MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25....

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WAR BULLETIN LONDON, April W Lanc«el- m toiUy bcmbtd Hiller'* eh»lel at tkrchlM(>dcn In a possible attempt Qti Ui« fathrcr’* lire. Illtler’i Alpine refute at the t«p of Kehbleln monnUln wa« amonx the Uritli. A Regional Newspaper Scrrins Nine Irrigated Idaho Connllcs MAGIC VALLEY EDITION yOL. 28, NO. 7 W IN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. 1945 PRICE 5 CENTS TWO-THIRDS A m erica Firm on Issu e O v e r P oland As Parley B egins SAN FRANCISCO, April 25 (A’) ^ With the cba Poland empty. ‘IG nations in wur on the axis uaaeml.lcii in their first liialoric political confereticc totiuy to try to blvie- priiil mucliinL'ry for prcvcnliiiK World war 111. ThiH 18 the (fay that millions of people over the rarlh have waited and worked for through the year.s of fighlini; to the verge of victory. It dawned bright with expressions of hope for lasting pence, yet darkened by one cloud—tbe Anglo- American dispute with Russia over Poland. Barring aomc dramatic move by Stalin of R dispute on Polish represcnUitioii at the conferen' locked today as over, splitt: „ in the moment they atrivc for a, that s dead- ■Jinks of the allied cowers delega- -nity. The United Stat^ ion gave every indicalioti to- Iny of standing toiiglily •guin.sl any further conceb- iions to Ri Irover s of Hie Un inference. .by Prcslclcnl Ihc clKlil dclcRi ited Na Tliere wft.s nc Apouklnti (or c O.astUn ilclegw Jicrc wlUi the mnndj lor Ihn poscil B •inbly by Uin d lor ackccl WawBw Polbh rcclnic. Enou{h Conceuloiit Another deletmt who Is unuccu temed to sccrccy nnd tho diplomai Ulk M -TJhlcIi much InKma- Uonal InXormallon la irnnamllied, wid the llwo lios come for the TJiilted States lo decide wlietln wonts to be Die leader or tollaivi peace moves. Adinonlshlng listeners t h o i didn’t want to be quoted by n this drlcsBic eald lie. for thoushi that enough concessions had been made to the Ru-sslnnc. Kl«hllghU o( the scheduled half- Iioiir proaram to, be broadcDsl around the world b a speech by president Truman from Waslilng- ton. Secretary of State Stctilnlus rapa the session to order and de- llvera the Initial address, Introducing the American cWst executive, Alter Truman the prosram calls for nd (iressM by Gov. Earl Warren, Call fomln and Mayor IloBer Lnpham, Snn FYanclsco. Bteldnlus Preside* Stcltlnlu* hclris the tcmuori.. p of the meeting in Snn Franclsco'i red- l-ROld ( 1be elect- iiend- house and la sliilcd lat cd pcrmiuient chairman. The first real brcalc c ments cams-when Slcttlnlus nounced tliat Rii»la had Jolne United States and Britain In nc ing a Chinese propwal lo write . clflc Kiiarnnlecs of Justice nnd legal- ity Into tJie proposed world organlzu- At the Parley SAN mANCISCO, April 25 (/!■/- About nn hour mid n hair bcfon soviet Forelun Commissar V. M MolotoII arrived here by planu lo the UiUlcd Nations conference, tin honor Bimrd and navy band wlUcl are stationed nt the airport to mce tliu flood of iliBnlinrles marched pompously onto the field. The ni slclaos were ready to strike up fanfare when it was discovered th the plane Uiey were greeting h been rolled out from a hangar ai was empty. Whipping winds disclosed that the 8us.tdg ot Artiblau pttatca htic lor the United Nations conference wcU-heeled. Outside their flowlns robe# they carry scimitars. Strapped Inside Around the waist of eaeh ' caliber amomatlc pistol. Russians w)io prccedeil Foi Minister Molotov hiTc thoughtful ot his comtort. Tliey doubted the ease of the cushion s lected ior his desk chair. So tin sent out for a new one, giving can ful cpecificatlons as to its thlckiiei Incidentally, the Hussinn attitude -w far Is; No imcrvlews, no publicity, no comment. To remind the delegates that American movies aren't entirely ex- DEScraitd. an Indian ihuUlcd through hotel lobbies in feathers nnd buckskin and the front page of a morning paper told of a mail coach robbery In U u t Chance canyon down in southern California. MOUE RANGES WABinNQTON, April J4 lU.PJ — The war production board today a thorlwd production of 37,818 domi lie eleclric ranges during the r of ms. iihcrs In service could bo iissinn non-liaiardous duly on reque.il. vlo>i.'ly only soli tills policy. Tlie atnnic ixVcniJtd Uic iclccilv« servlcc act. umendhiK It lo prohlbK sending of :8->ear-6ldivl«to CMbal without six months of training, Tlie blU now gc>es to conference will ' ' house, which extended the act - out such a provblon. TJie house voted to return much-baltered "Korlc or ebe" ; power bill to the mllltnry affairs committee, thus In effect writing obituary. GASDEALER HI! BYOPAPENALiy BOISE, April 25 (U.PJ-Four pension orders for violation ot shoe nnd Kosoline rationing orders wer Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week by Dsiliis H. Young, Sal Lake City, CPA henrlnes commb /,loner, the Boise district OPA offlc announced today. John Zurawskl. doHiK business a the Zurawskl j,torc and Kcrvlce Mn tion. route three. Twin Falls, wn ordered to refniin from celling gaso tine (or 'iO dnv® beginning April 30. He was accused of behiK short 3,153 gasoline coupons, f.-vllurc to su der coupons (or 3,153 gallon,-! o (. llnr nnd operutlng a serMee station not rcgblercd wlih his local board, gtusollno operation* o( the RtHni e 0» C l pany, . icGesn foi- n gusollnc from Uic Idaho Rel comphiiy of Pocatello without i Ing over ration coupons- Oiist Cooper of Cooper.< store o( WeLser. wn/. charaed being /;hort C8S coupons for sale of rationed shoes- HI* buslne.« was siupcnded (or 10 dnys beginning April 30, Lytntitt Klnue at\d Ralph Cmuc o Inland Empire netliierles ot Welsei. were chnrged wiUi selling ga.^ollnc white not regbtcred and without ‘Securing certain rntlon coupons. Charges against Crane were dbmlss- ed, but Klnne was ordered to "stay ouv ot Ihe RosoUtie businesa as long as gasoline remains a rationed com- modity.■|_bcgbnlng^^ Germany Gives Tips To Frisco Parley NEW VORK. April 25 «T, - ITie Qeminn radio at the besieged port of Bremen. In a broadcast ItUendrd (or delegates to the San Prnncbco con- ference. said today “the problem of dbannninent b the central question on which any tuture peace program is bound to rest," The ESiglbh-lansunge broadeost, reported by the federal communlea- lions commission, proposed that the conference place n ban on ttie use and nlonufncturc of “the heaviest artillery” and "the heaviest type o( tank” as wtU a& the -use of gas. phosphorus and Incendiary bombs." NO "SEVERANCE PAY” HOLLYWOOD. April 25 (UJO - Actor'* agent Pat di Clcco todaj' b- sued a vehement denial of reports ill recelVB »s».000 '•seversnee from Olorlda Vanderbilt. 21- year-old heiress who divorced him to mnrrj- orchestra conductor Leo- pold Stokowski. Our Peace Delegation Vlrrlnla filldfn.lervp d Bloem of New Vork, a Oei lion* fommUlec: Sen. To man of the senate foreign bcr* ol MIchJRan a llepubVVrai Itepubliean; Conidr, Harold K, S ulilp ot Sllnnesoia lo enter nav; slate, is a Democrat and former Flame Prcyenlion “Better Than Cure’ SPOKANE. April 25 i/T—Thi tire depnrtnionl received a cal trom W. M. Jone.i in Plummer Ida. "I led for Idaho (hl.i nrtenioo. nnd Ictl the Move dratt ojn'n,' ■aid Jones. "I'm nfr.-Md the siov< might overheat.” A tnick crew sped to the Joiiei home, goti^cd tnWancc nistl Wni- ;d down the drafts. Firemen explained: "We'd rather prevent a fir than fight one," 96] VOIES CASI Twin Fnll-s volera reelected Bert A, Sweet os mayor o; Twin Falls Tuesday In a run-off cloctlon In which his opponent. Edward Bnb- cock, neither sought nor campaigned (or the ottlco nticr ruut\lnR sccond I the primary here three weeks iigo. Voles In the three w»r<l.'. lotalled 967 nnd of this number Sweet re- ceived 630 . ballots or n .Mx to one triumph over BabcocI;, whMC name had to appear on the ballot due to ihe lad that the Incumbent major foiled to gain n clear majority over hl.'i two opponents In the prlmarj'. By chance, 402 both w ;he s. and V\rrt t ,ard thn °nl^°lM celvcd 02 ballots. Dabcoek 31. The day followlnR the primary Dabcock had announced that he was hdrawlng from the racc. but Ida- ho law required o run-o(f since no was elected In the first racc. Babcock's name had to ho certified as the second candldnto in the prl- man’ and his name placed on the ballot. He declared last week-end, how- ftv. thai hts was not a eandWnlc lor le ofllce and If eleclcd would rot Plane Minus Pilot Hits Shriner Hall pllotll .way from its remote light and crnshcd inti he Bhrlne auditorlun Itstroylns Iticlf and roof afire. ntrol last the roof of coinplclcU' setting the Peanut Removed SALT LAKE CITY. April 25 >A’)—A lO-uuintlis-Qld tdftho boy. Robert Nutsph of Jerome, had half a peanut removed from his throat today and his attending phyelclan said his condition wa;i ••Juj<t fine." The child wan brought hero by his poTtniK. Mr. and Mr>- Leo II. Nut«h, »ho plan to return home with their son tomorrow. PRISONERS JAILEO RUPERT. April 25— Fif. teen more Gurmnn pri.sonor.s of war joined tiieir bucldieB on a bread and water diet at the lUipevt POW ttan\p toilsiy as Lieut.-Col. I). E. Smith con- tinued the procOHs of weed- ing out ringleaders who have been fomenting dissension. In all 65 are now being held In the guardhouse, .some of them in solitary confinement, following a.strike la.st week in which some 285 prisoner.^ re- fused to work on south Ida- ho farms. Work di and hb I, but. officer of the cat nrc keeping a do.', to see that no fiirUier trouble breed.'.. "We'ns geUUig from 5(1 to 70 per cent more work out, of the prisoners now than before.” tlie colonel -laid. Some 250 of ihb group were placed on a bread and water diet, from Tliurfday through Simdiiy nfiemoon and left to sleep In a bnrbed wire enclwciS fltid with oniy one tolnnkel during the strike. Sunday they sent reprt ............... . to the colonel beKgIng to be allowed to return to work and asking the: return to the barracks nnd a ht meal, TIIEV WOKK IIARDKR NOW HA2ELTON, April ■ .’3 — Ocrnia prli-oncR, ot war. un strike nl tli RujxTt camp iMt week, are now dc Nazi Chief Caught Decorating Self WITJI THE U. S. SEVENETH ARMY IN GERMANY, April 35 t,T> -Pour-suir Orrnnn Qencml Hel- mut Tliumm. commander of ihe nazl troop.1 In the battle of the Colntai iwcket lar-t fall, was captured at hij home In Welztcim by « ih dlvblon doughboys. 17iumm. who said he was relieved of conunand ot the Hlh Oer corps after the Colninr licking, pinning decorations on hb uiU preparatory to going to the « tl vi.'inn command post to surrender when troops entered his home. Pocatello Reelects Dinty Moore Mayor By The Atsoclaled Press The clo.^e race ywierdny for tlie muyoraliy of Pocatello ended with C, D. (Diniy) Moore rctiulated lor hb Uilrd two-year term. The nin- off count was 2,Q<7 for Moore and IJC3 for Onint Stowell, At Pre.iton. Mayor E. A. Crockett nnd the lull city staff were returned lo oftlee. At Nampa, S. O. Honsteod wa: elected over Jesoe J. Herrell; Oeorgf Otookham. Jr.. was unopi>ojcd at Caldwell: Mory Schoenwnlk “' • ■ unopposed at Emmett. Battle Climax Nears; Nazi Heads Flee by Air As Capital Crumbles PARJS. April 26 (/I>>-Thc American third army i-eached the Danube and moved with- iu 82 milvs of BcvchVcbgaricn today while two other armies, nsHaiiiting H itlers Ali.ine re- doubt, craahod forward in a great maneuver to encircle Munich, gre.'itcat of south German cities. One divi.sion of Ihe .sevoiilh army captured Oberbuhheim, G7 m ilw .soiilbwe.st of Mtniich and 97 from the Brenner pass into lUily. Other seventh arm y troops were but -IG miles from Jltinich, capital of the nuzi party and third largest city in Germany. The Hritvsli stovmed Bre- men, tightened the .siege of Hamburg and l)ojnbe<i troop trains inilling into Denmark. An Americuii-Ku-s.Hian junc - tion in the center was expect- ed today, if inrleed if has not occurred already as ninny cor- rc.ipondenl3 at ,‘!iipreniu heud- quartei-s believe- Tlie Aiiii-rlran sevcnUi army. <Ta«tnK itic a i pcHinpN n dozen pliicc,<.. wii.s last rciwrlcd -tli Briidley'f iroojja, many Qermiin cftine voluntarily to surrender ti AmrricarL\, 1,500 at- one place. l,ieut.-Gm. George Patlou's thiri lid *lfKo to Regen.'.burg Iron pofiti t of t mile n c D.mube. •o milt thunder Keoup Th.' third arm iri.suiiers on a ' Cievhosln' &.ilarn. 38 mihs fi from Prague-i the last heav >roo[)^d up 10.000 Tex.is nnd Okla- urllne alone the (rtlliUi:! n PIber ndu.s nnd 01 eneloMng ' area left nnd French the redoubt -•olumn «) Another Hitler-Hurt Story Now Circulated STOCKHOLNf, April 25 lU.Rl — Wholly unconfirmed press reports r.nid today that Hiller hiid been in- jured severely In a ".'erloa^ acci- dent” in Berlin. No details of the supiwsed acci- dent were available, but the German radio ttiinounccd eorUtr ih t week that Hitler was remaining In the ’"main defense line” in Berlin. The na?l-conlrolled Scandinavian telegraph bureau said Hitler was di- recting the defense of Berlin from a subtcrrauonn fortress tnitler ihe high command bunding on Bender- strnsse, nlrcndy under Soviet artil- lery lire. "Slaves” Warned of Attack by Bombers today Iwmbed llw g works at Pllsen. last armn for Adolf Getting in the Big Game ROME, April 25 (UP) — Allied armies struck north) from the Po, river in northern Italy today to within 30 miles of Verona, gateway; to the Brenner pass. Swiftly expanding their bridgeheads across the Po, Gen. Mark W. Clark’s forces joined the race to trap remnants of Hitler’s armies in his national redoubt in the Bavarian Alps. The fifth army's tenth mountain division spearheaded the push, across the Po, establishing the first bridgehead after a 55-mile drive in two days. With their last natural barrier south of the Alps smashed, the Germans were in a confused state. Nazi divisions were broken, and battalions were operating more and more on their own. )i. t. 4 It Cell Awaits Petain; Death Is Demanded PARIS, April 2.‘) cell in an unnamed fortress near Paris was prepared today for Marshal Petain, former idol of France, as a precaution against disorders when tho aged hero of Verdun is returned here lo stand trial on charge of high Jii.stice Mini el entered F iwtlt, Francois de Jlenthon said Petain had not j, denying a French prc.ss agency report .rshal and his party crossed the Swiss frontier near Geneva this morning. An almost complete n««« bUclcout has been thrown over 4eiaU« OC-fha marshal'i return In | Upon arrival, however, Pc'UlntrtU b« held under heavy gi fortress in the Paris ,«uburl«. Llk« any other man accused of a mnjoi crime in Fraiito he will be denied any vbltors except defense coim*el. Frnuce nlrcndy has been torn i.part by the dramatic arrival nt the Swhj frontier yesterday of thi mnrshiil and hb niuiounccd tntcn- LONIXlN. April 25 Uke rM8 deicrling a sinking ship, axis •'small fry” clamored vahily for sanctuary In Switzerland today as nllletl armies cngulted Cei reftij ntry from ikf. ■tapo Tlio' :ialn1] prisonc of other refugees, workers n n d allied ......-....... .. ,.jr, wore (lowing acro.-j vhc border Irom Oennnny. however. A Swiss broadcast »,nld 13,040 had entered Ihe country between April 10 nnd 22. An e.xchange telegraph dlsi>nich from Bern said funner Vichy Pre- mier Pierre Uival threntened to commit suicide unle.vs he wn.', per- mitted U) •'c.scupe from the Ger- mant,” but neverthele.'i was retu.'ed entry at every Swbs frontier poit. Vittorio Mus.soIlnl, son of the une- lime Italian dictator, nrrived nt the 8wlss-It.ilian border with a. fake Spanish passport ind wn.-. refused entry. Pastor Protests Paternity Ruling LOS ANOELES, April 25 <UJ!) - Tlie Rev. Cecil L. King. Sunlaud prcncher. fald today he would ap- peal a court decision which nnmed him father of Mrs, Bonnie AUen's 10-month-old son and ordered hln y J30 a ••You can't :q clerical iurn!|i Burnell said as -I dor inth. blood out of c Judge Charle; ' named the sum feel much sym- pathy (or a clergysnan. and con-^e- nuently one who holds himself ou as n moral le.-ider. who has Immora relations with the wKe of a mar. serving hb country, and then comes to court and lies." lumlog lo France t< e provli ■thoi eland b of perfons who still Idollrc Petoln And (or whom even today his vast pre. tlgo remains undlmmed by tl events durli^g the Gernian occupi lion ot France, Paris newspapers de- mand death (or Petain. Hardly - phrase is written In his defense. New.'papcrs bristled with such a; pelailoiis ns "traitor.'^ ■'moa'ilci. 'HUler'.< vulct.-’ ond "hend ot (ifth eoluiii : opinion Uie Oemtnns fusion In France and with the hope ol placing him at the head of ihelr undergroimd ofganltallon b widely Mprpued. Nazis Prefer Death To Meeting Russians PARIS, April 25 tUJli-Tlie mans (eared the Russians so much that some nnil officers nnd mer conuuitteed suicide rather than mee the red advance. Stun and Strlpei Correspondent Thomas Hoge said today. Hose, cnptured by the Gennan? hi Holland in September nnd who recently cscapcd to Ru.sslan lines gave a (Irst hand account o( ih( aweioinu red army In n dLsjiatcli publbhed by the unny newspaper undur nn Odc.s^a dateline. •Tlie most unorthodox army' li llw 'Kotld, il\c Ru-jblans combine Jm.^- ly eathusla.^m with cold-blooded (e- rocity to make (or a drlvhig (orc< that has been shrlvelUng Germai opjwsUlon to B slate of abject ter- ror.", he said. Physician Wins Gooding Mayoralty Over Clergyman to Feature South Idaho Vote OOODINO, April 25-Dr. F. B. Barrett, (or mayor, and the three councltmen. candidates o( the Pro- gressive Clilrens’ ticket were elected in the Gooding city election Tues- day. SI* hundred and elghty-scvcn ol 800 ellglWe In Ihc city voted. Dr, Barrett rceeived 391 votes to SSO (or the Tiew j . Wesley Miller, Z. t>. Btlbon, an uidependent candidate, was unopiKccd for city clerk. Ho received fl53 votes. He has held the o((lcc finco lOia. Mrs. Han- na Bailey, unoppojtd lor treasurer, received 552 votes. Councilman for a (our-year term In the firtt ward, ira Brook.s was given 403 vote.^ to 270 (or Jolui W. Clouser. D. C. Oakley was elected to tlic laro-ycBf Itnn by a vole ol -199 to 174 (or Albert W. Stone. In the second word. A. W. WUlius was clected for a u n n of four years by a vote of 368 lo JM for Herbert Meyer. Barren ’SIlI become the llth may* hbtory of Gooding. Tlie re- tiring mayor. A, P. Jamc.s, ha* held the office since May 1. 1025 with tlie exception of (our years during which Hnrry Levy scn-ed, Jamea retired from the ofdcc stating that he be* lieved someone ebc should have a turn ot guiding city government, . LIGHT DljRLEV VOTE BURLEY, April 25-ln what was reported by T. D. Poster. Ourley clerk, as the lightest vole ever cast In Burley, only 650 persons out ot 2.500 eligible voters casting ballots today. Charles P. McDonald was elected mayor with 489 votes to 218 for U F. HolU. Poster was reelected city clerk by & \ « le «,{ 437 10 2bZ ittt n R. Butlge. Unopposed candidate for city treas* M, Coleman, received r Orpha 600 votes. ward o; . B. C. £ Pollard. L. L. Mftrtlndale waa elecUd Iman In the second ward with 3SU votes, while h b opponent, Vi Mitchell, received 329. In the third ward two candidates were elected to the council as Uie hold-over eouncilmnn resigned prior to the election. H. M, Drake defeated Jay NIcljon for the four-year term. 355 to 240. and for the two-year terms Otto Paukon received 45D votes and Ed Borw retelved 220. L. W, GREVING F.UECTED JEROME, April S5-L; W. On Ing. unopposed, became the n. mayor of Jerome Tuesday, with toul vote of 198. George D. Petrie, foriner mayor, did not seek reelecllon. Ouy Stanton, who received 203 %•««», >Tia reelccled clly ireasurtr. He was unopposed. Also reelectM was Wallace E. JelUson to ofllct! city clerk, with 199 votes. E. C. Craig. eleet«d os o councilman trom word one to eei tC«sUi»4 r«n i, C*lmu I) LONDON, April 25 (U.R) — High nazi officials are fleeing by air today from siege* wracked Berlin. JIoscow dis- patches aaid chaos and panic arc rampant in the Germfin capital and the climax of tho war's most apcctacular battle is near. Two thirds of Berlin has been overrun and ground to rubble by two Russian armies which novf had joined forces in the city for the final on- slaught. The German high command ,t in south Berlin ‘ a Une-.- situa) miicB southwest o Platz; nnd Babclsborg, the “Hollywood" of Germany and silo of tho big UFA studios two and a half miles east of Pot.sdam. ______ _ In the ai — of Ketdn, on the Hovel 10 mile# northwest of Potsdam, IndicaUns that whatever gap tho no*b etUl had out of Berlin was shrinking fost ' Tho expiring German capital is almost encircled. &tarahal Gregory K. Zhukov's army had hooked around U from tho north to Brwid- enburg. due west of the copltal, nnd Marshal Ivan a. fConev's men are hammering Potsdam at the'south* western edge of the city. By Sky Itoale The Luxembourg radio quoted Moscow dbpnlches a$ saying that the topmost ranks of the nazl hler- orchy hud begun to ieavo Berlin by air. Nazi broadcasts admitted Berlin •as scven-clghths encircled, but allied plloU said tha Germans wens 'ushing reinforcements of men and irroor from other Ironu through he narrowing gap west, of the city 'or what mny be tho last big battls of ihc European war, "All that b left of the Oeiman army seemed to bo streaming back nlo Berlin,” reported an RAP iquadron leader who Joined Amerl- :an nnd Russian fllera In sprendlns :arnage through the enemy eol- RAP UcUcal planes alone de- siroytJ or datnagtd 300 lo 400 enemy ■ yesterday on roads leadlna Un from the. west. 'They tf- n>.4 .n 1. Ctlann » FLASHES of LIFE TEETH NEW YORK, AptU 2J-EnhlMl A in felony court was a set of f«be leetli belonging to Tom Collins, .61. residence, the Bowerj-. A detetUva said he found the teeth Insldo a. burglarlrcd shoi>-whlIc their own- er stood outside. Innocently watch- ing the police InfestSgaUnn. DAMAGES COLUMBIA. MO.. AprU 25-JudB« w . M. Dinwiddle ruled two titfe- crackcra must pay damogcs oftSSO for repairs on a safo they (ailed to oixn. However, the Judgment dldnt indlcat* how Iho-vlcllm .61. th«- ihwarted robbery could collect. One Is on parole and tho other la senr- ing ft three-year prison tem for the epbode. HUG ' TACOMA, Wash, April 25-An BttracU^-e blond yqung women tolit..' police Judge W. -A. -Rlchnond ^ . m l s t ^ him for..am>U«tf when Mk«I »li# hwJ ianns »Tcund-,».btohtei'pcilJe«nitir-- on a »trfet toner. PatTiok.OUaUer>;' one of Tacoica'a n«veit «nd ym - est poUctmcn, told about th r b Sing. It cost.thtt-rtmns voeub; and costa on -ehjtfgf* of ij----- ' conduct.

Transcript of MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25....

Page 1: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

WAR BULLETINLONDON, April W Lanc«el-

m toiUy bcmbtd Hiller'* eh»lel a t tkrchlM(>dcn In a possible attem pt Qti Ui« fathrcr’* lire. Illtler’i Alpine refute a t the t«p of Kehbleln monnUln wa« amonx the U ritli.

A Regional Newspaper Scrrins Nine Irrigated Idaho Connllcs

MAGICVALLEYEDITION

yOL. 28, NO. 7 W IN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. 1945 PRICE 5 CENTS

TWO-THIRDSA m e r i c a F i r m o n

I s s u e O v e r P o l a n d

A s P a r l e y B e g i n sSAN FRANCISCO, April 25 (A’) ^ W ith the cba

Poland empty. ‘IG nations in w ur on the axis uaaeml.lcii in their f irs t liialoric political confereticc totiuy to try to blvie- priiil mucliinL'ry for prcvcnliiiK W orld w ar 111.

ThiH 18 the (fay th a t millions o f people over the ra rlh have waited and worked for th rough th e year.s of fighlini; to the verge of victory. It dawned b righ t w ith expressions of hope fo r lasting pence, yet darkened by one cloud—tbe Anglo- American dispute with R ussia over Poland.

B arring aomc dram atic move by S talin of R dispute on Polish represcnUitioii a t th e conferen'locked today as over, splitt: „ in th e moment they atrivc for

a, th a t s dead-

■Jinks of the allied cowers

delega--n ity .

T h e U nited Stat^ ion g av e every ind ica lio ti to - Iny o f s t a n d i n g to iig lily •guin.sl any fu r th e r conceb- iions to Ri

Irover s of Hie Un inference.

.by Prcslclcnl Ihc clKlil dclcRi

ited Na

Tliere wft.s nc

Apouklnti (or c O.astUn ilclegw Jicrc wlUi the mnndj lor Ihn poscil B •inbly

by Uind lor

ackcclWawBw Polbh rcclnic.

Enou{h Conceuloiit Another deletmt who Is unuccu

temed to sccrccy nnd tho diplomai Ulk M -TJhlcIi much InKm a-

Uonal InXormallon la irnnamllied, wid the llwo lios come for the TJiilted States lo decide wlietln wonts to be Die leader or tollaivi peace moves.

Adinonlshlng listeners t h o i didn’t want to be quoted by n this drlcsBic eald lie. for thoushi that enough concessions had been made to the Ru-sslnnc.

Kl«hllghU o( the scheduled half- Iioiir proaram to, be broadcDsl around the world b a speech by president Truman from Waslilng- ton. Secretary of State Stctilnlus rapa the session to order and de- llvera the Initial address, Introducing the American cWst executive, Alter Truman the prosram calls for nd (iressM by Gov. Earl Warren, Call fomln and Mayor IloBer Lnpham, Snn FYanclsco.

Bteldnlus Preside* Stcltlnlu* hclris the tcm uori..

p of the meeting in SnnFranclsco'i red- l-ROld (

1 be elect-

iiend-

house and la sliilcd lat cd pcrmiuient chairman.

The first real brcalc c ments cams-when Slcttlnlus nounced tliat Rii»la had Jolne United States and Britain In nc ing a Chinese propwal lo write . clflc Kiiarnnlecs of Justice nnd legal­ity Into tJie proposed world organlzu-

At the ParleySAN mANCISCO, April 25 (/!■/-

About nn hour mid n hair bcfon soviet Forelun Commissar V. M MolotoII arrived here by planu lo the UiUlcd Nations conference, tin honor Bimrd and navy band wlUcl are stationed nt the airport to mce tliu flood of iliBnlinrles marched pompously onto the field. The ni slclaos were ready to strike up fanfare when it was discovered th the plane Uiey were greeting h been rolled out from a hangar ai was empty.

Whipping winds disclosed that the 8us.tdg ot Artiblau pttatca h tic lor the United Nations conference wcU-heeled. Outside their flowlns robe# they carry scimitars. Strapped Inside Around the waist of eaeh '

caliber amomatlc pistol.

Russians w)io prccedeil Foi Minister M o lo to v hiTc thoughtful ot his comtort. Tliey doubted the ease of the cushion s lected io r his desk chair. So tin sent out for a new one, giving can ful cpecificatlons as to its thlckiiei

Incidentally, the Hussinn attitude -w far Is; No imcrvlews, no publicity, no comment.

To remind the delegates that American movies aren't entirely ex- DEScraitd. an I n d i a n ihuUlcd through hotel lobbies in feathers nnd buckskin and the front page of a morning paper told of a mail coach robbery In U u t Chance canyon down in southern California.

MOUE RANGESWABinNQTON, April J4 lU.PJ —

The war production board today a thorlwd production of 37,818 domi lie eleclric ranges during the r of m s .

iihcrs In service could bo iissinn non-liaiardous duly on reque.il. vlo>i.'ly only soli

tills policy.Tlie atnnic ixVcniJtd Uic iclccilv«

servlcc act. umendhiK It lo prohlbK sending of :8->ear-6ldivl«to CMbal without six months of training, Tlie blU now gc>es to conference will ' ' house, which extended the act - out such a provblon.

TJie house voted to return much-baltered "Korlc or ebe" ; power bill to the mllltnry affairs committee, thus In effect writing obituary.

GAS DEALER HI! BYOPAPENALiy

BOISE, April 25 (U.PJ-Four pension orders for violation ot shoe nnd Kosoline rationing orders wer Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week by Dsiliis H. Young, Sal Lake City, CPA henrlnes commb /,loner, the Boise district OPA offlc announced today.

John Zurawskl. doHiK business a the Zurawskl j,torc and Kcrvlce Mn tion. route three. Twin Falls, wn ordered to refniin from celling gaso tine (or 'iO dnv® beginning April 30. He was accused of behiK short 3,153 gasoline coupons, f.-vllurc to su der coupons (or 3,153 gallon,-! o ( . llnr nnd operutlng a serMee station not rcgblercd wlih his local board,

gtusollno operation* o( theRtHni e 0 » Cl pany, . icGesn

foi- ngusollnc from Uic Idaho Rel

comphiiy of Pocatello without i Ing over ration coupons-

Oiist Cooper of Cooper.< store o( WeLser. wn/. charaed being /;hort C8S coupons for sale of rationed shoes- HI* buslne.« was siupcnded (or 10 dnys beginning April 30,

Lytntitt Klnue at\d Ralph Cmuc o Inland Empire netliierles ot Welsei. were chnrged wiUi selling ga.^ollnc white not regbtcred and without ■‘Securing certain rntlon coupons. Charges against Crane were dbmlss- ed, bu t Klnne was ordered to "stay ouv ot Ihe RosoUtie businesa as long as gasoline remains a rationed com­modity .■ |_bcgbn lng^ ^

Germany Gives Tips To Frisco Parley

NEW VORK. April 25 «T, - ITie Qeminn radio a t the besieged port of Bremen. In a broadcast ItUendrd (or delegates to the San Prnncbco con­ference. said today “the problem of dbannninent b the central question on which any tuture peace program is bound to rest,"

The ESiglbh-lansunge broadeost, reported by the federal communlea- lions commission, proposed that the conference place n ban on ttie use and nlonufncturc of “the heaviest artillery” and "the heaviest type o( tank” as wtU a& the -use of gas. phosphorus and Incendiary bombs."

NO "SEVERANCE PAY” HOLLYWOOD. April 25 (UJO -

Actor'* agent Pat di Clcco todaj' b- sued a vehement denial of reports

ill recelVB »s».000 '•seversnee from Olorlda Vanderbilt. 21-

year-old heiress who divorced him to mnrrj- orchestra conductor Leo­pold Stokowski.

Our Peace Delegation

Vlrrlnla filldfn.lervp d Bloem of New Vork, a Oei lion* fommUlec: Sen. To man of the senate foreign bcr* ol MIchJRan a llepubVVrai Itepubliean; Conidr, Harold K, S ulilp ot Sllnnesoia lo enter nav; slate, is a Democrat and former

Flame Prcyenlion “Better Than Cure’SPOKANE. April 25 i/T—Thi

tire depnrtnionl received a cal trom W. M. Jone.i in Plummer Ida.

"I led for Idaho (hl.i nrtenioo. nnd Ictl the Move d ra tt ojn'n,'■aid Jones. "I'm nfr.-Md the siov<might overheat.”

A tnick crew sped to the Joiiei home, goti^cd tnWancc nistl Wni- ;d down the drafts.

Firemen explained:"We'd rather prevent a fir

than fight one,"

96] VOIES CASITwin Fnll-s volera reelected Bert

A, Sweet os mayor o; Twin Falls Tuesday In a run-off cloctlon In which his opponent. Edward Bnb- cock, neither sought nor campaigned (or the ottlco nticr ruut\lnR sccond

I the primary here three weeks iigo.Voles In the three w»r<l.'. lotalled

967 nnd of this number Sweet re­ceived 630 . ballots o r n .Mx to one triumph over BabcocI;, whMC name had to appear on the ballot due to ihe la d th a t the Incumbent m ajor foiled to gain n clear majority over hl.'i two opponents In the prlmarj'.

By chance, 402both w ;he s.

and V\rrt t

,ard th n °n l^°lM celvcd 02

ballots. Dabcoek 31.The day followlnR the primary

Dabcock had announced tha t he was hdrawlng from the racc. but Ida­

ho law required o run-o(f since no was elected In the first racc.

Babcock's name had to ho certified as the second candldnto in the prl- m an’ and his name placed on the ballot.

He declared last week-end, how- ftv. th a i hts was no t a eandWnlc lor le ofllce and If eleclcd would ro t

Plane Minus Pilot Hits Shriner Hall

pllotll.way from its remote light and crnshcd inti he Bhrlne auditorlun Itstroylns Iticlf and

roof afire.

ntrol last the roof of coinplclcU'

setting the

Peanut RemovedSALT LAKE CITY. April 25

>A’)—A lO-uuintlis-Qld tdftho boy. Robert Nutsph of Jerome, had half a peanut removed from his throat today and his attending phyelclan said his condition wa;i ••Juj<t fine."

The child wan brought hero by his poTtniK. Mr. and Mr>- Leo II. Nut«h, »ho plan to return home with their son tomorrow.

PRISONERS JAILEORUPERT. April 2 5 — Fif.

teen more Gurmnn pri.sonor.s of w ar joined tiie ir bucldieB on a bread and w ater d ie t a t the lUipevt POW ttan\p toilsiy as Lieut.-Col. I). E. Sm ith con­tinued the procOHs of weed­ing out ringleaders who have been fom enting dissension.

In all 65 are now being held In the guardhouse, .some of them in solitary confinem ent, following a.strike la.st w eek in which some 285 prisoner.^ re ­fused to work on south Ida­ho farm s.

Work di

and hbI, but.

officer of the cat nrc keeping a do.', to see tha t no fiirUier trouble breed.'..

"We'ns geUUig from 5(1 to 70 per cent more work out, of the prisoners now than before.” tlie colonel -laid.

Some 250 of ihb group were placed on a bread and water diet, from Tliurfday through Simdiiy nfiemoon and left to sleep In a bnrbed wire enclwciS fltid with oniy one tolnnkel during the strike.

Sunday they sent rep rt................to the colonel beKgIng to be allowed to return to work and asking the: return to the barracks nnd a ht meal,

TIIEV WOKK IIARDKR NOWHA2ELTON, April ■.’3 — Ocrnia

prli-oncR, ot war. un strike nl tli RujxTt camp iMt week, are now dc

Nazi Chief Caught Decorating Self

WITJI THE U. S. SEVENETH ARMY IN GERMANY, April 35 t,T> -P ou r-su ir O rrnnn Qencml Hel­mut Tliumm. commander of ihe nazl troop.1 In the battle of the Colntai iwcket lar-t fall, was captured a t hij home In Welztcim by « i h dlvblon doughboys.

17iumm. who said he was relieved of conunand ot the H lh Oer corps after the Colninr licking, pinning decorations on h b uiU preparatory to going to the « t l vi.'inn command post to surrender when troops entered his home.

Pocatello Reelects Dinty Moore Mayor

By The Atsoclaled PressThe clo. e race ywierdny for tlie

muyoraliy of Pocatello ended with C, D. (Diniy) Moore rctiulated lor hb Uilrd two-year term. The nin- off count was 2,Q<7 for Moore and IJC3 for Onint Stowell,

At Pre.iton. Mayor E. A. Crockett nnd the lull city staff were returned lo oftlee.

At Nampa, S. O. Honsteod wa: elected over Jesoe J. Herrell; Oeorgf Otookham. Jr.. was unopi>ojcd a t Caldwell: Mory Schoenwnlk “ '

• ■ unopposed at Emmett.

B a t t le C lim a x N e a r s ;N a z i H e a d s F le e b y A ir

A s C a p ita l C r u m b le sP A R JS . A p ril 26 (/I>>-T hc

A m e ric a n th ir d a rm y i-eached th e D anube a n d m oved w ith - i u 82 m ilv s o f BcvchVcbgaricn to d a y w h ile tw o o th e r a rm ies , n sH aiiitin g H i t l e r s A li.in e r e ­d o u b t, c ra ah o d fo rw a rd in a g r e a t m a n e u v e r to encirc le M u n ic h , g re .'itc a t o f so u th G e rm a n c itie s .

O ne divi.sion o f Ihe .sevoiilh a rm y c a p tu re d O b erb u h h e im , G7 m ilw .soiilbw e.st o f M tniich a n d 97 fro m th e B re n n e r pass in to lU ily . O th e r se v en th a rm y tro o p s w ere b u t -IG m iles f ro m J lt in ic h , c a p ita l o f th e nuz i p a r ty a n d th ird la rg e s t c i ty in G erm a n y .

T h e H ritvsli stovm ed B re ­m e n , t ig h te n e d th e .siege of H a m b u rg and l)ojnbe<i tro o p tr a in s in illing in to D en m ark .

A n Americuii-Ku-s.Hian ju n c ­tio n in th e c e n te r w as e x p ec t­ed to d a y , if inrleed if h a s no t o c c u rre d a lre a d y a s n in n y cor- rc .iponden l3 a t ,‘!iipreniu heud- q u a rte i-s believe-

Tlie Aiiii-rlran sevcnUi army.<Ta«tnK itic a i pcHinpN ndozen pliicc,<.. wii.s last rciwrlcd -tli

Briidley'f iroojja, many Qermiin cftine voluntarily to surrender ti AmrricarL\, 1,500 at- one place.

l,ieut.-Gm. George Patlou's thiri ■ lid *lfKo to Regen.'.burg Iron

pofitit of t

mile n c D.mube.

•o milt thunder

Keoup Th.' third arm

iri.suiiers on a '

Cievhosln'&.ilarn. 38 mihs fi from Prague-i the last heav

>roo[)^d up 10.000

Tex.is nnd Okla- urllne alone the (rtlliUi:!

n PIber

ndu.s

nnd 01 eneloMng

' area left

nnd French the redoubt-•olumn «)

Another Hitler-Hurt Story Now CirculatedSTOCKHOLNf, April 25 lU.Rl —

Wholly unconfirmed press reports r.nid today tha t Hiller hiid been in­jured severely In a ".'erloa^ acci­dent” in Berlin.

No details of the supiwsed acci­dent were available, but the German radio ttiinounccd eorUtr i h t week th a t Hitler was remaining In the ’"main defense line” in Berlin.

The na?l-conlrolled Scandinavian telegraph bureau said Hitler was di­recting the defense of Berlin from a subtcrrauonn fortress tnitler ihe high command bunding on Bender- strnsse, nlrcndy under Soviet artil­lery lire.

"Slaves” Warned of Attack by Bombers

today Iwmbed llw g works a t Pllsen. last armn for Adolf

G e t t in g in th e B i g G a m eROME, April 25 (UP) — Allied armies struck north) from the Po,

river in northern Italy today to within 30 miles of Verona, gateway; to the Brenner pass. Swiftly expanding their bridgeheads across the Po, Gen. Mark W. Clark’s forces joined the race to trap remnants of Hitler’s armies in his national redoubt in the Bavarian Alps. The fifth army's tenth mountain division spearheaded the push, across the Po, establishing the first bridgehead a fte r a 55-mile drive in two days. With their last natural b arrie r south of the Alps smashed, the Germans were in a confused state. Nazi divisions were broken, and battalions were operating more and more on their own.

)i. t. 4 It

Cell Awaits Petain;Death Is Demanded

PARIS, April 2.‘) cell in an unnamed fo rtre ss nea rP aris was prepared today for Marshal Petain, fo rm er idol of France, as a precaution against disorders when tho aged hero of Verdun is re turned here lo stand trial on charge of high

Jii.stice Mini e l e n te re d F

iwtlt,

Francois de Jlenthon said Petain had not j, denying a French prc.ss agency rep o rt

.rshal and his party crossed the Swiss f ro n tie r near Geneva th is m orning.

An almost complete n««« bUclcout has been thrown over 4eiaU« OC-fha marshal'i return In |

Upon arrival, however, Pc'U lntrtU b« held under heavy gi fortress in the Paris ,«uburl«. Llk« any other man accused of a mnjoi crime in Fraiito he will be denied any vbltors except defense coim*el.

Frnuce nlrcndy has been torn i.part by the dramatic arrival n t the Swhj frontier yesterday of thi mnrshiil and hb niuiounccd tntcn-

LONIXlN. April 25 U ke rM8 deicrling a sinking ship, axis •'small fry” clamored vahily for sanctuary In Switzerland today as nllletl armies cngulted Cei

reftij ntry

fromikf.

■tapo

Tlio':ialn1]

prisonc

of other refugees, workers n n d allied

......-....... . . ,.jr , wore (lowing acro.-jvhc border Irom Oennnny. however. A Swiss broadcast »,nld 13,040 had entered Ihe country between April 10 nnd 22.

An e.xchange telegraph dlsi>nich from Bern said funner Vichy Pre­m ier Pierre Uival threntened to commit suicide unle.vs he wn.', per­mitted U) •'c.scupe from the Ger- mant,” but neverthele.'i was retu.'ed entry at every Swbs frontier poit.

Vittorio Mus.soIlnl, son of the une- lime Italian dictator, nrrived nt the 8wlss-It.ilian border with a. fake Spanish passport in d wn.-. refused entry.

Pastor Protests Paternity Ruling

LOS ANOELES, April 25 <UJ!) - Tlie Rev. Cecil L. King. Sunlaud prcncher. fald today he would ap­peal a court decision which nnmed him father of Mrs, Bonnie AUen's 10-month-old son and ordered hln

y J30 a ••You can't :q

clerical iurn!|i Burnell said as

-I dor

inth.blood out of c

Judge Charle;' named the sum feel much sym­

pathy (or a clergysnan. and con- e- nuently one who holds himself ou as n moral le.-ider. who has Immora relations with the wKe of a mar. serving hb country, and then comes to court and lies."

lumlog lo France t<

e provli ■ thoi

eland

b ofperfons who still Idollrc Petoln And (or whom even today his vast pre. tlgo remains undlmmed by tl events durli^g the Gernian occupi lion o t France, Paris newspapers de­mand death (or Petain. Hardly - phrase is written In his defense.

New.'papcrs bristled with such a; pelailoiis ns "traitor.'^ ■'moa'ilci. 'HUler'.< vulct.-’ ond "hend ot (iftheoluiii

: opinion Uie Oemtnns

fusion In France and w ith the hope ol placing him a t the head of ihelr undergroimd ofganltallon b widely Mprpued.

Nazis Prefer Death To Meeting RussiansPARIS, April 25 tUJli-Tlie

mans (eared the Russians so much that some nnil officers nnd mer conuuitteed suicide rather than mee the red advance. S tu n and Strlpei Correspondent Thomas Hoge said today.

Hose, cnptured by the Gennan? hi Holland in September nnd who recently cscapcd to Ru.sslan lines gave a (Irst hand account o( ih( aweioinu red army In n dLsjiatcli publbhed by the unny newspaper undur nn Odc.s^a dateline.

•Tlie most unorthodox army' li llw 'Kotld, il\c Ru-jblans combine Jm. - ly eathusla.^m with cold-blooded (e- rocity to make (or a drlvhig (orc< that has been shrlvelUng Germai opjwsUlon to B slate of abject ter­ror.", he said.

P h y s i c i a n W i n s G o o d i n g M a y o r a l t y O v e r

C l e r g y m a n t o F e a t u r e S o u t h I d a h o V o t eOOODINO, April 25-D r. F. B.

Barrett, (or mayor, and the three councltmen. candidates o( the Pro­gressive Clilrens’ ticket were elected in the Gooding city election Tues­day. SI* hundred and elghty-scvcn ol 800 ellglWe In Ihc city voted.

Dr, Barrett rceeived 391 votes to SSO (or the Tiew j . Wesley Miller,

Z. t>. Btlbon, an uidependent candidate, was unopiKccd for city clerk. Ho received fl53 votes. He has held the o((lcc finco lOia. Mrs. Han- na Bailey, unoppojtd lor treasurer, received 552 votes.

Councilman for a (our-year term In the firtt ward, ira Brook.s was given 403 vote. to 270 (or Jolui W. Clouser. D. C. Oakley was elected to tlic laro-ycBf I tn n by a vole ol -199 to 174 (or Albert W. Stone.

In the second word. A. W. WUlius was clected for a u n n of four years by a vote of 368 lo JM for Herbert Meyer.

B arren ’SIlI become the ll th may*

hbtory of Gooding. T lie re­tiring mayor. A, P. Jamc.s, ha* held the office since May 1. 1025 with tlie exception of (our years during which Hnrry Levy scn-ed, Jamea retired from the ofdcc stating th a t he be* lieved someone ebc should have a tu rn o t guiding city government,

. LIGHT DljRLEV VOTE BURLEY, April 2 5 - ln w hat was

reported by T. D. Poster. Ourley clerk, as the lightest vole ever cast In Burley, only 650 persons out ot 2.500 eligible voters casting ballots today. Charles P. McDonald was elected mayor with 489 votes to 218 for U F. HolU.

Poster was reelected city clerk by & \« le «,{ 437 10 2bZ ittt n R . Butlge. Unopposed candidate for city treas*

M, Coleman, receivedr Orpha 600 votes.

ward o; ■. B. C. £

Pollard. L. L. Mftrtlndale waa elecUd

Iman In the second ward with 3SU votes, while h b opponent, Vi Mitchell, received 329.

In the third ward two candidates were elected to the council as Uie hold-over eouncilmnn resigned prior to the election. H. M, Drake defeated Jay NIcljon for the four-year term. 355 to 240. and for the two-year terms Otto Paukon received 45D votes and Ed Borw retelved 220.

L. W, GREVING F.UECTED JEROME, April S5-L; W. On

Ing. unopposed, became the n. mayor of Jerome Tuesday, with to u l vote of 198. George D. Petrie, foriner mayor, did not seek reelecllon. •

Ouy Stanton, who received 203 %•««», >Tia reelccled clly ireasurtr. He was unopposed. Also reelectM was Wallace E. JelUson to ofllct! city clerk, with 199 votes.

E. C. Craig. eleet«d os o councilman trom word one to eei

tC«sUi»4 r« n i, C*lmu I)

LONDON, April 25 (U.R) — High nazi officials a re fleeing by a ir today from siege* wracked Berlin. JIoscow dis­patches aaid chaos and panic arc ram pant in th e Germfin capital and the climax of tho w ar's m ost apcctacular ba ttle is near.

Two th irds of Berlin has been overrun and ground to rubble by two Russian arm ies w hich novf had joined forces in the city for the final on­slaught.

The German high command ,t in south Berlin

‘ a Une-.-

situa)miicB southw est o P la tz ; nnd Babclsborg, th e “ Hollywood" of Germany and silo of tho big UFA studios two and a half miles ea st o f Pot.sdam.

______ _ In the ai —of Ketdn, on the Hovel 10 mile# northwest of Potsdam, IndicaUns tha t whatever gap tho no*b etUl had out of Berlin was shrinking fo s t '

Tho expiring German capital is almost encircled. &tarahal Gregory K. Zhukov's army had hooked around U from tho north to Brwid- enburg. due west of the copltal, nnd Marshal Ivan a. fConev's men are hammering Potsdam a t the'south* western edge of the city.

By Sky Itoale The Luxembourg radio quoted

Moscow dbpnlches a$ saying tha t the topmost ranks of the nazl hler- orchy hud begun to ieavo Berlin by air.

Nazi broadcasts admitted Berlin •as scven-clghths encircled, but

allied plloU said tha Germans wens 'ushing reinforcements of men and irroor from other Ironu through he narrowing gap west, of the city 'or what mny be tho last big battls of ihc European war,

"All tha t b left of the Oeiman army seemed to bo streaming back nlo Berlin,” reported an RAP iquadron leader who Joined Amerl- :an nnd Russian fllera In sprendlns :arnage through the enemy eol-

RAP UcUcal planes alone de- siroytJ or datnagtd 300 lo 400 enemy ■

yesterday on roads leadlna Un from the. west. 'They t f - n>.4 .n 1. Ctlann »

FLASHES of LIFE

TEETHNEW YORK, AptU 2J-EnhlM l A

in felony court was a set of f«be leetli belonging to Tom Collins, .61. residence, the Bowerj-. A detetUva said he found the teeth Insldo a. burglarlrcd shoi>-whlIc their own­er stood outside. Innocently watch­ing the police InfestSgaUnn.

DAMAGESCOLUMBIA. MO.. AprU 25-JudB«

w . M. Dinwiddle ruled two titfe- crackcra must pay damogcs oftSSO for repairs on a safo they (ailed to oixn. However, the Judgment d ld n t indlcat* how Iho-vlcllm . 61. th « - ihwarted robbery could collect. One Is on parole and tho other la senr- ing ft three-year prison te m for the epbode.

HUG 'TACOMA, W ash, April 25-A n

BttracU^-e blond yqung women tolit..' police Judge W. - A. -Rlchnond ^ . m l s t ^ him for..am>U«tf when Mk«I »li# hwJ

ianns »Tcund-,».btohtei'pcilJe«nitir-- on a »trfet to n e r. PatTiok.OUaUer>;' one of Tacoica'a n«veit «nd y m - est poUctmcn, told about th r b Sing. I t cost.thtt-rtmns v o e u b ;and costa on -ehjtfgf* of ij-----■'conduct.

Page 2: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

P ag e T w o TIM ES-N EW S. T W IN F A L L S . m A H O Wednesday* April 26,1048

RUTLEDGE REELF.CTJMUflTAUQH, April 2i~V

persons out of S3 qunllflfrt • CMlIng ballolB Ln the M iim ujh 'cUcilon. Tommy RuilrdEe ■a-n* re- elrettd president of the vlllise bo»rt ■Wlrh 36 votes, o r Uir olher th r« nsme» uppenrlriK on Uie billol, Wll- Hum OrlffUh w ith 27 w tfn i»nrt Tred acrbert w ith 31 wtrp eleclprt t s bosrd member!<.• Vemon h tr recrlvpd 31 snd t«T: wrll«-ln candldiiles, Htno’ Tolmar nnd Ted Clough, recctvfcl 3 nnU 1, respectlvely-

CAKDIDATEg TO TOSH COINHA0E31MAN. April J5 - C:>da

Dunn won fin e plnco « e o w o ^ a n here TuMd»y xflth 38 vbt«.<. Second place «1II be decided by the to&s of a coin, clectlon oft>clnU said, when bothO, P, M aloney #nd Stanley Prn- M i received 29 votf.«. F. D. Conklin, ilao n inntns fo r o»lce of council­man, received five vote*.' laecUon Judges were Mr«. S llu

Condlt. Mrs. O loriti E3IorUgn nnd Mrs. Corn Swectliind. Clerks were M n. Annn Wlllls and Mrs. Vi

BRAZEAL RU PER T MAYOR nU PD lT. A pril 25-H tnry Bm-

teal was clectcd mayor of Rupert Tuesday by ICB votes. He was unop­posed.

There were 11? votes can In Ru- wrt'fl Iwo wards, th e f lr« ward hav- in* 81 votes, th e second ward 81. . O ther candidates succfuful In calnlng office w ere Price D, Sears, city cltrk, 108 votfS. and Clara D, Colwell, city trcM urer. lOJ Aot«s. '

Councllmen elected from the first ward were Ploj'd SchoR’. with 76 Votes, in d Wnyne Tanner, 33 vo i« Word number tw o candidate, Floyd FVuIt. received D9 vo l« .

Second ward Judges were Mrs. a Doyle. Mrs. D ana Cowell and

Mrs. Minnie Snokc. Judges In th( first ward were ftjrs. Rom Terrell and Mrs. William Broadhead.

n. pen ano » lew oeem s r r Ins to Kliow above sround. It A noiincrd WedneKlay by Coun- ^

COIINCILMEN RETVRNED 6HQSUONE. A pril 35 - 6ho

ahone'B councilm an election return­ed both Ben D arrnh nnd Jack Chrlj. tenaen to otflce- w ltnoiit oppofiilon Of the t«tal vote of ISl, Darrnh re­ceived 90 and C hrljten frn 92.

EleeUon Judgpf. were Mr. w .u - Platz. Mrs. M argare t Hr Elmer Todd.

HORNE HAILEY MAYOR HAILEY. April 25 - Robert

Home becsmr m avor here Tuct- ................... i voi'e of 39. Twe

■enth 13 votes'In wa Georje Cuttler

cUmon for ward year t^rm. Jntr tiecicd couacllmi a two-year femi councilman to fill a i was nob«rl Savnrla.

• Alien, the only holi __election, to ie n c n^aln for year term.

Mra. Oeorje S ln tes wsj elected a ty clerk. Mrs. D onle Slmmeri electcd city treasurer.

Judge and clcrlts of ward one u-ete I, judse; the Rev.

fleeted r ne to fill a

Ixrtchliier , of ward ont

, W ard two's

1 Qeorge

Mrs. B. p . Thar

K e e p t h e W h ite F la a o f S a f e t y F lv in g

ffow three d a ys without a tra//ic death, i n our Maffie Valiev.

THREE VICTOR,S CASTLSrORD. April 2J — PYl

Bybee. John Alexander u ld Dell Hud.^on were elecied to thei C astle, ford vlllnje board of tru s te es ai yesterday's election. D efeated can-

wns C, El Perkins w ith i: There were 27 voir.*i cn,>t

Holdover members of iJie bo a rd nrf Bill Rosencrantr. and E. L. B ryan t

CAMAS VOTE PAlRTIELD. April 25 — G eorge

Perkins nnd Homer C. Kli neither with oj)pofif to ihc village bonru n i thi held hprr. Each received 111 the only conirsi. D. B, Hollowell detealed Edward P rn tt 82 to 2 ' Chairman of the group will be acleci ed a t the first resular m eeting.

<CUMBENTS L O SE EDEN, April 3J-V ernon Lnnc

illh S7 vole}, Prank Green w ith 40 •otfs and Ralph McCauley w ith 12 •ote.v were elecicd to tiic vlllagi

board of inistcM Tuesday. O reer iicumbrni. Lloyd W est anc

Incumbents, t s Harold Q. Bi

NO RACE HERE HAZELTON, April 25- T p,o Un-

oppo,Ted candidates for the vJllace board were pUced In office a s a re- .'ult of Tuexlays vole. They were Clinton WaU'on and Paul S n ider. They succced Chnrles W. B arrow and H. E. Oimdelflnger, w ho. were

5 for reelectlon.

Lumber Men Talk Plans for “Boom”

.Magic Valley lumber d e a l e r * studied federal housing regulHtlons and mapped their plni« to p:irtl41- pate In an anUflpatfd gigantic- post-

bulldlng program a t n d is tr ic t ...Ing of the Inwrmountaln L um ­

ber Dealers association a t the Pa rk hotel Tiieiday,

F. E Hatch. T»ln Falls, p resided w tiie meeting th a t was a tten d e d

by « members of the association.0. D, Ronmey. Salt U k e Cili',

aecretary. and A, O, Sheldon. S alt Lake City, representative' of the national lumber dealers grou|Unded the meeting.

The meeUnj was concluded t banquet Tuesday night.

A d d h i | | ^ e s t i o n

Idaho. He went overseas In Januarj- ef this year. One brother, S 'S rI Qrahom Browne, lias been u prls oner of war in Germany since las. \prll while another, 6/6gt. Howard )rnaiip. U serving wlUi the marines.

A sLUer, Mrs, M, F, Smith, resides It Glendale. Calif., and is employed it Lockheed Arlcralt corporation,

FOR SALE USED II. C. Lilllc

Oil Furnacesand

Space Heaters4 and B R«em Sice

ROB’T E. LEE SALES C O .' PLUMBING & h e a t in g :« m : 6 Main Ave. S. PH. IS9W |

Page 3: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

>Vcdnc8day, April 2G, 1045 T IM E S -N E W S , T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O P ago-T hres 1

;e heard by

BOISE, April 25 01') - ITie eu- jittinc TOUrl JitnrU iiliomcyB argu- mento Tucsdny for a second Ume on tJie qutsilon of whether a property >.uil should be tried la Twin Palls Gooding counties.

The suit was nicd o l T uln Pulls by Ray W. Banbury, special adroln* lairator of the estate of Louisa W Hoezard wid sought to set aside a licccl exccuiwi by Louise Ilazzard to P. M. BrnlL^ford In 1038 In Ooodlng county, anti anotlier deed for prO' perty in Buhl. IV ln Pnlls county.

Brnlbford disclaimed ftny Inter- tiV li\ the Dnhl property and asked that Ihc suK be trnn-ifcrred to Ooodliitt county, but District Judge Jmiu's W. Porter of TV’lii Pnlla ' nied tlie motion.

D«d Cancelled Judge Porter then canccHctl

(Ircd to the Duhl property and rtcrcil that the liislniment dealing wllh the Ooodlns pro|)crty bo con- rellpd condlllonnlly, dependent upon «liclhcr Bnnbury piild a Judgment 111 nil accQuiitlnR wliich wii.-. ordered.

■Ilie ciu%e win appealed by BrnlLf l.jril ni»l .)ii Feb. 13, 1045. the su- Iiiviia' court In iin uiianlmnus opin­ing IV oiilcsed II Ix' chiiiiRfd to GoodhiK county (il>lrlct conn.

U.inbiiry'j. nHorliey, James Bolhwcll or •1‘ttUi Fiills, pclllUinrd Ji)r nncl obtained n rehrarlnK of the i';i.m: uhldi tt‘11. iirKiiC'd toda? !r;li:i)cjil ol IjiU’. Attor/icj'.sA. F Jame.'i iind R. P. Parry pcarcd for BralL'Iord.

Another Tnln Kallj Ca«A second cii.se, arguet) for the

flr.n time bcfcirc the high court, heard todiiy from ’fftln Falls c t}''

Dorothy S. Fortner filed suit ftKolait i . U. Cornell and J . W. C'innlnghiini, Iruslec.'i of Oakes and company, mid iiK«lnsl the Wc.stcm lyiaii iind Lhvstork ctimpany i iiiK an interest In jjlwk of the driuiict Oiike.s corixiriitldn which »lie allPKeil »nj valurd lit S20.01W

'Die Cdinpliiliit Nilil llic il-kH'Is of the Dnkr.s icnipnny urrc In r>aw.s- ,<inn of (he Wisiern Loim and I.lvc- lcK■k, Tlic uisc wii.s (llsmbjod by

JiKlKi' Porter lit Tv.111 KalLs and ap- pcalpd by Dorothy l-’ortnir.

JEROMEBishop Cliarirs H. Andrus is

.slii'iutliiK a few duvs In southern Ciillforiilii (111 bii.sini-. - He nccoin- IMiilPd c u n R<»kfr b;ick to the roiiJi, Joll.mlnn 11 visit here nt the Unrnlti Rookrr re.'ltlence.

Infantry‘Officer

LIKUT. W. ii. HANKS . . . Kimberly man commls

signed In the Iniantrr. lie i> not of Mr. and Mr*, ii. ii. ilaiica, Kinv berly. (Official army pholi encravlne)

ilaff

TORT DENNING, Gu., April 2.i- Wllllam H. Hnnes, KUnbfrly, wa.s cominiMloned n :ccDn<l ll<niirii- ant in the army ol tiic Uiill<-d Stuti.s on completion of the ofllrpr randl- dale cour.ic April 17 at the hil;iiitry k )i’>oI J)pre.

Ueutcnatit Hano.s is son of .Mr. and Mr«. H. H. llane.s, Kimberly,

He wiw Inducted into the army June 20, 10« nnd served wlih the 108th Infantry tralnlns battalion. Camp Robinson. Ark., before enter­ing officer candidate jchool tour months iigo. He held the ratik private when chtisen for the nchool.

The new hlfanlry offlccr IKimberly hlRh school graduate,__wa* ii.s.soclated with Idaho Power company. •

PUUDUM REELECTElt EDEN, April 25—Eden OranKc an- ml election saw Dowd P>irduin. the 'llrlnK Inislee Irom Ihc Perrlne

dblrlct. rcclectea. A speclnl levy lax wa.s voted as well a.? the nine months .school temi.

-------- b a l l e n g i : r s _ _ -V E L T E X -S E R V IC K

Champion Spark PIuks. Ilntteries..Muffleni, Aeeej^orle*.

Keplacenirnl tVheeln for Several Kinds of Cars,

fihonhone F A Stb, Tho 610

3 SCHOOLS FILE RESULT OF POLLS

Additional election returrw from common school dbtirlcLs were r<> celved yesterday by Mrs. Doris Btrndley. county school ^uperln- tcndcnt.

Pleasant Vftllcy, No. four, Curtis W. Bower rccIected for a three yeur term.

Mountain View. No. 17. H, W, Rledenian, jr.. electcd to a three >eiir term to llll the vacancy, of C. E- Orcen. and Jrimes C. Cluwson. elL-ctrd to » one year term to fill the unejtplrcd term of C. L. Blgger-

Popiar Hill, No. 18; Prank J. Moii- niihiili. clected for a three year term, replacing L. j . Clbulka; R. L. ifrii-nfri, elected for one year to fill Ihfl unexplrcd term of C. O, Shaff.

ut^ep Creek. No. 27: Not enough voi.cr.s lor election. Roy Cothcm ap- wiviivcii by Mis . Stradlcy \o btrvt

Purk Lniif. No. 30: Merle Brek- ifv elected for three yent:<, .succeed­ing D. A. McQulrc.

Shamruck, No. 32, l-euL' Dean, reflected fur « three yenis term,

Allendiilc, No. 45: Mrs. Ulllan Ntts,sner rcclucicd for thtec yeur

Rostwonli. No, 5i: Mr.-. O, L.

arrijon elected111 out the unexpi I. C. FL^h.

Wolter Speaker AtWWjflVClub

William R. Wolter. M nlce oJflccr for Ui« Atnerlcan Leglou and Dis­abled American Veterans, was prin­cipal /tpeaker last night In tlie Amer> lean Legion hall al a gaUicrlng of members of the newly formed W W II V club.

Wolter . sccordlng to Max Brown, club pre.ildent. explained the work- InS!. Ql the benetU plan ot U\e Q. 1, bill of rlghta. under which veterons may obtain aid from the Rovemment In sIckncM and In gnhilng old In bu'lne.'.v

Brown said th a t the club plans to meet each second nnd fourt: Tuesdays of each month in the Le glon hall,

•'At our next meeting." Drowm said. "Wolter will again address a i on how to proceu clatnu for disabil­ity i)ciuslon,s.'’

Next meetlnK of the W W club will be held at 8 p. m. May Uie Legion hall.

PROMPTSERVICE

for y o u r rlumbinK a n d heating nerd.v Call us for repairs nnd new installntlons

HOMUPlumhinjr & Hcjiiinp

Pfptl-CoJa C«7«pa«y, Lofiff ftlarnS Cily, N . Y.f<rin<-'it..<-./ l\r fi-C o ln Boltlhip Co. o f Twin

IS THE OCEANYES

DUSTY 5 f

Like a giant b it» m sweeping China, the Asiatic wind shoots a blinding fog of dust o u t over th e Yellow Sea. Gosh, the pranks o f winS and w eather arc endless—too often dangerous! B u t Spring w e a th e r’s m o s t d an g e ro u s threat to your one an d only ca r dies down the m inute you change to fresh motor oil th a t will o il-PLa t e y o u r en­gine-bringing new high resistance to w ear-help ing to keep up mileage and power, while holding down carbon and sludge.

AJI you need is paten ted Conoco N '* motor oil for th e added s a fe ty of oiL-PLATiNa — a shield o f lubricant added direct to inner engine parts.Oil-plated m etal isn’ta llb arc to w ea r. Even baffling corrosive w ear — froifl

ad d s th a t engine combustion alwaj's forms—is curbed b y o il-platinq.

A feat of research—a special Conoco N*'' ingredient t h a t supplies m agnet- like e n c i^ —is responsible for keeping your engine’s delicate finisli o il- p la te d as long as you use Conoco oil. This oil’s high-strcng& liquid film, p lu s OIL-PLATINO besides, m eans m ul­tiplied safety from wear, breakdown and expense. Y ou will be glad you paid a b it m ore— to g r t Conoco oil. Change for Spring—rig h t today. Continental Oil Company

CONOCON%MOTOR OIL

CLEARANCE^ offer you a group of selected items that are pi'ieed to move the mer-

chandise, not to make a profit. These offei’ings i n c l u d e odd lots, overstocks, short lines and soiled merchandise. We need the space for new goods and we have no choice in the matter. Somewhere in the list is something you want, a t a price you’ll be glad to pay.

Starts Friday—Come Early—Q uantities Limited

F m SUPPLIESVACUUM BOTTLE. . . S1.19

FILLERS. Qu*rl Slle.

tTigatiiig Shovels • • • $1.95In Mchter irel(ht. 51.K9

SHOTGUN SHELLS

PUMP CYLINDERS10 Inrh and 16 Inch «1pp5.

SICKLE GRINDER . . $5.79liitnrl <(l)lr >lrklr and tool irlnder.

12 OZ. DAM CANVAS . 49c yd..Specially Irrated. Inches wide. '

ELECT. FENCERS . . . $7.956 voll elcclrtr lenccn. Only live ol lliesc lell, reru lar $11.95.

COLLAR P A D S................49cHone collar pads, rrfular C9e. Only IG of these.

TRACTOR LIGHTS . $2.794 left, Sealta Hearn lUlitn. come early, regular S3.19.

FILTER P A D S................ 17cG Inch ilze. 100 to box. Limit 4 boie< (o ciutomer. Regular ZSc.

mmmomCLOTHES BASKETS . . 69c

Only B led. ijllKlilly damaged. Ileculsr priee SIJIS.

COOKIE JARS . . . . $1.1911 left. Cute Owl dffiltis. 12 Inches lilsh. Regular 51.63.

NOVELTY MEMO . . . . 19cAnother handy kKclien Item, "Mammy" deslcn, refu lar 29e.

MINUTE M O P.................49cAnd drainer, rrfular Sl.'S to close oul at—

Combination Offer . . . . 98c1 Ql. O 'Ctdat tieU rollihUij \Vm , TtjulM 19c.1 Droom Barohj Cover, 69c. m i l e they Iasi, both for Dio

PARSON’S AMMONLi . . 9cQ tu rl Ilze. Rcjular price l»c, with everj purchase.

smiomySTATIONERY................. 43c

H boxea of Lady lUmllton itatlonerr left. Retular C9c,

NOTEBOOKS................. 12cU left. S lrin t tie noleboolu. RetuUr price Ue.

CLOTHimMEN’S WORIi PANTS .$1.29

SanforUed »hmnk,_^wa»hable color*, of blue and tan, repiU r 11.55.

DRESS SOCKS . . . 3 for 59c

A u f o m P L imTrunk Bumper Guard . $2.69

Fit* In center of bumper to protect rear trunk.

AUTO COOLERS . . . $1.98Air condition your car. Frorides clean, cool, filtered air ia wann ncather, lu iu la r

TIRE RELINERS . . . $1.98Fix tires for >afe drirlnc. fi.OOxlS alxe. R e ^ la r price S2.89.

REPAIR KITS . . . . . . . 4c1C aqaaret ot rcbber, 3 patches, tube cement. Rernlar price IDe.

SOLVATANE................... 79cru t real pep In that car: Quart site, ttecolar price S1.49.

GAS CANS......................$1.69Army Surplus. Al thi* price you ean’t »o nrronr.

TIRE PATCHES ................ 5cA permanent repair. 3 Inch. 3 ply site. neVuUr 19c.

TOILETRIESMAVIS TALC................. . 19c

L arjc slie c»Hi talcum powder, rejular 35c.

BATH SALTS . . . . . . . 19cLimited supply left. Waldorf brand, choice of iceols. Regular 39c.

HAND LOTION..............10cRosaline hand lotion, special with etery purch»s«> repilar 23e

TORN (TOREBABY HIGH CHAIR . . $4,49

Slnrdy built, unfinished. ^ l u U r price ii£9 .

BABY MATTRESS . . $6.95^Vaterproof. baby bed maltres*. BerUar priec $8^5.

VANITY LAMPS . . $5.98 Pr, |Lovely, neat vanity lamps a l « real savln<».

CHILDS ROCKER . . $10.00Sladc Just Ukc a trown-ups c to lr. BlroDf and comfarUbU. ,

All Sales Final No Returns

Combination Hems nay be pur« chased separately a t rriular pricta.

Watch This Paper ■ Tomorrow

GpccU

.MW. ta w w ' W mSfc -vL

Page 4: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

P a g e F o u r T IM ES-N EW S, T W I N FA LLS, IDAHO Wednesday, April 25, 1945

S “iT«r

r J i S

3eded In

cryjn:

V K IIN T H O U f t: IS S T IL L K lf ; i lTT h a i d ls e n in t le d c liq u e of Id ah o R e p u b li­

c a n s w hich th e C ic a rw a lc r T rlb iin c h a s d e ­sc rib ed as " th e so re h e a d Adu couiil> of iia i iv d isse n s io n ," h a s fin a lly succ o usU ng s , L. (V e n i) T h o rp e of Jc ron ' p u b ilc an s t a t e c h a irm a n .

E ver s ince th e g e n e ra l e lec tion , th ' R e p u b lic a n s a ro u n d B oise h av e beei t h e i r eyes o u t in th e s i l l ie s t o f d le -h a rd * fash - Ion , T hey h a v e cooked u p every excuse th e y c o u ld th in k of to b la m e M r. T h o rp e fo r th e p a r ty ’s o ve rw helm ing d e fe a t In Id a h o la s t N ovem ber. T h ey w ould lik e to m a k e th e p e o ­p le believe t h a t u n d e r a d i f f e r e n t s ta te c h a i r ­m a n , th e Republlcan .s w ould h av e w dn a d e ­c is ive victory, H lthough a n y o n e w ith com m on sc n s6 ccuUi undcr.slancl th a t. Ihc D em o cratic la n d s lid e w as th e p r in c ip a l reaso n th e y w ere snow ed u n d e r.

W hen It com es to p o lit ic a l s tr a te g y , th e s e lf -a p p o in te d R e p u b lic a n blg-w lgs of Id ah o h a v e given a good d e m o n s tra t io n of k n u c k le ­h e a d e d po litics . E v ery o n e In th e p a r ty Is e x ­p e c te d to p la y th e g a m e th e i r w ay , o r e lse. E i th e r you ta k e I t a n d lik e It, o r th e y .stuff I t do w n y o u r th r o a t .

In s te a d of lo o k in g fo r som e sc ap e g o a t, w h ic h In th is In s ta n c e Is Mr. T h o rp e , th e y s h o u ld give th e m se lv e s th e once-over.

I f V ern T h o rp e h a d bow ed a n d sc ra p ed b e fo re th e se big sh o ts w ho like to c ra c k th e w h ip , h e cou ld h a v e b e e n a c c ep te d a s th e ir f a lr - h a lr e d c h a irm a n . B u t M r. T h o rp e d o e sn 't h a p p e n to be t h a t type , w h ic h to ou r w ay of th in k in g is m u c h to h is c red it.

H e w as c o m m itte d to a p la tfo rm t h a t r e a l­ly m a d e se n se fo r a c h a n g e . In ste ad of a lo t o f p o litica l, b e h ln d - th e - s ta g e h o k u m — a p la t ­fo rm w h ich in c id e n ta lly m e t w ith c o n s id e r­a b le p u b lic a p p ro v a l in th e p r im a ry e lec tion .

I t w as fo llow ing th e p r im a ry t h a t A da c o u n ty R e p u b lic an e m is sa rie s w e n t a ro u n d c o m p la in in g t h a t M r. T h o rp e w ou ldn ’t "p lay b a l l" w ith th e I n n e r c irc le , a n d th e y w ere th e o n e s la rg e ly resp o n s ib le fo r b r in g in g a b o u t t h e b re a c h in th e p a r ty ’s r a n k s .

W e do n o t be liev e t h a t W illiam H . D e t- w eU cr, R e p tib l ica n c a n d id a te fo r governo r,

' c o u ld h a v e be en e le c te d in a n y e v e n t in face o f th e D em o cra tic la n d s lid e , b u t w e do feel t h a t th e R e p u b lic a n s w o u ld h a v e m a d e a p iu c h b e tto r a llow ing , i t th o se w ho d e leg a te th e m se lv es a s th e p a r ty ’s le a d e rs h a d given th e i r su p p o r t to t h a t c o n s tru c t iv e p ro g ra m on ip/hich M r. T h o rp e w as so th o ro u g h ly so ld , in ­s te a d of c o n c e rn in g th e m se lv e s w ith p e rso n a l p re ju d ice s a n d p o lit ic a l t h r o a t c u ttin g .• P e rh a p s M r. T h o rp e d o e s n 't m e a s u re 'u p to a ll t h e q u a lif ic a tio n s ' o f a sh re w d p o lit ic ian . O ne th in g fo r su re , h e w ill h a v e no p a r t In so m e o f th e p ra c tic c s w h ic h su c h " sh re w d ­n e ss” im plies . A c tu a lly h e Is to o good a c i t i ­z en to h av e g o tte n m ix e d u p in th e R e p u b li­c a n m ess a s I t now e x is ts , b e ca u se te m p o ra r ­ily h e hos h a d to p a y th e p e n a lty .

B u t i t Is a ro u n d in d iv id u a ls like Verr> T h o rp e t h a t wo m u s t h o p e lo b u ild sound , c le a n a n d c o n s tru c tiv e g o v e rn m e n t. A nd to r t h a t reason , w e h o p e t h a t h e c a r r ie s on.

S o o n e r o r la te r , th r.se R e p u b lic an pow ers t h a t b e m u s t le a rn t h a t th e i r m e th o d o f p la y ­in g po litics Is o u t o f d a te . I n tim e s p a s t I t w as e asy to p u ll th e w ool o v e r th e p eop le ’s eyes, b u t now th e y a rc b e g in n in g lo see. PreJudlccB, v ili f ica tio n o n d th e lik e w ill n o t w in fu tu re e lec tio n s. U nless th e R e p u b lic a n p a r ty of Id a ­ho is p re p a re d to o ffe r t h e people so m e th in g c o n s tru c tiv e In th e w ay o f s ta te g o v e rn m e n t, a n d Is w illing to m a k e a c o m b in ed e t ta r l to ­w a rd th a t en d , I t m ig h t J u s t os w ell go on be in g n k n u c k le -h e a d a n d ta k in g a licking.

TUCKER'S N A T I O N A L

W H I R L I G I GLA BO R-Tho nation’, foremojt Ubor leiders c n te r-

(aUi h ig h Iiopes of eventual unity In this Im portant RAr n n d peacellme Held u a tmuU of H orry S. T rum an '* acceulon lo llie prwldency.

A lthough Uiey mourn the paajlnB of Uitlr jtreat friend, Fr»nlilln D, noosevelt. thfcy recoinlie ih il the new chief execu- tlve enters the White House tu ider

; clrcURUUncei which permit h im to deni with the labor problem Im par- tlally and non-polltlcally.

Picaldent Truman holds no per- Bonal grudge agaUut any of the

' ;hleft»ln«. The recent a s re e -■ Incrr the

Untied Mine Workera will rntl/Ifd by the an r Ubor bonrd w ith ­out any difficulty. For which Jo h n

_ _ . I*. Lewis will be as ihanfcful aa his ' gruff nature permits.

Nor dors Trumnn o»c any ereat political deb t lo the CIO , even IhoURli Iltllman made poulble his noinlnntloii fo; vice president. For one thing, T runinn did n o t wnnl the honor. Second, he knows HUlman iinrt Murrny lurd him nirrcly to block Jam ea P. Hyrnr.% of EiiuHi Curollnii

e Tnini

A Jurisdictional Stalemate

r AFL and the United Mine

ton. chapters In the bor mil probably bo of Truman. I

if< in Uic jxBt rival worklngmi ihelr political ,

irepar

f John L, LewLVs United Mine Worker; s now a ccrtamty. Tlie path had b

A always the pawlbllliy tha tform er ndmlnlstrntlon would u vent n n amalgi po.li. Truman tORCther.

Onco the.'e i br fver>- Inrcnt

p combined, there 10 Join these two o the r

id Rooaevrlt conllrmed i«cn his succcMor,

d by Eric John rce. Prejldenl ; It P))IJ)p Miirri/y

: Truman already ha.s i

‘WASHINGTON CA LLI NG ” BY

MARQUIS CHILDSWA8HINOTON-W

e ^udlclsl rhnmploiii of

Wini

decl.ilons, have

:la.'ped imm 0. Douglai <>eolB uiicajlly, blnrk.fniir JurLils wh

tloni th a t bukliis til

.s quite vidcnl fromthey thoi

for Ihelr personal m t me suitucf.i and giving them a new ; :lonal orders, nnd they did not like It

The black-robed new deal Judges rclnllDn.ihlp with Prcslclciit Roosevelt

IN T E R E S T IN G R E L IC S A m e ric an so ld ie rs In G e rm a n y h a v e come

u p o n ."iome In te re s t in g o ld re lic s o t a bygone tim e , liv ing In c o m fo r ta b le se c lu s io n u n ti l d is ­tu r b e d by th e a d v a n c in g in v a d e rs .

O n e of th e m w as th e P r in c e s s H erm ine . w idow of K a ise r W ilh elm , "H e w as a poo r old m a n w ith th e w ro n g s o r t o f c h ild re n ," she sa id o f liim . "H e loved G e rm a n y .”

A n o th e r wa.s th e a n c ie n t , m assive , iro n - v isaged M a rsh a l von M a ck e n sen , idol o l tw o g e n e ra tio n s o f P ru s s ia n J u n k e rs a n d p e rf e c t sy m b o l of G e rm a n m il ita r i sm . " C a n ’t you do s o m e th in g to s to p th e R u ss ia n s fro m k ill in g m y c h ic k e n s? ” w a s h is c o m p la in t to h is A m er­ic a n c ap to rs .

T lie re w ere o th e rs , to o , in c lu d in g a few fa tu o u s , n a z l- io v ln g 'H o h cn z o lle rn s , B u t th e se tw o a re e n o u g h to p ro v id e a n o th e r com pelling re a so n fo r u n c o n d itio n a l su r re n d e r a n d th e p u r s u i t a n d p u n is h m e n t o f w a r c rim in als .

H ea v en fo rb id t h a t A dolf H iU cr sh o u ld e sca p e to g ro w '-o ld -in h a lf - f o rg o t te n , h a if - fo rg lv cn ex ile a n d ono d a y b e c a lle d a "poo r o ld m a n w ho loved G e rm a n y ,” o r t h a t H tm m - le r o r a n y o th e r to p n a z i s h o u ld live to com ­p la in . a t 96, t h a t th e c i t ls e n s o f a c o u n try sco u rg ed by h is ow n c o im tr y ’s m o ss m u rd e r­e rs w ere a c tu a l ly k i ll in g h i s c h ick e n s .

B o b H ope, In a f i t o f p iq u e f o r w h ic h h e a f te rw a rd apo log ized , o r d e r e d p h o to g ra p h e rs o u t Dt a c e r ta in b e n e f i t p e r io rm a n c e . I t 's & good th in g h o ap o lo g ize d o r th e c a m e ra m e n m ig h t g e t n o 5 ty a n d ^ r t ta k in g p ro file p ic -

. J u r c s o f B o b .

. 1

iijoyed cloj »nd tried t

arry o u t nis wisnes. now (iiry seem to feel them elves In ccllpsc, peraonnlly nnd judicially.Chlpf JusUce Harlnn F. Stone nnd Owen J . R obert

lolh a«piibllcan appointees and new deal dl.isenlor pptnudcd like noisy gallery llstenerr. while th e olIeoBues kept Uielr hands folded in their laps. Th

itt’O Justice.^ «em ed to like the new President philosophy of goveriunent and Jurbprudence.

V I E W S OF O T H E R SWHO'D HAVE BEEN 80 CRAZV?

One of ihe most dlfllcult ihlngs general i ta f fs run up ngalaM In preparing tor war Is the u t u r refu.' nl of nillllir^’ events to follow any kind o f a p a tte rn , hlstorlcil. logical or otherwise.

r o r Instance, the Germans are gisneraUy acknow i. edged to bs the greatest professlona) aoldlers in the world. Tliey ought to be because they devote so much o f their thought and efforl to It, No o th e r people. iinlFu'lL be the Japanese. lives, eal2, d rinks and sicepjs war In penceUmf, According to the popular notion tiiey foreiee ond prepare for everything.

W ell, do you luppoji uny Germon warmaker ever In h ti wildest drcsms. even If In the la«t sUges of the d. I.S Imagined the military flluallon tha t c o n ­fronts th e faihftland right now?

From the east mighty Russian ormles arc clcee enouKh to Berlin to throw long range shells Into the city llmUs. On the we.st Anglo-American armies crowd cvtr closcr, with some of the American forces alm ost as closc as the Ru.'slsnt.

One BUfs* Is enough on thb point. Nobody was crazy enough to even dream such a cockeyed » ltu - atloii, because nobody had nny Idea the Q ermnns

lid b e crazy enough to continue fighting so long

But ti­th e fight

they are, crnzi’ or ."ane? So can you blnine staff* If their plans oceaalonallj- go hoy -

ilong with the course of evenU ?-N am pa r r e e

lU ; STARTS OFF WITH GOOD WILLA reasiiirlng note from Washington says th a t P re s i­

dent T rum sn , hlnviClT. Is somewhat disturbed by th e fulsome ond eulogistic manner In which he was w el- romed by radio and some new.ijiaper com m enutora on his acccsslon lo th e prMldency. He Is essentially n modent man and hos yet to demonstrate th a t he m easures up to Ihe high ofllce he h a j Inherited, If he docs. A* a matter o f fnct he probably oMUmea hla high office wllh belter practical equipment than did most o th e r men who took office under th i same traa lo clrcuin^tance.i—Andrew Johnson after Lincoln, C heater A. A rth u r after Oarfleld. even Theodore Roose^•eJt After McKinley, and Calvin Coolldge after H arding. T nim nn 'a ten yeari In the senate, t««ether w ith h ta political training In Missouri, have made him a c ­qua in ted with legislative processes and persons— an ixceedlngly valuable resource for the executive, even ;hough 11 waa machine training under a co rrup t pollUcal boss. Hli chalrrtanshlp of the IVuman com ­m ittee le t him In on war secrcts Uiat were w ithheld from h ts colleagues oti capltoI lilll. He will no t ta m p er with th e armj--n»vy ejtabllshmenl. His colleaffues In the senate «sy th a t there is no venom in M r. T n im a n : th a t he doea not hate. ThU will enable h im to begin hi* admlnlstrnUon with the good will of c o n -

1, capeclally as he Is the first legislator to occupy executive maculon since the day of S e nntor

ren C. Hording.—Pocatello Tribune.

WORDS o r WISDOM "W hatever will b« poeslbU centurle* ahead. I t ia n o t

a t th is stage in our aoclal evolution tAat v e can dU - pense w ith the Incentive of private enterprise. I f we believe in the preservation of the freedems as th e In ­sp ira tion of our fighting, we can only say th a t, tn th e b roadest sense, freedom of ptlrato enUrprlsa U (he basis o f all the other freedomi."—O . L. Wood, dean of the faculty of commerce, University o t M elbourne. A u s tra l ia

imporlanl as »h Francisco. 'ITinl may admlnlstrnUon baa a Cldtd to allow thc.ic ir no further than lage until after S

itip committee

Tlisi ..............cL'lon. I t nilght be better lo i full responsibility squsrcly conscrsi nnd let the ilcbalc while the delegates of the 45 ore our official guests.

Brettoii Woods, In partlciil test of our Intentions. Arc w to tiU a noble peace while, economli: side, we Insist on 1 the old weapons that finally war?

The Brctton Woods plan—agreed to by reprejentatlves of 44 —seta up two internaUonal Mtlons. One Is r banlc fo aiructlon and developni'-nt one. Including Uie America

;lonJ, Wc pul Britain puts u Frcnch so mai

imward(hst coan tv

monelivry fund

of money formed by ns of all member na up so many dollar!

) so many pounds, th y francs, and fo on. ■ouniry fcch tha t It depreciating—clipping rlatlon to world price!

• f<j fhe

gel frsnt

tlon losn. If England had Inrge TienLi to make In France, she would

the fund nnd agree , , . l i t later In pounds

stetltng,TliU would help lo do away wllh

airreno’ speculation—the kind of Rambling In money which had made big proflls for a few people a t the - pntc, often, of currcncy .•■lability.

,ould help to eliminate Ihc kind of funny business with blocked cur-

nclM which the nails, under tha ildance of crafty HJalmar Schacht,

carried to fimtasilc letigUis.The bunkers object bccau.^e, they

-ly . the privilege of getting credits 1.1 "nou-dlicrlmliiatorj'-" T hat is a bonker'i word meaning they would

c Brctton ’ 1.-S vcr>' r.i: the rlglii

T h ethe loiiii

1 of Ih. HretW oods phmillennium, wllh Wal w ith gold and choirs of iinseLi ting­in g m the Block cxclianie building. As the bunkers hove pol) i»Rfulnes.s Is limited.

lut 1 does s_ Tlie Ui

v llh Brltuln an ;hlef currenclej iven level. Our n io blloteral

ted States worked France to hold thi

of the world on at

ablllu'Itli Utln-Anierlcan conn

tTlc,^ and out of th a l operation cam a p ron t of »100,K)0,000. Drettoi Wood^ carrlu stablllutlon the nex lo ^ c a l aup, In a formal Interna *' * il comptr*

Trui , a t his first e his coniplct'1 In

Presfder p ress coni approval

H earings bclore the house bankln e n d currency commute* ire stli going on. R » tT « '“ >atlv»s of mui Inrgc organlwtlons have come ou fo r Dretton Woods as on rconoml p ro p under the political plan tha will evolve St Sj« i m ncijco.

T he deleistes out on the wes c oast arc going to have one ca cocked a t congrea*. They will wan to know whether we Intend to stani beh ind our noble profusions of good will.

The BIBLEn tre Is the key rene In the

D ibli readlDf pasu fe for today •elected frem th# American re- vUed version by the Bev. II. 0 . McCaUUler.

A rK e y

•il 26, L u k e"Whoso-

liotli n o t bear liis own TOSS, and c o m e n f tc r Me, u n n o t b e My (Jisciplc."

AUXILIARY MEETS HAZfLTON, April 25-HaKllon

n i t . Amerlcun Legion auxiliary, •111 meet at the home of Mrs, 8, E. ■nnce, Jr., Monday.

HISTORY OF T W IN FALLSAS QLEANCO FRO.M THE r iL E S OF TDC tlMES-NEWS

Z1 YEARS AGO. A m iL » . I9U The selective sen’lce board last

night acted upon the part of certain now in claw A one lo have

Uielr call for service deferred on ac­count of being actively engaged In farming.

In connection with the advent of iprlng and the campaign for the extension of home gardening, gord-

are urged to avoid the risk of . farly planting. From a record

of 11 years In Twin Palls, the U. 8. weather bureau declared that the last date on which a killing frost occurred in this city was July 14. This happened In 1913. “Hie date for

final killing frost in 'iSsin Falls been May 31.

15Y CA B6 AGO. A Pfllt J5, 1910 O fficers here yeal«rday Joined In o

seo rch for three young men report­ed escaped front the Nevoda whool

■ • ' • Thft fiiBitlves lierc be- I old Ford

.... a ithout a top. earning exempf' license plates.

H arry E . Vogel returned yesterdoy f ro m Chicago, where he and Mrs. VOBcl attended a concert tn which hia daughter, Mis* Charlotte Vogel. p U n ist, took p a rt and won high pr»lse.

Extension of th e Idaho Power com pany's lines to supply^tUTcnt lo 60 more Twin Foils county farm hom ea waa eridetteed by application for electric «e • ce filed by the pow­er company yeit«nley In tha office of county recorder.

P o t

S h o t s ®

toiid-A ra n c h and collect one vli: Icrcford h teer which you so kin ,• helped th e Larlo« drive 10 nil

wllh their herd.

THANKS TO THE SCDUTB

Dear Pol s h o ts : fm th<! veteran who wrote In U

you nbout t h e flag-ond now fd llki to Klve you n word ol appreciation to the Boy Scout.^ who are now ' dllng the d o lly flag-ralsing a t el school. T hey've been raising old glory each morning since shortly n ftcr my rto tc~one ini' n l t t i the flag reverently, two stand by and

-.A Vetera

SNOWBALLSEdwin C . Ehlers. who Uves c

route one. X»-ln palls, read a stoi In the T -N Ihe other day which told of the wind blonlng up great snowballa in Colorado. Shucks, taj's he, this w iisn 't anythin? new to him.

Friday h e brought a snapshot Into tho T-N bailiwick. I t WM token 20 years ago I n Colorado and, enough, th e re were big enowballs aU over a hillside.

Mr. E. explained thal with the snow Just r ig h t the strong wind will a to rt a lit tle piece of snow moving. This'll pick up other pleccs and

a snowball has formed. The

'M ISSIN G IN ACTION '

. . iioUier n e v er sce.s 01 Joe,Dut the lltU e boy of the long ago. W ith Uie golden curl.i and th e smile.

creallnK fellow to ta lly captlvallnK.

T lia t Is the picture ft mother will see The Innocent one a t his mother's

knee,m il e she though t thst she'd ever

T h a t he'd b e b prisoner of war one

But now th r u her tears she must sadly g rope

Por the measoge has left h e r a raj of hope—

[n the depth of her sorrow, the sil- Isfactlon.

Ke may be alive, tho "missing In ac­tion."

- J a c k Richey

DRASTIC MEASURES Dear Pol Sho ts;

The way your readers come through w ith practically anything jQU of.k fo r. for a serviceman, do i-ou think t l i n t if I Joined th e army >-ou could th e n gel me three hired men to he lp run my place? Looks tike thnt's abo u t the only way I'm going to be ab le to get 'em.

—O na t.C

FA.MOUS LAST LINE . . Y eah . hU wife <)ult worklor

—hadda p a y Ihe maid more'n she made herselfJ . .

TH E GENTLEMAN IN THE THIRD ROW

HOW T H I N G S A P P E A R F R O M

PEGLER’S ANGLE...... In Russiaand. according to]1 rather nice hab-J t of magazlnes.1 nve the girls];ach a bit of a sendoff' or buUd-| up by way of In- troducUoQ to th clientele.

Of Miss Wtntei., the b l u r b said ahs was bom li AuslralU and fed' ucaKd fn Eng. land and goi ht politics as a member of th e parlla-

eniary committee of th e British bor party. I t added th a t sh# *-as ice associated with PeUx Prank- irter, one of the mc«t oggresaive ifluences In the remodeling of our

form of _ _having served as h la secreUry

le Paris peace conference. It lews to me tha t old weenie hid

mixed up In th a t historic

’ WMlbntk F«(t»ntroducllon to

k-fry and I have beet how he managed to he

I could have bowled m e J ostrich fni

wonde) n in and

fllclread tha l he and the W inter num­ber had been together Ih n l long ago This Information explains a lot ti — •" I might better sny, confirms

jplnlons of mine about the pa^h/uJ IJftJe master m ind Irom "lenna by way of H arvard.

The ad for Heilman called h«i America's brilliant playw rlghfand

said her "enlightening sto ry reveals what the war has done to formerly flourishing areas” In Rtisela,

T read both pleccs and found them nothing special as w rlllng and noted that Winter's story, w hich was more political than Heilman's, followed

familiar line which earned themIS cltnth X In

of Ihe late Dies commltlt , you may remember, Investl

r midst b d therefor e bolo* an

an government pa id for her a practice tha t som e of our r, u»ed to frott-n upon . lo the major league baseball rs on the ground th a t it placed

under obligations to their However, Hellmi

a cory friend of l or M) lonK, liicliKlthis p<i.ce-lovliiB

illy of ours was gallantly de- ng herself against th*

proroked aggre.ylon of mighty land and using nati o fficers to sho»- Uicm tricks, that nobody will sus-

her of singing for he r supper. She would ho' ...........

e daysaeklng Innd)

1.S he

erridlou.-s F

faiback

iilunif

Ing Russia, Tallulnh Biinkhcad got ' enough to spit hcctiuso .?he

!d to throw a benefit [jcrform- of a show called ■'me Little

to ral.'.e money . fo r Finnish and Heilman w oifldn'l let her

use Uie play, which waa her prop- erty, for this purpose. Dnnkhrad railed up and wanted m e to de> lounce somebody fearlessly but 1

thought the iltutilon had it« com- penssUon In the fact th a t It showed pretty clearly what Heilman'# poU- Uc* were.

U seemed to me ht read lne the burbles about the girls th a t CoUler's had been guilty of an oversight and, being a fellow who Is always rig h t there to field a baD for a pa l who has muffed one, I thought I would give you some further background infonnaUon about these two a tar perfomiers in our Park avenue con­temporary.

Winter 1s listed 30 times in Uie congressional document issued by the Dies committee under th# llU e of "cumulaOve Index' to fcs “repcjrt on communist front o rgonlatlons with spcclsl reference to the naUonal cllUens: Political action com m ittee.' The old girl cerUlnly l.i a s re a i Joiner for we find her in a whole string of committees and editorial boards, fronts and all such device.i as the bolos contrive and contribu t­ing to publications which, of course, never amounted to shuctv b u t fol­lowed the line through its twijsta and meanders. As a matter of fac t she Isn'l much of a wrller. herself, nnd If your lUtle girl couldn't do as well you inlghl be locllncd to ynnlc her out of (chool as a stop-loss. ge t her a mop and buckct for her birthday and tell her to make herself useful. For that matter, most of those who coll themselves nrllers In these, fronts arc mediocrities or worao by crltJcsl standards and don't nm oujjl to anything even In their own set.

Heilman has 42 cItAtloni in thU Index of the Dies commtltee a n d as you flip'the pages of the committee report to see whal they re fe r to you find the usual run of com m it­tees, rallies, causes and little, no- nccounl sheets that hardly onybody ever heard of.

Now, of course, this Index contains the names ot many Individuals who ore no more communlsl than M us­solini Is a Ch^aman so It doesn 't necessarily follow that these tw o old babts are commy or pro-commy merely bccaiue they nin such o high

the consls- id the char- m ovementj

oted Ihem -

your conclusion tency of tj '

fro • activity a

with which they -■.elves and 1 have drawn mine. M ore- ovcT. It Is okv' with me lor i n t one to be a communist or pro-coinmunlst which Is a degree of tolerance th a l I have new encountered nmong tliaie people but 1 Just sort of think tha t Collier's. In presenting ihc lr stuff and blowing kisses a t W inter and Kellmsn, would have served the public Interest If It hod Indicated their sympathies and politics aa aug- gcstfd by UiPlr rccords.

Iiicldnilally. In the .-iunie l.wie with Heilman’.', plrre Colllrr s pi'lnt- ori one hv a lellow who mils himself Kyle Crichton In Colller’.s nnd Roll- e rt rnrsylhf In communlsl puhli- callons to fthlch he has been n per-

;or. As Forsythe, thl. •lUttons in the Dle.^

IndeiB. uny»i

.r of Collie Tctty good for lie

man with hl«

I Che

ellel I pro-corr untM 01

e KohiE

going to BO -acierliiitlon In the blurb It to give people a tell I't kiion-n. I mlRht have tl e pieces were tlie work <

biased reporters.

A N A L Y Z I N G CURRENT N E W S

FROM NEW YORKFO O D -W t sh4U probably iv( to tighten our bo lts as mi I Ihe alarmists p redicted a J i-eeks ago. a c -_

cording to nation-8 irfood authoriUei | n New York.

Early epring J _ ilways Ihe low B polht In stocks. ^The political c troversy over t appearing m e ‘ ms fe ir i of fa - jl line. Knowledge ■

that hungry E u - f rope Is looking t<

for aid . Altart U a t i,orrIe» housewlvei,“There Is no cause fo r panic," u -

serU Paul B. Wliili, president of the Grocery M anufaclurere of America. "The civilian populaUon will eat about five p e r cent n food lhan In prowar years . Dut collapse of mlUtary resistance Germany will not resu lt In any ... mediate eu lng of shortages in this country."

Meat, faU. oil, canned goods, fresh fruits and sugar will continue tight,

diet will be le.u va ried but not nourishing. Unfortunately, we

shall lack what we m o st en jo j'- Julcy steaks, rick golden butter, seets—hence the fam ily is likely ) think things worse th o n they are. Poor crop weather a n d exlraordl-

..ary relief demands could upset cal* culstlons. But In general the trsde

sperts are reassuring.

CHICKEN—We ran over our al­lotment of sugar la s t year; Ihtt ineans a small reduction in 1949. A dry spell In Cuba dim inished re- len'es. Soft drink manufactureni. confectioners and Induatrlal users *111 be worse off than housekeepers. Heavy snows caused a very poor 'leld of maple syrup a n d sugar.

Uncle Bam asks form ers to raise . i t r a poultry to offset scarelUes in beef, pork and Ismb. ond os on en-

regement will lift p rice ceilings July i. Otheni’ise m ilitary

those of Us!nr-~wlll cut the c ivilian supply. Latest reports show t h a t the mar-

-Gting of chicken m e at is behind 1044. especially in the midwest. Dut n dearths, such as the p resen t one

many fowl do not pass through or­dinary trade channels.

Ultra>1olet r a j t used In halcherlei itlmulate greater o u tp u t These » m s have characteristics of ght. dfcrcashig m orta lity round 60 per cent a n d effecting

arjer growth.More turkeys sl)ould b e available.

Farmers say they bope to boost cur­

ren t estimates. The departm en t of agriculture is making experiments In raising s smaj; breed welffhing from one-half to three-quarters of n typlcsl Thonksglvlng b ird . If enough of these csn be produced, they will appeal to families which refrain from buying g lanl turkeys lesl they dine on It cold, as hash, croquittes and soup for a week.

Although eggs may be fewer, fed­eral procurement has eased off. The public will probably get ah ex tra dozen per person to add to th e rec­ord 1M4 consumption figure— 340.

FIIVIT-Last year's harvest of fruits, notably peaches, was boun­teous; trees rarely h it the Jackpot In a successive season.

A record crop of Florida oranges la expected, but supplies of canned orange end grspefnilt Juices wlU be lower, Some processors are holding off owing to the high price o f raw Irult. A drouth in Hawaii stun ted the pinespples and therefore reduc* ed tonnage.

BOB H O P EIt Says Here—

Will

UntU recenll)', kids' shoes . . . up slie five . . . weren’t on th e ra­

tion list, but the OPA has Just n o ti­fied the toddlers ithat from e their f e e l need those cvcr-

j lo v ln ’ point* Ju.'t Alike e v e r y o n e jel^e's , I guesa now • whenever & (tiiy H slarts shak ing the

lice in R crap t a m e h e ll say 'Saby necd.i a icw a i r p l a n e itampi" And it's jonna be p re tty

tough for kids up lo five to get ex tm loo . . . unless, of course,

they work at Lockheed. But porent-i have had lo be careful about shoe atamps for a long lime now. Tn fact, nowsdsyi. If a baby s u r u to wolk before the age of seven, they t a p it

the noggin and make It get bock down on all fours again. And kids____ rattles anymore, e ith e r . Iguess It's Just as'w ell though. It's dangerous (o have anything ra ttlin g In >-our house. It's liable to give M or- genthau (he Idea he overlooked som e- thiiig. The whole clotiiing problem is pretty serious for babies. I saw a tot ^he other dsy anti I won't say whs* ie was wearing for a dlnper . . . but sv-ery time he turned around, be ipelled out "Pullman."

Page 5: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

Wednesday, April 25,1945 T IM E S -N E W S , T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O

DUP Party H eld For Past Captain

Th« Lo-Em-Bo-CaH camp oi Oaught«M of the UUli P lon tcrn mel at ih* home of Mr». WIUhb Robin-

The evening wm s p e n t socially. The affair wa* in h o n o r of Mri Olidyj Wllllamt, past co.ptaln. R< fre»hmeni« were »erved by ihe hosi e«. MemberB will m eet again May J8 St the home of M rs. Oladyi WlUlami.

¥ H- *Officers Selected

By Group M embersMrs. Berlle Schnltker w as nnmed

pruldent of the B nnd H club a t a meeting held a t the hom e of Mn. Ftvy* Brady.

Other ofllcfr* are In es Lauslimll- ler. vlee.presldenl: E>orothy Stroud. »ecretar}’-trea«urer. T he n e x t meet­ing will be April 27 with Mr». Ellta' beth R}'an u host«u.

Marian Martin Pattern

9163 I

Birr*ra'turn » ll| Mm«« [n junior mix i Im

I 'i 7 i.‘»!/,:.” • ” • '*• ®‘** ”

Twin td>. Trlnt pUlnIr 8 iz£HAMB. ADDBU8. BTTLK NUMBER.

«“r n*"

•trirt. rsEE DI(W*« f»B*rn VrtnWd7o"Si!

\auyi.?fiSa.V

S.diaQlaListed For Clinic Work

Wathlliston school will attend the PTA prt-»eliool clinic today between I and « p. m. Volunteer vxirkers IncIudc Mrs. Lelaii Black, Mrs. Harry WlUlam* and Mr*, loyal Perry.

Thuriday St. Edward's worker will b« Mrs. Plave Lydum and Lincoln worker* will be Mrs. E. H- Ha^lam and Mrs. Howard Mun­son. The clinic U being held a t Twin Falb county hcaltli unit. Mr«. Lionel Dean U general

Conclave for PTA Set This Week-End

Two I’TA war lir7ic confcrcncoH have been schetiulcd to be held in lliu fou rlli d is tric t, one in Burley Fridny and th e second in Twin F u IIh SiUurdBy.

The meetings f o r th e d is tric t will begin with a board o f managers HCHBion scheduled a t th e Idaho Power uuditorium to bo held a t 8 p . m . Thursday . Mrs. Ho«'ard J. M aughan, president o f the Id a h o congrcss, will attend.

Mrs. C urtis S to u t , L ittle Rock, Ark., mu.«ic chairm an o f national congrCBs f o r p aren ts a n d teachers, will be one of th e featured speakers. S h e will {^ivc an address and dem onstra ­tion of her work a t th e afternoon session in Twin Falls. Mrs. Stout has devoted m o s t o f her work in developm ent of high school hands. A g r a d u a te of Hendrix colletre i n Conway,Ark., she studied m usic at Shenvood school o f m usic at Chicago and P a rk school music in Illinois.

.Mrs. Tlieodore Darrclough. Bolie.Idaho Congress pubUcntlon ch man, I* m chargc of publicity hlblw which contain n dtsplny of PMbllcliy and procedure record booki.

The Saturday acMlon wlU begli 10 a. m, with Mr»- H. H . Burkhart speaking on.iummer roundup: Mrs,Vic Ooertien will jpcnk on new pub- llcfliloni; Mrs. E, C. Vnwdrey, mng- ailnes; .Mrs. Elmer Phillips, hoi lunch; Mrs. Alfred Piigllnno, study groups; Mrs. Ray D iinkln. member­ship, and Mrs. Roy Evan«, prosram Iteports from varloiia pr&sldrnts of nil PTA's of Ihe d is tric t will be Slven during the m orn ing ec-’ulon.Mr«, John Hayes will concludc the morning program on "W h n t la for New Officers." M rs. Hayc; return from H enoT huraday evening in order to a ttend th e PTA ings.

The general theme o f the gnlh- erlng will be •‘Together We Build."

Mrs. B. M, Anthls w ill read tlis pirent Uacher prayer. Mrs. Stout win be the principal speaker a t the luncheon scheduled a t the Pati hotel.

The afternoon m eeting will btgit at 1:30 and will be held In the Meth­odist chupel. Mrs. Tlieodore Ooeck- ner will read the national prealdem'i message, which will be followed bj Mrs. Stout’s miulcal dem onstration

R. H. Snyder, president of Albion a u t i Normal school, w ill tuKSrtsi Ihe group 'T lie D um barton Oaks Proposal." A forum of Albion siu- denis will lead a diiicuu ion or "Should Military T rain ing be Com- pubory After Uie W »r." Mrs. Mau- Khsn will be the concliidInK speaker for the afternoon and will disci "Parents and PTA '

Oltlcets ot th« Sourth tllsVrlci i •Mr*. C, E. Young, Twin Palls , pre dent; Mrs. Reed H an.ien. Rupi vice-president; Mrs. H errick Drake,Burley, secretary; Mrs. L e t te r Ward,T»ln Falls, membership chairman; and Mrs. Morris Moore. Tw in Fallj, ms|!a;:lne chairman-

Hymns Discussed At WSCS Circle

Meet in JeromeJEnOME. April 25 - Mrs. Leon

Fairbanks read on easay on blind Fanny Croab>"< best loved hymna when she spoke at the meeting of circle two of WSCS, a t the home or Mtj, J, a , Oarrell.

Mrs, Fairbanks’ essay was "Seven Songs of the Soul." Some of the hymns mentioned by Mrs. Fairbanks, th a t Fnnny Cro-iUy had written In­cluded "Nearer the Cross," "Pa.ss Me N ot 0 Oentlc Saviour." "Blessed Assurnnce. 'amI "He.vue the P e rch ­ing.” Mrs. Andrews ww n guest and Mn,. John Kulm wa.i In fliarge of th r dr^otloIV .

Tlie importance ol curly dluKntwI.-i In control of canccr, was lold by Mrs. H. O, Woody, Member.-* donated to

Nw . i iivcctluK -..lU be licld It Mrs. Harold S. Hurd, y 17. Mrs. Hugo Jonea Mik Beer assisted the

President Honors Board Members

Mrs. Reese Williams, outgoing president tor Ihe Twentlrtli Century chib, honurecl her ottlcfrs at a tea party Tuesdiiy adernoon following th e board meelliig,

ThL< was the last board nieeilng of the year. The lea table was deco­rated with daffodlU and Chinese fo rg e t-m r-n o li . Mrs. Alvin Cnwy presided at the lea inhle.

Thosc attending were .Mis, L. E. Hinton, new president of the group: M rs. Wallace Bond. .Mr - Stanley Phillips, .Mrs.Tliomu R. White, Mrr. William Middleton. .Mrs. H .A. H -

. Mrs. Hugh Phillips, Mrs. ;y. Mrs. P. D, Wllion and Mr«-

K. L. Hogsett,

Tells Betrothal

Tbe eniacemenl of their daofh- ler. Loll Jean, to CpL Earl Arnold waa announced by Mr. and Mr*. E. C. Myen. Jerome. He li Ihe son or Mr, and Mn. Den Arnold. (Staff enfravlnc)

Lois Jean Myers Tells Betrothal

JEROME, April 25-Mr. and Mrs. E. C, Myers linve announced tJie en­gagement of ihelr daughter, Loli Jean , lo Miuine CpI. Earl Arnold, son of Mr, and-Mrs, Ben Arnold, all of Jerome.

The date o f the wedding hai. . . been set. Botll attended Jerome schools, Cpl. Aniold at present Is stationed a t Sun Valley convales­cen t hospital nJter having sen'ed overseas in th e Pacific theater.

¥ * ¥

.J im m y L e e H o n o re dA t B i r th d a y P a r l y

Quests Included Jack Dunlap. Dick Mingo, JUnmy Robln.«nn, David Mur­dock. Janie Hern. Arthur Abbott. Jimmy Hai\seii, Milton Davld.' on, F rank Hill. Ronnie Kemper, Britton Price, Terry Hall and Lynn i.ee. G ifts were recelvfrt By the honoree.

B u s y B ee iM em bers M a k e S ew in g : B o x e s

•me Busy Dee «-H group met re-

H o n o r e d G u e s tJEROME, April 25 - The Most

R-verenrt Bishop Dlward J. Kelly Boise, or the Catholic church, wa; m i honorfd guest here at a dinner arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert W hite. Other guejt/ Included the Rev, Father Eric Schermanson. pas- to r of St. Jerome's church, and Mr. and Mr.s. A. J . Olodoivskl.

Care of Your ChildrenBy ANGttO PATRI

Showing off takes many forms Ihoy all have the tame meaning, defense against trouble. When child Is noLiy. rebellljus about seet 'ngly nolhlng, and keeps tlic tcachcr .ft«r him con.siaPtly. It Is best tc

a top and take time to leam w hat 1 U he dreads so much tha t lie I. willing to take on the .world U hi

in JuJt forget It /or the time.First, what about his clothes? Ih

th is child dressed as the others arc? Dress means so much to children h a t If they look dUfcrent from ithers. even If that dlffcrcnci

caused by finer cloihes, they un e u y and soon uneasiness comes disorder. Let children have th e ir way about dressing as long aa I t does not Imply unsulublcneij —like a party drcM In class—oi m arked e:<tiavagincc In style suci as the bUarre Zoot suits. DresA thorn as they want to be dressed If possible. Olve up your lovely picture child If need be and let him ha^ hla sweater and slacks.

i r a child has a miserable home lie Is Ukely to be irritable, uncerta ■ nd uncooperative. Wlio wouldi

Tlicrc Is not much a tench . . do about cliangtng a chlkl's home background but the can help by knowing about it and adju.itlng h e r atUlude to meet the child's un- bappiness. When such a child feeb he has an undetstatidlns friend Ui h is teacher he Is happy while with h im and a happy child l,s no prob­lem.

W hat is one lo do with the show- off child In the home? Study to know where the child lacks power, where he feel* inferior or afraid i>nd do w h it Is poMlble to help him t-vc his way to oveteomSn* th t rtUJtculv, Some dlfllcultles can be removed,

! cannot. Our duty Is to dls- what the dlHlcultles arc and

how best to meet them.Some children show off in terms

of domination, some In laurtnew, aggression, bad manners. Some of

TRUCKERSHave us check, clean and repair jour

R A D I A T O R SKov during slack season befere bot « a lh tr .

BENTON'SOlau and BadUter Sbop

W ta d E s il PhenaiM-W

J W M W i w J l

them show off by saying the most shocking Ihlng Imaginable, usually before strangers. Show-off children nlways perform at ihelr worst before relatives or .nrangf^.^. lliey are so fea rfu l of being overlooked, of being found wantltig, of being over- .shadowed by ii superior brother or Ulster, that they put forth their g rea test effort lo look Imporlant a n d succeed In being a nuisance, a Brl(-f to their p.irents and a bore to th e ir friends.

Shyness, fear, failure, a feollng of being disliked, a half concealed w rakne.v, nnv iiliy-ilcal dprrcl. are ciuises of Insecurity In Uie child's m ind and insecurity leads to Phow- in e off. To cure It re<)ulres imder- ecandlng.

Chlldnn . >.n ..

S o c i a l a n d C l m b N e w sUP Boosters Plan Mother-Daughter

Banquet May 22The U nion Pacific Boosters aux-

niary m e t Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs, Fred C, Farmer. 1&3 B g h th avenue c u t.

Tlie bualncs.1 meeting chargc of Mrs, T. J. Pain dent. G roup singing was held. Roll call was a seed and bulb

Plans were made fordaughter p a rty May 22, •_............noon was spent sewing for the Red Cro-vv

Metnbcrs i membership .. ber took home a Dimes will be placed for each holiday, the year th e dimes the Christm as fund.

The w h ite elcphai

rIvKi year

by I MniI by 1 , _ ...................

baked th e club cake whlr-M «d awarded Mrs- Tom Hanson Ciiir.a were Mni, Tom Hanson and Mri John K lllne r and daiiKhier. Hr Ircshm etitj were j.erTed bv ili»- hivi ■■M a.islsted by Mrj. J. i-’ drr

« V ¥

Carnival Held by Hom e Economics

Club at JeromeJEROME. April 2J-More that

children a n d adult.^ attended home economic c\ub's carnival at' the high schoo l. gymnasium, when groups fu rn ished fcauires liictuding bingo, telegraph, fortune telling, roulette w heels, d.'ris and rcfrtsh- ments booth.i.

Climaxing the evciiius's gaU af-

queen of th e cnmlval, who Rebii Freshour. mem'Dcr oT ilie liwie eco­nomics rliib- CoDniitloii »-(u bl Donna Wnll,

Tlirre were four 13 prlr<-,s «»ardr-c popular boolhi, -ni.il

Mrter-Included ■s|>on.'oro<l by the high the bingo game, fponso freshman nlii.*.s; the lelcR by the e lrls ' glee chit:

Martha Opodnhl was I)

lUpMhiilMioii:. abo prom oted cliolcc ftir

id Nonas.'lsled w ith arrantemrnt-s. Others assisting I n c l u d e d Bum. Hoopes, Barbara HiirgLv Esthei

•d b(K)ll

V Cnniplx-ll. ( •tin;i Cal- n Sixiliiii

c; B r tly Wesllall. Ellen Helen O tt, Charlotte Anrterioii, dec orntlon.v Yvonne f>rlesi-l, ,M,.rlki Tatnml, Evnini Andi-r.'on niiil Ml .'iiko AIzawa. publicity; .Maxln Hansen. Leona Andnis, Alnm Flsch er- LoU Snllors and Nurin;i Church, flean-up; D onna Wahl. Hrleii Ni-w- Ian. w n d a JMmplirrys, Aideth Pet­rie. Alice Preiillro, Uckpl^. Phrlll; Hymas a n d Lnel McMillan, confelll

Ceremony Unites Sweeney-Thorpe

R IC H riE L D . Apill 2S-An an- Junccment ha-s been received In

Richfield of the nmrrlagc of Mar­cus Sweeney to Loul-se •hioriw, daughter o f Mr- and Mrs, Robert Em I T ho rpe , Ansele.^. The cer-

ly took place April IS at Chip- Park. Pueblo Oratorio at ‘

Angeles, T lie brldcKioom has f 'd in this vicinity for several ; md Is expected to return here

his bride. H e Is the .«on ot Mr, and Mrs- H. A. Sweeney. Richfield,

E nterta in ClubJEROME, April 35-.Mr. and Mr»-

. W. G reying were ho«l8;rs of th e ir evening din...............

Mrs- C harles Welteroth, A. E Ootild and Mr. iind Mrs- Gilbert UTilie

on prUes.¥ ¥ ¥

G r e v i n g s E n te r ta inJEROME. April 35-Dlnner club

member* w ere enlerlalned a t the home of M r. nnd Mrs- L- W, Grevlng. Prltes a t ca rd s Tvrnt to Mrs. Charlfcs H. W elteroth. A- E, Gould ' and Mrs. G Jlbert White,

ATTENTION FARMERS!33

WE ARE PAYING f . CASH

. lo rdoz. F resh EGGS

Shop Here f i r s t ! W e h a ve f tn n d re d s o f PO IN T FREE G rocery Items

The

F R U IT B A S K E TFormerly Kimble's

Mrs. Barrett Has 80th Anniversary

ALDION. April 34— Mr». Alice Marsh B anett celebrated her SHth birth anniversary April H, She was b o r n ApcU 14. lecs a t Stocks* bridge, Yorkshire.

About two vears after Uifir mn>> rlage the coviplc

Uielr daiiHh They came

lo UUh. Coi settled In Albion,

Women o f Moose To Make Cookies

For USO Hut.ItROMK. Aprl\ 34—Al n mee\li>S

of the Jnronie W omen of Ihe M ow . It was vntrcl lo m ake 100 do?v-ii cookies for the U, s . O. In Pocatel­lo.

Senior ne^rn t M yrtle Robbins presided during tlie bu'lnes* meet­ing, Mrs. Ethel M iller was accepted as a member.

Maty Flick Bnnounccd tha t more Red Cross m alerlnl had been re­ceived by the group, Membera are cooperating In ga thering clotliliig for the allied n a tio n s ' relief. They may bring Ihe c lo th ing lo Senior Regent Robbins' home.

Get well cards w ere sen t lo Ruby Main, who Is a p a tie n t In the T sln Falls county general hospital.

The mystery box was received hj' co-worker, Ethel Hiiniphrles.

Mrs. Wesley Hontl.v. one of Ihe members of the orgajjluitlon, dls- ciL«ed plans for

inlty. voted I

. Pauline Kelser

Promenade Given By Declo Juniors

DECLO, April 3 4 -T lie junior class of Declo hlgli school featured "A Night in H aw aii•' as Ihe theme of Ihc pioni li«lri recently a t the Declo Trcmitlon linll.

The hall was dccoratcd In Hii- WHllan motif. D uring ihe evi-nlng a floor shew wa.s |>re.-:emed. Progrnm numbers incliiclrd alee chib; vocal solo. Leslie Anderson, and a Ha­waiian dance by M argery Sandell.

Tlie deroratlon connnittce con.slst- ed of Margerj' Sandell, Patricia NVflls, Prank O Hlelte and Don P e ­terson. Floor show arrangements w.-re made by M ary Sandell. Helen Orr ond Qayle RlcliliLi. Mrs, Fern Manning wos In charge of Ihe prom.

Members of the senior cla.vi and the Incully were gucst-i of the Jun­iors at the Jutilor-scnlor banquet held In Burley,

Nine LDS Wards Represented a t Blaine Stake Ball

JEROME. April 25-More th a n from Jerome first and sccond w ards attended the annual Blaine atako Gold and Green ball, staged a t t 'L, D, e. recreation hall In C arey.

Tlie while pillars, background for the coronation ceremony, were haiiced wUh fuchsia colored j snd greener^’.

Mrs- Evil Adamson, Make young womcn'f. president, and Edwin Cook, young men's slako president, were In charge.

llie floor show selections, accom ­panied by mu.'ielans from resi>ociivi ward. parUclpalhiR. Included i ehoru. from Wendell, dancc num bets, Shu.shonc ward, and a trli Itom Ciirey ward-

"Mi-mory Wiilti," was given Carey members. Jeromr second war( members look purl in the "Ro.'c From Ihe aotilh .” climce num ber Mrs. Mill Iliu rjini niTonipanled Je r

Qiiff-iis prf.M;iili‘<»cre fioni rich. Hnl

eiited

W n

i In pink fortwhiliwiird;Jackson, s,'C.iM

iieen. wns dres.swl In white lid laci- formal. Each of Che f lipearliig WR.% presented a cc Zclla H a n s e n , Wendell. . . .

crowneti queen ot the stake hall, by Stake President, F. N, Manwlll.

Calendarof'Clod will ineei Tliursday alter-

Red Cross sewing ¥ •

Twin FUlls Cluii ers will meet al Ihe Ainetitmi \» k

c of Mrs. ..

needles tor RedCross I wing.

A devollonal meeting for Me dlst Woman's organli-Hlon will be held at 2:30 p. m. Thursday a t the chiircJi. The Rev. H. G, McCallL-^ler will deliver a talk regarding the San Franrlseo pence conferencp. All women of the church are urged to

V is i t C h a ] ) te rALIIION. April 25-Among the

\hltlng members of the O. E . S, rimpier irere Mrs. Flora MorRiin. New Meadows; Mrs. Doris D. Clous- er. Ooudlng ond Mrs. H au l Daw.^on and Mrs, R o v Crawford. Ogdei \Jtah.

To W edJEROME. April 25—Mary Jones

member of the comjncrclal depart­ment of the high school faculty, left this week for N orfolk. Va., w' she will wed boatsw ain's mate Wyeth M, Harris, form er resident • Kamlah. who Is now In the hnval rces. Ml.u Jones In the daughter Mrs, Scott Jones, Eden.

Do you suffer from MONTHIY ' _

j NERVOUS TEHSIONIf fuBctloaal ptrlodio dlsturbaoce* iftske TOU teet ntrrouj. tlrnJ, TetUeo»— BHUch try thli creat medJcWe —Lyait E- riokhsm'a Vtgeta&la Com- pouatl to relievo luch lyirptoma.Taken rtpiUfly—It • • - • ... .................... -ajilQ.1 .ucl

Ip re*Utaac«ttomachlc taals.rollc

Kimberly ?ride

roeatello wa« the scene of a wedding when Dorothy M. tien- drlka. Kimberly, bceame the bride of Donald G rcsilnnr. The cere­mony wai performed March ia In Ihe evenlnf. (Hlaff engraving)

Dorothy Hendriks Weds Gressinger

KIMBEIILY. April 25-D o ro th y

Kimberly, became the bride of Don­ald Oruelnger. son of Mr, and Mrs Oresslnger. Pocatello.

The ser^’lce was performed a t 7 p- m. Friday, March 13. a l the homo of his parents. The Reverend Olcft- son of the Baptist church, Pocatello, performed the ceremony.

La Dene De Corla was maid of honor ond Robert Ackey was bes

liie bride will graduate from thi school of nursing Pocatello general ha 'pital In September.

The couple will make their h In Pocatello where Gresslngei..............idnjjg Qin4g

aint store.The bride was (

■J high Khool li groom has served he Pacific iirrn.

aduated from FI 1042- The brldo-

wlth the navy In

Luncheon Given For Mrs. Koster

Mrs. O. T, Kosler waa honored at a farewell luncheon held recently by Ihe T»in Falls Garden club the home of Mrs. H, P, Lnird,

A Rift wai presented Mrs. Koster who has been pre.sldent of the g

1 Mrs. 1 Micr wni leav 3 make their h

Has a Woman Doctor a Right to

LOVE?

NEW r/ME-N£VV STATION

KTFI 8:45 A . M

M ONDAY W m m o A Y ’

Baptist Circks Schedule Meets

lapUat circles hitTe anu u n ced .'stlngi to be held Thuraday aitr

enuaatuCircle one wlU m e e f tt 1:30 p. m. .

a t the home of M n. R. R. nusteU, H37 EUhth, avenue east. Circle two will mee a t a p. m. a t the boms of Mr#. Lucy Carder. 641 Pburth ave- — e east. M n. Emery Atulrews vUI

. tlie speaker and M n. Nonli Nlctx- ols win lead the devotional*.

Circle three will meet a t 2-.M p. m. it the home of M n. Vie .Ooertien.

285 Addison avenue. Circle four will meet a t 3:30 p. m. a t the home of. M n. n . C. Morehouse, s u Second avenue north.

t t M P T O ™

WAIIANKAofflcen of the Wahanka

Camp Fire Oirls were elected a t a recent meeting a t the home of Bor- leut Oambrtl. with Baibai» PuliJt named president; Betty Lou Dunfi, vice-president; Barbara O^Hallonin, secretary, and Lourelle Chaney, treasurer.

The meeting opened with a pledge lo the flag and one minute ol medl- intlon and prayer in honor of the lato President Roosevelt.

I t wu, voted to lolti the Audubcrii Bird society. I t was decided tha t a project of bird study Includln* habits, nest building and identUlca- tioii. would be sUrted,

Plans were completed by the group for their first boy and girl party lo be held May n , a t the St. Zdward'a recreation hall.

Oasnts wlU be ployed during th* • first section of the evening. Follow­ing IntermLwlon, a dance -will be held wltli the grand march led by retiring officers. Folk and progrotn dancing will be featured and va­rious stunts wiU conclude the pro* gram.

Committees In charge of the event Include Laurelle Chaney, genenl •chairman; Mary Wlnterholer atvl lean Young, invitations; Marguerite

Phnilps, Darbttxa O^Halloran and Lenore Rodger, decorations; Betly Lou Dunn. Potricla.O ’Halloran, re­freshments: Patricia Flynn. Harlene Cambrel and Barbara Funki for­feits,

it- * *Couple United

JEROME. April 35-Charles L. Crabb, Mounuln Home, and Jessie S. Harman. Rupert, were united In marriage here by Bishop Charles H. Andrus of the second ward L. D. B. church. Witnesses were Arda Crabb and Beamon Harold Crabb.

FULL MEASURE OF GOODNESS

mmM IliK

Freih Dally a t Yonr G n een 3 Home DellTcilea Weekly

Y O U N G 'SD A I R Y

How about a breather?...Have a Coca-Cola

. . . o r refreshment joins the gameT b e re ’s o n e d a d in tb e game w b ea everybody Tvins. T h a t 'g w b e o the host

. n 7< H a v* « Coke. E reiybod^ w elcom es th e m offlea t w b c n rcfreshm eot joins

Ihe party - Ic e -c o ld Coca-Cola is ooe o f the g o o d t h in g s o f life th a t belongs

i a jo u r f k m il f refrig erato r. Next tim e yon sh o p , d o a ’t fo rge t Coca-Cola . . <

th e d r in k t h a t h a s m ade ib tp a u it tha t re jr tih u a a a t io o a l c u s to m . . . a frieodly

H ole m o m e n t o n the s n n o j ilde o f th iogs.

aOTTlID UHOIl AUTHOIIIT OP IHI COCA-COIA COBPANT IT

TW IN FALLS COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY

. . . . . . ...lylw«?Coea-Col» ■■I cdM tv iU MtaCy abtmlaltaI'OM '.Belb BKB itN 4 ^ prrf' 7 «f n a CM»Ocilt Ocoptqi.

Page 6: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

P a g e S ix T IM E S -l^E W S , T W IN FA LLS, ID A H O AVedncsday, April 25,1945

ON THE

SPORT FROJ

■••Happy CImndler <U. S.B. Chandler or Kcniutky) li made high comml«lonfr of Om ball!" Ye Olde Sport Scrlvcn Hashed a t Mr. Pol Show *mi; ftcrcM llio (JmIc alter Uic piifliry o had torn a hunk ol copy from tlio AiJoelatcd PrcM “ Ire. "Bnscball could hardly Imvc done any » with «o mntiy other eoo<i inni avnll- «ble."

Jlr. Tot SliotJ» anillcd uiid the; when Y 05S Wft.1 iiboiit to ndrt •■They elccted Mr. BUi Bin hliiUflf, h b eye.' droi>i>ed down the copy uii he found jomellilng Uint inmic hii: n b h tlinl he hnd kepi liLi timi;" under pndlock .iiul m-i thoiiKhU n bl more clmrltnblc.

It wM Senator Chandler >j)rukln{ via Iht printed w ' nuunfin* that lie had iircrplrti tliel550,000 a year poiJtl .......................ju a je i\ene>uiH ni had filled to nnbly he iaVd-.

S E N A T O R C H A N D L E R N A M E D B A S E B A L L C Z A R

DiMaggio Best but Williams Tops in Tight Spot Successor to LandisPicked by 16 Owners

CLEVELAND. April 25 (/P;—Bascball’a five.month quest for a commissioner end,ed Tueaday with'thc selection of Sun. M b c T tB . CViundlcT o i Kcntv»c\<y Vo tb e posiVionvacriitcd by the dealli of Kcne- snw Mountain Landis. .

By a unanimous vote of the I 'Wa ii;16 major league club owners I I^v tV KjliaL or repre.senttttives, nnd on the first ballot, the 46-year-old junioi- senator from the blue grass state wa.s niinicd for a aeven-year term al iin annual salary of $50,000.

WiUe O'Contvat, \c ,commLviloner nnd a member of ihc three-innn body that has ruled the ipurt iilnce the dentil of Lnndls iiut

Miuuld do niter llii- »in i 1 ?re Unit iil) .••iirjiJiis

rqutpinJiitrd

Ihroiighout the couniry."And then, get ihls;••Olvc Ihc kids a ball niul bnt n

a corner loi and you don’t have worry "boiii Juvenile delliiqiici

,ln ihnt neighborhood/'Now that's right dO'vn th it anrii

word puddler's a man i»ho»e[first tliouglil.t on usrending hlghent >purt!i offire hi th trere for (he kiiU of the nail can't go nrong.

klda—more thnn YotfS iii you, nnd you, anil you. i they're proving It In n Irai:

I Yes I

thatI the I > of j

II. and

and totlny have so terribly'fumbled'."Give Uie kid.t a ball and a bat and

a eomer lot and you don't have lo worry about Juvenile delinquency In tha t neighborhood."

These arc noble word^ and form a creed tha t Ihl^ typewriter lormenlor ha.1 been preaching tor niontlu on

Tliey show Hint Senator Chandler rccognlzcs the IlrBt duty ol hu office—to manage organized base­ball for the benefit of the k lii be­cause baseball la the klda' game and the American's game,

T hai duty muni transcend every* thing clic—even duty to Uie 18 own­ers c( major league clubs who np> pointed lUm to the office und agreed to pay him a salary of *50,000 a year for seven years.

Eren though l( takes money out of the club owners' pockets in order «8 protect the game for the kidi of the nation, he cannot healtale to do his duty. Judge Landis didn’t—even when he waa fa««d with tearing from the graip of club onnen ralu> able players, one ot them later lo be batting champion of the National league, he believed weren’t getting » square deal.

’•Happy" Clmndler has turned hlj thoUBhts In U\c rlgh^ dltccllot the kids of the imUon—and 1 Veeps those thoughts there he can't go wong.

Anti that's that for now. ex(Lei's get tha t Chandler •corncr In Twin Palls In the fonn of a rc Alton building.

Bruins Face Soloiis Today

mes hcUedulcd (or vcsVculis' e MaKlc Vnllcy. Dulil w.us to iiycd HaKcrmaii, while Twin ,<l tlir second Kiinii' of ll.v 1

Cone . "Monk " Halil.

B osox Adopt New Slogan

WASHINQTON. April 23 i.I’t-T lie Boston Ilcd Sox have a new .slogan; •'Let’s win one for Joo."

Joe Is Joseph E, Cronin, managci, and player uniU he broke n leg lasil ^ttk.

Tl»e Sox hdve all gAjnrt play ed—six—In Uie 104S season, but acl- Ing mannger Del Baker wo-^n't dOTOhearted In the tirr.-.sing after posijxinnninit of todays with Washington's Senalors.

'•*mU Vajon may lielp us, aald. "Il'll give ui an opivjrtunity to readjust our ."ilKhis. We simply haven't been hittlnB."

Meanwhile, rumors iiertbicd tliai Wa^hlnglon owner Clark Orlfflll) will iry to make a deul for Jeff HeaOi, Cleveland outfielder, whlli QrlfflUi Is in Cleveland attending * meellns ou the selection of n ncs baseball comniL^loncr.

Cleveland neeUs n catclirr. anc Wnslilnglon could ilsc Heath’s hit' ting power. Heath has not report­ed to the Indlani.

■Washington ha.s llirce ciitclicrs, the veteran nick Ferrell: A1 E\ans, a service dtschRi'^ec who has done most of Die work this :=prlnR, and Fennln Guerra. Cuban who looked promising Istl seMon.

The Senators rejwrtedly arc will. Ing to imri with one of these recelv- ers and toM In a bundle ol cn.* lor Heoth.

ATHLETICS DEATEN NEW 1/3NDQN, Conn., Apili 25

(>TV-The coast guard Dolphins, comprising enlisted men a t the U B. coast guard academy here, dC' ftatert the Philadelphia Athletics, 9 to 3, In an exhibition game here.

In your pcot-war plwu Include a

B O A TPENN VAN CAR TOPS

ODTBOARD RUNABOUTS CHRIS-CnAPT INBOARD

Runabout «nd Cabin Models

DELBERT CLAJ'IPITTP. O. Box la l

Idaho

II with Ihc whid when he ixx-d I the game with Jerome. Uali

poured down during the nlKiit ant knowing that the Jnycee park din- niond always wn. slow drying out Hnlliday called Jerome and Inform­ed Prlnclpal-Coach Enrl William; that U would be nrce.wiir)' lo defei

game. Howi-vcr. later KoIiik te park he illscovered tha t the iilul d had dried out llie ground com­

pletely.Tlie Riinie with Jcronic will ho

played Tliursduy.Today Coftch Elmer PAik

call with his OoodhiK Seuatoi day the nniln.s will Joiuney ti for the lirjt Riime of their with the Indiiin.'.

Will

Proof Needed To Got Boiinty

BOISE, April 35 (fLsh and g

«-Tlic .•Ivin;

ily protrrani on predatory luua for the first time In y slato.i 7,000 wiil be killed thU -bui II demands proof."To collect bounty on coyoles

wildcat*, persons must present .s<......cars and a imrtion of (he ii;>-

law bune with iwo front teeth ;hed,’’ James O. Beck, fUh and : director, .said today.I couRur.i, Beck Aaid, the -skull

musl be skinned and show evidence r fresh kill. In addition hunters lid tnippers must convliicc the con- rrvatlon officer that the pretiatoi

killed In IdahoAfter wlldc;

killers will be rctiuired the complcle hide to tccclvc tUc bounty.

Rate.? set by the fl. h and game commission a t n meeting la.st week were S5 for ndult coyotes, bobcat nnd lynx and « for pujw and kittens. Tlie cougar bounty is *30,

The bouniy p aym ent will j tn r t ........ ■ continue untU Sept. 30.May 1

O t t ’s T w o H o m e r s G i v e G i a n t s V i c t o r y

O v e r P h i l s ; R o o k i e H u r l e r A l s o S t a r sNICW' VO itK ,

i-ye fo r Ua- fir.-'t I th e rijrh l fipld'.s;

Nciman Homer Beats Brook.'i

BOSTON, April 2'j — Qm(

the Ua.lon Univi'.i' s-0 U Ihi- Hruuklyn DudBm.

IJiO Ori'KK api)carcd (i

Iii (/I’l— ,Mc‘l D tt found hi.'* htim e s jit'a.' Dii T tic .sday a n d b a lle d tw o iiil (‘acli w ith a h ire ii h a n d (in ba.'te, ti

Kive h is ( .iia iits a '>-2 niai'K in tivi'v th e P h illie s .

O i l ’s ro u n d liiiiiKir.s, th e IDOth a ix l -IS)Jst <il' liis 2U -year L'arcei'. booslo il i h c G ian t m a n a g e r to w ith in lli re c o f [,mi G ehi'iK ’s life tim e m a rk ;if •191

Igtll of . live I Hrook-

s by Phil

l Bill Uttr

)fl Jim Tolihi atxi ila.-l and rookii' No he Ilravcs bt'hlnd tlic etKlit-bj Triillinu 6-t wlih one «oiie In

Hob Coin o hit tor To- Dick Culler's

fourlh hll ol the day a Holes' .slhKlc produced

i sel the s.l«i(c (or Nlei o the right field stiind?, his third the yenr.

ilrooklri' ob r tiukffVh, c 5 1

M-'lIuiHan-sei

otloose

r from Uike Wnic

Oil's first clout, foll<iw :le Hm Ko

I.n-.en a two-Ualfcn-sperger. gave : run le.td In th r llrM frame but the Phils came back wiih one in the

I f when Jlnuuy Wa.vdcU i>Ui. to right nnd moved around to on a walk to Vince DeMnggio,

We.s Hamner's infield out and John- Peaeock-j outfield fly. iranville Hnmner’s low peg on

Niip Reyes’ bouncer gave the New York third iacV.tr a life ih t stv- ;nth nncl Han.sen bunted liim to lecond where he cuuld ^core on Johnny nucker'.-. .single to lelt. Oil then .cocked his .-eeoiid i ircult clout

I end tJic Giants' sculliu;.With one away in the eisiith.

Broivns Need Feu’ Base Hits

CI.EVLLANP, April 26 i-fj-T he 31 LouL, Browns have .shown an al- miv'l eoniplele reversal of their 10<4 Mint, when they won Uielr first uiiM' RMnes, b«l Mauagti Luke Se­well is not unduly worried over the plluht of Ills Ainerlunn leiiguc cham­pions.

■"rhere is notiilng the m atter with

.suld •; I todayr but < did

manage to come through In th . iHiichcs. So far this sea.-ion wc haven't been able to do that."

The re.sult has been five straight deteals a l the hand.5 of the Detroit Tlpcrs and ChlcngQ While Sox ofler inking the ,?ca'on's opener from the Tigers.

L-e Dinge.s found the lands for hb. first big :r bui Hunscn reilrcd ; men In Bucee-sslon.

said Chandler n . fflce within a reasonable lime.

Fireworks Kltjic Tl\e lorm tt governor ot Kenlucky

•as ."ielecteil ntler a four-hour dla- cu-viion in which expected fireworks

iterlall/^. Tlie

irolong■-SRTiiy, finmd enouKh suiijjiirt w lul e.xtended debaj.e after ihe c mlllcp of .four—Alva Brndley Clfyr'latitt. Don Barnes of Ihc l.oui.? Brown«. Sam Brradon nf SI. Uiuis CardlnoU nnd Phil W _ ley of the Chicago Cubs—had made

report.Othei . dLscusscd but club

owners declined to say who they However, it was lenmcd tin

. imes of Gov. Frank J, LaiLsche of Ohio, Bob Hannegon, ehalrniar if ttie Democrntlc national commit- ee. James A. Parley niid Prrsident

ro rd Prick of the Nallnnnl •nlioned promUicmly G anm for lied ('ros

■ the club repre.^piiiiu Ihc tn.'k of selettlim

•' pinyI tor elnht

t th

■hool t'

rolleKc. LvxInKtnn. Ky. One hiid th r laodr. l but

ol .4S7 nnd pitched his 1

. -je wa.swltli Ol H. In the Hert niver 1 leiiRUe Ui I93Q, winning

13 game.s. In ID22, he Joined org>11 with Lexington in the Blue league.

nesaw Mountain LandU thru . the hitler's 24-year relgi nniKsloner of baseball, sale lire would de|>cnd on whi 1. A. B. "Happy" Clmndler,

si»rl.

Solon to Bat For Negroes

WASHINGTON, April 25 i/T Congress will be nsKed to look Into the question whether Negroes should play in the big leagues and other o tsan litd tastball cVtcmILs.

Rep. Marcantoiiio, A.L., N.V.. said today h(s will introduce a resolution, probably Tliursdtiy. calling for n •ludy •'of racial dlscrimlnaiion in >ur national gome.^’

"I maintain that baseball Is Inter- stale commerce, nnd a-s n member of the Interstate tommercc commit­tee I ’m going to ask Chninnan Lea. D.. Calif., for tiearlngs .soon on this problem," tlie only American labor party member of the house told a re­porter.

,t’s a bit rare, so let’s share

HERMITAGEFor Gentralions^A G nat Ktniucky Whiskty

T rue , you can 't get as much Old Her* miliigo as you mi^ht like, but please share 'whol litlle you do hove! T his way you help ease th e trem endous demand for this fine w hiskey.

NitioRdDi«tiller« Product! CBrr,,Ntw Yolk ■ « Proof

L tt’t all hack the attack! B U Y EXTRA W A R B ONDSI I

SEN. A. B. CHANDLER . U. S. (ienator from Kentacky 10 yesterday wns selected a»

Six Schools In Buhl Meet

IIU H I,. A |)iil 25 — The c e ss i ly fo r tr ia ls in several e v e n ts on th e anendii o f Uie iui.-<leni .MjtKii; V alley track am i fii'lil m c ft tii bo held T liiir.sday jifltTiiodii a t Ihihl IcKiiued to d a y a f te r s is schools iiniKHinced th a t they would .•<ond th in c ia ils to th e s|>»rl (’.NtravaK'iiiizii.

'Hie schools which will .'eiul iitli-

iiade to Umlt ciich school to tw ftcU fvenl..mman slated lliat the field it.s would stun m 1:30 p.m, the track events at 2 p.m.

ilil's hoi)e.s of winning the meet T bobiirrcd today by Don Miller rling for the relay nnd Leonard Is t«r the pole vnuVl nnd high

Coarh Hniik Powers of Ihe 'I'wui Fulls Bruins announced last night llmt he probably Muld tuke a fmiad Ilf 25 nlhlctes to the eastern Magic Valley tnick and field mccl at Duhl Tliursday nfu-nioon.

.NEW ATHI.ETIC DIBECTOU CHICAGO, April 25 m -Tlieodorc

Q. iTcdi Payseur, for 5fl years n member 'of Northwestern imlver- !liys nthlctl': staff, lint night was apiMlnied athlctic director ot the Wildcat.s by Ihe imivcrslly's board

Buy needs «t a seed ilore—Adr.

=SIMMONS=PLUMBING & HEATING

CommoDnrealth Toba and Standard Flxtuces

Alt Work Guaranteed ;SS Addison W. Th. ZOOM

In Smith Itooftng Dldg.)

lE iB IQ B B E B lE S l

n i r u i

YESTTillUAVS ntSULTH

Pulford W ins Fifth Contest

.................12 12 JOO.............. II 12 .47*

Hollywood ..................... G 11 2CA

PORTLAND. Ore., April 25 "Vi— Righthanded Don Pulford kept his .seu-son’fl record spotle.'s as he .'cor­ed his fifth piichliig vlelory of thr season, Portland beating Oakland, 7 to I.

R H KOukland ..........000 000 100-1 4 2Portland .........420 OlO tWx—7 11 n

Lotz. Monco, Aynlii and Ralmoudi. Fcncch; Pulfoid mid Adam.’>.

rAURES IN THIRD ri.ACESAN FRANCISCO. April -J5 '/7' -

n ic San Diego Pndres defeated llie Frnncl.sco Seal". 7-3, lo movr

third pliice on th r Pacific CoaM loiigue ladder. Tlie winning pitcliei. /allle Euves. pulled ItlmseU out o( a

illowed the Seals lo sage i> two-run ally.>i.n DIrgo two 102 13U-7 13 3 Jiin Pranci.seo lOO 000-t>02—3 7 1

Eaves nnd BnJIinger: Branclell, Ehrroaii Ogrodowskt.

Feller to Hurl In Contest Today

ntf of the Orcn am yrslerdiiy w iU.'.c of rain, bu

liril J5 i/ri — b Feller’s sdlied- ger nnd iJitchinK

Lakes ba.sebiill s postponed be-

hLs bluejackels

crslty in a0 face

:nunto' hi more thon two ycar.'. former Cleveland star enlisted days after Pearl Harbor. Since

then he has been mainly on sen duty.

WE’LL PAY TOP

1S4I PONTIAC 0, 4 door sedan. Radio nnd heater. Exception­ally clean, good rubber.

CEILING PRICE FOR YOUR

11140 OI.DSMOBILE Club coupe. Radio nnd heater. Pre-war white slde-wall tires.

Several Other* to rick rrom

OUR FIGHTING MENNEED

More Fighting M etalThat’s Why Uncle Sam . Has Asked WAHO to

Get The Lead O utfor More Ammunilion, Batteries, Cable-covcr, Tclra*

Ethyl Compound.

To Do the Job, Idaho Lead Mines Need More-MINERS

.MUCKERS (Experience Unnecessary) LABORERS (Experience Unncccs>ary)

To Help You Get on Ihc Job» Idaho Lead Mines Offer; TRANSPORTATION and TRAVEL PAY

WAGES AND HOUSING — GOOD EXCELLENT POSTWAR PROSPECTS

(Now in 65th year of operation)The Need Is Critical

Apply Now nt Your NearestU. s. Employment Service

WAR MANPOWER COMMISSION

4 si

Page 7: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

Wedneaday, April 26,1945 TIM E S-N E W S. t w i n f a l l s , ID A H O

VETS ASSURED OF

ReadJusUntnt allowiince*__ ___Billing relum ing Idaho veterans In SotUng Bt&rud In their own busl. ne«e» by Iniurine a net ciuh In­come of 1100 per month. Harold A. SalUbuTT. local representative ot the Idaho unemplo>inenl eompensa- lion illvlaion. said Monday.

SalUbury. quoting a communica­tion received from H. P. Garrett, executive director with headquarters In Boise, said th a t veterans full? engaged bi self-employment for profit u-lth net eamljigs of less than $100 per month mny claim the dl(> Icrence beVKfen the it c&th earn­ings and *100.

Prom October. 1D44. Uirougti April 18. m s , 25 seU-emptoyed veterans have filed for ailowsnces and have received «J.717. The majority of self- rmployed clnlm.n have como from veterans engaged In furmlng whUe some are operating stores and other independent businrsjes.

Claims for a m onth of self-am- ployment must b« filed a t iha United Riaies employment service offices before the 30th of the following month. Accurals and detailed rec­ords miiKt be kept of cash Income .ind expenditures and such records must be iwbject to audit. A sU te- rn<-nt of the In.- ome and expense for

be completed when n and the value of

produce used

Free Famed Flier

Wing Co..... ..der. aboTc, famous Icglen fighter pilot of the reyat air forte. ««« freed hy Amtrican Iroeps after th rw jrar* Imprisonment In Ger­man camp*. Cemdr. Badtr. who repeatedly escaped h lj m il rap- (on until they took hU artlflclj

th month m u fUlng each claim Bood.' such as fi from the biulncs miwt be reported

by t FAi MACHINERY

Twin Falls Cat Duel Broadcast

To Italy TroopsNews from T«'ln Falls gets

long ways from home. In fnet o atory appearing in the Timcs-Nc which Involvi-d a couple of flghtli _ cats down a t the Dlngel and Smith company was featured on a hrond- cftst )n lu ly .

8/SKt- W. p. rBllli Holley,Dr. and Mrs. QrorKr C. Hailey.

■•Ith the 1 he files

5th >Italy wher

Said the scrgennt:\ "I almost forgot to fell you before last (and thLs mighl the Tlmes-Ncw,M. T«’ln Falls rn »n Ilaltiii radio brondcn.it~you know, thiit, liimuiii Inlerrsl portloi

k ihiit often iiccompanlc.i the news?• Well, much to my amaremen

they .‘ clected the cnte on the tele-nnd

■y refer.^ \hia a Tlnics-News fca- ire. I t told of the police car nisi ) the Dlngcl and sm ith place luse the telephone operator card "moans" over the open w

TH E TD IES-N EW S

F A R MS AL E

CALENDARi r

S A L E D A T E S

APRIL 26Clyde and Gracc Eskridge

A dvertisem ent, April 23W. J. Hollenbeck. Auctioneer

ATTENTION FARM ERSDm Is (bom n of om priat •Bd Uu ltrf« BsmbOT of f v a u Im.

»» piijit llmll thU frM llaiinc to Bxior u l u • >-«olumii s-iack

G A S HP A I D

F o r ticad and useless

HORSES - COWSV911I also pick up bogs IT they

are close.

PHONE US COLLECTIV ln Falls 3U

Gooding 47—ttapert S5

I d a h o H i d e & T a l l o w C o .

HUNT. April 25-W lth dealer i -.lasers from a l least su strepresented, sale of surplus fa rm __other equipment a t this relocation center got under*'ay this morning

.here had been 53 1

Two speaker*—a returned overseas veteran nnd a recentb'-appolnted raembei; of the state fish and same commlMlon—4hared speaUne hon­or* a t the weekly session of the Twin Palls RoUry club a t the Park hotel Tuesday noon.

The relum ed veteran was Co: H. Q. Laulerbach. who left Ta-Ii Palls before s ta rt of the war a head of the 116th enilneers national euard regiment. Ho has Just ret ed from scrvlca In the Paelfie U now on leave.

The game board member was Paul 'Thwnan. Twin FAlk. lie tHrfUMi activities of the state game dcpar ment and also outlined plans f after-the-war steps which would continue to make Idaho a nfor h 3 fU-Jier

Lauterbach spoki on n il experiences while ' durin* which time he saw cQiikld- erable front line action under

Program chairman for the «-8s Truman T. Oreenhalgh introduced the speakers.

Durlns the business cession Harr?' W. Barry. wHo had former a member of the local club a tha Buhl club whll# resldlnaUy, '

ship in the T»ln Falls ■Colonel Lauterbnch was dueal

S. H. Grave* a t the meeUhg, w guest of Frank Lett was the I

disposed of. The sale. only,

ngaln a t 1:30 p. m, today and was pxpected to be concluded hy I ftftffiioon.

Staip.s represented ot the sale I mombiR Inrliidfd Idaho, Orrg Montana. Uiah and Washlngtoi

In opcnUiR the Ml*-. Mr. Ttilel said tha t to take part all farm an .utomotlve dcalrrf nhoiild be regii cred. Each dealer I ' furnished wit

IK prlcc. which 1-s I off list price. L< t of th r equipment

Thiel told the dealers tha t Ci llled chccks or cash could be pi t the proJcct office until 4:30 p-, , .hat If dealers maklni iiccessful bid did not have a err- Hied chi'ck or the money ImmecIN tely available, they could make

such payment on Thursday from 9 1:30 p. m. a t the nogerson T«-ln Falls where a sale

office w ill, be maintained on the m erunlne ^oor.

Thkl suld tha t sales of thU type iroughout the United States would

be held on a "cash on the spot" bn- lounced other similar sales

scheduled for Pnsco, Tuesday. Moy 1, and for Friday, Moy 4.

Write-inPolice Chief Howard GUlette re­vived one vote tor mayor a t Tues-

..sy's city election, but the ballot couldn't ^ counted as he was not a certlfted conrilriate for the office and under the ronimlwlon form of government write In votes arc not permitted.

He received the vote Ui ward two. Whoever cast the ballot scratched he names of Bert A. Sweet and Ed- ;ard Dabcock and arote In the po­

lice chiefs name,Tho ballot was marked Invalid b;

ectlon Judges,

RadioSchedule

Sgt. Rowley on ' Merited Sojourn

HAJISEN. AprU a j-sgt. ArlU Reed Rowley is spending « 4S-day furlough In nearby Aberdeen with, his wife and parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. .Rowley, and other relatives.

He attended school In Hansen and left there In January. 1913. He has been ser^’lng In the European wi area with the second mechinlri cavalo'. He w»i In three campalgi •—Normandy, northern Prance ac Germany.

He w*a wounded In action In Sep­tember. 1844, and received the pur­ple heart and th i bronte star award for meritorious service. He was aenc from Germany March I.

Rls wife la the fomUr Thelma Farnsworth of Aberdeen.

HOWLKY

BURKHALTER•JEROME, April 3Si-

. tirthalter, son of Mi Prank Burkhalter, Jero

frombrief lea . He Is

thena , tt-hora h« attended a dl«el rn :lne .vrliool. Later he look smphibl n training a t Camp Bradford, Nor oik. Va. He recently completed i rulEe on the Chesapeake bay, fie hM two brothers In service

lliey are Capt. Delbert Burkhalter. taiJoncd a t Chanutn field, 111., am'

W arrant Officer Dale Burkhalter European war area. The lit

irdcd th'i bronjc

Mrs. Harry W ilson. Buhl, whose specialty as a publli^ health has been school ch ild ren in th end of T».-ln Falls county , announced Wednesday tha t she bad suhmlited her resignation to D r. Georje T, Parkinson, director of th e south ce tral d tttrlet health u n it.

The rttlgnatlon. M m . Wilson is Is to be effective A pril 30. all which she will 'd o a lo t of fishing and some goUlng.

retting.

original nur.'its In th e Rockefeller insUtule-.spiinsorcd h e a lth unit here, and followinK this aaalgnmeni. she sened as Twin FbIIb county achool

vas appointed

I time she

A year Uirr. school nurs. for ing in that capat rtslsneu.

Mrs. Wilson training in 'he Boyd hospital, which la now the Park hotel in Twin Fslli

Always i’'t«rp«tert in boy* an girls. Mr. \vil»nn Is known I

ir school tiu r.r- mvIhousanrti almo.'! e hundreds tuidren • call V

r medaland f

rltorloii.'<

Buy seeds a t a seed s —Adv.

CINDER BLOCKSMade of White Pumice Rock,

the light weight volcanic cindcr Investlg&le Today

CINDER PRODUCTS CO.Vhono 66-3 Jerome

D ealen Throughout Maglo Valley

Ford TransferOffice and Warehouse

lioeated S 1 7 W a llHere'B how to find ub. . . 2 Block# west U. P. Passenffer Depot. . . Across atraet new cit>- garnge.. . Next door Dependable WholcRRlc Grocerj’. . .,2 Doors east Kin­ney Wholesale Co., or 1 block eaat of Co-op Crearnerj’.

217 WaU Phone 227

Farm Labor Sponsor Group Will Convene

Officials of th e T n ’ln Falls County Farm Labor Sponaorlng awoelaUon wW hoW regular roecltaR a t office of Uie county asei* at courthouic a t 8 p. m. Thursday. It was announced by Bert Bollngbrokc. Buhl, president.

Service Center- n ie Friendly sta tion-

Formerly Joe Oovey Texaco

GAS - OILS LUBRICATING

Wm HUix - >V ular - PeUitOnt

Mrs. Shea Dies; Rites Thursday«. H arriet Annie fihr«, IS, of Idaho 'Since 1035. dir p.m. Monday a t ll\« l\n« dauithtrr. Mm. Lorriia

Krelgh, 373 HarrL^on nveniie.

-ish, T«-ln FalL«: two grandchild.. Mary Ann and Alpha Mac ■iKh; four ^tcp-daughlerB,1-soii and 10 stcp-great-Kr

Mineral scn’lcc,? will be conducted 2 p.m. Thursday al thr V rlimrv chapel with Ma) <Ispii of the Salvntlon Arm; ating. Burial will be In the 'Is cpmeterv.

Suit Claims Love Cooled in Alaska

Arthur Alhcra trcnicd her "coldly and -.vlth Indifference - In the Unite Stutts, and more coldly In Aluski Ntrs. Marie Albers charged Iti a dl vorcp complaint filed Wednesday 1 di.'strlct court. She asks for the dl

The complaint .■■cu forth tliiit Al bcrs left In April. 1943, for Alaika, that In Januory, 1344, Mr«. Albem

She persuaded him to return ’ ler to tha state of Washington, ihortly thereafter he returned Maika against her wishes, itatcs.

The couple married Feb. 16, 1 . . . It Vancouver. Wash. O. C. Hall rep­resents the petitioner.

6 th Grade Party At Youth Center

afternoon with Phyllis Gkordahl, <tor of the Vouth center, to

complete plan.i for a party to be given from 4:30 p. m, to 7;30 p. m. Thursday for the purpose of ac­quainting sixth Kradsrs with the

II be assisted In____jf the c<

Miss Skordahlrrnnglng the party b y .............udcnt members of the Youth .

ler. S tudent ofllcers will addi group, I cxplali

and r a ot r_______ iger hunt :

ed for S p, m. ant ;lll be served throuE

of the Panhellenlc :

..-.•antagcsembershlp.* been plan- refreshments the courtesy mberj.

Snake RIvor Report

!*ole»lc«l Sutviy. .i,.)i,k ,‘ .

jlMcl l-*tlc JU«n>3ir

cioi'/h

illlnfr I.Vf. .. Mllnir S.S. &

Cyanide Fumig:ationBed Buga . F leu - MotAs

. Olve llM of bouse, ttfrw

ORLO WILLIAMSTnrln Falla Floral Co.

• .^plrndld cooi>frallor

county."1 b e s t Intere:

Members of the h e a lth unit havi planned a pot-luck d in n e r for Mrs Wilson Friday evenlns. She will con­tinue to live in Buhl w here her hus­band operates a Jewelry business.

Sgt. Dwight King Hurt on Okinawa

uck by ohrapnel. Tlif

loi rcporti^d.ScrRcanl K

Ulu battlo II nd the Mars

lU wife. Jnrlf Mull, ;

lUghter, Ji

MIS.S ’

idy, who live In Dolsc, ■n vUltlnit M r. and Mr*,

j In their home here f . . .t lu r n r i to Boise Tuti

They are living In Bol.*e a lth • Mrf>. Ocorg» Mull. Mrs. King’s

psrenrs.-ergennt King never Has see ighter. Sergeiint a n d Mrs,

M a r k e t s a n d F i n a n c e

IlksiEADIESIMarkets at a Glance

NEW VORK. April :» (4^-

L i v e s t o c k

M a r k e t s

NTA- YORK, April 25 (J-, — Thi Klock nurt:el was ateadlcd today hi mcre»«d buying In the fina l hoiii

SpecMlailvc ai icwly dl5<la'f(l luctlou CUltliirk fiH ass A f.irt

beltfRalls developed I

the laai hoiu rup, i Hallway. Illinois Ccii Fe. and Oulf, Moh

Psn-Amcrlcan Air em Airlines moved i Jo h w -M an v ll le . Monmomcrj- Wnrd

itcp roceedlngf

■d by SouUien ral.E rle . Santi e S; O hio, vays and East- (5 a po in t o r w.

WcstinBhousB,

buck .. IJonds w

i Roe-

e mixed I'nd narrow .

N e w Y o r k

S t o c k sII 35 ury — The

him I

Sergeant King ntt< lutherti -branch of Uic : Idaho a t Pocatollo. H- tiled from high school

YAiESSETFOR

MANILA. April 23 (,r)— Amei consolidated'their B a su lo pos today for a final push In to the ?d summer capital of th e Phlllr vlilte far to the south, o n Mint sland. other Yanks prew ed u he Japanese sironshold of D

MaJ. Oen. Percy \V. Clarlyon'B I3rd division held eommandUiR •Wons in the plne-covored hill) the northwest, west a n d south' of mlle-hl<h Baguio.

On Mindanao. MaJ. O en. B. W oodruffs 24th division was f...

north and e a s t from the road Junction of Kabiic.m , nearly •lalf way to Davao from the Aitit tan 's Moio gMll bcnchhead.

STALEMATE BROKKN GUAM. April 25 (U.R>—Sevenili <

•Islon troop.% broke the .'itnlcmate . southern Okinawa tcxlny In selil

lelght 0 thesrth of the capita! .Behlsid a puWtrUlns n"vM bom-

bordment which bln.ned a psUi ihrough strong Japonr.ie defenses, he army Iroop, hom m crcd acrosa 4ie hilly terrain and cnptured an Important high position west ol Ishlii villoge, .

- n, Chester W. N linltz dlscloscd element* ot 3 rd tnatlnt

amphibious corps landed on Ueaiiu Island, east of Okinawa.'* Kiitchlii penlaiuU. and Kourl a n d Yagnchl Islands north ot Motobu ponln:ula.

Headdress Afire Takes Life o f Nun

NEW YORK, April 25 Smoke from the burning hcoddrcss o' 2fl-ycar-oM nun. which caught as she bent to light n vigil can brought d ta th by suffocation Sliter Mary Maureen Crowley in the ■thapel ol St. Calhartne ncademy.

Slstw Maureen, a te ac h er a t tl academj-. had remained alone in t l . chapel after devotions t o perform her duUe* w sacrlsU n, whUe 32 other nuM descended to s basement dining room.

Police said th a t a lthough the h tadd ttas M u jh t lire , o th e r pans of the nun'# clothing v er« no t buni' ed. They listed the cauie o l death ii apparent.suffocation.

ProddetloB of m ilita ry vehicles and pa rts by the au tom otive Indui- tiy amounted to 13^ ,000 ,000 In ;044.

;l on,1 ProdiifiA .

DuPulit

General Ooodrlcli Goodyear Hudson

Kennecott ...Kre»8c .....Loews . .Mid Con I’rt Nash Kel; Nutlonsl 1 National Dali

lonal (Nnt lal PottNev.' York C North Ami INorth America , Northern Mciiic Packard ..Penney ..

Pullman .........Pure O il.............RCA ......Republic Steel . . Reynolds 'lotincco Sears Roehiick . Socuny Va SlltllHMXS............Southern I St, O & D .. 6t.niidard i I Stundiird Oil, Nfv Studcbaker

. s Co.............Texas Oiilf Him .T im k e n .............Tranwrnenpuii . Union Oil callfor Union Carbide .... Union Pic United Air U, S. niibliT .....

ClIlM 6fr\’lcc

Stock Averages

The longest ecclesiastical w ord In ..IS English vocabulary Is A n ti- dlsolatillihmiaitartuilsn.

U 'r.wi:

SIACHICAGO, April J i W>>-aralzi

.la rketa were on the olf side today w ith losses, ranging fhm fracUon* to m ore thsn two cents a bushel, indlcaU ng tecluilcal weakness fol­low ing two days of urgent short Ctfv-

M nny shorts who had evened up ocQln took the bear side following a prediction by the bureau of agrlcul- tu rn l economics th a t the carryover of w hi'a t on July 1 may be as much OA 379,000.000 bushels despite rec­ord cxporta for lend-leaie and Euro- penn relief.

:iiilsh I Uc to

5. Oats were unchanged to ;. M»y 68Sc. Rye i m Ic to cr. .May # lJ3 \ i.i i , Barley :Sc to 2»»c. May 97?ic.

iiii lilii iiiil 2»' J.J8* litlH l,«fl

S5 1:!!' :!k :SS0. Afili : i K’)-N« cub wIiMt

C^rrii N,^ ?«''w°7t V e v V 'V H iw

ll'lMHiNl («d

rcrt”H oJ.r'•ik> s:s.M>.

cItv,

uncliinMl

■*'u. M., «I.UHlr.r«: I ' lox r: No. S «t>IU

*06 w llos’alriKr'iilc'w'lf.'o:.

Potatoes-Onions

CHICAGO ONIOKS

B u tte r and Eggs

cincACO. >

N ext Hog Pool Set Here for May 3rd

x t hog pool of the T»-lii FalU C ounty Livestock Marketing associ­a tion will be held in T sln Falls (« May 3. it wo3 aniiounced by 0. ». McKealy. chairman of the hog e«(c* m lttcc . Hogs must be at the Twin Falls stockynrdi before noon on that

I-inibs win be pooled later In cason. officials said.

T vin Falls Markets

:hl

(On< dulir QuoMI«tD IU.OVB*

(r*r IH»<• Ke. I. r tn l,t .nd willar----

O ral Nortbma Kd. t _dialarar«

POTATOES

s r " ‘_.r q,«4<)

n « toUovlu »Imi .«■>* w n iw ’ tha raUa for.

A-A. ___ ___ ±_i_____ r ^ ' .

a

Page 8: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

P a g e E i g h t TIM ES-N BW S, T W IN P A L L S , ID AHO Wednesday, April-25,1941

BOARDINGHOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE R E D RYDER By FRED HARMAN

Pat ted."

Bniee T em ple, big. but wlUi «U the hardness m elted Bway. la t In

^ Cogswell.“But ffnvve-robblns!" Brenda taW.•T hat WM E rlc’4 ldc«," Tempi*

answered her. "You may remember . th a t Ptilneos Hudson's co/ket

' already been selected by him was stored )n Uie hoa^e a t Louli* burs Square. Well, riilneiin liad

- enld In both Eric's and my pres- enco that, if h e ever sol ills hand* on the O sterm ann diamonds, lie would either soe tha t ihty were re­turned to th e rightful oaner* or Uka them to th e grave with htm. Eric thouBht llicy might be con- cealcd m the lltUng of iht coffin."

.• "What had j-oii and PiiineM Hud­son to do w itii the Osiermann dlA- monds?" B renda nslccd.

’That." T em ple said, "Boe.i o long : way back. In 1039 Eric Wtwll mart-

Phlnca.1 Hurifoii «hm ttrm rd like an Iniiocrnt pro|>a'llloii. nemcmber tJiU was before ihe war.

"Eric hart form ed llip Atliinili^ DlstilbullnK Com pany Tliey dealt in German op tical goods nnrt mar* kelcd Inrtie (11111111111 1 nl Inrredlbly low prlcr;:. E ric Bdmlllrd runvfly that Amcrlran prcliKllre ngnln.'.L In- flllrutlon of Clcrnion rdoiI.s would t>r more eiuilly ovrrcomc liv thr pru- rnce of Pliliieru-; HiitlsotiV iinmr on Ihe Ictterlieaci n.- rlialniinii of in'- boarrf. TJie m o iiry an.i iiiwl. rtiln- ra.s Ihidjoii’.s fo rtune was roup. He

“When he found out llio front for nazl uctlvlilej, I Isle to pull o u t.”

‘ But, father," Brenda t.ild. "how

"Quite by nccldcnt." rrplled Tem­ple. "I had be en nppro,ichpd by Pcler Xavlcr lo iiid In llie rtLspoal- tlon of Ihe Or.lprmann collectlnn. Tlie Idea was lh a t If llie Moni'.' wen marketed Inlo tli r private roller' tlon.i of men of mi-an-i. Ihry would bring n tilKher price. Xatler’: seeniori clear. I nccrptert the misiloii.

"I wo.' to receive Ihe gems from Calavestrl. B ut Phtneaii. through Eric, got wind of n plot o( the Qei tapo. lo lift tho 5tanes. He told n of It and I s ta r te d a t once for LI; bon 10 Intercept Calavestrl. naming Phlneas a* authorized agent 10 ac­cept delivery In my absence If I should fall."

"But Calavestri didn't g bon." I Raid.

"No.” Temple drew throiightfully on hts cigar. " S h e went lo Africa, got passage somehow from Dakar to NaU! and c am e here from South America.” -

"Where did Booker come In? " ' luked.

"Xavier hired h im lo watch Gala- vesirl," replied Temple. "He los' her trail when «he went to Africs but picked it u p again In Boston."

"How about m e ? ”"Booker had been Informed of

the substitution of Hudson for He thought he h a d a good contact In you to grab th e etones and dis­pose of them to his own proftt.

. Then things got. badly fouled up.- Booker lifted the; stones alter Cola- • veatrr* death,"

"Did he kill h e r? ”"No." Temple shook Ills head.

••She was killed b y narl ageiita who mistakenly Ihough t she wss cnrr>-

, Jn i stones w ith h e r when she tried •, to eonuct you."

"But why did Bhe do that?” "Panic," Tem ple said. ‘'She wonted

. to pull cut of th e deal. Booker had been after h e r to a b s c o n d

- with the stone*. Y ou looked honest.""And creduIou.i.” I said. "Wliat

« iu Booker doing a t The Ledses?"“Hiding out." Tem ple' .'aid. "He

pushed his nu isance value to hard with Phlneas t h n t Phlnca* gnve

» him ftsyJum. T h e n PhlncM had to ■ W l o beat you down here when

d him where you w ere head-

. . Booker then w h o h it 1 1 llie cellar.""Yes." Temple answ ered. "0 Mo look at shot a t y o u In your >om. But he got Into th e lom. He was looking fo r Phlnean" "Did father sri fire

Ledges’ " asked Pal.Bruce Temple looked thoughifiil.

He said:"Docker."■'How do you knoi?""How do I know lif d ld n i. " Tem­

ple sold. "Phlneiis framwl that lie me.uage In N ldiolai'o minor; thrn after he had goL you n

look the Btone.i from Booker at the potnl of n. pt.-iol. He

(u hard p rrw d fo lie cnclx-d “ ‘ onps In th r frmoler>-. and ic me aflpj tha t Eric got him ."

Brenda's lovely eyes w rr* on father She snlrt:

•dll don't we li"W tlvii your prr-'nif'" iii th v P.u

Pwid griivryiirri " lih ii Rlmvel [Inire Tempi'’ lnol;<Tl hL' dnughler.•Wii^n'l H good tiling fo r v„.i o

BAD flEVJS 6liR»<E A lti 'T H BR6, M A 30a?-Pe»iEL0r CAME HOMB VJlTHOtJT WARM1M5 AKl' GlNJEs MIMA LOOK TMP.T v jo o u o T R e e a .

©OQILUA./— M&LePT aUICKEB.‘^S A CO.T OSWirsJ’ DOvMSl

A BfMM SPOUT.''

OLP-AVJK.' e u R iie s o r ^ e ? eSA O .W A LDO /.SU RK I ‘ 'A S SEMSrriVJE AS A. HtXRPSTRlWG — T "M fW MAVJE PELT IKj'SULTeO AND.,7 %

L E FT TOVJM-'HgA.vJEWS/

I CANJ s s eMS ^\oo , F o c e e iT { VJlWGltOG

W ASH TUBBS By LESLIE TURNER

OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS

ye>. fiitlier." sti>' •-;il(l RrmenilKT. 1 Uin-- »M

for dblK;:IIlS lit t «n the lime Phlnr.n* u il motor trouble ni TIi

-Slrl;, - Pal

I looked up."You don't m ind?' iiskcd Charley. "No," I said."You’re sure?" , ^kr(l Chnrli'y. "Sure. I ’m sure," I sukl."Well—” Charley Miitl.Pal and Drcncia Iniiiilu’d."What's funny?' I a.'kpcl

fee Hilly111(1.

"Yes. I will. And <1

MAIIK SEIlCiHASXHAZELTON. April J.=>-Word ha.s

been received by Mr. and Mrs Ai ihur Q. Biil.wh, iliiii llirlr M»n. .Ai Ihur H. BaUch, armored Kiinii'-r o

20, wn,*. pronioti-d lo iJic ran of sergeant r«:i’iiilv. Also SfrKCJir Balsch and S Sgl Wllll,niii ll.i »orlh. KazHton. met In Eiulan

visit recentlv.

HOLD EV ERY TH IN G

/ CK W65,.' wELl \ - f MAVE 7 0 '

f. CNi. OVEC:-- j

,v ,

LIFE’S LIKE THAT By NEHER

•'I wish Pop would let m e quit achool and get into sotncthing essenllall"

_ W>tE>lMO*JAAHDiPlcKOPOUR<a>lV WHAT \ OP ‘BeHORSfi* AT HtKBESiPTTO.

ISTH16 \wnyH0TAl50UFTH£Ei6EUUlME^ IMSPlBATlOH A96WBPft'SUNSETANOCASflAdES?

eeruftNS from yau say eet— sw A PTH fM !

BeaLuwr,BAM«M! TMBV WOUtP NOT PBMCOVBRESTWt PAY4-UNT1U w e a r e far AWAYi

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By EDGAR MARTINK V i HKi-K#3Trt\Ki&.

,V O O WSDvvACs.iji WWlOO

GASOLINE ALLEY By KING

T H E GUMPS By GUS EDSON

^■3S-4S-

fTHIS CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSONA so tr ro N E half of theBlROf O FT H E WORLD

^ A /S A A T V .

PEeSONs'l >^R£ FA R -S I6H rE C ,".S i^

PETER N . KHCJCyi C^'a., A aiu

0 5 L ( P 0 R N I A ? ‘n o te d f o r rrs 'M s /w f x i ; -

0OE5_l.^_OTM«vR STATES

SCORCHY

SIDE r.LANCKS By GALBRAITH D IX IE DUGAN By McEVOY and STRBEBEK

THIMBLE THEATER

"Ye.s I've got enounh points, dear, b u t T haven't the heart to orter - Mpiik—remember how poor Buster a lm o s t had a ner^'ous breakdown wolchlng us CM th» ona w# had In February?"

B y EDMOND GOODteAK> witL TBAP >c LIMB FKOM LIM3 ' Twey V-ILL NEl€fe TAKE A ie .. . .

MAYS APSiSH— O R A T L E A S T

STARRING POPEYE see/NOMANl?S/J feVTH" W'ICTKERS V\0

ALLEY OOP By V.T. HAMLIN

Page 9: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

Wedneeday, April 1945 TIM ES-N EW S, T W I N P A L L S , ID AHO ' ' P flge>N lnfr -

Phone 38 .

” ----------- -------------------------------------------------------- -------- , i . -------------------------------------------------------- . -------

L A S S I F I E I 5 ' A D V E R T I S I N GPhone

38

TRUCKS AND TRAILERStKITEkI------ -------------------------h«uM. l il l , conit>>«t*lr (urnblf ............ e<r<l;« eullen. « bW U s«nk

t i KT U u moSl Slc*-»P dirtln. t <ut IIuBt

WANT AD RATES(SiMd en CMl>p«r-«onI)

l S : . ^ z = - , T s r . - «

CAHD OF THANKS

Hlisi UKRT r.KIHHLTr

S P E C IA L N U T )L '£S

EohofjiuASmn:.

„ >u,i Home. tiiL.b.0,

CH1K0PHACI‘0R S ~

HE^P WANTED—MALE

BOYS!Tlie Tlmca-Ntws will have lev- :ral good carrlfr routes avnllable Mny l i l ror bovs 12 yc^r8 or

Any boy IntfresiciJ in obinlnlns 1 route plriue oPP'y after acHooI

T IM E S -N E W S O F F IC E130 2nd s lrc tl «Ml

H ELP WANTED— MALE AND FEM ALE

DO IT NOW!

.ILD, m r^pl.- 'u, ..

T O P L A C E Y O U R

C L A S S IF IE D A D j

P h o n e

3 8

YIMKS-NEWS Classified Ads

Di‘c«ii5e tiir ’nmw-N o v e r 18.000 liomu Viiiif)- dnlly r«iuli*. . . lu t l

EAL tiSTATK W A N TED

REAL LSTATE FOK S,\LIC

FAUMS FUtf ItKNT

T(i IliK hcM lliddr'i

-13. ri.,>.r.v:n.

BEAUTY aH01>8~

LOST AND FOUND"

nOARU AND ROOM

HOMES FOR SA l.E

K-r-h-ur..

'cK".'L 'irKi!'’!:''

~SlTUATIONt> W ANTL;ir

if lT L P ^ W A N T Iil)— FE fttA L E

CnSESTIAL ».r

^^^^TKD:r..V l„ .m.U WOMAN 'V'

~ HELP WAN'l'liD—MALE

PIN SETTERSW antrd a t the

BOWLADROME

WANTED Route miiii.

Pinnl mm Apply

YOUNG'S DAIRY

W im tcd-M ECHANICSMl, Mechanic—you n tm post­

war security with on old rslab- llshfd Jlrm. Wc need tncclmn-Its. Lct'5 gel togcthfr.

ASSISTANT MANAGERFon MODrnN

SERVlCt SlORt ANl> STATIOJI

FLOOR MEN

Wanted SERVICi; STATION

LUBRICATIOH. . DEPARTMENTS

No eundiy or Night Work

SCHWARTZ AUTO Company .

Wanted: Men to w rk on cattle ranch. Year mnmnd employ- mml. C*U . , .

SAND SPRINGS RANCH Phono aM7-2SB9 WendfU. :di.

See BACON for

SANOER i BACON

SALE or TRADK

f a y c o x

I'l'iaVr

T liis w eek o n ly :

FA R M h e a d q u a r t l -:k s

WESTERN WAnEliOUSr

JESS EASTMAN

FARM IMPLEMENTS••roOT tnurMiloii.l lucwir 41.<. r. J.

MISC. FOR SALE

f.~ Ar n.;.—or hor.. ind toot, t :

.'xiuOi P*rk. M. E. fU7. S.PCCTIDN iu«l h.rro*. it®J «.Ajitlcn

C.-IS" I Urjiairs

WILLI.A.MSTItACTUK CO.

CREW Ready nnd Equipped

Him QUALfn- Itooflni.GAMBLES

I d c u l G ifU .fo r ____MOTHER’S DAY

sHiotn 8EV.-1KQ u*cnsnE c

NOTICE FOR PUDLICATION OF THE TIME ArPOINTED FOR rR O \’lNO W IL . ETC.

IK nCE PROBKTE CO U RT OP THE COUNTV OP T W IN FALLS, ffTATE OP IDAHO.

In the Matter oC (he E sU te of A. J. BOCKWITZ, Deceased.Puraunni to »n order of *ald

Court, mide or the te n th day of April, 194S. notice 1» hereby given that Friday, the 37lh day of April. 1943,'a t 10 o'cIocK A. M. of said day, a t the Court Room of oftid Court, ■I the County Court H ouse In the Oity and County oJ T w in Palls, ld»ho, h a t tw«n uppolnled as \he time and place for proving tho Will of Mid A. J .B octilti, deceased, and (or hearing (he application of LouUe B. Bockwlli for th e Wuanc*

her of letter* ifstln ien tary when id where any porsoii Interested ay appear and contest th e tame. Dated AprU 10, 1945.

C, A. BAILEY. Probate Judge and Ex-offlclo Clerk. (SEAL)

pub.: April 13, :0. 35. 1045.

H o llc iibcck 's S(i!i‘ G round

LUCKY’S ~ 2 n 6 iMnin So.

M O N E Y TO LOAN

L O W ' I ^ A T I - S

I-lvM A. C H A PIN

i’OTATO SEEDI yonr from BIup Thk

Sorird-lO ouncf.N rtnm

l.G V D C. DAVIS PHONE ?8J5, MURTAUGli

Securfliee Credit Corp.

( iU O D T H IN G S TO BAT

BA BV CH ICK S

OWNER LEA V IX C:Must sell allrnctlve 5-rooiii mud-

eru ligmp uu lUrce lots. F\ill hnvcinrnt with ruiiipuh room.

PHONE I153M or cnll nt :59 PiERCE after 6 p. m.

F . C. G fitvos & Son

BETTER INVESTIGATE THIS ONE

S Rno.M MODF.IlN IIOMV., LImih

A1.<!0 OFFrSING :- ih

M noncHTS t

.cW , U n .'ku lld iu on r . Could b. mid* Into i irteitnl. ruMMitoo la m k» tWOO. T.rnx. m owlem honit. Clc«t In on ".i:

FARMS FOR SALE

Slectrjellr. »<hoo1 a

,<Uo„ „1. i t .r 1o< I

IDAHO FINANCE CO.

ilU■Use BOiUr Idibo EWU Smtl'l l^*n UoDM No. I’rio u u ln i1k>

V».

CHIC HIATT. Mgr.

• DAIKV COWS Arrd oUier Denontl OMraL*

ffiX undn Loao

UUy hu.»y. buUnr «nd i tH , . . . . tidckj. Al«> eiftlllH pullorom r»<«cj

'“ c a r t t o ‘ha tco trvW.ln E«1___________ n.n» »:

"UVESTOCK—FO U LTRFiLSTf.lN «rnin»r StK.rt.

ON''. IIOLSltIN .prl B.r r«.. V . H>

'Ar<Tt:Ui 100 httd Cilllorula llolii,VANJEb^ iptlxtr »Vi

•nE°i.-iTrFtTn'5rn*h!;n i-Jlt..

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

D I R E C T O R Y• BIC YC LE S A L E S L S B R V ia :

• C L E A N E R S & D YE R S

COM MERCIAL PHINTING

FLOOR SAND INGrf bour. Cambis'*.

SiR^tn, (dsan fc

• G L A S S-R A O L irO R S

HOME M A IN TE N A N C E

• JU ST IC E o r PEACEJ. 0. PUMPHJtn*. PkoM IT or I

• MIMEOGRAPJ/ING

u UoVY.niW. rh. ;

• M O N EY TO LOAN

• PLU M SING & HEAT/NGAtibott'a. 11* Shotlion* Si

• T Y P E n'R /TE R S

Eicliaiite. >11 libMbsiia

^»ooj'’I>r«»>TH«r El. Owcalu P. 0. _

• ty A T E /i SOFTEXERS

W IL L IA M S T RA CT O R CO,

cuaTOM f.; Svkis'F^jib-

W’EARlNG'AV'l’ARIiL'

WESTEnN AUTO

w a n t e d t o uuyWANlllD. m il.r hau...; Il.hl

U S E D M E R C U A N D JSF,W«ni*

HiBhfst Cash rrice.s paid at

GAMBLES

Wnnted Clean Cotton Rags

IDAHO JU N K HOUSE

MISC. FO R SALE

Atl-Y NOTLS, )fvc kid afjlbMM, cn’gr ahopplnt b»t». J. II

Ul.A^K dlara iril aunrli*.JVrKjL

WANTLU;~ ..'i?;,n«' uTl‘a

W1LI.YS Hfknp. l»>ra« >Ul l«bo». orf.n. -11 r.

SEAT COVERS — »«.60 Up for couI»i, roafhn, a iiain.

BABY CARItlACC

T.nN AUTO TWIN FALL*

WINDOW CUBS-^Brins li

UOOtrs-HOl UaJB • «

Ironln* Bnnrrt pari and cover set Sleeve btiarrt*

SEA RS, R O E B U C K k CO.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE PROBATE COURT OF

TWIN FALL3 COUNTY, STATE OP IDAHO.

stale of Horo’ W. Smith, deceased, NoUcc Is hereb> flvri) by ibs un-

derRlgned AdmliiWrKtor with the■ Annexed of the E iiu ic ol Harry

W. Smlih, dccea.«ed, to tho credltora of and all perjona hav ln s claims against the said deceased, to ex* Iiibit them with the ijecessary •ouchers, within lour m on ths Blur

the first publication of th is notice to tho said Admlnbtrator (»t Uii . . . . : of R. p. Pan r, attorney. F i­delity National Bank Bulldlngr, Twin Falls, Idaho, this being th e place tlxrd (or tho ttiiniaclloti 0l ttw

jjlnf.ss of Mid estate.Flisl publication hereof: April 11

ISIS.JOSEPH P. MARSHALL.

Administrator wlih ihit WUI An, nrxed of Ihe Estate o{ Harr^' W .snimi, deceased.

Pub.: April II. IB. 35; May 3, 104B,

FURNITU R E . APPLIANCES

! -•lir.AUVAlS” A.roln.I.r ?u«. I

RADIO AND MUSIC

SPEC IA L SERVICESFOIt rnapMl. a*pUe unk d.inli

FLOYD LILLY CO.

AUTOS FOR SALE

n.SON. N.> .Ir,. Illon. D... <1. TimIIAKP ChtvroNi

o Comptnr, Jtroma. rh<,n«

PncU ai-d Sedan 1038 Packard 120 convertible fe­lon, Very cirnii, cxccpllonally »ood rulibcr. ftudlo. overdrive, neater, deluxe ncce.wrlps.

SC H W A R T Z A U TO C O .

-■TWII.L PAY TO SEF. McRAEI-

McRAE’S USED CARS

HIGHESTCASH PRICESpaid fo r late model

CSZD CAAS.TBUCKB.

AKS BDSSS<It pays to shop around) T\VIN FALLS MOTOR

P B o n e -

We p a j th#

CASH! TOP CEILING PRICES

lo t

U SED CARSWhy 6&op vouodT

gm o N MOTOR c a

TltUCKS A N D T R A iLER al«l( INTtllNATtONAL uueV, U«t bad

fiCMd llw. rnoU’f. Stt <th Atanua

hsuaa laal Kiodtll rienl aortii aid* ' r>^. Fbna l u t .

LEGAL ADVEBTISEaifiNTStha .tlnu lim tn tpedlled, th s pl»ixv> Utr vUl Uks itidgment t f t ln s t yon - jytd In taid complaint.'

. . .d ixnplaint prays t, dscree o f . the Court qulstlnj in the pUlntltXa, ag&lMt the claltni.'demand* a n d

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS Idaho. dMcrlbed o«:Lot Three O). In Block.’ O ne

(1) of Wood'! Addition to 'th e city c( Twin tW li. Idaho. «n same Is ihown on the oHlcUl- •plat theieot,- on {Ue and o t le c - ord in the o((lce o t tha Record­er o( Twin Falls County. Idaho. WITNESS My hand and th e seAl

of the said District Court, th is 34th day of April, 1045.

C. A. BULLES.Clerk o( Ihe District Court.

By O. OOIIfER, •Deputy.

(6EAL)earxj e . w a l k e r .Attorney (or PlslntKfs, nesldenee and Post Olllce AddreM: Twin Falls, Idaho.Publish: April 2S; May a, 0, 18, 33,

. 1043.NOTICE TO CREDtTORS

IN THE PROBATE COURT O P OP THE COUNTY OP T W IN PALLS, STATE OP IDAHO.

ESTATE OP ALBERT N. S O N - WELL. DECEASED.Notice Is hereby given by th e u n ­

dersigned Executrix o( the L aat WJU and Ttslam tnl ol Albert N . Bonwell, rteccaaed, to Ihe creditors

nd all peraons having eU lnu _ .1st the eald deceased, to extilblt

them Witt) the necessary voucDers, within (our months a(ter the *lrst pubJJcal/ono/ thlinoitee, to Uie «ald Exccutrlx at the law o(flcea Of Frank L. Stephan. Twin Falls B an k and T nut Company Bldg., T w in Falls, County o( Twin FaUs, S ta te of Idaho, this being the place fixed for the transaction of the bxuineu ol snld estate.

Dated April lOth, 3045.JESSIE A. BONWEU-.

ExecutrU ot the last will and te*ta>- ment of Albert N, Bonwell, do* ceaitd.

Pub.-. Aptll U, W .« ; May S. 16i5.

NOTICE TO CBEDITOBB IN THE PRODATE COURT OP

TWIN FALLS, COUNTY. 8TATE OF IDAHO.In the Matter of the Estate o(

CAROLINE E. ALDRICH.Deceased,

NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN By 10 uiidiTslgned Executor o f the cs- le of CiiruUne E. Aldrich, deceased,

.J the creditors of and n il pertons having claims agolnst the sold de

< to exhibit them w ith tlie nec y vouchers, within (ou r month

the (Irjl publication ot this___ e 10 the tairt Executor at thela v oince ol Franlt I,. SWphnn. T^'in Falls Bank * T rust Co. Bldg. In T« ln Falb, County of T w in Falls, Stale o( Idaho, this belnc th e plac fixed far the transaction of th e busl nejs of saltl titale.

Dated April 10. 1845.CHARLES WILUAM ALDRICH.

Executor ot the Lu.it Will and Testament of Caroline E. Aid- rich, deceased.

Publish April 11, 18, 35, M ny 2, ID45.MISSIONS

IN THE DISTRICT CO U RT OF THE ELEVEN S JU D ICIA L DIS­TRICT OP THE STATE O F IDA­HO tN AND POR THE COUNTY OF TWN PALL6.

Bnmufl B. Bmith. nnd Luctl*! smith. Husband and W ife.

Plalnll((s.

Mike A. Piippiis, nnd Jnne Doc Pap- pns, husband and wife, and the Un-

known ............... ---------

Delend

Unknown Dev. he above Named ow M ay Be De

D efendants. THE STATE OP IDAHO SENDS

ORKETINGS TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEPANDANTS:

You are hereby notified th a t i complaint has been (lied BRolnst yoi In the District Court o( t h e Elev enth Judicial District of th e State o( Idaho. In and for Twin F a lls Coun- \y by ih t ntove nnmt;d plalnUIls, and you nre hereby directed to ap ­pear and plead to the ti ld com plaint rlilihi twenty days of the service of Ills .•lummons: and you a re further

..otllied that tmle.'S you s a nppear and plead to satd complaltxt within

Village Selects Council Leaders

____ attended the commur .council entertainment and e lection of officers ai the high echool.

Officers elected for the corplnff year Ke Mte. Hubert Byversoti, president; Mrs. Orville Olsen, f ir s t 'Ice-pretldent; Mrs. Roy T u rner, econd vice-president, and M rs. J ran t Bales, secretary.

Preceding the election, the h le h school band, directed by H erbert Ewen. and assisted by men of th e lommunlty, presented a m lnatrel.

A play, ’Too Many Swecthearta," xft.i given by Elvln Blackburn, B ud Besslre, Oram Batej. Ivan Moyes and Olen Briggs.

Others pmiclpailng wcr* M errttl Wa»:cr, Harold Menser, Rosel .W al­ker and John Mitchell. Miss Ju n e Peterson presented a densonslrfltloa of freehand drawing.

Seaman Resumes Radio Schooling

JEROME. April 2 5 -8 l/c D onald O. Rice, son of Elbert Rice, »r., J e r ­ome. arrived home recently to vU lt his (ather and hU sister. Mr*. J« n e « Dalian.

Seaman Rice will leave tom orrow ' for Orest Lakes, HI.; naval tra in in g iiatlon to receive 10 more m on ths training In radio w ort Ho en tered the service of the navy a year ago Inst November.

Seaman Rice's brother Is Cpl.' E3- bcrt Rke, Jr., who U wltli the TJ. S .

ilh army, now In Oermany.

Hot Lunches Are Tops With Pupils

JE3W5ME April 35-There havo ,te n 84>56 hot lunches sened a t th o Washington echool from Nov. 6 to April 13. It was announced th is wcfk.

Tlic lunch project has now closed until next (all. and met with success during Its operation here a t th « school, Mrs. Mattie Week* was h o t lunrh cook.

The program was eponsored by th o Parent-Teacher auoclatlon of th a t echool.

READ TL^CES-NE^VS WAKT ADS

3“ 2 - 2T 6> 1 7 0

/-J

**'7 'd

w a a

»7 u a

90 ii 3Z

35 ii,

iA Jo

dx 43

«; Ai ' 4 io

t>c

S 'm

J .

Solution Of YeiMrday’i P u u la DOWN 5. EUnintarr

Pour, u a .; . nJwVa ™■ II,*',M ^ Chllts * — ......

t Rom.a houM^

a s ; s s “ ' “,v J

jKropiaa 1

Page 10: MAGIC TWO-THIRDSWIN FALLS, IDAHO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945... · Issued osain.^t Idaho buMiies.'! house this week

Page Ten ' TIMES-NEWS,- TWIN.-PALLS, IDAHO Wednesday, April 26, 1946

•e OPA 'cl

OVER BEF.PORKBy FUEDERICK C. OTIIsrAN

WASHINGTON, April 25 ■•you’d think." obscn’cd Sen. Tllfo- dorc O. Bilbo oI MUsIfslppI. look­ing o t his watcli, "Ihol a man who’d moved tlie curfew up one hour wouia have no trouble with cloeki."

T he Km»U» agricullure conuiilitcfl wsltetl. I t waited ajmc more, nnally I t heard ft cllppety-clattcr doMi the marble hall. The door exploded In­ward kiid in bounced hi* honor. P lorelli La OuardlB. mayor York.

•'I apologue for being Utc.” he gasped, as he ttowcd nway.fpring Sletson. "Dui - ............over Balllmore."

Ho »ald th a t mcanl they were "i In the air."

He undid hla blut seme coiil, u huitontd his vest, pushed his p) Blasse.1 up on tils liesd. polnied chubby Ilnsor nt Cluitrman Elmc: 'Ihomns, and.suld he ukcd to riliry running from Iho oWFA 10 the IhroflsM of OPA back again. He Mid If the peopk' were lo s«t '"'■'I.Rould havn to lie comhlniMl.

"They tell II* to l)e p.iiient,” ha tfsllflc<l, mlkliii! through 10 fliiKeri pressed lo his fiice. "II " r amid cut rfguliitloii.v men I d »;iy let the OPA coiillniie iix iLsuol. We'tl ]!>:(! Ic pntlent, but In Ihe menntlnir ' piefcr lo enl ((kxI."

Only rcnlly h“d »l«il hi New ' I'oneeriu poultry, lie niid. i’jr l Inrly Is thr slluatldn Imd rtiirliiK Jewish hollcln>^.

"Ovir olflccrs *iand hi tlir ii keUi with baclge.s on iheir ciic'i.' aomu Indy comes up nnil huy. chicken. Then It gocJi like thLs:

••Mnrkct m an; Tlmt'a be *3jO, plenec."

■■Officer: 'Hold oii. let's pul timt chicken on llic scalcs-’

-Lady; 'No ymi don't. Tliufs rjilekcn nnd 1 don't oant weighed,’"

Whnt. hLi honor cried, are EOlng lo tio in 11 cjisf like thul' you've Rot the uiu'ftpr. nUilrcsi i cure the city hah, Ncn York,

Veterans to Get Special Attention

netumliig veteraiu will be Klven •peclal aticnllon from the olflce of price odmlnlstratlon iipon ihelr re tu rn to civilian hie, according to C- L. Edwards, director ot the 13ih civil zenlce region, who nnnuoncnl yesterday the vacancy In the posi­tion of veterans’ relations aclvt'pr hi the seventh regional office ot price Administration, Denver, Colo.

Tho ncwly-creiited Job will ii;iy M,eoo a year. No ejanilnnlloii.s will bo held for th e position, m i clctuils may be had by contacting R. r Jtexroal. T » ln rails civil senli rcpresenutlve. In the past oftlcc.

Awards Made at Boy Scout Rally

SHOaHONE. April 2 i-A t the re­cent Boy Scout honor court, awiirds were given to Davlrt Coulter, Sho- «hone. and Diiryle Knlgje, North Shoidione. N. W, King conducted the court.

Scout lenders present were Dean Barney. Jack Keith, Ed Baer, flay BaJmforlh, Tw in Fall», ecout e.xecu- Uvo of Snake River area.

Funds ratsed from the breakfast and drive up to date are 1350.

Boy seeds a t a seed store-Adr.

Private Wounded In Luzon Action

BUHL, April 36—Word h«s received by Mr. anti Mr«, William Chlshara, Duhl. that their »n . Pfe. Paul P. ChUham was seriously wounded In tiellon on Luton March

Tlip nature of hi* wounili wa.s no' learned, but he wan awarded thi purplo hciirl. which has Just beei received by his wife, now In Mnrll-

er. Cnllf.Chlaham hns been overecas for 13

monthn, nnd haii been In New Qul- Admlrjilty-tflands. Leyie, nnd

.u2on. going Into ManlU on “ first lank lo enter tho city.

He Joliieil the service Sept. 1B<3. nnd received hLi trslnlnc Ft. Riley, K(in.. and Ft- Orel. Calif.

llLs Just furloiigh hotne was In Februnry, ID«. He uttemlrrl Rriidc nnd high school. He was ried A us. 17. 11)43. to ML« QiRenla MarshHll. Wenrtrll. Chlsham was a m em ber oI the llr^t cavalry cIIvIaIoii, A brother, Sjft. Wllhird Chislmm.In O ertnany with th f first nnny.1.1 aldo hbi brothcr-Ui-lir*', S»'- Ilrn ry E. Arterburn.

iv ic i.i, TnAVf;i.i;i> h.mlou SHOSHONK, April 25—lUiy Cor­

rigan. m crchnnl niiiiine, .-ioii ol Mrs. lleleti MCW1111.S. bho.shoiie, home

1 n 30-day leave.Ho received II weeks ol hsslo

tra in in g on Cntnllim l-ilanr1, then to Seattle »iul u n i ii.«li{ncd

s h ip nnd Iclt for Prnrl Harbor i w ns there tu'o d.iys aiiil then . on a convoy .'>00 nillci

iinci wcnl Irmn llni I'Vancl.sco-.Slni'c llii'ii ho

tr ip s from .S.iii iiittlr. O n rftiiiiiin<; to

c 61'coiiil c-hu'. .a rd 's I

C o u p le Elected Grange Membersr. nnd Mrs. Harry Cov.ill wrr<- t rd new mrmbcrs of tlip Kiiiill

O rnncp iit a rcepiit mtrliiii: "llicy will rccriv r the ariiMK'- ciblimiium

mrrlliiK to be lirld Mi.y

'iiiirt Gordon.' Wciiib'll ,cl iliirtiiirn TiiMor nncl

EKirUs BiuiRCon, .ilvi ol Wi iiilcll. were Kue.‘.t-<i.

Tnylov prp.M'iiUd :i n;i(lliiR entltlcrt “I Llki‘ AiiuTlenii'.' A inKnl (junrtet, eon.slMlni; of Mr'. (

K ; EKV.'.si K.Orlevr nnil Shcnnaii KIlan. ^

niimbrr.s •Oiillkr, ' nnil ''Hie QullllUK P.irtv."

. luul Mr-,. C. W. Krv.iti were host? for the eveiilns.

mELECTtllU

MOTOUK K P A IR

in.*,';;!,:.:!Fails Eletlric

BOISE. April 39 <>P)—The flrat slrjible group o f Mexican na tio n al —some 400 In n il—were being sent to fouthcrn Id o h o poliila today for spriiiK farm w ork ns farm labor of- flclol'' einphnslzflii need for obtntn- Ini! irmximuin efficiency from avail­able ims Idaho fnnn labor.

TJio Mexican ' workers arrived at Pocalello last nlg llt. An additional COO are expected to BrrtTe at Namps, Cnielwell. Pnrm n and Payette for distribution on Thursday.

Tlic group w hlcli arrived a t Poca- ■llo Inst n ight wim flsalRiied to there

Shelley 25. Thomas, ninghnm county 25, WIUUt 50, Franklin 50, Qoodlng 50, Jefferson county 34. Homedale 25, Pnyelle 25. Welser 00, Nampa 50 and Hazelton 20,

D, U Fourt, Idaho «upervlAor of emergency fiirm liilior for the Unl- verjlty of Idnlio rxt«'nRlon srrvlce, salil upproxlmntely 2,000 will be ■ riiuiiht to fd iiho during May.

f\jiirt met w ltli K. F , Warner of If U.S,D.A, hitior utailMllon dlvln- in (ll'cn.viinc; miiximum utlllzntlon

of tnrm labor.Warner prnlr.ed Gem state farm-

rs tor seltliiK lliemBflvp.i to thr lime tn.«k ol prixliii'hiK »hnt mnv r nttmher rrcorrt crop iirudti' tlon

for llip \m r e ffort,lui greatly Imprrs.scd with ihe ■ ot evrryonc lo preiwr.- thr fTlni(T<l w..rkcT for farin

Hcndcled th a t a coopcrallie fnrm- ci ntlllude Iti Irn ln lng Is nece,'..-'ary iKcmi.ie of ihe Iiitko nmounls of r - • Inbor. " It niipUca lo nil tyi>e.i oi emergency fa rm workers—Mexican.......il, prl.ioncrs of wnr. Imported

trnnslen l liib<ir and locnl

German Atrocities Reported by Girl

(/r/—Prison courtyards of nail atro­city camps werc'tomire arenas, r i­valling tiu»»'of the days of Nero, where dc^i were turned In to rip the clothe* from defenseless prlfjin- ers and naked men and women were

p a raded together In the bitter cold, U bcmted Inmates of this camp said today.

A cwvip of women who had been held In Belsen eamp today de.icrlbed nazl tortures—the Hogging of wom­

en's b reasts. laahing of the soles of feet, forced proatltullon, the us# of hum an bcliigs for vivisection experi- ment»—w h ld i Uiey declared were •'enjoyed" by nnrl women S3 guards as well tis .G erm an men.

The things the prisoners endured, a t Belsen ftnd a t the com ps In vhlch they were Interned before they reached Belsen. «a!d Veronica McI- nar, a beautiful Jew ish girl, 'th a people of England a n d America wlU not believe."

T H U R S D A Y , F R ID A Y A N D S A T U R D A Y O N L Y !

HAZELTONK. V ance. J r . lre„-.urcr l-'alls Pn'.Uiytrrliil nk m"

a inootlnK o /ll ic Hnlil Pro

i r n irn iiu i mill Mr,« Itiili ’ llie HKzcltoii Prc.'bvU'rli

Poor Digestion? □ □ Headachy? d o Sour or Upset? □ □ Tired-Listless? □ □Do you feel hendnchy and ur«t cl up io pcmrli- dicrsti'il foocfT 'To fM rhf,.,r(ia •ml liamiy nsnln youf food must l»

proixTly.Ufti clay. Nuluro mmt proclurfobncii

l»o t'ltits of a viiicl clicrjiii« juiro l,rl|. clii:.nL yotir fcoj. (nil.,voiir fw.l may rt-miln unciijc.ira —

you l.cad.irl.y ind Irnluhlr. Thc-rrlofo. you iiiii.il Inrri'Mci the’ flow

el thii ,licc- iivn juic^. Carter's Llltrol.ivpf I’llls incToano tliii (lotv nulckly_o(i*n In ».i litllo na 30 inlnulr.t. And, jourr on llm road to fc^Hnr Iwllc-r.

Don I dfjl’ ljd on arillicM «kla i<jl,inlrl,ivrr nil!, ui.l clici-^llun.fi" nV’ tiirrn c,»n or<lcr Tnkc Carirr’s l.iiiln l.lvr: i'llhu-i clirt-i-icd. Oct tlicm at onyIlfuillnrp- nnlv "r.t

W E BComforta .■< n d eoiivcnlences for -ileeplnK. for rldlns, for ciitlnK-All are h r re a t Wl^on-Bate.s In the moat n ttn irllvc styllngs nnd nt the loweit prlccs.

T h e r e ’s N o S h o r ta g e o f C o m fo r ts F o r B aby

BABY CRIBSDropslde erlUb of smooth, heavy nooden cuiislructlon. plahi colors or decornlcd In nurjeo' motifs.

HIGH CHAIRSComblnlHB the "no-tlp'’ safety fent- ures with hcaiy lasilnB construc­tion.

BABY BUGGIESExcellent quality buggies featunnc all-metal construcilon. nibber tlrea. ihock absorben a n d ntlrftctlv* finish. '

METAL STROLLERSConvenient, hsndy and Ideal for Bffordlng baby an opportunity to exercise his lep.

• Door SwinRs • Traininjj Scat.s • Porch fin tw• Cor Sca(.«5 • Juvenile Clmirs o f A ll Kinds

BABY SULKIES

GET ALL YOUR NEEDS AT ONE TIME

on EASY PAYMENTS a t

W i l s o n - B a t e s A p p l i a n c e

F I I R S A L E

pins tux

5

D E P O S I THOLDS YOUH CHOICE

VALUES TO $225

Black Dyed Caracul, Black Dyed Skunk,Sable Dyed Viscacha, Antelope, Black Dyed Fox Jacket, N a tu ra l Australian Red Fo.x,Natural Blue Fox Jacket, Platinum Dyed AVolf, Beaver Dyed Coney, Black Dyed Kid- skin, Coco Dyed Kidskin, Sable Dyed Fox Paw, Blue Dyed Fox Paw, Natural Red Fox Jacket, Sable Dyed Muskrat, Beaver Dyed Mouton Lamb.

ALSO FUR COATS FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK REDUCED FOR QUICK CLEARANCE. BUY NO W '

SAVE 25, 40, YES, EVEM 5 0 %W e A d v i s e Y o u — U r g e Y o u — t o S h o p N O W

A n d P r o f i t F r o m t h e R e m a r k a b l e V a l u e s

“Twin Falls’ Most P opu lar Department Store”

P a y ^ 5 M o n t h l yWHILE YOUR COAT IS IN

FREE S T O R A G EUNTIL FALL

NO CA RRVINi: CHARGE