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PRICE 0 CENTS :^ Daring Doughboys Snatch 513 yan k Prisoners From Jap Camp in Night Raid ;,MACAKTHUE HEADQUAETEES, LUZON. Feb. 1 (ffO-Men of Batmn, Co) ____________ > S .W . V ”;— iuBu i«aw» ttu ,v^oA iCB iuut-auu Singapor^lS of them—were Bnotched Irom under the fljiminff muzzlea of Japanese £runs ia an CKpIolt of unmatched daring. ^ , Some 400 pickcd men of th e sixth Ranger battalion and Filipino guerrillas made a com- mando raid 25 miles behind .Japaneso. llnea to empty a prison carnp and partially-fulfill one of the Philippine objectives closest to Gen. Douglas MacAtthurU heart. - They toox Japanese guards by surprise and rcscued 48G .Americana, 23 British, three Netherlnnders and one Norwegian—^1 that wore left in the prison camp.in Nuova Ecija- - province of eastern L ikoh. Hundreds of more able-bodied war prisoners had been sent to work camps in Japan. Hundi’cda of others had died- * * A ll but tw'o o f th e men ^ r e brought out alivo by the 321 men of the sixth Ranger bat tolion who stormed into the prison atockddc under command of Lic\it.>Col. Henry Mucci , of Bridgeport, Conn. .Their enfeebled hearts fllckered'out when they were In sight of Amer-| ican lines. / ■ . The Rftjigera attacked with Buch mereilcss predsion that not one of the Japanese stockade guards'was left alive or able to reaiat, and they attack(\d with such cai*e that not one of the ■prisoners was scratched. Within a matter of minutes all had been released and were on their 2B mile journey to freedom, walldng, carried on backs of husky Rangers or riding in carabao carts. Nearly 100 were so weak from malnutrition, disease and three-year-old wounds that they could not walk whei^^ey were cut.loose from Japanese bondaffe. \ ¥ * ¥• . The rcscue cost tW lives of 27 Rangers and Filipinos in a guerrilla unit led by Maj. Robert Lspham of Saivcnport, la., who fought off a savage tank-led Japanese attack along ■tho'escapo corridor. The raiders killed 523 Ja^neae—^moro than one for every prisoners released— and knock- ed out 12 enemy tanks. This first mass liberation of allied prisoners of war in the western Pacific was accom- plished by an all-night forced march east of the American lines to Cabu. The commando raid, ordered on short notice w hen Intelligence reports disclosed the whereabouts of the camp, was such a success that MacArthur decorated every man in the force. - . The lean and rugged captives received the homage of thousands of American soldiers now fighting to redeem the islands for which the veterans fought so valiantly and hopelessly. The youthful GIs formed an impromptu honor guard, flanking a military highway down which the rescue party passed after it returned to Atncrican lines. * * It was the last of many marches for the rescued men—marches which began with the brutal "death march of Bataan.” The freed men showed their happiness, despite their sores and ulcers, wasted bodies and ragged clothes. iCMHyRHAS 20ILEST0G0 BEFORE I f li l L A MACARTHUR’S HEAD- QUARTERS, LUZON. Feb. 1 (/P)-^ubic bay and its naval repair base of Olongapo, dot- ted with pillboxes but inex- pllcably abandoned by t h e Japanese, were back in Amerw lean hands today as linblunted Yank spearheads to the east rolled clear of a dangerous bottleneck passage only 20 miles from Manila. ..Well^aruned Oronde Uland, Ui# ‘Ultle Comgldor” guanUne the en- ironct. to eublc bay. wu tekea wlUiout oppoilUon TUMday by elghUi tioops.. UnJta of the u. 8. Mventb neet then, Into Bublc tay. Other elemenl* of Lieut. Oen. Rol>ert nchelberger'* elghUi anny by twid Blong th« Inner rim 10 bay to capture tbe OlonffB- po naval bue which, before the war. an American depot,- Olongapo WM weU outfitted with Goyerhment Flees Berlin As Russians Smash Last fe e a t Barrier to Capital Filipinos Have ups and Downs Japanese dugouU and pU empty. SlmUarly. Orande abandoned Uie enemy. Island wa« , .............................. , MaeA^thki: Greets Rescued i Former Captives in Hospital AN EVACUATION HOSMTAU I.UZON. Feb. J (UJO — Qen, Douglai 3biacArthur Tblted this evocuaUon. hospital today and sreeted cuuijr of: the prtBODcn Tcseutd e.t Cabanatoan. TtiB Eener*] talked (o them as-they crowded orouml him and ncalledi th o ^ t Ume they hod seen him. Tho fUst man MacArthur m et waa UeuL- Coir James Breen, 40 ycnn In the arm y. l%e general reeogoUed him hn- medlaUly and recalled h e promoted Breen to corporal S5 years ago, " ' ' ■' In tUe hospltnJ there was a party atmosphere as the released men wandered througti the buUdlnn and over the grounds. talUng to Uie htmdrcds of vlsiton who cuse hopes ol meeting old friends <a learning the fate of prisoners not among those rescued. I ^ e prisoners were forced to tell their stories over and overragaln, hut they also asked plenty of ques- tions themselves. They had received practically no newa tn their prison campe. iTiey did not know who was vice-president now, although they had heard President Roosevelt was rcelected for a fourth term. They were Intensely Intem ttd in details of the European war and the Tarlous Invasions In the PacUle, but they teemed even, hungrier for •’ewaofhome. The sUiaulus oC rctease and good treatment favorably affected almost every person, accordlx^ to physi- cians. Some who yesterday were to weak they had to be carried, today w"-* fully el&d and walking aWut ■ A i RESEARCH OROPINO, Ida, Feb. 1 MVThe legislature next week wlU' be asked to^ provide a tpcclal >200.000 fund for the University of Idaho for re- s e ^ In Ui# fields oi; agriculture, mining, engineering, a n d forestry "to keep the state abreast of rapidly changing conditions," A. B . CurUs of Orofino, said today. Curtis. pitiJdcnt of tbo Idalio Alumni association which for three » program and whi* tto year was Joined by the Idaho state Orange through state- ments by Muter E. T. Taylor and edItoriaU In the SUte aronger, said In a prepared statement: - ■The ^ i r c h and experlm'enta- . H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible moment to ' Uie sUtfl abreast of th e rai changing conditions. Bucl» a proj- ect would enrich U>e statei'a wealth and increase lU Income i)y the de- cvlopment and precesslng of raw materials, power and other natural resources in which the sut« abounds." FLASHES o f LIFE LANTERNS WASHINOTON, P a , r ^ b . 1 - l h e _;brovnMt failed to face a cafe pro- prietor here;'Promptly » f midnight last night he exUcgul&ed the elec- tric window dliplay lights and sub-' sUtuted two old. but dependable Ulumlnatlsg eirecls-he iiung out two old-tashlnned country lanterns. COOKED OXFORD. Conn, Ttb. I—An Ox- ford fisherman and a friead looked forvard toapUnnedoutti^.tolUh through the Ice. The friend tn ^ h t a pail of live minnows w hich were dumped In Uit bathtub. And the vater turned on at a alow trickle while they went out to complete ar-' rangeraenU (or the trip. - Returning for the bait U>«7 found tho m lsnon ' were dead. In (set, they w ere cook* ed. They hsd lnmed,.oa the hot water faucet. the hospital grounds. - * ¥ ¥ * Ex-Prisoner’s Kin "We hadn't h^d brekkfut w hen^ heard J^he news and wo atUl haven’t UBOHUBUCK It V I 11 a dlngtcn exdte’dly'tdid'^ newipa^ •reporter the reacilona' of“ t h e ^ i dlngton family on learning Uut their »on, 8gt. &mon Addingtoi WM among men rescued- from prison camp on Luton. “We knew tU t MacArthurVi route waa near the prison camp.'* said the aoldl^aUL«^Wl4,We'^W^^^ ins thaTour toirwoiiid be rescued? DBAnOS STATE COLLSaS^ N. U , -ptb. I- The two eo*«d engtowlns MudtnU a t New Mexico A. & U . s r t n t goins to let any man get aJ^.Jof.thwai In the englneen' aonoal 'whisker-' raising dertiy. They‘d Boi.beards, UKMxvTOTid Irani ttatceUecodra- WASHINOTONi.pyb, 1 W Hloii Of two mineTweepen and a tank: tol .Nonaal eom pl^nt of':th«t tnw s siwsr,-'? T%a announeanent bTDuUiLin W Um totU'.ol oaral.TeaadS^^W tU eatoe slnct the start of- ““ cltidlnff 908' nink, <0 'pm ttm td lost, and id BOISE, F^b. 1 CUJ^—August Ros- qvtat. PocatcUo, stat« PederaUon of Ubflr secretary, said today tho fed- eration will seek a public’^ co S iS u - tee heartoff on workmen's compen- saucm act amtodments Introduced ta the house II the opposlUon to them wUI not compromise. ■^0 measures ask Increases In and scope of compenaoUoh for In- jured workroen and their families A farm bloc la forming in the house • to oppose tho measures pwnda tiey place too heavy _ b_Men.on employcra. Members ofi the bloc favor, a bUI to raise the maximum payment, to MO a week fr^ the present »16, covering an Iinjured m an wlih dependents, os Iopposed to the Iibor-backed bill to Increase th e maximum to 125. Both bUIa now are In the publle utUIUes commlilef, which Introduc- ed the one aakbj a smaller Increase. D. C. Parrott Put On Sheriff Staff Shkriff Warren W. Lowciy ThurS'.; ay announced thst he had added David Charles Parrott to his ataff of deputies. panott, he uld, would be _ time officer and the aherOf added that he has begun his duUcs. The new oMicer has worked as a salesman for the past year for the PlTEstone store here. Prior to that he was employed for several yeara as a field man for Swift and com< pany. Be replaces John E. Lelser.on the therlff's force. 1/elser is sUte traffic oflicer. FaUore of the Japanese to put up a (ight In this nautral defense wne was as puallng as the enemy-a lack of opposition at Subic bay. One column of sixth army troops, which has been moving south from IJngaj-cn, turned west on tlje Ba- taan peninsula road from flan Fer- nando and captured Lubao. This, represented a lO-mlle advance to I within 33 road miles of a Juncture' with the eighth, army pressing east- ward from the Zambales coast beachhead, established Monday- Such a Juncture will seal off the historic Bataan peninsula, which fa ™ the western shore ol Matolla Buperfortrcsses bombed Japanese military InsUUatlons in the Slnga- ^ re area today for tho third time. A press flash from 20th air force headquarters said B ^ s of Brig. Oen. Roger M. Ramey’s aoth bomber con^and struck by daylight from India bases; • LEGISLA lSA i M Nazis Can Charge Subs Under Water LONDON, Feb. I (tUD—First lord of the admiralty A. V. Alexander today coivflrmed reports ‘that the Germans had discovered a method for charglns the batteries of their SQbmarlnes while submerged, thus eiimnatlng the rlik of coming to the itirface to recharge. Alexander's statement was eon* talned In « written measag« to com- , nons. He said publlcaUon of any I further details would not be in the publlo InMreat. Feb. 1 Wh-lUe ienato io- a proposed constltutlon- il to abolish tho pardon -------- a few minutes later killed a companion,measure which would have eliminated the pardon board and turn over Its duties to a stat&l boom of correction. The ppllt action further muddled the already cloudy prison leglslai Uon situation. Both measures voted on today twice have been' turned' down the electorate. ln.»U and 10«. But in lOU the people approved a, third measure which created the board of correcUon. The electorate's rtfusta to abolish the prison and pardon boards which now havo con- trol of the prison resulted In tJjo board of correcUon remaining as on authorlied but never-created body. The senate passed two major bills xlay, one to re-enact the special Jldler absentee voUng laws used in im but which'expired. The re- enactmmt would remain la effect untU Dec. 31, io«. it provides for early Issuance of ballots and auto- maHo registration to servicemen. The other measure passed M d sent to tho house would allow cities to levy 20 mills Instead o( 15 mills, after a public hearing, from the years 1949 to 1950. The caitlne-toUng O. t la the photo above has mdce lerigiis bpihim swalUng him. bot h« eooldn’t resist the tempUtlon t« atop and teeter- totter with the throe. FlUplne yotmttten In the L ao s town o( Dagnpaa. W N D p N , Feb. 1 (U.PJ _ BruBsela reports attributed to “• unimpeachable military authorities” said today that th e. . German government is leaving Berlin and that the capifai>^ - rapidly la' belns organized for etreet-by-Btrcet, hotiae-by-' ' houflo defense. The reporta, did not indicate where the German government might take refuge. v. Most likely site of the government is belloved to be Munich ita Msociations aa tho birthplace of the raii because o f .. ______ ___ ____ __ party, its proaa'raity ,to Hitler’o retreat at , ______ .. ^\.4V41kVO(lUUVll, UUU ita relative distance from both the eastern andweatecnfro^fttsi ^ M - . -------------- Belief is growing in mlli-.;: tary circles that even loss of >j. Berlin will not knock; Gep*'.' many .out of the war. ;AU> : though ita capture wQ] leave. : the Gcrmana only a SOQ-mile wide area of maneuver the': nazis are believed preparinfir" to attompt a Stallngrad-lIke' . stand, using Berlin aa the’bas- ' tion of a IJne on which they- will attempt to halt the Bus* alana. The red anoy.ls hurllnc tho Qo T' mans back across the Oder rtvcr, last defense barrier before Bails, and Is beUeved to have reached the east bank. 40 mUes from the cayltat . Reports placed the Russians on the Oder opposite FTsskfort. 39 mUu southeast of Berlin, and the . Germans conceded that other force*. had broken through to the eastcn ' edge of Mustrln, IB miles north of Frankfurt nnd 43 mUes east Of the. ' capital. ,. TUI the W . Ihere. Is no Indication that Hit- ' ler is lea^__B«^ l«liahV . SIEGFRIED LINE PARIS, Peb. 1 W>>—Hie Ahierlcan first anny advanced within plain ^ h t of tho strangely sUent Sieg- fried line on a broad front today amid growing IndicaUons that the a^msns had withdrawn farther Overnight advances generally peached four mUes deeper Into Ger- many. VlUago after village fell. Pa- MU entered the fringes . of th? Slegmed line In the Monschau sec- tor, Where b- whole three-mile sec- tion was captured earlier.in the week. Third anny Infantrymen seis- ed four mor» Oennan towna. Limited Beslstanee An eerie alienee covered the big n a n guns In the lines, but American nrtUIeiy of both the first and third army laid a borrage on the fortlllca- UoM along ft «.m llo sector opposite Belgium and Luxembourg. Heaviest ■.strict- ly to (mall iusu and mortar screen- iHff. Ihe InvBdera were amased i t*e complete lack of arUilery an the enemy's reluctance to fight. The tr. S. thlid'am v pushed tw drelement of flye-slxths of _ out through th e ., ward Danslg ahd tlons -north and Elf Fire Tragedy Cause Remains a Mystery AUDDRN, Me, Feb, I t ^ H a l a e officials began a Kries of investl. gallons today to determine cause ot a fire which snulled out the,llTet of 18 chUdren and a ntirse In » pri> vately-owned boudlng home. ' - As state and local offlclalr n et Id elosad: soetlcm at polio*; head- quarters hundreds of townsfolk u - WASHmOTON. Feb. 1 (UJO-Tho United States today took another step toward resumption of reUUons with PWand when It agreed to ac- cept the.Dec. IS payment on that country's debt and permit Finland {^undertake certain other financial tnnsactlons here. . . Uncle Sam severed relations with Finland last year. The Finnish gov- enmient offered to make the debt payment.when It fell due. but the state- and tnosunr departmento re- fused It because Finland was allied With an enemy power. , T^asuiy Secretary Henry Morgen- thau'sald today the payment of *W.44S now wUI be accepted. Fur- thermore, he said, arrangemenU Mve been made' for the Finns to PV. (340,680 semi-annual Interest due on a loan from the export-: , Import bank and to resume servlc- |lh< In this country of three Finnish [hond Issuea. Praising the record of the present city, administration, a citizens’ committee for tho maintenance of good govern- ment in Twin Falls Wednes-i da^ night drafted Mayor Bertl A.-Sweet and threo members of the council to seek reelec- tion at the primary election to bo held here. They took acUoa. alter pubUo hearing at teglon haU.and the na- ture of the gToup'a:appeal:Wt;.the city fathers’no'iiVtematlve s m ac-' ceptan(5e7de*plta rtho'fact- th a f .the - r and Councilman T. T. Green- h«l declared they wmlld not ndldates agahi. ’ Accept NemI Contacted, after the meeting by the Tlmes-News and.advlsed,'oI the proceedings, Mayor Sweet at first d»cllned'a statement, but then said that In view of the expression, he. could do nothing bufaecept; Coun- cllman:Oreenhalgh wa« also advised of what.had transplred.jind'he. too, said that he would accept the nom- ination,from the committee to seek reelectlon. Both he and the mayor express- ed their apprecIaUon for the honor bestowed upon them by the com ^t- Councllman. Orville' _______ and Kenneth H. Shook had pre- vfously said they were undecided In Uje- matter. W. W . ■ni'omas is the only holdover, meinber Of 'the coun- cU.,' , yn\tii Co]emah and Shook learned, of the‘dra(t movement and the ac- ceptance of the mayor ;and Green-1 halgh they said . they -would alsoj ' (C«ill»»»d «n Pm« t. C<l»«i» IX Wounded Rupert 'Tfrfns in Hospital BiuoHAM. Utahi,,l^b. I WT-rPfc. plied in Action ham-for treatment ' Bappy' to be so he.telephoned hU.pftrent*,,'Mr.,-ftnd Mrs. Aadrew M aler.,..lt was ^ then t^iat he learned that hli. twin brother, Edward-aialer. tw-^r.L.Un llfth. g^ft;:also:.w ’under'treat- ment, at fi^shnell. Ujb. ; t i^ :(dMerfed their' a ith : .*9 . P.FC. FnANKN.KEIXEY.: . . . killed In actl«a Jan. 16 tn Belgium where lie was secrlnc with the Infantry. n« Is (he sba .af Sir. and Mr*. F.; D. Kelley, Shoshone. In addition ts hls par- ents, he is inrrlved by his wife, Miriams, and three-year-old dsogh- tef, Katherlne.;.(Blair.ei)(TsvIngl mmm Treateninr I Oennui-''.-croaa-RhIni ' holdinM north and eotim of Stra^iirg also beg^ to eoUapee, reflectUs a wett- enlng of the eneor ........................ —estcm front ■ . .'Zt was certahi that - the thInouV had ’ weakened • Von • Rundstedt's whole position west of the Rhine so that he could not hold what he had bitten o(f In recent attempts to ' th e InlUaUve. Now.lt Is a <iut wheUier the Germans wUI be to, save.anythtng west of the B In the sectors of the main e attack. ; Feb. 1 wv-Several Dem- tha Idaho legislature today Just Plain D oublet^ , WAttmHOTON, Feb; 1 doubta the congrcaslonsl record to d a y ^ -^ It toojt U-lnchn;of.type to .' Twjjboura Uter. Rep. BWly, O.. m , who viu oat otlth# chamber • . w^,Dln«*U spoke, arose and r ^ te d (be tpeocb, wpM for irord. ^ : r: Tlw.siemlxn. apparently didn't xolad. At'least m *-sem ed:’M : M ft Kelly »ave this flustetwl ^ lia a tla n r .' ' " n waa banded to m« (he .wooltfn't i»y by w h m i'tijt t t - r o t - •--bapitttagaln. noax U m ax to Ito t ^ , wora 1,- :BURIOT. .Peb.',l-P(e. Lincoln L. Ttiomaff.-joa of'M r. and,l4r».:a M.' Thomas;'Burl«y,':has_been kllled.ln action in Belgium; acconllng"to a war, departm ent • telegram received by-pi? parents. ... . . '. Private Thomu entered the'army bi) pec.'26.'lM3 and recdred train- log at Comp Boblhsoh,-Ark; at Ft. .Qeorge 'Meade. M d; and.at Camp McOoy. ,WI«., befon<golog' oTehea« to England. , He land^ In France the day'foU lowing D-day and went through the, hedgerow f l ^ t l n ; -In Normandy. He wu. wounded In action Is-July.and received the .purplefheart at-that time. FollowlnK his recovery .he.aaw more front Ihie cocnbat with the ln- fantn^forcea.' ,. , ert of health and velfaro who said 'j^wmjtl not “undcntand ,U>8 73 colored Soldiers Jfpttisdnfor^ .■HQNgLULU.:T.’ H,’ 1 ^ 'i Aniy,«mrts miJtial bareMMvnti^ n.Nesro aoldlen.to prtasoit^^ eKht.to:.M:yeana(Sar& i B tt .S £ S sa -The.nen w«h»« Jn«rito.obe3r.arda(£ I»rt.for-wMlt:at- ’ wired Oem state Democrats In ins establishment o( a river valley authority as p r ^ e d in the naUonal house yes- The telegram was signed by Dem- ocrats In both house and senate, and asked that vlewi of the'sUte Cham- t» r ol'Commerce bo disregarded as n o t "representaUve of the wishes of th e people." The. message, addressed to Sen. ^ n ^ ^ y ^ and Ilep. comjjlon I. "We beUevc Democrats of Uie state desire Uie Columbia river valley au- thority. We ask you to disregard views of the Idaho Chamber o( Commerce as not representative of the wUhes of Uie people." H ie atate chamber has vigorously opposed the publlo power move on grounds that the federal govern- m e n t would be Infringing Qpojj Idaho's rights. SlgDcn of the telegram arei ecn. Qlenn E. Bandellir, D., Bon- ner; Sen. Philip Ryan, D.. Shoshone; Sen. Junes U . Rhodes D. Kootenai; Sen. Hsny Wall. D , Nex. Perce; S « . Oeorga DonarW D„ Washlng- too; Rep. J. n ; Meeker,:D, Bousdr outem veaa OfGoouuiy.*’ :. " M-.SarelepeA !a:;|laBeav'^ Red Star aald.'Sontob^MtdtiJl trf,-Dist Pnusla,.’«u.-^vBleped.la fUmes.,{miehedoff,l»,'8BrlergaS;%-' and naal demolitfooj^m^.lMs^:- onen ca^^u^ed-•^n^-;the^•«uU»m:■; <C»^UaW « P w a. Oriun |> :E SPEEDING ER BILL WASmKOTON, Feb. 1 m--Ttl»' • house today rejected .a subtUtuie.'/ for coercive' manpower' leglsIaUan • th at .would h ate provided for-fflUn* ’•sbor needs voluntarily. . Offered by Rep. Harness, .ft,,. Ind. the subsUtute w defeated.*.' 187 to m as thi ward passage o f __ leglslatlon-for Stinison “UnaWe. ToDisc,us8”Blaze N, ]>eWl '(UR>-S^ WAsnmaTof<. ]>eb.' ret»ry of War ' said today tb a t _____________ _ velVa laane-rtdln* dor, Blai^ ttf- celved 4a .-A-prlority*' on bto air. tnttaparteeenmaDaperKfanel. .Xn a Mtter to Hep. George P.JAU> ler, sttBuon said that bU lnnetlgt.' tioa or:t»«.snittat baa n o t-u m bera ,:.' . n -’ tterelore,*' am. ttiahlei am 'itk* /lno««t,'liJ detiPf 18 and 49. Harness' proposal » defexred draft-ajpi mu tlal Jobs through the p .„ followed by the United 6 - .v , ploymeat serrlee n/vnX systetn.' ^ .„ Barring an unexpected upeet. U».:' blU wia leave the; house Jn sub-M. stantloUy the' fona recommended'-.^ by the military committee—ntooa.'.’ .'., controversial antl-closed shop <asd anU-dUcrimlnatlon provlslQils -whida ’. earUer had .threatened to klll.lt. Safe voting marglns.pUediup y » ' ^ terday to knock down-thew'.-two' i explosive proposals were counted on by backers of the legUlatlon to bold " firratod^. •• London Was Near ; Being Destroyed;! NEW tCRB^.Feb. sMped “total de»tmrtlon?.oote..b»£Ji— halrViv breadth dutlnr. t l W v^^H j omb Bttacka.last wnmwr; Jehrman. 41sUoMd.';jn,';«ii',jMi£l*M:H| capita} Jn the'.cnrr«nK:,li(BW:X«kee;|l Only.1nmlea;V;»-*'''^'-*^ - rSvl.tha tavwla................ “Xhti' S I - " '” isJt®

PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

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Page 1: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

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Daring Doughboys Snatch 513 yank Prisoners From Jap Camp in Night Raid

;,MACAKTHUE H EA DQ UAETEES, LUZON. Feb. 1 (ffO-Men o f Batm n, Co)____________> S.W. V”;—iuBu i«aw»ttu, voAiCBiuut-auuS in g a p o r ^ lS o f them—w ere Bnotched Irom under the fljiminff muzzlea o f Japanese £runs ia a n CKpIolt o f unmatched d a rin g . ,

Some 400 pickcd m en of t h e s ix th R anger battalion and Filipino guerrillas m ade a com­mando raid 25 m iles behind .Japaneso. llnea to empty a prison carnp and partially-fulfill one o f th e Philippine objectives c lo se s t t o Gen. D ouglas MacAtthurU heart. -

They toox Japanese guards by surprise and rcscued 48G .Americana, 23 B ritish , three Netherlnnders and one Norwegian—^ 1 th at w ore left in the prison cam p.in N uova Ecija-

- province of eastern L ikoh.Hundreds of m ore able-bodied war prisoners had been sent to work cam ps in Japan.

Hundi’cda of others had died- * *

A ll but tw'o o f th e men ^ r e brought out a livo by the 321 men o f th e s ix th R a n g er b a t tolion who storm ed into th e prison atockddc under command o f Lic\it.>Col. H enry Mucci

, o f Bridgeport, Conn. .Their enfeebled hearts fllckered'out when they were In s ig h t o f Am er-| ican lines. ■ / ■ .

T he Rftjigera attacked w ith Buch m ereilcss predsion that not one o f th e Japanese stockade guards'was left a liv e or able to reaiat, and th ey attack(\d with such cai*e that n o t one o f the

■ prisoners was scratched.Within a m atter o f m inutes a ll had been released and were on th e ir 2B m ile journey to

freedom, walldng, carried on backs o f husky Rangers or riding in carabao carts.• Nearly 100 were so weak from malnutrition, disease and three-year-old wounds that they

could not walk w h e i^ ^ ey w e r e cut.loose from Japanese bondaffe.\ ¥ * ¥ • .

T he rcscue cost t W lives o f 2 7 Rangers and Filipinos in a guerrilla unit led b y Maj. Robert Lspham o f Saivcnport, la ., who fought o ff a savage tank-led Japanese attack along

■ tho'escapo corridor.T he raiders killed 523 J a ^ n ea e—^moro than one for every prisoners released— and knock­

ed out 12 enemy tanks.This first mass liberation o f allied prisoners o f war in the w estern Pacific w as accom­

plished by an a ll-n ight forced march east o f th e American lines to Cabu.The commando raid , ordered on short notice w h e n Intelligence reports d isclosed the

whereabouts of th e camp, w a s such a success th a t MacArthur decorated every m an in th e force. - ■ .

The lean and rugged captives received the homage of thousands o f American soldiers now fighting to redeem th e islands fo r which the veterans fought so valiantly and hopelessly. The youthful GIs formed an impromptu honor guard, flanking a military h ighw ay down which the rescue p a rty passed a fter it returned to Atncrican lines.

* * ♦

It was the last o f many m arches for the rescued men—marches which began w ith the brutal "death march o f Bataan.”

The freed men showed th e ir happiness, despite their sores and ulcers, wasted bodies and ragged clothes.

iCMHyRHAS 2 0 I L E S T 0 G 0

BEFORE I f l i l L AMACARTHUR’S H E A D ­

QUARTERS, LUZON. Feb. 1 (/P)-^ubic bay and its naval repair base of Olongapo, dot­ted w ith pillboxes but inex- pllcably abandoned by t h e Japanese, were back in Amerw lean hands today as linblunted Yank spearheads to th e east rolled clear of a dangerous bottleneck passage only 20 miles from Manila...W ell^aruned Oronde Uland, Ui# ‘Ultle Com gldor” guanUne th e en- ironct. to eublc bay. w u tekea wlUiout oppoilUon TUMday by elghUi tioops.. UnJta o f theu . 8 . Mventb neet then,Into Bublc tay.

Other elemenl* of Lieut. Oen. Rol>ert nchelberger'* elghUi anny

by twid Blong th« Inner rim 10 bay to capture tbe OlonffB-

po naval b u e which, before the war. an American depot,-

Olongapo WM weU outfitted with

Goyerhment Flees Berlin As Russians Smash Last feeat Barrier to Capital

Filipinos Have ups and Downs

Japanese dugouU and pU empty. SlmUarly. Orande abandoned Uie enemy.

Island wa«

, .............................. ,

MaeA^thki: Greets Rescued i Former Captives in Hospital

AN EVACUATION HOSMTAU I.UZON. Feb. J (UJO — Q en, Douglai 3biacArthur Tblted this evocuaUon. hosp ital today and sreeted cuuijr of: the prtBODcn Tcseutd e.t Cabanatoan.

TtiB Eener*] talked (o them as-they crowded orouml him and ncalledi t h o ^ t Ume they hod seen him. Tho fUst m an M acArthur m e t waa UeuL- Coir James Breen, 40 y c n n In the arm y . l% e general reeogoUed him hn- medlaUly and recalled h e promoted B reen to corporal S5 years ago," ' ' — ■' I n tUe hospltnJ there was a party

atmosphere as the released men w andered througti th e buUdlnn and over the grounds. talU ng to Uie htmdrcds of vlsiton who cuse hopes o l meeting old friends <a learning the fate of prisoners not am ong those rescued.

I ^ e prisoners were forced to tell th e ir stories over and overragaln, h u t they also asked plenty of ques­tions themselves. They had received practically no newa tn the ir prison campe. iTiey did n o t know who was vice-president now, although they h a d heard President Roosevelt was rcelected for a fourth term.

T hey were Intensely In tem ttd in details of the European war and th e Tarlous Invasions In the PacUle, b u t they teemed even, hungrier for •’ew aofhom e.

T h e sUiaulus oC rctease and good trea tm ent favorably affected almost every person, accordlx^ to physi­c ians. Some who yesterday were to weak they had to be carried, today w "-* fully el&d and walking aWut

■ A i RESEARCHOROPINO, Ida, Feb. 1 M V The

legislature next week wlU' be asked to^ provide a tpcclal >200.000 fund for th e University of Id ah o for re- s e ^ In Ui# fields oi; agriculture, mining, engineering, a n d forestry "to keep the state abreast o f rapidly changing conditions," A. B . CurUs of Orofino, said today.

Curtis. pitiJdcnt of tb o Idalio Alumni association which for three

» program and w h i* t t o year was Joined by the Idaho state Orange th rough state­ments by M uter E. T . T aylor and edItoriaU In the SUte a ro n g e r, said In a prepared statem ent: -

■The ^ i r c h and experlm'enta- . H*" 4 bo carried on a t• the earliest possible m om ent t o '

Uie sUtfl abreast of th e rai changing conditions. Bucl» a proj­ect would enrich U>e statei'a wealth and increase lU Income i)y the de- cvlopment and precesslng of raw materials, power and o th e r natural resources in w h ic h th e su t« abounds."

FLASHES of LIFE

LANTERNS WASHINOTON, P a , r ^ b . 1 - lh e

_ ;brovnM t failed to face a cafe pro­prietor here;'Promptly » f midnight last night he exUcgul&ed th e elec­tric window dliplay lights a n d sub-' sUtuted two old. but dependable Ulumlnatlsg eirecls-he iiung out two old-tashlnned country lanterns. COOKED

OXFORD. Conn, Ttb . I —An Ox- ford fisherman and a f r ie a d looked forvard to a p U n n ed o u tti^ .to lU h through the Ice. The friend t n ^ h t a pail of live minnows w hich were dumped In Uit ba th tu b . And the vater turned on a t a alow trickle while they went out to complete ar-' rangeraenU (or the trip . - Returning for the bait U>«7 found tho m ls n o n

' were dead. In (set, they w ere cook* ed. They hsd lnm ed,.oa th e hot water faucet.

th e hospital grounds. -* ¥ ¥ * ■

Ex-Prisoner’s Kin

"W e hadn 't h^d b rek k fu t w h e n ^ h e a rd J^he news and wo atUl haven’t

U B O H U B U C K

I t V I 11 ad lng tcn exdte’d ly 'td id '^ n e w ip a ^ •reporter the reacilona' of“ t h e ^ i d lngton family on learning U ut th e ir »on, 8gt. & m on Addingtoi WM among men rescued- from prison camp on Luton.

“We knew t U t MacArthurVi route w aa near the prison camp.'* said the a o ld l^ a U L « ^ W l4 ,W e '^ W ^ ^ ^ in s thaT our toirw oiiid be rescued?

DBAnOS STATE COLLSaS^ N. U , -ptb. I -

The two eo*«d engtow lns MudtnU a t New Mexico A. & U . s r t n t goins to let any man get a J ^ .J o f . th w a i In the englneen' aonoal 'whisker-' raising dertiy. They‘d Boi.beards, UKMxvTOTid Irani tta tceU ecodra-

WASHINOTONi.pyb, 1 W H lo ii Of tw o m ineT w eepen and a tank:

tol

.Nonaal eom pl^nt of':th«t tnws siwsr,-'?

T%a announeanent bTDuUiLin W Um to tU '.o l o a r a l .T e a a d S ^ ^ WtU eatoe slnc t the s ta r t of- “ “ cltidlnff 908' nink, <0

'p m ttm td lost, and id

BOISE, F^b. 1 CUJ —August Ros- qvtat. PocatcUo, stat« PederaUon of Ubflr secretary, said today tho fed­eration will seek a public’ c o S iS u - tee heartoff on workmen's compen- saucm a c t amtodments Introduced ta the house II the opposlUon to them wUI n o t compromise.

■^0 measures ask Increases In and scope of compenaoUoh for In ­jured workroen and th e ir families •

A farm bloc la form ing in the house • to oppose tho measures p w n d a t ie y place too heavy _ b_M en.on employcra. Members ofi the bloc favor, a bUI to raise the maximum payment, to MO a week f r ^ the present »16, covering an

I injured m a n wlih dependents, os I opposed to the Iibor-backed bill to Increase th e maximum to 125.

Both bUIa now are In the publle utUIUes commlilef, w hich Introduc­ed the one a a k b j a sm aller Increase.

D. C. Parrott Put On Sheriff Staff

Shkriff W arren W. Lowciy ThurS'.; ay announced thst h e had added

David Charles Parrott to his a taff of deputies.

pan o tt, h e uld, would be _ time officer and the aherOf added that he has begun his duUcs.

The new oMicer h as worked as a salesman for the p a st year fo r the PlTEstone store here. P rio r to th a t he was employed for several yeara as a field m an for Sw ift and com< pany. Be replaces John E. Lelser.on the the rlff 's force. 1/elser is sUte traffic oflicer.

FaUore of the Japanese to pu t up a (ight In this nautra l defense wne was as puallng as the enemy-a lack of opposition a t Subic bay.

One column of sixth army troops, which has been moving south from IJngaj-cn, turned west on tlje B a- taan peninsula road from flan Fer­nando and captured Lubao. This, represented a lO-mlle advance to I within 33 road miles of a Junc tu re ' with the eighth, army pressing east­ward from the Zambales coast beachhead, established Monday-

Such a Juncture will seal off the historic Bataan peninsula, which f a ™ the western shore ol Matolla

Buperfortrcsses bombed Japanese military InsUUatlons in the Slnga- ^ r e area today for tho th ird time. A press flash from 20th a ir force headquarters said B ^ s of Brig. Oen. Roger M. Ramey’s aoth bomber con^a n d struck by daylight from India bases; •

LEGISLAlSAi M

Nazis Can Charge Subs Under WaterLONDON, Feb. I (tUD—F irst lord

of the admiralty A. V. Alexander today coivflrmed reports ‘th a t the Germans h a d discovered a m ethod for charg lns the batteries of the ir SQbmarlnes while submerged, thus eiim natlng the rlik of coming to the itirface to recharge.

Alexander's statement was eon* talned In « written measag« to com-

, nons. H e said publlcaUon of any I further details would n o t be in the publlo InMreat.

Feb. 1 W h-lU e ienato io- a proposed constltutlon- il to abolish tho pardon

-------- a few minutes la ter killeda companion,measure which would have eliminated the pardon board and turn over Its duties to a stat&l boom of correction.

The ppllt action further muddled the already cloudy prison leglslai Uon situation.

Both measures voted on today twice have been' turned' down the electorate. ln .» U and 10« .

But in lOU the people approved a, third measure which created the board of correcUon. The electorate's rtfusta to abolish the prison and pardon boards which now havo con­trol of the prison resulted In tJjo board of correcUon remaining as on authorlied but never-created body.

The senate passed two m ajor bills xlay, one to re-enact the special Jldler absentee voUng laws used in

i m but w hich'expired. The re- enactm m t would remain la effect untU Dec. 31, io « . i t provides for early Issuance of ballots and au to- maHo registration to servicemen.

The other measure passed M d sent to tho house would allow cities to levy 20 mills Instead o( 15 mills, after a public hearing, from the years 1949 to 1950.

The caitlne-toU ng O. t la the photo above has mdce lerigiis bp ih im swalUng him. b o t h« eooldn’t resist the tempUtlon t« atop and teeter- totter w ith th e throe. FlUplne yotm ttten In the L a o s town o( Dagnpaa.

W N D p N , Feb. 1 (U.PJ _ BruBsela reports attributed to “• unimpeachable military authorities” said today th a t t h e . .

German government is leaving Berlin and that the capifai> - rapidly la' belns organized for etreet-by-Btrcet, hotiae-by-' ' houflo defense. The reporta, did not indicate where the German governm ent might take refuge. v.

Most likely site of the government is belloved to be Munich ita Msociations aa tho birthplace of th e r a iibecause o f .. ______ ___ ____ __

party, it s proaa'raity ,to Hitler’o retreat a t, ______ .. ^\.4V41kVO(lUUVll, UUUita relative distance from both th e eastern andweatecnfro^fttsi— ^ M- . -------------- Belief is growing in mlli-.;:

tary circles that even lo ss o f >j. Berlin will not knock; Gep*'.' many .out of the war. ;AU> : though ita capture wQ] leave. : the Gcrmana only a SOQ-mile wide area o f maneuver the': nazis are believed preparinfir" to attompt a Stallngrad-lIke' . stand, using Berlin aa th e ’bas- ' tion o f a IJne on w hich they- will attempt to halt th e Bus* alana.

The red anoy.ls hurllnc tho QoT ' mans back across the Oder rtvcr, la s t defense barrier before B a ils , and Is beUeved to have reached the east bank. 40 mUes from th e c ay lta t .

Reports placed the Russians on the Oder opposite FTsskfort. 39 ’ m U u southeast of Berlin, and the . Germans conceded th a t other force*. ■ had broken through to th e e a s tc n ' edge of Mustrln, IB miles north of Frankfurt nnd 43 mUes east Of the. ' capital. ,.

TUI the W . Ihere . Is no Indication th a t H it- '

le r is l e a ^ _ _ B « ^ l« liah V .

SIEG FRIED LINEPARIS, Peb . 1 W>>—H ie Ahierlcan

f irs t anny advanced within plain ^ h t of th o strangely sUent Sieg­fried line on a broad front today amid growing IndicaUons th a t the a ^ m s n s h a d withdrawn farther

Overnight advances generally peached fo u r mUes deeper Into Ger­many. VlUago after village fell. Pa- M U entered the fringes . of th? Slegmed lin e In the Monschau sec­to r, Where b- whole three-mile sec­tio n was captured earlie r.in the week. Third an n y Infantrymen seis­e d four m or» O ennan towna.

Lim ited BeslstaneeAn eerie alienee covered the big

n a n guns In the lines, bu t American nrtUIeiy of bo th the f irst and third arm y laid a borrage on the fortlllca- UoM along ft « .m llo sector opposite Belgium a n d Luxembourg. Heaviest

■.strict­ly to (mall iu s u and mortar screen- iHff. Ih e InvBdera were amased i t* e complete lack of arUilery an th e enemy's reluctance to fight.

The tr. S . th l id 'a m v pushed tw

drelement of flye-slxths of _ out through t h e . , ward Danslg ahd tlons -north and

Elf

Fire Tragedy Cause Remains a Mystery

AUDDRN, Me, Feb, I t ^ H a l a e officials began a Kries of investl. gallons today to determine cause o t a fire w hich snulled o u t th e ,llT e t of 18 chUdren and a n tirse In » pri> vately-owned boudlng home. ' -

As sta te and local o fflc la lr n e t Id elosad: soetlcm a t polio*; head­quarters hundreds of townsfolk u -

WASHmOTON. Feb. 1 (UJO-Tho United States today took another step tow ard resumption of reUUons w ith PW and when It agreed to ac­cept the.D ec. IS payment on th a t country's debt and permit Finland {^undertake certain other financial tnnsactlons here. .

. Uncle Sam severed relations with Finland last year. The Finnish gov- enm ient offered to make the debt payment.w hen It fell due. but the state- and tnosunr departmento re­fused It because Finland was allied With an enemy power. ,

T ^asu iy Secretary Henry Morgen- th a u 's a ld today the payment of *W.44S now wUI be accepted. F u r­thermore, he said, arrangemenU M ve been made' for the Finns to PV. (340,680 semi-annual Interest due on a loan from the export-:

, Import bank and to resume servlc- |lh< In this country of three Finnish [hond Issuea.

Praising th e record o f the present city, administration, a citizens’ committee for tho maintenance o f good govern­m ent in Twin Falls Wednes-i da^ night drafted Mayor Bertl A.-Sweet and threo members of the council to seek reelec- tion a t the primary election to bo held here.

They took acUoa. alte r pubUo hearing a t teg lon haU.and the na­ture of the gToup'a:appeal:W t;.the city fathers’no'iiVtematlve s m ac-' ceptan(5e7de*plta rtho 'fac t- th a f .the

- r and Councilman T. T. Green- h « l declared they wmlld not

ndldates agahi.’ Accept NemI

Contacted, a fte r the meeting by the Tlmes-News and.advlsed,'oI the proceedings, Mayor Sweet a t first d»cllned'a statem ent, but then said th a t In view of the expression, he. could do nothing bufaecep t; Coun- cllman:Oreenhalgh wa« also advised of w hat.had transplred.jind'he. too, said th a t he would accept the nom­ination,from the committee to seek reelectlon.

Both h e and the mayor express­ed their apprecIaUon for th e honor bestowed upon them by the c o m ^ t-

Councllm an. Orville' _______and Kenneth H . Shook had pre- vfously said they were undecided In Uje- matter. W. W . ■ni'omas is the only holdover, meinber Of 'the coun- cU.,' , •

y n \t i i Co]emah and Shook learned , of th e ‘dra(t movement and the ac­ceptance of the mayor ;and Green-1 halgh they said . they - would alsoj

' (C«ill»»»d «n Pm« t. C<l»«i» IX

Wounded Rupert 'Tfrfns in HospitalBiuoHA M . U tahi,,l^b. I WT-rPfc.

p lie d in Action

ham -for trea tm e n t ' •Bappy' to be so

he.telephoned hU.pftrent*,,'Mr.,-ftnd Mrs. Aadrew M aler.,..lt was ^ then t^iat he learned th a t h li. twin brother, E dw ard-a ia ler. tw-^r.L.Un llfth . g ^ f t ; : a l s o : .w ’ un d er'trea t­ment, a t fi^shnell.

Ujb. ; t i ^ : (dMerfed th e ir ' a i t h : .*9

. P.FC. FnANKN.KEIXEY.: . . . killed In actl«a Jan. 16 tn

Belgium where lie was secrlnc with the Infantry. n« Is (he sba .af Sir. and Mr*. F.; D. Kelley, Shoshone. In addition ts hls par­ents, he is inrrlved by his wife, Miriams, and three-year-old dsogh- tef, Katherlne.;.(Blair.ei)(TsvIngl

mmm

T rea ten in r I O ennui-''.-croaa-R hIni ' holdinM n o r th and eotim of S t ra ^ i i r g also b e g ^ to eoUapee, reflectU s a w e tt-enlng of th e e n e o r ........................—estcm f r o n t ■.

.'Zt was certah i th a t - the thInouV h a d ’ weakened • Von • Rundstedt's whole position west of the Rhine so t h a t he could no t hold w hat he had b itten o(f In recent attem pts t o ' th e InlUaUve. N ow .lt Is a <iut wheUier th e Germans wUI be to, save.anythtng west of the B In the sectors of the main e attack.

; F eb . 1 w v-Several Dem- th a Idaho legislature today

Just Plain D o u b le t^, WAttmHOTON, Feb; 1 doubta

the congrcaslonsl record to d a y ^ - ^ It toojt U -lnchn ;o f.type to

.' Twjjboura Uter. Rep. BWly, O .. m , who v iu o a t o tlth# chamber •. w ^,D ln«*U spoke, arose and r ^ t e d (be tpeocb, wpM for irord. : r: Tlw .siem lxn. apparently d id n 't xolad. A t'lea st m * - s e m e d :’M :

M f t Kelly »ave this flustetw l ^ l i a a t l a n r . '' " n waa banded to m« (he .wooltfn't i»y by w h m i ' t i j t t t - r o t -

•--bapitttagaln. noax U m ax to I t o t ^ , w o r a 1,-

:BURIOT. .Peb .',l-P (e . Lincoln L. Ttiomaff.-joa o f'M r. and,l4r».:a M.' Thomas;'Burl«y,':has_been kllled.ln action in Belgium; acconllng"to a war, departm ent • telegram received by-pi? parents. . . . . .'. Private T hom u entered the'army bi) pec.'26.'lM 3 and recdred train- log a t Comp Boblhsoh,-Ark; a t Ft. .Qeorge 'Meade. M d; and .at Camp McOoy. ,WI«., befon<golog' oTehea« to England., He la n d ^ In France the day'foU

lowing D-day and went through th e , hedgerow f l ^ t l n ; -In Normandy. He w u. wounded In action Is-July.and received the .purplefheart a t- th a t time. FollowlnK his recovery .he.aaw more front Ihie cocnbat with the ln- fantn^forcea.' ,. ,

ert of health and velfaro who said 'j^w m jtl n o t “undcntand ,U>8

73 colored Soldiers J f p t t i s d n f o r ^.■HQNgLULU.:T.’ H ,’ 1 ^ ' i

Aniy,«m rts m iJtial bareMMvnti^ n.N esro aoldlen.to p r t a s o i t ^ ^ eKht.to:.M :yeana(Sar& i B t t

. S £ S - « s a-T he.nen w«h»«

Jn«rito.obe3r.arda(£ I»rt.for-w M lt:a t- ’

w ired Oem s ta te Democrats Inin s establishment o( a r iv e r valley authority as

p r ^ e d in th e naUonal house yes-

T he telegram was signed by Dem­ocra ts In bo th house and senate, and asked that vlew i of the 'sU te Cham- t » r ol'Commerce bo disregarded as n o t "representaUve of the wishes of th e people."

T he. message, addressed to Sen. ^ n ^ ^ y ^ and Ilep. comjjlon I.

"We beUevc Democrats o f Uie state desire Uie Columbia river valley au­thority. We ask you to disregard views of th e Idaho Chamber o( Commerce as not representative of th e wUhes o f Uie people."

H ie atate chamber has vigorously opposed the publlo power move on grounds th a t the federal govern­m e n t would be Infringing Qpojj Idaho 's rights.

SlgDcn of th e telegram areiecn . Qlenn E . Bandellir, D., Bon­

n e r ; Sen. P h ilip Ryan, D.. Shoshone; S e n . Junes U . Rhodes D . Kootenai; S en . H sny W all. D , Nex. Perce; S « . Oeorga DonarW D„ Washlng- to o ; Rep. J . n ; M eeker,:D, Bousdr

o u te m v e a a OfGoouuiy.*’ : ." M-.SarelepeA !a:;|laBeav'^Red S tar a a ld .'S o n to b ^ M td tiJ l

trf,-Dist Pnusla,.’«u .-^vB leped.la fUmes.,{miehedoff,l»,'8BrlergaS;%-'and naal d e m o litfo o j^ m ^ .lM s^ :-onen ca^^u^ed-•^n^-;the^•«uU»m:■;

<C»^UaW « P w a. O riun |>

:E SPEEDING ER BILL

WASmKOTON, Feb. 1 m --T tl» ' • house today rejected .a subtUtuie.'/ fo r coercive' manpower' leglsIaUan • th a t .would h a te provided for-fflUn* ’•sbor needs voluntarily. .

Offered by Rep. Harness, . f t , , . In d . the subsUtute w defeated.*.' 187 to m as thi •ward passage o f __— leglslatlon-for

Stinison “UnaW e. ToDisc,us8” Blaze

N, ]>eW l '(U R > -S^W A sn m aT o f< . ]>eb.' r e t» ry of W ar 'sa id today t b a t _____________ _velVa laane-rtdln* dor, Blai^ ttf- celved 4a .-A-prlority*' on bto air.

tn ttaparteeenm aD aperK fanel..Xn a Mtter to Hep. George P.JAU>

le r , sttBuon sa id th a t bU ln n e tlg t. ' tio a o r :t» « .sn it ta t baa n o t - u m b e ra

,:.' . n - ’ tterelore,*' am . ttiahlei a m 'itk* / ln o « « t , 'l i J detiPf

18 and 49.Harness' proposal »

defexred draft-ajpi mu tlal Jobs through the p . „ followed by the United 6 - . v , ploymeat serrlee n /vn X systetn.' .„

Barring an unexpected upeet. U » .:' blU wia leave the; house J n sub-M. stantloUy the ' fona recommended'-.^ by the m ilitary committee—ntooa.'.’.'., controversial antl-closed shop <asd anU-dUcrimlnatlon provlslQils -whida ’. earUer had . threatened to klll.lt.

Safe voting marglns.pUediup y » ' terday to knock dow n-thew '.-tw o' i explosive proposals were counted on by backers of the legUlatlon to bold " f i r r a to d ^ . ••

London Was Near ; Being Destroyed;!

NEW tCRB^.Feb.sMped “total de»tm rtlon?.oote..b»£Ji—

halrViv breadth du tln r. t l W v ^ ^ H j omb Bttacka.last wnmwr;

Jehrm an. 41sUoM d.';jn,';«ii',jM i£l*M :H|

capita} Jn the'.cnrr«nK:,li(BW:X«kee;|l

O n ly .1nm lea;V ;»-* '''^ '-*^ -

r S v l.th a tavwla................

“Xhti'

S I - " ' ”

i s J t ®

Page 2: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Iliursday, Fettnaty 1,1941

fLEONG BERLINi r n a r in O a t )

. - _ v i t a were quoted u uy ln g eoa< tu d o n borderluK on anarchjr reu sed Inside the fo rtm i c l t j crcvded

' "VlUi m ,000 refUfces.’ O ermaa poslUons c u t of the

Oder, from Stettin In tu# north to ' belov Breslau In the south, w en ' crumbUns rapidly and there seemed little brospect the nuxslans could be

'checkM even temporaxtir before they were. established firmly aton^

ABOOT FUANKFUBT I . LONDON, Feb. I ( n —U Is about ■•.PTanklurt. a city of 78WO on the -west side of the Oder 17 miles south ^ o f Kustrln. tha t the aem irins have -. grouped their strongest fortifica­

tions alons the line of the Oder to ''p ro t e c t communications between

. ' Berlin and BrosUu In EUetU... W ltb hla wines spread out on a

'*n>>mlle front, Zhukov Is preparlss ' lo r a mighty battle alone the Oder . which might break German reiUt- aaee and lei the red army flood

- Into Berlin.- The Germans are reported dyna<

-Diltlnff, shelling and bombing thi ■Oder In a frantic effort to brea) ‘tip na tura l Ice bridges.

The R uulaiu quoted German prlS'. onera as saying large elements c.

'- th e German air force had been 's t r t p p ^ from the Gologne and 'A achen sector of the western front t u the nazl high command threw In

'VreiTthlng to stop the Itu&slans.

Wool President

RETIRED FARMER M E S OWN LIFE

Despondent over, extremely .h e alth Use past two months, Ray­mond Ftoyd Bush, S7, retired farm* e r. ended his life shortly after, a a . m. Thursday by firing a shot- Eun charge through his heart as he s a t In « rocUng choir la the base* m ent workshop of nis home a t tha Bungalow apartments. Second ave- s u e cast and Fifth street.

Investigating officials sold th a t hs pulled the trigger of the shotgim i m t as his wife, alarmed a t her husband's absence.from their bed­room. broke through a basement door.

' Etie entered the workshop with Oeorge Bailey, whom she bad aroused from onother apartment to a id he r la the search for her hus­band.

Mr. Bush was kUled Instantly by th e charge of No. 4 shot th a t tore In to h is heart.

The Investigation showed th a t' B ush got up about a B. p a ir o f oreralls over a n d le ft h is bedroom.

He w ent to the '

B ora a t Linden, Mich., to 1877,votUd have been SB Sunday. Be i __a member of the P r e s l^ r la n church.

Besides bis wife, who was under a. physlelan-8 care Thursday after- noon, be Is survived by a daughter, M rs. Edith Davis,' Twin Falls; two brothers, FVed and Bert Bush, both o f Florida; a sister, Mra. LotUe Stockwell, Michigan;' a n d , two grandchildren.

Funeral terrices will be held a t 3 p . m . Saturday a t the Twin Falla a o r tu a r? chapel w ith the Rev. H . J. ~ lolds officiating. Burial will be

■ t PWls cemeterr.

State Water Supply Situation Improved

B O ISi; Feb. 1 OIA-Sofety of v n te r supplies throughout the state h a s ImpTDved markedly, H. O. Glare, Zd&ho publlo health engineering di­rec tor, said yesterday.

But, h e added, 'tw o conditions pe­c u lia r to Idaho are giving the d»- p iirbne iit some trouble:

‘‘A common practice of disposing oZ‘ wost« la crevice in lava beds un­derlying certain areas and mistaken

. be lief th a t water from mountain dnU nages Is Inherently pure.” '

BOSCOE 0 ; m c i i« w w «

Burley Man Heads U. S. Wool Council

.FORT WORTH, Feb. 1 W >- American wool council, a unit of the NaUonal Wool Growers asso- cistion, reelected executive officers, made tw o changes In executive mitteemen, and- named two

convention.Roscoe O. Rich, Burley, Ida , was

renamed presIdenL

Cassia Paratroop Soldier Wounoed

BURLBV, Feb. l - M r . 'a n d Mrs. Fred H elnie, Springdale, received a telegram from the war department su tlng th a t the ir son. Pvt. Reuben Heinzo, was seriously wmmded In action Ja n . < la Belgium.

He Is a paratrooper in the Infan- try and has been In the army only a year. He was here on furlough last August before going overseas.

FOR POLIO, E O i SProceeds from honor roll cards to r

the polio fund campaign, turned In by SS of the 200 Jaycees a n d 'Joy- O-ettes by noon Ih u n d ay totaled' ll,007.«0, Earl.Bickford,'C ity chair­m an for the polio campaign, pounced.

■"With more thon. half the mem­bers in the two organizations yet to re p o r t, 'I t Is anttclpoted th a t this amount will be more than doubled by the conclusion of the campaign," Bickford said.

Each honor roll card represents contrlbuuoa of 11.60 or more to the “figh t infantile paralysis” campaign. Jaycees and Jay-O-ettes were urged to complete their canvass as soon

I possible, and tu rn in the money) the Chamber of Commerce., I t will be traniferred from there

to P rank W. Slack, county treasurer,I Twin Falls Bank and Tr pany.

O ther city and county drive totals were unavailable Thursday. Mere than WO, realized from the Sunday vesper service, had olready been an­nounced.

* ¥ • *

Theater Patrons Contribute $1,095

Contrlb’jllons to the March of Dimes Infantile paralysis drive In the three Twin Fails theaters cams to «1.0«}.<4, I t was announced Wed­nesday by Breck Fagln, chairman of the war acUvltle# cp.nmlttee’for the motion picture Induitry to Twin

Fagin said tha t the conUlbuUons came from u tro n s of the Roxy. Orpheum and Idaho theaters. The am ount thul collected has been turned over to drive cffleials. -

Twin Falls News in Brief

RO

BEIKZB JlLBRETJIStK

n tO M SOUTH PACIFIC OARinr, Feb. 1—SO 9/0 ChesUr R.

Albrethsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al­fred Albrethsen, Carey, recently spent a leave with his parents alter more than a year in the south clfic.

Be was recently flown from his base on Guadalcanal to the Ha- walUn Islands and from there came

boat to Seattle. He reporUd tha t

Albrethsen w ill'now attend the San Diego training school to be-

3Die a . chief commissary steward. He is a graduate ol the Carey

high school and entered the service Sept. 28,1042, being given boot Ualn- Ing a t F^rragut.

Tile Hospital.. A nerseacy beds were available a t T w in Falls oouaty general hospital TTrorsday. .

ADUnTCD

liO m a Bohanan. Joyce WUlls. all „ T w to PalU; Mrs. Willard Webster, I n e s Wicker and Opal u . Ball, all o f Kimberly and Mrs. Olocd Bean, F iler . .

’ . DISMISSED U rs . Ted Masumoto and daughter.

Sybil Spencer, and Anita Fisher, all o f Twin Falls; Mrs. Earl Johansen a n d son, Hazel toa. and Roger Buey,

Weather

Keep th e W hite Flag of S a fe ty Flying

This Oversea Letter Arrives Despite Crash

The entire bottom edge of the envelope w u charred away. The back of th e envelope was splashed with oU. spu ttered with mud.

But th e airmail letter reached Its destination. OUppM on the envelope was a small slip ot paper on which was printed to red: ''United Post Olflee, New Vork 1, N. T . This let- te r was recovered from a mall- carrylng airplane th a t was to an ac­cident. -Respectfully yours, Albert

Iter."

.................................................. sent byLieut. P reston G. Henman, Twin Falls tMmbardler, to the Tlmes- New*. w ith the exception of » burned streak across one fold of the letter, th e missive was entirely read­able.■ "My purpose to wrltln* is to re­

quest the paper be sent me. If a written request la necessar;. My next purpose Is to le t a few of my friends Itnow where I t a located. Per­haps the arm y has already re . . . “ (and th a t p a rt of the letter Is burn­ed away) . . . but there's nothing like a personal letter."

Because- of m lU tair censorship reguIaUons, the Tlmes-News Is not permitted to - - - - -

SEIiSIG D O D IIIE, OOODINa, Feb. 1 ~ More than 1,100 names of Gooding county ser­vicemen and wpffl'en have been plac­ed on the county honor roll which wJU be dedicated a t ceremonies toi be held on the Gooding county |

Dhder direction o t Perry Byam post of the American Legion, dedi­cation arrangements are beingpleted. Homer Hudelson, Boise post departm ent commander, will make the dedicatory address. The memor­ial will be presented by Ralph Day, commander of Perry Byam post, and acceptance by Mayor A. P . James, Oooding. for the county.

"To the Colors" bugle call and presentation of the colors will open the program a t 3:30 p. m., followed by Jlnglng of "America." accom­panied by the Oooding high school band; InvocaUon by the Rev. E. R. Kaemmer, chaplahi of the local

To Califemia v ,MTS.-W, S.-Browne, T w in Palls,

has gone to Lci Angele« to vlgit her daughter, Mn. Odell Randolph.

At Legfalator*Dr. Antha Lt« U arbert lias re­

turned to Twin Pills f ro m Boise after attending le jilou o f th e legis­lature. y 0

Daoghter Born A ^ u g h U r tru bom to M r. and

^ - H a r ^ , Bum, W ednesday, a t Tvrln Palls tou^ty general hospital

Bicycle 6tol«n Ron&Id yetoiui. iso Alexander

street, reported to poUco th a t his bicycle was stolen Wednesday night from the high school grotirfdd.''

C, of C. MetUni'Board of dlr«leti of th e Twin

Falls Chamber of Commerce will meet Friday s t coon a t th e park hotel. Jay M. U«rrt», presldent,'an- nounced Thurtdiy.

Arrives BaseJ . Philllp-'mamui, who le ft for

duty to the navy, hss a rrived at a naval training bue In B an Diego.according --------- - ......... . ■parenU, U

Enters HospltsI Mrs. Everett e . fljchtoJ. who has

been 111 at hesne the p a s t few, months, has eotertd St. L uke's hos-' pital In BoUe. T n tpeelallsts wlU a ttend her.

{tetnm* Hoae SP 3/0 . and Itrt. H. W. Zimmer­

man left ter their hom» I n Coeur .d'Alene Thundsy m om lns. The couple spent a i t dsy leave here a t the home oi htr m o th e r, Mn. z . M. Kloppeoburg.

iflhls ExecuUTft OKIc..I Lteut. E rout J. Ostrom h a s been

loted .to ejiecullve o fficer ol an___ la the south Psclflo, a n d hasbeen advanced from lieutenant

Jun ior grade, secordlng to word I received by hli mother, M r». Nellis It . Oitrom.

Attend* c o n f t w ^. The Rev. Herbert . . .of the local AmerlMa' _________church, will return this w eek from Pendleton, Ore, vhere he h a s beej) attendtog the rfjional conference for Lutheran mlnUters. Q uest' a t the parsonage Saturday a n d Sunday will be the Rev. L Ludwls. presi­dent of the noithm tem dU trlct.

Fnrfoogb One , S taff Sgt. Sylvan L. Hodabaugh. looD of Mr. and Mrs.'W. H. Roda- ' baugh. route two. Twin F»Us. hss a rrlved 'to the United States oa.fur. lough a fu r serving eight months In the- Mediterranean area as a-tall guflner on a B-17. Ho h a s ............

O n Bnrley P ^Mrs. Palmer' J . Satentrom, the

form er Witma Keel, Twin .Falls, has • w lth-the Burleyl

Aleutian Veteran At Georgia Camp

SHOSHONE, Feb. l - T /S B t. Mil- m Jackson, who Joined th e an

forces In I9« and ipent tw o yi In the AleuUan Islands, U now i Uoned n t Pt. Btnnlng, O a . He is

jn of Mr. anil Mr*. C. O . Jatk- .... who recently moved to Salt

Lake City, and breiher of M rs. Vera Burgess, Shtahone.

Compiiatlon of names’for'’tfi’e e n ' tire county has 'required several mbnths work by the Legion commit­tee, aided by the auxiliary. The hon­or roll will occupy the place where the old World war I cannon was lo­cated on the courthouse lawn. The lettering Is black egslnst a white background arvd a gpld star will be placed before names of those who have died In action.

Of the. total number of names. 2B

Dwight McCombs. adjuU nt of the post, was chairman of the commit­tee. O ther memtKn were A. s . Olark, and Oscar Edholm.

Parents and relatives of servlcs- ..len throughout the county are esepclally Invited to attend the dedi-

I cation ceremonies. .•

SOOAB BIVIDEND BALT LAKE C n V . Feb. 1 W >-

Dlrectors of the Dtah-Idaho Sugar company have announced the iisual annual dividend of is cents 'per, share of common stock will be ;» y -

Magic Valley Funerals

KIMBERLY—Funeral services for Leroy McBride will be, held a t 3;S0

m . Friday a t Reynolds funeral .. me. Burial will -be to Sunset memorial park.

man's address, bu t I t ta on fUe a t the ' newsroom, and available to friends who are toterested.

l a fact.* L ieutenant Henman, In a oetscript to the letter, has offered I drop some bombs on a future raid

to the nam e of Twto Falls. Idaha "You name the spot, i l l do the drop-

England os a b r sees it. . . when he 'a "socked" . . . Is told by Lieutenant Henman as follows;

I t 's Wet'Havtog a horrible' time — glad

you're no t here. This U poelUvely the dampest w eather I've ever seen, f t 'e a when Ifa cleat, the atmosphere U sU Qdamp. ' -

-15 our sad hearta cams the order •no Dying’ on those days we were socked' la here, and tha t Was lust the time ou r men needed c lr support so badly fo r Qielr halting attacks -n tha spearhead.’*

However, tha t's water over the d a m ,h e M ld ^ commenting th a t tha American alrm ejj were back In late December w ith e r t a larger tttaeks,

'Ton'tre heard aboQt the Oak-be* li^ r .to th ick you could walk on I t .Well. lUten, brothers and sister*. th» t'i no Joket The nsslB m u tt have put-plenty taito ack-ack guns and '’ammi.'' T h a t aloas ahows they hal« tb s a ln n ea beyond words,. Well, you know wa boobardlerg are h a r-

A je s l field d a y ., l ta u eto e ws m e n j)Topeity than any

TWIN FALLS — Funeral services for RajTOond Floyd Bush will be held a t 3 p. m. Saturday a t the Twto Falls mortuary chapel with the Rev. H. J. Reynolds ofliciettog. Burial win be to Twto Palls ceme­tery.

BURLEY — Funeral services for I Joseph Henry Powles. 73, who died 'S aturday a t Ogden. Utah; will be held a t 1 p. m. Friday a t the Burley LOS church of the first ward with Bishop Ernest R. Blauer offlciat- tog. Burial will be to the Burley cemetery under the dlrecUon of the Payne mortuary.

FILER—Funeral services for Rob­e rt Samuel Wygal, Filer,: t IU be held a t 3:30 p. m. Friday a t the F iler Methodist church with >h« Rev. E: L. White officiating. Burial win be to the Filer I. O; O. F. cem- etery under the direction of the W hite mortuary of Twto Palls.

OAKLEY — Puneral sendees for I Thomas Prank Burch wiu be held ,a t 3 p. m. Monday, Feb. 5, to the I stake tabernacle, Oakls^. under the ' dlrectloa of Bishop Rose! Hale. Oak­ley. second ward LDS church. Buriat 'Will be made to the Oakley cemetery under the direction of the Burley funeral home. Burley.

Herald'BuUetto as nbwi editor, oc- conUng to word received by her m other. Mrs. Ines Keel, Twto Palls. M rs. Satcrstrom replaces Miss Judy Allen, who left to become assljtant to w . T.'Lockwood. Boise, state OPA In fom ation director.

A t Coast necpltal Pv t. Eugene J. Malberg, Infantry . e d i c a l corpsm aa’wounded In

P rance July. 28, Is now a t Dlbbls general hospital. Palo Alto, Calif., h a advised his mother, Mrs. 'Anna Malberg, by Ulephone. He has had two operations on his right eye. and » th ird la expected to restore tight In the eye. Private Malberg expects ft 30-day furlough soon and will v isit his mother here.

Discharge* Recorded Claude P. Brandon, Buhl, record­

ed his honorable discharge from the a rm y yesterday to the cJerk’s oHlce., Q ated July 22. 191B. the dlschirge w as Issued a t Camp Bowie. Tex. I B randon « u a private. Russell U.' S m ith , Murtaugh, also recorded hU

', the dlschab;e t

T w o Seek.Divorce Two-Twto Falls women yesterday

filed suit for divorce In district court. Mrs. Barbara BonaccI, (lied s u it for divorce from Angelo B cuc- cl, chargtog cruelty; Tha cm arried a t Toledo, o ., Jan. <.........O. O. Hall, Tft-to Falls, li attorney fo r Mrs. BonaccL Pearl E Hatcher, charging cruelty and neglect, filed su it fo r divorce from Charles M. H atcher. They wed June IT, 1920, at BteelvUle, Mo. F. 0 . “

Seen Today

JACKSON TURNDtlLl.

RETUII.VS TO FARRAGUT CAREY, Feb. l - m o w ln g a <ive-

day leave; G i/c John D. Turnbull, son of Mr. and Mn. James .TumbuU, Carey, returned to tils base In Far- ragut Monday.

He was gnduated from Carry I high school last eprlng.

|Mrs. Venna Gale Rites Conducted

Puneral senrlcei vtre conducted I for Nirs. Venna Boden Oole. former- ly of Hazelton, at 3 p. m. Wednes­day to the White mortuary chapel w ith talks glTen by George B . Men­denhall and Ephran Nlthola of the L atter Day Sauts church. Hozelton.

Two eongs were sung by A. w . Morgan, accompuiled by M ra. W. O. Watts. Special tenlces w ere pre­sented by memben ol the Hoselton Rebekah lodge.

Pallbearers were Dave Detweller. William I>etseller, H arry Rois. Art]h Slater, Ollla Qrou a n d E. A. Plnkelburg.

Interment » u held to th e Twin Palls cemetery.

Crowley Finishes His “Gossett Term”

BOISE. Feb. 1 Wfl-Arlel Crowley has served out hlj 3i) days a s execu­tive secTetaof to Oov. C harles 0. Gossett and left to resumi h la posl- tlon as attorney vllh the regional department of sgrieulture. a t Port­land.

Gossett aald Robert Beckwith, slstant U. S. district a tto rney (or Idaho, had been gnnted a leave ot absence to take over the secretary­ship for the next 30 or 23 days. -

Crowley had a SO lay leave of absente from his pott. H e Is a former Idaho aaslsUat attorney general

least we release

T ha Chriatmaa dtoner.they served

tows had th a t f a r ,_____ __ . .tneij meal, aad BToyum*- a Christ- mas carol w u sung.'. There w u ft, determtoatloa to their facet, tba tl seemed to tayt'"Next CbHstmasTU' be h o m e r

MILK fillEETS Kovember and Deceml>er, 18U.

I milk eridence sheeti are now due at the-local AAA cHlce In o rd er that

I government subsidy paym ents can be made on production f o r thoae months, it was annoonced Wednes- day by Ben Jani'en, AAA ch ftlrm ia j

If Y on Are PlannlnffA NEW BATH

I t 'Wiu pay you to contact th e

NARK WELCHPlomblng & Heating

.Company - FrMSstlBitea Contrut iRiisllaUons' .

•PhooM 169W.1678"^

Secretarial ataff a t city hall taking tim e out to peek to on, and palpitate a t, weddtog performed In MP office by Judge J. O. Pumphrey. . . But­to n badge worn by tlx-ycar-old R obert Miller, proclaiming. “When I A m Puli, Send Me Home". . . Joe Donahue cotulderately retr&ctog his steps to close car door lelt open In ra in by a motorist. . . Army lieu­te n a n t, sporting one of those new half-blouses. . . Sgt. A. H„Muclcen- th a le r ond the Mrs. leaving town In h is Bulck, concluding couple ot years' asslgiunent In these parts as army food ltu|>ector.., Buslneuman put- U n? dollar bill to one o( those polio contAtoers. . . Lady right after him pu ttto g half-dollar ta the polio box a n d d itto 'to the Jaycee container ra ising funds for LST 'crew's ath­le tic equipment. . . And Mrs. Jean Schaefcr o' the O. o t 0. all adlthef over taking oft CVld&y for Balt L&ice to m eet soldier spouse.

More Names Soon Go on Honor Roll

M ore settled weather conditions wUl see the addition o( ecorea ot nam es to the Twin Falla honor roll board and also the addition of eer-, e n l gold stars. I t was announced W ednesday by Herb Smith, chair- m an ot the American Legion Com- RiltUe to charge of the board.

Sm ith explained th a t an up>to> d a ta file Is being motoUlned and th a t correcUons and additions to th e lis t on the board wlU bo made

S L O T irnD fflD i T i l L H y

, BOISE, Peb. I (ffV -Ihe bU to I tax slot machines Is dead a n d buited but Its w ake was a lively affair.

Idaho rep resen ta tlra argued and. aranjrued before .tu ralng thumbSi

ep. Jease.Vet-l to tax the

Mcanwhlle'additl’ons which should I

w ard them to Mr. Smith; Men taken th rough selective service are auto- maUoally put toto the fUe tor future

o n the board.

Federal Payment Issued for Beets

Government payments tor sugar beets, amounting to approximately «3.S0 a ton, are now being received by growers' throughout this section, ■■ w as announced by Ben-Jansen. >'

le AAA local office.Some StO applications for paymei

..e re submitted to regional oiflc.. records show, and two elgnatufei .were required on each.. The pay. m en ts are on the 16( i crop.

Class Presents PlayHAOERMAN. Feb. 1-FrIday at

S p .-m . to American' Legion hall th e Junior class of Hagerman hl|h

dMXJl will present a play, “Wed- Ins ' Spells."A m atinee was held for the i

school students Thursday after

BEA D TTMES-NEWS WANT XDS.I

Idown—36 to l»-on D , Kootenai,

lake of a lo t machtoes 30 p er cent and p toba ll machines 10 per cen t

~ . Hyrum Lewis, B , CasiU.-------llk s Vetter^ propossl th a t therevenue b o used' to iwost monthly okl age payments $10V " It Is a deplorable...........................the e tato has to pay Its old. folks from m oney obtatoed as a tax on Illegal devices." he crackled,

stone and Bread V etter accepted the serve."At th e la st session the old folks

isked th e legislature «ld and you gave them a stone,'* h e replied. *l'm , trying to give them bread e n n -U IV comes fro m slot machtoes.” .

Rep. Moore, D.. -Bonner, .eald be ad seen ‘'prominent men' and wom-.

.n plsy these machtoes—n o t only: the nickel ones but th e 33>cent ones —in clubs operated by fn tem aL or> ders.“ .' Yes. V etter agreed, and " fn tem a l

organizations make donations to charities w ith the proceeds from

I these machtoes."’X et's be practical and tax a piece

of property which does exist." Rep. BisUine, I>.; Bannock, chipped to.

But. arsuedRep..Vtocent, R.. Ada, .ie tax “wouldn't be be tter collect­

ed" than th e law is "being enforced a t the presen t time."

Rep. EUetogton. D., Bonneville, to whose county a grand Jury Is to tts - tigsting gambling, thought h e ^ m entitled to a say a t th is p o to t /

Except a t EJeoUon "Oftlcers never did e^iythtog. ex- !pt near elections, about gambling

..I'Our county.” he asserted. B ut as for tax toa slot machines, be added, "we m igh t Just as well get p a rt of the toko o f a pubUo prostitute.”

Easy fellows, Rep. Sm ith, D.. Sho­shone, cautioned. "We ore debaUng 'the m erits ot our police system rather th a n tha toxtog of slot ma­chines."

The senato spent m ost.o f I ts day debattog a resolution proposing a I consUtutlotial amendmeat authoriz­ing the s ta te to set u p a system of state-guaranteed land titles.

The bill, sponsored Senators Oeorge D onari, D., Washington, and Edson Deal, R., Canyon, lacked threo votca o t the 30 votes necessary for passage.-

First Aid Course SiatedNextW eek

An totensive course to f irs t aid. Tuesday through Saturday. Feb. 0 to 10. w ill be sponsored by Twin Fails Red Cross choptcr. Jam es 0. Reynolds, f irst aid chairm an, ~ nounccd Thursday.

The f irs t clots will be held next Tuesday n ig h t In the basement of the Twto Falls public library, Ho­garth B arton , Boise Red Cress field representative for t i n t aid and ac­cident prevention, will conduct the course.

Those elglbla to a ttend are hold­ers ot standard certificates who will be given a n advanced and tostnic- tora' course, and holders o f ad­vanced a n d initructora' cerltlcates who w an t a refresher course.

Persons Interested a re requested to notify tha Red Cross ottice. phone 101, or Reynolds before Tuesday.

CameraCnuse

h is camera la readinen, . T tostm aa, Ne a Service-

Acme aewsplelnres n r plclore peel phe tepapber, U fbown above as be crossed th a Cslmsy rlrer a e s r D agapaa, where be ts cov- e rto f the T aak advance oa Uuen. He . “chartered” theeanoisaad m ip too fertbe Jesmey.

Mrs. Henry Better Following Surgery

KIMBEBI.T. Feb. : - M n . J . F rw it Henry is oonvalesdng satisfaol "at St. Vlncenfa hoapltal, Port.___Ore., following an operation to which

Mrs. H en ry ? cUnlo for a week p lolng surgery. Her h

[her;

th s Portland ■ T ta imder-

band Is. with

.Missionary to Talk At Rupert Sessions

RUPERT, Peb. 1 — Mrs. O . J. lOoulter. returned missionary from China, w hose husband Is now to .an Internment camp somewhere to. China, will b e special guest spe '" Bt the Y ou th meet, Peb. 3-: Rupert C hristian church. T he public is Invited t o hear he r. I t is nounced.

On Sunday- momtog, Feb. 4, the Rev. Paul D e P. Mortlmore, secre­tary o t southern Idaho association, vlU speak.

Forced LandingPAXRPTET.T), Feb. I—Forced down 1

I Held one m ile east of F |had planned to return u uooomg ibut were radioed not to attem pt It I that n lgb t, 00 made th e emergency 'itndlng.

Stewart la (hs (on o f M r. and Mts. Carol S tew art, Fairfield. ..

DRIVE U N 0[R 1YB o r Scouts and Cubs throughout

the Snake River area coundl start­ed the task of collecting waste paper Wednesday and looked tor- ward to reochlng the goal ot MO.OOO pounds which has been set for this eouncll. I t was atmounced by Milton J. Powell, Tw to Palls, chairman of the camping and activities commit­tee for the area.

The overall goal for the eouncll calls for about 300 pounds ot peper for every Scout and Cub. Hoover, special awards will go to units which: average l/}00 pounds for each mem­ber.' and also medals will be given pounds each.todlvlduals collecting o v e r 1;000|

Under the plan, units will store paper collected to places which they can secure for themselves untU roll- rood cars are available to be loaded. The loading will take place a t Tnto Fall*. Oooding and Burley. First three' cars will probably be loaded early to M arch and'three more can the la ter part of April.

Under present! plans, there will be no special districts. ScouU and Cubs can collect the paper la any areas they wish, i . '

Residents of all communities to the council a re asked to start savlilg paper Immediately and to J; " until Scouts o r Cutis call for

AVPARIS, Peb. I W >-The figure' o t

18.000 American .soldiers sa id . Iss t w eek to be absent without leave to th a European theater was revised to8.000 today by MaJ. .Qen. MDton A; Beckord. provost marshal..- Beckord said the 18.000 total, pub­

lished in tho army newspaper S ta ^ a n d Stripes and credited to th e p r ^ ' v a s t marshal's offiee. probably was ' computed by addtog the 'approxi­m ately eoo new AWOL cases report- e d each day. >and n o t taking toto ’m account m en who had returned. < f

Actually there were 8,i37 AWOL’s reported during December who had n o t returned or been caught by the e n d of the m onth. :

m oddlUon there .arc about 3.600 long-tenn AWOL's who h a d beSn missing from their outfits more th y ia month and a ) a im a t large. '

Thomas F. Burch, Oakley, Succumbs

OAJOEY, Peb. 1—Thomas tr a n k BurCh, 74, died a t his home here At0 p . m. yesterday foUowlng im lUneas o f six months.

H e vas bom July: n , 1B10, a t ■OoalviUc, U tah, tho son of Thonjas ' P . Burch, sr.. and Sarah Boat Burw .

B e majaledSMlss Mable Sanford » i^pw m ber: 1803. a t the LDS £S^e. 8alt Lake City. *

, eurvlrlng beside the wldowi wo1 s ix daughters, Mrs. Nellie S. Hale,' Oakley; Mrs. Hasel H alt and Mfs. L ed a Ferguson. Morttoez, Calif.; M rs. Lens PUlmore and Mrs. Myrtle D urui, Salt Lake City, U tah, apd M rs. Vyla CaU, Burley; two sons. Blahop Raymond Burch. Heybutn. a n d Blibop H erman Burch. Oakley; . tw o sisters, Mrs. Irene Sutton, Osk- ley , and Mrs. Cora Hlgley, Pocatello, a n d 13 grandchildren.

Pxmeral servlees will be held a t 3 p . m. Monday, Feb. s. a t the stake tabem&cle, Oakley, u n de r the dirtp- t io n ot Bishop Ro»I Hale, Oakley ' second ward LDS church.

Burial wUi be made to the- Oak­le y cemetery under the direction of t h e Burley funeral home.

r r m

Ends Saturday!

Member of 101st Air Unit WoundedBUHL, Peb. I—Paratrooper Fred

A. Kambrich was wounded to Bel­gium Jan . 10, according to vord received from the war deportment ■ f hia parents, Mr. and Mrs.-Mike

lambrich. Buhl.He Is now hoepltallMd to Bel­

gium. Paratrooper Kambrich landed with, the famous IQlst alttMme' division. He entered the service Kov. 16. 1M9, and received boslo train- to t a t Camp Roberts. Calif.

He tratoed as a parstrooper at F t Benning, Oa.. before going — seas. He was home on iuiloui July and was sent to the cont to September.

NOTICE TO POULTRY RAISERS

Ws are booklnjr orders for baby chicks from U. S. PuUorum con­trolled s t ^ White Leghorns. CbriiUe Ne«r Hampshire Redi. Parmeater Rhode. Island Reds. Barred Plymouth Rocks.- These chicks are hatched from a hatchery under the NaUonal Poultry Improvement Plan. The nocks' a re selected end blood tested tmder the supervision ot

state imlvendty.'

MAGIC VALLEY PRODUCE CO.

There’s 0 0 I7 coe better ^ la B onds. B O N D S t

Gleamote IMttakriM Co.» U atiTnia, JteM adr

l i t t le Lula Cartoon “WIIATB YOUR

NAJHE7- > Late War New*

40e t i l d

Msrfe'lONTlZ^Jejanaefosra.

' Jeili*OAKS .Tfffccsi'.

Starts SUNDAY:

TODAY & FRIDAYa

•• Cartooa*fBroaght To AeUon”

‘S to u n b M lo n lh c R lv e r 'l

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T b n n d a y , F e b ru a ry 1 ,1945 TI!II!Sr}IEWS, TW IK .P^LS, ffiAHp

t A S r H I E F O R ^HAIX£Y, P tb . 1 — P u n e n l ser­

vices were eoodueted At tba L O a r . haU for Ttiewlfire Jsm es CuUtr. 87. who died a t hla home In Frtdo- n la . A rl t, Jan. 38. Serrlcea were.nn- der U>o auxplces o f < tbe I.. D. B. eburctu vlUi H u«Ul' A b n s lw oUU

• da ting . Muilc was oU end by . the li-DB. mixed choir.

FaUbeorers were N o m a n Hintse. H unter Nelson. F iord W ilson,!.. E . O u ta , ■nioaiaa Walker and lawrence

■ H unter. In tcnacn t w m Jn tfaa HsUoy cemetery, under the direction o{ the

. H u rls funeral p&rlor.. “T. J ." 'Cutler, fts h e was known,

was bom in Denmark July 8, 1877, eomlns to the United States in less. He grew to manhood In FTsnk- lln, Idaho, W hen he m w rled AdelU .Hampton In November, IflOl. To th is unloQ e lah t chUdreo, seven bon one 8lrl, were bom.

Coming to Wood river In Novem­ber. 181C, the family firs t settled on a ranch near G annett.' W hile living there Adetla Cutler preeedcd her

' huabosd tn death. U r . DuUer and O n ice-S lu ta were m arried in IWO

lumber business unUl NDvember, . 1M3, when’ they moved the ir equip- . m ent to Predonla.

S tarting with a small mUi equip­ped only to miJie boxes, they now havo an electrically equipped mil] cApabJe d l turning out 40.000 board fee t of lumber daily.

JUs business was completely burn­ed ou t on two different occs»lona. .

He la survived by his wife, Grace; six sons. Oeorge, ‘Iheodorc and Ae- QulUa, Holley, and Stohloy, Alvin and Elmer, FVctlonla; one daughter,

. Mrs. Verda Keller, Pocatello. Also surviving aro two fc«ter children,

. Mrs. Gladys Voung ' and Chester Cutler, Dailey; flTo--slstm . Mrs. L aum Johnson. Mrs. Olovla Turner, Mrs. M ilan JlUlhouse and Mrs. Mary Jensen, all of S alt Uilce City, and Mrs.-Annie Klmes, San Fran­cisco; one brother. Alvin Niclaen. Salt Lake City; and 13 grandchild­ren.

Trophies o f War For Jerome Wife

JEROME, I—Plm t Bgt. Rob­e rt Coupe, husband of Mrs. Wilma Bnllew Coupe, Jerome, sen t his wife n box of souvenirs which Included two Q crm an bayonets, one helmet, one nazi flag, one fu r coat wtilcli had been used by a G erman soldier on the Russian front, several Ger­man medals, wooden shoes and a bottle of perfume.

Sergeant Coupe Is th e son of Mr. aod M n . Cecil Coupe, Jerome, and Is now In PVance w ith General Pat­ton's th ird army. Ho has three other brothers serving in th is wor. They are AR 1/c O. Zone Coupe; 8 '1 /c Albert Coupe, who was on the D. S. 8. Helena when U was sunk, end Seaman Eddie Coupe.

A Bister of the four brothers is working In a war plant.

Radio Schedule

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' ^<ule lUU ^IliuurnhVlhm

iPifr,iuvils"?? Htw World ‘ Church o( Chrlit xOnIgn rcr LUunIsc.g ? . a a °

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Ircakrut Rlllloo ol

S sig sr '-i!!! i K - ; , ® " -N«l> zDrell EUr riarbotiii

; S S « “ .'ISlit OrT«n«tm!!2

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xCuttllDC Lliht

ACMflcaFimilriI'rtiMr YoUM’m Fts

zSulU Dallu xLoranio Jenm l Y c ^ ^ W M n SntwB

Dud V WO.M Cm» Hord. ,

- Ilrr* Cotn<> tt* Btnd

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:s g g & v a s

Dtrr <Srmm«, S tm u rr rorm tal. iDmk*

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PUota Pray Before Takeoff

At an e llh th air farce n jh te r lUOon in EBgUnfl. pUoU of Ihe 3J5th M iutjuir fl*hter group pante for prayer with Capt. James K Zeiflcr, formerly of Shoshone, tda« army air foreta eluplain. (Eighth AAF pboto-sUtf enpavlog)

M ¥ * * '4s * # #

Chaplain, Once of Shoshone,s Role ill Air MissionsPlays

AN EIOIITH AIR FORCE PIOHTER STATION. ilNOLAND-AIoilg with the IntelUgence. operations aiid weather officers who brief the Mustang pKol* o! the 355lh tighter group for their bsttSes ofei nw i Germany, is another man who plays an im portant role In every mission, although he takes no active part in the operotlon, .

He Is Capt. James N. Zclglcr, army air forces chaplain from South Nor­walk, Conn.. foTTOcrly ol Bhoshone, Ida. Hn oilers the airmen rcUglous guidance. Before every mission, the pilots, leaving the briefing room bound for their planes, pause for a devotion service of prayer and Scripture, led by Chaplain Zelglcr. As the service ends, he lenjJs a few words of encour­agement to each to tn .

A few minutes la ter, standing alone a t the edge of the field, the chdplaln watches the powerful Mustangs roar into the cold, gray skies of E ng land - bound for Germany <ind the luftwaffe.

Chaplain Zclgltr. whose wife, Mis. Margery B. ZcSgkr, lives n t 61 Flax k ill road, sou th Norwalk, is pastor of the Community Baptist church of Norwalk. Ho was granted leave of ataence in October. 1M2. to Join the armed forces os a chaplain, and entered the a ir corps in November of the ........year.

‘West Point of West’ At Sun Valley Urged

WASraNGTON, Keb. 1—Sen. John Thomas, R., Ida;, said today ho would “vigorously press" for the establishment in Idaho o f one o£ the four additional United Slates miUtary and nnvni academics provided for in sciinte bills 102 and 193, i f they are enacted into law.

The measures, introduced by:Senator Biliw, D„ Misa., call for the construction, maintenance and operation of two addi­

tional military academies—

lE X A S I"GALVESTON. Tex., EV:b. I 0?)—

The nation’s youngest all-girl four­some. the blue-eyed Badgett quad- ruplctfi. celebrated their sixth birth­day anniversary today wlUi three birthday parties.-

The four J's, Jeraldlnc. Jeanette. Joyco ond Joan, blew out candles Ot a kindergarten party and made appearances a t a service men's cen­te r And a t Fort Crockett hospital.

TI)e quads weighed a total of 17 pound? when bom prematurely. To­day Jeraldlnc. Jeanette and Joyco can hardly be told apart. Joan weighs 45 pounds, the others « .

The golden - haired girls take dancing and elocution Icisons and appear often to aid war liond drives and other patriotic endeavors.

Ellis Badgett. fatiier, works in a detenso plant. The tw o-story

standing tha t the four J'_ ..._ . . m ain in Ih ls city until they become is . Mrs. Badgett does her housework.

Probate Sought In Estling Will

A petition for probate of » will was presented hero in probate court by Albert Estllng in tho m atter of the eatate ot Mary EstUng. who died Nov. 3. 1944. Records disclose th a t in a wUl dated . Oct. 31, 1M4. tho petitioner was named as executor.

T he estate, according to the peti­tion, is. valued In excess of $40,000, and Includes bank deposltsi stock, stored beans, an auto, household furniture and real eetato In Twin Falls county.

Heirs aro listed in tha. peUUon as follows: Albert BitUng, widower. Tw in FaUs; Alice WaUace, daughter, lan slng , Mich.; bloybelle Read, daughter. T w in F»IU; Dorothy KnuD, daughter, TaA>ma. Wash.; A lbert E. EsUlng, w o ,- Bonsai),'

R*ybom and Rayboro, Twin Palls, are attorneys for the petitioner.-

Probate Judgt a A. Bailey sched­uled the hearing for Feb. 19. '

The S.i50,6oa poultry fanns of tho 0&it«d S t a tu I m e a tdA l o i mor« Uian 423,000,000 hens, '

WANTED L iy E POULTRY *

No. ,1 l& » r eebred 'h e n tL - t ta No. 1 1/Mjiom bw i*,.....___

MAOlO VAIXBV PBODUCB CO.;■ ; ^ R - B o | » r . M * r s .

’ ' Fbane or laq n irt -

one in the west and one in the south, and two additional nn- val aaidem ies— one on the Pacific coast and one on the gulf coast.

"Wlillc I have no particular pref­erence os to a number of sites where the western military acn- demy might be catabllshcd In Ida^ ho. It would seem to me th a t Sun Valley should be borae in mind,' said Scnotor Thomas.

••In Uie nortlt we have Lake Cocur d’Altne. where the glnnt Farragiit naval training staUon ha* operated so successfully during tho present war. which certainly deserves every consldcraUon.

"Mllltftry men tell me th a t Sun Valley is particularly Jlttcd for tho training oi bW troops, and It Is cer­tainly Ideal for the study of mili­tary problems associated w ith rug­ged,terrain,

“Sun Valley already has .. ____tha t Is known all over the world and It Is ono of tho world's greatest so­cial ccntera, although tho Onion Pa- citlo resort there now is temporarily used os » convalescent hospital for navy personnel.”

Heyburn’s Juniors Present AssemblyHEYBDRN, Feb. i-A U members

of tho juplor class of the Heyburo high school porUclpated In an as­sembly presented Iwt week. The program, written In Uie form of a radio broadcast, was originated by members of the class and Included a play, commercials and an Inter­pretation of ‘T rulh. or Conse­quences.”

Also highlighting l a s t week's ficliool program was a matinee dance honoring tho close of the f irs t se­mester. Muslo was fuml.ihcd bj ‘school dancc band, under the d___tion of Pierce B. Nelson, music In­structor.

H L O A i n i Phas

been named head of the tecn it aoUdaUon ot live n»Utm»l la tm loan ossoclations In this dUUlct In to th e Twm Fails ftssociatloa, with h e a d ­quarters here. It was snoounced yes­terday by 3. W. MtawtU, M cr«- tary-treasurer of Un ortuUaatlon.

O ther offlcem namrt were: S a m ­uel E . Vance, J r , H ialton. Xtrst

■ • and U. S a n d jren .

include as directors: IlUph W . T ea ­gue. Klmbctly; H w r WouUalb. Twin ra ils : Fred E. WlUJsms, n i e r . and Chrlss HesseUiolt. Castleford.

Consolidation o t the.secouats of will brtng to m ore

than 700 tho number of fvm cr-ho r- rowcrs served by the luger o rg an - IzaUon. ond the comtilned loan vol-' ume will , exceed M.400J»0. accord­ing to McDowell.

To ^ 0 ObUtallimi "RchablUtatlon o{ th e cap ita l

structure ot those assKUUona w h ich havo been impaired will erase th o ouUtondlng obligation and so t up reserves to cover aU forewablo Joss­es on loans now on the books." he stated; "Tho assoclntlont will tuivo three years In which lo detcfmino the ir losses. I t ennblM thtm to acttlo In fuU for stock held by fonner l>or- rowers who have paid of( their loons but foiled to obtain Kimbuneatent for the ir association ttock." he said.

•■This c n ind rehab ili­tation program, which jlrengthei the farmer-owned and t»nner*con- trolled mortgage crtdll system in this and other Paclllo northw est states, is made possible through op ­era ting economics ot the Federa l

em m ent funds in pretlouj years being passed on to the fum er-bor- rowers of the coopetnUie function ol the bank.-

To Betlro Batplus The federal land. bank, w hich

serves tho states of Mmtana. Id a ­ho, W ashington and Oregon, repa id the last block of cspltsl stock in 1044. and funds are noir bcln« oc- cumulated to retire by ntxt M arcn 15 the lost of the In surplus.

"During ttio post tevcral years the bank also has been decentraliz­ing Its actlvlllcs. glvUii the NFLA boards of directors the rcjponslblilty for servicing Its 4o8iu and con ­tracts,” McE>owcU jRld, T h ro u g h this program ond Wiroujh rc iln e - m ents In operaUng procedures, tho bank has rcduccd Its penonnel to 83 ngalnst 441 in mo. Savings In operating ayeUniH sbice that Ume have amounted to more lhan *040,-000 ft year."

Enabled to Bet Fu«Tlicse savings have bten pe rm it­

ted tho bank to set Uie pnco fo r long-time tatcrest ratei at four per cent on nli regular loans m ado through national fann l«n associa­tions. McDowcU slated.

••A 10 per cent dividend to all sociatlons was drclartd w 6cpt. 30, 1044," iw said. ‘ThKWih this ,new program and through olher opera t­ing economies and sound business practices, tho'bonk eonlfmpliites ko- ing on a permanent dl\Wwd-pay-

Rupert Couple’s Brother Passes

SALT LAKE C n V . Feb. 1 l/P h- Charles WilUam Johnson, 71, died a t his home yesterday of heart d i­sease. Survivors Include s brother. A rthur Johtuon, and a jisltr, M rs. Rachael Draper, both of nupert, Ida .

Youth Meet SlatedRUPERT, Feb. 1-More than 60

delegates are expected to attend th e youth m eet for j-oung ptoplo of south Idaho ChrUtlan ehuithcs to bo held n t Rupert Feb

Tho youth group ot Rupert Chris­tia n church has 'fonsuUted plans for entertainm ent ot the delegates.

Nr tW8>> ai.4 (nM ta tmlh lag (rwi uUi cr im Ui i , affim n*

COUGH iOZEHGESrealty tneiiieatttL Each 1 . . CoukIi Ixuesgs gives jroui Iboiit a 16 m]aut« foothlcif tntloeol Ulal reaches iinin...b»'

. low the gsrgla Use. Oaly 11! box.

p o l i c e !

The last annexation ordinance b&ame effccdvo December 1, 1944. .-The law relating to municipal elections requites three m onths residence in the city to entitle a resident to vote. Persons living In the annexed territory will beconie qualified electors on March 1,1945. The time for filinar a petition for .nomination, ends on March 8 , -1945.,Anyone living

, In tho annexed territory who conteniplates filing a - petition for nominataon m ust do so on either Mnrch

1 ,2 or 3 ,1945.

• C H A S . P . L A n S E NC H y C I e rk \

Heads Loan Groiiip PLYre D iw

JEBOMB Feb. 1 - Duslnes# re- ports and election of dlreclora' tor tha Jeromo Arango Supply featured thB annual business meeting, held'In the I.O.OP. hall Wednesday after-.

Leon Aslett, Pleasant Plains, w&s elected to servo a one-year term and Ous;Callen, Jerome, rcelected fo r o tuw -5«at term.-

Holdover officers include Jolm ■Ctmyonslde, one- year;

JAMES L. OASNES . . . . Ilan s tn man named head «f

thB consoUdatlaa of five national farm loan associations into one

Ketchum S t a r t s Own P.T Ji. Group

KETCHUM, Feb. 1—A Parcnt- Tcncher association' was organized Monday a t Ketchum, with Mrs. Ray pa]«y being named os temporary chairman. Tho meeting was hold a t Uie nchool house and was a ttend­ed by 73 persons. Peggy Pyle presid­ed a t th e orgaiflutlon meeting. Mrs. John E.-Hayes, Twin Falls, clwlr- man o l rural service lo r tho'.Idaho Congress of Parents ond Teachers, dktussed the P.Tj \ . movement.

Mrs. Charles Toung, ‘I’wln Falls,

Dr. Qendening, Noted Writer, Ends Life WithVNSA5 o m r , F e b .1 OIA—Dr.-liOgan Otendening,

medical writer whoso syndicated column on health »pp«»wd; Iji.'niw r..’ newspapers throughout th e nation, commlttod suitade a t.h ls hom®.y«ttt)* d»y. clendenJng, w hojicenU y told hJs physician ho was gota« to fUtlte 15 life when peopl? least expect m e to." was found dead In bed.’ h is UujWt--; slashed. Dr. P, n . Owens, chief deputy coroner, certifled ttia dcAtat^iii.v tiildde following an autopsy.

A. B. Bird, CAnj-onalde, two years, and Ralph Newberry, Appleton, one year.

Officers include Qlb Bird, Jerome, sccretofy-treasurcr, ond A. R. Bird, vlce-chainnan. Olb B ird is also tho operator of the supply sta tion In Jerome.

neports prcsented.during tho bus- Iness session indicated a good In­crease in profits from tho sole of coal, 'gasoline ond fa jm equipment in 1S44 over tha t of 1043.

fourth district president, of which Ketchum Is a part, was present. For­mal election will bo held w lthtn the next montli. .

The meeting preceded a se eld for tho purpose of discu

school consolidation, and calle.. . . Mork Patterson, county superin­tendent of public iflstnicCfon.

Mrs. HaycSs Monday afternoon conducted a school of itutructlon for teachers and a group of parent*.

MATTRESSREDOtUDINa « RENQVATma

I EVEaXON MAPTItEsa CO.I S18 Second Ave. & Pbons 61-W

The body w u.discovered by-Jtls. wtfe, Mrs. Dorothy Olcndoning, and B « r Tibbs, a member of tho police homtcldo detaU, said ho had been dead about 19 hours. Mrs. Clendcn- Ing found the body about noon yes­terday. Tibbs said Clendenliig- ap- parently,sat on the edgo of the bed and slashed his throat w ith a com- bliutUon pea knlfo. and. cigar cut-

Clcndenlng had expressed th e de- slro to take his own Ufo to h is per­sonal physlcUn. Dr. John .H. 'Wheo- ler, Monday night. Tibbs dold., .

Mrs. piendcning said h e r ' hus­band had been moody o t 'la to and *bo did hot go near Ws room until nearly noon because sho knew he had been taking pills to sleep 'and she did not want to rouso him.

In addiUon to hJ» medical •wrtl- Ings, Clendenlng also was known as a surgeon and teacbnr of medicine and In the first World war ho served

QUICK RELIEF FROMSymptoms ot O U tm s Artslns from

STOMACH ULCERS ouiTo EXCESS ACIDMuit Kdp or It wm Cort YOD NoUlPC

« i

’’ wA M BElSrD BU a'B X O BES TnOLmOEB PUABMAOV

__was.a graduate of-Uio tT 'ainr- v-islty of Kansas school o f medjein*:' and the Oalvcrslty of - Bdinborgbr'i Scotland. -■ ■v

OPENUnder

New Managemer^tW« have recently piaohMea^

P A P ' SIce Cream Shop

A t B u h l

Our aim will b e to serve the,, public and operate in a .busl-- ness'llke manner. W e extend an Invitation to the 'peoplo of'.' Buhl and tho cntiro - llagld-• Valley to como In a n d get' better acquainted w ith us. •

M r. a n d M r s . ! ’F . L y m a n .S c h e n k

Page 4: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

J p a ^ Four;

T U C K E R ’S N A T I O N A L l r

W H I R L I G I GJAPAN—w ailiim to i would no t b« surprised If

Ja p tn should extend pw ee Xeekrs to the United S ta tu and Britain «iter the CnJled ..........................................

TIMBS.NBWS; ,TWIN FALL?, IPAHO ^ u ra d a jr ,F e b ru a ry 1 ,1048

MtaUlc* la T*t»n d •!••• a*n m iUt AnU %-lt mil. Idabe. «B<n tbt Mt of Uur SUIUCaiPTIOH BATES

BT CilUUSB—PATAOLt IN AOVANCB

W . %

. . . . ' DT UAIU-PATADU m AOVANd irUlilB IlalM in i m * CmsV. KiTtii)s;

A Brand New HaryKiri Method

OntiUt 8ut« .f

CoasItU ei irrlM »{ thf Aue<lit«l F

All Mltea rMsInd br I** ar «rd#r s( ecorl of coa gt iorladktios to U cnl>tlih<4 irakV. «m ^ *a

r ’c K " / .

KATIOHAL MPnEaENTATlVKa WEST-nOLUDAT CO- IN&\Zi Utrkat Sm<t. S«n Frimeljoo. CiIlT.

" EDUCATORS PROTEST

Presidents of 13 unlverallles—H arvard, Vanderbilt, Cornell, Prlnccton, Tulane, Ohl- csi^o, Missouri, K ansas, California, Stanford, Ind iana and Brown—have raised serious questions In a jo in t le tte r to President Roose­velt, in which they oppose his p lan fo r u n i­versal m ilitary tra in ing after th e war.

Now U no tim e to open debate on th is highly controversial question, these no ted educators hnve w arned the P resident. At least we should wait "un til complete victory

,over Germany Is achieved."While these university presidents agree

th a t a continuing program of public educa­tion as to the requirem ents of na tiona l de­fense Is “certainly In order," they challenge the necessity of u rging the American people "to ac t im der the tensions of w ar psychology In order to bring th em to a d cc lsb n which, I t Is said, they would n o t reach under more norm al conditions."

The jo in t le tte r se ts out six reasons why these university presidents believe presen t com m itm ent of th e nation to a year of mili­tary service would be unwise:

1) The proposal Is n o t related to successful p rosecution of the war. I t Is fo r peacetim e conscription.

3) Adoption of peacetime would be a revolutionary change in fi m en tal American policies. To affec t such a change under th e stress ot w ar would be unwise.

3) The basic Issue Is n o t compulsory m ll- . Uary tra in in g b u t adequate 'national defense. Peacetim e conscription Is only one elem ent In a rounded defense program under m odem m ilitary conditions. To adopt i t under stress of w ar and to have I t prove unwise m ight Jeopardize o n . in te lligen t long-run defense program fo r the country.. ,4) C learly no one con now foresee th e in ­te rna tiona l situation when th e war is over. I t Is therefore Impossible to determ ine in telli­gently th e extent of defense m easures which will be needed.

5) The American people a re fighting the 'w a r w ith h igh hope i t will eventuate in on>cn- durlng peoce. If congress should now pre-

'• scribe a year o f compulsory m ilitary tra in ing , the action together w ith the necessary ac­companying measures for moblUzatlng in­dustry and science would be in terpreted as m eaning th a t we m ust continue to live fo r an

. Indefinite period In on arm ed camp.■ 6) The declslon on peacetim e conscription ' should be taken stric tly on the basis of mili­tary requirem ents a f te r the w ar. As educa­tors, we believe the argum ents in behalf of collateral educational and social values of m ilitary tra in ing arc unsound.

The m ea t of th is Joint letter, we believe, is embodied in the following rem arks w hich it also contains:

" I t is alleged In some quarters th a t unless congress acts under th e stress of war, com^ pulsory m ilitary tra in ing will never be adopt­ed. This rests on a d is tru st of th e capacity of th e American people, which we do n o t share. I t Is to Imply th a t th e American people cannot arrive a t a wise decision on a great issue th rough the dem ocratic processes a fte r » cool a n d deliberate debate.

. . We will support a year of compulsory m ilitary tra in ing I f a f te r adequate delibera­tion th e nation Is convinced th a t Its safety requires i t . But as educators we believe th a t th e decision should be strictly on th e basis o f m ilitary necessity a f te r th e w ar. The a rg u ­m ents being advanced In behalf of co llateral educational and social values of m ilitary tra in ing we consider erroneous. M ilitary tra in ing offers no rea l solution to national problems of education, health , o r responsible citizenship in a free society. Moreover, we do n o t favor the control of even a year's education of young m en by th e federal gov-

complete vonqulshmtnt u id lurrender.

r-tindw iU ndabla-Teaam u thu groups wtUch SU2BC41 a more

. . . flc ita tem ont of postwar terms ' In regard to O ennany do no t apply

, lha tame Uieory to our toe in Uie lortenU They feef f a r more b itter lo- Iward the Japii became of the trtaclierou* a tuclc on Pearl Harbor,

U r U t ia double^eaUng w im PDR and“ •*" OordeU Hull, the trea tm ent of p rb-

oner* of war. Thejr also figure th a t world economy would not suffer so severely If Uta IsU nd kingdom v « n reduced to a form of serfdom.

Our diplomatic spokesmen point ou t tha t, Japanese oiflelaldom consists of hard, shrewd businessmen u well a j mad (anatles. The form er now realize that their country U doomed and will bo crushed complete­ly U the confUet Is dragged out by a retirem ent to the mainland for a showdown. These are the men who have built the v u t flnanekl. Industrial and shipping eonterns since Tokyo became a f irst-ra te power.

They know th a t Uie land of the rising sun will be> come a thU'd-cloaj nation, once b la stripped of Its navy, air force and marlUme fleet. Without Ita pos­sessions, especially Korea, M anchuria and Formosa, Japan would sink back Inlo a medieval state.

BU86IA—The two new factors which dlsmoy Jap ­anese sutesm en are the recent demonstrBtlona of American naval, m lliury and aerial supremacy and Moscow's striking power. Tok>-o's strategists are ob­serving tliese ominous threats out o t the comers of the ir eyes. .

e talln has not taken our army, navy or diplomatic emUsaries Into his confidence concerning his plana after he h u liquidated Hitler. He may figure tha t Russia's malo and lmmcdlat« need Is to rebuild her shattered structure and economy and he may decline to dissipate h b forces In another vast adventure ot war. He may prefer to let Uie western caplUllsUo Uons finish the Job in the Pacific.

Even if he held aloof from th a t phase of the c_ . Xllct, he would occupy sucli a position of dominance UiBt he could almost dictate terms with respect to oriental icrrltoiy. I t Is certain th a t h e would not want Washington or London to exercise control in such vltai spheres as the Japanese Islands, Korea or Manchuria. Ho would probably prefer tha t they come under the domlnaUon of a communist-minded China.

Kevertheless, allied otisenera believe th a t Russia wUl eventually Join us In the destrucUon of Uie land of the rising sun. Moscow has many old grudges to pay off. and there may never be a more opportune moment than before the Kremlin demobilizes the machine now smashing through the naxi defenses on the east­ern front.

So, according to our foreign experts, don’t be sur­prised a t offers of peace from the east. B ut don 't taU for them, despite the yeamlxfg for an end to the do- mestla hardships and the klillngs.

JVALLACE—The senate vote on tiie nomination ofHenry A. WaJUca will furnish the u ltlm au test . . . __economic thinking of the members of th a t august body. The forces of rodlcallsm and conservatism are staging Uie most dlngdong behlnd-tha-scenes battle since they clashed over FDR's attem pt to pack the supreme court.

Sidney lilllman's political action committee and leftist farm orgsnlzaUons are bombarding members wlUi letters and making personal vlsiu. They have warned the legislators that they will forfeit all favors won by past j>crformance» If they do no t sing out "nye" on the confirmation roll call.

The vested Interests are equally active. They have complied atatementa mode by the Iowan which, they contand, reveal him os inimical to private enterprise and industry. And, unfortunately fo r the nominee for secretary ot commerce, he has gone on/record again and again with asserUons tha t a p p ea ^ to prove their contentloa

V I E W S O F

HOW Th in g s a p p e a r f r o m '

i^EGLER’S ^N G L EP ot efficiency a n d aoonomy . .

e ffort. Pm lfleo t ReoM Tdt’s iu u l t to bla Xriend Benry WaUaee, ~Jone t u tid tha r* s t of-Uw-pcople la o rderitst Jones to gat o u t of com­m e r c e to l e t Henrjr have the J o b , ' .bondsciDelr deserred a caplbU

"n ia t I n n a t e rudcnu* . ao coa- alstffiUy display­ed In patronm ng reU tkm a wlUi a gener*ll7 « d o e lte White HouM press delegation, w a s ----- ’ e ^ e s se d m ore

WfHkTMk Pfffa#

r his work Ine of a p o U t£ ^ Johnny Ap- during th e campaign. There

y a puslnB a n d furtive refer-

H E A T H ’S V I E W S O N D O I N G S

IN W ASHINGTONBy S. BURTON HEATH NEA 6taff CerreipoDdent

National O h a i r m a n Herbert Brownell's plans for strcngthenli the nepubllcan party have some r semblance to the method by which Jehn J. Raskob and Jouett ShoU5c hreaUied i Into the

CHEDIBLE PLEDGEAfter the CPA’s cancellation of ration

stamps, WB. heard a lot of muttering from people who wlfl they bad lost aU faith In the food control agency, that it had gone back on its pledges, and so on.

• Well, those people shouldn't have any fur­ther cause for complaint about broken faith i f they saw the headline we noticed the other dayi

'•Less Meat Next Month Promised Civilians ijyOPA."

You needn’t promise any more) boys. "We ; te llere you.

:-;::Tlr8t .the world was thought to be fiat— .v^tben it w as discovered to be round. But it’s ;; 5 ^ a UtUe crookcd in ^ o ts .

.'Women ar« beln j taught gunnery in some

tot, eve'iyone :wtio feels th a t their * b .U i^burden: D n v i t Into war bondo.

I.

BIG AND LITTLE^USINESSAmerican Instinct is to ^ e wlUi th e under dog.

CinsequenUy many .pKbt have been Impressed with Henry Wallace's promise to faw r " little • business- over "big buslncM" If he is confirmed as secretoir of commerce witliout being deprived ot control over the , government IcndUig agcncles now under th a t depart* ment. He claims tha t his predecessor, Jesse Jones, “ id Oharl favored "big business," I t has an alluring ring. Let’s examine.

The n r o . largest and most Im portant of the lending' agencies Wallace would head, waa s ta rted during thg Hoover administration for the purpose ot pumping credit Into banks and other large InsUtutlons too big for private Interests to help, or too f a r gone to be able to attrac t private capital, I t waa roundly assailed by Democratlo orators In 1933 as Intended to ball ou t big concerns, which was true, though the depositors

1»:.The Democrats

learned then th a t It is futile tor a party to spend three years pu t-

Iterlng around In- _ - eptly and then hope, in a few monUis of heclh oratory, to sell l t « l f to tho elec­torate. 6o Raskob und Shouse set up an BBgrcsslvc yciir-around party orgaaltation th a t, with an assist

ot U)9 big banks and employees of tho big rallroada who were ttu-eataned with losses o t money and ployment weren’t big shots In most cases.

However the RPC Itlled a vital need and the I ocrata hnve retained It to this day. l u buslne big business. I t h u financed war contractors to the tune ot billions tor plants th a t may be none too valuable after the shooilnj stops, and which might no t therefore ottract private tUianclng. I t has fi. naw ed friendly foreign government for bllUotis more

The RFC Isn't the forRoltcn m an’s pawn shop, aa Henry Wallace seems to think. Perhaps It could be turned Into Uiat. with on oJtlce in <very 4own. to make loans to the politically faithful, but Uils wasn’t Its intent, nor Its practice up to now., By and large, ’■UUle business" has scan t need of

crcdlt and if It did the banks are full of mo Farmers’ credit needs are already cared for by

••• ’--•••IB agencies. T h a t

from the depression, electcd Its President only four years a fte r the parly supposedly was ail ready tor embalming and burlol.

Ever iluce IS32 a few tceble volccs have been calltag OOP to

real working party organlatlon that wuild-j>fjbn-ihe-joh..cvcty-iwur..ot, every day.- in season ‘ahroulT 'Ah'di that Is exactly whst Chairman Bro»Tiell now h as been given au­thority to do. -• -

The type ot campaign that Browi-

haa enjoyed in the post, it m ight f ind Itself able to work effective­ly with OOP legislators In policy m atters.

Meanwhile In the field of straWgy, w hich is the committee's province a t present. It Is probable th a t Chairm an Brownell's Influence will be used toward cutting the congres­sional OOP loose from the coattails of the ontl-new deal legislators.

For some time the Republican bloc was so weak Uiat Its only way o t accomplishing anyUilug wu.i by per­m itting conservative Democrats to take the lead, and voUng with them. Unfortunately for the party, the: conservative Democrats generally h a d no corutruetive program, but- contented themselves with opposing m any of the President's non- projects. And when Roosevelt defeated, the OOP coud not c . .„ take negotlve credit. I t could only

-, "We, too. voted against him ,'

HEAD MANI>ear Pota:

This gent Allen Sei( reemlta fo r the navy hej

it be a

HAILEYSen. L. F. Heagle and'Rep. H ar

Old BulUcr spent the week-end In H ailey, returning to Boise for open'

Jn g of the legislature on Mond/»y. " t . George CuUer 'ls coHvalcic- _ It the home of relaUves In Salt

-T.Tkp^Clty. after. uadergoing_maJor siii^ery' a t the 'E T D . S; hospital'In th a t city three weeks ago.

banks aiis. pc.nons with some basis tor crcdlt. I t others ~ be financed on a grand scale Uie losses wilt be sicken­ing even to a nation of U*payen grown accustomed to mounting deficits In Uielr federal treasury. - .

Congress, while It is considering the Wallace matter, ought to make a 'decision on policy. If Uie RFC

Santa Claus for all. then Wallace probably gogd man to head lU If i t is to contlnuiwould b ' a ..........- .ontlnue

ik lt had better be headed l i rt too simple b

WHT IT UAPFENEO AU apparent signs now point to th e probability

th a t the house committee InvuU gttlng un-American acUvlUea-ordlnarlly called the Dies committee—wUl be allowed to become exUnct a t the end of the currentu sessloa of congress. The Dlea commitUe made a lot of enemies, in lha sU years of lu e*UWnce. Since i t waa.Investigating only un-American ocUvltles. it b pretty plain tha t the enemies it made were largely those Interested In such activities. Those enemies, which included such men as W alter Wlnchell. the hoofer: Earl Browder, Uie ex-convlctr Sidney HUlmaa, the ex-cooTlet, and many others of th a t stripe, fought the Dies committee almost from the day of Its in - cepuon. So, for Uiat m ittcr, did F rlU Kuhn, the bundlst. the silver shirts, and a lot o f other* Ui the naiJ-fasclst lunaUc fringe. However, th e burden ef m in g off the commlttce feU to th e communlsta, becauae meet of Uie bundUta ware Jailed or run ou t of the coant»7 . The Roosevelt- administraUon, u eveo'M e know*, allowed Uie communista to run free.

waking hour# trying to d J s ^ t C « ip » sm an Martlij Dies and hU enUre

*)? <luesUon th a t Congreas- olea mad* lome mistake*. Personally, he leaned

le fluabuoyant type, and be waa no t only a show-

Uclty he coutd. *nie fact nm alns and will in h* ^ r d e d by fair hUtorlans, Uiat his cocamlttee tu d done, and was sUU dt.ln*. a n --------n wgood In protecUng Amtrlca from thoat a ln u tv E u i^ pean influences which have been, and suU are. borina from within this naUon. In doing th a t task. M a i ^

.Die* mada enough un-Amerlcaa e&emles th a t H U w a .

............. .......... made Pre.sldeniHoover Increasingly unpopular to­ward the end of h is term In of­fice. He has not in m many words denounced and repudiated the "hato Roosevelt" strategy which has fail­ed Uie OOP up to now. By inference he has made It c lea r that he wants none of it tor himself. So I t cor be BMumed Uiat tho party's offl- clsl line In the next tour years will not feature th e smear. Justi­fied or otliern'lse. *

What Chairman Broanell wants Is easy to state, though It may prove harder to achieve- Re wants thi elected representatives ot the Re-

ibUcan party—notably in-congress it also In state capltols—to adopt positive, sRgre&slve, construcUvc

program of their own tw winning the war, consolidating and perpetu­ating the peace, preserving tho best features of the caplUlUtlc system after the war.

He wants the national committee to help coordinate th a t program and sell It to the voters who In 1S48 will elect a new congress and in "M8 a successor to President aosevelt .He Insists th a t the cDmmlttee

h u ncUiIng to do with Uie formu­lation of party policy. At least some members disagree wtlh that viewpoint. Temponirlly Uie Browxi- ell viewpoint luta w on out There wlU b« pressure for commlltea partlcl- paUon In poUcy shaptaf, I f the committee revlvltles itself, and wins

respect from eongress th a n It

BOB HOPEIt Says Here—

DODQE CITY-, K o n .-I Stopped off In Dodge City to blay 'for the boys a t tha airbase.. Colonel Rice Is th e C. O. here and Colonel "Killer"

Kane, the hero of the PloesU Raid, is the cxecuUvoj officer. The boys were glad to see me. I guess after a steady diet of Rico and Kdne a iltUe com breaks up tho monotony, (Note: I t 's Jokes like Uiat. t h i

Now hioat people say that a doi la wan'a beat frlend-but r a t lo with the, Severn dog “Traey." That canine, a dock dog of great pro­portions and black as the ace of spades, is parUcular.

I don't know whether It’s be- causa AUen keeps crawdlng the dog otf th e bed In hU deep, or whether he refuses (o let him eat a t the Ubie, but anyway, llle dpi Is mad.

R « u » —Severn can hardly get in tha house a t night. The dog ha* Idea* about what teeth are for (aside from eaUng) and Severn doesn't argne.

The dog new definitely is "hesd' man" down there. And thli ain't no foolin' either. —a-t5-t0

Matchee DaUy"—Newspaper filler item._____ ___ - •'E ig iv u n g w h a p - '— — -------

TALE O F THE BLOND HAIR Dear Pota:

You m ight almost think noUUng could cramp Bob Hope's style, espe­cially when hla styla Is abetted by * gtrJle show, bu t there Is a ccriblna- Uoa of two things tha t can—and' did a t the Roxy the other night. ,

They are:1—A few strands of blond hair.3—A young man's coat button. While Bob waa being a silly pirata

and flirting w ith n princess none ' the audience laughed more Uian pretty blond girl and her young mi cscort. However, there w u a tem­porary check to th tl r mcnlment when another young couple walked In behind them to net seats. Theg lrl-h e re th o p l o t ...................brunette.

deserved Uie place u the role of a ] ■" taesaed during .. waa only a patslnB . ence to th e matter o f Henry's ability and Rowevelt couldn't hava said less Uian hlB light obsem U on th a t the poor fellow was “lu lly suited" for the .Job.

After all. ha h ad to sny th a t for............... — ■ n ly a te c h n i-

rhlch his let-____ ________________ flat proposl-Uon th a t any half-w it. panhandler o r m achine gangster o f the new deal pollUcol ocUon committee organiza­tion deserved a p lace to p lant h is feet In th e trough a t the expense

.and pcrU of Uie na tio n if he "gave I of bla utmost toward the vlctoijr."

Before the letter w as written. Wal­lace had been cost In tha role of t prldelesa moocher who should not be allowed to starve, although, ab­stemious and fit os h e la and. con­sidering the a lleged . shortage o! hands in tha war planU , the place for him to apply would seem to nave

tho tJ. 8. employment service... jllace . be It remembered, is sup

posed to be Hoosevelfa friend. Th boas could have adopted one ot his moods of elephantine puckishness to argue h is quallficaUons but he didn't feel called ot» by friendship to make th e eltort. So. tha result was a public paper In w hich a man who had occupied Uia aecond highest of­fice In th e nation, w as depicted as a Jobless doorbell pusher whose dull plodding travels on the thumb through New Biglond and Pennsyl­vania h a d earned hUn a place in out If the cold.

This reference of course was take because Wallace had so lilt personal appeal th a t In many ot his bamaUimjing stands in ConnecUcut, for example, he' couldn’t outdraw -

potato peeler

I himself; “thought be cmild do Ui'a greatest ^ o u o t of good In Ute . depsrtme ‘ ------ -It of commerce." The offer '

miraculous spot remover. The tru th was th a t In fu rther dcvelopmc ‘

I of tho pottehn of personal Intldelltl ' to other trusting friends before and during the Chicago convention, Roosevelt had assured Sidney HIU- man th a t Henry would have chance to advance theprogram from the aldelines and keep himself prominent a s the years roU on tow ard 1948. T he le tter to Jones, by itself, appears to have been an ­other personal double cross because Roosevelt know* h la senate well enough to anticipate accuratcli'.how It wlU a c t In such a altuatlon. Thus he doubtless had private pollUcal assurance that If he d id send In the name of Wnltaca fo r the commerce dcparUnent, Henry would be turned back, whereupon Roosevelt could say that, weU. he did b is best.

The insu lt to Jone# was tod plain . j a ffo rd comment. Admittedly Jones h a d done good work and h e , - —

canned only because WaUace,| disowned.

!of a choSeeof cheap Joba in U ia d lomaUo aerrlce. which would him out of the country v h tra ha CQUldnt readily heckle hla au6cesm, - waa true to the manners and ethics .of a man who, w ith his own epee- tacular reconl o r personal be tr^aU , friim Farley down to Byrnes had the-effrontery- to d td a ro w ith a — straight and ploua face t b u the way to make frlenda was to be a friend. If, however, we say th a t Wallace and Jones were insulted la equal lavish measure in one latter, the rest of the people, including those fighting overseas, can be in no InteUlgent d o u b t.u to the sneer a t Uiemselves.

This wa* a declaration of su­preme disdain for their oltisenshlp and UieU- guumuity in accct>ting Roosevelt's c a m p a l^ sUktemsnta th a t he beUeved in private enUr- prlsfe and the American system of govemmenu

The lelecUon of WaUace with the IntenUon tha t th is cloudy and emo­tional misfit should have the power of the purse over pracUcally ail the treasure of the naUon, including the comings and taxes of future gencraUons, was a bow to the com­munists who are Henry's comrades and who, on InauguraUon day. prowled the White 'House a t Mrs. Roosevelt’s InvltaUon in studied mockery, of loyal Americans. Even WUllam Oallmor, late MargoUa, a thief,. Impostor and radio preacher of Muscovite poUcy on tisa Blue network wfta invited to snaffle mac­aroni and chipped beef and the Hollywood local of the Moscow in-

' was there In open cele-braUon of a famous victory over the Americans who last November couldn't believe it could ever be.

'hiera were those who, lha day lafter-elecUon. tossed their hats over ; Roosevelt's transom in token of surrender end fear of reprisals for truths which Uiey had timidly al­leged during tho campaign. There were others, and they were fewer, who, on tha t day, affirmed all they had charged and p re d l^ d . Insist­ing tha t Roosevelt's election would be a historic disaster to tho Amer­ican naUon, whatever the outcome of a war In which industry and all the people had had to redeem his

crsonal guilt and derelecUon at earl Harbor.Quickly ensuing evenU. once the

returns were In, have vindicated th is uncompromising convlcUon. WaUace. a failure In private busl-

luthor of spectacular cconomle in agriculture, political kins-

Df the communists and dis­parager of Uia bUI of rights was kept in the bockground during tha campaign. Tho draft worked Ugbtly and sparingly in those days, lest families already marked for quick dlsrupUon be oUenatcd a t the polls. RaUonlng waa enforced with tact and a dishonest pretense of plenty. 'T hen came tho returns and the

news of the roUonlng «C shells to tho guns in France, Uie concella- Uon of ration points, a move os cyn­ical as the InvalldaUon of paper dollars or war bonds and the demand for more and more soldiers Includ­ing 4-P's, and for conscrlpUon ot clvUlan labor to work and pay fin­ancial U-lbuto through the unions. And. finally. Henry Wollace was ignln publicly acknowledged after .our months in which he had been. wlUi «qual ostenUUon. politically

A N A L Y Z I N G C U R R E N T NE WS

FROM NEW YORK

of my most inter­esting scars.)

I used U) play . v a u d e v i l l e Ui

Doflge City, in fact, tha t's how Uie ploce got its namel T^ere are a lot o f cowboys around here ond .theyrt rea lly quick on the draw . . . I laid m y cigarette down for five seconds and one of them had It h a lf fin­ished before f could reuieve It. AU th e cowboya wear red bandanas. A red bandana, tha t's a handkerchief rith high blood pressurel

I d id n 't w ant to be' conspicuous so t w ent In a store to buy ana of those 10-gaUon hats . . . but they told m e I t would look funny on a ha lf p in t head! They were very glad to see me when 1 arrived and they gave me a real western reception

bu t fortunately the rope broke.

HISTORY OF TW IN FALLSAS OLKANED FBOU THE FILES O F THE TXUeS-NSWS

1$ « A R 8 A G OjFEB. 1, m O

a E. BooUi arrived yesterday from New York City ?fhere he went on a puKhvlBj trtp for the BooUi Mer- cuUIe company.

Rirty young people of the Im> manuti LuUiaran church m et last evealof In Uie church parlors at FOurUi avenue a n d Second street tast, for the orguilzaUon of a Bible

J. H. Olandoa. Twin Fan*, was: lacted to aucceed hlmielt as- presl- Mt Of Uie Boulhem Idaho Bean'

Ortjwer*' astocUUan a t Uia organi-

87 YEARS AGO, FEB. 1, 1018

th e rootns of the Twin FaUs Com­m ercial club room Friday night was la rgely a t^o ^ ed and resulted in h n - te r undentandU ig between the com. pan y and the beet r a ls tn and ex. p la ined away many of Uie souroes of mlsundentanding.

Pollccman R . 7 . Redman made a good s ta r t on his iniUal monUili service by m akins seven arrests for n tu n e r o ^ offenses. _

ITjo foUowtoK U U » weaUier pre­diction lo r n e s t wMl:- rrequent ligh t snows about .Tuesday. 111) -s-

I day a n d again Baturday. M oderate. 'iwnpcraiiitw on Ih# wtioJe. i

She-walked ahead of herand took a se a t a t the end o f _____next tho fraU. looking around-the observed he r boy friend had not! continued to ' follow her. He had stopped and was bending over the blond head In front of him.

THe brunette rose ond quoth loud­ly: '

"Wlint are you doing?"At this Juncture the blond head

was yanked backward and a frown took the place o t the Bob spired smUe. Her own 'around and w ar clouds jsUiered i h is brow. ■

•What the—" he began."Sorry, so sorry." said the other

chap, u he looked confusedly frtxa'

This wa* th e blond’s cue."Eh," sho *ald, eloquenUy. She pu l'

her hand to h e r hair and felt a cost' button tlghUy tangled In It.

She began to laXigb. Her nrsln began to laugh. H ie folks slttUig In front of them looked around and be­gan to laugh.

But not so in Uie rows behind."WlU you^ please elt downt'’ said

m a r e r called _ m an .with IcB'tooaalfleraUon. The brunitte, sUU jfiufitog against Uie wall, sUmped a dainty foot. (This *'dainty* is stuck in for dramaUo effect.)

Finally two women on elUier sldei of the unhappy younc feUaw went I ■ hi* rescue. Twenty feminine fin- —r t unwound the'M ond hair, “piece by pleee,“ a n d the audience began trying to remember w hat Uie Bob Hope ahov waa about, after a five.

Qge-tnterlude." •-The Oay B«*Ua 'em

FAMOCS LAST UNE . . Say. yon m w darned near

as tMt as th e Boaslan atiByl . . .*...............H IE . q e n t ie m a K in

T s > n i » o BOW

T E R R lB L E -s tra lns of war an beginning to tell heavily on the peo­ples of Europe, especlaUy the wom-

B eneath the patience and fortl---------------- tude Is a weari*

ness th a t may ex­p la in some ot the emotional explo­sions.

T h e a e h i g h llgbU aro spotted f r o m converaa- Uons w ith ' refu­gees. officials and Aingrlcan oftleers recently, arrived In New York from abroad:

ReprcsenUUtes o f the D u t c h queen, w ho visited th e liberated ter­ritories, - fo u n d th e populaUcn numbed from their terrible experi­ences w ith the nasla. Folks are su- spclous o f allied promises and skap- Ucal abou t the future.

'The retreating Q erman* robbed ttle children of underclothing to

take bock to the rcich. In Eindhoven two of every Uiree of th e city's tots had no th ing under the ir outside

' to protect th em from theI cold.

... _ K orth-Drabant town the 'da- parUng h u n s rounded up the m sr- rled w omen and took the ir wedding ring! Theae blti of Jewelry In many '-*es were the otily links between

wife a n d tn abeent prisoner of ir or a deported forced laborer.

.cItUen. B u t someUmu he finds it difficult to accustom him self to Ujb

I ways of peace."For five yetn." explains one, "we sd to m ake our own nUes. The pa-

trioUo th in g then was to to u a Oer- man soldier into the c an a l and hold

Ijour boot on. his h e a d until ha stopped gurgtlnj.”

Even In the few agricultural re­gions now freed, the enemy main­tained gas chambera in extermina-

of Uien d w a a bIn Uie Isa t dsys Uis n » M dragged HQllandem from Uielr homes and shot them . Bodies o f th« exeeuUd could n o t be remored from ' the streets fo r 13 luTon—to p rors to the people th a t the browiuhlrta atlU had t^e upper hand.

Before they left, some B tlg laa vil-

bombod towns. Coal la so scarce near the bulge th a t several famUies pool their meager supplies and alt together for a couple of hours each night In one warm room.

FAMINE—Olrls near Strasbouis and other secUons in the enemy plane and robot range visit the ca­thedrals or ahrlnes e>-ery afternoon. Each makes one simple auppUca- Uon. “Please, God, protect me from death tonight," i

In a Frcnoh city looted by the foe. Yanks found people knitting bed­spreads With needles made from the barbed w lri of an abandoned con* centraUon camp. One prison was known as the "house of the linger­ing death.'* Unlike other places, there waa no execuUoner or torture chamber. The victalms were left to die In peace—from starraUon. Soup, bread and margarine once a day waa the diet—no food packages v permitted from ouUlde,

n ie prisoner* were doctors, law­yers, artists and other profession*! men. At first the? gave lectures for one another or recited poetry to while away Uie time. But malnulri- Uon effected casua lU e^ rlU ian t minds decayed with the emaclaUon of Uielr bodies.

A de OauUe official, who flaw to New York, entered a hotel and scru- UnUed the menu. 'Twenty-four hours earlier he had been in fam­ished Paris. As ha gated a t the Items hla hand shook violently from ex­citement. " I did no t dream Uiat there was so much food in the en- tire worldl" he exclaimed.

Mldwlnur dress-up for tired* joking elothea la easy wlUi nov-'^-

buttons used in unua\al ways. L .— aewing centera feature a sm art and th rifty variety and recommend th a t

, eonalderaUon be glvctl to alts, style 'apd color of buttons wlU> relaUon to the garment they win sdcni.

The BIBLEHere is the key verse In the

Bible readlsg t>w*ar« for m Im M from (be Amertean n . vlse4 venlott by Uie Bar. H. &

aelves, bu t merely to deprive Uie ,klda of th e ir pels, w filch were often Uielr onljr ren tin lnc t r tw u n a It)

Feb. J. Mark l :l-2 8 -K e y vwaa l:22 :.,“And-thoy were sstoniBbed a t His doctrine; for He taught them as one tha t had authority, and not M the ecribea." . -

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ThuTBday, F eb ru a ry 1 ,1945 TIME&yrErfrS. TWIN PALI^. IDAHO

(Fm P«(* Oaa).■cctpt the nomlanUon oUered by the dUxcni' commlUee.

T b o au riesaed ■ CtninelliMa Ills

• MUi£|icUon oj th« wsUon Uken by the titlm u ' commlCtc* u d so ld th a t h« Iwktd { o r w d to w itla u ed

- _.AMocl#Uen wlUi them In the #dmta- . UtraUan ct tlty aWntns,

I t was a n . Nelson, who alter r t viewing brklly.the accoapUshmeata of tbe preseat adm lnlstntloa und polaUng out the postw ar projecta th e ; no« h&ve tinder consUtnUon. announced that It was the unani­mous optoloa ot the eommltteo tlw t the pruent administration be ilriilt* ed by the public ‘ h o bcUeru In th e

' maintenance of good eovemmenl to seek rtelcction.

"The next tvo years a re of g rea t fmpDrtance,” ho pointed out aa ho mentioned the Improvement p ro ­ject* planned lor the recently a n ­nexed city sectors, continuation of plans to giro this c ity an airport th a t will put It ca tlio nlr travel route of the northwest, soUlng of the present overcrowded hospital iiroblem and the need fo r a compe­ten t adjnlDlstratlon to cop« with th e Ihouuod and one dcclslooi th a t m ust b« (sode In the n e x t two years on whleb wUl depend th e Und of postwar Twin Palls t h b city wiU become.

Chffl Crabtree, perm anent chair­m an of Uie committee, made U clear th a t the recommendation of other candidates Is sUU In order becauac. he !<ald, the group was not ore of any frBCllon but on organliatlon formed In Uie behalf of and to pro­mote greater Twin Falls.

' Salm O fftn SecondW. Q. Swim, chairman of tb e ___

Ins commlMloa. also requested full discussion on the rccomment’ " before he olfered his second t motion that the action by the raltlee be approved.

Verl# Moser, president of th e Junior Chamber of Cotnmercc, voic­ed his apt)roval of Uic susgestcd tlckot and eald In hla opinion th e nominating commitlcc should be congralulalcd.

Lcsa than 60 persons uttcnded Uie meeting and only two o f them were women.

Only voiced opposition lo th e present administration came from C. P. (Rabbit) Mj-ers, w ho told th e group that the Highland area and all other scclors of the recently a n ­nexed Urrltory were entitled to th e samo UOniis that Main s tree t was.

He was (old that the c ity admin­istration would give th e now areas those things Just as soon as equip­ment and labor were ovallable, b u t he wos__remlnded th a t ‘‘there Is a

Other Projects SeveredThe clUitns' committee dcclded.

for the time being, to sever another of Uielr projectv-lhe Investigation of the tli'ce various types of city government—from Uie forthcoming city clttllon.

I t was agreed that th e matter of continuing tbe present form of gov- emmeat, or changing to an alder- mnnlc or dty manager plan should BWalt further study.

In any event the people of Twlri Falls Ihemielvcs must dccldc, by clecUon, If they wish th e present form of government chanacd.

This, the eommlllee decided, could beat wait until after tho April elec­tion. However. Chairman Crabtree said that a meeting o n ' this lu u e would Ukcly be called a fte r a com­plete study of the th ree plans Is made.

Finance Grenp NamedChalnnan Crabtree appointed a

finance committee co ....................H. Nelson, thalnitan. . weller and Jay MeirUl.

Nominations and acccptance of tbe present admlnbtratlon officials" Uirev/ the rate for m ayor into a two-man affair Inasmucli os Joe K . Koehler, former moyor o f the city, has already announced that ho would be a eaiidldate lo r tlie olflce.

. Koehler h u announced that he would rim as an Independent.

SHe CaiTies on for l iu sb ^

B ins. JUNE CUlDESTEtt MOOEE

Wife Wliose Husband Gave Life Signs up as Ai-my Nurse

By MABTINA YEITEUBOHL. Feb. 1»-Mr3. Juno Chldea-

ter Moore. 33. daugiitcr o f Afrs, Hatel Chldester Klrkman, Is a young woman who has aUeady contributed a Buprttne aacjltlce lor th a war ef­fort—but still Intends to do more.

Her fUer husband lost his life but Mrs. Moore has enlisted In the anny nurse corps, and has received her call lo report for OcUve duty Feb. 6 a t Madlgan general hospital, Ta- ;omo.

I'My only regret," ihc said loday, 'Is tha t I did not take this sUp be­fore, nurses ore so urgently needed to care for our wounded beys. But I couldn't seem to do it right after my husband’s death, I don’t tolnk I could have stood tho stra in then th a t I know army nursling entails. I intend lo live up to tho best tra ­ditions o t my profession, ond do my bit toward caring for Uie wounded the way I would want some nurse to care lo r my own husband, if ho

SgtMuckenthaler Ends Work HereSgt. A. H. Muckenthaler left

today for Salt Lake City, where ho will report lo the service command unit 1064. station Tctcrlniirlnn, end­ing his Twin PalLt assignment os impector of all dairy producU and produc's of animal origin purchas­ed by the arniy la thU region.

Sergeant and Mrs. Muckenthaler . Will spend. 4 furlough a t h is liomc

in PhocnU, Arlt., altes whSoU thty will return to Salt Luke City. Be will receive new assignment Uien, working out of the Utah city.

The sUUon v«tcrlnarlaa a t Uie Rupert prisoner of war cam p now has token orer the Inspection* In Uils icgSon.

Setgcnnt Muckenthaler was <Ia- Uoned here for almost two years.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSNOTICE OF SOKRIFPS 8A IB OF

EBTRATf-ANIMAL POBIJO NOTICE 15 HEREBV

orvE N :T hat I wlU kU a t public aucUon

a t the Mary A. Pawson's Ranch, lo­cated three miles East on Addlsoa Avenue and one and oae-li»u ralles North of Twin Falla City, County of Twin Falls, stale of Idaho, the fol*

. lowing described estray-anim al'— One (1) While-Paco and

auemsey Oow; no hnm da; ap­proximately iwo (3) years; 800 j»und»; wllh wWt« i«ce. in aeeerdanc* with SecUon Ji-

2006 Idaho Code Annotated, to Ihe highest bidder for cash, law ful mon­ey of the tftilted States, on th e Ittb day of Pebruaiy, 1B45 a t th e Sour of a:SO o-eloei p. M. (Mountain War Time) of said day,

Pflted this 17th day of Joauuy . 19tS a t Twin PaUs. Idaho.

W. W. LOWERY. Sheriff .Twin Falls County. Idaho

Publish; JtD. 18,3S; Feb. 1. 19U.

NEW YORK, Feb. I (/p)-News- week says In Its current Issue Ihnt live German prisoners have been senlenccd to dcatli by court martlol for killing a fellow prisoner n t Camp Tonkawa, Oklahoma, Nov. 5, 1043, and are awaiting "their doom In a ledernl penitentiary.”

T he five noncomml.'Aloncd ot»- ers, the magnilne says, "proudly

ndmllted” a t their tr ia l- t lje first American .court martial Involving - capital offeaie by German prls- ..lers of war—tha t they killed Cpl. Johann Kunze. .found beaten lo death w ith sUcka and bottles.

;T7nder the ortlcles of war Uie court had no choice but to pro­nounce the death sentence.'’ the iM o sln e odds. ‘T he nails appeared

itirely saUsflcd."Newsweek said jirboners a t Uie

camp regarded Kuiu» "a traitor to tho relch and to tho futlirer" be. cause "some of lliem had seen a statem ent Kunxe gave American a nny officers, Information they be­lieved had been of value to the allies in bombine Hamburs.”

“The defendants also wcrt th a t under the American bill of r ights they could refuse to testify against themselves. Tljey waived the privilege, insfated their sworn testimony be heard, and proudly adm itted Ihclr u a rt Jn Kunzc’s liqul- daUon." .

C I V I W E M T OW ABHINOTONv^b. . i aU!>-Tlie

sovemment U gettlhg. ready to take K new tuck In tlio already slim m eat rations of clTlUins.; M elthv anny nor lend-lease 'h as ' been gettinc enough meat and an- upward vision is Imminent In amount ofbeef and pnrklnaclunt p la n ts -----*reserve for tho'BOvemmedt.

The goverBmbnfalreddy buys 40 per cent of all pork and 33 per cent of all beef.

T his rcjtrleUon'-haa resulted la unequal distrlbuUon of supplies. Worst shortages 'have developed in areas relying on. federally'lnspected Plants for their meat.

As result 6t the pressure of cl- vlllan demands an Increasing num­ber eS smaU plants' has Bprang up outside federal , . inspection. They have pulled moro and more meat animals from pacltlhft p lan ts which supply non-clvlliatv requlremenis.

To head oif th is tendency, WPA has placed top on tho number of came and hogs .th^^-small slaugh­terers may kill and still receive gov­ernment subsidy.-Without the sub­sidy slauglitcrers would be unabje to sell within- .tho celling price brackeis.

___ a li« today. You see I still havetwo b ro thcrs-ln fact that greater shore of my entire famUy-ln the service."

In truth Jt is a family which has 8000 “all o u f lo i the war ellorV Six members are now In uniform. Mrs. Moore's brother, Lieut. Ken­neth Chldester, was recently rescued by submarine In Ihc south PncKlc. while floating In a rubber boat after a crash landing near the Bonin Islands on the return from a on Japan. Cpl. Virgil ClUdester. other brother. Is stationed at LcwLs with th e army engineers; her two step-bt^thers. W/O Byron Kirk- man, siatloncd In the Aleutians, who has Bc«t\ nine-years ot w nlce; Sgl. Vouglin Kirkman, in Indiana; and t step-sister. Lleui. Mory Lou Kirk- man, with the army nurses corps In England. Sho also has a nephew. Pfc. Ward Gubler, Tampa, Fla., toll-gunncr on a B -n .

Mrs. ^{oore is the widow of Lieut. Harold Moore. They married May 15. 1M3. a t C0lumbu5, MUs„ ai ' L ieutenant Mooro was killed In . plane accident July 5. 1043, a t RoU' dolph. field, Tex., where he wa.' Ualnlng as an inslruclor. He hod received hi* pilot’s wings only short time before. Mr?. Moore v In Texas with him a t Uie Ume the Intal crash.

She Is a graduate of the L. n . hosplial. Idaho Falls, receiving I . diploma )n September, 1043. In Bulil she w-orked as office nurse for Dr. David McCIusky. and contlnu^ in

iploy for some time afte&he

READ TIME3-NEWS WANT AD3.

Seabee Solon

T» learn fln lhand the problems of eniutcd men which .*■(<>« often ore lost In the ehaln of com­mands,'* Rep. John E. Fegarty, ot n a m o n y , iL I., cnllited in e o ^ lte in the scabeea, was rated a car- penter'fl male, and terred a month aa a e tm ent finisher. Far- mer president of the Providence. B. L. brieklayert' union, he started h b thin) lerxD en eon^ress today.

A l’my Asswea Wool Industry Only Minimum of Foreign Use

WASniHOTON, F e b . I T hs a r department today assured Rep. .nflmMi,Il,CalU., U •would hold-to mlnlmust tbe a m oun t of foreign

wool used In filling army require­ments. ■

Lleut.-CoL James V . Bunt, assist- - J t in the quartennaster . corps^ itrote Anderson:- T h is oHlce has conslsleuUy. dur^

Ing ihe enUre emerecney, used as much domMtte wool ... .............

tee! lnr6U#aUng t h e pxoducUon, m ukeU ng and transporlaUon * 'Wool urged*cooperaUon between branches of tho Industry Id finding new used far wool and creating a better m arket for tho domestic clip.

Samuel I t Sabln. vice president of de fe r..................................... - - '

permllted, This same policy w ill___tlnue durliit tho presen t procttre- ment and preference wUI be given to tho use «t domesUo w ool tnsotar &s tho stoclu on hand o f the required grades »r* irillable.

Thie lo the urgency of qulremeiiu, lo conserve manpower and to attain the gxeatesl volume of production. It will l>e -

ed tha t hia agency had disiwsed of a ll bu t B5.000.000 pounds of its orlg. inal-purchase'0^34^.000.000 pounds of wool. I t will hold another auction Feb. 14, OWahoney told.

In s a to Vbut Uils wUl be held to a mlnhnum.'

Mean»hll(, Chairm an OWahoney, D., Wyo, of a special senate commit-

-W ANTED-Live Poultry

monEST cA sn rntCEs HOLMES PRODUCE

n tod AVe. So. r tie n a U7-W

In the first 00 days of ths inva­sion ot Europe, tb s aitny Issued 125 mlUlanvpaps.

Librarian: ResOUENNB^FBaRY,-

aor»hO anu.ylIIas*tU annual report UsU'3,'' ed. 1,030 to Bdulls.'«r._ Juniors,73 new bookaw

GOOD USES Gi;.OTHES!W eSeUWe B uy

Tonr good wool suits, costs, evercoati, skirls, etc. P. S.—Clean out your closots. Turn those wool clothes you ere tired of into cash.

Richardson’s

LaU o t selected'qsaUty eletb- Ing for men u d womcB.

>4>ENVER Trading POSTQack o t L D. s u m

left t

State Guard Here Sees War Pictiiffe

Membcra of Company K, Idaho sta te guard, nieeUng last night In the American Legion hall, witnessed a showing of '■Combat Anjerica," a sound moUoa picture obUUncd from tho office of war Information th rough the efforts of Sgt. U. N.

T h e picture depleted the bombing of Oermnny by U. 8. war t ' - — based in England.

The second half of the evening's meeting was spent in a .crlUque of la s t week's written c^amlnatloi

WILLOWDALE•Selmer ITiompson hos gone to

Cando. N. D., to attend funeral ser­vices of hU faUjer, T. E. Thompson.

Tony EnchausU hos been inducted In to the armed forces.

Mrs. Selmer Thompson lu s -celved word th a t her younger broth­e r, Pfc. Donald a . KeKay.', is re­ported missing in action in Prance. H b served with the lOUi Century di­vision of tlio sevcnUi army. Another brother, Cpl. John B. McKay, USMO, Is sUUoned in the Marianas and has been overseas almost two years.

Emilio Corplon has received hon- om ble discharge from Uie arm y and «- a t home.

WUR NEXT mVOM

LEG PAINS MAY BE DANGER SIGN

OfTindKidiie;!

. s ; ' s a r a a i ‘s w 5 ? i t i

If 0« <£l>Ua<r tuba sod Clun

65% g r a i n i p l d t i '

I I io n s S « ® « n

O O O p E R H A M * W 0 ll» « O’ PecriP. ru tneli 1

f thestate hospital nt Blackfoot. She al.<o worked for a short time n t the T Falls county general hospital.

your confidence is our one irreplaceable asset

" V V E AREN'T kicking about our ivartime hcaduciics . . . . I f we can’t buy its nftiny of the chairs and bedroom

suites in the sty les you want, that is a smaU item com*- pared to w n n in g a war. But we do w ant you to know

• that, in spite o i aervice und merchandise limitations, we nre irrevocably determined not to compromiso with the standards o f quality and integrity- that have built up our most priceless .a sset. . . your confidence.

> T H E

WELCOMES I G N

IS ALW AYS OUT AT T H E ;

H O O SlER F U K lilT U R E C O . '

keep this in m indYou,can buy hero now, as at any time, knowing any purchase, wiJI be a worthwhile investm ent

You m ay not be able to get everything you want lit any tim e, but you can bo assured that i f it is not a f in e design, a sound value . . . it would not be on our floors. That is because we prize your confidence above all things, and respect your taste for-finer home furnishings.

and___

Oiir welcome is alwaj-s present, a l­

ways sincere and os courtesy is

neVer rationed you 'w ill flnd cur

staff ready and wlillDg to serve you.

We believo.that It.ls no t unpatrioUo ■

to l?e courteous.

you n a y be sure la these days of shortages th a t the Hoosin Puralture la doing everything pceolble to secure tho b a t . obtalnable’selections to f the people of M atia Valley,' F e rt ' free to shop here fo r your needs for If we havo v h a t yon-': need it will be sold without rcstricU ons... . . you never havii' ,■ to buy one Item to secure anoUier a t this ^ n d l y rtore.. - .

a vi ord about your rugsrHiere Is a critical shortaee at tu n and c u p e U f i g -' .V: but if your rugs ore weorlas thlo lure la & ttfflely Extend their useful lives with Odta.rus cushleni. W« conr ■ V Odte la both rug sice and by the yard. 'lU s r(ts cushlaa>m : Jwaltlvely double the life of ruga regardlett'of th«lr ijuiOiff.'

H o o s i e r F u r n i t u r e^ M o n e y W i t h o u t H i s G o o d

ELKS BUILDING

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TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Tbura'da; Februaz7.1,194S

mi W 10 BE SEEN

Rcsardless o t the outcom* oC ih« batUe or lha Oder, w h ic h -a p - proMhea haarly ne*ief.^there w e tw o Item* In rceent a en n a n dii- patches which, ovenbiulowed by the RUB&taa tA m ta t alosxe the W uthe. nevertheless may play *n ImporUnt rolB-ln H lU ert coltapw.

A few days will tell .O erm uia bAve been »ble K i5 real deterue* betore B etU n- whether the Russlsna w e to con-

. tlnue unchecked, or wlU have to elop , J ftt the river to pull up the ir galluata

> a s they d id . > t ' the Vistula la it ; wmnver.I However. If Uie R uulons . . .■ SoTAU farther wuUi, m the Oer- I m ans eoy. any maaslng of nau : Btrensth in the Prankfurt area may ' mean UtUc more th*n have the

holdouts a t Torun. Boznnn, Elblng 1 and Konlkabers.; - B If DHfertnce

■While Som u Is twlcc a» far from I BciUn u m n k tu r t . there ta one : blff aUferencc. I t U 30 mllM we»t

of the Oder, well Iiuldo the area ' where Oerrnany was supposed to : have strong defcaiM. T hat could

m ean raucli or UlUe regarding dc- i fensea farther north. Tlic ImporWnt

, I thlwr I* th a t the 78 miles between ‘ w hat the O ermaiu call Marshal : Konev's northern anchor and ner- I lln Is IhTOUgh flat country, soinc- ‘ whoC more wooded Chan Z.'iuko*'’< j direct routfl, but crisfi-crossed by i only minor water courses.

I f Konev Is making a —I fo t l there (and V. would b« normal t fo r the Russians to keep silent a‘I such B move until lu outcome 1 foreseeable), the Oermon army and I Berlin could bo pbced In a posl- I lion almWat to tl\at -HWch would i have occurred last fail hod the ; western allies, crossing a t Amhom,) pushed up the east bank of the : Rhine toward Dortmund;

Clock Run DownTlie other report serves ........ .

ft reminder tha t, regardless ol any delays which may occur a t the Oder o r b rauso of such "banzai charges' a s th a t of th e Belgian hulRC, Hit­le r's clock has about run clown. The Germans mentioned renewed Rus- nlan attacks »outh of lAke Balaton In Hungary.

T h a t means the Qerman a ra y Is under actual attack, with the ex­ception of ft few very short Btretches, on more than WOO miles of front. Before the Russian of* fenslvo began, betore the losses which H itler has taken recently both eastern and western fronts, ha was credited with 2X»0 men p « m ils—and h e couldn't hold Uien. I t ie conclusion Is too obvious lo mention.

^ToSis WACs and Get ^\^Qo-WhoosV

I De c i o High Juniors I Have Peppy Program: • D E O I^, Feb. 1—The Junior class

o f Declo high school presented i three-ac t farco comedy. “Every­body’s Crasy." In the rccreatlon hall, under direction of Mrs. F cm Man­ning. Players Included OayJe Rich- tns. J>lck D alton. Don Peterson. U ike Matthews, Belcn Orr, Patricia Wells, Rohlhn Preston, N onaan Law, Ju n e Quonstrom. Mary Sandell. Charles U offltt, Leta Uvely, Mor-

Bacdell, Frank OllletteBcry Band'

___ numbers were presenttth e .high school girls’ glee c lut n c tc d by Mrs. Manning; a tap dance, Donna Dayley, and vocal

■ duet. Faye Sturton and Mary Lou , elevens.

CASTLEFORDDoyle Webb, who has been In Los

Angeles, CoUf.. attending to the selling of his sister's estate, who died

i recently, has returned here.Mr. and Mrs. W alter Reese have

xetumed from Spokane, Wash. They I visited their son. Dale Reese, who { haa ololoed the merchant marine,

and Isroughl Mrs. Dale Reese ■ 1 'j children back wltli them..1 F irs t Lleuu Cugene senften has .1 been sent to a rest camp a t Spokane! f W osh , to spend the next three I- months.■1 .T lie Rev. Isaac Todd has been dis­

missed from the Twin Falls hospital where he woa taken recently with pneiunonla.. Mr*. Johnn(9 BUck Is vUltlng in S a lt Lake City.

BUI Brown, who has passed hU i exams for the army. Is visiting hU

m other, Mrs. E . Dandretta. In Cal' Iforcltk. '

Carol Jean Haley Is now attend­ing school a t St. Pauls,-Walla Walla, W ash.

OosUeford O range held their ple- soclll a t UvB CasUclord Wgh school. Following a short business meeting with H arry B ronn In charge, they held a dance.

John Peters h as morcd ontc achoUte place and Mr. and Mrs.

[ Charlie H armon have moved from I the MUler place into the BUck pro- I p crty the Peters family moved from.I U s te r Bybee, who Is In the m a. rlnca, has been called here due to

: the serious Illness of his mother.I She Is Improving.I CpL Edgar Roberta has been : transferred from Camp Lee. Va„ to

Camp Cook, CoUf.: Mr. and Mrs. Sam RoberU have received word th a t their son, Char­lie Roberts, who was wounded In Gennany, Oct.-X«. has arrived safe, ly In the D il t« l States.

An alert Miami Death pbotor*pbcr cao th t the scene above. whUh m ljht well ji petUr. Alltntlon of lh« te lile r asfi tlvlUan In the bukgroand stems to be centered o Co the eemplele exelnslon ef the tyfrical balblng beaniy In fortrromid.

Here’s Tale of Ai-my Flier Three Houi’s Adi’ift in Sea

By JEAN DINKtXACKEBIt'S sink or swim, when you'i

forced to baU out over the Adriatic.And It’s the luckiest break In the

world when you're picked up by an lU llan fishing boat, after three h oun of fighting white caps.

White caps Uiat reach for your eyes-suck a t your legs-tug a t your arms—seemingly bent on destroying you In parts, a b it a t a time.

Iltte 'aL com om tn ttsBut it's the most lonesome feeling

In the world to be by-pessed by o rescue ship flying 600 feet above you, not able to see you in the - - Icr because you've IcpsV your marker.

You feel like the last m an -the

Fought Adriatic

'How Scions VotedBOISE. Feb. I WV-»cr» the

Magic Valley representaUves vot- ed on the slot machine and p in . h»)i jBaehloe taxlog wit, beaten

I In U u Idaho bouse yesterday: - Ayta—B anon . R , Camas.

_ N a y e s - B e l^ B , Minidoka;

______ _ Olavln, R , TwinB pljnbcn t, R , Jerom e;' a , CaasU: R..

I ^ F or FULLER BRUSH I n a o m t S b o v tn

CaU,»fACKEI'=J.’BKOWN

forgotten m a n -a n d It's the most "all gone" feeling In the world,

Take P lrs t LJeul. X enntth S. rlggs' word for It. He »-as ■ tha t spot last September.He'a a bombardier on a B-3«i

whose biggest personal battle of the vrar was lought out, not In the air, but in the sea.

Veteran of the northern Italian ond southcm French campaigns. Lieutenant Briggs U hero on leave, prior to reporting Feb. 13 for reas­signm ent Ho has been awarded the a ir medal with two oak leaf clusters,

nd Uip purple heart.Here'S the story of his se» rescue,

but It's os hard as getting a para­chute to open In a free fall jump ' feet above the ground to get him unfold It. He's th a t rcUceot.

With members of his crew ho w returning one day last Beptcmbcr lo an Italian alrbase from a mission. Mllltarj' ccnsoralilp forbids him to say where.

li l t by d a kTliey knew they had - ................

the ship, made by fink. But tliey didn't know the Injury was going to cause them to run out of gas about 30 miles from land, over the Adriatic.

There was nothing to do but ball out over th a t vast expanse of v.’ater Air force orders require that almien tree • themselves of th tl r parachulcs before landing In the water, because of the danger of drowning.

Lieutenant Brlgcs obeyed the reg­ulations. He was about &0 feet above the water surface ^h«n he S'st free His body turned a trlple-lllp, and he landed with terrific force, lost his n-ater guard. Before balling the ship had radioed an 603.

His Mae V/tsl—aVr force slang for chest llfesaver—was defective, hac a "deflated lung." which made It imperative for him to swim from Uie time he h it the waUr. rather than noal, and eove his sW iglh.

Lieutenant Briggs takes full n sponslDlllty for Uie condition of his Mao West—claims th a t it ftiis his own negligence In not checking it betore going on the mission,

plane D idn't Se« Him His watch kept rrmnlng fo

first nlglitmare hour and a half he was In the sea. The worst ordeal of alt was having the American reKue

Ir crcw fly so near him, not be ble to see him.The powder in Uie sea 'm arker

would have melted, casting a color­ed aura about him, which «'ouId have been visible from the air, the Ueuteimnt explained.

Dripped a t times by the fear of drowning, tho lieutenant had ex­tricate lilmself. a piece of apparel a t a time, from encumbering clo.th- Ing. and a t Uie same time -

ehnted from plane Into Adriallo sea, and after swimming for three hoors,. was rescued by Italian fishermen. (SUff engraving)

Oft came his Hying l&cket, his sweater, his flying coveralls, his heated suit. Ills heated boots, his uniform, hi* "longlcs." When ho was picked up by Uis fishing boat, all he had on was a pair of O . I . shorts, his Mao W est and a coupIc

t million "goose pimples."After an Interminable time, h#

glimpsed a boat on Uio horizon. The single m ast tor snlla in Ihs dlstanco looked about the size of a stub pcncll. I t shuttled back and forUi along tho horizon, seemed to come nearer; then to recedc.

Last to-Be Rescned After what seemed like a

span of years, tlie boat drew along .tide, and lie was taken on board, the last member of the crew lo ba rtscucd. Tlie boat was reeklngly dirty; dead fish were scatWred helter-skelter, but the smell was much better than sea water, the lieutenant admitted.

After a wlillo a Catalina appeared . 1 the sky. Tlic rescued airmen held up th d r Mao Wests to signal. From the plane dropped-a Mae West, UwUcaung ihav ii\ey already had of the rescued crew oboard.

'The men were hosplUllzed th a t and p a n of Ute next day.

_ treated for the quantities of water they'd swallowed. The

crew made cno more ml tte n went to a rest camp.

Second "nailing'I t was Uie sccoud time th a t the

lieutenant had been obliged to "hit Uie silk." Two months before ho had parachuted to safety south of -n airfield in lUly.

The whlt« fcBxvcs th a t h t wears around his neck arc made from tbe silk salvaged from the parachute that landed him safely hi Italy.

But Uie lieutenant doesn't Uilnk of his Adriatic tsperltnee as a .......... ,'break." He's thinking of Uie

night, being t

war's going to last a t least-three

" R i c hp & o d o A j s .

SchillingVACUUM PA C K Et '

C O F F E E

m i A C E e i yWALLACE, Ida., Feb. 1 MV-The

0 cm state's ilnging senator. Olen H. Taylor, “SnUnds lo vole ' Henr)- Wallace's confirmation secretary of eommcrce."

Tnylor wrole the Chamber of Commerce hero he believes "the rccord shons that Henry Wallace Is not only a mnn of large human vi­sion but that he also has demon­strated great Administrative ability In cabinet positions."

The mcsaage was a reply t c __chamber which last telegraphed Its concern "over the situation which has arisen regarding Uie power of ibe secretary of commerce over the lending agencies of the govern­ment."

Taylor furtlicr remarked Uiat Wallace was "not oppo.«d to busi­ness but may be expected to exert all nis ability In aid of business in Llie system of free enteqjrlse."

Army Instructor Visits at Albion

ALBION, Feb. 1 -H rs t Lieut. Del­bert D, <Buul W aterman, who, with Mrs. Waterman, spent a short time visiting here has gone t< Meade, Ky.

Lieutenant and Mrs. W aterman .aroe from Ft. Bennlng, Oa., w htie he has been an instructor in the Infantry' school for the past two years. He Is a graduate of Albion normal school, later attending l‘ unlvcrslly a t Oreeley, Co»; 1 sometime he was on the faculty . Uie Albion high school, and In the spring of 1042 entered the sen-lee. During his army training he was sUtloncd a t Ft. Douglas, then in Cailfornla, Norlh Carolina and Flor­ida, where he studied radar. He at­tended officers candidate school ot Camp Stewart, K. 0,

Mm. Waterman Is now in Burley where she will remain for a time visiting.

more yeors, Ui# way he has U doped, though admits he’s no authority.

Briggs has a "gripe" against the beefers on the home front, however.

When you\-c sctn a whole nation . Tactically star>-lng before your eyes —old women of 70 raiding garbage cans and then having to beat tho heads of would-bc "snalchers" with tho bones ih tj 'd found lo r Uiclr Ilr»t meal in days—grumbling about can* cellatlon of ration points, shortage of cigarettes, seems pretty cheep and poor sport.

Twin Falls, and his wife, who makes her homo at-Buhl. He graduated from the Buhl high school and was attending Armstrong Business col­lege. Berkeley. Calif., when he listed Armistice day. lBi2.

He received all his a ir training In Texas, graduating from tho bom- bordler school ot Big Spring, Tex. He took his pha.ie training o t Tuc­son, Ariz. Tlie lieutenant has been overseas seven months, three weeks in Africa, the other time being based In Italy.

O F F l B m CAUSE L H E O

BUHL, Feb. J-F riends tn Buhl bave received more deUUs concern- toa the death o l U eut. WlllUnn Mer­rick. which occurred on Jan. 7 as the resu lt of septicemia, while In acUon aboard ship somewhere lo the Pa^ clflc.

T he family, former ploater resi­dents of Buhl but moving less (h as a year ago to Los Angeles, received the news in a telegram from -the w ar -d e p a rtm en t. '- 'n ie -U le g ra m stated It was not kpo-ifn a t th a t time If he would bo burled a t sea or the nearest land base.

Charles William Merrick came to Buhl from Salt U ke City wlUi his

iparenia when monUa old. Dur­in g his school yeors. WUIlam was acUve wlUi his father in the hard­ware business. He and his twin sisters, Jane and Virginia, all grad­uated from .the Suhl high Khool in 1B31. During 1)U high school years he was acUve in public speaking and debate, and was a momber of tho naUonal honor society. He was also an bccompllihed musician.

On DebaUog TeamIn his sophomore, year he was on

the dcbaUng team tha t won the s ta te championship, and In his

year won the slate cliam- speak-

year he was chosen by the rlntendent of edncatlon to Idaho on the good wiU conversation around the

He attended the University . . Idaho for two years. In 19J5 lie received his baclielor's degree in economics a t Stanford university, and two years later his master's degree, with distinction, a t the Stanford school of business ndmln- IstraUon.

In March, 103(1. he married Bar­bara Llndley, Los Angeles, when they were both students a t Stanford. They have one son, Robert, *.

Five years ago he ami his wife lived In Bulil for a year, where he was associated with his father in the management of tiie Merrick Hardware store. He has also been associated with two large retail firms in Los Angeles and Pasadena.

Enlisted In 1M3 spring of 1043 he enlisted

In the service, when he, received a commlislon os ensign In the supply corps of the U. S. naval reserve. He woa sent to San Francisco for several montlis training, and then to Harvard university for six mQuUu>. He was aUo &latXoned a t Uie n>ival training school a t More- head. Ky„ where he was supply a n t disbursement officer. Lost Septem­ber he received the promoUon to lieutenant Junior grndc. ACler a S<y- day leave before reporting to I '• • ■ ■> hU family la

1944. Lleutcna: Merrick woa the supply officer In chavse on the ship.

He Is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Mcrrlck. now of Los Angeles, and twin sisters. Mrs. Virginia Jolinson, Los Angeles, and Mrs. Jane MacOoogan, New Mexico, whose hu.?band Is' In the dental corps on overseas duty.

Driver Fined $200 In Jerome' Court

JEROME. Feb. I—A charge of drunken driving was filed against WUlard McNeil. Jerome; who struck and damaged two parked cars late Tuesday. He pleoded guilty to the charge before Justice of the Peace John L. Gould and was sentenced to 30 days In Jail, fined 1200 and de­prived of his driver's license for oni year.

McNeil was recently discharged from the army.

Local Man Fined On Check Charge

Crandall A. Rouse. Twin Falla, ar- . ;sted yesterday on a charge of is- suing a check without' sufficient funds pleaded guilty to Uio charge when he appeared before Probate Judge 0. A. Bailey, was fined t& and costs and ordered to make good the amount of the cheek. i

The complaint, dated Sept. S. 1044.as signed by Woodrow Reed. o»ti-

er o f Uie Checker Cab company. The check n-as for 14.

NORTHVEEW 'Mrs. A. O. BlsweU and Mrs. W. R.

Raedels are in Balt Lake City.M n . MerUn Hays and daughter

have gone to Join Mr. Haye a t Ft. W orth. Te*. ft£r.-and Mrj. Emesi Miller accompanied her as far as Denver to spend the week visiting relaUves.

Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Gibson of Emmett vlslled relaUves over ' week-end.-

Mrs. Chorles Juker is In Bohe vb- itlng her sister, Mrs. J . A. Barstow.

R. 8 . Skinner is visiting his son, Merrill. In CaUfomU.

READ -nMES-NEWS WANT At>3,

Pacific VeteranVisiting at Decla

OECLO, Feb. I - P v t A lrtn’Haw- kJas. son of Mrs. Mary B. HawUns. returned to Declo Jan . 34 from Um couth Faclfle where he baa been etaUoned for U ie -la st-33 monUi*. M v a ta HawUos enlisted Deo. 13,

non'ujs*............. ... ................. .aselgned to Uie souUi Pacific where he has served In Australia and Hew Guinea. ITUs Is hts first furlough since Joming the

Private Hawklr.-In Uiree m ajor cam paigns-----------wears a good conduct medal for aerTtng- In ■ th e American' theater, of the souUiwest Pacific. He has had malaria, fever nine times. .' His wife and smaU aon reside In

Sydney. Australia.Private Hawkins’ brother. Pvt.

Willard Hawkins is now serving in England.

e amiy.ins has porUcipated campaigns and also

IIAWKINa

^VAC ON FURLOUGH GLENNS FERRY. Feb. I—Pvt.

Alyce W hite Is a t home on furlough from Camp Beale, Calif., where she has been trained.in the medical and dental detachm ent Of the WACs. She Is now ready for overseas duty.

Private W hlt« Is a daushter ot Paul H. White, Glenns Ferry.

Pilot Fisher Now In 12th Airforce

WITH TH E TWELFTH AIR FORCE^-Lleut. Chorles L. Fischer, husband o t Patricia E. Fisher and son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Fisher, Kimberly. Ida., has recenUy been assigned to a veteran troop'carrier group of the 13th a ir force.

The otganliaUon. affectionately called Cemy's circus" a fte r Its color­ful commanding officer. Col. John Cemy. Horrlson. Ida., has served oveneaa for more than 38 months

For distinguished service In the Chlna-Burma-Indla theater of op­erations, Flsher'a group has been awarded the w ar department unit citation. His group has also given ou^aUndlng performancea la the in ­vasions of north Africa, Sicily, Italy end southcm France. Lieutenant Fisher Is a graduate of Kimberly high school.

CEDAR DRAW

tlVC..Sgt. Prlmo Oabardl has sent his

sister, Miss. Elda Oabardl, a hula skirt made from a Japanese para­chute whicli he and his squad mem­bers made. 6gt. Gabardl is now sta- Uoned In the N etherlands East In ­dies and has been overseas for 34 mouths.

Honoring BUly Ricks, who left for the army last week, a family pot- luck dinner was held a t the homo of his parent*. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Kicks. •

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jageb are In San Francisco attending n co­operative creamcry meeting. Mr. Jagels la M cretary of the organiza­tion. Mrs. Bertha Kllflker Is stay­ing a t the Jagels place during their absenee.

Mr. and Mrs. Milton U erm an in California visiting relatives.

Mrs. Norma Jogela la a t F t. RUey. Kan., wlUi he r husband who expects to leave for overseas soon.

Mrs. Joe Oooch. formerly MissJoyce HllXIker U In ■“-------w llh her husband, Bl The air base there Is expected to be closed soon and she will return to live with h e r mother. M n . Bertha Hllflker.

The following Infanta were re­cenUy baptized a t ‘Trinity LuUier- an church: Roger Lee. son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Schroeder. spon­sors Maureen Schroeder and Mr. Schroeder's brother. Mr. Brown; Chryl Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy. O ortner, wiUi Mr. and Mrs. Marten Llerman, sponsors; and Glenn I>ale, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oordon schroeder, whose sponsors were Mrs. A lbert Schroeder and M arten Knlep.

l i s t of Boy Scouts.w ho will re­ceive awards a t a court of honor at Oakley on Sunday, Peb. 4, ond also four who wUl receive citaUons for haring collected mor« Uum 1,009 pounds o t tn tU t paper each, was made public- by officlala'of the cf- tlce here, v

l l i e four receiving tho waste pa- er citations, a ll members of troop

_J. a re AUen S. Hardy. David Mar- tlndale. Rodney. EaIa..aod Lloyd D. SmlUi. •

The oUier awarda^to be presenttd a t the court follow:

Second class rank: Clinton Tay­lor, troop 32. end K al Qorrlnse, troop 77. . .

Second class merit badges: BaJ Gorrlnge. troop 77.I P in t class rank: Leland Clark and Curtis Lee, both troop J1; Rich, ard Franke and Val P ra tt, troop 77.

First clasa merit badges: Ray 0. Bedke, pathfindliig. pioneering snd first aid: Lcland Clark, first aid;

paUiflndlng and public heolUi; Rod­ney Hale. David M artlndale, paUi- finding and first old; Lloyd D. Smith, backblodlng e,nd t i n t aid;

Uoyd D. SmlUi, all troop 33.

Five-year veteran aw ard: Lel&nd A. Peterson of troop 77.

DEEP CREEKw niard Harder has r t lu m td Irem

Ames, la., and Denver. Colo., where he attended the stock show. He also Visited relaUves.

Visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Me- Oulre'ls ih tl r daughter and lunlly, Mr. and M n. Judy Rash. Portland. They have also been guests a t the Huriey Teeter home. ,

Ralph Baxter, brother of Mrs. William LllUeton, hose received a medical discharge from the army and is expected here soon to visit.

Former resldenU of th is district, Mr. and Mrs. Charles ChrltWn, Nyssa, Ore., are vliltlng a t Uio Al­bert Broger and R. Bounechsen homes.

Mrs. John Moyer has been visiting relatives In Sporks, Nev. .

Mr. and Mrs. John Darrow are vslltlng Mrs. Darrow's parents In Ogden. ,

According to word received by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sedlvy Ihelr son. F / 0 Alvin sedlvy, has been trans­ferred to Great Bend. Kan.

J. W. Mlntum. Stockton. Neb., is Lsltlng his granddaughter. Mrs.

Lyle Dalss and family.

EDEN.Mrs. Arnold s a le ft r

eenUy to io ln her husband. P rivate Schauerman. vbo is itaUoned a t Camp RoberLi. Calif.

Mrs. P e a rl Day returned to h e r hom e-'from Tirla K ills hospital,

’ eho underwent surgery.....■d w as received by Mr. a n d

Mrs. F n m k Balls from Uielr son, Marvlo. w ho left fo r F t. Douglas. Utah., th a t he had been given tho opportunity to Join th e marines.

Mr. a n d Mrs. Jake Lawhora havepurchased the Jesstt Meta proper ty on M ain street. Mr. « sd Mrs. M ets plan \o locate In Twin Falls.

... . Jn th o I.O.Oi’. dining r ______Bazelton to members and stockhold­ers of th e Orange supply store a t Hazelton. A stockholders meeting Ttas held. >

HewCream Deodorant

btlpt

Stop Perspiration1 . Does n^imute jklp.^Doei

2 . PfCTcnci soilei.tttn odor.

THI lAIOIST •tlilNO DIOOOUNT

FLAKESand Cereal in Same Package

KeUoM'i Raisin- 4055 Bi.................... . ............ ........Flakes tqual_ the_ whole, ilpe .esientifll to humin nutridoni

\ Bran' tive' food el'emenU declarof

in nearly all the protec* ’. ®

Y O U R M E N rOLKS WILL PREFER

- H r .J . -

Page 7: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

T hursday , F eb ruary 1 ,1945 TIMBS-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

DAR Plans Birthday State Session

Daughters of AmerlcanBev- olution will observe Washing- ton's Birthday ot‘ a no-host luncheon Friday, Feb. 23, at

- the-Parlc-hotel.-M rs.-'Sr'M c- Coy will be in charge o f thi' affair.

The annual state m eeting of DAR will bo held in Twin Falls, March 16 and 17, ac­cording' to Mrs. R. R. Spaf* ford, regent of the Twin^Falischapter.

Slate ifflceSlate Mflcera are expectcd to - rive Tbursdftf, March 15, to attend (ui executive board mccUcs plated n t 7:30 th a t evcnlns.

OucsLs will Btay a t the Pa rk ho tc t The hanquet wiU be held there la charge o t Mrs. WUbur S. l!U l.,lt will bo held the CTcnlng of Friday, March IQ. O ther waslona wW be presented in the chapel room of the Methodist church.

l i t e biennial clectlon of offlccri Will' bo iicld Saturday afternoon. Mabel GispVon, slaw regent. Nftmpa i t expccted to a ttend the convention and preside a t meetlnEs.

Speaker nnd musical number# will be arranged for the Batherlnff.

* * V-

Elm ore County Women Wind u p .

Red Cross WorkGLENNS PERRY. Pcb. A

port fr« n Mrs. H. N. Blms of punvber o t w rslca t dttsslngs made by workers here, Hammett and King

completed and shipped. Nlnety-eev- t n earton& contained the dtcuins&.

Total il,04S IloonAsslittng In the work In this

Include 3Sa women and glrU. with an spproxlmato total of 11 140 hour* conWbuted. Bomt workers have <!*• voted Jnoro 1.000 hours apiece.

Recently the women gathered for a social a t the oily hall. Eleven Cf— irom Iilountaln Home, guests of . gronp here. Ptve hunditd . bridge and pinochle were plaj’od. Bridge prises were won by Mrs. Lawrence Friedman ond Mrs. Agnes Turner, both Mountain Home. Five hundred awards went to Mrs. E. L. Belmore a rd Mrs. R. L. Cline. Mrs, W. E. Hoalst, Hommett, and Mrs. W. R. Harley. Mountain Horae, won prizes In pinochle. Door prize went to Mrs. W. D. Clayvffle, U ounUin Home.

Eerre LnneheonA covered dish luncheon was serv­

ed. Those, attending from Mountain Home Included Mrs. W. A. Painter, Mrs. M argwct Oraee, Mrs. Esther Nichols. Mrs. Ben Crabb,- Mrs. P. W. Bennett, Mrs. Olj'do Porrey, Mrs. A. c ; Porrey.

Other Buesta of Hammett were Mrs. Tom Ledbett«r and Mrs. Fer­dinand Koch attended.

I * ¥ *

County Convention Scheduled by D.U.P.

Plans for a county Daughters of U tah Pioneer convention were mide a t a meeUns of county officers held a t U\e R ^ erso n boUl.

The convention will be held May 23. Ono representallve from the sta te eentral committee In S a lt Lake City will attend the conclave.

InvStaUona have been extended 16 the Jerome camps. Mrs. Virginia Davidson Olsen, Kimberly, presided a t the meeting. The next planning session will be held In March.

* * *Sharon Kuykendall

Honored at PartySharon KuykondaU ws# honortd

on her birth anniversary a t a party Sunday afternoon. Refreshments were served a t quartet tables.

Lavender sweetpeas and n u t cups dccoralcd th« Ublea. FoUowvni - Jreshments the group attended movie.

Guests attending the event Dlano K ai; Penny Thome, Coleen O’HaUoran, D iana Dunn, accirgiana Word. Venlta Turner nnd Sandra Jean Bowman.

Marian M artin.. P a tte rn

. 9261SIZB12-20)0-H

TODArs PATIEBH

Hk W-ln- ,s«sd TWBhmr CENTS . _____ ___

Marries Flier

The (onatr Shirler KUtie Glenn, who m srrled Lieut. Wilfred R. Andrew, son o f Mrt. Oeorge Kcnailsn, Shoshone. (Blatf en - graTlni)

¥ * * * Shoshone Aviator Weds in OklahomaSHOSHONE. Feb. I — Shirley

Marie Olenn. da u g h ter ol Mr. and Mrs. O. T. aienn. Ljvs Vegns, N ev . and LStul. w uired R . Anflrcw, son of Mrs. George K ennston, Shoshone, were msrrltd Jan. 30, s t the May avenue Methodist church In Okla­homa City, Okla.

The Ttev. B}-ron Cravens olliclotcd a t the scnlce. M ra. L. D. Moore. OkliiJioma City, a tten d e d the bride. Lieut Carl J. Ashford, Baton Rouge. Ln, was beat man.

The eouple will m a k e Uielr homo in Oklalioma C ity temporarily, where Lieutenant Andrew, an arm y filer. Is ataUoned.

Dinner Scheduled By Past Masters

PILESl. Peb. 1 — Masolilc lodgo will honor Its post moater* at n lamb dinner next Monday evening in the Filer Methodist c h u rc h bucm ent. The dlMer will be served at 7 p. by wom'fn o! the church .

Officers and p a s t masters of neighboring .lodges o re invited to attend. 0 . W. A nthony, 0. P. Oliver and LetiJs Kscic a ro In chargo of arrangements.

CARE OF YOUli

C H IL D R E N By ANGELO PATH!

Twins may look alUse bu t the peo­ple who Uve with th e m , the teoch- - - who teach them, Joiow they d lf-

------ In mUid a lw ays In deaHngwith them. To try to m ake tliem be- havo alike, succeed alike, to w an t the same tilings, U to court failure for both chlldren.

As soon as one of th e twlm shows a marked difference from the other

tables while Uie other distinctly docs not, or It may be m e n ta l attitudes. One likes people w hllo tha other shies away jrom th e m . It may bo In the matter of learn ing . One learn# quickly and gets p ra lso nnd h igh marks while the o the r la slower and gets poor marks un less co&cted dally.

If sueh differences showed be­tween chlWrea a couple at sears apart nobody would th ink It odd. Father or moUier o r tcacher m ight Bpeok about It but th e y would no t act as though M m ethlng was wrong becau« ooe did a n d one did no t.

coul( apd one cou ld no t Twins . ... separate children a n d they dUferent, one from th e other.

Allow IndlTldDolIsmIt, U a mistake to try to lorce

them to keep toge ther. Let each grow a t Its own rate, along his own guts. U t faeh enjoy his prefer- onces without criticism o r litiing of tyebfo-!.-*. U one I ta m s let him

ahead as fa;t as h o likes but n l- . . .f the ilow ono to rmw at h is rate, too. or tliere wUl be irouble and plenty of It.

R olttn happens t h a t one twin Is slower than the other. H elp the slow ono according to h is need without regard for the fast o n e 's ways. Tho alow child will have to live In h is own skin and tiylna to make him stretch and shapo I t according to his twin's pattern will only drstrey whatever strength th e re b in it. There is no reason u n d e r the sun why twins have to live I n Uie tam e scheme. TUey can't do so In tha n a ­ture ot things, and th e y woa'l.

The time comes In th e lives of the twins when they m u st go se u ra ta waya. Work, majriage, maturtty of .................. 4 will fo r r ------------------ -- lo reo their sep»

oration. Nature d a n o n d s I t and'so* clety forces It. I t Is b e s t to train twins to.1)9 IndlTldual children (ronv

'------th a t th e y wm no t

Train them aacord los to Uielr needs, prtfmnees a n d differencea. Let U un be theauelves osd theywill do better. T h ey ------but under .the sktn tl

r« d l« .IDdn, i. • ,c U * c .hUi

Mrs. Cole Fetes V isitor a t P a rty

Mrs. R. H. cole- entertained ot a bridge party in honor of Mrs. Ira T . Cartney, Jr.; Burbank. CaW.

• Two tables of bridge were In play. A Valentine theme was carried out in decorations. A late supper was served by the hostess. Mrs. Cartney h a s returned to he r homo In Bur­b a n k -fo U o w l^ B T ^ fc •

Local Girls Gain Honor in Music

Je o n Taylor. Tw in Polls high school graduate, 1044, appeared In th e first concert of the all-girl sing­ling orehestra a t th e Onlvcraliy of Idahb . Moscow. Miss Taylor ap­peared as a soloist, singing several selecUons from Gcorgo Gershwin'* ••PorRy and Bess."

Barbara Ravenscroft, high Achool g raduate ot 1D41, has been chosen a.ralstAnt director fo r the senior sere­n ade wlilch will bo given a t Moscow Feb. 10. 5

P a r ty Scheduled F or Mrs. Tolman

, M rs. MarUiik M. BarteH Tolman will celebrate her 80th birthday an- nlvcrsory today a t an open house between 2 ond 8 p. m. a t th e ’home of h e r eon and daughter-in-law, Mr. a n d i l r s . Keniy Totaion.

M rs. Tolman was a member of Uie f irs t organized L. D. S. primary a t Farm ington, Otah. She will be espec­ially honored by Daughters of the U tah pioneers ol »ho county Uils afternoon. The honoree is the only living pioneer In th is county, who crossed the plains prior to the rail­road May 10, 1800.

Pink, Blue M otif Used a t Shower

Mrs. Clifford Emerick was hon­ored a t a pink and blue shower held n t the home of Mrs. John R. Ruth­e rford. 184 Taylor street Tuesday afternoon.

Dougins nnd Le Vere Emerick, young gucsls a t the party wheeled In a pink and blue bassinette filled w ith gifts. A bouquet of Chinese iris and Jonquils decorolcd the room. P ink nnd blue motifs were used a t th e three tables where refreshments of Ice cream and cake were sen-ed.

C ucsts nltendtns p ie offalr were M rs. Vcre Pullon, Mrs. Dec Sterling. Mrs. Claude Detwelier, Mrs. Stella Sanger, Mrs. Jim Busby, Mrs. Norlne Brooks. Mrs. Pern Lews, Mrs. H. 8. Schw ort:. Mrs. R. D. Harkness, Mrs. W. A. Williams, Mrs. Lolita Becker, M rs. Arthur Urry, Mrs. Woyne H an­cock. Out-of-town guest! were Mrs. H arold Grey, Jerome, and Mrs. Myrle Williams, Gooding.

* *

Policemen to Sell Tickets fo r Ball

■Tickcts.,for the annual Police­m en's ball Wednesday, Feb. 31, wlU

Kfllo Monday.” Fred Zlmmer- . ... patrolman jin d chairman- of

th e dance, announced T hw sday m orning.

T h e ball Is under sponsorzhlp of nil Tw in Falls policemen ond will bo held a t Radio Rondevoo.

T ltk e ls will be on sale a t the police station. The tow i will be canvasscd by policemen next week. Those aulstlng Zimmerman ore Howard Gillette, chief of police; Lee M cCracken, assistant chlel; Roy Llndeli. Charles Vance, La Vcm Rawlings, George Bonham ond R alph Cooper, all patrolmen. '

Sewing Rooms Need More Volunteers

"More volunteers ore needed th e Red Cross sewing rooms which are open Wednesday, Thursday ond Friday from 1 to 6 p. m.," Mrs. H. L. Hogsett, chairman of production onnounced.

S he stated th a t volunlteis w ti t needed. At the present time the group Is making 200 girls dresses for foreign war relief.

Cook-Callison Wed In Gooding Service

GLENNS PERRY. Feb. 1-M rS. May callison and Edward Cyrus Cook were united In m a ^ sg e a t Gooding, Jan . It). Witnesses were Mr. and Mrs. Roilee Haney, King HUL Mr. and Mrs. Cook will reside In Olenn.^ Ferr>-. B oth have lived In th is vlcblty for years,

* * *Snow Theme Used

At Dessei't BridgeHazel Hong entertolned at> bridge

IPFIRt ^ ^ € I R L S

BLUB JAY T h e Blue Jay group of the Blue­

birds m e t a t the home of tholr guard ian , Mrs, Earl BlcUord. Patty W alker, president, was In charae of th e meeting. Joan Miller, seerstary. treasurer, gave a report.

Carol MuntoD was chosen report* e r by th e group. Members did w oit fo r Jun io r Bed Cross., A soctaj hour followed the business meeting w ith refreshments served by the hostess. Joan MUIer will be hosU u to th o group a t the meeUng a « t week, .

Weds in Jerome

T h t form er I r tn t Sinelair^

who bitam e M ri. ■frnnk E . DUlon ol a_eandUliekt

eeremonj/. Tunda]/ eveninff.

She i t the daughter

Mr. and M r,IV, Sinclair Jerome.

S/r#. Ditloti fAoie a blue tiiit for her tvcdding. (S ta /f engraving)

Thespians Slate ‘Smilin’Through’ For March Play

'■Smllln' Through" Is tlie play chosen by troop 2S6 of National .Thespian Dramatic Honorary society for high school lo be presented at the high school tlie latter part of Marcli. The play will be given two nights with a double cast; the pro­ceeds ot tho first night going to tho Red Crou, of the second night to bo donated to the Stage-Door Can-

Written by Allen Longdoii Martin, ■■Smllln’ Through" b a duel Iwe story. In the piny John CarUcr shows definite disapproval to the proposed marrlnge ol Kenneth Wayne and KaUilecn. Before Ken­neth leaves to Join the amied forces of tho first World war, Johti agteei (o tell of his grievances agnlnst Kenneth. This lead.'s to the second scene, which Is presented In a traslc and dramatic manner. The second scene tokei place 50 yean betoro the world war. The conclusion of the play returns lo the times of ltll7-l In tho third a c t

The play will be directed by Plor- etice Rets. Thespian &5»nsor. The 85 members ot the group will bo considered for tho cast and wlU be selected later, The cast is to be made up ot students who have had previous esperitn te in iho rtrnmatlc field.

Benefit productions of-, this t>-pe have olreody made the Twin Falb chapter of Thespian a member of. the American Theater wing ot Stage-door Canten. The group owns a e lu tion signed by Helen Hsyes. Last year tho group presented a variety sho w that netted »3J7J7 for the 'R ed Cross.

Bad Habits Studied By Relief Society

Mrs. E ither Bates was In charge of the special meeting of the First word Relief Society held Tuesday o t the Ik D. S. church. The theme was “Non-Uso of Liquor and To­bacco."...Mrs, 6. Helen Johnson discussed the theme of tho session. Mrs. Mary G ltnn discussed "Sacieintss ot the Human Body"; Mrs. Sara Yates, "Mothers Responsibility Toward Non-Use of Liquor and Tobacco": and Mrs. Edna Artitiglon. "Iieward ot Obedience." Mrs. Mary wrtght delivered the Invocation and Mrs, Bertha Mae Hansen the bencdlctlon.

¥ *

C alendarT he Knull Grange will meet at

S p. m. Friday o t Pleasant View achool house. The men will tunvlsh tho program. Members are request­ed to bring a pie.

X- * * p . M. club wUl meet for a 1 p. m.

luncheon Filday a t ihti hcime ol M r t Viola Weyland, 1228 Tenth i \ Due e u t dectlon of bfflcen will held by the group.

¥■ *BScktl P . T . A. study group -j...

m eet a t a:3S p. m. Friday. In the auditorium. Margaret McClain will be suest speaker. All parents who are Interested, aro osked to att<

¥ » *Mrs. O. L . Luke will present her

piano atudeijts In a rccltal at g p. m. today In the muslo room at the high school a t Murtoiigh. The public is tp rited to attend.

OBDER A PACKAGE....... OF-SPICY-

GOODNESS TODAY]

OINNAMONROLLS

w ith tb e eM-taabloeed tU<

n ld n a a n d topped with cTMtor raxar.

Jay-C -ettes Plan Valentine P arty

M rs . DougiM Borlase will be ch n lnnan Ct tJie Jay-C -clle vnlcn-

no party to be held Tuesday, Feb. i I n the Pork ho te l M rs . Jack Corson, Mrs. R. E. Car­

n a h a n and M rs. A. C. Carter wlU a ss is t Mrs. Borloso on th e commit* tec. Tile group will m eet this week­end to conipleu! plans for the offalr.

Styles fo r 1945 Shown a t P a rty

Of P idelis ClassS ty les of 1045 wero featured a t

tho social meeting of Pidelis class ot tho Baptist church held o t 6 p. T uesday. "Folly ot 1015,'* was i th e m e of the pa rly .

A rth u r G ordon ond Bernard M a rty n participated In the style show . Oordon, ■ Martyn and Mrs. M a rty n were characters In a skit depleting the silent movies. ‘T he H u m a n Comedy," movies taken Ot 0 P idelis party o number o t years ago. was presented by Ih e group. M rs. R . E. Bobler woa chairman of motion pictures shown a t tho a ffa ir .

"M r. and M rs. Bam ord Morivii were co-chairmen of the affair with M rs. Edward S k in n er ,in chatse o t

d e rso n and Roy Holloway. The re­freshm ent committee included Mr. a n d Mrs. Charles K evan ond Mr. and Mrs. j . A. W righ t

T h e business meeting was In c h a rg e ot L. W . Routh, and Mr?. M artyn led '

Local G irl F e ted A t Shov^er P a rty

R o se Marie H arm on, daughter of Mr. a n d Mrs. P a u l Harmon, whose engagement was recently onnounc­ed, w a s honored o t a pre-nupUal show er VJedneBdoy n t the* home ol Mrs. William R . Wolter.

L ucU a Ooberg, Ogden, woa a spe­cial Buesl at th e affair. T he mU- celluncom gifts were placed under a yellow and silver archway decorated w ith silver bells ond a miniature bride and bridesroom.

T h e yellow a n d white motif c a rried out In refreshm ents. Games were played yjy the group. Mrs Bffle Barmon, Buhl, grandmothei cf t b a brlde<elect, was among tha guests. ‘

Initiation Given , Candidates |o r

Rebekah todfeeA special meeting, to .lniuato can-

-Idates from Eden and Twin Falls was held by Primrose Rebekah lodge. Mrs. . Dole Bowman, noble grand, presided a t th e business session.

Thoge Initiated from Eden were

Sherrlck. Mrs. Opal Newbry. Mra. Irene Black, Mrs. Mary Rolce.- Mrs. Melba La Jeune&ie. Mrs. Beulah Donhoe, Mrs. Josie Davidson. .

New Degree Slalf PrimroM Rebekah Initiates Ineliul-

'e d Mrs. Gladys RlrkpatrUk, Mrs. Mabel Dean artd iMTs. Margaret Weeks. ' ,

The pew degree atoff for the year headed by Mrs. & T . Gutteiy. cap­tain were Mrs. M argaret Watts, noble BriLOd; Mrs. Viola Raines, vlce-grond; Mrs. Annette Mahnkln. chaplain; Mrs. Clara Anderson, past noble grand; Mrs. Clara Porks, right support to noble grand; Mra. Lillian Smith, le ft support to coble grond; Mra. Slgrud Smltl), right support to vice-grand; Mrs. ja ia Long, lett support to vlce-grond; Mra. Mae DbolitUe. righ t support to chaplain.

Mrs. Maxine Mullins, le ft support .0 chaplain; Mrs. Ruth Murphy, right support to past noble grand; Jane Jensen, le tt support W ptisl noble grand. I

Mrs. Loulso BoUantyne, outside guardian; Mrs. Thelma Higgins, In­side guardian: Mrs.* Marie Given, conductress; Mrs. AUce Bowman, warden.

Tablean .QWen Those taking p a rt In the tableau

..ere Mrs. Clarice Wolter. Mrs. Raines, Mrs. Bessie Gerrlsh, Ua Driskell. Mrs. Thelma Higgins, Mrs. Sigrid Smith. Mrs. Long, Myrtle Anderson, G. W. Oerrlsh. Mrs. Coto McRlU.

Mrs. Quttery was assisted by Mrs. Effle Watkins and Mrs. MeRUl.

Refreshments were served under dlrecUon of Mrs. Charles MeU, wliich were furnished by both lodges. Mrs, TheUtia Dcatx pceaented music throughout the ceremony.

« » «

Shower Planned For Local Woman

Mis . Robert Stokcsbery. former­ly Dortha Long, will bo honored ot a mlseellancous bridal shower this evening a t the home Of Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Carroll.

Mrs. Etokosberry is tho daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Long. Flier. Approxlmntely 60 are expected to attend. Tho affair Is being spon­sored by women of tho Nazareno church. Games will be played by the group. Refreshments sen-ed by the hostess, will term inate the evening.

Book Review Given At Church Meeting

Mrs. Edward Cooper was hostess to group three ot the Presbyterian Women's ossoclaUon. Mrs.. W. O. Wltham was In charge of the meet­ing. Devotionals were given by Mrs. O, T. Koeter. A book review ' preseaUd by Mrt- P . B. WHsoa,

.Mrs. H. J . Wall presided o t the tea table. Mrs. O. R. Scott was assistant hostess. The general meeting will be held ot the homo of Mrs. Luclen Voorhees.

Irene Sinclair Weds' [ In Candlelight Rites

Tells MarriageJEROME. Feb. l^T uesda^

a t 8 p . m. a t the hoilio of Jlr.^ and Mrs. E . W . Sinclair,- their daughter, Irene, became-thei •)ride o f ” ' '

T /S g t Milton Jackson, 8bo- ihone, and Baby KeUey, New Orleans, La^ were tnarTied Bee. 4 o t QtRolitshsu, Aia. The weeding announeement was received by Mrs. Harold Borfcss. sUter> o( Bergeaot Jackson. (S taff engrav- tng)

P aren t Teachers Hold Card P a rty A t Glenns F erry

OLENNfl FERRY, Feb. l-P o re n t- teachers gave a publlo card party In the high school. M rs. P . D. An­derson woa cholrmon of the general committee, with Mr*. A. P . Buckles and Mrs. Ernest Pasborg. osslstaata. Mrs. P . E. Pearl woa In charge of refreshments, ond was ossLsted In serving by tho room m others.

Prizes of cakes, wero donated by Mrs. WUUam Petersen. Mrs. Ander­son and Mrs. Pasborg. Mrs. A. D. Wlcher donated a chicken for a

Dor prize. 'Score priecs were won In pbochle

by Mrs. P . A, Hormon, Mrs. Pern Stokes and Mrs. Rue Cose.' In five hundred, Mrs. H arry Bergstrom, Mrs. Dan Sullivan ond Mrs. Sarah Cams Won prises. Bridge prizes w ent to Mrs. Harry Taylor, i tr s . A. MnrUndaie ond Mrs. L. L.,Johnson.

Mrs. James Patton won the door prize, and Helen Sullivan received

______ S 1/C Frank E, DUlon;;of the navy. ■: ■

.The coremony, perf’ormetl'. by candlelight, waa read by ■; the Rev. Harvey Harper, pas- •' tor of Jerom o. Piresbyterian '' church. Only members o f the-^ two families and friends w it- ; nesscd the nuptials.

The bride, given In su -hcTtolher.E.V?. Sinclair, w_______ _ed In a blue suit with cavy bloa occessorlea and her corsage was of-' gardenias.

Attending tho couple wcre'Mn,<' 'Kennelh B. K lrk,.matron ot honor,^’ Jerome, who was In a tuchsU dress' . w ith corsage ot talisman roses, a n d ' William Cushing, CaldwcU. who was best man.

The couple pledged vows as they< - stood a t one comer of the room ' which was background*! by sovea" branched candelabra flanked by tstU'- - baskets of lilies ond snapdragons.

Eeceplton Held Following the marriage a recep­

tion for tho bridal party and guesta • was held* where the bride cut and" served o decnrated, th ree-tlerrd ' cake, which was topped with a mini— Qturo sailor bridegroom and bride.’ '

The rcfreshmenU were served In " the dinette of the home . a n d - th e -- table was centered with tho'brlde'k. cake, and o t either side were two ' Illuminated candles.

The bride la o graduate of J e r o m e •' high school, Is a member of Jerome^ .• younger social set, ond ottended' Colorado Women's college, D enver.' '

The bridegroom, home after IB- months In the south PMlflc, is the- son of Mr. ond .Mrs. Floyd DUIon,D Welser. The couple’s plana for the future are Indefinite.

Present o t the ceremony In addi­tion to the members of the two fam - ’ Ules was Mrs. a P. Hartman, Boise. '

the blanket. Seventero Ublea of. cards were played.

Proceeds from the party will go'. Into the flnaaclal fund of the OJenns Perry group, w ith Mrs. ; Johnson, president.

C O I D S ^

$ 1 0 7 5

N o w onder we preenJ Thi* little pump I* loved ontJ ''livad-Irj" bjr

particular women everywhere! Siim.throoted to flatter your' anklet ....wall-loecj to moke walking fun I

MAIN FLOOR SHOE DEPABTSIENT

IDAHO DEPARTMENT

STORE

Page 8: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

> >Page Blffht TIMES-NEWa TWIN FAL>LS, IDAHO : IT h u rs d ^ ; T e b y i i ^ i;. 1946

SPORT

''Aboul the “sUckul"—and by U ut UiB pudS7 oos doem't mean Uia

. bft&kcUitil tc&nx thAt Oldo Sport scrivener has u m durlna tho

. . p u t two teiuons ore tho 19<S Rupert .. Plrntcs th a t Conch George Hoy« . put on th e Twin KalU Iloor Uie oUwr

Pilshtvn ie y hAve speed In abundoace

»nd p tu s like veterans ftllhoush lher« Is only one senior

UIO u n io u juio ur«ci*k aiiu tuu* ^

eorreet. They Jacked poi.e or r»t» were over ea je r to score.

Here nre iho lb plnycr* on U wiuad in willed there is reaUy c tin t o r aecond team:

Dale M endenhall, jt Jonlor. Gerald Culler, a Junior.Ilarrey Canlln, » sophomore. Leroy DePalmo. 'a Junior.Olcnn Oof/, a Junior.Uenrr Coatln, tU r r e f t <«rin,

sophomore.Jimmy Frlc»en, » sophonJore. virrll Fenton, a Junior.Bill LlcTrellyn. A Junior.Klle O sterhoat, a senior.AlUw ■ ■

Seven < . a t V time hasthe leain been disgraced „ .. quintets. Kencrolly losing by .. lew polnta which can be charged up to k laclt oJ poise.

YOSS Isn 't predicting tlic dbirlct ch&mplonslilp fo r the Pirates but If they continue to Improve as they h»ve in th e last month they ought to mske I t unpleasant for their ser rivals n t Twin Falls next month.

And If they do cO u this lime, who is there to say (b a t the Pirotia won't win next year and probably the year after w hen the present s 'OD tbe sauad a re wnlsrs.

Kow don 't m isunderstand this ancient word puddlcr. Ho Jsn t try- in? to com pare the Plrotes with tho Oakley H ornet team th a t Coach iUton Fairchild p u t on the boards 2ut a eu o n . tsor even the 'Heybum

■ Piothcrs th a t gained the class B dlitrlct crown.

Perhaps, the Pirates aren’t os good os Shoshone of lost year and thli or a le n n s P e n ? In tlie class B bracket o r Burley and Buhl In class A. Dut th is old typewriter tormentor still contends they are about the ‘’sUaest” tiasketboU article tho t he hat seen In two souons.

And th a t 's th a t for now, except: AU roads lead (o the Rupert outUw tounum ent for th e neat three day*. At least tbey wUI for the padcy one -S a ln rd sy .

Geo. Detweiler Sets 2 Mai-ks

Four new seasonal records wei. set in the M inor Bowling league last night.

The new m arks were: Hlgli team total, Friedm an Bag, 3.80S; high team single. Friedm an Bag. Sifl, and bt«h Individual single and total of 257 tad 031,. both rolled by George D et«iler.

■nie scores:

HAILEY TAKES CLASS B LEADBribers of Basketball Players Indicted, Held on $25,000 Bail

BROOKLYN. Fob. 1 (yp) — Action in the basketball gam­bling scondnl moved fast, torr clay ns the Kings county grand jury indicted th e two men alleged to have, bribed five Brooklyn colicgc players, state officials prepared to make such an offense a felony and' -sportamcn throughout the country urged prompt steps be taken to curb wager­ing on intGrcolIegiatc sports.

The grand Jury', in Msslon unUV midnight Tuesday night on Instrue- tions of Judge Samuel S. Leibowltz. handed down on indictment charg­ing Harvey Stemmer a n d Henry lUaen wmaplrtity U> commit the crime of larceny and defraud divers persons who would moke money beta -'1th Stemmer.

Second Indletpien.About the same Unit, Rosea also

-as Indlctcd by tho New York coun­ty grand Jury on charges of grand larceny in the first degree for re­ceiving stolen property.

Judge Lelbowliz ]lxed' ball o: both men o t (JS.OOO eacli a fte r As­sistant District Attorney Mortus- cello had called their crime more vicious than robbery and said tho TAmliUaUcns of the com m ay as­sume such proportions th a t the de- fcndnnls might want to flee. Their trial was set for Feb. 13. A third de­fendant. listed as John Doe. oljo

u Indicted.Ih e five players involved—Ber­

nard Barnett. L any pcarlsteln, Jer­ry Orcen, Robert Lcder and Stan­ley aimon—also were named na co- conspliaton but were no t charged wltlt any crime. TesUmony showed Ro.ien and Stemmer were in on the agreement to throw tho game aclied- lued against Akron university in BoiVon tonight.

Dropped from Squad Tlie quintet, all regulars cxcopl

Pcarlsteln, already have been drop­ped from tli6 basketball squad. Fur- lli tr a ttlon by the school wUl be taken today when the faculty* student athlctie committee convenes.

Tho state law. os It now reads, makes it a felony to bribe a profes­sional athlete but b Dill amending the penal code so that amateur sports and athletes may be covered was offered in the legislature yes­terday.

M onhatian police dlsclo-scd Uiat lore Uian a dozen men had been

arrcited since Jan. 3, when racing was banned in the U. S., in connec-

on with bookmakiiig on sports fcnts a t tho garden,Led by Dr. Forrest (Phog) Allen. :ansos university, sports officials

...iked th a t something be done quick­ly to curb gambling. Allen, long a, crusader for an Intcrcolleglatc sports

called for Immedlato actlon-

llto ltti . (4)

Eddr'n 15«li«rx (

d . » I K :

■ af c n

R sm S tT n 'o t^d )

■ m

s ill si !!!

iH,J i

BoostA skedfor Poaching P endties

B O t ^ R>b. 1 M V -PM chln i oq the Idibo fish and fisme praervosMMl liimllar out o f.................. .

::;#,ii08tly. buitneas if n

Dielil Gives Qiamp Tussle

SALT LAKE crTV. Feb, 1—Box­ing experts today saw a bright fu ­ture for Ted Diehl, Jerome. Ida., if he continues in the rhig game.

Although Diehl's boxing experU ice has been brief.' tha former Je-

.jm e high gridiron star, now a navy student a t southern Idaho univer­sity, provided the highly rated Bud Sorenson, New York golden- glovo light heavyweight champion, with plenty o t opposition In the TItnh March of Dimes program here Tues­day night.

Diehl put up an excellent fifiht ad stood up well under Sorcnson’J

terrlllc wallops.

Riclifield and Tigers Victors

Two-Time Cage Captain

Wolverines Annex No. 10

HAILEY, Feb. I — Halloy gained ita 10th victory o f the

. season — eigh^ of; them con­secutively—when tho M(oWor- incs repulsed a'gallant Good­ing S tate quintet hero lost

• • .30-26.. ... victory placed th« Wolverine*

atop the Magic VaUey class B stand­ings wIU) 10 vlclorlea and one de­feat—tha t a t the hands of the s tn u v Shoshone liedsklns.

Coach Daryl UartlndaU 's lumped Into a S-4 lead In tlie first quarter and managed to 'keep ahead of Goodins State thereafter, leading 18-13 a t UlB half and 28-21 after three pertod-t.. Drexler of the Wolverines mode

14 ii 'ld goals and a free throw for 19 points. He hod an excellent chance to add to this.total but mlss> ed eight free throws.

Netz, as usual, was the Goodpocemoker with five fl__

and four free ' throws for 14 points.

rcsulta;At Jerome

IDO-pound class—E. outhrle, Sho­shone, defeated J. EUlnger.

103—Preshour, Jerome, declsioned Uansta.

108 — WUdman. Jerome, b e s t SUmpson.

108—D, Van Patten, Jerome, ou t­pointed Turner.

136—Trappen, Jercanc, won Irom ' Vincent.

13&—Humphries, Jerome, defeat«d Barkdull.

135—Don Weeks. Jerome, decl^lon- cd Jones.

143—Klccgee. Shoshone, «-on from AlUlWB.

Ha-MUls, Shoshone, outpointed Olkawa.. 154—Bartolome, Shoshone,- decl­sioned Dames.

Fred Baldridge, Twin Falls, ref­ereed the bouts.

At RichfieldXKvrlet. 113, RlclUleld. declsioned

QlDUner, 114.Clements. 11», Richfield, woo Irom.

Roberson, 124.Rogers, 125, Ooodlng, outpointed

P .B ym e. IJI.Cblgbrow. 127, Ooodlog, beat

Eun)^13I>.m orapson, 193, OoodlnK, defeated

Blnemer, 130Brown, 135. Rlehneld, iron from

Aguilar. 140.PlPf.-, .127, Richfield, declsioned

140, RtchtleM, won from

19 to 80 days, o r both.pcial iQ H . B . 90 Is th a t

. la e se u ed from «35 to

.JaU w nk o ecB from a n

Penn’s Greatest Cager Former, Captain of Stanford Quintet

Di SAM DAVIS NEA BUtf Corrrjpondent

PHILADELPlllA, Feb. 1 — Hoscord Dallmar, six-foot four-inch Penn­sylvania centcr, hn* tho raro distinction of having been elected captain of crack major university squods on opposite sides of the continent. As far as the Red and Blue B0«. tho cutly-holrcd, 22-ycat-old 2O0-5»under simply dfoppeil out of th e cloudj la s t month as a navy V-7.

Diillmar led the Stanford varsity which swamped Dartmouth in the NCOA final, wu voted th e outilandlng player in the toumaiaent. Com­petent Judges consider liln i an> of the sllckcst biU-h&ndlcrs wlw . . . . played the game. Coacli Don Kel- lett regards him ss the finest csger

ho ever represented th e Quskers.He b 'S remarkable nll-around

man. a pUyroiktt &nd feedtt. He controls Uie backboard.

DallmarS keen judgment wid lim­ing in setUng up plays actually.re- tarded tlie Pcnnmen as they drop­ped in tc t' out o£ U\tSr first Sour.Coach Elmer Ripley of Colmiibla ;ums him up; "He UilnKs ’way

.iheod of hlj teammates and eveiy- body else."

Once Dellmat’s Jnale.'i caujhV Mp with his tricks and i 'ero on the spots to receive puses, Penn cnught fire, went into itie Niv? gamo a t Annap­olis with a ekein cf five stralgliU

j DaUmat Is a s(U-&a«indns Phas­er. frequently passing when he might score lilmjelf. Dcaplte this fact he rang up field goals and 11 foifis In his fim half dozen starts In Penn llvtry, t o no t b tcn shut out from tlie Held. Defensively he Is a granite block to cntclc.

Dallmar also captured Lotrell High Of Son Francisco. H e was thTte->’ci>T legulsr al SUinloid.

Once he tried Ills h and a t foot- boll. hut v i i advljed-against it. Not only because of hli basketball sbll- Ity, but because lie Is nn outstand­ing bSJtball proJpeeV. A rlght- haud batter and thrower equally at home nt first base or in th e outfield, he was trailed by m a jo r league scouu when he joined Qie NavyK

:loi cadet program. ‘IVnnsfMied to the V-7 pre-mldililpman's school, he spent some Ume a t O re s t Lakes before moving to Philadelphia.

Big Howard Dsllmar la a center of attmctlon—from coast to coast. .

MOUNTAIN HOME W INS MOUNTAIN HOME. Feb. 1 MV-

The Mountain Home arm y a ir field Aces downed a Tlsltlng Wendover army basketball sfluad. 55-36, here Tuesday nlglii. Mountain Home led all the way.butBonntUotW etuiow was high scorer with 19 points. Wlt- tebort paced tlie Aces w ith 14 tal­lies. Score St haUUme was 34-30 for the Idsho squad.

WE’LL PAY TO P

19J8 DE SOTO,4-door a e d a n . Radio aad> heater, over­drive. Oood Ures.

CEILING PHICE FOR YOUR

&«Tcrai Olbeti i t f lek From

Bliss Russell Fans 16 Batters On Pacific Isle

Bliss Bussell, fornier Twin Falls B ruin pitching star. Is showing his mound wiles earlier than ho would have had he not Joined th e marines and was sent to the south Pacific,

According to InrormaUon re­ceived here. Bliss fanned 18 but­ters In a gome in which a num­ber of m ajor and minor leaguers appeared. He gave UP three hits and walked three batters as his team u'on. 3-0.

RECORD SWIM - . .BUENOS A IRES-D anlel Carplo.

pern , &4.-ata La Plata river between Colonia, tJmguay, and Pimtalora. Argentina, in new record, time of 23 hours, 63 minutes.

Sullivan Free Toss Nips Paul

PAUL. Feb. 1—Coach Paul Me- Cloy’s Acequla Indians continued Uieir winning streak last n ight by defeating the Paul Panthers in a viciously fought game. 20-38.

A' free throw by J. Sullivan of Accqula, a fte r Clark of Paul, had tied the score I» the last icilnute for tho fourth time during tho final

flret quarter. Jed, 14-8, a t the half ! in front. 3a-ia. after three T hen in the fhial frame,

Paul tied the score o t 32-33, 24-34, 1.3(3 and 38-38.Paul made 13 field goals to 10 for

Accqula but made good on only four -f 16 free throws, while the Indians

ere reglitorlng on nine o t 30. Accqula also won tho Junior var­

sity game. 34-32. Wilske made 13 points for th e winners, wlille Stew-

rt had 10 of Paul’s points.Tlie tabulated score:

j i S . \ I 'i

auiifoid

IlcXnt*—Bad 8<Df«N a

MON'TOOMERY SIGNED LOS ANOELES. Feb. I (il*,-BQb

Montgomery, recognized in New York as Uie lightweight champion, signed Tuesday to fight 10 rounds a t Olympic oudltorlum here Feb, 13 with Cecil Hudson. I m Angeles. Montgomery's title wlU not be at stake and th e match will be at orerwelghti. Montgomery is in the anny, stationed in Arizona.

CUBAK LEADS THAINEHS MTXICO c r r y . .F e b . I - F oUow.

Iiig' i i days 'of racing a t the Hlppo> dromo de las Americans. Leopolds Sierra of Cubss leads the trainers with 48 w ln n m .

Bruins Invade Eastern Idaho

By The /I

Six touUtem .basketbaU standings ............touclnbie as the teams open the ir f if th week of conference ptoy.

The'Schedule sends Twin Falls to

place. On Friday the touring Bruins play a t Idalio Falls, but Ihe.Tlgtni- 4-0 win record will be loo much of a statistical hasard for them to be toppled out of the lesgua lead.

Second place Caldwell with a 4-3 on-lost record plays Its neighbor­

ing Canyon county team a t Nnmpa "so Oft Friday to round out the

eek’s play.Beaten by Mlfl*sy

Idaho FaUs bad no conference unes last week. Coach Joh i hompson's boys beat He»l)urg7 3i

to 35. and lost to Midway, 40 to 37. T v ln Falls, whlCh sboved Im-

play bylatlng Boise and Nampa, tho clr- ilfs cellor-dwellers on a western

Idaho swing two weeks ago, furtherbettered lls score by .................ley, 23-31. and Oftkley.________ „R u p e rt Burley Is tied with Buhl a t the -top of the Magic VaUey Big

Pocatello's Indians will do well to hold thclr. own against the invad­ing Bruins. Tho Indians went down, 37-31, before Caldwell and lost, 38- 23. to Boise on their tour ot Ada and canyon < counties last .week. TTiey beat only Nampa by a slim 33- 23 count. Tlie losses dropped Poca­tello from second place Into i with win for third.

Emmett StUl tlnbeaien Tiny Emmett, which has beaten

all of the western Idaho Slg Six teams, continued Its victory march last week by defeating Ontario. Ore., and New plj’mouth and making its Snake River Volley league rccord nine won and no lost.

Redsldns Face Pilots Tonight

SHOSHONE. Feb. 1-Coach Bill Powers and lUs Shoshone Redskins departed this morning for ,Glenns Perry, their first stop In a three- day tour of western Idaho,

Tlie game will bring two of the

this season. TTie Redskins, who have lost only to Hagermon and Jerome, are one of the two teams which have defeated the Pilots, the rampaging Buhl aggregation being the other.

The gamo will be ono of the to contests in Uie Magic Valley Ui week.

From Glenns Perry tho Redskins will go to Payette, a contcniier for the stote class B champlonslilp last season. Tltls gome is scheduled for Friday night.

Saturday night Boise wlU be Sho­shone's opponents. TTjey will try to dupUcato the feot of Olenns Ferry, which has two victories over the Braves.

are scheduled to o . . Parsons'' Bulldogs, wl

in the midst of a w

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS,

Tidket S^lout for Rupert Tourney Seen

RUPERT, Feb. 1—So great has been the rush for ticketa for, the .Rupert outlaw, basketball tournament, ’sWch btortod Qt 2 p. m . today and will continue through Saturday n ight, d th a t Bruco Rogeirs', president o f j-he. Quarterback club, w hich ' with the Rupert Lions is sponsoring the event, announced th a t there w as every indication of a sellout. ,

•Fourteen team s will play In the tournament witji the-Dcclo Simplots. heavy favorites to capturo the event with a lm ost the sam e ease that they w on the ^Gooding tournament la s t week.

H a A J ieilM U lS CO RE S

2a,AceguU » , Panl 24.

COLLEGE Korfolk N aval T raining Station

66. Tetnple 49.Holy Crosa <H, Worchester Tech *1. Dartmouth 45. Calambla 3S.Navy CO. P enn S tale 21.A m y 73,.K’e3t VlrgSnla 47. nice S3. Texas 4B. .Ortcon S U te 45. WashlngtoD

S ta te tL Brown 59, H arvard S2.Phillips ee O llen 57, Frederick

Army O. - 'Princeton 37. Rutgers 30. M ahlenberr 35. Bucknell S3. Tnlsa.45. Gleonan UotpIUI 44. t niorqaette 83, Lawrence CaUege 47.

DCDEN snD D IE S ' CAPTAIN ANNAPOUa. Md.. Feb. t- —

Navy's ISIS football team will be cflptnliifd by Midshipmnn R. Blch-

Eon'ever, Rogers said that a n u m ­ber of tcoins 'had bcui bolstered for Uie tournament.

find Friday with play commencing la the ovorslBS on Batmday;

Too first-round schedule . today callcd, for the following games:

p. m.—Heybum vs. M urtaugh Savages.

3:tB p. m. - Albion Rarobllng Wrecks va. Oakley

4;30 p. m. — Malta vs. Utah Wool-M.tiJO p; in. — JeiMi* Jaycees va. obE Junior college.S:45 p. m. — Holllslcr vs. R upert

prisoner of war camp,10 p. m. — American

Gooding.1 Falls TS.

CAR . . TRUCK , . TRACTOR IBALLENGEK I“VelUX Service- f

Shoshone E. & 81h Phone 619 |

E A S T .ID A H O , b r e w i n g ; ;CO, ..POCATEILO. IDa HO

New Spring

SUITSSpring Is closer than you tWnlc,

so to the first robin and the first

budding tree add to tlie plctur# one of Alexander’s new sesjon

suits. W hether you are 1

short, lean or heavy, enjoy made-

to-order appew aow a t a xtady.

made price.

$35.00Others 930 (o $55

single and double breasted mod* els In all-vrool worsteds cheviots,

twUts and tweeds now available.

In a cotnplete range of sizes.

SportswearEquip yourself now with a casual

w ardrobe'suitable for now and

on through spring. .

* Sport co a ts* Sport Shirts* Sw eaters

Swing Into Spring Ina FreshNewFeltLook at jDur w inter h a t and you

will want to come In and select a- to carry you on -in to 'the-

atraw hat season.' Your lavorito

brand Is here: M etro. Dunlap.

Dalton and Astor.

$ 5 ® ® $ 7 5 ®

DRESS OXFORDS

$ 8 S 5

Bee these new, shoes, featuring smart style, fine craftworR ond quaUty lealhep. well known to.m ost Moglo Valley men: T hey 're .the nevrest foshloos by Jarman, Fortune and .Davidson, the nation's lead­e rs In fine shoe styling, ll ie y offer perfect f i t and comfort for busy feet.-

P le ^ e Brine Ration Book Nol 8

ALEXANDERStais MAm AVE. so.

:- 4 : 'iV -

; * W P » F i M u i . s , r o

Page 9: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

i

Unniibjr, Febnmy 1,1948

S rA ItF A IU E N : START SESSIONSRether with repmenUUTM of Ihe w lO M t t i n UirouBhout U»e «Ute, m et here thl» arim ioon In lnJU*l

. r ^ ; iT A & 'S £I«Ir» this year.

Among QiricijtU o t the «U U unit jn Biiendance 1« T. B. toBdley, •Pocfltello, the presidenu HsiwUlbeone of the prineJpftl jjK akera t l » banquet tonight. Other aUte otU*

Included George Oleveluid, , Burley, »ecretiiry-treMurer o l the

s ta te I(Ur board. - 'O ther well known fair o«Jcl»U

present Include J. B. Beck. #uperln- > teadcnt of the Ft. Hall Indian rtser- vaUon: BUI HUl, representing the BlaeUoot fair: Paul N uh. eecnU ir o r the Pocatello Chamber of Com- mcrce; lY ank Keenan, manager of the W estern Idaho fair; W. H. Hcndrlcka. BoUe. chairman o{ the: board o( Ada count; commlsaloners; Thomas Fark«, Filer, secretary- m anager o t the Twin Falls county fair, nho Is sta te association'vice* president.

Mrs. Mary Harris Passes in Albion

ALBION, Feb. 1 — Mrs. Mary Rooker H arris. 73, wife of the late Joseph D. H arris, died early this jnoming a t the hons? ot her D. C. Burris, In Albion.

Mrs. Harrlji wan bom Oct. 1S71. a t Heber City, Utah. Ailde Irom the son o t .whose home shei died, slie U survived by three other children, a ll of Albion. They are M rs. Albert Boll, Mbs DUle Harris a n d Mrs. Mary CurL Also surviving a re 18 grandchllren, seven great, grandchildren, one slaltr. Mrs. Bes- ale Roberta,-Balt lAlte City; two brothers, 'Jim Booker. BeUevlew, Ida., and Tom Booker, Btockton, Calir.

She was an active oitmbcr of tha !>■ D. S. church and was also i member of Albion Grange.

Funeral a rrangm enta are pend« log word from relatives. The botly reate a t the Payne mortuary In Burley. Announcement wns made.' however Uiat burial wlU be at H eber City.

Torchy Valentine

All m a n y pln«Bp* fo r servlee* men are n o t I!«Ilywoad gUmbr n U , as wUoeu bUek-halred, krewn.eyed EUltte ^ o rc h . a lee- rttary a t (he Oh(o te e l esnpany, ClareUnd. She w u selected a t Ihe ValenU^e pb -ap for eoo of the plant’s men, new in lervlee.

j-^TIM Eg-NEW S, TWIN FAILS, IDAHO

HEW .YORK. ?e6 , 1 tlip j- john D. n a c M tl ltr . iJ r^ re i te ra te d hU World v u 1 plea, today, for a m l*

' church ta-flffer'm oral « u -

Impromptu Coniic Party Tops Unusual Idaho Polio Affairs

gclbera a jium ber of years ago, and Uicyre aUll the hub of <uch evenU:

Idaho Bank Deposits Show Big Increase

BOISE, Feb. 1 W.I>)—Finance Com­missioner Jam es B. Newport reports th a t tlffl* a n d demand deposits in Idaho ’s sta te banks Increased nearly •M,OOOWO In 1D«. '

A ccnpantUve state of condition o f SO sta te banks and two branches rtiowed th a t on Dec. SO. 19U demand aopodts wer« jll.t39,638j7 hlghe) tti a s the aame dote a year ago anc tfana deposits $3,439,633.10 lilgher.

T he banks purchased 110,000,000

in t h e '^ a r ^ '

Livestock Sale Totals $94,000

Reporting “one of the best sales I- i far," Tom Callen, co-owner of the 'Twin Falls livestock Commission ccmpany, reported grosa sales for ••ealerday amounted to 4D4.000, with

cads sold adding up to 1,167."We ran 600 head of cattle

through the sales ring In one hour and five minutes." Callen said. “On

|« » le shipped out, we loaded 24

- — top price for steers, was realised yesterday when a carload of the animals sold a t $11J3.

Thompson Brothers. Olenns Per* , ry, sold two loads of cow® and heU- era a l »1U 5. Burton Brothers, Orandvlcw, dtaposed of two loads of heifers a t $I3iO.' Peeder steers sold for an average

price of $ i a ^ to $»."We sold 300 weaner calves from I to 160 a head.”

thB in f p l r a t l o n which they neirt and .have a rig ( to eStpect." In a

« 0 C M P « n te........ ....... council’s drive for

$000,000 operating'funds this year, nockefeller proposed, a reborn church btiUl on rellgloOa spirit rath, er than fonnalltles.

BCTCNCE AGAINST WAR LONDON, Feb. 1 (/^—An Interna,

tiona l, brotherhood of. scientists u prevent future w ars'w as proposed today to the royal Empire society.

Prof. A. V. IIIU visualized a danger tha t the neat «-ar would be no t o conflict ba tw an armed forces but a dellbtrate atU m pt by sclcnUflc methods to destroy cities, massacre populations and make whole coun­tries unlnhaUUble,

•'•nic only hope of averting disas­ter nhlch science misapplied could Inflict on humanity," ho malnUhied,

IntemaUonal brotherhood of scientific men wUh a common eth- leal standard by which potential crimes of this character would be exposed and prevented.”

MUST BE PATIENT TORONTO, Ont., Feb. 1 (U.R>—Tlie

world faces a long “trial and error" evolutionary period before a working

•International security organlraUon -■rrfected, U. S. Ambassador Ray

Around the world and arOund tha. clock, millions of clvlUana and ber* or the armed force* have ifcen attending March of Dimes dancea «nd porU u the last w veral days in order tha t the fight against Infan. " le poralyaU might-continue.

But probably nowher* was « polio benefit staged with more spontan­eity than a t the WlUlam Qeerhort homo a t HoUUlcr la s t Saturday night.

Kangaroo Court t*«An Impromptu “on the apur of

a moment" comic costume party waa ^ i t c n up by the neighborhood.I e n someone had the idea of turn- Ing over the proceeds from a “kan-giiroo court” and ......................fantil& paralysis

A total of (0 was coUccttd and aent to -the Tlmea-News, with the requeat tha t •‘you'U please see It rcachea the right hands." The money order from tha HoUlster community was pUced In the hands of Frank W Slack, treasurer of t h e Twin FalLi county . infantile , paralysis

Cautioning Impatlcnce

Matrimony Master Will Ask Probation

•SAN KlANOI6CO,'PeK“ r (U,B- Attom eya for Prancls -wn Wle, rtrec tca r conductor who married but forgot to divorce 13 women, said today he will plead guilty to bf charges and ask for pnibstlon.

D istrict Attorney Edmund Brown I sa id h e would not oppose the proba­tion request.

A t his arralgnpen t Monday. Van Wle pleaded Innocent to bigamy eham ca filed by wives No. II and 13—M ary Josephine and Evelyn. H«; la a t Uberty on $1,000 bond.

Sugar Company Acts To Get More LaborBALT LAKE OTTy, Feb. 1 (fl.)-

'With assurances from the war food administration that It will do all In Its power to provide labor for the 1M5 sugar beet cnsp. tho Utah- Idaho Sugar company has sent its operations miuiajer, Wllford Y. Cannon, to th e Berkeley, C alif, la- bor uUllraUon. conference.

The three-day conference start­ed today.

Making th a t announcement. Gen­eral Manager Douglaa E. Seolley said:■ •TTie'sugar *l{uaUon'now ' has reached Its most criUwl stage alnce the outbreak of the war. Rescr^’e itccks have declined steadily until low they are a t their lowest point n yeari,”

The California conference la w ..- cemcd with obtaining and handling of. Mexican a n d prisoner of labor, he added.

Club of Canida thoTtho peopVe'’ of North Amcrlca should be "the very laat to lose our paUencc, the very last to lose hope" Uiat a world gnnl^tlon Is lensiblc.

The United States. AUierton called, had to weather the "bitter experience” of the articles of con­federation before perfecting Its con- atitutlon while Canada experimented fog 25 years before achieving g o v ­ernmental suwess.

‘■How con we expect all the na- Uons of the -world to rusli a t once Into a perfect, all-embracing organ- iMUon?* he asked.

drive.HollL.

"old.fashl...............exists.-. Every two or three weeks, someUraea cftener, a neighborhood gathering Is held. InvlUtlons are by word of mouth, and getting to­gether for folk music ts the usual excuse. Those who have musical In­struments. bring them. The host sends a member of th* famHy to Jet the neighbor* know th a t an “open

use" Is the order of the evening. i soon tlie crowd starts gathering.

They Started It Uncle Joe" and Mrs. Abbott

started the neighborhood get-to-

in Ihe community.Mrs. Geerhart and Mrs. J. N. Ab­

bott, asslstcd by Mrs. J . Calvin Vest, w «e hostesses a t the costume parly tha t netted $g for the polio fund.

During the e«n lng . a mock court was held, with "Uncle Joe" Abbott presiding, ira Wlckenhagen was jf fo ^ u to r and BIU Geerhart was ahcrtff.

Pines were Imposed for-»earing Icwclry or a 'happy expreaslon. An auction waa held by BIU Qeerhort and Ira Wlckenhagen. and miscel­laneous arUcles. donated by Uie guests, were auctioned. Proceeds and fines Joined the March Dimes.

Specially O fferinnSpecialty numbers were presented

by hidlvlduola and entire families. BUI Geerhart, sr., presented a series of maglo tricks, and a “Get the. I^U to Sleep” rac8 was a feature.' Mrs. Ouy Peters and Charies Shep­herd won coetumo prltea, and prlies were awarded, for the children's games.

Quests were Mr. and Mrs. Geer- hart. Patricia, Jean . Prancca and BIU Qeerhart, Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Ouy Peters, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Hen. derson. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bills Mr. and Mrs. Abbott. Mrs. J . Calvm Vest and Janet, Charlea Shepherd. Mrs. Jenny Courtnay, Isabel and I Laura Courtnay, Clive Courtnay,' Mr. and Mrs. Abbott. aU of Hollister,

Mr. and Afrs. Ira Welcenhagen, Betty. Jean and John Wlckenhagen,. a ll of Twin Falls; Mr. and Mrs.I Emory Johns and -Edna Mae Johns,' Kimberly, and W, R. Wlckenhagen and Mn,. H. M. Behm, ciieUn,

P 38.N l..

Markets and Financeu i i i s r¥ ord

NEW I H MARK. Markets at a OlanooNEW YORK. r.b. I (« V hlskttj i UIIUm W

Oilc>C«Wkrtt ilrin, miu buylpsi Ihort Mr-

Ism.-.--

Business Group Checks Real Estate Valuations

All real esUt« In tho city of Twin F bUb b being checked committee made up of local business men and property owners and heod- ed by George A. Childs, county os- scssor. In an effort to equalUe pro- perty values In .the city.

'■This ts no t an effort which will raise property values In all cosc.i," Childs said. "As a matter of fact. In quite B number of cases valua- Uons of lots will be readjusted a t a level even lower than tha t which was originally set In 1905.

"Tho general tendency, however."

Childs explained, "will be to raise

from 10 t<which iiave been in effect ' ’- 15 years."

iu o same survey will also affect Blue Lakes addition. Childs sold.

•This area's real estate valuation was readjusted four years ago." he said, "and In order to keep pace with the growth of the city and to be silre th a t all property owncra In thot' section receive a fair valuation of ^ o p erty , the present sur^'ey Is being

l i e five-man committee has been going over plat books and figuring valuutlcm for the past two days,

FILER

THE m iE S -N E W S

F A R MSALE

CALENDAR★

SALE DATESFEBRUARY 5

M. G. Colo Advertisement, Feb. 2 Itoy Bopklns, Auctioneer

FEBRUARY 5F r a n k T ru n k c y

A dvcrtlsenicnt, Feb. 2 W . J. Uelienbeck. Aaciloneer

F EB R U A R Y 6Avia E. Johnson and

Freda J. Hartley Advertisement,’ Feb. 2

W. J. Hollenbeck. AoeUoneer

FEBRUARY 8M rs. D e lla H a r r a l

A d v e r lb e m e n t , F e b . 6

FEBRUARY 9W . p . H l lb

A d v t r t o m e n l , F e b . 7 th . W. J . Uolleabeck, AncUoneer

•FEBRUARY 12

2nd Anntial S. C. I. Purcbr«d Sow Sal©

Advertlsetaenl, Feb. 9 ‘

FEBRUARY 13 'W .B . McCoy. •

A d m tlsem en l, Feb. 9CoL E. 0 . Walter, AaoUeneer

A ITENTIO N FAM IERS

Rationing of Coffee Will Not Take Place

W ASH m axoN . m . i iu .R)-aov- jemment food officials, alarmed a t , on Increase In ••scare” buying of cof­fee,. declared emphatically, today that coffee rationing Is n o t In sight.

OPA said buying In excess of nor* mal needs had Increosed during the post week due to rumora tlin t coffee, would be returned to tho rnUon list.

Tho WOT food administration not­ed that there la nearly h a lf again as much coffee avalloljla as when rationing waa discontinued in July

Stronger Chieks Life

, , ^ S o r

RANCH-WAYCHICK STARTER

Twin F alls Flour Mills Gooding E levator

. H anson Elovator H azelton E levato r

Farmers E lev ato r, Je ro m e Klmljorly E levato r RIciineld E levator Bupei-t E lev ato r Bulil E levM or Eden E levato r F iler E levato r

3 ^ « e o s

John g. Peldhusen, president s,. th e Prontler Hiding club. Thursday proposed to the Jai'cce board of d i­rectors a plan whereby boUi organ- IraUons. would ogaln co-spo annual horse show tha t Is si to bo held In early August,

I t was these two groups tha t spon­sored the show held In Twin Polls In 1044 and Peldhusen. remaritlna on the successful cooperation by the organlmtlons. called for n Blmllar plan to Insure the show thLi year.

Inosmuch as present officers of UiB Joycccs are to be replaced In two months tlio matter was tabled for study when the new offlcers.tjike over. Thero was. however, much fa ­vorable comment over the auggcs-

Members of a conunltteo handling to polio campaign funds gave a irU al report, saying tha t tlius fa r

IWOa has been collected hero cx- clMlve of theater donations,

The Mattjh of Dimes boxes wUl rem ain In stores hero unUl Feb. 15 in. keeping wiUi tho national pro-

to continue the drive for funds w ith which to combat the disease.

Directors elected Mrs. A. L. Nor- ton .m afroa of the BondodletS. She succeeds M n . B. W. McRoberts, who resigned recently. ‘

Groundwork was laid for several new project* tha t will be given con- rtdcratlon by the Jaycees In Uie near future, but tho nature of these objectives was not announced.

Liquor, Youtii on Officers’ Agenda

Jyjrty mambers of K e Magic Valley Peace Officers' assocalUon; includlnga tiilmber from Twin Palls, a ttended the regular monthly con- fm ncfl Wednesday night a t Hailey.

T he group discussed the present s ta te liquor law and problems o!

Committees were appointed to In­vestigate the various phases of these tw o problems. They will report to th a assoclaUon a t Its February

.A mong those attending from here ware Police Chief Howard Oiliette, Policemen Oeorgo Benham, Uivenie R«wllngs and Charles Vance, FB I ABOOt E. A. McMillan, SUte Police* m an John S . Lelser, Sheriff W m e n W. law ery and Deputy BherUt D avid Charles Parrott.

Mr. and Mrs. Kermlt Allison en­tertained with a dinner party 'hon- orlng his mother, Mrs. V. A. AIUboii. on her birth anniversary. Quests were Mr, and Mrs. Wayne Dln)ce,.ilce and daughter, Janet, Twin Falls, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Allison and Mr, and Mrs. V. A. Allison, Filer.

I t a . Jacfe Stephens, who has been a t Oakland, Calif., until her hus­band, W arrant Officer Jack Steph­ens, le ft for overseas. Is now visiting friends a l Monterey. CaUf.

W illard Lonning ajid John OUtncr le ft for Ban Francisco tc enlist In the merchant marine service,

Mr, and Mrs, Ouy Whltis returned from Richmond, Calif., where they accompanied their son, Olenn, who entered war work Uiere. Homer W hite left last week with Mrs, Q lana White and children who will make their home a t Richmond. Mrs. Earl White accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Quy White. Her husband is In the navy.

Mr. and lita . KcnncUi OToolo, aeottle. Wash,, and Miss Helen Wy- ffal. WAVZ stationed a t Kingston, Te*.. were here to attend funeral aervlces for their latlicr, R. s . Wygal.

HEYBURN

READ T1MES-NBW8 WAHT ADS.

WE PAYCASH

For DEAD and ' Useless

' HORSES-COWS WUl also pick up

hogs if close

CALLUS COLLECT .

Idaho H ide& Tallow Co.

Mrs. Roaa Dowdla and Mrs. Ruby n u w o rth , Payson, Utah, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. O. 0 . lo tt .

Carl Mera returned Friday from Lewiston where he attended • state AAA convention.

Mr. and Mrs. Rex ,Lott of Aber- ■deen were vlslUng relaUves*hcre Sunday.

Ivan McLane, who hos spent the last several months In tho south ’aclflo with the marines, U visiting

hla parents.Mrs. Ed Stewart, Kuna, Is vbltlng I the home of her sister, Mrs.

G race Blxler.Levi McDavItt e*peets to leave

^ n d n y for Los Angeles to vblt relatives.

M rs. H annah Olsen returned Fri­day S n u i Brazil, in d - where she vlalKd relBUves.,

Adrian Smith left Saturdoy for I« s Angeles after spending a 20-dDy furlough hero.

Money .Piles up in Idaho’s Strong Box

•BOISE, p^b. 1 01.15-A report of S tate Auditor Emeat Hanson reveal- ed.yeaterday.that the Idaho general funtl la picking up wttra surplus

IRUSTVIEW EOAS PEACE E S S E N M

Furmutloa and purpose as well tu iJlan of operation for tlio Dum- borton Oaks confercnco were n~ plained hero Tliuredny by R. L. Summer/lcld, manager ot the It. and O. Jewelo’ store, as he spoke to mcmbens of tlie IClwaiils club.

Bummcrfleld has made a study of tha t subject, having been assigned the topic as a member of the Toast- mn.5tcrs' club. He has dLscu.Med the

several local

Must Trust He commented th a t results of tlie

conferencc w.QuId depend entirely on tho larger notlona trusting each other and the smaller nations' belief th a t they would be given Justlcc. H a, also said tha t public opinion wlllI play 0 great pa rt In tho conference results.

A roundtable fcatered a t conclu. gion of his talk.

Program chairman for tho day' as Mitchell W. H unt, who intro­

duced the speaker.President A. D. Ballamy announc­

ed his reslgnAtlon because ho is moving to Idaho Falls as eo-owucr of a shoe store. G ran t O. Padget, vice-president of the organization will automatically become presi­dent.

Tells Thanks Bellamy. In a farewell talk, ex-

p re w d h is thanks and appreclotlon for the aid club members had given him.

Response was by Fred W. Meech, who expressed the good wUhes of club members for Mr. Bellamy in •“Is new endeavor.

G uesu of U. N. T erry v*. Klwanls member Johh Bnlsch and Ens. Wayne Orchard; guest of Fred O ravu was cx-Klwanls member Kyle W aite: Buest of C. H. Jackson waa T /S gt. R. Hinton; guest of Alva Sm ith was Doyd Lyttic: guest or J . A. Cederqulst wu ' Thomas.

NEW YORK, Feb. 1 (flV-UtUlUes lok over the rising leadership In

todoy's s to c k m uket and, on blocks Of 1,000 to 18,000 ahaj-es. a number recorded peaks for th e past five years w ith gains of fractions to point o r BO. A few sen ior Issues wider climbers.

Ralls, spurred by revived dividend hopes, pacleed the recovery a fte r a slightly m ixed stAr. Dealings ex­ponded to around 1,400W shares.

In tha "now high" c lass were Con- a'blldoted Edison, N orth American. Public Service of N. j „ American Power i i Light M preferred, Joy Mfg. and Standard O as. & Electric I

New York Stocks

LivestockMarkets

DENVEa UVEStOCK

CmCAGO LIVESTOCK

tnd'fUa

? ! ,s S iiii ...

NEW YORK, Feb, market closed steady.Allied S t o r e s _____ _

'Allis C h a lm e rs_______American IAmerican Smelt, and Ref.

, American T and T _______Amerlcon Tobacco B ______Anaconda .... .............. .

T and S P __________Bendlx A via tion___ _Bethlehem B teel_________

..2U i__ 41*i— 13H ..._ 42 S — IfiOU

C8-i__30’i_ ITA

BSli __ 719i

Canoda D ry _____Canadian Pncltlc

ICofs .Xerro de PascoChesapeake and O hio____ChryslerConsolidated Copper.....Continental Oil Delawnre . Com Prod DuPont ...Eoitmnn .Dectrlo A u to ......................

.Electric Pow er und L lclitErie ...........Oenerai ElGeneral F oocik____ _____General M otors .’...- .i '. .... .Goodrich ..Goodj'car ..Idaho Power

._170

.... 44 U ■-I 3BH ... 40 _ 64 ... 87»i - 61

XANBAa c t r r l iv e b to c k U m ' ‘ (UP)-Uc

I f l i l i S sE ’-is

VoiTo" on l.m ta itn n i ta

OCDEN~LJVEBTOCK B °.bS‘'-a'o

huV iiV '’ "’llow. rreeipt* !lulnV*(fc»*«ncxl'’to.r‘i |Jl

M A T F IS H. .c raoA Q o.'P tb . - O ntoN ''

.Sdgy‘^ t h ^ e ? t '^ ^ d f o y ^ gains while Ihe renalniSsr of th e lis t ‘'.' WM on the off Bide. Ilya b roko - sharply In the rino l 15 mlnutcB of ' trading.

At the iiQish w h e a t w u H lower V lo H higher than yesterdayB elcM, ' May ||.« H .% . o o m was i t H t o K. May $ u iK . o » t« were H b U h ttto n lower. May 60T4. Rye S 't« H. May $1J3H.*1.I3: BlSfel w S ‘

to H lower. May lU O i* . ,.

\u .» .8hrt:<l Baltble Sl«, tsUt 1.S21: too.

Is.i S l t e . ' V . . ' ” ' .........................

--------------------- --- ----- ----------- 32'.lInternational H on'cstcr______ 77?i

,— 23?. -- 22T

___ 37’- 2 7 '., . . 74',i

Int Nick C an ..................'In ternational T and T _.Kennecott Kresge ....

, Looewu .......................... ..!Mld Con Petroleum ____Nosh K elvlnator ......... ....Kotlonal B isc u it ...........Notional D airy ................ 30HNatlonol C o s h .................. ..........33T.National Pow er A; Light O'iN.Y. C e n tr a l__________North A m erican Aviation Ncnij A m erican Northern Pi Poeakrd

Ilocii Salabit

_ 21

LIVESTOCK...________

» 114: sOCk] to ckolcs plftjl«> t-.Ubl. .nd tout leo: »Ut..

I KtitlU ind l£UI le

Corni Ko. I |t<Ilo<r Ha. I nllaw *’

?j?V‘Yu Fk

Wh<>l (bid) I Soft >hIU ai.S!1i I .Cl»b »l5l«

Jlird t«! .Inur «rdtn>r7 lU lW j JO.'mJi ' i IM “• D«irt c rd ln w |u » i 10 vtr

KAKBAB CITT CBAIK

lt«)iu a Mr,.^«Bch.ni.d. Ko.t fU i«,«e. Hilo Btit.K v i f f i s t . ■

Potatoes-Onions

Penney __________PcnnsylvanlA R R _Pullman___________Pure O il____________n o A ............ ...............nepubllc S t e e l_____Reynolds Tobacco B ...Sears. Roebuck __ _Soeony V ac u tu n ___ ...Elninons .......... .Southern P a c if ic _____standard OH CaUIomla _

, Stondord OU N . J . ......ISludeboker ,I Texas Co. ,

Transamerlcft

— .......JtiELES Itvr-STOCK, LOS AHGELtS. F.b. I SUM SlarlKl “ — ' —

Union Oil C a l i f . .

Union PacUic _ I United A irc ra ft -United Corp..........U. S. R u b b e r-----

™ .......------- Jiln Ilfh t.tU m tieESI K if '. 's '" , ;? . ' r i i . fI1M9 to lis.so: common to .........

B u t t e r a n d E g g s

CHICAGO PRODUCE

ST.t« to S9.lc: U, s. lUmlirdt 3<.« u : ss.jy^furm t I«tlpu N.lei Ulrtl«

cincAco port.Tny IltCACO. K«h. 1 LlTs inullrr, - I’l^ ; t S S a

lint Inromulien on. potktoM tar lubo

.Jj'& SV .H siS 'T .'Sl::

5 IO.]h. .«U P.r c-t.. uUllt7 m d. I I

I CHICAGO. r.b."l‘^'Jn-lWFA)-Arrl». ’

ubIl.hH . n«rd fer ih.1 tl«.■ ‘J i i r s H :

All three of the c o u t to ooftst -- railway lines on the entire K ortli.- American continent a re located to', Canoda.'............. .......... '. •

S n a k e River Report

br D«re.u ef R«cliin.-

m

. ■ r -M H IW _.i«‘

A u ie a l Puk

Southwest of Buhl

HA V o Geraldine Howard, who has been visiting her mother, " A manda Howard, and family.

. reported to the Oakland naval hco- I pltal for Additional training. She was 'f jm e r ly In training a t Beth ‘

Mr. and Mrs. P rank Thatcher I have returned from a trip to 1^1 Angelr" '

NE^V YOIIK CDHB „ NEW Y O RK . Ptb. 1 (fl>_ iBunkpr H i l l ----------------------

Twin Falls MarketsLIVESTOCK

M arch^"*Mra. P a t RutherfonJ and her sis-

U-. Mrs. T cm Hewitt, have gone tc 08 Angelee to vIslL Pfc. Floyd Miller, home from Tex-

M, WU entertained a t the Jewel Keen home.

gera ld Jensen, Don Wilson and Alvin Heldel spent several daya to Moacow laat week,

sta te Solons Told Of Farm Deferment

BOISE, Feb. I (Uf!>-CoQfuslon aurrmindlng U » draft lU tu a o l 18. ‘ SSryear-old agrtculturaUy deXerted rcgHtTMta.prompted national aelte<

a e n ^ e beadijuartera to notify the legislature the Tydlngs unend-

,m ent bUU la "in fuU force and ef> le c t," ' •

i — I Ford B ro w i'o f thet Mr- stiecUve eerrlce 'a. manpower dlvl* — sJotrsenfthB ‘connnuhlcaUoif la

.fwer to » memorial ooD«nn

yU»ud»pot WMl tag* I144W. ^ o rt* o a n irray ot Idaho twm

. ,5»todet«na|n»keym «»to««- uaaptlon.

ra# Tydlngs ameadment prc tor tte ilefenaent of.aU. aeot«-M, Mi inreplftceabl* jpieultural wotk*

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■■ P d g o T m TIMES-NEWS,:TWIN FALLS, roAHO, T h u n d a y , F e b ru a ry i , ' 1945

The Way Our People Lived

BOAEDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE RED RYDER ByFREDHARM AM

By W. E. Wooiwnrd

J e ir M artin had be«n In Chicago 'e x ac tly one week when hoTt«cJved

• v r ltte n Ini'ltatlon. UiroueU the ■■ n a a , irom Cmtitoe Bendtnon to -

' T ltlns lUm to cooiB to a Uttle party on Suodoy ovcnlns. she wrot« tha t

■ a lt« r dinner a oumber of young peo- . < p3e, (rfeoda Ilvtng In the nelghbor-

, hood, Wtrii comlns In.:Caroline wiui the nlfe o( Charles

Henderson, ^ihoin he had no t K«n alncfl Uie time they were both youns reporters on the Baltimore Sun

'. ‘many years before. meeting• up with him again in Chicago waa

pure coincidence. While stroUlng' about the streets u it elghtieer. he

had paused the QuUy Bargain House . and noticed thot that establlslwient

offered Its entire stJJflt of men’s clothlnit for sale a t rtduccd prices,

. Remembering thnt he Had brought with him only " few ahlns and pieces of underwear, and needed more right away, he went In. Tho

- proprietor tu m rf out to be hl- *'■*- friend, Henderson.

W hen Jeff had made up his mind to 'ac ce p t Caroline’s invitation, he

<- sent a me&tenger boy alt. Uic way• out to tho Henderson home with a

polllo ond stilted acceptance wrlt-..tc n on holcJ paper. He b to id f wna

staying a t tho Briggs Houze down-- (own un til he got settled.

There were six or Seven young• meu and women a t the Sunday cve- •' nlng party be.'Udea a number of the ir■ elders. ’Itiey ran all over tho house

a j If they owned It, calling aloud' to one another, In tho lilghest of

youthful spirits. Some played games, such as lotto, parchesl ond checkers: others went In for rlridlcs and tricks tha t one plays wlthAords. Jeff

■ awprlsed to llnd hlmieU the■ beaten checker champion of the ■party., Mrs. Henderson had a supper

.'served n t 0:30. though she did not , call I t supper but a “collation." I t

was really n substantial meal, senf- r. ed In plfttcsi vfhlcU one U^d to hold• carefully on his knee to keep from spilling the contents on the floor.

After the eoUatlon tho girls gath­ered around Uto organ and sang

• the -cu rren t bnlloda and such old

. In the gloaming, oh my darling. When the lights ore dim and low, •And th e quiet sliadovs. falling,

,' Softy come and softly go.The young glrla, with their h e i . .

. bent together over the organ, form­ed a beautiful picture; and their

• -gentle TOlces made one think of life ;a» a dellghUuI emoUon rather than

,, as a* ha rsh reality^

At about a quarter to 10 Charles Henderson went out on tho lawn . . see . If oU tho chain had been

' brought In. He returned qu tho sitting room and beck ... ._ Jeff M artin and another man. They wondered w hat was In his mind un-

— tU they go t outdogrs and Henderson pointed soutltword. Over that sec­tion of Uie city—hut far downtown —there stood a fiery glow that cast shadows of tho three men standing on the Henderson lawn. ‘That's a big Uaxe," said tho heavily bearded roan—Mr, Pollard was hi* name— ■who had come out wlUi Jeff and

■'Charlie,' “and It covers ground, too.• Wide na a dcaen sunrises."

“Where do you think It is. Pol­lard?" Henderson asked, rather anx-

. tousiy. or so Jeff thought.• ' “It's hard to say, but my guess• Is tha t i f s on tlio West Side, down below Harrison Street, among Uiose

. lumber i t 's a good Uute miles

..from here.”

Copyrlghi E. P. Dalton & Co.4 b7 NEA B«rTte*. lae.

I “I t may spread across the river/ Henderson said. "But tha t river’s a pretty big gap for fire to cross. What

■•Listen, Henderson, w h e n ..........gel* to going in a big way Ujero^s

S E T '- ' H A R -R O M Prt.'- gUT CT VJILL 0e* O E V A S T W lf iS - - ^ ,

iCAUSEHE’f t £ _ _________

^ T o se e . WHAT/MP>OB lTRUM/-**-lP-lT ISNTT - j RME-STARFlhiP^L.tteLl. ^ eouMce B A C K .v o u LI k e

A CR00K 6O 1hiC0»Ae- - XM . RBTORKi/

, m s CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSON

AU.i:(AlLRCU0FREJ6Kr 1 CARSTWESAAXEUNSTHp

* - ■

SCOBCHY

e&lftjME A SLAN6 TERM ALMOST A HUNDRED YEARS •A&O...DURINO TKB CAUFO&NIA 60t RtJSH.

THIMBLE THEATER STARRING POPEYE

“Now stop fusslngl Can Johnny help t t If he hu a eold? H ere ’s his snow shovel and here’s ills list of customers-lhty musn’t be dlsap--

.•polnted, M see th a t you don’t mlas a single onel-

By EDMOND GOOD

; ujhere tA soim; ^'lMEl€RHrTA<3U' '\ __L1TT1.B? THAN AtSELF/., --- W6WT ) ^

ALLEY OOP

Page 11: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

Tbunda^i F eb raazy 1 ,1946 TIMEQrNEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

u"atalair« nmM>a aw OM ilwit/M Mt T « rn » -0 ^ '

PERSONALSirKKCKB oDTUiim ^ | « b*nla«r ^ tm al im . fMlcfto t^x u * . T»l» F.lta.

“ SCHlROPRACTORa

BEAUTY SHOPStkliuANENm IliS. Ovar lod«mXU <tad.M

grkia. All |iBl»r •tud*DI-*oik Jr*»

— f e S T r D / g n i i —EggfrHm.iraT«rrltr. lUw.ri,

r U LiT i . i>.V

K st. mm\i cciw7ro“ whHl t«t t7-

LOST In CUbdi F4rr7« V*

n beur. FKth houa>

: K !..g WiihinBlan. yhona 877. Wan and air< >iai

HELP WANTED— FEMAL]

& .S

WANTEDi Cirl for tcmnt*tn •rork. ApplT

feALL'^aitLTtoVill'i.r h— y ^ il i

EIPERIENCrD STENOCnAPIIER. atii'Jof KBtnl o«lc« work. BtMd7 pollloo U MUificUrr. D<ii U. Time*-

2 GOOD BUYS I

]«Uar han r «n<l a « ^. E. A. MOOK

kar. aUetrto hot *aur baaUi. Q»r- w t, r*nc«d hack nrd.

POSSESSION NOWI

Sec BAqON for« room fcooM. Uod«ni ihruuxhsoL Oil

MrM«. Wall iMatad.H 4cr»—4' room boua. Mo4«ra. Cloaa

BA><GER. BICKFOKD A BACON

IT’S NOT LUCK

TO PLACE YOUR

CLASSIFIED A D ..

Phone

38

wlien you get outstondinff; reaujta from a

TIMES-NEWS ■ CLASSIFIED ADTho complete coverago o f Blngic Valley h om es, over 18,000 copies dflily, brings prompt and eure action.

FARM IMPLEMENTSie^KlNS .ueVar. b«iir»k.. A. 0. d iU . iW ait Fouiilaln Sarrle.. DuhL

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE iTTcnp:------------------------------

FARMS FOR SALE

o«'»Mloo —~T»ln•allr tiaw bon»». Itmnt baa«ffl<au

»»■

ollur bmidlnn. On irMrtal klthwaj’.

ra«st baaamcDt, (1

IDEAL LIVESTOCK fStTVr • bU« from JaroBia. * a lln from

Wandell. ICO tcKa Und. iO water •harca, tO acra altalfa. t roora hon*. dr<p well, bam 14K4. and et)«r onU buiMInsi. ObIj liJSOi «710 dewn. balioca 1200 par raar.

Jararaa fiite

FOUNTAIN QIBL WAKTTD Eip«rlctica tiniKsiiry, Appb In Mi

•on. 7R0LIHGCCS PJIARUACY.

BEAN S O R T E R S

■ W»nttd'at-'• WESTERN WAREHOUSE

OcoJine

—Essential W o r k -

HELP WANTED— MALEL bulpmenu Rnn

. tniKljiii*. At^iTit£ET Milan aiiiladl Uot* b

HELP WANTKU— MALE AND FEMALE

Plr In Mnon—.Vim'i,WANTKU-RENT. LEASE

"Jo .ippi'd. p. oriE*xn Falli. Ill Waahlnrtaa north.

APHI 1.

ortt” Aft* '

Would BeU or Ttade—

30 AORSS eouU) o( Kimberly

Well (enccd. Small ImprovementsFAY COXPhene H 3-J

AM . . .tfr. 2 raodrm botoaa. harm, oaibulld- Irii, 10 ealO*. a honaa. hot*. Com-& x ' : r : , ' S S . K Ktown. IliOOO. Tarma. For brat bu»

fIrapIaM, hraakliut'’aoak.

Cecil C. JonesEUnk 4 T ru t Side. Pbona 200.

LIVESTOCK— POULTRY

« urtk WuhlBSt^o I

REA L ESTATE WANTED

Wan tall

Alw t r

luy I.B4 fiW'TuTlabtr diitnet.

delltarr.

i r S K s :

SEED POTATOES

Dlaa £* 'Q utk OILw and'' C^MIen GLOBE SEED

AND PEED COMPANY

“ m o n e y t o LOAN

ar. 7brca honan,

k. alactricllT.K a t s ' E r t - ;windmill, elaum. ai

iA°KE,

A GOOD 80 CLOSE INIMMEDIATE POSSSSfllONI Good land. In good sU te cultiva­

tion. A speclftl prleo for Imme­d iate eale. $2JQ per

COUBERLY is PARISH I0« Main aaal I

rhona UU

k'-oUA or fl.a hooa. wlcl> from S to 6 %ttm cIoH la Twin Falla or Uuhl. 5. E. Louih. Roaia 1. Phone SOISt. Buhl.

SO.KO. 1-rW.rablr «llh FInanea asd rafiriscM,

Vall.r. pStnra™hM,”Would aosildai turfns U. »4. Kln>b,tlr”

oS^^'falS’ ulJdleow, oa pU«.

llAVb rood mia «lit>eaab ratiU I’ban. or w: M. J. Uaca» ni„. n

«Mto Bt onra U n

KESFoHfllULE l.»llr of u , r « l^nrH )dnlrM rent mltUr niodom *. 1 bad- rooa unfiirnlilwl beuta. T»ln Falla.

o '

lOR DALE—Satrn .toolMlnula L«I^. Hgn.rt

-For &ala-

GROCERY STOCKF ix t i^ r ea n d

Scalaxtib rrtlat«r and rttrf(irat;oa aqulpmant

Buitoma roB r e n t

BURSON'S STORE

FURNiaHED KOQM8. KJrI<Ibheo_t<;

feOKrtBTAaU .wuU t•taoaajltMloii,_ii_(4ar. to

knALL roiKuU •p.naao-mgnlTT. Aitalta eatr. {%<ma M tltt.

'i jN t ' 'U i iN r s l lE e ' 'H O l j3 f e 3

halt Ultl oLED U . « _______Bnllt-ln lalph Mnrtaatb.

• K ft aal* hr •■nari. 'haangtal. a<l Untn. clMtrla v iu

—rO R BALE BY OWNER-^

GO ACRES 1 M uth, Si we*t Buhl.

7 ROOM MODERN HOME wlUi luU cemented basement

76x90 Jsum—chldccn. home Machine ehed—garaEe.

Land rented for (3S on acre lost year.

FOR PURTHER DETAILS- Phone 298M. Buhl or l#39, Twin Falls

FARMS FOR RENTW£lL toTriWd to atraa for tapt on' 't

Falla UvU J. E. Wbltft 1» Mala a

» A , " JOI>a «<iu!pm«i

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

CHOICE 10 Acaca. U«4an 1 Toomluim*. atolar. thnbla rarax.. tan. *b4 ehlckaa hcua. H i a»t B.U Tuk. Saa ewnar. lU a a r VTtLCOX.

Home & Investment Property

Wa abe tw» hotal I&rMtBasti

AtrrOMODILES-FUnNITUnE DAinv. cows

Ceuttaoua Sarrlca, ConlldtnUalSecurities Credit Corp.

W. C. Robinson(Acrcaa from Poll OKIca)

OrrERS NEW LOAN SEttVlCB

:!! ,!!:!! IH liiii ISi• rUKNlTUBE

• AUT0M0D1LE9• DAIRY COWa

^"«'?Bd'.,” iS b ;’ "L iaLicanaa.

Come, Pbaaa or WriulArnola F. Cross, Mpr.

t » Main Aar. N. Twin Falla. Ph »S7

■XP~-AII klnd;"' poulta. n f»U t

Pol'nu"' ’

!l« ? S % V o ’;a

WANTtp. Lira poaltiT.

14 Head H ig h Grad?

JERSEY COWSS-FWa ya«ra old *—Tliraa x««ra old

J—Two yt»ra old

H.T4. wt

IP BOW

I eiriil, gnit Saara noabwk lallkin* tn|c)iliin. ConpIaI« htai? aluminum butktu, kalf h. p. motor.

I mil.. <f.l Filar. 2’4 m!l» aoulh. Freca Buhl d(i » u th and » w t ot Burlfr [ornrr. Frank Suchas.

,v‘Ll!%)rD'Caa* tractor''moVtVT' 0 M^u».^4l|^»OTth. 1

KOKU.SON tractor oiulpMd »Uh mainato. ImpulM alartar. 'na% moUr. Xmc

-»-th a

M-lntb Kannadjr'Auto baneh arllL Van formas bortnc bar. tfi-» hctm

Mmplata.

Tratlor ,M»«r t*k'a-«« poat hoU dt*»

I S 'ASfflf.ftV!'-"--8 banr-«B acrapara for Ford tmlor. :e>ln^ D«ar Car har ehupptr. rowar mi for mod.1 liu lf KamalL : baat-baan eulllraton. Doubla bar.

* naw Caaa corn and apo4 anltfvator*.

WANTED TO BUYH 6gnkA>< Sh.pb.ri, ^ cailu pt

A. Lutbar. Coodlnt, CASH paid lor uaad ^mllura^^itor..

SPECIAL SERVICES

IF:Shop MOBnd or BO . . .It raa rally w»nt to n AU I naa (o as7la. -T*IU par to «a. VtlUa.-

—WIOE V A lU m CAB&—ilcR ae’s Used Cara

iSI U tio aut

Wa pay th#

CASHl

TOP CEILING PRICESfor

U SED CARS Why ahop around?

ONION MOTOR C a

s s m r - f“ PETSjrcall.nt huntlnf atook. 4<2pup^ ajcsll.nl huntlnf a

4 8 S @ i # W f s M 5_OrȣorGOOD THINGS TO EAT'

AVt-LEB-. na '

w -A rrL t~........ . Klml..rly Itaad. i

SllSC. FOR SALE

~ BABV C H lC g S ~

Photia 111. T»ln FalU._________

rUc. roar ottlar NOW for.High Q uality

Pulloruro Tested CH ICK S -

North Side HatciieryKnt I. Jaroma Uich School

IDAHO FINANCE CO.A LOAN SEBVICB FOB EVCBTO^ roo Bomw rw] Pix—

\ W T S i. .. _______ - :::: \ n \i t i ......................................IN i S S iD fenltvn^o ‘is;LiMmaa N«. i t Prlraia aala* al>

, flaucad Pboca. wrfU u aesa ia.

CHIC HIATT, Mgr.Ill Bhnboaa BL B. ' PhOM IM

LIVESTdCK—POULTRY

W ^^ M j^^ T T u eO T rap r tan rT em

% BABY CHICKS Glnlght run o r sexed All itoek blood tetled aad D. S. approved.

^VEST END HATCHERY Buhl, Idaho Phone 3J5-R3

HAY. GRAIN A N D FEED ----------------------- ~ i s t r ' " -t phoM om jt.

g i s a n

Tisar

Keep your herd in

'top-notch condition

PARM'UASTER M1N131ALS

HOOS. CATTLE. POULTRY

ttsa per cw t

SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.TWIN rx ifL a .

J-he-Wak

51S 7

condition. Sheila.

id condition. Phone S' ~ k V l '< VIc.ory cai

•at. babx h«t!. p chair, nbblt Ii chair, I

O T -u T n m

«oa lb. capaeltr; J aelty. Pe»ar I«ka>

f amall aalf faadar*.

Wo»»n »lra. Urh wire. bo«a Ullk flllar dlica -

Pll.n, bolta CO-OP OIL, PJIONE 4-

* EnT - ^ 0 fSafa and aiira. Oaly t9« »a'lon.

WESTERN ACTO TWIN FAtLS

“ M S - , .

HIGHESTCASH PRICESpaid for late model

DSED CAB8.TBUCKB.

AND DUSES(It pays to shop around) TWIN FALLS MOTOR

Phone 68

TRUCliS A N D TRAILERS

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSSTATE LAND BALE

NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN that the foUowlng described trac t of land, belonstns to the Etato of Ida* ho and glluated In Twin Palls Coun­ty will bo offered for i&le a t publle aucUon a t County Court House In Twin Palis. Idaho , at 3 o'clock P. M-, Mountain W ar Time, o n Mon- do}-, February 13, 1045.

r I

Unit I __WirUnit 2:

NEUBEU .-.-32 116 JOB 2000

TERMS O P SALE TIiU land to be aold In units

Uited above, and no bid of less than le appraised price win bo acOne tenth (I/IO). of the pi______

price and In terest a t four p e r cent (4 ;> on balance of principal for remainder of year, cash on day of

■ ■ CO In forty «0) annual

Idaho, to wit: L ot ‘nilrtseQ (13) and all of Lot Pourteea (14) except the west one hundred

,el«hty aeven (187) .fee t:th e re - of. In DeLons Addition to- the City of Twin Palls; tha t aald Lota ore platted upon and are a part o f . the Northwest Quor- te r of the Southeast Q uarter o t |e c to n Eight, T o T O sh ^ ^ 'f ta

Defendants,The B u te of Idaho sends exeet-

ln«s to tho above named defend^ an ta : . . .

You are hereby notUled th a t a complaint .has ..b«n^fllf i1 agalnst- you In tho DUtrlct Oourt o t tho Eleventh Judicial District o f the B tate. of Idaho, tn and for Twin Polls (»unty , by the above named pla lnm fs.,and you are hereby d i­rected to appear and plead to the sa id complaint w ithin twenty days of the service of this num noiu; a n d you are further notified th a t unless you m ai>pear and plead to oald complaint w ithin the time herein speeUIed. the plalntUfS'will take Judgment agalnat you s i pray> ed In said complaint.

You are further aoUfed th a t th is action U brought by the plaintiffs to recover a Judgment and decrce of said Court against the defend­a n ts and each of them as follows:

T hat the defendants, and each of them , both known and unknown be required to set forth the nature of Ihelr clalfns to the real property described In the Utle o t this pro­ceeding and th a t all claims o t the defendants adverse, to the plaln- Utfs be determined by the decree o t the Court; tha t by said decreo I t be declared, o rd m d , adjudged and decreed th a t the plaintiffs are tho owners of and entitled to the pcasesalon of said real property and each and every p a rt thereof and th a t the Utle of the plaintiffs therein and thereto Is good and valid; th a t by said decree It be fu rther declared, ordered and ad­judged th a t the defendants and each of them, both known and un- known, have no estate jlgh t.' title o r .Interest whaUoever In or to the sa id above described real property o r any port thereof and th a t the tit le to sold real property be quieted In the plaintiffs; and th a t the d e - ' fendanta and cach of them, both known and unknown, be forever re- atralned, enjoined and debarred from asserting any claim whatever In o r to the real property herein referred to and described b3 Lot T hirteen (13) and all ot Lot Four­teen (14). except tho west one hundred eighty seven (1B7) feet thereof. In DeLong addition to the C ity of Twin Palls. Twin Palls County, Idaho, said lots being; plaU led upon and a portion o t the Northwest Q uarter o t the Southeast Q uarter of Section Eight (8), Township Ten (10) South, Rongo Seventeen (17), E. B. M , reference being hereby made to said complaint - ) file herein for fi •'

: said proceeding.W itness my hand and the seal

o f said Court this 30th day of Ja n - uary,lB4fi.

C. A. BULLES, (Seal) cnerk of District Court. Roy E Bmlth.A ttorney for PlalntUfs,Residing a t Twin Falls. Idaho.Pub. Feb. 1. 8, IB, 33, March 1,1945

VioBrEasiaikp‘s ' “ .“ | Last Rites'fleld^

R iaerol cervlcea-ima

fldatlng. . . ■Singer#, tnclnded th». U n . H . 'a > 'V l

Glasgow and Eloltt Btalloae^' ." . r PaUbearera were Cli«le«

O. P.. Jacobs, Homer Bansnnr,’ lA -Vein Strong, ............ -and George . . . „

Interment_wa*.lnl(I In U»-??wlq-.- PBH»"eemet«ry. .................... '

Real Estate Transfers I by ; '

JAN.M .Deed: Harold OisJfer to Ployd a •

Jambrel. 110. BHBHKBH of KE5i' iB!l, 31-10-17.

Do: Floyd O. Oanbrel to H aro ld Shaffer. $10, lot 4. b it Sfl, FUer.

Hon. Dlich.: u. a U srlae CKart* to James Patrick Eelly,

Order Confirm Sslo of Raa]' E s t: Est. ot O. E . MoUn dee. to W llU sm - HInrlchsen, »400. Lot 9 of P ra n k P . - Oebome's Subd. of b it 7. T n z n c a ' Park Place.

Deed: V ic to r-w. Edmtmdson.-to Thelma Edmondson, »10, N H N H NW’i SEVa. 3-10-17; lot 16 OBd p a r t lot 8, Eoff Tract.

Do: Victor Warner Edmondson to ' Thelma LucUleEdmondion.il; * land.

Hon. Disch.: U. S, Navy to A nsua Andrew spcnce. . ____.

Deed: L y d ia Scheiblnske - t o ' CSiarles pred Wygil, »3J50. lo t l L ‘.

Deed: Gertrude Brsdy to O ertnidB irady and S. J . Brtdy, «1, lo ts 13, .• nd IS. blk. 130 T?. . • sDeed: R . 0 . P&lt (o Lee R . D ay ,

ttSOO, lot 3, .blk. a investor's and Addn., Buhl.

Do: Leo R.' Day to D aniel W . Rowe, >1, same land.

s to be paid

Installmenta a t fou r per cen t (4%) Interest.

Lessee's fo r In full on day of tala.

All sales are m ade subject to any valid Interfering rights which may have existed p rio r to the da te of

I sale except those for whleh allow- 3ce Is made herewith.By order of th e State Board of

Lend Commissioners.ROBERT COULTER.

B u te L and Commlssloni A. P. No. 1549, 1608

W E RAVE:S-lncb “I" baama. kncla Irena. al pUtaa >11 aliaa. Tt sallaa oil Us

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

DIRECTORY• B ABY SHOPSTln)^8koi». To*., t

BiCYCLB SA LE S^SB B V IC Eeuah» OUar7- Ph. ill. *1

• CLBANBR3 A DYERSII t e d u w. pv n t j

• COUUBBCIAL'PRINTINO

> FLOOR SANDING

1—dtti. t i ta n f t Utca'i. fknm I• G LASS-RADIAT0R3

I BOUB UAINTBSANCB

[ JUSTICE QF.P.BACE;,

• K S 7 s n o paelivl. K„ s ; ^ I t l Sacmd .traat •<

Daak af Idiba DaparUaoat S tn' U lU E O aR A P B lN a

• UONEV TO LOANa iONES lot HOMES ood Lmm. Booai I. Buk « Trat OoUdlas. Pl>m« IMU• PLVUBINQ & aSATiN OAhbotfa. lU Buttea* BHaaa Ptoklii ud Bt«. Pbona ttS.

• TYPSWRITERSSarrtoa A tenlla. Palltt Tjjywi1l«^« thanta. Ill Skjaboaa Nor*t>. fkeoa *11

d T»avillai fa. Q pt^lt*

S S K v "■ttflaUMitf. Llooljuaj. Cma *

3. O. PUMPHBZV. PboM 4T «r »M . ; jm m f, j| M M. M. . rk. Nnr.

FIBER SEAT COVERS

Chairolai —- ................. . ; i | ihn

F U R N l T U R E .A F F L tA J J C a aUUUTirUL na« llalnf

^ klCDArah eookinc rai

|NE»r d4T«» and etalr.

r m u . PlalDTkw Eatrlco eutioa,|

KESTEBM AUn> TWIN FA ttS

RADIO AND MUSIC.nd ne.1, Lut,

SPECIAL SEKVlOi^S

NOTICE TO CBEDITORS ,l IN THE PROBATE COURT OP'

TWIN PALLS COUNTY, SI OP IDAHO

In the Matter of th e firtato o f LES­LIE D.- ROBERTS, eometlnies known as L. D. Roberts, Deceased. NOTICE Is hereby given by the

undersigned Administratrix o f tho Estate of LESLIE D. ROBERTS, sometimes know n u L. D. ROB- E.1TS, deceased, to the creditors ot and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhib­it them with the ncceaary vouchers within 4 fDonths a fte r ths f irs t pub- UeaUon of th is notice, to th e said Administratrix, a t the Law Offices of Earl E. W alker. Suite 7. L D. Store Bidg, T w in Fallj, Idaho, thU

Uta of Leslie D. Roberts, sometimes known as I.. D. Roberta, deceased.

Jan. 18, U , Fe«. 1 .8

ANOTHER SrSDlONS N THE DISTRICT COURT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAI, Dlfl- TOKTT O P T H E STATE OP IDAHO. IN AND FOR TWIN PALLS COUNTY.

VlrgU McBride a n d Ida L. Mc­Bride. PlalntlfU.

DeLong, husband and wlto; Pred- erlck T. DeLons «nd Mary 8 . De- Long, husband and wife; lh # Unknown H tlrs a n d the D ntao im

.Devisees of tho following named persons U they be dead, to tAi: Helen a D eLong, EUen B . Se- Long, Jam ei C . DeU ng and Anita B. DeLong. husband.: and wife; TVederlck T . DeLcog and Mary a OeLoog. hw band and wUe; The UnkDOWD-Belrs-and Unknown DerUeea ot M a rtin b . DeLong. deceased; ih e tm ksown Owners Of th e IollOTing:dMctlb. ed real esUte^'sltUolM In' the Coun.ty of T w to-PU b^.S ta to iof.

NOTICE OF.SALENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

th a t In accordance with the provi­sions of See. 44-705 Idaho Code An- noU tcd, I wlU sell a t public auction to UiB hU hest and best bidder for cosh, on Tuesday, the 13th day of February, 1045, a t the hour of 1 0 : ' ' o . m., a t the place where the propt ty hereinafter described Is locaU tc-w lt, the gomgo behind my re. dence, 411 Third Avenue West, Tw_. Palls, Idaho, fo satisfy my lien for service to the owner .of aald proper­ty , Mr. Lcnnon A. Creamer, In safe keeping tho same since June 15th. 1943. said lien being In the sum of 870.00.

Said property is a Chevrolet coupe converted Into a pick-up. bearing 1043 Missouri License N o .-34-119 T ruck. .

D ated this 31st day of January, 1945.

DELLA McMASTER. Publish: Feb. 1 . 1045,

N o n c c TO CBEDtTOBS IN THE PROBATE COURT O P;

TW IN FALLS COUNTY, ST A T ia O P IDAHO. ^

IN THE MATTER OF THE ES­TATE OP EMMA DAVIS, Dcceas-

NOITDB Is hereby given by the undersigned Executor of the Lost WlU and Testament of Emma Davis,

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS IDeceased, to the creditors of a n d o U ' persons having clalma against tOia said deceased, to exhibit them w ith ' the necessory voudien within fou r (4) months otter the lin t pnbllca- Uon of th lf notice, to the sold Exe* cutor. a t the law olUets ot E a r l B.- Walker, Suite 7, L D. Store B ld g , ' Twin Polls. Twin PiUi County, I d a ­ho, this being the plsce fhced fo r the transaction of tbe business o f

Isaldestote.Dated January 3«, IMS.

ROY nuO K SO N , , lExecutor.of the Last Will and T e e - I

tam ent of Emma Divls, D eceased. I Pub,: Ja n . 35; Feb. 1,8,15. '

NOnCEThe annual meetliii of the b____

bera of the Chlldren'i Home £ ln d - . Ing and Aid Society ot Idaho wlU be held a t the Rtcclvlng H om e.

, Boise, Idaho, on Tuesday. F eb ru - ;ary fl. 1945, a t 8:00 P. M , fo r tb #' purpose o t electing dlrtelcra a n d fo r the transaction ol nicb other bust* ness as may be broujht before ea ld meeting. . . • . ,

' OPAL BEIiINaTON ■,SecretotT, I

Pub. Jan . 11,18.». Ptb.,1, I W . ■ ■NOTICE FOR PUBUCATION O P

THE TIME AFPOUJTED F O B ' PROVING ^vn.1, n a , . ;

IN THE PROBATE COURT O P TWIN PALLS COUHTY, STATO OP IDAHO.

In the M atter ot the EsUfo o f MARY ESTLINO, alio known: a s MARY M. EOTUNO, Deceased.: Pursuant to on order of said Cottrt-

made on the 30th day of Ja n u ary , A. D. 1045, notice Is hereby given that Tuesday, tbe 13th day of P eb -. nuuy, A. D. lOU. at 10:00 o’e lock A M. of said day. at the Ctourt Room of aald Court, at the C o u r t House In the City ot Twin PaUs; County of Twin Fills, Etato o f Zda> bo. has been appointed u the ttm « and place for pnvtag the Last WlU'

i and T ^ tam en t ot eald Mary. EstUng' (also known as Msiy U . ' EstUng).-

of Albert EsUIrig fee t . . . to him of l,ett«ra T a t a - . I

menloty, when and where a n y .p e r - ' l Interested may appesr a ‘ —

test the a DATED January JOth. A. D ; IM i. ' I

MARY SALMON. I Clerk of the FnbaU courfc I

(BEAL) ■Publish: Feb. 1, 8, » , ISiS.

i i l s S» . aoM t t Itarat* ‘

n a s ™ E Q ^ i a a B B ' C3DB D[liaQ UIIR}[9:

m i i m i l i g ;Solution Of Y «turdi/i PusM* ~

. eowH

y ? - r : 7 T — l i -7 f f " r 4Sceek •; ■ - ..v ' Iw g

Page 12: PRICE 0 CENTS : ^ iCMHyRHAS Goyerhment Flees Berlin As ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · H*" 4 bo carried on at • the earliest possible

Pago.Twelve TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO Th|}nd&7»'.F<ibniar]r 1 ,1 9 4 6

^ ^ M P I E D F O r A iE D SERVICESTlM botm Ko. 2. w e n toceptcd ' terrSM In ths u m e d tanu. a s d re jQduclcd i t P t. DougUj, tTtaJi. 0. S i tcMnUng to Joo L. Roberts.

t o Kmy eenrSce weror--------- ----- WJUard,

..................... ............. . H enrysaiiser lUwrWeiley-EHmKUTjaUfrr Jade Poulton H»]«. WUllam Rhode

. Andrewj, Boy Pnmlc HoHUIdiJ. W il­li) W tn tn Wlcdemnoa, Lenoy ,WU' UiSo John O. Kuusen.Clarence Abner WUsoo, Addlaon WUer DoiJU*..William M . Happleye. TadaiW Ted Pukulmni, John Fred UcCoUough, \VUUitm Beni7 Olav* MD. Jtunu d a » MoUmeaux. OUa Bert Bu{hu..DaIe Z/SWU OuU«r,

• AUea John Mder. Leo Wesley R“ - n iusen, Sverelt Eugene AUdrltt, E . Olew, Ralph Hcrtniui Thieme Qcorga Junior Vom, Robert D*-l8ht DeBoaid. Lloyd Harold Wledetunan and Dale Bugeno SchoUi.

Accepted lor aerrlce la the pavy were: Harold Dale Peterson, Robert Eugene Halbert. Leonard Earl Wlse- aian, Olenn E Prye, Burton Carl aarers, P a u l Chandler Kunkel. Charles WUUiim Bolyard. Clell Dan­iel McOonll. Ralph LeBoy Thacker, WlUlam Sherman Butler, Robert 3>o Pratt. RSth&td lATficswa JJlcl, and Jam u Michael J J e y e n .

Those who Mlected to aerre In th e marine eorpa were: Orln Kellh Shemnatfr. ilari'ey R alph Bouden, Waller Pelham Jones, J r , and RoBcr StaJford.

JEROMEMr*. WUllam BuUer, Dallas, Tex.,

1* visiting relatives of h e r husband. •8/B gt WUlJam H. Butler, who haa been reported mlulng In Beljlum by the «a r department.

M n. Doris Ellson and amall son, Michael, and Miss May Manses. Los Angeles, are rlslUng a t the homo of Mrs. Ellson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Flaxbcard.

Mrs. VlfSlnU Cooke "IVler recent­ly retained from a visit with h e r husband, a marine platoon sergeant in San lYandsco, and boa gone to h e r horns In Po^tello foUowtng a i c v daj's «1U) her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. V. Cooke, and other rela­tives. Mre. T^ler, a form er Lincoln school teacher, iras accompanied by he r small son, Richard.

Air:Aiiibiilahce;^World%^8te8t AugustSouse at Boise VotesTo Legally Get Statens Goats

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSK O nCE OF TIME AND PLACE OF

HEABINQ OF PETITION FOB D E C R E E D E T E B M IK IX G

• lUGHT OF DESCENT OF REAI, PROPEBTT.

IN THE PROBATe COURT OP TWIK PALLS COtJNTT, STATE OP IDABO.

I n the Molter of the E sta te of LtTD- WIO MEYER. Deceased.TO ALL PERSONS O L A nnN a

TO BE HEtRS OR CREDITORS OP LTOWIO MEYER, DE-

NOTICE IS GIVEN T h a t Harry " W. BarJyTiaa filed In Iho above en­

titled Court, In the above entlUed : Riatler, W» jxUUon p ray ta i th a t '

tho Court find, adjudge and deter­m ine that on* Ludwig Meyer, then

•, • resident of Twin P a lls County.. Idaho, died Intestate In Twin Falls

County, Idaho. Febmary 11, 1C31. seised and pouessed of a n Interest l a real property In Twin Falls Coun­ty. Idaho, described as Lota 4, i and 0 In Block 3, Suburban Pa rk Addi­tion, and praying fu rther that the Court adjudge and decree th a t such interest of said Ludwig M eyer la.Bald real property on his death Intestata passed to and vested absolutely In Dorothy Meyer as his surviving wife; that said pctlUoner claims th e title to said real property under deed of said Dorothy Meyer, now Dorothy Hochhaller, and her pres­e n t husband, of record In the office of the Coonty Recorder.

NOTICE 18 rURTHER GIVEN T h a t Monday, the 19th day of Feb- xuary, lOiJ, a t the hour of Ter o'clock A. M., at the C ourt Room o f the above entlUed C ourt In the County Court Houie-ln Tw in Palls. Idaho, has been Uicd os the time a n d place for hearing eald peU- tlon, when and where any tnterested ta aW « ta t« . _h e ir or creditor, shall show cause. U ojjy he has. why the prayer of the petition ahooJd not be granted.

D ated January 17.1945.0. A. BAILEY,

Probate Judge and ex*ofIicIo clerk. (Seal)

. Publish: Jan. IB, SJ; Feb. 1 . 19is.

The fastest anbalanca In th* world—* P-M, tia two aBXlUary wing gas tanks eonverted Into compaet paaaengef-eanrln* eompartmenl*— U demonstrated, above. In the Paelflo area. Tbe pa tien t a n d Utter (U eomforUbly Into each tank, which haa tw o pertholea, a ir venla and a set o t headphonea enablloi the paasengrr to keep in constan t toneh with the p ilo t The lanVa nne has been replaced w lth p le z lf la u Cargoalso r B not naed for swift

gave lost year to rccognired domes* tic (American) organizations de­voted to cliarltnble, educational, lit­e rary. religious or sclentlflo pur­poses, which do no t devote any sub- stan tlo l portion of th e ir Incomctf to trylnp to infkiMcc elections or leg- IslaUon. e lth |® lrco tly o r by propa- gnndit. The maximum th o t you can dcduct Is IS per cen t of item 6. page

Borne major organizations most commonly Involvea ore churches ......... ........................... and worlc-

NOnCETm THE .DISTRICT COURT OP

T H E • ELEVENTH JtfDlCIAL DISTRICT OP THE- STATE OP IDAHO, IN AND FO R TWIN

• PALLS COUNTY.In the Matter of th# Dissolution ..

INDEPENDENT WAREHOUS- . IMO; INC. a corporatlorx.

' Notice Is hereby given th a t an ap­plication for dissolution o f Inde> pendent Wanhousing, in c ., a poiatlon organised and existing d e r and by virtue of the law s of the sta te of Idaho, has been filed by the

. dlrcctora and officers having the management of th# affairs of said

' corporation pursuant to a n order of Honorable James W. Porter, on# ol tho District Judges of the Eleventh Judicial District of the S ta te of Ida­ho In and for Twta Palls County, w ith the Cletk of said district court

T hat thU notice (hall be published ln.^th# Tlmes-News, a newspaper

.. fubUahed a t Twin F ^ Idaho , once . each week- for six consecuUTe

publications so that thirty days shall - - elapse between the first and last

. puhllcatioiu; that a t any time be- V f o n the ezplntlon ot th e time of

w id pnWlratlon, any person nay' ZSe U s obJecUons to lha appU cation. :«nd. . after the tlm# of publlcaUan

: - bos I

X-.haTB _ ,-further............................. ... obJecUans have

bc«a filed, procetd to b e a r ood de- •teraiae the appUcatlon; a iu l. If the fU te n u a ts contained in sold ip- . lea ttoo .flrt ihown to bo tru e , iaOt-

be.mlOTd.

Gentle Ai’t of Deduction Is Big Income Tax Figui’e Factor

By 8. BURTON HEATH NEA BUff WriWr

Tlie standard W per cent credit and deduction used In compiling the In- .ome tax table may be greater than th e aMtmtmcca to w W th you a te entitled. In tha t case you are privileged to take th# tax tab le figure, and save money. But many have crcdlta and deductions g rea ter than the standard 10 per cent, while others have m ore exemptions th a n the tables provide-for. These would lose money i>y n o t figuring their

Take the tax family Income shown in Item 0, page I, and look It up In h e shaded columns o( the la:( table on .page 3 (the back page). Suppos<It was »3.6«J2. You have lour ex- empUonfr— your vrlte, i daughter and your dependent fa ther.

One line says “At least $3,C0Q but css than )3,C50." On that line,

the exemptions column headed ‘ . your tax U W3S. But this b too much, because $590,71 of the 1; was your wlfo's. The "special nhusband and wife" gives you-----ductlon of 3 per eent of th# wife's income, but no t more than tlS. Since

" ils case 3 per ccnt would more than 115, forget tho 3 per c. and take the $15 out of your $335 Ux. T h a t leaves $310. whlch.ls what the table says In your 1911 tax ..

You can enter Uiat $320 as Item fl, crcdlt your withholdings in Item 7A and any amounts pold with estl' mates In 7B, and subtract Item '(A plus B) Irom Item 6 to gel ellh' cr Item 8—w hat you owe Uncle Bom —or item 9—w hat Uncle Sam you.

Or you can turn to page 4, and with the assistance given In the rest of these articles, figure your deductions and credits and wlUchever figure will make your tax liability smallest.

The tax famU^ whose Incomt ex­ceeds »i,909£9 can not use the ta ­ble. I t can. however, a t this point make a choice between computing Its own crcdlta or taking a fUt $SOO. entering It on line 3 In the tax com­putation schedule a t tho bottom of page 4, and going on from there to compute Uie tax.

Por those who choose to try roll­ing their own. let's take up the de­ductions schedules on page 4.

CONTIUBUTIONS In general Uitse Include wliat you

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSNOTICE OF SflERIFTS 8AIB OF

ESTRAY ANIMAL PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBV

GIVEN:T hat I Till sell a t public aucUon

a t . th o H. L Marsh ranch. located eleven miles South and threp miles West of Twin Palls City, County ot Twin Palls, s ta te of Idalio. the fol­lowing described estray animal;

One (1) white face red Here­ford cow; about 4 years; ap­proximately 600 pounds: under bit In each ear; no brands.In accordance .with Section 31-

200S Idaho Code annotated, to the highest bidder for cash,. lawful money of the United States, on the 19th day of February, 1043, at the hou r of 10:30 o'clock A. M. (Moun­ta in W ar Time) of said day.

D ated this 17th day of January. U4S a t Twin Palls. Idaho.

W. W. LOWERY. Sheriff. Twin PaUs County, Idaho.

Publish: Jan. IB, 35; Feb. ]. 1943.NOTICE TO CREDrrORS

IN THE PROBATE COURT OP TW IN PALLS COUNTY, STATE OP

IDAHO.m the M atter of Ui# SiUte ot

JAMSa W. OEUiATLY. Deceued. NOTICE Is hereby given by Uie

tmderelgned, Roxle A. QellaUy. the Administratrix of the SsUte of Jan>«3 W. GellaUy. Deetased, to the creditors of and all persons havl:^ claims against the said deceased, (d exhibit them with theTOUchers within i months after Ihe f t a t pubUcatloa of this notice, to th e sold Administratrix, a t the Uw

n o ts and Stat4 of Idaho, t h l i ____th e place l i x ^ fo r ths transaction or thB buslnen’pf said-csUte,

Dated January 17, 1945.ROXnS a ; OKLLATLY.

• Administratrix of ths &Ut« of J a m a W. OeUstly, De-

ing socleUea, Sunday schools, mis­sionary organlzutlans, pew rental); Red Cross, Salvation Army, Volun­teers of America: local community chesta: Young Men's a n d Women’s C hristian and Hebrew .associations. K nigh ts of Columbus; national war fund; United Service organizations; B ritish. French, China, Qreek and Polish War Relicts; .S . P . 0 . 0 .: 8. P . C. A.; nnll-tuberculosls stamps; the charitable funds, h u t not dues, of American Legion. V eterans of Foreign Wars, United Spanish W ar Vetc^an^ their nuxlllarlus. Elks. M a­sons and other veteran and fra te r­nal organisations.

T here are many local charitable, educational and other non-profit organizations to which you r gifts deductible. Tlicrc also arc num er­ous scholarship and professional societies such as Ph i B e ta Kappa, Kappn Mu Epsilon, Sigma Delta Chi. P h i Della K appn. ctc. '

Donations to foreign charities can n o t be deducted—b u t the relief groups mentioned, and perhaps some others omitted, a rc n o t considered foreign. '

MURTAUGHA fireside meeting was held a t the

heme o l Mrs. Arwlo Goodman.M rs. nien Doss Is vUltlng her

husband at W alla W nlla, Wash. Her daughter Is staying a t Uie home of h e r grandparents, M r. and Mrs. Les Rose.

W ord has been received hero tha t Mr. a n d Mn, N athan T anney were Involved In an automobile accident a t Medicine Dow. Wyo., b u t escaped w ithout Injuo'. They have now rived In Denver, Colo.

Mr. 'ajid Mrs. Estel Sargen t and _jns spent the week-end In Boise with relallcfs.

Mr. and Mrs. Koy. E llis and M n . V auglui Koford. Oriincsvllle, Utah, are guests of l>lr. and Mrs. Earl Sears.

F rancis Egbert has resigned his position as teacher in the local school as he expects to be Inducted into a re anncd forces soon. Merrill W alker has been employed to tho vacancy.

t Pkittnw Behttlta, home <___.tion agent. Twin Falls, and

Mrs. M . Haberly, sU ta nu trition ex­perts. Moseow, were guests of Mrs. J . E . Newman.

.M rs. Nile Bradshow and Olen irlggs are visiting relatives in T a-

Jew ell Newman and P nm um W arr le ft Wednesday on a business trifl to Tucson. Arlt. •

LUCERNEWhile her husband wsm in Boise,

Mrs. B ill Roberts visited a t the home of her parents, M r. a n d Mrs. Ouy Bartmess.

Pom aer rtaldenta of th is neighbor­hood. M r. and M rs. S. V . Coombcs of G alt. Calif., and R alph Moore of PORoa » n vliIUsB here.

Highway M over D eep Creek's ..BW hrldg# is now open to trofllo again »fter.aeverol week*. •

M em ben of tho Home Culture club w ill hare a pot-1ude supper In the c ity hall to-entertain the ir hiu^ bands..,' -

L

BOISE. Feb. 1 (AV-Up until the time Oov. 0 . C. Gossett zigos bouse bin n the 3.739 goats in Idaho are as free as the a ir to trespass where they may with none of th e restrictive regulations which legally ctirb the acUvlUes of horses, cows and pigs. -

B ut goats likely will w ander no more without violating an Idaho statute. The senate has'passed a house-approved bill to Include the recaldtrant

in the state 's trespassing livestock act.. W. W. White, D., I

understand why goats « of the early day i '

I. who spoke for the bill said he couldnt

of the early day anim al trespass law, "unless It was because they were well behaVed a t O u t time.” .

,<n. George Ambrose, B , Cuj was vcoTled for fear i t would be lawful tQ chain a goat along the roadside to graze, b u t W hite assur­ed him th a t came unifcr the classi­fication of perming thtm .. Senate President pro-t«npore J. E. Wiillams, R., Bingham, Arose and said flatly, "I am for this blU.-

He explained:"I don't agree with tho sponsors,

but I 'm for It as an educational bill. Those sponsors are going to be cdu- catcd to the fac t th a t you can 't fence a goat in.”

Sen. Frank M. WllUams, R., Bear

Lake, was concerned over the nuih- ber o f-h is consiltuenia affected. H ow many goats are there in Ida­ho?" he asked White.

W hite woa unable to say bu t Ben. F rank W. Harris, R , Caribou, bad the answer: ‘There are 3,738 goats In Idaho With an as.iesscd valuation of $9,307.5<i,'’ he. eald. reading from an assessment sheet. U# said be was surprised tha t Idaho had that many.

Pew ah ro rts capable of handling the large new transport planes exist in Latin America. tas:s the Q. B. office of the coordinator of inter- American affairs.

He Has Right to Crab—Isle Crabs

Invade His TentOAREY. Feb. 1—PhM 1/c John

Elvln W hitby, former Carey youth, now stationed m a small Island In th e south PacUlc, has h is own ver­s ion of the.soylng, “when It rains i t pours.”

I n a le tte r written Jan . l to his alster, M rB.LJ7,.W .-K lrkland, he s ta tes th a t ' following four days of steady dowrnpour. the sun came out bringing w ith It a quanUty of rising m is fa n d m lgrotliig land crabs.

communlcaUon stated.- T h is I awoke to find hundreds crawling through my tent.

OH weu- annual migration trip to th e other aide bf the Island. They a re quite harmless unless you hap­pen to step on them with your bare foot." he explained.

Contlnulnff the letter, he stated, •'I am getting along very .well un ­de r ths conditions and managing to maintain a healthy ouUook on life

to keep up my morale on a

Orly high l«v«l deaplta th a flaetaa- on of the type o t chow, and dls- nirag lnf incUe&ta which'arise.*’

FAIRVIEWW alter Sis. who has been in the

..ospl.tal since November w ith a knee Injury, is now home.

PtaalL Burda, Dkklnson. D . D , la vislUn* his sister, Mra. Joe Tvrdy. He also visited relatives la Chico and Ban P^anclsco, Calif..

According to word received by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tvrdy from their daughter. Ur^. B ^ Boras; the pur­ple heart has been awarded her ma­rine husband for Injuries received

1 Guam. They are now living In Washington,-D. where Mr. Soraa a n instructor.Harold Hamby, M arten Holtacn

and Alvin Machacek have gone to Wheeler, O re, for medical treat­ment.- Victor Tvrdy is now a t Camp Roberts, Calif.

M n. C llntw Connell and baby have returned to the PVank Kodesh home from tho Twin F a lli county gentral hospital.

Good Citizens .league of th e pri­m ary room a t Palrvlew elected the

o fU een: Prtsk ten t. P a tty ' . I c e - H T ^ ^ X ella-O sab .—

beer; secretozr. ^ocUla Caaebeen treasurer, M ory Ann' Law yer; U- brarian,W »UerWogner. Purpoaec*

Benjamin PmnkUn received an honorary A J t degree f tw a B ar- vard college l a ITSS.

Beware _

That Hang Ongtnn laden phlegm, and a id na tu re to soothe ond h e a l raw. ten d er, ia - llamed bronchia l m ucous jn^om- branes. TeU you r dn inart to Ttra a botue of creomulslon w ith th e tm - dcretandlng you must like th o way milekiy allays th e c o ^ o r TOU ore

fe E O M U L S IO NhrCouzhs, C bestC ol5f. Broncfiltls

Yes, flrsl «8 alw ays th e beat at Pcnney’s, so come early tb see tho new spring sty les in apparel for women and misses. You’ll love the new colors for the new season.

ANOTHER FINE* SELECTION

P rin ted Percale

FOR FRIDAY MORNING

You'll find dozens of things youll w ant to sew when you see this crisp washable mater­ial th a t makcS'totA attractive aprons, dreaes. and children’s things.'

HonoluluPRINTS

79 'Large colorful patterns In this group o t rayon and cotton prints for spring frocks^

New Arrivals In FIrst-of-the-SeasonFRILLY BONNETS

Dressmaker, SuUs and Tailored Top Coals In Soft Colored Wools

%A V ariety o f Styles in

Suits and Coats

Cheeks, bright colors, pas­tels in tailored or dressmak­er styles. Sm art kick-pleat* ed Bkirts. Boy coats with sw eetheart lapels. Or Ches­terfields w ith new details on pockets and buttons. 9 to 20.

S o ft Dressm aker Details

Severely Tailored Types

Wonderful New Colors

2 - 9 8 3 . 9 8

Evtiy *ty!e {tom piU asd bwnpen to {eathtred and flowered concoctioni in wonderful, wonderfol colors) Soft felts stitched, straw or self-trimmed . . v raony In adJuiUble sliea. And aO wilh auch.a gay hctrl-w inni^ tiltl M«ay « tW s ^ «■;»*« ’ 1 —

New Arrivals!HALF ELASTIC BAND •

d i a p e r PANTIESCotton double-knit washable training panties,White, sizes 1 to 4......................... ................... —

BARD TO G ET ELASTIC OARTEB

GIRDLESThose “Pcr-fit” kind, m ade o f durable cotton fabric w ith small satin design,Size 24 to SO inch waiat------------------ 7 9 c

FOBS LINEN ART GOODS

VAiaTIES SCARFSAn assortment of item s on the most wanted stam p foodis fabric—pure linen— Stamped for A m A O m embroidery, an attractive d e s i g n , t o

COLD W EATSEB CALLS > 0B

THERMOS BOTTLESTo keep those noutiahitig, stimulatlas....^ 4 A Adrinks hot, the best in vacutiih ware...... 9 ^

M E N ^ FINE COTTON

KNIT BRIEFSKnit of fine mercerized cotton yatn,— ; White, sizes 28 ,to 84—.............'..... ..... ....