30
jjrest in Camas ^County Discloses RustlingActmty S e c o n d D e b a te C re a te s M o re C la s h , S p a rk s ^ s . R e d C h in a ’s B id fo r U .N . S ea t S h elv ed A g a in ; U .S . W in Is b y N arro w IN (St« phdto DD pa(« 12) B. C. SUnlev. Toppenish, Wash., w an the bljrtre.st biivcr ftt the two-daj-fall ponv snientthe I. G . rrencotl Shetland' ponv farm west of Twin Fulls. Stanley bouRht 21 heiici of rcRistcrcd and prndc Shetland ponies during tlie f<alc,| which concluded Saturday. “Four ]>’s I-o^ Lodge Deep locaird Ni --------------------------------------- "Red,” a'-roKistcred EorreiljKtnncdy> T niiT I GJ F ov mnrc Shetland pony brouRhtioscci PI lO p U. o . r a i ‘ SI,200 J V the sale Frufnv _ * ---------- •. _ Mrnlntt llid honor of the hlBhc.v priced Dony ut die snic, 'm e Don; was Mid by Ed WAtUns. Chico Califs to Opnl Dolbccr, Men .S. Far. East Official Sent to Laos WASHrNOTON. Ool- S Cfl-Thf' nepresentnllvr! Uended Ifie s:i )ur .'flrrcll fill! I^ucck: lor to Laos lei r»n.<port plirne for talks *111, US, imbaMador.t lir Lno.«, Cnmbodls, rhillana and Soulli Vlrl Nam, Hf »-iu »fcomfiflnlfd by John S. Ir«1n II, a.vhtunt fecrffLs dffta^e In chirjo of iKllltni • A nt» critical elemEnl * u in JectM Into ttif eituallon by tin Bnnwneemtnl ot prince Norodoii. BJAjnwjlc of nflRhlmrlnif Camtodla th« he rcllnqiilshli •S*ln hli Job as head of aient for that nrutrallsl c CfiallengelES^ , On Demos’ Trip IDAHO KAU^, Oct, 8 i.B _ BUie jAfjrf fommlsslcrner John ( —^ 8 l d —-WilllstiB— “rairtnlJmiy m*de a ijuslnfM trip' to Coeur d'- /ftre oil (he narne date a Demo- frttic rally was held In t' lUy Robbins said 'today, Hobbln.,. nepublJcan i i . t j cMr~ WllllBma, )ior.?e c o lt, SCO; fell ana w hite Illly, *110; ClUf A< lomlny iliilllCir^on7“ J3' 'Oracc'SykM, d.ippJc n>a«, 427i Garry Pctfrson, Cnld»rll. sarit mare, J300: C. l . •Williams, thn dapple fillies, k l>iiy Illly and ft pa oraino fiUy. JS75. and Ctcll PcttI Caldttcil, llufe dapple fllllP.s »n three blnetc fUlles. j38o. Mrs. I, G, Pre prices e iale oil noted ths an hlsher tha. * been able to <Jr«! ,nd acllers fro .nlm.l: buyer the V or the 49 lop pedlxteed i sold Krldny the average pr .......... - - 1. Prescott nddi . . ... .lured the "bejl quality ol stock o t any ot our sales. Each have It, but «ouid be lorced tt Kill. We (hfnk (h n fs The vice pre:ild< loua Kood jplrltr. Wajhlnjtoii alrpoi Demo Pushes More Aid for Africa Nation EM nOUTE W ITH KENNEDY, >ct, B cn Sen., John P. Ken- nedy today said th e UnlleU State! ~'ist embark on " a bold and Ini- Inallve nco- prosram” to help atlQii? of Afrlcc In freedom. - a iJOO-word stitement. Die Dcmocrntlc presidential nominee set forth a flvc-potnt program *'hlcli he said could becln .......... rerse tiie dl.'a.^crou.'* « r« icg!ect_«t the pas^ ' ' ' W fl suit •Mrw • party r. •Mr. Wnlter* «nd Mr Wi jhwiU Mpinin to lh» tWi ■licther th e y .were I '.nte expense to &i lly." RobblM ulq. er»tte n he PrcscolL't said tliat they ilenscd with the results of ' they plan to hold three i t yenr Inateiid of tuo.Tentative IS nrc that the third soli n May. ollhough separate from Registration Is Claimed Spotty BOISE. Oct. 8 (* - ttln. state chnlrman of CItliens ir Kennedy and Johnson, said iday voter registration In Idaho . spotty, He BaJd alniMt all the eligible clllrens we riwlstered )n ioi) - countleg, while oa many as n are not registered m otliei int^enewed his request th one day be sec aside by both po^ lillcal parties for a concentrited one-day effort lb reflster volerj lot yet on th« rolls. Parrot-WithrBrokeiriBealcis— „ Not Talking; Two Claim Bird tnvrk^*. ^ beik. :sl word, and all Uie M ies eta Is Wftlt. The trouble began when rrot—Polly, for our purp< :« In th e window of room i . hotel m the seaside reMrt ol Whitley bay, Mrs. Morrison ar- rived a t th e hotel soon afterward and .cUimed the.bird. my M&c.“ ih« Mid. Bo sh« took Uj« pirrot to her home In the ahlpbull^g center If South Shields.: B»tor« long MJ*. Pretty showed up. took one took st the Irtrd ud ttia.-’T ijiii tt-mjf JiMbtt"-- ............... reCora'DfTCK. nd indlffcrenco—of drift and e and retreot—hu resulted iteady decline in Amcrlcnn prejtlRe In Africa and ft steady crowth of Soviet Inllui said. Kennedy Is-sued his stntcm ftHeanl-o uatlon rlniE a campaisn i^lng through itral and we.ster/r^Kentuclty. a lie .carried by President Elsco- howcr four years ago. With respect to Africa, Kennedy lid the only real question Is whether ihe nations ot the conti- nent will look w est or east - Washington or Moscow help and Kuldancc In Ihelr efforU lo win Independence and Improve living sUndards. ■TbU choice m oy well deli, nine the course of the cold war— ihether the. world shifts toward communlim or toward.i demoe-' rtcy, towards treedom or slavery, -in the yesrs to come," Kennedy said. . . . . Keonedy’t program for Africa Different Boy BURLEY. Oct. 8 - The Burley aOODING. Oct. 8 - Sen. McGee, D., Wyo., strc.ised conditions o f ' , school.'! and the economic w ar of the Unlicd Stales and Russia d u r- ing ft Dcniocrallc rnlly here Prldny. night. Approjlmalely 550 pcrwin.i at- tended the rally, jponsorcd by the Ooodlns coiinly Dfmocrnllc ccn- ed ( chlldi Bliould hav e RtlOIl -tiould be .... ... jeoparcllie this rlf:lit. ------ -ifdiiif ni^c»nnl nrm . idldalc for conRress 11 Idaho's second district, also Kpolti •UiE the rally Friday night. Hi -Iclzed hU Repiibllcnn opponcn Jor iie callfd a •'Jack ol con . If Idaho: Iftrmcrj." Harding raid incumbent Rep. ftmer H. Burtce luJed ngslnst f food sld'mp dl'tributlon plan, fn supports, the school milk progn ed sfrvlccj milk Pi that the food stam p distribution plan aould have Aided needy families out of the nation's food surphtA and it va.i backed by the National Orange, the Nfttlont' Formers union snd the Matloni Milk Producers aj.socJallon. Mrs. Mildred Manuel, program .JiaIfmanr"lhlroailC«l“ K elth—301 hanson, who san; two numbers, accompanied by Mrs. Russell King, tMth Jerome. Group tinging 'vaa led by Mrs.. Harold Henderson, Ooodlng. •Inclpal speaker was in tro - John Wsliers. Boise, state ...........■“ Piaycr'Q^)5s; Dispute Flares Over Stand of Committee of © Backing Budge A (lissciitiiig memljer of the Committee of Nine Saturday called Thursday'.s statc- .... fment by member.-) <?f Ihe ^rroup in .support of Rep. Hamer Budge "purely political," »nd 'id-laccu.sed N. V. Shftrp, Filer, of promotiriR the endorsement. Sharp in turn countered ^“ 'Jiwith a statement that, although he has been a lifelong Democrat, he would be “glad ‘‘"“Ito e/idor.Ho any public official who ha.s worked for the beat intercfit of w ater u: ;----------------------------------------------A l t h o u g h h e w as a r her of the Committei Ooodlhg counly chalrmiin. i n t r o - duced Ralph lUrdlng. Blackfoot, eandld»te for U5, representative. Gooding county candidates In- troduced were Ben P- OJsuner. county comnilsjioner In the first district; Herb Palterson, aecond' district commlisioner; Mrs. M nn- uel. treasurer; Donald Q, Freder- Icksen. state senstor; Roy K ays, AirtiJledMen— Escape From Cuban Prison HAVANA. Oct, 8 «V-Tll fully plotted escape of IS poUtlcal prisoners from a n c ie n t Morro Castle here yesterday has tcieascd group ol lOfwer trmy cHlcw 'orn to battle cominunljt-in tratlon in Cuba's armed {i ...................................... a m e s' of the escapoes with tha«.sentenced by a mllltnry tribunal last Dec, 16 aho«-8 at least 14 of the 15 arc fcsaoclBtes of MaJ. Hubert Matos, formerly one of Prim# Minister Pld«l-CJ Matos. Castro's former military eommandant In Cunaguey pri ice and one of the revolutlo waders. Li serving a 20-year n ^nce for treason. It Matos’ officers succeed reaching insurgent iforccA operat- iri8r'ifi“'ttiB-mmint«lni-of-tTntTe Cubn, they will give a potent boost "> th e bands oppMing Caslro. Among those who fled Morro Castle with the help of five i men s.'isl^ed to guard thim Cap(. J e s u s Napoleon Bee,. Gonzalez, personal aide to Matos- M lllury investigators began a large scale roundup of <uspec(ed GOUQterTcvolutlonarles In P l n a r del Rio province last nl eral women were among rested. NEWS BULLETINS WASlllNaTON, Oel. B tCTO — President Eiaenliow rep9 uoUUvei fraoi IS oewly»dmi(ted nembers ta ...................... .. Uon»-lS African lUle* and C rp n u — to meet wlUi him at Ihs While ACCRA. Ghana, Ocl. 9 (Sunday) W — President Kwame-Nkni'msh, ihana, win deny in a broadcast tonight that he Intetidi national....... >relgn firms in Ghana, source* close to t»ie government aatd >e VIENNA. Anitrls. Oei. « CO — Three V. 8. soldier* were held aenrat hQun by AuaUUo sfflelali today after their army helleepUr landed jB»«ili»Ma*trii.TI)eforelxn ministry protested t* lh» 0. 8. eal -- the TloUUoB. The men were relDrsed le.Weat Oermaay. Howard Oransbtuy. one of four t«en*agers against whom cbiraes of dlsturblog the peace tire filed iWday In Caala fOMfr prrtattf ooui-t. ~ )dllee department rtported that Howard Oransbury, er Ot Jack, we* Involved In u be had wlthdraivn from th e campaign, HU r«ply. “Oh, thire’* been - ,-t. 1 iDcfdent fn which/otu-no chaofe of prani." He raa asked 1/ tbst means h« wU' jrquthi:*re aeotioM of toMlag alfor NUon It asked wd he replied that be had a tew UUt lighted flart onto the porch of ■ as seereuty of agriculture and «aa leavlni Oct. 30 ler i lamily’i borne hero. -IsobdwlU tour ol latlO'-Atasrlca,.. ’ ' ....... BALT LAKE oiry, Oct. 8 W — Secretary of Agriculture Esrt luft -easoo Mid Usalglii Jie »»reeo »1U» the purpose,of vice Preiident Rlchanl M. Nrton's fsnri policy, but conceded he Had M l dona much .............. g for ihe Republican presidential candidate. Re vas'asked o signed Thui •3 statfwcnt Thlch back lBC'3 efforts in concress. he diiscntlng member of the imlttce. State Sen. Cy Youns Frcrtiont couniy, rclrosei hi emeiit to the Tiraes-Ncws Sat- ..jy morninf: through Slevi Nlelscri. Blackfoot, who said ht father at Snake River hlun school. .ater contacted ., _ i-Ncws reporter, sold he had itcd to sfKn/nit Uie B u d g e sement bccauje ho thought as unfair to so out and ea- political candidates as , tee of Nine supposrtiy'IS pjirtJsnn IrrJjtation board thinks the committee should re- m.iln Just that- • "The auicmcnt «-as promoted by N. V. Sharp, a retired member snd former chairman of the commit- "The slAtement . William Holden,- a high Republican attorney. I the .statement does not reflect the sentiment of even a majority of ;ment. Sharp rebut- : is only Mr.Young-i accuMs me of spon- _____ !ment made by the eight members of the Committee of Nine la behalf of the principles that Hsmer Budge toMcs tor la ingress in tlie interest of water sers In Idaho." Sharp continued, "As to Holden's part In thfistatameot, "Tanll>M4 *B l>w ». II 2JxeitAgers_ Of Area May Lose License Two'area-tefw^ORCrs were linei ..iJ their driver’s Jlccnscs forward- ed to the state department of Inu enforcement with a rccommcnda- Uon thst they l>« suspended for CO days, when they oppeorcd Sat- urday before T w in Falls J»oUce •udae J. 0, Pumphrey. They were Identified as Michael 1. Green. 17, routei 3, Twin Foils. ,ned ta\ and Bobby D. Marsh. 17, Murtaugh. fined <13. Both were cited tor speeding Friday, by Twla Falls olflcen. Carl H, UlUer, 44. route 2. Klm- lScrtyrwu-nned-»19-«rd-»ases« ‘ 35 deroeriU by T w in Falls Voile Judge J, O. Pumphrey Saturda for failure to yield the rlsht Oct. e m - Tha West Ucrnun vovcrnmcnt plans new IcRlslailon providing possibly long prison lenns and r^foo^ tlbn of drlvlfig tlcenses, io toufftien the Uafflc code and help end riling highway deaths. Magic Valley Boy, 5, Dies In California' JlAZELTON, Oct, 8 — Johnnl# Popper ecantlln. S<year-otd son of the Rev, and Mrs, Orville Bca n tlln. 1 Ilarclton. died Hiur$day In San Franclico, Calif., following a h e art surgery optrallDn Wednesday. Johnnie taken lo Ban FV ;^cd In lata Amurt to t iteart fUt^ry lii him home to buua up The family look Johnnie 104t week of September time the doeion thought he w as in 1 xcellent condition. A hean catheriuUon operatloo .: ^as perfonifd'ibout Sept. a ; with no heart luigery llseU scheduled | for a »eek later. Jolmnle was bom In Augtuta, Me.. Kor. 10, IIU. tad apoa the ;ath of his tnolher, he became le son of the Haielton couple. SurvlTors include, besides his parents, a sister. Lou Ann Scaa(> lio, and a brother, Lefoy Scant, llrt, both HsMtton; m a t e r n a l grandmother. Uis. Rosa MuUlns, Sea Drift. Tex. and a paternal graDdfather, PJ3. BcantUa. Ot. Core.-" ■" at S' involred In aa accident. ._LQttd. *'7'^ Malone, 60. J< n u p ^ HnedTTlinrTfn — - ______ by Jerome Police Judge Fred Kberhardi for going 33 mllesi per hour In a 2B-mUe zone. George F. Baxter. Buhl, fined «9 and costa Thursday by Buhl Judge Bernard Suirr fr ' J fined *10 and costs Friday by " s Judge Joe Baum- Ing a red light. QoodJna PoUee- were cited bjr Bur- Don Odom and Nod Woraer dur- Cassia, Minidoka Counties ~ Lead in Traffic ] Funeral serrlces will be held pin. Tuesday at the -White ....tuary chspel In Twin Falls • vlth (he Rev. U D. Lock. Sweet, •da. Assembly of Ood church of- ficiating. HiiilLldHTSin T oday's T im«s-N«ws P»c« CWaes* bid for OJI. mewbersblp shelved again. Rustling acUvlty revealed in area. Dispute fUres over en dortcment of Budge by Com- mltieectMine, rage 4 — Editorials: "Wash- ington Work Load" and " •Over- prlvlleged' Homes." Page 1-Fire preveaUo»*eek acUvlty stressed. Page a-ldsho mother has art ezhlbitloa at Ketchuhi. Page 11 - proposed ..state Neorly one-half the traffic deaOu In M*8lo Valley so f « this ye»r have oeeuntd la Csssia and Minidoka counU^ state Police Ueutenant Olirk Hsad re- ported Friday. He »tH1hut^ to a powbty too-ea<r attltud the harimwg of traffic offin To dau there haw been, ifTen -‘- I f those counties for the enUre era cauiht hi yaUty-wlde radar traps, aght others wei---------- - and sot cite<L Twin Falls county led w ith M. assla *ai leoond «lth 66, and JOaMoka ttira wJtb 87.. fia a d noted that Twin FMls has tar more can'registered than either of the two eounUaa, thus allo^ln* for the cTMitf ^ b e r <of elu Other Talley clUUobi Je- rome, n , Blalhe, n. Ooodta*. u. Uncohi ilve.and paznw, one. Ouuof-itale drlvert and Isald. 1 , he pointed our. wtflto hot; (Ci«tlaW-«> Paa«'S. Oeteafi «). •< Page l^-fihKland pony sali held here. ^ e IJ-T, F. defeats Idaho - Yankees taka' a-1 lead in World Strlas. - . aonday ftalsre seeUftB Safety emphasised for Mlentlsts. Local m aa ------- bomb shelter. T. F. Canal.com*- pany plans lor future, apeolu camera tued la sujar Orm* «• search.

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Page 1: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

jjrest in Camas ^County Discloses

RustlingActmty

S e c o n d D e b a t e

C r e a t e s M o r e

C l a s h , S p a r k s

^ s .

R e d C h i n a ’ s B i d f o r U . N .

S e a t S h e l v e d A g a i n ; U . S .

W i n I s b y N a r r o w IN

(St« phdto DD pa(« 12)B. C. SUnlev. T oppenish, W ash., w a n th e b ljrtre.st b iivcr

ftt the two-daj-fall ponv s n ie n t th e I . G . r r e n c o t l S he tland ' ponv farm west o f Tw in Fulls. S t a n l e y b o u R h t 21 heiici of rcRistcrcd and p rndc Shetland p o n ie s d u r in g tlie f<alc,| which concluded Sa tu rday . “F o u r ]>’s I -o ^ L odge D eep locaird Ni--------------------------------------- " R e d ,” a '- r o K i s t c r e d EorreiljKtnncdy>T n i i T I GJ F o v m nrc S h e t l a n d p o n y brouRhtioscci PI l O p U . o . r a i ‘ S I,200 J V th e sa le F rufnv

_ * ---------- •. _ Mrnlntt l l i d honor of the hlBhc.vpriced Dony ut d ie snic, 'm e Don; was Mid by Ed WAtUns. Chico Califs to Opnl Dolbccr, Men

.S. Far. East Official Sent to Laos

WASHrNOTON. Ool- S Cfl-Thf'nepresentnllvr!

Uended Ifie s:i )ur .'f lrrcll fill!

I^ucck:

lor to Laos lei r»n.<port plirne for talks *111, US, imbaMador.t lir Lno.«, Cnmbodls, rhillana and Soulli Vlrl Nam,

Hf »-iu »fcomfiflnlfd by John S. Ir«1n II, a.vhtunt fecrffLs dffta^e In chirjo of iKllltni

• A nt» critical elemEnl * u in JectM Into ttif eituallon by tin Bnnwneemtnl ot prince Norodoii. BJAjnwjlc of nflRhlmrlnif Camtodla th « he rcllnqiilshli •S*ln h li Job as head of aient for that nrutrallsl c

CfiallengelES^ , On Demos’ Trip

IDAHO KAU^, Oct, 8 i.B _ BUie jAfjrf fommlsslcrner John (

— 8 ld —-WilllstiB— “rairtnlJmiy m*de a ijuslnfM trip' to Coeur d'- /ftre oil (he narne date a Demo- frttic rally was held In t' lUy Robbins said 'today,

Hobbln.,. nepublJcan i i . t j cMr~ WllllBma,

)ior.?e colt, SCO;fell ana w hite Illly, *110; ClUf A<

lomlny iliilllCir^on7“ J3' 'O racc'SykM , d.ippJc n>a«, 427i Garry P c tfrson , Cnld»rll. sarit mare, J300: C. l . •Williams, thn dapple fillies, k l>iiy Illly and ft pa oraino fiU y. JS75. and Ctcll PcttI Caldttcil, l lu fe dapple fllllP.s »n three blnetc fUlles. j38o.

Mrs. I , G , Preprices e iale

oil noted ths an hlsher tha.

* been able to <Jr«!,nd acllers fro

.nlm.l:

buyer the V

o r th e 49 lop pedlxteed i sold Krldny the average pr.......... - - 1. Prescott nddi. . . . . .lured th e "bejl quality ol stock o t any o t our sales. Each

have It, but «ouid be lorced t t Kill. We (hfnk (h n fs

The vice pre:ild< loua Kood jplrltr.

Wajhlnjtoii alrpoi

Demo Pushes More Aid for Africa Nation

EM nOUTE W IT H KENNEDY, >ct, B cn Sen., John P . Ken­

nedy today said th e UnlleU State! ~'ist embark on " a bold a n d Ini-

Inallve nco- prosram ” to helpatlQii? of Afrlcc

In freedom.- a iJOO-word stitem en t. Die

Dcmocrntlc presidential nominee set forth a flvc-potnt program*'hlcli he said cou ld be c ln ..........rerse tiie dl.'a.^crou.'* « r« icg!ect_«t the p as^ ' ' '

W fl s u i t

•Mrw • party r.•Mr. Wnlter* «nd Mr Wi

jhwiU Mpinin to lh» tWi■licther they .were I '.nte expense to & i lly." RobblM ulq .er»tte n

he PrcscolL't sa id tliat they ilenscd with th e results of '

they plan to hold three i t yen r Inateiid of tuo.Tentative IS n rc th a t th e third soli n M ay. ollhough separate from

Registration Is Claimed Spotty

BOISE. Oct. 8 (* - ttln. s ta te chnlrm an of CItliens ir K ennedy and Johnson, said iday v o te r registration In Idaho . spotty,He BaJd alniM t all the eligible

clllrens w e riwlstered )n ioi) - countleg, while oa many as n ■ a re no t registered m otliei

in t^ e n ew ed h is request th one day be sec aside by both po lillcal p a rtie s fo r a concentrited one-day e ffo rt lb reflster volerj lot ye t o n th« rolls.

Parrot-WithrBrokeiriBealcis— „ Not Talking; Two Claim Bird

tnvrk^* . ^

beik.:sl w ord , and all Uie M ies eta

Is Wftlt. ‘The trouble began when rrot— Polly, fo r our purp<:« In t h e window of room i . hotel m the seaside reMrt ol

Whitley bay, M rs. Morrison ar­rived a t th e ho te l soon afterward and .cU im ed the.bird.

m y M&c.“ ih« Mid.Bo sh « took Uj« pirrot to her

home I n the a h lp b u ll^ g center If S ou th S h ie ld s .:

B»tor« long MJ*. Pretty showed up. took one took s t the Irtrd u dttia .-’T ij i i i tt-m jf J iM btt"--

............... reCora'DfTCK.nd indlffcrenco—of d r if t and e and re tre o t—h u resulted iteady decline in Amcrlcnn

prejtlRe In A frica and ft steady crowth of Soviet Inllui said.

Kennedy Is-sued his stntcmftHeanl-o uatlon

rlniE a cam paisn i^lng through itral and we.ster/r^Kentuclty. a lie .carried by President Elsco-

howcr four years ago.With respect to Africa, Kennedy lid the only re a l question Is

whether ihe n a tio n s ot th e conti­nent will look w es t or e as t - Washington or Moscow — help and Kuldancc In Ihelr efforU lo win Independence and Improve living sUndards.

■TbU choice m o y well deli, nine the course o f the cold war— ihether the. w orld shifts toward communlim or toward.i demoe-' rtcy, towards treedom or slavery, - i n the yesrs to come," Kennedy said. . . . .

Keonedy’t program for Africa

Different BoyBURLEY. O ct. 8 - T h e Burley

aOODING. Oct. 8 - Sen. McGee, D., Wyo., strc.ised conditions o f ' , school.'! and the economic w ar of the Unlicd Stales and Russia d u r ­ing ft Dcniocrallc rnlly here Prldny. night.

Approjlmalely 550 pcrwin.i a t­tended the rally, jponsorcd by the Ooodlns coiinly Dfmocrnllc ccn-

ed ( chlldi Bliould haveRtlOIl

-tiould be . . . . . . . jeoparcllie this rlf:lit.

------ -ifd iiif ni^c»nnl n rm .idldalc for conRress 11

Idaho's second district, also Kpolti •UiE the rally Friday night. Hi -Iclzed hU Repiibllcnn opponcn

Jor iie callfd a •'Jack o l con . If Idaho:

Iftrmcrj."Harding raid incumbent Rep.

ftmer H. Burtce luJed ngslnst f food sld'mp dl'tributlon plan, fn supports, the school milk p rogn

ed sfrvlccj milk Pi

that the food stam p distribution plan aould have Aided needy families out of the na tion 's food surphtA and it va.i backed by the National Orange, the N fttlon t' Formers union snd the Matloni Milk Producers aj.socJallon.

Mrs. Mildred Manuel, p rogram .JiaIfmanr"lhlroailC«l“ K elth—301 hanson, who san; two numbers, accompanied by Mrs. Russell K ing, tMth Jerome. Group tinging 'vaa led by Mrs.. Harold Henderson, Ooodlng.

•Inclpal speaker was in tro - John Wsliers. Boise, s ta te

■...........■“ Piaycr'Q^)5s;

Dispute Flares Over Stand of Committee of © Backing Budge

A (lissc iitiiig m em ljer of th e C o m m itte e o f N ine S a tu rd ay called T h u r s d a y '.s s ta t c - .. . . fm e n t by member.-) <?f Ihe ^rroup in .su p p o rt o f Rep. H am er Budge "pure ly p o l i t i c a l , " » n d 'id -lac cu .se d N . V . Shftrp, Filer, of p ro m o tir iR t h e endorsem en t. Sharp in t u r n c o u n te r e d ^“'J iw i th a s ta te m e n t th a t , a lth o u g h h e h a s b e e n a life long Dem ocrat, he w o u ld b e “ g lad

‘‘" “ Ito e/idor.Ho a n y public official w h o ha.s w o rk e d f o r th e b e a t intercfit of w a t e r u:;----------------------------------------------A lth o u g h h e was a r

h e r o f th e Com m itte i

Ooodlhg counly chalrmiin. in tro ­duced Ralph lUrdlng. Blackfoot, eandld»te for U5, representative.

Gooding county candidates In­troduced were Ben P- O Jsuner. county comnilsjioner In th e first district; Herb Palterson, aecond' district commlisioner; Mrs. M nn- uel. treasurer; Donald Q, F red er- Icksen. state senstor; Roy K ays,

AirtiJledMen— Escape From Cuban Prison

HAVANA. Oct, 8 «V-Tll fully plotted escape of IS poUtlcal prisoners from a n c i e n t Morro Castle here yesterday has tcieascd

group ol lOfwer trmy cHlcw 'orn to battle cominunljt-in tratlon in Cuba's armed {i...................................... a m e s' of

the escapoes with tha«.sentenced by a mllltnry tribunal last Dec, 16 aho«-8 at least 14 of the 15 arc fcsaoclBtes of MaJ. Hubert Matos, formerly one of Prim# Minister Pld«l-CJ

M atos. Castro's former military eommandant In Cunaguey pri

ice and one of the revolutlo waders. Li serving a 20-year n ^nce for treason.I t Matos’ officers succeed

reaching insurgent iforccA operat- iri8r'ifi“'ttiB-mmint«lni-of-tTntTe Cubn, they will give a potent boost "> th e bands oppMing Caslro.

Among those who fled Morro Castle with the help of five i m en s.'isl^ed to guard thim Cap(. J e s u s Napoleon Bee,. Gonzalez, personal aide to Matos-

M lllury investigators began a large scale roundup of <uspec(ed GOUQterTcvolutlonarles In P l n a r del Rio province last nl eral women were among rested.

NEWS BULLETINSWASlllNaTON, Oel. B tCTO — President Eiaenliow

rep9 uoUUvei fraoi IS oew ly»dm i(ted nembers t a ...................... ..U on»-lS African lUle* and C r p n u — to meet wlUi him a t Ihs While

ACCRA. Ghana, Ocl. 9 (Sunday) W — President Kwame-Nkni'msh,ihana, win deny in a b roadcast tonight that he Intetidi national.......>relgn firms in Ghana, source* close to t»ie government aatd >e

VIENNA. Anitrls. Oei. « CO — Three V . 8 . soldier* were held aenrat hQun by AuaUUo sfflelali today a fte r their army helleepUr landed jB »«ili»M a*trii.TI)eforelxn ministry protested t* lh» 0. 8. eal --

the TloUUoB. The men w ere relD rsed le.Weat Oermaay.Howard O ransbtuy.

one of four t«en*agers against whom cbiraes o f dlsturblog the peace t i r e filed iW day I n Caala fOMfr prrtattf ooui-t.

~ )dllee departm en t rtported tha t H ow ard Oransbury,

er Ot Ja c k , we* Involved In u be had wlthdraivn from th e campaign, HU r«ply. “Oh, thire’* been - ,-t. 1 iD cfdent fn w h ich /o tu -no chaofe of prani." He r a a asked 1/ tb s t means h« wU'

jrquthi:*re aeotioM of toMlag a lfo r NUon It asked w d he replied th a t be had a tew UUt lighted flart o n to the po rch of ■ a s seereuty of agriculture a n d «aa leav ln i Oct. 30 ler i

lamily’i b o rn e hero. ■ -IsobdwlU tour ol latlO '-Atasrlca,.. ’ ' .......

BALT LAKE o iry , Oct. 8 W — Secretary of Agriculture Esrt lu f t -easoo Mid Usalglii Jie »» reeo »1U» the purpose,of vice Preiident Rlchanl M. Nrton's fsnri policy, but conceded h e Had M l dona much

.............. g for ihe Republican presidential candidate. Re vas'asked

o signed Thui •3 s ta tfw cn t Thlch back lBC'3 efforts in concress. h e diiscntlng member of the imlttce. S ta te Sen. Cy Youns Frcrtiont couniy, rclrosei h i emeiit to th e Tiraes-Ncws Sat-

. . j y morninf: through Slevi Nlelscri. Blackfoot, who said ht

father a t Snake R iver hlunschool.

.a te r contacted . , _ i-Ncws reporter, sold he had itcd to sfKn/nit Uie B u d g e sement bccauje ho thought as unfair to so out and ea-

political candidates as ,

tee o f Nine supposrtiy'IS pjirtJsnn IrrJjtation board th inks the committee should re- m .iln Just tha t- •

"T he au icm cnt «-as promoted by N. V. Sharp, a retired member snd form er chairman of the commit-

"T he slAtement .William Holden,- a high Republican attorney. I the .statement does not reflect the sentim ent of even a majority of

;ment. Sharp rebut- : is only Mr.Young-i accuMs me of spon-

_____ !ment made by thee igh t members of the Committee of N ine la behalf of the principles th a t Hsmer Budge toMcs tor la

ingress in tlie interest of water sers In Idaho."S harp continued, "As to

Holden's pa rt In thfistatameot, "Tanll>M4 *B l>w ». II

2 J x e i t A g e r s _ Of Area May

Lose LicenseTwo'area-tefw^ORCrs w ere linei

..iJ their driver’s Jlccnscs forward­ed to the state dep artm en t o f Inu enforcement with a rccommcnda- Uon thst they l>« suspended for CO days, when they oppeorcd Sat­urday before T w in Falls J»oUce •udae J. 0, Pum phrey.

They were Identified as Michael 1. Green. 17, routei 3, Twin Foils. ,ned ta \ and Bobby D. M arsh. 17,

Murtaugh. fined <13. Both were cited tor speeding Friday, by Twla Falls olflcen.

Carl H, UlUer, 44. route 2. Klm- lScrtyrw u-nned-»19-«rd-»ases« ‘ 35 deroeriU by T w in Falls Voile Judge J, O. Pum phrey Saturda for failure to yield the r l s h t

Oct. e m - Tha W est Ucrnun vovcrnmcnt plans new IcRlslailon providing possibly long prison lenns and r^ fo o ^ tlbn of drlvlfig tlcenses, io toufftien the Uafflc code and help end riling highway deaths.

Magic Valley Boy, 5, D ies In California'

JlAZELTON, Oct, 8 — Johnnl# Popper ecantlln. S<year-otd son of the Rev, and Mrs, Orville Bca n tlln. 1 Ilarclton. died Hiur$day In San Franclico, Calif., following a heart surgery optrallDn Wednesday.

Johnnie taken lo Ban FV ; cd In lata Amurt to t ‘

iteart fUt^ry lii him home to buua up The family look Johnnie 104t week of September time the doeion thought he w as in 1 xcellent condition.A hean catheriuUon operatloo .: as perfonifd'ibout Sept. a ; with

no heart luigery llseU scheduled | for a »eek later. ‘

Jolmnle was bom In Augtuta, Me.. Kor. 10, IIU. tad apoa the

;ath of his tnolher, h e became le son of the Haielton couple. SurvlTors include, besides his

parents, a sister. Lou Ann Scaa(> lio, and a brother, Lefoy S can t, llrt, both HsMtton; m a t e r n a l grandmother. Uis. Rosa MuUlns, Sea Drift. Tex. and a pa ternal graDdfather, PJ3. BcantUa. O t.

Core.-" ■"

at S'

involred In aa accident. ._LQttd. * '7 '^ Malone, 60. J< n u p ^ H nedT T linrT fn — -

______ by Jerom e Police JudgeFred Kberhardi fo r going 33 mllesi per hour In a 2B-mUe zone.

George F. B axter. Buhl, fined «9 and costa T hursday by Buhl Judge B ernard S u irr f r • '

J fined *10 and costs F rid ay by " s Ju d g e Joe Baum-

Ing a r e d light. QoodJna PoUee-

w ere cited bjr Bur- D on O dom and

N od W oraer dur-

Cassia, Minidoka Counties ~ Lead in Traffic ]

Funeral serrlces will be held pin. Tuesday a t th e -White

....tuary chspel In Tw in Falls • vlth (he Rev. U D. Lock. Sweet, •da. Assembly of Ood church of­ficiating.

HiiilLldHTSinT o d a y 's T im « s - N « w sP»c« CWaes* bid for

OJI. mewbersblp shelved again. Rustling acUvlty revealed in area. Dispute fUres over en dortcment of Budge by Com- mltieectMine,

rage 4 — Editorials: "W ash­ington Work Load" and " •Over- prlvlleged' Homes."

Page 1-Fire preveaUo»*eek acUvlty stressed. ‘

Page a-ldsho mother has art ezhlbitloa at Ketchuhi.

Page 11 - proposed ..state

Neorly one-half the traffic deaO u In M*8lo Valley so f « th is ye»r have oeeuntd la Csssia and Minidoka counU^ s t a t e Police U eutenant Olirk H sad re- ported Friday. He »tH1hut^ to a powbty too-ea<r attltud the harimwg of traffic offin To d a u there haw been, ifTen

-‘- I f those counties for the enUre

era cau ih t h i yaUty-wlde radartraps , a g h t others wei-----------and so t cite<L

Twin Falls c oun ty led w ith M. assla *ai leoond « l th 66, and

JOaMoka tt i ra w Jtb 87.. f i a a d noted that T w in FMls h a s tar more can 'reg iste red th a n either of the two eounUaa, th u s allo^ln* for the cTMitf ^ b e r < o f e lu

Other Talley clU U obi Je­rome, n , Blalhe, n . O oodta*. u . Uncohi ilve.and paznw , one .

Ouuof-itale d r lv e r t a n d ‘

Isald.1, he po in ted our. w tflto hot;

(Ci«tlaW-«> Paa«'S. Oeteafi «). •<

Page l^-fihKland pony sali held here.

^ e IJ-T , F. defeats Idaho

- Yankees ta k a ' a-1lead in World Strlas. • - .

aonday ftalsre seeUftB — Safety emphasised for —Mlentlsts. Local m aa -------bomb shelter. T. F. Canal.com*- pany plans lor future, apeolu camera tued la sujar Orm* « • search.

Page 2: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

TIMES-NEW S. t w in f a l l s . IDAHO ----^ SUNDAY, OTTOBgR

Dispute Over Statement on

ge Flares(fnm r«r»

' w u Mkfd bT Uie ch ilrm nn of me , ComnltUt o! Nine. i^on»rd S i Or»bun, W wtlU up th is Hate-

— meot ia d ll.v M dl3C>i5?irf,«nd *1; . Ur*d by the commiiue to in « l '

IKutlDn.n - -■•Mrr Holden MU *1 Uio Ie«»Ui!'

»Uer o| ih« ComJiiUtec of Mnt n: » tli u reprfsriitytiff m ai! o! tli'

MAOIC VALLEY — P»rlly tioudy tixU y. B*eoralnf t»lr tomorrow wllh «Jo»ly rWnj ltra» tr» torM . lUtf- • •• ton lih l 12 to 31 »nd hlr'Friday nl(ht 38 and «7 a

2 Teen-Agers Of Ai-ea May

Lose License;

Twin Falls News in Briefrrofnm Set Today

Twin Falli Mtulc club Inter- atlonnl miiile projram wUI be

..eld at 5:30 PJti. Bundny a t Uie Twin Fall-' EBplKopal Church of the AAcwlon pariah hull. T h is will feature music on New Zealand nnd AUJUolU. The public Li

■Itallonv andl ~ —ipfedfi, were Lee Ann Walker,,Strre* on Carrier iley. 60.m JtJ per hour; John ' Ronald K, Jordan, bollermi

Cro'a, lUipcrt, 65. nnd Lbien T ’second Cla.MV •s,. 19. Burley, 60. :c, Parrott, rouce i. rans,Arllmr' A. M oau forfeited * *15 jcrrlnit aboard Ihc anU ^ubm irlnc iid to BctlnK Btirlcy Police Judge »ir{nre aircraft carrier USS I-v

s A nnest FrMny afternoon operr mkUiB nti improper turn. He j,, u ,j m cltcd by a fliirley pcjilcc of.^

Kelsrti lo KchDOl Tliree Tv.m tUlls JtudenL\ hi

DUesaa ftebetanhip*DaTid Weaver. Dean Bi^house

Evelyn Bhotwell and Larry Har. vey, all Twin Pall*. »ert among 45 atudenLs eelecled lo attend banquet a t the CoUfBe of IdaJ Caldwell, to d i s c u j i jradua

larahlps.- The aludfnu we lhal with the re

•Thechali mof the Commlltf ot Nine called a. ineellnK and u

=r^U»ualtOUft:«lIimiilt?;m^TT!ber:frer this diitrict, Alfred Peters, man »»er of the T»ln Falls Canal com pajiy, inTlled me to go w ith him t

' Idaho Pklla to attend th e meelln; “iTili m ttter was b rousbl uf.

thoroughly dljcuued nnd eacl member was polled and s l l favored

; m auni the itntement with McepUon of Mr, Younit."

«h*rp'» ilalement conlli . “Mr. Youni branda thin as a I JitlcaUit. I ann-txnowtUB politics ! of many of the member! ' '1 «owmltte*. but I do kn

many ol Uiem have been lifelong ' Demoerati the um e a j myielf,' '*Th)< itatemenl was n o t an eti'I dorMDient of any one man, bu

I (latement of approval of thivork that Hamer Budge hm

' In eonj half of

In ble water

' t waa a member ef th a t ’ 'inllie* lor aintt«t“ 30“ ’l'BUIJ' in il

for more- IhV ir the lasr 'ha lt of tny years on th a t tMard. Wi har* token ilmlltr action » num-

' b«r of timei and to my recollection , Mr, Yount has been the only mnr

who h u crltldied any such itate' ment

"I want to aay again th a t neither I Dor anyone elM who ha« (ervecf on that eommlttea w an t to bring

. ItlntothspoUUcaliuvna. b u l ld o i le*l that »inc# Mr. Young Js nin- I clog (Of lenator on the Sem*' ocrat ticket, he p«rhaps un- I conaclouily, making a polltleat is-

iu» ot thU matttf.■•I ha»B often said, a n d ao h»v«

Vi* et^«r membtrt oT the com­mittee who algned Thuraday'i. it4t<inent. that we would be glad to «odotw any public ottlclal »- worked (or the beat intereet water uten ot the atAt«.''

Tha CooimlttM o; N ine la made up of nine members from nln* dls- trtcta from the Wyoming border U UUner, both north and south aldei W the anake rlrtr,

tt ie Aasoelated Press reported ether eommenu on th e endorse- m tnt from other pollUelana In the Matero pari of the stAte.

: In Idaho PalU. Bonneville coun­ty EWmocraUe ChalnnaA Ed ?an-

) Blisf u ld : 'I t U r«cr«ltal]le th a t '. Ih* Committee of Nine had aeea

-p n r t tr iB M m iT H n a je n tB n rp -f tir th» Republican party. T h la eom-

‘ inluee. which In the p a s t has been . M Inatnimental and intluenUal lo r

ihideTeltmnent or the snake river Tkllay. and which h iu had th e

. cotxfldenco and reapcct o t all th e , tu m tn aod bualnesa&ea .of Idft- ho, should not have allowed Itself ' to be used as a tool fo r Ifamer 1 Budge and hla poUUeal campaign.", llejtburg Mayor G ilbe rt U rsen ,

• j k fanntr and former Demoeratli"< a t a t e chairman, aajd : "I an

MHaMd that the commlttle* haa allowed 1U«I( to be used for » i

. Udoratment for a pa rtisan poUtl' pal candidate. I am su re tha t mos

<> wat«r u u n 2Jk« ntyMir hare been ' tad er the Impreulon that thU ; inmmlttet was non-poltUcal and I. non-puttean. By the membera’ a c -

- t -tlnn-they-haTB -not-Tm Jr diluted theJr lutur# effecUveneas. V

’ - V* publlcy Identifted thi

T w m PALLfi—I’Mncffll.iervlcfs -fof-W.ller-O, MeCUln.ftlll ba-held, o l a p.m. Tuesday In the White mortuary chapel by th* Rev. Robert C, lUchards, putor of the Eden Prfcsbyterlon church, Con- cludlnu rltea will ba held In Sun- se t Memorial park. Tlie family sugKcsu donations to Uie Eden Presbyterian ciiurch, wiilch may be srnt to Clyde Montgomery, Eden, or may be left at the nior* t u o r y . ____ ^

DurtLEY — fMneral jerHces for G ay L f^eOTnan » tl! tie conducted ttt the Burley Wethodlsl church w ith the Rev, Edward E. Dixon of- riclatlnj. Final rltea will be held

Burley with Masonic crave- I riles. Friends may csil ai the

Poyna mortuary monday alter- ind evenlni and Tueidny

u n til time o t services.

_aTWlN-rALL3-.--FunUAl.Kry-: for Johnnie Popper Scant*

— .'ill be held at 3:30 pjn, Tues­day in the While mortuary chapel ■with the Rev. h. D. Lock. Sweet, Ida., Assembly ot Ood ehurch of* tlclatlng.

B U irL — Funeral services for C harles C. Rogers will be held at

•2 -T O ^ ia n d iiy - im n e -n u h t-n rs t ’M ethod lit 'chu rc fi-w ltm ne-nev . W a r r e n McConnell officiating. F in a l rltea will be held a t the Buhl cemetery. Friends may call a t Al­be rtson funeral home.

BU H L — Funeral aerlvcea for M rs. Pauline Rendla will bi .....

1:30 p.m. Tuesday In the Buhl S t Christian church wit

.. / . Delmnr M. Talley olfldatlnR, assisted by the Rev, M,-M. -Ma;-

Buhl NazMene church-Pinal will be held a l Uie Bui

:tery. Friends may call a t th A lbertson funeral home.

HAILEV — noiary for Bobei»rl I in lch will tp ^ . Sunday in McOoldrlck lu- ; r a l ctupel. Hnlley, and mas I celebrated a t 10 ajn, Mond

CaHieOie ch urch. . . . . ’-y—Coacludlag-rllca-wUl-te-held

. Hftlley cemetery. Friends may ill a t McColdrlck funeral home i t l t time of services Sunday.

which

Magic Valley Hospitals

lie paid an additional IS a s is lor driving w ith a

driver's llcerue. Ho ^Sunday one and a h a lf rollfi e jf Twin FalLi on U.S. 30- hv Sti gatiQlman H .

|Engine, Eight Freight Cars Are Derailed

ig the sugar beeta**pluV two empty relght oara-and a caboose.to-Xwln nils when th e accident happened, 'he sugor beets, an estimated 65 3ns, were scheduled lo r delivery 1 the Twin Palls processing pli '

of the Amalgamated Sugar co

John H arris, train fireman, c le was a l th e engine controls he tlnje of th e accident.'•I fe ir ttte wheels bum p over t

witch a n d \ I could sense sonFrong," h e said. “Mynj .t nn hriiVp

0 I pulled righ t away."Tlarrls e.^tlmated hl.i (ipeed

rtlles per hou r al the time c

bound

1 of thi

i th a t the Bepubllcan attorney a I tU ^ U y n members of the Ci

Magic Valley Memorialvisiting hour* are from s to <

nd 7 lo 8 p.m. in the matemlty wards; In aU others, from 11 a jit ■ J«p jn .

ADMITTEDZenith Kerns, Vlckl Jo Clough,

David J. Koenig. Tliomas Amaya and Oary Ray Knox, all Twin Fnllj; Mrs, Lee Hoy Adams, Cary Galley and Kathleen Ilk, all Han­sen ; Arch Btombaugh and Mm John Payne, both Buhl; Mra, Rob­e r t Saunders. IlaicUon; M/s. Rob. e r t Orlngs. Jerome, and Mrs. Au- rello Chftvet, Murtaugh,

DISMISSEDMra. Jack Personlus and daugh-

U r. Mrs. Ray Albright and son Mrs. Howard Sears and son, Mrs Bay Relnbold. John B. White Anna Johnson, Mrs. Fitnk Me Oleary, Mrs, Qerald llorru. Mrs.B ra«T a~ B im onrT .n .c - aisvifcs MatUce. Myron E.Robert O, Jacb«i Hlnkley, Mrs. M. L. Wlutehead. Boben Newbry. Laura Ue Wr Uaim and Debra Hendrli, ill Tw ra ils : Herbert Kinnedy and Mt AHle Sandlaln. both Butlty; U rry fcatham and Ray H, ShlllinRion, both Jerome; Mrs. Robert Saun- der» and Mrs. Toralf Skrudlund both Harelton; William Oehrig and Essie Bltss. both OoodLns' Mrs. David Klnyon, Csjtleford Lawren Davis, lieyburn; Johr VanRuswyk. Filer; Mrs, Jamc: Henry, Kimberly, and Mrs. Ja; Stroud. ConlAct, Nev.

B iitrifs A daughter was bom Saturday

to Mr. and Mrs, Lea Roy Adams, Hansen. . _____

Gooding: MemorialVliiUng hours at Ooodiiu M

iDorlal hospital are from »:3() a to 8:30 p.m.

AnMlTTEI)

I County Appoints. .ppoin Election Officers

[ Triday appointed election oHiclaU to vacancies In tw o precincts.

U k OenlTe D ougherty was a p ­pointed deputy reg is trar of T n tn T ula precinct U . U rs . Mary HIk- H as knd u n - Rlk» R oder were ap- pointed eleeUon Judg«a in preclnc. Jr. mOMdat H it. z . V. «*teHlle!<S «ad U n . UkUde ‘Itilem an, whc

Minidoka CountyVlslilng h o u r a n t Mlnldoki

C ounty hospital are from 10 am to 7 p m. for medical and aurglca pa tien ts; trom lO.'JO n.m. to 3 p.ir,

• from 2:30 to S pjn. In thi •cmlty ward-

ADMITTED uy Hartgrnves, Mr.t. Raymond inipson. Mrs. Frank Fiedler,

T e r ry Walker and Chad Maxey, .11 nupert.

DISMISSED Donnalee Baker, Mrj. Robert

Dcmpsay and son, Mrs. Vernon Bryan .and son, Mrs. John Thome,

Mark Johiisoi; and lUiph ■s. a ll Rupert,

BIRTHS on was bom to Mr. and Mrs.

F r a n k Fiedler, and dnughlers wen 1 to the Rev, and Mrs. Ray- id Thompson and Mr. and Mrs

BofleUo~Alanls,-all-AupfrU----- 1.

Cassia Memorialvisiting hours at Cassia Xte-

m orla l bospltal are from 10:30 a .m . la 8 p.m. for medical and car- g lc a l patients and from 2:30 to 4 p .m . for matemliy patlenu, lor /n th e r i and grimdmotheri only.

ADMITTED Lance Udy, Malta; Mrs, Frances

Rodrigues and Mn. MarUna b o th Burley, and Lillian Mat­thew s, Dcclo,

DISMISSED CecU Powers, Maxine Stark and

M rs. Jeatjnetle Ballard, all Bur­le y : Mrs. Alice King. Rupert; F ra n k Lynch, Declo, and Terry T orlx, Paul.

- S t . Ucnedict’s, JeromeVuitlng hours a l St. Benedict'

hospiU l ore from 2 to 4 and fron 7 to 8 p.m, in the matemlty wart a n d from, 12 to 4 and S to 8 p.ir In the oJtjcr floor,

engine Jumped the west- track . H arris said, and alonR the rail ties betweer

VO tracks fo r sotne SOO feet be- ire coming to a stop.Harris w as tossed Into the cat

window w ith sufficient force tc break the Blass, but w as not hurt Ralph M urray, ihe hend brake.

• Frank Baker, the en­gineer. were to-ued to the floor ol

le engine when the train Jumped ,e track.Conductor Charles Kunts anf

Ru-'sell W inch, re a r brakemnn le caboose when Uie ac- ;urred. B oth aald thej

ere not hu --.The railroad right-of-way at thi

accldcnt scene was a craxy quill o ivcrturncd and upended cars am na.^hed .lugar bcct!<. Bonie 4 :uriou3 pcr.son!, m any of then :hlfdren. were observing, while th> nore adventurous y o u n g s t e r . :lambcred over the wreckage.

An Amalgamated Sugar com :any spokesman sa id productloi. \t the p lan t was n o t Interrupted jy the crackup. T lie beets ap- }arenily w ere loaded in Muitaugh ind were destined fo r tlio proces­sing plant, now beginning Its too-ds7rnround»the*cloek-oper«tlon^

Tlie Unloi “tld th a t 1

How J- Cioodmc, and/ntkins, QuUiry, Wasli. DlSMISiiEn

Mrs. Floyd Pierce, Oooding.

Funeral Set for Bennie F. Baker

Puneml services for- Beimie m n k lln Baker, 51, who flltd Frl-

tig nt hl3 home, 446

' Cl*” lna.‘'’

II

K eep th e W h i te F la g of S a f e ty F ly in g

0 20 dajfs w ith o u t a !e i ta th in o u t Magic

ind had lived here K.m years.

. r x - . S ' r . ' . S a . ' n v ;I ter. Mrs. Robert Jennlnu. RJch-

nobert Giles, Shoshone; ......F m n k Oavls and Mrs. Qllberl Kingsley, both Jerome; Mrs. James Marlow. Buhl: Mrs. Jay DU: T w in l-'alU: Mr*. BoSsa Sievsnsoi FYancls Hulel, WlUlam Peikln M rs, Alvin Voung, Kurt Benson a jid Kent Benson, *U Wendell.

DISMISSED Shirley FlUpatrIck and Ghtric}'

Thomas, both Jerome.BIRTHS

A son was bom to Mr. and Mrj Ja m es Marlow. Buhl.

ODDS VNCDANGED 1 ^ 8 VEOA8, Nev.. Oct. « m _

Bookmakers said the presidenUal election odds favoring Vice Pres­id e n t Richard M. Nixon over Sen J o h n P. Kennedy were unchanged n r te r Ust night's telcvislon-radlo debate. Nlzon was listed as to S choice. '

IpM PLETE

! RADIATOR SERVICEs t o r E v ery t y p « r a d i a t o r

USED RADIATORS - NEW CORESBxperienceiOferalora . . Guaranteed Work

II McRILL A u to Repairi t 130 2 n J A . . . N«. «E ' M M S

re.^rdenET^ ind Albion. In IS22 he v isted from Albion S U te norma,

school.In ths fall of th a t year ht irted leaching school a t Marlor id remained In the teaching pro- sslon for 21 years. The la.'it elgh' ars he wa-i principal of the lilgh

school a t Euhl.MarcJ), JS43, he w m t to »ork

ior-ttieJdiiha-einpJpBnent^i agency in Tulp p '

1041. he we iiriey office er until hts Tiarrled Flore:

March 13. ISU. He '3f the Metliodbt c Ihe £>f/JctoI bo.ird. J

A lw C . York Sees War but Praises U. N.

PALL MALL Tenn.. Oct. 8 liR- Alvtn C. York accepted ofllcla' homage today for h is exploits ti World w ar I and said he sec

r In the offing, looks like World

I the ! old , p a rtly parslyied

They hnve'snowed o ld Khrushchev under,”

presented ________pojJtJons

Services Set Tuesday for Guy Newman

^ U R L E Y .-O cO ^W nero l, serf Icei'for Ouy L Newm8n.-03, man

• the Idaho employmenoffice 1 1M4

(ho died Friday in Salt LJike City, be held at J p.m. Tuesday o l First Methodist ch urch with

the Rev. Edward Dixon ofllclatlng. Newman was born May 3t,

... It Fayette, Mo„ H e came to Idaho w1Lh his parei

Pined rLarry Ray r a.1 fined 1/5 I

Palls Polici •

T sk Liens Filed Two sUte tax liens

wllh Uie T«in Falls enrder Fridsy for ihe 1053. Ernest and Mrs. Mabel Clay- ton, Kimberly, were alleged to owe ♦ lOJJ plus 1124 Inlctest. William

Peggy J, Dirdwell, Flli

e filed

•a Hilt : Intersaid I e tl4.37, plus $1.07

rriage Llccntcsr*jT)age licenses were Usued by

the Tftln PalU county clerk Frl* day to Jack r ty Holloway, Twin Falls, and Vlckl Arlene Boiis. Wendell; Roy E. Kingston. Twin KalLv and Kaiheran C, M on' Buhl; jerry M. Thomss and Bi bars L. While, both Eden, a

LilasTowr 1, bolh Boise.

s transferred where he i

live m ...................lodge. Order of Eastern Star, Ev­ergreen chapter No. 64; Burle; Uons club, and Ihe American Lc

Surviving In oddltlon to his wld w are one son, Ueut. William L

Nevitnan, alatloned n t Tnchlkawn J«p.m. *l»i ihe «Jr lorce: one »l.i-

nuby Scott. Seattle ; one :e and Mveral cousins. His ila and a brother preceded

him In death.Its will be held In Bur* Masonic gravc-ilde rites.

Fricnda may call a t th e Payne . afternoon and

trening and 'H/esday u n t» time of -•rvlces.

Rites Set for R. Stefanicli

HAILEY, Oct. 8-Ro.sary will be

Vlnlnla Burgoyne. 2i] Adam.^ street, was Imed IS and coat T»ln Falls Justice of the Pence Robert E. Pence Friday lor driv­ing without a llcenie. She wa: cited Wednesday two miles soul! of Twin Fails on a county root by Stato Patrolman John Wray.

Bridge WInnen NamedWinners of the Plsyera Dupli­

cate Bridge club pUjlng Frldaj a t Ihe YWCA were Mrs. Clydi Straughn and Mrs. A. P, Ru.iscli tying with Mrs. Hugh Brown and Mrs. R. O. McCall, first and ond. and Mrs. EIra JfeeJta E. C. Montgomery, third.

Miale a n b r isa i MeelGt. Edward's Junior Muilo club

will meet Friday after school in the school audliorluni, A program is planned by Mrs, Ltoyd Walker. RefreshmenU will bg served.

BIrIh Is BtporUdMr. and Mrs. Uonel Dean, Twin

Falls, have received »ord ot the birth of a son lo Ueut. Cmdr, and Mrs. W. S. Oabrlel, Monterey, Calir, Mrs. Oabrlel Is ihe former Aflon Dean,

M, who died Friday In Sun Volley 'io.->pltal after n long lllnrs.^ a l 8 ).m, Sunday In the McOoldrIck uneral chapel here.Mass will be eelebratecl at 10

i.m, Monday in St. C harles Catho- Ic ehurch. Concluding rites will 1C held In Hailey cemctery. Friend.'! nay call Sunday a l McGoldncIc funeral home. The family sug* Rests' donaUons lo the orthrltts foundation, to be le ft a t the luneral home.

Mr. Stefanlch owned nnd op*

Roslyn, Wash..........from Kellogg about He was a member c Catholic church here

Surviving are his , Virgle Stefanlch. Hailey.

May 7. 1910. I

U titT-tnintnhe-tJnlted-N atlons ter.-M».-Vlrglnlft-LawUyr-lUlUy; ............ - •• •• •yw ell............................................................

ir he s

mother. Mrs. John Marlcicl Spokane, Wa.ih.; five sisters. Mrs Bernice Miles and Mra, Kclet Blackwell, bolh W allace; Mr?

irm ciiaugKi fKomotu Valeria Andcrion. Spokane; Mr, 'I U)Ut»i1.-.The_cerfJNlna Frankablch, Chewelah. Wabli.

years to the 'diVinrsTirajy'B uranie.-setiniC.-aiii: handedly wiped out three grandsonA.

Local Survey Notes Causes For Mishaps

<rr.« Ooi>primarily responsible' for accl deota. greatly Increases polentta Injury and loss of life. The possi­bility ot greater Injury and loss 01 life Increases wlUi the speed­ometer, he said. -

T h » d ay o f the week-at>peit3-la- icollve of aomethlog. he a a ld

s a tu rd sy is rnUd the: highest ac­cident day. followed by Sunday Tufsdsy, Friday, Morr---

hU ortlce tallied Uie following: 113 Sa day; l i t Sunday: 69 Tuesday Friday; 62 Wednesday, and Thursday mishaps.

T he highest loll is recorded tween the hours of 4 p.m. ar p.m.. tha lowest between 3

' m lshf •aylight ired elev

per.ioiis,Age of d r h ......... .......................

dents shows the 15*l»-year-old brocket leads with IBS mishaps.

Speed contributed to most accl' dents, followed In order by, rlgh of way failures, wrong side of thi rood drivers, failures to sisnal Improver turns, and failure ti

Demo Pushes More Aid for Africa Nation

a. “We m ust make the United atlons the central Instrument of ir energies and policies In Atrl-

■ o ra t jrs ta t is 'grenUy increase the numb<■' ■ itudents brought her. . . .

raining ond also estab*llsh a lUltl laUon Afrli

development fund.The United stat. .....

lablish a multilateral development loan fund directed by western and

n nations, with the expense by nil the wesiern allies. ----- . . . ------'-^restmen!

-AlticaAfrli

capltJiL,needs-(cat e

Seen

nue . , , Man adjust ...E lectric signs 1

e clo,iC(l offlccs . .

T. F. Aa-morv Resolution lo Be Discuss*>(l

icm ilurlnu'__ ...Off.Tllicuision or a

a-«essmcnt

ness Include.? n rVpc-t inglnecr on a pa^^sib'j e water ahort3i;c proh

f-*lt cfsldcri n ot n......... “• •• rcciuer.l Uy Ktidy',b.ikcry to instnll untiprnoim,i ga-sollne lank o l 2G1 Mfih avcnu* •est, nnd discussion of a procis- lation designating Monrtav. oci 4. as United Nations ctnj.Rounding out the agenda are tha

xpected authorization for publ'- allon ol the city U-ensurer's r,mr.

vn nfX bills

■e reatl- ,

-AMAZING

PSORIASISSTORY

JtH. JO. J950 — P lllibm K Pi. "Doctored for psoriasu 30 yeara. Spent much money to bd avail. TTien used OUP Ointment aind Tiblets for i weeks, Scilea dis- appeared as U by magic. Id 6 weeks ikln completely dearcd and cleiD. pirst time tn 30 years. Thanks for your marvelnu prod­ucts." This much nbbreiijtfd rv port tells of a- user'i wccess wllb a dual treatment for psortuis cow made available to all rilerers. Full liifonnallon and dcuila ot a 11 day trill p lin from Caoim Co, Dept. 21Z>B.lto«kport. Mm.

t Will Meet.

win nicfl at 8 p.m. ; the Mi«ie Valley pltnl auditorium to

Gctobw Is^Bad Month on Roads

BOISE. Oct- 8 IB-Idaho Traffic Safely Director Robert B. McCall said today October hts the record of being the month In whicli more people arc killed than In any other during the past 10 years.

He said, 'There were five people killed the first three d«y.i of this

29 fatalities

German mach-.. , ....................(he Argohne forest, killing 31

d capturing 132.Martin O. McKneally, nations,

commander <jf the American Le-! Blon, made the presentation. "Thi! Is th(

Incorporated

'• He said at this ra tori.sts win reach ihHr average for October ol this month.

—A-total-ol !M-peoplt met-death In the 10 Octobers, »hile Augusts’ record showed a total ol 2S3 fata l* ' llles. ,

The only exception In Ihe Oc* tober record was last ytar when onliLj2_peoplc.nuL.ileaih-in -Itai.- flc accidents.' which helpea hold last year's latalltles down to 223, a decline from no deaths in 19S8.

: said.

iciu of incorporation- “ Foils county

iiB 10 ur recorder fVfday tor th e Tb-W •RlBht’h e re ' ln Pall M a'li;™ '.':"*”^

- America's 8f«*test sol-' . _ 1.000 iharts of capital s'Ith total valuation of SIOO.DOO. Incorporators and directors arYork, a onetime consc........... .

Jbjector. was awarded the Medal. J. Personlus. Umi >t Honor fo r his heroUm. He lives and John Bay Personiu n th b Cumberland plateau section T« in Falls, Bach holds c :n a lorm presented .him by grate-lot stock. The articles wi iul TenDeaseuu U te r Vforii war j.jO ct J.

B e tte r Q u d lity -B ig g e r S av ings

C A R P E T I N G6 0 PATTERNS

2 4 0 Color Styles A ll W ool— Nylon V iscose— Acrilon

TAT E F u rn i t u r eJ sr o in a -T w in Falls

DIAL A PRAYER RE 3-2440

Statem ent of Condition

FIDELITY NATIONAL BANK OF TWIN FALLS

T W IN F A L I^ , IDAHO .

A s of O clober3 , 1960

RESOURCESCnsh n n d D ue from Bniika ....!............ $ 2,7*15,95111U . S . G o v ern m e n t O b lig n tio n s .......... 4 ,603 ,767 .16M u n ic ip a l a n d O the r B o n d s ............... 516.G24.38L o a n s a n d Discouiit.'i leas Rc.serve .... 6 ,773 ,320.41F e d e ra l R ese rve Bank. S t o c k ............. 30,000.00B ank B u ild in g s nnd E q u ip m e n t........ 92,796.19O th e r A .w t s ............................................ 3 ,575,28

T O T A L R E S O U R C E S ................. ? 1 4 ,7 6 6 ,037.53

L IA B IL IT IE S-D c p o s i t.1 ............... ..

,..C apital S l o c k .........—SurDJua—___UtidiviiTcil P r o f i ts O th e r R e se rv e s ....

. $13,-144,002.S5 500 ,000 .00

__ 500.000 .00210 .224 .84

- " T i l , 810.14

T O T A L L IA B IL IT IE S . . » 1 4 ,7 6 6 ,037.53

M em ber F edera l Reserve B a n k M e m b er F e d e ra l D eposit Insiurance C o rp o ra lio n

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2oaing Trial for Addison Areas Slated

rfj dtTtlopment

E''” notion of «unmivry

rfMl o«l«r«J tt trJsl of;u«« JoV sand la to conatdcr

f :" "? «nf«l "fl'We nnd pub- o!her Usum. itio-'c,

“ m ■pHXc^- ,,iM »«.' IllctI by Mr- and

M. vIuRlin, 11H7 M om-

'“■'rwlSroontlu 10 two >■ P!l,,„, lo ittorncy nobct

aiiernty to i

■ »tre 'llffl orlKlnnlly** . inr city Kliiscd to rczonp

? " ; r ^ s . » r r ' ’wr,:j T«-m Falls City

Involved nov »ntn lilt proctfdlngs «t«r5-

'fli!hfiflnson tlie Judsm cnt het»»J » 'procEclural phnae ot

‘^^^fc'ou^““ctemincd there Is ^ . Niucn Ihf plalntllf tind

‘ « 10 '<>« Question V\f! suU'Orlty to rcfu.18

Buhl Woman I s Taken by Death

BUHU 0«. t - Mr*. Poullnc BtmiU. H. MngleViiler M'raorIM hwpltiil « t 8:30 pA m a »«er an extended 111-

ii «u born »t Bumner. cikla.. ^ 1BJ5 wasniarried lo Adolph

I ntndli »‘ P'riT. Okla.. Dec.^ 1915, BfT ewe to Buht in

ind 4h« hW tcjldcd here aJnce tfiU iLnt. Slif "M * .membci- of t!n Buhl Fini Chrlstlwi church, ihe ZCW M e *n<J «h» Czfch UttruT wc'"!'- ^

Eurftofs Include >• son. Fred IKnlU. Buhl; » daURhtcr, Mr*.

_ u « T tw SiJJi)cy. PHh!;. a broth; ff, Fttd Kopp. Perry. Okla.. and /ii ptiilchlldrfn,

pjinf*! Mrvlcts wilt be held at J:30 pB. Tucsdnj' In the Duhl rir.'t ClirlJilui church w ith tlie H(T. Delioiif M. Talley omclntlnK, *islsled by Ihe Rtv. M. M. Mai- 1* 1. BuW Niurtne church, rina l rltPi »lll 6e field a t . Che Buhi cemfKry. Prifnds miy call a t AJ-btcuoa liineril home.

Lions Group Elects Heads —AtJIuftaugh^^^^TAUQH, Oct. t — Dr, ToTn

Utterbftck vo.i elected presldeni of tlie MurlaiiRh IJon* club nt iin organizational meeting Thursday n ig h t m the high Kliool. OrganlJA- tion of the new cIuS s'*i under th e direction of n o b e r l B»lccr. Tn-ln Falb, und Jay Merrill. Paul, extension chnlrmnn.

O th fr a«!csf.i Include J a m e * “^ in s ," vliir

No Progress Is Made on Strike

IDAffO P,4LLS. Oct, 8 W — NO n ti nfjoiiatlnj stislona were »chfduW today u federal mcdla- tOTj »d)«imed dlscuMlons of the rtiiKtl rtaetor ta tlng atatlon itnle »lihout reporting proi

His 38-day «ltike involvei nemberi ot tht Oil, Chemical and /lomlc Worker* union and Phil­lips Petroleum company, which niinagcj NRT8.

I The vorkui tra seeking J tract chaiiKts In overtime pay,

frinse bentflta and other mattera. federal Mediator Dan Edwards,

• Ealt Luke City, tald no meetings have been scheduled u ye t for ncr{ ««k.

-----Wiih-Ita-numefoUB-trtbuUries: Blehard-MrNlnon-tht CoRjo river drtlru an African »fM lota)ln?J,*»,«>0*}uar» mllM.

■ ROnKBT il. OAnnNEK . . . ton of Mr, and Mn. Ortln

C.ardner, Haiellon. will be hon- orcil a t a fareotCC (eXlmonlal at 7:30 p. Di, Sunday Oel. 16, t l llie I ln itllon I.bS chapti, lie will en ter tlie mlulon home In S.ill Ljike CUT Oel. 31 *ni )tare for the WMlern Slatrt mlMlon Nov. 7. A 1358 iTidoale of Valley h igh achool. Gardner h u fom- p le M l»o yrar* * t lllcki collejie, K eiburt, <Sla(f enrr»»ln|)

without prior dip-

kl IKlenlng .■.nilllnn prMUItrtlst

foiiiul common ground ■>nly II few-topics.- [■itiirr v-cjuUl e o 'to any turn-foiiforciic'

atlc . '-p a d o .............J ;ivMirance that Soviet Prc- ■ Klitushchev meant lo ncRo-

U:'t.e rind nn t lust to grind OutpropriM ndn.-............— - — - - |

I If recession threflUned, bo’hl woiiki conslcfcr tax c u ti W pump-

'nc'.v U[,' In to the economy, | I /.cp.'s dllJlcult times aliend.' spi'iicJinif for defenif, eco.

nomic u.vil'iiaiice and olher pro-. c rniiu rl-'lng. [

Bill (roin Cuba'to Formosi Ken- \ ncriy tind Nixon dliSRretd on In-, li'ni:\tlnnnl nffalt«. They threw

YounB. accretnry-trexsurer; Rufus T urner, tall twlMcr; Troy Kell. LJon tAwer. and Herbert Thome, M arvin Btarr>-, S. L. Pickett and Snm Lemon, director,?.

T he Paul Lions club was «pon- oorlnc unit for the new group. Fu ture meetings of the Murtaugh c lub are tentatively act for 7 p j

he first and third Thursdn; lie high echool homemalcing

O tijcr charter members includc Dale Petcr.ion. Art Schaeffer, Flor­in Hulse, Clarence ERbert, DeVon Andcrnon, Bot> Breeding, P ' ' Pickett and Nell Ortiham.

Police Open Fire In Africa RiotingSALISBTOY, Southern Rhode­

sia. Oct. 8 IPi-PoIlcs opened rire on African rlottrj In the non- w hite township of Harste out."ilde SftlLibury tonight. Tliey reported afx Negroes ncre killed and dozens Injured.

Riots broke out after a white n^otorlst knocked down an African In the foB'nablp.

The Incident, police tald. spark­ed off riola In which Africans set fire to buildings and atoned cars ond police.

Stores were (tutted and looted, nioters act fire to beer halls in the ir own township and burned them to tha ground.

nboii; civil rlRhls. They whacked at. r.ifli o ih r r aboul the nation's' poMtimi In tlie cold war. They ar- gucil over tlie depressed flreasj probinns nnd economic conditions I Boncrallj-. |

Mure thtvn once the c-weras found Kennedy Kstentnii to his: ncpubllcan opponent with

PAPER BACKS NIXON DE3 MOINES. la.. Oct, 8 — Ilie

D es Moines Register tonight edi­torially endorsed (tie candfdaey

• lepubllcan Vice President

BEAD T7MES-NEW3 WANT ADS

A ppliances,

Lower Leve!

SAVE ON

S reC lT R- SPA CE HEATERS ”

CLOSE-OUTSPECIALS!

gu aran teedJ.OWEST-P-RICES^

IN M A G IC VALLEY!

• ALLSIZESI

• G A S o rO IL I

Lewer-L.ev«l -

supported and tha t they will at­ta in the ir freedom,"

B ut h e w a n t e d to make thlnjr cJenr, Nixon said, 'There Isn’t any qutstlon bul that wi defend o u r rlghlfl there,"

Kennedy rtplled tartly h# i sa id Cuba was lost but only that - today C uba is lost to freedom."

The cundldates cliwhed Just acridly ove r the defense of For­mosa. h e ld by the Chinese Ua- tlonaUsts. Kennedy said the u .

GET THE TIf PICTURE

YOU PAID FOR!

Krlnily .^(ralt;Mt ahead a.i his rlvali spokft blinking his eyes as he stored Up nmmunltlon for an often cau3!)i rep ly as his rival apoke.

The vice pre-sldcnt. whcee pic­tu re left nomc of hl.< supporters s.-1 n c 1 n (T In the first deb.ite, showed up much better In thl.'! second eXfort. Kennedy appeared n mtla m ote relaxed than hisrival.

Nixon fielded the first question. H e didn’t nRrcc, he aald, with Kennedy's statement as related by ft questioner that the Elsenhower ndm lnlstrotlon should take the re- sporwlhillty for the ■•foss" of Cuba.

Ho »ald he doesn't believe Cuba la lost. H e said there Isn't any question th a t the people ■' -i-anj t. g to I

M A S T E R

th« full pittun quBirtyyotff- -

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W ov i" princlpts fo airm^ n a r t 'g h o m / inltr<#f«nc* and 'm ow .'

Bringt in 'dlfflevlt >0' o*** chdi^ntU bayond tha rang* o f Ordinary anwnnoi.

Th» CHANNEL MASTOtT-W . wllf l«t y#OT IflBJW

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; PA G E F O U R‘~ ™ E S ^ E W S ,T 'W iy FALLS, rPAHO

I A m m IUMIob at r*b. t, t il t ef tki tm l u Tib« •uklUM U 1M» «»<• tb. T.1. r.l l . K c . U I t -

l! r>MUI>«d .»d SuMif •> IJ« 8*roi.a ai«»t W«l. T.; r>lli. U»ho. I»T Ui« Tlm«vK««» Publliiltit Co»M«r

IITI

■U BBCRIPTIO ^

«II>~riTABLB IN JlOVlXCt

: W A S H IN G T O N W ORK LOADT lir R u L h e rln g of w orld leudcrs In New

York, w i th n l le n d a n l tensions, lias served to e m p h a s iz e t h e m assive taslts of peace- keeping a n d d e fe n se th a t rest on the shou ld ­ers of o u r execu tive.^ o n d representatives In W ash ln p io n ,

Able n n d ta le n t e d ns tncse men m ay be, i Mks t h e N ft tlo iia l Association of M anufac ’ turers I n a n e w study, couldn't wo cxpcc t ' better p e r f o r m a n c e from tliem In rea lly

c ritica l m a t t e r s If th e y were not loaded ; down f ilm iilta n e o u s ly w ith other do ta lls ,' , euch a s w h e a t a c rea g e aliotm ents, free food

j ta m p s a n d J u v e n ile delinquency?The c o s t o f f e d e ra l program s Is, of course,

jtaggcrlng :. B u t th e rea l cost Is eren greater , the N A M c o n te n d s In “The Prlmroso P a th

T herPfesldentT ^V hejrcabi^t nnd th e c o n g re s s m ust divide the ir tim e be tween l i f e a n d d e a th a ffa irs tha t only th e /edbra l g o v e r n m e n t can handle and co u n t- ]e u d e t o l b o f p ro je c ts a n d procrnims t h a t really a r c t h e business o f th e stale, lo c al­ities a n d p r i v a t e Individuals.

"No P r e s i d e n t can do the leadership jo b whifih o u r o w n c ltlzcns and the o the r n a ­tions w h o lo o k to us t o r guidance have a

■ r Ig h lT 6 'c x p e c t.’ '- tnB -sn iay -say3 r"on Iess-h ts re sp o n s ib ility f o r decision and action Is lim ited t o a n d exerc ised w ith in the a re a of tru ly n a t io n a l ta s lc s ."

T he s tu d y - d e m o lish e s th e som ew hat p re v a le n t Id e a t h a t fede ra l action Is r e q u ir ­ed In l o c a l p r o b le m s because of the w ea lth o t th e f e d e r a l rev e n u es . T here Is no lim it to the t a x i n g p o w ers o f the state In law , the s tu d y ^ I n t s out. T h e federal revenue

' in tB f~ 8ndlocalities.

H ie r e m e d y f o r unw ieldy centralism is to "bring g o v e r n m e n t bock home," th e NAM mgRcsts. T h e re so u rc e s a n d the ta len t r e ­quired t o s e rv e lo c a l p rob lem s already ex ist In the lo c a l i t i e s . To ta ck lc these problem s th rough W a s h in g t o n Is th e m ost expensive way, a s e x p e r i e n c e has show n. I t Is n o t th e m ost e f f i c i e n t w a y to so lve them .

To b r i n g 5 u c h th ln ld n g closer to h om e , we m ig h t a d d t h a t to b u rd en our c ris is - rid ­den f e d e r a l o f f i c e s w ith specifications fo r sewage s y s t e m s , fo r In stance , is to tr i f le

^ t h o u r s e c u r i t y and o u r world position.

A DISTINCT SHOCK — ■nierefore, they t t t poMlhlllty of «n >llrTl&ltan of Irrwloru u n c "PrcsK lcnf NUon. Th ty coa^ldcr It xlgnlllcant. poMlbly Blnrmlnft. th a l one of the key l.uuc.i In prc.ildcntlal conlMl Li whethtr Vice president Nl

Senator Kennedy will mloei > "toufner line" rd KliruAhclier, «nd prepwe lli« l/ntled Sti

a pa-wlble "jhootlns war." riiii conccrn Li «pcclilly acute In Britain, to a t^lme Minister Macmillan «ho led In brlnaln j

about the lll-Jaltd summit meetlnj at Paris. He laccs a riling demand for a npproclicment with nuK.Ua. aa revetled by the lecent acUs

jr Party 'i ruHnj; body.Rejpctina the advice of Hugh Oaltakell. I.ibor’*

nominal bu t ahaky leader, the cxecutlre com m it*" voted for turther ftttempta at nejotintlona a .gnliiit the atorase of American nuclear wenpc

.11 Britoln. The decLMon wm a duilnct ehock t>oi>i Elsenhower and Macmltlin.

■ T U aa O lL -lN ArBICA_:^S?n8ior Kennedy-a nl- «txtde-aff-«-“pre5ldent“-Trcirrles-0hBTiea -tie- dau lle. T h e Frcnch president, aa welt at the FTeneh people, b itterly resented Wb proposal that Parla con te rm i with the Algerian rebeU. Tliey regarded Interferenca Id their affalra.

. . . _ also a reminder to the French, the British a n d the D utch that Pranklin D. Roosevelt, miT Woodrow Wilson before him, were largely resporul'

for the breakup of European emolres aroim fl'the jM)r1d.

■Today'a tu rmoil In Africa, In tlidr opinion. Is the 7oBltf5r"rc5uIl of granlTni'lntTeJHiraeiTcnaiHOpHJw ho are no t prepared to shoulder ihe responslbl........if orderly and mature government. Tlie rapid

.-ftther unruly expaaalon of the United Nations, w here backward members will soon have iv m a lod ty

}t«. la also chalked up asiilnst American policy ' Its field.

GREATER INDEPENDENCE OF ACTION—U irse- ly because or these doubts, the European naUona i now trylnK to set their own house in order, and acbleYo .g ica ttr-political.and cfcnomie_unity._,The unproved RUit«rortfieJr tradrpositicin'Bnd”finBiicHi appear* to neeesslute neater inttgratlc

R«Utlons, for Instance, were never m ore friendly between deOiuUe and Chancellor A deniuer o f West Oermany. and Donn haj patched up earlier difficulties with London.

Talks have been held for a union or the Europei common morltet and the Brltlsh-lnsplred Free Trode association, leat the rival groupa engnge in a world* wide conunerclal war. Even In the laca of objections from the commonwealth members, which now enjoy preferential tariff treatment from BrlUUn. the Mac- n i lU n rorernffient laTora th» proposed tleup.

I n short. Europe may show pester Independence of American leoderahlp In world affairs under c ith ­e r a Nlzon o r Kennedy regime.

r « O V E R -P R IV IL E G E D " HOMES L Q ult« o f t e n w e h e a r I t explained t h a t B o o s t o f t h e J u v e n ile de linquen ts coma fro m ■ 'I tm a e r - p r lv l le g e d ’* hom es.

, ' /T h a t ’s a c o n v e n ie n t assum p tion , o f course , ; !m t'l t’« n o t n e c e s s a r i ly b o rn e ou t by fac ts .

- .Ju v en ile a u th o r i t i e s h a v e a rgued a ll a long ; th a t t h e t e r m " Ju v en ile dellnqiienta" la a

m is n o m er . A c tu a l ly , th e y explain, i f s m ore ftddir&t« t o d e s c r ib e ( h e problem u "par-

ft e n t^ d e l in q u e n c y .".1 Be a l l t h a t a s I t m a y , we were Im pressed

by t r e m a r k m a d e by T V ln F a lls Police C hief i H ow ard O U le t t e I n re fe re n c e to a r a s h of, m laeh ief b y lo c a l y o y ig s ters.*““T l i o s e r c sp o n s i& le fo r c u itlh g ^ o lh c s iln c s

'1 a n d p l a s t i c c h a lr - c o v e rs , pu lling e lec tr ic ligh t s w i t c h e s , tu r n in g o n v f tte r ta p s a n d

1 th ro w in g l i g h t e d f lr tc rac lc ers a t c ars w ere d e sc r ib e d b y C h i e f O U lette a s “young cow-

; ard« s n e a k i n g a ro u o d a t nigh t."I " T h e se eA U ldren ," h e sa id sign ifican tly ,* "come f r o m o v e r-p r iv ile g e d homes."1 We h a v e a s o o d id e a as to v h a t C hief 1 o m r t t e h a d I n m in d In m a k in g th a t r e m a rk ] a n d w e b e l i e v e I t h a s considerab le m e ri t.

One o f t h e s e d a y s w e're going to a sk h im to . e la b o r a te o n t h i s line o f th ink ing because V w e t h i n k s u c h n n In terv iew would b e In- i -tensely I n t e r e s t i n g .

I t ’s t h e p a m p e r e d youngste r from th e •o v e r - p r lv H e g e d ' ' hom e w ho Is causing a s m u c h o r m o r e tro u b le th a n those fro m th e offier s i d e Of t f t e t r a c l ts n i lK n v s T liw e 'r e r r •e n a b le t o c r i t ic i z e p a re n ts in th a t favo red e lr c u m s ta n c e t h a n to be m o an the p lig h t o f those U v ln g I n m e a g e r surroundings.

T h i e f O U le t te h a s co in ed a phrase w ith f a r > r e a c h ln g im p lic a tio n s .

R E P U B L IC A N ASSET P r e s id e n t E ls e n h o w e r , a n d also Vice P re s i­

d e n t N ix o n , b e l ie v e t h a t th e West's a n d th e ■neutral n a t io n s * rea c tio n to K hrushchev 's bad b e h a v io r a t th e N ew Y ork session of th e U n ite d N a t i o n s h a s b e en a definite R epub ­lic an a s s e t i n t h e p resid en tia l campaign.

I n v i e w o f f o n n c r Ambassador Lodge's M S d u 0 t a t t h e U n ite d N ations and h is p res-

^ o n t h e O O P 's p residen tia l ticket, th e m n b U c a n s t h i n k th a t K hrushchev 's clow n- & .c o n d u o t a t N ew Y o rk and In his earlie r

j t i c s to a v e t u r n e d th e poJUIcaJ llde. I t i t l ^ e d tu m l n g r .

t Elsen! s beI n o w a n d Nov. 8 will operate to th e

_ i t * « e o f V ic e P re s id e n t Nixon. Ind lca - j , ^ t h a t ••Ike'* w in go to town for th e fc. p r e s i d e n t . -■ 7 1 < w r t t r - i s - B m e r a n y - b e i i r v e a - tn n r i r 7v

j^ V l o s o v e r K enn e d y, i t -wltH wf .B l ie i id to w e r ’s backing.

l e r e l a n o D e m o c ra t w ho can provide th e( T a w t i m e n t a l su p p o r t fo r Senator K en.

^ O N B B O X T O P A N D A SLOG.VN i ^ A ^ d - l o t t e r e d a lgns which greet th e

l f t^ .« f tm p a lg n e r s seen i,Jo prove we ; o f - s l o g a n w riters . And some

^ ^ Pam ded in* S i * ®ne: "Next to S t. Nick

• - p l o t A nd there 's som eth ing

TUCKER'S NATIONAL

W HIRLIGIG■WASHINOTON - The f

am on i Europe's sutesmen < ot the next admlnlalrallon a t d considerable anxiety abr

Theaewbititi

0 w 1 n c uncerialnty rr me foreign pollclei WaJhlrgton ha. caus-

ov'er tlie” h6i«8 Jof V M ief of lions. Mpeclally In the newly-freed natlons.of Alla and Afnci

HOW T H IN G S A P P E A R FR O M

PEGLER’S ANGLEread mue.*! of H arry: people <

Ti^mon J own meatiltrlng -itory;a colonel, I me and .nuny mlncma shal and II

• sycopbiiits wlthoutUalMd up I aornlnft ai

observesnd Wasiilii... Presldent Niton, 1 erpecled la carry honer policy lo«i

- HUM, «

- I t’f a ahMBe-w* afs-imoved froni ilollywood

would bare a nei

Adrian, Twin (alia.

Chli Tlie VP. I Tfto male pups, tu e tn LAbrador and shepherd, are 1', months old and resdy for new homes. You can gei-lhem at the trailer house paflced behind .the. Northslde Canal company office;

Haiellon. Also, Prank Smiley] nnfl’hM three hftll-grovin klllens to the i[lve away.

In Jim Peacoclc, also assist the town rry's. uncle Jim Crow ' reacock on it Sunday 1 ilappca him ac

tied JimJim Cfow’j boy. 'U je.

SUNTjAY. OCTOBER S. lBfi,,

to Washington In 1M4 Is not vlnclnj. Moreover, it • ea s t wliD msde him . . .when Penderjast died, Trumai new to his iuneral lo' a govern­ment plane.

8 tm Ister. he sent his check to m alnuin his membership In the Pendergast machine aiiendeil bya letter on his leaierhead <-------Idem of ihe OnlW StaUs.

In the early winter of 1942,

S"E: Richfield

— i^ ic .,spen t » ....... .........ol.Hnrtj Trumiin. shot lu tld tr .the P»lron“g{ .of

I the bick. Imlssloner of police, a jiPescock'.-! boy. reporter «hom I hsd ^

»lth mnrial Uindon. Eien (hat late, I «aw.*n«rht after hlsht. exactly Ihe con-

,hlch creel described.

•eek Ksiiiis City I S "

ihot 'Llle do»i■ it snaRged Ills pistol

and put hlnv'clf

who .....

Jim Pc.uock, though spoiiilnR Tied lo itiAke Jim Crow , hut Tmnian'.i uncle for hl. gun and they shot Peacock ■ - -

... . . . . . . . hamonlzcj wllhalready kno»n. Truman Is,

a n t of detectives, collected In currency from a milk roi

; gambling houses.! Truman entitled hti Ulest bonk

, . . , ; " M r . Cltl«n." Implying tha { I thinks himself rather Jyplci

',K - «.A-<hv Am

.Ihiknd ccrcnit nlng nt the li Donnld Boll, : Olll. Lowell :

NOT NECESSARILY SO Dear Pot fihois:

/as Interested a short lime ago comments o

phone calls In your wanted •-you «them.

Ordinarily, If they'd behs> themselvei In the first place and tried a little harder to follow the Golden Rule, could b« would hitry s

KITTENS FOR KUJ8 DEPT. Dear PoU;

have an extremely gentl<. half-crown female Utten «1lh handsome black and »h1le mark­ings-. She Is housebroken and en-JoKa-i

cat Is getting ji . Interested parties can obtain cat by telephonlnj REdwood

3-0678. or atepplnir atU1 Third aie, west

(Twin I^lls)

FAMOUS LAST IINB ". . . She need* a 9«Ing Eye dof and a eonpaas to find her way around town!"

—=.^.--OE.NTLEMAK IN TUE ■ FOURTH ROW

(K«lM It.)

VIEWS OF OTHERSMAYBE SUE CUKT COUNT

Idahoans who set aerlous politics aside fo r the moment and take a look a t the lighter side o f c iur pftlgnlng m ust be amused at the •'lio*" Consres! woman Oracle Pfost is (ollowlng. She Is blam ing Ute tUpublleans lor ererythlng thslShe th in lu li wrong, especially those Isw?.? which might tu rr

m h er dliirlct. The mining Industry, th e re- 9 program, the housing program—all th is Is

Republican neglect.Mrs. P lost might well take a look at the housing

situation In this part of the country. Ther« Is a slowdown In construction, to be sure. And th a t has

serious effect on the lumber Industry, D u t there nUny are^^ where the housing program ha*

_bcen_ruilcd_£) a.estenLtpopulation. Rolse' Is one of UiMe areas.

To build houses just to build houses. With Kov- enunent EUarantees on mortgages Is one th ing . To build houses that are needed in a community, and which can be sold to persona who can permanently m ake the payments created by the highest building cost level in history. Is somtthlng'eise. W hen gov- em m ent must be active in the business or spending money for something thst not In demand. Mrs. Pfoat ought to know that a lot of the Income t money her First district constituents are paylog

tlally »-asted,ilns Republicans for anything tha t h a s not

been done along the lints Mi« believes im portant. Mre. Plost belittles not only the effectlveneaa o f her p arty but her own failures as **11. She is a mem ber o f a coneresa that hns two Democmu for every Re­publican, Some way or other. those-Republlcans

: seem to have mote effeciivenw* with half th e m em ­bership th an Mrs, pfost and her fellow Dem ocrats w l ^ twice the number. And she lays to.

aituaUon. When a minority can oremile a m ajority, atfhielhlnc ts wreng. Mrs, Pfott would be-much-more effective if she could explain whit has been going o n in congress, the only rKiuireinenl being that sh e deal tn facts, like one aod one to two. and

two Is four, and so on. Whether she realties ‘ ................... S ta ta i-

JEKYLL AND HYDECourtesy? Just what ever happened to p la tn c

fashioned courtwy in the makeup ef 89 drlvera < of 100?

Why do they change their chaneters from Jekyll to lij-de as soon as they get behind the w heel ef the ir guided mlssllea?

The most unthinkable disaster that could happen to the driving fraternity. It aometlines seems, would be for them to be deprived of their boms.

We have the aardonlc neUon that no grea ter punishm ent could be liifllcted on some drivers and t^ a t no greater safety measure could be Included to ho buUdlnj of uu /Jn j than u> 1mm off th e horn. great many toad hogs-would be totally disabled.Now and then, but very rsrely, someone stops

and lets another driver enter a troa-ded atreet. p a w s to le t him park, remalnsoulet If the one aKead Is haring trouble starting hli motor or is confused.

But why can't everyone be that way? Courtesy. Just plain commMj courtesy and a slight applies. Man nr thw.Chililen Bv’--------> — . t -

lU vana, Cuban dlcUtor Fidel Castro bawled th a t h is -ta the most loUd and firm goremment o f the American continent, because It Is (he only govern­m ent of America tha t has armed its w orkers'‘*nd peasant*."

T hat "solW- brae rwnlnds you of the U t* Adolf H itle rs bo«st that Na*t Qennany would la s t 1000 years.

As for gtvtng funs to hli irorkert and peasants, Cftstro inlght do well (o ask the Russlsns Ju st ho^

Russians who witnessed ------ In i» fl and the

■ m an thU L , th e Polish and H

Nowa* — - til a iiu nic

O tnnan f*j>Jo*Jwi in Yort O ailf

is advic

call aj a last t(Curioa

I n w n rallrrt '•••■ " ‘“u -iiiu,ently polltlcnli'''P '” '“ ''’' * commotion

us tliai of a knowlni?.*" nrtFn»nilfnr» i hri;cWnan of T o

the

t^iuah town which called Itself 5 e Paris of the WeM. Kansas

^'cfr'eel's people and Tnaman's ere Kentuckians who tittd set- ed in Missouri before the Civil ar. The Creels »erc dead broke

after the war acd Oeorge' llest memories recill a countryside in Hickory countj’ which had no mllroadj and only earthen floors

the houses. •People borrowct ihovel of hot coals from a nclgU- r when the fire went out." k-et. Hickory county contrib- ■d not only Oeorae but Zoe

Akins, the playwright, and Sally nand . the fan dancer who saved

Qhlcng0=Tf0fld-:t»i unique a rt dljcc.

times a night in a pitch close by “cash-and-carry” Pyle’s freak show.

Somehow the Creel family made „ sh ift to Independence, where the Mlaourlans had risen up In morol fury ngalnst the Mormons In 1832 on learning the meaning If polysamy.

then; settled clown ana jim peacock ser^'cd bs marshal until h e died of ht< many years.

T>ler, Trumin'a Ereat- grondmother. hut waitoned Into

•lih Daniel Boone and Ine because the feigned

death, uttering no sound, as a party ripped off her

scalp. Donld Boone himself prais­ed Nancy ‘ '

Bess Truman. Harry's wife, wa: Wallace and her fsther was re

owned for his sMech In defensi of Frank James, the .brother o Jes-ie, an oration "esteemed i viLilly superior to Cicero's best.' prank James was acquitted by ac- damatloiL..__

supcr-Southern and that most o the sur\lvlng adult mnle. of h i youth In toa-n claimed to have beeri confederate colonels.

Some could no t sdapt themsel'! to peace and the most unruly aa Jim Crow Chiles, an uncle of a rry Truman, havlnu married « ste r of Truman’s mother.Jim Crow terroriied Indepen­

dence with h is revolver and i th rea t to.kill any Negro who-got

windward of him. FlnaUy, Ui

a lace c r her

•thy American. Olven bet' character to giilde his belll- • dbpoiltlon he mljtit hav« . ________ 1-,.

DKMOS TO MEET HAILEY, Oct. g -T h e Blnlri

nty Democratic ........ ...................... : courthous

„ „.... Tliursday. They hav isked that all candidates and prc Incl commlttecmen and wome ittend: The public Is also Invitee

mltFFA.

Gt'KSTS IN ALMn ALAfO. Oct, ft-Mr. .ncl

Ferris Jiuncs and Mr r'hi Fred Hcr.^chl. Pork Villr., i were rcccnt giicstj ot Mr Mrs. Harold Ward.

®V w h a t e v e r homey o u l i v r t t r

mayhem against a w riter who wrote m of his daughter M ar­garet Truman's singing, b u t could - 'n the council of a machine

:nlng K a n sa s City which Creel dfjcrlbed as "a wide open

In every vicious sense of the

ploce In tlie heart of town, brothels lining Hth street. Every block had Its gaming houses run- ninft full tilt," Creel wrote. "Ilat- faccd ctcalures oifered m arijuana and in restaurants on th e main thoroughfares strlp-teasero enter­tained tired businessmen until they had shucked the last stitch."

Truman went to the county court by Pendergast's selection In I8» so-hls-later inslstenoe-.thal thb condition came after h o went

—we’ve got jiist the righ t Homeowners policy to fit your needs and your budget. Dependable pro­tection against losses fro m fire, theft, liability .claims and judgments. A ll in one policy—at one l ow'prcnilumrCdlTiynoday-for-fall'infanTT^tlgttr

PEAVEY-TABER CO.THOMAS C. PHIAVEW

EtUblUbed l» » T aaoranc* Is Dor Boilnesa*to : SbMbene Street East Dial BE S-1841/l/preJ(itiinfHiccford F ire In su ra n ce

. Company.Grotip, H artford 15, Conn;___ ______

SEE THE GItEATEST SHOW ON WORTH!

IflWER PRICES AND HAPPY IDEAS

EROM-THEIW SICHEVYCORVAIR!

^..^W aB L -prooI jh a tX o m U 't tl>lnkli>9.Aliaift. y a u l .J I o w 'f . . th i i J lower prices on all seilan* a n d coupe* for ’61. More space for you and ;our luggage. S pu n k ier eogineh G realer economy. iT'aioni.

T h e happy ideas start with lo w e r p rices on a ll ledani a n d coupes. You get more room f o r you and your lug> gago (tiiat up-froQl Irunk )ua a lm o s t 12% more apace), foo. A spunkier 145-cu,-in. t i t ‘Coole<l r e a r engioe. A gaa-saving new rear iila ratio . . . a longer rang* 14* igallon' fuel lankT .“ T thrifty ncv r K e ite r ’ T h t l w an a i ‘

/ everyone evenly. Anti - will im a ll H onders never ccaie I '' —uflgonj. The hard-working L tke^vond w ith four doers

a n d loom for up to 68 cubic f e e t o f cargo. The Green* b r i r t Sport! Wagon, that ho ld s p e o p le galore and up

■4wie©-lb*^tgo7att.c»Q4cJ ta , wago^ns Tou*re u«ed to. A o d every model - wagon, coupe a n d le d a o - ih a re t In C o rra ir 's tear engine traction a n d n im b le handling.

S peaking of Ideai, here’a one o f th e itna rtesti Why d o n ’t you viiil your Chevrolet d e a le r 's soon, lo r a look • t w hsl Corrair hai to offer f o r ’61.Y o u ’ll like what you see, w e p ro m iie I y o u .

n u Cofi'oif lohuvtJ 700 Statiait IF'tigon KonrCu ft/U a tjvap latt,yailaa iiugon .4 ijtd /0 i i t i J i / w evg«^

Aw ut Con-air Cnairitr SporU Tagai «f(A uf (o tuin si i?uiM nmsforpmpUBAiO^g, a, uo<on,. (SAou/i kIA opticntl-on^uctvu lU rin lii, p o ^ . )

P ® '!' C onam and the new Corvette a t your heal miOorized C h e m k t deakr’t

GLEN G. JENKINS3 1 3 M a m A y en u e W e .> Twin Fall. P h o n . R E 3 : 3 0 3 3

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OCTOBER 9,1960 ■^IMtS-NEWS, T W IN FALLS, IDAHO

Last BIG WEEK STORE-WIDE

SAVINGS of 10 to 50%I P

on FURNITURE and APPLIANCES ' I

LIVINGRO OMBEDROOM

DINING ROOM

FURNITUREIn c lu d in g Lamps, Tables, M irrors, W a ll R acks, Dccorator Pillows, otc. Act now litfore ,

bad w ea th er h its . NOW for ONLYEnjoy autom atic d ry in g a ll w interlong arid SAVE V ,

d c(i I jM ltiEXCLUSIVE NEW MAYTAO ......................-»"HAio »i Ht*r” mi«ii ( ................. !

m santH O HOT S P O T SI

Hurry! We May Never Be Able To Hepeat This Offer!

LIBERAL TRADES

^ O L D STRHei STAM PS—

iFASTESTWAYTO WASH and DRY

BAR NONE!,-KIIS-ANyW HERE

W ASHER W IL L !

WRSHES ftND d ries WERRGE

FRMIIV lOSDSH fdSiNCiunfO!

IN lUSl5 8 M lN U T tS

c v p n l e s s

on those•'Uuny-»ip”

RefrigeratorsT h ere 's a P h ttco for

every fa m ily a n d budget!• BIG10.5-«l.-FT.SI0l«tE()• BIG FREEZER]• AIL-NEW STYUKC! •

-•FKTURES-GALORE...............b...BUD6ETPRICEl

t>iiicks STAUf AtLOWA*

PHILCOsmxns.WASHER-MYER COMBIIUTWN

W«Wi'Tt!pl« KMif• c<dt^M «.ti(SM kC rd« . rriL ,d .d i» ,! « A Wt• Hlft4pMtf ($fiO RfW] ><•*• w W twHrituni

o u e r i l K t r k . M iu lriy runM >91* V i • Fib iirwkmMr*ntettMd*UM«n*r«uk>

T W IN FALLS - BUHL -nJEROM E ^ i n e Low Prices a n d 'T e rm s , A ll Thr«« Store*

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p A G B S n C -TIMES-NBWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Harding Says Budge Helps Big Business

POCATEI.tO, Oct. 8 '.?v-n*lph H irtlnc . Ihe Dfmocmttc tonRroj' ulonal nhinlnct, said ht» lUpubll- ran opponent In Ih r ntcnnd dlsUlcl lacp, Hfp. llam cr II. liudEf, wo-

'■ 'I:fnfrou^ 'Mlth x sn )a7 f« " f'ln'' lor tliP bcnftit or blf biislnr.' InlfrrsL''.”

riroppcO lil5 p iflcii'f t fctinomy w hni It cnme Ui vollnii Inr loans Ii> rtillrnnrt'," Horrltn* fnul. "but lir v ts buck «monc tl r

tlir Indian pcu))Ir fu 111/- Irilnnl uovcrnrnfm Iim

Inkcii n»ny Irriin Ihrlr Irlbnl rr.

MAGIC VALLEY RADIO SCHEDULESKAYT

m * Rllecictci)

-n .h

«w»rd rrcominfnilfd 'ly > pmlMr.”

libnrlllR m>n. Hl.< licnrt niily Eofi ■ n it lt> tll<- IJlK bUMMf .’ imfrr-vl-i

nlilch do imlff Kiwnrd Ills econ­omy of Iflntinr__________

Opponent of Cliianjf Given Bi«r Sentence

8 W - 5 firs

KKAR( lU S RUK;eln|

ClilnnuKnl-Mirk’* tuiit: ridf of N tlonnllM Clilnn, wii.s convlctrcl willllnii tfxiiiy scnlriicril to

I ■■■' total oflO yinir.i lirprl.'O Ii........iLL;----------- vHlvo-m«i-oimiJirj(-courLJouiiiL.

Lfl_04-ytiiT-old Icntlcr of tlie en'bryonlo China Democrntlc iiorly giiiHy of thorKM of nticmptlnit i

' Incite riots ond rebellion on F dj moan nnd of harboring >n altrsed

KEKP(l«5t Kll»e;e>«<)

H i

K IJ X(1110 RilKrciM)

KTFIi im KiiMicKc)

KART

SUNDAY. OCTOBER g,

Burning Pole Blackens Out

Cassia LightsDORIjnr, Oct- 8 — Power

Off In CfliislB county for approxl- jmsltly one linlf hour rrld iy I night when B power pole c.iugnt Iftre and tharfed out. c.KL- InK ■ |b1n» th«t could be »een for miles[about midnight.________________

Accorains 10 John L. Jont? Ilniman of'•(he Unity L lR hf Wi Power company, ll^lUnlnt; waa ui probible cniise of iv power pole locattd ftbmil th ree miles re liere catclilnK <lrr.

! lire alarteil n! th e lop ol .tile pole. cttlislnB a sfiort In llie iKOvornmcnt power line used by tile hurfftu of rrclnmiitloti. Tin :ro.« nrm of the poir fell oni< tile Unity LiKlit and Power com-

any line which runs on tni »me inswllallon.Ttie sovrrnnient line curried np-

JprMlmalclv 33.500 volls nnd tni rural power line c.nrrlea s.OOO voiu. Tlie Rovcrnmcnt line li i main tine coming from th e Mlni- iIo»a dBm to tho Decio feed. <5fll- clali said.

Ca»Us Mcmorlnl hospltnl w»' )>olvcd in the power f.-\llurc. bu: n tmcrsrncy wa.i cftiL ccl becaii.ie ( an auxlllnry power u n it a t the

6iilld(nc.Tlif City of Burley wn.n nc

.ftclcd because It hn4 11.5 owtI owned power p lant.

READ TIME3-NEW3 WANT A08,

it apy.

The alleged I

wnj Bcntfnccd prl.Miiimcnl nnd Ugltts ' - .............

12 :9 mnsnzlne,

............ JoTJ of civilelKlit yciira.

.......... 1 mniiuRrr Ma Clilh-teceivetl & livc-year prbon tc. and was ordered deprived of hla civil rlghta for tour yenrs.

Offlelnl Nntlonnllst Chi ciuarters had Ho linmedlale mcnt cn th e vwiJicM. buf cwjrral

--------------DDlnlOIV. jm t e l^ official quarttra:Va.s tha t the iicnfenccn wcii IHUCtl more severe thnn h a d been ex* peeced. M any felt th a t Lei. wJiose

' ; , arrest touched oft crltlcUm here ' I and abroad, would get off with -

‘ ' I ■ jujpcndcd acntencc.Some said th k t w ith Lei out off

the picture, the projected Chlnftl Democratic p a rty m ay cailtpse. '

LDS Meeting Informed on New Growth

SALT I*AKE O irV , Oct. B ti^ - | llembers o f th e LDS cliurch were' told tod»y of the churchy expan* ilon o( niemberahlp In Europe.

Elder Alvin R. D ^er, prealdent 0 / Uie ru ro p e an mlMloa. Mid J.700 niatlonftMea now wotklnB In IS mlailohs In Europe w d the ehurch h u 00.000 nem beri in U)##e countrlM. T h is Include* 6.» 000 nem bere In 3 t toranchea be-| bind the Iron curU ln . ■'

The report v os slven a t the' ttm lannual sener»l conference of the LDS church.

Three additional aulilanta were appolnC«d U> th * eoiascll o' twelve apostlea, one of the church’

111 I ,' iitry a t U tah « a t e unlvenlty and

former p ru id e n t of th e West Oer« n a n miaslon; :p^anUla D. Rich- arda, president of th e northwest­ern alatea mlsalon. and Nathan Bdon Tftnner, a Canadian busi­nessman, oil executive, former •ducator a n d Jrrlslator. Tanner Uves a t Calgary, AlberU. I

President David O . McKajr toldl Wormona attending Che ccn/er«nce| th a t the new je n e ra l autfiorltle* were needed to m eet the retpon-l HblUUes of the rapldly-nowlng church, n h lc h now has about i.s DUlloa membera. 1

The conference endi Bundayl with two general scsslotu and a| &M tlnc o f the D esert Sunday! •ebool xinion. '

Henry, a hnrd-luck Joaer l t i fl trip litre, returned today for

{eniclol scries of U unchliiss nlineUj I ninlciiig the Polarla missile op- rnllonnl within a few w.eelci.The 360-foat iinderaea dread-

nauaht crulaed Into nearby Port! Ctinavcral and biyan prcpnratlonjl for tlic vluil shots. Success wll'' mean that by siimetlnie in Nii- vcinUer (lie United E tu t i - s 'v l l hnve one of the most powerful nnd I iiioblle-war delereenlr-oyalenis dcH.ied.

Tlie einct number of launchlngal frum llie Palrlclt H enry will de­pend on the degree of aucce.u. Ai Dfflclftl said "n pn lr of Kood; launches right off th e bn t prob-. ably would be sufficient."

The Pntrlck H enry previously arrived here Aug. 3B (ifter th e flratl Polaris submarine, th e a co rge | Washiniiton. had succeasfully fired' three of four mlMlles from 60 feet Ucnealh the Atlantic. •

Tlie navy was ta lU ng hopefully then of declarlnff th e Polarla-aub- marine eombinaUon combnt-rendy

October. The P a lrlck H enry to fire lour missiles to '

Ither prove the reliability of'system, paving the .......Oeorve Washington . . irol with the first lood of Id elear>anned roclceta.

Instead, lluee of th e P atrick Hcnry firings failed In apectacu- lar fashion.

N c ^ F P o I a r i ^ A-Sub Tests Are Planned

:APE CANAVERAL. Fla.. O ct. 8

I to t the!

Heber C. Randall Dies at Hospital

Heber 0. Randell, b l. died about' lO.lO pin. F r i d a y a t Magic Valley Memorial hospital follow ' If a lingering illnesa.

Mr. nandell * ia born Sept. 30. k«0» raW hom «^d*-H *-m »rrled Loena May Decker Ju ly 24. 18JV In Twin Palls. A meihber of the LDS church, he -farmed In the Kimberly area for m any year* and In Hailey. For the piust four years he had lived in Tw in Falls, dolngl carpenter work.

Survlvlnc, besides hU wido' ,.jro soni, Gene Rnndell. Klmber-' ly, and Norman K. Randell. Port Huenemt Oxnard, Calif.; three, daughters, Mr.i. R alph (LaDonnai SWphen*. Stockton. Calif.: Mrs., Harold (Betty) Nelson; 6an Bruno.' Calif., and Mrs. M ark (Beverly)

■ ■ “ nnnyvale.

_ThU JaiU *chfilule..flrjeltTJfl2B -»nd_riidlojtsm ni^b-PK «nud. ai a lervlte la readers tho Ttmei-Ne».i. L lrtlnn "re fomlthrd by (ha olatlan. Any errora or changes ihnuld be reported to tbs s(adoa llaetf and net tb« Tlmea-Ncivs.

* * * * * * * *

Television LogKLiXVrv-

JUjhi'UiitlMa____

lin.cj Tiiilh Of ConifnlifnfW

WemVWateF" Runoff Spotty In September

PORTLAND, I/'—Thetd-to f

tlal Coun^WD

diiy thatw nU r runoff In thePacif- , Ic Northwest was somewhat spotty, lost m onth. >

The monthly mean flow of the IcolumblA river nt Tlie Dalles was DO per cen t of the average for the month in the I5-ye.ir period from 1943 (0 1S57. !

C urrent records Indicated the runoff made no pronounced devia­tion.? from sea.ioniil averages In nny.iiart of.ihc_PftcUl6,NB:lUwcsi.:

The runoff was low In central nnd southweit Oregon, the upper Bnnke. Salmon and Bt. Joe river, bnslns In Idaho, the Wenatchee' nnd K llck lu t river basins In' Wa.^hliiRton. and In the Dlackfoot' and p a rt of the Flathead river

jbasln.i In Montana.' Ifigh runoff waa reported In the Frasur nnd lower Kootenay ilver||

W. McClain’s Services Set

Fimeral lervlecj lor W alter O. 'McClain. 81. 375 Blue Lcikrs bou- levtird north, who died FVlUay oflernoon In a local nursing home, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesdiiy In White mortUB0 chapel, w ith the Rev. Robert C. Rlch&rds. pasto r of

Refinishing Hall Planned by Uiiitl

niCHPlF.LD. Oct. 8 - Plans . refinlshlnK (he exterior of lli« lotal lO O F hall were made at a raeetins a fte r n Joint dinner sfs. lon ulth Ri-bi-kiih loiice member.? this week.

Wendell Johnson, nobis crand,I nam ed lodRC tnutees. 0. O. Clut- ' field. Lyle Deeds, and Manuel Klnjr

the Bden Presbyterian church, of-l** « building commltlee In charge flclatln*. Concluding ritea w ill beheld maunseiMernorlar park . T h e charter was draped for

The family sujgesu donations to I ney Pate, former lo d g e noble the zaen Prtibrlerlan church. lo'j:ri.n<l nnd uarder tills year. b« aent to Clyde Montgomery,! n a i Broun wa.s chosen delteate! Eden, or which may b« left at th e | to p rnnd lodge a t Tviln Fnllj

three brother*, c h n rle i Randell, MurUuih; Ruben Randell. Tain Palls, and Oriel iNUke* Randell, Eden; three sistcva. Mrs. Ooldle Tracey. Orland. Calif,: Mrs. Mellj- M JrttrJuJY IlU ftm t-CRllL^JiDsi. Mrs. Qeorge Goodman. San Jo.«c. calif., and 13 grandchllriren.

Funeral service nrrnnRcmenls' re penrtln? nt W hite mortuary.

mortuary.Mr. McClain, a pioneer hom e­

steader in the Eden area. wa« born Oct. 18, in a . in Wells Valley. “

moved to Eden with brother In 1M8, One of the farm slh>y - -the Eden towns|te.

He retired from farming In 10441 and moved to Twin Falls. H e wa; a member of the Eden Prtsaby- terlan church. Woodmen of th< iWorld and the Eden Pioneer club

Mr, McClam married Elio Isabean on Nov. 2, 1815. In Twin I Falls.' Survivors. In addition - widow. Include tliree tons, Ralpb McClain and Rex Mccialn. bott Eden, nnd Marion McCInln. Hiuel- , ton; a sister. Mrs. Lcllo Robb.' Sacramento, Calif., and eight srandchUdren,

Five brothers and three sisters preceded him In death,

READ TIMI3-NEWS WANT A M

Iniontli. Broun. Deeds and King' lnitcndcd the dwirlct eneamBment

R upert today,Rcbckah lodKC members chc Ir.t. H.iney Smith ns delcfaie

I grand lodge with Mrs. F. R. BrlR s

, In Brltl.sh Columbia, and Pend Oreille lake and the]

Welser river In Idaho,

Lodge Says U2 View Misstated

, SEATTLE. Wash., Oct. 8 tn — ICenry Cabot LodKO said laitnicht Dcmocrntlc presidential candlflnlc Jolin r . Kennedy "totally mis­stated my position oa the U2 case" In his nationally televised debate with Vice President Rlch-

Nlxon.(Kennedy) staled that I

had jsnld our lejnl position wa. n-eak," the Republican vice pres­idential candidate commented. “1

sa id any such thins."

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT A

T H U R S D A Y !

ih^tombanglr-'Taken by Death

B tn tU O ct. B — Arch V. Stdm- bauKh. IS. Buhl. died , a t Magic Valley M emorial hospital a t 10:3i p jiu Friday.- a a .M 4 _ b o i lAprti a#, JS88......... .............

-nl» Paraon*. a t Elwood. Nebr..April U , IM7. They came to Buhl In 1»S# from Holbrook. Nebr., and he farmed u n til August. ItU . He WM a memb«r of Jehovah's Wit-

^*^iSrl»or*, bealdes his widow, in- oludB two aona, W illiam A. atom- btugh, B uhl, and Fred Btom-,

.b v u h . Fleo Rivera. Calif.; three diusbt«ra. Mrs. Robert Orlfflth,

-TWln FoUa: U ra. Patricia Hayder.; * | f Wney. .Wyo.. and Mr*. William

LTMoOonnlck. Buhl; twt) aUters.M n . M kbel Volkman and Mrs I

^CIr■e•V0lkm »n. tothEmtla.Nebr;imeni.,ry. and rpguesla W»lt<‘r /i O U flort 6tOTbaugh.,Pleii-p ndmlnlstra-,

, ^ U l 4 , ^ - ^ : ^ ^ y j « ^ l d r e n , 2 pm. Oct. 35.

wUt b« held r.i . Alh>rt«in With Richard

....., m inuter, ofri-rile* w in be a t i(i<-r. P rie n d l may

^ 'W o Fined• .'.a Vonda Ed.

■W flufd »3 and g f th e PMce Al-

S iU iiit to display ■“ •Tblaan Prank

'titUlon. flnedU

jPetition Is Filed In Pierce EstateJpetllion to probate the wIllI

and letters of admlnUirotlon ofl the e.rtnle ot John M. Pierce filed in TVm Paii4 probate cc Friday by his »on. W aiter H.! Pierce, [

The estate l.« ,*ld to con.-iLit oj; personal and real property valued in excf.y of Jio.ooo. Heirs listed’ a w Pierce, and Mr.v Nora R. Plercp. wutrm-. Mr. Pierce died’ Sepl. : i In Twin Full*.

Pierre nsmrd his wldoiv _ ulrix mhls will. The petition aald,

n.'k lettpr* te.-«la.|

W HCN-Y O UiRIP THB U PP E R CRUST O FF A N Y CITY YOU'LL FIND R A W FLESH UNDERNEATH.

PauINaMnnan‘ T h e ' W M i n g

Philadelphians

Be There When (he Fun Starts

STARTS

W ednesday!| ORPHEUM-----------L A S T - 2 D A Y S !

E N D S T O N I G H T BtfGGiiOSBir HBlAN TVESMrHBJ)’ NiO(UMilUREir

A**

/CQMJEDY

DRAMA

rV PROGRAM ^ I G H t l G H T S =

f o r f h o W e e k o f O c t o b e r 8 t h

SUNDAY-!0:«5 am.—Ch. !;00 pjn.—Ch. i :K pM.—Ch. 8:30 pjn.—Ch. 7:00 pjn.—Ch. 7:30 pjn.—Ch. B;00 p.m.—Ch, 8:00 pjn,—Ch. #:J0 pjn.—Ch.

10:00 pjn.-Ch,

7—W orld Series0— Shirley Temple—‘Tom and liuci' j - L a a s le —Drama6—T ab H unter—Comedy 3 -^ a c k le Oleason flpecial-Comtdy7—Best of Poet—Drama 7—Alaskans7—C ounty F^lr—Special 2—Coronado &—Adventur*7—Untouchables—Drama

MONDAY-^ • S f t 'pTm .-O h.-g—HHilglnn-UIV Wiady^DDbuiW8»ft!To»

7:00 p.m.—Ch. 7—Cheyenne-We.stern 7:30 p.m.—Ch. (>—D ante—Mystery7;30 pjn._Ch. 7—Award Theater8:00 p.m.—Ch. 7—Lorettn-Young Show 6:35 pm.—Ch. 2—Adventures In Paradise—New — Ad­

venture9:00 pm ,-C h, »—Powerboat-Adventure 9;30 p.m.—Ch. 3—Presidential Countdon-n — Interviw

10:00 pm,—Ch. 7—Sweet Succesa—Documentary

TUESDAY-0:00 p.m.-Ch. 2—CBS Reporls-Speclal-Ths year ol

the PolnrU 7:00 p.m.—Ch. 2—Tom Ewell—Comedy 7:30 p.m.—Ch. 7—W yatt Earp—Western 8:00 pjn.—Ch. 0—Donald O'Connor with Wlt l Qsyns

—Special9:00 p.m.—Ch. 7—Alcoa Presents—Drama 9:30 pm.—Ch. 2—Surfslde 6—Adventure

10:00 p.m .-Ch. 7—Wells Fargo-W est«m

WEDNESDAY-7:00 pjn.—Ch. 7—Perry Comiv-Varlety 7.00 pm.—Ch. 3~A quanauis—Adventure 8:00 pjn.—Ch. 6—Peter Lovei Mary-Debut Vitlely 8:00 pm,—Ch. 2—Armstrong Circle Theater — ’"nii

E ichmann Btory"»:00 p.m.—Ch. 7—Naked City—Police Advtntur*'

10:00 pjn.—Ch. 2—HonRkong—Adventure 10:30 pm.—Ch. (}—Jack P a rr Show

4W URSDAY-8:30 pjn.—Ch. 2—Bachelor Father 7:00 pjn.—Ch. 2—Donna Reed—Comedy 7:30 pjn.—Ch. 6— Ernie Ford—Variety 8:00 pjn.-^:h. 3—June Allyson—Dram*8:30 pjn.—Ch. 7—Untouchables0:30 pjn.—Ch. 7—Case of the Dangerou* B

tery

FRIDAY-8:30 pm,—Ch. »—We«t«mer—Dram*7:00 pjn,—Ch. 7—Bell Telephone Hour—Virlely wltb

Patrice Munsel 7:30 pjn,-C h. 2—Rawhide—Western 8:30 p.m.-Ch. 3—Route W—Adventure 9:00 pm ,-C h. s—S tate Trooper-pollce 8:30 pjn,-C h, 7—Mlchall flhayne—Myitery

PLUSYour F a v o r ite A fte rn o o n Showi

PLUS

The V Q rlety...of C h i ld r tn 's Shows . -|

PLUS

A S e le c tio n o f L ofe Movies a ll fo r th e low p rice o f —

C onn ection ^ 9 5 p«r MonthC harge * | Service Chorg*

The vs(ue o f y ou r o ld antenn a could peiilbly repretint a lu b t ta n t le l port o f the connactlon ehorgg. Trode in y ou r o ld an lin n a new.

P h an e RE 3 -2 2 3 4

Twin F a lls ' Firfest Source of TV Ent-ert-ainment

Page 7: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

)AT.OCTOBER 9. I960

Spray Can^ecome Flaming Torch' Cas efofd MethDdists Proud of New hurch A fter 30 Years in Basement

ES-NEWS, T W IN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE-SEVEN^

>. Oct- 8 — A ftrrilh i Oi »orslili>-]i'(l

imenl, Custlcforfl ' tliflr cfforu' ciil- rccnit dcdicnllcm

cliurdi. . 1

lincctl flC *«,000.

ilcclli-

13. Ihnt ilic r.HU. It H-S.t . !)>• BL'hop

fiurscrj- ( ‘- “ fi(I chitrcs htive- new striictiiri- u s s '‘ ' till' Ui'V, C h a r l f i ' ' sii;irnnli‘nclciit o f:

)iijrrr miH-E:irl nid-

mrtlclp;»tccl, ___111 Ihf Ocilici; .

Goal for 'illmbliii: oul of tliC: lascmrni ' v.aj llrst !cC In M-.»rch,

(i558. -nie flrii «iloicl of d ir t K «,Itiirnril MnrclijB by '!'« late R. 1.1 ‘imlthwk'k nni I'l’ prMiddnURlili-r.l

.Cii'orcf flllck, l)it f irst chllrt.Ill C:>sl)c!orcl. l l ic RcV. nol)-| CIcn5lla^ ........... '

IniililinK jhc.lj

' rixMors 111 I ttc rr tlic n .v . • {<1 2!>35; 111-- !t M nrch. 'l?pv.~ Ij^Hov -IV. the Rev. c c n ; ■ 1943:1043 I

. J!'14lOM. I

11515. T lic

^ Oiilc

New Dress Shop Has Open House

AccoKllns l> th t Hpv. T-1 . Sno(kr.i.'.i, priiciil pa.ilor. when

n.'structloii wh brgmi,:oc;l c-xc' vitim; » complcic M'mpiil. Icnrful tlu'y would Imvc comlmii- (utic n for anotlter yc.-ir.i. Only tiinurli spacc

oxcavnU'd fijr & fjrnacc room nnd

s (luring tlie mlnl-slr>- of

HAZKI.TON, a.s held FrUlny

here' .'-hoi) on Miiin mi ' • K torijiy Id

■rlic liiiihiiiii: ccntly Jroiii Mr Orutke mill im f>le[c rcniodfiiii tcrior.

Mrs. llrmkr •Miop. DriKkt' 1: iniclor. Till.' 11 funned In scllliii: llif

rirtBil blow loreh.^ SBnd»7'^'SUI

■ul)Un( fir* thief, d r»m *llcallr llta»tr»ln tfie pnJendjr flr« tli rra t conU lned In « 'if printed wim!ni» «n the c a n are lifnored. riaced near a flame llie can becomen a

ifp>*ii»«-ifn^t-hAa.d«wloMd a.Krlek-or-demonBlTAlltina-SUlltUileFire rrtvtnllon w e ^ .w hich be-

Bobbr

t Taflom tirte or club mteU n|r» In preparation f.

Iftt ftnd fire ti.?pcclf>r HlKgitu ■ orlc ft rcgulur d»y elilfl. nopp related nome (iintlstiM

illcUtlvo' of firflnoa M ffcrcd thLi country. Etery day

' yrnrfd-B B rernfn tin j-jT -T K cpi^ x r iio -d k -i^ T i5 lS ?o tiie

T. F. Fire Department Is Active in Reducing Loss, Suffering From Fires

deatrnys 1,525 h«n« . ravaeos 11 churchcs, scathes 11 schools, burns down BO barna, dcmollBhea 149 storM and ruins IBS faetorlea. Tlie yearly cost in dollnrs to Amerl-

U $OI>t),6S4iOO.

6- Opoii t Naoiiil's Drp.w

prinr lo open-

Cn.l1, Clui

iil trn , rrcd il W alter IUt.s Dn ll!c

A lbrn Kmn Kluvoii. Mr.5. Ki John IilicV: niul

luUcniili

Mrs.

TIlP Ic!u(Jr.'iW hyir Ai:d Ilownrd V

Sieve Ilriibl> W.I1 suprrlnlrm lpiit, Frit/ trlclnii niid D;irri;l I’hl

li>' liiinl nri.i • fnrm niovcd

Rrnile scliixt bum A nr.y >

- RIKTH8 NOTKI)--------FTt-KR, Oct. B-Mr. >nd Mr^. .. ...^

. Sept. 21 to Mr, nnd Mrs.l Mlko Iliff wlio ara livlni; nt 6tutt-{ 8ftTt, Oermnny. tthere Ilitf is with th e mllltiiry police In the nrmy. MrB, lllff Is ihe former Arvciial .Hodklns, I

RadiatorsNKW AND rSKI)

S c rv lc c ii

Phon e RE 3-6080_ All T y p e ^ Klndi

G L Y ^ =RADIATOR SHOP

nJ-W »y 30—On Truck L>ne R adiators Are Our Duslneu—

Not ft Sideline

EARN MORE

DOUBLE your MONEY> ju5( 10 years

WHY NOT?t.OOK A T THE G R O W T H OF 7^6 COM POUNDED

$ 1 ,0 0 0 .....................10 y c o r i .................1 ,9665 5 ,0 0 0 .....................15 y c o r j ...................$13 ,7955 2 5 ,0 0 0 ..................... 15 y c a r t................... $ 68 ,976

FOR M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N DROP A CARD T O :

POCATELLO, IDAHO

P. 0 . B O X -2022-W ESTERN

STATESSECTTRTTfES^

(RfsldenU of Idaho OaJy)

k 'S k o k m m m w r n i h -jv,r» two minutes'llro'dam '

, t „ a home soniewhcr# In thi

Is sctlvtly cnpged In trjlng irtuce this too often needier itr.i] suffering.tr • tl

c deparUnent

and jv a b rea k sprcRdlng ths ku out which th e n qulcltly VBporlica and vapor fum es arc what cause the damaRC."

Other dem onstrations aliow dra- mnllcally how electrical howe wlrltiff Insu lo tlon will burst into

12 yc.v.v while th e city has prown from 15,000 to 20,000 persons, lire fttiiriiis have dropped from 220 (a

"Only one th in g nccounU tor thh," hs aucrw . "people a re be. Inff cKtelul." C ^ o u n tm C o L L ie t

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w-PAOB-EIGHT— TIM ES-NEW S, TWIN T A I L S . IDAHO SUNDAY, OCTOBER

Truman Hits i i Trail, GOP’s

Farm Policy6PESCER. la .. Oct. 8

. .V tn y B. Trum«n nalcl today ; Rtpubllciin party htu» "rtrjertcd

I ArattlcM Iw m «r tn d th»i. “my-------^ n n tT -* h » tli*-.R«[»uUIcan

tickct tills Itll oURhl to s«t I I he deservtj."

The formfr prc.siilfnt, Jiltilni ' (he cunpaisn Irnll for the Demo-

triUs p»rty. told «, Inrm RUillfncr htrf, "You voted younflf ImOi

lli'e fH yWfp m now. Why do, 0 do It aK.iiii?"

Young Idaho Mother Has Candidates in AftfexhibitionatKetclium Cassia Speak

For FarmersKETCTIUM, Oct. S — Louise Ourll Hubbard, k yoiuiif nmiron Irom Grace, wlin )ust tlircc wreJJ Kto beeime tlie roothtr of » dauRtt- er, U the rtm«rkabl* palnt<i /hoie ihow ot oils, ttatercolon

and »ootlcun li»j )uit opened *l iCaWiimi'i.IziiUllc pp re^ • ''

r to >1 mottrcrhoo< liubb»rd oiwrrd tii

...w.. -- the coHee house Sa!urriJ>r. Jiiid }lalh'.(Jtvtnitr. ............"-

lilt firm prDblcin, Icllinfr rofluent li:<rta i\t Prc.-^lilnuho.fr, Vlre ITpMclpnt RlclmrU M.i''"''''' "HWon. the OOP prc--.ldfntl.H n w n - '

.......... ...................... .............. ; n=ii»

AA niembpr.'lilp xl 2( plcliires *he la

li ;tar, ficcppl

heart Ia healL

I all her hu>ban<l, Deon v ti in the U-< pro­ne ihe rniikihK from h'lmi- I'n her

n jnur heart. I'm ft/ralrt,'^^,, u n rf« 11. Dut j'oii vnlfd for It"

"U t no man deceive h i t n . ' c i f ..... ....... . ........... .; Into thinldns a new HepiiDUcan R,iV:idini rollese In Oreaon.

«dmlnl3tratlt>n would b» any bet-j o„rin j >,tr, ind Mrs, Hubbard' le." h r asld.i,[„y j„ wood Illver valley

UOnLEV. O ct. « —lUpubllcan nd Democratic Cassia county

ctiidltlates participated In a fimim on political su b je cu as RuesU' of Ihe West O vcrlond Farm BureauTUutMlay,night___^ ...----------I Clfo Larson w as moderator lor |llie question period. Candidate' iPsrtlclpallnR were Democrnt.'S }ler- 'maji Betlkc, candidate for stati '•■fnnlnr; Tom Cliurch, county *i- torney asp lran i; Floyd Higen*, ctndldate far county kherllf, and Charles Hendrlclcs. Ca.\.Ma county Democratic c en tra l c o m m i t t e e chairman.

Itepiibllcans taktnit p a ri «er( SUte fienalor K . C. Uarlow, Coun­ty i'rmecutlriB Attorney Norman Nifl?on; County Com m l»lorcr'J, Wfldon Beck: S ta te Rcjire.ienla- tlie Vnrd Chntburn : Trrn\urer

jJesnnetle ChatnbctU ln, all seek- 1ms reelectlon. a n d H, O. Warrell, candidate lor sheriff. Also attend- Inj was Cassia county Republican committee chairm an, Don Love­

land. who Is teeUng rrelectlor) u<

-'lUpublicsn leader i>e* Murray introduced Ihe candWites.

Chatbum w u flueslDned »1>out bills that »’erc rushed Jirough the Icitlslature durlnj lh« laat of UieS n .rd he*staK l t ^ t he irould favor a waltlni pwkxi-,be­tween an tjrller presejtallon of all bills In order to be Ole to come home to tslk *lth coatlluenta and dl.«ovcr ihcir views.

He Slated that the Idaho »heat enuahtlan »«j popuarly favored ,hcii 1’. crestetTaid consump-

, ,:oii of when his Inireascd by Its • uromollon prngrnin,: Illgcn^ and Wirrill Ik>Ui ex- •Inresicd conccrn pertilnlnR Uj tlie

• -- - ‘ - crime In the a rea and ■svarreii -lated he wivs of the i opinion that anothf deputy was'needed. . _I Nlel.-uii a^-erled th a t CaMla codnty would joon nwd a full time

^eculin* attorney He apoke -

9. 1560

English Protest I Visit of Norstad

COVSNmY, Xailand, Oct. * » — L e a f l e t* wer* distributed throuihouc CorcDlry todty calllns for public dcmonstrallont a{alrut the tchedulcd visit next Wednes­day of Oen, Laurli Noratad, su- prtme allied eommander, Europe.

The local Labor party held ■ rally In the city center lo protest Norsi»d'*„.Yl4lt„»ncI. 10 fltDouncc. Brium 's retention' of nuciekr weapons.

The rally was auppoited by the campaUn Jor nuelur dWrro- ament, which distributed the anti. Norstsd leaflets. ;

the Increased criminal activities and said an attorney can only give 50 to 60 per tent ot his time to the position in relation to tht salary.

t i v E [ r o n r i t e

‘The RfpubllcAn caiidld,ite . rot even pronil.'>e you niivthlnR

heifer. If you were to vot^ for him, you would hnvp no one la blame but yoiirselvM."

Klirusliciiev—Still Hopin

Fof^SummitOLEN COVg. N. Y .. Oct. 8 tfV-

Bovlel Premier K lirmhchev t< night held forth th e prospect of aummit with the nex t Amerlcnii pruldent despite preconditions nl ready set durlnB tho current cam- paign by boUi prealdenUal as-

ihey arrived In a Volk-nw irrjlns all but lix of llie pt

now in iiie Undvllie ll ley were Joined by her brother t',d llMbbsrd'i parenl.s and ir a lamliy reunion.Mr.*. «ub):>JV<)'J fxhJblf. s'Jl

exceiitloii ot {no p,'c(ur«, wJ.. . - • the coffee hou.^e until the

Christmts holidays *nc viev,«<l—dallyr-axcept Moiidaya,. etnrtlni at a pin.—Tha-twci.pIcLurfi uhirh Tt'lll n o t be on display are one which Pred Picard purchased and RBve this year for hts annual Picard award, lo go 10 the'school ot the w inner of the members' show—and one

Mrs. Hubbard hopes will bring her another prize from the Boise tallery's November .......

‘ Khnjshehe» likened the i . paIgn speeches by bo th Vice Prr.il-

'dent Richard M. Nixon and Sen.' John 7. Kennedy to mere words i to be tossed Into a snrbage pall I cnee tho election is over.; Khrushchev also said. In c menUng on the U. N . refusal day (o discuu the l&'sue ot m benhlp for the Red China regime, that the Soviet Union's world

—pQsitlen-tMlMennlnftd-notby-Vrli.— »ot«i. but—by-tha.economy, o f . the

BoTlet Union,' iltenherer^»hani K hrtahchev

has refused to m eet with except under condlUou unacceptable to U» Whit* Houae—a n d Nixon and Kennedy have declared they will not confer with th o Soviet chief vnleu advance negotUtlons a t the dlplomatlo level <hov proipecta ot • fnilUul meeting.

Prowling Bear Shot by Woman

, __>AKI5LA. O nt., Oct, « Wi—"It kept ebcUng the house and each tlzse would get closer. — tb* doc had bitten U."

Urs. Jean Money tola how »he _j6t a 400-potUid block bear out*ctdt her cabin a t C lear laki -----her*.

ehft heard her dog barking and 'opened the door to find » bear within 10 feet.

'7 inunedlatelT grabbed « JIM m iches ttf and Ilred tiro ahou,- ■he »ald.

., The anbnal craw led oft In to the ', wood* and * « fotuul la ter

two buUeli In the n e c t

A1TENDS KBVIVAL.. . • ' WT.gR. fv t, a—Tha Ri

I Wealey Brough le ft rrUay ‘ - tend a revival o f th e Flrat <

LOUIRK OARTF HlStBAHU

Huge Carrier Is Christened Constellation

NEW YORK, Oct. 8 l^Vi-The,i lavy today chrlslencd the new,'

.0,000 - ton carrier ConsWllstlon.ll, Navy Secretary William B. Frankejfl

it,_l'l» urgrntly_needcd" tolj! m aintain the itrlklng edge of ihe ^

M rs.-ch» iitlan“ A ''U ener,‘'wife of the aecretanr of ita te . formally conferred on the huie-mlulte-de> fended flattop the name of i famous ahlp of the earliest Amerl- ■ in navy.

Frnnke, In his address at thi New York naval shipyard, sale ■' Constellation b needed to re'

M a n Is H e ld on Kidnaping Count

Floyd niddlt, 49, nichfleld, U U h. tis arre.ited by T»ln Falls county

Sheriff James Uenham and Deputy clarence Ylng'C Friday afternoon. He Is being held tor Uie Richfield sheriff on a charge of second de­gree kidnaping,—Beflh»iT»-«>id-ih»t-the-ehante-*p^ parently atems-from-famlly-troub* Ics. Wim him at the time of his arrest was Kirk Riddle, the man'B 16-year-olc) son. The son Is being held by the siierlfl's office uhtll both are picked up by officials from Richfield. Denham anld.

Father and son were llvlnit In Hansen a t the time of the arrest. The father was employed In K im ­berly since his arrival here earlie r thU week, according to the aherUf.

Isaac M. Brown Taken by Death

WEHDXlXs Oct. 8—Isaao (Ike) U . Brom . « . Wendell, died at l:SO am . Baturdiy a t Magic Val­ley Uanor. where he had lived the past year.

Mr. Brown wu t>om Ju ly 13, i m . I t Salem, la. He cam e to Idaho fiDm CouDCll Blults. l a . In 19J8 and formed In the Twin Falla and Rimberlv areas until 10S4. Mrs, Brown died In k m and Mr. Brown made hli heme w ith his chUdren until ayear ago,when hei entered the nurilng home, I

Survivors are (ftree sons. Rnlph W. Brown. McOlll. Nev„ Fred W,' Brown, concord, Calif., onfl Wnr-. ren Brown, Arco; one daughter,' Mrs. Ralph (Florence) Bennett.l •Tcani,"»na n gninachHilmr— -j

Puaerol services wlll.be nnnoun-l eed by Weaver mortuary. Wendell.

. . . THE1 H A V E M ORE T /M f FOR tfV lN C

i TW nOHMt TOO AS MMH u n m AS HAW-ISOHMO. t ty rr oHCt ’»9« u w v n u

LIABILITIESC a p ita l and S u r p lu s .........................U nd iv id ed P ro f its mid

R e se rv e F o r T a x e s .......................O th e r L iab ilities ..............................Deposit.-5 ................................................

s ta tem e n t of The Condition of

T W I N F A L L S B A N K T R U S T C O M P A N Y

T W IN FA L L S. ID A H O

_ A l Cloae of I luaincss O c to b c r ,■), in r ,n

RESOURCESCflsh a n d Due From B a n k s ................... ? '1.078,)8a..}3C-.C.C. C ert. O f I n t e r e s t ..................... .. 7,:i^s,2.jU . S . G overnm en t B o n d s ........................ :?.908,011.1.1S ta te a n d M unicipal B o n d s ................... 1 .886..U 0.41

$ 0,880,2Ga„‘.2F e d e ra l R eserve Bank Stock ............... H.'?,000.00L o a n s a n d D iscounts L cs.h R e se rv e .. 10.050,125.02B a n k BuildinR.i nnd Fixture.'^ ............ ' -180,3G-l.GlO th e r As.Hcts ............................................... lu.T-IS.Tl

520..irj!),807.86

? i.ioo.ooo.nn

520.459,807.86

M e m b er Fede ra l D epaiJt I n s u rn n c e C o rp o ra iw n M ember Federa l R e s e rv e S y s te m

carriers still being utilized t __thnn (t decadc nnd a holt after Inunchlng. Fmnke said fnst. heavy planes sre being operated from tho old carriers "In a very mar- ginnl manner as far ns softly Is concerned."

Q ConstellBtlon is of the For- restal class, but much moi modern than the first shlpi i that postwor class.—WiUl_2M.0(XLJl9rscpo5,er_tro, her conventtoni^engmes, the Cot stelintlon will have a speed ot ovi 30 ktjotji. Her catapults can pi heavier planes Into the air thn.. Ihe eciuipment on other ships of the class. Terrier surface-to-air missiles are used for defense lo- stead of aotl-alrcraft guns.

Raise VotedliOKDON. Oct. B Ifl — Britain's

40.000 hosplUt and family doctors have voted to accept pay increases averaging »l^60 a year.

Tho raise from the state-run health service will make the i #e« physJclan'a aalory tBJPO.

T he language of W est Africa Is Hauaa, which Ls spoken by about 15 million people.

i m i m H M

makes m rm ffiirds in lyssa area

------ProgrOTiTT8~trading-cent<rfera -ferttle-regton-of-ifri-g a t e d r o w c r o p fa rm in g in E a itir n O r e g o n , N y » a i r a c o m m u n i t y o f g r o w in g ciW c pricfa. E v i d e n c e o f fha t r e n d t o w a r d m o d e rn liv in g i* t h e l a r g e n u m b e r o f new " L iv e B a t t e r E lec tr ica ily" M ed a llio n h o r n e t , m a n y of w h ie f i a r e t o t e ! e le c tr ic Gold M e d a l l io n , in c lu d in g w on- d e r f u l ly - c o n Y e n ie n t e le c tr ic h ea t.

"Electric h e a t w ith Its se t-and-forget th e rm o s ta t Is tru ly the mcxiem, e ff ic ie n t a n d com fortable answer to o ld -fa sh io o e d healing problems. ^ ^ H artley

Mr. »r>d Mrs, L e o n a rd E. Sm ithest, least c o o n p lk a te d , cleanest way lo heal,"

, Mr. and Mr?, Lorin E. M unn

" - a - J

" O u r hom e h a s been electrically h e a te d f o r th re e years. I t ha» - — ......... .. . . .vp ro v ed very sa tisfec torv . W e hlghly-Tecoromef>d e lec tric b e a t for itjy n k e w i th sm a ll children. We ieel it Is a p riv ile g e tot h o * e ^ n t i n g th e b e s l . ' ------------r.------- --an elec tficaU y-K eated. home,"

----------------: — Mf.-enrf M tt rW iW e m -ft tn im m o m ■- ^l^^rT'and'RTTr'HaroIH'ATexafKler*'

"Electric h e a l is convenient, economical a n d c le a n . ; . especi- .................................... ........................................ live in

Cot tt b ig {ob that needs expert core?. . e little lo b thof* more oniioyina than ' M rleu t?^C all the " H e u t* Doctoring

Servicer* V A 'r t rwither too proi,id nor toi ly le d o the snrallett itrvic*.

th o i 's in M r l in e . . . replace o breVtn bong o balky door, fix a btolien

•VviMr t r e o d , or holf o hundred olhsr odd iobi th e home.'

“ House Ooclorlng" it a service offered by your long -etlob lished Cetlw oy Building Center. U’l moiined by eapetf workmen. . . prompt ond effielent lo operoHon . . . t^or.

Id to t? Moleritili? Ploni? financing? Theie oro oil port a n d parcel of our service

r {or any kind o f 'remodelipg', repolrt oi

D I A L T H E ' " '‘' ‘" • •" - ''c . .

n u m b i r

W e ju s t se t th e Ihermostal* to th e d e s ir e d tem p era tu re In the fall a n d fo rge t i t until next spring w hen w e tu rn th e m dow n for s u m m e r . O ur annual heating cost has b e e n $ 9 0 .0 0 a n d th a t 's less th a n t e n c en ts p e r square foot of floor space.-"

Mr. and M rs. W a lte r E. Ford

A fIR V lC I OP

R E 3 - 5 2 1 2

.B e s lw a y

B n|oy \ electrk heating In you^ h o m e w h en you bu ild or

r w io d e l . For aeeunffc* «f an ecM omfcaf instaK ation, yitf* your

Idake T ow ar o f fk e or eleetrk heating eo«»raet«r.

"It Is t h e m o s t satisfactory heating we h a v e ever h a d . Eco- nomically I t is w h a t we have been looking for. W e are com pletelySatisfied w ith o u r e le c tr ic heat in every way."

Mr, and Mrs. Fay C olllna ' .

IDAHO'?POWEr J S I^ U C H - t o l s S . L ITT IF . PJiSif,:

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0C K )B E B 9 . I960 TIM Ei-N EW S. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

I B A R B E C U E

' S e rv e d piping hot a n d r e a d y ^ to ea t from OKAY'S

ro tisse rie .

L a rg e 214 to 3 pound s iz e b e fo re cooking. P R IC E S EFFECTIVE

S U N D A Y ,

M O N D A Y , T U E SD A Y

FRESH BARBECUED

TU R K EY STnaF U ISC H M A N 'S DRY

YEAST Strip o f 3 PKGS. 1 1 cS«n Poet C S tM A N D A R IN ORANGES 3 for IL um b e rja ck 22*ounc« ^S Y R U P ............................... O f o r I24-OS. N all« y '« K o ih ir

, owl DILL PIC KLES...

Brtty Crocker BISCUJTS.........

Tong— Q u a r t I SALAD DRESSING .

Pu rify 2 -lb . Pock r i T c SA L T IN E CRACKERS ...... D O

N BC O reo y | Q c C O O K IES ............................... 4 9

U b b y 'i 2 '/a C on i ^P U M P K IN .............. Z for O V

J iffyC A K E M IX E S.....

O O cB ISC U IT M IX E S...................Z y

- 1 0 '

tETTUCEi

SOLIDHEADSEACH

ICE CREAMMiss Muffet A ssorted Flavors

F R A D E t t i - S p f ^ O Z E N :

TV PINNERS

I

Y o u r Choice;h a m - S H R IM P - V E A L STEAK - ROAST C H IC K E N - ROAST BEEF - M e a t l o a f

m

49*APPLE CIDER

MISS MUFFET HOME STYLE . ^

B R E A D . . . . 1 0 * 1" OLD FASH lO N ED -eiN N A M O N — - - -

ROLLS 3 WOK A Y BREAKFAST SPECIAL! Served F rom 8 a .m .

*HOTCAKE, B u tte r, Syrup, C o ffe e . . . . 20c

iftAND- GALLON

Ubby's PIMEAPPll/GRAPEFRUIT A *1460UNCE CANS ...... ___________■ f <« : I

W l l i W l I

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“ PAGE TKN ' TIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS, IDaHO SUNDAY. OCTOBER E

Times-Mews Public Forum Voice of the Reader' People Scored fo r Allowing

Poisoning of F ish at MagicmightyrlM to the top ai»f dlc.Ti-tm'tlnj

the ones who klltrd tlifm like iihouKl hiive. But Ihty looic lontr K^-'P of »ir »ii(l *lo»ly to tn e lio:wm ntvtr lo bs tiKRin.

I could hdvs taken ttiH wllliout, n w ord. If most evtryniif tlie livit

two hntl

-..Z«Ulor..Xlniu-Ni:«iIV* like “Maiiic" wlicn you pro-

i plo »«re b7Bln»ajht(l In p«rmK- ■ tins the Iish luid Bome rtepnrt-

ment to poison the luh in MagicdAm.

Just « h « in thr »orl(l u«a (vc- tomplHIiftl? Anyone

I ih f IfMl thing t ' ■ dlwayj get Ibh

il fl^hlnj could

lc)*!,t / u h , tu t timt IM nut hsp' tougll lo set >uur limit, but Unit’s I ,,fiird. The fWiermcn c.iutlit fIsC flailing; 11 huppfns fifryvshrrr. |n.» tlipy always do. wlicrc thfre

SunUiiy tlify HIM fbh llial It „ri n s h . It hiu l».»>. would,laltp >«rj lo proilufe, tu»l ,irrful flslilng nlxJ'e and below

......................................... d am ............... u ihftc ftiidmy p»rly of tiirto caushl CO trocxC that »nshtd from ons lo four »nd » half pmindv We had J'l-'t

. one net In the bojt with n Iouk Jiindlr-hrolher. »hnt couUl have sone If ne had three iict.v There »e;e not Ito mAny trout

, c a u g h t .......................... - . . . .

thlnit thut blew tlip lid oft I th e method med lo check

. . . l i t content of Maslr. Any t ynu flRiire you

a n e t a a placp the

uiV'trtam trylnj . ,1 the poWn.

Tlie farnMC numier of (r. were cauglit on the e.ut sldr the dam at tlie upper end. 1 trout t*lieii were Jii't a ilroj) (he bucHi-t lo the ones actun

;i;r<f .MoKic you art bafVjnr MroHK trri: and Ju.'l wn.dn* mid money ilial ihould bs i for Romcthlng betler.

In th p fuliire, keep check of the j;oo(l fL'lifrmim and .... ... b domK- I>-arn some of lib Irlitloi nnd voti. Ion, will calch fish.

H. li. SOPEa llVin Kallii)

Fine Genera], Now Diplomat, _Sayed.World,_SaysJ r i t e u

Area FFA Group Appreciates Aid For Annual Sale

Canal Company Manager Has Explanation of Water Rights

lE<llU>r. T)me3.Nf»3; )rr«"n U t.Uinj U t precaullon. .W* woiUd..lUe-U3-Uke-UiU.,0P:,...in-.in»w«r—u> - Uf*. 'WUmilr«d;Ko-<lBuaiwaIcw-»llby.ffe'’_bj'Ji«y-

ponunlty lo tliniiK you, on beh.illig|.,n(f., article of Oct. 2. In ihcimfi lo jt-.ut o(t durln: January otxd ............................. - . . . ’ Ffbi-uan' but when approximately... JlHRprnian Cliiipt<:r of fn-i j.yiji],; Porum. n.^klnn for u.. .

turp > '.trm cn of America, for your: p]„,,„tion of Canal company wat in te rc it "nd Mopcraiicn m cur-ij,„hu.

mucliif,

chn-Mnic luc.il IlvcMort .i il fn t stoclc sale In T Sept. 2i. 1D00. Any

that you limy have p:rtalnlns the nex t *nlc would be jipprrcJntcd, We hope we c.in oi tain your support when you ai coiitocled next year,

RAV MILLER (Cliaplcr prt-'ldent'

RONALD CARU'^OW iClinpter sdvi.icr/

r rlltlus 1! o f ( ! be. t

Editor. TlmM-News;Well, we have been ilttlng on

. powder keg for twelve yenr», no ’ which would hare eiploded into horoc*U({ fonr ago e*cfp{ for

I fine general, turned diplomat. lie I Is tllll » genersl, flr»[, for which I we all thank Ood. and I for one, I refuse to sli idly by while little ' aharpahootcrs (and tilx ones) try

I ]!« U the rnalnslty for tu i I to uphold, even II ue do not i I igree on tlis present polltlcai m { up. aiRill and Injlgnlllcant oa i ha» now becoms In ih# face of

fUtlng, fBglns moiutcr, who c r lu for peace, peace, and in the nex t breath uya "Whatever <te cannot control WB must dtslfoyi"

. . If he cannotdestrofwUhmlghty r p » i , 'h . - w i u iwori lo m s -s ia

and ciutomnry syiteiii ol labolasc,, bombing, and any olher hecklins : by sUnlng up trouble In labor

groups, finances and by out and ou t ' insulting people to death.

Elsenhower h&s faced him down twice, and that Is enough to of any man even half his age. He need nei'cr do so tgal/i. He Jiaa. giren an ultimatum-ws all m ust ' stand back of him on that. Every-i thing depend* on that point. He haa named hlj terms for negoil- atlona and all the Russians have to do. It Uiey really want peace. Is lo comply, The terms are not very difficult really, releasing two men

«nom they do' not want anyway, is dll. No reparations ire a.rted, no apoloElu are asked,- none would be iicccpted.

So p.hy ila)l around to Ion*? 1j II Ju st to »c« how much steal a n d how much hell riiise? Yes, indeed, that is oil there I to It.B lustering, blufflni, Insincere,

^ tha<c whom lie

Sure the war was stopped, when they w ere half woy through Qer- many, half way through Korea and a compromLw sixved Indo­ch in a . They have all they will

ne ed In this woHd-<it every. ___I— 3.Vhv-iLo .1 • - -

have th e best of are belnif worked, ourj a Not If they can slop them.

T h ey own the i/oachlmsthal .Ine in Czechoslovakia which con*

talna pitchblende, cobalt, silver, nickel, bismuth minerals, quarts, calelte iind dolomite. But the rich­est o n e Is the Shlnkolobwe mine located In the Belgian Congo. Till: mine contalna pitchblende, copper

th e richest uraniumTld.

B nuMlaai iniere.'l In th ConROlesB is touching.

MRS. 8. 11, BEAl.3 (Tw-ln F»lls)

Buhl Writer Criticizes Demo’s Recent Letter in T-N Forum

Idltoi. Tlm«.Kews;lUfertnee U mids t« D&n J.

Caranagh's letUr In the Oct. 3 Ptiblls Forum polnUn* out the weakaesses of th# Republican ad-

' ntlolstnlJon and partfnUorly Vice . Prealdent NUoa u seen from the • eyea of th# titular head of the , IKmoeratio pu ty of Twin Falla

county. The impreulon atwmpted . tn hft mnTrvrrt t m thnt whateyer

-i-haa.b«aa-done.tn.Uie p u t d e b t \ year* by Republicans generally «nd

' Vice President Klxon In partlctilajr , h u been wrong.' ■ Mr. Cavaaagh failed to tire youx

readers bis Imprtt&lons of thJnga ' ■ to come, but that la not to »ay th a t

it* iia*.{u> thoughts of the future. . W o r in the October-Issua of the

. National Woolgrowtra magazine we ’ alM find Mr. Caranagh in p rin t, I and there ^e Hod him busily re­

m oving one of the main planks In hl» p a r ty * platform designed to

ir« a l l domestlo medical problema I n th is article Mr. Civanagh

sU te s ••. . . It will work a hardship If Aoclal McuHty is ukiJ as a meas­ure t o tinaivce aid for the aged and those in need of medical care, W« cannot carry an additional b u rd en in (axes which only lowers •he re tu rn of grou income,"

•T h * D e m o o r a t le prejldi... nom inee has committed hlmseU every opponunlty lo provide "Iree'' m ed ica l care financed through bo clal security taxes. Who is right D an o r Jack? Bo!h rvpnaenC the DemocraUs party at their rtspec- tfvB levels. Burely they both can’t be r ig h t.

O n c e tganl we te« the Dtmocrntlc fam ily divided agiinst Itself'. The re c e n t wsaloa of congreu is

YMCA Need Here For Youth Cited By Ti F. ResidentWltli iK> much talk about and

xrllcle.n written about lecn-nscrj ind ou r youth Rettinit Into (rouble vltli drivlnif offen.^e^ and olherj -iinnInK from cnnK flghls to de- .triiction of public properly, thencfd 1.1 well fctii for a i)lnce tlial yoiJlJi c an Ko to set al( ithrr pcr.'ion.s v.liom they 0 for ntlvice and help.I hnve heard a lot of peoptt

tnllc nDout the need for o Y.MCA nnd some have auKgesled that the p rem ieTi^fof/t<rz:Psrildinezc!!'>jf b e is ? d for a YMCA after the new postoffice Is built. Most every city of any slr.e haa a YMCA and It I quite a popular place.

F O llE S r W. ROBINSON <Twin mils)

FaIIj.I“ :''lsi.Mes and will.

' iMlLvtdes darn. It was even mort ilinproved. No. 1—By a hold-ovei

>Ji Jacic.ion Joke. Ilerrio/orr II ihe wator not used : je.ir that It accum ulated I ic!?rvolr II would drop dow. other storage rltthU and be I tills company and become the property of others. No. 2—A rlghl10 Jlore our winter flow or an) amount neces-sary and r e c e lv i credit for same In Amcricnn K.HL rc.'crvolr. The a t o r i x g r »pacc itmounE. lo etxiuc Hie same us tin total winter flow from Nov. I u April 1. This tr a c t heed never bi short of w ater by lakinR advaii- ta«e of this opportunity in storlnR during dry yeara.

From 192S to IB35 American Falls failed to fill seven years •uccesslon. IhL's trac t was cut 14 per cent delivery, in 1034, 40 icr cent le.is than i.i being Itered noiv, lliLt need no: 1 . pen again If proper precaution Is Jjten. Jn J957 th rre nnd ' ' million acre feet of wnt spilled past M ilner, b u t eai ihaJlow .haa rlropptd-ofX-aad.iat t j'WrTirajnBCrWXI aero feet weill by. If -the aam e r» tlo continues for IMl the dam s will not fill11 Is yet too early lo forecast tor 1961 but It looks very much the

the d ry SO:*—hence the

Two Points iu Speech GivenO n Armour Plant Explained

Editor, Tlmes-NewReceived a copy of your paper

of Sept. 21 which had a front page article about my talk given a t the Idaho Power nuditorlum to the agricultural division of the Twin Falls Chamber of Commerce. Thli

good report, hoicever, I bt- : as_niiKiufflHiLj£-iDls

which I would like to olarlfy.This nrticle atntes, “Kemp ex.

pJslncd th a t Jivesiock prlcea In the Boise valley have Inched to with­in 50 c en ts of market* In Spokane and Beivttle for certain types of anim als alnce Armour bought Its Nampa p lan t five years ago. Prior lo th a t time, prices for llveatocit in the DoLse valley averaged lUO below the olher two markets." Tilt--' would imply that Armour haa Infiuencrd local market to the ex-

R h.L ral,^ed to ^ tl higher level- ThLi ii not irue. W hat I did eay, or intended to convey, tha t the llvestocl;

rkel In the Bol.se valley over {Jio p;i.it !0 year.t hiM rUrit to tht point where R Is now 50 cenLs un­der Portland and other Northwest m arkets. This Is because of the growth of the slaughter Industry in the Boise valley.

T h e p lan t which Armour owns up he re «as already tn existence and slaughtering cattle when Ar- nour took U over. We have In- ;reosed slaughter In this plant jy approxim ately 30 to 40 per Ukewiso other planta in this have increased their aloughter and logether the entire Industry here has brought about the market tftiiiige. ' Aa —

cal example of th e results produced from such a division. Let's not stagger through four years of a stflJemnie oppoalnjr views Jnerti-, ably produce. L et's elect the man whose Ideas a re backed by all the members ol th e Republican party —Richard Nixon.

played only a small p a rt In this change.

In the following paraffraph the article atates, "He aald that small combined Uvestock a n d farming operations m ig h t find It putlcu- larly advantageous to supply the

plant wJlh winter and iprlnir I have_Iound ■ t-iltci

during these seasons." What I said, or Intended In this regard, was that a farm er-feeder opera- lion could very well lend Itself to producing a warmed up type of cattle for fu rth e r fattening and that the livestock feeding IndaHry found It d ifficu lt to buy replace­ment cattle in th e spring t n i esrJy summer m onths. The fornier-feed- .. buying lig h t feeder cattle in the fall of the year, carrying them

wintering type ration and marketing them In th e sptlnc for further finishing should llnd a ood markcl.The last paragraph of the arti­

cle staled. 'TTie p lan t will be equipped to slauRhter hog.v Kemp

1 altfioijRii the campstty ha. plans a t the p rw en t time tc

do this," Tills sta tem en t Is not en­tirely accurate and-could be mis­leading. W hat I said, o r Intended, was that th e p lant will, have a snail Slock ra il aystem which will be. .used for slaughtering lambs and calves. T h is equipment easily ■rould be added to for the purpose >f slaughtering hogs and at such :(me os cufflclent hog numbers ariUIabte we could go Into a : slaughtering operation.

J . R. KEMP (General Manager.

King Packing Company.

ilMd, I'I of tl

lO lC:.................-■ re.-cncrj ilo^ io t IIevcrjoiif will sulf-r during th e l.-ittfr F-'rt of AuRal

Our w.iter rlqhlsnrc about the mo.st nilfqunlc oUalnable.Jijit rmnj on oct n , looo, for 3.C00 . ccoiiil fcit anil a sccond Illlnj Dec. 22, 1915 lor 500 sccond feet lozcllier wltl siornRe spnce in J.ickion. i.._. feet jnfl 151,185 In American F aIIs

The 3.000-foot rlsht produce.s from 2.100 to 2;00 second fee l dnlly iliirlnc Julyonfl A ugmt. and the 500-fool rlRh la mQ.stly (iood aairj- e.irjy Jn tie season. D u r­ing the IrrlRatlox season we ru r betxccn 3.C50 aid 3.&00 accoiid ficl, ttlilch-mfaiB'that somi to 1.200 iecoiid feet mu.it from storage du'lng July. August nnd the first pirt of Scplcmbcr. The slaroRc iite r aniounU some 125,000 acn fcc l.pcr yeor The la.M few -tars we h.'.ve

.llvereil about STOO ncrc feel n to the aloctioWcrs hcncfcftlc.t which must als) come out of ator- BKC. Cfne.-a!ly ne h.ive ft h rnvy run 111 May. uilng quite a lot ot .storase water before th e heavy -rnn^>tiTO-rnrTCn-tbf‘-rlver.-w lignthe river run reaches Ita m axi­mum. usually n the la tte r p a rt of June, all ol our storage w ater u Is canceicd bj what Is known a refill In Amrlcaji m i l s and have a full water allotm ent to start again tie first p a rt of July.

Generally ve draw on storage for an aver«e of 75 days usually have s ell over 100,000 •rCTC~prito r« i!— '

long as possible lo eflecl the grea l- savlngs ana by exchang-

- rlghu with upper and lower users. Whether the water Is , one reservoir or another Is im­

material, as the credit goes to the right.luer lo 15)f nellj going dry

by-Wniln)r-out-lor-«-<l»yn -would egligible, a-s the water tabli s ond lowers wiih the Irriga -wuoii and only 60,000 oc r

feel le,« would be rim through the »y.'tem compared to UCO.OOO

■ used annually, lie suggestion of more s

holders a t t e n d i n g the annual meellnBs Is a very good , ,3oo!tl certainly tit apprccfsted. Surely more stockholders should

Interested In inis gre..............prLse and they should acquaint themselves with the many prob­lems of an Irrigation system. More dams are contemplated on river for full development of river, which will make the prob­lems even more complicated.

There are Informative bulletinsIn the olllce to be given to all ___wanl them, covering Ihe history and optriUon of the Twin F a lb Canal company. We welcome any one seeking more Information nnc «•»; gJadl}- M e as much aa pou-

TliQse of us In charge must sooner or later make way f< ers and this greal fertile , .. should never have to suffer for want or knowledge about the prc.v ent problems snd those problems to come fn (he future.

ALFRED PETERS

FFA Members to I Attend-ConclaveThree members of the Twin

Falls high school >TA chapter will leave Sunday afternoon with delegates from throughout Idaiio to a ttend the national FTA con­vention this week in K a n s a s Ciiy. Mo,

Representing the Twin Palls chapter are Norman Sclmlikcr, senior, and naymonB Par' am)D a v id — Brown.— boUU: JunlorJ-.Schnllker Is sentinel of the chap-

■r Poe Is secretary and Brown ; isslstan t reporter.The delegates will be gone lor

vne week and the convention runs Irom Wedne-iday Ihrough Friday.!lurnbh At the convention the nBtlonil;monty. Th Star farmer and national offlcer.snon Is c)ia '111 be selected, Iraln.T lif chapter pays cram expcnte^j

3r the delegaie.t »nd Iney mH'’.'REA» Tl.\t

BRYaN. Tex •■Why , re- you',oli.Vout M xon-L oc- ‘ Joairone n.skrd ncdy-Johnson c. quaricrs ye.'.terri:

Charlie DIake' inc. c.impnun n Demociasic tkkia sood nn.Nwer.

He examined 1 pilBU buttons hi 'h e -tjcm ocra tit qusrieii In Auv about half uere

' M a g n

BIG SCREEN PORTABLE TV 1 truly Wie finest your money can buy!

................... there was no pof American Falls and th e storage deliveries sta/ted May 13 and la s t ­ed for 129 dsjs. using 202,021 acre feet, whlcJi It the largest on rec ­ord, and lea;ing only 44,000 acre feet of Stonge, i f the year lofil Is Identical lo 1960 we would n in out of storage the la tte r p a rt of August.

During the other dry years we •wcre-oble to rent'JO.OOO-aere-Ieet

no longer available. We m ust - - . look to our winter w ater as the only poisJbJff niM ns of ex tra storage. Two months of storing would produce some 60.000 acre feet together with 40,000 ocre feet

3»er and the percenUge o t fill could be expected In the res-

ervolis would as-surc us a full d e ­livery again next year.

Tlie bureau of reclam ation op- rates the dams In the most con ­

servative way po.' slble, holding In (fie upper re.ien'oirs us

Officers Named By Speech Club

RUPERT. Oct. e — New officers announced tills week for the Rup­ert Toastmaster'a club Include Terry Gulley, president; Ed Bn- gert, licit rice president,• M Oab- ola, second vice president: F^onk

Mackley, sergeant-at-arms: E. M. Oreer. secretary, a n d Darwin Green, treasurer.

The blue pencil aw ard for the ;venlng went lo Dr. Howard O. Toevs with a speech on " aam e- manshlp," telling how to ben t a superior opponent in a m atch ot any kind without cheating.

Page 11: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

( OCTOBER 9, I MO TIUES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE ELEVEN *

r 'F u b l l c Forum Amendments td Idaho Constitution ^emories

'San A ffre e s With Editorial on j '• • • • ■ V .I -i.i u'i II- n 'suvf cm

eliootiiia! of Driver in Nevada ! woiilil prriiill n'lrcnivli t31* p ((j, jhoottra Wfrr cnugtit by IkuhIM cicbl llniu b y i n u i r r , ': tii

To Be P resen t^ to Voters on Nov. 8r B*Tiar >4mAr>r. > .' ____ .v> i. i/. Iia rrnilo.l I... 1a»i .. 1 o >,... ...•

' TDlW^ rtor to Ujftt I WH5 0

» ‘‘w .l» n d kUied-ThK. Mr.- U I* inO», & « •“»« y®“

£d ii* ;^ tn fdltorlnl entitled, ^ ^ r V L o o a t" •horily Blwr

»M m u rd errt while■i S w S fh ls duty.A ,„i I «tsW Motor line-.

^ T n o i Pacific Interm oun- R ilph Voeburg. a

^Infd In a rep o r t tha t 1U« " " " »hot ou t

" “..'fM BMiSury Bride. V w - lh« lltew e number and

luv shootrra Wfrr cnugtitlute Deputy sherifi Henry O lv (liter murdered by Vtn VJacJo.

n iM f tecn-«tiei» of 103i w tn Jtmenced to 80 day* m Jail, iirntencea lo m oayi j '“ *- , .......... •' niui;i- ■»ouId'be'i!)inetliin|'«thttrViii.»“»--°-1*']'-'-'-'' ,w uniy.suncjor f ; m i.b c .iit i. wet# made available from c o u iu y ,.“ ;'^ V , ‘“' i ' "’-I Z S today. Sinte it is a / .u l , „ii,cc «u..lilic.u,.u:,

ilm cnl Is de.^loicd I , . . .of govmimpiit Uy ilm mcnsuri' li be mnliitnfdcd sttilc fur (iic irRl-rl.-ir

y r.uccr.'.'I'iii Vi f|ii:illlifnllni\» fnr ih ill>f)lntci-j i)t tlic li-Rls-: Till-iiUornry Kcni- illil till' TPKUlnr olficc lion fn,iif nttlcle lit biirvviulnljlc for curry-,"no oti\fr nmiilv

' i (Uilli'-'. It i»l50 would ihoT ftiuincratecU ................llnilopuim by the k->!l»-|tnbll'licU '; anti tlip lunendmcnt'

reiordj today. Sinceof public record—wno v.v.v|

.fi teen-ase ehootet* of tru ck ' algnal light* who were nrresti'il j.,,

nd aerved M daya In J8347 ]ip;Tt)s IroJitcal part U th:vl :>11 m.-:

truck driver* befriend person.^ o ir .ii tlie highway. The Joyful Mioolliiniih; of the truck driver in Nevada Is i>h; eqylvalent to shootlnn a St. B it - nard dog In SviltMrland.

BOD WINTEnffOLER (Qoodlngl

............................^ lUlKllt il .Mfi U) iii^uninln u June- ihl'

lit . '110:11 u ftn ese-----1. w iild cuiiform wlUi llic.mo ;l0i>.lc5:c;i;i)t wjicrc, Iji !»ic pr,-j if's ljuil«nirni, to do hu,Hi,' ' imkrnctli.ablo nnd ndmll,ihi'

nnicnil tlic y• ihi- II

IX)calMan Wonders if Demos Really Agree With Kennedy

___ u .a . - with til# boy wonder from Ma.vin-letter lo the

^ c! Oct. J makes one «otider

S S “ •«>, a tp m a w i « p “S. »rt» in »Wch they speak.^ C»«n*Bli Boea to g rw t ^ M t o W l e r to m B '" — *'»•

th! Dewocruts cire .... . t of carrj'lns the sword

” [,mnte«treme In condemn- [•.Tpruldfnt Eisenhower lo r his

“4rs!us«“« j7 n me nuclear battlefield,

-prtiidtnt El«nhowcr'a addreaa ■ 1, ih. U. N. genera: rusembly con-

.......—— *■•■' cotiflntd

Uo qiiiillllcd tlcclurs In II nf Mal,o7-

I' ftUiirncy Kciicr,il> lntcr|in

lh:it I

. or df|tR i'“ tl'>" Ri n cun.'U- il Dfllct. IriuiiiK the matter luv Mir-'cytir iiii.^peclflccl In r t l l u i ^ s a i n , . omc_e_c.>^W

Damage Noted

CORDIN, Kj-.,Today l.» a day of meiiinrSc.'' tor Robert A, Enrly. Jt'« hLi U U h birthday.

"I remember th« ttwile of good tobacco In a good corn­cob pipe, (he hin I Jin<l kpcp. Ing a diary, Ih? joy in w.orK- Init wllli ynur h»nd.<," he aald.

But «fie liM written the cntl to the day* nhen lie wiioked hu pipe 'up until fading eycslnlH haa nddcd the la.n.chapter'lo hu diary.

PTSA to MeetrlLEHl, Ocl. e -T he Jun lor-5f

or P-reA will meet a t 8 j. Thurrdny al the Junior hleli

1 Audllorlujii. round i

. . . A .

ALL N E W 1 9 6 1

liollce <•

; Nui'sJs Told to ! Be “Expert and

'I Understanding”with til# boy wonder from ctiuaetta. Almost nl,lfie «ftr Senator Kennedy ..wa.i d with Vlcc President Nixon meriw of lilJ prosmm to provide medical care for llie need ntcdy and la ilfCed thnt the DFmocrn:.^' Idea to f i n a n c e luch n, plan through the social secu_rlty p ro ­gram . ~

'l ouil assi':.M'a villiullcn fur I! - StiBl.0jG.3ui iiccurdliig to fii;u

■1 In tllcct ril l' IDAHO FAL,I<S, Oct. B l/T—’’nie.■Ill debl limiuiiim iiur:.i'.". ct today ar.d tomorrow nuiu II iloirw!. iu UiiiC ji- rxjior: (I'ciidlMnT n.i wril

...... ' •v;irm, iintliTsliindlnrT liuinan bc-uif.'.," ft spMker said lodny.

Ju lU C. Thomp-.mi, Wnihliik-- tnii, 1). C., repTC-^cntntlve of tlic

in. 1 uy uic A.«u(uiirti'MiuTlcan Niir.'.os n-i'r)cla'.loii, n(l- of Idiilio. Tlircf per <irr.v'cd a conventl'm session of

le sociui »ci.uriv> .......... - conio tu »20,450,R39. | Hic Idiilm SUident Nurscs-sound Mr Cavnnnshl n'l'fnilmuiil rcoiis, "Sh;ill| shL- said, "O n t of tlie rcsponsl-

•rltlnr the etact onno^Uc for iirllclc cinlit of llii: b llltlrs of a i)roft!i>liin U the con-IftVOclober Issue of (he m tlorrn l ''W radlns of Us menilHTs."

M r ‘c S g L ^ g T l 2 l J o f f i ''" 'I tn lj^non the crc.Mlon ol'imblic a^odlnK S HchooWor the Deaf

gTcat.lc^th to « p h ln lh a t ‘•he i„.r cent of the a-iwscd valuaiiun; oijj ot profeasloual nurslnK" and Mlf employed farmer and Uvcstock | godmother Is tlieoperator Is M » dlsadvwUgc lii n .„ccp t In case of. Ami-rican Nur.w* av.oclation "

inir to sell Jil4 raw producta lor u-,ir, to repel hii invasion, or sup- chnrlenc Petenon. Idnho Stale t ne can get. . iirt,-,* i\n iii.,iirrcctlon, unless thclcoUcRe, was cIccWd student, nurse

shall be alithorlied by mw (,( ycor and Bol.sc wRS chosen n!c Hicclllc object or work?-' , the &l(c for the lOCl gntli.'r- Hltcfncy Kcnernl's ejplnna- jn r The convention ended la^xy.

tlon of ihc amendment states ih n t '

lated Uiat Third alreet v.r'1 caused daiiiagM at

I0:;il am. SaUirilay.The ilrlMi.s W(•r IdrntHled ai

ItiiKli M. M.lntKa^K•r^, 30, route 3, Twill Falls ftiul K ciiiictli n . Nea-

.f im c ivr'l. Dnm- rr.v-s l?):,5 PontlaC

r-liiiiftlfit 1 19.iG lUiick. J200. No cltfitlon;

), )3J

READ TTWE9-NKW3 WANT

A ntique SHOW a n d SALE BOISE, IDAHO

Blh and Waihiniton Stre tU Ocl, 11, i:i—1 In n P .M O cl.ll-N oon lo 5 r .M

PERFORMANCE MADE IT FAMOUS!

QUALITY MAKES IT BEST!

lIFEy

,,,Ui la peace and dlsarm am ei... Mr Onniih notes In hl» le tter,He'tonllaou, "Atnny AmeHcnn.i

I J..J toptd lor an nnnouncement [jrthftts'Jmphon of nuclear tests trjt the rresldcnt suspended two Tc»n «o, not peace bu t a sword.’

PfAapj s«r b H’h .it Mr. Cjiv- .Mi'h dnlrn, but Uicre are muny

I e.uucDi of Americans who would 1 licuflisve peace, b u t pcaee with

itr r«T«nagh 's desire for

,'dinci conlraat With aenni Itiifflj'l ullerlngs of r e c c ; ,n(j »hcn he said he thouRht PitiUm Buenhower ahould c — ' «;« to Khrushchev for the jil»r,e Incident.

Bill Uiu U not the f ln t lime jilUitul DtmocraU have disagreed

X-Rays Urged b j Citiw Over 6BORLTT, Oct. 8 — PersonB

ji tn cl m iod older »re ur«ed IS tUI Ui> mobile X-ra7 unit vhlch till be Ln Burley from 6 lo I pin. Uonflay thrOuglv m d a y It Ui J. C- Penney stors corner, lUUt prtsldeat o f th# CaMla ecutST Tuberculosis Mwclatlon. Un. M. H. Manning.

ThU disease used to b» conald- fred one most common In young iduIU, but there has been & shllc in ifie lu t fe«r decades, F o r this

j reason older persona are especlaUy I ursed to take advantsge of thli

free itrylce as well a« those per- Mns «ho hsndle food*. Th«»e who

I need IrJBJpcriatlon a n u i e d Ic ' calle OIKhard 8-7438, Mrs. Man­

ning sistej.

what I ^ .He cooUnde*.‘The self employed f

farmer and livestock man m ust f absorb all overhead e ipense In what he gets for the products of t ■ ■ business » lth only a hops th a t J

it In recent years. For th is . It will work a liard.slilD on tho.ie the above categories if social

security Is uied as a mea&ura ' finance aid for the aced and th in need of medical care. We cannot carry an aildlllonal burden Jn taxes which only lowers the te tu r a ot gros.1 Income,"

have your cake nndiUiiLsJ}ecnJbtJl?£An_oLth?_Do?.''

apparent that even the loyal bon. of that party do not believe it, so why should Republicans Independents swallow the line? Republican victory in November Ls our only assurance of no t being hookcdl

a small buslnewmixn In thia community I feel my Ire .dom Is at stake, as Is every other American's, In the coming election. We have an opportunity to Insure our free­dom with our vole. Let's no t waste

'i.htyll not cre.ite any debt, debts, liiiijiliiy or liabilities sinirly

•,;.:ruKale cxclu.nve of >1) t dl the territory at the ailnils'.lon as e> slate, I'i) t.'s ur liabilities for com- llie . tnte capltul, and i3i

. . . . ,.-.s ur llabimiei liicurreil tiy^ thu cleviiilii so.iblon of tlie leglsla-' lure, wlildi ;,hall ilncly or In ftK- (rroifatc wci'cd 52,000,000 enpect In

.fla iinc jfcm ilzxeinn itithe con.stllutlon the es;clu- niiiiibfred above, these dcbt.i

.net obhn.-itlons havlnn already Btlorney general

Eiip-wnrka Start Rumors of Birth

TTHRAN, Iran, Oct. 8 i.fl - "Doomlni? KUns" reverbernllnt: over T ehran during the nleht touchcd off ma.' s telcphune calls ti> nuw.spaper offices today usklns

................ royal baby I- -A gin-

a 21-Run

It.

Two BurJey FFA Delegates NamedBiraixy, Oct, 8 —^Two Burley

huh ictiool members of the PPA, M«t ftiltr, son o f Mr, knd Mrs, Mulmb ro«let and Robert Man. r.irj, loa of Mrs. Keith Conner. «rt«lKled by Junior and senior m lumbers to represent the Smlrj tij jifr a t th s unnuaf n«- lionil eonvcntlon a t Eanso* Olty,

■pi* m ths win be among 100 df fjiiu ol the s ta te to attend lhU eTtnt.They wijj leave by train Sunilif snd will re tu rn on th o fol- lo»ini Bunday, su te » Charles

II tar

Ilruiock kid dairy dWuiow. _ cuu jiatfs, and have eoatrlbuted

‘ SiHl deal to th e local chi a ^ g the past fou r years. lu ..i-

U district treasurer and «S»Wer rte« pr««dcnt.

Fines Reported In Rupert Court

RUPERT, Oct. 8 - Appearing In Rupert police court Thursday before Judge George Redford were Susie Buck, Jlobart Buck, Jerry Shane, George P a u s t l n o , al' ArUona, all charged with publli Intoxication, They were each fined |2S plus coats.

Also appeirtnn oh thi. charge was Bemie WashlDSton, Rupert. lie also paid a fine o f I2i plus costs, n-ed D, McGee, Burley, forfeited a )3S bond on a slmlUarcharg tr----- ----------------------------

Noble Green. Jr. was fined on two separate charges of public in­toxication. The first fine w as tK and'coats, and In lieu of th e fine, Qreen la to serve five days in Jail. On the second chsrge, O rccn hm given 10 days In lieu of a fine of "SO plus costs.

Wllll# Taylor, transient, on pro­bation for s li months for a charge ol puiUe lntoxl«*!J<?n Jn Aujruit, K u picked up on a similar charge l u t week. He vt« fined gSO plus COM, and In lieu o( the' fine, Is (pending 10 days In Jail.

Hay BurnsBURLIY, Oct. »-Two tons ot hoppad hay outside the Union e « eom iahO Jinron-jreit-M alir

street were destroyed In a n early morning fire Saturday,

Company officials said they did -Ot know ttiB cause of the blaze,

Burley firs department answered .•|he_c.anAt I3 :« am. Saturday.

bt

The prf.cnt r.cctlon, he wriCc. cxccpt-1 from the Indebtcdncsii limitation debts or liabilities "nu- thorlred by law for some ElnRic object or work to be distinctly upecHltd Jn iurh which also Bhall provide ways and means for payment within 20 year* of the da te of contract."

S J R No. 6 also proposes three o th e r changes and additions ac­cording to tho attorney genersla interpretation.

A change in wording providing for excepted llablllilfs from "somB slnRle oWrct or work," to ••*ome specific oblect or »ofk"; remov»J o( the requirement that debts and liabilities enumerateil be discharg­ed within 20 years, and addition of

provision providing lor discharge t the accepted debts so authorlz- 1. by "pledging the general ue power of the state.'B JB No. i would Buthorli

legialature to take.acUoru t - even t of enemy attack or other' dlsM ters to conllnus jisWe fov- ernment.

Farah .Actually, th e noise was caused

_ / a firework.^ ril.splny a t. a O rrm an Industrial exlilbltlon.

Tlio qiiccii'5 baby Is due In about wo v,eek.s.

“Santa” InjuredCANNES. F rsncf. Ocl. a i.n —

Oftln niganelll. a » .ycar-o ld ap­prentice, fell Inside a chimney while worklns on the roof of building.

He dropped eight floors, usln^ elbows and knees to brake i;te speed of his descent, and emcrjed a t the Rrouncl floor with a brolicn

and bruises.

f r si r S DIfFERENTI

A mG /CAL

HAIRCOLORING

WITH- - - — H P .B L E A C W N _ q r~

N O D Y B lN O t

u r i COLORCKROME is a totally dilTerent Jcmi-iinn»psrenl ha ir

S a v e M o n o y o n P o w e r

S e r v i c e H o a d e c h e i l

B e c e u a e Z o n f th '*

T V C h a s s i s Is

H S 'n d c r a f to d I■1 enaiils consectlon It cirduiiy I'lirtd. htnd loldartd. Comportnti •' i»j;;r.-si5Bii;jsed m .......

nic yours aloncl Use COLORCKROME iller tsch ihampoo...your hair

i< always bc.-iulifiil! No week.s of mailing uhilc hair grows and tJyc fatlcJ. Change colon (n;riinf/; -w ilh no fidcout, n o ruhbing offl

foi.oRCHRo.MP ffcaii tnil itztnglhcni al! Jj.iiV—as il color?—bccause in base is famous iirn lo tion iim r iRHATMnNT. the rub-in, rinje-oui lotion that irca tj damaged hnir.

Nutri-Tonic’s enclusive coi.oapi.ATE process uses the sUiiic clectriciiy present in all hair. Each shaft of ha ir a d s as a magnet to alltacl Ihe coloring lo its surface. . . only th e L irii lo tidm IUIR TREATMrsr actually pent-- U o its 'th e hair. W ith each shampoo, c o lo k c h ro m s washes aw ay Initantly-bul ihe benefits of UFE LOTION lem ain t

r t tXCITIHt COLOKBl

• 2 Zenith Quality Speakers• 20,000 volts of p ic tu re power• Sunshint® P icture Tube lor brighter,

sharper picTurcs• Spoliiis Dial• CinclcnsJJ Picture Glass• Ou!f-f(|W Bonded Picluf$ Class

CL E A R A N C E

ZenithTELEVISION

On A ll 1960

T sita d -A p p r ev td G u o r o n U td .

BOTHStORES

^ F F —ALL USED

TV SETS

Page 12: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

TIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO S raO A Y . OCTOBER 9 ,

Shetland Mare Admired at Pony Sale Here Headquarters For GOP Unit Opened Here

Silver Mine May Be Opened South of Oakley hi Utah Area

surface and »» bellere will fvcn.ltiit fom intion. n , i , ^lUiVlly prove Ihe m»ln lode of the iho footwnll for «

Tht* tron l^dsp WLII Drob- ulll-r^ ____ __ . MKn' .

BURLEY. Ocl. »—The mother j Uiougli the mint Is In ilie Aih- lode of sllvfr for ttie old Vlponc'broo)c mining district or iiortli-| nnrt Bkoro mints about 33 milt* wc.stcm Utah, the only ncce.ss

^ , , MUth ot OJklry mny be found , road to It U Irom Oiklry vu the..............,» NUnn I j „ „c5,rdln(! CO Sam Biccli creek roail IhrouaU Afoii!-,

... .mliilnit jpfral

- new and b eau tifu l. . .

c VoluntD > In ^oulll^cntral*

I tlr'.t■open I Wallace t

IK Bdc . well

In t: ■ cnrly dnjs

.................. 0 ;Uleyviulhcrn Idiho, »:cordlnR to Carl

IiroiX'lllriK ItM'lf in to a ma.vs mnve- ciinkscalea, Burl.y, prrsldent of :iit The iitntlquartcrs has txcn u,r compan).■niiti'd wltli furnUtliiiiKs. , ,ns struck In theCoiitily cM.'ilrmcn nlrrudy named,••a" munfl oI thi Vlpont mine In

■ Kroiii* I'lclVi.le.Mf'' Vcronl-Ijjjg |,,n nie « s dLwovcreil •-I Barron, CmniuV'county.UR' Hacllcy, Bliiliic county; Guy iilis, Onodins county; William

Kmncr .'.ikl, "HlKl'i-r tnxe'.

.r ol the v.clf»re slati' donilnntc other )«iirs. W hen Iiliilin's nt-

•iiry Kcncrnl Frniilc.Ilcii.'J'n *iip; ru tlic K ennedy lUkel which vik:!!!"! n proijram that ' ’IH co't

niij)rnxlinalely 19 bllltnn dollar? s more to operate, nnd »tl* ICS ciitttiiK Income t^xc' In the clcctorale become'

till-' Is wortli

llllliril OUl. A ^In 189S MlUlon.s ol do]. m j 3« „plalii.i llie

. Rfolojy and .structure and fault-fi thi early day.i.

Arson Might Have Caused Fire in West

_jcept for

lien'.' s ticket.”

PORTLAND, - .............n- IhorltlM todaj Si>ld II appciircd of tli.Mian «rsoll^t toiichcd olt the

I fire tliAt klllal lU fc m ile— jand h youns -lomnn In a

' home yciicrdny. I,,, di.,irlctre depiftmenl InvwtlRalor [i,,, n„„

Olenn RIcfiiuiLs said there wn.-. duiriti little doubt ti l l the fire »as se t .i,u,ioi,

Oakley anil It 1 clalnicd 35 team* ftnrt wcgoii.? h.rulcd froni the mine to the rnilhe.n Oakley, he added.

Tlic mines clo^cd dou,n yi neo bccau'e of the price of and not becaa'? the arfii

icculCKlca

Rfolojyme <'hlch acrniml; stiver drpojlt-i. Indlv bodies h:\ve b-en kiioA ns rmicfi

per I

]; Inipwfd c

............. pre-Caiiil;other iimjor ;itri)Ctural

1 the dhtrlcl arc .'U

e ri’plncemcnts id have irrcKUl ir

ly dL ;n has been rcspon-

Thl;

St'arl Ltutr, U»ha Falls, right. *h»ir» hit d»B(tiler, lUrban, the r»fl»Ured BbclUnd dapple heV uiht jSrtni th . f ln t d .T of the l . l l poor »»l» at the I. G. The p^ny. -n:Sliftr M»ld;'wM m M hy C ly d e ........................

dellbtralHy. l.slble for the delayed.1 fftlily obvious, he snfd, of the dL'trlct. The ore bodies.ot

.......... fUmnable substnnce 'vo.i | vipont mine occur In the lime-iRnlted'ln IhMlvlnK’nw m of-the^srone brt«een-lh*-*h»1»-ftnd-Uic

In the fashionable L aurel--porphto’. "ccordlng to the gco- dl.ttvt on the city’* e a s t ' io(,icm feport.

Tiny flaku of sliver have been observed cllnglnR to ihe limestone hnniilnE wMIa o( the ore bodies or plastered In ot sulphide.The nallvB silver frequenUy re­places argcnite, the report stales.

Storo holdlnRs »re situated ..bout 1,000 feel south and east of Ah*— ’IptuiL Thft-SllOriL-tlllCPed.

re from ibe old dUcovcry tunnel

TRULY THE FINEST OH ANY BASIS-YET ACTUALLY COSTS YOU LESS THAN ORDINARY TVI No o ther TV loU,>, proaches the dependability, , , the sle.iOior, dc.-»ref piciuitj . . . the finer, more life lihe sound . . . the bcnutitul csbinotiy . . . or the gfcatcr. more lasting value ot « Magnavo,. (dcagoniil measure) expat'ded screen I picluro at Ihe corners. Optical filter provicand depth-true eye comfort. Option.-illy available with conve.nient wireless remote tuning. Several a A n n»tylca-aPd2Land.r.ubbed_^ii^es. In _ V * j y | D g i l mahogany.

RE 3-2233

L a. rcwcoit. TVIn Kitu. lISDi d*rpl< >UllW>n, C»rJ r««r»on. E.i»»n.. Or TOM Clllin. Sptlntf. ilO»: >nr><

••Mlkm, IVUtMi, Cllfl Ail>ni*. til

VtruH ConuKxk, t:i9: darnt*Oim. V*rMnt Comitxt . tiaO] bU Mr*. GrMiit. Ccnitock, Il'S .

Stick mart, Ore«o«. Klchatrd Un> |W. IliS; blKk mure. Qrecns. C. U

ii»d.1w tl«°' '.'^euriorren^^niiy.as.«

Prccisjon balance both f r o n t wheels and install a ll n e ce s­sary weights to smooth y o u r , ride and correct uneven t i r e ; wear.

P L A Y T E Xfashion-magic* bra

1 h® m okers of Playfox offcf this exciting '’get acq u a in ied " sole boc o u ta they 're sure ihot once you wear 0 Pioyiex Foshion-

M ogic Bfo you w ill alw ays w eor one. The exclusive u n c le ? c u ^ ponels o f softest co tton give you new comfort, losting sup p o rt

►her® y o u need it m ost. And this bro keeps iis sliope o n d yours mor>ih a f te r m o n th ...e v en offer 65 mochine v /o sh in g s ..

H urry in o n d take odvontoge of this special o ffer to d ay ,’ ' ' ^ - i h ‘ ................... • '

IDA7lu1)ErrilTHrN“ ST0BB OF TWIK rALli’

rOU^uve y n u f [Of U Imuted iflHfl oi^iy* W hite 32A to 40C. Reg. $2.50 eoch-now 2 fo r J3 .9 9 .'

"D " sires reg. $3.50 eoch-now 2 fo r $5.99,1

THE 7^,1T W I N F A L L S

A H O D E P A R T M E N T S T O R E

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f - O C r O B E R 9 , 1 S 6 0

1 ° a n d a e n e P « c H -

e. LUlheran church

Bround

f * l « a c r e m s r k e d w l i t i accented wllh f r« n

l ' ^ . « n W o » e “ "B ••WeddlnR k “^ ‘ d - n i e Lord'* Pray-

^ ‘^ e b r l d e _ s ' ‘ »’ 8 " T f '

°lU^, «ore « floor ‘“ ’R**’ f ° " " ;'“ ?i‘,. irc->ind n c lovcr t:.J cla.: * {enlurcd n hlalil

" liih Ince Instl.'! nnil Uly- ? T ^e I'ouffnnt Rklrt,

Ur-f A band or oranije =*“ ® -jwjiJ Jjei- JJngcrtlp veil)

Mt. s n f wore a th

TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHOr i r » j ‘

PACE THIRTEEN

e bride.

girt of

» « “ “ ™ . n ,„ » n, nuB « l, - u matron ofBtrcet-lcnutli

Kcasf. erystttlllnc dt^lftncd‘S ’. S n ' ^ k l r t o»d carried t ^ w d » h iie

Dickson. T»1n F rIL', and

S s s « s r i " x s s .-—.•iiiji. ilreues wicn iwuiim** S u ? U fy CMried b^ q u ela Jden- ! S i^ ihe mutron of honor*. AU .Oh»“ tWDd*ntj wore while b1ov« ‘.ifmtlchlnft h e o d u n ^ desljncd ud Bide by M "- Buhr.- “^I-BTT3»nrn»«>»- o;- the -bride. J r S L w ^ l . S h e wore » yellow

drtM fashioned wltli n u«rM ll«r sn d ' <ull eklrt. She

o« petAU In a cr>-»U>l ^ * h l c h Ihe brlde-8 mother ^ i t td M » wedding gift 40 years u i toe al*® »<” ■* While gloves uid 1 BilclilnB headband.

Etirn Brown, niece of the bride, LTU lh» rlngbeorer. She wore n ' dtta Idenlleil to the XIower girls -lodanltd-UiB-Tlnss on a white

‘ M jb -ce piiiaw"

tello, brolhtr of the bridegroom, kmnioyfcl by the MounlMn Slntf,'MndlellgliterB. ' TiOcpliniip snd Teleerapli ...... , , ................... -

...c bride's motlier chose a green pruiy, Twin f .iIIj . Ttic bridcKrocim (.hiirch Mli.'lon ;.oc1p',vand UlncW figured jersey ivflernoor w.m xr:id\inttd from pocolello Ill'll! j _ Thiir:ilny n't

Mltli white Bnd blftcK accc.s- .'civji.l nnil H employed by the q r wbcmftn,T)ie moDjfJ" of Ihe brldu- unlnii Pnclllc rallroid '•• ~

groom wore a brown ault dress w llh , I'l'lh. Ilioy will make Iheir liomidark broan and white occessorlcs.jM the Blue Ukea boulevard trall-j JiAOEIl.MAN-Ooldcn Age clubi 33olh wore while orchid cor«nKes-| cr pnrk, ;„ .i, • ■

The reception, aflcr Oie c rrc-i Mrv Albert Llermin und M rs.loranK e hnll mony t.ts held Jn the American C.ir) l.lprm.ii), nunU of the brliliM uLegion hall. Mrs. R -H ariw lg . Mr.i.:>u',r IioMcshs lo « pre-nup;iall j j . n p „ , , . v , _ n . , , . .ArL,§,uhr^Mrs^Armln Mrs. Ed Pcltlt ai'dl

ana-(f:nnn'&®nn(ne-»*^-35 sins'. Tuesday at,Ihe LD3 church.

lilta. */vi. ttfimi ••• —- - —kitchen, Mrs. Harry C hapin regls- Uncous shower, tcred the RuesLi. Mrs, Jam es Paclt- cr. sWir-ln-Uw of the bridegroom ;Mrs. Charles Turner, alaier of the .................. Askew,

UW Packer. Boise, brother of a t trldegroom. waa best man. Ttercn Brom. Rupert, broiher-ln- hw el Ihe btlde, and Jack Packer, brolhtr of the brldCKroom, were flitrJ. Wllium Pucker, S o d a Sprinji, »nd James Pnckcr. Poca-

....... ................... - Vyrlcousin of Ihe bride, and U llle Lou C3arrl$on arranged the g lftj.

Tfie brMc'i (able b 'q j covereiS with a Ucc cloth flounced white nylon. Tlie Ihrec-llered 31n« cal6 w u dc:om tcd-w lth'7 e l- low rosebuds and tllvcr accent and lopped with a mlnlftiure brldn) pair, Mrs. William D loct mado nnd decorated Ihe cake,

Mrs. Htiiry 0 . Shultz, aun t of the bride, Mrs, Clifford L*we, and Mrs. Albert Jagel-i. Buhl, cut and served Uic bride's and bridegroom'fl cnke. Mrs. Jack Packer and Mrs, William Packer, alslcrs-ln-law of thB bridegroom, poured.~ Tliu bride cliose-a- drtjs ot birkstloth. m ade by h e r mother, for a brief tr ip to N orth­ern Idaho. 6hc wore d a rk brown accessories end the orchid from her bridal bouQUct.

Tlic bride was graduated <rom Jerome hish school In 1956 and Is

Care of Your ChildrenBy ANGELO PATRI

Somehow, It has happened that w jcbccl £jjj;drtn, even »«ne of tfis high school graduates, have nst se^ulred good command of the EmM language. Too often their tpolen langu&ee >® »loppy. syllable i)'jnt!l. pronunciation only sp- jxoUatlcd. slang phrases used In- wid of clearly expreaicd Ideas In wilenees.

I U11 iiQl MklnR for the use of clisslcal English In ordlnarj- con-

.rtrution. We a ll accept Inlormal " between ourselve.'s, but that

not meari improper usase ct words, 'You know what I mean, ‘uid all llkB th a t', and 'on atsd

Ion,’ phrases used to »ave the effort of chosen words In proper se- fluencB to eipreas what the speak-

man’s, Robert Frost's? o r th a t of a cigarette company using an In- corrcct gramatica! fo rm for tA - vertlslng purposes? O r a comedi­an's unlettered speech lor en ter­tainment purposes?

Children lenrn, and thLi includes the youlh who are beyond chlldlah things, by Imlt.itlon, T hey Im i­tate wjial tJiry « e ftiid hear, dally; they imlt.ite (»cilon.s a n d

>*cch that bring applaiwo ley learn by practice.Parents linve a larce share of

responsibility in thU learning and prMtlce of QiRllsh a^a^e In specch and writing. !f they to ie the trou- ble tc use good EnsIUJi. lo uphojd It m their talk and In th e ir choice of reading muterlal. th ey can

What we teachers want b ttfort on the pupils’ pa rt lo speak tlfirly to say what they mean. Ortr and orer, teachers have to — -TeU Us th a t in a aentence."

ithow thU Inatructloa does not 7 over. ParenLs do not .

,_l(Uiiidtrst*nd..the value of w .- ttcl. titir, speech and unleis Ihey « , the younter genertUon will not Itsw It.

Tier* ari aoms authorities v.. IWJ juWks w ho m«JnU)n that Usage, lodiy's uaage. u a standard for English speech. Maybe. I'd like to kno» M would Mortimer Smith, »riilnj in the Education Digest, jncee uisgB la our aiandard?

Churchill'*, W aller Upp-

guajB u.«ige In ihe children, n e ad - ■iK good lllerature U on« very ood way lo do this.Teaching English gramm ar

le younger children acKsa not help lueh. That should, in my opin­

ion, be held over for ih e advanced oUMas .ln ih ' ' ' dally practice reading are helpful.

"By their speech ahall you know them." Remember?

V/«. J0«. "Yc 10 ct

Woman Receives Rebekah Pin a t Je rom e ' M eeting,JKROME, Oct. B — Mrs. Hatry home <

n u s s — Women's FelIo»T.lilp will hold a no - ho-itess polluck luncheon a t 1 pjn, Wednesday th e church.

¥ ¥ ¥■lUnnony chib nJI! nji pjn . Wcdneiday at t " r s . nus.wll Dodciiham-

Lcna-Martens-«lll-bfrfi Members.are reminded

FILER — Clever Clovcrlirs will meet Tursday rvpnlng at the hmne Of Mr."i. Curl lA '^cr.

rl pin a t tl\s meeting of SyniiK.-i Hebrkah lodge lost wcck.U hnt roll call will be nn.?weicd by

Tlir pm 1M15 presented by flV e'"\vhv I vote," nnd to bring Irull RUp.'U from the Fairfield O cct-lfor the children'.-! homs at Boise. tJciil llrbfkuli lodst, Mri. Z.mc,mrrl.'oii, Mrs. Boyd jiarrlson. Mr.i.| H A NSEN-»-=^oyal NcIbUjotr Clyde Lee. .Mrs. Herb Oorm lcy. jqj.„ „..,i at 8 c m Tuesday and Mrs. Edna Peck Mrs, O'Con- tl'e I'XiRs hall. Mrs, w! H. nor. ttho lives m Jerome. Is a R nm bo and Mrs. Bryan Harris member of the Occident lodge. '

The charter was draped for Mr*. e hostesses,

prMidfnj 0/ the Dfbjkah sembly, by Mrs. Hairy Walter*. Mm. Oeorge Easton, Mr*. Leroy Benulnger, Mrs. Nat Bpofford and Mr.<, Fred Clubb. under the direc­tion of Mrs. Max Suiter.

Tttjn Palls, realjn5d, and Mr*.

Women's Christian Temperance ■Dnlon will be held at 10 ajn. Tuc!- day a t the Plrsl Bouthern Baptist church, Washington street i r i lc r avenue. Thms attending n.-Oted to brine table servicc for

WUlarl Shopshlre was elected to repUee her.

The program wm presented by Henry Claar and W, B. Bummer*. Cla.ir related the history of Thom- t i Wlldey, founder oj Odd Fel­low, Summers read a memorial

eulogy that was w rlttea to Mr. Wlldey,

Sefrc-ihment.? were served by Mrs. Loren Civnada. Mrs, Norman HlnUe, Mrs. Ralph Reason and Mrs. Lloyd Overraui, Girls' sta to scrapbooks were displayed during the refreshment hour.

ThB next meeting will . nlglit” and all members arc aiked ■ dress accordinRly,

B azaar Articles A re Distributed

RICHFIELD, Oct. 5-Artlclea to bo made for the Nov. 29 bazaar

...................RichfieldWoman's Society of Christian tserv- le« meeting last week a t the home ot Mr*, Dorothy Reynolds, Mrs. WlUlam Rider w u hostess,

A social meeting wu held with Anna Crane. Portland, a form er resident, as a guest, Mrs. W alter Stubbs will be hosteu at the Tues- ■aky m'rttlhg wlCh heh daughter. Mrs, E. L. filrlegel, assliUng.

furnt'hed. Transportation m ay be obtained by phoning REd- wood 3-3398 or REdwood 3-3BJ7.

* * * 1UOER.MAN — American Le- Ion auxiliary will meet for a pol-

. ick dinner Friday. Olrl’s st ‘ delegatus will give their reports,

* * * Hobbycrafter* club will meet

1:30 p.m. Wednesday a t the Harry B arry park recreation building, ThCBC attending ore asked lo bring

cup and three sites of plates lor rtlllnn. Mo.«lcs will be started

new projcct. All members t urged to attend as officers Mil be elected.

¥ *SHOSHONE -

lodge will meet at a t the lOOF hall.

____ JIONE - An all-day workm eeting will bo held at the LDS c hurch Tuesday by the Relief so­c iety. Luncheon will be served at noon and during the afternoon the Tcajon on nursing'will bi JirtWftlW by Mrs, Haiel Perron, Instructor.

itHL COALTop Quoilty AWayi— at

WARBERG'SRE 3-7371

RICHFIELD. Oct. 8 — First fall meeting of the Richfield Amerl. can LcEjlon auxiliary was marker! by the annual nppolnlmcnts by the auxiliary president. Mrs, Hays Vadcn.

Mrs. J . S. McInCasli was named chairm an o t th e welfare arid com­munity service department; Mri. Lyle p ipe r, bylaws and member. Rhlp: M rs. Je rry Johnston, Junior activities; Mr.s, Odell Chatlleld Olrls' S ta te ; M rs. Clifford Conner, music a n d poppy salesr Mra, Les- te r JaH anjeo..P aii Aiaeriea, and Mrs. R ay Appell, rlluol.

Mrs. Appell reported a profit of W from the recen t food sales at the C onner ranch . Mrs. Vadcn. Mr*. Je rry Davis. Mrs. Lyle Piper, Mrs, Appell and Mrs. McIntosh were oftlccr* serving on the host-Si committee.Mrs. M ary McMonlgal, Gannett,

fourth d istric t president, will make her official v is it to the auxiliary a t the O ct. 31 meeting.

SPECkAI.For This W eek

Full feihionec}— F orm erly 2 .98 To eloio o u t .......................................LEOTARDS

GJLEAD SLIPS'. S ’BLOUSES A nd othar o i ld t a n d a n d i .

pair

To <loM out at

J S O

J S O

1®*

GLOVES t 50'

S U IT S and COATS AT GRKATLY PEDUCBD PRICES To

SJake Room /or'H oliday Merchandise

B E R T H A C A M P B i L l ' & s T o . E

'H o w I learn ed 1 1

Free Book... TellsAII... 1 ^ ' Sells m rn s ’i'

•“ I w as Birald I iiecdcd a h e a r in g aid.Butthankgood- neas I sen t for th a t booklet. N ow I know I don 't need ono a f t e r all. Maybo i t >vill help

“ ’ ■ y o u w i t h e J p e d - n i o - - - - - - - - - -I f you hear,bu t don 't under­s t a n d , pe rhaps you don’t ne ed a hearing ald-oa you'll le a rn from this revealing 43- p a g e booklet,•'YourHe»rinff a n d Y our Health.”I t doesn’t bcU a thing, not even a ainglo word about S onotonc's new all-transis- t o r hearing aid. CooUlns lo c ta about cere of the eara; e f f e c t s o f v ita m in s and d ru g s on hearing; whether d e a fn ess is inherited; and m a n y o the r revealing facts. A n d th is booklet I i FREE. P K E E o f charge and FREE

.o f aalesmaiuhip.S end f o r your c o p f iS a iy r

SONOTONE O F TW IN FALLS

, ^ 1 3 -9030

A f t 2 1 1 , 8 3 3 Sho ikon t N .

FILER — Town and Country cjub 'vill m eet Tue.^dny evenln? at the liomn of Mrs. Krc<l Gnrdner. Kith M r;. Willlnni Dunce, Jr.,

Prcsbytcruiii Couples ^lub will meet a t ^ pm , Wednesday at the Prc.'^bytcrlnii church. R.;scrvatloa^ jr e to be made by 0 p.m. Monday wllh Mrs. D, H. Kenwlck, REdwood a.37C(i, or Mr.';, Ivnn Sklnnrr, REd. wood 3-5071.

¥ ¥ *

R ich fie ld Worrien

president.The Kroup will dponsor a chill

supper .wme tim e soon wllh pro. eeeds lo be se n t to the Idaho Ranch for Y outh, the atnle project for the orRiknltatlon this year. Anyone w ith donstloa^ of any kind lo be sen t to the youth rittich

asked lo contact the Jay-C* Ettt.?, Mrs. Normnn Jones TOlTgrglfSTynifl'rt- gr iUT.'mflHi for the chill supper.

A gift v,ill be Kent to Marjory Ander.wn. a pa tien t In a Callfor-

la hospltnl-Durini? the recreation hour con­

ducted by Mrs. McKargue, games played w ith prlzM awarded ■3. CralfT, Mrs, Hamilton. Mri.

Glenn Lemon.i and Mrs. Castle. Hefreshment.s were served by Mrs, Wayns E trlckling and .Mrs, Me-

One of th e food specialties of Belgium Li "tr ltu res d'onKUllles anttullles au v e rt”—fried eels, a cels with iliredded herbs, oil a vinegar.

S o c ia lly Correct T H E R M O G R A V E D or P H O T O -E N G R A V E D

W E D D I N G I n v i t a t i o n s a n d

A n n o u n c e m e n ts , th e m o st beautUul selection

In t h e N o r th w e s t , P erso tla lized

R e c e p tio n nccesaorlea, B r id a l B o o k s , B ib les. Ties Sam ples on request

T/ie H illa o f IdahoBank & T n u t BIdr.

Fbone BE

c a s e h is to r y o f a b eau tyAt Charles o f t h e R itz , your m ade-to-order faco p o w d e r ifofm ula^op-: n n f ilf t, . . a ln Dfl-with.afull record of v o u r c o m - 'picte beau ty c a r e . E a c h timo you com e in,call o r w rite .^ our trained c o n s u lta n t refers to your case history fo r e a s y shopping and p ro fe s s io n a l guidance. Why not lei u s ta k e your case h is to ry o f b e a u ty by having yourvery own s h a d e of face p o w d er h a n d -b le n d e d to your perianal ta s te a n d nccds-L oose.pow der; $ 2 .0 0 ,$ 3 .0 0 ,$5 .00.Pressed P o w d e r Compact, $ 2 .0 0 . All p lu s tax.

QlHrlevo f l e e t s

{ ^ U j j o f TW/N FALLS.

WALKAWAY: • Smooth b la c k co if, beoutifully trim m ed in browhi A lso bloclt and g o ld .

T rim your imoga to th e s lim tines p f fashion . . . show

you a re aware of th « fine points o f style . . . weave a golden thread

' o f glom our into your w ordrob* w ith fash ion foohvear f ro m

H udson 's huge collection.

Bmd HMTtx A Tmt HMhV.

B lo c k m o t c a lf , sm ooth leother t r im .

Page 14: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

PAGE rO U B T E E NT fM E S -N E w s ; TWIN M tL S r IDAHO--------------- S IW D A Y , OCTOBER ,,

Paige H em m in g , Larry W ebb W ed

InT em ple R itesPOCATELLO. O ct. 8 — At home

hfrc snrt MlPiidltijt Idnho Slate cnlleje tire Mr. and Mrs. Lnrr>' Wfbli »ho were mnrrlctl In rf- cfni tltei »t ihe Idnho >>115 LDS Umplt.

llrirTS'eblj U ttie form rr PnlKP Hemmlnir, dauElitfr of Mr niid Mrj,'arnvpr llqmmlnK,, llPxlJiirB. Rnd Ihf lirlclPv'rooin's i);irciiLi nn Mf. ina Mr.?. I .cn o r W rbt. T*1I .Knlls. .

Th« couple wns iiinrrlrd In t (Inublt H/13 crrrriioiiy AniT. 12 per- faniircl 1j> Ti'niplf I’rr.'.idrnt J-'r;in- cw Dills nnil lioiiorril aL a re- ffptloii at llie llcxtJiirtt I.D.H nilli Murrt th.ippl.

Marry in LDS Ceremony

I ullltr

tlirw. IlrldMmnlil.Hliir bflcp [.■'ttPla It nnil iiMilc by Die. ir.nir.rr,

n.ilj* MiinrcT.i-r the irtri:ru<im. m' ' v

Hfcimime Mid Val Jlcmmlnf;, lir liicrj o[ !lio Uridi', AliotlKT st't rf t!ip brklf, Jcnn lleiiiiiiliifr, (Inner Ctrl.

For her (lniii:liter’.'< v.-cddli»: M ][pii;iiilti){ ttorc a bflKe drr;-s ul utillp ncccivjrlea nnd n.carsn o[ white Tlbrlilisroomj motlicT won- r In OUT bliic ilrerj w ith while ncor iDfifs nnil n cor.vice o f «hl cJiryMnlhcimijii.'. . .'

____CtnurliiK-Uio ttl tlte iace covcred— moit « ilir i-P-t1t'iL-a a cflatnit

cnke cut by the brJde <md Ijrldc- Rrcarn ilDi AunLs of the bride

• spr>'lii(.’Hie chApcl wn» drcomted mth liukcu o> Blatll''ll.

Oiil-of- town KUcsls lnclud(^I l.yiiii Muiiger and Mrs. E. L. Mun- Kfr, bolh Idaho R illa; Mr. and Mrs. Dclbtrt HollnRcr, Mr.v Z. Wfbb, Sianley W ebb «nd Veni \V^b, itll Salt I-n te CUy: Evnti llro'.viiInK, Hrynnl rSH eh. ‘R ej Wfbb, (ill Twin Fnll-i, »n'd Clierj'l Mnrticn, lioustnii, T rx .

For 1 trip 10 S u it Lake City, Yellositono iiatlonnl park aiicl JAcfcion, W)'o., the new Mr.i. Webb chtJ- e » blacic stlpath dre.w with bUck «ccf.«orles a n d R while cnrusf. Thfy are n t home «(&oulh third (treet.

The bride was sradua lM from nexbiirs high school nnd ntt«nded nicka collCKe. R exburi. for

.-yrar..Tlif hrlrtegr.fwm, n 1PS7.

M iss Z ollenger C la im ed a s Wife

ByC inristensen. BriUNODALE, Oct. &—Kathnn

Zullcnucr. dauslittr of Mr. iriul Mfi. Ray ZnlleiiRcr. bfcaiiif tlic bride Sept. 15 ol Earl Jay CJirn-

Chrl.^lcn-stn. The double rliiR niM. ucrc ROlemrUi'd In llie Lonaii LDSI tf^nple try Pm irtrnt Nolene OI*<«iii

A KCiIdliii; fcrrptloii and dnr.rr' V..TI- held llir Iirxl cvcnlnc In lli'-: LD3 recrcallwi hall here. • i

Accnmpniiyir;; the couple to ili"! trniple m a-JcJu;on to ihcir p.ir-j enl.1 were Mr. and Mrs, n.jr..l, Clirwtcn^cn. Mr. and Mr.v !!o».ud] CiirWcn.stn, Nod Dowcul, Mr. ;iiid! MrJ. Dean Maiiiiinc, llobcrt CIiil'.- | t'li.H'n. Mr. and Mrs. Olen Lon.-, l.iiid, lr„ Mr. aJid Mrs. Fred Jr.bii-, s'lii. all Burli

I Falla high xchool, niwnart nicka collcse for two years. He »** employed by Reed Conslnicllon company. Twin Falla.

View G a rd e n snLEH, Oct, $-PouH ««n meffi

bers ot tha garden departm ent ot the Woinun’* elub a n d one guest, Mri. Pele SlatUr. drove to HaK«r- m n Tuuda; afternoon to view the h<rb garden (ind ehryaanthe< mumi o( Mrs, B m ca t Roberson, whotpccltlltes In th e early varletT

The troup aUo waa ahown the eoll«Uon of p lan ts and flowers

' (rrown In larse bottles which Mra. Roberion h u In h e r home.

Annual Festival Dgte Kloted „fQr_

^W SC STO erom eJEROME, Oct. B-T he nnnual

fall ffillval of the Jerome Mclhnd- lal fjiiircli hoj 1 :en net for NoV, 10. nnnminccd Mrs. Ore! Adams at Ihe Thursday'meclliiK of the Womnn'a Society of Clirbttan Service.

She stated that lliere will be nn a^innnmit-ot.timcv a orlt iDClud^ Ing plllowca.'e.v nijron.? nnd pot hnlflm. Tlipre also will be nut brcailJi, caiiily and a food table. Cnlfce nnd dnuRhnula will be Rrrv- cd In the jvcnitig. Mrs, C arter Li banquet chdlrnian.

Mr«, Loul.i Nelson led tlic wor­ship ncrvlce, Tlie program, under tlie direction ot Mr.n. Guy Ken­nedy, was on Iho theme of the 20th blrlhtiay aniilvcr.iary of the W8CS. She *tnted tha t tlio WSCS

Tie into being In IMO when the dlc.i Aid and Homo and Foreign

MtMloiis gruillis Wn Flttfcn charter members of the

Jerome WSCS and alx charicr members of other WSCS group.n now belonmng la the Jerom e group attended. Nine pa.it presidents of

Jerome WSCS were prc.ient . . two former president* o t other WSCS groups now members of the Jerome unit,

A complete collection of pro- Itritm books dKtlnn from . 1010 be­longing to Mr«. Dan 8i*wcll wa-i

'W ;.. Wade Kanfly was plnnl.'it. mvltollon from the Buslncs-s

and I’roresilonal Women's club the group. T he Invi­

tation was to t tea to be held Monday a t the Methodist church In honor of Mra. Charlotte Ilobcr

who has been chosen by ihe

Rites So lem nized in Idaho F a lls

and Mrs.

Jpromo club n.i Woman Yrar. Onll WltitPr.i, Ctiodlii'’. inl:,.slonary from the CoiiKo, will I irup:.t spciikir.

•Thunrfnr,~Oct~~ 3f;

WSC3 In observance........- .......o t prayer nnd self-denlcil, Oct. 2S-31, Each circle Is t^kcd to tnko part.

Tlic problem of nurses care dur­ing church services was dtscu*-*.! Anyone Interc.ucd In helplni; willi 'h is project I.' asked to cont.ict vfrs. Ralph Fplhcrglll, Mrs. Irn Fo'itcr,or Mrs. Harold nannlnu.

Ri'opeliliiK lUiTTIirift' lu l n.1 <ll.'cu^\cd. It will bp di'cldcJ ; the np.tl general niecilnK.Mr.s. Jiihn McConnPlI, Sacra-

mcnto. Ciillf.. wai a ciiesc.The Ucv. Ralph I'othcrRill an­

nounced that llie I^oifstanl Ml^- slon coavocHtlon will bo iicld here

Interdcnointn tional meettni:. The p trpuse of

convocation Is to awaken " inunlty to the uiidrrKtamll

purpose and conlrltiMt^to^n^f tChristian Ml. .sloni.

c of icvolutlun."OIca Brunir, Denver, C

i»j_wiii be the main tpenker. p ^ ru n e r Is n MethodUt ml.iilonary

In Jnpan. He 1' a foreign rervL-c officer, n member of the UnUt.-d Church of Christ, Jajian and vtcc pre.sldent ot Intcriiatlonnl Chris- tlim imlver.Mly, Tokyo, Japan. Dr, Bruner will bo In Jeroino from Nov, 10 to U.

CIrclcs of the WSCS meeting a t 2 p.m. Oct. 20 are, circle one. In tho church parlor; clrclo two nt the church; circle three n t the home of Mrs. A. F. He.vilcr. nnd

four a t tho home of Mrs.

Jluciic. a ll I'.irls; Mr. and .Mr; Fr.mlt JIirLilu, Montpelier: .Mr.' IVrn Zohnpr, Paul; Mr.s. Bl.iiich Martion nnd .\lr. nnd Mrs, Hpiiry /.ollonRcr, all Providence, Ul.ili, m il Mr. and Mrs. I.ymiin Ziilltiicir,

Aldrne Thoiiipwii and Jon •Itncnp.'.cii. all •ITcmonlun. A »cd-

dinner n.i.'s .served at tlic Z.iii.ivijo lodnf in LoKan c:iii)3n.

Fur the rrccptlna the brUle Murr .1 i:oivn of Ch:intllly Incc iic:rnlfd

ith tequlns and pearls. A j ;II: or- ruffle mnrked the Itwr-

liii'!th J.klrt. Scallops ouUliicd the ttadlllonal lotid sleeves nnd r.tcit- liiiu. All au ro ri cr ’slAl cro*ri held livr shouldpr-lenKth veil. She car­ried (I -w hite orchid ccnterfU In Talisman ro.sps.

Her Ulster. Dorothy Zollensir, at- icntled n.' nialcl of honor. She \koi

:lvetecn. theatli dre.'s /ej

Uuucjuct pompons.

Her cousins. Carol Zolleniicr and M argaret Budge, were brldesmald.s. Junior brldcxmaldA were her >lster,

M arie Zollenger. nnd the bridegroom's sister. Sue Ann Chris­tensen. T hey also were frockcd In Rolil velveteen and-carrled slnillar bouqucu,

— Tlie.flow«r-glrU-Bi'«r*Juc-iUt££x. Ellr.abcth and Barbara Zollenger. n ie y ctirrled autumn flowm Ir white baskcu and wore gold vel­veteen frocks. .

Robert ChrUteaien nllendfd his brother na best man. Allen Zollen- ser, brother of the bride, k .v usher.

'Hio bride's mother cho'e i bronn lace dres.s w ith a corsase uf white roses. The brlrieBroom's mother wn.s nlllred In grav Incc dress with n corsace ol -—

Ccntcrlnc tlie brldc'.n Ince-co ered table was a four-tlercd ca with three henrt-.ihaped eak forming the first layer. I t was dc orated w ith yellow roses nnd to pe<l with a inlnlaturo bridal pa

The cako was served by M Dean Manning. It was made by t: brides mother ond decorated by the bridegroom's sisters. Carol Manning nnd Ruth Chrlsten,wn.

Tlie luill featured autumn colors

, bouqucU of larite and pompon oiiK- chrys-intheiauais In ftuiit ■ nu arch, o:i the staKC an ' '- !c loycr. The « lft tnbk was red with a horii-of-plcnty draped

tabUs centered with small ■f-plniiy nnd Iv,

iirranged by KarenA iU ic r^ h ~ r .cy ;'' ncflrgia--Brar> excO ’m.Burley, and M arsha Loveland. Car. rj'lng gifts were Paul Zollenger, Jacob Zollenzer, Karen Manning, Kathy ChrW cn:^n, Ronald ChrL'.- leiucn nnd Leon Christensen. Outsis were registered by Susan Bowtn. «■

Carolyn Dowen, Sue Han-ien, Betty Broadhcad. Na-

Crnythorn nnd Carolyn Han- StnrSupmt'TlnfT-the-kttehen-wen

■ ,-ebnd ond Hanec Chris- tea.scn.

ZulIcnRcr, Robcrt-i. uncle irldc, w as ma.Mcr of

monk-3 for IhL- program. Songs mixed chorus, Nel­

lie Christensen, Lenna Fillmore. Elma Boftcn. Meniiv Marchant, Gerald M archant, George Johnson. Raymond Johnson nnd Steve El. Us; Anna M arie Zollenger nnd Etlabcth ZollcnRcr tap danced;

acconipanled by Mrs. Oary Mnstoner, nnd Honda Holm sans

:"Because;'' W ayne Woodfand pre­sented ft readlnB. nnd Fern Zohncr and Blanche Mndson. bride, played "Always" on the flute nnd mouth organ. .

Among the 300 attending were guests from Paris. Kobcrts, Paul, Itupert, Twin Falls, Oakley, Malta, I’rovldence and Tremonton. Utah.

Tliey are n t homepxpect.i to-leave

service In ihe

Springdale H as Welcome P a r ty

SPlllNODALE. Oct. 0 — The Bhizcr rxlmary ela.'j held n w el­coming F-'r!>' youns- cr bnj. promoted Into the clavi. .Str.s. Wlllsrd Bowen conducted the

Flag ctremonles were coiiduct- cd by Ihc cla.« nnd lap bonrd.? were prpjcntcd to new members. Special giKfts were Fred John.son, a meml»cr of the bishopric nnd In chnrge ol the Prininry organiza­tion, .Mrs. Gerald H urst and Mra. FVcd Johnson, both teachers nnd parenu._________* * __ *_________

Review G iven a t Heyburn P a r le y

HEYBUHN, Oct. 8 — Mrs, Jej llym.u, president of the Llt/.o

'club, rcvltxed James S . Drown'- book, 'The Giant of the Lord,

group a t a luncheon Im

G. F. Reception Fetes Pair Wed

In Church R iteOLKNNS FERHY, O.-t. 8 — A

wedding reception «as held Sepl the Momc hall for 100

Clark. Tlic couple was mnrrkd- Aug. 24 nt the Hr.^cc Luthenin church In rocatcllo with

' Schalcger pcrfonnlni;The tlTtmonT.- ......... — »•

me new .Mrs. Cl.uk Is the fflr- „,or Brlgctta Erlckvon. Stock- hfllni. Sweden, d.iuflUcr of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ivan-Ertck.von.' Stnctc-

ni The brldcgronm L< the son . . Mr. and Mrs. I.<»l4 W. Clark. Gll■nll. f'lrry.

•ic reception Mrs. Patrick........... a and Mrs, nomilc Dodirc.both .Mountain Iloiiie and cou.slii.-, of the brldi'groom, nrransed the

Mr.s. BUI Wlcll. Glcniw I-'. r- ry aunt ot the bridegroom, .' Pivt’d I.*!? cndcp. with .Mr.v Homer Claii; fourinc p^nch and Mrs. Ralph iTl.irk, aunl o( the bildci:room, nitims and fpnlng the cake. Mrs. M:ix Clark, Kun.i, rcjlstprcd the

Cu; - of - tn,vn cuf.'ls Included M i^ ^T tle B.irtctt, Mr, and .Mrs Ch.irlr?\Silllm.iri. .Mr. and .Mr;;. Hcbrri (J.ibornc and -Mr. and Mi:. Mt.'iilv .Sllllman. all BoLsc; Crtl::h- tnn .Sllllman, L<j-Aman; Mr. iiiid Mr- Jim Jnnes and Mrs. W. R. Joiic.', nil i’oc.vti-Uo; .Mrs. Kl.sle Cbrt, Syraciuc, Nebr.; Mr, nnil Mrs P,itrlck Bontmin, and M and Mrs Ronnie DodRC, Mountain Home, and Mr. and Mrs. ' • •• CIntk, Kuna.

The new Mr. Clark W n grnd- uate oi Morloy collcge In Stock­holm. The brlde;:rc«m b ft gr.id uatc of Glenns Fern' high school jpil.t.^-n-Benl9r-at-.-...................

Recent Bride Is Feted at P a rty

Drui:nail'd from [lol":'- iii-'ii • 1 lB58-nnd U fvtrt DCpirmiDnnrar^-iirrf. - ' •

* Y- .y.

Bridge Played0A sn.Evx)ni3,oct.H iiitou

tlcford Bridge club met Minclari-Mf T>.. . .CASTLEFOrUJ, Oct. 8 —

Gene F’ox was honored u lth ftcell.meou-s wedding thower ■----- .(In'y'hlKTlf'arttic-Ca.'iftctCTri -Pim tl— Prirps-Baptist church. ........... V,.r„n.,former Vivian 1...... , ,

For the program Mr.i. Wilma Dllck, Mnntt played the guitar and f.anK‘ T''* two sang.';; Mary Carol Itlll and ' Judy Heldel, a piano duet, "Tea for •n\o." and Jury Orayl)eal. .wxo- plioiie solo.-;. "You Are My One

Only Love" and "My Special

home ot Mrs. Fred Uu'iict.l;.___ :30 p. m. luncheon, rnils-: Mrs, John Bllck and

READ TI.Ml-a-NEW

week, 1 Angel."Mr.v Umd ChrLilenscn w a .i ' •nie new Mrs, Fox wn.i ru-.sL-ited,

hosicM. Gue,sf.i were Mrs. D u n lin ‘■opening lier gifts by Shirley;;TToweiir__ .,,, . TmTBodily, Burley, and Mnrgo Chrtstea'cn. a atudcnt ' collcge, Ostien,

$ 1 5 per ton Dcfiyeipl ?

. ......... Hostc.' .'cs were m , Jerry Fox.lWebcrlMr.1, Janice Sllegeniclcr and Mr.-;.!;

Clarabcl JageK

uMmEngelens V a n E n g e l e n s

Obvlousl.v.lhe^voung firat-nigm,on^^ourleft li.is a lot to learn •bout com fort. She d o e sn 't know tlial

P erm a.nrt's '’* Mnftje Q val PanfipCAN'T R ID E U P _ E V E R lB u l now you can cn;oy l l f c -y o u r ‘'P erm a .lif f Psntie will rem.-,in com fortably in place fllwavs. 13e fiKcd today.

Page 15: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

r OCTOBER 9. TIMES-NEWS, t w i n FALL5, IDAHO ' PAGE F IF T E E Hi i

Sponsored by Business Women Local Lutheran Unit Entertains C lover's League

Becom es Bride

UKr.rll. Il.rJiiilnl r-

■i;i, c'oniliic-trd tlie liuMiii"

M ary C hisho lm , " L. M. K elly Say

V ov/s in Burley

Burley B rid e Filer Cam p FTre i ; — B Girls Pick S la te

'u7 . M iss From UtahA n d Knapp Wed

Iv’i'i In N evada Rites <duel fill- workJiiop. iKilcii .II.-; tliriiie, "Lmcrs t/> U nml I."] r i l . l i l l , O c. B-Mr, ;,ik1 Mrs. ] Brrlpliirc -study will Le b u rd on c . j Shrll.uli.ir-icr, I.;ivu;i, Uuih, v Ucvcl,it;tii;5, chnptrrs two n iu l' [l^nollIu•l^ Uir m;ii ri:iM- di ihcli I ( ( lirtf. Spt'clal KUtjM V.1I1 mcluilc diiuRlitfr. LitiUIc, t,i W llllim't tlip Hrv. KclFiar Kcv'.-cr, Os<lcn, ■ Klinpp, : o[ Mr. nr.d Mt.s. I-'icil i

' pn.'.tnr.il ndvl.'cr. und Mrs. Herbert KliapD, I-ilrr. I.Murray, utftli, ills'.rlcl prc.?- [

I’lLEn, Oct. 8 — OfJUera < elpctcil i\t itir rcccnt mcetlriB of I

'•O-Wa-ICI-Ya Ciimp F irs 1 uroup nl liic home of the ir IculPr, S Mr.r Uay Uiilhcrlorii. wUh Donn» .IDciiiuii lif.idiiiK the -ilivle H3 pre.il. |(li'iil. Jnnc'. Davij Ls vlca preit- 1 den;; Jiicly D.nis, tPcrnnry: Jen - I nin L. Uutiitrtfird. treasurer, and *LIniln Gardner, jcrlbc,

'P ic Prciin rrportert on tn e c»n- i i Jy fiinil r.M.'.lriK project.

n:d Clil'linlm, tiunt of th e bride, nnd Mrs .s:nnley Car.-,on. aun t ol , ' (li<- tirWcRroom, served th e cuke. , . ‘

rn r h-r iMveUr.ff cn.irm ble the ^ ' J licA- Mi.v KcUy chose ti tw 6-pleio ' .t; ino-i Kfttii Moni clrcs.i w ith blaclc ' ’)L ncrc:.-iirlfs mid the white orchltl | . I"

hi-r bricbl boufiurl. A fter & h{l’ v ' hoiicyir.nui trip to Sun Vnllcy and •thn Nortliur.-.'. the couplP will I nt hoinp 111 Burley.

•Hie hriilf M.1S Krnduat«>d from | finiiit Mnr>-of-tMc*Wusntt:h Col- I lci;e nr.il llo'.y Crcr.s lioapltal I S0I.00I ot N»:sliiR. Salt L nl;e City, i The brldt-:rco;n nttrndcd MontAna (>

------------ State collffc, i!o?eman, M ont.. I . i -tir i E ich T,-ore a P' ' -luil sliower ki\ s Riven th e J pertliim orchltU. “'i' A'’'’’' D.ilpl»s ftnd Mrs. |

t L r.r,-.^n„Jw illl(.m Berth nncl r rehent-Ml I J" dvcn by Dr. . . . a Mrs. 1I'f-loin Rue.Mi »rcrc I.^ab.'l I

Initiiefllntely . . . reception hi'ld a t the Kllt.s lib. Wr.<. CUvp O nrm . F1cldlni!,|

In chtvritc of the Kucsll^

Mr.v Arnold Werni r. prosrnin ' chr.lr:iinii, prrrenled -Mr.v fTcIulti ,,f .i,» h-jiii.cft,,Holt-r„, Kenneth Jmne., «nd r u o . r o lu. u.r.ttiu.Buiicrildd..abo.Kave.a p a n e l__dlneui*lon—on~N«w—Gulneir—H>» *— most primitive field undertoken ■ by the I.uthernn church. The ml.i- .5lon proJcct for the loc&l LWMt. for the ptist year ha* been to -sponaor Missionary Bnd Mrs,A rndt nnd family of New Oulnca.

Rcfrealiments were served dur­ing a brief *ncinl hour.

lOiiy ■

u m»n H em lt left, li poarlnf t«* for Wfcnda Bryson. Twin Fa1I«~nij»IneM coTleei atudent. ftfno.1 lea ThUfiday ipoiuored by ih» Bualneas and Profm bnal Womeni club for «bo »lu-

1 ,“ “ p rn lJm l .1 lb . o m .^ (S U If .............-

Review Is G iven For T.F. L ad ies -OJLElks_aLMeet

BPW Event for Business College Has Dual Purpose

ru-tcr flcfv<':I t w I're bniiUe:! wlII the ninlchini; IiT hcadplpce v.,v u.ldc'd bow v.it)i ■r woro \^hllc v,r:

pump.?,c Anlla Dftlpla:

'Tnfni?''TtMdiiiff'iiie'\)riiir ciiouf s n irx - titp c itj’. ' imd jirjv n . d , •^.T— i;afyri311icTIoV-W s^iT^5u.'an-6t

the bride. They were frockcd m ijre.«e.?of mo.« itrcen. Tlielr

■ Cll!^- totiK. r. i:hc A tliree-tlercrt urddliin I lire (upptd with an oinm nent fioin the I t and brl;!f J p.irenl.V wocltllnK cal:e rc ii-

"•■'I't tried the bride'.', Uncii covriid 1 I'fivyi bble. m e cake was encircled by copper fern nnd white pomiions. S.Kcr coDper nppolntments nnd .illver cnntlela- ileml- bra holdlnft \vhltc lapcra co;ii- cloves piruil the decor.

Mr.i. Lnrry Jli-lnhoUz «r:d 'Mr.i.

•S Ucii:. nndi:eport. Nebr,; il M ' ri'i;. Ciiuiniln.'i, MU- [i

; Aiillr\ D nlplar, M r. P

.Mi . Willxiin J!fn<ln and Ju lln M a- ] .1 ro-.tiL:i, i.:,ke c ity : M r. n n d iy ^Mr'. I.:iny neinhol!?. Raw lins, j^ 'l ; . Wyo ; Mane UlCinnnno. E ly. Nev.. I ' n:iil Mr. nril Mrs. Jiimcs Burkc. tUlJ CaUhvfli. other KUe.its n ttendeJ 1

T»)n Tallj, BolJe. Pocal«]lo h

■me annual H i 7ur-atudenla-«t:youtig-woin»n-wlth-tb»-oppo^... '‘ 'Tvrin Palls Duslnea colleBc|itles they arc offered th roush the

, Ip^nSid by - 'd in tn v . am

^ f'S ltfm r“nosc'“ " ' ......... for the f i r s t time i t Blveslpmiinc meeting of the Uvdles ofSince Ui'e atudcnl.^ are futureithem an opportunity to p u t into,th.......

builnfssaomen U

H im Shown to r Women a t Filer

thtte-month course, the Nancy c courae. In learn- o

la Uie ..

; i-a Mrs Etiear Sluddard hosted . reception Iasi Sunday a t Uie horns of Mr and Mrs. Ross Lewis honor of Mr. and Mrs, Robert: Klrldinil. nes'lywcdJ,

I Wn. KlrUand Is tha former ' Jdelt LesrW, dnuffJiffr o f Sfr. and

Mn. Bou Lewis, and Kirkland U. ................ and Mrs. TommyKWlana, Vincent, Mo. T lie couple was minted Sept, 13 In a Jlnnlr tmg ccrtmony a t Uia Ellco court house by JusUce of the Peaea Ed-

-ward Lunsford.Mr. uid Mrs, B. J. Lewla, broth­

er and ilsler-ln-law of tha bride, Mtuniti l)i« couple.

I7i» i»de tras attired In iheer waltz-lenRth gown. The s m wu full and the lilted bodice iraj eooiplemented by Ihrte-quar- ■•ir tagth sleeves.

6 bride ntttnded Vnllty. hlsh Khooi and the brldeftrootn attend d achooi }n Mlsjourt.

:qualnls the practice Bome of th e aoclal omen-j t ,„ , „ arranRcd by;*A"'^,°‘.................. ........ they have learned' n t home « t cTimDbcll w ho al-.oT^ Shay

It the COIICM. Introduce/' ^Us Lloyd Walker,Each Rlrl a t th e Mileste take, a Mr*, wnlker ».,nK selections of

....................,Ose.ir llamn-ersteln In m c m o rlam > V ^ „i.i. A Mr.i. Gllnert EWKlotr, ]r..rfcent death. 1 elected chairman, and Mrs. How-

ntcinliera nrd Annl.s. secretnry-treasurer..nd ,o .d A. . U . I. a b ™ „ ! ' i i a ’S S i ^ S ^ Mrl.! “ 5 ”more formal even t than a neigh- EdKon J. B in.?. Mrs, n . M. K lrk- .borhood Kaffeeklatsch. It Is a per- nian, Mu. Nell Olnutc.id nnd Mrs.

Leon.ird McUowcll,The buslneM session w as con­

ducted t>y Mr. DMn Kcndrick.'. president, II Mas announced th a t the nnmisl fnshlon ahow will be

Reception Fetes .................Eden Newlyweds JS'-JS'SSS.-t i i i f , Oct. Hr-J'-Uiwu ■nfncnmdTTUtrho

feet chance for the girls to tome of the polso they have been working so ha rd to achlevc.

Tills year's t«a T liursday was ar- ranitfd by Mrs. L. L. Langdon. chairman of th o BPW public af­fairs commlttce. and M rs. Ernest Marlow and M rs. Moble Helton. They were aw lstcd by M rs. Mar­garet McCall. M rs. P r a n k l e Al- worth end Mrs. N orm an Hcrrctt, BPW president.

Featured on th e tea tnbla were a rrarjeinfnli o f fall fjonera and taperj In au tum n colors a n d allver appolntmentj. M rs. H erre tt pour­ed.

The tea It usually held during National Business Women'# week which was observed th is year by the local Eroup with a dlnnei Monday nlRlii n t the Roser.-ion ho­tel, tho tea nnd will be climaxed by members a ttcnd lnu th o Meth­odist church Sunday fn a Kroup.

.................. Ided to hold futuremeetings In members' homes with

meetinK to be held at ' home of Mrs. Edward Brown.

*READ TIM IS.NrH’S WAN*

white faiilo cor.sage nf red rose-;. Her at­

te n d an t wore a white linen jheath d r ts s with ft pink rose cnrsaKC.

The new Mrs. Knapi) was grad- uiited from l!;iyton hlch school In 1060, Sho WM emplovtd at the Davis County hlltU school library. K napp \vas Rrnduatcd from Filer hlRh school m 1052, He tiTVed ■ ^ Ih Ihc iiMnne" r o ip r io r ih r t i years nnd 1 employed by the Snnto Fe railroad. Alter a »h— honeymoon tho couple li at ho o t C30 Acomii, Neetllev.CaUI,

PAIR ENTF-RTAI.S'3 . MILNER. Oct. 8 - Mr. i

M rj. Edwar.i Dullon enlcrtalned f tf^ a dinner for Mr. nnd Mrs. T . R. Dutton, Belleville, Kaas.; M r. and Mrs. Fred Jorgenson, BcloU,’ Kan.v; Mr. and'Tim. L. “WiafTg. KimDcriy:~Mn and > Edward Dutton and dauchtetJ. Paul; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dutton, M urtauRh; Mrs. Dc.sslc Oaklund,

sorles nnd dreuca were fashioned Identical to th a t of the maid c honor. T lie a ltendnnts fach eat Tied n bouquet o f bronze cliryj. onthem tim i Ued with matching atreamers,

^Curnmlns. MKwila^ _

usher* w ere R. D. Leary. Othello, Wash, a n d James Kelly, brother of tjie brldcKfoom.

T raditional wedding marches were plnyed by Mrs. Paul Zlllner, oreanbt. Durlnt: th e ceremony Mrs. Zfllner .'inng Sliubert's "Ave Ma­rla," "P.trtl.'i An(te!)cii.r by FTsnck, nnd "On This Day O beautiful Mother." She was accompanied bycarol Lnnce._______»

Mrs. C hisholm cho.it - . ■.... daughter's wedding a beige alllc ‘ sheath d rew with matching ahlrred

a n d deep brown accessories.HoIdrcKc,'Nebr.. nnd Mrs. HarryiTho brldejroom'.s mother selected B lrt and "SlEeri Bltt. both Merld- a Rrcen wool su it dress with a coU

r'lnn, lia r trimm ed Jn jnlnk. She l

. . . . The fashions will b shovn throiiRh the courtesy of the Mayfair shop and all members and their guests are invited. -

Tho lei Uhto wa.s decorated In fall colors with ft hom-of-plenly surrounded by fall leaves ond otatice tapers aa a centerpiece. Presiding »-a« Afrs, CsmpbeJJ o'Jth Mrs, Jo.'eph Aln.sworth servlnR punch, Belreshment committee was Mm. Morrill 6<iulre3. clialr- man, Mn. Edwin Darker, M rs . Stanley rhllllps and M rs. Alns- worth.

RecelTlni? the members and ffueju were Mrs. Kendrlck.s. Mr*. Richard Howard and Mr.s. Harold Mufphy. -Tlie group's special prize went (0 Mrs, Victor Graybcai,

W E L L K N I T T R A V E L P L A N

HOLIDAY HIT! •

^ftlftttd Pattern Half b1*m 18W. SOM. MH; 3 ^ .

^ t a k e s 3% ,w (U SJ.iSh

biT (.£ (colni. fw tMiWtteni _ ,5 .■pattern for f in t - cUaa b«uim

ta M arlnn Martin. Tima-- N»««. PalterTj Dept, 238 We« Uih

“ * "nd. *iyi» -nuaJwi-.'fo r our IHO m

tverr -------- ---------- .jo r l^ e r

TheMAYFAIR

Shop

39'

Coing rountl the world, to a tea or jiut «hopping Bradley’a “ M u58-1«s Won*-, der” ia t}» outfit to do it in. ITie answu to the prayer of the .woman who plans to do much and would look her very best at all times. You’ll inviie coiinllcss compliments in tlicse

Zephyr Chenille./ I « f t /^ o -p 5 e c e card igan . Open diagontl

/W b ro f d e r r . Camel, Ro»e, A ^ua, Hunter Green, Navy, Black, G rape.

14^-22V4.

the

“A fter a 2000 milevacation trip ...not a care

w ith

■ ■ I

Page 16: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

PAGE SIX TEEN___ TXSiES.NEW^!-T.WlN, FALLS, IDAHO SUNDAY.

T . F . T O P S I D A H O F A L L S T O E N D 2 - Y E A R L O O P W I N D R O U G H - f

Hansen Defeats Murtauah U -7 for First Foothail'C rown in 11 YearsPoint-After Conversions By Dave McClusky Provide Bruins With 14-12 Victory

IDAHO F A U - S . Oclfiome twn c o n v e r s io n s riMifpri'iiue v ic to r y in I who alMi <ni it cWHS n k ic k cf lp n u m W cdtiP H dny which lin d n 't r e la x e d , plclrly.

n m tan-polnt ilr<‘l-'lf>n r

. 8— Tilt? kickiiiif toe o f jm (irifl U w Tivi« Fiilb

■.15-viir(l f icM K oaln l te m p t y niKhl ns hin ie ft le y w as

>:ick Diive McChisl -5 th - 'i r f i r s t Southern a l io FallH TiKcr.-. Mc(1 (ho f ir s t ( iim rtcr. vii inim nljilized by n i

hnolntl:,h<■kv

I n d i a n s C o l l e e t S i x t h

C o n s e c u t i v e V i c t o r y b y

D u m p i n g S p a r t a n s 2 6 - 0n U H L . O c t . 8—T he Ruhl Imliaiia r o lle d to t h e i r s ix th s tra ijrh t victory la s t n i p h t b y

( liim pinK th e M inico Siiarta iw T h o In tlia tis fum ed ‘'w liirlw ind offense” w a n k e p t u n d e r u ’ra iis com narcil to otficc r>ut tn ic c fo r InucMowm^ c.-irJy in th et h i r d Q u a r te r nnd w as a t its he.n on tw o c \ ! i a p o in t a tte m p ts . T he Spnrtana m i.s.sed on tw o K ood onnortiin itic .^ pro.scnted by fum ble^; a n d n e v er w ere able to m u s te r a n y th in g

* * * * * * * * liito a su.stnincd m a r c h ,

Minico Spartans Recover Fumble

ut I h n , - |H ^ , ! .T r k ,T 'i lll I'Vni.'! u'ftK~fDrraJ irth-iinri-otip *lluiilinn

MtUl'l'M in i' Imtt 111 iin Ii)r45-

Carl'1. D.il mil.';.

for

■nupkliflcJ, Wnclcpd (lie tr j

polnl.MinulM Inlpr McCltisky tried hli

llfld c'lal Irom th e 35-ynrri line

ball V I just I id c r IHdbnr. coach Pnul O siyn protesttd it

F.illn Mnrlcd rolllni Rroiinrt out 64 ynrd.' to lliei'nncr onc-y trnl nivnjcn In for il

Alihough moat o •cotcltM ilic r tl llirMli'nertlhree n

If/t In tiif Rnme. tlio Drulii:Ifl the Idnlio Falls 11-yard li vi're stopped Inches slio rt ot a Ilrst down.

Cwurh Oityn th e n th rew Jn thi last of )il5 Bubstuutea fttid thi Tiiieri rolled bock

' m -

. . . . 35-yard pass from Hayden to Larry Csrbon Betting th e touch' down. The attem pted kick was low Just IS (econds showed on th i clock «>ien (ho T lse rs kicked off.

i-BQwAa

COI

Challis Ruins Homeconiiiig At Carey 13-7—OAHByi-Ootr^M;tMaU*.«una-U;» wlth-».touchdflftn_iillli-Jcaa-Uiar three mlnultj left in the Rnrnc ic spoil the Carey Pnnlhcrs' home- coming J3-1 Friday nlicrnoon.

A blocked punt, rccovcrcil on tlit JO-yard Una sent Carey nhead Ir the second quatier. Tommy l“cter'

returned 11 to the t On the next play h Jo« Benndi init the

Challis capltalltcd fumble In the third ing the ball on the . yard line. The elxth>di:Bround down to tl nnd Mike Rohetti there. Tl>e 5»lnt atlcmpl. fallcil.

A tumbled punt g« the Btnw fo Chains to pull out the a ln, Challi DUnched_tlieb*** down deep bttoi carey set up « Konl lIiT- '

fourth doRT). Wnlh

Rcorwl nml extra point, >n a Cfttry

e-ynrd lln

: Mnnd:

---------jM a .ricpyj-l R,rvlc WiJic.r’, Tm .^o >1*1 e > t 'Chuirh t l , Commiinitr I

TtiiM. ru. Illiih h>nlllri>n

. Ult U>nuf<i.Utrk» y.^,. •onMsr T«n»-s

j bWT7. m . Illct> x n u h t< VlB<(Mturlo( oomp*Rir. '■■ ■ IS£

4o.‘'.iirh

BIuk>1VMMn ....................*■1. Miarr-DilMh d.frsuct rirm-nrsn 1-1, FowMr-CrumrIn*

s,nsiViiUk SUck. I»», llUb MLtJiul ..

-‘i s g s t s•JtmlT Ctmttnrlha <1/. irtai <•), £ u i 8id* -- ra>» BolU *-1. fi.f'.

got t . . added the

reterjon cited for oi

i toiicht

ind'''l^m"orlffith m^ndlni! play.

McDANIEL ROI.t)->Vl.VNJPEa,.Ocl...l-iJl — .The WlnnipcB Ooldcyci of Iho cli.vi C •• "lern lescuc announced tedny

indeldrr Von Mi-lD.iniel, tr bonus pitcher with Ihe S

.... I Csrain»l.i. hM been sol to Hochester ot tho Inlcrnatloni IcflRue.

, U7. t..n.kilVfl, »n, Uiih h.nJifl

lM>no'M'tiM ii'

Sjjl'HiiMfjui:!

HO«l.ADRnMKTr»

ri 'uilllilfi' inn s

Pilots Beat Vikings, Assume League Lead

.G L E N N S FE R R Y , Oct. 8 - T h e O lei iftjor-«t<H >-totw d th e L ittiP , Ki>.dit i

doiifl w h en - th o y .h a n d c d -p - ........................n s 3 n 20-7 BOtbnck F r itlay n i j i h t . T in

P H o ls bn to p w ith -n 5-0 rec o rt l w h ile V a llo ’a s te p behind w i t h ------------------------

c a c h . . ;Tiie VDitngs, who h«d taken

ia l>^unlicatp-n Val]c.y .Vik.p u t the

ml GooUinft

thro •iKht sineic leod In

quarter on a 35-yiird pojis from Dennis Shockley to

1 Tnrre.1, Chuck Otien ptuns- c<t for the extra point, cu t •’ ■ proved tho only time Volley .

Wo to penctrata Inside the Pilot 3-yard line. . . -TJis Pilots carrta buck to aJlWi

;io point In the second qunrtc hen Carl Trail hit piydlrt from ) ysrits out..Trall had « t up the:ara on ivjo.yiu-iljamlikjccoait^'rllcr, Terry Hclwlch was stopped 1 ptunelni; for the polnc-nftcr. After the teams had Mchsnced

unis, Olcmi* Ferry moved Intc IP lead for good.. HeUlch hit ■ony Trlpple wlUi a 30-ftrd strike ml Tripplo ran the last II

’ r the BO-ahead potiithe-enlra-polnt,--------

uiciin< Ferry waited until the econii time U hod poueislo hp b,ill ijefor# atrlklng in iJird period, llelwlch. RetllnK key ■Incka from Trippla and Trail, klrted end and swept U yards or lilt score. Trail agali d.

Pilot coach Bob Bellliton praised Is defensive wilt for contal) '

.li» blistering speed posed Schockley.

IVnI

(••M TwUi.r'tlU 1!«|1t Prtn MmoNt Vid* OII>

B^leviie Tips Bruneau to Stay Unl)eaten

Allison Leads Wildcats Past Indians 26-6

HLER, O c t. 8 — Joe AllL-ii :orcd two touchdown.^ and nrttl n c«lra p o in t to lend the Fll WIdcnts p.-x-st the Sho.'ihoiio I

capped a fujlalnei n Kot th e poliu.after >nd period, Ron Hep- :cd IV 3S-yartf sprlni

Mlnlco's the fir? plsy of tho Rama Khcn

Huskies’ Victory Stops Two-Year Reign by Devils

HANSES’, Oct. 8— Tiic tw o -y e a r ci\ t-Lut'h Ketl Devil.s crumbled im t io r th p li i S e n Hiiskic.H nnd the lli i .sk ie s w ra S outbside conferciice fo o tb alj cham pic b y a 12-7 score. L ittle Jo h n D e P e w , pl.i h ip injiirj-. w as tho bigRCst .sieRC pfun in conch l e d C ro c k c tt’.i defen.'iivc a rm a ­m en t bu t the whole line w as nt Its bCt In Jealoa ly prolecllnc the !Uisl;y ll:>lf ot the field. Noi

'>'0 Mur,

Lincohi Piillg WSU. into Tic With Bears

DcpV«.

limt 'in^t

In lih hip ony lonccr. Kutl ' otid one-half quarters lie rallylnc point. Dcpew,

MatlocI

il. way Fic.ilw. rd. A hree men ho fin.illy ■n the scvcn-yard lln The InJl Buhl toMc

n the fou'

30-y.irc

-kicking

. I Dan Dnvis wli I touchdo«-n -ilrlke. Ma ;crtcd in reffulatlon sty

j later the Indians r » Minico fumble on tl 10-yard tine b u t couldr

Gooding Belts Wolverines in 32-7 Decision

OOODfKa, Oct. 8 — Tlie Qood- Ini; Senators, stunR by a lopsided los.? to the Buhl Indians

irm ln l m ^ ^ ° ^ o i ^ " \ e p r t h e 5cn-a-

0 Eljht chnmplon-shlp rirry Slmonlon Rot the

Gooding score on on 18-yard alter a blocked punt had t Goodlni the boll on th e r -

|llner-jim. Btwy roI th e pi Jaftcr, Scconds I

rd 10S.S before he could hand off. t started in an cxchanw of

punts but Just before the first period ended, Oeorfte Urle 'ft’hlp- ped away on a 65-yard scampcr and teemlnit touchdon-n. However, It WHS ruled he stepped out of bounds after 19 yards nnd the,play had to be Called b.tck.- ‘

The second quarter passed with only one first do*n, Murtnugh tins that on a pau play. The Uilrd quarter started out In the earlj formation, three quick punts. Thi last kick bottled MurtauRh up ot Its 23-jTjrd line. T :e Dci'lJj wen for one flrtt down but fumbled on the first play of the quence.

Quarterbnck Raymond fitrolbenf Mooped up the fumble, eluded Rrasp of a ^luijsugh man stonned Inlo the end tooe.Th# try, for point failed.

On the firjt Murtauuh play afti !he kfckoW. Dcpew iamped 00 the center analn and this time took ;he ball away from 6iarry, Crock-

m t-sln ah ed -fcr- llTB- and - t hen - •

Allison scored from a yard nivt 35 scconds left In the Rim

0 , D- Snckc tt Kot th e polnt-nflc

1 11-7 Ins eltiht

resfcr

Rod McClure stnrtcd It off wllh a -< r-y n ra 'i!w lrn ff tnckle-ln- w ^nnd quarter nnd Bob V'nl plunRcd for the extra point.

third quarter beRan, .. ' •' ODonnell hooked

Ward Powers Nampa Past Burley 20-7

B arker 1 up on / Barker,

!>7-yr

NAMPA. O ct. 8 Nnmpa de. feat«1 the Burley Bobrnw !o-' last niKht n.1 fullback Ijirry W.ir( paced the Btilldoit altnck.

Ward notchcd Nnmpli'.? flr^ back, sneaked’ th’e,marker on a 42-yard n inon-th i ou, I second play In the sccor 'ii£h-.4uk-«arij;d;fy> i. on, KOt ' ' ” '

t tac 44-yard .

Tn the Mcond period. Lciimd ilbUons lolted a 48-ynrd scoring ia.w to Fred Nel.ion nnd Simonton ot the extra point.Hniloy moved for Its touchdown

1 the third quarter w ith 'som e hnrp passing. But Ooodlni; enn-

pcd the night when J im Patter- -80t..thj;Jinal_lKft..yiiidi of.A nined drive.

jOhio State Drops jFavored Illinois

the third quartet

• ard line.1 iimassed 'l8t ynrd' gc Bgnlnst 68 roi ■ tolal ynrdsga Jay.

Baylor Topples Arkansas 28-14

lo'teriip tIS5"»eciSna T then climaxcd th e n lsh t yard sprint to set the Dllly Shaw’s touchdown

Quarterbftck Georce ! the Bobcats aUged nn n

,ln the f in a l quarter, m ball from mldfleld to tl 11, He svi,-ll«hed to a p io the one where h e plUhRed :he end ro n e for the scorc. then kicked th o extra point.

PAYf-Tl—Baylor'j nnd p:ivr

,MLLE, Ark.. Oct. 8 (. iitlefealed :

CUAMPAIOH. ni., O ct, 8^ -Dliia.siat£'samdcfcalcd-nucktyi:i.

f . ’lspnrkcd by a !00-yard klckoff r , f i 'l 'w a by mil went! nnd exccllci

I quartertacklng ot Tom Mfttl 'erushcd Illinois 34-7 today tn Big Ten bottle ot natlonol football

tl^lpowers. ...I,,,mi niMol* homecomfnB crowd riive:?/,,?*'” ®, quIetly thMuBh thi„ Ilrst holt

Bob FerguOhio ,

Spartans Bow to Hawkeyes 27-15Razor-,

- ............. .... ..............ly for a 23-14 EAST I.ANSINO. Mk..., ,Southiie.'t oonfrri'nee Joolbftll vic-kfi _ Iowa ahojfed overwhelmiiii

ry which broke an elKht-gamc, pnwer and versatility In whippin: innint; sirenk for Arkans-is. 1 Michigan S ta te J7-15 with a founi

fled UP the game mlouarter cotneback today In a b.v-

. fl-ntchcd Jullbnck son pound o u t a 13-0 lead and thei

Wentz took thu opening klckoff of the necond h a lt

It! went all the wsy for

20-6 Victoiy From Indiana•tl Uepew broke I

................d-out-opitcliout and Bcootea 17 yards the touchdown.

.Tlint touclido>»'n seemed to atecl ie MurtauRh squad, on the kick

off, l>on Tolman, behind a cordon «'tti c riip . bfofking,. jtajpicd <8 ,nrd.i to the iianscn 42-yard line, ;he first time Murlaugh had the 50-yard line behind them,

•nve WHS killed seconds . 15-yard pcnilty, Hansen

picked up l»o first dows In run­ning the ball out of trouble and then was forced to punt.

Wlth time running out the Red DcWJ* sCartod to drive from their

28-yard line, Sbrry. Mo^an and Kent KIclnkopf reeled oft tuo first downs nnd Morgan pass­ed to Lewis for elsht more. On the

' play," Bfrclb>rK~Ke"em!n51y 'd the drive when he Inter­

cepted a pi.M on the Hoii.Ten 55- yard line. But two plar.i-later Han­sen fumbled the ball back, Brent a tajtny recovering for MurlauRh.

'■ took the Devils five phiys

l«lahtynrdfto the Han.'..

-Hoe. gains ofuvtnanc by Morgan handlln?From the four-yard Hr wos stopped twice but play Lewis plunged c fool out. Morcan then went for the extra point a.s the timer nimounc- ed 23 seconds remaining In the

The Huskies simply rnn the clock lut and then whooped It up. Some 1 years of frustration had ended.Hansen ends the conference sea-

on .with a 1.0-1 record. Just on»- mlf game better than Murlaugh,

BIOOMINGTON, Ind, Oct I }- Fullback Chuck Marsh.U «

Oregon S tate banged thrwjh t, dlana for two fourth • qijva touchdowns S a t u r d a y ar.d til aciii’ers .TpolJcd lha opcningo'.a H oojlcrs'new sut^um :o-8.

. IB P n c l f l c Northaest tna playing Indiana for ihs Ilrst t i i , scored fn the second quirtcat Don Kns.ie'a two-yard plunjtTj . } Ankersen'B extra-point kick ;r>:j vlded a mnrgln that wauU b-i been enoURh.

Indiana’s Nnte R jm se;____yards to r n thCrd-quarter toxt- down b u t the cooTerslos kid failed. E arl Faison, gluit IniUa end, set I t up by blocking t j a on the Beavers’ eleven

MnrklnK up ita third Hclajh four s ta rts . Oregon Glstt t down th e Hoo&lers’ thin ruli Uie final period, Marshall f 'x fi ft yard In a drive atsrtir Bearer 14. Then Oregt.. moved 03 yards In eljht plin nnd M arshall skirted end for ta

-last-JS.--------------- :------- -

D eclo Rambles To 41-12 Win Over Trojans

MALTA. Oct; 8 - H n Dfd HomeU struck on a series ofU

un.s and passes and dropped a 'Inlcs.i R aft River Trojsai 0

12 Friday afternoon.A 60-yard pass play froa :u

Exits to L arrg ' Wardle fat U rst touchdown and Povcn 1\ t sccond on a SO.yard pltchid jn. Power also converted. Mlnute.i la ter Powert refit "

converted. Qene B«t«lo^ pas.i to Powers, B«d for B

yards ■Tvnd alx points ani Bortz converted. Poweri tl» I"■ e l is t toiichcfown. jompliw

pass a n d running II » yards,

l a f t n ivc r’s touchdoniiic'b'y 'A rfW lUlhkcl'll.-----

Udy, W hitaker’s, on a U-TW dunrtcrbnck keeper, put

head temporarilj- a pltchout. ’Hie Troiw three touchdoaW penaJtJe*.

ilso sav back bj

Sophonin .•In put tl tr s t quarti

f i rn ir rwed In the llr^t quar-l ershlp.15 way. I t had ston-i Iowa m a d e two fas t touchdo7.-ns •baeks cold and lor ‘n the f i r s t period bu t then mw (••flljjed more lhanL\lSU move Into » la te 15-14 lead. Krouiid. ■ Then lo w a ’s Joe Williams inter-

3aek Ronnle aood-i«pled a fumble Jn the air and 3c.irs ahead In the|*Pdn>'<> 67 yards for the go-ahe.nl 1th a 23-vard touch-I touchdown, low a quarterback W

run. -m en in the aecondi' " r. n tte r Arkanus had pulledi H, Goodwli • -

inle Staerback'

T om Davl* of the San Pran-: jc o 49erj« did not ml&s a single

po in t alter touchdown during.last) year's National Football Icaguel season. Ha booted 31 In a row. 1

PORTABLE S T E A M CLIANINGI• 8pr*y PalnUBf

• X^nbrlcaUoii finppA< W ESTO N \VEBB RE3-0089

WRESTLINGTUESDAY

OCT. 11 —R A D IO R O N O fV I»- — R E M A T C H -

^ u ' l l <ind It in th e GOURMET BAR

-----Uowoiian-----Coconut Chips

Served on oil the leading a irlines ohd luxury liners. Ribbons of fresh coconut, c risp ly joosied ond soiled

— formerly known os "Kokies,"

‘Magcc Valley’s M ost In tem ling Store"

K R E N G E L ’S H a r d w a r e

Page 17: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

^ OCW BEB 9 T IM E S -N E W .S , t w i n f a l l s , ID A H O .

/ankees Clobber Pirates10.0 to Take Series Lead k Ford Hurls Four-Hitter

^ : . r , v O c t . 8vcWYOBK, O c t . 8 (/P) — T h e fllugRJiiff K ew Y o rk ^t o d a y 1 0 -0 w ith a 3 6 -h it bn rrn je t h n t in c Ju d c d ,n

U J c h n r d a o n a n d . M ickey M antle 's 1 -lth w o rk ) s i boofltcd t h e Y an k e es in to a 2-T I c iid 'in t h e h c n t-o

i ^ „ r n r d baffle** t h e P i r a te s w ith R four-hi't h / s / ;------------------------ (R ccord .v fe ll a!) o v e r ______

iniiliulod Ihe I’ ranilslam iioniu s liDnionin. WliiJi •vpn seriV*'. in 3'{ s rric s

Utah State Trounces t'E Id ^ o Vandals 33-6

' a l l a n g l e s

.tU B IlY HOVEY *’ l^f football game:

tlie conference sciicQ-oui«n lIuiklM mode he-

loci»l tootbdll lol- ihey were of cham-

'■'So

i,rna»" ‘‘" '*8

If fi 8*^ *

they had I

jl-juuS n . . . r

““•^abfrcd M urlnu*h-w «-lhe,h«mp*oa— »1U1—

f J^tmnlns trodltlon behind n«J DfVJM urcn 't

,-.rp(,olfeMlveIy.'„iier, ‘hf Hnnsen «nd play Mpilllc'n*'tl,. HuJHy corncrm fn Jmd

. .a bflorf- o n ly Infrcqu*ntly H HcrUW ' B''-

(Ir^crlbcd nn «\ "Cln- s'oo- at JlnnselTburJnW

•Lif II jcems a m atter of be- before It *lart-

W iT . ‘he Huskies currently uidtlH'cd, liftVlnR one tie loj -ua iticlr rccord. Tlie i t

proper to jcrj5:ri 10 Wich Divle Chntttrloi

IcioM Y a n k e e B ta il iu m jam liic il wlUi T O ,« i i i n a ■ the iiunned MratM Yanki knock out Vinegar Beml Mlwll In the «lx-nin first InnmK ” “ uien roll It up «(lh four m ore n the iDurth, , „

Richardson, » h itte r v.ho hart only one homer Ml »c ^o n Osnwed a 3.1 pilch from reliever Clem Lflblne into the ^flcia seata iMlh the biiCS.full in■ - the (ounlv W charO-

.............,-l«s Rlnjle gBine runsbatted In record of »lx by knock-

IS In t»t> more with » single, I.W iifHi the bintj loaded.T n t Yiinks, »ho clobbered the

Pirates 16-3 in PUUiiurgh T h u rs ­day after loslnit the opener 6-i. booaM iheir hit loUl for three

.0 49.ilie Mcond straight Ratne,

Plrale manager Danny M urtounh lid {0 ti« /)x pJlfhrrj. atartliiK ,-llh loser MUtll and n inn lnc

through L ab ln e , Fred Orecn, OeorRe Wilt, Tom Chtney s n d Joe

'aibbon. The siune th s relief m cr ilugRCd Thurjdny. Thft Yfln-

kcM In three camti are hltCIn? 307 as » team,

- - I!ord le t'redjhe fIriC n in e meni he faced unlirBlirVirdon-ne;d

jOboys «aroU£d.at.nich.-

f to sour the profrram! . dropped, the T l« rs ' back to post » 3-1 rcc-' the opener and *nap-

to »,ln t.hfte stralgbt- A> t/iB flKure n’auld IndJcale,

nstrj are not deep. Two boys „t b<tn Injured and will be out the Jr»T temporarily. Thursday,

ChiUerton had 17 men w m and five of them were ntn- Boohomore* have to be fd as teuoned veterans and d into «-mInule

[‘IVs only had 13 boys show up llW call.' Chtttwrton re- Xe had to cancel the tlrzt rlih Mackny) because one

, , H boys wa.% injured and B 'JUrn play. W e couldn’t pla '

mih n men.'’Putliaj the sltuntlon before Ih bdm body At. rh aasembl;. luiierion said '•! Just told them

■ bo>'3 dldn’

auxiliary score board In r ig h t Mantle moved »lthln one h t

of Babe Ruth's tll-tlme serlM ord of IB when he eent a p itc h by Orecn into the Pirate buUpen m left, about 430 feet from the plale,' In the fourUi. He nUo h it o n e off

In Plltiburgh T hursday. Mick, homcrun ch am p ol icrtciii itspnTrtitr^Or^-ln-

>.i hla fint tv.0 trips before hlttlnz the homtr. He followed H»)! a ground nile double In to the rlRlii field seals, while ba iting Ictt-handed. His Jour hlU lied series record tor a slnfile game . held by /nany, but )ie was called,

i t on strikes In the seven th , Richardson'* pandilam m er pull Im in exclusive compaJiy. Only

nix other men <itr did I h t ' ' '............ lsL " ■■

e to c cel the pit.............. late to gel li...elEht-man schedule beeaa« ! ichfdulcj already n rre u p - ,u t(„, ’

I told them It would cost / « - I to cancel out b >ouId come outloney

luilfnc h .."I don't know If tha t did sny........It Ihe t ----- --

We a tlll have some big I «altlnic v o iu id ihe halls that VI pHy football no m atter how try to get them out." Chutter- eontlnued.

I'Tln boys we have show $, b l Sf-'Jre and they play hard. If

' hid a few more like them 1 be a loi better off but I'm hippy with the ahowing wt'’ [f," he concluded.,ie ctoiblnatlon of 18 boys with IJltle fire a n d a coach that

unit Is a tribute to that roup. And w« have to in-

lie the fans. &s several doten ! at Ibe Costleford game Ju t r>day cheering ih# boys

ilory.

n« In two Mftsons Kriday night. Is plca«c.% coach Ostyn — the

K l thst they won—ijut whaC ppentd du ring the last two Us Just history to him. He

_ 3 hla boys arc playing pcft'dute one gam e a t a time

In aiscuMlng the '-history n .„• 'n-over-Idfthft-Palla,-eeaeh

_ say*. -'W e didn’t have to ‘ lliem get th a t l u l louch- '‘*11- We h a d them on ihtlr 1 elghi-yard line. We sent In t reserves lo r some experience

think It w 8 i the Ilrst'Varsity i«n lor four of th e boyj, w« !» Ihey were going to throw the

but frankly we didn 't ihjnk " »ould score. I guess It dlda'

t l'f really." r»lkln|[ a tw u t Dftvo MeClujky'' lor..» iS -yara ilaJii goti Ji* ! Iirsi qua rte r . O styn stated

E wen, 00 one v tu ever be able ' >ai me th a t kick w aW t .o«L m p ta on m e o/«cl«is about ic "J lildn-t se n d one down be-

“ they though t we were fak-

■>/»?“ ““■ Into ■

5 to kick It. 8«nd MQebody ■ w i - “ W he. would h u T «

“y « a « tln . Two of our *ere » t U u t eajl oJ-ihe

1 and sa id I t •n r j delimuiy w lood -jittt o re r Uie top of Ihe

»ed have W ed iwaln h Uma F U'O U ter w hen we wer«. deep P 'heir te rrlto i? . B u t a lter th«y

> hare th# touchdow n to ia lood."

“.f;!bleojura

I5 0 IS K , O e l . 8 (/V) — l't;i>i i ' ' mich<liiwn;< in cM'i-y (lUiirtcr tuiuK 'lit

I ( . 'u iv o rs ifv o f Jf)ahr7 ;);!-(>. A rhilU’tl i ro :58 -ik 'k 'rec w cu llio r us U tah S t ;ito ‘:

iriM idj'd hi:iho'.'> ilcfen.^c.H. ,!iiii Sw iiu l -v :in l run

eii il i.-i it tn ivuK 'i'd tl: il i)f 8..'jUll u a iu lic 1'lcH‘l b;vll c 'arrioi

■ .-<c()rcil im .' .-XnK'

Rebels Bailer Vaiiderhiil ilii Fir.-il Half

ildaho StateJCoasts....P a s t O m a h a b y 4 4 - 6

PO CATJ'M J.I), Oct, S M') — Q ii;irtfr}w clf.s Chuck For-....................................... -Ipd the! po w erfu l I(i.iho S ta te

11- t' iiitiir.'^i'i'iiniml foo tball vic- if O n v ilu i Ihi^ ivftornoon. Tho pi‘11 \v itli th r e e to u c h downs in

Miisliers Nip Hajierinan by 16-1.'? Score

PA G E SEVENTEEN

am i th e • foi a fti ')

(tllU'' H o f l>- (’>'

Badgers Stun { Btiilerinakers | By 24-13 Tally;

Wendell "lops Kiml)erly f<tr First Vielorv

victory m;<rki-il lano thal tl

rd a, aeasoii i eiorics, II a

WENDELL, Ovt. (1 fll Trojiuir. plckcd i

TomI dclci

l .ars

Idaho »crl« lli.aHulUlnK.’; H won ’"!> slralf:li[.[ Kimbcilv s,n.i lliP I3th Jov *hpn Clint

imes and Ibe Jourth'yord rcvriv tills si'o-'on. I point was I

ilcd. Swindle r\nd| •\vcn(k-ll i — IJSO's „-con.l

PU.-C-ed on .van

tmichri.mti when unable ecclvrr oi>cii for a pii.'is In tl'O jn flriil pnlod. In the third quarter,Uj ic helped put Wisconiln ahead nay Ills priMln* and runnlns Uj 3n a OJ-vard •' corliiR drive, capped. (, ay Mfriilt N<irvcU'.i divsh on n, quick-0[i«ier-fi0(u.Uie-CUriJuc-SlX,i

W ith Ir..- Hum t«o mln ' ' — ' M iller hit ciul Psi RIchti

iyo[[ iieavc.

HIj only homtr in tegular sci pluy came off Arnold Portocar 'n Baltimore, April M. He h a d hlt| mly three In hli entire major,

league caretr.

Matthews Cops Bloody Win in Third Round ~

JR—B(eh»ri)M/T.

E ?tW ashingtoirB t;i Stanford 29-10

21st Loss in RowCLEMSOK, 8.C.. Oct. 8 OR-A

S5-yard touchdown punt re tu rn 1 halfback Mack Matthews keyed 21-1 Clemson football victory ov Virginia In an Atlantic Coa^c coi ftrence gune' today. .

Clemson, rated No, B In the m tlon, also tcored on two SO-ya grind -’em-out drives, Hatfback Horry PavUsck went over from thr five ioT one m « r icore, a n d lull back BUI UcOulrt p lunged ove) (tom the one (or the o ther.

Scores

r.ilJifd pc\w.-«lDn ' l);ill four limr. on pa^ Inlei

Lioiis and i)j/Pt times on tuir .-H*irOuc-rpcow«d-U;f£t..Wl;

i-liQbblcaJiad^riared thrt

_ M aybcr,.ball c;irrlcrs. l.arschlcd Kot sitmiril ' y;ird5 In IS carries and Maybcriyjio cap a s'l r;in for ]1>5 yards In IB tr lti fcor- ^bo coiivoii liiK two of th e Aggie touchilottn^.| i t stayi-d .S-.vlnd.'e mnrJcrd PO J'nrds In tlx fourth QUui csrrlr.'.. |tcrbnck

ltJnlio'5 Jone touchdown came lii, from two the-opeiilng -ininuus.of lUe..llnnl;ndded_iT>rrinri r-.m]an_BCorcd It, la

6li VTiCnhTirvk-it.ickle pltt>

pond for Iclnhn

I the

I win effort[wrled Its drlvp on’Hovc. Hoh Stracllcy,

-ynrd imc, moving to the Klaster ^ind Cllni I.itc n . where an m- Pralse fionv Kimberly cpa.5s halted the msrch.l^ ^frjnan .____________.e next play the ARsitslIdaho recovered. The .icamperlni- 78 yars

...ichdow n p.U-i followed.—A-f\iinl>l»-*toppcd-puih_ elite's

drive b u t llic Agplcs. put Ihc biick a tew minutes later nhtn lo failed to make yardage, an e C2 yards for tlieir flmt touch

Tlie Vo .ycah S ta te 36 USu fumble o

ere sloppedAnother delanclnls 20 lo

A iG-yard run by Tom Uirj rhici nx the bJRsest slnsle gain In llu :lvc and Dolf Camllll paaed t( ouK Mayberry for the touchdown T h e play sU rtfd on the 20, May

berry caught the b.ill on l!)t Jivi

LOS ANGEU^S, Ocl. 8 l.^'-Lcn M aiiJif-.io,' p))li,id«p)jta unleash-

■ brulal head attack that smasl. ed the lace of Ktnny Lane of Mu.i- kcRon, Mich., Into a bloody a n d stopped the veteran sout: .In the third round of their sched­uled 10-round tiRhl tonl|ht.

nelttce Frankie Van hailed the battle after 2 nilnulej. St secooda of the third round. Under Califor­n ia mips It goes as a knockout foi th e 21-year-old Mnttlicm.

Lane weighed 137'i. Matthcwi 130'i-

The MIchlsFin left-hander wor th e first round and looked like thi 7 -5 favorite he was when enierltig th e ring a t the Oljniplc audito-

liot the ball to thK/tC

In four AnilcrsBi) m down III Uji ynrd_gut

Syracuse Sneaks 15-6 Victory

5i;Qyer Holy Crnss

Jerome Defeats Oakley 35-0

,.Syra

JEROME, Oct, 8 -T l Jcroi

Uic Tdiiho-«. hut; the',,ca^cn Friday iilnht \vl I downs. I hurried pa.'t the unclci

carrlcd from theiQaklcy llorneU 35-0, he Utah State 20 The victory, In whici L or steam, | Small, Hem -Woolley. Tim' .............. • \Vttlly Williams shinci

WORCESTEfI.M;tW,lit-fi(p<I by iitvitart

In the cl&si half. Idaho wrnl to the Utah State six, b u t th e Aggies stopped them rccord for the year agntn- 12-0-1 in ihe C

Ajt. Intercepted p n ii stopped a'fcrenrc, mie-hnlf polrntlnl Utah S ta te threat shorli pace-sctlliif: Buhl lime la ter, l l ic ArkIc.? drove to] rn r Oakley it wi ih f Idaho nine. O ne pa^^ ln-;much speed, sise

Crovs which outplayed lli ‘•o. 1 lootbali iciitn for 4i minutes.

iHinJ behljiil 111 nilcbty dcieijsp id lullb.ick An Baker for a IS-G clory today,Tlic Oranncmen felt their pres-Kc niid II I3-fMmc fttcakitltilnt!'until tacKln Tom Oiltnirr; )omcd ft conversion kick to dc-

clile tho contcst with one sccond Terry I left In the (JilrtI .-iimrtiT, fiapho- .avpnslniorc h;illb;ick John Mackey had

drapced tho Cru:..nlrri' (luarter- back-lci ' ....................................

3 (nt tho clouclidown,

Tlie Ornngcmpn'-^ defense In the country In total and Inc dpfcn',lvc fienrcs, held oi iour-yord line to..stem r 1>«ttaUCa Holy Cro.v

- th e

nint-ytrd Ion.Tliat provided the eprlnsboard

nii ! iiUio pl.ij-.t J.iter the Pirates -■ cnred. A 41-yard se.imper by Ken McC.uninon WHS the big gainer and ft nine-yard pass -from-Bob Ptlm^r

The try for point tailed.th e (iilrd quarter opened, th*

ic rs took advantage of a St- . . pun t nin back by Carr OUl and pushed lo the one-yard }ln» only to «ee another fumble foil U\e bid.

Later In the period. Osmas fmnbled-on lis 4B-yard line and HnRcrman moved goalwiird.T«relV»' play.'j laler McCammon went In from the one and Elv.7n Tupper plunRcd for the point-after.

The Mushers bounced right back, Gary Lniv returning the klckotf to , iJip iiascnn in 47-yard line, On th# ) tlrst pl.iy 0111 swept end for tha ‘ remaining distance and Sutton apaln converted.

TTirtl « l the *!age for Ha^er- ninn's la^l desperate drlrt.

ound Mjrlui

B ut In tiie I'rcond J thew j fot liH brilliant 1-2 combi­nation punches ttorklng and a t thi e n d or the frame Lane wa.s cu over both eyes fln<1 bleeding !rom a gosh on the forehead. ‘

Matthews renewed hli attack In th e third and Lune itoon was blind­ed by blood xrenmlng Into his rig h t eye.

Tile 2B-year-old lin n went into th e fight wil'' ■ " '-"rt "f a n d 6 Joues-

STANFORD. Call/., Ocl. 8 'B - ' Washington A(i-America quarter­back Bob Schloredt pused (or one touchdown ana ran for another, today as the resurging Huskies battcrtd (umblinc Stanford 25-10.

Slung by a 15-14 upset loss to Navy a week ago, the Huskies put 10 points on the scoreboard before Stanford conlrolled Ui< bail.

A 29-yard (ield goal by Oeorge Fleming and a 33-yard'touchdown pass (rom Schloredt to Lee Folktn.s w ith Fleming converting built the early lead.

Sophomore fpeedsur C h a r l i e .Mitchell's daailng 89-yard punt return brought tha third touch-rfnwn iinrt r#n 10_for_tlie___lourth. The (Inale, late In the Rome, came on n 3S-yard pass (rom Bob Hlvner to Ray Jactscii.

Navy Belts SMU,For 26-7 Victory.~ MDRPOUC, -VA.nOct.J liw N ayy. crashed In on a couple o( aaulhern Methodist errors tor two touch­downs In the first quarter to4) y.- tlien went on to whip the Mus- t»ng* S«-7 In the «Ui Oy«ter bow) game.

Jo« Belllao, Navy's one - man bacMleld of last year's Army game, hod hfs biggest day <lncc th a t altemoon when he acored one touchdown, passed for one and

, llgured prominently In Navy’s o th­e r two toucMown marches.

BtUlno ran M yards on JO c m - r le i Irom iwlmnuge, ran back a punt 62 yards, relumed two kfckoffs to yards, threw one pass and caught

These P ennan t Winners Smoke

CAMELA R E A L C I G A R E T T E

R o g o r Marls, N. Y. Y anke» >1ueg«r. s a y s , "I looke;] a long timo for what I w anted In a clgarotlc. But I stopped looking when I started smoking C am sls. T hay give me ovorylhlng I w ant.”

r.......... ' ........... ^

W h y d o n 't you join th e n rt~ e s p e c ia l ly if y o u 're s m o k in g m o r e t h e s e d a y s , b u t en joy ing it l e s s ? S t a r t to really en joy s m o k in g a g a i n . S t a r t g e ttin g c o m p le te s a t i s f a c t i o n e a c h a n d every tim e you l i g h t u p . S t a r t sm o k in g C a m e ls —to d a y .

EIRoy Face. Pirate roller p l tc h « r . say t,'*1 can tell you why I trnoit* C a m e lt In o n e m t i —salisfaclion. i m ean re a l >Bt*. U feclion each anil avery tim e I llflht up."

dinali and ) m a ^vnie[cs ot the Sostoa Red Sox. t o d a ; were namad’ wtnaan of . tha llr it * - a tu i ‘tlreaM k' awardi ortBlaay,th>flperUntMai»»-

'JopQiuid^D(j Cfenniiiij.

p le k G ro a t Plra taahortilop. s a y s . •xp«r]moniot> will) olher c isaro tto s . But my steady smoke is C a m e ls - fo r mlld- n e se and rich Uata t never (ountJ In any o th e r brantf."

B i l l S k o w r o n a n d Y o g i B a r r ao f t h e 'p e n n a n t - w i n n i n g Y a n k e e s

W a r r e n S p a h n ; M i l w a u k e e B r a v e e P e t e R u n n e l s , B o s t o n R a d S o x M i l t P a p p a s , B a l t i m o r e O r i o l e s H a n k A a r o n , M i l w a u k e e B r a v e s - T e d - K l u 8 z e w s k l i . C h I e a g o W h i t e S o x D o n L a r s e n , K e n s a e C i t y A t h l e t i c s E d B a i l e y . C i n c i n n a t i R e d s L e w B u r d e t t e , M i l v s m u k e e B r a v e e A l S m i l h , C h i c a g o W h i t e S o x .

W hItey Fort*. N .Y . Y an k e e p U c h tr , sa y s. "Sur«i I'vs smoked o th e r elga* rettes . But nan* oJ lbsm c an com par* . with Camels forjlavor. I g u a a s that'a w K /l get real snjoynient w ilh every puf( o f •V'ery-C*m«l."

Have a real cigarefte...H a v e a C A l V U E L

The best tobacco makes the b e s t smoke J

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PAGE^EIGHT^EN ’• TTMES-NEW5, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO _ S tm P A Y . OCTOBEi,

Trainin" for T. F. Future

Nurses Due

: tirs l

Membtts of ttie T«ln F a lh lilHh Khoo! r\ilurf Nurwn Amtrlca cl.aplfr alll l>c(iln ' trftliiini: proKrnni ilurliiK

• ftCCli ol t.’ovrmticr. It iiouiicrd Thursrt.iy liiK tlic u iilf' iiittlliii! In ttic I'.itili scliool llbniry,

. - . Mcmliuj «tlcn<lM (It Mnnle Volley MomorUl Jios- p iu l. Alifc coriiplftlnK irnlnlne.Uicy vlll ttOrk nl Hip liaipit: from 4:30 lo 7;:o !■■.. nl'^l M th fioin thr IciM ttcfk 1Novrml>rr llirousli Mny.

Membpn\ dl<rii.'<fi1 linlnlifttinn ' of oiricprs. »!io

«fpt. ,Tlif formal cfrcmoiilrr. will bi hfld In Novfiiit)cr, jiiiilff liiKh fclioul mulltor

. uppnlnlcilr rl itif l;

C^n\ fiifvfin li

.•liib, ■ iiicmUci

Jinj'rrl. Ollitr tn'iiilirri 'vlir. ... Iriulril T,rrp J.uifl il;\llrri. IJ.iryl

. Kyp, Msne wlili.iKer. cclln T I.imla Coriilrl'oii. LyiuLv pinlr.c, Mnrl« Orcco mid IMl

1961 IJamhlcr To Be Shown 111 Area Soon

lie cll'jilayrrt hfslimiljiK WfcliicsUay by MtiRlc V«llfy *Alfrs. lins coin- plflr new klylliiR for (he first llnip Miicc Us lulrodiiclluM mote Itinii 10 ypar.i m;o lUi llic orlKllinl Amprlcnn conipnct Mr. ncwrdlUK to llic m an- lifiirliirrr.

AlIlimjKli clumccd Ilils vrtir. nc- forciliiR lo noy Aljcnirlhy. <iim- Ii;iny,_vlfP prrslilrm, Ihp Riiniblrr

■■v.111 cfiiuiTmP Til T lirrin«ii'-on--n b..5l. of slylliin statjillly. |

•■Wc lire rommiicfd lo n policy of mnliiuvlnliiff tlir owner's liivc.it- merit by not milijpcllnc H

llie excc-

Amerlcciii lins llic Mine liilorlor

rcaiiccd exlcrlor (llmciisloiu. 'r lio _ ioo,-lncli-wlwlbaj« Is S.3 Inches

' liowevtr, lins bociiliicrcii.sert 51 . . .' ccnt lo 23,a cubic feel, lliB Ilrm

■tilrT. IAn liiiiovnllon added lo all lOGl

I American Motor.i cars, the uulol mnker noted, is a ceramlc-armorptl I MJjBiJil i / j im , suaninifcd lo the) orlRlnal owner as long lui he owns j the cur. Tlic new system was dc -l rlvcd from a procvj ii.'cd In Jcl Blrcrnll. wllh tlic ccramlo coMlntt bonded to llic metal by llr ln s ml 1,500 dfBrces Fahrenheit. j

•'Tlio new Amtrlcaii." Abcrnelhy' «ays, •'contlnuea lo retain iho fcn- tures which helped nambler revo- lutlonltg lh« automoblJe markcL— .Bll'weldcd. ilngle-unlt construe* tron. 'dffp-dlp' rus(proofmif. fopi e u a oj handling »nrt maneuver-1 ability. Irophy-wlnnlnz economy.! •implltlcd maintenance, ree llnlns teats and others."

Purchasers will have a choice oJ two engines and three transm la- Blon» with atimdnrd axle m llo s , HlBh-pcjform«nce axle rotlo.i ftre optional a t no eitra cost, nccord- toe to llio auto makers,

Tlie 125 - horsepower overhcftd- valve "six" li standard on nil C us-| toms and optloiisl on Bupei

iioUiy, U the engine which ihE American Custom to victory ... every major economy run in i960, with a number of refinements ad ­ded Jor the new model. The L -head lU . «hlch develops SO horsepower. Is standard.on Super and Uetuxe models.

in tilt JWI Iln« ol Rflmftfer «lx and V-8/nodels, Abeniethy notes,

• major e/glnterlni Innovations will be tealurcd. A u«w aluminum, block engine which "reiircsenta t major breakthrough in llglitwelght automotive deslRn." he explains. Is tlie new power plant for the Clnssic

. Six. This is the first alumimim glno block produced m Amrrlci passenser car use by the dlc-cost -lelhod, I t weighs 80 pounds lessmethodthantl

c u t aluminum engines nnd development ol specialized procli Uon (icllliles costing more than »S,000,W».’; Abfrnelhy claims. '

Horsepower or this nnmblei .elftsslo six remains a t 127: the «BS»JffTfi«-ir7»iri3-Br-5W-horse-

RriidC'power, power-paek- option Available on both. Resular .. gawtUie Is reecmmcndcd by the: manufacturer for all models

A VMlety ol style chanRes cm be found in these model.«. How erer, Abernelhy says the firm bc- U e w It has ■’successIuUy prcscrvec the conUnulty of appeamiico w hich ' h u proven lo be a major competi. U\'c tdvnnuite in the compitct nuirfcet. Amfrtcw Motors (s t

.Jcated to basic

•tS malnialn Rambler tMale value . ' • t tht-top and 4as an im portart fajto r lo lUirbler'i all-iune record

Filer Methodists “ ^ o l d i & m f e r e n c c

1 , Oct. ^ T h e Hev. Chiules •“ superintendent o'

- _.it^lct of the MeUiod- L. presided a t th e iirst

» eonfertnee ol the Filer

MinwUng opened with a short - 1. loUowed by report-t Iroin

il commit-

uillned World I conference bcnevo- •'■‘-g bow the world

1 disuibuted

w m m \

f W s\ STEP RIGHT UP TO BIG SAVINGS!!

L a d ie s ' GENU IN E

Le a t h e r c o a t sL o d io '

FORMAL DRESSEST allo rrd nr fu r trimmed. Choo.se from Jatkpt.i, f in ­ger Up or lull leiigtli. Whii*

V2 OFF ............... V s OFF

i MEN'S W EARnUAS WOOI. SPOIIT C(MTS — Tlie Pnljncfile Klylcil in Callfonila. All new Inil colors niic^ shades. Bcsutllul piillcriu. liicluilliig checks, iiiibby flnlshe.i. nnd jg O O MrlpM. Values to JJ7 60 ...................... ...................

Mf-.vs IVIIir co n n ‘fASTX — 1B or., myon »n6 nylon.wji.Minble, double stitched bell loops. Colors: sage Krey. Pants from our regiilnr *lock. n e t - '

MK.V'S CLICKER KTVLE COATH — Reeve.spile lined, kim collar and cuff. Colors; CMI ural. Kites S-M-L-XL. Ideal for ciuiual wear. Reft. 16 38 .................. ................

— nu:x:a_fiiEHVt:t.K.s8 iiM iKn-siim T sijivj.u rlh MuiiilngaeaF. liliKin Jrregulara. Uca.

Ladies' R ea d y -T o -W ea r s e c o n d floorr»MOUS NAMK .SWKATKHS-Pllll- ovrr or CardlEans. Tlir%p nre dl.'con- tlniird xtvlc.i that .sold fnr as much

MOa, Sever.M .Uyic.i ami colors - om. FOUND-

E n S DAYS SPECIAL

I'AMOfS NA.MK >

lJ.int.v AM'VlrsL'fii'i:

4.8S

LADfESy?JiESSE&:

MKN'S 1IA\DKERCIIII:fH — S I z b IT xlT', hemmed borders 10 pnckcd to liolybng. A Q j nPeg. 1,00 pVg...........................MKN'S WIUTK SlIIRTS-LonK sleeve*, Pima cotton, firsl quamy, fine tailor­ing. excellent m . lop stllchcd collars

>rKN"R LOST. BtKEVE SPOIIT KIIIRTH — Assorted styles .and p a t­terns, button down and regular style collar, flr.1t qunllly, sliej s-m-l-xl. Reg.

2 .5 9 o ,,» 5 .0 0NAP OUT COTTON GLOVES for men Doiibis throughout, rubberized, first quality, g o ld color. Reg. 45c

3 -SS

c o n n u n o r p a n ts - Boys- Mldwal* continental style. Corduroy J» Jwek /or fall 1960. This pant embodies wear­ability and above all the style i la new and popular. Slrei 6-18- Reg.

BOYB- HOODEU SWEAT SIIIIITS — n r s t quaUly heavy weight- Top quali­ty- Versallllly and long wear are the feature.1 of lliu garment. Assorted colors. S-M-I., Regular « ^ j2«. - ........1 -4 4BOYS' I’ASTS^Plrst QuaUly, cotton

, <;f5UB| flBtKi • ■ •continental styling.- Assorti

WK.V3 DIIES9 SOX - Hfovywciflht. fancy pntlerns. cotton and nylon stretch. Assorted col- ors, size I0-13. Reg. I9ci633c „ 3 97c

BOYS' W EAR — BASEMENT

BOYS' POLO flIlIRTS - Crew neck, Iwiff sleeve eonjbed rollon. h s j Ji« easily and little or no Ironing re­quired. S im 4 to H. Rc

THBnMAL VNDERSHIRTS A N D BEAWEBS — Boys' short sleeve ther­mal undershirts and ankle lengtli, elastic waist, thermal drawers a ll first quality. Wonderful warmth wlili com­fort. All cotton and fully washable. Color: white. 8l«a small, A A m medium, large. Reg, 1.48 SALE y y C BOYS- .SPORT SHIRTS —

All wool coats, wllh qu ilted wool Inlerlln- Ing and rayon lining. Som e w ith psri or- Ion pile lining and tr im . M any iiyltj, fabrics and colors,- Tweeds, plaids, mix- tures and plain.

Size* <7-14 10.99

1 .7 7

i t . s s choose- Sites 6 to U. Reg. I.: lS»i-07_ JEANS-Doys- iJ’i-or. heavy w eight, full-cut west- ern Jeaiw. Sanforiwd and first quality. Ttugged and certainly a wanted item for school or play. Slr^s C-18. Reg.

...............-............ .................. - .................5ALE

BOYS’ STHETCI! SOCKS — Boys' fancy pattern, cotton and nylon stretch soclu. Comfort plus lonK wear, assort­ed patierns ana colors, sues Medium tO-B’i) , Large lO-

.........3 3 c or3 ,or9 7 cb o y s ; H.4NNTI. s h ir ts _ Boys- be tter quality,Jong slec»e fUniiel. sport shirts. Top stitched col- lars and cuffs, wash and wear. san/orlM d finish.Assorted plaids and assorted colors. Sites 0 to 18.

n tg . 1.68. SALE ».S9 o 2 ,„3 .o o._BQYSL.JlBl£F4_Il£,y».-_{trM -qualltT-

elisllc waist knit brlets. You will rec- ognlte the famous maker of this fine garment. Nylon rflnlorccd a t points of strain, vertical Hy, mrI;, bjiqi. llonal savings by Burclia.-,ii.<r thrr»

Y.aJles- GLOVKS-Cold weather gloves In wools and or- loii.s. New .'tylca and colors. 0 Q | HReg. to :il8 ..........................................................niLI-FOLDS, ETC.-Ladles' billfolds and continentals In colorful Icallicr.^. « t t A

............................ p.t.t quality, full fashioned nylons In

.4 4 cIIKAI) SC A Iirs-O bbng. colorful scarfs of cr'epe. silks,

.......... -.... . 50 cCOTTON RRIEF.S—Ladles' cotton knit, band lee briefs

» „ „ 1 . 0 0strctch anklets

..................25cIIRUSIIKD KAYON PA JA ^L ^ff^^ht Irregulars of thla soft. co7,y fabric. In long pajamas. PMtel ^ ^ 3

Sizc.1 5. G. 7. Reg. 49c. p r ._________ 3STRETCH ANKLKTS—Ladles'111 white only.RciT. « c pr. ..

shades in sizes 34 to 40. Assorted li

CLUTCH BAr.S-Ladle.s' small style purses In an assort- ol leathers and fabrics 4 A A

Reg. JDS .......................................... - .....- Pt,I.»<llei'- TIGHTS-Stretch nylon tlg h U In plain snd Xancy styks. First (juaUty. Sires <

.L. Reg. 2.58 ................................... ...............nuBDLE BATII-Colorful bath powder In atirsctlve apothecary ]sr. An outstanding value. 'C A pReg- 1.00 .................................... ........... ................. P W Wl.adle»' BRlEFS-rancy nylon tricot briefs, w ith usoricd trims- White and colors. - - - -Sizes 5. 0. 1. Re«. lo'l.O LACE BCAnF-Sl7«s 16x36. ih l te a n d ecru laca scsr^es toe j'our JflWf, chwi of drawcrJ, etc. Q Q C

..rirst qunllty, Reg L j L ..........................." 7 7 * ^Ladles- BALBRIOGAN PAJAMAS—F irs t quality colton Xnlt pajamas In assorted patterns a n d colors. a 0Sites 32 to 40. Rtg. 5S5 ....^ ..............................3 * 7 7COTTON KNIT (iOWNS-^ltght Irregulars of warm knitted gowns In pastel shades with su o r te d •« q Q trims. SIzcJ 3J to 45........ .................................. -

7 7 c , 2 ,

BEDDING & DRAPERIES A BA S EM EN T

BKDSPItEADS-rancv taffeta i iijsorted colors and patterns Reg. to 1

y Iron," muslin' PILLOW FOIIMB-Poly foam In e lilic r round or must*1 A A <>>apc. U-lnch plump site, ^ « A A

• y y Reg. 63c ..............................i. ............... D lo r * *W V1 cotton spreads In BATH TOWEIJJ-Heavy weight, th irs ty te rry lQ«lJ ^

7 m m slight Irregulars, Deep and j}astel sh ad es f i t t C • 7 7 - DIB 2;x46 sire ............................. .....................

r . _ — OtfHTAtS'K—Dacron-curH(n4-ln-*hite-wlthbrown-Wm— b‘C A rrK B -«l/G S-A -*oo4-(3ioT tm enl-of-U M ful-rugt.only. 30-lnch sit:, RCR.3.49 - ....... 1 .9 9

h iiebacks

» ....Z. 9 9 p.n regular size. J Q Q

pholstery

1.33SOFA PILLOWS-Decorator colors In assorted fabrics and fillings. Ideal for the TV season.WASH CLOTHS-^erry cloth

Som e slight Irrejulsrs ...................UPHOLSTKRY FABRICS-Wldeselection of patterns and colors. Redecorate m a A

for the liolldayj ahead. Reg. to 3 9B yd.KTAMFED PILLOIV TUBJNC-HnJ quajjly jtamped a n d hcmstlichcd muslin tubing. «R es. 1.49 ........................................................ Reg. IB 9 ____ _______.............DRAPEUIKS-Readymade pinch pleated draperies. In MUSLlN SIIEETS-Sllght i r r e ^ la r a ot 12S count, p rin ts and plBins, rcg, to 1,98. bed, 81x108 she 1 A A

9 9 c 1 -9 9 . ........................... ........

Reg. tcFOAM PILLOWS-Pirst quality plum p, foam rubber Wllh white and fancy ilppered ticking. <• A AFull me. Reg. SJ8 ...................................... ...... ^ * 7 ^tUKrAJN TASELH-W Mt i ic r o a manjuUelte panels.

42>BI size. Wide hem. 9 9 C

36-lnch

PILLOW CASKS________ .. .PR IT

T H E

O F T W I N F A L L SI D A H O O e p A R t M t N T ' jTOfie

Page 19: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

- In This Section^M ade V a l le y . . . G ia n t D iesel W reckcr B u ilt . . . T<.mnt

" I j H a r d - • . W e n d e ll YpuUm P repare for C o n i e s i . . . (;m, S tudcn t-s . CflWil Com pany P J n ji

SUNDAYA R cgionol N ew sp o p e r Serving N ine I r r ig a te d C o u n tie s

FEATU RE SECTIONT W IN f a l l s . ID A H O , SCJNDAV, O C T O B K R 0. 1960

Qose Supervision Needed in Chemical Experiments Special Purpose Camera Is Built For Research by Area Sugar Firm

1•t lit llip ciinicrns

r !l!Ci» It .10 imall

Sufiar lirvslals Magnincd 50 Times

n U b U iiv v c h em U tr ; itudcQ li ihouU exp«rlinent with poten- m j dinprwu ebtmlcaU In * elimoom illMllon, *llh (he jo ld -

>t la iDilnctor. Local p b a m ic ls li are alanatd about th e

a tttkjtri eiperlm eaU Ilm w ith luch chemtcali c mop of Jcunnim to r life. Her*, under fuldance df thtlr e lilry (acher, John F la tt . ten ter, two Twin Falla hl(h Mho«l ti

work under auperrlitd eonaillons. They wear aofely toc fle i and work with a mlnltnum «f themlcal while they te s t the critical lem- perature of potaislum chlorate. Students are M arsha Ott, dau|bler of Mr. an>l Mrf. Crawford OtI. and Robert Runnlnr. »on cf Mr. and M n, S. E. Uunnlnr. R ati notea th a t experlmentlnr w ith dan- rcrou i chtmlcala If ai danierou* aa d r lr ln t » ear fait with na braliF*, and atreiu* that every precaDtlon ■bould. ba Uketi to

. . . -.eniraTln*)a ro ld accldeala. ISUII p

Danger of Experiments in Explosives Is Emphasized

, ... Inllni; auWoridcj and re.^pan. lble Oulu In Tv.’in Falls. ' •Lfslle Crowity, T«. ln Pallj phar-

' presldfnt.of the idAho or phorTniwy. &aya lo-

ers are slflrllnit a Ind cause themselve.'i and

rttfids 10 lose their r IrIu or pos-jrunis on such chcmlcaTs pcrrodicaily j wn fo r buylnR them and by taklns [when teen-B6crs start a tJd, Cro»v-l the cliemleals off the eelf-lielpley slrcjscj this an extremely slielve.s so they can’t shop fordangcroai lad iimt should be d ls - .. ...................couraRtd by parenla. school nu - thorltlM and mcrchantj,

Speaking a i !hf prcjJdtm o l Die ■ Idaho board ol pharmacy, he np -

pfiur and poiaMium pernianffann le. Crowley noies ihat mixed toRetlier these chtmlcati can be extremely dangeroui.

He adds U is doublful If th e teen-agers want the chemicals lo r any purpose oiher than to c reate

rpIo.!lv«. He says drvulor

He sa y * mercltaniJ car forced to restrict the tale ( chemicals, but adds It Is th ponslblllty of pharmacliti merchants to aafeRuard pc health and satety.Theycando this by refusing to sell the chemicals

wl)D ha'

Inboratary w as reduced to aham- bles. One boy lost a hand and other was blown throuffh a dow. DamaBc to the room building tota led nearly $SOO.

Crowley mixture of thechemlcAls “couW creslc on «pJo- alve Diaterlnl Uiat could result In' the loss of on eye. a rm . leti poislbly even kill a person. Such chemiCAU could cause a severe

11 for life.Cioilfy hn t.%lked with other .’nmftiits In (he d r y and they

chilli tun on chemlcaLi tho t It hljh txploslvcs. Croaicy es- IM he hM lind n t least a

fifml:i"l,“ 'in “.*^wcek’ ®'^'^^|inaiio ooara oi pnarmscy. he a p - cur-, ri. , IP « '’ ‘o iT'erchi.nls ^^ho deal

■jf/i ; i l , ? POtWBlum in-such chemicals to restrict siilesiwa«lum chlorate. BUl-'to responMble aduILs,

'wfthout fljkinif.Crowley points out the nichflcld

chcmlstry cla. s explosion In May as nil exomple. Btudenls expert- mciued with certain chemicals w llhoui approval of the instructor.

In that explosion three students were injured Btid iht chemistry

“Hard Look” Is Given to lJ7^7”DiscoTeTer Satellite

» turd loolc a t th e liorej luck Jiiwuertr, v.■o^kho . e o L ^ m e r-

UIClllIc.l.-Atijr-T doitiV m ore i o r ^ |c u ' ft»ro|i{i, (allure.,, two, MU:ie«,ive

scored Lwoi flrjit. t«|)lot4tlon —

qulrlng RrcBter accuracy than h as b e e n demonitraled to far • AmcrJeaos.-T h i

used by the plane shot down by tl>; Soviets.

Before this vital equipment be placcd In the sky, a vehicle

Dlscove

Success Talc Of Man, H.5, Reraarkal)le’

FUNT. MUU. Oei. S !' - }lr Isn't widely known rmi..i,ic l>i:' home to'vn but Charles strw.irt Moll ha.' one ol tlic nniunrs iuom rcniarkatilo (inniiclnl s u c c e s s stories.

A; 85 Molt lin.\ ninie moiiry thin most pioplt cvci ilrcuin o!—snd-he's-*tlll. m :Uaiis_ii_______

The Flint niiliusirlallsl. (innuclcr ind phllanthrnpl.st Is n .slQckliold- T In .irvfra) foiporniJbm jinri hi^

holcinRs In just one — Clcrini.il Moior.i — nir w on li nio;e lh:iu JOO million (lolUii-.s,

H’on’t T ell H ordi Dlvldcnd-s nione from his

<56,000 OM ^liiirc.s five million doll.->i

Moll «.on't .■=:iy 'Questions aboi

»J)nt worm."

Under the crr.st of hU f»!iilly Spcclanmr ARcnila,"

T iny (rafiMatc,-:. he Inx^'"Known by our decd.i." not, he

ur assets.” of th e very few sur-

vlvtng automotive pioneer*. He started In blcyclc wheels; switch­ed to automobile wheels with the comlnj of the horseless carriage. He has been f- Gener.al Motors director alnce 1013; was a OM vice president from 1D16 to 1931.

WtiAt do yoa d o whfn ;'Ou’re Si and have It madC7

Mott ! • B«i*y M m Mott is a busy man. Ha rises

M 7:30 a.m. a n d breakfasts at S vhlle reading th e newspaper and listening to newscasts. His “liome secretary” arrives a t 9 and Mott dictates until 10. then rcpacks the; briefcase he b rought home the night before and goes to hU office aovnlonn.

He heads fo r home a t i p.m. after a day s p e n t making

Man Builds Bomb Shelter In Six Weeks Spare Time

avenus west, Twin FalLi, structed a bomb she lte r for his family In his backyard In six weeks

r (tac,have been rendlntt a n t

hcarlnj about the need for shel­ters In the ca.se of a tta c k and de­cided to do something about it, '

IlaKncr. He po in ted out th a t money through io u n d Investmentslwhlle Twlil f'alls b n o t a atrftleglc - a n d giving aw oy b(g hunks of t„get. a rocket w ith » hydrogen

Of total W...,: “I feel th a t If wa It would be much worse to run g Ifian it wouW be to slay. Where fc would a person run to anyway?" he asks."

Uc points out that with the sheN t ter he and hU family have a placc "Jiut a few steps from the back door” where they cwt weather o

attack.

Mother and Daughter Make Tliemselves Comfortable in Bomb Shelter

jWd-fliys b ier by a spectacular of bovlct slrenftth .

X in o im cd 0 cflDsufe I Earth with enough nccurncy

close to It.s 60-by.200- ' wjc( area. T h is was the

'«overy Of a n objcet from

X iy jj^ .U B U l,1.1 itie air by planes—the

recovery of an object

i i i ? . S o v i e t s Dicy had recovered-* cap-

Miur.iiiinp, live, unhuri aiii, m ore, the

Dlscoveters, , ; iSlscoverer. sholsSoylst successes 'have p u t , the

^•'iDlscoverers about t«o gamivv be-................... global scries ol spuceball and gives rise to tlie. quca* lion: have the Dlstovtrers discov­ered anything worthwhile?

The full answer lies behind .. veil of secrecy, but this much Is known: -

something th o t haa yet "i®™^ c U y _ a fliK averi^. ,P‘j;nMd and; try. w lih tnlee. ended "« aoflea n necessaTyT failure xvhen a aecond> 8<»ne'«i( them mi' bisiiiij iniiuri

*‘T. l!!": atOTM-:« insicid of in to o rtit. T h t » R heaua monkey,

^hedulcd for la te r thJ* year. n«;wc the .pace firs ta acored by

, n n d XXV, Dl».

------ mlM ed th

.......

caw up. howevM. and pre. fcavery.

tvi'b!?.".'?* tapped D i«ov . M» uc»t in two o th e r algniricant

Som e ot tUt mfornifllJon lo — obtained by Midas and Samos sensors will be too deialleti-and too sccret—to be sent back to E arth by radio. Capsule drops of tapes end fllmi are an obvious answer.

T he spectacular air catch Discoverer XIV's c ipsu le-by _ CU9 which managed to drape the

I pirachute over- a huge trapeae

to Earth- M r .............. ........My a Cl30 could easily catch 3.0TO-1............................................

In apace.3. Probably the most urgent of

Ihwe Jobs U ipylag on tit u rjp re . 3,000-pound mannei Mpsule likedlctable. uncooperative. neiRhbor. th a t soon to be rocketed tioft a*the Soviet Uhlon, In’; order to a n a rl of Project Mercury,strengthen national defenic. Biicceuftil recovery of ■

i. At least ?(} more Discoverer; ptete MieJIKe, a< planned, tiatd mora may

....... may be se n taround the moon Md back m b Ic- UMf mlUtary latormaUon not likely to b« obtained by such purely Klentllie vehicles ai tha upcom ­ing nADgertockeU.

Air force itrateglsu believe Ota- coverer, deiplte lU .widely pu b . UeJ»tl /iUurw. baj beta M trw ne- ly aticceuful, I t h u done a t I c u t

P»ve the ««■ for --------------

,w<lu U designed to 'd e te c t jr.th infrared t iu o n , Uia ho t e«* AftiCj Df-mlsuiei launched » n y »hera 10 th t «orld. Samos will » r iy c*m«rM, M l eventually

I n . llIPOliirtO.-.U»pM

vltnl appllcatlotu for

to Bllde down from orbit and Und like a plane, Qlseoverera majr never have wings, but thtir cap- .sulcB are aolvlng some of Dyna- , soar's, atmoapherle re-entry prob-

O ne qUMUon Discoverer crltlcji are beglnniDg to uic U ihU: v lth Mlda» ana ■ SajDw. M neAr-they

x H r tS u ! '" ''"

She ^ match them »iUi aimllar •aleUlles of her ovo.' or the may •iM t, to try to knock pun down.

t o eiUier c u t rt would im v U* lo know what U Inilde luture Bo> Viet M UUlt^

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PAGE TIVENTYTIMES-NEWS. TW IN FALLS. IDAHO SUNDAY, OCTORER 5 ,

f ^ Q \ C VALLEYA S Y O U R M IN IS T E R SEES IT

______ _____________ "Measuring L ife" —-----------------------------------

Annu«l vuiion lo KINO rni-L, Oiti hU wn-ln-lsw »nd iliuflucr, I two KTKHdclilldren. 6hlilcy. It. world pila lummer wWlr -

_ .A Mounulnecrs, cllmblnj orssnluitlo eludes »l>oui M ptrso and tlio Jnnn faral' prUfd to »ee iwopli

( thfy wtr« icquBlnted.

cabin fclilch win nifd foi

Thpy UMd llie csliln for tliclr ■ church onrt Mlll.i wid hl» erand- I «mi werr nppolntpil to prepare It ' for Sunday cliurcli srrnrf.'. Tlipy.

By nONAl.1) I,. HOKKM 'a ito r. Flml ClirUlian Cti

scs'icvcm l w.iyj to

which thfy nilltd

Ikprr »o nucli men today becomeimeasure; lepers, cut oil tliroujh plne-u?

. 'mi elerolty Jrom Ood *nd His >'ol be called succcsslul. ;e the dlCIerence be*

call'hnpplnes.'i"nlV. 'h ^ V the "blrMed liapplneu« " h t to think." Erenlwlilch our Lord *peau 1ft MaUwiu-

»' truly reliable

Black Widow Spider Wel)s Are Valuable

t thethi . onljr- worth'

licwure'of lllf. H •rrult-b:armB-" ■esuj rpealcs of thu. measure In ohn 15;1-16. Note there that one Iocs not bear Irull unleaa he Is "In he vine:" that Is. In Christ. If or:e ibldes in the vtnf. he bears "much

Resolutions Approved by

Elmore UnitKINO HILL, Oct. »-Reiolutlons

approving (vderal aid tO~education and rejecting the proposed Si (ooih national park In Stanley basin were adopted bj- Elmo: county Pomona Oraiiie membei We_dnesday evening _ln_ the Kin?i,nf,uj„^n

R est It Occasionally

People Are Indicted fo r Much Abuse of Stomaoi,

By HAROLD T. HYMAN. M.D. v(W ritten lor Newspaper jitnruooarcl ivc Enterprise AssocUUoni csn t be foldc

If» a Bood *or most of lusluDt,4iaH ii» re ’* no court, la. WhlcU ae;.. Ovtrdoilnf v

charged with eruei and felr.e m bevrr.v^

H ii r b v ™ . hiui. reporu iw b i d - “ " " m “irds, Mountain Home, romona[jj,pjg „f ^h o happened to have cl ulcers.“ ler. Ivlndlcllve stomachs misht pos.; CoatinR.% of pA resolution concerning reseed-jaibly spend moat of our lives in sijtric jutces B cutover lands In lorest treas'debtor’s prison. their dlBcstive

resolut

lialatlarAUSTIN Tex, Oct, 8 _ -n.e nctcrlied by "love, joy, peivce, 1

.Idow spider crawled out of;.'uf/enn«, inut huliiT boillc and l-e-l fnltlifulness. rnfcxntss. • lelf- rklnft for the slate of TexB'

Is chftr-

Nell R-aa proud of making seats out ot pine limbs. Tlie church »n.i rfsdj' for ^erv-

s t«o older raccoons Hut111 ui= .Tio>- I...........- secured by irapplnB wwt

Th , . . . . . (titin b:~ r,l man- ’nign Hid .Ednardl, 01£.ro the end of neilftnh lai« where iTRICII, cave him a rnccoon pupor they made their camp. I raccoon kitten as It b olieii called,

Lunlly her production

ii^huay dcp.iriment.•n.e black «lduWs only po

III occ.\jlonal fly or inoth ai For tills the will

Speakers fo r Toastm istress

P arley N oted

.dopted. Members tabled private truck hai concerning runoff

nommntins elections.Reports from s u b o r d in a te

Oranges were'itlven by Mr.s; Frank Jones. King Hill: Mrs. Jack Craig, alenns Ferry, and M^, Olive Oroefsema, Mariposa

e Grange Nov

ivs well as alze, Zach roembi ills own pact fioinJ and carried about 100 pounds,

- reporu-.txctpt lha children whose-.paefca-irere-lithter.---------- ----------

Bhlrley practiced •rilklng be* fore she came to Idaho lo con- dltlon tierself tor tht trip. She

' would nalk about (wo tnlles dally v lth la poutidi on her pack board.

The group used lea In the cof- I fee pot they Included In

Dui there Is nolhlng aljuiil lifr wnres. When It liAr c.iL Us own, the dcparlnient Robert Carlc.'on were speaker; pnys J15 lo r 50 feet of web. ;durlnK the Friday niomlng meet-

Warklntt with the splder-iind IriC

jlr-fondllJoncd i/yilnimfnl repa ir.^ ’" ' ' ' '" '" '.'Imp r t Camp Hubbard, n depart,

lal branch In North'Au-sttn.

th e family cat and the up together for Uielr afternoon naps. Even the family dog Is get* tlnfc used to the young raccoon's presence In the house.

Uzilah ( I I Chronicles 28i. vhn^ and fame "spread fa

abroad." Is not the true measure o life: for as he ended life cut of from all people

Of Experiment With High Explosives

Clanfle- Evttns. en ierinstm m ent repairman, and Milton Inr Instrument repairman, think there’s nothing ilk# the widow’s web for crof« holra. Moat ot departmenfa 2^00 levels and ti sit.t used In surveying nre

lipped.rtie web Is stronger and r

llejible thnn platinum wire.Her lo clean. T lie hlack

thf—ffcnt—n tn ner In t he—ttpti , . her Alik i.i always nuniform blnckne.ss and even In dl-

___ tiBiU fraa rif« 1>.accident and.should be used only with extreme cauUon.TTiesechem. Jcals are dangerous and I know •they aren't using them for meuica purposes."

Crowley continues, ‘Ttilii;s like IhU become a fad. These kids '

tlneana*ndiuchaithat.bu t'. ... th lt U dangerous and could result

s that t( often

Success Tale Of Man, 85, ‘Remarkable’

(CMtlilitJ rrea r>il v h a t he makes throuih his Mott tounditlon. .

This still erect, mujtachloed aJx- footer, with craggy festure* un ­der btuhy gray eyeUrow. onci couldn't scrape up enoimh cash to meet hU bllla. But he uys he's never met on advtrslly he didn’t OTercome.

The flnanclaa panic of 1M7 .... but va«hed out hU shtelmaklng business. Order c a n c e l la t lo n j i tumbled In. bill paymenu lagged, Ftnally Mott induced ttioie who owed him to give him notes. These, in turn, he endorsed and (arg to hLs own creditors.

^ Two years later Ouicral Motors . bought a « per cent Interest In •. h is firm for 11,481,000 sorth ot I OM stock. And In UU-before 4 there was an Income lax — M ott I turned over eomrolllnj Interest

for another chunk ot QM stock.In 1B2S trusted officers in _

bank ot which he was chUrman T ’ The Soifa speculated in stock*. The market crash sent UJ9J.000 In bank funds cascading dowik ih<

, ilraJn,r—• Mtrtt * t* under no legal obliga­

tion. But he made good the short. • (» out of hb own pocket.

9 WhUe he was kssoclsUd with * etptalDs of industry ind tli t moat ot hU life, he feels as much ^ a t home with men In overalls, He ^ holdi a lUe membership in Flint

local 1H3 of the AFL-CIO Poll * 1 union.

An awesone tornado hit Flint June t, »M. I t killed lie peopleIn lerelu ..................... ........■aebrB— V......—“Operation Tornado." Volunteer, inarched Into the stricken »nd In two days they rebuUt than (0 home*,

I t w u In the middle of a sizzling h o t afternoon when someone

r T '» fB i«a-r~ i»rp»nim -tiH p»r «ar ^ beat-up hat u C. B. Mott.

’ Ba then l i and had brought ■1 «loD| bU hammer and uw . -

«M to ie l; embarrssscd «hen . . portoia ftod. photogrsphtti troop­ed Up.

• 7 'u n ‘t understand vhat all

t w r b e i f m Flint KU doing, to- dlV, If* whal every good nelgh- bor oucbt to>U dolDg.'

Xmieo painters on the scene

' RlDi h u been called the town tb tt-M o tt buUt. m tuins orer to ti«f jantt=ftnindaUon n lo 30 per

I income t a r ..............

iflJiF 'chem cIals lo the purchasers.

He docsn-l know if other tomsre experiencing such ......._lyn It has happened here In years

p ast nnd that once the publli ’ tvlcrtcd the fnd will run It* coi

/e r a short period of time,John FIntt, cheml,?iry Instructor Twin Falls high school, doubts

I t lltc lecn-agers who want such chcmlcala have ever been chemis­try atudcnlj. He says any alert stu­den t who ha* been Introduced tt th e dangers of the chemicals has enough sense to leave them alone, 'T h e persona who know about •• e chemicals are the ones «ho

j them nlone, Tliey can form . tinaUble compound

extrem ely dangerous."

th e kids don’t realise the danger u n til It Is .too late.'

explains It Is rather easy to te ll If the teen-ager has a genuine Jn tertat In the chemicals. When ft.'ilced If they have such a reason they have no answer, and simply

Crowley explains the dan0«

belle' le chemicals o ve been Introdui only through children’s

chemistry sets ond now think they ' low something about chemistry.

'T hey nren’t Rolng to discover anything new. They might

Riles Honor Ar ea Woman

t ihfy cc itff-rlve an automobile off

m akes Ju.si a,s much re Flntt point* out It Is

ponslblllty of parents themselves Informed on w:

illdrcn nro dolnK i\iul to rciilrlct ..iCiii from experimenting

■eucU chemicals,they don’t , ' he snys, -It Is

about th e same thing as discoi nectlng th o brakes on the is r nr telling th e ir chllUren to go lor ride."

SHOSHONE. O ct, a — Funeral s e rv ic e s were held a t 3 p.m. Wedne-sday nt the libS church for, Mrs. Mary Cleveland with BUhopj Olenn L. Sorensen, of the Dlctrlchl LDS church, officiating.

Prelude and postlude n Ihe orsan waj played by Conrad Thome.

Speakers were Herbert May and F. L. Manwlll,

A mnle quartet, cnmpo-^ed

Lecturer Speaks At Grange MeetIfENDELL, Oct. 8 — Mr.s, J, H.

Canal Tour Held In King Hill Area

KINO IHLU Oct. 8 - Directors o f the King Hill Irritation district board toured the canal thU week from D eer gulch. 15 miles south­east o t town to the head end of the canal a t Malad near Hagerman.

Porticlpatlng In the lour o’ere M anager Ted Moore. Karl Carna­han , Knrl Anderwn, Donald Flock a n d L. S. Ulllcan. Work to be done th la fall wa* dlicuued.

After the tour directors held tin regular business meeting at thi IrrlgaUon district office with Cam' ohAn, chairman. In charge.

reported water recently wa* turned Into Uie new ditch a- round the Deer Oulch canyon.This project ha* been under construc­tion for several months. '

W ater will be turned out of ihi entire ayatein Monday.

U K E B A T H IN G Y O U R F A C E IN

WENDELL.Freeman; lecturer, rcporled

dystrophy program and . , ! a re.idinc wl

Wendell Ornngc met this Albln Holnmulat. overseer, pre*

aided In th e nhsencc of the majter. Freeman, O ther pro tern

officers were Ben Oulllford. over­seer. and Mrs. Den Oulllford, chaplain.

Mrs. R ay Ruby, home economics chnlrmnn, reported lunch will be served a t the Ike L. Armstrong

lie Oct. 20 and jiollclted help om O rnnge women.Henry Schmidt reported (

. jrvey being conducted by University of Idaho,

Unite

___ ... the table topics by dLsiMlng names In the news. The xlcology lc!>v]n itressed the u

new and different adjective*.t subsidiary

motions was Rlren during the p a r llamentary procedure Itison,

Toftstmlstre.w w’ls Mrs, Hugh Boone, who eiplalned the club' theme. "Ever Widening Circles.''

Frank Bradley and Mr; Lucille EldredRe.

Mrs. Ben Eldredge presided; th Invocation vas given by Mrs. Kenneth 8ht»-. and Mrs. Gordon Tobin was chief evaluator.

The next meeting will be held Oct. 21, with Mrs. Carleson toa*lmlstreu.

Wherever you go. you hear Addition. .^me one or other coi ’ ' about his stomach. IfsIt's "sensitive." ............Or 1C*

e bllnt Ladle:

Mrs.Vel.ser i

i Mrs

......... Itaelf. you jury, rnUicihcor nothing. ,a complete

Here and now, I propose to pre- fcnses to tenl the stomach's side of the case, been -lubjcc After you’ve, read my bill of par-am certain

r and llculars. I believe you'll agree ihni!lnlclllRcncc my client Is more sinned ogalnst abuses inflk than sinning, JIoJbI mni

The.se are but some of the Ihe .jcrlme.-s commined by

'■ !cu

R-.aiII hotly.

Heyburn Newsit-vniiK .-

subject was Widening Circle In t Natloai,"

-STTWiiiT>f7rEnaTnis5tn>arnet= ^w s-K niountaim iom B o « r i7 . -

with Mr. alternates,vtrs, C, K. Spence acted a•er In the absence of Mrs. L l o y d ; o ~ . , enson. Mountain Home. Thel Overloading, making It lmpos-| .

program Included a piano solo by.slble for the overstretched muKle lltyBU RN ..........................Mrs, R. I, Barne3..«05LJLQUttilld.»4^rsJo_clenr ouLoneiimngta^jM rs, Dar^^^ Wruulck.. reading by Arthur Orecr. jfore the next Is due, turned from n trip nirouch U'lv

Edwards stressed Uie Importance Chilling with Iced beverages, Arizona, New Moxico .lii-.i icL 'every Granger voting In ihe 'creatlng working condlUo^ un-,r.-<rto n - i , . . ---------- .

ov 8 general election favorable lo efficient hondling, sThe next Pomona meeting willI Folluro to masticate thoroughly.jl

Glenns resultl"®an all-day gathering at GlennsjresulUi ■rry. Mrs, Oroefsema Invited

King Hill and Glenn* Perry of : . Marvnjlablp

I’ulln;'

Refrcjhmenu were sened by ..Irs. 'Thomas Timbers and Mr*. Melvin Ilelwlch. Floral decoration* were furnished by Mra, Cecil Bott,

Seven FinedKINO KILL. Oct. » — Seven

drivers were fined this week by Justice of the Peace Lj'nn Sher-

ic-ovacwalght-vlolationA----Ts and their fines Include

Roy B, Albright. Kimberly. *10; Darrell J . Chlgbrow. Ooodlng. »ll; Harry E, Kenyan, jr., Portland. »1S: William cook*ey. Bountiful, Utah. » ll; Tom Hickman. Idabell, Okla.. iU-. Velmur Whitesitt, Ver* dale, Wash., t i l . and Wayne E, Miller. Indiana. SIS,

the exit door (pylodusi. Ouc.si.'iIngestion of roughage foods stre- h.

(d rr e«real4)v tha t «cralch-Uie-lii*|Ouf{y.-C ner lining; of alleky substances and Mrs (caramels, taffy) that cling to the'Callf,

DIAM ONDS'- I to b SK m m cr^jcw jlCOMPARE . . . . QuoliK COMPARE . . . . Weight C O M P A R E ................Prici

_ C o nrhole^alc pric

quoted by rrputablp wlioit. sale diamond dciilcrs catalogues,

C R E D IT TERMS

ana

B & B Inc.

TllOi Allen. . . . Thorne and Conrad' Tliome, .inng, Mra, Velma Allen' wa.s their accompanWt, Mrs, Allen' and Bheldon Calllstcr sang a duet.j with Allen Thom c accompanist.

The Invocotlon was by Howard' Pitman and tlie benediction v by Walter Bowman. Fred H arrL^n; dedlc.ucd the grave at th e c tery.

Pallbearcra were Herb McGowan,! OeorKe Cleveland. Randy McCow*; an, nobble FWher. Jim Scott and; Mimln Pitman, handled by girls of the Dietrich' MIA,

■nis family prayer a t the Mc- Goldrlck funeral home was by H)rum Jeasen. Downey.

DEL MONTE

riSED FOR LANQUAGEJEROME, Oct, B-Lewls Thomas

Jerome, wa. fined «5 and sen­tenced la 10 dftya In Jail Thurs* day by Police Judge Fred Eber*

ihardt for using abusive Innguage.' iTha complaint against Thomw jwas tlKncd by Catherine Powell,

READ T1MES-NEW3 WANT ADS:

TOMATOJUICE

4 46 oz.c a n s

DEEP BLUE" Tiny S ize

OYSTERS4

8.. S ' !cans ■

I V I a g n c i v o ^ iw onderfully functional .-i

Large Plump STEWING

HENS

poUC7 »*r»:... our rwourcw and cupportlBf actlTltles - J iu ttw -sian tA rU

iMe KUrltle* m a;

4lDf a 10 snllUoneeaW eo «0 •c rta

____ >l.Usd. Oa tha «lt«Dn»iiM<I MUdtnii woxth l ’ «D><h»U nllUon dol*

-r, .• TUot braocb of t of Uichliaa and I* of Kl<nei and ap-

foundation pula ft' mUllcD dolUr* into

id.-Vott pngnm which - ' A v ^ buailns* a*

; tU ehUdren. r tCBsU It so and

latty at 79- . _ Jt h» »[ll|-iiidiM m bit ow n '

R I C H A R D H U D N U T

ROLLS ANYWHERE— BEAUTIFUL PROM EVERY ANGLE! Incorporates the samt high quality, dep«nd- a b le full-translormcr powered ch jstis as in many of th e fine Magnavox consolei. Automatic picture and sound stabiliiers Joropjmum performance from local o r distan t stations. Optically filtered 19* screen (di­agonal m easure) for greater picture realism and depth

■ Js ilh true eye comfaft_-AlM .aM ilabla-.w th-opt;ona>- convenient wireless remote tuning. Several beautiful h a n d 'ru b b e d wood-finisha*. In m ahogany,

HALIBUT. . . .FRESH LEAN, QUALITY .

CompUla «lih m'obUt ei 229"» I lEround BEEF • 2 lbs*79< ..d

DRUGSA V >iM O R

F A C T ^ O ^ Y ^ ^ ^

420 Main.Ave. So. RE 3-2233

T h e fineit, lorgett, m o s t

com plete selection o f f««h , open itack

LuncheonMeatsin th e Volley

siiDi': iMARKin561 MAIN

a v e n u e e a s t

P H O N E RE 3 - 4 4 3 4

O P E N D A I L Y

8 A .M T O 8 P .M . C L O S E D S U N D A Y S

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OCTOBER 9. fiM E S -N E W S , TWIN FALLS". IDAHO- - P A G E TWENTY-ONE -

J i a m m o l h D i e s e l W r e c k e r B u i l t A r o u i u l 3 5 - T o n C a p a c i t y W i n t - l i Scoutmaster Welcomed l>v

pow Ihf cluircli •crvlcr*. At a ti m. for the ChrlslniM prejT»m. |llie Rcv. Mr. E.i.Mry will conducl Clinlrmnn of this commlulon Is (lie qiiarltrly conlcwce. Mm. John Jones, jr., and mtmben

■nir comiiiKMmi on (riucMlon nre Qerslrt-Martin, Fifd IWbcts.., will iiifpt .<01111 lo pctparp mnlcrl-innrt Mrs. Eltnnarn McConkey,

Solve that money, problem by mail!

Apply for n C .A .C . Idnn rtt.v,,...'lU'ol C o in p lc tf ll io entire tmns* II iiv-t.lm .priviicy-.of your liome. O ur tiine-M viiiR loniw-bv-mnil ji l iu ciiab lo i yovi t<> ImncHe ov- crydiiiiK I'.v iii.-iil.../'ro;ii .nfipli-

final iinyiiu'iil.

lo o n t u p lo $ 1 000

G . A . C . F I I W A A T C EO R P O R . A T I O N

rmfrlv Conlumer Finunqn Cotpoiollon

■ 1 4 7 M a i n A v o n y e , E as tTwin Fall*, Idaho

T c lo p h o n e RE dw ood 3 -1 0 6 6

dltMl w recker equlpptd »t their Thonund Sprlnic* machine tlinp U eaiacUy of 35 ton,, in aplte of Its «lxf. llie wrtckfr can roll .M spe rtsfrara le/t. bT Keith Bllrtr, V ojlt 8Uj»f and WlUUm BUjar. wKh HklpMr »n h«ur. If* the only one like U In thia p irt of ilie nation

r n I t r « r T h e 8llr*r» fabricated nMtlr all of the »cce»iories themselve*. imonj Ihe larjcest auto wrecker* (n Uie world. I t I5 one of tlbsMlaiWund * ipecltlly deilpied }Iolmei IM wrtcker wlncb Trblch Ivai a load wftcker* In lilalio. (Staff photo-cngravlnn) _ _ __

Giant Diesel Wrecker Constructed by Doyle Sligar and Sons in Five Months

THOUSAND BPniNQS, Oct. -Doylt a larRC mon wltti(:ae RraylnK hair, hasit?j;rtd irtcitd. moriKlcd trucKi tir.3 uitttrs lor msny yenr* In inichlr.f ihop he opemtcs TO<jujc3'£pr)nEi rcsort-

liul Ills monthj ago he and his l.ojonj, Keim snd William Sll- fir. ur.dcrtiwlc somclhlnK tlCW. TT.fj Sfjtn trori: on w hs! has dif-

iiuo one of the largest »:f:hrs In the world.

r . a j , s .^pfclnlly - built B50 !l:^nts MTCcKcr w inch, ft 'iscd K(/iiocili iriick nnd b 220 Cum- d.-j illtjpl engine os basic units 'f.t thtct men constrdctcd i ■TKkfr that Sllciir declnres will ■luncllc nny »l7< wreck anywhtre" Mfa.'iirln* 27 feet, B Inches

.lom buiiipfr to bumper, the truck Pss IS sptcds forward nnd will Ro

ll’s [i.ice up to BO miles a>'i SDpnr.boom extends 18 feet

r. For Jolj. reQUlrlni! It ft <5-foot optional om Is nvallnble.20 mlntites to chanse ' boom and be 1 3 Keith Bligar.

..........— I5 eniilppod Kith 700IfH d livc-clEhth.1 Inch cable. 'Tlifrt an t a canyon In ISaho '•t nril itnch to the bottom oK' n ijv .s ilr« -D onr“ SIiitar. "and ■"‘1 » 35-ion load capacity we

m jn y th in g out of

canyon," he adds.A special feature Is four lorge

hydraullcRlly-operatcd outrlugcrj w/ilcfi, wfttn m place, tor working base 10 by M feet in - 'This gives extra stability a n d Is

> of the built-in cafety factors have Incorporated." relates the

elder Sllgar.Why tli'e trem'endous ______

•Trucks and /o^ds ftuve alj grown larger." rctwru Sligar. "Idaho w ja one of the few states not havlnft n large wreclcer so we Rot busy. T his is the first diejtl wreckcr m Id a . ho." he adds.

The rl? b u 10 tires, all l3-ply, Ihivt stand iialf a man filgh. radiator cap u seven feet above "le Krouni}. The outfit Is pa inted _ brlKht yellow-orange set off with gleaming chrome exhaust stncka mnnlng up each tide of the cob

The Sllsars used double rc ln . forced Irm eaort throughout to inlnlmiie chance of frame foUure.

The undtrslde Is a maze of w lrts and hoses nmning to lights, brakes, lh« h o i s t and to toe hitches.

The cab Instrument panel r*. sembJes the cockpit or an air force bomber. Dials and iw itc h u stretch com[detely across the dash. Tathometen. heat gauKcs. ait preutJre diali, ill tell th flr story •) the operator.

The driver's s e a l. Is sltuoted about live le tl above ground level

nnd provides a blnlseye view of the roadway- The cab is equipped

■ a sleepinfr space for use on____ eounlry IrJps. T)ie SIlRnrsreupliobiered the cab nnd Installed foam rubber se ili for driver and pa."iscnKer.

'I t Fould take Sto.ooo to dupll* „ L c the machine," says Sllnar. "However, by machining many of th e parti oUJ-ieJi'es and using pnrts

e had on hand the total co: 'I waa somewhat leu."O ne of the problems they

countered was building liltc.nea strong jnouRh to deliver full pay­load potentlnl of the wreciccr without urcnUinn dfmn. Following specifications provided by ' Holmes company, they solved problem.

A lter » trial road test Doyle SllRar proudly announced his gli.nt wrecker was ready for anything.

Visit ParentsKINO HILL, Oct, S — Mr.-and

Mrs. Robert Burr and daughter. Boise, visited her parents, Mr. and Mt.t. Iloben ■Robe/taon. nJid fam­ily en route from a vacation trip to Helena. Mont, They also visit­ed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil­liam Burr. Plain, Mont.

Robert Oraham went (0 Presno. Calif., this week on a buslno&s tr ip .

SeaI'Drire'Sets“= Central Mailing

Hospital 61*0011(1“ Landscaping Set By Rupert Group

RUPERT. Oct. 8 — TllC f(rr:t proJccL under tlio new community (levolopment program lor the Hu- pcn Jnycccs will bo lancl'.cnplnR of llie new hospital grountU, rc- Bortr. John Illllins, president. |

He SAld th a t at a inectlnR this eelc the Kroup had picd[!c'(f « i

hours of work on the Rroiinds to] the county hospital otilclab, and' thot th e JayccM were L'isaslng a chnllcnRe to other civic groups to m atch the ir offer, I

C urren t plan-s nre to have grounds leveled by machinery, then volunteers. -%uch as the Jnycce group, will furnish llie hand work neccssnry !or the completion of the Job.

Rex Bpcrry, chairman of the community deveiopnicnt project, said th a t ftnsB ers to Qucitlonnalres sen t ou t recently by the organiza­tion for sugKc-setloni on commu­nity dcvcJopment were still belnj; received, and that replies should be se n t to the Jaycce.^ a t 515 Filth street, Rupeit.

SIn l dleatl powerei

HAILEY. < S — Mrs, GlennStreet, pre-sldent. of the Blaine Coilnty TuberculosU a.'.soclation. reports Cfiristtnii* .spnJ.? for Sliiiiifi county will be mailed from a c trnl office in Burley thi.s year,

JIoweviT. a ll contributions m by Bhilnc county re.-vldcntA will returned hero ond handled in the pnst.

Mrs. S tre e t s ta ted Ihla will be true for nil aeven countlcs in thi

'fourth d is tric t and that the de- cUlon u 'oj reached when it waj determined there would be les.i expense involved.

StuffJnK envelope* with seals and lalllnc hn-1 been a project ol 11- su n Valley Biulnc-sa and Pro-

fCislonftl W omen the past several years,

NAMED EnlTOR H A G erM A N . Oct. 8 — Danny

Moore, son or Mr. snd Mrs. E, C. D inty) Moore, hn-s been elected

sporta editor for the Dally Unl- ^rse, the dally paper of .students . BrlRhain Voung unlverslly. Pro-

.} . UtAh. Moore la a senior major- Ing In Journalism and minoring

BUBllsh.

18 I n i t ia te dFILER. O ct. S — Eighteen boys ere in itiated a s greenhands Into

the Flier F u t u r e Farmers of America chap tc r th is week.

n ie y Includa Steve A iu)is.__nrlRlit, B r u c e Brown, Charles C iiam bera^Oclljeft Erfckaon,_D«an >'lslicr. D onnell Olngerlch. Jay Hauser, G erald H ay s ,. Horoid Jlaii.«r, n o g e r Jones, u r r y Mc­Cauley. C harles pubanz, L y le Ktckenburg. Robert Roy, Eugene, etarr. O erry Tegon and Henry. White.

d is tric t repo rt WM Riven by. Larry Annla a n d refreshment

served.

Giant Diesel Wrecker Hoists 21-Ton Machine Off Ground

Buying an automatic washer?

i mf f i S i l #

W hy settlehiP'lesi than the best?

•In eon(rolled lafKiratory ia i l i , tha FrllM itnW iih tr^m w dbtito te iM dingiu tom alicw uh- i .

___________ erscoMldefing the following polntis tall rimo». f -w h . Jar “ *n'>’n r i im m l r * y n m o n r

; .11(1 ■ 4 ..ncn M m ,I „„„,rt.R ,p„rtN o.6«M l.a.l«lM ,,3,I960. t

Exclusive somersault Washihg Actionw im > R ln s Pump Aglta^ir

balhet de«p dirt ou t b a « ^

E n jo y a w tu h w t f io t does th e tohoJe jo b . . .a u to m a tie a U y l

" TRIGIDAIREIm perial WASHER

all for onJywith a ll UiiM u tT -cm fMtBm ^

^Position Fabric StiMtor “Rtatter-tnlndi'' Um entlrt wuhlflf Job for youlWash or Soak Atitomatlally wiUi the two-way C>cla SelMtorl No massy lint trsptl Lint It svMpt away automatical^ iritfi Unt-Away-Wash-i-flitBa. —

• D ispenes blaach and d«tir|«nt pewiJw Of lifjulfJ-

undenvaltr, automatically!

1 8 8O T H ER MODELS A S LOW A S........

•W IT H TRADE-IN NOT O V ER 5 Y E A R S OLD

LOWEST PRICED 161JSIGIDAIRE DRYER!

n i j '

I

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PAGE TWENTY-TWOTIMES-NEWS, t WIN F^Il LS. IDAHO

: TW ENTY-TW O --------------------- . . — --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -—

Canal Company’s 90 Men Use Varied Machinery to Do More Work Than Larger Crew Accomplished A i S m a T p j J P '

A l f a l f a Fc’di . O M S

Krv,

“ SUNDAY70nT0BER,,„,,

>r force em ployrd br the Twin jid Ihrne m en do more < -'■ “

Die companjr whrn mi

FalU L’anU cnmpuir- lan (he ISO<nun labor tlKKork

band •'.SUckeri' b»»e bf*o wfedtd out o f the fo r« , m promotion iyilnri 1* In tro o p li th« MUne tU e ti the rnrn «re »rlMr»lned. their pay If hl»ber .n d tbe company h » a»«d d lU h rid er, and i. m oner oier Iho jcan, In k«plnr »nlr lo ja J ‘ nil *®®<1 worktrv lotlndetl In II

piylr-i .....Tlie complcif r...t|

-II the ralioiuJ-tt, but the Hull.......Uiin Jusi promiMni;.'

Magic Valley FARM NEWS

8y S a m Rosen

R oult 2 , H o n w n , Phono GArfield 3-5910

Valley; Some Labeled Disappointing

D cfsiu the «M U nt » w»Ur m U nienanc* le»r In Ihe / • « »l r iiln r M tU tor many eren a ipray r l j monnted on the tru c k a t Ihs rlth t, Ne lo t ImporUnt but iha rp ly Inyean. th« Tuln Falls C»n»l com pany has m tnifed (o father IhU array of tqa lp- contrast to tho m«h*niied array of power l i the imall whetlbirrow in (he f ro n t leftjnent that lares Ume and money in malntenaDce of the esnal system. Some of thla center. I t brln ji Into (ocuj, ptrhapit, tha t a certain imoutil of hand labor la allUtqolpment coniUls ol Ihrt# dnc tlnes , ditchers, mmalnt tractors, doaen, well r ljs and euenUaL (KeUer photo—atatt engravtnt)_______________________________________

T.F. Canal Company Has Future Plans To Deliver M ore Water Around Tract

Though Irrigation ruervolrs In touChem Idaho are tlirlnkliig down to pond alcM, nererthrleu the IVIn PalU CmuI company haa luturo pUna to prorlde evm moro leaier to ]t« ahareholder* than K doe« now. uya AUrtd Peten, com- piny m anaitr. ’

T h u s plans, are baaed on the auumption Uie drouihi vllL end and resenrolrs Kill fill again.

Tho pre«nt allocation per share of water is tlre>«lghta of iin Inch dellTered at the fanner^ hesdgate. However, the canal cotnpuijr has been dellrerlnt 'acUially three- fourtha of .an Ituh. kbout 120 per cent of the allocaUon.

Pet«n i»y» the eonpanj h*» plana to dellnr e ttn mora «»t«r

a*c m 2*vU m 'tM l*em bw u ^ ■quaro mllM of fannland.

Thti Ieat,.vlU only stlMl ih it many farmcri tlretdy knoWv

that tho vaUr rlfhu on the Twin jaU a tMct are amon| tha best In the wwW.

won't cost atockholders___j thsn It does now, aa-

aaiU Peten. who U JusUy proud that the maintenance lery oC »3

0 per ahare has been maintained io t £ 11 Tears.

r Juat how the levy Itan been h»ld ' ' 113 per ihare. In the lace o( coaU

IstOB In eiery corner of the Unlt- 1 BlAtes, shows vh&t Rood man- {«men( and luig-rante pluiiiine in do.In tho first place. Peten' office ew"«W -6ff ttntDiml? rmoney

9 . ap«nt each day for any Job done p In tbe ctnsi s>-siem. Many com- I puUas «Ul estimate usunllr w hat^ » ]ob will cost and «hen It is ------R pUad escUlm that c<uU i< ' er th»n anticipated.

- f r r ? r ' ' '

while he studies IheM re- But. 'Tills work Is more

like a hobby to me Uiui a Job oa rw oy ."

A no the r wsy he keeps coeta down Is to #e« to n that everj- last piece o f sc rap Rietal or lumber In the y a rd s U used up on mamtensnce w ork . Nothing goes to vnste. n e i th e r odd-sl:ed. •mall pieces of s c rn p Iron or itecl. nor odil-slzcd s h a p e s of lumber.

O n th e employe tlluntbo, Peters a a ld th a t by Improilng the wori-

' wage sltusUon at;d culling oui t h a la ile r men, he saved on monci • p e n t prcvlDiuly for Inelllclent la- I w . 'liier* were ICO employes on th e Job tor the canal company 13 y e a r s ago. but now there aie 60. WaB<* were low then, The help

rM alwaya dlsaatuilsd, and Uiere ,-aa poor incentive held out lo any

o f th e men In (he line of promo­t io n s .

Now. wascj are pmcllcally dou­b le w hat (hey were (hen. (he men

satisfied and put in o good days work for (heir pay, and th e y maintain the e<iulpment as II J t w ere their own.

Moreover, (he company h ts ib o w n training program to that mcr f ro m the ranka t in rt»e lo hlghci t ^ l n g Jobs when that is practlc-

purchases of any Item needed the yards or In the office. This applies to printed matter, such as ballot cards, ledRcrs or typlnR paper as well a s for purchnses of lumber, gasoline, well-casing, ment o r steel.

For B while, moro money .....spent on rock rlprappins the

1 than wns coming In from r ftsseismenta. but this prac­

tice has paid off In cultliig cans: repair costs tlirouRh the years

- -^ell a.% in helping Ute , . „ deliver m ore water I farmer.

Now that 7S per cent of IDO mlle-1 of canal, or 300 miles -•

banks are perm anently rip- rapped, the pressure la off Uie compiny to do rcpn lr wo;' tlmo In a rush a n d the be completed w ticn it Is advan- tagwus to do so.

Moreover, the $20,000 «pent by the compiiny to tile drains has iroved cheaper th a n cleaning iruih and other lit te r by hand, thouRh It might n o t have seemed 30 when Uie tile was being In- stalltd.

And though dynam iting rock reefs in the canal.n was expen.

first, les.1 Ice troubles or account of frceze.% In the area; of tlie reefs hnvc s.TVcd time. U'

?vcn money in the way r washed tn to the banks, costs of jM rm anenl Im­

provements during th e past years Jl0,000 for M ilner dam: M2,.

000 for Improving th e yards andl

houses of dllchrlier,^: *10.000 for spillways: S38.000 to pu t In fill: •- ellmlnntc Cottonwood flumes;, 500 for re-regulatlnit Deep dnm, and the money th n t has been spent on tiling. .

1 all this money has been spent. Peters, ’said the canal company has » « 0,D00 nccum ulatcd In reserves to take care o

major canal break Uiat, s< for. hasn't happened.

Tlie result of this t>-pe of man­agement? Tlia canal system Is it better shape than It h a s been

history. The yards lllled with all klnd-i o f he,ivy mulpmcni and vehicles, many of whlcti have radios to save time and mlleaBC, and the farmers have had more Irrigation water delivered lo them than orlRlnally antlclpaied. And more w ater will be dellve/ed In the years lo come.

Soviets Revive Plan to Reclaim Land; Attem pt to Surpass U.S. in Production

pre-harvest weatlier has In-' dlcated. spud yields so far are aown and in joine eases downrlsht disappointing, according to some buyers around Magic Valley.- J. n. einiplot company, Heybum. has harvested from IS to U per cent of wire 10,000 ncres of con­tracted iiaiatoes, according to Paul Han.^cn. Reiier.ile manager, with yields down" so tar from last year. Tlie quality i-. Iiilr, and though the wetitlicr Is warmer thsn Hsmcn p.r.d other men like JOr storlnK po­tatoes, the company liaj loo many acres out [o slow down and wait for co;d weather.

— J,-II_Hi:iiry-I*roducc. company.

potatoes hnrvcstcd so f i ...............and the plant Is going full blast .■sorting and storing. However. Ilenr)- said yields generally are "very disappointing." Henry iaid alio iiiai he understands some fields -of .' puds In (he Haieiton area are running extremely from ,75 to 125 sacks to the i

Bob Weaver, Buhl, reported the Hnzelton situation the some as Henry. Weaver adds that spud harvesting In the Buhl area Is ac- ualiy Just beginning. The weather Is loo warm for elllclent storage tually Just beginning. The weather nnd the spud Tines were killed

Meat Output Dip From Year Ago Noted fof Week

•WASinNOTON, Oct. B IT? - Total meat production under fed­eral Inspection Kst week dropped to about- 432 million pounds, three per cent less than one year aso.

This was the first week since July In which meat production had been below the level of the son week in 1353,

The drop largely was due lo _ decline In hog siaujiitcr. Pork pro- ductlon fell from nearly 191 mil­lion pounds one year agV'hr about 171 million pounds lost week.

Carl Qilb. Inc.. Twin Falla, dsoilng the hnrvcst or spod, feels the wcaUier has been too out the warmer arc.ij in iT. warm, which Is a factor In delay-lValiev. ‘ f'

rahlgh-

k- vw k done each day, a check made paolble by work sheets filled o u t MOh evening by crews. Pater* Knowa each flay the costs lo th e company and Just how far along tbe worit has progressed.

Haturally. this type of record --<htek ot work hours, equipment. /ftaoUne and other items ot ex- ^pniaa, meant addlUocal work fo r

who b u to keep tha Ughl .M m lai-lJi tha offlca many eve-

H uge

revived a land reclmnotlon plan of the early JBSO's in iU cfforis

surpaas the United States In agricultural production.

The seven-year plan lo oulpro- duce the United Slate.s by 1965 was based prlmnrlty on nn In­crease In yields. W hen Premier Nl. klta KhnLshchev announced the

meadow, in one region ot the Ukraine 4M.200 acres of land were

be drained a n d reclaimed by ' In IhL? area .soils .......... .

seml-arld lo n e s .o f-iila tic J lS S n . of the Volga river nnd the

........................... plower-

h a r e been applied to the purchase o f equipment during these years, b u t these expeiidliurc.s have saved

company mqi«y^Xald_Pci(;rs,._ T h e expense for hand labor used

to be enormous cleanlnj out can­a l laterals and ditches, •hoveling b a n k s and pUlng rock, but now m u c h of this work Is done by ma­ch ines. Cranes, small-jhovels. and o th e r Items have been pureho-scd-an tnntrte-porubier-uiinjrpuceaon wheels so (hat repair work can b e ahlfte^l from one p,->rt oI‘ the county (0 another la a minimum o f time.

W here it u>ed to take Ihree days > move some hea\7 equipment

fro m Castleford to the T»ln rallt ya rd s, now It takes Peters,

of money plan In 1S58, I t wns believed Hus-faniiers h a d about completed

an earlier plan of gettlnfc mon land Into cultivation by plow ing-UO-ylrgin ,v>ll,'t ahifiuhad-been used for centuries for grnzini; purposes. Apparently they had not

- perhaps th - ’-------------- ------

uppers are diminishing pasture . , and natural meadowiaiids in part.s

- -............. .. ............ Infer-Iof the Ukraine and tlie Northtile, have poor m otslure retentive Cftue.'iius.ability, and require heavy annual Despite Its tremendous total of

|5 i billion acres, the Soviet Union______ ____ _ __ ....... only obout 550 millioncuurvtttlon 'in 19M-5G!j'*II"'''e latid compared with 475

smaller Increases since li«ve|«’>l‘on (he.Dnlled States. Much brought (he total tillable land to;” Ihe Sovlet^Unlon Is no t suited

ferllliiation,Umjer the "nevi' Innils" proprum.l

'jtlie Sovieu added some 03 nillliunj

an estimated 50l.< m illion acres.The so-called "new lands" a rt

located In (he sub-huinld and

for farming. Abou( 75 per the total land mass eorwt-its-of dcs-

mountains, awamp.*., tundra forests.

decreed they h a d not.The foreign agricultural aerv-

Ice (FAS), culling reports hom thi [ SD,vlctjir»i.-hAaJe“ni«<i-U»al_reC'. ' liimailon Is operating in a big way

In the "new -lands’ 'area of Kaz. akhstnn and Siberia, and aLso Ir the European section of the Soviet Union.

In K aiakhstan 3.0M.150 r .! i I'Tgln land have been plowed this

Six Per Cent Cut Urged ~lrri96^1 Spud Plantings

WASmNOTON, Oct, 8 a?t>—The,amounted to S l i million hundred- |agrlcuUure departm ent advises weight,potato growers to cu t their ISGli - uki„ advisory onlyspring acreage by s ix per cent, ^ t

The departmenfs acreage guideilow the gOYemment's advice. But cslied for a to u l eprlng-harvcstjthe agriculture department warn- crop of l7},SiD acres ot potatoes.>cd, aa usual, that U wouldn't ap- With average yield per acre, thijjprore any goremment aurplw pur- would produce 28.7. million hun-;chastng programs for areas wliich dredaelght. The i960 spring cropilgnored tha producUon goals.

Some 40 Motor Veliicles Provide Canal Company Transportation All Ihs COW! in m y h e r d w o rn lo do o good iob of m ilk p r o d u c in g for you. Bui Ihcy con 't d o th e i r b e s t unless you give liitm lh « k in d o f b o rn and iooling siiti) lh o ( V O L C O iios! T hese fine VCL.CO b lo c k b u ild in g ! ore designed i„ keep 'e m h e o l ih y m d i,eips 'em g i ,e m o r . o n d b e l te r milk. You, b i m , g i l k

m c n is . . . tmd wtmt's m o r e y o u con ge t these buildings fo r n o th in g dow n w ilh S y ea rs io p o y ! T h a t 's o t—

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

watcn four Herd IncreaseI t takes wise planning and ready J \ j V T T jc.«h to develop a juccesiful'fan-.i or ranch unit today. Im- / kprove your livestock or (arm i X Xoperations/.istcr and more ef- iM ficiently with a long-lerm, low cost Land Bank Loan. ■“

Y our surest source of money Is j'our ne a rb y Federal Ijnd Bank Associiiion. For friendly financing "know-how’’ see your association manager today. G et the facu and you'll Ret a Land Bank Loan — th e loan w iih unre* itr ic tcd repayment privileges.

FO UR FEDERAL L A N D B A N K A SSO C IA T IO N S Serving M a g i c Valley

T W I N FALLS GOODING BU R L E Y RUPERTJ , II. FELT ALAND. GL[:N KtlNAU FLOVD FRin

M anager AlcCOMBS M anager MannerBC3-2o77 Manaier OR 8-8347 UEi-tUl

WE I-4K1

. . . m y herd

d eserves

fKe“ H est!”

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^OCTOBER 9. I9 6 0 TIMES-NEW S. -TWIN FALLS,-IDAHO_______

Magic Valleyf a r m n e w s i

By Sam fioien

R ou(« 2 . H o n ie n , Phont GArfield 3 -5 9 1 0

Increase in Cattle, Sheep Results in Larger Marketings and Lower P rices

WASJIINOTON,T he ftcriciiUurt deparlmciit ^ayj (ncrra .cj in cntlfe »nd iliK p l>ru~ i (lucuoii durlnK I960 v.111 ttsiiU ln;i Ii»i r;<T iinrlcetiniij Mid lower prices :

HID probablv will

i1 winler. Ilcinloiw t"tiiii.itM lotnllniuie soft' ix r prrson lulm nn Iftsl

down gbout^lWl Mirliie '■nil ft rriliic-'liicrca.vc, ni tinII olfwlilnn! iln'viisw;nn

PA G E T 'V E N p-T H IlEE • ; ‘J

Special Study Of U.S.'Siigar Plans Startctl

i -

fendell Y ouths study M eat Carcasses T o P repare for National FFA Contest

...... i.n >,tci, uchcwl t o t June »l »re R o ^ r i Miff c.mpelHlon Djcy ran rxpcr:

WA.5flI\OTO,V,, "[Tlio tlcjmimciu

‘ ' ' ' itixi RRpoliucd n cr nnd ecoiioinlMs lo

to t June St »re RobonSchimer. Ctiirlcj hlcti in d Rol- Iln Parr, ell 15. i

Roy Iroru. llieir WendellS' .r« busy studying <Jre.M-

':Sl ........................... ..ti '* i ^ n d c n t M eat co(7ipany|Jl<>nfll •

room-v leftmlnit Uccompany IM “ " lwould. bB liu tru c - veiitlon. Thfy will depart Oct. 0

older m en cnfsaRcd for Knnsai Clly.P » I r o n . ' ha# had Rood lucK Inmb, vml mid pork, boili Irg vifTC IcamlriK hlJ Judslng teanu In the U years anil cured, Tliey al.>o wilt bpIW* tfchhlQues thcihe has headed the ajrlcuUuj-e dc- qiilt.-<l sradr lo bcel cnc:i.-

,91 iind auciDnrbment. In 1055 he lurasd out nccorduix in USDA xpeolMentli'S i mM i lo company the poultry Judjiiiit lenm tliai 'i hrii hk youui.^ >viil be Jud

m n c l« Kei^yoa represenied Idaho at (he natlon.-J mrtui.l„a;iy anri a cenm ^rsr.» , n-cat, iniM c-'conleat. '‘ccr earca.vics, /our hIk

P* A graduate ot tin University jsMc ruL ol beei, four Dork c ^ on for thl» early vLMt, of Idaho, and a basketball play- ca.'.'.e.';. imir tvimirMvIe culj ol p ^ -• .r ^ bctore is tha l IhCie er *h((e there. Jrd« MW nn<l !our

^ olnen «'• " Idahoione major concern atwut the bo>j ; Iro in uotrs pi.utlcal Irutruct! i« t« la the ntttlon-fjudBinK ability, in the .......... . .......... . .u-.,,

. L ifs t th is m onth a t rancher* turn cm lorRe ainounl.'; l ii.ir during the »«• of prte<? b«/. Jn Mm Jc Valley. ttell„

................ IBci a-.d r till' [ircviou^'TMn thr-d»p*u..»:oiiii; niciii lune.'; m Its publication, "Tin cnj h I-ivcMo,'.: nnd Meat SltuMlnn. ' i alri. '

Ho.: -t.rlcM In U ic-rail ot ,1381.". ' K prob;il>;y V,IU be below llil< fall 1( 15oD. ilir lo'..ii spring plK crop Is iii> nntr.» frcim t(;is ye«r, ihc deparlment ''

Ilm: MnuKlllcr Is liicren.'lnlt *''a- tn Itic

111 lux: iirodiictlnnj tI ic deiuriniciit s;ilcl lli, l;ili‘ l.\.| fnll I'llio,! prices me rxpi'ctcil

. -u iid . Ui'obiibly wiU|ciim; sciiiOiniUi'itil.' fall, 19t>l, tl;- (U’pa rin id i'' " ■

: pis cOil July.l,

iiiber Ihtyi^"(,s [0' ' ^ ^ fjirrywJiiKs' f r,,d;rr

’t •r ''X rce ”•Up lan;er til

Beef, Eggs and J ^ O Turkeys Bought ' '

In Surplus PlanWASHINGTON, Oct. * W '—

AKilcuUure (Icpnrtmcnl lurplus- rivHOV’n) prngrjijTv? bnrf puUi ' mlicr *3.4:8,00 worth ot foi the commercial nmrkct.

I 11i<- deparlnipnt boucht I 1000 wnrlh 1)1 frozen stnund bttf.! another JRUO.OOO worth of froien:I turkry.s ami i:3l,000 wonli o[ drlctV '*!:ESC5..,;________________ _____'■ All [he,"? fnod.i Ti1!1 be jlven

. cllOoI hmchtoomi «ncl.iWClIiC IH.MI

RF;AD -nMES-NtWS WAhTAD.'i.

j W ells Being Drilled for ' Periods When Canal Dry

oniHiciiy Mo., during t...- — ,

‘ convtntlon o ' Fu tureol Arocrlca.

^ , mt-n who are BOln*

il> grade t... little ot t..1 oul In feedlou.He hopes llie youttu will be ...................." - prime 1-------i ’.nt Idaho. After w innine aO'« to dd “

'y fr»gi(ln»t 50 other teani-'ias on other gradw against the

Ip Imj learned a Rreal deal ii.'.flf ftboiil meat RradlnR In •p;uliiir tlir youtli.i lor Uie na- iinl roiile.sl. .

-Pftron-TKemLflfPotato C onsum ption IsSlowed Down by Processing Industries

About » clottn apiillcalloii' Inr back In M" i!riHini wclU have been, recelvitj/ With ini- by the T^vln Fallj Cnnni comii.iiiyiretcr.i ,s.i>s 111 receia v.ccks becaii.^e iht "nlerjiei can be run nr eannl water a ill be iiliul iit(|n> awurr ll for tuo nioiuitJ, jaild Alfred PcW.i, Ix'gl/!. /ir.y: Kriiri.il m.iiiaKer. much u.iii

MaM of tliese application' 0;- vulr l:iM i[:liiiUcd In th f Co.sllelord niei. Till.' ui! uhore appfircwly ilvr.slock had will lia\c u.'cd canal w ater for drlnklnK pur. tion w.itc; pose.' Ill th e winter, Olher wclU. In nmlurliv 1 ncklliloii to th u ^ reque.ued at tlic ciiiiHl comjiniiy, *111 be drilled lo ovcrcnme th e cmcrnency *ltuatlon th a t ha. nri.'e’n a-i the rwult ol a clioiislii period unparalleded In re- cciil Idaho History.

Pclcrj anld the company drew -Hcre*fen-o<-

will jirciiare a mtisc mrthocK

IniT w llli • report ncrlcill-

YOU PLANT IT OR FEED IT

GLO BE SEEDIF

Iroiii American Falls aioraje. mally, the company driwa 125,000

Miato proccMlng indu»lry|encM In Mll«»uke«-»nd C lneln.jpubllc. a. E. Metcker. executive;^ • . '^ “ . . . ‘ put heavy brake* natl help, explain Just w hat ahop-|dlreclor ot the NatlOMl Potato, The American FalU re«fvolr u

V -------- . . . p„» wMit when they tU lt th e food council. *hen he jpoke Aug. 30 a t empty. Wherena last yearicares. Ihc nnnu»J niftllnff 0/ Potato A s.' ’ ........................

Drat In preference for procc-'-,aoclaHQn of - America at Orecii ted products wn convenience.jL.-\ke, WU', a.ild. •The outlook for

apeed of preparation th e next five year* I5 very good,

,B«t!illy has I

,.,3ipUoni, i)o.ii»ard per capita

of potatoea In tfie U n«.. , iccorfllnK to mfortnn-

L'» oKertd »y Virgil CroM. M ini. cSn»HleM‘oa poltttQ.*Declall-'t. ■mu hu mfanlnK to Magfc Vul-

J ihtn H la said "o t fn o “ 8h I «ui«i ire taUey to aupply 'he I ef local proeci'lnB p lan u .

ptr taolia consumpHon o f po- iitofi'hu 6one from 100 pound* M IJSl Id no pound-1 In 105D. and

iht lame time consumption of Brtcoitd producl.i have gxrne from ij pm4j In 1051 to 31 pound* Irtffl ihe 155* crop.

— a-coitrastr

1 Peters.UnR Isystem thl.^ win ThouBd Jic knoi them will be Inconvciupucfd. he

1 no alternative, excvpt lo make other 05 per cent Mifftr, which

Secondail d a cIo» IMfd r i s t&ate. ,

Another - reason lor Increoaed' consumption ot proctssed potatoe.',! according to this jludy. wa.^ that resiaurwit manatem are almostjlntc universally using Iroien trench

.'|ir^rif^Sni5inc.w ,| MfrcVirr pointed

haveMslnc-w rccewlon,"

frcVier pointed out that 31 per 1S59 potato crop went

.liiR, and llial 23 per I960 crop would prob-

trlea. Their reasoning wa* tha t nbly b* u.scd In the packnBed pro . with proces,«d french Irlea' tlicy^ducis.could gel a mote uniform product] In addition. Mercker jald eon- wlih leas vasie, and with the easier jAunipiton should conClnue co in . aloraKc of Ihls product, w ith leaa,create. Tlie proce-vor knows

Big Expansion fo r Some Crops Eyed in 15 Years

WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 UPB — ARrlculture department economists say farm ers probably vlll have to expand tlic lr acreage ot tome crops m the n e x t 15 years lo boo.sL iarm production about 35 per cent inspace taken up and a dulcker time,Kood deal moro atwut the fo M ,- .

ln-ih»-prtp iiriU on t ie y Kkvelvalue, mid.good J.>tinB.quallty_of[, ' ‘ _------------.^mnngy luJng nrnrfwrf oottttocs palMtjr.t t^ian rioet the tinndier of( ---------

U pcurfdJ in 1S51 to * low o t 19 rather than tre.sh apudsi itl ie Ir'c71i product, and h m i r ro iii c i^ d j Ihe last crop year. The five-year outlook for potato 1 clcvier in offering the public i

ArettnHtudy by the Onlveraity con.'umpllon l> lavorshle in vlewlcontlnuoua supply of the aam< o( Idilio about consumer prefer, of tha purchsilnf fta&ltf o f the lhlgJi (juaJJiy produc! al iJl Unic.'.

acreage. I t 's an e.itlniate of what might be needed by 1375 lo niecL a moderate Incrca-'e in per capi. ta food conKuinptlon it popula­tion Roe.1 to 230 million and tn' provide for continued export* ol American farm product.'.

n g d .builttotakeit

• ll<iiilor<idltaiT«.low, •atr-l«Jsad, MMMid w »itn box

• l» >.lf.<lionIns li.lkfarIKoiogghihi<d>lln«

l.fur mipttodioi

t Clido «f < apriaJIfii ipttdl

r«lt.rl>.grl»8i.c .T (hoi* <(ci.itrgM«Wt

• tirrnuKort— Kllth paimiti ihtrp Ivix, iBiy

IW cVEY'S, Inc.161 3rd Avenue Wesf Twin Falls

FALL SEED G R A I N

• A lpine Barley• Elgin W heat• T urkey Red

W h e a t• M ixed Seed : Groin _

Alpine Barley ftDrevor Wheat

• Seed RyeOld fashioned am*U O

type.

• A lfalfa & Clovers I• Pasture Range

Grasses

GLOBESEED & FEED CO.

T r u c k L ane RE 3-1373

cra ln acreage may be expanded 8 p e r cent above'

levels, cotton acreage 21 per tot)occo acreage 65 per cent,'

Strife Boiling in California Between Growers and Farm Labor Organizers

STOCKTON. Calif., O c t .. 8 l * - Mtmwles of the turbulent e ra of

. "He Ortpe* of W rath- a re being iUrrrd b; ifrlfe now bolUns up Ixtnen powtra a n d farm labor in ihe Mllon'a rlchew ar^rlcul- lurxl stale.

Til! first akirmlshM Involved IfiUjeir'a cherry, pear, peach, r.aio and grape harvesta an<l .... pjrunt shlllB In the balance of pj»tr since the laa t m ajor faro KnJsnlfJnj e //o rt In CaJiforrla lutfjred crushing defeat In 1935.

( Oroaeri are bitterly complalblng about federal and state govern* mem policies w hich ban Mexican graccros <farm hands) and state* refened domestic workers '

( picketed ranches.Thty charge th a t Secretary of

Labor James P. MItchelt —who calls the migrant farm worker ’’eicluded American" gave gov- emtnent backing to farm unlonli*

•Mch as the American F a rm b U' i»^ tederatloQ and the National

-G ritnf-sre watching th e Call- fomii d«<lopments closely.

Thtr ftel th# struggle could atart a .TOiement th a t could sweep »frkulturt nationally.

niB AFL.CIO la pouring mnnej Mi leadership in to Its f irs t long- rsaje drive to unionize 2ft),ooO

farm worker* In Call-

Killonal convention action h u Mcktd Ihe APL-CIO's newly char- <<fed aifrtcufturaf Worker* Organ* Irinj committee. Lost m on th the AFVCfO executive council made

r i j third *ioo,wo'aiiDe«i6n-T6¥flri- I J>ni2inff work under AWOC d l w

tor Norman Sm ith . 51, » white. Mifed veleran of the unloWrlng

. ei Oeneral Motors and Ford,'' Inaiore than SO years o f rt< nnj conflict, every previous

- '^ tU a .-U P lo n tz e . farni. —

fornla growers, who firm ly de­clare that "organlied labor has place In agriculture."

To beat th6 union now. a..,_ Loula A. RojKJnt, California Farm Bureau f e d e r a t io n president, 'farmers musti.be as determined and as (ough aa (he union—but not Dllchforle Urng!}."

Bozzonl’a caution against pitch­fork toughness reflect* the belief on both ildes that prospecta arc remote for violence on th e scale tha t erupted In the San Joaquin and Imperial valleys in the 30’s, the days of John fiCelnbeck' "Grapes of Wrath."

The b a i lc grower strategy against the AFL-CIO drive follows traditional farm policy o t denying recognition and refusing negotli' tlon with union represenutlfes.

Acknowledglnt the member tp> crultlng Job has only starte ' Smith and hl« AWOC organltu „ staf/ hai'e dtmindtO only higher wages In the union's muscle-test- ' ig strikes.

The showdown rounds la the Cailfomla fam iirusgJe will come when AWOO leaders decide they

ready lo risk ' ' ' ' '

vanced the n

ctlon lo force lull recojnltlon, . This may ceme next year. Smith

t«Id. Callfomia Labor federation eonventlQn delegates. They save him and 30 farm workers a stand­ing ovation In Sacramento lost month on hl» report o f AWOC

age boosting luccesses.AWOO leaden claimed the un-

lon’a scattered peach harvest plck- e(l0( «iUtill<Aed « piece-rate pa t- tern of n cents a box compared with grower oUers of l i to 16

commJllee, Maijivllle area grow-

NOTICE!F < V s a l e an d LEASE

G rade A " Milking O perationLease includes 240 acre choice, irrigated farm lan d ; complete, modeni grade “A” mjJKing operation with barns, eilos, c'”'C ro te c o r r a l s , a n d m n H e fn A -nvim T^Amo

.0 30 Cl a box. . $1,10 an hour plus 10 box attcr AWOC strike action. T h e growers' Ilrst wage offer had been a /latVtMO an hour. T he pe a r growers paid $1 an hour in 1&69 and 90 cenls Id 1958.

One ot many groW r groups _ biii£lng against AWOC dcclarea t h a t Cahfornia is the first la rt;et iQ an AFL-CZO bitile plan "t. b rln« all agrtcullure under tb dominstion of ojtanlud labor. Diversified Growers, Inc., gave

warning In a rally caU fo r f» n n er unity.

icJd his 65.000 F a rm Bureau federotlon mtmbcra th e union's California , , dreos reheu ial for an eventual nationwide drive.

The significance of Secretary of I^abor Mitchell's role In the C ali­fo rn ia ' conflict became sharply evident after AWOC'i early str ike kctloiu.

Mitchell U one of the severest critics of the farm employers in the ir dealing with what he calls th e naUonal social problem m igrant worker's status "

hay acreage 13 per cent and pts- Jt acrcage about 7 per cent.Not a ll crops would be Incrcis. t. T!ic agrlcuHuf* deparfmenl

.■study indicates acreage of wheat mlRht have to be cu t 14 per ccnt, .■soybean acreage about 6 per cent end rice e^rtnes abcut per

, , , bottom of the American nomlc scale."

M itchell rejected grower ap­peals to allow Mexican contractl braceros to work on AWOC-p(ek' eted pear and peoch orchards. He said us« of the braceros would be •■tantamouDt to strike breaking." TTieie w ere the t i n t fonnsl rulings by the Iat>or department on the is. sue of bringing In Mexican na­tionals lo a struck grower or re- turning braceros withdrawn be­cause o f a strike. ,

M ltchcira rullnfts On California! farm picketing developed against a background of his previously de* dared convictions tha t grower or. gonlzatlons have been obatOJcllng efforts to Improve the mlgruil’t low Income and oieager living su n d a rd . i

The bureau of labor sUtlsucs reports the national average bf farm m igrant Income In 10&7 was $SS9. T h e average laborer worwd only 131 days of the year.

JEROME LIVESTOCK

COM MISSION CO.M orkef the a u c t io n w by — w here th rough

competitivB b id d in g y o u r p rices o re set.

Applicant m u s t be presently engaged in grade “ A ” m ilk production and fu rn ish satisfactory qualifications and financial references. .

For Appointment; Ph.CE 3.0380 Rowland Bros. Dairy

POCATELLO, IDAHO

S A JJ iTUESDAY

October 4

FJICSH MILK

C J^om oQ en ized— ____

SPECIALI1 20 H ead of

BLACK A N G U S CALVES150 Y edrling i;

S tee n a n d H eifers

JEROME LIVESTOCK

COM M ISSIO N CO.In iht H edrt ot Magic VuUeu'f

Utxtlock Feeilna Areal

•M ^

tomo^emzi

R e g u la r or

"GUERNSEY

GOLD"

AtWAYS FRESHl

ALWAYS GOOD'

COMPLETE LINE O F Q UALITY

DAIRY PRODUCTSa t ^ o u r i i o r e o f

-J ^ a s te m n z e d

a t y .o u r d o o r !

, PRODUCED IN MAGIC VALLEY-PROCESSED

Jerome Co-operative C-------- T W IN FALLS RE 3.5911JE R O M E EA 4-2331

Page 24: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

S :PA G E T W E N T Y -FO U R TIMES-NBWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO SUNDAY. OCTOBER n

Gun Accident JFigures Explained to Youngster

•Throushout tlie )i ,Ihrojfh civic work, lo crcote a niche th ii kouW be » Utile Imrd lo.-nil.«bta -I.ltlt.",

....... Mmc

MAGIC VALLEY PORTRAIT

James N orfleet Has Created Niche in Civic W ork That Will Be Hard to Fill

r u h tbd r»m« eonuri'KtloD cdocfttor, Georf ft p«*ler llenlilBf iona of Ibe trim run iccldi pUlo to t M»i)« lo nodentand. lloldlnf sne sf Hver»l snilqa* on dItpU; U IS-yur-otd Curt ChrUtenscn of nola«. ThtM |u n i ire ttftd Id (Uttwlds honlcr u t t t i j eU uet In poblle Mhoolt t i t r j j n r

t« in * t of un»«r# we«poni. A>»nt Id»ho ba;* and rrcclred aaeh tralnlnc e ich rear tinee it wai adapMd In

inlarjr profram for I tacb lnr u U run h*ndlld| hablli.

lehoK. ptiDtt ts Younr C hrliltnaen recelVcd hit tratninf l u t tail. T b e prorram J: flrorei that art backed b r t h a f l ^ &nd rams department In cm^ i ...........................

• o f the Natlonil

^ u n Safety Training in ldaho^Sch(^s Helps Reduce Hunting Accident TollsBy JIM HUMDIRD

Idaho Fl«h aoiS OaiBa DepartroeDi Durlnr th« fine nine m onths of

thlA year eg Idalio rrsldcnLi and »Ultar* k 'tn Involved in guii nc-

_Clilent3. eight of which coat Uvea, ■ ■ ■ '■ ■ ■ fpunVTter* under

n peR-

Nobodjf know* whot the rcmMn- dcr of 1960 will brinr, but the huntine «Mon from September UirouRh December Itit year re- lulted In ilx fitftlltlr^ nhd 40 In- ]urie<—all attributed to gun Acci­dents.

.......... .... defined n.ia person Li kUled or

Injured by a firearm or ft bow and arrow. I t occurs ouWde the home and 1» the rwult of huntlnft, In. cludlag tiavei to ftnd troin the

, Held.1 AeelflenU Don’t JUppen

Many psychologists, however, hold that thrre U no such thing as an accident, whether the end lesult Is produced by a bullet, ou- tomobUa or bathtub, and the alstftnt (urgeon general of the pubUe health tervlce goes »long with that fle«-polnt,' T hera li no luch thing «.i an lecldent—only premeditated nct.i of carelejjnesi,” Dr. Albert 1 Chapman oplnca.

He explains that ftccldenta don't Just hapt>en," Tliey are caused by what people do or fail to do.

Edltorlalidng on Dr. Ohapman’i current campaign credo, the Dolae BUtesman recently pu t i t this »ay:

:au.tlnr the accident Injured ihcmselei

3, Aljout the same percentage of itiooters Involved In accidents ftred intentionally at mlilaken eamE=-iina.inJucfd.or_)tilied,

ittms ..fire. Tlctlms covered by the shoot.

iwinRlng on game, victims out of sight of the shooter and victims mistaken (or gami

4, T he other iialf were mlihapa In which someone was Injured killed ivlUiout the sliooter's Inu by liandlnK a weapon In or out ft vchlcle, stumbling, calchuid the trlRger on brush,

— ^ o Jiyw iK lIcallifurtlons'lI. ustrats'the illlference. A person may be Indicted for murder for deliberately shooting another, but ft person who deliberately points an 'empty' weapon at another and shoola him may be freed of any responsibility. The only laetor missing In (he second ca^e Is the Intent to harm. Otherwise, physical actions are the same

Common Betue Needed *There U no lav th a t requires

human beings to use common sense, even such elementary sense as knowing better than to play v lth a dangerous weapon. Very often lie Is not held accounUble tor hla actlons-lethal though they

palgn wiil'suideiently arouse the public to the dangera of

,o fH l kinds. Not only are ■% leading cause of death and In­jury, the year equally deadly to

-th# innocent, bystander. More................................i tlm a-ot-aecl-

________n a t the whimae else's carelessness, je soma slgnKieant facta

Irom U)« Idaho record:1. During the .psjt sli . .

totkl of J « hunung accident*. 66 or Ibeoi fatal, were oflleially —

•ported.

and wnloodlng and many other thouRhtleu acta. Among accidents re-iultlng from unintentional dls- charRo of firearms, more cMual' tlM occurred when the hunte! stumbled and fell than any othe:

These figures ar« eye-openers (cause there Is no question, look- ig them over, that "/ooling

around « lth guns" causes more shooting accidents than hunting. And meet of the hunting accIdenU were caused by careless hftndllag resulting In "accidental discharge" of guns.

Tralnlor Needed The Inescapable conclusion alter

the study of such figures is that training of young people in the proper care and handling of fire-

rma can save litea and prevent :cldenu.To that end. the Idaho flih ai ame department and jportsmei ' ■ ' ■ ■ rttllnr training

About 1&.000 students ti public Mhools each year since 1S90, when the statewide voluntary gun safety training p r o g ra m wj adopted under the auspices ol tl INatlonal m ile association. Idoli.. along with 1& other sutes, autho­rized the volunlnry sl'stcm for teaching safe handling of lire-

whlle others legtslaled mil

tora tiuntlag Ucetisea Every year as hunter casualty

f lg u ru are publicised, there L) i g rea t hue and cry for Ia«s re- atrleting the use of firearms. Pol'

a re tome of tne nigmignts:

. . cunpalgiu against Ilresrm» have resembled arbltrary,total dtt- armament programs. One sufli, Ir a large eastern state, was Isunrhrd

-hy-a. l« ln lngly'J^^.^»f lf^l ,rsdlr> commentator, lie whipped up

figure, widely clrculnted of late, is • H,000 Amerlcnw were 'killed'

ins’ in a single year. Actually,' ovem m ent source.^ conllrm,

ti'oro-innrt-nmr of tn^e-Tiiiiga-iay

sh o t down wbllQ'Committing serious crimes.

"Homicides or deliberate k/IllnR.i by firearm s decreased from 6,395; In 1930 to 4,010 in 10^7 despite the great population incretue.

S tric t Laws Not Answer•’Nor cftr\ the decreaflc be direct­

ly a ttribu ted to stricter gun rcb’u- Istlons, New York state, with one of the eturUest and most rigid (Ire- arms law.-i. still reported proper, tionately more gun slivylnc.i thnr thfi New Erngland states, Nen- Jer­sey, Pennsylvania and a dnzci others,

"As to r accldentnl deaths, 3JC3, la 10i7 w ere bJamed on curu. The' fatality r a te from all forms of ac­cidents w as 89 per-100,000 pcr.vjns. Motor vehicles caused 23,7 of these deaths, fa lls accounted for 13.1. Ilrea a n d explosions for 3,7 and drowning 3,1. The rate for fatal firenrms nccldcnls was only 1.4, scarcely above the t-3 deaths from suffocation or choking on food.

No one seriously suggesU ban­ning automobllea, stalrwaya, wa­ter, m atches, or eating because hey sometimes cause deaths. To ittempt to place blanket restrlc-

tloos on firearms would be egual^ far-fetched."

:ause firearms aecldents can- —. j e legislated ou t of existence. thTprol3ierirrevolvM"batk-lb basic gun sivfcty training and sporui- m anjhlp. w hen iv e ry hunter Is ' ' -e of th e fact th a t udng a gun

bo very dangerous, and that every Individual has definite re- sponslbllltles wheit handling It. a lone wny can be made toward con­servation of hum an life during hunting .leason.

Milner NewsMILNER, Oct. 8 — Mr. and

Mrs. R obert Behr and son. Brig­ham City, Utah, have returned home a f te r visiting Mr, and Mrs.

ChristmasOkla,OKLAHOMA CITY,

Oct, a — C hristm as In Octo. bcr? Not tor m ost folks, but how else can you explain what happened m th e Oklahoma welfare tiepurtm ent yesterday.

! depar celvedplain broivn envelope ing JI.BOO In c ash —but no plaimtlon of the donor. The .. turn fnK«

Aiea Grazing District Plans Election Meet

SHOSHONE. O ct. 8 — A dtUrlct advLwry bo.iril, elctlon for Wood

-------- Tinff dUlj-lct. No. 5 -ccJnMcIay. Oct. 20, n

local BLM office.Artvl'or)’ board members elccted li: serve for th ree year.i one 11 vocanclc.1 crcftted by th<

plratloii ot the te rm s of LnVera .ttle rep.

Mlnldokn a n d Power coun- tlen; Fred Martin. Shoshone, sheep representative, precinct 2. Lincoln county, and Everett C;inibell, Bel- levue, iheep representative, clnct i. Jerome, Minidoka Power countlrj.

The meeting will begin a t 1 .Ith candidates nom inated from

. ID 2,pjn. H itrc-jU so wUl-be.«e, lection of Judge.-; and dlscaulor of o'.tier mailers during that^houi with polls open from 2 to 5 p.m.

mlnatlon m ust be by n quni llcenwe who Is permitted ir lame precinct, with th e aaini

cU« of llvcfltock n.1 the memt«i s term L< expiring. Voting

_ ... a district-wide basis. Each qualified llcenstje wUl b« permitted to cast R ballot for a candidati trom eacti preeJrtct s’ho reprw enu the cloii of livestock in whic' voter predominates.

It tl Im porunt th a t the licensee

............ lliinoLn. ! l; majorcfl :anlmsl Itljjijonilry, Intcniljnn

■■'fhf was-perflMflde'y Iftli the Woolworth manager

........ ..........Ith the company InS alt Uke City, and a fte r traU UiB at atores there nnrt In Osdeu, Sacramcnto, Bakerstlcld a n d Los AnRCles. he recctvcd his manane rial oppolntment Ir? 1D22. H e open ed his first Woolworth store I Monterey, Calif, He was there ur til 19J3, I f «fls'lhcrc th a t h e first started pubKc work. He and eral other Iju- lnciimen In the munliy started a comnicrlcal club, a forerunner of th t>er of Commerce,

In IB23 lie was tr.iiwferrod to Provo, where he was m anager and performed a bit of personnel worit tor which he ii still proud. Hu hired two youn* men to work In his store, R. C. Kirkwood and K. L.fiiimniT The tlr. t la JIQW-Prcailcnlof the Woolworth company------5fCoinn.rnrBa-i'the eompnny. Both men rtsldc New York and rcjulorly Cor;

Ispond wHti NorJleet.Both men were hired ns "lear :s'-by Norfleet ond have climbed

to two. of 111* hlftliMt po.iltloai the company. While he w&s Provo he was octlve in Chaml of Commerce work and was member ot the local Masoi lodRe and the flotary club.

In 1D29 he moved to lyORan a became manager ot the local store, lie was there throughout the dei>res9lon, until 1930. Again Norfleet was octlve In civic af­fairs. He ws!i- reneral chnlrman ot ifte iJomKomlng cclebratloa In 1037. served on the board of di­rectors of the Chamber of Com-

, . ir.\ was vice pres­ident of the Chamber, a member

the Lofiin Rotary club, ana was post master of the Logan Ma- lonle lodge.

In 1938 Norfleet took over man­agership of the Boulder. Colo., Woolworth atore. There he was on the boardsof directors o t- th e Ro­tary club, served on the board of

es of the Boulder Presbyti ihurch, was elected president

ot the Boulder Chamber o t Com- In IM3, was actlvo In Com-

j Chest work, helped or­ganize the local USO orKanlza- tton, and was-one of - th e - lo c i ' sponsors of the UB. arniy slgni corps school establl.^hed a t tl: University of Colorado during ».

ur years.Norfleet explains such schools

trained signal specialists and wen sponsored by the government, thi local community and the uruver-

Ministers at Burley Slate

Oct. 31 Even,hurtLEY. 0 : t fl

surpUis” wa.. dL.cu.,.rt J" O u rle y MlnUterlni ^ '* Tliursdixy 'm oi^lni; at ,v.

Rev, Mr. I leh c Ident o: t^ neitlnR, n:

tersteen, o pal church

Tlie Itcv, Methodist mcJsngeV

Bity.

ena, Mont, TJiero he wa.-i board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce and served os vice

-prtsldcnl ot the Chamber, He also wns pre.- ldent ot the Community

................... directors '

Lions’ Governor ■Visits in Wendi

WENDELL. Oct. fl _ lov, Stanley b . KHm

made his of ficlnt visit lo the dell Lions club thia week

Other d lfin ltarlej present m deputy d istric t Oov. RobotfDi^ Twin Falls, and Don ano, - ' rome. rone 30W ch:virm»n 6' guesu Introduced were Hsrry tersen and Gerald Pirrce.

Den M organ, vice prcs'dtnl.te. sided In tJie ab.^nce a! Wm

'Fagg. president. Laaics nljht announced to r Oct. n . Action

work concerns finding out how,taken to bcitln thu stated mtetljavarlou.n parts of the country feci a t 7 p - .........about law making. I Club

Norfleet Is on this commltteelP''* lo •' m.itnly bccause of his work with;*'""*

In Falls city commission,!. clectcd to the commisslonl «nd he lp them . ...............

lii-1553'nna-hartJcenon-the-beartl;‘a J " “ aUo“ ' f “ >'-‘>t-obWne4-^Iw»-Uk»>-4 Ib hat nnr_mnr>;.yfir co^t^tctlnK Llon.i cl^t, nitmhw.

the commission. Most of hUl Oovcrnor ,rk concerns the public safely «plratlonal_ ipon.ilblllllcs of the comralssJon, "

E plans t ab le t

t the

In 19J8 what wns Helena', bcciimc Twin Fall.s' gain. N or­fleet ttss Iranslcrreil lo Tain F a ll' and has mannRed the Twin Fall: store since then. In Oils ra ther

aer •lce,Since he has been In Twin Fa lls

he hm been a member o t lha board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce. Ha waa first vli president ot the board of dlreu tora of the chamber In 195J. He Is currently on the leglsInUve ond 5o,- bor committees of the chamber.

In 1950 he Illlcd out an incom­plete term as president of th i Twin Falls Community Chest. Ho has been on the board ot d irec­tors of the Rotary club and or the advisory boird of the Salva­tion Army. From IBil lo'l855 he was llie general chairman < ' MjVrJc VfllJfy lor IJie ShrJne CJi

that a t times drew up to £ loads of Magic Valley young

the police, fire and airportdcpa;

He hii.5 been on the Twin Falls airport cominlssiori for the last

■ ■ ' currently theFalls epresenlatl'

healtll district.1 been active In Mi

1 Twin Falls, but

m tnl Dl L ions club.? Fff)(e»ia the regular meetlnif, Kelm mett apeclal session with the club a rectors. I n his report for Uoa Internatloruil. the Kovernor n a number of suggMtloni « itt> ulMe In terest nnd attenSinre.

He cncouraRed every meato to read th e club mivgo .ine, ind ti piKe LloriA" magazinrj In and In libraries.

r the Idalithe board of directors I Municipal league In

K0« ano iua9, TliU year he is or he InterKOveriimental relation: :ommlttee of tlie American Munic­ipal congress, an organization o nil the municipal leagues through­out the united Slates, Purpose o Uie oatlonal committee is llalsoi work between city, state and na- tlonjl governments. Most of the

Norfleet hi Mine lodFte work notes th a t most of hla

S*hrme'circus!^He U a member o f l E V e i l t S N o t 6 ( l B v Uie Blue lodce. the Chrtoler and; — , . . •i.Commandcry, the Shrine El Kalah;Temple n t Salt L.ike City. |

If these acUvlUes aren't enough to keep D man busy. Norneet found time in pa.M years to serve for all years on the board of trustees of the Presbyterian church, and he served as chairman of the mei orlaLi committee preceding t construction of the new addition to th e church.

Norfleet says he will retire trom the company In 1955, but he In­tends to slay •'rea.Mnably active"In local civic affairs and pursue his game ol goU.

He Intends to make lila home In Twin F^lls because of the country, his irlends. and-he adds there ar» probably more good golf days here than anywhere else.

HazeltonViciffl'fvHAZELTON, Oct. # -y rt Ra!ti

Blotter re tu rned to her hcpme ii Logan. U ta h , after vlsl’int her brother an d sLiter-ln-U “Mrs, W arren WIckhar..

Mr, a n d Mrs. Eira WlcUiaa. Logan, a re visiting his brcthn and sister-in-law , Mr. i Warren W ickham , who i 0.1 their g u es t the ir nephe*, J, I Mftdson. B rlghnm City. Utsh. i

The Rev. and Mrs. Don Snor Mountain Home, are a.yl!iln| s the pasto rate o t the Asstmtif of Ood church here Iwiuse i the absence of nev . and Mrs. &• vllle Scontton who arc In Csllto- nla whera. tb c lr UtUe soa..J9tui3 Robison, d ied a fte r undergeln

aurgery.

THE DANISH INFLUENCEed fftbrtc w ith rich walnut IWIn looking over some notes we

lotted down recently we find that we have repeatedly used phrases Ike "triumph of modeling," “ver-

paUllty of nhape." and "fluid, flowlns lines" to describe the new Danish-Inspired furnishings that

re so popular today.Indeed, we are deeply Indebt­

ed lo th e Danes tor a concept in Wood engineering that u unique In th a t i t provides and esthetic appeal to the semes thiDugh com­bined lightness and strength, and'

th e contemporanr' sketched, tricolor diaperlts - goWen yellow, muted burnt orange and w hite—have been tuted as an

Bofft Is oJf.whlte, rough-ltxtuf-

, we aiiiu'*— J coffee uWe *«• s lnt«rpl»y o f ligh t and d a rk ^ icca. T he typically DanUh ^

. n sculptured w aln u t. cushions hRwe goWen

ra tha t Ue In wlUi the d r i f ^ An ouUUuiding feature o f ^

Uh fu rn itu re U lu Note how th # pryctoe d t» ^ * each plecfl Blve* It lapotWM Its o in r ig h t, and reliU«< of weight, altfl »nO been m aln tianed to g i«

INTERIORDECORATING

e d ^ d o n ^. t w in m l u

■ ISO BIB*

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I9 6 0 ------------------------ ------------ ---- TIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO PA G E 'nV'ENTT-FIVB

Qne Produces 213 Tomatoes Five Granges 111 East End Seat Leaders

KtMtlEflLV, O.'t. « -Jn!nr In- ftftllsiioit c frtm onle i o(-fk» » cf ttve iiybordlimlp O ia iiif ' 111 ttip r .;s t fn.-i nl riiunty WrclnfflclBv iiIkIU ftt tlic KiniDtrlv Oranije linll.

Rm- IJiirk n’R.i In .iim ne o r iif r fnr Muruiujll, lIlUl-Brn, nock, rifnv 'iu V.il-Iry K Im bfrly CIisdoc ; ^utUH offltTn In each Orftncc

I ie,7fl)fn

T.F. ManTBuilds Bomb Slieller iirSpanrThne-

nrlpf were c l 'n i 'Mf’a 'f r . M>irl;iuKli,

M oiiiium Rock; Drr.n HHU KInibrrly. find Vnncr N.ivlor. Htiiv ri'ii, *11 rp llr ln j niBstfr-.

N.-w m nslrrs Includp ,l. P. Rrll- vlllp. Moiiiilnln Ro:K: To MiiriaiJsJ); Lf-iJJe W »f, nmi KeiiiiciU Lnrsm.

Opf/ilfi(T und cIqiJhc p7.iyi'r>. rlvrn by Mrs. Dorn N.ill. l-lnu'l

Tnylrr. RrfrMjiinriit.? wirr '■rvcil l)V llif home ccnnmili^ r n m m U l e o of tlie KlinlJtrly

Tlic T w in I'n l’s CQuiilv Poni-:n:i OrrnrP will inc :l nt 8:3U p iii. 0 : 1. 15 in IIiP Ccrfnr DraR Ordii-jir fM».

nttffirflnp .->rf lo.brine e ith er pic. cuke or sand tt'Iclic.s.

Tuesday DrawingBuilds Backyard Bomb Shelter in

Six Weeks of Working in Spare Timefor the vW t T^esdoy of Uif ReJ Cron^ bloodmoblle w(re bclnK co:n- pletcd ihlfl wcrk by iho co-clinir- mcn. M rs. Ray Durlon ftnd Mrs.Jnck Ilnlls. 1 ................................

Tlicy report thfil'lhV blood d o - <^6 eitlrnnco *i3jrii-«y nMlun ccnlor v,in be set up n rclnfDrccdllip R upert Civic RUdllorHini Irom'Pi*'''"lon.3 to 0 p.m. Tuesday. The Quotsl Accordlntr to the civil defense;KaHcns o! ti-ater. ba ttery iwd elce-,on fgod jwo^wona, replacing hM been set for ISO plnt.s. nndloRenty, radl;Ulon trascls In iv,lrlcally operated llghw. powdered mins tlint dr»n« dumpiiesa

B urton pointed out thtttlatralRht lino and will not l;cnd,mlU, conied beef, dry ccrenU, sii- ever It Li needed. She chanRes since on the last visit the quota'arDUtid cnrnurs. therefore no door (Tar, R8!rr piiflWcr, nmaozlnes, twO| Ka!rr aupply onre a monlh

met, she- Urge.n everyone li needed between the st»lrftay| table.?, t*o chnlrs and gaibago con-isiimdnrd praetlcf.ninKe a donallcn. |and Inner ch:ti7ibcr, reports lialf-|laln(r5- | w iial canning ihe does

. I' Wlrrd for electricity If coinmer- says, 'This \ ..ttlU: M cl«l-pai-cf-/i couinmcRt.be )l5tfn)rg Ip Ucoiicrcle Includes two bunk bed.';, a battery [Hmt.v" lie AfldS. "

what It would hnve had h* tiltedall the work done. ^

"If we don’t-need It, fine. But II t we ever do, 11 Is going Co be Inice to liave." he remarlu. I

The Hafftier* welcome inyon# iwho Is inlereated (q ftwpect the I ohelter.

jand electrically powered radio. J5j Mrs. KUfner keep** elnse check ■;KaHcns of a-ater. b.iUery iwd elce-,'on food fwofWona, «p!*cinjf any-

'V[>* souti

rley-Slat(BURLEY. Oct. 8 — Presbyterian

ministers and churcft JeadetB from 1 southern Idaho will meet at the B

lurley P r e s b y t e r i a n chuteh I’ednesrfay for an all-day meetlnr

of the cynod campa and confer*I ........... ................................... ... , ences commlitte n id the Sawtooth ,

;atlons a n d v a r i o u s Tills wili supply th e basic nccdSiiner rocs (nw Uie sfteJfer. "ft Is'cruslces, Sgroupfl nre urned to mnke ivr-| Tlie inner chainbcr Li fcet.'fnr Mr, and Mr*. Haffner. tw o cool down there and adds to th e ! n ig i lc v Kenneth Be&U of th# ,'

...............................dccn_£rom_rMf_in;dauKhKrs^Donna,_n, and LAurn,'provisions." ahe says. Burley church Is chairman of the ..<fe|lson, A rthtir-Mndcrrr TK;r-F?rniL(nii‘(lftn-ana--MiitmiirnrcBmca-nn<i-eatifgr«nc«

L, 24, for two weeks, s tn tes frafTTerJof ,he shelter cost about IGOO :v,TO------------------

iHHCmcnt3—fo:— donations—from jtJ

the .drflwlng w e being mode by wide by 12 feet lonit. T he sheltrr L n i ° r two weeks, s tn tes H aliner.'o f nip shelter cost about »uuu >Mia utfiia » iuj me «n<^the Ja y -C -E ttes ,____________jbullt to civil dcfcn.ie^speclllcatlons.l^ “We would sleep In ehlfLa," he Haffner reporu It cost about h iU f' tr^jjtecs handle the maintenance, i

iiBti Henley, 3M Robbins aTenoe. holdi op the ( yur. Fart of (he yield ii In the basket ilUlng at tL.Wrintjdjj momlnc lo prevent pottlble fro«{ damsR. fSJaff pboto-enfratlag}* * * * ** ** * jone Surviving Tomato P la n t Does Job Of Eleven Others Killed by Late Frost

•if »e had two planta th a t hadiMra, Henley say*, "wid looked JuSt ^lenley aaya all he didproduced tomatoes Uke th a t onejilke a big floi . d.'a ire-waiiJd J»- «tvlmmlng - Inf AjjpmJmalaly *$.da>s.a*Q_ltiex tomilofs," exclaimed Mrs. Janies harvested the vine for the f ir s tHtnlty 14 her hiuband carried the lileslJwrfJI Into the house.

The Henleys started their gar' flsa Uii jprlng with 13 hothouse tomilo plants. A wftlc lalr r i. ]ate Irost Iffltd 11 of th e 1 The ons lemaining w'ls a ll they

' needM, U lupplled n total of 213 toBiiioei lor table and canning purpaiu.

“We wjpfcled n wax going la « s rtii producer when we aiw Ul cfie blooms on it." said Henley. At lAsi iJme Jt n)ea#UJ*ed 5£

lachu wrosa and w iu about 30 Inches hljti. The neighbors kept •dtlsini to cut It bncJc )f we wanl- fi We lomaloes, bu t we decided

...crow ,...........a BilUion bJoorruT on It,"

iCIaremont Group Chooses Leaders

BtmtET,-ocrr»=BU£sfifShoc*- JJ reelected m aster of the- . r r “ ’ • " • " ' " ' - ‘■'•“ '■I'

Othtr olflccru arc Floyd HlnRlns, «»fwtr; Mrs. R tuaell Shockcy, ^•ure:; Charles "Allen, steward; u»ie pjkt, asalBlant stew ard; Mrs.

Toner, reelected chapmin; '■tuls Andereon, .reelected treoaur- fr; Mrs, Ed schwaegler, reelectcd ««rfa/y; aorcn N iebon, (»!«. '«Pfr; Mrs. Rex M adden, reelect- » t«M; Mrs, Pioyd H lh ln s . Po.

Mr*. «onsn Nielson. Flonr. Oale Pyke, lady a sau tM t; mymlller, reelected to ei-

fwtJw foramatee; M rt. RonaM P ^ e y , Plunlst, a n d Mr. a n d ' M n '^^Ancterion. a lte rna te lo r sUU

6p«lal honor.aitmbets

Ur Shocker. Mrs.' C harles Allen Victor KertM.

time,•There «•«»« «a many .

coming on we decided to keep track of how many we jol off th e rlne."-HenJ«j<.nolea_

•'I canned JO pint* of chill sauce and 15 pints of relish luiil we s ti ll had all we wanted to eai,'Mrs. Henley.

keep the p lan t veil watered and th e thtetles choppcd down. No ferllllter was inf5,

Scftred by low temperal T uuday n ight. Ilcnicy picked .

■^6 elenn Wednesday morning,' to ta l of 120 tomatoes filled a

...e -h a lt bushel basket heaping full.--------------

Ruler VisitsBURLEY, Oct. 8 - Tlie d istric t

deputy grand exalted ruler. Ph illip West, Preaton, made his annual visitation to Burley BPOK lodge No, 13M a t lb ineeung Wednesday evening a t the Elka hall.■ K ve na»''n!enibe«iie7*)nll}»tcd, hey are U rry Weber, Glen W .

Paulson. Rlenhart Oraf, Earl 8. Bell and Ffed McCord, E xalted Rule/ Oall w o lf announced smorgiabord and dance will bfJd.wi Oct IS and a Sallowecn dancy-Qct.-tt,------------- -------

Watch SeriesBURLEY. Oct, 8 — The regular

meeting of th e Burley Gichange club was dispensed w-Uh during the Thursday luncheon m e e tin g a t Ncls^n'a ca/o Id lavor of Vi'orld series.

Announcement was mxle that Lyle Morton would be In charge of next week's program.

R u 9 a n d F u r f i i / u r c C l e a n i n g

T R O Y N A T I O N A LL aundry & Diy Clconun

Septonic

DENTUREREPUCEMENTS

HOTHINO DOW N — 2 0 M O N T H S TO PAY

• 2 5 Y m h of tgc* cM ifu l dontur* maniifoetttring tn*•u r n your lofi*---fflCMBH. ' _______ __ ,

• F o r y o u r c o n v e n i e n w w e a r e a B i r t 3 'a o ~ ~ | raojt De»ture Repairs in less than H4

: hours. '• I t costs nothing to come in and discuts

your denture probieM .O p e n D o l l y 9 p . m . t o 5 p .m . o r

b y A ppo in tm o n t .D > iy i U P — FA KK — W ALK IN

m c M W ' s ‘s a sH t a n t r t l l M n — I " tW O k .*

HARD W^A R E STOREmDE

STARTING MONDAY 8 A.M. F O r ItTBIG DAYS

OFFa r k e d

PRICEEVERYTHING in the STORE

(EXCEPT FAIR TRADE & FRANCHISE ITEMS)

ALL ON SALE! NOW! SAVE!W E MUST MAKE ROOM FOR N E W '

MID-WINTER AND CHRISTMAS MERCHANDISE!

SALE ENDS O C t 2 0 t h

Here's a n ' unusual chance to, save 'on :rie^ e d , proctico) items fo r the home or ' farm . . . or for Gifts. ■

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T IM E S -N E W S , T W rS T F A L L S , ID A H O -

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j ^ O i ! E K 9 , 2 5 6 0 _

New Camera Used to Inspect Sugar CrystalsTIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS,” IDAHO

eompMiy'*TWj F»lli.

W»Uer»l»yIoclc, Twii I In construct the cjmcra. (Slafr pi

Special Purpose Camera Is Built Here ;ii; T?nr AmalgamatedSugar Firm Research;;;;

|U l3 Placed In pasliion of ft.llic sug.tr cr>siaLilO wmpiny m »nulictu rcs' ncpullve and the ncsnllvc is pbc rd l.illcJe, itiroach ttie

I In the po^liton of enisrBing pspcr. nnd omo itio ncRHtl' ' The IlKht source (n (he hoiconWt/ic wmcr.i. Tl!c sin

U Mitr fti. . ......

iujit«d bncl; fircalcr iimRnlllcatlc lilllmc-ler wide ans

Uliiylocl: iny ".I gre.iUT-ilgpLh o t Held

eooiuUon*! Dtj»ll»e. or by usIhk , ipectil b itt U c»n use Polaroid fl!a ina ‘fn results In 4 m m -

liie einier» cmi be compared to the c ta tnlirfer, »IU] UJe tugar cn'g-lgln^s

ippllcd by 300- watt, 31j*mllUmctcr illde projector Jcmp fliid condfnior Jens A>strjii. The light 14 cast upwards IhrouRh the camero. through an opal naslj

dlffuae the light. Uirougli

Business News Improves Bit, Auto Sales up for September

KEW YORK, Oct. 8 Wt-Buslncss scti IsproTcd K bit during the ptii wtti. although )t ww hard to 1(111/ Uie Improvement RTcatcr tbJn mlghl normaly be expected II ihli time of year.One of the most IntereaUnd sto-

ti«lcs comlni ta light related tc feptember »uio ial?s. After trail- in; a year tgo for two months, Stptcmt)eT u lts Jumped nearly 21 ptr tent over Beptember, 1059.

fVcJght o r Joidlnsi advanced for the week, «Iio lopping i ^50, Depsrlment Uore sales,'rin behind & year ago lii Bcptember, nere four per •hctd of a y » r ago In the latest ttpcrt.

Jfoiei-er, tI tM c po«er produC' lion fell 10 » 5', month low, Sieel prwaucilon, already low, dipped lurther. Fir plywood production

cm back at lome northwest' Mis, rellecllng price weakness.

Copper prices eased to 31 centa

Market Notes Advancing in Grain FuturesCHICAGO, Oct. 8 lUTlJ — W heat

ml soyMin tuiurc* advanced in u oiticrwlsf lower grain market

|to«ect.i!ii,tfic.cmcagoJJo»ra.ofj nde. ^Computed with la.st Friday,

lo 1'.;3 if i :.......................n off

t i off n W T i; soy. - . io IS . and drummed

u ii up 42 to U polnu.^»ding wi, {low In most pralns.

"«iea llurrita of actlvlti'.' LnrcJ lielped by lilgher hog ana

'WUble oil prices.In nhcal, commercial nod mill

MJing 5cr\ed to firm prices, Th« JWembtr »nd March conlrocL*

lo new highs for the w aton. ‘ •Timiuion houses e o ld Cash »W i gained 1 ta U i centa,

Iiiiili bought more than 13 mil- icn bushels of hard a n a white

wheat,CwUnuea reluctance byBouthwest l^ e r., to Mjj the ir w h e n aiso “ Iped futurtt, .

V All corn contracts h it new lowt |f« r the >ea«n of ryjday. O ld crop

**rksi felt the weight of tw o auo- »jive heavy crops. Ideal drying •M harvesting weather was re! Wfd,-8iKn cum te»~*j tu <j-

**?« *by* CO* ''’’iMl *" h*'*the Decembtr down to 9o

^lUement of » Canadian ahlp. »i«ke touch«d o il eeUlae In

rtgalned p* rt o l their

«fre itZdcd by. hJeher ^ Wlcts and eiport bujflnt. A i» l . 2 ^ «Port. which e .U m «t«l toe

lOjnmioa biubel* be-

pound compared with S3 WllUam BuUer. vice president

o f the Ci^iue ManhAlta;) bank. New York, forecast a rcccMlon s ta r t late thti year or early ni year. However, he thnuRht It would be over by mld-lSOl slbly a bit Inter."

Charles Kellstadt, chairman of Sears. Roebuck and company, came right out and jald the coun­try Was In a "rolllnic adjustmenl." J w t (he fame. Sears' Sepccmbcr sales set a record for the month.

There Is no doubt Ihnt govern­ment cconomMU remain optfmfi- tic about the buslne.u outlook.

On Tuesday when Budget Di­rector Stan.5 (rave lltc otllclal ad­ministration forecast on the cur­ren t fiscal year's budget, lie wa: warmed with st.'\tlstlca and opin- loris from treasury department ex- perts.

Administration economists, it was disclosed.-npecl-a iharp-galn in: the RTOM national product in the fourth quarter lo »n annual rate of Mo billion dollars or S13 blllloi dollars. The third quarter is estl mst«d a t around 505 bUllon dollars.

In thfe fourth quarter, Stans Mid. government economists ex­pect "ft normal sea-'ionnl Improve' m ent In biulneii coniDilons. and It might be somewhat better than that." rurther, they "are not con­cerned about the first and second quarter* of next-yeir.'l

The rally tn the stock market started the next day.

Briefly over the business acene: A Califomia concern, Cohu Elec­tronics. Inc., has proposed to the govtmment th st a itlevislon caro- .er*-*nd.traaamitl«r.be:acntJO the moon , . . I t would take pictures of space; lend them back to Earth. At the business and corporal* gift giving show In New York, the word w u out that busfneu gifc glvlnirthU year will be ta high as ......deiplte' payola waodali. Said dealer; " M r ....................

by o rcmoip • Dlnylock, w

flr.^t cnmcra liicorporati-,1

clear BfiifrIS. shutler projcctii an Irnanc onto a lour- b' on top of.Ilvc-lnch iicKatlvc. Before

r ts irippcii nfsM ye L? pl.iccd in the ca •lease. for cxpo.surc the Imnge Is focusei

lote.'i this Is the on a pround nla is back.lys It The film holder ndaplei

rnthcr radical dc-

gifts say they don't'. Eorutlone corporation h a g an electrical •'heart beat aimulator” which re­produce*'the sound of mother'a heartbeat as heard by. the baby before birth . . . Put It on the baby'a crfb. says the oompany, to mafcs baby feel more psychologically se­cure . . . The Chesapeake and Ohio sntttfay. which wants lo get Boltl-

-re and Ohio railroafl stockhold- to sell thBlr stock, will give the

stocltholders four reduced rateweek-end house parties a t the — ---------- ----------- -------- - _

-^ • .c -a n d ^ -o srfa the nex t impetus lo be gUen )hur one or the other o( thest ISTi

Stocks Show First Advance Since AugustNEW YOnK, Del. B UPO-The

stock mnrkel rcKistered iLs flrj weekly advance slncc August thl week.

But trndlng ran well below list week’s pncc, indicating ft technici adjustm ent following five week of declining, prices rather than dellnlte uptrend.

But the bullish segment of the trading community wn. c need by the three consfcul)-, sion.1 of ndvnnces from Wednesday Uirough P'rlday. i t wa.i the first time slncc the August rally made Its high th n t the lu t had been able to pu t more thnn two eUns to­gether.

An lncrca.icd dividend for Amer­ada sparked the turnabout in tl» downward trend on Wedntsday. And It v a s the oil etockt In eea- cral th a t featured the three-day rally,

01)5 h&vo comt prDmlr«T>ce'-<Jn-^«Jrom m any quarti... industry price tiVnd in the third .quarter should result in reason- ably good earnings slatcmenls— particularly In comparlsoa will o ther groups.

Some Improvement in the busi- news background also helped

improve sentinieni. pnrlicularly reports o f sharply increa.-sed auto sales In September and favorable forccaitts for a number of indus­trial firms.■ ■ R e tiiir’ f r T f le ' rmproved;-and railroad carloadiogit ran above the prcMou* . «'Mk iUJd * year »go. Steel output slipped slightly, but the Minouncement of expansion p lans by Armco. and ihe report of Improved orders by another- firm

stablliie stee^ Issues, Alum-

. . ivenlional cut Him ciimcro back. Tlic lens

ible u ith ln the camenby II ivlntt 1

htjp td .slab llite inum ^compahv^5hy“ or-Amtrtc«-»lw •tho^otls-whetB-Ooi>Unsat*L^«iannounced a large expansion pro­gram,

A num ber of sUable defetui . tr txU helped the airCM/t and missile stocks. ~Coluinbla O u also raised lU dividend, but Uie repwt by Standard and Poor’s that divi­dends were whittled down In Sep­tember didn 't do much lor stock­holder enthusiaon.

One W»U street expert ?afd tiiit while th e business picture seezns . hstve a. way to go before it com­pletes Jtd '‘adjustment.’' th« jJtU' aUon Is n o t as bad as one mlEht Infer from much of the foreboding; sentim ent circulating.

The economy is pacing Itself st . :ar peak performance amid con- flletlQg recessionary and Infla- llonfcry forces, he safd. addlflg Uist

<n«y well hiiije i

Twin Falls Markets•.KUTUCkBtMn ■

Can^tri CutUn ~ ~ —

U tt7 ««« ’___________ —

ik - th

Ko. S -------- ,^t.u>i-*o

K ” _ -(I'Mir tu U n «MMd|

' LlV«>UUI,t« IOm Jw* aM 4mMi')

' . IIIAHIt Orwt

imagi _ vcs the opemtoi

cJjcicc o! tim e, bulb, and shul speeds from one second lo l / 200th of a ficcord, Blaylock saj-s most of the cxpi^urcs will be made

shutter opening for one second about f /16 to give greater

depth of field.The ciuo o l the camera Is

from plywood nnd the sliding top which gives the operator occess lo the .ihu tter Is niade ot ma. hogany.

plans o f Ihe consumer and the govemment-

Some of the technicians say that the fact th a t demnnd twice hs« materialized around the 570 level in the Dow joncs Industrial ago may Indicate thnt the lis b« in the jirchmlnary stages at forming a base from which ‘ lUnch-B sustained advance.

Sales iJjl,? week dropped sfinr to 12,208,820 shares, or 2.H41.7G4

.shares p e r day. from 16,652,BIO laharca, o r 3.370.SG2 -'hares dally the week before, some of th bla.me for th e dip In volume put on th e world aeries.

Standard Oil (New Jerseyl wa. IHo most active'S lock on 's aK s" 240.400 shores. I t closed a t 40’i

Oliver corporittlon ass runner up w ith volume of SOIJDQ nnd finished a t 2D'.i off IH.Term i of the sale of Oliver's farm equip­ment buslncM to White Moton

ere announced.Lockheed, despite a setback

mid-week following the crash another o f ILi Eleclras. flnlshefl up 1% a t 2 3 'j and was third ir s4Iu w ith 117.100 sharc.1, Bruns w ick'w id-aeneral-M otors rounded out the top live.

■nie D ow -Jones artrsges a t thi eloM-priday.ahowed SO induatrlaU a t S88.43 u p 6.28; 20 rails 126.21 up 0.19: 15 u tilitie s 8334 up 2.05. 8’65 stOckA 195.62 up 2.44.

A m erada Jumped points

« ri. AUantio Refining ! ’i . Clllt. Service I ’Si. Richfield 1 Royal D u tc h . 1.

U. s. B tte i r c ^ 1« and Youngs- town a fractlon\w lille Acme lei 3S and Bethlehem lost U, Gener­al Motors. Ford and Chrysler add­ed fractions while Studebaker. Packard te ll I ’i . Southern Rail, way stood o u t In Its group with 3-poine KfUn.-

Nilnneapolla Honej-well Jumped ey. b u t o th e r electronics iasuts were n o t fortunsle. Zeolth dropped Motorola 5>i. Vorian m . T exM iiutrum enls 4H and IBM 3.

t;n lversal plcture.i Jumped S bm Param oim t dropped S. Oains ' around 4 points appeared - T h o m p a o n - R«no-W wlfld«e Sweeti conapany of America. Wal. iR B -T n n r-rn rn ijm —McGrti^Hm and Owens Corning.

Polaroid wa« the downside (ea- tXire w ith a I v s of 17 poInU- Piper A ircraft dropped S. Louisville Q u 4?i, am lli» Kline and French <«,

Procter and OamWe helped lift the Industrial u re n g t wJth a »*Jn of SK .'U nlon Carbide rose 3» but - ' nan K odak.fell back 3U.

Oressograph . climbed and General American Transporutlon 7, .Cam pbell 8«up pick ' around S m did Consollda... . . gar, K f" — Oaa and Connlldatetl NatufH : 0>» . . . . .

i t a t t th a a 400 /si»loo trees baye been p la n ted by Amerlctn tortst indu iw c* l a mo>

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p a 6 e t w e n tTIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO SUNDAY, pCTOBEB «,

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.OCTOBER 9, 1 P 6 0 TT^TES^NEWS. TWIN-FALLS, -IDAHO - ^ ^ T T - N I N E

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BENEATH THIS BANNER ARE THE WORLD'S BEST BARGAINS

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Page 30: jjrest in Camas S e c o n d D e b a te ^County Discloses C r e a t e s …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014. 12. 12. · lBC'3 efforts in concress

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO SUNDAY. OCTOBER* ,

Ladies'L O U N G M G

ER

I A k .11 . * bloeki norih of W o ih -L O C A l IU bS: inston School, on Blue U k c . filvd. o r Filsr A v en u e . . . o r ju it w eit of thg new high ic h o o l .

EVERY NEEDED ITEM-Every Service Here!

The Following B usiness andProfessions to S erv e You:

Super-M arket Food Stoio U p h o ls te r in g Shop

M odern D rug Store F u r n i tu re Store

Lunch Counter Service C o m p le te InsuronceR eady-to-W car Shopi R e a l E s to te & A uctionJu n io r Mil* Shop S e rv ic e

Shoe Store B e a u ty Sa /on

J r . Dept. & Variety Store B a rb e r Shop

M uiie & Record Shop D o c to rs of M edicine

Com plete Book Store D o c to rs o f D entistry

SLIPPERS5 2 ”

E lastic Tops H ard Soles

I SPECIAL . .Beige - Red - Blue and Black

in Glove L ea ther and Nylon V elvets

S ize s 5 to 10

pen I t «.m. to 7 p.m. Mon thru tri.—!i«t, 10 »-tn, to 5:30 p.m.

S u b u rb a n S h o e s

Your Fovorite

STEREO CENTERFeaturing C olu m b ia LP.'s

RHAPSODY IN BLUE— G ershw in BR16AD00N— S h irley Jo n c s -J o c k Casiidv DIALOGUE FOR BRASS EILEEN FARRELL— P ucc in i A rios BERNSTEIN PLA Y S— B ru b e ck plays Bcmstri. JEALOUSY— Percy F a ith - SAY IT W ITH M U SIC — R oy Conm ff m a r c h a l o n g w i t h M IT C H — M itch M il l,/-

For mony hour* o f w o n d o rfu l enjoyment!

I OQes, houses a n d b u s in e ss property.

AUCTION SERVICESelling y o u r b u s in e s s Is our business —

A n y w h e re in M ogic Volley.

GEM STATE REALTYAND

AUCTION SERVICEI 1. W , M E5SER SM ITH __________ JIM MESSERSMITH

WOWWHAT A BUY!5 TUBE COLORFUL

LYNWOODW SHOPPING CENTER

ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR ALL Your NEEDS!You can chalk up more sa v in g s on move items iji less t im e h e ro th a n a».v\vhcre else. All o u r sto res a re pledged to offer top v a lu e s a t all times. Together th e y c a n meet practically ALL y o u r shop­p ing needs! -

CHECK THESE SHOPPING ADVANTAGES:

You'll Do Better a t P«inny-Wisi 3 in LYNWOOD SH OPPIH G CENTER

SPECIALSPrices effective th ro u g h W ednesday

BABY GifT SET ClREG. 79c

2 w osh cloths, soop, soop d ish , boby toy. All b c o u ti- fu lly gift-boxed w ith vjift c o rd . Seniotionol Low Pfiee o t Penny-W iie.............19

-R egu lar-— 14.95 V alue

Ju .st pa rk y o u r car, s te p o u t a n d s te p in lo a complele sh o p p it iK cen te r w ith ever>lhln(C c lo se a t h and .

All o u r s lo res nre_ va lu e m in d e d . Sales pcrsoniicl a re a l e r t , well- T hey go all o u l’ lo b r i n g y o u inform ed, th o u g h tfu l, f r ie n d ly money savinR buys a t a l l tim fcs.

Slinillor to I l llu itra tio n on ly

T h is i t a new a n d differen t type table model rad io . D is tin g u iih e d by iu elegant ttyling, l u p ^ iT erfo rR iancc , Ho* tuprijjng pow er

ond te n iitiY ih ri9 r_ e M e lle n t reccoHon ony.w h ere . H a i bu ilt-in ontcnno, vo lu m e c o n tro l.

A v a i la b le in B lue, Pink, 6losk oi Ivory

KING'S LYNWOOD SHOPPING

CENTER • TWIN FALLS

THESE ITEMS GO O N SALE AT . . . . , . / n AM . M O N D A Y

FinalClearance!WOOL SEPARATES

Junior ond P r e - t e e n Sizes

COTTON DRESSESPre -teen S iz e s

M o f lk VoMey'* L orgett Vofiety Store

NOW .M onday th ru Friday 11 Q.m. to 7 p.m.

Saturday— 10 to 5:30

there's FRIE

PARKING too!

i h t

^ A R I S

LYNWOODSHOPPING

C IN TIR

HaVS YOU Tried

NOMA'S BOOKSFor Varied T itles?

Hunlinj, H o b k l . . , H o p iiin n i ,

H to llh , KENNEDY o r N IX O N , V l„ „ W ealth, Seo, Scicnee , S pace or

e • ■. Antiques, A rt, AQUA RIU M JirsnvE!------ -------

Aui-horized LDS D ealerIneludino

G ENEA LO GICA L BOOKCRAFT SUPPLIES

W elcom e: j. c„.d11 o .m . to 7 p.m . _ Sot. 10 to 5 :3 0

L o c o lo d W « l of Solewa), i„ SyHnao B uild ing -

.22 RIFLE $HELLSt tLong Rifle

REG. 78c

A t Penny-Wise... w

G-E Elec. Heater!

DRUGSOriSN SUNDAY 9 im .ito 9 pjn. j