+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in...

Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in...

Date post: 11-Aug-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
12
j^ffic Death I ^ »»u»r •»« «“ “ >• r Sin IdilA>9» ------ _ '-*r~ jA .jyha. JWl ---- — «o I *** ^ _ / d i uis)e V«Ufy. 19W — 6 I tr-“ ------- The Macic Valley Newspaper Dedicated to SenlnR and Promotinf: the (Jronih nf Nine lrrif:atc<l Idnhn Oumtics j, NO. 353 TWIN FALLS. IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes \Ug&l Gambling ToDraw Tourist rnKF April 3 proupjaf. Icliilio men were platj- ,.lni,iii:n twlny lo' promote passaKC of InwH IcRnl- ^ Xrm of pimbliiiR ill Idaho to nttract tourists to r*M ntntc The formation of an orKiinir-ation to pro- ^ finance the candidacy of state offii.-crs and legis* '*Mmtiiiilcd to "locni option casino-type K«niinK” ^nnounccd vcstorday by Vernon K.'Smith. a Boise sraith’i'nid articles of incon>oration have been jfilcd for a non-profit cooper- 'ntive associationtobcknown ■as “TouristJi of Idaho, Un- limited.” IneonMrntors *re Smith. Keith Durns. Tttiti S p r l n . . . OToyer C. Cummlngj and Guy tl. feond Layer I »isHINOTON. April J S a e «C3t ccMl of Mexico ' T through to tht I J S e w a n for U>e NntlonftI df Sciences said-the ,jou*h— ft "inlle. at a the txplortUon of the -a'_h*ppent(J e»rly Satur- r^tblle occftnosraphcrs of ^ t t l M(*ole *tf« drllllnc bC 1 ^ of irooo ffCl nenr ■*^p« Wind, „ d B»»com, project dl- •. ndJwl the academy V diamond-Upptd drill b|down S«0 feet before stop- ■ M nddeoljr. Samples of ba- t b»rt rock formed by , tD^ial wltnm the n brouthl up. liff Powers atinue to I Supply Laos it Cilied mtM Inlematlonal SUta dTllian piloU flew ■ Mxrkan-suppllcd Iiellcopun • '/ tint iUpDly runs over a* arcftB In Lac» today EmmunlM-cupported troops 3i to advance. inl» Chlnoc Uireol of I In lAoi r a i^ the ___ . not Koreftn-t>T* w b ta major pm-en cnn agree fcfttHf meona to atop It. ■ Meoptav. port of a croup iinfltd hy th* VoiUa b a n l lAoUan cotcrnmeni to m Its supply and oomma- R. Slorcr. Meridian. ' Tlie articles of Incorporation said the association would support eandldalej for Rovertior, -Hetiltn- ftni Rovernor and lechlatoni “re- icardles.1 of political Brflllation.i,”. provided ttiey were committed to .the -fulfllimtnt of the purpaiea lof the ns-wlAtlon." Smim Mid m order lo build _ IhrlvinK tourbi’ Industry In Idaho "WB mtut crcaie a tourist and convention atmosphtr#." He said, "nie history of acrid tourist centen has proved Ihtit strictly rceulated nnd leRaliwd caslno-tj-po earning Is the founda> lion upon which a flouriihlnit and prosperous tourist Industry built. _ ...... ......... _ "Tills U not necessarily beciuse all tourists like to play at Ramins tables, but becau.<ie lecallted Ram- InR soes hand m hand with bright llRhLs, salety, entertainment, ex- citement and the fun and thrill r a vacation."' He anid ilie new construction this u«uld nifflulat« and the addi- tional buslnc.u It would noutd mean empluyment and busl- r.cM for evrrs'body, would put mil- lions of tourist doUnn In circula- tion In IdiUio even' year, and would rc.%uit In tax reductions. Miss Cassia County Receives CroAvn |tr. & martnra In ndchborlng ' cdand flown to Laoa. snent lroop« atre driven bTt#TT»m. a vlllairtin XlcnR n e t ptDTlnce 33 miles couUi- i«(t!MTltAl Plain of J ats. last I n bdnj *upplied by ^ le t •. itUle the United SUtes. bind the SoTiK Union dis- eeaae-fire In l«on on th( le front, both Aldeti con- Edlo back ihelr partlrans or '-‘ anc fronts wlUi aid, n Defen.i« Minister Drlc. a-Wwrntf-Nftwran—Mid—the' Id rebel* »U]| were Rd«nclnir. R In an (.wtull. Bt prttiiaiifnl foreen ........ . ttd adrancinc *lov.-Iy aRnla-t B Itooli backrt by arUllery ' loettr fire on the VlenUane- j Ptmbans lilRhway 5| KafB>-. a key point . M uwt « mllM BouUj of Uie N ttrtlal ol Hums Prabang. f N.’sCongo ostlsOK’d; |Russ Beaten . D KATIONS. N. Y . Aprtl ^Tbe U. N, KenwtU cwscmbly *J owpode blttff SoW« oppo- » W appmvrd a t«mporarj- of SfcrplAo'-Cencrol k Contro spfnd- ■ Po*Tn. "iiWip rcMlu- 5 -10 »uh a atxxntlonji. ^ ,-WlTt Woe and ^^a^. "tw the iPEoJIty of the as- MirMnR out the iSS‘nrs fc,.„T, »"'rrv ana Vl'pt inu. ivxrikniptcybV ►»*Wch«-ir,la:r i|ie U. N. char- IHttH Rarh. ;uie op-rimnn has b « n "2. ' powers' Coui’t Agrees To Review of 2 Labor Suits WASHmOTOK. April S (171 - The »uprm8courc«greM«xl»yto review the convictions of two lolwr union flmires—Dave Beck, once- powerful former boss of Uje Team- sters. nnd MftUrlcB A, Hutcheson, prc.ildent of the Carpenier.i unlop, Deck, who wa.^ supplanted as . resident of the Teamsten unions by James It. Iloffa, hod been found ffulity b y ........................ Auto Found in Lake May Have Been Booze Runner of pocketlnft IIJW from tiio ule ’ a union-owned Cadillac. Hutche.v>n' hsd been sentenced to sic montiu In )all aad flnrd $500 on contempt charees for r fusinc to ansuer questions of Mnate committee Inve-HignUng «1- iCBed Indiana Klfthway iciindilA In 1MB, He has been president of ttn)-unitea“Brotnernooa"6r"c»iT penten (AFL-CIO) since 10S2. ThB supreme court anreed to hear armimcnts In Uielr ease.i sometlnje next fall and hand dcran declslon.1 later. In other actions today, thf court: -nefuscd lo consider * conflict over damage suits filed by coal operators aRalnst the United Workers of America, -Let stand a lower court rullni that the next pha.ie of Uie seven' year legal battle between the Koh' ler company of Wbcoatln and Ihf AKL-CIO United Auto Worker union will be founht out either Waslilngton or Chicago eourU, Easter Blaze Fatal to Five tian tnm —died tn ' at ihrtr home, Mr.t, Johnson. SO. emped with • two by Biutfhlng k window. Neigh, f bora held her back when ihe tried ‘ to ru.>h Into Ihe biasing house for • the other*. "nie rire the old. frame ' home. Pour , of th? clUltlren who lost their llrt« w m tnpptrd at • the top of a •t*lrw«y leading to 1 their bedroom*, “nie fifth was rraoji]' • • found downattirt 'Vhm M il. «». > bail. No. «sideiits Urged to Qean up l^ly During Next Two Weeks tl* It. - '•••■« ir.iiucnu 10 t t y ! ’'**''' p,|„, t- Derrick, ••ne.iidenlJ ahould be proud of their city." Derrick aald, “but who can feel real pride for a city with many IoI a overgrown with weeds *ind cluttered with, rubbish, un- ’lightly ditch banka or other areai who-w looks delerloraU the ap- pearance of the city." ' —Derrick-added SANDPOINT. April 3 tfl-Dld the rusty Peerless sedan, raised from the bottom of Lake Pcnd Orlelle where It hnd rest«d for 30 years, once run prohlbitloij b^ore? Tliat w'n!i Ihe educated oldilmers vtio watched the mys- tery car being raised from CO Jeet of water Saturday, With hard rub- ber Ures Rleamlng nnd hcadllitht? still In place, alr-fllled metal drums atl.iched by skin divers finally brought the old car to Ihe surface. A a e a ^ Revealed & eallon Jug and a beer bottle ln ‘the back of the car. The speedometer registered only 12.555 miles. • - -We have proof the running when It went o ff into the Joke, said Dan W. Eagle, member of the Historical Auto aoclety, Si>o- kane. who examined the relic. '‘Tlie In Uie ’on’ position tlie temperature gunge had stu<:k at 110 degrees." Residents of the North Idaho resort area recall that Lake Pend Oreille was a favorite rendeivoui for booze runners during prohlbl' tlon. Illegal whliky and gin wen smuggled acrou the line from Canada, transported down lake by boat and then transferred to powerful cirs_for the final run lo Bpokane'ahd oUjCT'dialrlbutibn points. The oldtlmers fues* that the peerleu' « u run lot? the hki after federal agenta became sus- picious of Itj trips. U.S. Ship Stopped By Cuban Gunboat •WASHINGTON, April .T (UPI)—The state department said today that the Wcatcrn Union Telegraph company cable-repair schooner •‘'\Vestcrn Union" was intercepted by_a_C_iibnn_gunbpatJn?.tJlridny_nn(Ldctfilncd_f()iL.fi.cver(il hours off the Cuban coast. An American destroyer nnd ATTifiripfli] the* f?hO'?npr tmdor fliir^'silttinco tin- til it wa.-? released, the department said. Reports reaching New York suit! the Cuban Runboat \s■n^ forced lo with- dniw by the U. S. naval Juditli Diima^ Has Answers For 3 Queries , BURLEY, April 3-"CompcUtlon Is good for ajiy girl." replied Ju- dith Ann Duma.\ daughter ot Mr, and Mrs. James Dumas, the new M l.\s Ca.isltv County for tOOI. spon- sorrd by the Durley Chamber of Commerce. She answered questions during the last minute ot the contest Sat- urday night at the Burley high school auditorium. Approximate- ly 1,000 persons viewed the event and many were turned aw’oy, * ^ e experience of belns in Uils contest-Li good-foi--us, *fld-wben you put rce from Gunntiinamo f bay A state department spokesman said the United States had de- manded a full explanation of the incident from the Cuban govern- ment. The demand was delivered lo the SwIm government, which rcprc.«nt.'» U. 8. diplomatic Inter- in Cuba, le state department said the Western Union, an 8G-foot sBllIng vc.i.ie!, was Intercepted and board- ed lour to five miles off Daracoa . tha northeast Cuban coast.; near Guantanamo bay. The ahlp had been repairing the Barbados-MlamI cable and had put Into Mayaguez, Puerto nico, lor fuel and stores. It was on Its way from Puerto Rico to Key West >s'hen It was Intercepted. Department Spokesman Lincoln White said the vessel made a land fall approach to get her bearing four lo five miles off Boracoa, \\ ’hen the Cuban gunboat Inter- cepted the schooner, ll ordered Uie vciwi to turn off Its radio. But It apparently was able to send a mcs.<iage about Its plight before shutting off Ihe radio t>eaeuAe the American destroyer and planes a r.' rivrd cn the scene. White said the de.itroyer care- fully sUyed outside C^jba's three- mll^ limit, Meanwhile, In Cuba today Cuban anny units controlled m o« of the L'iand’a OAvaX InstAUailons to-pttf vent further uprialng bV naval per- Bjnnel oppcaed lo the pro-oommu- nL« pollclea of ihe Oonlro regime. T*Tnty-one aallon and one of- fleer—the entire detAchment of a <C*aU«i«4 M Tat* t. C*Iai>ii I) Mother Acts Fast To Save Her Girl next‘two Weeks city employes will '>flp the aanlta'lfon dtpartment ^‘ck up’ .trash, leaves. Rrass. branches *nd other rtfuse collected from cleaning up yards and lots. (CMilatct M ru * J. C*l*aa «) dark. HASflLTON. N. Y_ April 3 W>- The mother took off her eo*l, act- ing aUmly but quickly. She ient hBTion. David, 6. runnlns for help. Then she dltnbed 94 te«t down well to aave her dauehtcr, Bar- bart, *. from drownlne. Mrs- Arthur Lln.nle7 plucked Darbart from the wtUcr. Then the braced her back and feel .Uie_njueh_ailU_eL_liit, *11 Boise Pupil’s Chicks Study Wins Award NAMPA. April 3 IJi-A Ifi-year- old Boise high school Junior won best-of-thow awards for her ex- hibit outlining her experiments In which she said she changed the :x of chickens. Beth Burt copped besl-of-sho« honors along with Jes.ie AbtMll, Meridian, and Dennis McDonald, Olennj Perry, at the Southwe-it Idaho and Eastern Oregon Re- glonal Science fair here this week- end. Abbolt showed a heat- engine which converts heat Into mechan* leal power and Dennis ahowed the growth of beans under a greater weight than gravity. Miss Burt and Abbolt won trlpi ) a national sclcnce fair at Kan- is City, Mo,, and McDonald naval cruise. MISS Burt, daughter of sUte Rep. Carl Burt. Bolie, said »he obuined a larger percenUge of female chicks by Injecting ihree- dsy old egp with female sex hor- mones. She said 83 per cent of the chicks hatched from one batch of eggs Injected with female hor- mones develo^d into females. Ofi the remaining chicks, most were; would want lo b« Miss CasaU County. Three quMtlons were naked the three finnilsis by MB.il«r of Cere- monies Robert Saxvlk. Tl>ey wen ' ’With whom woqld-you prefer ti je marooned on a desert Island?' ’What Is your opinion of the trad- ing stamp Luue In the state of Idaho,".and "Why would you like lo win the Miss Cassia County title?' MLu Dumas irtld It would be.a thrill for any girl to receive the title. 1»f( gnn><ay fv»nln[. In rf . turn to school at Utah State uni- In aJwwer to the first question, MLm Dumas said ahe wouldn't really care lo be marooned with nityone, but If alie had to choose II would be Cary Orant/ • It was her opinion that Jt would bo better to save ''first hand" rath- er Uian getting something from the stamp books which many felt they were getting for nothing, DIAnne Turner. Francisco Studio, who placed second, wore a aheer white gown..wlth tiered muf- fled skirt and lace bodice over satin, tier baUilng suit was white and her talent was a dramatic reading from ’'Our Town.' Karen Woodhouse, Mias Oakley Vigilantes, wore a alieer while sovn with a red chiffon stole which was fastened at the wiklst rhinestone pin. Her batli- Ing .lult wa.1 black aaUn. She plsyed the piano for her talent nnd sang several numbers from Brosda-tty shou's. “The King and 1" and “AJy Pair Udy." Patricia Thaxien. Miss Scholer's Je^’flry, who won the title of Mtw Congenlaltty, wore n gown of Swiss embossed cotton that was accented with a sky blue satin at the waist. Her b»thU)e suit was black and her talent wa.'i a modem dance In con- junction with a display of her art work. Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in June To Air Differences PALM niCACIl, Kla.. Ai)ri! : ill vi.sit l-'nince iic.\t tiiimlli : tl;ri’c-(liiy stale,vi.sit and (ii,<ni nalinn.-'. the White lloiisi' aiit dent aiiiiiit'eiitly steniincci fn>n verKoiit'o till other jmlicii’r*.' It folliiwcil extensive (li.«ciis- n.-t ann)ii;r Kl iuiii I; . Gaulle :iii(I their iinil>a: dor.'*. The Kcn»f(tys ; ( I 'i’D — I’ri’siik’iit Keniictly, ni-c<im|iaiiit-<l by hi.q \v.ifc, t llio invilatliin of I’re.iiitent Cliarli'.< tic Ginille for ft •: ii>ii of a bfoail raiipc of probletns iM\<ilvii)jr their two nmu’i'il today. The I’arin iiivilatioii tlu’ 1‘. S. l*resi- li<ml»Ics ill Laci.-i nnd the Conjfn aiiil Krench-U. S. di- throuiih June 2 in wiiiit scribed m n "modified" stale vlmi, Thl.i mciuit *oinc of llie monip.i involvfd'm such i. ___ will be dbpoiiscd wllh to permit De Qjiiille sntl Kennedy- Kreaier opportunity to dlscuM bii'.InfM. The chief executive’s fir.st offl- [J Kennedys^fe K ^t ^Jnd^r-T- ightG u a ^ slmulbiicoiiily in Paris niU Palm Beach R^ Kfiincrly prepared in fly back to Wn.’Jilngtott tomorrow for nferenccj tiic remftltidcr ot the :ek with D;ltl.Mi Prime Minister Hnrold Mnc.MlllAn. PrcM Secretary Pierre Salinger declined lo dtr<'UR.\the pos.ilbimy that visits to London. Bonn and Rome miRht be added lo ilie mncli trip, He snid the mecling In Parl.1 was the only Item on the Kennedy overseas ngenda at pres- West Goman Chnncellor Kon- rad Adeimuer is due In Woslilng- ‘■ )n on April 11 and wn.^ expected i ) urge Kennedy to Include Bonn :i his .\tay-June lUncrar;-. | The President's firat trip out of' the iounlt^'. according to present plaw, will be to OtUwn, probably in mid-May, u> addreis the Cnna*^ dlan parliament. This trip origin-1 ally had btiii set for someUme In the Ilr.’.t luUf of June, but Is be-; Inc ndvnnced becnute of Uie visit' to Prance, i Kennedy was expected l« leave! Wn-ihlnglon ^^ay 20 for I PALM BEACH, Flft.. April 3 (ITO-Pre.Mrtent Kennedy and hfs family ,,, ,' I rrniiilnrd under IIrIiI protective trcurily today—the.lost full day of ullhcir t:ai.i<-r vuit la Plorlda................ .........................................................| ! ,j| ’Ilir extra lie.ivy ftecurity precautlon.«, due lo kidnap nnd murder ' 'iliri';it^ asain.st liie fir,\t family by pro-Ca.tiro Cubans In the area, will coiiiliiue iinlll liic President, his wife and their two children fly | biifk to Wn^hlnRt(ln tomorrow oJternoon. Selfli:m_liave a Prriidcnt nnd hl.t wife bei-n more-heavlly protected —~— in II . . ................. . .............. at St, Edward's Homan Cajhollc ciiiircli here, n ie num- ........... ...... service nueiils In and around ihr cinirch was about twice the norinnl complement, 'They al.^b were nuRmrnted by state and lural iwllcr. Once liie Kennedys are back In the well-organlted safety of the White House, the current federal Inveallgatlon of the recently re- l>orled threats may take a different direction. t;ntll lliL> momhu. authorities have kept prime suspects imder sur\ ’clllance. partlcuiatiy lo see that lour or more Cubans In the Palm Bench area do not slip away lo Havana. Of the four Cubana prtnclpaiiy Involvefl.-one naji-bem-ae.wnbcd-jisTiarrof nnlntemirencB - relay syiilem between souUi Florida and the Castro government. eniraffcmiiil In Boston. Then he will rpeak May 30 In New York City to the Eleanor Roor«velt Paris from New York the next day. Other Items besides liios on the if«nntdy-De Onulle-affenda-were expected to be the French partld- paUon in North AUantle Tnialy organlratlon acUviUen and French dentre to continue .nuclear testing. According lo Informed aources, M Pan I. OliMB Brewing BONN, Germany, April J,WY- There Is mounting evidence of an Imminent soneC spue ex-' perlment, a ipokesman of tlie Bochum observatory snld today. "Por several days a surprising Increase In Intensity of Russian telegraphic and telephonic com- munication on frequencies gen- erally used by space rocket launching stations has been ob- aerved," the spokesman de> dared. Plan.Made to . 1,000 People Tiu-n Out for Sunrise Rites —A-«fou.d-er-about-l,000'p( UNION, 3 OTHERS SUED BOISE. April 3 in-The AFL- CIO Laundo' and Dry Cleaning International union and looaJ-UO and th'ree Individuals are being sued for tu0,000 In complalnla on file In third district court here. Ralph NlchoU, manager of Troy- Capital, Inc.,’ claims he waa sub- abnormal wllh many having bolhjecied to libel and slander In male and female organs, Ihandbills. attended the annual Easier Sun- J lie Mrvlees Bundav morning at Shoshone fall.i, reporta the Rev, Robert Keim, director of ' pageant. The Twin FalLi MlnlsUrlnl... . clailon fpoawred the service. The Hev. Mr, Kelm commented the arrangement of having spec- 's on the lawn near Ute park- ing ioi '’worked out real weil," He added. "The services rar smoottiiy and several slight prob- lerfOnve noticed will be Ironed out next year. "We wisli lo thank T»ln FnlU county Sherllf.James Benham, his staff;-state" policemen and the American Legion auxiliary police, who helped direct lrafllc,“ the Rev. Mr, Kelm said. ‘Hieme of the pageant was "The -------- Morning.- Narrators' LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo. April 3 Mwin the rote of mediator. _ LumumbUt official who Is on speaking Urms with President Joseph Kasanibu's central government arranged a peace flight today to U\e stronghold In sunleyvllle. LOS ANQELES. April 3 fin—Judge David Coleman (old (he Jury today te consider only (he las. chamber or life ImpriaoomeDt tor coovieled nordereas Carole Trtgeff at tba panel net (o deelde on ponlshment for Uii enetlme model and her lever. Dr. B. Bemaid FlBch. and *taied, David did hlB part. He r»n half-mile u j h e nearest hcMse. . Ftfmen arrived lo 16 to 30 mliutea. Mrs. Llneiey CBtimatod. WASHINGTON. April 3 m-Caroline Kennedy waan'Ulhtre. The -.;y wM_pvercasi. and the temperature was chilly. But thousand* of chnSren aHa“ihelr pafenta it«rmeaThJ“WWtrH6use"8rtfunaflTS^ for the tradlUenal Easter egg roll. JERUSAUM, Israel, April 3 dTD-Adolf Elehmann has been brrjacbt iron hU aeeret prlsoa to ataad (rtal toaerrew an charfM «( alaaita- Ictlnf BUUlau «t j«w% Informed aottrecs caid ioslgbt. were Boyd Ash. Fred Ward and Wanda Oarrtson. The cast Included Pat Nolan and Georg6 Nolan. Ronuin soldiers; Sarah Mlkel, Louise Wabon nnd Karen Mlkei, angeU; Janet Walk, er. angel of'the Lord; Carol Fuller, Mar}'; Kathy Cutshall, Salome; Curtis Garrison, Peter; Jonathan weiu. John, and Aroletui Routt, Mary Msgdaicne, ' MinMerv parlldpallng tn the ser\-lce Included the Rev. Earl >V, RJddle, who gave the Easter mes- sage. "Chrtsl the Life"; the Rev Wayne Cutahsli. scripture reading: Ute Rer. Homer Walkup.-prayer; the Rev. Mar?Jwll Combs, offer- 100^ pmyer. and ihe Rev. D. L. Mlkel. benediction. Boy Scout troop 69. of which Archie Bro*-n Li Scoutm " the offering, A quintet poeed of Susan Shartey. Connie Heniell. Linda SUles, Bonnie Read and Jud}- BodenMab. Preserve Old Oregon Trail A government agency and the Twin Falls County Historical,so- ciety are Joining forces to preserve the Old Oregon Trail between llagerman valley and the King Hlll-Oienns Ferr7 area. It was an- nounced Monday by O, A. (Gus) Kelkcr. historical society presi- dent. The c6operatlve project will be handled through the Boise office of the bureau of land which Is In charge of Delbert Pal- The visible Old Oregon Trail _titJiaJocaiC!LDiUli6JMmilL*Lf!t ofjsnake river from a pomi south of Upper Salmon Falls and ex-' tending, almost without Inter- ruption. to the famed Three Is- land crossing of Snake river 3ust below Glenns. Ferry. - Tlie desolate, sage-covered provides one of the few stretches where the trail today looks prac- tically as It did when the pioneers used It. .................., Ihe project. Pres- ident Kelker termed It “one of major ImportaQce and one which will become more appreciated by historians and the general public u the years go on." Kelker said It all atarted some weeks ago when D. W. (Wayne) Walker, route 2. Buhl, a farmer- pilot. reported reseeding opera- tions In the area, were blotting the- original trail In some cases. Walker Is a director of the hl.itorlcal group, J. L, Sevy. supervisor of tlie Sawtooth national, forest with In Twin PalU, Solon Has Hope For Idaho Dam s-eek-cTid he is confident the authoritlng ihe Bums Creek rec- lamalion project In eastern Idaho will pa.^f If ll ever geta to the house floor. Bui, he raid, public power cpm- panics are fighting hard to keep Uie auUtorlbUlon loe« In a house commlttM, Harding, home for the Easter recess, said he rescnta Utah Power and Light company o^^icaiuon to Uie Burrs Creek projcct, which trlUcsJmvejiuWKd.aj)ur«_eleolrlc. pott'er project - Harding said UPL has higher r * ^ for Idshoa.TJ than. Uwae tn Utah and higher than the largest private power* facility la OresoQ tad WashlastoD. contacted to find out who was In charge of the range reseeding pro- gram. Sevy had been helpful to the society In past projects. He wrote Jack Wilson. Burley. BUM district manager, who In turn ‘In- formed the society head that Ute area In question was under the Jurisdiction of the Boise office. In a letter lo Fallon, Kelker ex- pressed Uie concern of the society (C»«iUii««< .a r»n ». critti. ■ Ban H-Bomb Rally Staged By Marchers LONDON. April 3 ItTO-Tens of thou.%ands of ban-the • bomb marchers todny staged a monster rock -n' roll rally In rain-swept Trafalgar square to protest Brit- ish nudear arms. More than 1,000 policemen. In- cluding some on horseback, pilded the damp marchers,!^ the jam- med square at Ihe ' "• -thrw^way.-) from Aldermuton, home of -BrJt- aln's nuclear weapons, and Weth* ersflBtdi-slte of a-UA-ftlr-ftire*- NATO base. Police estimated tha crowd at . about 60,000. The marchers Induded beatniks, communists, Quakers, Scottish naUonHliU,-JewUh"youlh •groups. Church of England youth trroups and other organliaUons and repre- sentatives from 317 nations In- cluding UiB United States. Some marchers wore raincoats. The beatniks wore beards. They all sang. "Ban, ban, ban the bloody B- bomb (three times) .. .. button painted red, "If anybody slta oa It well all f us be dead , ," They chanted; "One, two, three, four, we <loD't want nuclear war. “Five, six, seven, eight, ban the Philosopher Earl ( B e r t r a n d ) Russell, one of the chief organizer* of this fourth annual Euter anU- nuclear rally, stood In the nquare Upping a toe to a Jau band’s brassy “When the Saints Go Marching In." WomanWorld? Tiieir M arinin U. S Js Gaining •WASHINatON, April 3 LR-A decade ago the cetnu bureau flret' reported (hat women outiuaabered len in Uw United StaKa. Now, as raulu of the IBCO cen- sus roU in. Uie bureau aays the women's margin Is InereoslnB. The m uon is women live longer. In IBJO. the ceiisus bureau re- ported 100 women for every » Preliminary daU from the IMO cftnva.v diow 100 wcmen for every S7 men—« l million females and S9J million males. Announcement Nears for New Plants in T.F. Area 'Several sizable new Industrial plants are in Ute final stagu of plannlor constnicUon near Twin P^lta and official announcement of the sites for st least two major Industrial operations should be forthcoming In the near fulure." states William Grange, secretary- manager of the Twin Falls Cham- ber of Commerce. He noted that more eonlribu- tlons to the indusirlal fund hate brought the amount In the fund n> »U.130.43. Recent donations were from Grace Smith Keveren, r. W. Wool- worth company, Magic Olais and Paint company. While mortuary, Bruley's Floor Covering company, Chris Jensen ConstrucUon eom- panyTWesCer Bearings, Ihc, M. Hi Ung company, Culllgan 'Soft Water service. Twin Palls Peed and Ice, p and E Concrete and Riddle and RoUi. cerUfled pubUc accountants. * ^ 6 chamber Is very pleased with the response of contributions to the IndusUlal park site fund. We do need the flnandnl and moral support of Twin Falls busl- persons as we stUl have a way 10 go for enough money,” Grange'commented. He noted Utat many checks, sev- eral for sizable amounts, are In the process of being drawn. ClUng othe^lndustrlal develop- ments near Tivln Falls, Oranga said that actual eocstractlon on Uie Armour packing p l a n t Is sx- pected to get under way during Uie early part of April. He added final negotiations ar* ,be]ni_complel«4_oa_property_Ioc— me- department of agriculture water and soU testing facUlUet to be located northeast ot K la- berly. TIis ^ t faculty win «06ft - l»904>00 and have an annual pay- rou «f
Transcript
Page 1: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

j ^ f f i c Death

I ^ »»u»r •»« «“ “ >•r S in

Id ilA > 9»------_ '-*r~ jA .jyha. JWl ---- — «oI *** ^ _ / d i uis)e V«Ufy. 19W — 6

I tr-“ ------- The Macic Valley Newspaper Dedicated to S e n ln R and Promotinf: the (Jron ih nf Nine lrrif:atc<l Idnhn Oum tics

j, NO. 353 TW IN FALLS. ID A H O . JIO N D A Y . APiUL lOC.t rn iC R 5 CENTS

j[roup Promotes \Ug&l Gambling To Draw Tourist

rnKF April 3 proupjaf. Icliilio men were platj-,.lni,iii:n twlny lo' promote passaKC of InwH IcRnl-

^ X rm of pimbliiiR ill Idaho to nttract tourists to r*M ntntc The formation of an orKiinir-ation to pro- ^ finance the candidacy of state offii.-crs and legis* '*Mmtiiiilcd to "locni option casino-type K«niinK”

^nnounccd vcstorday by Vernon K .'Sm ith . a Boise sraith’ i'nid articles of incon>oration have been

jfilcd for a non-profit cooper- 'ntive associationtobcknown

■as “TouristJi of Idaho, Un­lim ited.”

IneonMrntors *re Smith. Keith Durns. Tttiti S p r ln . . . OToyer C. Cummlngj and Guy tl.

feond LayerI »isHINOTON. April J

Sae «C3t ccMl of Mexico ' T through to tht

I J S e w a n for U>e NntlonftI df Sciences said-the

,jou*h— ft "inlle. at a the txplortUon of the

-a'_h*ppent(J e»rly Satur- r^tblle occftnosraphcrs of

^ t t l M(*ole *tf« drllllnc bC 1 ^ of irooo ffCl nenr ■ *^p« Wind,

„d B»»com, project dl- •. ndJwl the academyV diamond-Upptd drill

b| down S«0 feet before stop- ■ M nddeoljr. Samples of ba-

t b»rt rock formed by , tD ^ial wltnm the

n brouthl up.

liff Powers atinue to

I Supply Laosit Cilied mtM Inlematlonal

SUta dTllian piloU flew■ Mxrkan-suppllcd Iiellcopun

• '/ tint iUpDly runs over a* arcftB In Lac» today

EmmunlM-cupported troops 3i to advance.

inl» Chlnoc Uireol of I In lAoi r a i ^ the

___ . not Koreftn-t>T* wbta major pm-en cnn agree fcfttHf meona to atop It.■ Meoptav. port of a croup iinfltd hy th* VoiUa ban l lAoUan cotcrnmeni to

■ m Its supply and oomma-

R. Slorcr. Meridian.' Tlie articles of Incorporation said the association would support eandldalej for Rovertior, -Hetiltn- ftni Rovernor and lechlatoni “re- icardles.1 of political Brflllation.i,”. provided ttiey were committed to

.the -fulfllimtnt of the purpaiea lof the ns-wlAtlon."

Smim Mid m order lo build _ IhrlvinK tourbi’ Industry In Idaho "WB mtut crcaie a tourist and convention atmosphtr#."

He said, "nie history of acrid tourist centen has proved Ihtit strictly rceulated nnd leRaliwd caslno-tj-po earning Is the founda> lion upon which a flouriihlnit and prosperous tourist Industry built. _ ...... ........._

"Tills U not necessarily beciuse all tourists like to play at Ramins tables, but becau.<ie lecallted Ram- InR soes hand m hand with bright llRhLs, salety, entertainment, ex­citement and the fun and thrillr a vacation."'He anid ilie new construction

this u«uld nifflulat« and the addi­tional buslnc.u It would noutd mean empluyment and busl- r.cM for evrrs'body, would put mil­lions of tourist doUnn In circula­tion In IdiUio even' year, and would rc.%uit In tax reductions.

Miss Cassia County Receives CroAvn

|tr. & martnra In ndchborlng ' cd and flown to Laoa.

snent lroop« atre driven bTt#TT»m. a vlllairtin XlcnR n e t ptDTlnce 33 miles couUi- i«(t!MTltAl Plain of Jats. last

I n bdnj *upplied by ^ l e t

•. itUle the United SUtes. bind the SoTiK Union dis-

eeaae-fire In l«on on th( le front, both Aldeti con-

Ed lo back ihelr partlrans or '-‘ anc fronts wlUi aid,

n Defen.i« Minister Drlc. a-Wwrntf-Nftwran—Mid—the' Id rebel* »U]| were Rd«nclnir.

R In an (.wtull.Bt prttiiaiifnl foreen ........ .ttd adrancinc *lov.-Iy aRnla-t B Itooli backrt by arUllery ' loettr fire on the VlenUane-

j Ptmbans lilRhway 5| KafB>-. a key point .

M uwt « mllM BouUj of Uie N ttrtlal ol Hums Prabang.

f N.’s Congo

ostlsOK’d; |Russ Beaten

. D KATIONS. N. Y . Aprtl ^Tbe U. N, KenwtU cwscmbly *J owpode blttff SoW« oppo- » W appmvrd a t«mporarj-

of SfcrplAo'- Cencrol k Contro spf nd-■ Po*Tn.

"iiW ip rcMlu- 5 -10 »uh a atxxntlonji.

^ ,-WlTtWoe and ^^a^.

"tw the iPEoJIty of the as-

MirMnR out the

iSS‘nrsfc,.„T, »"'rrv ana Vl'pt inu. ivxrikniptcybV

►»*Wch«-ir,la:r i|ie U. N. char-

IHttH Rarh.;uie op-rimnn has b«n

" 2 . ' powers'

Coui’t Agrees To Review of 2 Labor Suits

WASHmOTOK. April S (171 - The »uprm8courc«greM«xl»yto review the convictions of two lolwr union flmires—Dave Beck, once- powerful former boss of Uje Team­sters. nnd MftUrlcB A, Hutcheson, prc.ildent of the Carpenier.i unlop,

Deck, who wa. supplanted as . resident of the Teamsten unions by James It. Iloffa, hod been found ffulity b y ........................

Auto Found in Lake May

Have Been Booze Runner

of pocketlnft IIJW from tiio ule ’ a union-owned Cadillac. Hutche.v>n' hsd been sentenced

to sic montiu In )all aad flnrd $500 on contempt charees for r fusinc to ansuer questions of Mnate committee Inve-HignUng «1- iCBed Indiana Klfthway iciindilA In 1MB, He has been president of ttn)-unitea“Brotnernooa"6r"c»iT penten (AFL-CIO) since 10S2.

ThB supreme court anreed to hear armimcnts In Uielr ease.i sometlnje next fall and hand dcran declslon.1 later.

In other actions today, thf court:

-nefuscd lo consider * conflict over damage suits filed by coal operators aRalnst the United Workers of America,

-Let stand a lower court rullni that the next pha.ie of Uie seven' year legal battle between the Koh' ler company of Wbcoatln and Ihf AKL-CIO United Auto Worker union will be founht out either Waslilngton or Chicago eourU,

Easter Blaze Fatal to Five

tian tnm—died tn ' at ihrtr home,• Mr.t, Johnson. SO. emped with• two by Biutfhlng k window. Neigh, f bora held her back when ihe tried ‘ to ru.>h Into Ihe biasing house for• the other*.• "nie rire the old. frame ' home. Pour , of th? clUltlren who

lost their llrt« w m tnpptrd at• the top of a •t*lrw«y leading to 1 their bedroom*, “nie fifth was

rraoji]' • • found downattirt

'Vhm M i l . «» . > bail. No.

«sideiits Urged to Qean up l^ly During Next Two Weeks

tl* It. -'•••■« ir.iiucnu 10

t t y ! ’ '**'''

p,|„,

t- Derrick,

••ne.iidenlJ ahould be proud of their city." Derrick aald, “but who can feel real pride for a city with many IoIa overgrown with weeds *ind cluttered with, rubbish, un- ’lightly ditch banka or other areai who-w looks delerloraU the ap­pearance of the city." '

—Derrick-added

SANDPOINT. April 3 tfl-Dld the rusty Peerless sedan, raised from the bottom of Lake Pcnd Orlelle where It hnd rest«d for 30 years, once run prohlbitloij b ore?

Tliat w'n!i Ihe educated oldilmers vtio watched the mys­tery car being raised from CO Jeet of water Saturday, With hard rub­ber Ures Rleamlng nnd hcadllitht? still In place, alr-fllled metal drums atl.iched by skin divers finally brought the old car to Ihe surface.

A ae a ^ Revealed & eallon Jug and a beer bottle ln ‘the back of the car. The speedometer registered

only 12.555 miles. • -

-We have proof the running when It went o f f into the

Joke, said Dan W. Eagle, member of the Historical Auto aoclety, Si>o- kane. who examined the relic. '‘Tlie

In Uie ’on’ position tlie temperature gunge had stu<:k at 110 degrees."

Residents of the North Idaho resort area recall that Lake Pend Oreille was a favorite rendeivoui for booze runners during prohlbl' tlon. Illegal whliky and gin wen smuggled acrou the line from Canada, transported down lake by boat and then transferred to powerful cirs_for the final run lo Bpokane'ahd oUjCT'dialrlbutibn points.

The oldtlmers fues* that the peerleu' « u run lo t? the hki after federal agenta became sus­picious of Itj trips.

U .S . S h ip S topped

B y C u b an G u n b o a t•W ASHINGTON, April .T (U P I)— The state department

said today th a t the Wcatcrn Union Telegraph company cable-repair schooner •‘'\Vestcrn Union" was intercepted

by_a_C_iibnn_gunbpatJn?.tJlridny_nn(Ldctfilncd_f()iL.fi.cver(il hours off the Cuban coast. An American destroyer nnd ATTifiripfli] th e* f?hO'?npr tmdor fliir^'silttinco tin-

til it wa.-? released, the department said. Reports reaching New York suit! the Cuban Runboat \s■n forced lo with- dniw by the U . S. naval

Juditli Diima^ Has Answers For 3 Queries

, BURLEY, April 3-"CompcUtlon Is good for ajiy girl." replied Ju­dith Ann Duma.\ daughter ot Mr, and Mrs. James Dumas, the new Ml.\s Ca.isltv County for tOOI. spon- sorrd by the Durley Chamber of Commerce.

She answered questions during the last minute ot the contest Sat­urday night at the Burley high school auditorium. Approximate­ly 1,000 persons viewed the event and many were turned aw’oy,

* ^ e experience of belns in Uils contest-Li good-foi--us, *fld-wben

you put

rce from Gunntiinamofbay

A state department spokesman said the United States had de­manded a full explanation of the incident from the Cuban govern­ment. The demand was delivered lo the SwIm government, which rcprc.«nt.'» U. 8. diplomatic Inter-

in Cuba,le state department said the

Western Union, an 8G-foot sBllIng vc.i.ie!, was Intercepted and board­ed lour to five miles off Daracoa

. tha northeast Cuban coast.; near Guantanamo bay.

The ahlp had been repairing the Barbados-MlamI cable and had put Into Mayaguez, Puerto nico, lor fuel and stores. It was on Its way from Puerto Rico to Key West >s'hen It was Intercepted.

Department Spokesman Lincoln White said the vessel made a land fall approach to get her bearing four lo five miles off Boracoa,

\\’hen the Cuban gunboat Inter­cepted the schooner, l l ordered Uie vciwi to turn off Its radio. But It apparently was able to send a mcs.<iage about Its plight before shutting off Ihe radio t>eaeuAe the American destroyer and planes ar.' rivrd cn the scene.

White said the de.itroyer care- fully sUyed outside C jba's three- mll^ limit,

Meanwhile, In Cuba today Cuban anny units controlled m o« of the L'iand’a OAvaX InstAUailons to-pttf vent further uprialng bV naval per- Bjnnel oppcaed lo the pro-oommu- nL« pollclea of ihe Oonlro regime.

T*Tnty-one aallon and one of- fleer—the entire detAchment of a

<C*aU«i«4 M Tat* t. C*Iai>ii I)

Mother Acts Fast To Save Her Girl

next‘two Weeks city employes will '>flp the aanlta'lfon dtpartment ^‘ck up’ .trash, leaves. Rrass. branches *nd other rtfuse collected from cleaning up yards and lots.

(CMilatct M ru* J. C*l*aa «)

dark.

HASflLTON. N. Y_ April 3 W>- The mother took off her eo*l, act­ing aUmly but quickly. She ient hBTion. David, 6. runnlns for help. Then she dltnbed 94 te«t down

well to aave her dauehtcr, Bar- bart, *. from drownlne.

Mrs- Arthur Lln.nle7 plucked Darbart from the wtUcr. Then the braced her back and feel

.Uie_njueh_ailU_eL_liit,*11

Boise Pupil’s

Chicks Study Wins Award

NAMPA. April 3 IJi-A Ifi-year- old Boise high school Junior won best-of-thow awards for her ex­hibit outlining her experiments In which she said she changed the :x of chickens.Beth Burt copped besl-of-sho«

honors along with Jes.ie AbtMll, Meridian, and Dennis McDonald, Olennj Perry, at the Southwe-it Idaho and Eastern Oregon Re- glonal Science fair here this week­end.

Abbolt showed a heat- engine which converts heat Into mechan* leal power and Dennis ahowed the growth of beans under a greater weight than gravity.

Miss Burt and Abbolt won trlpi ) a national sclcnce fair at Kan- is City, Mo,, and McDonald naval cruise.MISS Burt, daughter of sUte

Rep. Carl Burt. Bolie, said »he obuined a larger percenUge of female chicks by Injecting ihree- dsy old egp with female sex hor­mones.

She said 83 per cent of the chicks hatched from one batch of eggs Injected with female hor­mones develo^d into females. Ofi the remaining chicks, most were;

would want lo b« Miss CasaU County.

Three quMtlons were naked the three finnilsis by MB.il«r of Cere­monies Robert Saxvlk. Tl>ey wen ' ’With whom woqld-you prefer ti je marooned on a desert Island?' ’What Is your opinion of the trad­ing stamp Luue In the state of Idaho,".and "Why would you like lo win the Miss Cassia County title?'

MLu Dumas irtld It would be.a thrill for any girl to receive the title.■ 1»f( gnn><ay fv»nln[. In rf .turn to school at Utah State uni-

In aJwwer to the first question, MLm Dumas said ahe wouldn't really care lo be marooned with nityone, but If alie had to choose II would be Cary Orant/ •

It was her opinion that Jt would bo better to save ''first hand" rath­er Uian getting something from the stamp books which many felt they were getting for nothing,

DIAnne Turner. Francisco Studio, who placed second, wore a aheer white gown..wlth tiered muf­fled skirt and lace bodice over satin, tier baUilng suit was white and her talent was a dramatic reading from ’'Our Town.'

Karen Woodhouse, Mias Oakley Vigilantes, wore a alieer while sovn with a red chiffon stole which was fastened at the wiklst

rhinestone pin. Her batli- Ing .lult wa.1 black aaUn. She plsyed the piano for her talent nnd sang several numbers from Brosda-tty shou's. “The King and 1" and “AJy Pair Udy."

Patricia Thaxien. Miss Scholer's Je^’flry, who won the title of Mtw Congenlaltty, wore n gown of Swiss embossed cotton that was accented with a sky blue satin at the waist. Her b»thU)e suit was black and her talent wa.'i a modem dance In con­junction with a display of her art work.

Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in June To Air Differences

PALM niCACIl, Kla.. Ai)ri! : ill vi.sit l-'nince iic.\t tiiim lli :

tl;ri’c-(liiy stale,vi.sit and (ii,<ni nalinn.-'. the W hite lloiisi' aiit dent aiiiiiit'eiitly steniincci fn>n

verKoiit'o till other jmlicii’r*.'It folliiwcil extensive (li.«ciis-

n.-t ann)ii;r K l’ iu ii’i I; .Gaulle :iii(I their iinil>a: dor.'*.

The Kcn»f(tys

; ( I ' i ’D — I’ri’siik’iit Keniictly, ni-c<im|iaiiit-<l by hi.q \v.ifc,

t llio invilatliin of I’re.iiitent Cliarli'.< tic Ginille fo r ft •: ii>ii of a bfoail raiipc of probletns iM\<ilvii)jr their two nmu’i'il today. The I’arin iiivilatioii tlu’ 1‘. S. l*resi- li<ml»Ics ill Laci.-i nnd the Conjfn aiiil Krench-U. S . di-

throuiih June 2 in wiiiit scribed m n "modified" stale vlmi, Thl.i mciuit *oinc of lliemonip.i involvfd'm such i. ___will be dbpoiiscd wllh to permit De Qjiiille sntl Kennedy- Kreaier opportunity to dlscuM bii'.InfM.

The chief executive’s fir.st offl-

[ J K e n n e d y s ^ fe K ^ t

^ Jnd^r-T-ig h t G u a ^

slmulbiicoiiily in Paris niU Palm Beach R Kfiincrly prepared in fly back to Wn.’Jilngtott tomorrow for

nferenccj tiic remftltidcr ot the :ek with D;ltl.Mi Prime Minister

Hnrold Mnc.MlllAn.PrcM Secretary Pierre Salinger

declined lo dtr<'UR.\ the pos.ilbimy that visits to London. Bonn and Rome miRht be added lo ilie mncli trip, He snid the mecling In Parl.1 was the only Item on the Kennedy overseas ngenda at pres-

West Goman Chnncellor Kon­rad Adeimuer is due In Woslilng- ‘■)n on April 11 and wn. expected i ) urge Kennedy to Include Bonn :i his .\tay-June lUncrar;-. |The President's firat trip out of'

the iounlt '. according to present plaw, will be to OtUwn, probably in mid-May, u> addreis the Cnna*^ dlan parliament. This trip origin-1 ally had btiii set for someUme In the Ilr.’.t luUf of June, but Is be-; Inc ndvnnced becnute of Uie visit' to Prance, i

Kennedy was expected l« leave! Wn-ihlnglon ^^ay 20 for

I PALM BEACH, Flft.. April 3 (ITO-Pre.Mrtent Kennedy and hfs family ,,, ,' I rrniiilnrd under IIrIiI protective trcurily today—the.lost full day ofullhcir t:ai.i<-r vuit la Plorlda.........................................................................|!,j| ’Ilir extra lie.ivy ftecurity precautlon.«, due lo kidnap nnd murder '

'iliri';it^ asain.st liie fir,\t family by pro-Ca.tiro Cubans In the area, will coiiiliiue iinlll liic President, his wife and their two children fly |biifk to Wn^hlnRt(ln tomorrow oJternoon.

Selfli:m_liave a Prriidcnt nnd hl.t wife bei-n more-heavlly protected —~—in II . . ................. . ..............

at St, Edward's Homan Cajhollc ciiiircli here, n ie num-........... ......service nueiils In and around ihr cinirch was about twicethe norinnl complement, 'They al. b were nuRmrnted by state and lural iwllcr.

Once liie Kennedys are back In the well-organlted safety of the White House, the current federal Inveallgatlon of the recently re- l>orled threats may take a different direction.

t;ntll lliL> momhu. authorities have kept prime suspects imder sur\’clllance. partlcuiatiy lo see that lour or more Cubans In the Palm Bench area do not slip away lo Havana. Of the four Cubana prtnclpaiiy Involvefl.-one naji-bem-ae.wnbcd-jisTiarrof nnlntemirencB - relay syiilem between souUi Florida and the Castro government.

eniraffcmiiil In Boston. Then he will rpeak May 30 In New York City to the Eleanor Roor«velt

Paris from New York the next day.Other Items besides liios on the

if«nntdy-De Onulle-affenda-were expected to be the French partld- paUon in North AUantle Tnialy organlratlon acUviUen and French dentre to continue .nuclear testing.

According lo Informed aources, — M Pan I. OliMB

BrewingBONN, Germany, April J,WY-

There Is mounting evidence of an Imminent soneC spue ex-' perlment, a ipokesman of tlie Bochum observatory snld today.

"Por several days a surprising Increase In Intensity of Russian telegraphic and telephonic com­munication on frequencies gen­erally used by space rocket launching stations has been ob- aerved," the spokesman de> dared.

Plan.Made to .

1,000 People Tiu-n Out for Sunrise Rites

—A-«fou.d-er-about-l,000'p(

UNION, 3 OTHERS SUED BOISE. April 3 in-The AFL-

CIO Laundo' and Dry Cleaning International union and looaJ-UO and th'ree Individuals are being sued for tu0,000 In complalnla on file In third district court here. Ralph NlchoU, manager of Troy- Capital, Inc.,’claims he waa sub-

abnormal wllh many having bolhjecied to libel and slander In male and female organs, I handbills.

attended the annual Easier Sun- J lie Mrvlees Bundav morning at Shoshone fall.i, reporta the Rev, Robert Keim, director of ' pageant.

The Twin FalLi MlnlsUrlnl... . clailon fpoawred the service. The Hev. Mr, Kelm commented the

arrangement of having spec­'s on the lawn near Ute park­

ing ioi '’worked out real weil,"He added. "The services rar

smoottiiy and several slight prob- lerfOnve noticed will be Ironed out next year.

"We wisli lo thank T»ln FnlU county Sherllf.James Benham, his staff;-state" policemen and the American Legion auxiliary police, who helped direct lrafllc,“ the Rev. Mr, Kelm said.

‘Hieme of the pageant was "The -------- Morning.- Narrators'

LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo. April 3 Mwin the rote of mediator. _ LumumbUt official who Is on speaking Urms with President Joseph Kasanibu's central government arranged a peace flight today to U\e

stronghold In sunleyvllle.

LOS ANQELES. April 3 fin—Judge David Coleman (old (he Jury today te consider only (he las. chamber or life ImpriaoomeDt tor coovieled nordereas Carole Trtgeff at tba panel net (o deelde on ponlshment for Uii enetlme model and her lever. Dr. B. Bemaid FlBch.

and *taied,David did hlB part. He r»n

half-mile u jh e nearest hcMse. .Ftfmen arrived lo 16 to 30

mliutea. Mrs. Llneiey CBtimatod.

WASHINGTON. April 3 m-Caroline Kennedy waan'Ulhtre. The -.;y wM_pvercasi. and the temperature was chilly. But thousand* of chnSren aHa“ ihelr pafenta it«rmeaThJ“WWtrH6use"8rtfunaflTS^ for the tradlUenal Easter egg roll.

JERUSAUM, Israel, April 3 dTD-Adolf Elehmann has been brrjacbt iron hU aeeret prlsoa to ataad (rtal toaerrew an charfM «( alaaita- Ictlnf BUUlau «t j«w% Informed aottrecs caid ioslgbt.

were Boyd Ash. Fred Ward and Wanda Oarrtson.

The cast Included Pat Nolan and Georg6 Nolan. Ronuin soldiers; Sarah Mlkel, Louise Wabon nnd Karen Mlkei, angeU; Janet Walk, er. angel of'the Lord; Carol Fuller, Mar}'; Kathy Cutshall, Salome; Curtis Garrison, Peter; Jonathan weiu. John, and Aroletui Routt, Mary Msgdaicne, '

MinMerv parlldpallng tn the ser\-lce Included the Rev. Earl >V, RJddle, who gave the Easter mes­sage. "Chrtsl the Life"; the Rev Wayne Cutahsli. scripture reading: Ute Rer. Homer Walkup.-prayer; the Rev. Mar?Jwll Combs, offer- 100 pmyer. and ihe Rev. D. L. Mlkel. benediction.

Boy Scout troop 69. of which Archie Bro*-n Li Scoutm " the offering, A quintet poeed of Susan Shartey. Connie Heniell. Linda SUles, Bonnie Read and Jud}- BodenMab.

Preserve Old Oregon Trail

A government agency and the Twin Falls County Historical,so­ciety are Joining forces to preserve the Old Oregon Trail between llagerman valley and the King Hlll-Oienns Ferr7 area. It was an­nounced Monday by O, A. (Gus) Kelkcr. historical society presi­dent.

The c6operatlve project will be handled through the Boise office of the bureau of landwhich Is In charge of Delbert Pal-

The visible Old Oregon Trail _titJiaJocaiC!LDiUli6JMmilL*Lf!t ofjsnake river from a pomi south of Upper Salmon Falls and ex-' tending, almost without Inter­ruption. to the famed Three Is­land crossing of Snake river 3ust below Glenns. Ferry. -

Tlie desolate, sage-covered provides one of the few stretcheswhere the trail today looks prac­tically as It did when the pioneers used It.

.................., Ihe project. Pres-ident Kelker termed It “one of major ImportaQce and one which will become more appreciated by historians and the general public u the years go on."

Kelker said It all atarted some weeks ago when D. W. (Wayne) Walker, route 2. Buhl, a farmer- pilot. reported reseeding opera­tions In the area, were blotting

the- original trail In some cases. Walker Is a director of the hl.itorlcal group,

J. L, Sevy. supervisor of tlie Sawtooth national, forest with

In Twin PalU,

Solon Has Hope For Idaho Dam

s-eek-cTid he is confident the authoritlng ihe Bums Creek rec- lamalion project In eastern Idaho will pa. f If ll ever geta to the house floor.

Bui, he raid, public power cpm- panics are fighting hard to keep Uie auUtorlbUlon loe« In a house commlttM,

Harding, home for the Easter recess, said he rescnta Utah Power and Light company o^ icaiuon to Uie Burrs Creek projcct, which trlUcsJmvejiuWKd.aj)ur«_eleolrlc. pott'er project -

Harding said UPL has higher r * ^ for Idshoa.TJ than. Uwae tn Utah and higher than the largest private power* facility la OresoQ tad WashlastoD.

contacted to find out who was In charge of the range reseeding pro- gram. Sevy had been helpful to the society In past projects. He wrote Jack Wilson. Burley. BUM district manager, who In turn ‘In­formed the society head that Ute area In question was under the Jurisdiction of the Boise office.

In a letter lo Fallon, Kelker ex­pressed Uie concern of the society

(C»«iUii««< .a r»n ». critti. ■

Ban H-Bomb Rally Staged By Marchers

LONDON. April 3 ItTO-Tens of thou.%ands of ban-the • bomb marchers todny staged a monster rock -n' roll rally In rain-swept Trafalgar square to protest Brit­ish nudear arms.

More than 1,000 policemen. In­cluding some on horseback, pilded the damp marchers,!^ the jam­med square at Ihe '

"• -thrw^way.-)from Aldermuton, home of -BrJt- aln's nuclear weapons, and Weth* ersflBtdi-slte of a-UA-ftlr-ftire*- NATO base.

Police estimated tha crowd at . about 60,000.

The marchers Induded beatniks, communists, Quakers, Scottish naUonHliU,-JewUh"youlh •groups. Church of England youth trroups and other organliaUons and repre­sentatives from 317 nations In­cluding UiB United States.

Some marchers wore raincoats. The beatniks wore beards. They all sang.

"Ban, ban, ban the bloody B- bomb (three times)

.. .. button painted red,"If anybody slta oa It well all

f us be dead , ,"They chanted;"One, two, three, four, we <loD't

want nuclear war.“Five, six, seven, eight, ban the

Philosopher Earl (B e r tran d ) Russell, one of the chief organizer* of this fourth annual Euter anU- nuclear rally, stood In the nquare Upping a toe to a Jau band’s brassy “When the Saints Go Marching In."

WomanWorld? Tiieir M ar in in U. S Js Gaining

•WASHINatON, April 3 LR-A decade ago the cetnu bureau flret' reported (hat women outiuaabered len in Uw United StaKa.Now, as raulu of the IBCO cen­

sus roU in. Uie bureau aays the women's margin Is InereoslnB. The muon is women live longer.

In IBJO. the ceiisus bureau re­ported 100 women for every »

Preliminary daU from the IMO cftnva.v diow 100 wcmen for every S7 men—« l million females and S9J million males.

Announcement Nears for New Plants in T.F. Area

'Several sizable new Industrial plants are in Ute final stagu of plannlor constnicUon near TwinP^lta and official announcement of the sites for st least two major Industrial operations should be forthcoming In the near fulure." states William Grange, secretary- manager of the Twin Falls Cham­ber of Commerce.

He noted that more eonlribu- tlons to the indusirlal fund hate brought the amount In the fund n> »U.130.43.

Recent donations were from Grace Smith Keveren, r. W. Wool- worth company, Magic Olais and Paint company. While mortuary, Bruley's Floor Covering company, Chris Jensen ConstrucUon eom- panyTWesCer Bearings, Ihc, M. Hi Ung company, Culllgan 'Soft Water service. Twin Palls Peed and Ice, p and E Concrete and Riddle and RoUi. cerUfled pubUc accountants.

* ^ 6 chamber Is very pleased with the response of contributions to the IndusUlal park site fund. We do need the flnandnl and moral support of Twin Falls busl-

persons as we stUl have a way 10 go for enough money,” Grange'commented.

He noted Utat many checks, sev­eral for sizable amounts, are In the process of being drawn.

ClUng othe^lndustrlal develop­ments near Tivln Falls, Oranga said that actual eocstractlon on Uie Armour packing p la n t Is sx- pected to get under way during Uie early part of April.

He added final negotiations ar* ,be]ni_complel«4_oa_property_Ioc— me- department of agriculture water and soU testing facUlUet to be located northeast ot K la- berly. TIis ^ t faculty win «06ft - l»904>00 and have an annual pay- rou «f

Page 2: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

PAGE TWO TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO MONDAY, APWL 3.1^,

Cubans Stop U. S. Vessel; Navy Alerted

(Frra Pal* OmI kn&U iwrx post ftt Ouutftbo bMch —«tre to hire dcfect«dftiid ac«p«d aboard « ooo»t Kiuud <T*it yeatenl*y.

On teUinl*r. reports In }Unuu Bald U»e Bownmcnt hud broken up fc.ecwnMr-reToJuUonary move. m«nt br aoo navtU penonnel. it iru the fourth rvportnl inuUn; by

FIVE'DAY POIlCASr THROUOH 8ATUROAY: Temperalurei will avcnse ncir Maional normals. CooiMt TUndar uu) Prldar HUh* mtaHy <5 ®S: Iws 20 lo 40. Scallerfd ihowera about Tuk»dajr and m d ir. preelplUtUaa trtraglng Jeu ihun .J4 inch duj the period.

Somcwtut cooirr. Low totilslil 33 to 43, high tomorrow 48 to

In/onned oourcca wld 00 caUon V)d ttrtlcen ntd lo llalU Aboard ih m PT boau ,vhll« ot^cn « • eap«d In Hiullcr numbers aixwd Jener aiift when t*ie ®ovct- iMmed of the plot.

Antltorrenment Um rM a kept up Uirlr rclentlcns bombino In Uw Cuban capltAt. Two bomtis «trc exploded.-nwr the eovenunuit prlnUng pUnti In Itovan* la« DlRhL

The EaMer »wk.«nd endrd u-llhout extraordinary lt»cldenU Ui lU ruu . In (he prorlxxien. thou*

• Minda of faUliful mftde their Indl- UonAl pUfrtmace from n Cano in Amyo Arena earrylne ft plafltrr lm*fo of Maxy Maptalcne. al- thou«h a forenunent p«m tt »■»» not lanu^-thUyear.

By Tbe A

•r »lib a hl(h

T. F. Citizens Are Asked to Clean up City

Twin Falls News in BriefMecllnc P»i(pooe4

priendihlp circle. Twin Ptlli Woojca or the UooM. has poet* poned the meeting acheduled for Monday night until next Monday,

r»i» OMiIte encouraged all rnldenU to ParUng B«Dd PeMed;hip In and do a good Job" o(i a II overlUne parlcing bond was nnlng up unalghlly areas. 'Each'posted with Tain rails police Sun-

id. property c«-ntr h u an obligation day by Janice Ded*ell..■ Boan Other rrildenu In Twin Falla i —

_______ lo keep the elly clean,* Derrick lUmiln* CriUcilNORTH IDAHO: Mojtly cloudy through tomorrow with occaslOMi ilatcd, | Claude Epl»y. M.

ilBins nnd ■cattered showers at lower elevations. Jt* noted thnt a elly ordinance: nue west, remained In critieal slstet that property owners or oc- condition at Magic Val’ey Mi

»U«»pli4l-MflnatJ*jUJ0ipit*l.aJ:iM;\V VOHK,'April J Iin—The highest cemperslure reported to the weeds, grass and rubbish

.„S, weslber burtsu yeitc'day was lo: decreet t l Death Valli ~ -The l<metl reparltd today was 17 degrees at Inlematlonal FalU

nr, Jllnn.

L'slllj the

AtUi nlanw at m high during Ui« Ea*t«r u-eek-end and ktj-men said the number ot men'recclrln* comnti usually large, “niis •»

Tmdlttonally, Oub«n men ar. .. puled (0 be rather lukevi’arm chwchgoen.

Youth Placed On_Erobation After Hearing

JEROME - Oravesldo i Icei for Tliomss Wright will be held at 11 a.m, Wednesday »t thi Jerome cemetery with the Ilev.

- -DaV-V«nrfeTrrt^wfWel*iWnr*inr» der direction of tha Crlppln

il home.

aell J. Merritt, 17, Wendell, sentenced to six months on probi Uon and hU drlrln* prlvllegu were reroked for six months. Judge ZOe Ann Warberg announced Monday After a Juvenile hcarlna In Twli Falla probate courL

___ Merritt, appeared before JudgeWarberg chaxgtd with drunken drWlng and leaving the »cer- ftn accident The youth ws; rested March 28 by Twin Falls police.

Another youth, whose niune wu not released by Judge Wsriwnif, received the same sentence. lie was charged »lth permltUng an intoxicated person to drive hU car. Merritt w m . driving the other youth's ear when he was arrested.

Both cases were referred to pro. bate court by Twin Palls police tmder provisions ot Idaho's youth rehablUUUon act.

John 7. Truchot. 88. Port llaJl. was fined *300 ond his driving privilege w u revoked for one yenr ■when he tppeared In Twin Falls jusUce court Monday and pleaded tullty ot drunken drivlns.

__Trach0t wM.dtod one-halt tnlJi. eu t of Filer on hlghwar so 6uq.

'nvm PALLS-Funeml services for Mm. Susan Elliabeth Blwk-

. rtll be held at Uie While mortuiiry chnpel here at 3 p.ni. Tueeday. wlU) the Rev. Emcnt Ifurselblod of Uie Pint ISaptlst lureh otricjaUng, Ptnal r iM will 3 held'At Sunset memorUl pork;

BUnLBy-runeral servIcM tor rn. Italtle Josephine ' blanks

Marchant wilt be held at 3 P-m. Wedne.«Uy at tli# Burley, second

day by State Patrolman H. Z. Carr. At npon Monday, Truchot had not

"piild his floa and Tw'hfld lh IKi' Twin Falls county Jail."

Henry W. Koebemlck. Boise, w«u tloed UOO and costs and sentenced to SO dsyi In Jail Monday mom*

...Ing.^. JusUes ot.tliB.Peaes.EUU B. Allen, Hagermui, for drunken driving- The Judge suspended thi Jail senlence and »M ot the tlni upon payment ot the balance o 1160.

Eoebemlclc was arrested by Btsu norotosn WaJler Kirtley.

Leonard u inavaty, route Buhl. WM lined *10 and assigned 3S demerlU when he nppeared

pleaded guilty of speedlns. lie was

John Wray for'travellns 00 miles •n hour In * 80.mlle tone west of Twin Palls on highway 30. .

LeRoy Mills, 01. Jerome. T u fined 118 and given IB demerits Monday by Jerome Police Judge Pred Eberhardt lor rtumlng c Ught.

Merle U DIok. Jerome, vas tlncd •10 and given 2S demerits Monday by Judge Eberhardt for pualng over a double whlto line.

Slward Cannon, 433 Second avenue north, was lined *3 In Twin Palls Justice court Monday lor tailing to dtm his headllghu lor an approaching car. He wiui cited Saturday evening by state P*troU man B. O. JUirdln* west of Twin Palls on highway 30,

Carl E. Torp, Jr.. 30, Idaho Palls, was ftoed *33 and costs by Burley Justice of the Peace Alfred Crane Monday for driving on tk suspend­ed driver's license. Ke also.wu.

’ tlncd (3 and costs tor defecUve brakes on the dump truck be driving.

Torp's driver's license was pcnded three years ago for drunk driving and he tailed to comply with the llnuKla] .responsibility act.

' Gordon A. Oou. 48, Rupert, wai tlned *13 and cosu by Judge Cram tor making an Improper left turn

John Bos. 37,' Murtaugh, wgj tlned 119 and cosu by Judge Crane for a slop sign rlolsUon.

Lonnie Kendtli. Si. Burley. ' _. cited for fttllure to yield the right of way after a two-c.n accident at 8:30 pjn. Salurdny at the Inter- section of Overland avenue anil' Eighth strreu

The IPJl Ford Kendall was drlv Ing collided with a 1851 Cherrolci driven by Don L. Bergser. 1». Oak-

Magic Valley Funeralsrard LD6 chapel with Bishop Nor- nan Dsyley officiating, plnal rill be held at Pleasant View

DUin^Funeral se:

Wednesday at Albertson Mi morlal chapel with WltllAm L, Mc­Cormick otriclallng. Plnal rites ■111 be held at the Buhl cemetery.

Prlends miiy call at Albertsoi ' funeral home.

tWlN FAUS-Puneral servlt., tor-Mre. Jennie McDonald will be

'Id at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at Un White morluary chapel with thi Rev. Henry Oeml)ordt officiating Plnal rites will be held s i Sunset Memorial park.

Magic Valley Hospitals

Magic Valley Memorialvisiting hours are from 3 to 4

and 7 to * pffl. In the maternity wards; in all others, from I I to 8 p.m.

ADMITTEDMrs. Pred Dsyley, Mrs. Cecil

Jonu, &tn. George Mondrason, Erin Oriffllh. stiaron Orltllth, Kenneth Conrtdl.' Nemeila. Ara­gon, John Brown and SonoaulaU* nen all Twin Falla: Mr*.’ Dean Mudd. Thomai Lass«r. - . ^ i l Undemana and. -.Mra._.Euicnfi Chrlstophenon, »U Buhl: Ann Pry and Wllmetia Pubons, both Pller; Carlson Pe te rson nntf Charles Bridgu. both Kimberly; LeRoy Gilbert and Charles lUsn* dall.- both MufUugh. and Mrs 'Marls Schertman, Caslleford.

DISMiSSKnMrs. Samuel Jordon and son.

baby girl Slondley. Shelll Hetten- bach. DAVld riillllps. Pred Allen and Donna- KsKner, all Twin Palts: Harold Kuslon iind hfrs. Joe Terhunit, bolli Filer; Kenneth Lowe and Mrs. Dean Drltt, both Kimberly: John Dennis. Buhl; Mrt.-Dalo-Bartlftt-and-fton.-Han- een; Mrs. Claude Mull. Wendell, and Henry Garcia. Rupert.

nillTll.S Daughters were bom Siindoy to

Mr. and Mrs. Al Woneiiberg. Twli Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Drni Mudd, Buhl.

Minidoka CountyVlslUng hours at Mlnldokix Me

morlal hoaplwl are from 3 to 4 ind 7 to 8 p.m.

ADMITTTD Ralph T-ousU Mrs. DourIa.i

G rant. Mn, Eva Btnrk. Mrs, Jui Allphln and John E, Tele-wck. i Rupert, and Mrs, Walter Colemn Jleyburn-

DiSMiSSKO Lomesla Palmer nnil One Lyni

Wllske. both Rupert, and Tom He­bert, Decto,

nitiTusborn to Mr. and Mrs

Douglas E. Qranl. Rupert, and Mr and Mrj, Waller Colenuin. Hey. bum.

Johnson Popular On African VisitDAKAR, Sfliecdl. April 3 ilTD—

Vice Pre.udfiii I,yilon 11. Johnson, here as Prr\!(itni Keimrdy's per» wnal reiirfpiiuiive lo hrlp Scne- -al celfbraic ihe lln l aimivcr.-uvr)' it lU imlrvi'iiilfiicp, lod,'vv cliormed

the'Seno:,ilp>r Mtih hij soul n Tr\M rimw

death in our Magic'

y a r n -

Keep the W hite Flag of Safety Flying

going north 1 avenue wid Kendall ouuide I.me and al>

■ ..........make a left turn col-[lidliig uiih the Chevrolet In the jln.i|de line.! JJnda Shill, i«. a paMenger tn ' the Chevrolet, was sllghUy injured.

«nd-K5-t<r-ihe

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

St. Bcncdict’s, JeromeVisiting hours at St. Benedict'

hospital are from 3 to 4 and 7 to 8 pm- In the maternity ward, noon to * and 0 to 8 pjn. Ir medical and surgical ward.

ABMITTEO Lull Cenamizabelta and Mrs,

Robert Parkliusrst. botli Sho- ahone- Mrs. Charles Maestas.RichlleMt Mrs. Don * lm an . Mrs,Rarfen Bo^lawski. Joyce Good and Robert U Waitoa, all Jerome.5pd-UTO_chruan . W inum .,.. moutano-

Kennedy^^“ De Gaulle to Meet in June

<rn« r«ft Ontk.........._Tirhlsialk»wHtrlan and De OauUe, also wanted to convey pom«ly an understanding U»t Great BrUaln and France no longer need regard themselves as broken between the United SUta and Soviet Ruaila. Macmillan and De OftUlIe both assumed the roles

Intermedlftrica alter the death StetcUvry of SOite John Poaler

Dullea late In the Eltenhon'er ad- mlnt<ttraUbn.

Kennedy has never met De Oaulle^.The President speaks a modenvte amount of Pnmch, but

Is fluent in U»e language_____ ilan arrlree In Washing.

ton latf tomorrow and ht,i talks R-tUi Kennedy will begin Wednes­day morning, niey wlU confer through Saturday.

Meanwhile, authorltaUve source* ..1 Bonn « ld today Chancellor Konrsd Adenauer will Invite Keh- nedy to vWt We* Gemxany. Ade- nailer will leave tor Wa/ihlngton on April 11 for his first meeting with Kennedy.

•n» last Ume an Amertcan Prnddent vlsl(«d Parta wnn In May of last jrar when lormer Prceddent D»1«ht D. Elwnlwwer Joined Mac mlllan and De Oaulle at the sum.

• • Soviet Pre

Twin Falls-BISmSSED

Mrs. Leo Chesler, Mrs. Weldon Ellis, Mrs. Keith Andeson. Mrs. Elmer Robinette, Rlcl)ard Hnll and Mrs. Don Tolman, all Jeromi. and Terry King and Mrs. Everett Ward, both nichfleld.

BiR-nis A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs.

Karrtn B og us law sk i, Jerome. Daughters were bom to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mneslas, Rldifleld, ind Mr. and Mrs. Robert Park. hunt, Slioshone.

“ GobdtnK“ M e m o r i a l ^

VlolUng houm at GoodJng Me- 'htortarhaipllAl are rmn a. m.

> B:SO p. m.ADMirtEn

M«. Hubert, Brake. Jerome.DISMISSED

Mrs. Al Lawson and son. Palr- tleld; Mm. Jim Klrtland and oon, Kunn; Clark Brackett. Gooding, and Mra. Ro«l Simmons. King HIU.

BIP.TH.1 A daugliter bom to Mr. i

Mrs. Hubert Bmko, Jerome.

Cassia MemorialViKlUng hours are from 3:30 to 4

and 7 ■ rnrds; 10 a. m. to 8 p, m. In themedlcnl atxl surglcni n'ards.

ADMITTED Evlvlsn Pewkw nnd Bartxira

Draper, both Rupert; Mrs. Rubj Hanst, Blacktoot: Mrs. Vfvlan D«ir- rlngton, Eiba; Mrs. Anita Ander- Mn, Oakley: Knrcn Hall, Mn. Ifelrn Mc.Murmy. Marlene Yost, Mrs, Phjllls Hulln. Mn, Elaine Pullman. Mrs. Denloe GroBbeck and Donald Howell, all Durle>-.

DISMISSED Mrs. Jane WhlW'le)-, Mn. Sandra

CritdiJluld and C. B. Pajton, ar Oakley; Debra Hardy. Rupert: .Nfrs. Ruby lUnst. Blacktoot; Mrs Vivian Cottotn, Mrs, Barbara i>and}', Mrs. Denlcc Orosbeck, Mrs. Olive Delmater nnd Eu.vblo Erlso-

aU Burley,niR-nis

Daughters were bom to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bablngton, He>’burn; Mr. and Mn. Keith Donington. Elba: .Mr. and Mn, J.ick Pullman; Mr. and Mrs. Dougliu HaU, nil Burle}-. and Mr, and Mrs, lUrold Anderson, Oaklry. Sons were bom to Mr. and .Mrs. Ronald Draper and Mr. and Mrs. Roruild Huddles­ton. all Rupen.

Not ShotVUERNBERG. Germany. April 3

m-Medlcal Investigators today uled out the posslbUlty that sbme if the S3 TicUms oC a Czech plane

cra^ last Tuesday had been shot o death.Dr- Alex Nelu. head of the In- ,-ejtleallng learn, said X-rays of 111 the bodies were completed last midnight.

property not later than Jum each year. The ordinance als< suies Uie penalty for failure t< remove the rubbUh Is an assess' rtent igalnst the propeHy'for-thi cost of city employes doing thi

Derrick commented that prop* erty owners may obtain asslstsncr from city employes lor eleanlni their lots tree during the twi w;elui set aside tor the city elean-up,'

Since some property site:In such a terrible mess, he tlnued, the city commission has designed two weeks tor cli up. Instead ol the usual one week.

After that Ume. he added, the ordinance.- which Is section t< article eight ot chapter six of the IDJ8 city code, will be enforced, including the property aa,'ieisment.

mlCT NlkJta S. Khrushchev explod, ed at the nrst awrton in hU Ire

Amtrtoan U3 lUghts over Rus-

back to the Amnrlcan revolution, there are probably more points of friction beta-een Uie United Slates and France than any otheiU. I ally.

Th(r« difference. uHleh Km. nedy arul De Onulle will have ar opportunity to explore during Ken- nedy^ forthcoming visit to ParU. mnge all Uie u-ny tram NATO In Eiutipe to the pallcles Uie West' should follow In Af4a.

Other major dllfercncen Involve itUUidea to»iird Uie Unltetl Na- ;lon* and Prance's forced entry In- lo the n-orld atomic club.

Accident .Victim,Reported “Fair”

BURLEY. April 3 — Donald HoutU, 72. Burley, was reported In tnlr condlUon and Improving at Ca.ulA Memorial lio^plUU Mond-ty moniing uhere he was Uiken after a t«'0>car accident at 5:10 p. m.. SAlurday at the Intenieclkm ofi Eighteenth sUvet and Hansen a— '

idant reported. He recel' es and cuU In a one-i . .

dent on highway S3 sou'.h of T«ln Pails at 3:30 ajn. Saturday.

Pemlt Soflfbt L R. OalBble. 1033 M

street, applied for a building per­mit Friday at the city hall to con­struct an addition to his single family wood frame dwelling. Coal

it (3X00.

Plan Made to Preserve Old Oregon Trail

irn> Pis* OntIrelative to the trail's ellmlnsUoi He stressed It was one of Uie few stretches left where the original

‘As a matter of tact,’ Fallon ote. "we have been somewhat

concerned over U ls same prob- lem-We.know the Old Oregon Trail traveried a portion of -

:ea which we have plans to led. Our main problem Is know-

lactly where this route -

•Therelore. we would certainly appreciate any Information you could supply us regarding Uiese locations. We would then be In a position oC Uklng positive action toward future protection of these locations."

later letter received from Dan AfcFtddan, • acting dlstrle manager. Uie society was agali assured that "we will cooperate li such preservaUon whenever pos slblc,"

Kelker said at present a seal sketch being prepared, based oi data contained In U. S, geological sur>'ey maps made years ago and ilso through present day travel In he area. Sometime this spring it ilso Li planned to photograph he entire area both on the ground

and from the air. These pictures will be available for reference.

•Tills project will take a little time." Kelker said, “especially

It U taken Into considera­tion that all society members and officers donate their tlmi services.

'But after completion-I prove. I am sure, to have been well worUi the effort. We are most happy Uiat the bureau of land management. Uirough Mr. Fallon, offered to cooperate Immediately 'hen contacted. It once again

interest .most ..peopleIn preserving the heritage of

this great western country.” Kelker said Uie society will ac­

cept an offer by Mr. Wilson. BLAf "lie f at Burley, to mark historical

:es and - tralU In Twin. FUU county. That project 'will comi after the present one of prejtrv. Ing the visible portions of Uie Old Oregon Tti"

Senator Church To Visit inT.F.

Senator ^ank Church will visit ‘idnZgalIt-Tliuadtty-«nd~Frlilay;

April 13 and M. and be lentured

Attcadi.ConveBUaii Beverly Bucklln. diughter Ir. and Mn. Thomas Bucklln.

1974 Ninth avenue east. Is repre­senting the Women's Recreational association of the University of Idaho at a saUonal convention »t the University of UUnoU. Miss Bucklln. a Junior majoring In physical education. Is president of ihe women's reereaUonai aesocla- lion at Idaho.

Participate* In ExerciseJerry A. Holier, llreman, son o;

Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Hotter, route 3. TwInTalIsr*ervlng'aboard'lHe’ « . tack transport USS Bayfield oper. •Ung out of San Diego, will take pjtft in a large U- S. Pacific fleet ixertlse Iron April 3 lo Juni '

Trala to Carrier Navy Gordon O, Burgess. )n of Dr- and Mrs. O. W. Burgess,

and Anthony N. Horsley, seaman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hors­ley. all Twin Futs. are serving aboard the anU-submartne war­fare support aircraft carrier USS Yorktown operaUng out of Long Beach which will take part In a large U.S. Pacific fleet exercise from April 3 lo June 3.

Marriage Ueeosei•'Marriage licenses were Issued by

the Twin Frills county recorder’s prfice Monday to Richard K Iloagland, King Hill, and Lull Mae Kllllnger, Twin Palls, and William Lea Pletnlng, Balnbrldge,

Rancho Cordova, Calll,

remen to MeetWomen's aux ltl^ Ni^RS to Ty-

pograpWcal 'union No- « i will meet at 8 pm- today'at ths hon 01 Mrs. SUnley curfew. OOJ Centi street east, Kimberly.,

CarOirner'Ftoetf- Harold C. Elg. Salmon, was lined

*7 lor permllUng an unauUtorlsed person to drive his car. He appear ed Monday before Twin palls ju i

of the peace Robert E. Penci .. was cited Sunday on a count,

road two miles north of Kimberly by Stale Patrolman B. G, Hard' Ing.

DUeuts PromoUons Twin Falls Chamber of Com* lerce Commercial division mem­

bers discussed various approaclilng city-wide promotions at their ular Monday noon meeting al Wray's cafe.

sun UnconsciousL Joyce Sartaln. 34, Tv^.

Falls, remains unconsclou.i "critlcar at Magic Valley Memo­rial hospiuil. a hosplul spokesman said Monday. She was admitted to Uie hosplul March 5 wi:h head ■ {Juries received In a besllnf )unty road northeast of Fllei

China to Free American Held

On Spy Ciiarge-LONDON.-AprU4.ajB-C.ommu. list China has agreed to tree crit.

Icaily lit Robert McCann, AlUtdena, Calif, ,nn American businessman serving a 15-year term for "esplo- ruvgc," the com'mlmUt New Chlni cws agency reported today.The agency aald McCann wll :ave Communist China Wednes ny with his wife who flew ti

China to visit him when she was told he was dying of cancer- The agency said she arrivrd March 29 to appeal for his release.

The agency said the Hopei prov­ince high people court granted herpftlB&n "In Uig'tplrit of Hiimiinl-tarlanUm.':- ...................Mcf^nn

Burley Ai-ea Woman Dies At Age of 76

BURLEY, April 3-Mrs. Hattie JOBfphlne Hanks Marchanu 78, died at her home here Saturday morning after a short Illness.

Mrs. Hanks was bom Nw. 29, 1884. at Charleswn, Utah, On Dec, I, IIKB, slie was married lo Stan­ley Marchant. They resided In H' ber. Utah, before moving Springdale In 1913. They ha' lived In Burley lor Uie p u l 18 jeivrs, _ • ___

Mrs, Mardianl was a m'emkkrr of Uie LDS church, a former presi­dent of the Springdale relief so clety. counsellor for the BprlngdaU MIA and Relief society and visiting teacher for the Burley second ward- She was' a member of thi Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Sar ah Yeaman camp,

Sur%'lvors are her husband, twi jons, .Gerald 8. Marchant. Burley, and Jay W. Marchant, Salt Lakt City; five daughters, Mrs. Calvlr (Ola) Wlxom, Khartoum, Sudan Africa: Mrs. S. Crandall (Edlthi Dunn, Burley; Mrs. Glen iLellai Short, Paul: Mrs- Don R. (Nona) Jacobs, Declo. and Mrs. Ivah L. (Lula Mae) Doggett, Idaho Falls: two brothers, Reed H. Hanks and Edwin-J. Hanks, both Lone Tree, Wyo.; two sisters. Mrs, EsUier M, (Etle) Fowlke. Orem, Utah, and Mrs, Eunice H. CulIlmore, Provo. Utah; 28 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren- A . son, Le

Funeral services will be held at 3 pm, Wednesday at Uie Burley second ward LDS chapel with Olahop Norman Dayley officiating. Final riles will be held In Pleasant View cemetery. Prlends may call at the McCulloch funeral home Tuesday afternoon and evening and Wednesday unUUlme.ot.aerv> lee.

King Hill People Report Activities

KINO HILL. April 3-RonaId Hoagland. navy radioman third class. Is on leave from San Diego to visit his parents. Mr. and Mrs, Martin Woodward, and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Bruno Pasleka. Ellis, spent the Easter week'-end with her slsUr, Mrs. Robert Rob. ertson. and family.

Mr. and Mrs. M. V, AfcMlUan. Dlnuba. Calif, are vlslUng his brother and slster-ln-Ur, Mr. and Mrs. Russ McMillan. OUier Easter week-end guests were McMillan's i^hew, Harry Lower, and family, lAnuba, and his niece. Mn. CurtU White, and family, PcrUand. They also visited Mr. and Mrs, Lynn Sherman and family. The vlslUng McMillan family also visited her brother and slster*ln>law. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Jensen, Mountain Home.

Rod Anderaon, Caldwell, visited his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs, Terrell Poiter, en route to Las Vegas to spend Uie Easier holiday with his parenU, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Anderson.

Dinner Held-BHOBHONB, -Aprlfs^A-church

fellowship dinner wm sponwred last week by the MeUiodlst Youth Fellowship.

A skit, readlnga by Rona Janou* sek and Steve Olasby. and a piano iolo by Joe Shaw made up the pro­gram. Parents asslsUng were Mrs. George Kenaston. Mrs,

:k. Mrs, Woodrow Harrl.i. Mrs, Leonard Rogers and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Olasby.

Seen TodayDale Blackham c;.-,. , '

about sunburned h-aj many week-end golf -Mr. and Mrs, Rov Lrr-oa J ing to work . . . Dill ChtM * with Eugene Ore Newton tr -lng i play , . . Mrs, Mar;h- a modelling blrihdaj' j, wailan muumuu dre'? • ' r Daugherty striding alo:;; 3.^ street early In monii!..; Reynolds waving to rr:tr!a '' Warberg home from co'C Easier . . . Mr«. June o; 1,.

-Ing-red-ouiniT-.TPoiicirirY; gus Spence and Wcilrj Ooibty, Ing coffee together . . . Ui? rCtnr,^ .,1lln, .hr.........

. .Prar ■I Peai

mouth wide open!

W o m a n ’s Fa! In ju r ie s Fatal

Mrs. Jennie McDonsia, m ^ at 13:45 am. Sunday ,i i,„. Valley Memorial hn.^p:tll o f- Juries the received in » ' irday from a ledge ai iiit lere Inn, 40J Second .mtm She wa.1 born Feb j 1

Belleville, Kans.. an3 ci Twin Falls from there I

S Ulttl tinvas -a member of i :hurch In Kansas.

She Is survived by ■Dewey Julian, Ta'ln "

Ars, McDona l d fell »ppf«. .tely IB feet from a lrd» to

aldewalk. Joseph Seaver, owtj, the Inn, sold Mn. McDonsld hi lived there for-Uis^iut four yt ind find been- de. pondent for us :lme.

Stephen 5as.t. lO-i. .. ... ^ of Mr. and-Mr*. Robrri fim, Shoshone street north, «'.he fall.

F^Jneral senlee.i for Mrt V aonald will be held i ' Tuesday at the Whli _ cliapel will! Uie Rev. Henry Om- hardt offlclaUns, Concludint m

. will be held at Sunm I rial park-

Frank Brewer Is Claimed by DeallBUHL, April S-Prank Br«e J, route 3-'Buhl. died al h

at 1 fl.m. Monday after an rstn!.•d lllneu.He was bom Sept. 4, l»j. ■:

Columbav Kan. .. and caine a Buhl In 1914 from Tj'ron, Nfe Ke farmed In the Buhl area taa that time until a year ac» vis he retired becau.'e of 111 hoUti

Mr. Brewer wan a member i le Bu h l Jehovah's Wltneaa

church.Survlvor.i| Include hit fttbc

John W. Brewer. Buhl; two breli- era. George Brewer, Buhl. 1 Claude Brewer. Caatlefoni. 1 three sl.iter.v Mrs- Thelma n* Ura. John Conway and Mn.0; Bernier, all Buhl,

Funeral services will be held li_ pjT, Wednesday at Alberta*

Memorial chapel with Wllllan I McCormick otflclatlng. Final ni will be held at Uie Buhl.cencie Friends may calUat Albertra funeral home-

3 BILLION COMING UP UNITED NA'nONS. N- Y,. April

_ The world's population will Ba.ia the three-blllion ,mark this

e communists

The 1D57 Chevrolet Howell driving went on DghleenUi sUeet tt-as struck on Uie rear right fenderand Uirown agalnat a light pole ..........

iBSSPonUacdriiYnbylsabeUllng to ett. 31. Burley, who was going county. . on Harvicn avenue, was rcport«d Uiat the CheV'

rolet was almost Uuwigh the In- tenecUon when It wtli struck. The Bennett woman wo.i cited for fall-

to yield right of vay and for explttd drti-er's lleeaw. Dom-

.. ■ tt-as «et al »l.oso for Uie Chcv- rolet luid.ta t200 to the Pontine.Tile accident wn.'« InvesUgated by

Burley police officer.

Tlie first meeting will be held It B;J0 p.m. Thursday at the American Legion hall. All persons In the county Inleresled In agri­culture are urged to attend.I A no-host luncheon Friday noon In lieu of .the regular Cluunber board meeting will be at the LC' glon hall.

Grange said the senator probably will discuss the mixed grain altui Uon and oUier legLilntlon pertali

■ e economy of the

Damage Reported For Road MishapRUPERT. April 3-A C.V and a

pickup truck coUlded three mllm wft.'.t and one and three-quaner mllR> norU) of here al 8:40 a. m. Monda}’. the Minidoka county sheriff's office reported. Damage ■as esUmated at US.The pickup truck, driven by Jack

WhiUng, 47. Rupert. wa.i emerging from a prli-ate drtven-ay. U collid­ed with a ear drlvm by Mra. Ro­selle Thonipwn. 3i, Rupert. No cltaUon has been Lciued.

Theme Noted for Easter’s SermonKINO HILL, April 3-"Chrlsl'.i

appearance to Mary Magdalem ilfls ihme ol lUe Earner gemo.. preached by Uie Rev, It. L Barnes at 10 ajn. Easter Sunday at the Unlled Presbyterian Community :hurch.

Plano prelude was played by Mr*. Barnes. A duel was sung by Mr. xnd Mr.v Prank Jones, accom­panied by Mrs. Barnes and congrcKRllon sans.

Cow KilledRUPERT. AprU 3 - AppTOXl. lately }700 damage rerailted when M.-itlonn'agon nuuck and kUIed

a cow on highway 30 In Kej-bum at. »:20 p, m. Sunday. Minidoka, County Deputy Shertft Hoa-ord' Plau reported. I

The driver wa« IdenUfled as' Garth Obon. 38, Ruperi, He said the cow suddenly appeared on th road and he couldn't avoid hlttln. It. The cor belonged to Mrs. Dor Thannan. Heybum.

Masonic Lodges

Masonic Temple

COMPLETES SCHOOL

DIETRICH. April 3 — Second Lieut. Oene A. Klsllng. son of Mr and Mrs. Floyd O, Klsllng, Diet, rich, has been graduated from the ba-ile pilot training sciiool at Webb air force base, Tex. He has been reassigned to one of Uie tacUcal

CAR.S COLLIDE JEROME. April 3-A 1D60 Chr

rolet driven by Even Hall, Pocj ;cllo, pulled from Uie curb at e:4S

m, Saturday in don-ntoft-n Je- :ome and collided wlUi a 1901 Fttrd inven by BeUy Lake. Gooding, Damages were estlmAled at tU to the n>rd and $3S lo U)e Chevrolet,

T. F. FIR.M FILES BOISE. April 3 im-Artlcles of|

IncorporaUon filed with ihe secre­tary of State today Included Tuln Fall. Farm and Cily DlMributlng, Inc, Twin FalLi. at a capttallzAllon oC tMM. KenneUt D. Erwin, Barton IL Ford and Carl O. Hallqulst. all Omaha, Nebr. are th( Incorpora-'

P E R R Y ' S TVGuaranteed tervico on I

i-an:Mokoi-‘P*-&-Rodio*.-i

I PHONE RE 3-1037 |

Can't Get . Auto Insurance?Under Age, Over Age,U'oer

Driving Recerd. Etc.? .

We Insure You!

— ^TABER-mSURANCE— s>GENCY

112 S ho .^N o . • RE 3>ini

Frederickson'sFRESH CHOCOLATES

bcaallfDlly bosed (or glfU.

With IS yean eiperienee, Gen* «erve« yeu best for lets.

Gaaranteed Servlee en all lleme Appllanees.

EUGENE SMITH APPLIANCE SERVICE

Horn* Fboai RF. 3-003S

TWIN FALLS LODGE NO. 43

Wednesday, April 9. B pjn.Stated CoromunleaUon

Regular business meetmg

KAYLER LODGE NO. 64om>»tt uciun, v/M. ns

Tlmrsday, April 8, 8 pm, Stated CtmmunleaUon

April S—VLMt Gooding Lodge

People 60 to 8 Tear Out This Ail

. and. mall it today to fbl

a »i,000 life Insurance policy u

help take care of final ezpeuo without burdening your famUj-

You handle the enUre U»mk* Uon by mall with OLD AMtS- ICAN of KANSAS CITY.Wo *■

ligation. No one will call 0:

WrlU today, simpl y your name, address and year ef

birth. Mall to Old Amertai Insurance Co., 4B00 Oak, Dep) L4I1B, Kansas City, Mo--AdT-«

Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain

» Iherough lh»t lufferfri<n. Y..k, f first tins I htaling iul

V. (W D - F o r tht

la can afot c m , *hll* genii, Ttlitrlng pain, actual rtduetliin (ibrlnkag*) look plaeo,

liMlamatingofall-rMulUweia

UlIVihav« etsMd ie bt a problfi-.

The leeret li a at* hf»lli>C ■tann (Dlff-Dr>»*)-<<l«” " a world-famoai r.iufcVla.ti

This luhfUnca li bow 1b *iipp(i«il«ry or «i«l»<««l under ihi nVmt At aU drug eouaura.

O P E N I N GU N D E R N E W M A N A G E M E N T

NAT-SOO-PAHF R I D A Y A P R I L 7 t h

----From-10;30 A.M-,to-10:30 P.M,^-.....-CLOSED THURSDAYS

If yoir find you havan't •eirmorktd lufficlenl

money for tax Ini^olltntnfi, call on o» for a

loan, Yoy'll like lh« way w « do builnM*.

■ FiSTSEHVICE # 'CONVENIENTTEBH*

• looni up iQ $1000

G . A . C . F I I t f A N C l !c o r p o r a t i o n

Co«.um.r C.rp"” ' "

I -----IW-MaliuAvenin.JSIl—M Twin Fells, Idaho

Trtiphon* RIdwood

Page 3: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

bonWT.‘iPBJLS. 1961

Burley Quartet Prepares Numbers

TLMIiS-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE ■msz

n t Btl« at the B«1 CmUi. Mleci ehoJr of Ihe DnrlejUA icli-V «be»r»* numben they will iln t for .the pre-lonr eoa- S u b* f)«n by Ihe rroup »t 8 pjn. Tuesday tt the school I llnrlnr ftUUord AUlltr, led. son ot Mr. sad Ain.

• * * *--- - — -

Burley Bel Cantos Choir Sets i Toiu’of Magic Valley Schools

BURLK. Apfll 3—The Bcl-Cftn- lnulKttliolror the Burley high ji»l, ufldrr the direction asrlne Aodnis. will present.R-tour coacen at 8 p.m. 'Hiesday ■ Uu Khsol auditorium, nb imp ot voices will slnit

in rjfflbn* they will present when Ufj ippor on suenblles or six tflotat Klwli of the MftBtc Vnl- kr Wfl T. Thty will visit TtiK;, Jtfooie. Wendfli, Shoshone., r if cd Felrflcld. prtfns la be presented will In*

(bit *anilvsl,ot Melody.” i>r» tetri br JUrnr Robert Wilson:■Xsa B4 Ysh.’ A/rlcsn Negro (h:ei] tnnttd by Maurice tn.’iw; “I Uve Thee,” from the

'Wnidly Peniuislon." Dl»‘ncoUn; *MalR(uena" Zt-

»u 'P#eme." ZIbleh,irupd, Robert JJonnan: *'01- isi»lft.*Frlml: -Olue Bells of BalisftM Scotch sir arruised tj ffsmS; 'The Hsppy Won- (m : >£saer; j;.^«r Du.«." Hon- a Oskiuiel; 'Showboat Med'Iff,’ JBOM Kerns,.Mirii Htsks li the sreomponlst » U» &I Cantos.

number* to b» presented teMi n i Wsik Wllh aod" wid •CiacT liOirered’ tJla ^oohi" by “ • tOT’i Qusrtet wlih Milford

r.Oi(ld.Cleuon. Bill Closson KdWijat Orshsm: "The Lord's Run” lad "Climb Every Moun- U5' by s-8lrr» irlo with Dline

Thompwn. Nnncy Miller and Jean Steen. Judy Clouon will give a refldlnc.

Other mcmbcrx of Ui« group In­clude Wnrren Bodily. Miles Chris* tenson. Sieve Cossrove, Lorna Dayley. Ruth Ooettsche, Susnn Hansen, Marcia Ifalch. Nada Hatch. LuAnn jolley. Bsrbara Jones. Llndn Kidd. Eva Ann Mad- nen, MUford. Miller. Nano' MlHer. Marsaric Nielsen. Karol ollmann, Kay Price. Blllle Lou Scoffleld, Jean Scarle. Diive Spencer,-AIWc- cy Stanfield. Nancy Weldon. ItuUi Wlicelcr, Bill Blake. Clifford Ben­cher and Lynn Larson.

Richfield Names Cancer Workers

Blood Drawng Is Set for GoodingC««)INO, April 3—Announee-

BT»iiin«de'srihe’Uons“cm U« wetk of the cqnteal

bw which club eonirlhutej! the tas blood when the bloodmoblle

Ooodlnc Tuesday.Kh Rupert reported that a

»-7fiaul eourl of honor wa.i held »! Uie Stile school. One Seoul ™ tro»p 02 snd three from W9U were reviewed for-eagle ^ Uon.i menjbers from sw-as Md Jerome compose the

“ •■a Of HVlCW,11 ihe meeUnc were nay

WM,<. Goodins: coach Dave ut-cscr. GoodinK hlKh sdiool, and

o' tills year’s bitv ictm. Ktnt llumphrlcs,

•"'I Leland

IJncoln County Drive Scheduled

fflOSilOXE. April 3_The Lin- wj wni)' canccr drive for 1001

wnduciert April 4-18. Thlr- ^ from lUchfleld, Dle-

Slio..lion# siKwJed a CttUns lui ttfrk. worker kit.', ror the campaign

*nd educaUonal *wn»li distributed.^^P s 'J l Bintrqll Is county

MUm. Ths Other city “ wu fey Mm. Michael Urrutla.

^PaSiTHdd

SS cS K',!' “K»sr;.* « • hew In

C X to Kent

lIONOn STUDENTS

r j

" 5 per ton Dellrercd

FaUi

nichfleld cancer drive, has named volunteer workers for ths Rlch- lleld area.

Mrs. Lee Monroe Is co>chalrman with Mrs, Swftlnston. and other* nre-Mra. Arthur iUcharduo, Mrs. noger Freeman. Mrs. Wendell King. Mrs, Harold Prldmore, Mrs. Clifford Dayley. Mrs, Thuman Hansen. Mrs, Lloyd UeM>

Mrn, Eugene Faddls, Mrs. Lyle Piper. Mrs, Carl Piper. Mrs. Jerrj- DavLi. Mrs, C. M. Prldmore and

Warren C. Sillier, lint tenor; Dsvid Ctonon, second from lefi, sec­ond tenor: IIIII Cloucn, second from right, baritone, sons of Mr. and Mr*. Jolm Cloiion, snd IVayne Graham, son ef Hr. aad Mrs. Ray C. Craham, bai*. (Stair pHolo-engrsvtflc)

Lions of Burley Induct Member;

Report Is MadeDUnLEY. April 3-Dlll Pettln-

gale waA Inducted by Harvey Rog> crs a.1 ti new member of tlie Lions club duriiii! J-'rlday'i luncheon meeJIn? at Cousin Eay'i. He Kita aponiWred by Ormand Durch.

Robert Dfitner.i reported on hu trip 10 WfljJiinglon. D. C., wltli Sen. K. C. Barlow and Ms). Oen John E. Wftlsli of Uie Idaho na­tional guard, on behalf of the }{ov,eIl canyon road, )!e wid he felt tliat tlic irtp IiBd ftccomplishci: Its purpa^e and that liciion would b« tAken on the road to the r •Uon area u lililn a year.

Ron Jones urged a teen»age education nnd luifciy club project for the next year.

Olen Kunau. co-chalrmsn e Live, Inc.. rural salt, reported Uie lie WM a succus.Dick Orave-i'was a guest of Jltn

Dumas and Gene Kerbel, Colora­do, wa.< a guest ot his brother.

Woodrow Kerbel.Other Kue.-iid *tr* Erie Robert­

son. former Burley school teacher, Alton Martlndnle. California, and Charles Hendricks, Burley.

W R E C K I N G

P A R K H O T E L

Used Material FOR SALE

★ Brick★ Lumber★ Light Fixtures ■jlr Doors and

Facings Windows and Facings

■Ar Bathroom g Fixtures i ★ E t c . -

^ Phono RE 3-1234 i Twin Falli

i -

88.8 Pfoo».O.F.C.OItl,CflHN,r.C.

The drive will begin Tue-iday. and continue for two weeks. Can-1 cer films will be available for'

-2-Flned---BUHL, April 3—Paul E. BufJlns-

when lie appeared Thursday be­fore Buhl Justlcc nf the Peacc WllUam Nungc.ster,.for having a faulty muffler on his car.

EnnU H. Kirkpatrick. Wendell, as fined tS.plus costs by Judge

Nungealer for driving a vehicle with faulty equipment.

Commerpiai PhofosBlock & W h ita and Color

ALBUM STUDIOSUt Sbothone Street North

Olopeifo^m,D m m fm c sA^j/mxASf eeaum o

I f y o u cou ld

b u y a fine im p o rte d

8 year o ld C a n a d ia n

w h isky (O .F .C .) " a t

th e same p r ic e you

p ay for, m os t 6 year

o ld s ^w o u ld n ’t you?

VOUNG'CJ i D A I R Y U

Q U A L I T Y C H E K D ^

h a s a

Q U A L IT Y C H E K O

T h e y ’r e .b r ig h t e r , s m a r t e r - lo o k in g , m u c h m o r e a t t r a c t i v e . . . T h e y n o w

f u l l y r e f le c t t h e e x t r a q u a l i l y , f l a v o r , f r e s h n e s s a n d p u r i t y t h a t h a v e m a d e

Q u a l i t y C h e k d d a i r y p r o d u c t s p r e f e r r e d b y m i l l i o n s o f c o n s u m e r s i n 3 5

S t a t e s . . . S o n e x t t i m e y o u s h o p . ; . k e e p y o u r e y e s p e e le d f o r o u r

e x c i t i n g n e w p a c k a g e s . . . B e s u r e t o lo o k f o r o u r n e w lo o k .

T h « “ B i n R e d C h a c k M a r k ” h a s . a n e w l o o k l o o . . .

a n d n o w m o r e t h a n e v e r I I m e a n s Sure Sign of Flavor.

Q U A L I T Y C H E K D Dairy P rod ucts

Page 4: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

PAGE FOUR TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO' JION-DAY.APW I.,,,^'

A •< r*k t. INI .wUkluM !• I««* ud tto Tvlt F*— .. .

r«bll«M 4«Ur u4 m I>« B«m4 tlrot Wot. TrdJi. U*k*. by iU rskliblu Coai»«er. It

JARED now JACK HULLOWNCr .rraUnl ftUUktr

AL WemtaBEM lowell pic* w iut dodosBmIim )Uui>r> M*U(lu Ulut AltvUtlK Eiur«< u mmb4 cIm Btll Mtur A»H11.

•fflra la TwJi 14«fc«. Bad«r U« Mt • !_____ ____ _All Bstka noBlrail ki too or kr «i4tr •( tMrt el ««apK«ii(

larMkllu t« U pibliiM «Mkl7 «1U to si>UI>M la tb. Ttandtf IMII« et tbU patxr pgresiBl U t«. I >1m C«)«.

NATIONAL XernCSENTATIVU wEOT.HonnnrrcoTTKc—

«» Mjirk'rt S*j> FnMlM, C*

^vilDefienseTwo civil defense sesslotu will be held In

Twin Falls this week. A four-day session

Btjirtlng Tuesday will have the theme of "elementa o f civil defense and defense iho- blUzatlon.” Then a two-day workshop lor women on home preparednes Is scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday. These meet­i n g are designed to prepare M a^c Valley

^residents fQr_that.po5alblllty In the Xuturc another war.

Neither session Is des ired for the general public. The first w ill be presented to legls* lator*. county'commissioner#, civil dcfcMe directors and a lim ited number of county civil defense workers from nine Magic Val­ley counties. The workshop Is for women

from nlno counties who have been active In civil defense. I t will cover all factors of pre­paring the home for an emergency, Includ-

_ J n K j .....................................................This sort of th ing has hod IlUle or no

m eaning In tho U.S. even though this coun­try has gone through two World wars. Ac­tually, U.S. citizens have little or no com­prehension of tho damage possible from the w caporj of war. And except for the resi­dents of two cities in Japan, the whole world

no firsthand knowledge of the destruc- • -“ ivcRess of iiu dok i'" iraxfuT." H ia t Is tho

wholfe point civil defense, learning, what

can bo done In the event of nucleor war­

fare.Actually, this country can never again

hope to escape tho wholesale destruction of war. I t takes no Imagination to know what

would happen to the U.S. In event of another war. A person needs only to read of Rus­sian success w ith sputniks and space pr6bes to reall20 the Communists could rocket nu ­clear bombs to' any portion of this country. That's a simple statement of fact.

Except for negligible hortltlltles on the West Coast during World war n, the m ain­land of the U.8. hasn’t been touched by ac­

tive war since the Civil war a century ago. How vouKl peopl« Bcnerolly ttoct under

.„ho9tlIo fire? Immediately, probably panic would take a greater toll than bombs. And after that, who would know what to do?

This Is where civil defense enters the pic­

ture. Far too few citizens know far too little conccm lng civil defense. Let's hope the leaders attending the sessions In Twin Falls this week learn their lessons well. And If they, pass along the Information, perhaps more, people w ill become conscious of civil defense.

In event of nuclear warfare, civil de-

--fensohoiarth9-k6rtoT)oth'lnaiV ldudrahtf national survival. Let's not take It too light­

ly. _________________-

ANO THER DBY YEARTho verdict on Irrigation water Is in for

• 1961 and It'll be another dry year, something th a t has been apparent nearly all winter. The only chance for. some relief will be heavy spring rains, a rather remote possibility.

Farmere depending on water from the Wood river drainage were told to expect only 60 per cent o l the normal water supply

—thls-year,-whUe-Salmon-tract-farmera- . expected to have only about two-thirds as

. m uch Irrigation water as last summer. Which was drier than normal.

Because water th a t normally has been wasted all winter wos saved for three ttontHs. fanners on the Twin Falls tract and 6om« others who \is« Snake river water can expect near normal amounts. What will

happen to Snake river Irrigation water If the present drought continues for another year

or two Is anyone’s guess.I f no end Is Indicated to the drought this

year, i t Is probable the Twin Falls Canal company w ill try to save even more water next winter by shutting down the canal Bystem for more than the three months it was dry this winter. In any event, the prece­dent has been set. Besides saving OAood deal o f water, the canal company leam^cthe city o f Twin Falls and the tract can get along w ithout the water In winter. The firm also learned a dry canal systems permits a great deal more maintenance and Improvement

work.The only complete solution Is full reser­

voirs again, to mark the end of a drought th a t has cost fanners and everyone else in Magic Valley millions of dollars In crops th a t were never raised.

After 12 m ild winters In a row. It w u ld seem the drought has to end in the nctir future. P e rh a ^ heavy spring tains yet this year w ill Indicate tho end.

STAR FARM ERCongratulations are In order for AUin E.

Harris. Twin Falls high school senior who earned the FFA Stor Fanner award for Ida ho at the annual convention of Idaho Fu turo .Farmers of America. It's a coveted award for which all FFA members work hard every year. .

Indicative of the competition Is the rec­ord of young Harris in winning the title, He was choeen on the basts ot operating an 80-acre farm he leases to grow com, grain and hoy and raising grade feeder cattle and registered Hereford breeding stock. Keep In Tftinrt th a t the Star Farmer lor 1961 is a senior In h igh school.'

A lvin Harris Is a credit to his FFA chap­ter, Twin Foils h igh school and hU parents ■undoubtedly are proud of hts achievements. I t wouldn’t be hard to predict he will enjoy even greater successes as he completes his education and turns all his time and energ>-

_*o j*nn lag ,- iL thatJs- to be-hia chosen-worrIt*# a pleasure to congratulate tho star

Ite n ie r .

TUCKER'S NATIONAL

W H I R L I G I GWA6}{1NOTOK-Tti« UoUin cruu thm un i u

reveal UiU the tTtWtn o( Qoibed Sute«*«poaiored■ lllan^M Hmmlny th« BUU0>C&1*seM tmptre* * « onlr "p^pe w* l*nluUon*~ nlher thto ctrceUTc mlUtarr buiwuki ASAlnft cotwnu- aUt apvulon vxl tcEreulm.

Mormer. thi experience or the tJnlUd NUIOM' InunrenUoo in Kcrret 10 )»ir» mo *nd In ih« Con«o today dUclotet thAt the In- tenuUonAl bodr pououet neither the power nor the precUie to com- poM deference* InvoIWnc thegj-f t «nrl mifhl

rure mto locAl or globiU n r . To deKrit>e'the ilt- tJAtlon m Another w*r. u dlpIomAUc czperu tnd mlllt«ry lUrtetUU do In (heir conridenUal tnilrwi of the. cold war itnigglea. ihete e<mp*el*-wlih the poulblo excepUon of NATO in Wwtcm Europe —are not capable of'conlAinInc the eooununltu In accord wlUi earlier expeclationi. And even NATU hai lerlous «ea)U)ei*ca.

DROKEK PROMISES—The proof of thl* thuU lirs In the fact tha( both Iluula and China have Robbled up vaat areu of Cemtcrj' alnce thcM ilaneei mtra forrned in the foUowlCf World war n. when It became obvlouj that neither BUlln nor his lUccMMn, partlcularir Khnuhcber, intend­ed to keep Uie ptedse«'flnn the weitem allle*— Rooserell and Churchill—at Tehran and Yalta and Ttilerftltd at PoUdam contennca o( BMls, Tniman and Atlee.

Although the Souiheut Aila Treat; Ortanlutlon (SEATO» has breathed dellann agal&it the com. munUt4' Invaiion of Iao*. an; re«lttanee agalnet further eneroaciimeat. ihould negoilatlotu fall, will drpend almott entirely upon the air and Ka.power of the United State*.

Ai In Korea a decade ago. other member* of the

ALLIANCEB BrtPOTE.VT IN BnOWDOWV-FMr. thermore, with reepect to Laoi, military expert* hare srave doubt* whether an aerUl offeoalve would be effective agalnit amill eocamunlit band* oper- aUnit a hlt-and-nin svne In the rugged mine*, mountain* and Jungles of Boutheait A*la.

Tho erlsir In-the Mlddl»;E»it-wrcrii?‘ jean mu atto fural&hed evidence ot the unreUablUtT o( the alliance, ontanlud by the late John Poster Oullet

I leeretary of itate.When the orerLhrow of reslme* friendly to Ue

Weit preused a communlit coup In thU leniltlve and *uateRle area. Uie Middle Eut Treaty Org»n- IZAtlon <M£T01 wu hetpleu.

In order to thwart the reds. American forces oc­cupied Ubanon, and the BrlU*h dl*patched mllU tary unlti to Jordan. A* In Loo* today. Prance it- Xu»ed to participate In thU proteeUve action.

laval bate* which the member* have furnished t< the United BUte*. they deter tJie Rus»lan and Chi­nese comtnunlat* from provoUni a global, nuclear eonfUct.

Out they have been .totally Ineffective In prevent* ng piecemeal gains and advance* by an admitted

but undeclared enemy.Each tenuou* tetUement haa resulted In s division

of territory that represent* a lot* to the democrat cle>—In Korea, in the Middle Ea*t, In Vietnam, and poulbty In Lao* today. It U tragic, but It 1* a fact that the Weet ha* been In a *te*dy retreat on both the mlUUry and diplomaUc fronu.

Wben and If the souChe**t Ada crlal* In resolved, Amerlcaa and BrtU*h lUateglsU muit—and Uiey probably wlU—devise *ome meUiod for ataving off defeat by alow but per*l*Unt attrition.

Ttitt pment tyatem ol aUlancu haa b m demon* ■trated to be a failure.

-V IE W S -O F -O T H E R S -A KENNEDY .SETBACK

Prom what ha* happened «o far this «ewlon the progrefla of Prealdenf Kennedy* progrun thnwgh consTfiM »e«na desUned for one close dcelslon after anoihcr. ThU wu Indlcnted at Uie befflnnlng of Uie y w «-hen admlnlsimUon efforta to break the house tulm cccnmlltee deadlock were suoccMful only by a handful of votes.

lAtt w k Uio hoUM handed Mr. Kennedy _ Btlnglng aeUMCk when U rejected hi* mlolfflum pay bill by a Alngle rate, then enactcd a eotUltlon meas­ure by a mortrln. And the defeat u-a* even more pleaaing to adtnlnlstrnUon foM because the President, only a day earlier, had publicly unred enactment ot a bill cair -tng out hla campaign

The legtslAlion. as paooed by Ute houm set the minimum i.-a(!e at tl.lB v i hour instead of Uic -aaked-by-the-admteW t l onrlln the house, however, w m the be covtred.

The ortclnal atolnlstrttion bUl extended eoverwe to 4J1I,000 puwna. This figure was later reduced to 3300.000, Uim to 3,600,000. Dut the bill *a U left tho htw.vt \rtn Include only 1.400.DOO new. worker*, the reduction being due to the way coverage of retail and tervlce entcrprlsea Lt deflne<l.

For v-orknn to be included, such an enterprise has to haiT five or more ouUeU In two or moK stAtm.

Stnaie action cn the minimum waco Is yet to come. But If Uie pauem of ln*t summers* scoaion l* folto»Td. a bm U lUcely alonir the line# Mr. Ken. i»dy wants. Then wUI come the Job of reconcliinR the hous« and «enat« versions. And alhce tho batUe 1* far from belns decided, then u awaya % chance the Kennedy foreea can turn defeat Into victory.

At the juune Ume. the Kennedy lorco have anoU)er seHr* ot battles ahead, each rcqulrlnc eX' pert genisralihip and hard fijrhUiw. If the Preal. dent and hit lieutenants could arouse more public, intenoi in their domesUc-proenun they mlKht have an easier Ume. But this they haven’t been *ble to do. — Salt Uke Tribune

“Can I Get up Now?” H O W T H IN G S A P P E A R

P E G L E R ’S A N G L ET k .. . in Mm»« i« m,M. floor. It «’a* a iw<

weight the announcemeti- ^ haJI-dollar and the Ir *

: .1 » S

I have counted 10 Umu 10 commltucg myself to the dismal duty d scolding wala my beloved callioc. the pres*. UU* Ume lor a particularly stupid and paltrydefiance of It* ................kod *«lf-r«ipect.

I refer to Ui . dead-pan trtst-l- ment. Indeed an approach to ven. entlon. of Ed BuUlvan's t«pw> tee «1th a rtral Philosopher of the.Tt. Jack Paar. on the questi whether this lh*t one paid hi* __ poodles, cockatoos.Ui and ac robat* p*(tnmore. Paar m»y be excused from thl* *tudy, for he Is a very rc' cent fellow of • formless. Im p^pable art. By no record of past performance 1* he qualified for the analyUcal disgust with which I approach many people:

It Is not Sullivan'* economic success that evns my detestation. The-woods, or if not the wood*, then the graveysrds, are full of jraduaU office boy* of newspsper shop* on Park row. The late Dex. ter Pellows, the Rlngllng circus pres* agent, remarked that he ahowed them unfalUnrre»pecf be­cause their rickety bench near the city room door va* the kinder­garten from which the head of the copy d«sk. indeed, the city editor.

■iTOCe-woBld-come:— Tammaay Young, an office boy

Pot

Shots

DEAD FISH DEPT.

Tor some Ume Tv# contempl the advantages of twitching from wster to bMt, Now City Engl Fsul Newtoa has convinced m< th* prtpper thing.

To quote Mr. Ntwton. •The water in Uie csnal «a* about the color of coffee. It was covered with about an Inch of foamy light blue sc and In the water there w thousand* of bloated desd. fish.*

I take It he's describing the local drinking water. No, on second Uiought, you take lit

Beer SriDher (Twin Palls)

ALWAYS PRODLE»}SI Dear Sir--Wdul<lin» to print thetpoTl* psge In a different place?

Usually you print It right on Uie oppcalte side of the comic poge and when I B « the pnper nnd *Uft working the crossword puzzle, my boy keeps yakking at me to burry up to he cui have the sportj peie.

Irra Tated(Jerome)

ANOTHER ItlT-RUN Detr Pot Shots: .

Just another Rripe at people who flen'l slop alter killing an animal

■ thelr-ear.-----------

stop and tsy they weer sorry. I'd like to see the law enforcement

strict about hitllng animaU and leaving the scene. Or better still, I'd like to see Uie person who hit our dog . . .

Csutlon other people when they see a dog you have no Idea whal thst dog means to his owner.

Rum Andrrun (Twin Palls)

FASIOUS LAST LINE *. . . And about the Ume yea

think ynu have trouble*, you n o iBlo Mmeene who rtaiw haa Ihem!"

GENTI.EMAN IN TJIEFOURTH now

W A S H I N G T O N

the old Now York American, was caddy-ln-general to the- rog­uish Wilson -Miiner, who .wrote him Into the deep purple and se­duced him from * promising fu­ture as headquuter* : nlckl*-and.dlme career

first claa* to London with a ring from Richard Harding Dftvls, a glamorous correspondent nf fire, cracker wars, to Bessie McCoy, the Yama Yaroa girt. »chlevlng Inmiorlality..

By PETER EDSONWASHINOTON (NBA) - Vice

Pttildeni Richard M. Nixon was probably in his best form—from the fun standpoint—at a recepUon

In ISendrUc Hudsonhotel. Troy. N.Y.,s hut Sept. 30. '

The -campaign as Jiut getUng

warmed up Uien., and Uie R<DubU.V-_- csn presidential)^' candidate--, w a s- — riding high, lie

greeted at the aliport by a near cloudburst., but H d i dn ' t ' dampen hi* splr- r«ur Its a bit.

Here are some of his remarks that drew laughter and applause ‘n that happy day:

"As you know, It's the responsl- bllity of'the candidate for the presidency to make a lot of speech­es. Ke makes them at unusual hours and on occasions many times unexpected. As a matter of fact, wo had three or four on the way from'the airport today.

" I didn't dream that people would come out in the-rain and sund Uiere completely soaked. I know they got sonked because I did. too. I mean the mln. Incl- dentally.” (Applause luid iaugh-

"That renilnd.1 me Uint when'I went to Caracns. somebody said. The vice president got stoned when he was in Caracas.' (l«ugh-

contracts, the' first <........... -'bung man. the t>cstadvice I can give you Li to marry for money and practice law for love.' Well. I did that (Laughter.) In any event. I want to sny Uiat Uie Mres are tremendously loyal In these timp^gns—they havt to ■ !.

*'Thry *lt th'ere and hear you make the same speech and look If It’s the first Ume they ei.. heard it, each time." (Laughter.)

' . . . I must share with j-ou oni niy favorite recollection* of i

long handshaking session in Flor­ida . . . We shook hands with 3J00 people In Uiree hours, and ihaV* moving . . . Finally one lady came through the line at the In.it and she looked so tired, because the

people hod been crowded and jammed In . . . and Uils lady came Uirough the line and she got up here and said, 'You know. Mr. Nixon, I'm so glad to get here. I didn't think I w»a .going to g ‘ here In time to vote for you. (Laughter and applause.)

“Well, an occasion like this In which everyUiIng goe*. of course, can't finish wlUioul a Texa* etory. So I'll tell you my favorite Texas story.

"This occurred In Dallas, about two years *<o. I was ataading in line alone on this occaalon because Pat had not been able to come About 3.000 came out—and shook hands, on and on and and I apparenUy looked n bit tired at the end.

couple of ladles can through, one a' lltUe older, one little >uunger. The older oi looked at me, obviously a very con- (Iderote, compassionate type, and she said. ‘Mr. Nixon, you look BO tired. I feel 60 sorry for you.'

"The >-ounger one took my hand and she said, ‘Well. I don't feel sorry for you. I've been standing here Just os long as you have and I have high heels on.' ** (Applause.)

And so much for the Troy speech.

Republican.i have praised Nixon' for conducUng a clean campaign and not Indulging in personalities. What the record shows, however. Is Uiat Nixon got off several sharp cracti at Kennedy'* expense. As the ■campnl8n“ drcw toward the end, the vice president's humor ggLlLUUle-more-gntcaaUe-Jhli.'

FOUR DAYS* WORK, nV E DAYS' PATThe Itre-day n-erfc wc«k originated in the depres­

sion of Uie 1B30S. The theory was that It would in- crta.- the number of Jobs in a period of severe un- empioymcnt by requiring an employer to hire B to 10 per cent more employes to do Uie work hlUierto acca-nplishfd In tho flve-and-a-half or stx-day week.

The general effect of the plaa was to tacrease the hourly pay of those already employed. It did not incrc.-uie employment very much, la fact, the, deprr.vion gmr a little deeper and It wa« not re­lieved until the war order* began to cctne la 1N9.

But Uie theoty th»t ahort«- hour* (with no de- crr.v.e m p.iyi will create employment ha* u many adlierenia m IMt as It did la m « . David McDonald of Uie United Bieel Worker* »ay» r shortea' atek- witli the (caUierbeddlns which he made the bsue m the l. l steel strike—Is the only way to rtsure yw.erdsys union ranks in Uie Uidustry.

Hie Um Angelee district council of carpenteta has the simr idea; It ho* proposed to contractors’ group* in K>uihrm Calltomia that the tM.OOO coiMiwUen carprn:cn for which It speaks go on a four-day verk—wiui iire-day pay. of courae. The council has Ml addlUonal gimmick: Overtime for any work beyond « hours a week—but wtUi no orertJme wort except by permL%slon’ of Uie union. If thl# latter pre xKal were aocrpted. U» union would Uterally trol the construction industry.

Pmildent Kennedy has found the courage to op- pctte the shortening of the work reek. There Is. of coune. noUUng sacted about AO hours aa a work week, but the President points out that the economy cannot continue to grow on leas producUon per man. The ahorter work week In present condlUons would rciult in a naUonol slowdoun ot producUon. It would also breed InfUUon- Por example. U Uie souUiem CalifomU carpoitcrv got their four-day 'wortc wee*. Uie labor caeU ot construction would rise 30 per cmt at least.

President Kennedy has a difficult task of union •dueauon-before-hlm.-if'he-lnwndsTa-cftiTyoirrrom hW remarks to his press conference. Ke may lose some devoted union frleods, *uch aa McDonald.- U » Angele* Time*. ' -------

Poor Man’s PlatoBy JtAL nOYLE

NEW YORK. April 3 CT»—ThlnRS coiumnlM might never )u i^ U

he dldnx open-his mall: .Dont let w-OffT}-' scalp you, It

h*s been found that extreme men* 1 or physlwU stress may cause fallout - at least temporarily

— of from 100 to 1.000 hou- a day.But cheer up. If y-ou have an

anrage of JOO.OOO or more hairs .son your head, you 'have to lose at least SS.000 befdre

■, ■ even. }-our closent■ ' ^ ^ K fe n e m le a wUl'tw-

m

I ly greetlnc y - - ■ wlUu "lU, baldyr

How much air

pint of I

lAn-oke and relax­ed, you breathe a

_ _ m times a minute. Ailtep. you ofdlnaflly breathe only 12 limes a minute. But if j-ou ate hatinc a bad dream the rate dou- ' Im to 24 breaths a mlnuu;.

It *««jns to be a mba-an's awld aiwKiR raa aa wtU a.'k people. Ex- pertmenis rhow-ed girl rut* not only, outnm boy rats, they also lire longer.

ThUif? do Rc< hot In the Uonsl capital. We are Informed Uie Peniacoa seeks to maintain a tem- pemure of 18 (Jegreee. This seems a bit high in new of fome aclen- Ulie evidence that man's thinking I0 It>'^enal--lo-dllul)ayl-^5bTe■a tenpcmture of 70 dcKrces.. Our quotable sotobles: **As aoon osyDuleeltoociidtodoa tbl&c,

o a.- — Margaret Deland- The prejudice against lady driv-

n predates the automobUe- In 305 D C. Rene pasted a kiw'ban- nlnc women from driving chorMs on the grounds they caused toe many truffle aodden:*-

Be/ore communism. Ruvdan Or­thodox Catholics were among the worlds ttrlotest obser\-ers of Lent. Butter, egg*, milk and checse oompJetely lortjldden ai we meat. Many de\-out lUiatlan pns- onta subsisted during Uie enUre Lenten stosoD on nothing but po­tatoes. brcsd and water-

Up aerrloe: Dont *sk me why. ut mustaches are mote popular ow Uiaa U>ey have been in the

last 20 years. ‘Ihanks to the beat­niks, of course, ro are beatds.

Somethlag new U> chew .... Every year some 750.000 Americans are fitted out wlUi artificial teeth.

U Im t neceanftly true that If

slty ahowed th-'-t the c^tdren of

b«m« people have such Urcd M»ed evsn the blood bank wooldal be latereMed Id It.

Harry Romanoff. 90 years on Uie desk of Chicago's American,

a fat urchin on Uie old Jour-

liar benefice In the United Press.aere InstlncUvely hosUle then

and always unUl we met the night Uie American wu sold to the Chi­cago Tribune. Barrier* burned away when Uils .plglron character and I sat alone In ft tllthy, shad­owy room with a can of cof(ee on the leaf of his desk, a room haunted by my old man.

Sullivan, however, had never kept the faiUi of our *u»ndard.i. He first appeared ss a copy boy and husUer on the sport side of the New York Mall, a sport de- parUnent with a basket on the sport editor’s desk for conUibu- Uons to the column oC cliiUlenges and banter between sandiot baU ' teams "wiUi *uiU.”

There was • legendary draft through Uils room and unweighted envelopes unfailingly blew onto

uaji-«wu»r aou me lao- ^ * sot flratxraek at Uie

Later, on my first trip Ida. I encountered SuiI'VJt. ing m-lth a primitive tolf Ut Hid press-agent »ho Uie tournaments-

Another columnJu. o o Intyre came to be emiM, f/J- first client wo* the .Msitiut

homely reflecilonj. Voj quarrel wlUi the ethics o ■grapher who lived t n h , u.T'- Uc on Uie cuff.

Sullivan wrote hLi o»n nent dlsqusJUlcatlon Ut of honor when he luta > column on Uie S'e»' Vo„ Neu'S that oft in the of prohibition he and the nlght.club undc.'»o:iij twi- ™ flroaJway were Uktn Iiot./S armt.'d bodyguards o[ Uit «ir-, gangs.

He said, furUirr, th»i hr colleague* whom lie MtiiW i. I shall not. refralnrd from Ing the truUi and "dm i loujt on their wrIUng for the slab sordid- reason— Uiat- nif,- ^ afraid. It was a n.ysirn’ lo ? Uist Uie late Jwcph Mtdill h i tersoti stood for SullUan b«i^ Patterson wo* both-a soidljf^ a-streel-flglilet-ond-he-MfitWa reject payola long ix/ore Ux word was heard along about lii Um# of Uie Van Doren TV frua

6ulllvv)‘s Irlbuus to a ^ departed called the comitess d,. othy dl Prasso were simt*: running story. Yet she becsnii Ci- broiled with the Ute Buoy SWU and others almost as bad in |

yacht down (o the Calapan* im

He eerUlnly did not exptw Bti and, for that metier, the oi New York reporter «ho did i Plorsbel Muir, who was mut manlier *tuff Uian Uie rtiiiea male experts In the sris of chantment.

Plorabel wa* *hot.*t and I lltve aVlghUy hit one nlihl Mickey Cohen and slie freiiuc: turned up sturdy clty*side new* In a beat Uiat wm c.'siti with aychophanu from Uis ou ropollton pres*.

AltogeUier, Bulllvsn's ennkq In the New York morgua cd other accumulations of im ktwwledee reveal a cutter d-ax- aUve achievement under dal- lenge of the old Ideals of u people who ought to perMnlfrn; press—the reporters. Yet rtn he concocts a sordid publicity <;il with a rlvnl almost m Uvdry, Uj papers nnd wcekllrj trest Wa u though he were a dlgnlisrT.

I think the reflection Is wwte the paper* and press assoelsUei than on Sullivan, who has s rl|m to despise us for our fallurs t) tell truths which he knows tl heart we should hivve told.

The Doctor Says

from hU remarks about Kennedy St Burnett park. Fort Worth, Tex. ->v. i. 1600:

•Let'* look at tlie.ie Uilngs he's changed his mind on. He voted against Udelnnds. Now he's for It. He voted against TVA. Now he's for It. He voted against the pres­ident on Quemoy and Matsu, Now he says he's with the president I say wo cant have a Jumping Jack as president ot Uie United States of America."

And this U from Vice President Nixon's remarks at the high school stadium, Rldgeu’ood, NJ-. Oct 31,

“As a matter of foct. i Ju.it got report thot my opponent. In one

of .his Juvenile, schoolboy com- menia in Philadelphia, suggested Uiat he would like to have an­other debate, and for me U) bring UiB President along. Just let say Uils;

"111 be glad to debate him and his whole family any iim«, but I UUnk what Uie counuy really needs-1* a debate between Jock and Lyndon. Let's find out where they really atand.-

Dy HAROLD TH05U8 HYMAN, M.P.

Written for Newspaper Enletprlsa AsseeUUen

Por some Ume. I've been mystl* fled by- request* for InformaUon about Uie use of sea water as st "chemical smorgasbord" for our bod i l y glandi'(pancreas, l iver ipleen. _thyrold ndren'als'ahd bohi marrow),J2iE— rcbmat^'

lost report of the food and drug ad­ministration hai Just cleared thi air for me. .

"The govern- emment has mov- ed to slop the sale *''• of AUantlc cuy ocean water /or (3.75 per gallon.’ It sutes.

Recommended ss a "founUtln of youth" and general tonic, It was also advocated as a “cure" for ar­thritis. cancer, diebeles, multiple scelerosls, Parkinson's disease.

leukemia and what have you.Tho report concludes wiih

sUtement that “there srs healUi beneflU to be obUlnri l| adding sea water to yotir Mlnrrol constltuents./ound ln ‘~ water are Identical to Uiose la dlnary foods wlUi the possible < cepllon of Iodine which is r-> piled, by Jodired salt." —Ths-admlalstrauon alio elfKls! a convlcUon of a door-to-(!« aaleswoman who attempted t«

wheat germ oil to FDA sgentsvSJ recorded her sales pitch on upt

The court held that Uie ment was misbranded becsiw . did not bear adequate <UrefW tor treating the dlstsKs for It wM offered.

These disease* Included arthi high blood pressure, heart dl»< goiter and other aliments. It - concluded Uiat the product *•»« “no value In Uie treatment oi« ot the condlUons mentioned Is sales talk.'*

parents w l» . relied heavily physical punishment to maintain dtoclpllne tended to iiave more feelings of Inferiority. Iras sens* of humor, and we« less socially *d« Justed.ond more ca.iily frustnUed Uvm oUier chUdrcn.

Do you think of Africa as .. pagan continent? About :0 ptt icest'of its populaUon of 334 mlU Hon Is ChiUllan. As even larger pert«ntAC« Is Moolem.

A sobering Uiought; Th* United States, cm of Uie rleheirt oC na- Uons. sUU lists suldde a* a major oause of prevenUble deaUi. Every hour a number of propi© in UUs country try to take Uirir Jives — or moke a half-hearted attempt

, — awl each year coou 18.000 - more succeed.SdentfKs esUmnte ihat In ouj

galaxy alone there may be any­where fi«m 10 to a too thou.«nd planets capable of susuunlng boric form ot 1W«. Tc* bis problem*' How to find tho!« pluiMA, how tc communicate wlUi the forms of life on Uiem — If they do mlo

It'S hard for the dieter to win. If you are a nonsmoker, the'odd* are Uwt.you are fonder of oake*. s*tet« and chocolate Uuui a heavy smoker. On the other hand. If you do smoke, you probably jo In more fof fOoas"v.'Ith ililg h fat cohtenl

It was Heywood Broun who said ot falUit “Wtthout a belief, a man It helpiearicolnst Um dragons.”

Henry McLemoreROME, luly—pew people know

U, and fewer care, but this col­ls probably Uie last word

when It come* to keeping In touch with Uie rise and fall, economic­ally. ot the communist world.

It U no easy t**k, let me tel you that.

The economies of the communist countries go up and down furiously than Uie,Udes ot the Bsyl of Punday. One day Uie commu­nist economy Is' outstripping the' world, and thel next It 1* lover!Uuui a well . ger‘* boou. A few] day* ago our eco­nomic bureau (It occupies an enUrgl linen closet In a w»umof» alde-tueet pesvfiontl had word from the Eut Oeminn government that it aoon would forge ahead of

t Oermany in prosperity, especimiy In Ute matter of con­sumer goods.

pur ec onomic bureau duty flashed UiU 10 Uie world. The ink

scarcely dry on Uie flash when word came In from East OtrmMiy Uial it wa* in Uie Uiroc* of an economic crisis and i closing all of Its airplane plants.

, This ihDws you what we i.... up against In keeping Uie world ■'* - - - how Uilnjs are goingInformed___________behind the Iron Curtain. A boast U no sooner made Uian It is flat- tcnedjiy a sutement saying, “Woe

China Is a tremendous headache to our bureau. Tiree of,our as­sistant economUU have gotie

craxy, plain craty, trying » up with what Is going on U «=■ping and its surroundings.

Only a UWe *hlle sgo ^ announced that half the ot China were produttas ateel a day. Uiat Uianks w »commune system farms « « K i aU.Ume high, and t h a t ^ were being poured Into Uie pfO«. Oon of a bomb. .

Hard on the heels of thW mlsuc announcementdal word Uiat millions of were Uireatened by starvsiW^ that rice and "heat bought by the shlplosd from g_ trail* and Canada to k«P nese body and soul within dUtanee. ,

J “ weVre“’comfortrf

the prepotonas the iron Curtain counirle

Think of th# miseries oi —

^°m lle Uie rllht ha"^

ine sway at » ' ^r do these

seu of propaganda m l n ^ ^ for telling lies and <we ^ g, the lie* a « lies and h ^ ^ ^ j,truth as best ss we e«

The free „ all of those for a peanut *>utt«M W , b S .t ment* dont UU two **«

e v e r y — ■ r v ^ p «irOurburtaM hubec^»^K r

Ucsl that It Unt Ola ha* ever *etit a ow “‘•g—>

Page 5: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

Is S c e n e ,o f R ite

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Bread M a k in g Is O ffic e rs D iscuss M in i-C a s s ia G o lf U n it 's S fy le Show D e m o n s tra te d a t D ecio C lu b M e e t

MB. AND sins. DALE n. CHATTEUTON lt»m f phol»-tt«» tntrttlng)

C a to le W illiams T akes V o w W ith- D a l e C h a t t e r t o n

S l ^ u r t h 6Murd»y »tter- z i jSth « . ‘R’e bfldfsrewm U

* -an Jonnff Pr«ton re»l- 91 of DflUe.

^ Baa niKnon., A !«*« ^ hfflifd «Wi bMltel* f>l SITiri pink gliilloll »nd while

fMwrf the itlilnit for ihe5 S ! iw-a llllu «!«■

Mcorled by he

haw elwe » P *” *®'*

l.pslai ileetw. K»llop«l neek- je . '^ toulftnl *klri with 5«ce HHUxila the double n»te. Her esprtpTtUdl lllwlon wu held h I part cmted tl*r>. Her &rm tartrt TU » c%xtiie of pink aJtuitei tied with pink itreiun-

loltaitiA th« cfirritd anfceton budkeretiler.. belonslni; U bB piadmoUier.-Mfs. Irene Btt£,Kihl ■ni tridel tttendanU w

iS i Ikdid «)U* towni of eollon iM iQsnn* "Wte BC- eertiiad while carnation cor* MO. B i Lweil T»yior, »l4ler rill*Wle,Bl*br. woi m»lron of tor, Suta Beal. Utah Stale lolretv. Ucu. and Unda Wtl' taCiurt^Ux bride, nictifield. mtcHastiis. . fttm fflHlaru, In white, and

IkWr n;lsr. In pink, nieces oI tti We. lerred u flower (tlrls. XT eiRlM baikeu of petals and » c^U of flowers In thclf

U Fttenn. Nampa, teni'ed ai to sin. Bobby ^avel, Richfield, f|l i‘j« bearer. L>Ie Cole, PO'

ud Ren Peterson, Mont' Ti usheri.Ulams chost a Rray and

«!»t*i»-plece drcM witli a mul'

Marian M a rtin Pattern

ll*pleated skirt. Mrs. Lcltind Chat- tcrtoii chcM nn aqun dress. Both

corsaRes of white carnallons. Mrs. Skcem.. lh e. brldC*. Brand, mother,- wore n suit in navy blue acecnted wlUi • white jrarnallDn coruRe. - ~

Mrs. Vcrn n . Thomas playe<l the weSainR mnreh amTsaiiit "rXOVe Tliee" preeedlni: the ceremony. Mrs, Kenneth Johtuon wan her accompanist. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bkeem, DuhL uncle and aunt of the bride, snnn a duet, "I Love you Truly." Oene Williams, brother

' the bride, Idaho Fnlls, offered prayer.■A w p tlPn-^raa -heM in-the

church recreallon rooms after the ceremony. The bride's table, cover­ed with white linen. «ru centered with a lour.Uered weddlnR cake decorated In aqua and pink and lopped with miniature bridal pair.

Mrs. Bill Wllllnms. Provo. Dtah: Mrs, Oene Wflllama. Id.aho Falls, and Mrs. Donald Wllllnms, Carey, all ilslers-ln-law of the bride, served the weddlne cake.

Judy Wllllnms. Dietrich,Mrs, Dan Ralls. lUchfleld, reitlstcr* ed the 200 Buesls at the reception, Karen Smith, ahelley, and Mrs, Ed Peterson. Nnmpn. presided at the Rift table. Janice Chalterton, Preston, and Joyce Chalterton. Olorla Chntterton and Carol Chat- terton. all Boise, nieces of the bjldcRroom, a.ulsled with tlfl ranKcmenLv

Bill Williams, brother of the bride, wna recepUon host. Donald Williams, also b brother, wa mtisler of ceremonies. Wayn akeem played a trumpet solo with his wife os piano accompanist, and the couple snnR a request number by the newlytveds, “Love Is the Sweetest ThlnR."

Receptlonlsta were Mrs. Marvin WlnR and Mrs. Leo Peterson, aunts of the bride. Buhl; Mrs, William E, Flavel. M n. Clifford Dayley. Mrs, Pete Schmidt and Mrs, Clive Capps, Janet Flavel. Susan Flavel and MAdR« Hclderman assisted with servlnR,

OuUot-town relatives attending Included pareula of the brldt- sroom: two brothers, Oene Chat- terton, Preston, a n d lAOrand ' Chntterton. Boise, and families, and uncle-t of tJie bride, M, Skeem, Hollister: Lest«r Skeem, McCam-

and Roland Skeem. Twin Falls, nnd fomllles.

For a short honeymoon In Salt Lake City the bride chosca three- piece ensemble of (treen wool knit wltJrbelKC Rcceworle.1 and the cot'

IRS from her bridal bouquet. niB new Mrs. ChatterUan Is t radualo of RJchfleldTilBh"school

-he attended Ricks College, Rex- burR, for two years and U a ISM RTRduate.of.utAh 6tat« university with a deRrce In elementary cducn- tlon. She Is a teacher In the Die­trich school system.

Chatlert«n was itraduated from Preston hiRh achool and attended Boise Junior collese for two years. He waji Braduated from Idflho Stat« colleRe, PocaUllo, In I9S9

DECLO, Arril 3-Mr.«, Marjorie Olllesplf. liirlrv C(>\iii[v cxtciiilon home ami;. cirMUJiuir.Mcd brrad makms .-vi !iic •niiir-'d.iy mftline of the Tlli;(;v TlirUTrN club.

Mrt. Lau;rncr Ttioiiipson. pie.'- Idcnt. ciii;«-,ir;rcl tlif mc c t l n c which iiri;j n- iiir Dfclo hlsli AchDol hu-i:c rroiiiruinv room.

Spcclnl urrp iiifiiilwts of the H-1! rh::i sirLi ciioitini: clii’M with thrir ;r,nir!,>. Tlify were ilio Junior Kr-i[iv Kll^ nnd Irailcr. Mrs, AiiMlii \Vall:rr; llie Junli«-r Jllb and .\!r . Clifford Sution nnil K(!;Oi Mnllhpws. and Mrs. Jcanr'.'r KcliwnrKlrr and her- grmii):--------- ---- - '

MIS. Hoi;,;-. Krl'ry will nlletid the »pfcl.il Ir.idrr irMniMK sri.Mon on .wltvl j r.iirs nl tlit Burley ex­tension oll.cr. Mrv. AiiMln Walker and Mr', l^nl iVfstnn rrnrc.<ifnird the club tv; ti\p Home Dmio,«m- tlon club iiJirlct convcalloii at Rupert.

Tilt c.ikr funihhed Ijy Mr.v Tlionipson mid rceclvtd by .Mrs. Kebfcy.

RTfrrshiiirni. ttcrc nerved hv Mrs, Dale 'Kiiid "and ' Mr.i.~J3ck Chambfrl:iiii Thf next tneeilnB will be held fit the home of Normn Lou Whipiilr. Mrs. Tliompson will be co-hoilr.\'.

P res ident Leads W orsh ip S erv ice

Mr«, pierce Ronn, president of the Ophelln club of tJie Ilror- ga.n!icd_i.RSf|iiirdi^rMCtHedJlnL worship senii-e nt a meetlnj al the home of Mr.i. Ivan O. Mor.t- gomery,

Tlic theme "I wtU walk wlUi Him" and Mrx. Ronn presented two ^eadlnR , ■’Arm In Arm Wlih Ood" and "Where Two or Three.”

Tlie Invocation was given by Mrs, Lisle }Mllmcr, Roll call •rnscti Matthew:

Members dl.v;uMed a proRre.ulve supper with proceeds to go toward church Improvements. Ivan O.

ry save the benediction.Games were plnyed durlnR the

M iss K e m p e r Is . W ife ofTO erkTey

In C h u rc h R itesThe nre-Mde roonj of the Rnt

MfihixlLii diurcli was the i ft>r llie doub l e rlnit ceremony NUrcli 17 unltiiiR In inorrlaee Myi- n.i Keuiper. daucliter of Mr. and Mr.*. William Kemper, and Ron nld Mrrltley. non of Mr and Mil .M,u Merkley.

The Rev. EnrI Rlildle olenlnl/.rd llie rveninK rite.v The couple < chnnsed nupilnl vows Ijrfore backcrnuMd of brn^ c.indrlatir,! viiUl Mhlle lapcm and n Inn;* bou-' quet of pink sniipdraKons wrb silver lollase,

Oiveii in mnrrln^e by lier father.

lliirii shealh (Ire.\x wUli a fitted Jnrkcl accented wllli full sleevej iiiil;ii)iderrd In rrd. Jler w.-ilst. Iriiiiili veil of nylon tulle wa

irr<l to «. w.'lxlle Iftcc till, S.*ve irried while carninion.t <

nirntril Willi ihlne.Mnne.' nnd green •Ivr.iniers. ' . . •

Ui'mald Morrnw aliend, tlie bride n.i matron of honor. Slic ttore a Ian suit lined rIi nmichini! p r i n t , complementlnK accc.varic.) and a corsase of while carnallon.1. Donald Morrow served if best man,

Mr*. Kemper selected a blue lace over lAffeta ROwn with belRe cr iorir. and a corNiRe of pink c.irnniion.1. Mrs. Merkley chone a dark .lur trimmed beiRe suit will) belKit acces.iorleA and a cartage ycUnw carnauons. •

The green, pink and silver wed­dlnR theme was carried out al ihe reception held at tiie Dance center after the ceremony. The brlde'i

social hour and refreshments Inn Easter tlitme were served.The next meellnit will be held

April II at 180 WlrxchlnR street west with Mrs. Fullmer os hostes.i,

• » ¥ »

Tea Is F e a tu re dBy F ile r L e a g u e

FILER, April 3—Th« mother- dauRhter lea of the Junior high school was held Thuriulay after-

the hlRti school audi­torium.

Barbara Brown. Olrls’ league president. Introduced her officers and pre-wnted a cornaRO to the leajfue’s sponsor, Mis. Jcano Carj-

Mlu Brown also announced the profrram which consisted of sonRa by the Junior high school chorus and a play by a number of the students, other entertainment In­cluded solos and duets,. Instru­mental numbers, a twirling solo and a hula dance. A style shcAv of fashions of year* ago and now concluded the oftemoon'a enter­tainment.

Mothers of the league'iS officers presided at the Ua Ubl« which featured decoratlona In lavender and white.

"Jo b ie ’ o fW e e k " N o te d b y B e the l

Gerry Gurley was named "Joble of the week" at the meeUnR of bethel no. 43. Job’s Daughters, the Masonic temple.

The meeting was conducted by

A birthday anniversary parly was held after the meeting with members given favors reprcsentlns each montli.

with a deRTts In physical educa­tion, He has been coach at Rich­field high school the poat two years.

The newlyweds are at home In lUchfleld.

Gare of Your ChildrenBy ANGELO PATRI

The baseball season was open* Ing, and Peter, aged S, had hit bat, baU and glove out for In­spection.

"Guess I I I have to have a new bait, Dad. Tills one Is whacked lopsided. Do you think I could hava one?"

■•Why not? Wen go to the store early Saturday morning and pick

«Ewi.so

P.». ^ Marlin, limei

®«MlJeenUnow|

engage In. aad'hls mother wid, “Are you golnt to let him play on that field with those rough boys? He's too young, too IltUe.-

"Nonsense. He's S and sturdy enough for his age. What do you want to do?- Keep him a baby? He's been ploying ball on the lot for ages. Sure he'll play on his team."

Peter played on hi* Uam as all small boys play. There were loud aliouls. louder arsuments. some hitting and base ninalag, and much fun. once a week a teacher looked on, saying lltUe unless he was called on to referee, which was often.

‘Theyre learning.” he reported. “Coming along nicely."

Then ODe afternoon afUr the game, on 'UlB way honie, when Peter and hla friend were aky- «rklng. Peter fell off the fence he was climbing, and cracked his, collar bone. -There," sold his mother. "Now you see."

•'Don't -Poor child' Wm. He'll iun'lve. It's A hard way to learn, but most of us learn that way.-

Nobody likes to m« a child break w bone or Injure hlmsell In any *.»y-bul we must occept.the.lact that there I* risk In every motion « make, i f we make no motion »« get nowhere, leom aothlnj.

FILER - Hillside Helpers club , 111 meet Wedne.vlay nt the home of Mrs. l.aurft Miller.

♦ ♦ *BUHl^Home Culture club will

meet at 1:15 p,m. Friday for lunch­eon at the home of Mrs. Ernest Baxter. AsslstlnR will be Mrs. lln: n Davla and Mn, Fcrd Dlerktr- soti. Officers will be elected. Mem­bers are a^ed to bring a suijject

object of their hobby to the meeting.

* VBUIII/-Chapter No. 38. Order of

EMtern Star, will meet at B:15 pm, Thursday al the Masonic temple to elect officers.

* *Lend-a-Hand club will meet at

3 p.m. Wednesday at Uie home of Clara Stokesberry, 3i3 Van Buren street.

* *SH08HONB—A Oliver tea will be

given by the Opal Rebekah lodge from 3 to 4:30 pjn. Friday at the lOOF hall. Funds mlsed will 30 to the United NaUons pilgrimage.

•tt ¥ ¥. eo-Joumey club luncheon will be

held al 1 p.m. Saturday at Wray'/ cafe. Reservations may be obUlned by phoning Mrs. .Hugh Drown. R.Bdwood 3-5801, or Mrs. Eda-ln Barker, REdwood 3-7S32.

¥ ¥ ♦BLISS—Mr.-'. James Fnulkner

./ill be hostess for the Flower club's Ruc.tl day meeting at 3 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs. Aldrich Bowler will show slides on The'Nether- Umda.__________■___

with neau of tiny ....on the tables, Baskei.i of spring flowers al.io were placed on the Ubles. Mrs. Peggy Payne and Mrs. Shirley Dickson were In charge of the dccoratlon.1.

Special prlMS were received by Mrs. Leona Rehm and Mrs. Wood­row Kettle. Mrs. Lyle Mecham and Mrs, Mel Ander.wn. Rupert, — In charge of publicity.

anniversary HOlUr.. , .......from 3 to 4 pjn. at the home «f her daughter. Mrs. Harold Oreen- awall. All friends are Invited. Mrs, Church requests no bifta. Her

achieve nothing. This also holds for the children. We have ‘ courage them to try out r perienees and train them os beat we can to avoid danger without making them afraid to venture.

E\*ery mother shivers at the thought of a child riding his bike on the highway. There is certainly a grave risk Involved but It may be necessary for that child to leani to ride a bike safely.■ Tlien tliere Is swimming. All boys and girls must learn to swim. Surely there U a risk but with leaching and experience, the ac> cidenU are few. I

Ju.it walking down the street can be a risk. If we bind children with cuf fears we do them grave Injury, mentally and physically. Life Is full of risks, some clear to ui all, some hidden, and the only way to live with them is' bmvely.

If we hide fear until we lose It. and free the children to do oa much on their own os their strength allows, we lay the foun- daUon for a future of eonfldence and power. ______

L O W E S T

C A R P E T

P R IC E S !"Drive Out and Sav^

W a lk e r 's

Y o u th s G ive P laylUCHnELD, April 3-A one-act

play. "Wilbur Minds the Baby," was presented by ^^A youth Wednesday evening at the LD3 church. Mrs. Grant Flavel direct­ed the play.

Taking part were Dawnelta King, Lana Sanders. Mary Ann Lee. Marilyn Crowther, Mrs. Iona Perrera, Alva Richardson. Keith Thomaa and Gary Moates.

¥ * ¥MEET TO QUILT

HEYBl}RN, April S — A quUUng bee was held Wednesday at Uie home of Mm. Melbert Taylor. Din­ner was served by the hortees 0.1- aisled by her daughter, Mn. For-

Son.

S o c ia l C a le n d a r Le ag ue in F ile r H on o rs Fa thers

FILER. April 3-Members of the Girls’ league senior unit honored their fathers with an annual •'dftddy dinner date" last week at Filer hiRh school. The decorations featured a Dutch .theme.

Sftlly Lutes, president, -welcomed the fatliers with the response ' ' Kern Thurman. Mistre.ia of ct.- monle* was Judy Thurman, vice president,- The Invocation g i«n by Potrlcla Dierkcr.

A program wos presented after the potluck supper which was served by the Key club. Judy Wan’, p l a y e d --------------- -

- Mrv. Lee Ijnen, Rapert, standlnc left, preildenl of the Mlni>Cassla Ladle*' Golf aaooeUlIon, looU over the procram given al Its annual luncheon and ilyle show Wednc«day afternoon with Mn. Del Jtupert. vice president. lUndlng right; Mn. Kent Woodall, seated left, secretary, and Mrs. Ilowtll Gnau, sealed right, treasurer, all Hurley. ISUff photo.engravlng)

.¥ ¥ ¥

M in i-C a s s ia G o lfU n it S ta rts Y e a rW ith S ty le ShowBURLEV, April 3 —The annual

Mmi-Ca-ula Udies Golf-'ossocla- llon luncheon and style show Wednesday afternoon at the Elks hall was well attended.

One of the highlights of the pro­gram was a Mtlre skit portray­ing iwo women on the golf course.II depleted the "ridlculou.^" to the '•sublime' In womanhood. Mrs. Dan Howarth tvnd Mrs, Wendell Me- Murrny were the "characters.”

The tables formed a large "U" and, the models paraded to a email platform In the ccnter. New sports­wear ensembles were shown through the courtcsy of the Anne shop, Mayfair, Style shop and Roper's.--

Modeling the spring fashions In pastel shades and white were Mrs Marva Nelbaur. Mrs. Bert Soren­sen. Mrs. McMurray, Mrs, Donald Holmes, Mrs. At Thaxton, Mrs, Col- Jeen Kerbs and Mrs. Cleo Kerbs.Mrs. L. H. Horrls was narrator.

Two dogs, "Scotch ’ and "Sodo.' belonging to Garntl Taylor, wor< blue and green to complement the gold blouse and matching Bermuda shotU showtv by Mrs. RowKlh.

Mrs. Lee Larsen, president. Ru­pert, was mlslre.« of ceremonie: and Introduced. Rulon Budge who spoke to-lhe group on new rules and golf course etiqutte.

Records ased for background mu­le were supplied by Mrs. Marvin

ChrlsteMen.' The hea'd' table was centered with a driftwood Easter egg Uee and halves Of mulU-colored eggs

cloth made by her mother trimmed with nn array of smilax caught to elusiera of pink snapdragons. The cake wnii baked and decorated by the bride with pink and white car- nailoai. sliver bead trim, swans, dove.s and topping of a cluster of weddlnR belU accented with net bows and lily of Uie valley.

Clusters of plnlLand whlU flow-

wlth silver holders of green tapers on elUier side. ServlnK was Mrs. Flora McCartney. Carol lUnkle- man was hostess at Uie punch

Quick Service on

K O D A K

F IN ISH IN G

T E E D O MP H O T OlU Shosbooe 8L North

8bop located nnder WUer Dng, cotroaee on the all«y

(WE GIVE S&H aiiEEti STAMPS)

by Karen Klrkman, Unda Shank snng a solo, accompanlcd by Karen Kalbflelsch. Rae Von Skeem pre­sented a humorous reading.

¥ ¥ ¥

League C a ro lsFILER. April 3-Membcre of the

C low Walther league caroled at Magic Valley Memorial .hoepltol and tiie Sky View Manor Friday evening.

The league held an Ea*t4S' bre«ik- fnat at the Clover ocIkwI after the Easter Sunrlw service.__________

Individual Ruest tables covered with white, green and pink Uhle- cloths featured centerpieces of green shamrocks sprayed with sil­ver and pink.

Beulah Sloueck registered guesU end Dennis Summers. Janet Sum­mers artd Sandra Brown presided over the gift Uble.

Students of the Dance center presented .a program.

On relum from a wedding trip to Utah the coupte li at home at 31S Eighth avenue north. 1116 bride Is a 1»«0 graduate of Twin Falls high AChool and ihe bride- Rroom was graduated from the lo­cal high school In lOM.

Among the out-of-town gucsU ere Mr. and Mrs. Pearson and

,.udy Prudek. all Buhl; Mr. and Ktro. Leo Reeder, Mr. arid Mrs, William F. Reeder and family and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Reeder, all Hyde Park, Utah; Mrs. N. W. Merkley and Ruth Merkley, both Idaho Falls, and Ronald Kemper, Pocatello

¥ ¥ ¥READ TIMES-NEW8 WANT ADS

Delta chapter. Alpha Delia Kap­pa. will hold a dinner meeting at 7-30 p.m, Wednesday at the Rog- erson hoUl Desert room.

TV SERVICEA ll M akes

P H IL C O T U B E S

Improve ony n t

RE 3-6146

W fL S O N - B A T E S

A P P L IA N C E

«V(3(V)CW0£M«X»£^^

“ H v c

'‘ O lt h y !mif i f t y * .

- ------- 1

___________ i

E U R O P EW e con- Book Ar<y Tour you've reod about or help you ^ o o s e one of thou* sonds ovoiloble.

No Service Chorge.

M AG IC CARPET TRAVELS

RE 3-1668

T e m p le R ite Set

LOriSK PKTKItSOS •

Louise Peterson A n d F ra n k R eid

P lan F a ll R itu a lWENDfXL. April 3-Mr», Ruby

J. I’fterMin BtiniHinerx the enRSge- ment of her diuiRhter, l.oiibe. lo Prank L. Reid, Aon of Mrs. Vera C, Reid. Lund. Nev.

The hriile-eiecl was graduated fnm Wendell high school and at­tended Ricks collegr. Rrxburg. one year. She taught In the Wendell elemrnter)' tdiool two years and

n 'iJ tf. bnt la al- trndlng Drlsham YounR univer­sity. Provo. UiAh. where ahe will receive a B.S, degree June 2,

Her fiance attended the Uni- veriiiy of Nevada two years and served three yean In the.armed forces. He is engaged In farming.

Plana are being made for a fall aeddlfig ceremony «C (h« Idaho ywn. t.rw I>mpu

S andro A b e l W il l H ead Y o u th U n itn tE R . April 3 — Sandra Abel

was elected president of the Junior Baptist Youth Fellowship of the First Baptist church at a meet­ing last week.

Other officers chosen are Lind­sey Johnson, vice president; De- lores Butts, planbt; Uoyd Hardes­ty, Christian faith; Dorlnda Dun­lap, Christian wltnefts; Jenny Lou Rutherford. ChrUUan world out­reach; David Ilardesty. OhrlstUa dtlunshlp. and Judy Smith. Christian fellowship.

¥ ¥ «

D ire c ts LessonHAOERMAN, April 3 — Mr*.

Emest'Tolley trave the social m U ence lesson on values of life at the Relief society meeUn* last w^k.

Mrs. Charles Sherwood conducted Ihe meeting. Prayer* were led by Mrs. Joe Haycock and Mn. Floyd March. ‘ , , .

H O T

A S P H A L T

For Drive*, Parking Loft, Potlof, Efe.

FREE ESTIMATES

RE 3 - 1 8 2 9

Magic VeJley

Asphair Paving Co.

Checkscostlessthanmoneyorders

The cost of a postal money order nint from 15 to

30 cents — and they can't be written for more

thar> $100. With a check you can sat>d any amount

at less cost In fact, checkbook money has become

so popular It pays for over 90% tt all.flnancl^

transactions. Put checkbook money to work for

you, too, with

low cost •> no minimum balance — no charge for

deposit* — rto nulsanca daductlons — checks are

Only all-purpose commercial banks offer check­

ing account services. In this area, you will find

TWIN FALLS BANK & TRUST CO.. “your Ban)dng Partner Since 3905”

T W IN FALLS ..................... K IMBERLY

Page 6: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

PAGE SIX TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Cassia Creek Forecast for 1961 Is Less

SORLET. April 3 — Th* »»ter loraeut tor C w U creek u ilifhu

' tr UtM t b u iMt jH i. retwrU NcU : mmiMftn. aoU ccnMmUonUt o(

Ui« Burkr aoU conienr»Uoa otflce.■nw loreeut U «bout M per cent

of nonu l but there *r« v e u In IiUbo where (he (orecut u 33 per ceot «ad p lu a In UUh where It 1« 0Ql7 d(ht per cent or ooniuil, be deelftTKl.

rereawtf Olrea rorMuts ror the Subfelt

CusU creek, end the tonow to 4ne ( j i t i .*Oekler teeerrolr were me<ie * i ................U iit* Qrence hiU end Oi___hlnti Khool meeUngs. MerrlMi W.

' NeUoa, 8C8 now eurver luperrU* or tor the Columblk Hirer buin made the tortcasU and Jack Walker. 8C8 engineer, Burley, led • diacuailon on proper lue of Irrl* gauon water control aritema and the Umlnc of Irrigation.

One of Die main points brought .out at the meeting* waa that the past hliton' o{ anow couraea ahowi Uiere la no trend In anow water from one year lo the next, and that there la no baala In forecaat- Ing ne« year'a anow from whal haa happened the prior yrar.Tlooda are m lUtljr aa a drouth,Sampaon aald.

Belt la Dry The fact that anow deptha on

moet of the couraea are greater than laat ytat U olftet br drr » n . dltlona of the coll under the anow pack. Bampeon pointed out.

‘The mountain aolla are

MAGIC VALLEY RADIO SCHEDULES

K B A R

take a good portion of mow water to aoak the loll before any run>off or atream flow occura." he aaid.

Snow aurreya were made at One Ulle anow eourae. Howell canyon, Sot Scout camp, fiubJeu anow courae. Summit aprlnga. BoatetUr ranger ilatlon and Badger gulch.

Two Attempts at- Burglary Noted

Twin Tttllj pollw Inveatlgated two burglary altempta during the week>end. Chief Howard Olllette aaid Monday. Apparently, nothing waa remoied.

Entry ol Vnlted AutomoUre, Inc- aervlca department, SM Third alreet eaat. waa attempted between 6 pin. Sunday and 12:10 kjn. Mon- d«r, A frouod'/foor window paas v u broken on the atreet aide of thobuUdlne. A prellmlnuT cheek ahowed nolhlsg mlialng.

A alx-lneh hole In a aecUonal wlodov, near the window Utch, vaa dUcoveted at the Tliometx Top and Body worka. >50 Main arenue north, Friday evening. Ofllcrra aald no entry waa made and noLh* tog wM reported mUalng.

Gdld Valued Near $200,000 Is TakenORAND JUPIDS, Mich., April 3

m —FoUce preaied « aearch to> day for daring profeaalonal "gold buga" who brated t»r .g aa -

' Eaater 8unday-to loocwoo,oo( gold and aomo diamond# from of the naUonl largest makers of school and fraternity rins*.

The burglary of eight tafea ahut down the IL H. Thomberry com­pany. also a top manufacturer of jea-elry emblems for fraternal and schotaiUo groups, pending an In- Tcntorr of the exact loss.

C. R. AmstnsiR, co-owner of the firm, aald It "may take weeks.- to find out what the thieves got. An estimated SOO gold sheeta were known to be rolssJnr pJus m u known number of silver sheeu.

KEEP' (|U« KUoCTcUfl}

SiU S«*ru Nm

iMru II iM riM<gr« T

l«:v* Cluk

ue4Tw.4«r

1*iftO akbruM Kn»>ur lOilt FUuur* TIb* tOi>» lp>ru Nm

K L K

s s s s .T .s z :

4|3* C4»Li(kt liM H,w,I.U A.4, D«to

KTFI

TCUUAT

‘. S i . . .

KART(ItM KUocydca)-

«it* tp«n<(lU K*KTaMt«tavi«iU N m

«!u ! i« ^ UmBMk - «;U-t^Ua kmtntMM

11l l la IhkS;S* C*r*l>tJ la Bm *

ItiM D1bmcB<U r*<«p

lliU E>»«nI rtO K*w» tiM Urr7 W«lua

I.Ml uu»dir4 liOl D*rr«ll IUbm* 4iM 8Mjid«H N*w* (:0I VuMd akfas TiOO MvriM. K m TiU As<tr till*

«:M Aodf OkU loig* Ntwt ll-«« Ntm lli«t aifii Of^

. j t a t S K i :tiMi J t Ca^ta

«« NmuiHMna SMiir M Dt*<« TIa*M tK« »lt

Of $25 Slated ToTop YoiitliBtmLET. April 3-A |» award

wlU b« made by the Pomona Orange to an ouCaUndinr mture F^er.ot-Amarlea.jmtur»-Home>' maker of America or 4-K club member. It waa <tecld«d at the Saturday night meeting with the CUremont Orange aa host.

Ktaster Rex Madden. Burley Orange, presided. The Pomona Orange Is compoMd «f the Glare- mont, Burley, Albion,, and Raft River Oranges. Selection of award winner will b« made through the Cassia county agent's office and Keith Amende, Albion.'chairman of the youth committee.

Jim Chatbum, Albion, loa of Mr. and Mrs. Vard Chatbum, had been given a national Orange jrouth award as an outatACdlne Orange member.

Olenn Bodily, Caaala county ex­tension agent, at>oke on control of alfalfa weevil and pea aphid.

Ennll Jerome. Kuna, state mas­ter. will visit the Albion Orance April 11, New Pioneer Orange In Minidoka county, April 13. and West End Orange. Emerson, April IS.

Vard Chatbum spoke on leglsla- tlva mattcra during the lu t Urm of the leglstature.

The program Included a poem by Donna Bergener, acrlpture by Mrs. Ruiull-Bhockey and a couple of Easier hymns suns by Ihe group.

-------------•in the

■ ThU daily acbedola «f lettvWoB and radio prograBia is pnMStc4 >p I as a service ta rtadtra of the T t o f N ii^ Uitlaga aw tBmlahed fty

~1heitatloa.~Auj'uiuis ui'itiaiiiei alivuW b* repuilod l 9 ............ItacU asd net tb» TlBica-Niws.

Mrs. Bell Heads Cancereaiwass

,-CaiKer~»ocleiy for U»e Haaerman

Scott Preston. Mn. Russell Soyer, Mrs. E E Polwell. Mra. Olenn Hendrickson, Mrs. George Palaieri Mrs. Bill Choules, Mn. Del Plnks-

Mrs. Joe Howard, Mrs. Emer* ton Boyer, Mrs. Jim DartoRl. Mrs. Sam Tale, Mrar. Stanley Klrtland, Mrs. Percy Pollard and Mrs. Faye Bockslcad. The}' may choose an asslatant to help canvaia their designated areas.

The campaign begins Sunday and ends AprU 18.

Demonstration Is , Given 4-H Group• SHOSHONE, April 3—A demon- itration on patching was given by Mrs. Larry Tews to members of the Merry Mlxfrs 4-II club last week at the home of Mrs. VIvan Jackson. -

Diana Ilclsley. president, con­ducted the meetlnii. Members de­cided to pay 10 cents dues each mertlng and to use the money for a parly.

Arts and crarti will be taken as a project this year. Next meet­ing will be April 12 at the Tews home. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Jackson.

Hubcaps Taken. Two Twin Falli men reported the theft of q>lnner t>-pe hubc»ps from their cars to Twin Falls po­lice Saturday. TTie thefts occurred sometime Friday nlcht.

Devem Fahrenholr. Twin Falls labor camp, said four hubcaps were stolcil from his Dodge Lancer and Jack Tucker. 1730 Ninth ave­nue east, reported four hubcaps taken from his 19S0 Chevrolet.

W o r r y o f

F A L S E T E E T HS lip p in g o r I r r i t a t i n g ?Don't b« acnbuTUMd by Ioom (kit*• ' -pptoi.aTOpUMtcrwoObUa«

nt Ml, t«a CT u y t». Juit

01*4*aal powotr attc* a --M or kdOrt eomrort

boliUnt pIktM moT*

tMW sUpptBt. (U wban Tou kT- -

Easter Is Chilly; Mixture Follows

By United Pren IntenaUonal

, A chilly Easter week-end for much of the nation gave way today to an April weather mixture of darting rain clouds. sklta-Oi winds nd a wide temperature spread. Skies were generally fair from

New England-'along the Atlantic coast, across the South and 8outh<

la. Warmer weather headed for the central Oulf and Muih At­lantic states.

■pfidieted scattered ihunder&hovters over the middle MLulsslppl valley. Wivning fwyjnlnpal rain In the lower Ohio valley smd imow flur­ries along a'path northeast. Show- erelh westerjTMontana and drls- tle In the Pacific Northwrjt pleled the rain picture.

Hagerman Judge Fines 2 DriversJIAOERMAN. April S-Two drlr-

,ra were fined during the weri- end by Justice of the Peace EllU B. Alien.

Jack W. nifer, Boise. wn« fined t3i and costa for failure to obey a traffic citation artd and costs for driving with an expired driver's license. He waa cited Nov. SS on the license charge by Slate Pntrol- man Waller KlrUey and appeared before Judge Alt^n on a bciich larrant. "Eldon William. ,Hobb,». Motib,

Utah, was fined tSi and conu Sot- urday for violating the overwldth resUlcUons on a truck, lie was cited by Stale Patrolman Richard

Straw BurnsBURLEY. April 3 - Children

plajine .wUh matoh« were be­lieved to be the cnu.*« of a stmw fire 100 fe«t aouth of lath stm t here at 10:30 a. m. Thursday. Ac­cording to Otis \vuilAm.% Burley fire chlrf.

Tlie wet KnouldtTlng ton of stnw kept Uw ftmnrn at the scene unui 2:50'p. m. The sU»w u-aa believed to haw belonged to OUs Orton.

T elev ision L o g

K L I X . T V

it Riflit__ CoBtMirillan

ie:HTniUi er CeB>n««iitM

Declo’s School Youths Present 3-Act Operetta

DECLO, April >-The Decio ele­mentary school presented a three- act op<retla, “in the Utnd of Dreams Come True," Thursday slghU

Students taking port were ISvi- lyn Osterhout. Oary Darrlngion. Nadine Thornton, MUce Priest, Su­san Tumer.Leloa Anderson, Elaine Darrlngton, Sam Matthews, Caro­lyn MatUiews, Jlmmy'Kldd. Shar­on Rae Sutton, Gene Kopenlck. April Richardson, Ray Bagby, Iris Chamberlain. Ken Saxton, Steve Matthma, OaimA Saxton, Stanley Preston, Diane Olllette. Terrll Hurst. Karla Walker, John Ander- aon. Nancy Preston, Karen Turner, Pal Reed. Owen Jacobs, WUeen Kidd.' Jaiile Delgado . Randy Mende. Karl Darrlngton and Jay Wardle.

All six grades presented special 'numbers In costumes.

Tommy Olbsoo. Dan Darrlngton, Ken cobbley, Darrell Bortx. Danny Warren. Ronny Kidd. Richard os- UrhouUand-AlbsrV.Sow«ra-dld-a can-can dance. Pamela Oununer-m was the accomp«nlst.Teachers helplng.wlth.

Mrs. lone‘'Ball*y.Clare Peterson, Mrs. Anne Lewis.

Thomas Wright Taken by Death

JEROME. April 3 - Thomas Wright, 17. died at Magic Valley Manor Monday morning after a llnserlng lllne.'s. Mr. Wright was born Oct. 15. 1S83, at Alcona, la. Tliere are no known survivors.

Oravcslde sen-lcM will be held at n ajn. Wednesday at the Je­rome cemelery wllh the Rev. Dale Vandergrlft offlclallng under di­rection of the Crlppln funeral home.

Toll Is 46^rIDDLE^ON. AprU 3 in-Idaho

(raffle fatallUea this year were <« today with tlie death of a 16-year' old Middleton girl In a one-car accident a half mite west of here

stato highway 4t early ycsier' day morning.

Can>-on county Sheriff Dnle Haile said Sandra Hendrlch was killed InsUntly whrn a car driven by Rudy Kent Mlllrr. a 18-year- old Caldwell boy. left the road, went Into a borrow pit. struck the raised entrance of a driveway and flew end-over-end, landing o: wheeb.

DOES.. . . G e t t i m g U p N ightsM A K E Y O U FEEL O L D

uul kKunty t>r boliUnt

M r u f i ^ a s a a r d

II

:0 Uik of NIaht -0 a«>nh for Toa»»m t CuldlBg Usbt <0 Am«rleia llandiui

” KeCra>0 ralh^r Knox 0« .g KlJX Vltwt ib« V

IS!10 KUX iltadllBM

star VisitorsNoted for Filer

PILER April 3-Wayne Schmldl, Daniel Itoesler. Harold Bchroeder and EUetn Llerman, who are tending college a( Portland.

the Eaxter .vacatloa'wlthUielr families.

Ur. and Mrs. William Wells and son. Morris. N. Y.. have beta guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Haag and family.

House guests of Mr.' and Mrs. Wilfred Herrett and family were Richard Mitchell. Phoenix, Arlt.. and Mn. Stelle Duddleston. Idaho Palls.

Mrs. Lcul,ie McEwen. who h u been visiting her mother. Mrs. Ruby Blskeslee. rteuroed to her home In FTultlaod.

Resolutions and Reports Planned

Three reports and two resolu­tions are slated to be discussed by Twin Palls city commlasloners at 1:30 pjn. today at the city hall.

Reports scheduled will be on tlie water supply, sewsge treatment project and drilling at tli# airport and Lynwood wells.

One resolution Is expected to establish policy for water service to re.ildcnts outside tiie city lim­its. The second resolution will au- thorlw the execution of coopera, tlon agreement between the city, school dUtrlct No. 411 and the Twin’ Palls housing authority.

Other items on the agenda In­clude approval of the March pay­roll, building permit, license applU cations and monthly departmental reports.

Linda Shaff Will Lead Kler Club

FILER. April J-Llnda Shaft wai chosen president of the Flier Four- Leaf Livestock club at the first meeting of the year.

Terry Shaff Is v ice..............Janle> Pierce, secretary; Oayle

o^treasurer: Gordon Storrs. re- xttr. and Stan Shaff. senteant-

. l-arms. Ricky Storrs. Bemie Jay Reese. Clsrk Kauffman, Joyce Te- san and Jerry Tlieener pointed to the entertalnn mlttee.

Members decided to begin out' door cooklns as a club project with Mrs. Ed Shaff In charge of the lessons.

•Ih# club voted to have each

Shoshone People Attend T.F. MeetSHOSHONE. April 3—Mrs. Ben

Walker. Mrs. B. A. Mabbutt. Mrs. llnsel_ll?iddocfc_.«nrt_Mn*,^jV._«,

. . attended a mccUng of the Eplficopal church missionary dla- trlct of Idaho last week at Twin

The Rev. and Mrs. John Shaw and Mr. and Mrs. C. D, Low at­tended an Assembly of Ood dli- trtct convention In Nampa re­cently.

Mrs...Marie Burton has arrived home after a three-month visit In Colorado and Mluourl.

Power FailureRICHFinX). April 3-L lgh ts

In Richfield. Carey and the Hailey rea were out for obout 4S min- te. Friday evening.Slate Patrolman WDUam.Van-

Dyke. Shoshone, reported that a conductor cn the power lines at Hnilry shorted out atwut 10 pm. Power service was restored about 10:44 p.m.

Former Area Teacher .Will Give Lectoe

A former Jerome Junior high school teacher. Marahall Plshrr. will present a science program de-j signed to demonstrate some of the fascinating upects of chrmlsirrl and physics at the Twin FaUs high' achool next week. I■ Tfle University of Oregon trav­eling science demonstratlon<Iec- ture program will appear at the lo-i cal high school from April 10 ■through 14. It t« supported by'the National Science foundation.. Fisher, a IMS graduate from the

iiii i Not >in4iiB<a noiieite of Idaho, travels in MpecW tfluibpei "—wlUch carries all his demonstrailflo apparatus.,most of which he de* atgned and constructed himself.

Ttxe program U part of a nation­al movement to excite Interest In science as a career for high schoo atudenls to 'stimulate Interest in scieift e teaching and to encourtge tnchers and students in use demonstntlon apparatus.

While Fisher Is In Twin Palls he will be available for civic groups as well as Uie scheduled appearances at ths high achool.

Report Given on Filer Candidates

FILER. April 3-A petition for Lauren Butts for councilman frorr ward two was filed last week and i petition Is being circulated fo Walter Schenkel. candidate fo

Schenkel Is councilman from ward one now and his term ex­pires this year.

The election will be held Aprtl 35. Leonard Martin, ward two eounellman. and Henry Wejlen dorf. mayor, do- not plan to ask rcelecUon.

Kem Thurman, registrar, an­nounce*. regUlratloa. book&^ar* open now-at tha city office.

Rex O’Neil Going To Rifle MatchesFAIRFIiXD.Aprll 3-Rex O'Neil

la going to Ft LewU. Washni to compete In the sixth army reserve rifle maUhes April s to Ifi.

Mr. and Mra. Martin Luther and boys and Mra. Luther Koonce have returned from Bayvlew.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson have returned from a vacation in Arl'

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Edwards and children. Heybum, apent EasUr week-end with hU parents. Mr. and Mra. Zahnor Edwards, and her mother. Mrs. Ira Wolfe.

d s s o n s !

4 LegsORLANDO. Fla, April 3

Johnny Caldwell. 11. of sutnir- ban UDkm Park received an Eaater chick and t hought aoaeooe waa pUylng an AprU Fool« jc*e on him.

C. R. Douglaa, Oalneavllle, t m Johnny 33 eggs as a pres- cnt Saturday. By the time Johnny r>t home with the eggs. on« bad batched Into a four- legged chicken.

Johnny'a mother reported to­day the chicken U doing fine and walks on all four legs.

MONDAY, APl!ILs,li^

Rupert Elks Wj

Install New Slat.l O I ^ , April } - jcvj ^

Utahns^ VisitRICHFIELD. April 3-Mr. and

msuuM Tueaoay as eui-*.'•’ of tha Ropert Elks lodsc tof OenoTRedfofd.

Other officers e!ectt«] u... Include ' Don Tooiiai. u . ' knight: Robert Adsmj. knUht: Ptonk Urlgum knight: Hany. Colwell,-,;^:t France* L. Schmidt. tre«'iJ'^,'' OoQ DeThomas. tyler.

. Rusell Undatrom tv. ;for a five-year temi sj and .Oeofge_ Itedford «».>

Wtj

Salt Uke Clty.-spent the Easter hoUdaya. with hU mother. Mrs. C. A. Johnson, and other relatives.

Martha Hitch, BYU student from Tennessee. U vacationing with Sandra Kubsmlth at the Seymour ilubunith home.

Mr. and Mrs. Oary Rubsmlth and daughtcra, Boise, ipcnt Euter wllh relativea.

Break-in RennrinjBtmL. Apnl 3-A biril.i

Wright Fuel company »ss tnr~' cd by Darrell Looi. ager. Apparently nothinj Uken. “

Buhl Police ailef T. M r.k drlck aaid U»e vandsli ehm trance by prying oprn tht Vi-i door. Hie window, of Hit Ca-. the main office was brckfn '>, ■

had not been cr,i„«

TUESDAYA t T h e F u n S po t

I IA U A HNIGHT"SERVED BUFFET S T Y L r*

SPJTOHETTT-r- R»VIOES(-^-*-■ M EAT-intlLrti

Served with Cactus Pere's Famous gourmet Italian Souce

Combinotion tossed green solods, your choice of dressings

12 different choices o f relishes

Sliced tomotoes, breod sticks, garlic sticks, rye bread, Itolion sour dough breed.

Famous Italian Gcrllc.Sausages, Polish Sausages, Cocktoll Fronts — Gorbana Beans

SERVED EVERY TUESDAY FROM 6:00 P.M.

ALL YOU CAN EAT—

FOR O N L Y _____________ 1.50

membership drawing every Tuesday!"

N o t h i n g t o b u y . ' J u s t r e g i s t e r

C lip This Check And Cosh It fo r ^1.00 ij

'■ 4

ICACTUS PETE'S SAND BANK OF THE DESERTJackpot, Nevsds, Wedoeaday, Apr. S

ONE AND NO/lOO_____D0LLAI18

, NEV/AU-CARTOON FCATURE ■

• a n i f l l t e J !B(/CACTUS PBTEr-|;

l i ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a i

Boon Open 1;1S Men. A 4:M Tue.

FEATURES.

SINUSSufferersm.t. «« . .. . .

............ • S«Gtiic(M

itawtrMf- ■ -

T«nc.r.vcEx riunuAcr

FARMERS!PROTECT YOUR HAY CROPS

Spray Now fo r Alfalfa Weevil! . AIR or GROUND SPRAYING Reeder Flying Service

Phono RE 3-5920

PnHISEUEIiS. tm c m im im is i

At 9:M Only

I t t Run Admiition

AdiilH $1.00; Child Free

Adults 15« •U1 2 P. M.

Then JI.OOs Child U«

'TnM.t4IIt.liM I-

E M H J iRecUter for rrisiUes -Lockr fop"

I from 8bell7 ’a] Bar the 101 Animals

regulor drawings every Wednesday

N o th in g to B uy !

A U D IE M U R P H Y

^TOHELL |^«BACK

CmnsAScoMTtCMNICOLOPI

m U C K K EU Y

I SUSAN KOKNER-:o«u»c.»,

Door* Open 1:15 p .m .

D o m i} U>1m - |:U tiu ____ I91II

R A M O N A

V O R I S

Limited Engagement

SEE IT NOWAdults. Eva. l.«S. Hat. IIS

fried chickenD e lic ious G o ld e n C risp

$S o u th e rn Fried W ith A l l the T r im m in s !A l l ,Y o u Can Eat 1

I CACTUS PETE'SI Fun-Spot South of the Border!

Page 7: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

1-

M ONDAT,AMLS,i961 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE SEVEW

jforbeck Takes Hoitors at Sun Valley American Legion Junior Ski Meet

' A__!( n //O', ' ft forniPr Kollfurrr

Seattle Youth Wins Sun Valley Event

„.Tw ^ L L E Y . April n (/Ph-Jack Morbeck. Seattle, a fornier Kcll»/;r ^kier. ti)ok the ni the week-end Sun Valley .American LcrIoh ju p io r ^ k i meet. He won tlu‘

honors a . combined. Knren Korfaiitn of Pinedulo. W .vi.,. won tlie slalom Sun-dow-nnili «jjdg total time for two runs. But Sandy ShellwDrth. Boise, took tom-

b“ ’ed"hbno” She was th ird m the «talom but second in «he Kcirfafita,

pnsse ll. Defense

Have A id e d CelticsnnsTON. April 3 (/P>— Defense and B ill Ruflscll ore

“ reasons the Bonton Ccltics have the jum p on St. Loui.h In t ^ Notional Basketball association playoff finals. ■‘RuBScll was the key— his defense and reboundinR," Coach

Auerbach of the defendinR world champions said after

SundflVs 129-95 t r i u m p h S the Hawks. The fae.st- of.sDven series resumes here

Wednesday m uht.TO. «.foct. 10-inch nuMcll

rribbtd Jt rtbounds. bloekcd *?^ .b o iin (l iliois BDd on *ih,r oecMleM *»*<1 BMllcndlnB S pn hun when h# had dl- Hrtrf '»ure" »hou. He »1m hid S” t “ .nd u>U«a on-lDut- ether

•He »»* J»bulous,“ Auer-ledi

fljht." ehlmed in m n K Rtnuey * Kentucky ttammali

i St WuJ*' cm;/ lUgiM. the !Le'i high »cofer with 33 polnu 'Wednudiy the Important

nae If 8L Loula wins »e’ra In irauble, U we win we h*»o • good SS ie to win one of tho« t*le. tttrt wtek-ena pune* la BU Loul*

It up if l/ lrr”-- laiifcjiadfcPnil-Seymw.

nut TOT opttmUUe ct Ihc Htirlu" . .h.n«» Without Injured plvoimnn

■A cWe Lorellette, heart today he f muht hate the b\f juy for Satur- ' i t j t coaltit.

Canadians,* Hawks Ready

For PlayoffscmCAOO. April 3 WV-The Chl-

dso SItek Kawlu and Montreal Cutdtos tune uo to brief drilti today (or the sixth aad poulbly flBil fame of the Stanlo* cup Kml-nub pUyotfs.

A Tin for the Ifa « ^ In the Chicaio iUdlum TuMday nlRht tria put them In the flnaUi, tlie nrid Krttj of hockey, for the nnt Uot alnce 1944. Tlie llawki took • 3-3 }(*d In the Mrol-fJnalt wltha)*0 rlctoiy over the Cana>

. dlcai, the rtffular MMon league leaden, in Montreal Snturclay niftit. n e Hawka haven't wr tb* Stanley cup alnce 1031.n i chAinpion Caaodlem. who

tar* Toa the Stanley cup the last nrt yean, wlU b«’ eliminated If

» tb*T lot* Ou «lxtti ftste of the tat or tm n lerlea. If tha Cana- dlena vis, Uia aerenth same will bt pUytd lo Mootrnl Thuraday

*al|ht. with the wlnnner to meet the Detroit Red W ln« la the txat of aertn games finals for the oup. Detroit ellffiloatM Toronto ' four ctaea to oos Saturday with a 3 fa> 2 trlumpft.

Both the Kawki and Montreal tmerieil tram the game without any new Injurlei, but Montreal will be lacking 50-coal aeorer Ber- nil (Boem Boom) Qeotfrlon Tuei- day tUfht. He haa a t>adly Injured knee.

CA6ET TO FIGHT BAN PRANCaSOO. April 5 (tPO-

—Hank Caaty. the barber aupply ■'enspleye wHo waa trimmcd'lnnns

tut fl<bt by nory Calhoun, meeiii Irhh Mdle Andrtwa of Las Vfftaa tonight In a 10-round scrap at Ke-

,a r Pavilion. Casey moved Into fixch fpoc among the NBA^ mid-

.-dJewelght contenders last year

Classic for Best Bowlers To Commence

l l l h ill the downhill,, The—liinho-boya toam woii' the cvotU. WashinjTtoii was' >ecotia Hut tlip Wmhliigtotl tub'

Mortjr.ic's lime for the' two i!»- /oni ruu'v was UJ.8 aecondv Dave Engen o( McCall was ircnnrt ml 130 atirt ihird In tombincd. Jolm; Jonaj. or Boise, fifth In ihr -iliilom but 4rciiml in the downhill, uai aecomi in comblnrd.

Sunday’i Betulit

Boj-. >.l.i!otn;1. J.ick .Mortxck, SeoMe.

2 D.1VH1 EnKeii. .McOUJ, 130 0; 3. Spldfr R.iblch. K>-du«, C.illf.. 130i: 4. Pcier Baa-tt. Bwxunlxwt Sprlns.1. Colo,. 132.8: 5. Jolm Jonw, BnLsc. 133 4; 6. Norm Znciinry. Mc­Call. I3n ; 7. Dennis Akic. Mniii. month l.:ikrs, C.illf,. 135 8; 8. Ocrr>' mnnldl. Ktmtjerly. BrltWt Coluni-

DErmorr, Aprll3(LTt-Tnepimi;bln. UCZ; O, Scolt Hendcrxin. should-bcgln hopping thU week at; Banff, Altx-ru. aCnndn, 130.4; 10, the American Bowling Congresi Bill Vt'onnocoU, BaiiXr, Atbcru,

The Strolu. who won the ADC tl»e in 193S and b»*e UnliSiti Jn tlie prlr« money In every tourna­ment alnce Uie end of World war U Included second placta In 1DS7 and 1K8, will see acUon Wednes­day and Thursday.'•

The I*alsUff8, current national match-game champions and wln- nen-of the-ABC-UttoJiUhe-paat five jeora. Kill open clasilc play

and -wind up on Fri­day.

After heavy booster team firing over the p«it week-end. the Syl- vanla Electric club of Ottawa, O,. la the new booeter leader 3.813 series rolled EuUr Sunday night. TTie 3M12 replacei PeCe’« Service club of Ann Arbor, Mkh, which had paced this division, limited to teams with 850 and un­der averages, since Manh 2£.

The Strolu and PalsUffa, along wlih seven other clussle division entrants this week, will be after IhrSBlO leadlns total rolled last week by the Haimn's of Chicago.

A 14-year-old bowler, Wlllhun Warner, jr,. Conneautvllle, Pa, roiled a 018 series In booster team play last night. ITie youngster'i father, on the same team. William Warner, sr,. had a 4S3, It U the Mcond year of bowling competl' Oon /or William, jr , and he ear- rl«d a 149 average in a grade Khool league.

Rainiers Defeat Salt Lake Bees

DAyrONA BEytCH. Fla, April . m - 'n e SeatUo lUUnlers,' epArked by good pitching. de(e«ted the 8aJi liile City Bees 0-3 yesterday In i Paolflo OoaK kague exhlblUoa game.

The Bees go( only three scratch hll>-but they made the best of them. Aii' three alngto came to­gether In the fourth Inning, and with the help of a Rainier produced three runs.

Hi# lUinlert, aided by seven walks and a homer by Jerry Mal- lett, Kored three nina In the (int, l«t) In the second, and one In the olghth.

Beauie meetfl Toronlo today, while the Bees go ocalnM Uie Col- unjbai Jeti.

WlN.9 SKI EVENT XJT. SlIASTA, CoUf, April 3'a?D

—Henry Hamllion, a 16->Tar-om skier Iron Dodjce ridge, parted the beM time }tn(erday In the M(. 8h«flla <kn,-nhUI slaOom. Hamllion, radnc for the first time as a sen­ior, finished the clnas 0 event in two mlnuttt 3il MCoAds.'

Jonn\ 511 a; 3. Darld Eniren. 543 0; 4. Scott lIciKleron, 249.4; 6. John Dnioe Bntclipldcf, M a mmo t l Lakes, Cnllf, SM.O; 8, Wayne Hm. deraon. Datiff. AlS)erla. J5B.4: 9. I>ave Denne. Romland, BnUsh Co­lumbia. :00.4: 10. John Miller, Ball Lake City. 261,4,

Bel'S team total time be: i three ;leni:•J. 'JdaJw:-7333r^. WsdjinjrtwK

7S7.8; 3. AlbPrt-n. Canada. 704.4; 4, .Colorado. 'ITBil; 6. OtUlfomla. 779,4; 8. Utnh. 808,6 ; 7. New Me»- i» , Sn.O; 8. BritWi Columbia. m S : 9, Oregon. »47.4; 10. Wyo­ming. 0192; 11. Ntrvada. OSSj, Montann did not compete as a team,

atrto slalom;1. Kiiren Korfanta. Plnedale.

Wj'O-, 107.8; 2, Kay Eyraud. Walla WalU. Wiuili., 133.8; 3, Skandy SheJIworUi. Dolr«, Ida.. 114.1: 4. Martiuv Aposul. Butt». Mont., J10.0; 5. KAtiiy Najtel, Bkykomlsh, Wash, 1174; 0. Darlene Despaln. Jacknon. V/yo.. HS.O: 7. Mary Jane McWUllftm.1, Twin rnllt, Ida, J19J: 8, Sherr)’ Thatcher. Cwnellan Bay. Calif,, okllnK tof Nevada. 12U; 9. Sherry- Blnwi. Bend. Ore.. 123i; 10. Joyce Johavm, McCall, Ida., 124.4.

Combined total Um« dos-nhlll end alalom:

J. Sandy Sbel)»-orti), 230.4; 2. Kay E)'rt»ud, 340,4; 3. Mnrtha Apostei, 343.2; 4. . tary Jane Me- WUllam.i, 947,0: 5, Sherry Blann. r8.2; 6. Karen KorfantA. 2BS.4; 7 Joyce Mohnaon. 29>Sv 8. Sylvia Ooodrlch, Bend. Ore., 2Mi: 0, Pam Keoms, Albuquennie, N. M,. 314J; 10, 6 h ^ Thfttchcr, 3I7J.

aifht team total Ume beat tso tUers;

1. WaeMngton. 477.0; 3. Idaho, 4S3.4; 3. Orceon. &3S.2; 4. Wyo- mlnjt. 5063: «. New Mexloo. 0W.4; 7. OaUfomla. 7C3.4; 6, Nevada, 892.2. No other Matca eonpoted teMui.

Tireless Spahn Moves Toward 300 Game Honors

By The A»i<rlilrd TrtuThe end of Ihr rainbow i.-< ju s l 1:2 t(■p5 frrnn .Milwaukee

nioiiud ninrycl W arren Spalm. whn fan l;iich onto tho I'oi of K"hl thiK .«e«.'»on -by 1.,'cotiiinjc tht* fir.st Icfthanded'

, j.'ili'hi'r in Niilirmiil iii.siorv lo wjji ;{()() frame,’'.]Thal's one of the few lion- or.i h'ft for the* lireles.H. ii If.s.-* Spahn, a 20-Kame v

inT 11 timi'.t, till' top aciClinic Slated

‘llip flpconrt clinic and flrAt

Jsek Mtrbeck. Seattlf. waa first place winner In the downhill, alalom and eomblaed In the 6un Vsllry.,4ffler(can teflon JanJor rhatnplonthlpt that rnilrj Sunday afitTBoen. The beys' team from Idaho and the glrta' team from Waahlniton shared top honors. (Sun Valley news bureau photo—«taff

'enpaTlnii

Golf Writers to Meet for Tourney

MTOTLE BEACH. S. C„ April W—Many UTitem on their way to

Augusta. Oft„ to cover the KUilen golf touiTuunent will aop over hrre t<jaay^o■-pEy-^h--Ule-eft5^fTf^7 nual ehamplon.^hip of the Oolf Writers A^aoclaUon of Amertea,

urday night's ehamplon.ihlp pro­gram wiii be three round-i of three mimitfl duration.

I— TTwre-wJU-bfr-wnpelUlon-ia-W weight divisions ranging from the n2-pound class up through the

. , ^-1^-hnla.lonmamrnt tho fljoo-ynrd Duna golf andbeach club course, which borders the AtianUc.

A field of about 50. Including iruetts. n-lU try to deUirone dofend- ng Ronald Orccn. asaiatant sporU editor oi the Charlotte. N. C, FfewB, who uually siuMta In the OS.

Milwaukee W ill Need Top F light Relief

Pitcher to Stay in Battle for PennantBItADENTON, Pla, April 3 (Jn

-**alnrully aware that his Mil­waukee Bnves must havs a top flight relief pitcher for an all-out bsjil# far the NaUonaJ Jeague pennast. Manager Charlie Drcs- •en has Just about decided to send Lew Burdette, his rlght-hi starUng ace. lo the bullpen.

The Brave.1 did something about relief htip last Friday, obtaining two nuwiion mliric hurlers, Moe Drabowsky and Beth Morehead, i r ^ the Chicago Cubs for surplus Infleldem Andre Rogers aad farm- bsnd Daryl Robertson.^ But he still could fall back Burdette for reUef work.

Their pitching sUff, once their reatesi uatt. may have been weakened by winter trades to plug holts at second base and shortstop, btarler Joey Jay and Juan Pliarro

A «cnl to anclnnatl and the While \p6oi respecUvely, and relief pltch-

er Terry Fox went to Detroit, Ironically, Po* has won the No l relief Job with the Tigers.

,Tlie Braves unque, *t«nsthcned IhejnseJcej «rc- ona and short wllh the aequWUon ^ P i ^ k Bolling from Detroll and Jwy McMillan from ClnclnaaU bUt they eft themselves without “ tablhhed center fielder «|

unquestionably

OR YOUR

MANAlEEZER

SEE

m m

they gave up Bill Burton to the Tlgen,

“We’re not as badly off In the ouUleld as some people think, sa/d Draoen. *'IVe got Ihree ten ter fielders, any one of whom can do the Job. John Demerll htw Im­proved tremendously. Al Bpsngler won't embarrass you In the field and hell gel on base even If he dofcin't hit Uie long ball. The other is Felix ManUlln. who has been switched from the tnlleld."

Lee Ma>-e apparently has beat- -0 out the late-rcportlag Wes Covington for the left field berth. Milwaukee has Uie ' best right fielder In baseball in Henry Aaron.

TUe Braves are overloaded wllh IntlHders. Wllh Joo. Adcock al first, DoUlng at second. McMillan at short and Eddie mtiiew* tt

third. It may be the best Infield In the league.

Del Crandall, baseball's No. 1 catcher, will handle virtually all the work behind the plate al­though Charley U u wi l l ' around if needed.

Dreasen scoffed at any mention

weakness In- the bullpen."You won't find a better top

three anywhere than we've got— Warren Spahn 31-10. Burdette l9- 13 and Bob Buhl lO-g," he chal- lenged.

COALTop Quolity Alwoy»— «»

W A R B E R G ' S

RE 3-7371

W E S E R V I C E

All Makes aad MedtU

T V & R A D I O S

lactndlng Car lUdlos

LONG'S RADIO

TV SERVICE

a t Addbon K*. ns. I'VM

N a tio n ’s B est to

M eet a t P o ca te lloPOCATELLO. A pril .l (/P)— A hundred or more of the

nation’s be.st boxera square o ff a t the Idaho State college ring Thur.tday through Saturday in the national AAU championshipfl. There was word that Woody Marcus, a 132-pound ISC boxer who waa a semifinulist In the past two AAU t o u r n e y s , will,

c o mp e t e . He's been 'on a stale department t o u r of Africa.

This Is the second time the tour­ney has been held Jn the West.

■nie Amateur AthlcUc union uses different rules than the NCAA boxing events which TSC has played host to In tho past 10 years.

AAir boxers do not wear head­gears and gloves are lighter by several ounces.

BouLt’ In tlie toumamenfs pre­liminaries this week .will be titree two-inlnute rounds, some as the NaUonal Collcglale Athletic auocl- atlon. Rowerer, all bouts

weights will use elghl-ounce gloves for all bouls, while 10-ounce glovcj wUl be used In Uie' lop Uirce welghU, officials sak

Mareus has returned lo Uie United SUtes from Uie tour of Africa end wlU dcflnlUly enter the AAU championships. Holt aald

Still in FrontBURLEY, April 3 ItTCu-Vern

Montgomeo'> Boise, was sUIl out In front In the scratch and handicap singles competition of the Idaiio men’s bowling tour­nament. here.

Tliero was no change In the leaders reported litst night at the end of Uio next to the lost week-end of play. The tourney ends here next week-end.

Montgomery paced the scnucli singles neld wlUi a G82 and was ahead In iho handicap singles wlU» 727.

Inexperience Is Unlikely to Win Masters

AUGUSTA. Oa.. April 3 WWDn- le.ss history is wrong, an inexperi­enced golfer hasn't much chance of winning the' Masters tourna­ment. Tlio only plaj'er who eve:

• leded on his first attempl - -

Trial to Resume In Elght^ScandaL

LOS ANOELBS, AprU 3 (UTD—llie trial of Frnnkle Corbo and four other persons accused of trying to

Four other Idaho SUte colletie representatives wUl be compeUng.

They are .Fat Coughlin, I2S; Dale Trumbo. 147; • Jerry Arm- stroDg. 119; Don Rouse, 178, aad Jim Palmer, heavyweight.

ONE IS KILLED

CAUIQUN, Oa., April 3 dW-< penoQ was killed and 10 others in Jured yestenlay wlien a female race driver's *tock car spun out o! conUol and plowed Into a erod’d of spectators behind a wood and wire fence. Deward Lte Duncan. 23 of Ohfttaworth. Oa., was pronounc­ed dead on arrival at a local hos­pital. Ten others. including the occiiplmts of the racing ear. v injured. The car was driven by Mrs. Virginia Quarles. 23.

1956 Auto Specials!19M DeSOTO 4 OR. SEDAN.

Plredome wi t h automaUe (ranamlailon. heaUr and ra­dio. New nbber. ... S 7 0 0

tnaxmlaaJen. beater, ndle. power fteerMg and powerbrakea ..................- * 8 2 0

19W OeSOTO 4 DR. SEDAN. . P l r e f l l t e wlU> aatoatalla

radio.

m e FORD VS, 4 DR. SEDAN. With heaUr, radio, sUndard traatmiaslon and overdrive.--------------S 6 4S

19M FORD 4 DR. SEDAN. With radio, bealer and standard trana.___ S 6 1 S

Many good sccond, fish­

ing or Irrlgoting- cors to

choos« from.

ZITLAU Motor Co Jn c .WENDELL, IDAHO

PLYMOUTH - MASSEY-FERGUSON - VALIANT

wellerft-elght Iwxing champion Don Jordan resumea tomorrow' in U, S. dWflct court.

TJie trial was in reeeai aU Jsst week to enable tha defense lo pre­pare Its ca.ie.

OUier defendants besides Carbo, reputed underworld boxing king­pin. «ere Truman Qlbson. Jr.. Frank <Dlinky) Palenno, J o s ^ Sica and Louis l\xn Dragmt.

Halfback Emla Davis, who galn- etl 87T yards for a 7.8 average and was No. 3 ground-gainer nation­ally, wilt b« bock for anoUier foot­ball season at Syracuse.

Horton Smith, when he won the first Masters In 1934.

Tho masslvo and often decep­tive 0,DM-yard AugusUV'-National course takes too much knowing for anyone to master It the first time out. Besides sheer power and sharp hitting. It calls for expertly placed drlve.i, keen Judgment on a proaches and excellent putting.

Bui outside of defender Arnold Palmer, ll's hard to see any of the pa.1t winners os likely contenders when Uie Jith Masler.i starts Tliursday—and they're the met who should know the course best.

Oolng back a doien years, only seven oUier winners are listed— Art Wall, Jr„ Doug Ford, Jack Burice. Cary Mlddlecoff, Sam Bnead, Beh Hogan and Jimmy De- maret. '

Tiist.se/mi to lesvt-tltfco-pos. slblllUcs. Can Palmer win a third Masters? Win some brash new­comer finally break through? Or

Peter Thomson, Dow Flnsterwol. or Jay Hebert, who has served his apprenticeslilp learning alxut Au­gusta National and now Is ready to prove his knowledge and skill?

MCDONALD SCORES BEJUmEY. Calif., April 3 ItW—

Buddy McDonald scored "goals and rt-o amteta yeolerday to lead Uie Los Angeks AU-6tAra U> a 7-t victory over the Bay Area AU-stm In an ice hockey game at Berkeley Iceland. Tho two teams are among flit entered In the first annual Wefltem Senior Open Ice Hockey toumamenU

at ;jO ►nil Ihr me of the Biove^' l>i:cliiM3 ttalf,

haj'siiimn nn bIkh-' of sUmiiii; <ln»ii lliis spring »hHr

fur Iiia , Th sea»oii in the bie ttmr. Hr won four exlilbitiotw sllhoiil a loss — the lairn a nlne-hinliig. five-hll ef- fi>rt tiiat slopped the Kaiisas City A’,' S-3 Uundoy,

llnc-kfd by Hank Aaron'a three riiitsrniilve lioineM. Spahn faced citily 3(1 tnen. iirlking out three mill walking none as lie timed for Milwaukee's o p e n i n g i inirhlni: as.’ilKnment.

Oui.'liindlng pitching Jobs aUo wrrr turned In by New York's Wliliey Ford and PitLiburgh's Joe C>Jbi>o;i, Ford lOiut out CJiiclnnatl 1*0 nn a slx-hitter while aibbon liurird four Innings of perfect ball III the Pirates 4-1 whi ove Louis.

In other gamr.i. the Los Angeles

liftlllmore belted the Chicago While Sox H-&. San Francisco heat Cleveland S-l. Philadelphia (Ipfealed Detroit 7-4, the Chicago Cubs edged Boston &-3 and the Lo!i Angeles Angels downed Ban Dlrgo of the Pacific Coast league 7-0.

Moose Bkoaion's homer was all I-'ord needed and sJI he received IIS he became the first Yankee pitcher to go the dlstanee? limit­ing Uie RedS lo six singles. Skow- ron's bftw was me first of three h lu off Jay Kook, who wotKed the first seven Innings for Cln« clnnatl.

Gibbon, Jim Umbrlcht and Fred Oreen checked Uie Cardinals on five hits while the Pirates pounded route-going Bob MlUer for 11 safeties—Uiree by Dick Oroat. Om- brlcht gave up the 8t, Louis rur on Julian Javier's single and a • • • by Wall Moryn.AiUiough laced (or IS hits, Dodg­

er lefty eondy Koufa* went th# distance against the Twins and held-(hem scorelctt (uttU-L«aBy Oreen hit a Uiree-rw homer in the ninth. Triples by Charlie Neat and Dob Aspromonte paced Los Angeles' 11-hlt offensive.

Earl Robinson's two homers, the second-B-’grand slam that capi ' a nine-run uprising in the elgl.... InnlQg, carried the Orioles to their wfn over the White Sox. Round Ulppers by Olanls' rookie* .Bob Parity and Tom Haller along 'with six Innings of scoreless pitching by Bam Jones beat the Indlar-

Tennis Greats to Open in Nevada

LAS VEGAS, Net, AprU 3 OTC-. Jock KramerSi touring tmnU pro- feeslonals will engage in tourna­ment play la this guabUng city starting May 14.

Anangemeals' for the touma- Rient A-ere ocmpleled yesterday. The Las Vtgos porUon of the ten-, nls "world series" «1U be held at the TnqjiMna hotel with Um Las Vegas Tetmis taxxlaUoa a« ^nso r.

Tlw utMpe. cunenUy in Europe, returns to Uie UnH«d Bt*tea to­morrow for the first of some 20 n»iicn«~B{iheamed-t>eror«—leou pbiy-opcns, "

World cluunplon Pancho Oon- ales, Fmnk Bedgtnon, Andres Ol-

holt and Alex oimedo................the tennb greats who wiU corapete In the tournament.

Veteran Itfiy Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves pitching staff U beginning his 16Ui major league season.

HARVIE KINCHELOE Phene RE 3-3732

There’s an unmistakable quality about H IH -HILL

. . .a n d a b o u t

th e p e o p le

w h o e n jo y i t

Slnc« 1878, Hill and Hill Straight Bourbon Whiskey has bttn • Miect Kentucky distiiis-

tlon. It If truly a bourbonjnsda ln4heftfl»st American tradition.

tkfi bourbon w ith the flavor of AmericaJ K u M lu iDnim (•., w sn it D.« iDtnan m uqn.nM

Wiimrti'.i Muiii,-iim1 Golf as-vi- fi.ittiin »m lir iirld lliursday a! tiiuHirifi.ci coif couKe. nie clinic will lie,-in at 10 ajii.«iih luiicliei’ii i;i i,i)on. Phone' flKd«ood 3-'J(i3< bv Tuesday nicht for re.vrvntioi'n.

Earlier Wins

Playoff at

Azalea MeetWILMINOTON. N. C . April 3 — Jerry Barber niid Chandler

IMrper. a pair of happy guy golfers - bound for the Masters Tournament opening Tliundiu»^i, Augusta. Ga.. mastered the ydungsters here Sun­day.

They survived a gruelling 38-

place In the M-ho1e *1.000 Aialca tourney and Uien played a sudden- deach extra hole. Barber won with a par four. They had Ucd al 213, three under par.

The vIcUkt waa worth 11,208 to Uie 137-pound. S-foot. 7-lnch vet­eran fram Los Angeles, who will be 45 UUs month. Harper, who is 47. pocketed ll,00«.

Or th* extra holo Bari»er-t2n— furled a great drive, got on in two, 35 feet from ihe pUi and mado hU par, the last putt from 4H feet. Harper missed the green to the left wllh his second, chipped up eight feet short and missed his putt.

George Knudson.'Canadian pro from Toronto, closed wlUt ea-7D for a 315 tout. Ke tied with Dow Plnsterwald, first day leader from Jupiter. Pla, and Tom Nieporte, defending champion from Bronx* TlUe, N. y. each won $e08.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

WomanNeariy Itches To Death

rRONT-END

SPECIALANY CAR/

92SFBONT-END ALIGNMENT

-C»«»et-aifirresi»b»CH*a«/'—

li. . ^ s teering Al

» i T c ^ t f ▼ BRAKE /'t)JUSTMENT

NEW L O W ‘.TIRE PRICES

and GOODYEAR

Q U A Lm \ TOOl

MAtSELT I R E C O .

Twin Falls

WORKBOOTby

P A R A T R O O P E R

• Steel Shank ^

• 6-Month guarantee

on sole wear.

Reg. 11.95

Specioll ONLY-

OPEN A CONVENIENT CHARGE ACCOUNT

Page 8: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes
Page 9: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

jU®IL3,I561 TIJIES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO

^ g K E T S A N D F I N A N ^ u . s Soyb,

Stocks

U„M;

CfcU^jTjS; ISV |i* »"

Livestock

uptnlAt butli

rnrllnr b«lfrr> :

.■2Tisf-u«SrS"SbifW* ecuwi

S l^ S 3 sMTtni--one kixS I-a-

W f t : nK««l

.....S S :3 « 2 .ruDDlnl UlwMii

«»»^* ’Mrtrp9ln“- •'*“ 2 ^ “2»euo“ • ' e ^ ^ Jo M «^S i'‘’bumooa Aiuil. 61

«n>or.U=

»«T b'-JT;

“ toJ’ oreJa* <1 uuund

! S s r u r ; « = ; ‘ r t r .

“ fS S ‘‘S3 *B*cSnts>

^®’2S, iSSi2utS'M*«n-^>5S«Sll

^ £ s o S ' r T . r s s , . s

■ ,p«ati .nu.Uon. w«.

^ .C.v— ...... -’' •1HU‘»«Uctuil tnd nimcrnl.

»a. Ioeo«*lne ounrtxr-

quuwf f»niln*» wporuI sn?; ■

' wnr YOBK STOCK E

i r :

Ck<T»J»f

Colt film

gsK

:gS3, !

!

; wnn lui isr, i; r»t>*l Colm i0>4

]}•* lUrUiran :j\ n«puB 8U i; ii IWWT06 tl«, lUch OIUa;i’ n o Pfwoi

Bch»nler

s:aC»W>r

I K-K“!;aDo. CUm 71U

li Sou <Sl B(U,.5 South Pm

...^ MS U 8 .. . .

Alira“ « '* *'

Isvr-ITMCNT TBUm

Aches at 113ANCHORAOE, Al»3lui OT -

An Esktmo native from Lime Y‘“ Ke. AlMka. recenUy hob- l> M 4S miles on enitche* to nn •‘rlorce Inndlnc girlp for » mp '0 sei hi* leeih jixed.J'-hpn he arrlvwl at ihe hos-

In AtichoraRe. otter a 100 illKtil, he told ftliendants,

Ij" Slony Pnppy-l-m U3 w«_old Rnd I got fc Woih-

nospiiai olficlaU Mia the 9'J couldn’t

'Wtj- thsl he llS.

>: •Undirda U.OCkSU.M: c>l<n>

:i.O(Me.M; <ull lo u

rluilc* nd pr4m>!

• •.n I.H-4.tO..

IVEIUAprlU iUI-|)-C.lll.,l,

'Ml' Mflr mIm iWMc. :M 0 h!(h«r; ulj civi< luntu I bl(h>r: rmr% •tn.Jr: nn

l»tnb«t •l.ufkirr oM (roptliiiih.

TWIrd n~l»J

lUPH-Hofi *,W.

Grains

rmtrt'l »h>n.

leau Production to j Be Increased

WASHINGTON. April 3 Cf-The ,i w>l)Mn, ilic glory crop of *n

Amfricnii aKrlcuUure beset with '“nurpliis problrms. promises to rlM jlhiihfr In iinportAncc this yf»r.. Pro<Iucilou of »0);l>fan» hus befn ', cioft'mii by lcap« nnd bounds dur .IlliiK iht iM.\i 30 yenri-*nd with- I out drvfloplne over.iupply prsb-

■y Irms that have plagued many >; crop« mnklni: much Um sens«(loti> ‘iai gains In producOon.

Kipinitlon E»r»«rtt<l,; A >harp ijprnri lo b<

inslon thlsyca77 the, works—that

:ly previOllntc favornl

: tUucMrr Umb Ir^r i

rtlfir tarrowi

; no m1«« •taekm j

lUiiibUr Umia K.oo: t»

•t»ni uHib* No.' I

Market Unit Cooperating In Meat Test

IWPERT, April J—Membei . the Nallonil Farmers orjanltaUon art eooperaunit thU week in i major teat acUon on cattle, hoj and iheep market bes>nnlnr to- <i*r.

local cfflclab of the group re-

latlon-wlde alUmpt to bttt« the prices currently offered fc livestock. They point out that

five to jeven-day supply of meat, a test period sueh os this «lll ahow the support of farmer members and Iht rencilon of the market.

The organization Is holding for I3J.45 per 100 pounds of choice Rrade aUtnt; 133.76 per 100 pounds for hogs weighing 190 l> 2ir pounds, and tS0.4& per 100 pound: •)n choice (trade wool lamb.t wU ither cattle, hogs and sheep to be sold on relative merit basl.t

Charles Wojclk, local boarc member, said the prices were de­termined by county meat barRiln' 'ng committees. Local officials lugjeat that non-memben will be benefited by supporting the efforts ot the UNTO.'

All fanners vlshlntr to Join thi newly-formed orsanlaitlon may contact Wojelk or Ed Zenonlatil. president of the local group.

None Injured in JWced Landings

" irop- • - • • tUM

•'‘“dim Mrporta!

thi'“ '?*,*■“ Indured In elthi

ITi, P'*"* " ^ P * .

Elwtr* wljh 1, ^ * ^ »t>oard circled Boaton's

'■'•■0 hours before — ^ 7 to coTcred-i-uh.

Illinois Slayer Gets Life Term

OTTAWA. Ill,, April 3 (OT-Che> ter Otto Weger. convicted bludjeon slayer, today waa sentenced to life Imprisonment for the murder of one of three matrons slain at SUnred Rock atnte park more than a _j'«ar ago. , .

Judge Leonard itoffmnn «n- tencfd Wtger after a brief lecal battle In which Defense Atlomty John McNamara contended that the Jur}' had been “pressured Into reluming a guilty verdict."

Hoffman overruled McNamara's motion for a new trial. The de* fense attorney sold he had IDO days In which to Jodse an appeal, and might do so next month.

Wejer. who throughout hU tensi five-week trial ahowed little emo* Uon. showed less today.

Potatoes-Onions

lOAlIO l-AU-S. ApHI l»«i Upp.r Tw

1 lUPIl-PM.. In >'slli. Ilurir;

Ofr«Jn(i auxl«rsi«: acKxl >lr* Isqulrr;

ixc..ior>4l

k>U US J »!>• A

IJa-i.W: m l

us"i 10 oi.-' Iirxtr

S.»>}.Ul so-o

IJs 'i 4

• ni. minimuiB 10 lb. Mck nnkni. too Itw 10

(fo*rr»' Altera « *!

1 «~dlfloo

ruri)-p0lml~.

: (oMi •rrlvab 19J;

IhrrwlM lUIad); I<l«ba b4k»ri

Unknti ArrlTili 12 ..odcriu; dmond •lHhllr «Mkrr.

/•liov fletx n>M)lum '

price;tee to sui>port prices of the 19tt crop 4S cenis a bushel above last yr.nr't cuarantee of tl.85.

In a rc|)ort Issued todny on th< faifl and olM situation, the «er:< culture department said prices an expected to continue atrong dur Ins ttic spring and aummer.

Tlie Miybeim It an Important Murce of vegeUble’ oil used for food an-* Industrlnl purpo*e *nC Dl jiiffll for Jlvrsloclc fe«J of high' protein content.

Demand Grow*A bli fflcior In the strong price

fcr thr nop In a growln* world de­mand for food fata and oils. EX'

^»rtr:teLVfr-b»ri»»«ipaBd4n8 .aJoof with production.

U. S. production haa Jumped from sboiit 1« million bushels In 1»0 to S&a million In. ItCO.

For centuries. China wa;. . world's lesdlns producer of 'thl.i crop, Dut this country has moved well to the front. Communist Chi- <ia's production last yew has beet estimated nt 3S0 million bushels.

In mid-March, growera were re- celvlng an average of $3.08 i bushel* for soybeans, or B3 cent: above - «ie (foverrunent- tuppotl

You! No, You!April s I7t-Jiut how

1 >ou be?It PUnlo fUnucchl saw Un cro.vms the street ■ and siopprd to let

Misl ttliippfd 0 pointed the mui Uiroat.

: courtesies lljr.e. The l 1 pi.'tol nnd It n.muccr*

Candidate to AsU Pay Hike

I I I Mayor JobwW» ti

Shoshone’s News Events Reported6110SH0NE. April 3—Mra. Edith

Oaer relumed from California where she visited friends and rel‘ atlves.

Mrs. Kenneth-McOulre and Corvallis. Ore.. Tlalt«d her mother, Mrs. Angle Whitenack, at the con- raleseent center here.

Mrs. Denlna Rodeback returned home Thursday after « two-week sUy at Oeorgetown and Mont­pelier where she vUlted friends md her brother. Dr. R> B. Llndsity.Mrs, Onier Sliook haa returned

fronrk vWt In Orcifon.Mrs. Hazel Pon-ell haa relumed

home after vUlUnj aeveril weeks In California.

Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Oolloway, Measant Hills. Calif,, rlalted Mr. md Mrs. Dale Bailey this week. Hie two couples Attended funeral services for an aunt at Idaho Falls.

37 Pounds Lost By Burley Club

BtmLEY, April 3— The TOPS Losln' eusana ret»rted a loss -of 37 pounds by Its IB members who attended a meeting at the cl' hall Thuraday evening..

A toul gain or H pounds w reported. Mra. Carl Helner was t bic loser of the week. losing sli pounds. Mrs. Pat Baker lost tJ most pound* over a three-month perlod-~23’i pounds.

Weight problems were discussed and members were asked to brlni a white elephanc the next meeting.

Springdale News -ilvents-Reported

Butter and Eges

r.£c ti.lii.d: »hli<

n l« S»W; <h«rU »l

YonK. AprU S fo.

TRAIN. LEAVER TRACK ELLENSBDRO. Woah. April 3

i«-Forty cars of a 70-car Nartfj- em Pacific freight train toppled off a honeshoe curve about 10 miles west of Ellensburg Tc te One man waa hurt.

Twin Falls Markets

SPfUNODALE. April 3 -Ml and Mrs. Leonard Beckstrand an In Salt Lake City to atUnd fu- neral services of a relative.

Mrs. Ralph West. Mrs. James Bronson. Mra. 8am Ogai Mrs. Orval Brondhead attended the southcentral Idalio home dim- onitratlon council meeting In Rupert.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Slmon.«n and family are movlns to!6andy, Otah. to make their home.

Edwards ElectedF A I R F I E L D . April 3 — Till

Oama* County Rod and Qun club met In the Lcjrion hall Friday eve- Blng to elect Zohnor Edwartls, president, Qlenn Miller, vice pres­ident. and Dean Eskridge, secre-

Members dLwuMcdthe deer and elk hunta In this flclnlty and plaimert recommen­dations they wcuit to make to the district fish and game meeting.

DURLLT. April 3 ate my intention in promote j

full-time po, liioii »i;h adwjuat* salao- for thr oilier p/ mnyor.' --clarM Wallace Smiili, candidat*

' councilman of the first ward the April 2i riectlnn.■At preiienl the ofdce renulrej .•erul hours aiiemuin e(*eh-d»y d m an rrrm m m t also Li Im- ratlvc to make oCf.v.|onal •ay from home ami the city to lend, parllclp.ite and reprcflcn e Interests of the rity of Burle; d surrounding nre.i. Under the

present forai the mayor Is salaried IlM a montli, Tlits docs

begin to compenjate for the time retiulrcd. For tills rcnwn the flee holder Is not able to compt ly neglcct his onn mierejts . .

ill o; f«j- bmlncsj," he a.vierta

-Consequently boUi til* pcrso buslntsj and rJiy biujnris neglected,-tmdfr-thwc conditio— It Is difficult to get capable people Itilercated In Ihls civic " Smith says.

•It has been siifigfjted by some that Uiey will drive for a cltj manager form of government. ) am opposed to ttils," smith de­clares.

“I do not believe It necessary to hire at a great expense antT bring In a complete strnnger U manage our affairs and m.ilte oui decisions on how to operate oui cJty at Ihls time. For larger cltJe.i with greater budgeu and more complex operatloni. It might be feasible. I am sure that nny cli manager would be more Interested In enlarging and expanding pri ent city facilities than he would be In economical operations," h( autes.

■To me. city manager govern- lent takes the actual govemmcni

further away from the people In­stead of closer to the people. This Is what I am striving for In thI: campaign. It U an effort to ge: the dtltena to cooperate with thi officials and the officials to listei and cooperate with the people TWj U bule In ' t democmcr With sovernment of the people, by the people and for tha people,- Smlth reports.

Traditional Meal Held for Masons

HAOERMAN, April S — Scottish fUles for Maundy -niuraday woi observed with the tradlUonal roas: lamb and mint Jelly dinner at thi Hogennan Masonic tonpte.

Masons attended from Jerome Ooodlng and Wendell. Eastern Star membei'Ofepared the meal and. Job’s Daujblcji of Ih* JocaJ ' sthel aerved.

lvan_Dunham. Hagerman. ■v.'asmailer ofceremonies.-------^

The prosram waa presented by Job's I>au8hters. with Kay Starry.

rSTO

duett. The final number was "Eas­ier Parade" sung b j all girls prcs-

JEROMB fitUDRNT ACTS XINIVERSITY OP IDAHO. Mos-

:ow. April. 3-Ardell Shockley. Je •ome. wilt play the role ot Basllii the music master, when act on of The Marriage of Figaro" by Mozart and The Telephone" by MenotU are presented by the Unl- -erslty of Idaho, opera workshop m Wednesday and Hiuraday.

FHA Cha])ter Gets Officers At Hagerman

HAOEIU.UN. April J _ Uevi chnpier officer* for l-Mlure Home- makers of America were ln.Mallpfi In the home economics rooma Thursday,

Lois SloKes. outgoiiic prrMdent, held a re;l candle. A* new officer;, light a white candle from the rc-rt one. they recited the purpose o! FHA. Officers Installed are Coleni Bllgar. presidetil: Shlrky Miller, rice pre.Mdent: Betty Ir\(nc, ^^frr. tar>-;_.CArnJ Wj!*on,_iryvu[£:' Delva tjllgar, lilstorian: Donii^ Beawn, reporter; Ruby nmckrtt, decree chairman, and Kathy Oil- more, p.irllamentarlan,

Coleen Sllgnr prcaeiitcd MLu Stokf* a necklace and bracrlc: from the ctiapler, .Mim Siokes presented Mra. Roland Phillips,

Library Display Contest Winner

T«ln Falls public library w.is iiwr.rded honorable mentloii in a inent library book dbplay con- le.'ton world affairs by the Oceana Publication*, Inc.. New York Cltv, rL-iwrts Arthur L. DeVolder, city Itbrnrlan.

For the i

VFW Selects New Officers 111 Shoshone

SIIOSHONE. Apfll 3-New offl- •rs were elecled by the VFW tiursdny night. Oliver Payne waa

succeeding;e>t. the local library

hud an arrangement of a l;irKci‘' “ "',‘, “Mr.rld map on which Is porlra5cd'“ »'0ld Hume,, u ^^1all figure of a man re.-iiiinr nl Don Stlmpson Is new quarter* iKok with a b.-ickzround of Uniti-d, niasirr: Hunter Is . enlor vice com- Nations flags and a collection of ninmier and .Mac Pethick U Junior books on world affairs. iMcr commitnrter. II. W. Orove wu

for winning an honorable men- rerlectr<l advoc:»le. R ay Oyer, lion, the library received three cfi.ip1.iin, and Kormand Conklin,

from {he Oceana PuWJci,-'.i!jrs«>n,

.ed a Nobel Peace prl^'dlrtorlan at commencement exer-

leachi red and white flowers,

LaNoiia Neldcr. outgolnc secre­tary. submitted names for comple­tion of requirements for Jiinloi and chapter degrees. Dalva SllcAr L*iNon:i Nelder, Penny Stran',;i and Joan Dojnl}o>' received jujjloj degrees.

Coleen Sllgar received her chap. ter decree and LnNona Nelder accepted for Shirley Mlllor

Chronology United Nation*," coveting fiun 1U4I to ISSa. by Waldo Chninbor. liiln, and -Freedom In a Fedarw World,-' by Everett Lee Millard.,

The display was prepared niic ip by Mrv Arthur L. De-

'fj Voider, library cataloger.

KINO HILL, April 3 — Mi imiia Crockett and son, Fred

Crockett, and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hall and family. King mil, and Mrs. O'Leah True and family. Mountain Home, went to

is- ioi presenr-fgT'hn rWaiiLci TflWrn-F “ ' — — ------ -—Betty Irving received _

chapter degree and a scroll.Tlie prcsldenl recognlted the two

Junior high school FHA members Terri Larson and Arlene Grldley, Others present were Mra. Willinm Strange and Mrs. A1 Irving, chap­ter mothers: Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sandy, representing the schoo: board, and Mrs. Wllnui Lnr.v>r and Mrs. Doyle’silgar.

Refrestunents were served on a white-covered table with a bouQuet of red rtiiea In the center. A' film

Reunion Held on Easter Week-End

T»VO COM'S Tf^STEO

RUPEnT. April J-Bcauty Poach' L5on.s La.-.-> produced 32,013 pounda of milk and 637 poundi of butterfat In 305 (bys a. a 5-year-old and .Mint Crr. t Duiiy Ester produced 17.203 poiind.1 ot milk and Ml pounds of Imlterlat as a 6-year-old.' BuUi lloUeln co»s are owned by Louis Holt and Mns. Rupert. .

... Easter.Mr. and Mrs, Wesley Pink and m, Donnie, attended n family

..'Union at the home of his sister. Mrs. Edllh Hammett, at Ooodlng on E.-vster Sunday In honor ot Mrs. Ilninmetl's son. A 3/cl Charles Hammett. Sheppard field, Tex,, who is en route lo The NeUier- lands.

Eggs Hunted

Baptism Held at Services Friday

ices held al 6 pm. Friday at Uu United Presbyterian church here with the Rev. R. L Barnes, pastoi

Received into church member ahlp bj- public profession of faith In Christ were Cliarlcs Flnlayaon, Glenns Ferry; Gloria Woodward, Phyllis Slonakerand Tonctta Rob. Inson. Adults baptlied were Fin- loyson, Mlu Slonakor, daughter of Mr. and Mra. Gyle Slonaker. and Miss Robinson, datighter of Mr. nd Mrs. Nick Roblnsatj.Infants bapllted' were Lucille

Mae and Cherl Lynn, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Flnlayson.

s Ferr)relude was played by

Mra. R. I. Barnes. A solo was sung by rrpnk Jones, accompanied by. Mrs. Barnes.

Declo Residents Tell of Travels

DECLO. April 3-M r. and Mn. QJeen Uwis wtnt to Salt Lake City. They went to Provo and met their niece, Margaret Lewla, a sen­ior at Brigham Young university, lo go to Br>-ce canyon for Eaater services.

Susan Darrlnglon, and her ___brothers, Douglas and Darld Dor- rlngton, are spending the faster racaUon In Salt Lake City with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, neber Hunt.‘ Sheila oummerson, a Junior at

Ihu College of Idaho. OaldwtU. is vlaltlnR her parents. Mr. *nd Mrs. Charles Qummerton.— Mr*.-EoIa-FUher-Is-»l«lUng-In Farrolngion, Utah, with her *on and daughler-ln-law. Mr. and MVs.

Buhl Man FinedBUHL. April 3-8teven R. Mil­

ler. Buhl, was fined tlO plus costa when he appeared Thursday be­fore Buhl Police Judge Bernard

tnrr for failure to have a muf- er on his car In working o;der Philllp C, Peterson. Buhl, waa

fined tlO plus coils by Judge Slarr ler having a noisy muf/Jer.

IF YOU PLANT IT OR FEED IT

GLOBE SEEDW ill Hav« It.

W e mix the bes r~ .

Yo\J de tho re ilw C A L L

C O L O N IA Lfor- all your

C O N C R E TEneedi^RE 3-5500

Quick, Eoiy, Looks Nieo

3 M IN U T E C A R W A S HW Ma»0 Aveone SodUi

iO»» dilw <«>udl

ARTHRITISR h e v m o t l s m ?Yeuf doctor can Ullyou (her* ii DO knowneun for the** eondl- Uen*. Hoir*v«r. /oarf. fa$l rtlit/fnm o*|- fing palnatUekseC minor arthritia, rh«» »*tUm , backach«s and nuacutar aches c*a b* youra whan

you Ukt ratrvo. Thor* la nolhlag fuUr. ,aftr or men rffKtiot. rauvo’a Mdkalty provsd fomuU hai helptd

happx '"d full Uw*. Get a trial al** bold*. Taka .a directed. You muit get wsnderfUl rwulta a* thousands han, or m »(U refund your Doiwy.

--- n o u N c a puAUAcr...

O P E N I N G SHAMMOND'S REPAIR CENTER

"Toro" Parts and Servictt

IN STOCK . . PARTS for Brisks & Stratton and Lawson Motors!

W E SERVICE

ALL MAKES

• Lown Mowers

• Outboard M oten

• Choln Saw*

• Small Electric H&BLET UAMMOND Applioncat, OfC.

IS Years aetuol experience in Servicing Small Motors, etc.

HAMMOND'SRtPAtR CENTER

Nextto KrenEel’fi - KE 3-5099-:on the Corner"

rounds highlighted Ihe ape* r.vJons class party last week. , C. M. Pridmore. leader, waa

In charge and directed story tell­ing and alnglng. Group prlies were on by students.Joy Alexander found Uie most RKS. Mra. Lenoy Magoffin and

Phylls He l derman were other teachera assisting with the party.

COW RETS RECORD BUHL. April 3 — Ray Cothem

and Sons. Buhl, are the owners of a Ouerruey eow. Sugar City Nor' mans Susan, which has cotnplelet an official production record of lOJSO pounds of milk and 630 pounds of butterfat.

RadiatorsNEW A.S'D USED .

Scrflcc-t^cgafrs— «.

'ThJno 'RE 3-6080All Typei-Klnds

CLYDE'SRADIATOR SHOP

EARM_Aucrion

CALENDARALL MAGIC VALLEY

SALES LISTED HERE

We have

Contract Acreage

Open for Seed

OATS & SEED

BARLEY

It's a goad deal

GLOBESEED & FEED CO.

TWIN FALLS

Conuet Usa Tlma(< Pans Bale* d».

partisent for eomplela adrer* using coveraie of yotir farm aale: band bUla, newspaper coverage (arar n w readen ta Maiie ValUyl, advanca BU]. ing. All at one special low rata.. Every ula listed U this Para Calendar for 10 days before sale at no cost.

APRIL 4 OeB* QUek

Adrertlseaeat AprU t- l ' trvln Eller* and J in Meaamnllh.

ABcUoaeets

. A P R u iS -Fred and Alma BaUey

" ' t April S-4

FOR CONTRACT BEAN ACREAGE-eONTAGT-:---- — —

-NORTHROP-KING

TWIN FALLS

RECEIVED I N . . . I. BULK

2. BOXES

' ' 3. SACKS

C o ll-N O R T H R U P , K IN G & C O . RE 3-4812

LONG DISTANCE CALLS . . . CALL COLLECT

SCENIC SALMON RIVER RANCH

AUCTIONSaturday, A p r il 8, 1961

135 acrw located 15 miles south of Salmon,.Idaho, on U. S. Highway 93— (Brlney Creek Ranch)

Sale starts at 1:00 P.M. at the ranch |

Excellent land for potatoes, all typea ot ro and train; ranch located In natural co;’e river aurrounded by p lnr----------•*‘"

I crops, hay. paatur* on beautiful Salmon

__________________ ______________ . very nice a bedrocnjfully modem home, hardwood floors*, basement, furnace heat, larva front room finished In knotty pine with fireplace, loj bunk hous«, garace, free IrilgaUon waler. ranch haa two creeka-BrJney Creek and Camp Creek, large polato storage cellar for 18.000 aacka poJ UtOM, farm seeded to hay and pasture: this farm In past ^ produced some of the top seed potato fouadaUon alock aeed; h u electrielly, mall, school bus routes by door: the ellmate-U light for all typea of crops; ranch has small family orchartL. Owner a> present time Is running sheep on ranch. This Is an Ideal rtUr*. ment rancher can be SUBDtVlOED Bor SUMMER HOMES. Very Bood spot ioT joadslde business. ;

Tins PLACE IS LOCATED IN THE HEART ^ T H E B m mJNTINO AND nSHINO TERRnORY IN NORTH AMERICA.

Terms will be XOft down at tlxne of aale. balaaea a i I1.M0 per year ploa lotertst. Tbe pobUc may Inspect thi* ftna taaeb ui;f. Uoe prior to sale. Juit call ROOO REALTY at ChalUs. Idaho, e* IVERSON REALTY. Telephone ^TE 4-tiM. aeedlaf. Idaha, DWAYNE FARMER, Salmim. Idaho. >

Pull line Of farm machinery to be sold at auction alao. •

FRED and A L M A B A IL E Y , OwnersfAUCTIONEERS: COL. HARVEY C. XVER80N, IFhone 4-4U4 OoMllnc. Idaho (Im*en Really) .

COL. DWAYNE FARMER. Salmon. Idaho. 'BACBXI£BKi~Wniard Kood;Fhaa« TB 9-2S01.

(RMd BcAlty) '

Page 10: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Cubs, Nurses Group Assist With Project

Cub Scout pack 70. iponsored by (he Kuruon Bchool PTA. «nd Uit Twin FttlU high Khool chapUr of Future Nune* of Amcrlca Mid Ei!l«r In varloui locftUoni of II)p city Friday evening and 6a(> urday to aid the Euler teal (oun* dndon.

The Cubs dyed 30 doten esgi rrlday adcmoan and w ll 8&tur' diij al the Okay ahopplng cenW._whtlc_{he.Fu{ure_Nunci_?rQfkedalier school Thurwlay to dye 28 di-zen esjs. They flold fjt«i Frldny eicnlnR and Ki\lurday in dowi t<i»’n’ 'Bwin Fnlls.

Janet UnlLwr. proldent of llie local clmptcr of fulure iiuries. cAtlmated that M girh aided In clyltis and selUns the ess*-

For-lhclr part of the Ea>l< rSK »ale. the Cub ScouU dbplayc the ei:ss In a large Easier ba-vkct at the Okay food xtori.

Den tnoihcr* and aiJilManl dti mothers helplris on the CubV com munlty »er\'lce projctt «ere Mr*. Ra) Mohtgomery and Mr.v Dill Newbry. firn one; Mn. David Me.

• Clure and Mrs. Oerald SnIUbury, den two. and Mm. Sianlty BrrK nnrl Mr*. Wayne Skeen, den thrtf.

Boya participating Included

Dniiny Smith. David MonUomery, Oreg Wllllama and SUinley Par- kty, all den one: Jay D, Brynn. Mike Cannon. Mark Ennlimn. njcky Kemp, Gary SalLvbury. Jotui McClure and Eddls Culltnnn. all den two. and Kent Brrtt. Donnie Jcuer. Mike WilllamJ, Dick Jlall, Kris aoldnmlth. Da.ill Hyan. Urry Miller and Mike Skeen, all dcr three. _______________^

Anniversary Is Noted by Group

JEROME. April J-Eleien tabiM wen in play Saturday afternoon at the annual annlveriary party of the J<ran« Duplicate Bridge club,

' North and Muth teams tied for flnl and *econd place were ^tn Joe Blielby and Mra. Guy TXywle and Mnt Earl Pelt and Mrs. J m n k Henry. Third place winner* wre Mm. Kenj-on Oreen and Mrs W. P. Ilnney. and pWelng fourth were Dr. H. E. Sunrc0 uid Don' Aid Luak.

Saat and weal team piadniri were, first. Mra. L. H. Van lUpef and Mrs. H. MUler Proctor; oDd. Mni. J. C. Osgood and Mn.8, L.' TTiorpe; UUrd, Mb , R. S. Tofflemlre and Mr*, Irii Oa»- eolgne. Sheridan, Wyo.. a fourth, Mrs. E. W. fllnelair a Jlr*. Irving Towle.'

Mrs. Oaoooiffne w«a a guest

Talent Show Set Thursday Night

HLEIt. April 3 - A Ulent iho* featuring both adult and youth talent be presentttl by the

• Junior-Senior PTSA at the high school auditorium Thursday.

The show iB a fund-raising event to provide money for the scholar­ship which will be awarded this spring.

Advance ticket* are being by grade school children atHollls- Ur, aover and Pller Khools, Tick- eU also will be available at the door.

The.*how will feature vocal ind - tnstnmental .U)umber«, readlnga,

panlomlmts-and variety acts.'Re- hearul Is set for8:30 Tues­day.

_2JaywalkersAre Blamed in Wreck

Two unldenUfied Jaywalker* caused an auto accident at 3;M pjn. Batunlay. T*'ln Falls pollci

. reported. Tlie collision occurred li the :oo block of Second avenui east. -

Mary E. Bleachell. 4«. ««te 4 Filer, told Inveatigator* she bn' to avoid striking ta-o persons walked Into the traffle l*ne. A driven by C. E. Bousrd. SOS Borah avenue west, hit the back of the nieachell vehicle, Borne » T "

. damage to both car* was ej maled. No clUtlop ,was Luued,

C. OF &. TO MEET SHOSHONE. April 3-Tlie Sho­

shone city council will meet at 9 pjn. TutKiday at the city hall.

ClassifiedWANT-AD RATES

tUtiM ••

Morket Place of

M a g ic V a lley

BENEATH THIS B A NN ER ARE THE WORLD'S BEST BARG AINS

@ £ ^ m is s iF iE :] > m s ®

TtU ll>« li^»ind tflfCt >nr •'’d|H(. -DllnJ Ad." »« itriJllf dralltl >i»l na Informnlleti (

Page 11: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes
Page 12: Ug&l Kennedy Will Visit, I De Gaulle in Junenewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · IDAHO. JIONDAY. APiUL lOC.t rniCR 5 CENTS j[roup Promotes

PAGE TWELVE TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO MONDAY. APBll. 8,1^,

T U ^ SI WID. S f/W'i

BEST■ lARGAINI jj;.-;. ^

K :: ; ,

CLOSE-OUT!■ • i S S J C a c a S E B S E S E S S S E S ^ a v ; ' 3 X S a B S 5 ? ' ^ ^ 3 m a S S ® S S ' :

H ER E'S PROOF - W H Y P A Y A lu m in a teMORE? IR O N IN G B O A R D C O V E R

• ( ^ m B t r o n g

Accolon -

' 12-F tW idth i

4 Patterns to

Choose From!

Reg. 1.69 sq. yd.

^ 0 9

H sq.

S P E C IA L P U R C H A S E

MEN'S DRESS HANDKEftCUlEEiL..,

L«u you tion coo) u * bm u l Coiioti on OM ildr, radunt aluminum on-lhe oilier. PlU ill t i in d a r d aUe Ironlnt Uurdj.

Quantity It Lirriitedl

FOR 12FURNITURE

209 Shoihone St. South RE 3-1421

T W IN FALLS

TUES.-W ED.

Goodquolity cotton h

- TWtM rAIXB JTOIl* —1

hems. Lorge size. Pockcd 12 to o bog. W hite Only.

R im tm ber . . - Ju it tay " CHARGE IT "

FINAL CLOSE-OUT-MEN'S

iS I SPORT SHIRTS

POLEUMPS

Reg. 10.95

W hile T h e y Lash

7 .9 5"DR IVE O U T A N D SA V E "

W aikeriFILER AT FILLMORE

453 Moin Avc. Eost Tw in Foils

RECLINERS Men's

Store

S P E C IA L S A V IN G S O N T H E R M A L U N D E R W E A R !

A compllmcntory 5x7 Portroit w ill be given to

ony patron of IHollywood Baouty Coileoe thi*

THURSDAY^.FRIDAY or SATURDAY ONLY!

Coll Todoy

for Appointmentl

AH W ork Dona by Superrliaii SudinH

• FRIES • COKE

HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY COLLEGEPHONE FOR APPOINTMENT, RE 3-7722

134 SHOSHONE ST. E.

-A L LFORO N L Y . 33 » 4 9 “

V A L L E Y ir r '^ '

12" M o n a u ra l ............................88c12" S te re o ..................................99c

240 MAIN NORTH

EXCEPTIONAL BUYSREPOSSESSED AND UNREDEEA^ED

— Fully Guaranteed!—OrijiMl Our

rriff I-flf,

...S287 50 ISO.OO

SCHUBACH^fWELERS

1806 kimberiy Rood

DRIVE OUT

AND

SAVE!

BACONAolv. Cbanrcr, All SpMdiRECORD PLAYER ................. 44.50Slnpr. Uxbi-wtlrtit PortabU

' j SEWING M A C H IN E ............... 99.50Dell A llowtU temn ElMtrle T.}tMOVIE CAM ERA ................. 3S0.00Webcor n i« n

TAPE RECO RD ER .................... 250.00 - H q c nSoriiatr*. «U ■tUttamfBtjVACUUM CLEANER ............. o eAUsUU U-Vol» o » .9 5

CAR RA D IO .............................. 59.50. , UadenroMi Offic*

TYPEWRITER ........................... Special’

22.50

59.50

149.50

24.50

Morrel's Palace Brand

SLICED!Tuesdoy,

Wednesday

Onlyl

37.50LARGE SELECTION OF DIAMONDS A T FANTASTICALLY LOW PRICES!

Convenient Credit Terms

B O D . Loan and Jewelry” JJ,® .5h o s h o n e w e s t

WKXT TOjlEtXOW CAB CO.)For Ganulna Bargolni-I^HOP B&B

SPECIAL BUY!Folding Wire Fence

Flower BorderW A " high— 10-ft. SecHon

. Reg. 2.95

1.59

OUTSIDE

COoi/ WHITE

Gallon Now a

Only.....2 .8 9"J A C K E T C E N T E R "

SURPLUSSALESFra. Paikhj.


Recommended