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Show f THURSDAY. JULY 4B - THE CITIZEN 20, 1972 The Long Road Back To Law Enforcement NOW... One Nicy Protects Entire Family i insured by the most flexible of plans. He is not limited to one mode or type of life insurance but can select the plan which best suits his needs and budget, If he is disabled, his insurance, plus that on mother and the children, will remain in force fully paid. None of us knows how many By PAUL HARVEY DAD Of all the Impressions revised or by the Nixons' visit to Moscow, the one which must haunt us is the irrefutable and obvious fact that Russians behave themselves better than do. But there is some evidence, the United States has begun the long road back to enforcement' of the law. The mayor of Moscow told our visitors, You're safe anywhere we is covered by permanent insurance (rather than term as with most other companies). This means that she is building up cash values and retirement benefits. Her insurance and the children's is fully . paid up if Dad should die, in addition to the cash she receives from Dad's policy. MOTHER here. Isnt that something. CHILDREN are insured at no extra cost New additions to the family are automatically covered after they are 15 days old. At age 22, children may convert to $5,000 of any kind of insurance for every $1,000 provided under Farmers Family Plan without a medical exam. able. Yet Vladimir Promyslov, mayor of one of the four biggest cities in the world, said, "Nobody shoots anybody." And Mrs. Nixon, visiting a Moscow secondary school, noted that the students were better disciplined than those she sees in the United States. ROBERT N. ACOCK SOUTHERN 32 WEST AGENT INSURANCE GROUP SERVING FARMERS IDAHO safety. Guns are for sale in Moscow stores. You need a permit to purchase one, but they're avail- Aik your Fumm Agent about this outttending prottctUm for oil your family. . . glut all your other Insurance nerds too. DISTRICT Chicagoans, scared to death being raped or knifed on a city bus in broad daylight, hear from Moscow in presumably backward Russia that anybody can walk any street day or night of in & UTAH NORTHERN PHONE ONEIDA 852-192- 4 But there is now apparent the first pale glow of a brighter day in the U.S.A. The United States Supreme Court, in a decision of small significance, has decreed that state criminals may be found guilty without the unanimous agreement of the no jury. criminals have been getting off because one member of the jury1 held off perhaps was bought1 off. I But hereafter, at least in state! courts, no one Juror can veto the other 11. It may be significant that the Supreme 5-- 4 Court decision! reflected all Nixon appointees! to the court j Youve heard some decry the; decision as opening the door to future convictions on inade-- . quate evidence. But those same protestors were protesting when the Sufj preme Court gave lawmeii: permission to stop and frisk suspects. Former Attorney General John Mitchell says the proper function of the court is the! discovery of guilt or innocence; that function has been drowning in a sea of legalisms. He said and hear this The right of an individual to a fair trial does not outweigh the right of society to prompt justice. ; Ideally, we don't want tougher police, tougher courts. But practically, whenever individual refuse to discipline themselves, government must. Also, ideally, it is better to correct the cause of a social sickness than to treat the symptoms. But that's for the religionists. And until they are more successful cleaning us up from the inside out it's going to have to be done from the outside. MID AL JONES Primary election returns are in this wise conclusive: You will vote for the someone who cares most for you or seems to. Historians will remember this as a time of caring. Where 'preceding generations had been oriented toward materialism, this one is concerned about the humanities. Yesterdays preoccupation in fact and fiction was making and earning and accomplishing and winner take all. Today's youth sees money buying too much misery; all that affluence bred such psychological distress that 1 in 20 of us is in a mental hospital and 1 in 10 ought to be. Now and for as far ahead as we can see, the name of the game is and will be love. This is a time for caring. Every program topping the TV ratings relates itself to human needs from Mod Squad to Oral Roberts. How about those corny, campy, overacting characters on Mod Squad? They grimace, stone face or emote with the unsophisticated exaggeration of school-ager- s but they care. About every single misfortune .to any unfortunate individual- boy, how they care! And audiences love it. As they do Dr. Marcus Welby ' and the attorneys Perry Mason and Owen Marshall. The nore impersonal true life becomes, the more we are forced to accept the hazards of muggers, speeders, corrupt courts, mercenary doctors and compromised religion and education in wholesale lots and the more we reach out for and cling to the TV doctor who'll helicopter over the gates of hell to help a pregnant, unmarried hippie. In real life, an Atlanta mother holding a baby convulsing with' lukemia is kept waiting at the. ! SUMMER t l lo LpjcrLnJr HrtpLorlrLt fxrtirriii : 1 I JONES SINCLAIR Of' SELF SERVICE . hospital admitting desk by a, debate over how the bill will be' paid until the baby died. So, inexorably, we turn to, tune to, cling to even fictitious images of men from whom each individual in need of help gets it. And nothing more than this explains the phenomenal res- -' ponse to the campaigning of George McGovern. His entire political image is that of a man who FULL SERVICE SINCLAIR STATION tSinclair 25 SERVICE AND MECHANICAL WORK cares. However impractical his economic platform, if you are poor he cares. If you are black, Mexican, sick, old or a farmer or a draftee he cares. Subconsciously you may know that a society which mass produces itself inevitably ends up a mass. But each of us still yearns to be somebody special. OF YEARS COME IN AND SAY HI AND SAVE WITH AL. JONES SINCLAIR 101 NORTH STATE PHONE 852-990- 9 INSIDE DIFFERENCES HOTPOINT APPLIANCES !: - from a two year tour with the Brown and Kurt, Mr. and Mrs. Air Force in Australia. Lynn Brown and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hoopes. They Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Albiston Spending the weekend with spent the weekend with their also went to St. Anthony and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Nash and children and grandchildren in visited with Mr. and Mrs. Kay sons was their daughter, Mr. Idaho Falls, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Albiston and sons. and Mrs. Terry Nair of Salt Lake City. Ronald Bingham and son, Brian, of Mesa, Ariz., and SP5 Ronald Craig Bingham of Phoenixville, Pa., came to NEW MANAGER attend the wedding and reception of a daughter and sister, Cinda Bingham, to Ronald OF HobbB. Ronald Craig spent a week with his grandmother, Marie Oliverson and sister, Cristin Bingham. The Literary Arts Club was held Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Robert Haworth with Mrs. Larry Bradford as Mr. and Mrs. JimINVITES YOU TO my Biggs showed films and talked on their stay in Ger many. Refreshments were ser ved. SAVE V Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Robinson went to Brigham and visited AT THE NEW with his mother, Mrs. Jennie Robinson, who is staying at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Steven Smith. Mrs. Robinson is improving from her illness. Mrs. Horace Haworth enjoyed an evenings entertainment at the home of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Goff in Preston. She viewed slides of AND the travels of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davis, who have just returned Franklin Briefs Paul Harvey ' CLEAN UP MORE CROP WITH THE NEW GLEANER COMBINE fHatpaiitb Exclusive sure-fee- d system with down-frocylinder location GLEANER combines harvesting leaders, on the hill as .makes well as on the flat. Retractable auger and beater fingers feed grain directly to the threshing cylinder, located down-frowhere the crop is. You have controlled feeding and threshing at all times. The crop moves only a short distance from header to h width of the cylinder and is fed evenly across the entire location cylinder. Plus, the down-frocylinder permits more area for separating. nt nt 44-inc- nt Gleaming porcelain Automatic loak cycle Three Family-siz- e capacity Fountain-Filter lint removal Permanent-pres- s settings Oven timing dock Calrad atav-tisurface units High-spee- Fsmlly-si- d surface unit 2700-wa- tt Infinite-Hea- t surface unit contrail Eaay-Clea- Triple rinsing n porcalain-enamei-finis- oven ll cu. ft big vegetable crisper Full-wid- 3V4 11 A capacity Speed-Flo- suix uoofL a 28 wide, zt drying Separate start central lint filter Up-fro-nt door shelves cycle Covered butter bin Automatic interior light Cushioned egg recks finish protects drum and top from scratches, atalna Porcelain-enam- el cleaning, another GLEANER combine exclusive, saves more grain . . . puts cleaner grain in the bin. A heavy blast of air from the upper fan separated grain coming off the raddle to the cleaning shoe. Chaff and dirt are blown out the rear of the separator. A majority of the grain is cleaned before it reaches the cleaning shoe. fan directs a volume of air to the The lower, variable-spee- d the grain. This volume of air shoe to finish-cleais regulated from the operator's platform by a hand crank located on the console control. The variable speed (398 to 826 rpm) fan is standard equipment on the Model GH "Hillside Special". So is a stepped dean grain pan that adds to cleaning shoe capacity for "uphill" combine operation. Chaffer and sieve match the capacity of the separating units. Optional finishing sieves are available. Two-fa- n 189 189 95 $16995 $13995 pre-clea- loLpxrinir 1 5 cu. ft. n No-Fro- st Refrigerator-Freez- er Equipped for Automatic Icemaker Accessory (available at extra cost) . . . add now or later. Family sized 1 1 .33 cu. ft. fresh food section 3.69 cu. ft. freezer section Rolls out on wheels Only 32 wide NOW ONLY H 289 U. & I. Furniture Co. YOUR VOLUME DEALER 65 North State Preston, Idaho Phone 8520824 MODERN FARM EQUIPMENT CO. PHONE 852-117- 5 PRESTON |