iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS,...

10
iH E TWIN FALLS NEWS TWIN FALLS, IDAliO, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1938 Price Five Cents OREeONHA ffi =EI 1 Dnnu[Dun[ More Than Hall Million Re- publicans and Democrats To Select Candidates in Battle Over Labor Issue CBy The Associated Press) PORTLAND. Ore.. May 1&— The position of John L. Lewis, CIO chairman, and the unoffi- cial participation of a now deal cabinet member and a senator will rccelve a test tO' morrow In the Oregon primary election. More than half a million Re- publicans and Democrats-wllI s for governor, short The Democrallc contest for gov- ernor between atocky, white-haired Governor Charles H. Marlin, tor- mer con^«ssman and retired ma- jor ccenentl, and Henry Hess, for- mer state senator from t a Orande, eclipsed-all other races. • At(«cka Icket' Statment t The governor, criticlied by In- terior BecreUry Harold Ickea and Senator Qeorgo W. Norris (Ind- Neb), closed his campaign by re- arfimilng his loj-ally to the admin- istration. He attacked bitterly Ickes’ statement to Hc£s that he (Marlin) was at heart ':no new dealer." Ho was equally resentful of Norris' remark that he waa "dU- appolnted” In the governor .and urged Oregon farmers to vote for Heu. Martin, spearhead of » law and order cam »lgn to curb labor irfo- lenee, descrlfced Hess’ endorsement by the O r w n Commonwealth Ped' eratlon as proof that he was t Cewla candidate. President Roosevelt and Post- master General James A. Farley, national ' Democratic' conynlttee chairman, both said there would be no campaign Interference. Stephen Early, presidential secretary, last Saturday denied Martin’s assertion that President Roosevelt, on a visit to Oregon last fall, had said U him, "You and‘I,make'a good pair.’ tMhed at Perkins . The labor tntB became predom- inant In Oregon. iMt faU during • OlO-AFL (l|M V . lurla^tion la ^ the lumber Jniiortfy. Oovemor P . -<oo»tu»uid State School Head Accused, of Perjury In Abendroth Tri^ Nampft-Doctor-Ii^cefr - Ada Grand Jury Indictment BOlfiE, May 16 (/T)—Dr. .Charles R. Lowe, superintendent ^f the sUt« school and colony at Nampa, faced t9day an Ada county grand jury Indictment charging him with per- The Indlctmcnt was brought In secretly yesterday, but was not made public until Dr. Lowe was served with a bench warrant today, Dr. ^w e , served with the war- rant St Nampa, motored to Boise and posted tSDO bond wltli Judge Charles P. Koelsch. The Indictment was returned al- most immeeiialely attrr a directed verdict of acquittal was brought In for -Captain- W,' llarry^Abcndroth, former state purcliaslng agent, who was charged with embeaimg $50 In public money. The charge accused Dr. Lowe of 'wilfully, corruptly, falsely and fel- oniously” testlfymg on May 17 In Captain- Abendroth's trial. The physician, a state's witness, denied that he had made certain statement^ before the grand Jury during Its Investigation of the Ab- endroth mattet. Dr. Lowe was head of the state mental hospital at Blackfoot six years before being transferred to Hampa In June. 1931. During Abendroth’s trial. Dr. Ii>wo testified that he had not purchased 180 tons of hay for Uie Blackfoot hosplUl before Abendroth DR. CHAnLES R. IAWE consulted with him at Blackfoot about the matter. State's attorneys called two g , , Jurors to testify that Dr. Lowe Imd told them ho had'made-tlic liny purchase and that part of the for- age had been fed prior to the time Abendroth visited him in December, 1»3C, Attorney General J. W.-Taylor as- serted ^n his opening'statement to the Abendroth trial Jury tlint the itaW-^ould show that Abendroth had obtafncd a >50 sight draft from the state and had spent (43 of it on a trip not required In the duct of state business, ' France and Britain Warn Fascist Ruler cm Relief Cards Distributed to Poor When Cash Gives Out OHIGAOO. May IB W ~ Him- dreds of houieholdera. deprived of cash assistance becauss the Chi- cago relief administration exhaust- ed ItA funds, received bulging bags of food today. Packagea of dried beans, rice, cabbage, butter, prunes, celery and oranges were doled out at depots established by the gover^enfs surplus commodities corporation. I Tlie recipients — many smiling, ' some sullen—formed U)o vanguard of 34,000 families who will receive food cards In lieu of checks. A skeleton staff of lulmlnUtra- tion employea continued to mall ................. t ti>A nit< of 4,000 a the leash .... .............................. oney wai spent in making regular May pay- menu to.<l»e first BD.OOO fomllles or the relief rolls. Tlie state legislature wan nched- ulrd to convene In special session tomorrow night to devise m^ans of meeting the crisis;. flashes of LIFE Praoticdl Joker CAMDEN, N. J.. May IP (/T)- Tliree times an Intruder forced hla way Into Iiaao Paul's lioms while ^ Paul and his wife were away, and ▼ helped himself to contents of the / Icebox. Tlie third time Paul carefully searohed the liruse. On a couch In the living room he saw « figure «p patently asleep. Stealthily he np proaclied, then Iroped upon , the inert 'Ueo|>er.” It wan n dummy~made ot pillows and old clothrs. men were arriusned liere in a drlv ■'Yoiir lionpr," said a dofrnse at- torney, ’‘some dlstrlhutor* mlgtit be led to believe gambling devices legal Ixcaiise the federal government coi- lectJi 10 cents each nn them ai " "•'i’s'tiiat so?" replied JudgnVoilf- ford McLaughlin, "Oase dlsmlised.' , Birthday Egg VANOOUVEB. I). 0,-A Tobln llulitfd on the coverlet of Bvanga- lino Larkwnrthys iiaby carriage m aho slept outdoors oh her first hlrth- rtny. It laid « small bliit f|IB. . P r e m i e r Mussolini’s Demands Rejected By Powers (By The Associated Press) PARIS, May l&-rrance and Oreat Britain wanted Premier Benito MusaoUnl of Italy to- (Uty^that thejr stood altouldet to 8M uld«r Respite efforts to .......' O Puctf# Ifltfst demftnds for sluing Kn ItalorPr.ench friendship agreement were re- jected and the byword In of- ficial Paris tonight was: "Now It la up. to MussoUnI; he knows answers."-. The deadlock in efforts to reach on accord iMmllcllng the Anglo- Italian pact of April 16 was believed* in many quarters here to have put scAithem Europe back under the same war clouds that hung over it In the early part of the year. Premier Edward Doladler himself made » statement referring to the reinforced Anglo-French bloc. At the same time. Lord Perth, British ambftsnador In Rome, waa reported to have told lUIIan Foreign Minister Count Oaleauo Clsno that the .AnglO'Itallan agreement waa wortlileag without an Italo-French accord. Datadleir’s reference to \nglo- French solidarity caine in a surprise statement in which ho declnred France alone cpuld defend her fron- (Contmuad.on rat* 2, Ool. }) Japanese Iiijiir<; Chinese Crewmen BHANOKAI, May 10 (/I-) — The Texas Oil company reported to the United States consulate Uiat J4 ChlncM crewmen were sent to the hospitAl today with Injuries suf- fered at Uie hands 'of a Japanese navy party which boarded and searched a launch flying Uie Amer- ican flag. The midnight search wss con- diioteri while the launch was tied up at « wharf on the Whangpoo river here. Two of the Injured Chinese suf- fered broken anns. Two British, one French and one Netherlands. sailor aboard the launch were not touched hV tlie searcliera. but the oil company eaid Uiey received nida treatment. lABK PIEDIGTS BEALFOSBW state to Acquire Span W ith' in 60 Days, Governor Tells Demacrat>'^ KlMBIIU.Tr. May 19-^oadblHt7 hat the rlm-to-rlm bridge spanning expressed by Governor Barxllla W. Clark In a well-rccclved and surpris- ing statement made before 160 Twin Falls county Democrau assembled at the Young Democratic club's meeting here tonight. "I expect that the bridge deal will bo ciMCd in sixty days and a toll bridge will no longer exist, Governor Clark emphnalred, H added thAt it waa his hope that "in the near fuHux) U. S. highway Q3 would be improved and completed to the Salmon river making road to the MontaJia border. Conrratulate Governor Tlie n&iemblrd Democrat.^ Ir lately pas.sed by a nnanlmmis vote a resolution congratiilntlng the governor on hUi )x>llcy and attitude towftKls ttio piiccUwie ‘ pro- gram. Reverting back to his spccrli on 'Administration Policies," Clark urg- 'd all Democrats to back up the program of tlio Now Deal and com- plimented Senator James Popo on his policy of faithfulness to Prenl- dent Roosevelt. Llculenant-Qovemor Olmrlcn 0. aoiisrtt attended the meeting and reiterated his intentions to be a Democratic Kubernatorlal candlate, Russ C. Wilson, county central commltteo chairman from Kimberly spoke briefly ' encouraging Demo- crats to back up Uie administration, Johntton Kpc*ki Uuncan McD. Johnstoi), of the Twin Falls county Democrats club, si>oko on th,. ... ciples of the Young Democratic .. ganitatlon. and explained their de- sire to work with the nationai ad- ministration. "•niere Is no such a thing as », fac- tional fight In tlie DomocraUo party, becaiuw a Democrat is an ndmlnls> trotlon Deinocral,'' declared John- <Cnn(lnu*<l nn rt|t 3. Ool. «) IPA II BUSTS FMF IU IV rDnM cnuilMTO Nipponese Forces Com- plete Q.ccupation ,of Suchow After Severe Land and Air Barrages (By Tl-io Associated Press) SHANGHAI, May 20 (Fri- day) — Japanese announced today their , troops had com» plcted occupation of Suchow. icey to Chinese defenses on the central front. Reported occupation of wa'lled town, which had been* the base of a Chinese'army of nearly half'a'mllllon, came after severe artillery and air nt- tncks ond assaulL-s on defenses by )nverglng Japjinc.se columns. Sitchow. Junction point of tlie' Tlcntsln-Pukow and Lunghal rail- ways, had been the target of Jap- nnc.sc military operations elnco tlie fail of Nanking December 13. From Suchow, Japanese could' push westward along the Lunghai' to the Peiping-Hankow railway and' then south toward Hankow, Um- porar>- capllnl of ClUna. Doomed City Earlier today Japanese had de* nrcd Suchow was a burning, doomed city, with hordes of be- draggled Chinese soldiers and clvll- iMis in flight. ■^Japanese officials did not claim full occupation of the city until af- ter g a. m. Before, they declared only that they •■virtually" had completed Suchow's capture, Assessing all por- tions of the burning city except Jta south side. msing-Sun nags wcrt jeported flying from Suchow's gov- ernment buildings. Chinesc-‘-dare-'to-dlB“ imits, how- rer. still wcro resisting In the southern suburbs against Japanese Infantry as'saults supported bj heavy air. and arUllery bombard- ments. Shooting Flames Two tremcndou.H fires, apparently started In munitions storehousea, blotted the city out from the atf under a'blanket of smoko and shot flames hundreds.of icet into tbs air. -At Rankow, however, a Qblnesa millUry anokcsmatv dtsputta ese .reports that all but Sucbow'i ■southern U B U .were tecuplerf. said Banktw headquarters had bMO inform«d by telephone front Suiihow that the city ^111 was In chlneie hands. Japanese asserted their armies word killing and scattering China's faltering defender* throughout the vital area -along tho Tlcnt-Slnpu- 1 ^ rSliroad north ot Suchow. and tfie Lunghai railroad InUmd to tho west. Suchow la tho-Junction of the .two lines. China's forces, the Japanese Raid, were, being driven from scorcs of towns and villages by llcrce Japan- ese attacks against wliUh resistance was feeble. Japanese also declared llicy had captured liuge quantities of ami]>u- nltlon, foodstuffs and rolling ntock of the Lunghai railroad between Suchow and Kwelteh, another prime Japanese objective on the central front. luiisirauon. »,pUident nty .TVoung 1 tlw prin- Idaho Planes Carry 20,000 Air Letters U010K..May 10 U W - In obaarv. ancc'of national Airmail week, la pilot*—fiylni rverytiiliig from op«n< noekpit to trim -cabin planei — landed Jji jjolfo, t«'»i! wiiii. aai pounds of airmoll from a score of Idaho commiinitleii. Other pilotj flew mall from Ida- ho towns and vIHbbcs to Biwkane W«ii>., Idaho Falla and Pocatello. PDtUl offlcUis aald 30,000 letters were brouiht to Bolat, Ttio airmail gathered from this •eotlon ot the atat«'Wai placed aboard ti apoolal Vnlted Air Ltnaa trana^rt bound for Salt Uk« oily. Tlie big VMi tr»n*ix>ri *u flown by lltrry H ^int of Balt Uke oity, th« oomMpy'a waslem division lu-' perlnt«n^{, who wu acoompaniM by Oo»pl1ot Bob nrady and Mlai Altha OBble, olilff itewardeuTjor tha wastam division. boUi of Balk Lake City, Tho fhit plan" to land waa piloted by Vernon N. Oliver of Burley. .OUier . DlloM ' P*rllolMt«d ffldon carter of BoUe; Charles T. Cox, Casey Jones and Boyd Swan- son, all ()f Ontario. Ore,; Lionel Dean of 'I'wln Falls; Allan Pratt ot CilBtfRlli ii«>> Johnson of Ou- cade: Chlok Walker of MoOall; LamoUiB etevens of 'I'wln Full*; Van Jonea of Nampa and Matoolm Par- sons of Boise. nay Orowder. aoheduled to brlni Uia airmair from Weiier, broita an oil.ilna and «HI>t waa 4at^t«d, lha mall t»li« flown tor.ftingw Colonel KMl o. Popp of San Fran- OFFICERS of sontheaitem l^ h o are on the trail of Iwo younr aerial bandllt Hhn stole a plane at Ogden aod disappeared in nigged country after crashine in a field near Inknm, Idaho. Standlnc «lth his hand on the cowllni: of the wrecked plane is Dounlas ]lall, one of the searchers. Poliru-iaiis Biiy 01(1 €ai-s - It’s Ele<-tiou Year WASHINGTON,- May 10 (/IT— Summer Is 33 dnys away, but Its appronrlj h iiiiml.sl.ikablo on Capi- tol Hill- — It's eloctlon year,,you see. — You don't need an almanac to notlcc: ^lain coiTsidereU looking lor used nuloraobllcs — It bettor politicr, to campaign in o old car oi'c. Handclasp.-i—a little weak after long rest from campaigning — b) growing .str^cr. . TtckctuCJIiU-. uho generally do good bMiici!! selling vacation trips to far-anay lands nrc licorlng the gospel ot ".Soi; America first." ::.'.Ohccry. Kcrctnrlnl. "couio .ins'.', greet the fnlntc.st tap on political ' ' ond doors are opening as if Just been oiled. . ___ ft greater r\ i|h for.^thp. back .nomff'iiewjpfipcrs.'' ,Th6 entertainmeiu cycle is slow- ing down — lioslf&sc.'i are R-Tvlng tlje surplus for gartlen-parllcs-to-be In the old homo town. Forty-eight dlflercut statr-s or. being de.scribed daily as -God’ country.” Railroa^PUnions ThreatenSirdke^ Throughout U,S. Organized Labor’s Opposition to 15 Per Cent Wage Slash Wins Powerful Support in Congress (By 'Hie AwxTlated Pre.v;) WASHINGTON, May 19—Railroad labor unlon.-^ .served no - tice today that a nationwide :itrlkc would be the "only ulti- mate resuiV 11 the roads caviled out liilcnUons Vo cut -wages. The workei-s' opposlUpii tn^tho projected 15' per cent pay cut won powerrul supp'ort In cont^ress, where a movement dc- V(?lopcd to withhold emergency financial aid from the car- riers unless they aRreed to maintain existing wage levels. At the roqiie.st oT Chairman Wagner (D-NY) of the bank - ing committee, the ,sennte sent back to the committee legis- lation which \vouId provide federal loans for tlic roads. ■WiiKficr :akl ;.cvcrnl nicmbcrs of Uie comniitice wnnlcd to tlinnge. tlic bill 10 prahSblt fcdcnil loaui' to car- riers that Inrrcd ivni.'f- cut.s. n ic WaKiipr firoui) jircviou.sly had approved ilic bill In 11 .-5 pre.wiit form bal llic Ni-w Yorker *:ikl the action wa.'i taken before the waRc HOySE APPROVES R[ AGRMNWR DEFIESWROENAS General Cedlllo D c c ia rc s President o! Mexico Planning Attack SAN LUIS POTOar. Mexico, May > (Friday) (/n-raeticral 8iitiiriiio Cedlllo, ftccusfd by IVe.ildent Ururo Oordetitts of plotting-a revolt, told tho AMoclated Press Uiis moniliiK hn had been Infonned federal troo|>s would nttock him today. Tlie agrarian leader nnld lie had "tnistworUjy" information that thn ll^ildent was plannhig to "try to crtish niB by forco of arms." He added defiantly: "I am ready to repel all aggres- altm by mtftns of arr\\» tint, l piste tha rrspoplblllty for the blood that may be ^hed on the rapricn of the man wiio seeks to make of Mexico A dojwindency of tlie flovlet." Qenerai Cedlllo mud^ Ills state- ment at I.OS Pnlomas; Ills CAlato near here. At thn time only right or ten men were thrre, AH his armed agrorluns wers gone, 'Iliey bad slipped away into the lillls. It seemed Uiat Cedlllo would follow them aiiortly. -• Yeaterdaj-Pnwldent Oardrnai ex- pr«Bse<l confidence he liad rllinlnat- ed the pasilblllty of revolt liy Onn- eml aaturlno Oedlllo’s agrarian ntiy C a r ^ n u lald them, would bn no need to ua« forco t*> carry wit hi* ultimatum to Codlllo to ntirrnidpr Uia arma and ammunition of his itimaUd 40,000 agrnrlnn lollowers. The ^tirealdenl wlio liioiiglit his own aoidlera here to eunure raliti in the (act ot rumore<l iinprndUig re- bellion said moAt ot thn ngrarlmis of 6iin Lula Potosl state had signi- to enlist McCormack Loses Fight to Provide tor Reser- voir Power WASHINQTON, May ID M76,000.000 oninlljus flrwl <■ program rcfclvrd hoiinc ajipvo' ,iiay after n ripple of cxcltrinci tho iMJWer qui'stloii. Tlie bill, p^n|m^lng a flv . plan'of const ructlou, was pii.s.-ii'd by standing vole wlthoia niiijo ameiidment.i. U now koc. h to tin mate. Chairman Whiltlngloii (O-MI.n.-. of thn hoiiJvC flood cimtrol comnilt tcc. who (Ip.scrlbt'd thn meitMire a. broiid expansion of thn lft3(1 flood control act, won out hi a lively de <tc with ncprrsrntfttlvo MrCnr lack (D-Miffti) iiiul others who lined the |K)wcr Iwiue. McCormack wanted to ami-inl Ihi bill to permit hydrocleotrlc drvrlop- meiit on rc.iprvolrs. Tho hoiiBO rojected the amrnd ment after WhittliiHton lUKunl I- no place in the flood i-nntrol program. Tho house voted to ird rwenes tn th* regular arnty. Ueanwiille, a group of lO oljnnrva UOQ and oombat plane* were ordered ner« from Mexl^p Oity to Join Uie Already atrongly roiijorced iiiilltury larrtKma. le for tho purchase of property iiiTdni for flood .control reservoirs. At present local conWbutlons of 100 i>er cent ore required, but tho bill rrduci this to ao per cent. The bill would autluirltn coi structlon of approximately 100 river, walls and IDO reservoirs In many river bating,' Belrctlon of projects would be left to the army engineers. F .D .R . Holds Up Tax, Bill Aclioii WASIUNQION. Uay 10 (AV- Presldtot Roosevelt has lakcii no aotlon yal on Uie Ux revlslnn bill, which eonfna* passed May 11. nie blit atripa away all but vBstigB-'or the onflutmuted prorita t*». favored by the admlnlitratlon. and modinea thb oapltargaios lax. lloweyer, lAformod legUlat^s ex. pressed belief Itr; RooMvelt would sign Uw biU. aald -he might IM) lioldinc it up untU he prepares n statemriil oriUoltlni'tha ohaniM in corportt* Uxatioiv Ooi)vreN paaaed Uie measure May POSSES PURSOE BAillSUSPEGIS Officers Press Search for Airplane Thieves in Rugged Country INKOM-, Idaho, Mny 19 W Tlic grim "fox-and-hounds" hunt throiiRli ^outlieaslcrn Idaho's morX rugged .countrj- wa.s ftcutcly pr/ws=' cd tonlRht bccau.w of a pot of boil- ing water and an identified foot- print. Ccrtfllii that two bandits—sought after a plane was -stolon llicsday from Ogden, Utah, municipal air- port and wrecked ncnr here—arc still In this region, oncc the rcn- dcrvous of stngDcoach robbere, posses ^redoubled their vigil and eneiratcti remote noota In the ills. -Soufht for q«o.-ittj 5 tlng..*re -Ear} GUb«rt, 22, Idaho TX-convict, and a<rtand -<Red) Hail, ID. brth-resl- denta of southenstcm Idaho. That Hall wa.'i iii Uie. region was pstabllBhcd, State Patrolmun D. W. iDiid) Bllss'Kald, when Hall's fa- her, Hoyrnrd Hall of Prc.-iton, Idcn- :ifled a new footprint. Bliss said the yoiith'.i father ex- amined a fresh prhit near Topons inger cabin and lold him; '“Those nrc my boy's. I can t<'ll by the pwuliar clrcIc In lli« rub- ber heel.” Earlier, a state patrolman and n deputy flhrrlff eiiteri'd the n-^note cabin and found water boiling on stove. DIIm said a diy Io;if of bread was on a table. "Tlio boiidlta could hide out In- definitely with fnml,'- ^ald Htate Patrolman Elmi-r Ti-ny. Aided by thn pociillur fiKii|irlnt, posses trailed the baiu1lt,-i tliroiiKh- out tho area, llie "fox" kept dnub- IhiK back on tlieir tri«'k;^ Terry said tiic baiulll,-. hail dou- blrd back over prcclpltuou:! ilnnne- vlll<- peak, hlghe^ hi the I'ortncuf range, toward Inkoni. Police officers hi Utah. Wyoin- lug, MonUiia niiil Idalu) wer< warned to be. on thn lodkoijU foi Uin bundlU, aithouKh Tvriv m»U ho bPilevrt the men were Mill lint tied In Uin hills by thn heavily The untniiV strike threat was eonl.-ilned In a .-statement by the railway labor executives' associa- tion. Cliaraini: that lailroad rrtnnnRe- mcnl had "ilouble-tru.-Md" 11.S or- Kiinl/.ed employe;;, the i.tatemenl de- clared:' "U the railroad nianacrinent.i in- •slst on going througli wlUi their at- tempt to cut pinployps’ wages 15 ix-r ccijt, thn only ultiniato result will be a iiatloii-wlde strike. -'Ill* Railroad Workers of Ameri- ca. already gros.sly underpaid, sim- ply will not accept a wage reduc- tion ot any kind. They have already been lieavT sufferers from the rail- roads' policy of putting the payment of Intcrc.-it to wealthy bondholders above dooctit living standards for t h ^ cmployce. <>Thn labor executives said they ^'ouUl observe the r(illwny labor act, which provrdcs machinery for adjvisttng disputes, l»foro they re- sorted to & strike, but added; •'If the railroads cannot be con- vinced that a v,-nge reduction is not only unjustified, but is absolutely dangerous to tbe economic .struc- •ture of this nation, it will be neces- sary for iho rollroad employes to use tlielr ecouomlc strength to save the vftlljoad fndustrv from commit* (Oonllnua^ on Paga 3. Col. 4) EAIPROi® fANS PROPOSED '- .i TAX UENB lirKU I-Oa ANOKLE8, May 10 i/l-, come tax llenn were filed today against Neveral perttons. including Virginia llruee Ollbert, film actress, Wl for iOafl: Henry Hidi, actor. (3^^ for lout.' mid Cllssa iJindl, actress, |l,28a for 1034. MfiliTCIS uiiinnE Detectives Seek Remains of Weaitiiy Widow in Mo- jave Desert LOS ANGELES. Mq? 10 IfP)- cross thn wastes of tho Mojave de.sert, 100 miles north of liere. de- tectives and a murder suspect trav- eled today looking for tlio hidden grave of a wealthy Los Angolcs widow. Tho officers were directed illan Nell flos.i'. 30, who broko off two pieces ot mescjulte bvu.li and »Vet\ \wn ho etecVed & H to mark the grave after, he told autliorltic.i, ho burled her in he dead of night last March 0, The gravn souglit Is that of Leona May Schmidt, 50, Hos.s’ mother-ln- law. who. Dctectlvo Mout. Prank Ilyan' said, lloss confessed, killing with a revolver. Ho sold Uierc had been nn argument over Rosi’ wife, who died two s-earn ago, and (hat lio killetl her hi her home with a single bullet. Ross was questioned by detectives after Mrs. Cora A. Miller, Mrs. Oehmldt'H aUter, rejjorted her dis- appearance. Officers said he finally confessed. "Iliit I can't remember where I burled her body," they quoted Ilosa as saying. Administration Hopes to Keep Surplus Grain Off Market . . \VAij»I.*JGTON, May 19 (JV-A prc.sldcntlal letter to congress dis- cloMd today tlmt thn administra- tion Intends to lend wheat pro- durers «120,OOO.CMX> to SlT.'.OOO.CKKl on their surplus grain this year. OfdclnLs said the purpose of t^a loans would be to keep surplus wheat off the market and thus preyent de- momJlzation of tlHces. Mr. Roosevelt sent a reque.st to Speaker -Bankhead for $80,000 to finance ft government licensing nnd -<■ supen'Wng of additional. facllUlp.': for storage of the grain. Ho asli;cd.__ congress to includc this fund In a •supplementary appropriation of •I.--' 030,000 for the agriculture depart- ment, J050.000 of which would be iLsed to control Insect pesta and plant dJseasc.s. Surplus Estimated The president sent along, with his approval, a letter to himself' from Daniel W. Bell, acting budget director. In it Bell said Secretary of Agriculture Wallace had advised him that the 1938 wheat crop as ' ' ^was e s t ^ t e d at 950.000.- ... ____ib, and uiat domestic con- sumption and ei^rts»o< ,U»'Sniin during the marketing yew^etart- on tM daK w^-expecta(l^<s der the« condltlona a Itwa to pro- ducer* of wheat on the lOtt-wnlqil of some 200.000.000 buatiels v iil be '' neceasary. • - * . ■To more adequaKQt protect the collateral of the goveniment, It la deslroble that Uie vheftToii whictv' loans are mado be atored’ ln grain elevators, licensed and supervised by Uie government," . 60 to se CcnU a Bnihel OUier officials said the new orop control law authorizes the asricul- ture department to make' wlieat loans which, under present condi* tloiw, could range from 60 to 86 cents a bushel—or 1120.000,000 to 1179,000,- . 000 on 300,000,000 buslieb. AAA officials have been urglnx wheat growers to accept what they call a "reasonable" loan rale. They have not Intimated what the rate might be, for feat of affecting th« market. Tho figure may be an- nounced in July. Diftlculty In fixing iho rate lies In the fact that a minimum i<m- of eo centa might bring pro^ecta from fanners, experts said, wnile b Bubfltantlally higher loan might peg tho domestic wheat price above the world level and atop exporlk. Steel Chief Sights Road to Prosperity M INJUMD IN OOUtllON DALLA8, May il» i/»i>j,Twcnty. bun, an ambulance, an automo- bile here i«nlBht. OHARLBSI^N, W. Va., May 10 (>r)-Ern<it T. Weir, iteel niagiiat«,< advocating .a seven-point recovery ItfOgram tonight, pre<ltoled "men wanted” signs again would hang on factory gates if Uio Rooievelt ad- mhilBtration changed Its policies "to aid and enoouraie private en- t«rprUo«.” The outspoken chairmwi of the NaUonal BU«I corporation suggMt- ed to the West Virginia chamber of comlperee this program for reoor* vry: • - ■ "Restore confidence by an un- qualified'pledge to retain unaltered thn prlnelplea and sUuoture of Uie American lysleina o( business and of gOTenunent, 'Declare a permanent oolbqr with regard to baslo eoonpmw oontwi. "Amend th« labor laws M they ahall be* fair and apply with 'eQual force to ^ e employer, aU.attplWN and all ubor organl^iaUoM. ' "Raroov# threau of r™ oompetltion luoh aa Uw hang^ uttmiN.*'...... “BetiS tiM ooroorani, tt*'OobKu and Uteir. kind biek «rli pama frtm. Oeaae attaeki then Hllck "H Uiene Uilngs are done I pre- dict Uiat wlUiln a period of from four to alx months tlie country will move definitely from this deprea* alon not to temporary reoovery buk to permanent improtameni. * • ‘Men wanted’ algna eventually would again han«>on faetory galea. "If they are not dona wo nuit expect oondi^loni to grow 1y wowri^v'Ulk bfa'noaatlon li ridiculous. This U dep ions, deep-rooted, and .. . h^art’.' already had been arouied by preaidnUal Donferenoea with buaineaa men but •ihSenu'arS aXM ''*S*1^ dent Rooaerelt.’ jVeiT. a itaunoh liapubllcui. utt- •ID tha eonlni elMUoQi, Qs ^ UildMUnd Ihb iMuUta, tundUQWtal our eounto" Okluholua Flood Damuges Crops ij OKLAHOMA caTY, May IB Swollen Oklalioma streams poured j-> destnictlve waters Into western and. northern Oklalioma lowland areas tonight, damaging crops, wrecking’ bridges and disrupting train and automobile traffic. Water waa running in Uie atneta! of Jefferson, in Grant county, but' . no immediate damage was reports^, ' W E L L .J ’U TeUYou A preacher friend of mloa

Transcript of iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS,...

Page 1: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

iH E TW IN FALLS NEW STWIN FALLS, IDAliO, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1938 Price Five CentsOREeONHAffi=EI1Dnnu[Dun[

More Than Hall Million Re­publicans and Democrats

■ To Select Candidates in Battle Over Labor Issue

CBy The Associated Press) PORTLAND. Ore.. M ay 1&—

The position of John L. Lewis, C IO c ha irm an , an d the uno ffi­

cial p artic ipa tion of a now deal cab ine t m ember an d a

senator w ill rccelve a test tO'

m orrow In the Oregon prim ary

election.More th a n h a lf a m ill io n Re­

publicans a n d Democrats-wllIs for governor, short

The Democrallc contest for gov­ernor between atocky, white-haired Governor Charles H. Marlin, tor-

• mer con^«ssman and retired ma­jor ccenentl, and Henry Hess, for­mer state senator from t a Orande, eclipsed-all other races. •

At(«cka Icket' Statment

t The governor, criticlied by In ­terior BecreUry Harold Ickea and

Senator Qeorgo W. Norris (Ind- Neb), closed his campaign by re- arfimilng his loj-ally to the admin­istration. He attacked bitterly Ickes’ statement to Hc£s that he (Marlin) was at heart ':no new dealer." Ho was equally resentful of Norris' remark that he waa "dU- appolnted” In the governor .and urged Oregon farmers to vote for Heu.

Martin, spearhead of » law and order cam»lgn to curb labor irfo- lenee, descrlfced Hess’ endorsement by the O rw n Commonwealth Ped' eratlon as proof that he was t Cewla candidate.

President Roosevelt and Post­master General James A. Farley, national ' Democratic' conynlttee chairman, both said there would be no campaign Interference. Stephen Early, presidential secretary, last Saturday denied Martin’s assertion that President Roosevelt, on a visit to Oregon last fall, had said U him, "You and‘I,make'a good pair.’

tMhed at Perkins .The labor tntB became predom­

inant In Oregon. iM t faU during • OlO-AFL (l|M V . lu rla^tion la

^ the lumber Jniiortfy. Oovemor P . -<oo»tu»uid

State School Head Accused, of Perjury

In Abendroth Tri^N a m p f t - D o c t o r - I i ^ c e f r -

Ada Grand Jury Indictment

BOlfiE, May 16 (/T)—Dr. .Charles

R. Lowe, superintendent f the sUt« school and colony at Nampa, faced

t9day an Ada county grand jury

Indictment charging him with per-

The Indlctmcnt was brought In secretly yesterday, but was not made public until Dr. Lowe was served with a bench warrant today,

Dr. ^w e , served with the war­rant St Nampa, motored to Boise and posted tSDO bond wltli Judge Charles P. Koelsch.

The Indictment was returned al­most immeeiialely attrr a directed verdict of acquittal was brought In for -Captain- W,' llarry^Abcndroth, former state purcliaslng agent, who was charged with embeaimg $50 In public money.

The charge accused Dr. Lowe of 'wilfully, corruptly, falsely and fel­oniously” testlfymg on May 17 In Captain- Abendroth's trial.

The physician, a state's witness, denied that he had made certain statement^ before the grand Jury during Its Investigation of the Ab­endroth mattet.

Dr. Lowe was head of the state mental hospital at Blackfoot six years before being transferred to Hampa In June. 1931.

During Abendroth’s trial. Dr. Ii>wo testified that he had not purchased 180 tons of hay for Uie Blackfoot hosplUl before Abendroth

DR. CHAnLES R. IAW E

consulted with him at Blackfoot about the matter.

State's attorneys called two g , , Jurors to testify that Dr. Lowe Imd told them ho had'made-tlic liny purchase and that part of the for­age had been fed prior to the time Abendroth visited him in December, 1»3C,

Attorney General J. W.-Taylor as­serted ^n his opening'statement to the Abendroth trial Jury tlint the itaW-^ould show that Abendroth had obtafncd a >50 sight draft from the state and had spent (43 of it on a trip not required In the duct of state business, '

France and Britain Warn Fascist Ruler

cmRelief Cards Distributed to

Poor When Cash Gives Out

OHIGAOO. May IB W ~ Him- dreds of houieholdera. deprived of cash assistance becauss the Chi­cago relief administration exhaust­ed ItA funds, received bulging bags of food today.

Packagea of dried beans, rice, cabbage, butter, prunes, celery and oranges were doled out at depots established by the gover^enfs surplus commodities corporation.

I Tlie recipients — many smiling, ' some sullen—formed U)o vanguard

of 34,000 families who will receive food cards In lieu of checks.

A skeleton staff of lulmlnUtra- tion employea continued to mall................. t ti>A nit< of 4,000 a

the leash.... .............................. oney waispent in making regular May pay- menu to.<l»e first BD.OOO fomllles or the relief rolls.

Tlie state legislature wan nched- ulrd to convene In special session tomorrow night to devise m^ans of meeting the crisis;.

f l a s h e s ofLIFE

Praoticdl JokerCAMDEN, N. J.. May IP (/T)-

Tliree times an Intruder forced hla way Into Iiaao Paul's lioms while

^ Paul and his wife were away, and ▼ helped himself to contents of the / Icebox.

Tlie third time Paul carefully searohed the liruse. On a couch In the living room he saw « figure «p patently asleep. Stealthily he np proaclied, then Iroped upon , the inert 'Ueo|>er.”

It wan n dummy~made ot pillows and old clothrs.

men were arriusned liere in a drlv

■'Yoiir lionpr," said a dofrnse at­torney, ’‘some dlstrlhutor* mlgtit be led to believe gambling devices legal Ixcaiise the federal government coi- lectJi 10 cents each nn them ai

" "•'i’s 'tiiat so?" replied JudgnVoilf- ford McLaughlin, "Oase dlsmlised.'

, B ir th d ay EggVANOOUVEB. I). 0 ,-A Tobln

llulitfd on the coverlet of Bvanga- lino Larkwnrthys iiaby carriage m aho slept outdoors oh her first hlrth- rtny.

It laid « small bliit f|IB. . —

P re m ie r Mussolini’s Demands Rejected

By Powers

■ (By The Associated Press)P A R IS , M ay l& -rrance and

O re a t B r ita in w anted Premier

B en ito MusaoUnl o f Ita ly to-

(U ty^that thejr stood altouldet

to 8 M u ld « r Respite efforts to

.......'

O Puctf# Ifltfst demftnds for s l u i n g Kn Ita lo r P r .e n c h

fr iendsh ip agreement were re­

jec ted a n d the byword In o f­ficial Paris tonight was: "Now It la up. to MussoUnI; he knows answers."-.

The deadlock in efforts to reach on accord iMmllcllng the Anglo- Italian pact of April 16 was believed* in many quarters here to have put scAithem Europe back under the same war clouds that hung over it In the early part of the year.

Premier Edward Doladler himself made » statement referring to the reinforced Anglo-French bloc.

At the same time. Lord Perth, British ambftsnador In Rome, waa reported to have told lUIIan Foreign Minister Count Oaleauo Clsno that the .AnglO'Itallan agreement waa wortlileag without an Italo-French accord.

Datadleir’s reference to \nglo- French solidarity caine in a surprise statement in which ho declnred France alone cpuld defend her fron-

(Contmuad.on rat* 2, Ool. })

Japanese Iiijiir<; Chinese CrewmenBHANOKAI, May 10 (/I-) — The

Texas Oil company reported to the United States consulate Uiat J4 ChlncM crewmen were sent to the hospitAl today with Injuries suf­fered at Uie hands 'of a Japanese navy party which boarded and searched a launch flying Uie Amer­ican flag.

The midnight search wss con- diioteri while the launch was tied up at « wharf on the Whangpoo river here.

Two of the Injured Chinese suf­fered broken anns.

Two British, one French and one Netherlands. sailor aboard the launch were not touched hV tlie searcliera. but the oil company eaid Uiey received nida treatment.

lABK PIEDIGTS BEALFOSBW

state to Acquire Span W ith ' in 6 0 Days, Governor

Tells Dem acrat> '^

KlMBIIU.Tr. May 19-^oadblHt7 hat the rlm-to-rlm bridge spanning

expressed by Governor Barxllla W. Clark In a well-rccclved and surpris­ing statement made before 160 Twin Falls county Democrau assembled at the Young Democratic club's meeting here tonight.

" I expect that the bridge deal will bo ciMCd in sixty days and a toll bridge will no longer exist, Governor Clark emphnalred, H added thAt it waa his hope that "in the near fuHux) U. S. highway Q3 would be improved and completed to the Salmon river making road to the MontaJia border.

Conrratulate Governor Tlie n&iemblrd Democrat. Ir

lately pas.sed by a nnanlmmis vote a resolution congratiilntlng the governor on hUi )x>llcy and attitude towftKls ttio piiccUwie ‘ pro-gram.

Reverting back to his spccrli on 'Administration Policies," Clark urg­'d all Democrats to back up the program of tlio Now Deal and com­plimented Senator James Popo on his policy of faithfulness to Prenl- dent Roosevelt.

Llculenant-Qovemor Olmrlcn 0. aoiisrtt attended the meeting and reiterated his intentions to be a Democratic Kubernatorlal candlate, Russ C. Wilson, county central commltteo chairman from Kimberly spoke briefly ' encouraging Demo­crats to back up Uie administration,

Johntton Kpc*ki Uuncan McD. Johnstoi),

of the Twin Falls county Democrats club, si>oko on th,. ... ciples of the Young Democratic .. ganitatlon. and explained their de­sire to work with the nationai ad­ministration.

"•niere Is no such a thing as », fac­tional fight In tlie DomocraUo party, becaiuw a Democrat is an ndmlnls> trotlon Deinocral,'' declared John-

<Cnn(lnu*<l nn rt|t 3. Ool. «)

IPAII BUSTSFMFIUIV rDnM cnuilMTO

N ip p o n e s e Forces Com­plete Q .c c u p a t io n , of Suchow After S e v e r e Land and Air Barrages

(By Tl-io Associated Press) SH AN GH A I, M ay 20 (F ri­

day) — Japanese announced

today th e ir , troops had com»

p lcted occupation of Suchow. icey to Chinese defenses on

the cen tra l fron t.

Reported occupation of wa'lled town, which had been* the base of a Chinese'army of nearly half'a'mllllon, came after severe artillery and air nt- tncks ond assaulL-s on defenses by )nverglng Japjinc.se columns. Sitchow. Junction point of tlie'

Tlcntsln-Pukow and Lunghal rail­ways, had been the target of Jap- nnc.sc military operations elnco tlie fail of Nanking December 13.

From Suchow, Japanese could' push westward along the Lunghai' to the Peiping-Hankow railway and' then south toward Hankow, Um- porar>- capllnl of ClUna.

Doomed City Earlier today Japanese had de* nrcd Suchow was a burning,

doomed city, with hordes of be­draggled Chinese soldiers and clvll- iMis in flight.■^Japanese officials did not claim full occupation of the city until af­ter g a. m.

Before, they declared only that they •■virtually" had completed Suchow's capture, Assessing all por­tions of the burning city except Jta south side. msing-Sun nags wcrt jeported flying from Suchow's gov­ernment buildings.

Chinesc-‘-dare-'to-dlB“ imits, how- rer. still wcro resisting In the

southern suburbs against Japanese Infantry as'saults supported bj heavy air. and arUllery bombard­ments.

Shooting Flames

Two tremcndou.H fires, apparently started In munitions storehousea, blotted the city out from the atf under a'blanket of smoko and shot flames hundreds.of icet into tbs air.

-At Rankow, however, a Qblnesa millUry anokcsmatv dtsputta ese .reports that all but Sucbow'i ■southern UBU .were tecuplerf. said Banktw headquarters had bMO inform«d by telephone front Suiihow that the city ^111 was In chlneie hands.

Japanese asserted their armies word killing and scattering China's faltering defender* throughout the vital area -along tho Tlcnt-Slnpu- 1 ^ rSliroad north ot Suchow. and tfie Lunghai railroad InUmd to tho west. Suchow la tho-Junction of the .two lines.

China's forces, the Japanese Raid, were, being driven from scorcs of towns and villages by llcrce Japan­ese attacks against wliUh resistance was feeble.

Japanese also declared llicy had captured liuge quantities of ami]>u- nltlon, foodstuffs and rolling ntock of the Lunghai railroad between Suchow and Kwelteh, another prime Japanese objective on the central front.

luiisirauon.

»,pUident nty .TVoung 1 tlw prin-

Idaho Planes Carry 20,000 Air Letters

U010K..May 10 U W - In obaarv. ancc'of national Airmail week, la pilot*—fiylni rverytiiliig from op«n< noekpit to trim -cabin planei —landed Jji jjolfo, t«'»i! wiiii. aaipounds of airmoll from a score of Idaho commiinitleii.

Other pilotj flew mall from Ida­ho towns and vIHbbcs to Biwkane W«ii>., Idaho Falla and Pocatello.

PDtUl offlcUis aald 30,000 letters were brouiht to Bolat,

Ttio airmail gathered from this •eotlon ot the atat«'Wai placed aboard ti apoolal Vnlted Air Ltnaa trana^rt bound for Salt U k« oily.

Tlie big VM i tr»n*ix>ri * u flown by lltrry H ^ in t of Balt Uke oity, th« oomMpy'a waslem division lu-' pe r ln t«n ^{ , who w u acoompaniM by Oo»pl1ot Bob nrady and Mlai Altha OBble, olilff itewardeuTjor

tha wastam division. boUi of Balk Lake City,

Tho fh it plan" to land waa piloted by Vernon N. Oliver of Burley.

.OUier . DlloM ' P*rllolMt«d

ffldon carter of BoUe; Charles T. Cox, Casey Jones and Boyd Swan- son, all ()f Ontario. Ore,; Lionel Dean of 'I'wln Falls; Allan Pratt ot CilBtfRlli ii«>> Johnson of Ou- cade: Chlok Walker of MoOall; LamoUiB etevens of 'I'wln Full*; Van Jonea of Nampa and Matoolm Par­sons of Boise.

nay Orowder. aoheduled to brlni Uia airmair from Weiier, broita an oil.ilna and «HI>t waa 4at^t«d , lha mall t» li« flown tor.ftingw

Colonel KMl o. Popp of San Fran-

OFFICERS of sontheaitem l^ h o are on the trail of Iwo younr aerial bandllt Hhn stole a plane at Ogden aod disappeared in nigged country after crashine in a field near Inknm, Idaho. Standlnc «lth his hand on the cowllni: of the wrecked plane is Dounlas ]lall, one of the searchers.

Poliru-iaiis Biiy 01(1 €ai-s - It’s

Ele<-tiou YearWASHINGTON,- May 10 (/IT—

Summer Is 33 dnys away, but Its appronrlj h iiiiml.sl.ikablo on Capi­tol Hill- — It's eloctlon year,,you see. —

You don't need an almanac to notlcc:

^ l a i n coiTsidereUlooking lor used nuloraobllcs — It bettor politicr, to campaign in o old car oi'c.

Handclasp.-i—a little weak after long rest from campaigning — b) growing .str^cr.. TtckctuCJIiU-. uho generally do good bMiici!! selling vacation trips to far-anay lands nrc licorlng the gospel ot ".Soi; America first." ::.'.Ohccry. Kcrctnrlnl. "couio .ins'.', greet the fnlntc.st tap on political

' ' ond doors are opening as if Just been oiled.

. ___ ft greater r\i|h for.^thp.back .nomff'iiewjpfipcrs.''

,Th6 entertainmeiu cycle is slow­ing down — lioslf&sc.'i are R-Tvlng tlje surplus for gartlen-parllcs-to-be In the old homo town.

Forty-eight dlflercut statr-s or. being de.scribed daily as -God’ country.”

Railroa^PUnions ThreatenSirdke^ Throughout U,S.

Organized Labor’s Opposition to 15 Per Cent Wage Slash Wins Powerful

Support in Congress

(By 'Hie AwxTlated Pre.v;)

W ASHINGTON, M ay 19— Railroad labor unlon.-^ .served n o ­

tice today th a t a nationw ide :itrlkc would be the "on ly u l t i­m ate resuiV 11 the roads cav iled out liilcnU ons Vo cu t -wages.

The workei-s' opposlUpii tn^tho projected 15' per cent pay cut won powerrul supp'ort In cont^ress, where a movement dc-

V(?lopcd to w ithho ld emergency fin anc ia l a id from the ca r­riers unless they aRreed to m a in ta in existing wage levels.

A t the roqiie.st oT C ha irm an W agner (D-NY) of the b an k ­

ing committee, the ,sennte sent back to the committee legis­

la tion w h ich \vouId provide

federal loans for tlic roads.■WiiKficr :akl ;.cvcrnl nicmbcrs of Uie

comniitice wnnlcd to tlinnge. tlic bill 10 prahSblt fcdcnil loaui' to car­

riers that Inrrcd ivni.'f- cut.s.

n ic WaKiipr firoui) jircviou.sly had approved ilic bill In 11.-5 pre.wiit form bal llic Ni-w Yorker *:ikl the action wa.'i taken before the waRc

HOySE APPROVESR[

A G RM N W RDEFIESWROENAS

General Cedlllo D c c ia r c s President o! Mexico

Planning AttackSAN LUIS POTOar. Mexico, May > (Friday) (/n-raeticral 8iitiiriiio

Cedlllo, ftccusfd by IVe.ildent Ururo Oordetitts of plotting-a revolt, told tho AMoclated Press Uiis moniliiK hn had been Infonned federal troo|>s would nttock him today.

Tlie agrarian leader nnld lie had "tnistworUjy" information that thn ll^ ildent was plannhig to "try to crtish niB by forco of arms."

He added defiantly:"I am ready to repel all aggres-

altm by mtftns of arr\\» tint, l piste tha rrspoplblllty for the blood that may be ^hed on the rapricn of the man wiio seeks to make of Mexico A dojwindency of tlie flovlet."

Qenerai Cedlllo mud^ Ills state­ment at I.OS Pnlomas; Ills CAlato near here. At thn time only right or ten men were thrre, AH his armed agrorluns wers gone, 'Iliey bad slipped away into the lillls. It seemed Uiat Cedlllo would follow them aiiortly.-• Yeaterdaj-Pnwldent Oardrnai ex- pr«Bse<l confidence he liad rllinlnat- ed the pasilblllty of revolt liy Onn- eml aaturlno Oedlllo’s agrarian

ntiyC a r ^ n u lald them, would bn no

need to ua« forco t*> carry wit hi* ultimatum to Codlllo to ntirrnidpr Uia arma and ammunition of his

itimaUd 40,000 agrnrlnn lollowers. The ^tirealdenl wlio liioiiglit his

own aoidlera here to eunure raliti in the (act ot rumore<l iinprndUig re­bellion said moAt ot thn ngrarlmis of 6iin Lula Potosl state had signi-

to enlist

McCormack Loses Fight to Provide tor Reser­

voir PowerWASHINQTON, May ID

M76,000.000 oninlljus flrwl <■ program rcfclvrd hoiinc ajipvo'

,iiay after n ripple of cxcltrinci tho iMJWer qui'stloii.

Tlie bill, p^n|m lng a flv . plan'of const ructlou, was pii.s.-ii'd by

standing vole wlthoia niiijo ameiidment.i. U now koc.h to tin

mate.Chairman Whiltlngloii (O-MI.n.-.

of thn hoiiJvC flood cimtrol comnilt tcc. who (Ip.scrlbt'd thn meitMire a.

broiid expansion of thn lft3(1 flood control act, won out hi a lively de <tc with ncprrsrntfttlvo MrCnr lack (D-Miffti) iiiul others who lined the |K)wcr Iwiue.McCormack wanted to ami-inl Ihi

bill to permit hydrocleotrlc drvrlop- meiit on rc.iprvolrs.

Tho hoiiBO rojected the amrnd ment after WhittliiHton lUKunl I-

no place in the flood i-nntrol program.

Tho house voted to ird

— rwenestn th* regular arnty.

Ueanwiille, a group of lO oljnnrva UOQ and oombat plane* were ordered ner« from Mexl^p Oity to Join Uie Already atrongly roiijorced iiiilltury larrtKma.

le fortho purchase of property iiiTdni for flood .control reservoirs. At present local conWbutlons of 100 i>er cent ore required, but tho bill rrduci this to ao per cent.

The bill would autluirltn coi structlon of approximately 100 river, walls and IDO reservoirs In many river bating,' Belrctlon of projects would be left to the army engineers.

F .D .R . Holds Up Tax, Bill Aclioii

WASIUNQION. Uay 10 (AV- Presldtot Roosevelt has lakcii no aotlon yal on Uie Ux revlslnn bill, which eonfna* passed May 11.

n ie blit atripa away all but vBstigB-'or the onflutmuted prorita t*». favored by the admlnlitratlon. and modinea thb oapltargaios lax.

lloweyer, lAformod legUlat^s ex. pressed belief Itr; RooMvelt would sign Uw biU. aald -he might IM) lioldinc it up untU he prepares n statemriil oriUoltlni'tha ohaniM in corportt* Uxatioiv

Ooi)vreN paaaed Uie measure May

POSSES PURSOE BAillSUSPEGIS

Officers Press Search for Airplane Thieves in

Rugged CountryINKOM-, Idaho, Mny 19 W

Tlic grim "fox-and-hounds" hunt throiiRli ^outlieaslcrn Idaho's morX rugged .countrj- wa.s ftcutcly pr/ws=' cd tonlRht bccau.w of a pot of boil­ing water and an identified foot­print.

Ccrtfllii that two bandits—sought after a plane was -stolon llicsday from Ogden, Utah, municipal air­port and wrecked ncnr here—arc still In this region, oncc the rcn- dcrvous of stngDcoach robbere, posses ^redoubled their vigil and

eneiratcti remote noota In the ills.-Soufht for q«o.-ittj5 tlng..*re -Ear}

GUb«rt, 22, Idaho TX-convict, and a<rtand -<Red) Hail, ID. brth-resl- denta of southenstcm Idaho.

That Hall wa.'i iii Uie. region was pstabllBhcd, State Patrolmun D. W. iDiid) Bllss'Kald, when Hall's fa- her, Hoyrnrd Hall of Prc.-iton, Idcn- :ifled a new footprint.

Bliss said the yoiith'.i father ex­amined a fresh prhit near Topons inger cabin and lold him; '“Those nrc my boy's. I can t<'ll

by the pwuliar clrcIc In lli« rub­ber heel.”

Earlier, a state patrolman and n deputy flhrrlff eiiteri'd the n- note cabin and found water boiling on

stove.DIIm said a diy Io;if of bread

was on a table."Tlio boiidlta could hide out In­

definitely with fnml,'- ^ald Htate Patrolman Elmi-r Ti-ny.

Aided by thn pociillur fiKii|irlnt, posses trailed the baiu1lt,-i tliroiiKh- out tho area, ll ie "fox" kept dnub- IhiK back on tlieir tri«'k;^

Terry said tiic baiulll,-. hail dou- blrd back over prcclpltuou:! ilnnne- vlll<- peak, hlghe^ hi the I'ortncuf range, toward Inkoni.

Police officers hi Utah. Wyoin- lug, MonUiia niiil Idalu) wer< warned to be. on thn lodkoijU foi Uin bundlU, aithouKh Tvriv m»U ho bPilevrt the men were Mill lint tied In Uin hills by thn heavily

The untniiV strike threat was eonl.-ilned In a .-statement by the railway labor executives' associa­tion.

Cliaraini: that lailroad rrtnnnRe- mcnl had "ilouble-tru.-Md" 11.S or- Kiinl/.ed employe;;, the i.tatemenl de­clared:'

"U the railroad nianacrinent.i in- •slst on going througli wlUi their at­tempt to cut pinployps’ wages 15 ix-r ccijt, thn only ultiniato result will be a iiatloii-wlde strike.

-'Ill* Railroad Workers of Ameri­ca. already gros.sly underpaid, sim­ply will not accept a wage reduc­tion ot any kind. They have already been lieavT sufferers from the rail­roads' policy of putting the payment of Intcrc.-it to wealthy bondholders above dooctit living standards for t h ^ cmployce.<>Thn labor executives said they

^'ouUl observe the r(illwny labor act, which provrdcs machinery for adjvisttng disputes, l»foro they re­sorted to & strike, but added;

•'If the railroads cannot be con­vinced that a v,-nge reduction is not only unjustified, but is absolutely dangerous to tbe economic .struc- •ture of this nation, it will be neces­sary for iho rollroad employes to use tlielr ecouomlc strength to save the vftlljoad fndustrv from commit*

(Oonllnua^ on Paga 3. Col. 4)

EAIPROi®fANS PROPOSED

' - . i

TAX UENB lirK UI-Oa ANOKLE8, May 10 i/l-,

come tax llenn were filed today against Neveral perttons. including Virginia llruee Ollbert, film actress, W l for iOafl: Henry Hidi, actor. (3^^ for lout.' mid Cllssa iJindl, actress, |l,28a for 1034.

MfiliTCIS uiiinnE

Detectives Seek Remains of W eaitiiy Widow in Mo­

jave DesertLOS ANGELES. Mq? 10 IfP)- cross thn wastes of tho Mojave

de.sert, 100 miles north of liere. de­tectives and a murder suspect trav­eled today looking for tlio hidden grave of a wealthy Los Angolcs widow.

Tho officers were directed illan Nell flos.i'. 30, who broko off

two pieces ot mescjulte bvu.li and »Vet\ \wn ho etecVed & H to mark the grave after,

he told autliorltic.i, ho burled her in he dead of night last March 0,The gravn souglit Is that of Leona

May Schmidt, 50, Hos.s’ mother-ln- law. who. Dctectlvo Mout. Prank Ilyan' said, lloss confessed, killing with a revolver. Ho sold Uierc had been nn argument over Rosi’ wife, who died two s-earn ago, and (hat lio killetl her hi her home with a single bullet.

Ross was questioned by detectives after Mrs. Cora A. Miller, Mrs. Oehmldt'H aUter, rejjorted her dis­appearance. Officers said he finally confessed.

"Iliit I can't remember where I burled her body," they quoted Ilosa as saying.

Administration H o p e s to Keep Surplus Grain

Off Market . .\VAij»I.*JGTON, May 19 (JV-A

prc.sldcntlal letter to congress dis-

cloMd today tlmt thn administra­tion Intends to lend wheat pro-

durers «120,OOO.CMX> to SlT.'.OOO.CKKl on

their surplus grain this year.

OfdclnLs said the purpose of t^a

loans would be to keep surplus wheat

off the market and thus preyent de-

momJlzation of tlHces.Mr. Roosevelt sent a reque.st to

Speaker -Bankhead for $80,000 to finance ft government licensing nnd -<■ supen'Wng of additional. facllUlp.': for storage of the grain. Ho asli;cd .__ congress to includc this fund In a •supplementary appropriation of •I.--' 030,000 for the agriculture depart­ment, J050.000 of which would be iLsed to control Insect pesta and plant dJseasc.s.

Surplus Estimated The president sent along, with

his approval, a letter to himself' from Daniel W. Bell, acting budget director. In it Bell said Secretary of Agriculture Wallace had advised him that the 1938 wheat crop as

' ' ^was e s t^ te d at 950.000.- . . . ____ib , and uiat domestic con­sumption and ei^rts»o< ,U»'Sniin during the marketing yew^etart-

on t M daK w^-expecta(l^<s

der the« condltlona a Itwa to pro­ducer* of wheat on the lOtt-wnlqil of some 200.000.000 buatiels v iil be ''neceasary. • - ■* .

■To more adequaKQt protect the collateral of the goveniment, I t la deslroble that Uie vheftToii whictv' loans are mado be atored’ ln grain elevators, licensed and supervised by Uie government," .

60 to se CcnU a Bnihel OUier officials said the new orop

control law authorizes the asricul­ture department to make' wlieat loans which, under present condi* tloiw, could range from 60 to 86 cents a bushel—or 1120.000,000 to 1179,000,- .000 on 300,000,000 buslieb.

AAA officials have been urglnx wheat growers to accept what they call a "reasonable" loan rale. They have not Intimated what the rate might be, for feat of affecting th« market. Tho figure may be an­nounced in July.

Diftlculty In fixing iho rate lies In the fact that a minimum i<m- of eo centa might bring pro^ecta from fanners, experts said, wnile b Bubfltantlally higher loan might peg tho domestic wheat price above the world level and atop exporlk.

Steel Chief Sights Road to Prosperity

M IN JU M D IN OO U tllO NDALLA8, May il» i/»i>j,Twcnty.

bun, an ambulance, an automo­bile here i«nlBht.

OHARLBSI^N, W. Va., May 10

(>r)-Ern<it T. Weir, iteel niagiiat«,<

advocating .a seven-point recovery ItfOgram tonight, pre<ltoled "men

wanted” signs again would hang on factory gates if Uio Rooievelt ad- mhilBtration changed Its policies "to aid and enoouraie private en- t«rprUo«.”

The outspoken chairmwi of the NaUonal BU«I corporation suggMt- ed to the West Virginia chamber of comlperee this program for reoor* vry: • - ■

"Restore confidence by an un­qualified'pledge to retain unaltered thn prlnelplea and sUuoture of Uie American lysleina o( business and of gOTenunent,

'Declare a permanent oolbqr with regard to baslo eoonpmw oontwi.

"Amend th« labor laws M they ahall be* fair and apply with 'eQual force t o ^ e employer, aU.attplWN and all ubor organl^iaUoM.' "Raroov# threau o f r™ oompetltion luoh aa Uwh a n g ^ uttmiN.*'......

“BetiS tiM ooroorani, tt*'OobKu and Uteir. kind biek «rli pama frtm. Oeaae attaeki

then Hllck"H Uiene Uilngs are done I pre­

dict Uiat wlUiln a period of from four to alx months tlie country will move definitely from this deprea* alon not to temporary reoovery buk to permanent improtameni. * • ‘Men wanted’ algna eventually would again han«>on faetory galea.

"If they are not dona wo n u it expect oondi^loni to grow 1y w ow ri^v 'U lk bfa 'noaatlon li ridiculous. This U dep ions, deep-rooted, and

. . . h^art’.' already had been arouied by preaidnUal Donferenoea with buaineaa men but

•ih S e n u 'a rS a X M ' '* S * 1 ^dent Rooaerelt.’ jVeiT. a itaunoh liapubllcui. utt-

•ID tha eonlni elMUoQi, Qs

^ UildMUndIhb iMuUta, tundUQWtal our eounto"

Okluholua Flood Damuges Crops ij

OKLAHOMA caTY, May IB Swollen Oklalioma streams poured j-> destnictlve waters Into western and. northern Oklalioma lowland areas tonight, damaging crops, wrecking’ bridges and disrupting train and automobile traffic.

Water waa running in Uie atneta! of Jefferson, in Grant county, but' . no immediate damage was reports^, '

W E L L .J’U TeUYouA preacher friend of mloa

Page 2: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

W O T TWO TWIN FALLS TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, FRIDAY MORNING, MAT 20, 198B

OPfflS ISSUES REF

, W ork M ust Be Provided in Industrial Cities Says ' WPA CMef

WAflHINaTON. Mny 19 W -The f»>i<Tal cfnvprnnignL mmt ProvldB more Tiori; rrllcf Jobs In oli llie big IndUftrlnl eltlc.1 to help mecl "a Ecriou.i rellcf-problcm" In the near future, Hftro' L- Hopkins said to- __

B rev itie sVltltj PartnU^Mra. Bill Blgley

Kone to MtlUn, Kans., to vklt !icr parenU, Mr. nnd Mm. John WoshbujTi.

BoUe TrljK-Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Mulder nnd Inmlly are cxpccLed

!tUm Saturday from'BoUe (nl- IK a mid-week vlilt in the cnp- :lt>-.

i5cletynJ6I.^VrU lirrrfo r'a v«-callon visit wUh her father, Dr. H. T. BllUngton.

A. adiiilnlsU-ftior'Told" reporters thnl federal work relief lists, on which 2,600,000 persona are now enrolled, would increaws short­ly to 3,800,000 and' might reach a peak of 3,000,000,

Increa;-es nilght apply, he «ald, to ChlcaRo nnd Clertlaud. wlierc *lato relief funcla have been exhausted,

"Wo are going lo have a serious relief problem In the near future, Hopkiai declared.

He said many family heads who lost their Jobs In the business slump weeks or months ago were now reaching the end of their own re

Also, he said, (fw aw.OOQ iiersQr

. ance might have to seek WPA en ployment when Ihelr Insurani checks Slopped,

STBMSIIISEI EflfS

Safely Consultant Here—Blnli Corey, safety conr.ultniit for tl WPA. Is In Fnll:i frcnii hBoise office, conferring with loci officials.

Attends Convention—Mrs. Cora ] Stevenj, Twin Fail,i county trca:

, and head of the State Assocll lion of County Treasurers, presided at the annual convention of the soclatlon In Boise yesterday.

Royal Neljbbor* — TJie noyal Neighbors of America will meet Frl. day evening a l a o'clock In the Odd Fellows hftU. All officers are urged to be present. Members an.f< vbll ing metnbcra velcome, '

Heavy Snow Blankets Rocky Mountain and Great

Plains RegionHELENA. Mont., M117 IB m - n ie

he»vl«t Uto spring mow and rain Btorm In » decade swept the nortli cm Rocky mountain and great pl|iiu region tonight, hampering ocsnraunlcatlons. slowing transpor- t«Uon and bringing a threat of flood at BUllngs, Mont.

Flood waters ran bank lu ll In Pl- anwt f i tk creek at BUllnga. Wa- t n stood bU Inches deep in the (treels. Irrigation componlu shut

- off headgite« west of the city today — M-the reln obnllniied.— -.Two-avlatorsrraaklng-special air­

mail week flights in Wyoming met /iiffipiiity rtnring thji r>ln t^day.

• - ^e plane Earl Campbell of Chey­enne. Wyo., was piloting to Sheri­dan. Wyo.. noaed over In landing at tha Newcastle, Wyo., airport. Camp­bell was not Injured,, and another plane was sent from Ch^cnne to

' retrieve the mail and complete'its delivery by train'.

Rain and hall forced PfltJT E\-- eratt Hogan of Lusk, Wyo,, to make two forced landings, but he com­pleted his flight and delivered II,- 000 pieces of mall to 14 poslofflces lo Mlobrsra county.

AU Montana airplane nighU were . eaneelled, aon^ l a n d ^ fteldf, aoaked by three days o f rain, may

’ ' sot be usuable for several days.Telephone and Telegraph poles ii

the mountain areas broke under thi weight of Ice-encnisted wires.

Heavy snowplon-a that had been dismantled were put bock In ser­vice by the highway department to clear snow from high paaies between Helena alid Butte and Helena and Missoula.

Trains, running behind schedule, crept Into Helena.

The snow on Boulder hill between Helena and Biitte was reported IB to 30 InchM deep.

Power and communication 'llnw sagged’ and nnapped at Bgzemnn. Mont., imder the weight of a foot of mow (hat fell there. Power i>er- vlCM was disrupted at Intervals through isjt plght and today,

Yellowstone park received four Inches of new snow, and the

• exVtntied Into Ihe country ci the park.

neturns (o Indiana—Miss Myrlam Slcber returned this week to her home in Goshen. Ind., after spend­ing the past year in Twin Tails. She was a member of this year's graduating class of the high school,

Hummel VisUs-Coloncl F. C, Hummel, commander of t*e U6th Engineers, was In Twin Falls Wed nesday night to Inspect the mcdlcal ilepartment detachment of the local iroop. He left here Thursday for Jerome and from there will return to Boise,

HosplUl Note. — Fred Williams and Merton Boss, Twin Falls; Mrs.

KMbtlelsch. Filer, ana Mra. EdIUi Bolton, Castleford, have been idmltted to the Twin Falls county

ho.spltal. Miss Hascl Howard, Twin Falls; Fred Bhaub. Buhl, and Lloyd

lybeal, Kimberly, have been dis­missed.'

R OUIil D BRIGHT

Reclamation L ^ d e rs to Dis­cuss Development a t

Session HereIdaho icclatnatlon leaders will

leet here today to discuss a water cTtiopnitnt-lutufe termeU-‘'tglgnter lan for several years." Principal neakers listed are R, W. Farls^ Idi 0 commLwloner of reclamatloi .lien C, Merritt. slaCe public works

ning board ‘corisultant; . Lynh Crandall. Idaho Falls reclatnalloi leader, nnd Governor BaralUa W Clark, who will speak at the lunch'

N. V, Sharp. Filer, chairman of the Idaho WfUer Conservation b.ard, Is presldent-oLU>e sUte'fec- lamatlon association, a voluntary organization open lo r membership to anyone Interested In Irrigation.

Tlic meeting will open at 10 a. m at the.Idaho Power company a u i

im. recess at noon for a lunch, at the Park hotel and re-convene e to coacljjde business.

, Lost on Big Airliner M K PREDICIS W ea th er DEALFORBRIDGE

GON PRIMARYmmiContlnucd From Pago One)

Martin said the national labor re­lations board was "impotent" to act aTid called Secretary of Labor Per­kins "that miserable secretary of labor." The campaign against van­dalism rr.sulted In scores of ar- rf.sl.'i and already more than 30 men have been scntCKced to Jail or

PlERIilPlil

W

Attend Moose Meet-O. A. Bled- esell; A.-6. Mort and Vlrjll Mort nnd H, 0. Erlcson attended Buhl Mowe lodge ses-slons" last evening, A clo.u of candidates were initiated, Including come from Twin Falls lodge. Refreshments were served by

Ladles' Auxiliary. Members of Auxiliary presented a drill.

WS DELira 20,000 LETffi

(Continued From Pasr On In* expedltlni), flew hl.i iilniin here to Cilrjuis I'Vrry lo pick iii; city’s mafi,

Boise PoMma,^t^r llnrry I,, was chairman of tlm Mnho mittee for the observnnrc.

IHll ClT I IVIi1 lnii)ort

ant event Iti communlcallon hern with over 1,100 plMfs of airmail matter being sent lo nohe. ■ivin Falls, Kimhcrly, Vt\A\\ and Flltr r» sent one bag of mall out on tlip

>tane piloted by Lionel IXan wlilrh left the alrpoK at II n, in.. Weather eondltloiu were adveiM

when the plana took off and only handful of npectntors were preieii to witness thn event. Rain wan fall Ing Intermittently with a rhll

, breexe blowing when the plane wen into the air. Arcompnnylnt Deai was O. A. Kelker of the Idaho Rve nIng Times who made the trip as i passensrr.

Dean arrived In Holie at 1 :(ia p. m . and the mall carried on Ills »hlp wa* Immediately sorted a l n B]ieclal poatofflcA set up nt thn alrporl and re-routed to varloiw dmiinatlons,

. The fllghls fn noUa will demon­strate the poulblllty of feeder lines from all teoUons of (he atatr,

Oliver, the first pilot lo arrive, carried mall from Hurley, Rupeif, Deelo, Albion; Oakley. {JlioMicmo, Hatley, Kalrfleld and Run Valley. lAmotna fllevesvs, tlylng «\»t ti{ Jrv- ome, carried mall froni that point, Haaelton, Eden and Ooodlng.

RfieKN HKAltT HAI.MLOa ANOELEfl, May 10 , (/T) -

Charles tliat Busby Uerkelry stoli Uit affecUons of Carol Undl*, •cn tn aelreu wife of Irving Wheel- «#, w»r» oontabMd iu a qiiarlar-of-a- mlllion dollar heart balm suit (lied I aiipertor court herr* loday by il' liuabimd against (ho film dlrreio

Hc.'v who served two terms li lie :.inlc legislature, claimed • th' upiiort of labor organlzutloiis whet le wn.s an unsuccessful candidate <ir ;i federal judgeship last year

Of Miirtln ho said: " j lic natlonn ilstratlon has repudiated hin Is urging the Democrats o

Oregon to, vote for me." W illc li ipimrtcd the president, Qofcrno

Martin said he was not "a rubbc

mcE. iiffl ■N iSSO(Continued Frcm.-P^e One)

tiers Ttgalnat "all attempts «t vio­lence,"

"The London conversations (of .pril 28-3B)," lie sftlri, "reinforced tie Franco-Brltlsh entente—an en­

tente which threatens nobody, which on the contrary Is a means toward Europewi pence."

II Duce-s main demands for sIrii- g an accord with France-and le replies—were reported as fo

lows:Muisollnl: France must clo.se In

Pyranees frontier with Spain before Italian troops fighting In the civil

ar will be withdrawn.'Tlie reply: France will clo.' e the

frontlar only after the Italians Joavo Spain.

Mus.V)llnl: Italy will con.wrlpt troojvi In Ethiopia unless Fraiicc

ilses not. to recruit troops In colonial empire.10 reply: France refused and Is-

an order recrullliiB 00,000 ad­ditional colonial soldiers,

Maxim Ulvlnoff. Soviet RiisMar foreign comml.ssar. Mill was In Pari? tonlnht, determined to keep ft way open tor )ia.vMiRe of arms and am­munition Into Kuvcrnmrni flpain ar long as Italy krep.s lirr lr(xnw "'111) the liisurgeiiui.

idldatc, O. HCnrj’ of St. Helens, sought the

Democratic gubernatorial nomlna-___Mahoney and.Uonauth locrats will ch’obse between

Willis Malioiicy of Klamath Falls, who lost to Republican Senator Charles McNary a l the general dec-

.... ..nd Carl Donaugli, United States attorney, for United States

fus C, Holman, state id Robert N. Btjinfleld,

former senator, arc Uic Republican andldatcs. Each parly will noml- late a candidate to succeed Sen- itor Evan Reamefl, Democrat, to 111 an unexplrcd- term until Jan- lary 3.

Tlie short senate term will ex­tend from the general electlo:i.s In Hovtmber wnlH JariMary 3. 'il'ie winner will r e-p 1 a e o Sc:intor Reanies, appointed when Soiintor Frederick fit<lwer rn> rcslKned, Tliree RepffbMcans, Alex G. Dnrry, Portland. Rcade M. Itrlmitl, Clack-

■ Id T. Mc'Nary Weed, Washington county, scrk liie nom- 'natlon. Robert A, Mlfler of Port- and Is the unopposed Democratic :holce.

Republicon CongreMmnii James W. Mott wilt defend his (li.d dls- rlct seat against Walter Noililad, \siorla, and Represciitatlve Walter I’ lercr, La Grande Dnnorrat, will ipposo Wado Crawford. KIniuath Falls, In the second dl.itrlcl. Con­gresswoman Na'n Wood Hi

Mystery S I i f o i u I h

HcluiKclini^f]; I'alc

many seems to ki Morn for fallen I (khusclinliiif,

A re^ponsltllfl goV' man /.aid tfiday, he .■'Itimlloii for ! <•llll. c forced iml of offlri troops maiThed lii1<11, liii

'I'hi

I’ainler to .Spciik Al Bmili CoiH'liivtHoy Painter of the Fidelity Na­

tional rank will attend the idahi Hankers’ aisoclatlon meeting a Lnwlntoii June (1 and 'I .ami wU serve as toaiHnianter at the linniiA baiKiuet. Fred Hinting of Altilm and A, » , mwsiin ol nurley aim plan To attend.

Painter Is also llntrd on thn pio gram for a Ift minute inlk mi "Vlo lent Crime In nanks" l.ant yenr the convention was hrid In 'IVlii Falls wlUi nuy Hhrarer of Twin FallB presiding as preMdent.

M.AYr.n »)ONvn*rw» TAMPA, Fla., May Ifl (/»’) -- Aftei

delllH-iallng 11 mlnutei.. a elr.ndt rourt Jiii-y tonlglil coiivluted I'niil K Himne, HJ-yrur-old Herman poet, of the first detiiee murder of hi* wife, here May 3. 'Hie jury did not reconmiend mercy. Death In (he elertrlo clialr I* mandatory,

AlHiiil a PHWiijers I/)ndon in

lUarter'nillllon n irrlveatand <le|

a-golng

EAIENSIRIKE(Conltmicd From Page One)

B social fiulclde and dragging

er industries along with It."

n n;iklnB the senate to send, the'

Iroad bill back to committee, WaRiier salrt 11 would be

stamp."Gnu

eportcd again He .said that when the committee

ipproved the program, drawn to arry out recommendations of labor, nanagemenl and administration of- flclaLs, there wa.s no dlKUSsion of a Ihicntciicd wage reduction." -

The labor executives’ statement iUiiiiiteil that a 15 per cent pay it. would Ukc M50,000,000 a year •oin workers' pay envelopes, Wagner said he would soon hold lidlilonal hearings on the lending

program, at which management and labor "would be asked to present

views on the wage cut pro-

icpreLonta

Jacob Wagner, Portlniid,

Farley I';iu1oi-h<‘8

(jovcriior IX'liiuunNF;W YORK, May ID

I'roopM .Spar for Upland I’oHllioiiH

HKNDAYK, Kin

lilriia Ue Uudar, IS nt -IVruel, an Ins

nrd Mora I)e Ilu>i|el'

•nU "if li

Chairman Wheeler (D-Mont> of le .senate Interstate commerce

committee said ho would not m»kc fiRhl for the lending program ir linlnLstratlon supporters turned ;alnst It. He said he helped to pre­

pare 11 only because of ndmlnL- tra- tlon recommendaUons.

Speaker Tell§ of European TravelsHighlights of a trip to lialv ink-

II ft year ago were tnlti lo local Klwanians by Lleulennnt-Ciovernor ■ les Palumbo of the WrMerii Iria-

KlwanLs club al their luiiMieon meeting at the Park hotel Thurs­day.

Palumbo made the trip wUh lilr. broUicr, spending ^ome tinie on tiio

lUnent and attending ilie no­tary convention In Italy.

Superintendent Homer M. Dnvls 'liorletl that 30,000 bollk, <,i ],i||k

had l>een dlstrlbut<'.( (InritiR the past three months In a milk fund project at the local wIiooU. Clintle.s aiilrlcy played two Kc!ectlnn. mi his

'■ 1, being accompanied on iho 1 by MLss Lucille NorMl. response to a bid t<> aiKnd

the All-Klwanis night and >llnii(-r ,l Twin Falls on June 37, liiilil and 'Her clubs sent Ihelr accrpinnce. H. H, Hedstroni presided al the nerilng and Stanton Hale vuis In charge of the program.

Ju r is t Decrees ' Public ^ ip p iu g

For Boy ThievesFITCHBURG, Mas.?., May 10 (/D—

An Episcopal rector tonight upheld a judge who ordered' ttie parents nf two boys, found guilty of .-iteallng, to "horsewhip their sons publicly wlihln three weeks.”

Even (tf the parents of William Allen, 15, nnd Harold Woodworth 16. branded Judge Tliomivs F. Oal- IsKhers order "uncivilized," nnd de-

. cllncd to cnforce it, Uie RcV. Fred crick H. Sleep, rector of the church of ihe Good Shepherd, .said they Mould show their-''gratitude" to he judge for saving the boys from I jail Hcnteno?.

"No one enii doubt the Judge wnvinced-thfft 'a whlppintrrb*.ban any other punhhment, woulcj 'elurn ihc boy.s to honest taskV •Mr. .Bleep said. -

"Surely there can be no shame r degradation In the proper pun- hmenl of a child for wrongdoing.’ But Mr.-i. Joseph Allen, mother o. even children, who said she cpokt )r boili families, declared "11 Is Dt civilized to whip people. \ nvc no right to do things like tli

dog."to

Nazarene College Funds Approved

SPOKANE, Wash.. May 19 (/Ph- A 110,000 completion program for the Northwest Natarene college and lanltarlum at Nampa, Idaho, was ipproved hero tonight by the Northwest Nazarene assembly.

Tlie assembly aUo allowed a J2.500 general budget for Uie col­lege and a »,M0 general budget, 70 per cent of which will go Into mis- ilonary work.

FUNi^ALSWILLIAM AUSTIN

Funeral servlees for Wlllliim A n of Rook Cri-ek wIiii died H ay will be held at 2::in p. ni. I

urday nt the Twin Fnll» mniU; :hapel wlUl.tlie llev. Oeoinr Itc l>erry nf the Melliiidlst rliiiH'li Rupert and llir Hrv. T. W, I10'*'i r the Methodl.U clmrfli at K :rly ofClclatlnK. Intemienl will I thn ■J'wln Fnlls .emelny.

JAMRM II. HTIM.Wi:!.!.

Herviccs for James 11, ililll 111 bo held today nl p m ni

■fwln Falls mortimry'rlmp^l t

III be in Ihe Twin l"n tery,

CI.ro FAV TIKIMH

nUUI.ny-Funeriil rm oieo Fny Thomsnn, h

lighter of Mr, and Mm omtion, who died Tiie-d

local liMpltnl, \MI >l 2 p, in. nt U

rd L. n.Friday i'ililillinliInte;

HidiK>nt will l>e In

:ietery-

'F LO iirN tr. om i nunt.CT- Beivluvi („|

Orr. IB-year-olil cUmKlitn and Mrs. Robeii n. (ii,-, \ Moiiilay of iieiiiiihiii;,, «iii Friday

a picnic al the filer fair ground. lat« In June or the first part of Jtijy. The committee will be named at' a. later date to cooperate with Mrs. O^-W. Witham, women’s presi­dent and her committee.

Oovemor Clark paid a short visit to the CCC dancc at Kimberly afte) the meeting rnd spoke briefly. Hi will attend the meeting of Uie Idaho Reclamation society in Twin FoUi today.• The next meeting will be held In Buh! early In June,. Johnston nounced at the meeting.

Parole-Violator-

Returned to PenMitchell Wiley, escaped parole

violator frwn McNeil Island wa! on hls'way "back home" today will:

al of United States Dep­uty Marsliall Dave Nichols from Pocatello to Ukc the man Into tody. Wiley had given himself up .1 the local ponce station a week ,igo stating that he was "<lrcd, cold and hungry" and would ra­ther return to McRell than -'suffer" and be "hunted."

Nichols arrived Tliursday aftc) noon with a warrant for Wiley ar the pair left immediately for thp Washington penitentiary.

Rubber Company Employes Strike

AKRON, 0„ Mny 2Q (Prldny)(yPJ- The United Rubber Workers of America (O. I. O.) went on strike early today at the B. F. Goodrlcli -comp*By-a»-a-r*tull,-Unlon Presi­dent L. J. Callahan said, at the dismissal-of three employes,

Callahan .said Uic rubber.£am- pany's midnight shift-did not-enter the plant and- brought operations virtually to a sUridstlll. The firm employes approximately GOOO per­sons. Callahan said at least 85 per­cent of these are union members,

Goodrich and the union have been at odds for months over wage re­ductions proposed by the company.

IdjChoi clendy and nnM(-tled Friday and Batorday; poMlble l« a l showen aontb portion Friday: rialn* lenperatDre Saturday.

Thursday's high and low temper- itures were 61 and 33-degrees. Pre­

cipitation during the 24-hour period ■ending at 5 p. m. amounted to .62 >f,arfinch', .the federal weathi server reported. Winds were iablfl and.the day was partly cloudy. Humidity rangrd between 8« ai ' per cent of aaturatlon.

Arirona to the Qreal Lakes, Interaction with a belt of high pressure across southern Can- Ida has caused general prccipita- ion over the entire nortliern half )f the country, excepting tho Pacific lorthwest. Tlie largest reported imount was .63 of an inch at Helena, Much of the moisture fell as snow........... northern Rockies, wheretenfperatures are far below normal, Weather Is unseasonably cOol in Utah and Nevada also, but other sections of the country are warmer,

Stationi Max. Min. Free. Wthr.

.03 Rain •

.06 Cloudy

.14 Cloudy .C4 Rain .16 Clear T. Cloudy

i r sNew Vork--- 64Omah*...-..;---« -Pocatello ....... 52PortUnd, Or^ SOReno ..............64Salt Lake City 69.San Fran........68Seattle 5Spokane .........68Twin Falls ....SIWashington ...64

-M— M ^t.C ly ,30 .02 Rain-&0 .00 Clear38 .00 Cloudy

.34 T. CloudyS2 .00 aear62 .00 Clear52 .00 Clear M .62 Pf. Cly.54 .03 aoudy

Wheat Traders Voice OptiuiiBin

CHICAGO, May 19 i;p)—The Unit­ed States, some grain traders ob­served tonight, has prospects o: maintaining a good position In the world wheat export TOXtkct, a l least until the harvest of new crops In Argentina and Canada.

These traders believe this becausc wheat prices are the lowest In four years and have been declining with prices In other exporting countries.

Kllghtly toiiihnt In ittmnHei

NION AOIIKKMI'NI' W A fllllNdW N , Mny 10 (/IV-llie

United lllnlrs and Veneninla have signed a provUlonnl •'miiineridal

niing rarli olhrr illnn IreitUp<'iil, tiu' nl Hiiniiuiireil tn-itntfl '

llllit.

II 1.. 1).I llimir.'i

at the

C .W . & M . C O .

Drip CoffeeMakers .............BowlWhlpi ........ .....DoubleBoilers..............Aluminum Hoy KcoutCoak Klti HollerHh»tr» ..............[lelt and l,«att.i

Ilf tdkeirtn till

niaehlneI'linnhei .........HeylhBHtone» ...........Red Top TirePum p i...........Custom nulltHammem ......'.........V, and n..IUmm*n ..............Dlamalioy KlaplnI’iilleni ....................<rollar Padi, Tapatoi nu it ProDt V. and n.Matrhrta ,

"'.“r " —..... 69cZ \r .......... : 99 c

.... $ 1 .6 9SAVE AT TIIR 0, W, AND M

TI1I8 WKr.K ANII KVKIIY WeEK

CONSOLIDATKI)WAGON AND MACIIINI

COMPANY Twin

8 9 c $ 1 .0 9

S9c 9 9 c

$1.X9 7 9 c

$ 1 .5 9 $ 1 .1 9

7 9 c 3 9 c 6 9 c

$ 1 .4 9 4 9 c 89c 9 9 c 4 9 c

$ 1 .2 9

g . r , , ^ ------------------------------ w

S* Whe£5’6u buy quality foods—economic- J ally—square pleased. It is our constant {

J endeavor to always please. We know you W9 i i r i l l Vto r\lAoonr1 iirtfV i fP iA re ^

L

W will be pleased with the foM>^ing

VALUESFriday and Saturday

P R IC E S P L IT T E R spec inclg.de many o f the finest

changed automobiles we've h id

in many a day-nod we’ve raada a deep cut In the regular price of every e x c h a n ^ car in itocki There’s a lot ot real mon»*taving bnrgainj on our lot. They arc

worth every M nny o f the regular

price, N O W at these deep May price cuts, chey’r® rare bargains such ai you haven’t seen In many - year.

Come earlv-your nreient car may

“ lae the down payment.I. Look at these

easily

Convenient lei bargains.

STEP UP TO THE V-8 CLASS

33 V-8 •i'udor Bedan ...........gna

U V-B l>luxe Tudor Hedin |27fl

3!> V-a -nirtor Bedan, 38 Lie. 1360

3ft v-n neluxo rordor Sedan I30B30 v-fi 'iudor aedan ......... Has

3fl V-n Dehixe Fnrdor Bedan M1B3,> V-R nelilXfl Coupa .......... »37B

37 v-n Kordor Sedap, 38 Lie. •.IDS:i7 v-(i -nulor fledaii ......... IM5

iiirt Bedan, lYunlcI ilii I n Sedan, 38-Lic. *140

ntllCKH TRUCKB TltUOKH.1(1 l)o(lnn 1(17 J)ual Wheeli ..,.|31)9 Dll aiievrolet 187 Huai

WheelR ....................... MOflnnv-ii 'I'liii'k 187 Stake Body

New Motor.......-........v-fl 'I’riiek, New Motor,IS7 .

........................ .IIDBrnrrt 'micit, state Body.„.|-en

.w V-il titake piukup .... *<98:>n v-B pinkiip, 38 Ho..........4 «8

M a n v l l lC ir i

UNION MOTOR CO.

Your FORD Dm 1«T

)Directors Recommend Sale

of Properties to t V A for $ 7 ,9 00 ,000

NEW YORK. May 10-W) - Tlie i.ilo c t btlw ffl TVA ana utlUly

systems In the Tenneasee valley, over disposition ot private properties in the face of government competition,

broken on a major scale for the • today when directors

Tliey recommended to stockliold- ra the acceptance of an offer of

$7,900,000, made at Knoxville and the TVA, forTjropcrtlcs ol a sub­sidiary, Tennessee Public Service company.

Tlie directors' decision came af- ter the TVA and Knoxville auUiori-

booated by $400,000 their offer of 17,500,000 made a weelc ago—and which, at the time, they character­ized a* "final,"

National Power and Light offi­cials said the higher offer waa made

Washington-yesterday when P. Sau7er, president of the utility

company, conferred wltlT-represen- tatlves of the purchasers.

~ <7,000,000. the . company,’?

Wall Street WPA Project Favored

WASHINOTOr^' May 10 W7—The securities commission received today a request that It Jponsor a WPA project in Wall street,

A delegation from Uie United OV fico and Professional Workers ot America made Uie request. Rob­ert Curtis, Ita spokesman, said a p- ,^^ proxlmately 10,000 brokerage w ork-w ', ers had loet. their Jobs In Wall 7 street In the last six months.

Any SIxe fi or S Expotora Developed u d One Print of Eaeb

2 5 c nSX. » 5 cCUT-RATE FIKISHEBB

Bisbee BIdg.

at the J

Idaho Dept. Store

RAISINS

Thompson’s SeedlcBS

4 l7 t...25cSPINACH

■■Bonltii" No. m can

2 ,„ .......... 27CTiro 8 Ot. rackacea

,POST TOASTIES' One R Or. Piwk«i[e

HUSKIES

............ 1 5cCHEESE

Chnllengc Full Crcnm-

.... i s cKraft’s French

DRESSING .B Ot. Bottle

Z,„-...... ... 29CCATSUP — Plerccs Pure TomatoCntfliip. 16 or. can....................................... A w w

SHKIJ.EI) WALNUTS — Light Mcnt-s. jg 1 Pound ............................................... ...... 4 3 ^

CANDY CIIEWINfl KISSl Pound .............:................ ...:........19C

DIJX PICKLESJ^nlloy'n Q ua rt Jn r25c

CRACKERS' "Cftscjulc”

Sm ull Sftlter W iifo r j p o i i n d

, Box . ^ 1 9 c

DIUlil) APniCOTS — llrlRht FruU. Pound ....

II ’PimiTAN SPICEI) lAINCllKON MKAT k 12()i:. Can.................................................. ^

KrtKSH BTRAWBERniEfl —Per Hox ...................................

COFFEE• DrllB Star"

COOKIESVancjr AaodrUd

... 1 9cSALMON

Fancy Ited Bockeye

......... 2 5 c

"MELO”

Cleanser and Water Softener

IVkinn ....... A y C

IOC

NU BORAOrnnuUtcd 8onp 06 Or. Pfickftge49C

^ Use our free delivery serviee, Four free ^

^ deliveries cach'day within the city limits J

S Idaho Dept. Store M^ “If ri^sn’t Bight, Bring It Back” ^

Page 3: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

;■ -TWIN P A tM NEWS. TWIN TAUJS, IDAHO.TRTDAY MORNING, MAY 20, ig^g P A G B l i i t M '

<Graduating Glass of

-195 Given DiplomasLarge Audience Witnesses Comrifencement

Exercises at Tvvin Falls High Sihool

Impressive In the ir royajT jlua academ ic caps apd gowna, 1G&members of the Tw in Falls h ig h school class of 1938 re'

celved d ip lom as a t commeticcment exercises last evening ‘ the h ig h school gymnasium . An aud ience th a t filled

Targe auclllbriuni to capffCIty, was~prc5cnt~ lirTccoBnl' of the scholastic a tta inm en t "bf the class.

C on tinu ing an innovation of la s t year,- three boys and two girls delivered pertinent talks In place of the customary

• ■ .... ................. T ljuy ■ -- - ......... ........

BRIMS FEARS

“ '■com'mcntcnrcn't^

were selected on a basis of

scho larsh ip standings.The speakers dlscuwed a

variety of jubjecla. but each^edffed fidelity to Amcrlctm Idenls and ftc-

W ccptcd on bchfljr of the i-oungcr gcn- W oration todny's Challenge to defense

of these ideals.Accompantcd by clas, ndvUcre.

Miss Helen Mlnler and Oerald Wnl- ](icc, the graduating cliuis filed In­to the Bymnaalum os the high Kchool band plfli'ed "March From Alda" by Verdi m the-proeeiislonBl.J, T. Balnbrldge dlrcclcd the num­ber.

Rev. H. E, Heilman proiiotmeed the Invocation, nnd MI&? Mildred Brngg nang a solo, precedlnR the first addrp;a of the evening., "Am­erica—rortimato In 1038" by Asher B- Wilson, Jr.

.......... -Virginia Kcrlln. Gpcond - Biwn'tor,cliose as lier subject, "Education nnd

. . Damocraoy.” ..............Tlilrcl fijKaiccr. Bert Tolberl. ad­

dressed the Kradimtes and the nud- lonce on "The Individual and So­ciety."

Tlie glrlV sextet sang a selecllon, directed by Loyd Thompson, and the orchestra followed wlth a num­ber, "Prelude to Lohengrin' Wagner.

Lucille Tinker “ dir,cussed "My

f Ideal Future America.”"Tho American 8yflt«n of Gov­

ernment—What Will We Do With It?" was the question answered by Edward Benoit.

Reeclve Scbolarihlps Studer^ta of the cla.« who quail-

lied for RCholarshlps were then hon­ored. Mis . Harry Ball, president of Twin Palls chapter. American A.'ao- clatlon of University Women, an­nounced Vlrglnlt KeUln>i* the win­ner of the A.A.U.W. scholarship award. Lucille Tinker was named

' u altemftt£.Superintendent Homer M. DavU

_____presented Uie Qoodlns ioUege tcliol-arshlp to I^valn F. Barnett.

Bringing the commencement ex erclses to a climax, I>rlnclpal H. D

V. Hechtner presented the class of 92 girls and 103 boys, and George Ward, chivlnnan of the board of Khool Inistcca, presented the di­plomas.

Rev. Van B. Wright pronounced the benediction, and the graduates marched out ot the gymnasium to the band’s recessional, "Commence­ment March ’32." compo.«d by Mr Balnbrldge. and transcribed for thr band this past ?i-eelt.

. • Receiving diplomas were:A GUlfl of CliM

• Kllnor M- Alldrltt. LueUa Alls- berry. Doris B. Andrews. Mor- tha. E. Anbury. Helen E, Bailey Madonna S. Bailey, Lavaln P. Bar­nett, Helen D. Blggerstaff. MildredT). BragB, MftTle F. Brenntn. Rult-Ellen Brose, Mnty E. Buckmnster. Theora Bplle Bums, Clarodelo Cald- •well, Wlnonn Cook, Oleta M. Davis, Carmen L. DeWltt, Maxine L. Doss, WandaSW. Eaton, Dorothy M. Eb-

^-frliardt.Betty L. Emerlck, Edna Lee Esllng-

er. Doris M. Evans, Selma M. Evans, Ardltli Fllnn, Margaret L. Gee, Ruth A. Gibson, r . Priscilla Olnson, Ter- Mft M. Greene. Loreart A. Halne.i. Mftrjorlo Jane Halpln. iJiDeano Harrte, M. Jean Han’ey, Lol.i V. Hayden. Blnora A. Helms, Dorothy O llochn. I-eenuo B. Kollman, Katherine M. Hoovgr, Alice E. Irish, Ruby M. jnyncs. Jean R. Jone.i.

Mary M. Kawal. Virginia.D. Ker- ]|ii. Mildred I,. Klnder5 Mary 1/)U Klrknian. Naoinl Klrkman, Olllmae KnlRlit. Nolft M. Krager. FroncM M. lang, Leota Llerman, Mnrgaret E. Jflwe. JBOJUie D. Lynes, Nellie Moo

■ McBride. Blidella E. McClain, Doris L. MoDoniJd, Melvlna E, MoNealy, Hazel Eleanor Malone, Barbara Mln- nlek, Helen J. Mofflt, Eileen Glv)n. Ma« Parker.

Angolliio A. Peovcy, Priscilla M. Prunty, Marjorie C. Riyl, Ruth

/ need, Entd Francis Richards, Pa­tricia L. roie. Ulllan 0. Roberts, Rutho A. Roberta, Cnrol J. Robert- non, Jennnfl D. Robliuon, Edna M. Rynn. Ruth Birliwmllman, Marie A. ac4ij. JuHa, E. aiiephenl, Myrlam Eallier Sleber, Roaemnry Sinclair, Maxlntt O. BmlU), Shirley Jane flmlth, Marjorie E. Spencer, Hw- rlptt« J . Btannbury,

Dorothy Jane Strain, Audrey •nimnpson; EUieJ Lucille Tinker, Virginia E. Waddell, Argle L. Weav­er, Betty J- Wegener, Eleanor T. Weaner. Oraca F. WelU, Gloria M, Went. Billy May V ajlte, Jsne Wylie.

Cloai of Doya nut AdaniK. Warren M. Adnmson,

Deo W. Aliuiworth. Tom E. Allen, Wendell Almqulut, Annour A. Ander-

r ron, WlUon Q. Anderson, WaynoAnnU OroAby n » r n a t t ,

Edwin Allen Deck, Edward L. nonolt, B dwartl E. B ortJe , O r v ln W. niMid, O h a r le a r. tie, Orvln W. Hlajid, Oliarles E, Brewer, Alma N. Briiikerhoff, Doug R. Brown, Graham 0, Browne, Mau­rice H. Oapivi. Prank E. Carpenter.

KenneUi .R- Otapaaddle, Dale W. Oolemaji, Jiinliis'Cook, Carl J. Doe- nett. Alan Edwards, Herbert D. Ed- vi&rctt). lArry M. ElIU, Jimmie Rlcli-

USlh P ' v-v;.™noy Olklu, Dale Jim Griffith, Lewis 0. Glittery; W il­lis 11. HaiiillUin, Kenneth F. Mann, I)l<;k 0. Uurijor, Doi» W ., IJarder.

WIlUs K. HoUiu. Paul e.'ItAlton, U'^tcr I ninU. EiiEcne R. Hinted, imlniid Hutohlnson, Ulaln# Hyde, ic*nneth Ciydn Ketm, _Theron • D, Kniaht, Uoy‘> Kuykendall. I/m«ll KiiykemliiU. CliBrlen 'l\ Lamon.

to I ’aul W. M. I*, lifiww, Nor-r man a. Wda, O. Gilbert Mcmil. ' R, Mttiel, I*-

Marvin F. Muyu, Halbert V. Miller, Raymond Q. Mills, Wovdin 0. MUU. . Richard Morris, Duane Morrison,

Great Naval Station- and Fortifications Ready ^ ^ S l n g a p o r e

By JAMES A. MH.I.S SINGAPORE. Straili t

Bt thp AP Feature Sen Ice

G URGED AS PEACE MOV

Nation’s Parents Condemn W a r a t Final Session in

Salt Lake CitySALT LAKE CITY, Mny 18 (/D-

The nation’s parents who today condemned war as a "menace to :hlldhood” were coumcled by a Cal- fomla rabbi to go home and "prop­

aganda proof their children."Wc must preijare our children to

Ivo In R world, with other jwople ond get along with them," dcclnretl Rftbbl Edword F. ^yiagnln of Lob Angeles In a speech prepared for delivery at the final M.wlon of the 42nd annual convention of the Na­tional Congress of Parents and Teachers.

history should' be taught In such a wny as to make the boys and girla think about it and contrast our fortimatc lot with that of people In backward couji- trles. Tlicy must be made propa­ganda proof and be taught how to avoid demagogues and how to cr vl- iioto them properly."

In ft day devoted to rc.iolutlon.-; and speeches urging the clean.slng of youthful bodies and minis, dele­gates concludcd tUelr coiwcntlon and turned over to their bgard of managers nnd executive committee the Belectlon this week-end of a 1039 convention city from bids which included liidlnnapolls. Cin­cinnati, Oklahoma City, Omaha, St. ■Louis nnd Honolulu.

The congress’ four resolutions. Ttad'by'Mrsr JrWrSnydcr of Far­go, N. D., were passed without mo- jor change. Tliey held that "war nnd all that It entails Is n menace to childhood nnd nil for which It stands;” reiterated the congress', contention .that health is a local, slate aTid national responsibility; recognlzcd the "right of every child to such training as will develop his, chnractcr nnd enhance his person­ality," and contended that "If the public school is to meet Its responsi­bility In a changing order of society. It must prepare those who will claim the rlghts of democracy for the-so- clal adjustments In i^hlch these rights may be realized."

The American Medical associa­tion's bureau of health and public instruction director, Dr. W. W. Bauer of Chicago, told delegates from rural communities that If they

' , . .uate medical carethey ^jould patronize the country doctor. "Who Li probably Just competent as the city BpeclalUt,’ ailments other than colds and t fingers.

He decried hurried hcnitli exam­inations of children, as more detri­mental than beneficial nnd eald 'the Importnnrn of health check­ups is not the frequency but tlw adequacy.-

"Economic conditions determine the amount and ndequacy «( inedl- cnl cnre Ju.it a.-i It dcterinlnc;i cv- crythlnK else. Tli« EnUitlon for school health progrnms la to pay

• ■ ■ - • ■ well."

Henry Wilson wears his In plain view of all. It’.-j a_ bald head.

Ifs a worry because Wilson Is barber.

"My chromium plate<l pate U giving mo an l.iferlorlty complex says thti Denver tonsorlalL-.t. ' T\ been selling hair tonic to ciuiomers for years con.'clentlou.ily thinking I was helping them to keep their Imlr. Then I discover my own liiilr Is a.i,.«:rag«ly' as the fuzi Chihuahua pup.

••mat shriveled up ,my cgo like a scorched hair. It turns my pride Inside out and I 'm ‘ lower tlinn pearl diver. So I ’vo decldixl to ;somcthl:iB nbout It. I ’m koMik grow hftlr If I have to plant chi chllla clippings with a hypodcrnilc n'ecdlc."

Tomorrow: The FIori«{.

SC

Scitlements

Prer>s(—Japan’.'! enoniioii.s mllltsfry commllmenla hi Clilnn. her tremen-

State Buildings Near Coiupletion

NAMPA. Idaho. May 10 m-Tft-o new buUdlnRv nt the State School nnd Oolong’,In Nampa will bo re«dy for dc3lcatlon In July, Lewis Wll- llnms,. director of charitable In. tUu- lloils,.sald today.

Williams came hc/e to laipcct flic struclures now nearing completion, ■nio 1937 legislature appropriated *107,000 /or-a men’s dormitory, a woman’s dormitory. Including a clinical office-

Hagerman Scouts Score at Gooding

■HAGERMAN, May IB - Eighteen boys nnd tliclr scout ma.-.ter, Harold Brown; Auslstant Ma.sler Eldon Bosom, and Committeemen Dale Ca­dy nnd Fred Leach ’.atlendcd tiie Scout rnlly Iti Gooding Friday night. Hngermnn tied for first [ilace with Ironp 3'J of Gooding.

Places won were: Plral, blimket .slretclier race. Kenneth Glore. Dill Moore and" Harry Dennis; first, knot tleing relay, E<lgnr Chaplin, Jimmy Pnrrott. Kfiiiicth Glore. Krlth

Hartley, Junior Woodhesd, LaVan Potter,. Chariea Cary nnd Junlor- Alien; llf-il In rc.icii*- rnce, Kenneth Oloro and Hiirr>- ilitrlOBi; first In Ilr.'.t aid, Kenneth Cllore, Edgar Chaplin and Wlllis Uurice';' first, antelope lace. M.iicy-Larragan, Jimmy P.imnt. KeniiPiij oior«. La- Van Pcitrr, lultar Cli:il)llii, Charley Carry, ihirry DrniilJ: first, relay rnce, Edft.ir Cli,i|.tiii, LiVnii Totter. Keith Hartley, Knmrili Olorc, Mar­vin Wilde. Mim-y UraBan. and Jimmy Parrot'.: second, dressing race, Billy Moore; third. Edgar Chaplin: ."ircoiui. .'ignnllnK, Jltjwny

Parrott, Kenneth Glore, S<Ul«r Chaplin., and Marcy LarraBtn.

n ^AD ’THE NEWS WAlfT ADS.

I N S U R A N C EJ o h n B . R o b e r t s o n

IRRIGATED LANDS CO,

LYLAN LAUNCHED

Tiiree Pliascs of Activity Mapped Under Acequia

Program

First group plan or Scout fnriillv in the Snake River Area Co;iii(il has been instituted by the Accnui;; P,-T.A. ftccordlnc to Ambf Frrti. eri^. scout executive- Within the fold me cubbing, scouting and .*011- ior scouting activities.

Tlie program is designed lo build character In leisure for boys finin the age of 9 on up through iniui- hood. Ten scouts. 10 cubs nnd II

:plorer4-ot..senlor scouts are lUtc<l In the scout family.

Chairman for the group commu­te Ls H. A. Butler. Chslniian for

the cub committee is David L, ker with L. P. Alien and C, A. Nut­ting assisting, while nay Summers Is the cubmaslcr. •

In the scout committee are J. F, Winniford. M, B, Gcnti-y. C. A- Browerton and Willis B. Clayton. -1th L- R. Wagner o,s .scoutmii.ster.

Hugh Roberts Ls the chairman of the explorers committee and J. “ Hurd <1 the'^corthe explorer leader.

Services Honor

Fred R. ForbesFuneral Bervlc^s for Fred

Forbes of Twin Fails were held Thursday afternoon at 3 p. m. at tho Betliel 'remplo church wltli the Rev. B. M. DtLVld ofilclatlng. Tall- bearcrs weio E. P. Mesaner, Phillip Lapp, Earl OlonU, J. L,'Fouik, " N. Alldritt and P, A, Meuner.

Til# Bible cl*M tang '•wni^Jeiui Find l/s Watching." "No l\;ara ’niero,*’ "My Redeomer Liven," "Tiie Kud of tlio Way" and "No Dark Volloy." Interment was at tlin ’I'wln I'uIlH rrmolery under thn dlrvctlon of tho Twin Falls mortuary,

Itodge Iiiitiatiiptt Flams Progress

Plans lor the l.O.O.F- hiltlallon ceremonies in BuliT.i sinking Can­yon on June 23 were nfisumlng more ^eflnltc fiimpe llnirsday with the announcement that 'J5 past nnd pre.i- ent offlcJals of the lodge had been named on the committee on ar- rangemenU-i,

George C. Lelh. Ilulil, Knind con­ductor for llio Mtiilfl orgnnltntlou, NtatedHhat the second dpgreo will b« bestowed on ft cla.vi ot 100 didatw at the bottom of tlie yon. ncpre.ientntlves of 58 lodges in Idaho and^ surrounding ntjUes will atten^tU^lie ceremonies which wlil not bo open to tho public.

Included on the nrrnngcmenta committee were tho folIowlngi'Pres- loy F. Home, grand secrclnry, Cald­well; Fj-n:ilc MnrUn, pa. t grand ,-<re, Dol.to; E. D. Hiigheti, luist grAnd patrlarcli, GcKKllng; , George Scholer, past 'grand master. Hur­ley; II. G. Feckham, grand monOial, WUder; and Duran LewLi, grand guardian, Boise.

, have convfnccd lah defeu.?e authorities liere that tho mllllarhts in Jopiui mu.st abandon whatever plan tJiey may have had of attaclring Dritiiln's mighty naval base and fortrc. 'i in Singapore.

During tlic early months of the SIno-Jnpnncsc liostllHlcs, British na­val and roiiltnry officers entru- ted with the defense of Hong Kong, Singapore nnd Australia were franli- ly worried over Japan’s avowed alma of expansion In the south PacKlc.

Today, however, due to the vir­tual con>pletlon of Britain’s irrcal naval station nnd fortifications here, and nl.so to Jnpan'.i great military demands In Chinn, these authorities no longer' show nn> real concern over Japan tis a possible aggrcwor.

"I/cl the Japanese come If they nivh; «-c-nrc UiVy fircji.ircd for llu-mr' 'ITiiLi 6unv; up the prc.sont r.iim nnd confident attitude of tho Hrlilr.h officials here, who only tlx immtli.'-. ago not only fell giavy nnx- IflV for the fate of Hon? KcnK and .Slu’,;apote, but Aur.trftUft nnU In- dij.

Moreover, recent naval maneuv- Runnery in a c f lr e nnd aerial cp-

-atlons have convinced the Brlt- h defense nuthnrltles that Slnga- Dte is now virtually Impregnnbio 1 enemy land or naval force,';. During recent test;; It jvas found

that John Bull’.s thundering 10- inrh nnd IB-Inch guit';, which vomit forth tons of shattering shell and lend and then dl:.appcar behind

concrete emi'laccmcnts, could .';hool with the accuracy almost■ jnachlnc guns at n range of from■ to 30 miles.No Japanc.'^e battlerJilp of today

could get within firing range of Sing- .ipore In the face of such deadly de- fen.'e g iiiv ;, British gunnery experts contend.

IJi spite of IhLs new-found confi­dence. however, the British govern- incnl In ihc Straits SetUementa ?x)uo is taking no chances against _ por ;lble invn^lon of that arcs by Jap.m.

Japanese already in tho Straits district and in the Malay States arc carefully registered ond cIo. ely watched.

Apart from tiie Japanese -resi­dents, of wliom tliere are several thousand In Sincapore alone, ail for­eign visitor.';, fiicldlng Americans, are closely chccked up .when they enter nnd leave the country

during the time they are actually here.

Wlien, for Inilance, I arrived 5n Penang, en route to Elngaporc, I

required to stale where I camo from, how long I Intended lo stay, what form of tmnflport.\tl,on I in­tended to take when leavln'g, tho date of my departure, when I expected to arrive in Singapore, where I planned to live, tho date of my de­parture. and tile coiuitry of my des- llnatlon. In every ca:;o I was olillBcd lo register with the police.

—For Style and Value!

WILKON AIDK IUKS

NEW YORK, May 19 (/?)-Martln Vogel. 69, n.H.slslnnt treasurer of tho united Stnte.s under Woodrow WII-

dled at his homo here to<lay after o six montlis llineM,

At 230 fect\in(ler water, pressure 1.1 more tlian 09 pounds lo the nquare inch.

CURTAINSDRAPERIES

ea lu for^Hi type* ot *iniIo

The CURTAIN and . D RAP ERY 8H0P

Sheep Euroutc to Denver’s Market

I.Ambi, Bwti and wetheri ___Included In th« second pooled »hlp- ment by th# Twin Falls county Livestock Markotlng auoctatiotx which loft thn yards in 'I'wln Falls ■niur.-(d«y night for Denver, niey wcro loaded in 'I'wln Falla and nuhl nnd sorting work- was dona allWBBiC,. WlUj U»o market report from Denver rtiioried as steady wlUi a top price nf 19.38 beli^g pal(t for spring lamb*, local pnxluuera hoped for a belter (irlce Uion thn flguro of 10 to IB.25 nxelvrd by tl)o pool on May 0.

Bemlfl I.. Morse, Ronald B. muI- Ilna.'Joa I. Muriitsuelil, Douglas P. Nelson, fllicrwood K, Nlcewonger, Paul O, O ’Leary, W. Loo O'Mallojr, Merle OrtUuinl. RujueU .fl. Oroutt, liaiiMt John Oilrom, Leland M. pnrry, Jamen A. Prlebe, Raymond E. Ptit- ■ier, Kenneth Rnyburn, Harold II. Rottd, Dick Reynolds, Dean O. Rice, Martin Oroa* Roark.

Dwrdettb- It. ROas, Daniel W. rtoiwh, Wllbiirt Jooepli Roy, Harryp, am lth, W ayM 'W i Umllh, LukoV, eoinier, Jr., Aaron Bloddartl, Robert J, fliitclirf, Harry J. I'aylor, William B. I'aylor, J3ert M, 'I'olbert, Clnyton I'oler, Q»vls TooUiman, Art Tnuimer, Wiyno U T»in\er, a , nu\ Wnrncr. John Watcru. Abo Wlebo, A^her I). WiUon, Jr„ Robert D, Wil­son, SJrtwIn 0. Woods, Paul J. Wright.

C* l Into • pair of Hancs Shor(*« and you 'll • • •- th a t HANES d in tn 't out cornaral OantUman. tiMW U • buihal of eemfort. You can ait, band, atoop, and walk w ithout faar of ripping tha raari

Y .. . n j r l . . . You'll Ilk* th .

B ut yo u 'll l l n d othoir'”

polnla trt thaM aherta. Thara'aganulna "Latlas” yarn in lha inatat. And « • fUa you our word tha calora ara faitt

Evary pair ot IlANRS Stiorla ptada • HANEa Shirt. Llflit, cool, a la itlckn it . . . It llti com fortably amootli acroti jrour chaat • • • tucki lo far balow tha bait that It can't craap and wad a t your waiill Saa a llANCS DaaUr today. I‘. II. Hanaa K nitting Company,

Wlnaton-SaUni, North Carolina.

Complete Line of HANES Undcrwciir

In Stocic at

VAN ENGEI.ENS

New! Junior S ize

Dressesr ' i } 9

$ ^ . 9 8

They are ns new

ccji'ho! Nciv .summer

fabrics sum ­

mer slylus. Dressy or

sporls styli's—all with

more color aiid'tinsli

:vcr bef-ore. This

assortment tli'c

.■size iniss will

.■ink', Si/.es 11 lo

than I'

Ladies’ White Hi-Styled

Shoes$ J .98

There i,«! style—fit—And com­

fort in these iniulity shoes.

Every one a iii'w suiiiincr

atyle. IliRh or.low heels in

straps, sandiils or oxfords.

Linens or all leiillicr,

Ju st Arrived! New Sum m er

Liiicii.s, urci)c.s or

fells ill white aiiiJ

pastH.^. Shapes of

every d.L’sci'iptioii in

larpe iIS well as

.ijmaller ho.nd -size.s.

New White

H and B ags$1.

New .summer .styles iirthc "Fat-

tish" shapos so much in voKue.

riain or irrcdisccnt cffccts thfit

are new nnd differcntr

B all Fringe

CurtainsAre New$1.

Ball fringe curtains are much in demand, for every room. Made of fine quality dotted gi'enadino with plain white or colored ball fringe. They will add to any room.

Men! Genuine Nap-A-TanWork Shoes$5.98

(The $4.50 Grade)A nnUonnliy iinown work r.hoe timt can «tand

the wenr. I nill Rrnin uppern, oil tanned, double

ttilckneaa sole. Triple atltclied. All leather

,conitructlon with leather in-so^e. Narron and

Ide widtha. A qualltx shoe at a saving lo

Boys’ Athletic SHIRTS or SHORTS15c

BhortB of fine broadcloth with balloon istic nt Bld«i. Volie front, E f fine mercerlted yama.

Men’s and Boys’ White or BlackOxfords

Red Diamond Special No. 1Drcjisy hlnh grade (ibocB priced «pe- cially low. Stitched, wing tip. or plain tocn. Cuban or flat heoln.

Pnncy d«tl«nft ,|u;inroroe4 U» %ni KUt, ReivlWly

Page 4: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

W W W

TWIN m iS-NEW S. Twm FALLS, HJAHO, FEUI-AY MORNING, MATio.’1988

TWIN FALLS NEWS

luurd ererr momlof Morat Mondir. br Th* T»ln PtUa N(v» Publliblni Co IDC, Twin mU. Twin PUU COuntj.

bUblUhed leoi

ot Much 3. im .

SUIUCRtPTlON RATES BT CAaalUt-PATABLE IN ADVAnCB .

» r th* w»«» ----■—....... -— —— — ..By Ih* Bionlti'----------------------

three ------;----------------

D7 Ui» y«»r — — ........... ...................... .............

within Idtho «n<J EUo County.

Thrto Rny th»Outjldf

n"Au'’tlsliu 0* MPuMlcsUon of ipecJU m»- i>l»o rwervod.

tin M«*na A»»oeI»t«d Pt«*

Mfmber Audit t

Bui PT»DCl»«>.- C»llf.

Tli8 New* m n BdvertltcmcnU but I correction of lh»t p«f

- ir occur* - ----

(In&nclKl rupanalblUty C4*e where th" paper

... jf the «dvertljemeni In lUhlUbsd without chitKB

r c ”r i £ ”i & ’ .r cK *p i“,1i«, itu SMlon ot

Ouesta a t a party move a round ta lX lng and

geatlculatlng an im ated ly . I n fact, th e more

they gesticulate the fu nn ie r the game w ill be.Suddenly the one who Is " it " calls “Freeze

I t l ” and everyone In s tan tly keeps, whateyer

attitude he was itt w hen the com m and rang

out. No one is supposed to m ove'B muscle, even » fllckcr nn eyelid, u n t il the order

cornea to "M e lt I t ! " In old statue tag any

ch ild who moved too soon became “ it” and the game proceeded. T h is la on ly ' one ot

m any chlldrcn’.s games now popu la r In draw­

in g rooms. -- Such pastimes on tho p a r t o f adult-Amerl- cans Indlcattf som eth ing ^ Ig nU lcan t, though

we nrcn’t quite sure w hat. Is It evidence of

a return to s im plicity a f te r the a r tif ic ia l Jazz

age? Are whole com m unitie s ente ring their

second childhood en masse an d years earllci

A Dog’s Life

T H E W A Y T < A ® C 0 V E R Y

I t IB reassuring to f in d a business m an like W illiam S. K nudsen- iJtG flnera l Motors m a k ­

in g th is f la t p redic tion ; ‘‘Bu8lnc^.s w ill be ■better_in the early fa ll. Recovery w ill come,*^ gradually an d o f its own accord."

M any people thInJf-business can help, an d

m an y th in k th e governm ent can help. B u t

there Is certa in ly a good deal of tru th in th a t phrase, "o f i t s <iwn accord." W ith a ll a ia n ’s

e fforts to unders tand a n d control econom ic

cyclea, t W » h asn ’t been m uch progress- A ll we can be reasonably sure of. In a case like th is , is th a t w hen th e present surplus stock

' Ot goods Is used u p , as i t w ill be for the m ost

fa ll, the renewed dem and from con-

- sdotten w ill p u t id le m ills and factories an d

. 'stores an d ra ilroads to work again.^ ’ M r. Knudsen says ano the r thing, still m ore i pertinent: “W e give po litics too m uch b lam e

- a t one a n d too lit t le crcdlt a t another. W e should th in k o u t our own problems.

Labor, governm ent a n d business should get

together. There’s n o use calling each other

names.”The sense o f th is statement Is so obvious

t h a t i t needs no com m ent. And^fortunate ly m any pw p le a fe "beg ln n ing ; att'fer a-braln-

storm period, to th in k an d act along the lines Indicated, i t w ill help the n a tu ra l

tendencies toward recovery.

E T H IO P IA N LOSS

D uring the I t a l ia n conquest of E th iop ia there were honest newspaper m en w ho frank ly debunked the m aud lin sentim en t

spent on the ru ler a n d subjects of th a t la nd .

. They told us th a t m a n y Ethiopians were sav­age an d bru ta l, w ith quite unlovely customs.

T hey said Ha lle Selassie himself was no se lf­

less saint.Perhaps It was Ju s t as well to get th is p ic ­

ture of the people I t a ly was conquering. I t p u t Judgm ent o f th e s ituation on a saner

foundation. Anger a t the civilized tre a tm ent o f unclYillzed h u m a n beings remained. The

In justice of a strong power’s bu rn ing and

k illing the people o f a weak power rem ained

clear to a ll w ith be lief in hum an rights- The

w orld learned, too, th a t even savages w ill

face terrific odds In defense of the ir hom e­

land.

Now th a t E th iop ia ’s case Is clearliK lost In the only court to w h ich Selassie could a p ­

peal, the League of Nations, the big powers m ay move on to o ther problems, B ut i t i-s

possible th a t w hat I ta ly an d the rest of them

• have done to thcm8elve.i Is more serious th a n

w ha t has ^ e n done to EthloiMa.

Tliey have turned the ir backs on n Kreat

ideal to w h ich they once pledRod thcmselvc.s when the League of N ations was young, They

have betrayed the ir own civilization flr.st by

practising savago b ru ta lity and then by cnn- .donlng it. T lie lr con.-iclencea should trouble them for years to come, A helple.sn people

Is sacrificed to expediency, bu t tho.se who

perm it tlie .■Jiicrlflrc m ay yet rpRrot It b it ­terly, IlHlle aela-sslt^ Js beaten--nnil a lipro.

A m iA Z I I J A N K X I’ I.A IN SThe rovnlt uKulii.-it Oetiillo VarKii.-i of

B razil, p u t down by liin i tho other tlay w ith

nentni'M iiiiil ill.spatch, wa.i (‘nKliii^eri-d by

green-shlrtpil Iiitcgm lls ta .i, lip roiie to power

w ith the ir im ppm t iiiirt had kept .some of

them in hi? fiorvlct! u n til this icvoll. Ho

aeems to liuve bren gniihm lly ahiitukm liiR th e ir doelrliic.'i lii favtir of ii ninri' liberal

policy. T ha t l, doublleiia the rcii.soii why they turned afcnlnst h im . Pu t thoy are .‘itlll

believed to have considerable atreiiKth.These Intewrallstan are rcKnrdeil nn a va­

riety ot rasctKts, n « t noth ing ro simple a.s

th a t description would tto In Liitln-Amerlca, w hich ravels In- pardon UH- polyoyllablr

ideologies. Hero Is tho ex|)lnnatlnn Klveii by the ir eloquent leader. P lln lo Halgf^ilo, to a New York corre.ipondent,

HIn i)(!oplc, nays Honor HalRiuln, Imvo been

'’greatly defamed afi adept,-i or rnrcllKlon-

IsUs of certa in raclamn an d blind, nbsorblng ntatlnma. 'Hie In te rgra llst m ovement l.n bnsed

on ap lrlltia lls llc tlio ug iit , the prlncljile th a t If economic a iu l fioelal facLi lU'o Koverned by

determlnlHm, the h u m a n iiplrlt l,-i Kovorned by riee w ill."

An Am erican w lio reada th a t over a few

times may f in a lly begin to th ink ho detecta

a sort o f vague g lim m er in tho general dark-

ncNH. Salgiido m igh t m ean th a t the U reon

Shlrtn are no t rellgUiun or political crankn, th a t they have noble prlnelplrH. and th a t , in spite of economic an d noelni ob.-itaclen, they

believe they can do nomnthlng, for the peo-

• plo through governinont. Mill. If Ih iit ’s th e ir

tlsual lino of ta lk , how ilo llicy im dcn itand eaeh other?

C H U .D IS H (JAJMKS F O Il A1)UI-TH There ia a m odern version o( the old i{iunn

o f “Btfttue T ug ." played by adiiUii In Ihe liv ­

in g room ^nn tpad o f rh lld ren in Iho yard.

■JSan"*f6rmeriy? Are m e n -and wom en so

weary of depression an d politics and wpr

scares and d ictators’ show ing o ff th a t they can’t bear to ta lk to each other an d must4 play chlldLsh games to m ake a social evening endurable? O r is It Just good clean fu n to

relax the b ra in before ta ck ling a new day's problems?

Other Points of ViewTIIE MINGO OAK

About tlie year 1200 nn ticom took root In wliat Is now Mingo, W, Vo. More than nineteen gsnernUoiLs ot men, reckoning thn i; lo Uic ccntury, have comc and gone since thtil iime. While Uie ncorn turned Into an oak mcdlevnllMii fuacd out, tlie RenaUsanee /lowered and faded, tlie religious wars were fought. Amcrica was discovered nnd settled, the modem na- tloiw took form, the modern Idea of deraocTacy_Rr«w up,' In'diialry nnd liivcntrsh“ lfattsformcd men'sllvS; Innumerable wnrrxwerc fought, population Increnscd many.times over. - _ ^

Nineteen eenerallon.s of men and women—playing, working, loving, fiKlillng, hoplns, dying. If we went to the Sierras and co^st ranges of CaUfomla We would find older tree*, but ixrlmps six and a half centuries are enough to contemplate. For an oak tree this long time of slow growth nnd slow decay was awordlng to tho laws of nature. It U not m> easy to find out what laws of nature have opcrntcd in the lives of men. If

•W8 could find out we could rewrite the histories and predict the future,

Mingo's white oak l.'s dead. Ita successor, If cllmnte doeii not change, may .-,1111 be standing In May of tlin year 2588. Undbiibtcdly Uiero will also be men on tlw earth In that ycsr. Perhaps they wUl say, looking at Ihc new Mingo cnk which will hftvo grown from this year's acorn: "In IB3B, when Uie tree put out its first shootfl. mankind was at la«t emerging from the Dork Ages. The la.a wnrs were being fought. Tlie age of peace was dawning." We can hope K>,<iliHe the a «s ring and the great white oak. In whose mde the pre-Columbian Indlnn.i rested after hunting the buffalo, nt last comc.s crashing down.—New York Times.

THE LEND-SPENn BILL G0E8 THHOUGH

The' house, by an overwhelming majority, passed the lend-ipehd bill for resumption of large scale pump priming. The senate may be cxpected to do likewise with only minor alteratioiu.

The reason seems to be pressure for projects froir the various locallUes. The appetite for "pork" Js te;. rifle and the pre-wure placed on a congressman oi seoator Is Irresistible, especially In nn election year

If you ask the average person what he thinks o; thts (pending program he will say that'he Is agalnsi It or doubts lU feasibility. He feels no enthusiasm for It. But if youjisk t^ls .•tame chap whether he wants government funds sifent on some pending project he will almost invariably brighten up and soy he l.t keen for it. On the general principle he is against tlie pork barrel, but he is for its local benefits.

This is why congressmen cannot re.ilst—and indeed they .do not try very hard—a proposal to spend a inrgo amount of government funds. Tliey know few votes are to,be lost by spending, while many are to be lost by appeSrlng to oppose public Improvement.? their con­stituents want.

Tills trait in the American people, which lins been- flharpened.in tho last few years, will make budget balancing extremely difficult. It reminds one of Ella Wheifler Wilcox' poem "the road that lencU to a bank acount is over a stony hill, but the road Hint lends to a home of your own is swept by biast-i ttint. kill.”

And what present-day statesmen want'to lace kill­ing blasts for n mere principle? You coutil nlmo. 1 n.wcmble them In a phono booth.—Baker Ociiwrat- •Herald,

WHAT GRAnUATKS FACE

Tlie Unlver.slty of Washington Dally, sludenl news- paper on thn Seattle campus, has made a Rurvry of Job opportiinltie.s for tho forthcoming class of 1030. nnd ronfludes ihnt "the first ‘rccesfllon Braduate.i' \stll tnco ft CO iKT rent hlnsh Jn employment pra.-.iwcl.i UiU Juno," Chnnees of cmplnyment are less for all ,'ilutleiiia 1)111, at Wn^hlngton at least, the field.i nf riiKliirerlnK, chemistry' imd fore.stry provide le.w ojiiiniiimUy m contra. t I» jirevloiia ycnr.i.^

•iii'o Washington figures are more iicv.r.iinullc thiui thi)M> which liftvr l)ren gathered by an In.MiKinrfl com­pany hi n recent survey of employmeiil. piosperts for llie 103B Rnidiiates In 338 Ainerlrnn In; tltullons of UlKher learning.

i^vi-ii-lriillis nt the sehoob oivrrnl In Mils nurvcv expiM'tfd Hint half or mnir of Ihrlr .1'

. Mnrn pnyn aa jH;r

1.1 kjcfor Ihr !••nt reporleil thn '0 |>C1

wrnen Kriuliialivi Kvrn at bcU Ihrnnploym

‘Ak»« Kiacliiat,- Is noi n pi,

■lit of lh.-lr grndur

I i>(i; Ixjih II nnd

ir for the nvf K-, yet It In a

.................. ri Or. Homer P,Uaiiiry, c.f Ihr Aiiici li'iui vmlli . rmiiiilMltm. backs wllli mill IlRiirr^ n filiitrindii iiixl thn typlrnl American ynuiii:.%ii'i- bi'twi-ni ihr mii'h of 111 Mild 34 Is rllher Jnh- Ic.'i nr .-ariilllK $in u wrrk nr Irw at a htlnd-alley Jnti, llin HBeiii lri nioM .•i.niTincil wlUi siirli n problem can­not flhiiilt.i lihn IlKhtly nn n pesslnilnt. l'>ir the flKurc.i 1ki liilniin to Jii.MUy his recent statement nrn Ihnte: M(.tn ihiui 'I.IK).),!).);! young IK'ople are out of rdicmlaiKl iiiiciil|iliiynl

I'lif m.nim ran 111 iifCiird to los? Ihfl jWlentlal skill nml rmiuy of Ihew liiilned young men and wonivii. It rnn III afford llie <1enil-eiid ntlltiWe thus created In yoiilh, mempllflrd in (lie Ktlin Imninr ot the hlouaii iMlopird hy n Mnnlana IiIkIi ni'houl uradiinilng rlnsq: "Wl'A, Ill'll- \Vr Coiiiel" Ttin older itfiieralloii, who inunl fiirn tr.npdiiniiiiiiiyfor roiiilltlnns that give youth If Uiitsy lliu Kl(«.iny outlook, elmtild feel the Ming of

SOME- OCIDIKO PRINCIPLESNobody la wise enough to tell Ji

mother Just, what lo do to bring up, a clilld In Uie way he should {to.- But here are a few guiding princi­ples:

First have, a clear Idea Wf what you warif a child to bo and to do. Let your thoughts abogt him bo ;lcar and definite and •Strong. You :annot hide your thought. A mother ;annot secretly wish that lie^ child would becolne a movie star or a mll- Uenilre^janlcer-and-tell-hlm-thBt she wanta .him to be a servant of Ood. He will know about the hid-

nmblUon and he will want to w that, and end up by falling

between tlio twosUndard& So.thlnic :lcarly and definitely on what youi :hlld Is to bo and to do.

Second, teach him to obey. I t Is lon.sense to say that teaching a ■hlld obedience Is robbing him of reedom. Proper obedience aaves :hlld from the slavery of Igno) ince and sets him free to use h ntclilRcnce. Tench him to obey and le win gladly obey you when hi finds that U means greater com­fort, more happiness and hlghei

,rds. Decide upon what thing: iinportafit. Confine your request

for obedience to tliem. Don't fuss trifles. Ask for obedlencc when lecessary, and see that you get

It.Third, use force as lUtle ns possi.

ble. How do you feel when somebody rs you to do something? Even

though you want, ^o do It In the first plaee-yQU. rebel-So does thechild. Say to-a child, "It's getting ■ilosT'io^ aWpcr“ Uiner'J61ili7-H6W- about putting things away now nnd getting ready? I'll give you a han ‘ with the blocks.” Tliat kind of jpeech will bring obedlencc nnd cc operation. But If you shout, "Johi got those tilings out of the way; do

you will get

N a t i o n a l W h i r l i g i g News Behind

The New fls

WASHINGTON By Ray Tucker

INSIOEIIS. The dizzy behavior of itiilty stocks ond bonds slmviltn- icously with New Deol dickering or a truce over T. V. A. and Uie

"death sentence'’ on holding com- p.inies has attracted unpublished attcnUon at Uie capital. It may have (he makings of a senatorial .sensation from cloakroom rumblings about po-salble "leaks,"

Althmigh-the S. E. C, kept secrct for nve days the private power committee's letter regarding a hold­ing company get-togetlier (and only the principals were supposed to know of It), the price of bonds of affected utility eOJporations leaped twenty points overnight. Someboc'y apparently was wlae to the fact that something good for the utili­ties was In the •'air. Then they were jol(i short for a while, only to re-

the losses In a few days. A lar movement occurred -■several s ago on tho eve of David Lll-

lenthal's announcement of "yard- iUck" rates. Securltie.-i of corponi- ;lons in tho shadow of T. V. A. were sold short, supposedly by a Chica­go brokerage house.

Tl;c S. E. O. vms given power lo stop that sort of thing, but the wise boys are now nsklng: "How long haa this been going on1i‘ Sim­ilar bullish or bearl.Mi raids were staged with respect to silver botore tlie famotis purchase annmmce*-

t, and also In connection with F, C. C.'s report on its A. T.

* T. InvMtlgotlon. Somebody who knew .something bought or *pld in accord with what U>ey k n o w N - ^

PRIMPING, ll ie new pump prim­ing prospects don’t look so hlgh- watcrlsh to economic experfa with .special knowledge of the operation of. similar efforts In, the past. Al­though the President.recently side* stepped the lowdown .problem, .im- absorbed inventories measure -thB r.iilurc of former, land-ojid-speed. experiments and hint at another

Current Inventories, a.i Whirligig exclusively reported, total 21 bil­lion dollars, a.i against a 1D33 low of 12 billion. But the discovery as-* tonlshlng even the economic plan- neis Is that Uie total Icaiwd Irom 16 to 21 billion dollars’ worth In the period 1035-1930. Jl-^as during this era liiat P. W. A,-W. P. A. nnd other outpourings of government money were supposed to have brought the economic recoveiV tliat cracked up last August. Production and reemployment reached peaks untouchcd &lnee 1639.

But what appears to have hap­pened then ia that factories and middlemen and retailers simply used the federal funds to burden their shelves and warehouses wlUi unmovable goods. The purchasing power primed by government rx-

.WASHINfrrON OFF TIIE RECOHD„

Madame Butterfly, 1776Capital H/m Snme DlfflenlHei With Opera

ny .SIORID ARNE AP Feature Service Writer

W A SH IN G T O N — The ciipltftl h e a rs-10031 of Us opera In

D. A. R . ha lls bccnii.se thero’fl no o ther opcra-.slze aud itorium

hereabouts.T hat wou ld be a ll rlKlit pxcept the D.A.R.'s have h un g tV

bark of their stage with mmi' i fine tapestries depleting kcmkI Independence Square in Philai phh.,

Ho poor little Clio Oho ,‘ an "Madame Butterfly," reccnilv v bled her "One Fine Day" brfor background of mie ctierry imc Nagasaki) nnd yards and yar<lr Philadelphia,

tho chips on their slioulilers. lle’i never men around the capitol. Doci ‘ ■ ■■ ilnctlng at thn White llounobis 'c

:<-l>iikr.atli) lurrl.iin llilln If, iiftrr lung years

III limning, liiiiiilini, cif tlinii.Mnid.i of young Anirrlnin iiiru nnd wiimrii hri< ciixliiitllng from cnllcges, rioni hltih i^liiKilr rager, fir^li, rlinllenglng-oiily to find (Im iitKir of i-i'imnnilo oiijmhtimlty Blammed In Ihdr fiire. 'Ilinn 1li(iiiwind« Imvo Inlxired faniCblly. imtlriil- ly. 'lliey do not rxjirct In Imp from follmo Into n nllircilir. IIIIL Ihey ilo rjjKTt n rhalicp. Vftlimlilo B.i filiicallni, h, It niiiM IrmI t.i .niportuiilty, UwiM.in Trlliunr.

I t r e i i k f i i N t F o o d

"/l|i1rii<lldl I Jiinl I

.lildKe (a'l I»rlm1f la you?"

I’llbinsr:

nvldrllre'^n liln own nwyrr to lepiennnt

rt '(ip«ak th i tru,(fii-

toniey friend of tin- I'rcnldc hind every lilg N.-w licul il ^WhllB tlift tr(irKi>ii1 .a1l' C K bPhig wiigecl on r«| '-I'ommir,

ndliiK to I , lln (lltrl

nnii of the tdwii'n Heems (juner to i IK-ct BomrthlnK n lurlaii from tin- I

I \Hr

Speaking of .shoulder chips

ml were discovered when thoie

undred Congressmen r e c e n t l

m>enl four days In Houth Carolina.amber ot commeir

liad nskeil thnn down to nee 111 aimlcas. Hut they neemrd lo b steered within sight of aeveri .ipota where a iltUu money was badly needed.

H in t Inrluded Fort M o u lt r ie Tliat seemed aproprlate, since tlie Junket Inrluded members of tin military and naval afalrs commit­tees and tho appropriation com- iilttee.Tlie Hiuilli Carolinians were get-

ling thrnuKti tho thing very dlplo- niBtlcnlly wJien Hie. party arrived >t the I'ort. Itiere the Colonel i 10 bourn about hls Inh-rnit.ished to greet ii|iroprlat1ons <

Troyalio :lan >il>oi 0 Tiiiy, inpi.lim

Madiii goes I materialsewn niinir of lirr <

'nu ll uot her Ini at » liH'Kl h

( priiilnlid she wiiiitrd n

iltlee tukhulime to net lo Iho nd 11

penditurea moved a portion, but It could not keep pace with produi tlon. I t may have been due to fau ty planning by both parlies—go' irnmcnt and Industry. That's on i surmise—nobody knows the ai iwer. i u t the frank fellows don't think it's anotlier pump. They caU It "pump-priming.”

AID. The upshot of the Scott Lucox-Miko Igoo shindig In the Il­linois senatorial- priman": will. prob' ibly bo a law barring fcderiil judges

district attorneys, marshals nnd r legal officers from leaping

onto th«- political stump with a courtroom take-off. Tlie nffalr as­sumed such scandaloju^iiroportlons that even congresanrfn rftc i.hocked.

Rep. Lucas souwit the nomina­tion ns ft Homer-Courtnoy man, while United States District .Attor­ney. Igoe was the Nash-Gelley-Far- ley starter. Tliough Mr. Lucas wn.s _ a Son James Roosevelf.s word that he was "unobjectloimble" ns a

mdldate. tlie .federal judicial ma- line swung Into action against

him. Mr. Igoe quit his office for the hustings, only to retuni to han­dle the Rosa kidnaping case'that conveniently ‘’broke" In lils favor Democratio judges tlirow theli robes at bailiffs as tliey dnslied from the bench to catch a train bcariiiR

1 to an out-state political hnll Federal marshals and a.ss1sUint at torneys locked the doors of Ihrli ifflci's. Assistant Attorney Qenernl

Keenan jQumeyed from Was' ton to speak at an Igoe rally,

In !ihort, the federal judiciary In IlllnoU—that is, tho Dcmocratli port of it-M]Ult work during thi primary. Like the tuneful merry-go- ffui round, it broke down. I'he I.itrfV ’Uli ix'npio won't demand leglstallo Ihls session for obvious roasc ilirre’K still an election to be tillered—but wait tUl next yeai

ISOLATION. Several rcpreseii lives leceiitly canvassed tholr homo •states lo dticover whether -thiTi was any demand for them lo rui for thn senate against silting mem' hers up for reelectlon. 'ilielr tieri Sion supplies Ihe lowdown on Pres

Roosevelt'S popularity wilh

Two of the iiulse-fingerers private informullon that lliry look for nn White Hou.se a.salsl If they decided to start a prli fight against the fairly wel haved upper • classmen. F. D. It, didn’t want Uie anxious hoys i hu would oppose them; they \ simply askod tn bide their tlmi seeking reelectlon lo the house, whnl Uiey really wanted to dlsi er on Ihelr canvass waa 'whether they would win In Ihirtitfio of jii Idfiilhil Indlfferencel'-Now, tl:

kid lhemsclvos-(ir theii'nlillPi- > you V i. lay boU i ilielv

OUR CHILDREN -Annto fW it

Illy I ;istarBut don’t hesitate to use force If

necessary. In an emergency pick dressed envelope for reply.

the child and put him where ho

ought to be and make him stay

there. IFourth, don't talk and talk and

talk to a child two or-three yeara Iof age, Don’t try to Veason irtth him.A child of that age gola tired listen­ing after the first few momenta and his mind jjosea doWn tight.That Is nature’s way ot protecting Chim against strain. Make yopr words few. Don’t argUJ. B« conslrtent. Try 'tft-ke«p-»i»-av>a-tampar^ Ba<ia iiM .------you love this child, be strong. In that way you help him against hla own weakness,■/Fifth, keep order In the house, A disorderly, house makes for bad manners, loud noise, disobedient' children. Put a. noisy child Into ft quiet, orderly room; speak softly to him: give hlfh some trifling task to do nnd he will become orderly and quiet.

Sixth, rouUne the day. Have a fixed time for doing the Important things. A program will help you save time, help you to keep the fam­ily good-tempered and in working order. Children thrive best when they know what to expect and when to expect it. Order Is a law of health.

Seventh, tcach your child to be useful. As soon as he can hold his oftTi wash-rog. or the soap, let him do so. Let him feel that he la being helpful. As he grows let his useful-, ness BTOW. Teach him to put things where they belong so that nobody ha.i to DlClt UP Pf<?r ^^m, .A ..

V

_ tho child la able to do a house- liolirchoffinenitm'do itrtTsnfntnes.’! is a tonic to the body and the mind.

Mr. Patrl will give personal atten­tion to inquiries from parents and school tcacben on the care and de­velopment of children. Write blm in care of Twin Fails News, enclos-

ilamped. self-ad*

Farm Belt Backs Foes of ' Administration Wage Bill

NEW YORK WHIRLIGIG By James McMulUn

TONED. The American Federa- •ion of Labor is on something of a ipot with regard to the ndminlatra- tlon’s wage-hour bill. Federation ifflclak are privately not at all en- thiuilaRile about the measure. But they, rftn’t affcrd -tO'lgnmTJiorjop-' pose II, and thus aliow the C.I.O,

grab whatever giory may attach It. Tliey have gone on record

publicly as favoring the bill, but mny tip off ihelr congressional friends that this Is a tongue-In- ;hcek performance.

Southern opponenl.i of federal A’age-hour legislation will have" ilrong though mostly silent ."iupport rrom the farm belt, Even though" the bill does not apply to agrlcul- '.ural labor.' farmer.'! arc nervous iboul establishing a legislative prec­edent Uiat might return to plague them later.

Informed New •porkers predict that the bill. If It passes at all. will be so drastically toned down that It will amount to nothing more than

gesture to save the President'* face. I

FRIENDLY. Committee 'tippolnt- nients announced by William McO. Martin, jr , new chairman of the New York Stock Exrhonge, indicate that the new reglmo is on the level about 'cooperating with the S.E.C.

Tlie personnel of the' public rela­tions commute# named by Martin

\trr.s a complete now deal In Imporlant field. Paul V,

Rhlcld.i has long been a lender of the Rxehange's'reform element. Ho Is on cordial personal terms with f?.E.O. Cliainnan William O-Doiig- las and h«H coiwlstontly ndvocalcd better rHullnns between Wiislilng- lon aii(! Wiill Street. Sidney J. WelnberK Is iiopulnr In Wa.slilnnlon nnd a welcome guest when he ralln at Ihn While House, Lawrence Oak­ley played a rtonilnanl rolo In fni.-,t- liig Itlcliavd Whitney as pre.sldenl of the Slock Exchange in 1D3S. E. nurd Onibb was hlglily i.urces.ntul In public relatloiri ronlacUs when wn.H president of tho Curb Rxchnii These four should bo ablo to flgi out how to Eell the exehnnge to tho public ir anyone ran—and It’s eltieh that there Will bo no more Riilplng at the iidinlnlstrnllon nnd tho S.K.C, by exchange officials,

Cliarlen B, Harding,' vleo chair man of tho board of goveninrs, ii a former partner of Jnhn W, Hanes who Is headed for n high Washing lon\Ji)1i lieeauflo of his onorgeilo ef fortfl lo iironioto lietter feeling be tween Kovemment nnd Imslnesfl

ilnly Iho exeliango'R new bo;i.\es

wd-of-mouth ballyhoo about th# •onderful new can coming up for

•30 that many potential purchasera re waiting for tliem.Those who wait will bo disap­

pointed If they anticipate startling Improvements, Manufacturers are economizing on tools apd diea. 1939 edIUons-will have fewer-gadgola

■win’ be"priied lower. Body styles may bo altered far "eye ap­peal," but few, if any, important :hanges are in prospect.

DUAL. Here’s an odd labor wran­gle. A Detroit dance hnll is being picketed by members of the A. F. -ofL, They charge that the manage­ment is unfair to organized labor, despite the fact that the four musl- ’inns playing in the orchestra are II union members.The trouble is Uiat the muslciana elong to a union only by day, not

by night. They work In Detroit i to plants and ar«;tluly-«jrolled the O. I. O.’a United Aut»«jiohil Workers. But they don’t belong 10 A. F, of L.'a musicians' union. Looks like a case of dual pcr- mallty added to labor's oUiei

problem's. — (Copyright McChir< NeMpaper Syndicate).

aim Ui pleai«.

hopes this

’i'liii illpldimil tiom his beilriHii ing room, to tli luiihliig im at all.

.lust then hi,i secrela lildn't know'of her chief

lad Jii.t I, IliimiKli 1h. Bliowrr. Hi'

, , , Oieifil 111deleyutloii of Arneilraii Imll

"'yiero'Wa# imthliiK to iliIt, 'llin dliiliiiiiat njiened lil rnmu door u bll, nnil he i ladles shouted hark nml fnil lillrrnHlloiial htollirrly lo^r.

'liiiic ulll disregard Mr. Roose. ;i'n Iidvin-, 'llviy ain’t goiuiu nii - 11m H-imle, And wtiat lhey'r< >l.'.l>niiiK lo Ihelr colleaguoH loi ai.nc'1 Ihe the latter want lo Ikr of the Je<;dbox Stuff Is: "Hnya . I ’lrnldenl hasn't gol a soul onI filde-except tlie votersl"

hi;a h (:h i;u . 'Hie able and popii- "lllll" Hrny recently apitenred

CiiplKil mil, which ho does every oIt.'n, When Uio prwelice of

,ininiil oiiajnnan Farley’s srore-V pi iivciked >ocal-.curiniilly, rs- i ijilly ns a morning nowspaixr >1 ir|iiiiir.l that "Jim" had ono ic'Hiii<'i for 10*0 In hla pocket, 111" U'l.lled with a twinkle:'Oh,'I Jint wandered up tn hee M'le ihosn delegalej) are,'who hueII anil If we can hol4 ’em."

Administration Bcoiits '■ iivliig,l/f Indue# Under Hccre-V of niaii) Biimner Welles to run

.iiini /inialor ifdlng# of Mary- m . , , President Rooaevelt will iiiniir the Klernal Light at CJei- ■hniM .Tigy 3 , , . Ono M Hex <i;urll'» old molasses lankeTs has ■ II Hr,|iiiiril by Mfxlrnh* '■'*'■’’1' inoiiilaliAnli . . . NfiW light on jii<rM.,.nrrVrovealftd In old man-

ariiuliell hy Folger Bliukr*.• Iihi........ .......................... , fl-

I Nebiaika'a power iproJncUg Iboul llttr# T. V. A. lu­ll, — (Oonyrlght McOiui# r Hyiidli'illc).

iirnMl

N. 8ecreHu7 of Uibor Perkin# scored « victory

maritime unions gained advantage in thn amen

(tin propofod now me t approved last week by le. Tills amendment-estfb- sea labor board of tlf^e to "encourage" agreemonta management and labor,

hoard will liavo no author rhltratn disagreeinenta eX' II petition ot boUi olden, lu'iidinent replacoa a pro-

■iimo time ago by Jo iieily, but opponed bj

provhlimii of the railway labor re- lalliiii.vnet. In niarlllmo labor proli' li'iiih. I f adopted, it would have iiiiKio aibliinllon mandatory, subuitiilo iirovUlon doe# little i tliiin ]ir<servfl the otAlUn rgiio, thoiiKh Ihn l>oard la suppoaod to fiaiiin II Iiermanent polloy hy 1040,

'llih nieaiis Ihot seamen rrtal: thn rlRhi lo Alrlke whenever Uiey whh. Marillmft labor leaders were I'liM'iiin tn preserve their fieedoni In llili respect, Innlead nf being iihiu klril by tho eompllrateil n '

iiiorediire laid down In rullRay hibor ar.1. ’Hioy felt (Imt. Mr, Kunnedy was partial lo man* ageineiil and are pleated that hli lileag liave bean ihort-oiroultod.

a

iCKE

E M E OACE

Additions to Dcmocratio Party List Certain

Before DeadlinenOISE, May 10 (/T)-Tlio Idaho

Democratic parly now ha-i a com* plete stnte iirlmary ticket—but nd- dlllons aro certain before tho clap,M> .6t Ihe 30-day filing i>erlod ne«H M July D, ' F '

1.1 the ticket oiT Ute bo-tla of fonnal aimouncemrnl.i:

United HUtes Senalor-Jamea P.Pope nf nol.se, Inciniibeiit; CongrcM- man D.~.Worlh Clark of Pocatello.

Firit district congreMnian—Bert H, Miller of Idaho l’’nlLi. former Idaho ivtlorney geiieml; Secretary

fltato Ira H, Masiers; CharlM Of liol.vi, former Ada county

lUle lator.rnor - Hnrzlllii W. Clark nf

Idaho Palls, Incumlienl, and Lleul. ov. Charles C’, Oo.vielt of Nampa. Lieutenant (jDvenior—Mrs, Maiido

Cosho of linlne, Ada lumnty ntalo reprrjenlntlvc,

Hecretatry of Kliiie-Lowla Wll- llama of Untie, dlrcclor of charlt- ible instlliilloiis.Atlomey general—J. W. Tayl6r of

Buhl, Inclumbent.Audllor-Doiiald D, atewart of ava Hut Bprlngs, former llannock nmly legislator,'I'reuMiror-Mr.n. MyrUe P. Knkln*

■ of OooiHng, Incumbent,State superintendent o

stnictlon-Oolm W. Com 111, hicumbent,State mine iniiictitor—Arthur O.

Campbell of Miillan, Incumbent, Othora are mentioned for Uio vor*

louA iMMlllofl bnt have not an- noiuiKcd,

I"ormal declarations of candidacy miuit 1)0 filed wiUi a »i>ociflc fee and nominating petltlona nt the office of tho seerelaty of stale for Ihe var­ious offices betwoon June B and July 0,

Tlie Republican party nllll ha« veral vni-ancle# on lla Ilckot, 6o r (here has Iwen nn Indication of ilrd-parly movemenla,

it 'of publio In^ ' I t ' londlo of Prea- 'y

nuaiNKHS AnVIBERHUED FOn DIVOROB

SAN JOSE. Oallf., May ID (ffV- Mrs, Velma I* Kirby filed suit for dlvoice today from Olenn E. Kirby, whom she deaorlbed as n buslnesa adviser who "alwaya got -lired be- x causftrlUa-ampleyera rewnted l» ln f W lold HOW to run tlieir bualneM.” i

Tlie United Btale# wniumea ni than BOO,000,000 Iona ot ooal i nually.

Page 5: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

TWIN PAU.8 NEWS, T W m TALtS, IDAHO, FKTDAY MOBNINO, MAT 20, IWn P A 0 8 !

Dance d7i(i\rprUnary Festivals . Clhnax Activities of L. D. S.

An.claboratc dftnco Tcstlvaf. at.whlcU a number ol griglnal dancea will be Introduced, will bring to anuanuuo rrtu yu rtiik »inun;jJiYO'the”ItD.8- stake cerles of dances, a n d w ill take place this

evening a t 8:30 o’clock In the recreationa l ha ll. AIL G lean ­

ers a n d M-Men are expectcd to be present to participate In the aw arding of prizes to be given fo r the activity contest

being sponsored by the stake M-Men, w ith Mr. B all as dlrec- to i, and the stake G leaner Girls, w ith Mrs. Roy K ing as d i­

rector.

B I R T H D A Y S O B S E R V E D A T P A R T Y

Mrs. Lucy Strtcter, one of south- -Ti IdihQ’6 most prominent pioneer women, and a ktoup of her friend*, whose birthdays occurred recently, enjoyed the third of a series of birthday parties at the liL^torlc

home at RocVc CrtfV: We<l- nesday ■ Afternoon,

Other honor aruesta were Mrs. Ada Butler, Mm, Sarah Bower anti Mrs, Mary Y. Norton, Twin Fnlb, and Mrs, Mavis Hall. Haiclton,

Ari Interesting program w m pre­sented, afid refreshments were serv­ed to the 50 guests attending.

-Make This Model At HomeTwin Falls News Pattern

4 ,

Tlie floor show w ill begin at

0:30-p’clock to accommodatc

^ those ^ lu ) do n o t w lsli to rc-main for oanclne, according to the committee^on arranBcmenU!. Tlie pn^ram will leaturo the Btalce num­ber, "Qold and Orcen Dance." orlg-. lnat«d by W, O. Robinson, of the Rcneral board In Salt Lake City, nnd directed by Mr. and Mrs. Vem Yatea. This number will be effec­tively costumed, Murtaugh ward will present a dancc lindcr the di­rection of Mark DayJey, and the first waid will appear In an orig­inal number, arranged by Tom Wil­kins and Mrs, Myrtle Rogers.

In charge of the event are Vemyatw. general ehaJrman; Mi_____H. atoices, publicity: Mrs, Ruth

---- Mooit— rcfrcshmcnt3“ M r^~ Vlnrll-McBrldo, decorations. Other mem­bers Of • uie- stake board will as- sUt.

A spring theme of decoration will prevail In the rccrcatlon hall ap« polntmenta and In Uie punch booth.

Prftnary Festival Tlie spring fesllvnl of tlic Buhl,

Murtnugh. Twin Falls and Klmbcr- Jy Primary ass6clatloia of the U D. 3. church will bo held tomorrow at

♦ the city park, If tlie ‘weather Is favorable. Otherwise It will bo slnKcd In the recreation hall,,

Tlic children will meet In the tab­ernacle at 1 o’clock and the festi­val wUl begin at 2 o'clock. The May queen and her attendant* will pre­side. Songs and dancea will be Klvcn in costume by the children. The ’ulndlng of three May poles Rlmu\tju\c0i.i5ly will climax the per­formance,

S O D A L E S P I N O C H L E C L V B M E E T S

........... Sodales-rtoochlexJub-Wft*-enl«.- - iftined Wcdnesday-ftftemoon by Mrs.

Matt Schmiat.,Tlirec tables of cards were at .play. Mrs. Harlan Halle, Mrs, Jock MacDougal, Mr*. Matt Schmidt and Mr*. L, C. WHdman winning the prizes.

Mrs, noyd Lincoln was a guest, nefrcshmcnts were RCt^ed by the

■ hostess, Mrs. Roy Weller will be hostcM to the club June 1

H U S B A N D S H O N O R E D B Y C A R D C L V B

Member* of the T. A. C, club <-ntertnlned their l\usband-i at a buf­fet dinner Wednesday iVenlng at

If the homo ol Mr. and Mn. Plavo ff l,ydum. Mrs. BUI Brown and Walter • ' Dois won the priics at cards played

following dinner.The service table waa covered with

a lace cloth and centered with lllac.v The quartet tables had pastel covers and tulips In black vases formed the centerpieces.

Mr. and Mrs. Lsdum, Mr. and Mr*, Dosa, Mr. and Mrs. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Clcll McDowell, Mr. and Mru, Hqwnrd Manning, Mr. and Mrs, Kwnld Schwarts, Mr. and Mrs. Har­old OroTcs and Mr. and Mr*, Bud Wadsworth were present.

Parties Honor Eighth Graders

E igh th , g raders . of-St. J2d-

w ard’s paroch ia l school, who w ill rccelva certificates ot g raduation Suftdoy m orn ing

J o ’clock mass, have en­joyed a ga la week. ’They were

hostgW ednesday evening to a

g r o u p N ^ the ir junio r h ig h school f ^ n d s a t a dancing

party a t the parish ha ll andCJIfX/.f of M ifh /T ir. R H fJ N . at a picnic Tuesday at Ban-

btiry'B natatPTlum',---------- =a flnalfl to the week'.i fcatlv-

Itle.'i, Mrs. John F.' Coujhlln and Mrs. Claude Detweller will enter­tain tiio graduntc.1 Sunday morning at a breakfo.'it at«Uic Park hotel, following moM.

Members of the gradunUng class re Genevieve Benoit, Joan Benoit,

Mary. Alice Buchanan. M ary Coughlin, Margaret DetweUer, Flor­ence "Lang. Juanita Belaya, liouls Dillon. Andrew Florence, Olio Flor-

. diaries Glib, Hubert Hicks, Allen McDonald, Sheniiiin Obon, Donald Tlilpl and WIIIIbih Whlt-

Patrons at the dancing part^ sre Father Raymond a. Belberf

and parcnta of the graduates, Tlie hall waa ornate with streamers of blue and gold, the cliisa color.-!, and garden bouquets. Jar dwicluR

played by Glen Boren, punch and wafers were sen-ed.

S O U T H A M E TllUX N ---------P R O G R A M a i V E N

Mrs. R. W. Corpenter prrsrnted a program on South AJnerlea at a meeting of the PrcsbyterUm Mt. - Blonary aoclely in the church par­lors yesterday afternoon. -

Mrs. B. F. RatcUffe conducted the .lonah and Mrs, H. T. fllnke

gave hlglillghtrt of tho Prc.'.bytcrJnl 'hlch wa.*! conducted iR-'.t month at

Wendell.. Mr.s. D. R. ClnirclilH pro . Idcd at (lie business meetliiR In the nbseneo of the president. Murray North played two piano selections.

Refreshments were sen’cd from a lace-cdvercd table decorated with yellow tapers and flowers. Mrs, J. D. Kautz and Mrs. Frazier presided Hoste.ww were Mrs. H, N. Wngner,

W, Neale arid Mrs. C. L. Roger;:.

W . C. T. U- Mrs, HuKli Allen rnterlalned

inember.1 ot the Woman's Clirlstliin T-emp<'raJioo—tin{on-ftt-In>r-<wunlry- home near Burley Tuesday_pfter.-

Tenipprancc'tbpl'cs were rend by Mrs. L. M. FL*sher, Mrs. Iva drew*, and Mrs, F. B, Dot-wii with prayer by .Mrs, Dotson who al.w. read an article from the Union Signal, Each member rend nr tide and dUcns.-ilon of cach article

by the group.

I N I T I A L B R I D G E C L U B M E E T S «

Initial bridge club memUen and two guests. Mrs. J. L. Berry and Mrs. E. E. Bingham, were enlertalned WiMlnesday afternoon by Mm, June KIrkman. A dessert luncheon waa served preceding tho games,

Mrs. O. C, Hull, Mrs. Arthur Slm- nions and Mrs. Hevior wito prlto wlnnors, Biirlng ijlon.som.s iimdo the rooms atlracllve.

S U P E R V I S O R S A N D F A C U L T Y F E T E D

Mr. and Mrs. A, L. Jarmen enter­tained yesterdoy aftonioon at an In­formal tea for teucliem and play­ground supervlsor.s of IJncoln fioliixil. 'i'wenty guests attemlc«l,

F O U R - L A T T E N D S S W I M M E R

I ’oiir-L club members attended a ^wlmm}ng and dancing party early this week at Artesian, followed bj A plenlo iimch. Mian Catherine Jones, Mlsa dreta Walson and Miss Iklna Mlntz were guests of the group, _____

G R O U P O F ^ m o i t s . E N T E R T A I N E D

Mlsa Priscilla Olpson and M lu I/irean HalnoA were liosle&sea to a group of senior glrla Wednesday eve­ning at a shimbor party, followed l)y a breakfast yesterday niornliTg, Tho affair took I'lace at the Olpiuu iiome,

Decorative details were In a May motif, Ouesta were M lu Lavaino llaniett, MIm HarrleVVe fitanshury, Mlsa Pat line, MIm Wnnda iCaton and Mlaa Doiothy Strain,

H I ’L O B R I P G E C L U B

to tho Ul-Lo bridge oliib at Ivmch- .ron yesterday aftenioon at the l*ark 'liutel. auesU of the club wero Mr<. Coe Price, Mr», Olen Jenkins nnd Mra, Harry aeverlu,

anesta were seated at a single fable, -nie Intler part of the ufter- nn<m waa n|ient playing cards at tlic Helfrecht home on Eighth ave'-

BURLEY

M A R T H A P R O G R A M A Martha program was featured

Monday evening by the E •er8recn Chapter of Eastern Star meetlnB the I. O. O. F. hall. Plnjio mu by Mrs. Martha G.-usklll opened Hip meeting. Mnrtho. heroine of the order, was dlscuwd by Mrs. Pe:\rl Rambo and a sketch of the family of Bethany waa given by Mrs, Alice Chadwick, the correspondlni? scrlp- tute being read by Mrs. Celia Bcach, Mr.'i. §ybll ^hroetlcr san^

so o.

FLATTERING CArELET-FROCK

' PATTERN 4807

, tyd timcC^amSL'Revel In the Uiought thnt now

you can look smarter, slimmer, younBerl How? Tlie answer b cn.-.y —simply order Pattern 1007, and make up this delightful style cjiilck-

H f l KM I J E M S

Trgdc Practices -of Large Firms.Assailed by In-

- vcstigators

Ing Anne Adams model will prove (0 you that yoii don't have to be experienced .vnmstre.- s to turn i becoming additions to your ward­robe In a short time, • Can't you vl. loii yourself In .this flattering -•tyle. iLs sracoful linos set oft by colorful flowered voile, or a dainty synthetic .'.lieer? Ynull lovtf. the flatten’ ot lt.s full capdet, trim panel, ai\d little bow.

Pattern .1807 Is available hi women’s : l.-c. 04, 3(J. 38, 40, 42, 44. 40 and •!«, Kl/c 3G takes 4’i yards 30 Inch fabric, illustrated stop-by- slep .scwhit;. ItujrucUona. arc, in eluded.

• Send ril-TLEN CENTS (I5c) In coins or .-itamps (coins preferred) for thi.'. Aniit" Adams pattern. Write plainly Slzi;, NAME. ADDRESS and STVI.i; NUMBER .

Drc.‘s 11]) for Summerl' Order your copy of Uie NEW ANNE ADAMS PATTKHN BOOK Imme dlatelyl Learn how to have a smart w’arm-wcather wardrobe that's

_,ffl^)o/iiri£iit. cca/ioaiJcaJ,-♦'ajij.'-<<j makel PlannliiK a .vacation? See

-lhe^^ctKc-^^^^^llcOlalof■sport^oulT flta, nfternoon .".herrs, evening fln- rryl Stnylnj: Home? Have flatter, ing porch frocks nnd g.iy . un-style«l Flattery for bride and Rrndimte . . . cottons for Tot anti Jiuilor! PRICE OF BOOK FIFTKKN CKNT.S PRICE OK PATTERN FIITEEN CENTS, noOK AND PATTERN TOGKTHUR T \V E N T Y - F I V E CENT.S.

Send lour tirdrr to l-uln Palls New.'!. P,Tt(»-rn Department, Twin Falls, Idnho.

S U N S H I N E - V A L L E Y C L U B M E E T S-Sunslilne-Valley club met at Uie home of Mrs. W, A. Kelly yester­day afternoon with Mrs. Ida Sw’an- son as hostess. Roll icall response.'! were fa\-orite hollda/s. Prizes for the best went to Mrs. Claude Pen­nington and Mrs. D, E. Ryan. Mrs. Edna Jakway and Mrs. Violet Her­rick won the contest favors. The prosperity gift weiil to Mrs. Elsie Swanson.■ The hostess served refre.shmehts, Mr*, Violet. Herrick will be hostes.i to the club June 2.

C A L I F O R N I A G U E S T S H O N O R E D

Mr, and Mrs. M. E. Brown , and daughter, Karen, were hosts at^ ln^ ner at their home on Second ave- nu« north last evening for Mr. and Mrs, Albert Krull. Marysville, Calif. Mr. and Mra, Krull will return Sunday to their home In Califor­nia, following a visit with Twin Palls and Kimberly relntlves and friends,

H O S T E S S E S P R E S I D E A T L U N C H E O N

Mrs, P. r. McAUe and Mra. W il­bur 6- Hill were hostesses at tiic first ot a aerlea of brldge' luhcheon.s Wednesday afternoon at the home of the fomier on seventh avenue easL' They will entertain tomorrow at a second luncheon, aLv> at the MoAtee home.

The six quartet tables tractive with phik tulip centerpieces.

Mrs, J. O. 'Phorpe and Mrs. Alvin Casey w’ere presented with the bridge prlres.

D E L P H I A N S O C I E T Y The Deita Sigma chnptcr of

Delphian society met last Friday evening at tho homo of Mlr-s Ida Gaskiii.- The .lubject ■wa.i impres­sionism with MrK, I, H. Harris program chnlrman. lmprc:>slonl,Mlc theory waa Introduced by Mrs. Mac Crouch and a general discussion of pre-crusors of Inipres.ilonlim fol­lowed by the group, Clyde and Edward Monet ^vore dl.'x:u.«ed Uy iMrs, RO.SCOC Rich, and Mrs. William Roper. Mrs, J. 'P. Hackney talked on Renoir nnd Mrs. E, Corrlne Ter- hune's topic w’n.s Dages. Current evenU were in charge of Mrs. Jesse Brandt,

Cotning EventsROYAL NEIGHBORS

Royal Nelglibors of America will meet Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the Odd Pcliow.s hall for regular lodge work:'

AI, E. E. O,Chapter Al. P. E. O. Sisterhood

will hold a called meellng Prlday evening at 8 o'clock nt tiie home of Mr/f, Hnrry Benoit. J30 Seventh tve-

en.st.

HAGERMANF R I E N D S H I P C L U B

Mrs, Wllln Justice entcrla'lned the members of tiie Frlcnd.shlp club at her home last Ttiesday. Tlie dny was cpent tiuiltlng.

S H O W E R G I V E N A shower w’ag given Friday after­

noon at Uic Civic club rooms tor Mr.s. Edwin Fryer. Hostesses were Mcidanie:;, ftcd ,-Roberts , Jolin Baptic, E- L. Cliapltn, Jolin .Town-, .'end, Anriis McCollum and Jay Coolldge.

S H O W E R F O R D A U G H T E R Mrs, Joseph Haycock was- hostess

ot a shower Tliursday afternoon nt the L. D. S>t‘Uurch for her daughter, Mrs, Lc.sllc Partin, Readings were given by Mrs. Myrtle Callahan nnd Mr.s. n . A. Stevens. Games "were ployed.

B I R T H D A Y E V E N T I Mr.v Jack O'Brien entert^ncd I-Ylday afternoon on her dtiughtcr, Jeanne’s, ninth blrthdny, Ouesta were Trellla RawllnBs, Ellene Bil­liard. Dorla Jean Parrott, Etta Max­well, Dorothy Smith and Lucy Mao Snedon,

M E T H O D J S T A I D Mrs, John Jones was hostess for

tho Methodist Ladies' Aid Wednes­day afternoon, with Mrs. Wills Jua-

CHALLENGE

TheNntlon's

1 HenKh Fm)t1

.•i'.',l.-.lhik-. Mr.s. Clinrlc! Holt an liUrrcMlng talk on her work

In the Children'.! hospital In San Jose, CnllforiiLi,

G U E S T C O M P L I M E N T E D IT,. Jnhn Ooiies lina enlertalned

nt panic,-. ui honor of her sister, Mrs. Dan 'Ilioinas of Albany, Cali­fornia. Moiidny afternoon she en­tertained at kciwlngton for former clawmate.i of Mrs. Tliomas. Tuesday afternoon flic save a bridge party with r.lx table.s In play.-----

C H U R C H A U X I L I A R Y ■Tlie Wonicii’.s Auxlllnry of the Re

organised L. D. 6? church me Wedne.' day afternoon with Mrs. Dona Gilmore. A .•>hower was given In honor of Mrs. ailmore. Hostesses were Mrs. I^ank Dickerson and Mrs, Reverla Condfi. Mrs. Jennie Condlt wa.s In charfic ot the program.

. LABOR KEWARBED

AUBTIN, Tex. (,7-i — One ot the most ifBlquc student funds In the United States reccnily was cstab- lUhed at the llnIver. lty of Texas by T, U. Taylor, engineering dean emeritus. Twice each year candi­dates who have earn<tll the costs of their education by mnnual labor are handed 115 to spent^lt Irway they may desire. !n ndi.......to working, students mu. t meet certctn BChoIastle standards.

BEST

D R I P C O F F I E

Y O U r V ! R

\ t a s t e d ;

Storm Benefits CropH in Idaho

BOISE. Mny 18 (,7^-An out-of- •scu.-ion siiou.sujrni brnupht beneficial niol.stnre to foutlimi Idaho, but r Eood strong ;,un coiUd be u-sed right.

WASHINOTON. May, i s '.,v, - Senator Walsh (D-M*aa) climaxed

' road Bitauk Hjdjy on’ wool fl«BI^ trade proctlcea w itif* declara-

I a vpport to a .•'peclttl seimte In- iRi'ilng committee by ita clilcf

nKeni con,Mtlutcd virtual charges of I’mbezzlcnient" against some of Ihc counlrj’’,! largest wool firms.

Wal'.h h.-iUcd a review by E. S, Haskell of n reiwrt ILstlng ciinrgcs ni;:ilii;.t unnomed wool hou.w hi Co.'.lon, Plillndelplila, Chl-

Louh, nnd other cUlr.s and told Chslnnan Aibni.s (D-Colo) he

i:isld(’ied the nllegatlons were ’Irtuol charges of cmbczzlcmcni. ’ Adiuns said lie agreed wliii

Wiilsh’s fiugBC^tlon tlial "In fnlr- he W’ool Industry names of

Individual flrnw should be put inio the record when chorges against them did not opply Renernily to the Industry." but after Haskell resumrd his ic.stimoWy, he continued to leave the dealers unidentified and the committee memlwr.'; did not wk him fc. their names.

Haskell, chief investigator durlnft 10 committee's twq and a holf-

ycai—int]ulry-lnto' wwjl~marketlng RncLiUlca .Broccdure._3aid_the_in- vc.4llg;illon discloscd many prac- tlcea tlmt caused ,‘ gcasa tncqulUcs

I wool growers.Explaining the practlcca were

general In some J(J5}nqoe .tmd ap­plied only to one' or Iw^ dealers in others; Haskell gave these as oiit- staudlng e.v.implcs dtscloscd by the InvestlRatlon;

■niat :om>? dealer.-, "realized .'ig- nitlcantly higher price.-, ' In sales of their own wool as compared to gales of wool for which they acted as grower.s’ agent.i.

Tlint In conic cajcn the price discrimination was "quite striking."

That dealer,'; "gro.s.'ily manipulated" shrinkages nnd made •’flctltlou,s' reports to the disadvantage of the growers.

TJiat dealers •‘comnihigled" wool of varlou. type.-; in .such n way that "serious inefiullles’ resulted grow’crs.

Tliat fictitious records were kept ; some firms.TJiat some dealeti reimbursed

growers for conFilfcnifient shipments known in the trade as "to nrrlvc" rales on-the-ba.-!ts of-thB'wool price m the date the deal w’bs made, vhercM the wool would have brought I higher price on a later date.

Hafkell .said other "questionable tran.wctlons" that caused "flagrant inequities" to the growers Included "unfair charges" by the dealers for •storing wool; "thrce-corncred deals" in w’hlch a second denier partlci- pat<'d without the growers' knowl-

di.screpancles in the commis, •slon fees charged by dealers, "dc' spite an agreement to abide by c.S' tabilshcd nchedule.s; dilference.s in certain lftt«(5£l rates ehargcd agaliLst the growers; "unfair" storage In­

surance ratr' fli;tl "fictitious'' cart- oge charKc'f. •

Bankers, ' auasi-pubUc ..^officials" nnd "fiomctlinf’.’. federal govetiiment employe.',’ ila:.l;eli .snki, had bi-cn employed by '.oiiir dcnicrs as field agentJ with ihr result that "some -growCTT-had-t)rm-C0c>Cea"lri mar­ine wool salc.'i.

Ha.<ikeil f.-ikl tl;c liive«tlgaUun convinced hliu "vohiiilary renula- Ilon of the wool hulustry. wn: fu- tile."

David Greer. Bo.-,ton attorney who said he represented the National Wool. Trade ar.soclallnti, told the committee the orEnnlzallon 'dc not want to condone or cover anything." but. hv.icad we want help eliminate any unfair prac­tices."

3W. State Agricultur Commlasi ' Quy Graham said todajr.Oraiiam said "we feel atire that .i

Uie snow storm lias, not injured any •: growing fruit trees and vegetable! ia ' this section ot Idalio.

'The moisture w’as very ticneflcial to grain crops, but sunshine la needed to mature tho general ruti '• of crops," lie tsild. -

Weather forecasters predicted po*. sible light Irosta lonionow, how*. .. ev'er.

For ’All Types

INSURANCEiJEXCEPT LIFE)

SeePEAVEY-TABER

C o m p a n yAgents for

HARTFORDTested By Time

And Disaster________

^ S A L E -and Saturday Specials'

COATS ^ SUITS - TOPPERS300 Co.-its, Etc. C t Q & O f t

Greatly R e d u c c d ^ * * '® 2 2 *All Sizes 9 9 > 9 S

DRl^SSES500 Spring Dresses at Prices $ 2 * 9 8 You Can Afford to Buy Sev- eral. Sizes 14 to 50. I 8V2 to -26%. • $5.98;

HATSEntire Stock of Straws, S'elts, Taffetas, Crepes. Col­ors Taris and white, navy, l)lack.

Figure It Any I Way You Wish..

M-J'B''s speeialfMw, improved

DRIP GRIND

'III#nrth.

varded to Mrs.

T A L K P R E S E N T E D O N H Y M N S O F C H U R C H

Mrs. O'. U, i’rjor preaented k paper 01] "Hymiui of Ihe Church" at a nieatlnv ot the AicanaloQ Cplaoopal riulld yesterday a ltem om .' Mn, I.. II, I.iuk waa lioitwi tonhi in up .

riio butincu MMlon w u dlMcljd by M n. O. II. Trullt. Rsrtflilw inent.1 were served by the ilOtteai.

THIS WEEK!•

Dulk • IMn(H . qunrtK

Fresh Strawberry

• • •

3-I.nyer Brick

Vnnilla Froflh Btrftwbony

I’inonpplo

When you Mt down to a de*

llolously cool dl«h of Ohallenga ■ Ic8 Oro*m. you know you are

setting tlie Jt'a pureat,

freshest and luu tliat down

right good flavor tliat BA11B-

PIEHi^Ko wonder lt‘a tiia fav­

orite or All noutliem Idaho!

AT ALL LEADING IfOUNTAINS----- -— JK ftO M K .--- -----

Cooperative Creamery

b i i n g i y ou A t L than F I i t o i Factors *

Now M 'J'D ' announcei a i[>eclal,

new IM PROVED DRIP GRIND

leulning all of M ’J B’ CofTce's full

/Idler.

■nds new M'J U’ DRIP CiRIND

Is guar.intetj to milce tlie mojt dc-

llclous (trip coiTce iIiK you liav«

ever tasted. I f you don't igtce your

gfoccf w ill fcfund )Out money.

Try i(i rich, fiill flivor—the re­

sult o f pcrfcain^i anil combining all

important flavor*fiiciors lo pcoijuce

M'J'U''»famouj"ri»vo;I!iiei?ll»l”.

THR c o r r i l WITH THi > • . * i f* ’

Page 6: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

' P A G E S IX TWIN PALLS NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, FRIDAY MORNING. MAYSOrlDSS* '

Octagon Hou$&BY PHOEBE ATWOOD TAYLOR

ThB StoiT So Far: felwpy. Quanomet oa Cape Cod wake* up with a bain whn» all Us clUifiu are carlcaturfd in the new p«.t office muraJ. Asey Mayo, homt- ■pun deteoUvf. leom* from »*- nellE Fj7 « who Urea In the old Oetnon House, lhat her' «l»ler Marina U married to the artist and pul him “P ‘0 m.illclou» trick. Late thnl nlghl us -Ui-y.U

‘T knew the lump would float bnck In with the tide," ahe Bald "But Sister didn't atop to figure thiit out. Aftfr Rlie got cxhnustcd, [ :.aia I'd Bct It U slic'd proinlic to take It back for me for l 5 ,ooo,

“ grocery bill. I've fni ’I , ‘htit. I mnrrhrd into ttie ?;urr and fished nnilirrRrh. She '

with slartlW iicnn- She tins fouiiU S50.000 north ol ambrrKfli on the btach. Marina h.ii hrrn killed wllh ' Pam's knife, ami- T.ini is wanted for the muriicr.

Chiiplcr Tlucc nuiuilne tlie Gamut

•'When I found the BmberRrls," Pam ruslied on, " I did a lot of hard IhlnXlnR. Fvmny that In nil thwe jciir.'! of InmtinB, T never once cou- sldireil ” nftermalh and transpor­tation problems. Anyway, the lump wasn't r.taked. or above lilKh waitermark.'ITie sand was soli (herI couldn't SCO any foolprlnUs. But n i admit the wind was wlilpplng so that n practically lfh<l covered my own prlnt.-i In the sand. On the other hand, anjoiie who might have found It before me wouldn’t have lelt It. anymore than I Intended to."

•'night." Ascy said.“Well. I got a .-iilck from

dune drift and levered the lump up above the hlRhc.st water marl;

“ -'crKCip-nnd -scnwtcdr- and,- Uh-u -i

-2-ut-dQwnuma..c(lt-!lU'A'r<i;xi)L_ni“L wondered where to ko from ilicie.

- V. - "Think ot ciililiV It up? ""Oh. ye.v I thought of Uml. I

aiually wear n .'.lieatli kJiUc, hkn ' the one vmi'vc Rot oti your belt. Awfully hnnrty. from cleanln« fish to dlBBhiR wecil i. Uul I'd foruotlen It. then of all tlme.v I even remem­bered Just where I'd left It oh the back porch, too. And—"

•That'.s the knife tljal killed Marina?': Ascy Interruplcd.

“Yes. Well, there I was, and there was Uie ambcrgrla I ’vo hunted mil my life, and there was the tide,

V bounding In. I thought of swim­ming It back, but three mllc.s Is ton much for me, and If anyone ]ftcl:cd me up from n boat or nnytlihiK. they could claln RalvBRe. And-do you

- ■ liBppcu to know Rodney Strutt?''■•young nodncy? No," A-.ey r.nlti.

"I don't, but Bill Porter claims nodney'll be the first ot the Irtle rich they rend limb from limb, come the revolution, and a godtl thin? ll'll

' be."'■ Paiii noddefl-approvingly. “That's

Rodney. He's Rot a .Oiootlng camp beyond the point, I noticed fresh

‘ tire mark.'!—he ke<TM a beach wagon wllh bis llrcs to tnxl his bunch and back. After considering that angle, 1 decided I'd practically rath­er shove the ambergrl.i back Into tti* water Umn a.sk Rodney or hb pals 1(1 help. I've had. my little

• R ^ y , like the rest of the local

* ■ ‘I,Ike A.Tawny Titer'"And then Roddy's beach wagon

• bounded up In front of me. and in It was Sister, apparently on h jr way to Boddy«.'’

‘■She plays around wllh him. does ahe. huh?"

Pnm shrugged. "Patlicr and I de­cided years ago that we were hap-

• pier not knowing Marina’s play matca. It's all very well to take up tlie white "man's burden, but you have' to draw the line Bomewherc. •Well, there was SUter. Ascy, and

- - ahe eauBht on about tlw ambcrwrla.Her eyes gleamed llke-llke a tawny tlger-I never raw a tawny tiger, but thal'.i the only way I know of de.wrlblng her. And—.'■omehnw—I don't honestly Ihink I ever hated lier more limn I did that momcnl

"WouUl the aml)i'rgrl!i menu r much to her? 'llie money, 1 mean?" Amv asked.

'Ilie iiionnllKht raughl tlwsled fimlle, "Her mnih'linK iind Jark's painting would ki rp I'alhc-r and me in iiltor luxmy. I'ut .si;,t<'r and Jack have expen'.lvi' Iji.-.tr.'i, imtl Ihey'ro nmuilly morr titdke lh;in we arc. Hl.iter rauRlit im. all rlHhl. Don i think .'he'.s an\one'« foni. i knew tlicrn'wiiMri any ii' - hm:«llin;

_ w lth her. I lalil. 'All ili;iit. Half If you take It hark'." '

Her cigarette i)ull deicrilicd an •rc Into the water.

"And atiter said," Pam conllniietl, '•'that I eoiild go to hell. Oh" Raid aho wa.n the otilv one who cnuld k«'1 Ihe htulf b:irk, unil wlllunil hrr I'll have nothlnK. In i.licirt, .'ihe wi)ul<l have 11 nil hcrrrlf. And llm l \va that,"

Aney Krunti-il. lie hjnln't liked the Boimil cif Hip liewlirhlng Ma­rina whi ii liii IHM hi'iiiil at)iiMl hi-r, Now ho lliivi’ ii|> li' l'in '’i" n iiihidi'tl and lei hlnv.i-lf Imir liir, 11iiprniii;li-

' )y and forri'fnlly."I liope," hr mill, ".mmi knocki'd

her teeth oull"“I plrkf<l lip 111'’ 'iilrk I'll uM'd

lUi 11 levrr,'’ I'lim sain, "and I rtnn'i f know where I R-it Hi.> j.Ih uhHi , h>ii

before ahe had liiui- In niiil'iM^uicl,I had that hmii) id iuuIh iii iK dnwu In the flurf."

Aney'a eyes iiniHnve.l, With »'in,- 000 and all lhat It nu'i.iit rtailm: her In the eye, Hili innii/liu! < hil<l lirefrrred l» llinov H awi.y mtlin- than let her «l;,t<:i » i l 11

•'Yen, I'll rather have lir.t It «'ii- lliely." I'ain echoed hin thoiinht.i. "Ho would yo^. When Woter raw that hniip lilt the nnilntii'V. nlm wan out nf lhat iieai'h waniiii in a fla.ih, yellinit for me io iH'l it. Ami that lime, 1 illd tlir luliilhhig"

'O d llnla mill Mlir'"IJliiii't hiie nil hir i iV A’.ry de-

niiinded."filnler," ram i-aid,

»if watrr. (illo nm'l j.u' me (ell yiai, Ai.i'V, M emolhniii that gut alieil on Hint l>e«rh-I felt lllir niiiiiethlnK i>iit id one of tho.so eavtlily lUiveln, all heavluR breanln and nlaik iiiiici

, Wo ran iiie iinmut, Hliilcr and 1 did, Ami the ainiini'.i li. hntpl«'il <>u tho aiirf."

Aney pulled at hlnji>l|>e iill ihn Ixiwl jiuriiMl hlK lini^in. li<' m»c- voled at Pam Kry6, and lii» ini- j)*r«mai . way l.lie nmld dcN'iUie HUch a neene. an lliontiU II had luip^ l>aned to two oilier iiriipl'' luthe- Jy. It WUK. he deeldnl, Ihii (!a|i

•' • Ood half nf her npenklng, Ilf niodier'fl faiiillv had I'm i im In

■ . rtomltable trilie.■•Oo dll." he M|i|.

t lu ' oeacii wagon, and . ..•il It wllh a torpaulln, and i.tait-

M Imm. Sh, ,v«s „"I y, ■„,l I

n.o surt out tl.cro !■;iiwrill, niui riGhtliiK tl.c uiul^rlowaImo.it cavcd me in."

"Did you trust her?" Ar.ey Hiked "Trust Sister?" Pam lauRhed.

"Don't he silly. Of course not. Half­way home, aho said we mustn't tell

soul, I agreed wc mustn'l. Then .■ihe raid, let's take 11 r.tralRhl to Boston, now. And the air wa.s full of the smell of old rat,'; and mlcc. I Slid wc couldn’t, without my tell- Inc I’ather. Otherwise, Jie'<l h,\vc the police combing the C;ipe for me when I didn't return to ret. din­ner. Rhe s.Hd that.mur,tn't happen, and 1 ke;)l on agrcchii;. I I ua: dawning mi me, .■\sey. thal i.hi hadn't an i''ea In the 'Axrltl of k l ting nie have my ambergris, after all. It was nne of those thliij,a yi roiild ferl."

• CoK-Tlghl. 103n,■----P!iK't5(T niwrfltr-TnyIor7'~_ -iCoiUlnucd-ln ih c jic it jiiu c ) .

OAHOPRISONI[fLOYlMllES

Meredith Announces Plans For Sweeping Reforms

At Penitentiary'-nv WALTER R. BOTTCHKR

liOlSE. May 10 (.T>—Employment for inlsoiier.s and a $50,000 redue- tlon In the state's annual penal bill wpre projected by bu.slnc; warden P. C. Meredith today i Jor objectives in his .sweeping pro- graufc-to reform Idaho penitentiary ^(Imlnl.strative practices.

"Our pioRram already is well un­der way," the warden. broUicr .of the iate one-time ynjted-Btatefl Sccrctary of Ajcricultur^ Edwin T. ^rcredlth. JJild in on Interview.

Meredith, former dlrectorTJf the ri.'.t Idaho emergency relief ad-

mlnistratton In the dark days of the depression when nearly a fourth of the .sUte’fi iwpulace looked to him for food, hhclter and clothing, !,ume<> his prc.senl post Feb. 3.

^ Variety of Job.s Inmates, the number of which

averages 300. will be put to work making furniture for certahi' etivtc lMtltutlon.i, shoes and clothing for themselven and other state charges, cultivation of the new forestry sery. intciwlfled operation of the COO acres of prison lands Including dalr>’ and poultry activities, canning of frulUand vegetaiilej, anil Rlaugh ter and preparing ol hogs and eatth for eou.?umpllon by the prisoner:;.

Others will continue on mess niu laundry duty. In the bakery, as Janl tors. Uarber.s, guards, tnlliMii and mechanlr.s and similar funetlinis,

"I think exjien.-.e.s of tho instlti lion can he cut Sf.(),000 a yrar I Increasing iirodnrtlon of f. and by raising and iirrsiTVl for use ill the lir,Ilt\itlon,' M<Trdlth,

"Our cannery l.s being .--et u] plan to can ^lx to Kl carlimds ot Irnit aiul vegi'taliies nnniially

"We slaughter ami pn’pan ,v: beet that

POPEYE - By E. C. Segar THAT GOES FOR WIMPY,'TOO!

,IUST K ID^- ONE WORD LED TO ANOTHER ' t

DIXIE DUGAN- COULDN’T TELL THEM I’y

SCORCHY SMITH- AND WHERE HE GOES, NOBODY KNOWS { |

In a r w MiNurg^, a t w c k i?ou& b y tmeCAfiHN, TDRNING-ON TO -mg VIU-A6€ t?OAP“ ......

Page 7: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

H U S P !TWIN PALLS NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO^ FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1938

CLEVELAND CLIMBS BACK INTO FIRST PLAGEt ' * - tSr . t f ^ -ti ir- . ☆ *Collegiate TrackSters Converge a t Seattle for Assault on UecordsIndians Wallop Senators

15 to 3; Cubs Whitewash ^ a tits In Pitchers’ Duel

Whitehead P itc h e s Chicago to 4-0

Victory

AMERICAN I.EAGUR CUreland 15, U'o.ihlnston 3, Detroll 6, rhIUdelphift 2. Chlrato ‘4. Boston 0 (Called c

■eventb. uet troundii).Ntw York »l St. Louli, rain.

CLEVELAND, May J9 m - 'ilio Cleveland Iiidinns pul on tliclr lieavlcsl attnck or tlic tcason

—agafnat— Washircton— Jodaj— and- wound up the fltlemoon wllh tlirce home runs.-*-trlplc,-four -doubles nnd ft 15 to 3 victory, wlilch pul them In first, plnco In the American league.

The score:Wiulilnglon r h|Cle»clnn<l *b r U

Washlncton ....1*0 ...........

Detroit .............THlIiaflpIiTi 6t, Louis ..........

. AverUl,

leith. 'Btamoru. Double

W hite Sox 4 , Red Sox 0CHICAGO, May 10 (/PJj-Blg Joli

Whltfhead. cioklns his flratr «t«i in mora than three weeks, shut out the Bo«tonj Red ' Sox with throe singles In a Rnme held to s Innings , by rnln today and White 6ox triumphed In tho . contest of the curUlled scries. 4 to 0.

Th9 defeat ended the Red ■wlnnlnjr strealc at eight g^mej,

'dropped them from th«'Iraguelead­ership they held since Saturday.

Jim Wilson. wlio.ie previous t\ xlnrt.'? had been shutout vlctorli had little support from tenmmat and bore Uie brunt ot Chlcttg< eight single attaclc that drove him from Jbo mound In the fourth.

*h r h;Chic»Ro «5

l i S 3

rksjStandlnfi

B i l l Lee Restricts New Yorkers to

5 Hits

..............-....18

...17, 1.1 J67

NATIONAL LEAGUE

? York .....Chicago ........Boslon ....... .PllUburjh __WnrlnniU ....

I/Ouls ...Brookljn .....Philadelphia .

...1C 12 J71

... 11 18 .S79

NEW YORK, May lilcago Cubs, taking artvaiuagc o. momentary break In the encmy'i

pitching defenses, cut Uie QianUs NationaJ-Jeagxio-Jead-toH'i-gnmer today. wtUi a tcn-lnnlng 1 to r /Ictory-ln a-llght fUjiglng duol-tlin. inw Bill Lee go the route for the flr.'it time IhU

TJio win gn itfll 'the curr

Qumbcrt hooked up In

Error—Ow«n. BacrlM

C 5 ' ,T S K i .V ; SI’

Crews Vie for Eastern Title

Navy Ready fo r Saturday’ Defense ofxRowing

CrownANNAPOLIS. Md.. May 19 HV-

Navy oar*men, -who- regard rowing supremacy o.s llinlr private oyster, will have to turn back the powerful challenge of Mnn-ard nnd Pennsyl­vania Saturday to' tetaln their cb.i I- cm sprint title and extend the most brilliant crew record ever made by the Tars.

An ardent nftvy fan, Presldi Roosevelt, will watch with divided sympathle.s from the vnnlaRD point ot a nearby yacht as Navy and Har­vard, his alma mater, vie with Penn, -sylvanla, the outsider. In the Adami cup race.

The regatta In the Severn will de- termlne the ensVs sprint rowing title In a mllo nnd thrce-ouarti dash. • - ,

Twice nil-victorious In eastern sprints, Navy Crews have bowed only to the Hwky crews from the “ clflc coast In the distance rac Poughkeepsie In amas.'ilng a record of 48 wins In three years.

Seeking the precision nnd power to stand off the threat oJ Hnrvard’s great crew. Navy coach C, 8. (Buck) Wnlsh hastily revamped hla varsity lineup after watching Harvard de­feat Cornell li«^ Saturday In mori Impres.'ilve fashion than the Tnn had been nble to nccompllsli.

in.iylvnnlB, too. must Im reck­oned with, Walsh eald.

Tigers 6 , Athletics 2DETOOIT. May 19 W) — Oeorge

om set tho PlillartPlphla Athlellcs down with alx scattered hits to<lay M th« Detroit Tigers Blugged ihnlr ;\’ay to A 8-3 victory In tho opening game of a serlen here.

\ lb < > .lohnton, It :

cmp'n. et i

a;;

UM — (Iftirllll*: XiiibiB iHny—Ttl;

CaU Issued for Baseball Talent

AmericSn Lcoion Team Can didates to Meet at

Old Ball Park

Pocatello Host To Track Stars

POOATn.LO, M«y 10 m - A DOBt. »rn«on track meet iitlracted nrnrlj in of loutliem Idaho's rrack trnrk- iitpn here tonight for Uin flrnt an­nual Idaho aoviUiern , InvltBtlonal event tomorrow.

noise, Pnyett#!, Pocatelio, Amerl- ran I’nlls and nnxhurg rontrlhutrd their iMiwerful Bqunils lo hrlng ti Hflthrr flotnn of tho inni who roii

r lifiteil In fleparnto •’stalfl" ment.i,, NBmpft, Malad, Rupert nnd Lai

irot Springs also entered men.Boise won thr •’stale" iiirrt held

there lost week nnd American Palli nosed out Pocntello Iti ik "ntntu' meet here.

I C I R C U l i nL I c l o u t s IKcixi, Red HflxOrernl.rri, Tliert ..................Onodman, K«<U ............... .....IHMaiilo. Yanketi ................Kellner. Indian. ................Olt, ( l la iila ............. I ............M<i(.-»rlhy. Ulanl*Ullier. .......................Ulpplr. (llaiilil.aiiorl, Cul>»..........................

miNH uA n 'K i) IN . lied Hoi

llalai <:ui.«Olanla

KcUiirr, Indiana ...Marl;, Cuba

• Mrf;arlhr. <H*n«a ,. (lihrlnftr, 'J'liera .

NATIONAL LEAGUE Chlcaio 1, New York 0.Doilon 4. PUUburih 3. Brooklyn 8, SI. Louif 4. PbUadelphla 6. Cincinnati 4.

i m — T1

TJi' m AH m iu t6 ' -........Henry Armstrong >cmlnl3ced. He as preparing for hts May 29 fight 111! Welterweight Champion Bar­

ney Ross. Ax he talked he traced •fthr~c^preill'CtrTIT!i ■'entire"'c4ye6r.

rm.strong knew he wni In tlic blg- loncy class, at Inst. But lie recalled 8 had been fighting for beaa?, not

long ago.He had wanted to become a doctor,

o he became fcatherwelfthl boxing linmplon of the world. He h«d been . "depression baby"—without the .'horcwllhal to further his ambition, le hi'd started to box to .gel tho

money to go to medical school. “ itiinlly he had gotten so much

had given up the.lden ot

to 0For , Leo nd Har

I th ■ flr-sl ot the tenth, ho:Gujnbert’s mtro ■rtcdid ho walked Lee

Hack In order, with one out. Billy me through I

"clutch" In that spot with ilnglo to left tiiat sent Lee •he plaffl with tha one nr •un ot the game.

I OiMoorr

3 I I,Out

39 1 bI 1

. . oon OM i- i 1 -ork --- ----..OOOOOftWo-O

lUy — Oi ..............

Dodgers 8 , Cards 4BROOKLYN. May IB (/P)—Paced

by Ernie ’ Koy's ihcec-run homi nnd Cookie LavagettoM jwrfect ' at bat. the Dodgi

eighth Innings ic St. Louis Cardlni

c back with

rcllclncrappy negro i : got I

ling.-:"I

ran-fr<

a. hat factory, Peo hat.s. IIL weekl

n $5 to *8,dl.';gu.‘;ted,"

itlll had Idi ling a doctor. About. _Uiiit

F'klel LaBarba was flBhtingChKomje, to_gct some_nv.'iicy-) Hack' to'school, hat gnvc me Ihe Idea, I .bought I of boxing gloves. I'd clown Uie .street, me and iL«k him If he \vi :, If he did, we put

right there'OT-the s

Iturixcd tlow tc i\m >•€t. Vwi’vtgo- tn Ip^ini to Jab and cro.« jour

. ni-- 1 1 L'l^tiinijii'ipii.i'In i i i ; ^ " cjMlcklv, brga;1 1 fightmgnnd wiriiling, -nmt wa.'i In 1032.

"But 1 w.r. only gctllng $35 and$40 a fight. I had drcan;1S of $1,000a flKlil ftnd Miilf IDte th!at. So I gotawlullv ill-KilMcd. HilL this fellowlold me I I'OiilClirt i:rl 1nto the bigmoiifv .--,11 (,IM, He :aul 1 hnd to Kctthe liim l:uiinil;,l,. cl riKhtliig, Weheaded 1:or Cr\itforuiH. We Iftiirieda fight .Ill Mexico with ChamnlonBnb.v At

fiKl.’ . i.'

Irrnondl.'•le orfereri 5^550 for Ihnt 0 didn't K<| the uionr-.

other il'.-iI IcM Ihe I'Kni lo him ni

. I lo.st aii- Mexlto."

-Thr lii lie ohampio;! Iaughed. ]!'•

)ce(l for 10 full ny. me about

r 100 good .1

Set New Mark Hn^road'JmBjpF^

100 A t h l e t e s Represent- • ' ing^ S ix. Schools T a k e Part in Northern Di­vision Conference Meet

SEATTLE, May 19 f/P)— At loR.st four rccord.s w ill bo in

■p;\rdy when some 100 ath-

cs vie for hoiio’r.s jn tiie a n ­

a l norther divLslon Pacific

uM. coiifcrinicc track and field meet in the W ashington

:ladUim here tomorrow and Saturday,

A ll blx ^cliools—MonLana,- -. aiio, WnUihigton State. Oregon.

Oregon-StMc-nnrt-WBsnmgtOh—sill----^mpete for the lt)3!l champlda^lilp.

■I-rlals are .whuJiiIcd in ihg dash- , quarler-mlle and hurdle evcjits

•llh the finals to be held

(jleeman Wins TanforanRace

Basil James Rides Boeing ' Entry to Vic­

tory

Eastern Coach Picks Trojans to Win 4-A

Carl Alenier ot Columbia Terms SButhern

Calirornia Class of Meet

SAN FRANCISCO. May'lfi W. E. Boeing's. Oleeman, In hb first race 'Since Santa AnlU, won the $1,000 Glen Valley ranch raco

Tnntornn today to give Jockey Basil James of Sunnyslde, Wa.ih„ his second victory of tho day and boo.'it still further his stock as lead­ing rider of the meeting,

Tlie Seattle entry beat ott Pnir Lead'.s home-i.treich bid to win by a neck, Indlwi Lodge third. Tlmo for the six furlongs was 1:12.2.

aiecman paid W.20. $4.40 ajid 13,20: Fair Lead $3.30 and $2.40; Indian Lodge $3.30.

Ryb», p 0 0 o! ______

nrooHlyn ................... - .010 000 «3x—8Etrorn—Nnnt. T»-o biu# hit* — L»v».

•nitpo blue nil—lUBfn.-Ilnme rum— mtr. Koy. a»cruicen—Slrlpp, Poaedol. Double' puyi — rndgoiAMtlo ■ ................

mi. l.o.ilntiixXo,....

— Dupochtr W —Macon,

Phillies 5 , Reds 4PHILADn-PHIA. May 10 (-P) -

The Phillies climaxed an uphlU bat­tle against Cincinnati today b) taking ndvnntage of a balk nnd nr error to Mcoro a ninth Inning 8 U 4 victory.

With one down in Uio ninth Hugh Mulcahy singled and went to sec­ond on Joe Cn.-icarelln'K balk, Iler- sehel Martin filed to Dusty Cooko In left. After the cntch, Cooko Uirew tho hall towards third, but Krey deflected the ball into thi Reds’ dugout, Mulcahy scoring thi winning, run.

Walker Cuppers Take Workouts

S. Contingent Drills for British Amateur

Tournament

TROON. Scotland, May 10 (,iv- ThB United States Wnlker cup golf- era^rrlved on the scene ot tho Brit­ish amateur ehnmplonshlp today

spent jnbat of the day on

Youtlis Inlere.ited hi playing basC' ball this year under the American I-<'gIoii junior bnsrball banner uro

Iked to reporl at tho old ball park . 0:30 p. m. Monday by W. W.

Frante. coach and mnnager of th# team,

gnnlratlon will be completed night wllh regular prnetlce

id-H to follow on Monday. Wed- ay nnd l''rlday of each week,

FtanU stated (hat at the pruenC tlmo It was Impwalble fa predict the rnllber of the team that would jicprchcnl tho Juniors, Jjul added

"It would be A hustling bunch ot IwyB," '

"Wo cxpect a lurgc turn-oul for Lhi Inlilal practice," aald rrants, 'and we will nol out th* «]uad until every lad haa iiail a chance to (.how hLi nlutf."

l"»ill uniforms for tho sciuad have arrived but will n'>l be iMued until a possible fllarllng line-up has l>een

med.

Max IJiicr'’8 Son Shows Progress

OAKLAND, Calif., May 10 (/P>- Max Oner. ]r„ Infant aon of the former henyywelglit champion, reported "nllBl'Hy Improved" tonight hy HilendiuiU at an caat Oakland huhpllnl where ho Is ill wltli.bron-

'nio five- nd-iil>al)y wit# plaCM i tent laJil night.

laU I )Mlha old

I.lCWIH HtHlllKH KAYO ATLANTA. May ID (/f) — Joli

Hcni.v LdWi.M. lOJ, llghl heiivywelgl.. rliitni]ilon, kuorked nut Elmer Rny. 10.1, of Tampa, Fla., In laih round ot a kdiediilad romnl flglU here tonight.

Native women of parh< of llrltlili (Jiilnna use diamond ■rntlngboarda In making tlinir dally bread. Rough dUmonda am panned front nearby stj-eanu and jninnddsd In wax cover­ing A nlab of wood

X , '

Itdelphla .. rrot»—rrfjP

y Loiln* I'll!"

{l-b1liul«lphta >Martin, cC fl

rf “ *irnov'h. If a

OorboU. ’ib S

j.'two bu» hiu-wmt- Ilomo nin*-<J<i«liti»n

ilaleur• Johtiriy Fbcher. U, 8. ni ;hamplon In 1030, conllnu . . drill liLi driven down the center and scored a IX. Thla waa equalled by Marvin (Hud) Wnrd of Olympln, Wash,, nnd Charles (Chuck) Kocsh, If I>rltoll, hoth of whom were plnv- ing on a Scottish course for tho first time,

Dtlur scores; Fred Haas, Jr., of w Orleana and Charley Yates of lanta, 70; Johnny Qoortmiin, U, H. latenr ehamplon from Omaha d Ray B illow ,of PoushkeciiHle,

Y„ VII. nnd ReynoUl.i Smith, Dallas. 70.

le six-dny ohamplonshlp ntart Monday,

Beos 4 , Pirates 3BOSTON. May 10 WV-n># Bos­

ton Beea Jimtped over Pltttburgh tnlo the National league'# third place today by aweeplng a Uiree- game nerlea with Uie Plratea, 4-3, in 11 innings. It was the aec(ind luc- ccssivo overthne victory for thn Heea and the sixth exlra-lnning game Uio plrntes have played In [heir last sevrn sUrts,

With iwo out In Iho HUi, Al Ix>- >t; atarled Iio-iton's wlinilng rally

by driving one of relief pitcher 'lYuett Sewell's ottering* for two batks! Sewell then attempted to

dtrwn on Rabbit Waratter, only to have the llfht-hllUng infleldor sinsh a nlngln over nhorUtop Arlcie /mighan’a head to drive in th# win- ling I

AMKItU.'AN AHKUCIATION IndUnapolla 7. Toledo .1, Columbiii 4. l.()Ulsvlllp 2, Kanias City at Kt. I’aul, MIIhi

kee at Minneapolis. {KMlpeneil, n

By B IL L B ON I

NEW YQRK, M ay 19 f/P)— Throw together the' best track an d field men of C lu inb la . Yale and Princeton, an d still

there will be too litt le ta le n t to keep the 'Univer.^lty of

Southern California’ powerful squad 'f r o m w inn ing the

IntercollcKiale A.A.A.A- cham pionshli) a t R andalls Is land

s tad ium June 3-4.

Taken from Carl M erner, Colum bia (?oach for twenty

yeans, that opinion also pretty weil rcprc.'^exits the feelings of

eastern track coachcs, conipetltor.s an d fan;;. Now that

the Trojan:; are back in the

field a fte r a iwo-year ab.sence.

eastern collCRe.'i merely w ill be out to do their bc.' t.

Menicr, leaji,I, fcoLs r Ix-M

of b<-ln

give theLi handing runner-up iif>sltlon -{i California, with pnt.sburch, wltuie

. hla.owii Coluinbliui-s. i)f»ci out then by hnit'n point, and Princeton, .-(tronger thnn ..............fighting foMhe he scoring eastcpi te;

■'All 'j-ou have to nn is iook ai me record*,"-80ys Merner. ' ThoerSouth-

Callfornift boy.s hnvp men In practically every one ot the (lltccn

tlie proKrnin whn have ei]ualled the l>c;,t m.^ieni

performancea.

Memer adds lo hln argument the fact that coast nthlelrs have better

while hts Cnhmibla team, meeU, hu?. i.lrurk n Kood once, anrl thin In It.s first

BALTIMORE, May 19 1-n--Tliemighty Cnaey of Mudv llle-"I

wfts a home-run kinK" - sti'(ipcd

troin the fablc; of the (MHiM- elsihtle.s

tonight to prove lie coulcin't hit

then—and proved he rnn hit r

.hut na eager-maybe n llltlemore-as he wa.i tha t hot AiiKiwtday of 1687 when his three riiilHhty,'iwlng.s shattered only the Hlr with(lie ba-ses loaded and tnnd/- hlrn the

Mead Predicis ArniMlroiif; W 111

PONPTON I.AKK, N. J.. Miiy 10 (/T)-Eddle Mnul, manager ot Henry Armstrong, said flatly today hts man would knock oul Barney Ross "In 10 or 11 rounds" when they tight for Rom ’ welterwclKht Iltio iit Mad­ison Hfiiiatii Oordni l.ciwl. May "II

Mend nuld he didn't think Konr would bo nbln to fathom H.nry’i unorthodox" style.

WAHIIINOTON NINK WINH

BP:ATJ’I.K, May 10 (/l’) -'nie l)ii verMty of Washington hiiw-hall l.'a won a-3 tcKlay to miike It, two in row over the University ot Oiri(o

COAS'^' I.KAOlir Hn

Oakland H, Kan 7. I’orduiid 4, Non Frunrhr Raeramentn R. llnllywuu Lo« Angelea 4, Kealllo 8,

(^asey S m ash e s

B a l l J o L e tt

O n F in a l S w in jr

bruins Sciiedui.e Six Home Games

Pflwers Predicts Strong Grid­iron Machine lor

1937 ■

Tlniln fonlball phvprs will i-tlon in nine gtnnes nrxt tall,■f tiu'tu bring sohrduled ftt ho- t annoiuiced Thursday by Co: lank Powers, wiio will depend hrce reculnrs and a liftst ot .itrong c.vrvc.', to battle tor the Blue a Vhltr.

Rec-cnt action of the sclionl bon n keeping the Jaycee lights -Incoln field Indlcntf.s that two iiore ol the Eiimes will be played light, which will meet with t pproval of Bruin supporters.

Although eight regulm IncVudlng he whole backtleld are lost from the .037 edition. Powers stated that he o-xpected to put a strong, reprcien- tatlve DrulD eleven on Ihe field igfllnst the best competition In the itate.

Rctiirnlng next fall will be Wayne Stokes, Bob Ooodnlght and Ira

ill from la.st fall'.-,

) of “Ca-sey At Ihe nat.'' I Casey, 78 nnd bent to<lay, went hat for tho Baltimore Orioles •Casey night,"

"Yeah, Ca.vy," the nnwd ()[ roared n» Miidvllle',.5 'hmi nil.'

first tos.1 from U<'Kfi--. '• Riijah" Ilomsby by n foot.

"Put in Horiwtiy,'’ they Shnii us the second pitch r.-;rnivd ln]i Komsby struck out with the b: nndetl ‘hU fir.st lime up n« pi litter.for thn Orlohv,'.

Casi-y pounded "wUli cnicl • men his bat niwi tho plntr," ho plteher "holds thn ball, low ho letfl It HO , , , "

'Hie myth of the flO's was shall, n u twlnkling-Cii.'ii'y Rlnnkii

ii'ttl

Vandals Ups<!t Beavers, .'> lo

MOSCOW. Idaho, .May 10 (/!' The Oregon Htnte-^ollegB ban-ti teiim dropped its first game today In nine Paciflo Coast conference northern division, atarts, when thi University of Idaho Vandals wor ft to 2. In thn second Buino of iliBli MTlcs hern, Oregon Otatc Wun jea- lerday. 12 to 3.

Both teams pinyed errorless ball.

niuluiculi llandl'y, 3b

nJtiuin X

I S•• II I 0

Wanl'r,

•rotaU 42 4 n

R S K i-r f'-" '"

Pulling for Dear Old Wellesley

W H I N W I L L t S t l Y N A V Y W I N 'T 'T O | I A , lh . t . w m n u lU i n U ili to> .(«™near eoilti* In MassaehUKtti. T>>ts« mtmbcra ot Ui« iO liM cr«w h tdn 'I .in f IhftOflil h t wlnd>Vown eofmirei m they pullrrt vlioronaly. l-eft lo rlghli M irth* K jh h . areifiwleli, 0Mb.. 'biwi llr tw ftr li,

OretJ^M Irh. Z| HUdk IVarahiw, N«wlon, MilT.. ll-liM OlerU Shfcrpt.’VecIlHUr, K. T . i.

Saturday.

•ifir

who turn In to enter

1 Callfor-

’ii<' oldc.<t record In Ihe northem iMoii books-^3 feet lo Inches In

broad Jiiinp-sccins the most langcred. U was made bv Hsnk ■I'-r of OreKOn and has stood 16 ir-. Mni'k Roljlnson, Oregon Ne- , hss Jnmiird up to 25 tfft wv- 1 tim e ;, ihl,-. vcar.Jcurge Varotf, Oregon pole vaull-

cord ot 14 feel 0’»............ k tho meet figure

)f 13 ;cet 41i inches; and Le« Orr.' ■ .£mJghr-'

Rcser 1 tal veredby game.-ula.-il season who will be

hand Include Kenneth Skeem. guard; Mj’ron DoMctt, (luarter-

Inx Croft, Bob Pntton and Dale Waite, backs; and the follow­ing linemen: Dill Pokom, Hill Pet-

Ulll Price. Dewey Olbb, Gay­lord Toler. Chuck TlionuLs, Don An­derson. Orville Tetz nnd others.

Tlio full schedule follons:Sept. 23-Goodln* ihere, •Sept. 30-0aklcy here.Oct. n-BoUe thei-e.Oft. H-Jerome here.Oct. :>l-Pofatello here,Ocl, 28-Cttldwell here.Nov. 4-Id«ho Falls there,Nov. II-Fller here. (Arndstlce) Nov, 24-liurley here, iTlmnk.sKlv-

Evans Silent on

Proposed tJanu'AllhmiKh nb word ):

. lve<i Thnrsdny from Ooaeh Clint of the University of Call

fomln baseball team on a query of ilaylng a gnme here. Junior Chi )er of Commercn ottlrlnls exp

>.ed tlin opinion Ihnl (he rraaon Bllrnre might l>e that Kvnna

. iiK to arrnngo dates for tho gi here,

John B. nobertson. Jaycee preal- nt, hart askM Rvans to bring hto lb her* when It wan learned that

thn Golden Benr.i wei X transcontlnenini loniuimed that the cli. ........ ...hrough WelU, Nevada, and Uiat

ICvaiu might b« Infliieneed to bring Wh team bar.k \o Ihe "o\rt home own" for a game.

KVaiiii cnmo to Twin l-’iills ti arm In 1010 otter turning out vtunn iKmshlp teuma for alx'- youra h

llfornla high ar.hooU. Unable t<. away from alhletlrs. Kvans look

■ ooachlng duties nl Twin Ii iiU I nchoo! nnd produced nrula i greatefll teams, Lnler ho I to 0 Lnii Angeles high aeliool oacli, going 1(1 uie University of

Calltornla In 102.V tftflth Twin m ils upablo to pro- do a suitable diamond, tlin gamo

wonld 'prolMbly Im played al Kim­berly, wlUi the Kimberly Merolianl'a oliih tAking tho field agalnit tlia Oolden Heart.

Track S tar*^e In Big Six Meet

UNOOLN, Neb., May 10 (AV-A freo-fofJali batllo for llio Big BIX tnck and flald chimplonihip «•> to-prwpeel-tenWtt-snd-tht trnifBT* •noa M)u«di oonv«rfvd on Untfoln for th« preliminary «TenU tomor­row u id th« tinaU 8«lurOay.

The defending oriimpion Mebru ka q^hu»ken.-w liineri of t>i» In ­door tlilQ U it Mttob ftud a lw m reprMenlod by a waU<lMltnc«-u«m. continued to rata «a TdvortUi,

feet 4lU ton ...... ^

Montana, and Ttobliof battcrliig the dash

records ot 0.5 In the century and 20.B la Die 220-yard dasli.

Twin Falls Ring Artist Triumphs

Flake Wins in Boise Tour­ney; Hardesty and Kil-

born LoseBOISE, May 10 w>> — Idaho’s

—•■\lcur fighters slasiied tlieir way )ugh action-packed jounds here ight lu the i,oml-flnaI cvcnLs of

southwestern Idaho amateur boxing lonmament.

From.the first gong, the boy* threw/caution to tho wind and

:(>a,?wllh the audience howling npprovpi.

Tlic final matches and presenfa- 011 of championship Utlea and ivlng cups will be mado torrtorrow Ighi with boxing commis^oner:

Ralph J. Davis of Boise, liniiMnH- thr- awards. ,

Tonight's result.s;118 pounds; Joe Maravilla. .Nam-

a. won a decision over Weymaa Moffett. Boise.

I2fl pwmds; Billy BurreU. Nam­pa. t£(:luiically knocked out JaeUt O r ^ Alexander Plats, In a con- Bolatf^ymalclj: Burrell Won by » technical knockout over Richard Smith, Nampa, In the sccond round.

Perkins, Ola, dcclaloned Billy Hoy. Boise,

135 iwunda: Frank Hahn. Nampa, dpclsioned Bill Kerr. Centerville;

•111 B«rne.\ Bdse. won a four- id decision nvpp. nob Qobat.

areenleaf; Jack Dtirling, Boise, won' hy a technical knockout over Har- ild Steiner, Caldwell; Bob D« Mar­ian, Boise, technically knocked out VIrgll Evanslllstea, Alexander FlaU.

. tho tliird round. ;147 pounds: Clifford Brandol,Oise, won on a defaull from Par- t Jordan. Caldwell; Mike Zivic,

Boise, declaloned Ted J0(:kunn0n».' Alexander FlnU; Permin' Sabelv' Boise, won by a knockout owrDayi ton liowen, Kima; Prank Olrdner, Boise, awarded decUlon over Lloyd (BIrepy) Hardesty, Twin Falla; Joe. Wulhh, Boise, Knocked out Pran-

Oglesby. Meridian, in the n«- ond round; Sterling Qoenell, Marid- Ian. won by default over Dwight IlnUiclilld,.Kagla, -~— n‘

105 pounds: Dusty Pluke, Twin PnllB, won A four round «eclsr(«r~7 over Leland Orldley, 'Mountain' Home,

105 pounds: Johnny 8 u ttd * ,v Boise, won by delault o v e r - ^ i ^ Della, Jrferldlan, who s u f fe r * ? ^ sprained wrist In a match U it night,

175 pounds: Jack Andenon. Bail­ey, won a decision over .Mu KU- . born. Twin Palls.

147 pounds; In oonioSatlOQ flihti; Pormln Sebala knooked out- 01U-' font Orandel of OOlae in Ihe HO-' <. nnd round and Uoyd HtrdMty,' I'wln Palls, took • roiir>round de­cision over Mike .Zlvlo of Bo(n.

Page 8: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

PAGE EIGHT TWIN FALLS NEWS, TWIN' FALLS,' IDAH 0. FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 2t>, 1S8B

LSIREtrS

SSUESDIta c k of Buying Inspiration

--------'Accounts for Day’s ‘Slump

New

York STOCKS 1 [AT FUTURES RECOVE|OSSES

JHABKEISJg-A GLANCE

Fnrflcn firlistijc: }llKtirr; btljii

Cniton; Improvrd; loc»l «nrt lr»<J(

, ,Co'fVi(: ■1?l*her?*W»rtV’buj?n^

VI'”'''. Higher; l«rg» lullun pur

Corn; Firm; rainy *e»Ui»T unf*v

Allli Ch»lnitr. .

. . Tfl i i Tri ....;ZU0’',

Bt FUEDKRICK OARnNEBNEW YORK, Mny 29 ori-BliylUR

InsplraHon was • scnrre In today's slock mnrket anti lending Lwucs bnckcd down frnctloa'? to around points.

Wlillft,Krlllnfc prcsfiure w m llglit thrtiURJiout. Riccis, motors.' coppcrs and fiiKclalllw wore offered In suf­ficient. quantity lo keep the H t

- on the iMlng sWe filter ft freblc ■ atlcmpthftfl been, made at.the. open- Inf to* extend yMterday's dlmunl-

. Uve roily.Ttie news wo.% no worsi: tlion rc-

U il Idles ••Tlie list- Idled moKt of the dsy.

■haiufcre toUllcd 43O.0G0 tliarcs . ngBlnst 388,370 the day before. Tlic

Associated Press Rvcrage of 60 8tock.s Kaa off -7 of a point at 30.G. •

U. 5. Stccl'wai down IS at 43»i and Bethlehem !o«t the nami

Prospects of contra-.sea.ionally slackenlni? automobile .viles durlnc the remainder of''thl* month hurl

. moton, Gfcncral Motor^ yleldetl ' Bt 29 i and Chrysler wa.i down 1 at 42. .

Tending to dcproM coppcrs wn.'< rtrtval of tnjfc resardlnl^a nearly price shading oC the domestic metal. Aft«r the cloee a cut'was annottnced from 10 eenta to 9 cenUs a poimri, a^ow low mark since 1S35. Ann-

... cmda slipped IS at 26 and Kcniie- COttfeTl 2 at 33,

Except for Santa Pc, wlilch lipped over lH el 2614 rails held their de- cllnw to minor fractions,

Woolworth Up

Woolworth was up H at 44'.; on a meager turnover as the company re­ported rccord buslneM for 1937. Douglas Aircraft, with the best 5'i months deliveries In Its history was down Vt at 44>i.

International Harvester steppe<l ..^back 2 'i at 54 when directors pared

both dividend payments and offl'• cers' salaries.

Others on the losing end Included J.-rCR6o-al TTrAllled chemlcal I4B, Du Pont Ogrii. Eastman Kodak 1S4, Air Reduction 46, General Electric 35 and Jolm.'s-Manvllle 73,

UlllltlM fJlcI over a narrow route, American Telephone was up at 130,

Lat& Rallies Overcome 1 3 -8 Cents Decline in Grain

iVlarketn.- JOHN p. BOCUUAN.

,\M0clttlrd rrew ntarket Editor -CHicAiw , M n r io—TCmiitB-nrrnri;,i m Clilc:u;o wheat futures todav

lly .ncu;oinc ccnts a bur.hrl ii'iiicn iimiblc lo low prlcc record.i

Ulud ill four year,-:,M-rinnwRe-tff-thtr-cnfn-

Twin Falls Markets

LlTOILlRhl Imlclier* .......... .. ............tS.OOHcsvy l)utch«r«, 250-300 ll«, ---tn.7illrn\> Inilclifr.s, 250-300 :i>'..........*1.00UnilrrwclKlit Inilchfm. 12i-liO lt>a. *7.23 Kmirr plRj, .................. ■„

.... o 13.00

(Other dtalcrs

aissi'^uv» pricft t i t»acB). . . . . . .

icllI, ijocn

I pile

Livestock Markets

nr *ji. ^ ^

BOO; (imootli lifnvy 7.SO; bowi fl 00 U> M jo (irHrr-"7 ^

liietp: esa; unfhanRWl.

KANSAS ClXy LIVKSTOCK KANSAS Ciry, rt«y ip (u s n to »T.35;’pfe »7 lo 'V l.X

leo to 260 po'unrts 840'to S25; few r.il 10 315 pounds 7.M 10 8.If; sows 7.10 iMllt.l V5o’ 'tO*‘’$».«;'cM

990 pound S IbIiM^O 50; li'ulk fed i,lrcr< rllKlOl* tn fli-ll BOO lo P.25; yearniit;

110STo;;-D.miiii.l for dommtlc romii>iir<i In <Irnn In the Bo'ton mm-

lieuer.'< fat row.s krt, tlio t.n g, drpnrtnirnt of iisrlc-iil- tun- rrixirlKl today. QiioUtlon-i ttcri

"shefp: ’ MOO; ni\tlvi« nprlnR lF\ml« D!5; Ailronas B.35 mrnlBl't; K>P fHO'-

Tvvrlvp-montlis. Triiw wool j®''”

P<vl ■’'I'* hlKhtr.

CIIICAGO I.IVKSTOCK CmCAOO—HoB>i: 10,000, 7,000 dlrrct/,;

Kr to (S5c dCtmrisl t)n\U. nnil full Tr>.i- jvo-.jl^wfte nuolfd mrxnly around 5..r

10c tr> »c lower: top »nOO: lt;0 to 340 llw, IR.« to *8.55; :i0 1(1 2W11V.. IH HO 10 »a.50; 300 to 360 IKi. M IO to IS 3.',; *ooa sows, 17.23 to rrcoi biitrhtr kliiiLi

Biilter and E<;"s

minor' dowiitmn* fnllliiK on iiirdlmu

i.DS A N ^ ^ ’.s ritciiii i r:^^103 ANOELH^ IluUn

Stock Averages(Cnmpllfd hy lln

ir .n tilKh ,

7 hl|h ,

pfp: lo.oon, -i.iKW

rr; cllp|>r< 1 Un:

IS :

Trend of Stij^esNBW YORK, u»r A».ocl»«-

Kl rrtM wrlRlited wIidIm iU iirlr* In-

llingfi Ilf rrrpiil\vf«ni.IIIDl .. -Min UII.M RoiiJ 7B«n ■'

llOJS »vpi»i!ii r(m‘»U IIHI).

to 19?,0; fr*' KO'-t ' ^

■ jr.lililH :!!

5’.»: V m’--" liiii

MI'/I A1.S

. I'nni’ Kiiiir.HJN i:\fWAN<;r

mt

T i ' i h I c h < ' . o i n i ( ' i i

S n | > j i o r l H l ' ' i i l l ( ' i. . \VAI,l,AtJK. Iilnlitf. May lit Kl'i

Wnlincr ntiil vlrlnitv lrn<1<'r> iiiid in- biU' I'uimrtl eiidornrrl l-ird P. nilirr i.f Miillaii for Mail' niinr iii.-.iirrl'ir IhU »Vffk.

l*iillpr, promliiful In lI1 ine|• • imlini rircl»» at Miillmi, U e)ii>rc-inl t/: Illn for olJlro b« n DMUc'crnl, op- liinlilK tiM fellow |i)Wiir>iiinn. Attiuii CriiI|iImi11, liii;uiiil>cjil, filrnil'i niilil,

DFNVEn LIVESTOCK

h a ( ; k u m . \ n

,1111111 nf ;itlll |.;ll.r <'llv rilC'll (li.v:, 111.',I \u-il, XMll, liri- |,iu- , Ml mill Ml . M l...iiiii:itn

\Vr l(• , Irll lil;.lio, to ].i||i I'l I'lUlllu^iiiniL

lul Ml-. -Iiicl. W in

li" I. I'. .'I. I.......... .M. Kaili

Simiiniii.rct-Mir, Mmlun l.'c ivni wnui Mini, inr fn- m M. Ni'lIv ilii’ci l''ililiiv At I- Ih Mcmi, (.'iilciUKln. Mnv iiii'i In I .......... II tlK.il

V.Ktilli.'iitl iMlii ,iMii rtf < i'itillK ilil'IKi', 111 llir

Aliiliin VI,M«-M|. (

rill- rilrti i>r ilir liKiiiIIi| ||»|| ('Kiiriiiniti M l'. .... I Mli

li.il> TlllUllll. Ilf Ailmiiy. Ci.illmiili

tiM tiiiillM'i. Mi:t WIIIk .III.Ill,' VUilt. ill llnltr- Mr. I i.miii ‘I'.ii

Irtt Miniitiiv tcir ............. Vlr.lt hrcliiiit;ii(<-r, Mi:i. Aitlim riow.

i)v hiju .c.s with export iORiUlier with 1 i rn-

ip l<v,i fluiry. cnti.' cil the fall of value.-!.

cloiccl p.x.ictly io \ cent lourr corn- • Nc.sicriiayii flulih, May lly 76\-'.i, corn ’ .--t. '.-■i, July. 59-59'i, oi>i'. ucd, rye unchittiKCd to niiti provl.'iions var iilr. .'•.ctback to 1 2 c

liii: io rallies wn.-! an il)atch from a ieai iiliorlty -snyhiK hp

0 6o|)tcnibcr delivery .liiow- .siccpc.%1 fall today, mu

1 1 law of 70 cent.s, but clu:,rc

,iMtW-xlcla}-a to i)lniitiiii

V. K. Clri L NorIhrrn.v J ......

n«l l)Mns^cjiiQ^ piilil^dciiii

nr« ii, lOO-pdvi.Kl lo l^ ' .. . ........'fltocl- rwMl.\Jlin-noiin<l la-' .'.'..!.'.-!.Slock twcl. iffl^pmiiKl Im.............. ......Onl.v lOO-poiincl lo w ___________ *1.00

POTATOIiS

IIU.\N TAIII.C

‘ ()pen ''/l?Cli

.01’., .SlU -01'

nil-, Trlmiii'Iu., : >

wlilu I'w r.* / cnV

t.\SH (illAIN

r.ii. 1 narK norlhern f>[

NEPEALSEEN

AS M l iSSParty Leaders Manifest Con­

cern Over Primary Balloting

PHILADELPHIA. Mny 10 UY.- Mnnlfc.it coiicem'ltj Priuisylvnnln'i prlmnry elccllon (levclnpini'iit.'i li; the hlRh commands nf hotli nmjni

'iiirked Ihn «tnto tnnlnliL ii’ectlvi' iitjor Ircrni

PRESIOEN SPUA

mllloii,lIlllOll-

tiii-

Chief Executivo to Recom- mcncl Search for Chonp

Farm Fertilizer

f.nll-. Mlili IntllHlll. tlllll Kcivni rxpnl.’i IM- Iiililinilrc'ci In t.iiiciy nf dru'inpllli: l'lli'li|i Irltlll,-!'Jrin n n .', l in i ( i 111.' n i . t ln i i : , .1, o f p h o ^ iii iu t i '.

'fiir Whitr llnu^^ iimiouiiifi It mcMiiKo on wi>iilo tiif ii-KlMnton, ImL iliviili-i

"r.V.n'vlu-ii' II. \l. Mild Ihfilcill, WuUl*i uinn .^.wi..!unit llr.li of tho vlt«1 rli'iiinil. I.H viilui<l>ln both fnr In I lll. i'i In Ihn in»niiriu:tuir oI nuiiiltltt

Jlomi- |)ernon,'» iitnilrlnl l,f MIKKn. 1 1 1 (lllUly C'f llli' I'M' li |intrnllallll('» Ilf Anii'llnili ItlitiiklHvilin by a .........................nf iiKrh'Uitlirii (Irimltmrnt iiml iiMirn Vnlli-y Autlioiilvr-xiinl . n r.tuily, llii-;e pci.unn inltl,

November with the cut l.v,iio.

President Roosevrll, Jn Fnrlcy, Dcmorrallc jKitidnii man, and John IJ, M. ]| (•Imlrmnii of Ihii Tti piii.Uciin nl c'Omniltlrc, were (]ulc k in oulcome of Tiie-iiliiy.i nTntd-breiik- inif vote,

Tlin vlrtiKilly rniniilele rount li Importniil shdwed:

DEMOtlliA'l'lC- Knr Kovrniiif (ll,n;i|) at (1.07, dis-

trlcU):Charles A. Jnnes, I'Utnl)ui-«h la'

lKlniAr<l i>y Ihn ftinin :ommlt-

,)oim I,. I.n\vl:i, Hi'imK (ey, nnd ifrouinirn.li ,Mn,0(MJ,

Ciliirln ,1. MnrHlntt utinrm-v Knii-rnl, illnii rrnnr Kiulc, 171,MM.

rnr U. 11. Mcimlor rl lldvcliinr h'liili-, lit

<iiiu1l(lalr K-inmmi'lii 7liH,fi02,

II. r nvl.i Wilson, 1 1 1 (lelphlii, niiffi-y-l,i-v Jl!9,07;i.

UKlMIlliJCAN Knr Kovniinr Ul.OII JudRe Arthur Jl. . 1

Allprrlor nnirt. liiK ki-i piilillrnn oiKanlral Rfi:i,

(liffOKl I'lln-jKii, twlcn Knvriiior 411,104.

ror II, fi. «(*iiator (7.U7D (l \lrlcl.i) (ienatov Junies ,1. Davin, 7113,214. (i, Mnnon Owlrti. iiatlonal nini'

d ^t»Il' ?ienHtoi-, 4<0,.

I In

timer titnte 'd l)v f.iov-

I <li.',lrh'l.'t):I'nniiiiltin'liy niilpy,

r of 1‘hili.. raiKlidaie,

of Ktnte inivit Ur- cr«, lirj,-

iMlllllKV ihll'tl

fli):i,AlilK iiKh lonrifl in the llrnKx iailo

(0 IIIill llii-lr Ni

■ lo c

.Vtllllo Iiiilii'i

mil '

niild offrr lo |)iiv I--,III,.........ymi-iit/i lo Iiiimn.t in |ilic |.lialo

ferllllreui, II'- M'V.n ii.’i in ......... rentof tiin |)lin:.|iliah- ,|i|ii.'1l , ml' nil Koveinnir-nt. Iiiml.

lUDINl'l TOHAS I lit IIIIAWIIACKK

I.ClNDOIf iri Illilliu: In Dm........................ . In Ihr MllkllMl.!■' n M.nil Iiti rl........ ami hlmithrailft.

Cllliif; till' iitirt' nil.... . „f h

M'Uth I iiiik of- tliniUKli wlthilrawiiln luiil iiitiitliiu- llniiri—waned In virw of rx|)l^ •lUllI. 1 fioin national lendcui.

rrnildent lliM):ii!Velt li-li-|:ii<irlffl|. KlHin (lliiilnilali Diivid I.. Latviiniin wi:ihin« "every niii'i'rii.i lo mv Iiinui i (ienrjln I'Jlirln and C iiaiin .Iniicv’- Tiiriey, whonn pvn-piiiimry lecnm- iiirndntion wan to Bar.ilfiee oiin mu- Jor cniidldatft of earli fiirtinii, inter iinknl dll lo ftbldn l>y tiin ir.tuit.v

HepubiiciiUB, too, Inoknl In Nn- veinlier with a oliiiiii <if "rriialn \lf- tory" by Ghairmnn llninilloii I'm- ley diBpuled tho pn>iilie<'y in ■iiii-illr,’PhicllllL '

lloillil Impn elei:tlon, ' rliiints wnn In l»:ifi fto IDIO,"

Cntl Hen rilMlni' in a llie nticelfl

ntl(iili<'(l im

20 Years of Air Mail

NnllonnI Air Miill week. Mny 15 0 :!l, cclebnitcs the Iwcntielh an- ilversaiy of schcdulcii iitr mnll rerv- :c- In’ tho Unllcd Stnic.s, which has

developed from a few thousnnd nir letters In lOlO to 760.000,000 In ID37. Plcturrrt-above Is the -plnnc-which plonecrcdralr mall and the modcra airliner of tod;iy.

n io -slnKle-cuRliied mall plane of ) year.'i ago wn.-. a wnr-tlme Bhip inverted to cany a few hundred

pounds of m.-\li. Tiie pilot fat In an open cockpit wliii few aid.? to

Ins? tho ddytlmc. Air mnll tliuo con.st-lo-coast la 1920 wa.s 78 hours 30 mlnutcj. United Air Line;; todny file;; Douglas Malnlincr.s over the .same main line mid-continent air­way pioneered by the post offire from New York and ChlcnBolo-ilic Par4{lc-coast, In addition to larRO m'nll and express compartment';, the Mnlnllncr carries 21 pns.- cnRcrs In louiiBO chnlrs nr 12 In large berths on ovenilBhl tripn. 1 1 l.s powered with two H-cyllnder Wn.^p engines and crul.ses at 205 miles an hour. I t flics coast-to-coasL In 15 hours 30 minutes. •

WEST BIOS FOR

NEWJiOSIRiESEngineer Heads Drive for

Development of Vast Resources

NEW Yonic , May 10 i.V, — n ie wc-st—Uial'area they l ecl loVddlb brochures about at a (ii;ne a copy, lavishly llhi.stratcd witli bad men holding up railroad lrabi;.-ha.s como forward with a plan to ht irpITrft^^t futUKf economic dcpro<f.loii.i. \

Tho people behind i have Incor- iwraicd the Idea a.s ’/ilie industrial west,’’ and the fundnmeaial prin­ciple Is that tho day of American opport-tinlty, such as that-enjoyed by Andrew CamcRlc nnd Henry Ford, Js far from Its mmsct.

a word, the Industrial we.st- emers argue that a dccentrnllza- lon of American Indur.lry will go

. 1 long way toward whlppliiR the coimtry's ecSiomlc travail,

GeorKo Malone, a BcninI, round- faced Irishman who Is tho con.sult- inK cngineer-mannRer of the organi­zation, wa.i In town this week to ftlk with the heads of rt)ine of Uio

large .steel companies. Me used lo bo Nevadfts state ciiRlnecr, and his ac- cnmpli.-ihmcnw fill 45 llne.s of Jinn type In "Who’s wlio in enRlneerlng, ”

"U iool:s good," he salt!,■’rhft steel people arc Intere.sted,

It’.'i bound to come. Our olevcn west- oni stntc.s have sCveryiiiiiiR—the nalurai rc.'iources anil the power initu'.iiy Is Rolng lo mnvn in.

• riu' p.sy<'hology of tLk«4ouiitry iiiiir.i hn cImnRcd It we nro Rolng to aviiiti rrcurrcnt rconomic troubles, with mllllon.'f on relli'f. Who Is ro- iin; lo deny that the currcnl filiimp IS ik.yi'lioioHlnal? All the people hnvn 1 - 1 i.'iillr,e Is that opportunity Blllll-.Nl.'tlS,"

Mnlono rame east well armed with IlKnre.s and grafs, I.inrs of produc- llnii, consumption, population nnd linwcr oiitiiiit raced nil over a dii?.rn l)l)c I iini tii ho had prepared (nr "tlio iiuUhtrlal weal, Inc.,, a imn-piodf Kioup with headijuartera In Ban I'lnnclsco.

40 Per Cent of U, fi, Area ■fho t.lalt'K Involved, Malniin went

on, WL'ie Arlronn, anlifoniln, Colii- iiKlo, Idiihn. Mnntann. Nevada, New Me.-dm, Ou'Koii, Utah, Wa'iblncton iiTKl Wyoming. They rontaln, ho K'liiiuked In pns.siim, 40 per cent nf tliii (iri-a nf liiii United Utnte.i, 10 pc-r cent of llio impuiatlon anri 15 jirr rent nl ihr pnwer huppiy.

"Hut," hi: aiiiii'd (lulckly. "In five moiB yearn, when liifl latRS power pi'ojprts iinw under way are opera* (liiK, "as pci rent nf nil thft Rcnnra- llni: rapnrliv of the nation will bo In ihnMi el.veii utates."

Tlini Ini Innk up tlie ))roJeel,

Cnnllnudu* Showi Dailrl ISO In l>, M. — 20«(o«P. M., , Klildim lOfl AnTtlme

--- IINCI.K JOE-K'fl ----

i 'T T C aTODAY & ^SSS r R O ^

which In plan had a.s.iumcd hciolo proportions, from tlie Rtandpoint of national defense,

"What are’the vital metab?" he asked chailenglngly. "Thcy’rechroni a.sked c h a l lc n g ly , •'niey'ro chrome, tungsten and manijanr.'^c. We’ve got to have thasc In wartlme. Of our chrome, 05 per cent Is Im­ported, of our tuuRstcn 70 per ccnt, and of our magonc^c practically all of It.

■ There’s no rea.son for that. Wc’vo Rot those metals. Chrome occurs In California, Oregon, Montana and Wyoming; tungsten In Nevada, Arlz-

-onn, California nnd Colorado, and manganc.ie In practically all thoweslfm ftfltc.s. ...............

Power His It»«n"The sccrct In Betting It Is cicc-

trolytlc reduction, and with plenty • f power we can get all the niang- ahCse we want from low-grade orc. ,. Our native chromo and tungsten Is pretty high-grade."

•'It’s a new frontier." he de­claimed, "but the wi-iii Is unbalan­ced Industrially. We’ve got a com- binatjjjn of steam and electric power, and we've got the raw materlnb nnd adequate -tran.sportatlon, and down In South A fr ic a we’ve «ot Custo­mers crying for our proflucts. What are we waiting for?"

To polish off his argument'about the siM of the west and its potenti­alities, Malono said the campaign for Indu.itrlolliuitlon would get un­der way at the Golden Calc Iiiter- nallonnl exposition at ^ n FrancLsco next year.

Two Boys Lead Jorctiiie Seniors

Jack I’cii-r.son niui Itoivln Pejrlc .Icromn IiIrIi whool hcnlors, will de­liver the valpdlctory and tho ^nlul- atorlan address at (i senior ns. cmbly inpftinR at the high school t'ciday, it w>s announced today. Jork ni- tRfnrd the hlgliest rating of 1.038 for the four year period and itoivln attained a ecoro of 1.378 for the four year period. Both boys have aho earned enviable records in other .\clioia»tlc ncllvltlrfl.

Amerlran 1oi,h of life diulilHi tin Itrvolutloiiary war amount,il i< 7,184 men; the BrltLih loss wa.s n,07:

Farm Better With TIichc Products . . .• CkM M uhlntrr.

..... iUktt..................• 0,M.<\ Truiiki.

Williams Tractor Co.Ph, 4T0 .184 ard Ava. Kniilh

NOyiiSIEK CAUSE OF CWSH '

Los Angeles County, Federal Government Investigate

Airplane Disaster

held in.nil attempt to determine tho cause of the airplancj cra.^) which broughl fliunlnc death lo nine pcr*^ Oir; on a California mountain top ilmd

il KO-.'cnunent stepped directly luio the InvciilRation when - acting Scnetary of Commerce J. Monroe John.'on, In W.ishlngton, nppolnlcd nn offlclid accident board and annouiiiTil public hearing.^ would l>c iichi In Los Angcle.'s "aa 4 .sooji as iioi^.iblc." I

ikis Angete county’s official In- vestlcation, the Infjuc.st Into tha deatlw of tlirce men, four women and two small clilldrcn. will l>e held tomorrow under <llrecllon of Cor- • oner Krank A. Nance.

N.'Uice J.ald that nmonR llie ques- llon.'; he wanted nn iwcrcd was whe- tlier tlie giant flirllncr might havn cauRlil fire before It crnsiied. Ho said reports had comc lo his officc thnl tiil-s w;us true.

The $80,050 Lockliced plane was on the fir.st IcR of a delivery flight to. iN’orUiHCit.. AJrIiucs_o£_iS£.Mint . . .

off.

m odk rX d ie t m aki:s ,wn,!) GKESiE LAZY

SWAN QUARTER, N. C.. M’)— Tlioii.snnds of wild gec.se here have failed to fly north this spring.

The un.scasnnal dallying ha.s work­ed havoc with Uie crops, e.speclally corn. One farmer has had to plant hts field- the third time-the greso having cnten up the first two. Other' farmers tell similar stories.

They believe tiicro were It Reese Ini.t winter for the suppirof nulurai food nnd tliat the blrd.s be­gan to forage on farms, gotthiR r.o u-.cd to tlie diet (hey decided to stay indefinitely.

PLANT LICEWhfn your nUntfl hare juit been w»t-

<-r«i or arc Mil] wi-t with dew, sprlnkl* tlinn witii BITIIACIT nurc death to la- «ect So MTB jour cheriahedplant* tliin cany way—cannot InJur* Ihe mnnt il»liea(» foilauft or biouonu. In llandr Hifler Csof 3Se up Dnic. Grorerr. 8e«) Ston* sod Pet Shop*.

PRONQUNCtD ■ITHACK

TOMORROW!

.-'THE G R E A T E S T ,. ’

A D V E N T U R E O P

T H E C E N T U R IE S I

. . . Crcalcst T hrill o f

Ihc Y earl

T h t A dveH tum o f

x f e b in

food

CuHtom Killing:,

Cutting, Curing

And Smoking •

^Yoiir niimtfl procesnrd

wlt.li tlin nmnn cnr« «tif1

euro iiN our own mefttn.

Iii(ic|iciulciit Meat Co.

I’hnnii- iP lm tl

Or Shop 1G2-10.1

Page 9: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

TWIN FALLS NEWS;' TWIN FALLS, TDAttO, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1038 PAGEOTNB

Try Classified for Unusually Quick Results on Your Problems-Call 32WANT AD^ RATES

BOARD i t nn. 431 3nd Ave. W.

RATEB PEK LINE FEB DAT:Six Av/t, per line per dey--- VUThree da7i. per Une ptr dty__ litOne d*r> pef Une_.

RM. at bd., downstairs. 130 6U> Ho.

Oaah discount aUowed U sdver- UMment U paid for within Mven days ot llrst Insertion. .

No c la m e d ad taken U

Une of clasallled advertising com­puted on basl3 of five mcdlum- lengih words per. line.

IN TWIN FALLS PHONE 0- 38 FOR ADTAKEB

IN BUHL Leave Ada'at Vamey’a Candy Store

COMPLETE COVERAGE AT ONE COST

FRONT bedroom. 3rd Ave. East.

CONVENIENT bcdroohi. Ph. 300-W.

1 ROOM fum. apt. 3M 5th Ave. No.

PURN. front apt. 605 2nd Avt. N.

PERSONALS FORK. npt. i\5 2nd Ave. No.

GRAVE markers, bronie. 113 2nd St. W.

5-RM. furn. apt.^Ph, 160.

JOE DOWNING—For fresh Irulta dally. I blk. W. of 6 Pta. West.

F#ONT fum. (ipt. 520 Sth N.

TORN. apis. The Oxford Apts.

BEE matters Sunset Memorial park.,_0//lee_Thpma3-R»L53!.atfi:_Z>Lu21S-J.

REPINITB water.-aofteners pay tor tliemsclves and aave hard work. Ph. fiS for explanatloh. Abbott PJumblns Co.

report. MMM Studios. Dept. T, Portland. Ore.

p. O. EDWARDS, physiotherapist and Swedish Masseur. 1137 0th Ave. East. Wo aid naturq’a forces to make you well and keep you well.

2-RM. TURN. Rpt.7 elec. refrlg. and stove. 202 5th Ave. N.

MEN Old at 40.' Get pep. New Os- trex tonic tableta contain raw oy-

' ster Invlgorators and other slim-, ulants. One dose aUrts new pep. Value »1.00. special price 80c. CaU, write Malestle Pharmacy.

4 ROOM fum. house. 364 7th Avc. E.

NEW 6-rm. mod. house. Ph. 1383.

SMALL house.-earage. Ph. 1248-M,

SADDLE HOR3E3 FOR HIRE!

By The Hour . . . By Tlie Doy . .1

WESTON DENNIS Blue Lakes South

Ml. 80. of Brldje)

STEAM BATHS

ANQ massage. Rm. 8. 130 Main N.

BEAUTY SHOPS

PERMANENTS *1.60 up. 13.00 and M.OO, two for price of one. Over Ind. Meat Mkt. Mrs. Beamcr.

' TWO beautiful permanent waves for the price of one at the Crawford

' Beauty Salon, 112 Main Ave. So. Phone 1674.

M ARO IIiE ’S, 735 Main E. The ahop of unusual permanents. Ask about our May special. Evenings by ap­pointment, Phona 382,

ARTISnO BEAUTV SALON Spe­cial Oil permanents t l£0 and up Ask ' about our May Specials. Phones 189 BuU and Twin Palls.

BEAUTY ARTS ACADEMV on permanenta as low as *1.<

Junior student work free. Ph. 3i iss Main Weil.

A GRADtJATION present worth whlJe-»8.00 Pre-heat wave, 2 for price of one. Bring a friend to the Idaho Barber & Beauty Shop. '131 Main E. Phone 434.

BOATS and MOTOUS

NEW boat.' Phono 373-J.

MALE HELP WANTED

/H ia H clans aalcsmaii for Twin Falla district. Must have car. Can make around 1300 a month, rep* renentinK larsesCmfg. of Its kind In tlie’ world. Adrlrc».i B?*- 30, Howj*Tlmcn.

FEMALE HELP WANTED

■i

BOARD AND ROOM

I. 121 7th Ave. N. Ph. 551,

I. 143 8th Ave. N.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

FOR RENT—HOUSES

USED cnr radias, recondlUoncil. Prtccd from $5.00 up. Cnii be bought on budget plan, Flrrsloiie Auto Supply and Scrvlco Store,

SMALL house. Inquire 318 Harrl-

6 ROOM house with I?* acres of ground in Kimberly. Apply Lloyd O. Davts, Murtaugh. Ph. 28-J8.

4-RM. PARTBY fum, mod, house, .rage. $35. Adults. 440 4th Ave,

IMPROVED iimall acreage. Prlccd reasonably If t«ken at once. Ph. 0390-Jl.

AUTOS FOR SALE

AUTO MART FOR GOOD USED OARS '

We buy, sell and trade. 3rd and Main West

STUDEBAKERCERTIFIED USED OARSLurte. Or. Sedan.................1585

a. E. H. sedan.............. *648,'fller Alrstream Coupe,

DcUixo O'drlve, Radio — .....$675"35 Stude. Coupe... -......'35 Ford Tudor Sedan .

\JC>IV4a sturte. O ^ a .6 cn^A i

_..»380

";'.|950' Several others

We Buy 'Em, We Sell 'Em TWIN PALLS MOTOR

BABY CHICKS

RESEUVE your date now. B. Hocks, n . I. Reds, larte type Leghorns, 18,00. W. Rocks, Buff Orpingtons. B. Mtnorcas. Black Giants, i m Nawhampahlres (9X10. assorted all breeds *7,00. coitom hatching So per egg or So per ohlck.

CANADA HATCHERY Phoi>e ‘138-V/ - Jerome. Idaho

LIFE’S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher4JiC5 s a le —h o u se h o ld- rURNISHlNGS

PIANO SIS. 155 10th Ave. E.

10 jio aUowcd for your old mBUrcr.i on new Inncr.«prlng mat­tress. Moon's. Phono 5.

.SAVE SS'-o <m Slpwart-Wnmcr Rr- frlRcnilon. 12 moiith.i to pnv. No carryliiK rliarKc?, Phone 5 for demonstrfttlrin. Moon's.

“I had to do somethin’, sarRo . . . No onie paid any attention to my old indicator.”

AUTO SUPPLIES

1—D00x36 new tractor llrc.i for rale chcnp. inq. Orange Trnnsporta- tlon Co. Phone 630,

INVESTIGATE modern rctrcnd method before buying new tlrt-s. Save '.i on tire cost and get mod­em Kafe rlb-tread. Stuart Morri­son Rtliead. True/ Lane.

MONEY TO LOAN

C. JONES for loans c

MODERNIZE your bathroom wiui FHA, funds.' Let us "expIaln-Ph. 85. Abbott Plumbing Co. '

LOAN at low Interest rates on FARMS. MODERN HOMES and Inside BUSINESS PROPERTIES. Prompt action. Fred P. Bates. Box 268. Twin Fall. . Ph. 1370,

PETS

ENGLISH setter pups. 302 Elm.

DOGS FOR SALE—Offering choice hunting dogs, all ages. Some trained. Buy. sell and exchange. Phono 00. Fureht Kennels, Good- ,lng, Idaho.

• WANTED TO BUY

SPRINGER cows. C. R. Flowerdew.

LIVESTOCK and POULTRY

FOR SALE—Younj Jersey ___heavy .iprfnger. Cory Comer Ball Shop, Kimberly.

HlOHEST prices paid foe youc tat chickens and turkeys. Independ­ent Meat Company.

iEE US before you sell your poul- tri'. Poultry Supply. 147 4th Ave, W. •

F£lR SALE nt attractive price, grey roan Ktallloii, 6 yr. . old, wt. 1,700 lbs. For furtljcr particulars phone James B. Black, 88-R4. Wendell,

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

NEW house for sale, double. Kctch- , um, Sun Volley. A. M. Rose,

833, Ketchmn, Ida. '

house, modem. Write

Box 28. News-Tlmes.

Business and Professional

DIRECTORYA uto Repairs

SPECIALIZING CARBURETTORS, generator,~f«i«l,jiump and speed­ometer. j SOULLY'3 AUTO 8KRVICE

Phone 3131 214 BhDshone East

Baby ChicksBABY CHICKS. VASSAR PROD,

Bookkeej)inoH, H. BURKHART. PHONE 1716W

Chiropractora

Quick Loans$5 and UP on

YOUR SIGNATURE ONLYEmployed people who tiertl cnsli,

solve your problems here.

No RED TAPE ,No endorsers. No mortRngM.

Repay ts you get piiUl.

CASU CREDIT COMPANYRooms 1 and 3 PhoneBurkholder BIdg.

m . WYATT, cmROPRAOTlO: electrical treatment: foot corrto- tlon. Consultation free. IM 3rd Av. No. Ph. 1377.

WARBERG BROS, PHONE 240.

Coal and WoodCOAL — PHONE 88

Idaho Beaa £t Qev,- S St. &

ORNAMENTAL IRON WORK, PH, 712-J. Work guaranteed. Prices reasonable.

FOR SALE- MISCELLANEOUS

McCOY COAL AND TRANSFER, ABERDEEN COAL, moving, trans­fer. Phone 8 Pttoca XO

GOOD pu.ih cart. Ph. '1142-W.

TRAILER housw. Oem Trailer po.

PURM Maine Mipte Syrup. Phone

MALE AND FEMALE HELP WA5JTED

ahed. We buy 30o lb. Free book. Write Muahroonu 3019 Second, Beattie, Wn.

s it u a t io n s WANTED

ALL kinds of trucking. Ph. 0488-Rl,

EXP, WAITER, Box Ifl-N-T.

EXP. PRESem . Bo* 10 N-T,

KI.DKRLY Ionian wants housekeep­ing for home and imajl wage. Wrile Box 2, care Tlmei-News.

MARIUED man. eiiperlenced, all faun work. Worley's, aastleford,Idnho.

LOST AND FOUND

OTRAYro! B lick Ohelland .'• branded PP oit ahouldor. Nol

Je«H OMts, Jerome, Ida,

LIGHT 2<wheel trailer. Good rub< ber. Cheap. 621 6Ui Ave. No.

IF YOU want fir or plna derrick, radio poles Ph. 0488-Rl by May t».

ELEOTRIO fence, 6 makes to iel«ot from, 3 i; Shostione No.

HAUOK Plamo Duns, lha best weed burners you can buy. Pres trial offer. Krengel'a Hdw,

OLBAN-UP, Paint-Up. Low prices ' nn paint and wallpaper at Moon' Phono B, .

GOOD nheep. camp for two on Otisv- rolet triiok. Price complete 1136 for riuIcK sale. Gem I'raller Co.

SATURDAY BALE 0 extra good dairy, oows to

Irtshen soon, alf one man’a lieril. Moline mowing machine, Pordsoii Tractor, 4-|ilece bedroom sulln, larte burfet,

W. J, HOLLENBECK

MISCELLANEOUS

OUBTOM kllllni, curing and imok' ing meaU. Phone 35. Independsnt Packinf Plant.

Floor SandingFLOOR BANDIHQ. MODERN MA-

rlilnes, 10 yrs. sanding In Twin Falls. Get our prices. Ph. 0J#4-Ja. aaaser.

Feed$ Grinding and Mixing

PURINA CHOWS. SANITATION producu. Standard Goal. Vassu Produce to. Phone 1740.

Fur StorageRICHARDSON'S. PHONB B70.

STORE PUR COATB IN IDAHO’S moat moderh plant. They're fully Insured. Parisian. Ph. 650.

TROY-riATIONAL PUR BTORAOB vaults have the approval of fur experts. Be sure and u (e by stor­ing your furs with Troy-Natlonia. Phone flfl or 780.

GiftaBRIDGE PRIZES DBLIOHTFUL-

ly different, . . gifts, unusual, ex­clusive but low priced . , . Drap­eries tailored to flatter the Inter* lor of ov6ry home. The Window Shop, 602 Maln .& .£Ie lt« Bkiieh.

ln$uranctPBAWY TABSR 0 0 , l « a fVtOMl

801. n i» M d ta to ttuun aot.

Shoe RepairingNIW SRA. OfV- IDAHO T n U T m

M oney to Loan

^ 'M oving

Ornatftenial Iron

HAY derrick, complelc. Sell or trade for livestock. I. D, Amos, 4 nil No. Curiy, Ph, (lUM-JJ.

ihis-{lxtwo6.-lncludliig-t).ilh tub,-;, cinspu, lavntorlcs. and slnko. Krcjigel’s Ifardwnre.

-TUBE nruiixwlck console model radio, polid blnck-wnlnut nntlque calenil;u lUjck, Pli. 410 or 253 Sth Avc, E. ;iltcr i p. m.

FELT b.nscto $l.r)0 100 0X12 *5.35,

(i Inlnlri linoleum 40c 'mave ynrd. AlfO

!• Iki:,c rugs $4.05 to ■! lire drop patterns.

Moon's SprliiK s.-ile. Phone 6.

- -......... ..V...aerators,Dexter Wiii.lirrs. .Siewnrt Warner Rartto.'?. racrrrnraTir.icv aiufWater Hentcr.i In Moon’s Spring

Phone !. •Sale.

LIVING room .tulles as lev n.-! 147,50. Complete flock of Davenos, bed­room sillies, tlhilnR r^oni fiidtc.?. Also biK iisi^ortmcnt AxnUnsler, Wilton run:, nt prlce.s you can nf- ford. Mwn a Spring Sale. Phone B.

REPOSSESSiro benn drill, a gain. Benii cultivators used J15 and up. D:im canvn.s and IrrlKB- Uoii .'•hovf’ls (in ,'|)f('lal, EaRle Sup­ply Co.. IfiO 3rd Ave. S.

Save up to $30 on 1537 L'a.'.y washers. Have limited tiuantlty.U.sed Aiitomnilc ...... .. , .. $ 9.952 U-'Cd Ea.\v;........................$27.506 used Ka.s washers.....»23H5 up

APPI.IANCE DEPT, C. C, ANDKRSON GOLDEN RULE

STORE

SEI:D a n d FEED

FIRST year from Bllie Tag seed po­tatoes. Lloyd C. Davis, Murtaugh, Ph. 28-J5.

FOR SALE: Ashton seed potatoes. C. L. Ashley. T. F. Tourist Park. Cabin lo,

RUSSET seed poiiUoc.5, 1 yr. from Blue Tag. Joo Klein, 1 ml. ' " S.. E, Cftstleford. Idaho,

10 TONS 1st cuttliiR hny. H. W. Rledeman, 4 ml. 80., ‘,1 E. cast end Main. \

750 BAGS sorted seed potnloes, fitst year from W the^lv'Blue T'ng seed. J, A. StonrTTionc 0181-Rl

WE have certified and uncertified seed beans. U.'iif I. No. 81, 123 A: 69, MurtftUgllSeed'A: Supply Co,, Murtaugh, Ida.

FOR SALE: Certified 123s and 55s Northerns: also fer> Red Kid­neys to contract, Kinney Whole­sale Co. Phone 68.

FOR SALE: Choice hand picked northern beans, 81’s. )23’,s and Rex Mexicans, i'wln Kails Peed and Ice Co. Ph. 191,

SEED spuds. St. Antliony dryland Russets, Also few bag.i certified Nebr. Bliss Triumphs, Pli, Klmb. 68-R3.

GREAT Northern seed beuns, UnN verslty 81, Grown at Milner, Bre them at iVlnldad Bean Co, Tnln Falls or Art FInke, Buhl,

FOR SALE OR TRADE

^il Ij trade 5-rm.,modem home In Los Angeles for l^s'ln Palls prop­erty. U'ave phone No. dreii nt Perrlno Hotel.

—ja—ffw,v—inolor—bo«'. p. oulboard. A hteal

Will irade. Call 633

FAH.m' i.Ml'I.KSIENTS

1 J. U. D.Tin u.scil 11

GOOD fonijjlcto h.iv derrick. In- fiulrt> Uolleiibcck, Twin Fall.i, or llari.'horn, Jerome,

FOR a real cultivating tool for on- loii.s, bccl.s,.beans; call to see the mnchino at Self Mfg.,Co.

1 USED P. O. doubh bar beet and bonn cultivator, 1 J. D. dou­ble bnr beet and bean cultivator. C. W. i : M. Co,

Hajjorinan Girls (;li(«)si‘ Leaders

HAGERMAN, May Ifl-Tlie 4-H girU Frldny clected ofllcers for the comlnR summer. Tlicre will be first, .'econd niicl third year scwliiE

flr.' t ycr.r baklnu und first :amiliiK tiul). The leader.';Eari Allen and Mrs. Ralph

F.illln,Officers Fire: First sewlnc, prpsl'

dent, Gcorulnnna Dlckerfon; vice- pre.sldent. EdlUi Condlt: sccrctaiy, Donna LOU plnyer; reiwler Goldie Dell Werch.

Second sewing; pre.-fldcnt. Dlekcr.' on: vice president. Irene ■Hiomp'cn: .secretary, Donna Lou

oyer; rcporier. Laura Vader.Tlilrd sewing, president. Sylvia

Tucker; vice president Thelma Wat- . secietary, Jean Allen: reiwrted,

Donna Tucker.First conning, president. Florence

Mary Jones: vice president, Doro- they Bnptle; secretnr>', Florene

cn.slee: reporter, JcEm Allen.First baking, president, Tresa Mae

Coiidlt'^vlce president, Actota DaUl- qulst: .secretary, Iona Coiidit; re, porter, Leona Condlt.

Hagerniaii Plans Memorial Rites

' HAGERMAN. May 10-nie Am- erlcnn Legion and Lculoii Auxlllnry heUI a Joint mcetliiK nnd roclal Tlmrsday evening, 'Hie LcKicin de­cided to aet aside M»y :8 lt> a.sj,Lst the I.O.O.F. lodge to clean Hie ceme­tery. Arrangements worn made for Memorial doy services, aiul commit­tees appointed, James Barlofii l< range for apeoker. Dale Oady for firing squad. Ros.s Finch Phil­ip Kemilcott, Jr.. for proRram.

Tlie Auxiliary made p1nii.v for Poppy Uay. May 28, and Mr.s, Ross Fltich and Mr.s. Philip Kennlcott were sppolnted to work on the Mem­orial day prdgram.

At the Joint, mecllng plans were discussed for-attending the 4th dis- *ric^ Legion convention at Keichum June 10.

Didn’t Liiie Sleuths

40UlcerilWoulcLflestclcLEerl=l_l. od for Attack on Coun­

ty Properly

~T5oisn:Trirrft:=(SVnnftyianW -county treasurers approved at their .......................... today a proposal

.Sl'CJAR GF.ISE, film aetrew. ob- laliird ft divorce In l«o< Annele^ Irom~J. tieorje Urlfliit, oil 1 >vlin -tbR rharsed »a.vso jealous lie hSmi a iklMtlve to ^haat)W her. Her .hu^liand, she vild, admitted "nolliinc ever hopprned" when be hud her watched.

Mappiiifi Fli«hts

Begin in I(lali«nOI.SE, M;iy 10 i'7'i—Col. Earl C.

Popp of Sdii rrnni:l:;co,.^Klonal su­pervisor of the airporl .section of the Bureau of Air i-n'mmcrce, cam

T today lo hccm 11 scric.s of mnppliiK ninlit". In Idalio.

II- will t)p .i.'.;,lf,ic(i by Eddie Bry1. Idaho director of ncronautlcs."Tlie mapplnR ))roJcct will be un

dcrtakcn witli jiaitlciilar recnrd to the Interests of avlollon," hBld Bryan. '

wmmmi ^PROPOSED

that ihe 1010 ICRtiAftturc enact > to limit to one year legal attack-s upon property i>a:i.->lng lo the coun- "CK on deed,

Tlie'. period now Is unlimited, n ie propofed measure was out­

lined by W, Jnck-son of Black- fool, Bingham county treasurer, and chalnuan or tlie county trea-sur- er ' state n-'.sociiitlon.

Tlie other ypeaker at today’s open­ing session of the three-day meet- lr« was Gt^vcmor Daxzllla W. CTark. who .said hl.i Information Indicated > that coiiinlr.s, 'cliool districts and other sub-dlvLsloiis of the state gov- eniiiicni -'are better off financially tlmn U conunnnly reported."

Only H of the county treasurers lodfly—

Tlie scs-slons. over which Mrs. Cora E. Sieveiis. I'vv'In Falls county treasurer, l.s pie.sldlng. will conllnuo until-.Saturday when now offlcars-- wlil be clocted.

0

Hagerman Pupils in Music Recital

HAGERMAN, Ma>' 10—Mr.s'. Roy ir.>ons and her music pupils gave rri'Ital Saturday nt the L. D. S.

church In the recreation hall, The progmm was read by Nedra Humph-

Plano solos were played by Joan and Charles Blackhart, Flor­ence Mary Jone.’i, Nedra and Joyce Humphrey, Pauline Reed, Joan Allen, Irene Hetislee, Fairy Barlogl; Wynarda Woodhead, Lila Lee Sevey, Lllllas and Georgia Pugmlre. Mar­lin, Sylvia aiui Donna Tucker. Fairy Barlogl. Nedra and Joyce Humph­rey playect a trio. Mrs. Dan Tliomoa played her accompaniment and sang a Welsh solo. Mrs, R. H. Greene gave a talk on her trip to Hawaii. MKs Dortithy Baptle gavejipo Ha­waiian dance.s, nnd Mrs. C. W. Holt talked about her work In San Jose,

Real Estate Transfers

Furnished by the Twin Falls Title

and Abstract Company

Deed; A. H. Bralls/brd to E. B. Elliott et al, $1. SENW. NESW, NW SW. SWSW and SESW 1 10 13.

SPEAKE AT JEROi 1

Nazarene College President to Deliver Baccalaureate

SermonJEROME. May 18-Presldent Rus­

sell V. De Long of the Northwest Naiftttnc coUtgc at Nampa, -wHl .'.peak at the baccalaureates services Sunday evening. May 33, In the Jer­ome high school auditorium. U l i ' subject will bo "What Is Sucoess."

Mtislc will be by the high school----archc-stra under the direction of-in---- ?itructor Gustav G. Flcchtner. The Invocation'wlir be offered by Milo

Roberts of the local Naiarene ' church and a trio under U>e direc­tion of MLss Anna Mae .Osmanson, will sing. "Beautiful Savior." S c r l p T lure reading will be by the Rcr.Albert E. Martin of the flethodUt church. James Davis will sing » solo, followed by a solo by Mrs., W. A.Helss. Benediction wilt be offered by the Rev. w. R. Mills of the Pres­byterian church.

The seniors. M In number, will l» clad In caps and gowns. Former District Judge Hugh Baker of Ru­pert will deliver the commencement address Thursday evening, May 38.

Graduation exerclaes for the Jer* ome eighth grade school pupUs 1s scheduled for Fritfay evenUig, May 27, at which Ume Prof. Prank B. Howard of the Albion SUt* Normal school . A>lll deliver the addreu to 110 pupils.

MARRIED AT JEBOMBJEROME, May 19 — Hugh Hollen­

beck and Nola Potter were married here Tuesday pfternoon by Probat«Judge Heber N. Folkman. The cou* pie were both of Nebraska and had as witnesses Beet and Vera M U Cooke.

Painting and Dccoratlng

PAPERHANOINO, P A IN T IN G , Katsomlntni. Workmanship ab«o< liiteiy fuiranteed. u * Burki. Pl>. 1438-J.

PhotographenMORRISON STUDIO. WEDDING

pictures In the home. Vleni. Visit my studio, aavB money. 803 3rd Ave, W.

Plumbing and fhailng

Radio RepairingCALL POWELL AT DETWEiLER'S,

AUi MAKBa RADIOS RBPAUIEU and lerrloed Factory Radio 6<nr> te*. Phona M i 138 3nd North. .

JunkWB PAY MARKET PltlOKS FOR

yout iiraa«, copper, tc»d, nluml- num. Twin Palls Junk, S30 Main Ave, e.

-V » ed FurnitureOASH PAID POR VHGD FUHNN

ttir*. We Uade, buy or sell. U09n‘«, PtiODoS,

TaxlCabBYKUOW OAB, PHONE 67. PER- ^na« BoM . 8aft»Otp«o(l»iiM.

C ER llrtED hand picked U. of I. 1)1 seed beans 13.00 per bag or will trsde for common DB % bciiii.i for 40(>ner bag extra. Impilrn Mur- Ifttigh Seed and Supply Ca, Mur­taugh, Idaho.

SICED iHJt'fttoes h) niiontlty. 1 yr. out from Ashton scrd, lo lie let out on shares. Call Idaho Sales Co., Klm- becly..lda.; Uet> Goldman, Oond- Inp; Ido.: Abn Goldnmn. Jerome,

^Ida,; O, M. Corpehtler, Wendell.

FOR BALE—Orcot Northern Benn ileed. Both certified nnd uiiucrtl- lled of t]je following strains:■d of tlje

u. at r. u, of I.

.u . of I, ElKwort

81forth

at cur warehouses In Flier, Kim­berly, Uaselton, hiflnfir,"

Bean Qrowera’ Warehoii.so Corp, 430 Shoshone West 'I'wln Falls

GLOBE "A-l" FEEDS

PEED CONCENTRATES Pilot brand oysler shell, meat meal, llsh meal, charcoal, sardine oil, bone meal, cottonseed meal, linseed

THEATERSIDAUO

Prl.-sat.~ "A rain* Lupin turns," Melvyn Douglas.

O RP inU M

TimrsJay^lfiraiiy^'Wrii iiimilrei Years," Robert Montfomary, Vlr llnla Bruot, ,

Bat.—"Advantum »t ItoblnHood,"

n o x Y

Edgar Hoover's {iii)[erprlnl clearing house at WB.shlnRtoii, V. C„ ecelves more than fSOO flnuerprints laily. Wlion the Jlle.n wetfl started n 1024. 300 fingerprints were rc- ;elvcd every day.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION OF TilK TIME APPOINTED FOR

PROVlNa WILU ETC n Uie probato Court of Twin FalLs County, Idaho,

n the matter of the estate of LYDIA N. PIEMEISEL, deceased. Pursuant to aii order of said Oyurt,

uade on the nlaeteenth day of May, 03B, notlco la hereby given ihat

riisMlay, the seventh day of ' IS3S, at 10 o'clock a. m, of said day. at the court Room of said Court, at the Olty of Twin FalU In the 7ouit llouM of the County of Twin n>ils, Idaho, haa been appointed as .he time place for proving the Will of said Lydia N. PlemeUel, deceased, and for hearing the appll' cation of Robert U Plemelsel for Issuance to him of letters testanien- ary When and where any person nterest«<l may appear anil contest ihe same.

Dated ^lay V», 1038,^ M. O. BLACK,

Clerk,Pub. News May 30, May 37, June 1.

NOTICE TO CREDITORN EsUte lit DORIS REHMANN, de­

ceased.Notice Is hertiby given by the un<

deralgned Executor ot the Will and testate of Doris Ri ‘to tfle creditors of and all penwna having claims against tha said <le* ceased, to axhlblt them wltli Ut* necaiury vouohen, within six monUu after-Uia f(n t publloatloa of this notice, to the said Bxecu> tor, at 41B FtourDi Avtnue i»-Twln Jp»Ui. Oounty»f-q>>tii SUte o f^daho. this b«lng theiplaot fUed for the transaotlon ot tht buslneai o( u ld eiUU, .

'(Pub, Nawa May ll,ao ,'H ,JuM l)

Daily Cross-Word PuzzleAChOSS

1 . I'nar ssU Kvcrrre«n tr«»

10, o <«

Solution ot Yeatarday'a Punla

w m m ISIL

0130 OQli I

b q I rmm la&iiiiiiniN in a mm siuiiaiisi

18. Colar QualUr

I S ? "

tt. U r«ai!n | tor I t, I d i t i comb, •ormI I . Eurnptin KTUI*

fliipports tor tiirn ltu r*

K f .

•uSmMci

t, DoQuwUeasble S. S andana tr«* ' I. Uorbld

s a r "

ai* . Bniall Muui at

JS S .1 Spalms

ST. P lsu ant <K

I I . Conji-o..,DrltAnnU'

"■ “ iSilSl?;rr*. piaiilUaaI I . a y llib li u iid so, partlc l*In miiafcaJ ^ 1 . AntmBl

rafrmlaa raliad fors .t “■ ■'Sr.T

C).

pullIf?.|ha"™ofnlni'i IL T?i7iftii»f«ia

II. Corusrs tl, Rymmatrf

1!: l i . i z ' s l r. 1 kS X ! ' ...

mak<L Ma"A-^Vrni|

a.<ao1r'afi«k« *

i: tUSSiS'h TuSVrt*

.. u K ' s a . .

IL Bi^aUM^eV

u . A t ^ M la^:

Page 10: iHE TWIN FALLS NEWS =EI OREeONHAffi 1 TWIN FALLS, …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · iMis in flight. ^Japanese officials did not claim full

• PAGE TEN TWIN FALLS NEWS. TALLS^JDAHQ, FRmAY MORNING, MAT 20,1988 '

11 FALLS IN

Broderick, and Stephons Con­victed o! Chicken

Stealing

gtcnllriB at trlnl In the disUlcl court In Twin Fnll3 yMtcrday. will be scnlcnccd Rt 10 o'clocl: Sntiirdny momlnR. 'District Judge Jftmes W.

Under Idnho Inw tlie penally muy be either a prUon tcrtn of not more than 10 ycnrs and a fine, or a six- month Jail term and fine.

Tlie Jury recclvcd the case shortly before noon of the trlal’/i third day, »nd returned Its verdict In the early afternoon.

Ttio women who said (liey accom­panied Brwierlck and Stephens on tliB luscrtetl chlckcn stealing rxpe* dltlon the nlRhl of Ifiat March 15, testified at. the trial. Mrs. Artlc

lor the defense.Evidence Indicated chlckcn wer

taken from the home of-Mrs. Priest' ■isler and also from the farm eoil of TR'in PalU owned by Mrs. Brown's former husband and occu-

.. pitd-ty-M.-0.-Wlnklc aa-tfnanL • Officers testified the two women

• were with the necuseil men the ne.xt Diomlng when the men were arrr.ncd u they were taking the assertedly itolen chickens out of a cUtern near the Twin' Palls power plant in Biiakc river canyon.

Mary ain't like most (Irla. She plays our (ames, and sometimes she XcU (0 dirty I wouldn't be nshamed to walk down the street with her."

WSllLOIS “(IISON POW

Police Keep Eye Upon Straw Hats In Cakes of Ice

Merchant police and officers rid­ing the prowl car In Twin Palls had. an additional duly Thursday night and early Priday morning. Ttiey had to keep an eye on the straw hats.

Thursday was annual straw hat day In Twin Palis and sU mer- ehantd had blocks of Ice In which ■traw hats were frozen, displayed on the sidewalks in front o( their stores. But the day was cold and chilly with some rain falling and

.. the Ice rcliued.to melt before clos- -tog-tim#, forcing-the displays to

bfr left out during ths night.Priees will b«.given to the per­

sons who ar« able to guess the clo»c«t to the time that the ice will

-melt away and plans called for that to occur during working hours.

. But "Old Man Sol" failed to put In an appearance so the winners

‘ must wait an extra day until the lea U fully melted before the i Sjiants will award a free hat.

Sale of straw hat^ on tho out>of- season day was poor. merchant.i, stated, but contesti-mlnded people

' cast a huge vote In eetlmatlng the time. Participating in the straw hat day event with Ice displays were Alexander'i, O. 0. Andcrson’i; Idaho

.Depwtment store. J. C. Penney.. RowleS'Mack and Van Engelen's.

The merchant's bureau sponsored the event, with Charles Shirley, cbalnnan, being In charge of the affair.

Charles Cox, 26. was reported by lioiipltal ftttcndant.1 to be Ijnprovlng from the effects of a bottle of Iodine which he had poured Into a cup of coffee and con.sumed while spalcd In the Hilda cafe In Twin Falls at about 1:30 p. m. Thursday.

Ho had been 1]\ Twin Falls about six vreelcs doing odd Jobs'. He came hero from Pueblo, Colo., where his mother and a sl.%ter reside. He for­merly lived In Virginia.

According to officers of the pollce department who inve.itlgatcd, Cox poured the Iodine In n cup of cof­fee, drank It and then fell to the floor. Offlccr.i, who nn.wered the call to the cafe, rushed Cox to the ho.ipllal where It was reported he would recover.

E. K. Moore. MUsourl;'Arlls Jones. Twin Falls, ond B. O. Moil ■ listed by officers as witnesses to the net. Police gavo a.s the cause for tho action the inability to secure slcftdy employment.

■License Petitions Await Signalures

State nepre.^entatlvo W. O. Tl)orn- ton of Gooding announced Thurs­day thot Initiative petitions for the tS automobile llccnie fee and the move for the return nf 20 per cent of tho state gasollnr tax to Uie counties had l>een jilurrd In ten locations huBulil and 10 plaee.i In Twin Palls.

Tlie petitions have’becn plarrd at buslnes.1 house.i and with Individual. .Additional petltlmw will bo iilarrrl in Kimberly. Filer. HnivM'n niid Murtaugh this week. Tlioriitoti Mat­ed. with four other roiuitles al­ready having Uie petition.

Signers mu.ii have hrrii retilt- tered voters at thr lust general elrc- lion and men who rlrciilate (hr petitions mus‘. attest before a tary public llmt they saw (he iinmes signed. If n voter klgn:) more tlmn once he l.s guilty of a felony, 'lliorii Ion added.

RitcN at ItiililFor IN. P. Ulna

' num., M.iy 10- l'imrri.l snvli were held Tiie.' diiy iifK'riionn nt dm Mrthodlnt ciiurrh fnr N. I‘. UliiK, who died iit hl.i honir wrst of lluhl, folUlwlng a iihnrl llliiciji. Thn chilA- tlan .Bolrnro servlrn wiit, rcrnil hv Mrs. llorvry btlrhter. niid Mtn. <;. M. Merrirk Ning lwi> i.olon, "Nri Nlgljt Tlierr" nn<l 't) lln iile Pir»- cnee" with Mins Pfnure.i (Irciw iilny. Ing (lie nrrnnip»iilineiiln.

r«lll>enrern weri' n. lioHng, Fred Aldrich. I,. W. !.<ivr1e,vv i>, W. Joyce, JaniNi (Irow niid Will Jlaw- klrii

MlelB Pedrr NIp1.'\pii /ling was tinrn Novrmher 4, 1850. In the vlllaHii of Holnie. Drauliy flngn pr Khelfolt, Kingdom of Deiiniiuk. whitre lio grew til liiniilicKMl. Kn wii.i eMiicalei In Ihe coiiuiion srliiiols iind wiis ron finned In Ihn I.utlirrnn flint church. Ill llllio he lunrrleil Jnlniii- na Marie Jtorrnsfii i>f lloltne pr. Cbflltoft, living Ihrtn unlll 1IIH7 when they came lo the Ihilteil Htates. Itn rettlr'il lii f7nri)ruter, lowu, iinct canin to l<l»hr> In IDOM.

Mr. ning iH nuvvlvcd liv JiIh wife, Mrs. N. 1>. King, and elghl of Uin 13 rhlUlrcii born to lliem'. Albert N, Uhig of Uogrrnon; Mrn. Ix-n A. 8ohfK>novor of AiRunvlllo, N. 1).; Mrs. I'ranclfl MarDiinuld, Pnrtland; Hum a . Iling, lliilil; Kren A'. Ulng. Uary, 'nd.; CHto W. llliig, Ihihli Mrs. Dlahin Ferguson, ValU-r. Mout.;

. Mrs. Ulon Tnylor, lluhl, and 11

Intemiont was In Ihe liuhl c (ery under the dlreotloii of the £vans and Johitton funeral home.

ParniB In Uia Uiilled lilatea have motfl. avttllabln horseiHiwer than nianufncliirlng and nilnhig Wncrt.'

Cliarles Cox, 2 6 , Recover, ing From Drink of

Io d in e '^

Potato Prices Continue Climb

PolAto dealers -Jn Twin Palls boosted prices to 80 ccnt.s generally with one dealer tiuotlng a'high 85 cents price Tliursday. In an effort i . pick up Uie small lots of 1037 potatoes still being hold. Market prices ore high due to the p i ^ auBllty of early potatoes raised Uils spring In California and-aouthern slates.

Number two's were quoted at 50 oenLs again Thursday, the price that had been paid last Saturday for number one’s.

Tryouts Slated For Radio Play

ywood direction nounced for a radio mystery play that will bo produced over ntatlnn KTPI next week by “Chic" Crab­tree, local announrer, who stated that a screen player now vLsKlng in Tft'ln Palls would l>e on linnd ti direct trj-ouU at nndlolan.l at 7:30 p. m, Monday.

Young people with radio nmbl- tlon.s up to ontl mrluding 18 years nf age are Invited to attend Iryouts and seek roles hi the "Pine Hond Mystery," ncrordlng to Crah-

II supervise the produn- , day of the iirixlurtloii

and the niinie of (he llnllvwood plaver were nnt dlselow-d liy Crab- tree,

A s K i H l a i i l P a H l o r

K c < ‘<‘ iv < ‘H ' r r a i iH f < > r

F.ithrr n»vtn<.nd n, .Srlhrrt, who Introilucpcl B|invt/i Into thr nirrlc lurn of .‘It, Kdwiiicl'/i nrhoiil, hns been tnul.^f^r^'(l to Mnvcnw, U wii?i nn- noimri'fl ye.itrr<luv.

For Ihn past two vrars Fiilliri Bclhert hns been iis.'.lidniit piw,lor o: fll. IMwnrd'n Catli.illo chinrh, com Ing hern from Hobc.

Among Ills rirroiupll.shuient^ ^ ’pr< Ihe orK‘iril?iil)oii of "lr)uch" font liall, .sofltiiill and lln^ketl)nlI teams for tlio Iio.vs, iind n i-oftlmll team

Iln'Klrls. Ills foolhnll loam on! of in ellKllKem ■nt. ; hl.i

kcttiiill pliiyrr.'i won fcvrn out of 111 iiuti'Vtx,'Itnd hlh roftliiill terini wori I out of 17 nll.l^hr:^. linbbv Wiilliui' iind n ito rim

•luiilirird ns tin- M'iKxil'n >,lnr nlh- ,.r)hm lo

ATvlit!W unit 'IVililv I'hirence. l>on- lil 'I'lil' l »nd

Ihe "lir;,

' I ' o w i i H l l i i i l e f<

< ! r a l< T H < > | X ' i i i n ^

IlI.ACICrDOT, M»v Ivllig lu Ihn Hiiiik'' llviT niid l-ont ll lv r i- VKlleyfi ( .m ii.l i'lc il 1<h|hv th.-lv (ilnnn for icli'biiitlnil llin oprnhiK IIUMiliiy of the C^iiiliTs cif the Moo liiitlotinl liioiillineiit.

Autriiiifihlln caiiiviiiis from tlin iwiis will liient nt Arco (o Jnln for

Ihe nlioit lilp to (hn inmimnent.

Twin Falls Largest Assortments Of New Styles for The New Season

SHNIORS!I'or 'lliosn PIcturr.T

In Your Caps and

downs Wn Hnvn

Arrangett

YOUNG’S STUDIOItMrmrnt Next Idaho Power

Where every thing is selqcted personally by our own buyers and where a strict attempt is made to keep the styles exclusive. This feature of absolute exclusiveness, of course, is impossible to attain, but our never-ending efforts in that direction have met with considerable success and appreciation from our customers. '

Just In

Three S m art New

WHITE KID

PUMPS

D ry Goods Dept.

120 Munsingwear Girls’ Rayon

PANTIES and BRIEFS

25jz^ ^

Kroni Rcgular'SOc Numhcrs Closed Out To Sell At-A Vrke Ani'one - Will Appreciate

These also are aamplc.s aiKl sonic irrcguiar.s. Every ^ 'arm ent carries the M unsing label. The color is a

tea ro.sc. S i z & f 4 to I G ................................................... ................

Featuring th e new Peek

Toe and open shank — .sMnall pcrforation.'T on vamp. Boulevnrd or Cii-

i)an heel.

Erlccd at-

$3.95. $4.95IIi

Another New A rriva l

A SOFT W H IT E K ID

SandalWith the new square toe. Dainty pcrforiitloii-'.—collcje heel mid T-.slr;ip. ■nil.'i one comes Iti AAA. AA rnd U widths. Priccd at -$2.98

Other pnltems at this price.

WEAR PATENTFor Smart Spring

Apparel“The Corot”

A now ci'cation by Peacock— sii'iHlnr, .snufi: f i t t in g V .strap

— w ith open shank and toe—

perforated vam p and quarter.$8.75A t .

M any O the r Lovely Pntterns

To Choose From

A L L S H O E S X -RA Y F llT E I)

D ry Coods D epartm ent120MUNSINGWEAR

RAYONPAJAMAS

FOR GIRLS

Made to Sell Regularly From $1.29 to .$1.49

But Offered Friday and Saturday For

ProgressSmart

PRESSPatterns

10c3'o. go w ith the dress

sq iia rcs.' Thoy havo

been very p o p u l^ t h is season— and they are entirely

liiffo rcn t .... A

“Progress” Hand Printed

DRESS SQUARES

Of Pure Linen$1.98O rig in a l designs th a t

arc a ll fa s t colors done on a fin e linen cloth. They are all washed

and ready fo r use.$1.98

79/Every G arm en t Carries The M unsingw ear Lubcl

Two Piecc Stylc.s In Assorted I’a tterns

A nd Color C om binations

A ll Sizes F rom 4 To 16.

These A re A ll Salesman’s Sam ples A nd Irregulars.

New!

INFANT,S SWEATUKS

T hat Ju s t Arrived

98cllift kleidR tlmt ii Hutton Irout rn llttlB fllp-ovrr«. AI.I, IVOdI........

I,', iiiid ,'uuirt

9 8 c

In fiiiits New

Print DrcsseH

98cA pci,MMiiill:.<'d llciii (if ni'W T,mni wc'iillirn- iln- r.i nf ^lll•.-l.n lirondrlnlh,-! uiid im .'r|i inir (irliil.'i■nir i>l/-'.i in'-

8now W llltr Drrs-iri '9Sc

, It’s KAYSER’S Finest Non-Run

HOSE

$1.29Very ]>i)inilur fo r summer. A ll pure silk and

fu ll fH.slii()iic<l. They may bo lind in cither Iwt) fliiTud or llir(‘(! thread construction.

Until ii'idcHcent and tius new regular Hpriiig

fdiadc.s arc O 4 ^ A frntuiTd...................

FORTiie lie.st All Silk Chiffon HOSE

In Twin I'allsTlie hoMo value th a t luiM every tliinj,'. It in a

li'ut! n'MKh'HH lio.Hi! w ith a ])lat(!il foot, narrow

liccl w ith in a lie d and (-oiucii in ^ A o

iriileiicoiit and staplo hIukIi'm ........

A f

niid off-'

You will

hiil!i in t

til

alho n

hiti ni

Iti-ady-Ti.-Wfiir1

A U N ew

.SU M M ER UATS 01'

ST R A W S , FEL'I'.S AN I)

L IN E N S '

98c $1.98IM'lll. of Clirt-wlll'ld (ilmill'li, imlk ImlilirlH

ii’o iityhvi ill w hite and pn;.(rl I'dluni.

I hiilDred

/ K n m j) . 98c ,$1.98

IU'ady-T«-Wi‘iir

D E A N N A D U R H IN A N D S ll l l i l .E V

T EM PLE H A T S .F O R C IIIK D liliN

89c $1.98U’.i linrd t<i fliKt Hint oiin ('(iKnIii h

It cciiiirfl to nrlnaiiig n lint for ym

dniiRjiilfr .....................- .............................

I li" ''' t- 'ii 1..... [nr wliiin

S9c ,$1 .98

.lu.stlliipaclicdl

RAYON CltEPE

to tTURBANS

f j $1.98'm With Thr Open CrownH

Cool aiu l Miiiart for ruim iiirr iiml

clothen. 'I’hcy Imvo (he (‘liintii

head Ki/.eH, T Iu ' cdliirji me wlul

navy, brown jind

blacU ......................................................

lit w ith Hport

li(u-k:i and ndjiintnbln

'link, blue,, mnizc,$1.98

I'Vir The liali.vl

D A N D Y U n 'L h ; TlllMOE-PIECE

K N IT OUTFITS

$1.49with nit niltliriilln Iiivild'Uiilt i

CBlin nud lioidrcn niid rumn In i

bliia and wlilln ....................

. ’I'lif.io «eU coiwUt of

‘ $1.49

The Season’s Newest and Best

Punjab and Topmost Fashion

PRINTS

19c80 fiquare p rin ts in ex­

clusive and orig ina l

designs. These arc no t

. ju s t any 80 squares b u t come from two of the be.st known style

houacs in the United States.19c

They Are - Crown Tested

These RAYON CREPE

PRINTS

49c/ i b r illia n t n.^Hnrtmcnt' o f patternii in n Ltril-

lianL fabric value,

g uaranteed fast eol-

orH anti wasludjle. Tho w id th iH :}9 to -10

inche.i.

49c(!(imparo Thl.n

Towel Value

A Heavy 24x48 Double Tliread

I'lIRKISH TOWEL

29cl'’ull and flu ffy and

hiKbly abaorbont. You can caaily toll

w b iit a towel like

th in aellH for regu­larly .

MonogrannniiiK Free

29cA HETTER HEMMED TEA TOWEL

lo cTlii'tut fiiut idwuhi are niado from all nttw inutftrlaln nntl

iirti bli'iiehed and watthed and rciuly « A m

for UM.i ............................................................. l U G

[[[II -