british blast at reporiersees gop head nazi roosevelt...

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father forecast ;'T|i||f'.U r ■i'Sr:.;':., i ' ■ i';.^;v ■'’J'j'f .'-V :';: I ri;:';' T '/ :c ; .:: VOL. 3 a a i i . m 207-45 cents.;-:^:’n 3 '; ( ' -; M— <t Aodlt B wmv ct Olteatatlon. : T t ^ FAU^^BDAHb;' SATUBDAY, AUGUST 17, 1940 . Full «-Bopl Wirt T.I«»imi>hU SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL c m NEWSPAiPBJl British Blast at Nazi Highlights on Willkie Talk ELWOOD. Ind.. Aug. n W.W — Highlights of Wendell L. WiUkle’fl acceptance speech today: I cannot follow the President in his condaot of affairs In this critical time.' There have been occasions when many of us have wondered If he Is deliberately In- cltlns; us to war. I trust I have made It plain that in the defense of America and cl our liberties I should not hesitate to stand for war. And I believe it to btJ; first duty, of a President to try to maintain t)eace. By WALLACE CARROLL _, j NDON, Aug. 17 (U.R)—German air attacks on Britain tie to a virtual halt today while the air ministry reported ! RAF had raided far into Germany. ^n an official communique the air ministry reported that in/ the 12-hours since dawn this morning the Germans had hit made single attack on Britain. However, there were 4casional reports of German planes, possibly reconnaissance aft, flying over scattered areas. ■\t the same time the ministry reported .the RAF last ni^ht attacked many new ob- _ves in Germany including Leuna oil works, Bohlen, Augsberg and Holledz. he British attacks on sev- |il German towns is part of ampaign to blast the cen- of German power and ilyze German initiative f)th for the air blitzkrieg and Jie possible invasion of the British isles. I The air ministry indicated tho at- cks were highly successlul and at “Important objectives" were at- cked. It mentioned speclllcally tho hydrogeneration plant at Leuna, near Leipzig. The score on yesterday’s battles was placed by the-air ministry at 79 Qermttn, planes downed and 22 British'planes lost. Fourteen -Brit^ lisli pilots were ' safe. A revised tabulation placed OenQony’s '|.ojsa#i .Thursday ot HO. - ' CM<ia1tles nigh : The air nilnlstry said while ;tH0, Gennans employe4, ftwer.; jilainei yeateplay, ipoHblbly' ^becavse <Iargc about 1 p.'m ., the “proportion of 'xasualUea which" the-Oermans sus - tained continued high. There was a growing feeling here the German air force Is suffering under the punishing blows RAF and that raids will noUnSrease materially In strength yiiless Ger- many has onother ace4n the hole. Whatever the cause there ap- peared to bo a notable fall-off In German air activity today. Substantial Toll The air ministry Indicated anti- aircraft guns are talcing a sub- stantial toll of German planes. These guns destroyed 22 German planes Thursday and a total of 5T since Monday, it was said. One raider dropped 10 incendiary bombs on a soutlieast coast town this morning. Iiourteen more bombs were dropped near a golf course on the southeast coast, but there was little damage. ' The new raid began as ah- raid" protection workers dug into the debris of London’s soutliwest su- burbs which had been battered by German bombs. Londoners were angered by the attack on the suburbs and many' suggested that British planes strike at thickly populated Industrial dis- tricts in Germany. Tlio British have bombed military objectives around Essen and Munich. British planes also have flown over Berlin, but have never dropped bombs on tlio German capital. Swarms of German bombers and (Contlnufd oh Past I, Colamn 1> The Ptesldenl’s attack* on for- eign powert have been useless and daH|;wu].; has courted a war tor which ■ The coimlty ' Is Ii»pcli:^>ui)()tcparcd and em- •'.phallwUy want. I promise to outdlstanca Hitler In Uny 'contest he chooses In 1040 or after. And I promise that when we beat him we shall beat him on our own terms In our own American way. Our way of life la In competition with Hitler's nay of life. It Is a competition of energy against energy, production against pro- duction, brains against brains and salesmanship against salesman- ihlp. We must honestly face our rela- tionship with Great Britain, If the British fleet were lost or captured, the Atlantic might be dominated by Germany, a power hostile to our my of life. The confusion In the nation's mind has been largely due < to . . . lack of information fro m the White House. Some form of selective' service Is (Canllnutd on Ptse 8, ColumQ 7) ' JOKE LONDON, Aug. n (U.PJ—F irst Engllslunan: “How did you get on during the air raid?" Second Engllslmian: "Oh, I en- joyed every drop of it." There—You have London’s lat-, est Joke, born after yesterday’s bomb attack on the eastern sub- ■urbs. REPOR IERSEES §m m H iP ll By FEEDERICK 0. OECllSNEK WITH ’THE GERMAN AIR force on ’THE ENGLISH CHAN- ■NEL (via telephone to Berlin) Aug. 17 (U.R!—I saw few signs of any expe- ditionary force which the Gcrmons might be preparing to send against Britain In a tour of the French and Belglon coast completed today. My tour In company with sb( col- leagues from Berlin took me over about 2,000 miles of Germany, Bel- gium and Prance. I found scores of emergency air- fields that dot. portions of ths French and Belgian coasts from Ostend to Boulogne. But I saw llttlo sign that tin expeditionary force was behig prepared. Our trip was mode by airplane and automobile. It was conductcd by the German high command. M ake Airfields I saw how the Germans have cleverly made airfields out of farm- lands and hangars out ot haybarns. The fields are stratcglcaUy dis- tributed and are part of a vast net- work which the German air force estobllshed upon Belgian and French soli for the offensive now taking place against Britain. Neither directly on the const nor Inland did I observe any large troop concentrations, although they mi^ have been there out o! sight. I passed frequent coWmns of motor buses on the roads filled with air force men niovlng to fields or to anti-aircraft batteries.. 'These batteries, pepper'the coast. B ut,the only atthy troop trains I saw were moving to the east. Large Atllilery Pieces On three occasions I saw large railway MtUlerjfcpleces of a cnllbet ■fflijlc'ft a p p e a f i a i o ' b e big: enough to flr^ aoross the channel. The most concentrated air activity which we saw'iwas In the areo around Capo Blanc Npz and Cape GrJs Ncz which were In',the public eye years ago when Gertrude Ederle and others were swimming thq channel. Only 21 miles separate the British and French coasts there. 'The Germans showed their brll- lance' at camouflage and at many places where I had not the slightest (CoQtitiaed on F tl* Column 5) EEENDERSFLEE ROME, Aug. 17 (U,PJ—A high com- mand communique said today Bri- tish troops were “fleeing along all fronts’’ before the Italian drive Uirough British Somaliland. ’The announcement said the climax of tho Sojnallland battle had been reached yesterday, Italian dispatches from Addis Ababa In the last few days have told of Italian victories over Bri- tish forces defending seml-clrcuWr defense line south of Bcrbera, capi- tal and principal port of British So- maliland, British warships were re- ported to have left their ba'se at Aden, at tho southern entrance of the Red sea, for Bcrbera to bolster Uie British defenses. Willkie Approves Conscription in Acceptance Speech Wendell L, Willkie today fonnaUy accepted the nomination (or the presidency on the Republican ticket at his old home town of Elwood, Ind. He spoke to friends and ncl^libors at the school whfch he attended, before the acccptance speech, and here an artist sketches the scene in detill—even down to the “wrong: way” N hi “The Hope of Our Country." GERMANS ORDER FULL BLOCKADE AGAINST BRITAIN Great London Airport in Ruins After First Nazi Attack? (NEA T(Ieplioto) Alrview of tlm (rut CroyAnn iilrtlromr, oiiiy ei*lil nillci from Olimliil which w»« K target lor Nn'l I... . I'* Hllldr incrcsiitil the liileinlly of Ills '’«li|i|||t’' ria ImkI I,oM(lim proiior Rnil Ortal Urilaln. rjiime* of imok* wni§ teen Moclidliif from tli» Hold arier bombinia Tlmrmlay and ITr)d«y, ,. • By KICHABD C. HOTTELET BERLIN, Aug. 17 (U.R)—Germany proclaimed a complete blockade of the British i.sles today and in formal notes to neutral governments which have, not forbidden theif ships to enter British waters said “iii the future every neutral ship approaching the British coast subjects itself to danger of destruction." Notes were not sent to the United States and Ari;enUna, which have banned their ves- sels from British water.s. Denouncing tliq British blockade of Germany as In contravention of International law the German rov- ernment said It had “decided to retaliate with an eye for an eye iind act with the same ruthlessne,s.s" us the British “around Uie Brlilsh coo-sts,” It said, ’'n ie high couimiincl of the armed forces will. In Its oper- ations, make use of favorable ,strn- teglc positions offered by Its domi- nation of conttacntal coasts riom Bl.soay to Nortiv Oape n» well as the swoerlorlty of German nnned toms In both the'aea nnd air around England,'’ Tlio goveninieni said hcnceioith planes will attack every ship In British waters and It said'In pro- claiming n complete blockade of the Brltl.sh Isles <3erlnany was acting In tho Interests, of all Eufbpe. “It lies In tho interest ol the states themselves tliat this rctiucst (that ncutroi shljw stay away from Britain) bo followed as soon as possible,’’ the ■announceineiit siild. , . Naval warfare hiis flared up in full force In the area around EnBlatid. 'I’he wholo orca has been sowed with mines,” Eiirllcr, It .had bteii annuiuu'Ccl 'mines imd been laid by Ooinmn plain's last night In the Irish sea, Noith than;iel nnd 81. Oeor(ic’s chniiiiol nnd that hcncoforth no ship would be nbio to enter nilllsh wiilers In safety. StresBliiff Its charge th.at Iltlluln’n blockade of Gernmny was In viola- tion of Internatloiml law llio'iiovein- inent said It had'becii aiiswernl with II coiiiiter-blockado nnd tlio Blnkllm or dnmnitlnK of 0,000,000 Urns of IJrillsh nhliiiilng by tlio tlci’iunti navy iiml nlr force ulnce. tlio .start of the war. Foes Still Fail To Get Together On Plane Losses By United Prcsi ’Tlio aerial war on Brluiln entered Its seventh day today. Tlio score lor tho previous days follows: Friday (Sixth Day) Oernian claim: 09 Brlilsli planes a n ^ 2 barrage balloons shot down, 27 Crtrman plones lost. British claim; 71 German planes shot down, 18 British planes lost, Thursdoy (Fiftii Uayl Germon claim; 108 British ships shot down;, 20 Qcrnian plnne.s lo.sl, British clahn; 144 German planes shot down; 27 Brltl;ih planes lost. Wednesday (Fourth Uayl German claim; 22 British planes shot dpwn; five Gorman planes lost. British claim; 30 Oerinan planes shot down; four British planes lost. Tuesday (Tiilrd Uny) Qcrman claim; 132 Urltlsli planes shot down; '.14 German planes lost. British claim; 7U Gcrmiui planes shot down; 13 British ships lost. Monday (Necond Day) Gornian claim;, liO Ihltl.sh planes shot down; 34 Oefmnn planes lost. British claim; 01 Clennaii iilanes shot down; 13 British iilants lost. Humlaji (First Day) 'Gernuin claim; 02 British planes and eight bnrrngo liallooiis shot down; 17 aornmn pianos lost. British clahil; 05 Gerinhn plmics shot dotvii; 30 British plane.s lost. Tolais oeiirtnn elnlm; 032 lliltlsh planes nild 30 bnri'agi) balloon* shut down; 130 aermail pianos lost, lUKish elaimi 4lll Oerinan plaiirs (iiot down; 70 Urillsh piknes lost. JEROME, Aug. 17 (Special)—’Tlio mahi canal east of here will bo ^ene.of a search Sunday morning for James H. WJieatcroft, 51, man- ager of the Farmers' clevotor, Jer- ome, who disappeared ’riiunday about a p, m. Late yesterday a small boy, while hunting rabbits, discovered Whcat- croft’s car parked on tho canal bank cast of here. Officials, after looking the car over, said that fobtprlnts could be seen leadhig dlrcctly from tho car into the water. Today water had been turned from tho canal , and the Intensive search ot the canal bed will start Sunday mornlrig, according to Sheriff Lee S. Johnson, fly that time the water will have receded enough to permit the Bcarch. rvii'nds of the local businessman .said they knew ot no reason why ho should take his own llle. If this proves to bo the case and If tlie body Is found In tho canal. One friond reported srelnt: him driving his ear at about 2 p. m. Thursdoy on Main street. He was not reported as having been seen after that time. GOP Head Roosevelt Acceptance^ Talk By LYLE C. WILSON ELWOOD, Ind., Aug. 17 (U.R)—Wendell Lewis Willkie ac- cepted the Republican nomination for President today in an address in which he endorsed conscription anti material ai( to Great Britain as national defense measures and snggestet. that President Roosevelt may have been “deliberatdy in- citing us to war." . He-accepted the nomination almost as an afterthought- and said that party lines were down. Nothing could prove it better than the nomination BmZES IM PMK G ISREOPEME YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo., Aug. 17 (U.R) — Fire crews worked leverlshly today to throw con- trol llnea .arpund^ve big forest blazes In Yellowstonb park. ’The wlnd_had died down, giving the fire- fighters a chance to extend their systems of trenches. The south entrance of the park, (ilosed yesterday, because of smoke S om a big fli-e noorby, opened this ornlng. Park officials said It wiS\i!d be keptj open untU noon, and all day unless s^oke conditions be- come'bad again. Notional park service olllclals said frankly the lire situation In’ Yellowstone was “the worst In his- tory.;’ AU flresi.'however,, were In isolate4,.£$ctto,B..iar Jroin tl)o, ro,aln. hlghiyays, fe4ouiist. tfaVel' was -nbt- affeotcd. , Two New Fhijs Two new fires broke out In the park yesterday, one of them on Sph-ea creek less than a mile from the Snake river road. It was smoke from this lire that Impelled park officials to close,the entrance for a time yesterday. ’The other new fire was southwest of Shoshone lake, but Its extent was not determined Im- mediately. The Ranger lake. Moose creek, Ozol foils and Mountahi Asli creek fires still were out of control, and has spread over about 2,000 acres each. Park officials hoped to estab- lish cpntrol lines by tonight If the whid does not spring up again. ’The Fox park fire in tho Teton national forest Just south of the park bound- ary was under control, but still was botag patrolled. “FINGERS CEOSSED” M I^O D L A , Mont, Aug. 17 (U,R>- Major E. W. Kelley, regional forest- er, said today tlie fire situation in region No. 1 hod token a turn for the better “but we’ve got our fhig- ers crossed.” . The huge fire In the Nes Perce national. forest In Idaho, he said, was under control olthoijgh lilOO men still were engaged in "mop up" operations. Ho sold the crews v^lll be reduced gradually, but that the Job , (Co;illnntil on P*to >, Colnnm 6» Equalizing Board Studies UtUities BOIBE, Aug. 17 (U,R)-Tlio Idaho board of equalization today con- tinued hearing representatives of utilities aa members considered doto on which nsse.ssed voluatlons o^ the utilities will be based. Mondoy, os-scssors of all Idaho coimtles will meet with the five- member board to discuss abstracts of county nsses.'unents. After all assessment data Is considered, ten- tative tax rotes for the ne.xt fiscal period will be Ihed. of himself—a liberal Demo- crat>—by IJie G. 0 . P., he said. ’ He invited all races, creeds and colors to join the battle for “the preservation of American democracy” . and challenged Mr, Roosevelt to meet him in a nation-wide stumping tour to debate be- fore the same audiences and from the same platforms, the fundamental issues of the campaign. That was Winkle’s platform today nnd It took precedence over the .doc- ument contrived of sweat, camprom- iso and anidous anger by tl^ Re- pubUoon platform commltteo which met at the PWladelphla conTm-' tlon. , , ’The candidate’s home town ms out en masse to cheer the tnmll town boy who had m ade good. Thou- sands from coast to coast were In Callaway park to see the Republi- can leader of the t^trd attempt,to stop Roosevelt and the first attempt to ,block a tiilitl term. ' Tiie 'cerenioiuea w ere' as 'tursJ os an 4o(»>fir«i^,,so!rt*t^^:iir.'<^ , eanwaiti«(.fc^.YfUilde>»-ovra.irorilfc !' Ask tor Sebatei ' “I want to meet the-champ," he had said when he was nominated, - Bo ho called out Mr. Roosevelt todiy face-to-Iace In meetings that would top the Llncoln-Douglas 'debates preceding tho Civil wai, II the date was accepted, WlUkle made a poundtog' attack on Mr. Roosevelt as a President and leader and proposed to can? It on. He charged that the President "dis- torted” Ubemllsm and was leading tho. United States 'down the road toward destruction and dictatorship trod by France imder the regime of Leon Blum, who may face trlaj In Prance. He said lir. Roosevelt emplojed polltlcol persecution throtigh toies, that he Incited'doss agolnst class and that the New Deal had distrib- uted poverty Instead of the .more abundant life among the people, Old-Time Ubeitd “Because I am a b u ^ e ^ man connccted.wlth a large company, thi . doctrinarians of the opposition have attacked me as an opponent ot lib- eralism," he said. "But I was « liberal before many of these men had heard of the word and I foUght for many of the reforms of the el- der LaPollette, Theodore Roosevolt and Woodrow Wilson before anofh» Roosevelt adopted—and dlstortcd- liberallsm.',' Willkie called the roll of spend- ing and unemployment. "Where li tho recovery!" WUIU# asked. On that thcme.be based bis f|nt campaign appeal. But he endorsed substantially great areas of tho New Deal fabric. Specifically, he com- mitted hlmstlf' to thot much of Uio New Deal policy as is covercd to tho following quotation from on ad- dress by President Roosevelt: Back Two Principles "Wo will extend fo th o opponenU of force the materldJ’Tesources o( tills nation, and at the fame t|mg we will harness Uio use of those to- souixcs In order tliat we, ourselves In tho Americas, may have ttiulii- merit and training equal to the task (CDDtlnutd >n P a n I. Colama I) All Candidates Show Vote Gain As Official Canvass Is Ended All eniulidutes for iialiomil, Btntc and (;ounty ))o.sts iii the 'fwiii Falls county primary election showed minor iri'ins ovur uiiotficinl results i\a Ihu bonrd of commiH-sionurs an- nounced complete tallioH in the formal caiivaBs tliis after- noon. .Only ono rcveranl ol' nom- ination occuh'od a.M I'Oiiult of tho caiivaDH—K. V. Molandcr tnkhiK tho Unpublican first (liittrict coii)ininiiionor rano by 18 votes over A, 15. Klinn, for- mor coiiimlfinioner. Ooinpai'lsuii of tho buiii'd's ciin- vn,'-..s wltll the uiiiifllclai fliiuirs iiub- llshcd the day i^flor tho prlmiil'y showed O m t Uio bulk of th e cliongo came bccnuso 'Fwln Falls precinct No. 3 announced only a |>ortlon ot Its ballots. Tliat fact completely' re- veracd 'th o Molaiulcr-lUlss race. When Uio commissioners bcRnn Uielr canvass tliey were f0i<30<i to call pieoinct Mo. 3 offlclnls to order tho sccond of tho two cleotlon books brought to the coiii tliouse. Only ono lind been turned In. Major ItMiilU tiioliniigOl All niiijor I'CiiultSi In'U ic county remained a s ' at first announced. Kiecloi's of the county favoi'ed James ll. fiolliwell os Uoniqcrntio smmtiulol noinltico; ii|iheld Frank Keenon oVor Ira Mantois lU oon- Bressloiml choice! endorsed Obaso A. Olark over J. W. ’ftiylor for tho gov- ernoiflili), KoiinblUiaii voters gave John Thomm n landslW* apptobA- tlon; granted Qovj 0. A. BotiolUen an even grenlcr margin. In llio MoIander-lCllas commli- slonershlp contest, tlio reversal camo when Twin FoU b No. 3 was found 05 ■vole.i Bhovl lor ICllss and 87 jlmit for Molondnr, Hollister results, tiirni ed In as 13 for ICIlsl nnd soven lor Moiander, were actually Just tin opiTOlto.ln tlio ofllclol canvass, ' lUlkcr for Coroner , ’I'lio ooiuiilcted figiirei showed tlitil Mrs, Wtls Btradloy, O. 0, P, Incumbenl luperlntondont of 'pub* llo . Inntruotloii, still rotahiM li;r :v place as tlio roclplont o t th« lilglictt total volo on oltlior tiokOt for iliy , office, Bho had 3,lo t Ooiig, B to 0, Dwornlmk VM iioxt wlUi 9,11 Tho only major county |XM(l craUo was blanji on t|io Dcmocral (Ciiilln«i4 m r t it I. 4) &

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Page 1: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

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O ltea ta tlo n . : T t ^ FA U ^^B D A H b;' SATUBDAY, AUGUST 17, 1940 . Full «-Bopl Wirt T.I«»imi>hUSuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL c m NEWSPAiPBJl

British Blast at Nazi

Highlightson

Willkie TalkELWOOD. Ind.. Aug. n W.W —

Highlights of Wendell L. WiUkle’fl acceptance speech today:

I cannot follow the President in his condaot of affairs In this critical tim e.' There have been occasions when many of u s have wondered If he Is deliberately In- cltlns; us to war.

I trust I have made It plain tha t in the defense of America and cl our liberties I should n o t hesitate to stand for war. And I believe it to btJ; f irs t duty, of a P resident to try to m aintain t)eace.

By WALLACE CARROLL

_,j NDON, Aug. 17 (U.R)—German air attacks on Britain tie to a virtual halt today while the air ministry reported ! RAF had raided fa r into Germany.

^n an official communique the air ministry reported that in/ the 12-hours since dawn this morning the Germans had h it made single attack on Britain. However, there were 4casional reports of German planes, possibly reconnaissance

aft, flying over scattered areas.■\t the same time the ministry reported .the RAF last

ni^ht attacked many new ob- _ves in Germany including Leuna oil works, Bohlen,

Augsberg and Holledz. he British attacks on sev-

|il German towns is p art of ampaign to blast the cen-

of German power and ilyze German initiative

f ) th for the air blitzkrieg and Jie possible invasion of the British isles.I T he a ir m inistry indicated tho a t-

cks were highly successlul and a t “Im portant objectives" were a t- cked. I t mentioned speclllcally tho

hydrogeneration plant a t Leuna, n ea r Leipzig.

T he score on yesterday’s battles was placed by the -a ir m in istry a t 79 Qermttn, planes downed a n d 22 B ritish 'p lan es lost. Fourteen -B rit^ lisli pilots w ere ' safe. A revised tabulation placed OenQony’s '|.ojsa#i .Thursday o t HO. - '

CM<ia1tles n igh : T he a ir niln lstry said w hile ;tH0,G ennans employe4, f tw er.; jilainei yeateplay, ipoHblbly' ^becavse <Iargc

ab o u t 1 p . 'm ., th e “proportion of 'xasualUea which" the-O erm ans su s­tained continued high.

There was a growing feeling here th e G erm an a i r force Is suffering under th e punishing blows R A F and th a t raids will noU nSrease m aterially In strength yiiless G er­m any has onother ace4n th e hole.

W hatever th e cause the re ap ­peared to bo a notable fall-off In G erm an a ir activity today.

S ubstantial Toll The air m inistry Indicated a n ti­

a ircraft guns are talcing a sub­s tan tia l toll of German planes.These guns destroyed 22 G erm an planes Thursday and a total of 5T since Monday, it was said.

One raider dropped 10 incendiary bombs on a soutlieast coast town th is morning. Iiourteen more bombs were dropped near a golf course on the southeast coast, but the re was little damage. '

The new raid began as ah- raid" protection workers dug in to the debris of London’s soutliwest su­burbs which had been battered by G erm an bombs.

Londoners were angered by the a ttack on the suburbs and m any' suggested th a t British planes strike a t thickly populated Industrial dis­tric ts in G erm any. Tlio B ritish have bombed m ilitary objectives around Essen and Munich. British planes also have flown over Berlin, but have never dropped bombs on tlio G erm an capital.

Swarms of G erm an bombers and (C o n tln u fd o h P a s t I , C olam n 1>

The Ptesldenl’s attack* on for­eign pow ert have been useless and d aH |;w u ].; has courted a war tor which ■ The coim lty ' Is Ii»pcli:^>ui)()tcparcd a n d em -

•'.phallwUy w ant.

I promise to outdlstanca Hitler In Uny 'contest he chooses In 1040 or after. And I promise th a t when we beat him we shall bea t him on our own terms In our own American way.

Our way of life la In competition with Hitler's nay of life. I t Is a competition of energy against energy, production against pro­duction, brains against brains and salesmanship against salesm an- ihlp.

We m ust honestly face our rela­tionship with Great B ritain , If the British fleet were lost or captured, the A tlantic might be dom inated by Germany, a power hostile to our m y of life.

The confusion In the nation 's mind has been largely due < to . . . lack of information f r o m the White House.

Some form of selective' service Is (C an lln u td on P t s e 8, ColumQ 7) '

JOKELONDON, Aug. n (U.PJ—First

Engllslunan: “How did you get on during the air raid?"

Second Engllslmian: "O h, I en­joyed every drop of it."

There—You have London’s lat-, est Joke, born after yesterday’s bomb attack on the eastern sub-

■urbs.

REPORIERSEES§ m mH i P l l

By FEED ERICK 0. OECllSNEKW ITH ’THE GERMAN AIR

f o r c e o n ’THE ENGLISH CHAN- ■NEL (via telephone to Berlin) Aug. 17 (U.R!—I saw few signs of any expe­ditionary force which the Gcrmons m ight be preparing to send against B ritain In a tour of the French and Belglon coast completed today.

My tou r In company with sb( col­leagues from Berlin took me over about 2,000 miles of Germany, Bel­gium an d P rance.

I found scores of emergency air­fields th a t do t. portions of ths F rench a n d Belgian coasts from O stend to Boulogne. But I saw llttlo sign th a t tin expeditionary force was behig prepared.

O ur tr ip was mode by airplane and autom obile. I t was conductcd by the G erm an high command.

M a k e A ir f ie ld sI saw how the Germans have

cleverly m ade airfields out of farm­lands and hangars out ot haybarns.

The fields are stratcglcaUy dis­tributed a n d a re part of a vast net­work w hich th e G erman air force estobllshed upon Belgian and French soli for th e offensive now taking place aga in st B ritain.

N either directly on the const nor Inland did I observe any large troop concentrations, although they mi^ have been th e re out o! sight.

I passed frequent coWmns of m otor buses on the roads filled w ith a ir force men niovlng to fields or to an ti-a irc ra f t batteries..

'These batteries, p e p p e r'th e coast. B u t,th e only atthy troop trains I saw were moving to the east.

Large Atllilery PiecesOn th ree occasions I saw large

railw ay MtUlerjfcpleces of a cnllbet ■fflijlc'ft a p p e a f ia io ' be big: enough to flr^ aoross th e channel.

The m ost concentrated air activity which we saw'iwas In the areo around Capo B lanc Npz and Cape GrJs Ncz which were In ',the public eye years ago w hen G ertrude Ederle and others were swimming thq channel. Only 21 m iles separate the British and F rench coasts there.

'The G erm ans showed their brll- lance' a t cam ouflage and a t many places w here I h ad n o t the slightest

(C oQ titiaed o n F t l * C olum n 5)

EEENDERSFLEEROME, Aug. 17 (U,PJ—A high com­

mand com munique said today B ri­tish troops were “fleeing along all fronts’’ before the Italian drive Uirough B ritish Somaliland. ’The announcem ent said the climax of tho Sojnallland battle had been reached yesterday,

Ita lian dispatches from Addis Ababa In th e la st few days have told of I ta lia n victories over Bri­tish forces defending seml-clrcuWr defense line south of Bcrbera, capi­tal and principal port of British So­maliland, B ritish w arships were re­ported to have left the ir ba'se a t Aden, a t tho southern entrance of the Red sea, for Bcrbera to bolster Uie British defenses.

Willkie Approves Conscription in Acceptance Speech

Wendell L , Willkie today fonnaUy accepted the nom ination (or the presidency on th e Republican ticket a t his old hom e town of Elwood, Ind. He spoke to friends and ncl^libors a t the school whfch he attended, before the acccptance speech, and here an artist sketches the scene in d e till—even down to the “wrong: way” N hi “T he Hope of Our Country."

GERMANS ORDER FULL BLOCKADE AGAINST BRITAIN

Great London Airport in Ruins After First Nazi Attack?

(NEA T(Ieplioto)Alrview of tlm (ru t CroyAnn iilrtlromr, oiiiy ei*lil nillci from Olimliil which w»« K target lor

N n 'l I.... I '* Hllldr incrcsiitil the liileinlly of Ills ' ’«li|i|||t’' r ia ImkI I,oM(lim proiior Rnil O rtal Urilaln.rjiime* of imok* wni§ teen Moclidliif from tli» Hold arier bombinia Tlmrmlay and ITr)d«y, ,. •

By KICHABD C. HOTTELETBERLIN, Aug. 17 (U.R)—Germany proclaimed a complete

blockade of the British i.sles today and in formal notes to neutral governments which have, not forbidden theif ships to enter British waters said “iii the future every neutral ship approaching the British coast subjects itself to danger of destruction." • •

Notes were not sent to the United States and Ari;enUna, which have banned their ves­sels from British water.s.

Denouncing tliq British blockade of Germany as In contravention of International law the German r o v - ernm ent said It had “decided to retaliate w ith an eye for an eye iind ac t with the sam e ruthlessne,s.s" us the British “around Uie Brlilsh coo-sts,”

I t said, ’'n i e high couimiincl of the arm ed forces will. In Its oper­ations, make use of favorable ,strn- teglc positions offered by Its domi­nation of con ttacn tal coasts riom Bl.soay to Nortiv Oape n» well as the swoerlorlty of German nnned to m s In both the 'aea nnd air around England,'’

Tlio goveninieni said hcnceioith planes will a ttack every ship In British w aters and It sa id 'In pro­claiming n complete blockade of the Brltl.sh Isles <3erlnany was acting In tho Interests, of all Eufbpe.

“It lies In tho interest ol the states them selves tlia t th is rctiucst (tha t ncutro i shljw stay away from Britain) bo followed as soon as possible,’’ the ■ announceineiit siild.

, . Naval w arfare hiis flared up in full force In the area around EnBlatid. 'I’he wholo orca has been sowed w ith mines,”

Eiirllcr, It .had bteii annuiuu'Ccl 'mines im d been laid by Ooinmn plain's la st n ig h t In the Irish sea,Noith th an ;ie l nnd 81. Oeor(ic’s chniiiiol nnd th a t hcncoforth no ship would be nbio to enter n illlsh wiilers In safety.

StresBliiff Its charge th.at Iltllu ln’n blockade of G ernm ny was In viola­tion of Internatloim l law llio'iiovein- inent said It had 'becii aiiswernl with II coiiiiter-blockado nnd tlio Blnkllm or dnmnitlnK of 0,000,000 Urns of IJrillsh nhliiiilng by tlio tlci’iunti navy iiml nlr force ulnce. tlio .start of the war.

Foes Still Fail To Get Together

On Plane LossesBy United Prcsi

’Tlio aerial w ar on Brluiln entered Its seventh day today. Tlio score lor tho previous days follows:

Friday (Sixth Day)O ernian claim: 09 Brlilsli planes

a n ^ 2 barrage balloons shot down, 27 Crtrman plones lost.

B ritish claim; 71 G erman planes shot down, 18 British planes lost,

Thursdoy (Fiftii Uayl Germon claim; 108 British ships

sho t down;, 20 Q crnian plnne.s lo.sl, B ritish clahn; 144 Germ an planes

shot down; 27 Brltl;ih planes lost. Wednesday (Fourth Uayl

G erm an claim; 22 British planes shot dpwn; five Gorman planes lost.

B ritish claim; 30 O erinan planes sho t down; four British planes lost.

Tuesday (Tiilrd Uny) Q crm an claim ; 132 Urltlsli planes

shot down; '.14 G erman planes lost.B ritish claim; 7U Gcrmiui planes

shot down; 13 British ships lost. Monday (Necond Day)

Gornian claim;, liO Ihltl.sh planes shot down; 34 Oefmnn planes lost.

B ritish claim; 01 Clennaii iilanes shot down; 13 British iilants lost.

Humlaji (First Day) 'G ernuin claim ; 02 British planes

and eight bnrrngo liallooiis shot down; 17 aornm n pianos lost.

British clahil; 05 Gerinhn plmics shot dotvii; 30 British plane.s lost.

Tolaisoeiirtnn elnlm; 032 lliltlsh planes

nild 30 bnri'agi) balloon* shut down; 130 aermail pianos lost,

lUKish elaimi 4lll Oerinan plaiirs (iiot down; 70 Urillsh piknes lost.

JEROME, Aug. 17 (Special)—’Tlio m ah i canal e a s t of here will bo ^ e n e .o f a search Sunday morning fo r Jam es H. W Jieatcroft, 51, man­ager of the F arm ers ' clevotor, Jer­ome, who disappeared ’riiunday abou t a p, m.

L a te yesterday a sm all boy, while hun ting rabbits, discovered Whcat- c ro ft’s car parked on tho canal bank cast of here. Officials, after looking th e ca r over, said t h a t fobtprlnts could be seen leadhig dlrcctly from tho c a r into th e w ater.

T oday w ater had been turned from tho canal , and the Intensive search o t the canal bed will start Sunday mornlrig, according to S heriff Lee S. Johnson, fly that time th e w ater will have receded enough to perm it the Bcarch.

rvii'nds of th e local businessman .said they knew o t no reason why ho should take h is own llle. If this proves to bo th e case and If tlie body Is found In tho canal.

One friond reported srelnt: him driving his e a r a t about 2 p. m. T hursdoy on M ain street. He was not reported a s having been seen a fte r th a t time.

GOP Head Roosevelt Acceptance Talk

B y LYLE C. WILSON

ELWOOD, Ind., Aug. 17 (U.R)—Wendell Lewis Willkie ac- cepted the Republican nomination for President today in an address in which he endorsed conscription anti material ai( to Great Britain as national defense measures and snggestet. that President Roosevelt may have been “deliberatdy in­citing us to war." .

He-accepted the nomination almost as an afterthought- and said that party lines were down. Nothing could prove

it better than the nomination

BmZES IM PMK

GISREOPEMEYELLOWSTONE PA R K , Wyo.,

Aug. 17 (U.R) — Fire crew s worked leverlshly today to th row con­trol llnea . a r p u n d ^ v e big forest blazes In Yellowstonb park . ’The wlnd_had died down, giving the fire­fighters a chance to ex tend the ir systems o f trenches.

The sou th entrance o f the park, (ilosed yesterday, because of smoke

Som a big fli-e noorby, opened this ornlng. Park officials said It

wiS\i!d be keptj open untU noon, and all day unless s^oke conditions be­com e'bad again.

Notional park service olllclals said frankly the lire situa tion In’ Yellowstone was “ the w orst In h is­tory.;’ AU flresi.'how ever,, were In isolate4,.£$ctto,B..iar J ro in tl)o, ro,aln. hlghiyays, fe 4 o u iis t. tfaVel' was -nbt- affeotcd. ,

Two New Fhijs

Two new fires broke o u t In the park yesterday , one of them on Sph-ea creek less than a m ile from the S nake river road. I t w as smoke from th is lire tha t Impelled park officials to close,the en trance fo r a tim e yesterday. ’The o ther new fire was southw est of Shoshone lake, but Its ex ten t was not determ ined Im­mediately.

The R an g e r lake. M oose creek, Ozol foils and Mountahi Asli creek fires still were out of control, and has sp read over about 2,000 acres each. P a rk officials hoped to estab­lish cpntro l lines by to n igh t If the whid does n o t spring up again . ’The Fox park f ire in tho Teton national forest Ju st south of the p a rk bound­ary was u n d e r control, b u t still was botag patrolled.

“FIN G ERS CEOSSED”M I^O D L A , M ont, Aug. 17 (U,R>-

M ajor E. W . Kelley, regional forest­er, said today tlie fire s itua tion in region No. 1 hod token a tu rn for the b etter “but we’ve got our fh ig- ers crossed.”. T he h u g e fire In the N es Perce

n a tio n a l. fo rest In Idaho, he said, was u n d er control olthoijgh lilOO men still w ere engaged in "m op up" operations. Ho sold the crew s v^lll be reduced gradually, but t h a t the Job

, (C o ;il ln n til on P * to >, C o ln n m 6»

Equalizing Board Studies UtUities

BOIBE, Aug. 17 (U,R)-Tlio Idaho board of equalization today con­tinued h ea rin g representatives of utilities aa members considered doto on which nsse.ssed voluatlons o^ the utilities w ill be based.

Mondoy, os-scssors of a l l Idaho coimtles w ill meet with the five- member board to discuss abstracts of county nsses.'unents. A fter all assessm ent d a ta Is considered, te n ­tative tax rotes for the ne.xt fiscal period w ill be Ihed.

of himself—a liberal Demo- crat>—by IJie G. 0 . P., he said. ’ He invited all races, creeds and colors to join the battle for “the p r e s e r v a t i o n of American democracy” . and challenged Mr, Roosevelt to meet him in a nation-wide stumping tour to debate be­fore the same audiences and from the same platforms, the fundamental issues of the campaign.

T h a t was Winkle’s p latform today nnd It took precedence over the .doc­um ent contrived of sw eat, camprom- iso and anidous an g e r by t l^ Re- pubUoon platform com m ltteo which m et a t the P W ladelphla conTm-' tlon. , ,

’The candidate’s hom e town m s out en masse to ch e er th e tnmll town boy who h a d m a d e good. Thou­sands from coast to coast were In Callaway park to see th e Republi­ca n leader of th e t^ t r d attempt,to stop Roosevelt an d th e first attempt to , block a tiilitl term . '

T iie 'cerenioiuea w ere ' as 'tursJ osa n 4 o (» > f ir« i^ ,,so ! r t* t^ ^ : iir . '< ^ , eanwaiti«(.fc^.YfUilde>»-ovra.irorilfc

!' Ask tor Sebatei '“I w ant to m eet the-cham p," he

h a d said when h e was nominated, - Bo ho called out M r. Roosevelt todiy face-to-Iace In m eetings th a t would top the Llncoln-Douglas 'debates preceding tho Civil w a i, II the date w as accepted,

WlUkle made a poundtog' attack on M r. Roosevelt as a P resident and leader and proposed to c a n ? It on.H e charged tha t th e P residen t "dis­to rted” Ubemllsm a n d was leading tho. United S tates 'down the road tow ard destruction a n d dictatorship trod by France im der th e regime of Leon Blum, who m ay face trlaj In Prance.

H e said l i r . Roosevelt emplojed polltlcol persecution thro tigh toies, th a t he Incited 'doss agolnst class and th a t the New D eal had distrib­u ted poverty Instead of the .more abundan t life am ong th e people,

Old-Time U b e itd “Because I am a b u ^ e ^ man

connccted.wlth a large company, thi . doctrinarians of the opposition have attacked me as a n opponent ot lib­eralism," he said. "B u t I was « liberal before m any o f these men h ad heard of th e word and I foUght fo r m any of the reform s of the el­der LaPollette, Theodore Roosevolt and Woodrow Wilson before anofh» Roosevelt adopted—a n d dlstortcd- liberallsm.','

Willkie called th e ro ll of spend­ing and unemployment.

"Where li tho recovery!" WUIU# asked.

On th a t thcm e.be based bis f |n t campaign appeal. B u t h e endorsed substantially great a rea s of tho New Deal fabric. Specifically, h e com­m itted hlmstlf' to th o t m uch of Uio New Deal policy as is covercd to tho following quotation from on ad­dress by President Roosevelt:

Back Two Principles "Wo will extend fo th o opponenU

of force the m aterldJ’Tesources o( tills nation, and a t th e fam e t|mg we will harness Uio use o f those to- souixcs In order tl ia t we, ourselves In tho Americas, m ay have ttiulii- merit and training equal to the task

(CDDtlnutd >n P a n I . C o lam a I)

All Candidates Show Vote Gain As Official Canvass Is Ended

All eniulidutes for iialiomil, Btntc and (;ounty ))o.sts iii the 'fwiii Falls county primary election showed minor iri'ins ovur uiiotficinl results i\a Ihu bonrd of commiH-sionurs an­nounced complete tallioH in the formal caiivaBs tliis after­noon. •

.Only ono rcveranl ol' nom­ination occuh'od a.M I'Oiiult of tho caiivaDH—K. V. Molandcr tnkhiK tho Unpublican first (liittrict coii)ininiiionor rano by 18 votes over A, 15. Klinn, for- mor coiiimlfinioner.

Ooinpai'lsuii of tho buiii'd's ciin- vn,'-..s wltll the uiiiifllclai fliiuirs iiub- llshcd the day i^flor tho prlmiil'y

showed O m t Uio bulk of th e cliongo came bccnuso 'Fwln Falls precinct No. 3 announced only a |>ortlon ot Its ballots. T lia t fact com pletely ' re- veracd ' th o M olaiulcr-lUlss race. W hen Uio commissioners bcRnn Uielr canvass tliey were f0i<30<i to call pieoinct Mo. 3 offlclnls to order tho sccond of tho two cleotlon books brought to th e coiii tliouse. Only ono lind been tu rned In.

M ajor ItMiilU tiioliniigO lAll niiijor I'CiiultSi In 'U ic county

remained a s ' a t first announced. Kiecloi's o f the county favoi'ed James ll. fiolliwell os Uoniqcrntio smmtiulol noinltico; ii|iheld F rank Keenon oVor Ira Mantois lU oon- Bressloiml choice! endorsed Obaso A. Olark over J . W. ’ftiylor for tho gov- ernoiflili), KoiinblUiaii voters gave John T hom m n landslW* apptobA-

tlon; granted Qovj 0 . A. BotiolUen an even grenlcr m argin.

In llio MoIander-lCllas commli- slonershlp contest, tlio reversal camo when Twin FoUb No. 3 was found 05 ■vole.i Bhovl lo r ICllss and 87 jlmit for Molondnr, Hollister results, tiirni ed In as 13 for ICIlsl n n d soven lor Moiander, were actually Just tin opiTOlto.ln tlio ofllclol canvass,

' lUlkcr for Coroner ,’I'lio ooiuiilcted fig iirei showed

tlitil Mrs, Wtls Btradloy, O. 0 , P, Incumbenl luperlntondont of 'pub* l lo . Inntruotloii, still ro tah iM li;r :v place as tlio roclplont o t th« lilglictt total volo on oltlior tiokOt for iliy , office, Bho had 3,l o t Ooiig, B t o 0 , Dwornlmk VM iioxt wlUi 9,11

Tho only major county |XM(l craUowas blanji on t|io Dcmocral

(C iiilln « i4 m r t i t I . 4)&

Page 2: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

Vage Two IDAHO (EVENING TIMES, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Saturday, August ]L7,

NAZIS CLAIM EAS’T LONDON DEVASTATBD BY BOMBS

OFFfiHEN. EEKSmBy JOSEPH W . O n lO G , JB .

Aug. 17 (l).R)-aciTO W -fialmcd today her air force h a d W t thB slunu rt east London a amok-, tog ruin, reduced Britain’s b e s t h a r ­bors and moat productive w a r Indue- trles to rubbli, and set a p ace to r her vaat aerial oHenslve ca lcula ted to m ake tlio'Brltl»h Isles deXeMeless.

This copllAl seethed w ith excite­m ent over oniclal reporta of t r e ­mendous devnstatlon visited upon um don 's Induitriftl suburbs a n d <«* flclal claims ot a b ig victory In the greatest air battle of h is to ry In

, which the Qcnnans claim cd. a t least ao BrlllJh pUmes w ere sho t down and' S7 p erraan c ro f t weremlfislnSi , j

In addition, the Germans claim ed the ir planes lanlt fl British d es tro y e r

■ yesterday., Break Throueh Defenses

Asserting tliclr bombers a n d fig h t­ers broke through British coastal and air defenses a t will In y es te r­day’s furious raids, th e Q etm ans said " the air over England h n a been fought free" ol elfecUvc res is ta n ce .

• The Ocmians sa id "at le a s t 100 of their raiders, Including a new type bomber of. devastating power,

• fought their way past the B ritish coasts to strlki tor the Ilrst tim e a t

. London Itsel!.T he olalms ol destruction w ro u g h t

Upon London were baficd on rep o rtsl ^ o e d homo Iroih reconnaissancePlanes which, the Qormans said,

. tru leed over Uifl a re a while bom bera unashed a t Uielr ta r g e t a n d em - batUed fighters "danced o v e r th e London fog llko gnats over a sw am p .

' DNB, ofllclal ao rm an .new s agency, carried the radio re p o r ts to the German press.

Chlel Objectives T he chief objectives blasted, DNB

sold, Included the Tliomes h a rb o r district, arsenils,' warehouses, r e ­frigeration plants and m u n itio n s

^ * ^ 6 'bombs started “h uge fires rasing on both tides of th e 'T h am es whUe British fighters and a n t l - a l r - oraft guns made “unavailing '’ a t ­tempts to break up th e ra iders’ close formations, DNB said.

T he British lought, DNB so ld , as though they reaUzed "everyth ing w m at stake—exiilence or n o n -e x ls t-

Back From CoastMrs, Gerald MlUtr, Filer, has re ­

turned from Los Angeles, where she visited friends and relatives.

Goes to MontonkMrs. Cora Stevens, county treas­

urer, Je ft this afternoon for Ana­conda, Mont., to visit her aunt, Mrs. Sarah Wenger.

Completes Conrse Miss Wanda Eaton has returned

from AJblon S ta te Normal school where she has completed a summer course.

Eetum s to Coast, Miss WUma Keel Is returning

tomorrow to Son Pranclsco, con­cluding a vocation visit with her mother, Mrs. Inez Keel.

B ere 'F rom Pomona 'Mrs. H aw l Fasoacht, Pdmoha,

Calif., Is visiting re la tives and friends in Twin PaUs.

To VlsU Father . Mrs. Keith Carlson and children Will arrive tomorrow from Loi An­geles to visit Mrs. Carlson’s fatljer, H. P. Barger. Mr. Carlson wUl Join them shortly for a vacation visit

From California Mr. and Mrs. L, M. Young have

returned from San Francisco and Los Angeles, accompanied by Miss NeU Westlnei Los Angeles, sister ol Mrs. Young.

Join Airlines Miss Ada Brown, daughter of Mrs.

Pearl Brown, has been accepted as a hostess by the American Airlines. She recently visited her mother here.

(snce.'Airdromes around London w ere

.Intensively bombed, and G e rm a n reconnaissance planes reported th®? saw "signs of great, destruction."

London was Just one poin t o t a t ­tack. Military objectives n o r th of the city were bombed and a large power plant at,Enfield was b la sted with high cjploslves. the G e rm a n s

'eald. South'and southeast E ng land , isWetH«peat«ltM3etotacked again., ,

-----r-T—A

Keturn to Boise Mrs. J . H, Stew art and Mrs. Hugh

Pouch, mother and sister of Mrs. Albert Wegener, have returned to Boise, followbig a visit ot the Weg. ener home.

From Outinc Rev. and Mrs, H, O. McOalllster

and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Latham, ’Twin Palls, and Rev. and t o . A. E. Martin, Jerome, returned last even­ing from a brief outing a t the Riley cabta on Warm springs creek.

Conclude Visit Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Howard have

returned from Deary, where they have been guests of their son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Gorrle. Miss Patricia Oorrle, a granddaughter, returned with them for a brief visit before school starts.

Rodeo Enthusiasts- M r ^ n d Mrs. J . W.' Newman and Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Brown wUl be a t the .Newman summer home a t Ketchum during the Sun Valley ro­deo. ’They will be Joined by Mr. and Mrs. Larled Jenkins and daugh­ter, Sharon, who a re ranching above Stanley.

(Fron P m Oni) flghtersT-aome estimates p laced the num ber'at 3,50^ -sw ep t out of leaden skies from dawn to dusk and b lasted England, Scotland a n d W ales, and BOBle broke through the defenses to reach London, the h e a r t of B rltaU i’s far flung empire.

Terrille BombincT he great ’Tilbury docks a n d the

Industrial southwestern su b u rb s were subjected to a terrific bom b­ing.

The m ajorltj of B ritain 's new s­papers made no e ffo rt to m inlm lM seriousness of the raids and gave equal promlnenco to the " fan ta s tic "

■•‘claims of Germany.Britons minimized foreign press

reports London had been sub jec ted lo a terrlilo bombing. Londoners were amazed to re a d the G e rm a n

' claims of htfte successes In tlie bombhig ot military objectives in the suburbs, because w ith exceptl the bombing ol Croydon a

ot an ncrlal bllUkrleg here.

Nursery School

nlo la s t cvenlns at th e city park . Qnmcs figured In th e ente ment.

The nursery icliool, which closed last evening, will be reopened Sept. 1, according, to Mrs. loin Johnson , in charge.

E. M. Wilson, Boise, assistan t d i­rector of the prolessional a n d ser­vice department, a n d M arlon E. Hoyt, Bplse, chlel clerk, were spec ia l guests.

Tlio refrcElunents com inlttec In­cluded Mrs. Mary. Wnnicr, M rs. Ruby H arral and Mrs. Robert P au lk .

Former Visitor at Murtaugh Killed

MURTAUOn, Aug. n (Special)— Allred Dressleln, who had Ju st re ­turned to his parents’ homo In Now York, after spending a year hero with h is brother and slstcr-ln-Iaw , Mr. and Mrs. John Dressleln, w as ac - clilontally killed rocontly, according to word received hcre.-Dotniis werfc not Icnrned.'

Mr. Dressleln wn» iJoni In G er- ‘ many, Juno 2 0 ,1030, a n d besides ills

lirolhcr in Murtaugh, is survived by Ills parents, Mr. and M rs. D avid D. Dressleln; a eliter, Uerllio, a n d ■> Ijrolhcr, Michnol, all o f New Y ork .

nO Y DltOtVNS IN IlIVER lO llIM ES PASB. Idn ., Aug: 17 (U.R)

“ -Funeral scrvlcM will bo com luo t- (kI lomorfow for ratrlok Idolil, fo u r - ycw-old son ot Ht, a n d Mrs, l lo n iw Moll! of Orlmcs l>nn, wiiO d row ned lliHh# louUi'fork, o f the I’B yctle river ,w iim In luinUlod Into tlio Bitonm. fi'o'in » do-foot clllf w h c io lit nnd K bi'other were playing.

Baptist EvangelismDr. O. P itt___________le Northern B aptist Council on

World Evangelism, will dhrect a con­ference in the local Baptist church at 3 p. m. Monday for officers and workers ropresenUng .11 Baptist churches of the C entral association. A mass meeting is called for 8 p. m., to which the public is invited.

In .B o lie Twin Fails reildenti w hp were

registered yesterday a t B oise hotels Included W. Osterloh, M r. and Mrs, W . I. Tanner and Jack tyne« .

Iowa Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Carl GlUesple, Clar-

inda , la., a re visiting a t th e home of h is brotlier, J . E. Gillespie. This is M r. Gillespie’s firs t visit west.-They wUl visit S un Valley a n d other points of Interest whl)e h e re .

Rodeo ncM nrailw u Mr. and Mrs. Dan J . Cavanagh

an d daughters. Miss P eggy Cavan- agh and Miss B arbara Cavanagh, le f t this m om ihg for S u n Valley to a tten d the annual rodeo. T h e y have reservations for Saturday an d Sun­d ay a t Sun Volley lodge.

H ere From GeorgU Isadora Friedm an h a a anlved

from Savannah, Oa., f o r several weeks’ visit w ith h li m o th er, Mri. L ena Friedm an. n i e y will be m em bers of a party from T w in Falls w ho wiu attend the B u n . Valley rodeo tomorrow.

From South Dakota Mrs. H. N. W ledenman has re­

tu rn e d from South D ak o ta where sh e attended funeral serv ices' for h e r father, H. Douglass. M rs, L. F. Kelley, Idaho Palls, an o th e r daugh­te r, was also a t the services, Mr, a n d Mrs. Boyd Wledenman.lroquoiB, S . D., son and daughter-in-law of, M rs. Wledenman, and M iss Phoebe P . W iedenm ui, Deadwood, 8 . D., h e r daughter, returned w ith her to Twh» Falls.

A t the HoapitalPatients adm itted te th e ’Twhi

F a lla county general ho sp ita l in elude M yrna Brewer, B u h l; Marvta B ond and Mrs. Ray K och , ’Twin P alls, and Mrs, WUUam Herndon, K hnberly. P atty Skeen, M rs. G. T loknor and daughter. T w in Falls; P . AntUle, M urtaugh: H a rry Stakes, A lice TUley, Buhl; H a ie l M ae Ba­d en , Plcabo, have been dismissed.

NewB of RecordMarriage Licences

AUG. nAlbert E. Mayer, 25, and Florence

M. Pratt, n , both o f Twin Palls.Royal L. K aufm ann, 37, Twin

Palls, an d Fern Preymlller, S3. Burley.

Wililam Stevenson, 35, and Anne Dorris, 33, both of Seattle. Wash,

AUG. 16Lloyd E. Jenson, 20, Preston, and

Dolsy Dene Thomas, 23, Twin Falls.Willie Edward Pare, 34. West

Plolns, Mo„ and Louise Margaret Henry, 24, Palo Alto, Calif.

TemperaturesBlln. U t i . Pr«e.

Ilo lu ...................... ................66 tt7, Uutte ........ ................... - ........40 HO

C#lBBry .............. .. ________SO 70Chicago ........... ..._______ VL

‘ Denver ^ ._6fl (jflHavre .....^__ - . ..46 7iK alispcll ................... .......4B 77K tn iaa C ity ___ ..... .'..69 60Lui Anu«ilc> ............... HIM ilrt C \ly _____ .— .......68MlniicuiintiB ......- ...... . _____60 (tn

, N pw York ............. .. ............... 69 7NO m sha ......... .. ____ 69 MSPoc«tello ..... ........... ............... 60 91

• I’o rtl tn d .........._ .fl3 H81 St. Louli .......... ..........------- ---- 74 9S

Kail U k e C ity . ____ 69 9StJan F ra n c lic o ..... .. ..............8& 76Seattle ....................... ................66 77TW IN F A L L S ........ _______ 49 HliWiUUlon _________ ............... 6bYcliowiionB .............. ..............46 HI

Last Call ComesTo H. J. Harris

Funeral senlces for Henry J. Hai-rls, 38, who died suddenly last night following a h e a rt attack a t his home. 125 T hird avenue south, were being arranged today.

Ho had apparently been hi good health. M r. Harris was born Oct. 1, 1001, a t Oaksdale, Wash. He mar­ried Nellie H unter July 1, 1027, at Boise.

Survivors Include Mrs, Harris, a tliree-year-old daughter, Juno Faye; his nioUier, Mrs. G llie Harris. Twin Falls; and four sisters, Mrs. Perry King, Vancouver, W ash,; Mrs. Helen Glenn, Boise; M rs. Robert Dlng- fleld, ’Twin Palls, an d Mrs. Paul Gil­man, Twin Palls.

’Tlio body rests a t the White mor­tuary.

DRAFl?Maybe i t ’s the arm y d ra lt pro-

po.ial.But whether It Is or not, the

maningo license business In ’rwin Wills county took n sudden up- ward opurt tvilay. lu a one-hour iwrlml from 11 a. in. to noon Auditor W alter 0 . Mungrave dlj- ponscd no lew th a n four licenses. Two other* were iesued yesterday aflei'nooii.

Previously t h e mntrlmonlal lloeliBe'"(iurve" im tln’l shown any apprrolabi* rise whatever.

Complaint Names Driver in Crash

Because h e assertedly le f t the scene of an accident w ith o u t giving h is nam e, address,- auto registration num ber and without show hig his d r iv e r’s license. Bud K ea tin g has been nam ed defendant In a com' p la in t filed to probate cou rt.

K eating was assertedly in a crackup a t the rim -te-rim bridge S unday . T he other car w as owned by O. A. Ranfbo.

T h e defendant has not y e t been ■ralgneoHBie-ls-understood -to be-ln

Jerom e.

Masonic Picnic to Be Staged at Filer

M asons a n d Eastern S ta rs of Twin P a lls , B uhl, flolllster, a n d Filer lodges, and) their families, will as­sem b le Sunday at the T w in Falls co im ty fairgrounds, Flier, for the a n n u a l picnic.

T h e lodges will furnish ice cream, co ffee and lemonade to supplement t h e lunchcs Uiat picnickers will tiring . Lunch will be served sliortly a l t e r noon.

A ball game, horseshoe pitching a n d o th e r festivities are scheduled.

(Fro*—coroner—w as filled through writerln cam paign th a t nom inated 0 . A. Kelker. Twin Falls new spo- perman. k e lk e r was bailed by J h e county centra] committee, and will be the party ’s nominee on the N o­vember ballots.

Tabulation of!votes for Justice of the peace a n d for constable a sp ir­ants in th e county was nearing conclusion th is afternoon a t th e auditor’s office. Bwause m any of those posts h a d no nombaees on the ballot, w rite-in votes produced a tangle ot five deadloclu Involving 10 persons.

’The commissioners today were contacting th e persons Involved w ith Instructions to appear at the court, house a t 2 p. m . Monday, when lo ts will bo draw n to decide the ties.

The com plete official results of th e county’s p rim ary voting for s ta te and county oUices;

DEMOCRATIC0 . S. senate—Bothwell a,i

Taylor 688, D onart 233.Congress—K eenan 1,003, Parsons,

m, M asters 604, Howell 301.Governor — Clark i,33i, Taylor

1,083, Barnes 620.L leutenant-govem or — G o s s e t t

1,831, Simons S8JS, George 276.Secretary of sta te—Ourfis 2,635.State audltor-r-W rlght 2,571.State treasurer—Eiiklng 2,614.A ttorney-general—Miller 2,026, E l­

liott 722.Superintendent of public Instruc­

tion—Roberto 2,513.Mine h ispecter—Campbell 2,026,

Wilson 649.State senator—Wlthom 3,401.State representative—Prater 2,060.

Alworth 1,646, Roberta 1,618, Thom p- som;426.

Commissioner, firs t district—H a rt 2,631.

Commissioner, thh 'd district — Johnson 2,40p.

Sheriff—Lowery 2.409, Van A us- dehi 990.

Treasurer—S tev en s 3,738.Probate J u d g ^ W a lk e r 3,489.Supt. of public instruction—L ar­

sen 3,410.Prosecutor—P aulson 1^93, R obert­

son 896, S m ith 701.A ssessor^Bamharit3,634.Coroner—K elker. 163, (all w rite-

in).Surveyor^M Umlck 2,479,

R ErU B U C A NU. s. senate—llio m a s 3,489, S h i-

olab- 337, A dam s 211, Price 164, D ot­son 09, Dulaney 72, G off 104.

Congress—D w orshak 3,138,Governor—Bottolfaen 3,021, M c-

Dougall 401.L leutenant-govem or — W hitehead

2,220, Lewis OOO.Secretary of- s ta te—Hardwick 826,

KeaUng 633, Bw an 763, Day 706.State aud ito r — R o d g e r s 1,445,

Schoenhu t 704. Bulltlnch-a33.

' Electrical tra n sfo rm er spitting fire as it blows o u t in downtown section . . , M an .wearing WlUkle button but teU ing friend "don’t think I ’m all R epublican , though” . . . Marriage licen se counter look­ing like parade a s altar-bou^d couples get t h a t legal document . . . Lady d river scraping fender of parked car, g e t tin g out ot h e r own m ach ine, carefully rubbing scratched ferWer with chamois cloth . . . One sm a ll boy socking, another on e a r , ' th e n protesting he was only k id d in g as second youth squares o f f fo r pugilism. . . And Lorry D aly, Cowboy mascot, taking It like a l i t t l e man as door in Evetlmes o ffic e s catches h is finger while h e ’s reporting Junior Pee Wee ball score .

PAUL

M n . Angus MacRae and daugh­te r s , M ary Jean, Dona an d Doris, a n d th e ir guest, Mrs. K itty Tlghe, Hollywood, and Miss W ihna Dean, re tu rn e d Sunday from the MacRae c a b in n ea r Hailey.

M rs, Abble Watkins, en route to h e r homo In Los Angeles from Se­a t t le , stopped to visit her brother, F r a n k D arrough, and family.

M rs. H an n ah Hicks entertained at a bh-thday party Wednesday honor­in g h e r five-year-old daughter, Mel­b a Jean . A large decorated blrtliday c a k e an d Ice cream were served by t h e hostess, assisted by her daugh­t e r , M argare t Ellen,

M r. and M rs. Jack M arthi drove to M in idoka Mondoy to meet h is broth­e r , BUI M artta , who has been seri­o usly 1)1 In th e Veterans' hospita l at B o ise. M r. M artin Is Improving and w ill rem ain here until able to return to h is work.

E dw ard Bllnco Is rccovcrlng from a p a h ifu l blow on the chest, received w tie n a sledge hammer cam e off Uie h a n d le , s trlcU ng hbn on the-cliest.

L a s t week Mr. Hamilton. ’Twin P a lls , w ith h is local representative g a v e a showing of pictures on de­velopm en t of transportation to COO en ro llecs of Cam p Paul at th e camp. T h e y fin ished by showtog pic tures of sk iin g a t S un Valley.

T w o representatives f r o m Camp P a u l re tu rn ed Sunday from aquatic schoo l a t Pocatello, where exam ina­tio n s wore given for life saving. Over 50 m illion w ere there representing th e d iffe ren t camps over the district. E n ro llee C harles Howe was one of th e few to pass the .rigid exami­n a t io n and qualify as a life saver. H e w ill supervise swimming a t Cahip P a u l.

L ieu t. G eorge MUierik a n d fomlly of Com p P aul loft Sunday fo r Chi­ca g o an d o ther eastem polnte on a v ac a tio n trip .

M lnldoko stake mci..bcra of trail buU ders of th e primary association o f h . D. S. church, about 60 boys, d ro v e to A rlesian Inst week to en­jo y a picnic and swimming party, ’T licy were accompanied by M rs. Or­v ille M iller an d Mrs. Andrew Peter­son.

V erl Greon* Doward Miller, Dean C oon and F red Arthur Wldmler, P a u l Boy Scouts, who spcht a week on o n outing in the Gawtootli moun- t a ln i w ith HoybUrn llo;' Scouts, re­tu rn e d last week.

JoM * Dllllngton, Jr., Paul, Booul- in n stc r, w ith four Roouts, J a y Mer­rill, Lnuronco and Charles O la r and K e llli Jacksoil, drove to Lake Cleve­la n d last week and spent tw o dnyi on a n millng.

B tateT treasurer—Painter 3,033.A ttorney-general—Millar 2,805.S uperhitendent of public Instruc­

tion—D avls-W lcks 1,300, Murray 907, B arker 707.

M hie Inspector—Campbell 2.446, Dye 683..

S ta te s e n a to r-N e a le 3,887.State representatives - Relnke

2,450, M organ 2,409, Busmann 2,158, TOwan 1,323.

Commissioner, fh-st district—Mo- lander 1,535, KUss U 17.

Commissioner, third district—P ot­te r .3,066.

Treasurer—Leighton 1,890, Leslie U 76.

Probate Judge—Bailey 3,433. J en ­nings 667.

S uperin tendent ol public tastruc- tio n -S trod ley 3,167,

Prosecutor^—Swceley 1.739, Cam p­bell 1^07, B arnes 353.

Assessor — Childs 1,313, Shrout 1404 f’ Sheriff—H aw kins 3,028.Coroner—Newberry 2,939.

-. Surveyor—M errick 2,893,

Former Highway Worker Succumbs

GOODING, Aug. 17 (SpcctoD— LewD H ex R eed died at 7:30 a.m. today a t Gooding, following s lin­gering Illness.

P rior to his Ulness, Mr. Reed had been employed by th e Idaho state highway depa rtm en t,

Fiinerol services will be hold a t 3 p jn . M o n d a y a t th e Thompson chapel, under th e dhectlon of the Thompson m ortuary . Burial will be hi Gooding.

He was bo rn Jan. IS, 1003. at Sprague, Mo., a n d canie to Gooding with his paren to about 20 years ago.

Among the survivors are his wife. Mm. Edith R eed, hla father, A. B. Reed, Gooding. His mother pre­ceded him in death .

Mother of Four Seeking Divosce

The m other o f four mhior daugh­te r! filed divorce su it in d istrict court today on grounds of non-sup- port.

She la Mrs. M ary Rogers, who sued Rowe Rogert. ’The pair married M arch IS, 1025 Iri Arkansas. Mrs. Rogers asks custody of the tour children and seeks "reasonable” suport mopey. H er counsel Is O. C. Hall,

Infant SuccumbsJEROME, Aug. 17 (Special) -

Elmer E. R ichardson, Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Jo h n T. Rloliardson, Wendell, died la s t night. Fimeral services will be hold Monday a t 2 p. m. a t thu L J t^ l. churah In Jor- onio. Bishop R. G. Harston offici­ating. ’The child was born Ju ly 3, 1040,' a t Jerome.

Man Wins DivorceFreil E. Hosselkua, claiming de­

sertion since M arch of 1039, won a divorce dewree In dlstvlct comt F ri­day afternoon against Mri, Irene IIOMelkli*. n i o p o ir married In J a n ­uary of 1034, At Orce<le, Colo. ’Tlio wife und Ihelr tWo soiiil, elnht 'aud U y ea n old, a re now In Colorado.

NOAITACKPIAN(Fr«ia Oni)

suspicion there^ w a s a n airfield one could hear th e ,w h irr in g of motors.

’The aviators a n d anti-aircraft crews radiated confidence that th e German offensive agatast B rltata would succeed.

Harvest H an d ShortageThe Belgian (ind F rench country­

side looked well c a re d for. The grain crop was being b ro u g h t In but there was obviously a sh o rtag e of hands.

In both F ran ce and Belgium thhigs are definitely s till to the tidy­ing up stage, a lth o u g h gencrol re - , construction has n o t ye t started o n any large scale.

Villages which a couple of months ago were deserted a n d bleeding w ith the new wounds o f w ar today a re agahi Inhabited, b y th e h former res^ Idents.

’The v l l la g u 'a r e making a d e ­termined effort t o restore life to normal as quickly a s possible.

Hit-Run Charges Follow Accident

Pacing a charge o f h it and ru n driving. Bernard R . '(Tuffy) Ford was being held i n th e city Jail to ­day, police records show.

Ford was placed u n d e r arrest th is morning by local p o lice and the com - plahit agahist h im was signed by Max L. Brown. B ro w n alleges th a t B^rd failed to s to p a f te r the car ho wos drlvhig was Involved In a crash wth the Brown c a r .

I t was believed th a t the case against Ford w ould be heard la te this afternoon by M unicipal Ju^ge J. O. Pumphrey.

Wife Says Husband ■7PiafTt~Support Her

Non-support a n d desertion were listed today as g ro u n d s for divorce hi a district court s u i t filed by Mrs. J ane 'P atton against Donald Patton, whom she wed In 1915 hi Kansas. The couple has n o m inor children. 0 . 0 . H all Is a tto rney for the wife.

READ THE T IM E S WANT ADS.

(iinniT uuDDBrn

KELLOGG, Ida., A ug . 17 (U.ra- Idoho 's mining -and fa rm in g indus­tr ie s m u s t-s ta n d to g e th e r to take p a r t In a new form o f n a tio n a l life, a type o t m ilitary p ttp o red n ess . Gov. 0 . A. Bottolfsen teld th e m iners and ■meltermen of th e S h o sh o n e county a re a today a t th e ir 36 th ann u a l pic­n ic here.

Bottolfsen outlined th e position of m ining in relation to th e Industrial a n d economic life o f Id a h o during ft ie 60 years o f Id a h o ’s statehood. H e lauded the p ioneer s p ir it of th e m en who opened the- C o eu r d'Alene m in ing district: In th e 1850's.

H e said m ining a n d agricultural In te tests m ust,try to u n d ers tan d and consider th e -co m p lex a n d highly specialized na tu re of theh r respective industries on a com m on basis.

H e emphasized the n a t i i r a l wealth of th e s ta te and sa id h e w as certain th e sta te’s resources w o u ld be used to assist in p reserv ing American prlncdples of governm en t ”«t any cost.-'

UNDER CONTi(froa F i l l Ont>

of extinguishing the f ire will be a long one. - - 'L Fire t n d e r C o n tro l

M ajor Kelley ,also repo rted tho t th e K ootenai rive r f ire In Canada, Ju st north of th e In te rnationa l line, w a s ' “under con tro l a s f a r as the D nlted S tates Is concerned ." He said the fire did n o t cross- th e line.

’T he Caribou m o u n ta in s fhre, also ju s t no rth of th e border In Canada, w as described a s "to h a n d at the m om ent.” M ajor Kelley sa id he did n o t expect the ' fire to cross into U nited S tates tlrhber.

Crews of U. S . fh e flg h te rs were sen t from here to h e lp Canadian' au tb o rltie s ..flg h t.th e f ire s .

Boy Scouts Gain 6 Advancements

S ix Boy Scoute, m em b ers ot two troops in H azelton a n d Jerom e, to­day received approval, o n applica­tions made for Issuance o f second class rankings, records a t th e Snake rive r area council offices here show.

Those recelvtag ronk advancem ent approval follow:

-Troop 46. H azelton: Dale H. Chrlstopherson. Gale H , Chrlsto- pherson, and Qlen, B au m . Scout- inaster of the troop is K oy L. Gale.

Jprorne, troop 30: D on G ray, Nor­m an Hardesty an d T h o m as Henoge. Scoutm aster of thi> trn o n Is T. n . HawlbyT ”

i t ;FISH PLANTEDCOEUR D’ALENE, A ug. 17 (U.R)—

F ifty thousand f ta g e r lln g trou t from the federal h a teh e ry a t Boze­m an , M ont, today had b ee n planted by airplane In th e K ooskla and Sel- way districts under superv ision of David J. Machiy, s ta te d lre ^ o r of fish culture.

P lrs t i fall tesSon of th e mer­ch an ts ’ bureau ;of th e Cham ber o t Commerce wlU b e > W n ex t Monday noon a t the Rpgersbn h o te l'an d the "very Im portant- question” o f th e back-to-school pro ject will be dis. cussed a t th a t Ume, It wos on. hounced th is afternoon by R J . Val. Iton, chairm an. - J’

C hairm an of the back-to-school prom otion committee Is Russell H. jMisei). O ther members a re Rob­e r t H. W arner and E. H. Gyer.

PUn Day Tentative plans have been fo r

m iilated for-“ Back to School day" w hich will be observed F riday , Aug. 23. . . -

Such tentative p lans call' fo r a parade to be hold through the dow ntow n section s ta rtin g a t 10 a. m . w ith a t least fou r competitive sections and one non-competitive section. Cash prizes will be-aw ard­ed . w in n ers ' in each competitive section. -

All children .en terh ig Into and partlc lpath ig to the parade wUl re­ceive “free treats,” those in charge said.

F ree Ban ’Ttlokets I t Is also , p lanned to dlstrib)ite

free baseball tickets to thpse par- U dpatlng to the parade, the tickets being good a t Jaycee park fo r ad­mission to- the Tw to Falls-Idaho. -Falls baseball gam e th a t evening. D etails as to the m anner to which th e tickets wUl be distributed wlU be announced following M onday’s to ltla l m erchants’ bureau session. D istribution of the free baseball tickets Is made posslb lethrough co­operation of Hugh Pace, business m anager of the Cowboys.

As reg iu :dL thauj£6m lng parade, com mittee members said th a t calls would be Issued for members o f the staffs of local firms to aid In con­ducting It, and cooperation w ill be sought o t the Monday meeting.

Employe of U. C. Called by Death

F uneral services fo r J. E. Hill, 73, Kimberly, employe of the U tah Construction company for m any years, will be held Sunday a t 2 p jn . a t the Kimberly M ethodist church, Rev. E. L. White, pastor of the F lier Methodist church, officiating.

H e was a member of the K nights of Pythias and the ' M ethodist church. Mr. Hill, who died last evening a t the Twin Falla county general hospital, foUowkig a 10-day Illness, was bora to Gentry county. Mo.

Surviving arp his wife, Mrs. Dena Hill, Khnberly, and the followhig sons and daughters. Cloy Hill, Po­catello: Mrs. W alter E, Johnson, Notus; Mrs. Charles W lniiett. Good­ing : H alp liT lill, Ktoiberjy; Mrs. M arvin Rasmussen and Jam es F. Hill. Rexburg; John Hill, Coeur d’Alene.

’Thp body rests a t the White mortuaiir.

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFYMoINTOSH apples for cooktag. Good

size. Kenyon Green. Ph. 0264J3

'NEW>

1941 HudsonsNow On Display

STATE MOTOR CO.130 SECOND AVE. NORTH .

Greatciil value per dollar ever offered the American public. Listed below are features found on no other car in America.

0 Symphonic Styling . . . A selection of hi- terlor co lo r combinations tha t harmonize with th e exterior colors . . . a t no extra cost, N E V E R OFFERED IN AOT LOW PRICED OAR BEFORE.

f More B lie and Room . . , Bigger by far than ony o th e r car in the lowest price field.

9 Most L uggage S p a c t. . . Biggest luggage space eve r built Into any sedan body, re­gardless o t price.

9 More P ow er . , . No car even close te Its price haa ever equalled the power of this 1041 H udson Six.

0 Safest S topp ing with H udson's Patented Double-Safe H ^rau llcs . . .'Hie extra pro­tection o f tw o braking systems (hydraullo and m echanical) working off the same foot

. pedal, N O T OBTAINABLE AT ANY PRICE IN ANY O n p i CAR.

0 S a f e r Driving . '. . Surer, steadier stcerhig w ith Patented Auto-Poise Front Wheel C ontro l, which helps to keep wheels on th e i r true course, even If a thre blows. N O OTHER CAB HAS ANYTHING LIKE IT .

t ’The time to th ink of SAFETY Is before you buy your car.

« F i n e s t . Steering . , , True Center - Point S ystem , used in only two other cars, both i n th e high price field.

« S m oothest R idtog . . . F toest Independent F r o n t Wheel Coll Springing, unlike any u s e d before except to a few high priced ca rs .

9 N ew Bilent Bhifting . , . With Unproved a ll-s ile n t synchromesh transmission of ty p o used to very coetly tars.

The H udson car holds practically every hill clim bing record in existence; every speed record and every en d u ran ce record from 1 to 20,006 miles,

. These reco rd s were made under the American A utom obile Aasooiation contest board super­vision, the o n ly unbiased Judge you have to go by in regards to th e endurance, speed ond power of any c a r. If you buy by comparison you will b uy a Hudson. ’Tliey have more powef, more room: u se m ore alloy m etals, have the hardest b lock and more safety features than any car built in th e United States.

By com parison this car is also th e easiest rid ing c a r built, th e only car in the low priced field tha t has tru e center poin t steerhig, radial safety s tee r in g contrfil and a ir foam oushioni w ithout extra coat. ,

’Tlie 'B tato M otor Co. Is nlocklng thousands of d o lla rs of new parts and equipment to give you Uie^service you liavo the righ t to expect. You only h a v e to look a t the new Hudsons th a t are traveling o n the roads In ’Twin Falls County to rea lize the tremendous strides we hav i made in sales. Ask any Hudson owner about w ha t th o y th in k ’ o f ' tlielr Hudson or the service we give.

All service an d repairs to Hudson owners a re given o n time paym ent basis It desired. Sales- m m and su b -d e a lo n are desired w ithin a radius of 100 miles of ’Twin Falls, and the •m nlleit places can m a k e frofti 13,000 to 13,000 l» r year.

The H udson factory m an will be here lot th e n ex t le w days to Uitecvlew tUose Inloresleil m K lU b-dealorshlp, and 'iveryone Is Invited to see a n d r id e In these wonderful Hudsons.

TATE MOTOR COMPANYi

ER['ilBEMlIT

Action to aeek revocation of pa­ro le—and an b rder m aking effective a one to 14-year.prison sentence— will be taken against K yle Jam es. Buhl, by Prosecutor E vere tt M. Sweeley after jsentenpe Is passed against the mim in probate cou rt on charge of drlvtog while to to x le a te i

Jam es must oppear before P robate Judge C. A. Bailey a t 10 a. m . M on­day. He pleaded guilty Frldoy a f te r ­noon to the driving com plain t a f te r a rre s t by a s ta te police officer o t B uhl.

The young m a n was paroled last Feb. 6 under an order w hich sus­pended execution of h is sentence for g rand larceny. He and several others- w ere accused th e n of stealtog a calf a t Buhl. ■

Speeder Assessed Fine of $5 Here

Ferris T. Freestone, K im berly, who was arrested here on charges of speedtog, was releosed a fte r pay­m en t of a ftoe of $5, police records show.

Freestone was arrpsted n ea r Five points east th is m orning and was said to have been traveling 40 miles a n hour at the time.

Appearing before M unicipal Judge J . O. Pumphrey, h e pleaded guilty to th e charge.

(

$ 4 2 5

Prices Going Up? BUY^aW

’37 CHEVnOlET M A S T E R DeLUXE SED AN -Low mUe- age, market price C i t IS $495, our p d c e . . . . 9 4 4 9 ’36 CHEVROLET M A S T E R DeLDXE COUPE, excellent condition, .had good core, m arket $305, 6 2 i i Cour price ............ 9 ^ 4 9’37 PLYMOUTH D e L U X E COUPE, extra good condition, good tires, m arket $476,

: _____ $ 4 * 5•38 V-8 DeLUXE FORD O R SEDAN, original black fhilsh, a modern Deluxe F am ily car. M arket (S95,our price .............’37 V-S DeLUXE TUDOR SE­DAN. Its Clean. I t ’s ex tra Volue. M ar&t $476, our price...,'■36 CHEVROLET M A S T E R TOWN SEDAN. New finish, Good Rubber, reconditioned. M arket (345. 6 <9 A Couj- price ............ 9 A y 5•37 DcSOTO' TOCR SEDAN, has overdrive. F loating power. M arket price C$505, our price.... 9 4

.’35 DODGE SEDAN, F loat- hig'power, H ydraulic B rakes.

•Has nearly a new motor. M ar­ket-price 1345.o u r price ...........•35 PONTIAC COUPE. A good Looker and Is good. M arket price $3«,our priee ............•35 CHEVItOLET D e L U X E COUPE. Plenty oi miles. I t ’s Economlcol. M arket price

....i - $ 2 4 5■39 FORD V-8 05 II.P. TRUCK, 168 W 3 . , 2 Speed Axle, 710x20 6 Q A A •nres, 16000 Miles '35 CHEVROLET T R U C K , B eet Body,167 W 3 ......................9 X 4 3’39 V-8 PICKUP, 4 Speed

$ 4 9 5Speed

Trans.,for I.....*37 V-8 PICKUP,Trans,,fo r ....................'37 MACK JR .M TON P,U,...„•35 INTERNA-TIONALP.U. ..... 9 1 / 3

Don’t Bay we Didn’t Tell you. See,your. Ford Deni­er first and save $50 or

more.

$350$275

UNION MJJDR[DE 23!C T ;:« 7 4 g 2 2 D aaE

‘ i

Page 3: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

mI '

faturdA7r August 17,1940 IDAHO EVENING T IMES, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Pag(| Thw8

BACK “DEFENDERS" IN ARMY GAMES

B y ARTmiR L. 8CH 0EN I Y ELM , Wash,, A uj. 17 tU.!l)-Den-

Im -c lad troops of th e arm y ol tho lo u th poised for a knockout blow a g a in s t defending " red " forces a t fo u r points alons th e Nlsqually rl'

. v e r today.O nly an annlsUce ca ll by Brig,

G en . Henry T. Burgin, chief um« p lr e o f the fourth arm y 's annual m aneuvera In'southwest. W ashington app a ren tly could save th e northern fo rces from a beating before the " w a r” officially comSs to an end to ­n ig h t

T h e nrtrthom. arm y pf 18,000 troops, most of them regulars, was th row ing heavy reinforcem ents ta to th e badly shattered sectors. In l a s t s tand to, prevent, Invasion of th e lower Puget sound region, b u t s t i l l they «ere forced to give ground befo re the numerically superior force o f 26,000 men.■' T h e Invading "blue” arm y ad' vanced under a heavy smoke-screen la id doTO by chemical w arfare units a n d th e pincer m ovem ent It a t ­te m p te d th re a ten ^ n o t only the m a in defense force b u t th e north ' e m headquarters as well.

Storm H eigh ts'Cavalry and infantry stormed the

h e ig h ts above the Nlsqually river a n d w ithin a few hou rs were en, g aged in one of the few pltchsd b a t­t le s of the maneuvers, in the fla t fa rm lan d s around th e Centralia powerhouse.

B o th armies suffered severe aerial tosses. The defending “red” troops lo s t 14 of thefr' 21 p u rsu it planes, a f ly ing fortress and th ree obser­v a tio n planes. H ie “blues" were ch a rg ed with the loss o f 33 out of 80 observation planes a n d a blimp.

D efense forces were m om entarily successful yesterday when they tJirew back an attack across the M cK enna, bridge, but w ith in a few h o u rs amjored cars th row n into the f r a y succeeded In fo rd ing the NiS' qually southeast of M cKenna.

Four-Point D rive S trategy of the invadtog forces

w as believed to be a fou r-po in t drive ac ro ss the stream to sp lit the de­fen d ers and dislocate th e ir lines of com munication. Artillery and m a­ch in e gun units kep t, u p a steady s tre a m of fire against Che Invaders vain ly seeking to prevent them from rep a irin g bridges destroyed In the re tre a t.

W h e n , the games en d tonight,• s ta f f officers of the fo u rth army and th e national guard im lta from the n in th corps area will ca ll the 190 um pires Into conference to decide th e ac tual outcome of th e four-day b a t tle and to study ttie weaknesses a n d strength disclosed.

. BMIFOIIiim

B O ISE , .Aug. 17 (U.FD — Seventy- n h ie Idahoans today h M been call­ed to appeor in BoUe fo r duty with th e federal grand Jury an d a pros­pective federal district co u rt Jury.

O f th a t number, 20 w ere ordered to rep o rt Sept. 8 for th e federal g ra n d Jury and a venire of 60 will re p o rt for duty Sept. a with the prospective federal d is tr ic t court Jury.

Included among those called for th e federal Jury wore R . J . Lemmon, R ichfield ; Clarence Alien, Twin P a lls ; Charles R. K ays, Jerome; J o h n H. Ayres, Bliss; A lber Bayllss, S hoshone; Charles B lackhard. Hog- e rm a n ; B. M. Collen, Jerom e; Ralph F au lk n e r, Ooodtag.

Prospective trial Jurors Include C harles P. Baker and, J . W . Henry of Gooding; Harry A. B all, Phillip W . BeU, H. O. Hayes, • Sidney L. K n ig h t, Holmes O. Lash and J , £1. R oberts, all of Twm F a lls; Orland B atesm an of Burley; L. L. Fisk and R ay G am er of Rupert: F ran k Hen­derson and Lawrence Tew s of Sho­shone ; Phllllp A. KennJcott, Jr., of H agerm an ; Donald McCloud a n d L eslie Lawton, both o f .Wendell; W illa rd Nelson and E. J . K l r ^ a t - riok, both of Dietrich; an d Doud P u rd u m of Jerome.

VETERAN, H TO JO IN O. A. R.LLANEROH, Pa. (U.R) — William

R lttb r, a 04-y e a r -o ld Civil w ar v eteran , who law G en. Robert E. Lee surrender a t Appomattox t o e - q u a rte rs of a century ago, h a s final­ly decided to Join the G.A.R. He will be Inducted Into Ellis Post 0 by M oses I. French, 98, sole luhrlvlng m em ber of th i post.

B E A D THB TIMES WANT ADS.

«• * SPE C IA L REDUCED

ROUND TRIP ■

FAREST O SALT LAKE CITYfor tilt World Prcmicta of the Motion Picture '

' ' B r i g h a m T o u n g ’ *

August 23l.nvo All*. 11,. 22 Of 21

I Rehitn tlmlt, Aug. 35

Ajk yoNT Lofsl Agftrt h r tttiaih

U N IO N P A C i n C

R A ILR O A D

Finer Service for Mothers and Babies

’ S tm addiU qn to the m a tjrq ity homo th e Tw in Piffli rtm ny general hoq iita l,' t o c h wlU be open to pobllo inspection for the flitfe t to B p. m., is shown above. W ith completion o f thenew addition , iflit hospital !• now able to oare for 25 mothon with no crowding. Amon^r the room s found In th'e new addition are to^ private roofUA two wor4i, two doliverr rooms a n d one preparation roojci^ a room fo r th e doctors, a n office for the n n rse a'ffd iBcitrental rooms. (Timea Pholo and EnsfkvVlng)

• Miss Hansen, superintendent o f nurses a t the county general hospital, inspccla new Itnce oper-atIoj|t-wasHlng^ basins' a t th e matemitjr hom e. At the left of the picture Is a portion of one of tw o com*

t ^ delivery ^ m s . Amonr equipm ent shown in the picture a re th e delivery table an d the- lighia. (T im ts Pholo and Engravinfi:)

N urse ffijjma Noble is iliOTm above (llsi^ayini: th e new infant baskets in th e nursery a t the m aternity holne. P rb rlsions have been made for the oare of 25 babies at one time. T he room ii soundproofed so th a t m others will not be disturbed ^should all th e babies cry at once,** as one hospital official p u t It.

(Times .Photo and Engravlnf)

New Maternity Home Ready for Inspection

New maternity home a t th e Tw in Palls county general hosp ita l will be open fo r public Inspection th e Initial time Sunday between th e hours of 2 and 5 p . ni.. It was announced to ­day by H . 0 . Jeppesen, superh itend- ent.

D uring those houis th e general public is invited to take th e oppor­tunity o f inspecting tlie new home, which Is completely modern in every detail a n d . which fea tu res new equipment. Tea will be served du r­ing visiting hours.

25 i t a TimeWith completion of the n ew addi­

tion to th e maternity home, 25 m oth­ers can now bo cared for a t one tim e with no crowding..

Four private rooms, tw o wards (cdch having three beds), one prep­aration room and two m ain delivery rooms a re found in the new section.

The p rivate rooms are equipped with Simm ons beds and alrfoam m attresses, a comblnotlon m eal tray and beauty table which fits over the bed, a closet, dressing tab le, dresser and easy chair with foot stool. Ve­n etian 'b linds are a t the ia fg e w in­dows a n d drapes to m atch th e crcam and w hite walls and ceUlnga haVe been hung . The flooring is grey linoleum with green trim. Provisions

hlive been m ade for air conditioning the entire sttuc ture.

Two Delivery Itoonli'The two delivery rooms have a

deUvery table, complete gas m a ­chines, an instrum ent table, a baby Incubator, a solution bowl stand arid Castle lights. Sterilizing .equipm ent Is in an adjoining room.

Q uarters for the doctors a re equipped w ith rest room and show er and also a lounge. Tlie nurses' o f ­fice room has a modern chart tab le and In a separate room the la te s t automatic bed pan washer has been Installed.

The new nursery can provide fo r 25 babies a t one lime and is .com ­pletely equipped with the lotest d e - vlce.s. Including thermostatic w Ster control.

Remodel Old Btcllon Announcement was also - m ade

tha t tlie old section of the^maternlty home will be completely rem odeled, but the work will be carried on in such a m anner tha t It will n o t b e necessary to close the itrnctu re a t any time.

Completion of the new m a tern ity building gives Twin Foils county general hospita l the finest su ch quarters In Idaho. The expansion program was the second In six years.

Lasso-Toss Blocks Woman In Suicide Plan at Bridge

aWLEEl 1

WASHINGTON. Aug. 17 (U.R) — The w ar deparlment nnnounced to ­day th a t i t has completed o rrange- menta to purchase 1.617 acres of land tw o miles northwest o f Ogden, Utah, w here a $6,165,000 genera l de­pot will be established.

The depo t will serve as a base for genera l supplle.s for th e arm y, particu larly from the Pacific coast to the m iddle west. The la n d was appraised a t $342,000 anc}. congress voted $213,000 toward.s th e p u r­chase. T h e Ogden •Chamber of Commerce has offered to buy and donate $100,000 of land. I t agreed also to assist In disposal o f w ater rlchts a n d In ihe salvage of im ­provem ents on the fills.

MaJ. G en. Edmund L. Gregory, quarterm aster Keneral. sold th a t w arehouses lor the chemical w ar­fare service, the engineer, m edical, signal a n d quarterma.ster corps, will be constructed In addition to a d ­m inistrative buildings, utilities ,Qhd railroad facilities. Gregory said $1,665,000 is now available to begin the construction. Expansion of the facilities, .he .said, will require an additional $4,500,000 which is not now available.

DEPuiy mmAIIDIPRII

BOISE, Aug. 17 (U.ra—Dan Covnn- ttugh today was named deputy w ar­den of th e Idaho state prison, suc­ceeding Em m ett Corbhi. who re.slgn- ed W ednesday after W arden Pearl 0. M eredith was dtscharged by the state prison board.

H erm an Falls, regular parole of­ficer, w as selected by new Wnvden Gilbert Talley as chief Identifica­tion clerk, succeeding Ed W hitting­ton, who like Corbin, .Tyjiigt Helen Duvaney an d Guard Eorle Williams quit W ednesday, No succe.ssors have been named for Miss Duvaney and W illiams.

■^Tiree guards who were discharg­ed by M eredith were reinstated last n igh t by Talley.

Suicide leap off the Twin F a lis- Jerome Intercounty bridge by prominent form er Twin Foils w om an hud been frustrated today by a le r t work of two deputy sheriffs.

The deputies, Roy Puller o nd Claudii Wiley, prevented th e w o­man's leap Friday afternoon w hen F*uller lassoed the woman and bo th men then climbed over the bridge ralUng to drag her back to -the travelway of the span.

About 50Sheriff L. W. Hawkins did n o t d i ­

vulge the nam e of the woman, w ho Is about 50, b u t said she was "fo rm ­erly a prom hient resident here.' Spectators included In th6 group o f 30 watching the rescue said th e w o­man's motor ca r carried a Canyon county license.

Hawkins indicated that the wo­man had been drinking.

T1 ; bizarre Incident took p lace about midway on the bridge. T h e woman stopped her car there, climbed over the railing and sa t on the narrow steel girder which ru n s outside the rail. She muttered r e ­peatedly, "G uess I'm goln' to Jum p," according to the deputies and R. G, Cooper, proprietor of the Brink r e ­sort on tills side of the eonyon.

Each tim e slie made the rem ark, the woman moved nearer the edge o f tlie steel "ca t walk,'.'

R ope Over HeadCooper w as about to try lassoing

the would-be suicide when Puller took tlie rope ond stepped near the railing, several feet away from the woman. He tossed the rope expertly over her h ea d and around her neck.

Tightening 'th e hnpiomptu la ria t so the w om an was unable to Jump off and th u s hang herself. F ille r— with D eputy Wiley—climbed over tho railing. W ith the \«)man shout­ing and resisting strongly, they lift­ed her back to a safe place.

A fter firs t a id treatment In Twin Palls, the w om an was released.

WITH THE ALL-CROP HARVESTER!

Oat of tli« Saeram tnlo V alley of California, in 1930. came a curio)n con- braption. It cut and Ihreihed a S-foot iwath. It had a full- width 5-foot cylinder — a wire bruth. It was a one-

O r i f in .1 O m . m » i i . r T « t o r , machine operated bypower take-off from a THREE‘PLOW tractor.' Machinery men laughed and called it a toy. En(me«n had ‘■prdoP’ to ihow that no combine could ever replace the binder. But Allii-Chalmen taw i(> poMibililiea^RQ. VIDED they could iblve certain ‘mutt’’ •pecifieatioMi

T H E S E W E R E T H E “ M I S T S "

• It MUST b« pulled and opkriled h j a 2 plow tractor with power toke-oll—then tht prevailing u i t farm traclof, • It' MUST be priced to replace liie binder. • It MUST do good work in all climate*. • It MUST harvest ALL the iroaU grain*, beam and tceda on diveoified farm*,.

R U B B E R T o T H E R E S C I E F h r * r « v * p M « M . RnblieC'•tirei and a new kind of rubber-faced bar cylinder lolrcd the problem of draft.- They made the barreiter a 2-pIowl tractor lo a d -^ ilh ^o. aumllary motor neceaaary. RubW*

Uma. Seed cropi wMw Ihreahad with rabber ai eaiily ai frain. Thia California idea—now changed ahnoat beyond racognition—had at lait become Qi« ALL-CROP HARVESTER . "Socceaaof lo the Btnder."

THEY LAIdHED AQAIN ab iho.. y ^, . the experli w«r« aayind It wa« "another!

AlK*4i:bakaw*>«am.!l.IM today

are two aiiea of Ihe All-Crop Harveiter . . . Bttting a p act for all to fo llow , . . taking Ihe backachea and Ihe aweat and Ihe dnidg- ery out of hanreat Next to the rubber-tired' traetoi^T-alio pioneered by Allii-Chalmera— the All-Crop Harveiter ia Ihe greateit contri­bution of modem limea to better farm living. AU-Crop Harreatiiif doem’t, eoat—it paytli

Eldred Tractor Company

a h i l l i n g a u r f a c e i a p l V e d I h e m o i i l w r e a n d c r a c k a g e p r o b - ' > j » y l n l '’n l l « — ' 1 2 1 S r d A v » . W .

I N V E S T I G A T I 'I T J I E A L L -C R O P F o i l Y O i m B E A N A N D S E E D C K O F H A U V li lS T - T O D A Y l — — — — . — ^

dUIS-CllfllMERS

lUiEIIOIF irst district-wide m eeting-of the

Independent M erchants association Of Idaho will be held In Twin Falls a t 7 p. m. Monday. Aug. IB, It was announced here th is afternoon.

Merchants from Buhl, Jerome, Burley, Rupert, Tw in Falls and Boise will convene a t the Blue Arrow cafe for the meeting, according to Keith Hunter, Twin Falls. • Approximately 100 are expected to a ttend . Hunter will preside as tem porary chairm an pending selection of d is tric t officials.

Seek Federal Fond One major topic to come before

the association, w hich alm s to Im­prove the servlcja offered Idahoans by home-owned establishm ents, will be plans to take advantage of a (IDJMO federal fund allocated to thU state for employer-employe educa­tion. The governm ent purpose. Hunter sold, is to tra h i m erchants and their workers In b etter business tactics. Pat B ran ln , Boise, will- ofc- Ihie the program a n d will lead the discussion on ways and m eans of securing the federa l money.

O ther major topics a t the open forum dlnr.er-sesslon will be pre­sentation of th e au tu m n advertis­ing budget, action on th a t budget, ond discussion of various activities planned by the association.

lUeal U nits Elect Hunter announced today tlie of­

ficers thus fa r selected by associa­tion units a t Burley, Rupertl Jerome and Buhl. BIU R oper ;:cads the Burley group as president: Ross Freer Is secretary; Lester McKean, vice-president.' At- R upert, Jack Roper Is president an d Ai Qregory, secretary.■ Jerome has seWcted only Us presl' dent, A. W. Tlngwall. Buhl also has named only a president, who Is Roy Fait.

White to Battle For Water Funds

BOISE, Aug. 17 Rep. Comp' ton I. White, D., Ida., Informed Ida­ho Irrigation leaders today he would fight efforts to sidetrack reclama­tion project appropriations hi favor of defense funds.

White sold th e " irrigated regions of the west offer th6 m a jo r oppor' tunity to stabilize th e n a tio n ’s food supply, come w ha t m ay." He added th a t "should d ro u th come with existing world w ar conditions we Will face a situa tion m ore critical tlian thot a ttribu ted to unprepared' ness In planes, guns, tanks and warships."

f CAREY ■TM iss Marjorie LoosU, d augh te r ol

Mr. and Mrs. Otveli Local], .Oorey,- became the bride of WUbur-Roisen, ion o f Mrs. George Hotaen, Bt. : Anthony, a t a weadinu ceremony-- ■performed by Bishop Neltaoa a t St. A nthony Aug. 8. T he bride an d bridegroom both attended th e t<VA school a t Welser la st year. H ie y ■ will make their home a t S t. An­thony where the bridegroom Is em­ployed OS a lu ln te r and decorator.

Jack York left la s t 'S u n d a y to visit w ith his brother-in-law , Wesiey L athan In Moscow. They w ill boUi re tu rn to Carey before school be-, gins here.

M r. and Mrs. D. Folsom, I jOs A n- i geles, Calif., and Mr. and Mra. Wal­ter Oxborrow■■ and son, Raymond. ’ Ely, Nev., visited, the Briggs and Patterson homes here in Carey over the week-end.

M r. and Mrs, Hugh Wllde, qgden, D tah spent three days w ith M r. Wilde's parents in aou th 'Carey. They returned to Ogden Sunday.

M rs. Phil McElroy and tw o smilV'' daughters, Charlotte and Phyllis,' left la s t Sunday to visit M rs. Mc- Elroy’s parents in C a ld w e ll,* ''' ', Mr. and Mrs. Robert R ich ' re­turned to their home in . Glendale, Calif., after visiting a t the Forrest McGlochlhis a t TllLUra, th e L eaien - by home in Priest, and th e Peter­sons in Gannett.

Miss Catherine-M eecham, daugh­ter of Mr, and Mrs. Parley M eecham, Carey, and Cafleon Totam n, to n ' of M r. and Mrsv Fred Tolm an, Rupert, were m arried by Bishop Phillips, Frultland, a t Frultlftnd last ’ Monday, Aug. H. T h e bride is a graduate of the Carey h igh «chod with the class of 1034. B o th Miss Meecham and Mr. Tohnan attended tho NYA school at. Welser for the past year. They will m ake thehr home a t Rupert;

M rs. Ted Dav|s en tertained .for her small daughter, Anne’s , fifth b h thday last week.

-PEACHES-Elbertas Btartlngj

Also a few Hales while they IsstI

BARTLETT PEARS ,

John GourleyFiler. Idaho Phone 6-J3

THANKSfor the fine support

given me in my

candidacy as REPRESENTATIVE

On the Democratic T icket.

J.E. ROBERTS

George A. CHILDS

saya

“THANK YOUfor your support, hi nom- hiathig m e as your Re- publicom candidate tor ■

ASSESSOR"

THANK YOUso much for th e spendld support received In tho primaries. I have en­joyed my work ss your. County T reasurer and trust my efforts m erit your continued support.

Thank You

Sincerely

CORA E.. STEVENS

"To thoao who

plnccd me in nom-

inntion ns Domo-

c r / i t i c cnndidftt# for .

SHERU'P

tfo cs my thanks"

WARREN W.LOWERY

Saythese successful

candidates!

A Word of Appreciation

I wish to thank > my f r i e n d s in Twin Fails Coun­ty for their loyal support and splen­did cooperation.

Mrs. Doris StradleyCounty Superintendent of

*' Public Instruction

YourDcmocrat^ic Candidate

for

PROBATEJUDGE

extendi sincerest thanks for the support received in the primaries.

YOUR CANDIDATE

EARL JE. w a l k e r

L W. “Doc” HAWKINS

Republican Candidate

for

SHERIFF

^ u b l l n h c i h l i . i h i n k i i ,

for the fine lubport

recojved in the rooent

primgty *lectloB. : , -

■'■Am

Page 4: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

: r -

■J^age Four IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO S#turd»y, Ai«niit lit 184®

T E L E P H P N E 8 8

roU.LwMd WIr. SirrlM tlnlW Prm AuMlitlon. Fun NBA rn tn i* S tn tc i

PtblUIiKl Sh t t v • W«k It HO Sirjit W«*. >^'1^n>ABO TIMES PUDUSHINa COMPAN* ;

K oum •> SiooBil OUl UlltCT Is U« Twin FlilllAet of OonffrtM Uareb I. 1870.

- By Curler Ftr«bl« In AdvMMt t f tb# weelg Uoi 1 montL COoi I month*, tl.tSs 6 mootbi. t31B} 1 m v I9.0f

- -»Dy Utfl Pvablt la Adraooai

WJthIo H»ho «nd Elko Ooanly, Nertflu 1 ffloatli. 40flt I month*, 11.001 6 months, ll.fiOi 1 tu t , 13.50..

Ootsid# IdahoI month, eooi I monthi, I uontht, tU fti \ Tur. tlOO

All ootlcet ngtilnd b7 Itw or h7 order of eoort of eompttcnt Jurlsdlotioa to b« pob* ]|ih«d w«ekljr. iriJl ba pabllahed In thi Thnndv U»o* of thU P»P«rM-108 L 0. A. 1S32. u added thereto by Ch»pl«r 184, 1088 i

lonuant (o &cUoa m L am of Idaho.

NATIONAL BCPnESENTATIVEa ^ WEST-HOLLIDAy CO.. INC.UiUt Ibwer. 220 tath Btrett. 8ta maeUco, Calif.

What Did Mi*. Curtis Say?Idaho’s record in the administration of her state

prison has been anything but good.Wardens have come and gone, and so have many

prisoners who should have been kept behind the bars.■ Not only have too many convicts escaped under cir­

cumstances not always explained, but in times past our state pardon boards have released dangerous crim­inals who have continued to prey upon society, a prac­tice that has been ojienly criticized by the federal bureau of investigation.

Several years ago, William H. Guest, warden at tha t time, was replaced by P. C. Meredith when Doug­las Van Vlack, a condemned murderer, escaped execu­tion by committing suicide under what appeared to be mysterious circumstances.

Now Warden Meredith has been ouaLeS for reasons that do not appear to tell the whole story. “Too many escapes” and “trouble with his guards” are the gen­eralized criticisms that precipitated Meredith’s dis charge.

But during the actual process of handing the w ar­den his walking papers, at least one memoer of the state prison board indicated there were other reasons for the ouster.

Asked by Warden Meredith to make an “official explanation” of his discharge, other 'than the state­ment that he hadn’t shown enough warmth toward the guards. Secretary of State George Curtis declined to elaborate, saying he already had given his reasons to Meredith privately.

In view of all the circumstances, the people have every right to know what Mr. Curtis said to Mr. Mere­dith In private. To cl^ar up any further mystery about the operations of the state prison, either one or the other of these men should let the people in on their secret.

One Eeftple, Government, ArmyHow fa r the':|plari has gone to enlist a home defense

force to replace the national giiard if the la tte r is called into active semce, we don’t know.

I t la certainly worth considering. But one thing must be carefully provided:

Any such force must be a legally constituted part of the U. S. defense forces, under their leadership and responsible to them. It is perfectly all right tha t such a force be recryited largely from veterans’ organiz­ations. B ut though we respect the veterans’ organiz­ations as probably more patriotic and devoted to their country than any other cross-section of the people, even such organizations should not be allowed to form armed organizations on their own. All members of any such home defense force should be serving their government direct, and not through even the most purely patriotic private organization.

“One people, one government, one arm y” is the only safe guide.

Will Congress Take a Recess?While there are a few senators and representatives

who have been conscientious in their demands that congress remain in session so long as world conditions have a critical bearing on tlie United States, it is sig­nificant th a t th6 general ado over the issue is waning as the November election approaches.

Some of those who were oudest in their insistence that congress stick to its guns are now growing a little apprehensive over their political welfare back home.

While it might not be altogether kind to make such a prediction, we’ll hazard the guess th a t nothing short of w ar will keep the boys back in Washington from arranging a little recess between now and November, so they can scamper back home to patch up their political fences.

Let’s see if we are wrong.

Excellent-^Witli Exceptions“Idaho’s highways are in excellent condition,” says

Public Works Commissioner J. 0. Newcomb after a 10-day tour of the state.

Generally speaking. Commissioner Newcomb is probably right, but just in .fun, we’re wondering if he happened to travel over U. S. 93 between Twin Palls and the Twin Falls-Jerome intercouilty bridge, and that stretch of gravel about 10 miles beyond Qalena summit.

Now Yorlc conserviition departmont is feeding cello­phane to bi'ook trout. Next tiling wo know the cham­ber of commorca will insist wo can land ’em already wrapped.

The Windsors traveled light to the Bahamas, carry­ing only 52 piccbs of baggage. Of course, if thoy like tho'plBco they cim always Bciid for tho re s t

................................. - I ...— r

There i\r« no vltnmins in the razzborry but; often there is * Btrong physical reaction.

S h o t sW ITB

The Gentleman in the Third Row

The Buckeroos, The Lasso and

The LadyI t looks like o u r Tw in Halls county

constituents w ill ' have to abandon Deputy Sheriff Boy Puller's n lck- mune “B uzz';.and substitute "Cow­boy."

They may also prefix "Buok" to Deputy Claude WUey’5 monicker.

As you'll see elsewhere Iti today’s Evotlmcs, tho lad s stopped a lady from hopping o ff th e .big Bridge. Cowboy Roy lassoed h e r and both gents then climbed over the railing ond lifted her. kicking and screech­ing, back to safety .

R. 0 . Cooper, who runs tlie "Brink" Inn, was getting ready to try the lasso act, ,

Wliereupon .io id Cowboy, form­erly B un. Fuller;

“Listen, are you a cowboy?" ‘'Goal! no,” sa id Cooper.“Then dm m e th a t rope,” snap­

ped Boy.Hp twirled th e rope over the head

of the woman teetering out on the bridge girder. T h en ho handed the lasso to somebody else, and he and Buck Wllcy climbed over the railing.

Incidentally, Boy slipped and dam near lell Into th e canyon himself.

We quote S heriff Doo Hawkins as of this morning:

“I'm lertoualy th inking ol en t­ering both my buckeroos down a t the county fa ir rodeo. I didn’tknow w hat I h ad on th is stafli”

(Note: If Doo en ters Cowboy P u l ler and Buck WUey In the rodeo, Buokeroo Puller w ill do » Uttle more practicing to vary his attack. I t seems he lassoed the bridge Iddy around the necK).

• • •EXTBEE! ONE DEAD IN

FOREST FIBE Although the press apparently

didn't get th e im portan t news, Pot Shots is in a position today to a n ­nounce th a t there was one casualty in th a t Shoshone basin forest and range tire.

Our private sleuths advise us that this casualty was extremely deceosed when they came upon his (or her) body.

l l ie casualty: One porcuplni.• • •

THE DOO, THE FLY HOD AND THE 400-POUNDER!

This Is tlw story ol a gent who tried to hook a 4(X)-pound fish on a fly rod.

Needless to say, the gent didn't land, tlie fish. In fact. It's question­able w hether the fish even knew the Uttle trout-hook was stuck in Its side, I

Tho gent Is Doc E. R, Price. Ho went fishing Wednesday afternoon a t upper Salmon falls with Mike Throckmorton and Larry Lundln, two etalw ort preceptors of our local youth.

DOO pulled hi a ^x -ln ch trout, dis­gustedly threw It back in—and let out a whoop.

“H eyl" he hollered. "A sturgeoni" And there It was, rig h t below him,

a sturgeon thftt looked as big as a baby whale. ’Ih* th ree Waltonltes swear i t m ust have been 400 to <i(X) pounds. Doo took a look a t his frail fly-rod and decided w hat the heck, let’s make history. So he dropped his hook Into tho w ater over the stur­geon and snagged th e thhig In the side,

I/arry wanted to hop Into the river and subdue th e fish with a few well chosen uppercuts. Doc and Mike prevailed on him to stay out of the water,

Doo pulled on his light Une. ’The big sturgeon moved upward a little. (Mike claims It was Just a swell In the river th a t moved it).

Doo was really getting entliusl- astlo by then. He yanked the line ognln.

The sturgeon started for other places. Doc's line reeled out. And reeled out. Ju st as I t began to look like Une, pole and Doo were about to reach a crisis, the hook pulled loose and th« fly rod blitzkrieg of th* iturgeon passed Into history.

W hich may explain why Doc l i ■till w ith us today.

• « •

Ho Hum Dept“Sword Sm llow er Chokes on

Aprlcoi"—Press oddity.Olamor U ruined by such swordid

details.' • • •

HAH—HUT BEM EM BEa THEPIAYOFTS!

Dear Bhotie;Allow me to point out since no one

else hn? volunteered to offer IhU lugubrious b it of inform ation, timt tlie Cowboy baseball team (lilcis tlielr undyhig hearts) have lost even a m athem atical chanco of winning tlio league championship. (Excuse me whilo I biiish away a tear).

T in Cowpokes are 39 games from first placo .(yeali, count 'em a i of Friday) and thci'e rem ains but 33 gnmcs to be played. So-o>o-o if Twin IMIIs won' nil theh ' remaining gnmri ( f I IT) and S a lt Lake lo.it all theirs, Twin Ii^ills would still be two games behind a t tlie end of the Mason.

—Jo -Jo .llif Jsint • • •

FAMOUS I.AHT U N R " , i . n n l , p e p , m y k lU i, w a s *

d l r e - b o m b e r , s o n h a t ’f »n» b r o k e n w ln d o w T . .

T n r . nENTLEMAN IN Ti(K T i i m o now

• S E R I A t S T O R Y

MURDER IKCOGNITO B Y N O R M * M K A H l

ebpYRioiir. 1140. N U t tl lV lC I . INC.

YKITBttDATi Q % w T « « • - lloni Dal0 abODt Sjijler’ii b u iae tf ■ni posslblt encalca, iibA aboat th* flr« dianer n c i U . A'window c t Ibe fltvdr M fltacormd nii- locked. 0* ltu rr m tilesi*prafeetlar fiay ltr m brcaek et promlte, aetleB« lie lUnrnQJui UflUl L«lirlitOB«

CHAPTER. IV m r n H B u e l ]>Ight0D walked ■ " into tho s tudy , It was quite apparent sh» h a d completely re ­covered from th e shock of flnd« big Sayler'i body. Aloof imd leU - composed, she stood poised In ihe doorway for a mom ent, as i t w ait­ing for L ieu tenan t O 'Leary lo .ac-

^wlcdge h e r presence., lo polico officer was, itlU

seated a t S ay le r’l desk, engrossed In several. docum ents he ^ d spread before him . Lights In the room were coming from a lertes of lamps along th e w alls and from tho desk lam p. O’Leary flnally looked up, and th e re was the traca of a imllo on h is face.

"Mils Leighton?” Hazel nodded. " I’m L ieu tenant O’Leary. Come

over hero and s i t down, please."Calmly H azel walked tow ard

th e lieutenant. I t was onV ■ when she reached, the dark,

Jagged stain In th e middle of the room that she hesitated a mo­ment and c a r e f u l l y stepped around i t O ’L eary motioned h e r in to a chair th a t had been placed to the side of the desk, at his right.

"Miss Leighton, 1 understand It w as you who firs t came upon the body,’’ he said.

She lighted a c lg are t "Yes. I t w as pretty m u ch of a shock."

“Did you ' en te r th is room a t all?:'

"Not until th e others came. I Just scrcamcd . . . I couldn’t help IL And then I felt weak, so I hUng onto the d o o r and stared a t th e body un til D ale and the re s t came from th e draw ing room.

The lieu tenan t fingered tho check ho had ta k en ftom tho desk drawer. “Miss Leighton, did you know that you w e re to getm SOOO check from M r, Sayler tin lght?”

p 'O R a’ m om ent, Hazel’s eyes (altered, a n d she tamped o u t

her clgaret w ith quick, nervous movements o f h e r long, slender « n g c t« --“Why,—S6e,2 - sh o -sa ld slowly. “Mr. S ay le r was a law­yer, you know , and the check W03 part of a business m atter ho was .handling fo r me.” ,

“What k ind o f business?”“I don't th in k th a t matters. I t

was penonal . . . nothing at all to do with—w ith w hat happened here tonight,” ’

O’Leary held o u t a single sheet of paper, c lipped to a ' tan legal Jacket. "Did It have anything to do with this?"

“Why, I don’t k n o w . I can’t - ” •M aybe I oughf to te l l you what

th l i iJ ," O l e i t y In te rru p ted . "It’s ■ ie le a s » -« ’releiis« f ro m possible fu tu re breath o t p ro m lis action tg a ln it Martin S a y le r . There’« i space dow n here t o r y ou to sIjd. Y ou w o n 't seed to n o w ."

E a z d la t fo rw ard I n h e r cb tli and rested h e r e lbow s on the deak: “I etn’t u n d ers ta n d i t I h av en 't the fain test no tion w b it you m ean."

O l e a r y looked s tra ig h t a t the blond w o n u a an d s e s t u ^ mildly w ith a cigar he to o k f ro m his veit pocket "Oh, yes, y o u have, Mlsi L elth ton . I l l te l l y o u w h a t It m eant. Sayler w as s o tn s to 8lve you 15000 10 y o u w o u ld n 't sue him . he w as g o lh f to make su re th a t you co u ld n 't sue. Maybe you’d b e tte r tell m e t h e r e s t ”

H azel s a t very r ig id ly , h e r blond h a ir gUmifletlDg i n th o glow of the desk lamp. U t t l e spots ol angry re d rose in h e r cheeks, “All righ t. Lieutenant," d i e said. “ I’ll te ll you, , Maybe tk a t 's better. Then you won’t ,bo g e ttin g a lot of ideas about Boinethijig th a t iim't so.”

O 'Leary liruck a m a tch and held It to hU cigar. “R ig h t It Would b e a lot b e t te r a ll around i t you to ld me ev e ry th in g .”

“S ay le r w u one o t th e lowest persons I ever m e t," H azel said. “Funny about t h a t . . . I thought I loved hhn.' He’s 'g o t a k ind ol veneer th a t doesn't sh o w up so badly u n d er the r ig h t kind of l i g h t ' W e went to g e th e r for al> most a year. H e w a n te d m e to m arry h im , blit F w a s n ’t sure.

"And then , last w e e k , h e made m e a n o f f e r . , ; th is offer. I was nev er lo insulted in m y life. _ had know n h ii a ttit tu le tow ard me was changing, But' I d ld p ’t know w hat a ro tte r he w as u n t t t he told me th e w edding w as d f l ond of­fered m s fSOOO to b e a good gh;L “ slapped hl» face."

O’L eary leaned b a c k In h li swivel chair. "Why w e r e you here tonight, th e n , Miss L eigh ton?”

Hazel avoided th e officer's eyes. "I don 't know. T h e re w as some­thing ab o u t that m a n . . . I can 't tell you w h a t exactly . He asked me to come, and 1 k n e w w hy he -wanted, m e here. I d id n ’t w ant to come. I h id .n o in ten tions ot coming. Until ton ight . . . and then something Ju st seem ed to draw m s here, 1 w is h I hadn’t now.”

"I can understand th a t,” said O'Leary.

< • •p n O M th e vestibule doorway,

Sergeant' CwroU s tepped into the room. "Look, (3 iie f,” said the Sergeant "The boys h a v e been doing a little checking, a n d 'th e

medical e x A m W 'telephoned. 1 m a y b t 7 0 a w an ted , to

k n o w —^

"Go oliM d, 'Sergesnt," C L e s iy suds; , ^ o U sh n igg id , "O kay , Well, f lif t o f t i l , w e checked th e phone COTpany U k* you sa id . They'd know If any long iiM im N t calls w ere m ade h e re ton ig h t. There wasn’t tn y ," ' '

O X M ry nodded. “W hich means Sayler n e v e r reached h is desk. H e wfts k illed righ t a f t e ; h e left th e o thers In th e d raw ing rooni— 0 0 W» w a y b ack to th o desk."

C atron squinted. "R ight: And h iro I w hftt th e medical b a s to say . He m ade a quick check an d h e said th e b u lle t h it Sayler from th e r ig h t a t a n angle, and s t e ^ h is h e a r t I t knocked him off l i k e ‘a building collapsed 0 0 him .”' "W hich m eans th a t th e ^ o t m ust h av e b een idred fro m some­w here n e a r th a t w indow . . . right?” ■ ' • , '

'" l i i g h t . . . Only It Wasn’t—not through th e w lntow i anyw ay.”• O’Leary’s .^ e s ie c a m f t quizzical,

b u t h e w aited to r Carroll to con* Unue; ,

‘T h e boys h av e been going over th e .g ro u n d s w ith a com b,” tho sergeant explafaied. “T h e re ato’t any foo tprin ts. The g round is p retty soft outside th is window, and i f ohybody w as hanging around th e re ’d be foo tprin ts sure. A nd th e w i n d o w a in 't been touched . . . n o t from th e out­side. T he o n ly w ay to open that window Is \ r t th a crow bar or something sharp , u n l e s s It’s opened fro m th e .In sid e . That’d leave a m a rk . There is n 't any. M aybe th e fin g erp rh ta w e took on ih e in sid e wffl show some­thing.’!

O’Leary grunted . “T hey won’t show a tv th in g . The housekeep­er’s, B arbour’s, Sayler's, e few cops’—th ey H b e a sm ear. Any­body w ho’d t r y a Job like that woidd b e s m a rt enough to wear gloves.”

“Yeah, su re ," Carroll assented. “We Just though t w e'd better, though—th e o ld routine."

"The angle o f the shot is all w rong fo r a n y o t the o th e r wln- dows?”

“B ig h t”“And n o sh o t could h av e been

fired th rough this w indow—tho one th a t w ould give us th e right angle?”

“Right again,” sold C ^ o l l . “There's on ly one answ er I

can see. S e rg e a n t” O’L eary said. "W hoever com m itted th e m urder was righ t h e re in this house—is probably s till here."

(Xa B e C ontbued)

snd

DEEP C IU X K '1 ^ C ree k Orange met a t th e

Carl H a rd e r home with a good a t ­tendance, a n interesting business sessto a .n n d a n equally Interesthig

iren i. H i e program was under d irec tio n of th e Orange women

— 1 b egan w ith the singliiit - of “Anferica” a n d "Idaho” by ,tl ie group. A q u ite comprehensive an d Interesting rep o rt of the women’s sunmier c a m p a t Easley’s hot springs OTS gtven b y M rs. Ed AMm, m aster - f Deep C reek Grange.

This w as followed by s demon •tratlon o f . th e sometlmes-gentle- and-soinettaies-not-so-gentle a r t o f m U ^ thle festive cow. by M rs. Ahlin. I t flieenui th a t this portlculat cow did n o t relish the Idea of p a r t- hig w ith h e r milk which she h ad worked, so . h a rd to produce an d kicked lu s tily , scattering mllianald, bucket a n d m ilk all over the room, which w as, b y the way, one of th e rooms in t h e Harders' ftae home. Only w hen som eone thought of pac­ifying bossie by playing the .piano, did the becom e docile, and then she proceeded to dance bllthelf about the room, .crea ting much merriment among th e G rangers.

I f th is s to ry Is authentic, I don’t know w h a t i s coming over the cows of the w est en d , for It 1« milk and n o t m onkey-shines tha t the farmers, need to buy gas and pay the m ort- gass off. , ,

• IT'S NEW

m LSO N

By W. H. WILSON

In this age ot synthetic fabrics, i t rem ains lor the old timers to te- call when our clothing was made chiefly of cotton a n d wool.

Clothing from trees, wtiero Adam g o t his first aiilt of leaves with two pa ir of brunches, may soon be In fashion. F i b e r s resembling s i l k ca n be spun from th e filaments of a new liquid wood, made of pulp with hydrogen oddcd. in Ihio with other clothing Industry fabrics, a wood m ay bo born. In w inter erocrijcn- cId s , then, man

ca n give the shirt o ff his beck lo keep the-furnnce fire going.

K nitted bsthing Hults, made from a synthetic vinyl resin fiber, are appearing on the beaches. The ma­te ria l is flastlc, equally strong wet o r dry, and is proofed against water, acids or alkalies. F ish llnei, nets a n d eelnei, shower curtains and w aterproof clothliig are also made of- th e fabric,

Bhrlnkproof Nylon Is making Its appearance as an Improvement over th e original fabric being used for w om en's hosiery. Future usej for th e product will probably be found in parachutes, lace, upholstery, m en 's suit Untoga and hose, knit goods, woven dress moterlals, rugs a n d carpets.

Neckties ot glaai o r rubber pro­vide something new hi an old glft- fo r-m en standby. S oft as silk, but s trong a s tttel, th e glass fiber neck­ties a re ttain-proof. bum-proof, fade-proof »nd wrinkle-proof, and com e In 4} different color combin­ations.

This same fabric Is being used fo r tab le linens, lampshades, toble- cloths, bedspreads an d a variety ot household articles. F o r tlie outside o f th e house, there are colotlul glass fiber awnings, easily kept clean by turn ing the hose on (hem,

T h e . new ru b b er, sheeting, plio. film , is behig tested fo r use as neck­w ear matorinl th a t would bo easy to keep d ean . Now found a t ribbon counters h ij i variety of widths and colors, pllolllm may soon be used to m ake M ti, h ats, shoes, handbags a n d household funilgliingi.,

Competition for d lk from still anoU ier fabric 1s found In tho full fashioned llile stocking of shoor cotton mc.Mi now dovclopcd by tlio V . S, Department of Agriculture.

N EX T: New n«r« fo r pl««tlci.

ALFALFA nEHIHTS DltOUTII LOVBStiAND, Colo, —(U.P.I ~ 1116

H nh lestan variety ‘ of ’ altnltn — a boon to wtalerii dry-Iand [nrmori beentise It tequlrea n o , Irrlgntlon- Is Plfovlng lUccoisful In Colorado, L arim er Countjr Agent Dpn Uo- M illen reporla, F lrit produced on

M ontana experimental itatlon, th e hardy variety will product a ton lo an acre, McMillan sniil.

H I S T O R Y Of Twin Falls City & County

As Qleaned from F ile s of The Times

2S YEARS AGOAUG. 17, 1025

Miss B ertha Halloran, accompa­nied by h e r aunt, Mrs. A n n a R ich­mond, left this morning fo r C har­lottetown, Prhice E d w ard Island, Canada. They will s top In Denver for a few days en route.

This evenhig. Miss H a r r ie t Clapp Is en terta to ing with a d an c in g p a r­ty a t h e r hom e com pllm enthig Miss Flo Cook, Adacotes, W ash .

Miss Betty Wilson en terta in ed the T ri-0 club et bridge Saturday evenhig. Miss Morgdret SclUey and Miss M arjory Woods w o n honoVs. Club guests Were Miss R o b y n Finch, Miss M ary Virginia H art, M iss Peg­gy W all. Miss Ila P ea irs and Miss Flo Cook a n alumna of th e club.

27 YEARS AGOAUG. 11, 19U

Mr. and Mre. Prank H Igbee were pleasantly surprised a t th e ir home on Seventh avenue east l a s t SatuT' day evenhig. The occasion beh ig the fifth wedding anniversary. A num ber of friends and relatives w ere pres­e n t M r. and Mu. HIgbee were the recipients o f some very handsom e presents. Dainty refreshm ents were served and a t a late ho u r th e guests departed to their hom es wlshhig Mr. and Mrs. HIgbee m a n y returns of the day.

M. F. K ing was hi th e c i ty yester­day from Burley, looking a f t e r busi- neis affairs.

GOODING IReports of activities of boys’ s ta te

In Boise in July were g iv e n to Ro­tary elub last week by O le n n B ark­er,' Jr., who was tponsored by th e club, and Jhnm le Watson, w hom th e Legion post sent. I t w as voted to have' th e party for I ^ to r y A nns on Bald m ountaki Sunday, A ug . 3S, an d tho fellowship committee, w ith J u ­lius Schm itt as chairm an and all past presidents ai m em bers, was Instructed to make arran g em en ts. Junior Cham ber ot Com m orco will also participate. Visitors w ere E. J . Bradley, R upert; Italph R ose, Twin Pnllj; B ranch Bird, O oodlng , and R otarlan S tan Baer, Shoehono.

Miss Virginia Itccd, w ho Is to bo m arried Sunday, was h o n o r gUest a t a m iscelianw iu ahower glvon by Mrs. M arion H um e Monday, A stam ped tea towel was embroidered by eoch of thoee present. G uests included Mrs. Lucy Heed, g randm other of tho bride-to-be, and Mri, R o d n ey Reed, her mother,

Interm ediate W, W. a . girla of D sptlst church m tt a t th e hom e of Mary R n tii Jenkiiii T uesday . M ary R uth led ilevotioni and M r*. 0 . H. Nortlirop directed a B ible lessoni M iHtonary itMon on In Uie Belgian Congo i t i i |iv * n b y Krma Jones,

# HIGHLIGHTS FROM U TK T BOOKS

KENNEDY WARNS V. B. DEMOCRACY 'ASLEEP AT SWITCB"

Two years ago Winston Churchill published a 'grimly prophetic book, <TThUe England S lept." II had a lesson for B ritain . Now, John F . Kennedy, son of AmbaS' ssdor Kecmedy, writes a similarly ehallenglnr t»ok with a lesson for'Am erica. I t Is “Why England Slept" (W illard Funk: $2). H ere Is calm, dispassionate analysis of the British m ind which could not bring Itself to face the totaU tar- lan reality an d here Is fra n k rec- o(t|ltlon of certain w eaknesses In American democracy w hich Ken. nedy w arns m ust be corrected as a sort o t firs t Une of n a tio n a l de­fense. To read this book Is to ap­preciate w hat America m u st do NOW. Take (his brief excerpt!

When I t (dcm'ocracy) competes with a system of government which care.i nothhig for perm anency, a system bulifc primarily for w ar, de­mocracy, which Is built prim arily for peace. Is a t a disadvantage. And democracy m ust recognize Its w eak nesses; It m ust learn to eafeguard Its Institutions If It hopes to aur. vive.

In England we can see vividly where democracy failed. I n th e case of the A. R. P., for example, the government failed to get volunteers until a lte r M unich had driven home the seriousness of the situation. But Oermany had 13,000,000 m em bers by 1930. Sho needed no such shock to build up tills vital defense mea' sure , . .

Wo cnn'l escape the fact th a t dO' mocracy in America, like dem ocracy In Englond, h as been asleep a t tlie switch. If we h ad n o t been su r­rounded by oceans three a n d five thousand miles wide, we ourselves might be caving in a t some M unich of the western world.

We must always keep our a rm a­ments equal to our com m itm ents. Munich should teach ua th o t: we must realize th a t any bluff w ill be colled. We can n o t tell anyone to keep out of our hemisphere unless our armaments and THE PEOPLE DEaiIND 'n iE B E ARMAMENTS are prepared to back up th is com­mand, even to tho ultim ate point of going to war. Tliere m ust bo no doubt In anyone's mind, tho deci­sion must bo automatic; if we de­bate, if wo hesitate, if w« question, it will bo too late.

HOLLISTER

, Mr. and Mrs. Addison Beeman Imvo rclurned lo Hollister. B oth ore on the high school faculty.

Annual churoli service Of Hollis­ter and Ilogcrson 1’re.ibyterlan clnn'chcs was held Saturday and Oundny In Bear gulch In Ghoeholie basin. About 40 attended th e B«t-. iiixlay evening servlets and cam ped on the grmuKls. One hundred th irty - itnir attended Simday lohool. Rev. n, n, Davis, Bliss, was In cha rge of

n rvics on in ip lration p o in t A basket dinner was served a t nooilt An allejiuwn re rv lc t was Iiehl.

\ ‘ A

CEDAR D R A WSeems lik e w e have a Joke oil tho

Cedar D raw Orange this week. ■When I c a lled up for the news they didn’t h av e any for me as the ir Orange d id n o t m e e t though th a t was the n ig h t they should have m et" In s te a d they convened th is week, on F r id a y n ig h t I Just won­der If th e m a s te r didn’t forget to go last week, a n d i f he did, boy, did he .catch It w h e n th e gang saw him.

FAIRVIEW .KIMBEBLY ftWell, th e bunch from FabTdew,

about 30 s tro n g , w ent over to Kim­berly, like I to ld you they were go- tag to do, o n M onday n igh t Some of them h a d trouble findhig the Grange h a ll a n d suggested th a t they should m ark th e spot more plainly. B ut one guy h ^ trouble even to ftad the town o f K hnberly and suggest­ed th a t i t sho u ld be marked more plainly. I ’m n o t mentioning any names In re g a rd to the latter hap­penstance a s th e folks might guy me.' '

But you know , when you set out to save a le w m iles with the old bus as It reaches I ts decUntog years, you take a sh o r t cu t here and there, moaUy th e re . Now the Twto Falls highway d is tr ic t m ust have thought of thot w hen th e y li ld out the toads, so they fixed I t so you couldn’t get to Kimberly w ithou t going through Twhi Palls, o r down through Ne­vada. W ell, a f te r fighting our way through f h r e e . different dead-end roads, we bow ed to the bievltable and went th e highw ay through Twin Palls. T h o u g h t for awhile we were gohig to p e r ish wlthto flve miles of our goal, b u t we fhially arrived before G ran g e was over.

They have a nice, handy hall now a t Khnberly a n d phm to fix up the upper part o f th e building and have a still n icer p lace to m eet During the business session, Mrs. Carrie Jones was e lec ted chaplahi as the chaplahi h a d resigned. Mrs. Jones was histalled b y Roy Durk, of Kim­berly O range. A letter was read from the fa i r secretary giving this Orange theh- regular booth in the agriculture build ing , which reminds us that it i s n ’t long until the fair. After other ro u tin e matters were disposed of t h e meeting was given over to Mrs. O . G. Brooks, lecturer of PahTrlew G range, who presented the following program as a Major Bowes am ateu r hour.

Two songs b y the Falrvlew mixed chorus; ta p dance by Betsy and Caroline J e n se n ; Impersonation,

“ Between the Book Ends," by Tied sialone, alias A. Harvester; colp, M rs. P. L. Atkins: Negro dapce, Thayne Roberts. (This number was especially good); Song, “H ie P reach­e r and the Bear,” J , R. Crawford. F o r an enpere M r. Crawford to ld of th e trip to th e city th a t . M aster P ran k r Beer o f Kimberly m ade In company with Pomona M aster Erie Jo n es. This w as very funny <?)• I hope. Sandwliihea, cake, cookleg, coffee and iced te a were served b i th e host Orange, maldng the e n d of a near perfect day. You’re a fine bim ch, Khnberly, and we look fo r­w ard with pleasure to more tr ip s td yo u r Orange, and thanks for a fine tim e.

Bum , .Buhl G i ^ e m et Tuesday n ig h t

w ith a good (^W d In the O range h a l l and had rs their guests N orth - vlew Orange. I . E. Stansell g av e a ta lk on chemurgy, which is a su b ­j e c t th a t Is always of In te rest to t h e fanners, as i t offers a ^ y 'o u t o f ruhious surpluses of farm p ro d ­u c ts . Northvlew put on a N egro m instrel show as a program, w hich w as much enjoyed by the folks. R e ­freshm ents were served by Mrs. S co tt, Mrs. Plercy, M. Sandgren and M r. and Mrs. H. A. Peterson.

$

POMONA PICNICTho annual Pomona Orange p ic ­

n ic will be held a t the F iler fa ir grounds, Sunday n ex t All O range members' are invited to come a n d spend the doy w ith the G range frien d s from all over the county. A n d folks,, you better gaunt up for th e occasion, as we wlll>(iure h ave th e eats. Fried chicken—yum ,.yum . B rin g along a basket lunch, lemons, su g a r and your appetites. T lio Q raag e will furnish ‘Ice cream a n d ice .

There will be a softball game a n d W ilm a and W anda Cole of J e ro m e . w ill be there with their ponies. T h e grandfather ol tho little lassies la a m em ber of Filer Grange. There w ill b e games for all. And Editor J im m y com e down and ea t chicken w ith u s. Bring the wife along if you h a v e one and If you haven’t, b rin g sotnsone else's.

A. HARVESTER.P .'S .—I Just heard by short w ave

t h a t the cow th a t cut such capers o u t a t Deep Greek, was a couple of Jltter-bug gals masquerading a s a cow. They were so lifelike, th a t th e H ard er dog wasn't going to le t th e m com e b to the room, and had to b« h e ld to keep him from biting th e cow .

FILER

M iss Ethel Sm ith and Tom S m ith le f t Sunday for a week’s visit w ith th e ir sister, Mrs. Olen Copeland a n a family, Walla Walla, Wash.

L . M. Smith le ft Sunday to look a f t e r bushiess Interests In G ran d V iew. Ore. His daughter. Ellzabsth, accompanied hhn as far^as M oun­ta in Home, for a visit with friends.

M h . J. W. Creed ond three sons le f t Tuesday for De Solo, Mo., t o ' sp en d the whiter w ith her m other.,

E a r l Ramsey, superhitendent o f th e ru ral high school has announced th e opening date of the Filer rm -al h ig h school to be Sept. 9. R eghitra- tlo n date will be Monday, S e p t 2.

T h e North Street Dhiner club w ill m e e t Tuesday, Aug. 30, with Mrs. E d R ead .

Honorhig Mrs. J . W. Creed, w ho h a s gone to Missouri for several m ontlis , a dessert bridge luncheon a n d handkerchief ohower were g iven M onday at the home of Mrs. E o rl M oreland with Mrs. Lewis H ack, a n d Mrs. 3. T. Anderson as ass is tan t hostesses. Tlu-eo tables of bridge w ere a t playovlth the prizes going to M rs. T. Dan Cotmor and M rs. R. O . Fox, ’Twin Falls,

EXPERT FISHERMANnO K IZ O N TA l.

1,9 Most fa m o u s o t all. an g le rs .

10 Pleat. •11 Weird.(212 o’clock.

daytime.14 Mocking.10 Money c h a rg e .17 Note in sca le .18 P easan t20 Bone.21 Fonn o f “ t>e."22 To cook i n fa t . 24 Chaos.29 Blackbird.26 Money.20 Encountered. SlJo ilb ird .33 To recoun t.30 Conjunction.38 To be

Indebted,8DTo rccedo.40 Tea.41 Alto.42 Plural

pronoun.4SGolf t e n n . ,44 Being.48 To occom pN th 47H0JCS.

Answer to P re v io n s P a u ls .

H lS graiaHe:i i i l i IIl ”40 Ballot choices. 51 RoU of llhn.63 TUe setter.SS Strokes gently 57 Pussy.50 To make a

speech.50 Forewent eO H a w asa lM k

w riter o r — . e iB ls to m o a i <0 book, **1116

— Angler." VEB'nCAI.

1 Provided.

2 Encircling b an d s .

3 B it te r herb.4 Trouble.5 P ie r . 6T lum an ian

coihs.T w ig w n w .8 H u m an lunc>

t io n a l p a r t 0 N e w York

(abbr.).J3 P erso n s

appohitcd lor office.

15 Passing through.

16 He has m an y adherents o r

10 He was a lover o l th e

21 Form of "a.'* 23 You.25 Epoch. '26 Eye.27 Either. •28 Border fo r

an hiltlal.SO To make lacc. 32 Reverence.34 Accessory. 35ProposlUoa.37 To bow.43 CuIUvattoa 45 Calyx te a t47 Ham.48 Courtesy tl t la 40 Interdiction.50 To hoard.52 shield. 54 Varnish

substancok 56 Afternoon

meoL

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Baturday, August 17,1940 IDAHO EVENING TIM ES, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO;

ocia■ ^ r s . V M l i p H e i p i r i c l i

; ■. C o m p l i m e n t e d - ■ a t T e a

, Mrs. C. A. Heinrich is presenting her daughter-in-law, Mrs. C. Philip Hfflnrich, to a number of her friends a t a tea late this afternoon at the home of Mrs. A. C. Victor. Mrs. Heinrich was Miss Mary Lou Benson before her. marriage Aug. 5 a t Bakersfield, Calif. She and Mr. Heinrich amved here several days ago for an indefinite stay at the Heinrich home. . . . .

Guests will be received from 4 to' 6 o clock, Miss Carol Heinrich, daughter of thehostess, and Miss Ruth Dar­ling assisting Mrs. Heinrich and the honoree in ■welcoming them.

M rj. W. s. Pariah an d Mrs. 0 . B. U ndaey have been Invited to pou r th e firs t hour, a n d M rs. L. a P e r - r in e and Mrs. H. L . H ctaiea'wni be Bt th e services d u ring the second b o u r. I

D in ing , room ofs ls tan ts vlU be M iss DoroUiy Hudson, Mlaa Dorothy V an S to le n a n d Miss Marilyn H einrich, M other daugh ter of th e tioiitess.

Background m usic will bi p re ­sen te d during th e h o iu s ot recep­tion . MIm Itory Hoover and M iss B arb a ra SutclUf will present piano num bers; Miss J e a n Pierce and M iss Joyce Pierce, tw in alstoa, will elng. .

M rs. Heinrich h a s selected p ink petunias as a centerpiece lor th e te a table, end gladioli, zinnias an d o th e r flowers of th e season are be­ing used In the room trims.

Missionary Unit Holds Luncheon

M issionary locltety of the Ohurch of th e Brethren F riday attended pot-luck luncheon a t th^ home of M rs. Frank Helstand, Hazelton. M rs. P . G . Edwards pronounced the In ­vocation.

M rs. t ^ e FIs conducted the busl- neEE lesslon and led th e lesson study on "Women o( the Bible.”

M rs. E. A. Moon gave the Scrip­tu re reading: Mrs. P asnach t otJered prayer, and group singing was con­ducted.

M rs. Dwight M itcheU and Miss Ju lia Shepherd sang two duets, a c ­com panied by Miss Dorris Miller. Miss Verdi Helstand played an a c ­cordion solo and M iss Maxine H ei- s ta n d played a piano solo.

M rs. Hazel P asnach t, Pomona, Calif., a former resident, who Is vis­iting in Twin Vails, w as a guest.

T h e next meeting wiU be at th e hom e of Mrs. 0. H . Hempleman.

Presbyterians Conduct Picnic

’ M embers of the W omen’s Mis s ionary society of ti ie Presbsterlsai

I ch u rch entertained th e ir families th is week a t the a n n u a l picnic in the church parlors. Luncheon was served at 1 o'clock, cafeteria style. O fficial hostesses w ere Mrs, Rey­nolds. Mrs. Douglas, M rs. Herron and M rs. Morgan.

M iss Alta Frazier. Miss Eva Dun­ham . M lsi Julia M cBride, Miss B et­ty Edmundson, M iss Vera Good,- m an and Bob Meigs gave lilghllghta of th e recent conference above H ai­ley. caeo Frazier reported for th e in term ediate group an d Miss Mary E llen Grieve gave a n insphnUonal t&lk a n summer conferences.

M n . Grace Schade Boater, Vlan, Okla., told of her work at th e D w igh t Indian tra in in g school In th a t place. Her husband is also a s ­socia ted with the school.

M rs. A. C. Frazier led the devo­tions, and group singing was fea­tu red .

« « «D A U G nTEIlS OF OHUBCH GROUP F E B F O W

O n a program on th e theme, "Ad- vanclng L lght-O ur Y oung People,"

d augh ters of meihbera o f the Wo­m en 's Missionary society of the Bap­ti s t ohurch gave readings and a quiz p rog ram . Following was th e annual p icn ic for families a t the city paric.

Taking part were M artha and R u th B arnett, conducting the quiz o n missions, aAd Dixie Hinshaw and

' Peggy Strain, who gave readings. A business session, c o n d u c t e d by second vice-president. M rs. R. O. K uykendall, preceded the program. Mrs. P . L. Tuckcr led devotlonals and Mrs. Roy Barnett led prayer.

Following the picnic supper, the group attended the band concert,

FIBEPLACE PARTY FOB BELIEF SOCIETY

At h e r country homo, M rs. George J . W ard annually entertains tlie second ward Rellel society ot an A ugust luncheon. T h is nfeck she aga in was hostess, before s ta r t ol the n ex t season’s program in September.

Q u arte t tables decorated with yel­low blossoms seated 40 guests, served b u ffe t style before th e fireplace on th e law n. Games were conducted by M rs. F red Farmer during the atter- noon. To close the d ay , M rs. ClMide Bro.wn led the group In singing "Qo,d Bless America.”

* * *D IV ISIO N NO. 10 PLA NS OIUKTEit M EETING

M embers of dlvhlon No. 10 ol tlio M etliodlst Ladies’ Aid society hold a m eeting tills week a t tlio liome of M rs, Rnlpli emlth, wiUi M rs, IHr- o ld B cliutt as, co-liostess.

Boventeeii wore Bcnted n t ono large n n d two small tables, dccor- a tc d in n yellow color sclieme. Plans w ere disousaeil for tlio c lia rte r meet­ing Sept. 6 a t which nil women’s gi-ouiw oJ tlio church will bo cou-

•solldatcd.—*■ * ¥

l)E A N ,nilO W N JIOST A T FAKIiWKLIi DINNEIt

I 'r lo r to Ills dcpartiiro for tlio U niversity of Onllfoniln a t Bcrk- olpy tills week, Dean Drown onlcr- ta lned n t dinner nl tho liome’of lili parentfl. Mr. mid Mrs. Carl Drown Q u w ts were LoonaM niamlfoixl, who Rccoiiipniilnl him to nerkeleyj Jack llp llre c lit, Ocno H avrlin to ii mul M lltoij HovoiK*.

Ladies of G.A.R., Attend All-Day

Party at RanchA pioneer, ol Hock Creek and

ch a rte r member of Dan McCaok circle, Ladles of the 0 . A. K„ Mrs, Lucy Strieker entertained members F riday a t the fourth annual all. day party. A no-host dlrmer a t nooil was one of the highlights of th e day.

G uests, over sixty-Hve years old w ere s e a t^ a t a table, centered w ith a bouquet of mixed gladioli in a n heirloom vase, and a bhihday cake was cut honoring those under slxty-iive.

D uring the afternoon old time dances were staged, accompanied by M rs. Strieker a t the piano and B e r n a rd Strieker on the vloihi. Keep, sakes, family photos and records w ere exhibited. William Mlkeseil san g "When You and I Were Young, M aggie,” accompanied by Miss G race Bell, and group singhig of o ld time songs followed.

Guests over 65 who were honored inc lude ' Mrs. Strieker, M rs. Flora B ates, Mrs. Ida Mead, M rs. May B lake, Mrs. Jane Adams, M rs. Jessie Yochum and Mrs. Ida Sweet, ail of Tw in Palls; Mrs. Lavema Durk, H ansen, w d Mrs. Janette Hogue, Eden.

O ther members Included M rs, Ad­dle Moore, Mrs. Myrtle Johnson, M rs. Cora Murphy, Mrs. 'B ertha Clyde, Mrs. Mable Johnson. Mrs. H azel Leighton, Mrs. Nora Zachar- las, Mrs. Hazel Gardner, Mrs. Nel. lie Perwnette, and Mrs. P earl R il­ey, Tw ta Falls.

Mrs. Edythe Trunkey, M rs. Edna Bailey, Mrs. H attie Houchln.s. Mrs. IiJary ’Trunkey and Mrs.' Thresa Cline, Hansen; Mrs. Helen Becbout a n d Mrs. Georgia "Fulton, Eden; M rs. Clara W hth and Mrs, Lorena H udson, Goodtag; Mrs. Mary Mlke- sell, Jerome.

G uests were M te Gladys Strlck-, e r. Miss Grace Bell, Mrs. Frances R iley, Mr. ond Mrs. Bernard S triek­e r. Mrs. ■Wifflam Haynes, William M lkeseil, Bill, Joyce and' W arren M errill, Prank Fulton, Clyde S triek­e r . Roland Btrlcken Miss Janice M oore and Mrs. Howard Hill.

V « ¥

Miss McGhee WedTo Frank Phillips

GOODING, Aug. 17 (S p ec ia l)- M lss,M ildred McGhee, daughter of M r. and Mrs. Arthur McGhee, and P ra n k Phillips were married Sotur- d a y altem oon a t tho Assembly of G od church, with Rev. 0 . L. Cole­m a n officiating.

A ttendants were Miss Pranced L enker and Elnar McGhee, the b rid e’s brother. Others present to w itness the ceremony were the b rid e’s mother and Mra. Colemon. T h e couple will be a t home h i Good- Ing.

Marian Martin Pattern

Style Commands Into Black” S e p p e r

Mr. and Mrs. E . G. Kail and Mr. and Mrs. C.' B . Grieve entertained at a hamburger supper last evening a t Kiwanis nook, Shoahone falls, in compliment to Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Neale and fam ily, Virginia, Jim, Jean and Francis, New Wilmington, Penn.' The honored guests, who have been spending p art o^ the

summer at the home of Senator and Mrs. F. W. Neale, are returning Monday to Penn­sylvania. Dr. N eale and Mr.

(Prom S te in an d Blaine, New York) Splendid eiam plcs of that Important "firs t b locli dress” for la te sum­

m er and afterward are the two .A m erican-designed ones pictured here. ’The chlo bl(ick wool Jersey model, left, has a f it ted , basque-like bodice and tiie very new gathered apron front. The o th e r, of black silk crepe, h a s the new sleek “strln j bean” look about It. Notice the horizontal tucks and .thf. high pockets.

P a tte rn MM may bo Ordered only in Junior miss slr.cs II, IJ, is , H, in, 10,-17 and 10, Stzo 13 requires 3% ynrds 311 Inch labile, H yard co n tra s t and 3 yarda Inoo edging.

’Ho get tills imttorh iciul F iri'|c i!N ORNTS to Idaho lEt'enlng Tlineli, r a t to r i i Dopartinpiit. Tl!N CKNTH Hddltlonnl Will brilig you our newest I ’a tte r ii lloolt.

CalendarCamp Mary Lois of the Daugh­

ters of UUh Pioneers wUr enter­ta in Camp Em -Ar-El Monday, Aug. 10. a t 2 p. m. in the city park.

V * ^Ladles’ Aid society of the M etl\-

odlst church, Division No. 4. will m eet a t the hom e of Mrs. Price, 714 Second avenue east. Tuesday a t 2 p. tn. Mrs. Colleen Dillon will be assistant hostess.

^ ¥

Winners Selected In Photo Contest

Marilyn Ann D uncan, daughter of M r. and Mrs. D. L." Duncan, Twin F alls; M aster Billy -Lee Alworth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Alworth, Twta Palls, and M aster Salklld, son of M r. and Mrs. J . V. Salklld. Wendell, were awarded fhrst prtees In three divisions In a . “personality” baby contest last evening.

Five Judges examined 224 pictures of children ranging from three m ontlis to six years of age to deter­m ine tho winners.

Honoroble m ention to tho same order, three to slx-ycar-old group, w ent to Tom O’H alloran, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Harry O'Halloran, ’Twin P ails; one to three, Larry Halloway, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Carol Halloway, ’Twin Palls.

Honorable mentions in the six m onths lo ono yeai- group went to Eiyssa May McLaflhi, daughter of M r. and Mrs. D onald McLaflln, Burley; Adrian Peterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Peterson, Twin Falls, and Donald Waite, son ot Mr. and M rs. iCylc Waite, Tw in ITnlls.

PhotoKraphs for tlie contest were taken by members 6f Tlio Album. Judges were Mrs. Partnin, Mra. K night, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. W hit­aker nnd Fred Young. First prizes were J5 in cash and porcelain m hila- tures, vnlncd n t $16.

Briggs-Parrish Rites at Temple

JEROME, Aug. 17 (Spcctal) — Miss ilu th Parrish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Parrish, Burley, and John Briggs, «pn of Mr, nnd Mrs. William Briggs, Carey, were m arried In the tem ple nt Logan,' Utuli. Aug. 0. A fter tho weiUllng ceiemony tho couple, ,nccoinpahlcd by Mr. and Mrs. V. Oarl.mli and daughter. Doth, R upert, went on to Balt Lake Olty and to Spanish r\)ik , U tah, where they wore tlie guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Atwood. Tliey returned to Onroy auiiday evening and will niako the ir home liore,

Tiio bride Is a gradiiato of tlie Burley high school w ith the class of 1037 and of Albion Btato Normal Bohool hi 1030. aiio was a teacher In the grndo schools hi Onroy last year. John Briggs graduated from tho OaVey liluh sclVooV in JM3 mid servc<| an nil u p .a . mlnsloiinry to flcotWnd nnd England for two years,

’H ie sun Is slbtvly lonliii! 11, heat, but will coiitlmie to sliliin for n billion yean , loleiitlgtj estlnmtt.

Party, Aimouiices Nevada Marriage

GOODING, Aug. 17 (Special) — Mi.ss D oro thy Mink, daughter of Mrs. Edna M ink, and W ard Jude- vltic, son o f Mr. apd Mrs. P. H. Judevlne, w ere married a t Elko, Nev.. on Aug. 15) ID39. Announce­ment of th e marriage was made by Mr.s. M ink, m other of the bride, at a party th is w e e t a t the home ol Mra. Clarn B erger.

Mr.s. Ju d ev ln e U a graduate of Shashone h ig h school and for Beven years has been employed at the teleplione offices of Shoshone and Gooding.

Mr. Ju d ev ln e la graduate of Good­ing high schoo l and operates a fnrm north of Gooding. The couple Is planning to be a t homo here.

V - V ¥

V. F. W. G ROUPS HAVE SO C IA L SESSION

V. F. W . p o s t 'an d auxiliary, fol­lowing separat<j meetings, met at the home" o f M rs. EHeanora Sept for a social h o u r one evening this week, the hostess serving refreshments. Financial p la n s were outlined by tlie women’s g roup during a business session.

HAGERMAN

Mr. and M rs. Lester Jughanos and QU5 R itzhelm er, Trenton, I II , ore vLslllng n t th e Logan Pope home

Mr. nnd M rs. Ous Conrad nnd family are spending their vacation In Wushlngton.

Slln.s C o n d it was called to Pocn- tello to co n d u c t funeral services tor Mrs. Vern Vreman. His daughter, Treso M ae, n nd Bernice Clark nc- companled n irn.

Mr. and M rs. J , W. Cqndlt, Leona, Eunice and Homer, left Sunday (or Santa B a rb a ra , Callr., where they will visit th e ir daugiiters.

Diana S h a ffe r , who has been vis­iting her s is ts r , 'Maude, and her grandparents, M r. and Mrs. Wllllnm Shaffer, accom panied Mrs. M. L. Shnlfer M onday to their home In Ellenburg, Wnsii..

0 . K . for C. A.0. A .-C lil ld Appeal, th a t’s what hoinoitciiljcd and pasteurized milk hiisl I l ’i good for tlienil

TWIN FALI,8’ DKST = = r i i O N i < u = =

Neale are brothers.Supper was p re p a re d a t th e picnic

stoves, and comp s o n g s were sung as t-wiiight tam ed In to darkness.

Also present w ere M iss B etty Col­b e r t , Miss Mary ' t a i e n Grieve and BUI Neale,

I t * *

Reads Entertain At Lodge During Rodeo Week-End

Several Twin F oils friends will be th e guests Mr. and M rs . E . A. Read a t th e ir mountain lo d g e on Newman c ree k during the a n n u a l Sun Valley rodeo .

Among the house party guests fro m Twin Falls, w ho le f t Oiiaiafter- n o o n and will re tu rn Sunday even­in g , were Mr. and M rs . 0 . A. 'Bail- ey , M r. and Mrs. B . F . Magel and M r. and Mrs. E. E. O stran d er.

Also guests a t th e R e a d hom e now o re Miss Nadine F in n e y an d Miss C aro l Jennings, M on trea l, Canada.

Shower Honors Martha Garlock

A icitchen shower a n d garden par­ty given by Miss V ale rie H erre and M iss Barbara B radley a t th e home

’een nonorea M iss Martho O arlo ck who will m a r ry Qllbert McRlU la te th is fall.

M iss Oarlock Is d a u g h te r of Mr. a n d M rs. L, W. O arlock , who re. c e n tly moved to G ooding, a n d Mr. M cRIU is son of Mr. a n d Mra. O. G. M cR lli.

B rig h t colored lig h ts Illuminated th e law n where guests w ere seated at q u a r te t tables tor gam es. Following p lay , gifts were p resen ted to the h o n o ree and refreshm ents served.

A m ong the gueste w e re M iss Vir­g in ia Arm Chase. M iss June Weiss, M iss Maxine Herre, Miss Grace Brueggem an, Miss B e t ty Brinegar, M iss Louise Cam pbell. Miss Adda M ae Bracken, Miss M adeline Brack­en . M iss Janet P ltzw ater, Miss Alice M u rp h y and Miss D oro thy Mitchell.

¥ ¥ ¥

Courtesy Honors , Departing Pupil

M rs. Ed Skinner a n d Mrs. M. E. H olm es entertained yesterday after­n o o n a t a dessert' luncheon and handkerch ief shower in honor of M iss RutJrTCater, E d e n . *ho Is leav­in g n ex t week for W oodbury col­lege , Los Angeles, s topp ing en route a t S a l t Lake City.

G u es ts were sea ted at o single ta b le ,which was covered with a lace c lo th and centered w lti i rosebuds. Q u an titie s of garden bouquets trim­m e d th e rooms.

G u es ts were M rs. P . A. Tester, m o th e r of the h ono ree , nnd Mrs. F r e d Cheley ond M iss Lolse Cheley, E d e n ; Mrs. Effle B ondurast. La C rosse , Kan., a u n t o f the honor g u e s t; Mrs. FVed H aggard t. Mrs. 0. H . F ie ld s, Mrs. B e rn a rd Martyn ond M rs . George Roberts.

'V V V- PA IR V IEW GRANGE A PPEA R S AT K IM BERLY

A t a meeting ol K im berly Grango th i s week a t the schoo l house. Palr- vlew Grange p re sen ted a Major B ow es program u n d e r direction of M rs. O. O. Brooks, lecturer, with H e rsch e l Hargcr as th e major.

A ’spiritual Bong sung by the group, a t a p dance, Im personation of Ted M a lo n e and of K im berly Grange m a s te r , Prank Beer, b y J. R. Craw­fo rd , a song by Mrs. F rank Atkina a n d a Negro dance fo rn ied the pro- g ra m .

K im berly Orange re in sta ted Mrs. H a n :le t Bruns as a m em ber.

' ¥ V *'ASSERIBLY NOTES"

A T MABY-MARTIIA M E E TM a ry M artha class o f the Baptist

c h u rc h , meeting th is week nt tho h o m e o f Mrs. W. A. P erre tcn . heard re p o r ts from the re c e n t church as­sem b ly . Mrs. L. L. Holloway was In ch a rg o .

M rs . Perreten, ass is ted by Mrs. P. S. M u n ro , Mrs. K uka a n d Mrs. P. 0. S a lisb u ry , served refreshm ents.

Jerome Bride

T h e temperature I n Massawa, E r i tre a , docs not drop below 70 de­g re e s during winter.

M rs. Jack Sllbangb, Jerome, who was married Sunday* Au;. 11, a t Pocatello. She was formerjy M iss A lta Dick,

(Times E nsrav ins)

Bridge to Honor Former Resident

M rs. Tom Alworth and M rs. Lyle K au ffm an aro entertaining th is evc- nUig in honor of Mrs. Horcice Qesas, Idaho Palls, formerly of T w in Falls.

M rs. Gesos Is the guest of her p aren ts , Mr. and Mra. E . D. Mo- Cleery, now ot Jerome.

B ridge Is planned as the divertlso. m ent of the evcntog, and a la te sup per w lii be served a t q u a r te t tables decked with late summer flowers.

A g if t will be presented to Mrs. Oosas, and prizes will be awarded for th e bridge games.

Former Resident To Wed Aug. 24

A nnouncem ent has been m ade ot the com tag marriage of M iss Dor­o thy M ae Hafer, Seattle, daughter 'of C arl Hnfer, Twin Falls, to Lee Je q je n . Seattle. They will marry S a tu rd ay , Aug. 24, a t Seattle.

A fter the wedding, tho couple will reside a t the Paul B evere apart­m ents in Seattle.

M iss H afer Is a form er resident of y w in Palls, and a ttended schools here. S h e moved to S eattle about a year a n d a half ago.

¥ i f *F IR E S ID E SUPPEB HELD AT CLEAR LAKES

Mr. a n d Mrs. Blii Blake enter­t a i n ^ la st evening a t a canyon party a t Clear lakes for the per­sonnel o f Standard S ta tions, Inc.

A fter a barbecue supper, games were played . A. E. Mackey, Salt Lake City, division m anager ov' S ta n d a rd Stations, Inc.. was an out- of-tow n guest.

O th e rs attending were M r. and M rs. M aiion ■ Quest, Mr, o nd Mrs. Louis D enton, Mr. and M rs. Bud W allace, M r. and Mrs. W yland Lind, M r. a n d 'M rs . K ent Joiinson. Miss M arjorie Haipln and Don Duncahn.

^ ^SUN SHIN E CIRCLE CLUB STAGES PICNIC

A nnual picnic of S unshine Clvclt club w as held this week a t th e homo of M rs. E. P. La'ubenhelm. Guests were M rs. Barah Allen, Boise. Mrs. Hazel Rile, Miss Patsy Rpynolds and d a u g h te r of Mra. Laubenhclm.

W hite elephant, furnished by Mrs, Ooldle Fullm er, went to M rs. Wll- ham Reynolds. A brief buslne.ss ses­sion w os held and tho rest of tho a fternoon was spent a t games.

■PEACHES-E lb e rta canning peaches for sale by bushel or truck load lots. For small quantities b ring container.

CRY STAL SPRINGS ORCHARD Flier, Id ah o P hone 0J9

AIRPLANE BUILDERS WANTED!

U nusual o ppo rtun ity for men IB to 35 to be specially trah ied a n d ready In 8 w eeks for Alrl)lane Construction Jobs In large

' C tallfpm la factories. Minimum starting w age 60o to 05c per hour, p o r t tuition and tran sp o rta tio n needed ,to a ta ri. Balance o t tu itio n o u t o f pay while o n Job.’ lliousands o f properly trained m en h n v o been placed recently . Bonded rcprescntnllves will bo in T w in Falla territory In a few days.

F o r Interview , fill hi tlie following application nnd nmll to L t . Commnnder Novillo Box 17 c /o Id a h o Evening, Thnca. O nly lic n ith y U, S. O ltlie iis arc cllglblc-for th is factory training.

n a m e ......................... i . ........'.................... AGIO......

EXACT ADDRKSS..... J .......... ........ .............................

o c c u P A 'r ro N ...... ...................... I’h o n k n o .................

SADIO DEVOTIONS 6p«a1c«r f o r m o r a l s s rad io , d n o t lo n s

n e x t vrcek U H . 0 . M cC iU U U r o f t h a T w in FalU M o thodU t c h u rc h , .M onday , W cdnM diy a n d F r id a y a t 7 :8 0 .

P IU S T P R E S B Y T E R IA N Prelud#, “ P le re -a -n o U # ," D am m «>G uII«

m m : p ro c e u lo n a l, '* W h e tu M o rn in g G lld i th e B klet: h y m n , “ FalrM ^ L o r d Jesua;**, an them , “0 L o rd M o tt Holy." F . F . B a r ­k e r j o ffe rto ry , “ CU ilr do lune,'* D e b o ssy ; to lo , “The L o rd I s My L l f f h t / ' O lc y Bpeaks, Miss M a r s a r e t P o tte r . K im b e r ly : ic rm o n , “Tho L o v o Motif," R « v . N e a l , truest sp eak e r: rv ceu io n o l, " S a v io r A s a in lo T hy Dcnr K a m o '* ; on rn n ljt, Miw J a n e t F o lt! diroctor o f m u sic , M rs. M il la rd D a w

FIHflT a ro iS T U N ^ , '' s i x th aad.Shoshona StTM ta . . '

Z la rk 0 . C ro n e n b e n tr , m ln U ta r - • a . m . Dlbl« aehool, F . : W . fl l ic k .,

gen e ra l lo p e rln U n d e n t. l(H 4 6 'a . m . M o ra - na •w oiahip. A nthem , " L e t K o t- Y oor .'

f i t T roabled" b y U w re n c e i. F r* d L. K udplph, d ire c to r ; l e r a o n th e m o r " T h e . C h ris tia a a n d CooflicUng L oyaltla f^ r ' 7 p. m . C hrlfltlan Y ou th fe U o w ih ip ' t s d C h rU tltn E n d e a w . % p , « » t in lo n Ice a t th e C ity p#rk. ,

ST. E D W A R D ’S C A T U O U C R«v. H . E . H eilm an, p a a to r llev. J . H . G rady , a s f tU ta n t

Sunduy m osses a t 6, >7 and 0 a . m . ; w eek day musics a t 8 a . m .; confeaaions h e a rd B aturdays 7 :30 to- 8 :3 0 | c o m m u n io n 'S u n ^ d ay# : F irsi S u n d a y fo r men, a e c o n d S u n ­d ay fo r w om en: t h i r d Sunday f o r c b i ld r e o : fo u r th Sunday f o r young fo lk a ; b ap tU m a afU T m oises o n S u n d ay ; t ic k calls a n y tim e, day o r n i f f h t ; in fo rm a tio n e la u c s fo r non-Cftthollca a t the re c to ry , 860 B lu e I j ik e s boulevard M onday and T u esd ay « t 7 :S0 p. m.

F I R S T D A PT I8T Hoy E . D a rn e tt. p a s to r

0:46 a. m., S u n d ay ,sch o o l, M r s . H o w ard B u rk h a rt, g e n e ra l- a u p e r ln te n d e n t j 11 a . m ., w orship, s e rm o n aubjcct, *’W hat la F ren icm iT ": 6 :4 6 p . m ., J u n io r b ig h B. Y . P . U .; R j>. m .. u n io n ic tv lce i n th e c i ty p a r k ; 0 p. m .. s e n io r high B a p t i s t Y o u n s People’s union In th e b u n g a lo w ; 8 p. m . W ednesday, m id w e e k serviced

C U U R C n OP T H E N A Z A R E N S ' ‘ Sixth aventie-and Fourth •tW flfMrth"' :

L. D. Smith, pastor ■9:IS a. m., Sunday acViool, W. Ora*

ham. superintendent In charge; 1 1 a . -ts.( morning wonhip,. J. W. Smith in charga. or tho singlnsrtermon subject, "If-the - Vlfion Torry"{ 7 p; m., Young Pdbple'a • meeting, Wayna DeBoard president In, , chargo; the ionlora meet with Mta. U.'Q. Field, In their room; 8 p. m., evening ovangellstio service: Martin . Smith will ' have charge of the muilc and singing; icrmon subject, ‘'Whoa the Summont Cornea.*’ . ..;

ASSEM BLY O F GOD T A D E R N A C L B' 9G0 S eco n d avenue w e s t

B. E . A , H offm an , p a s to r 10 a . m., S u n d a y school; 11 a< m., w o r '

sh ip fu l le rv lc o ; " T h e Glory a n d P ow or o f th e Lord'* w il l be the s e rm o n th e m e : 7 p . m., Y oung P e o p le 's s e rv ic e ; 8 p. m ., ivangellstlQ sc rV lc e r week n i g h t se rv ices Tuesday and T h u r s d a y e'venlnga : ch ild ren ’s chu rch S a tu rd ay a t 8 p. m.

D E T H B L TEM PLE 450 T h i r d avenue w ca t B, M . D avid , posto r

10 a . tn., S u n d a y school. B. K . A lld lr l t , B uperin ten iicn t: 1 1 :3 0 a . m.. m o rn in g w o r­s h ip ; serm on b y tho p a a to r ; fl p. Y oung People 's m e e tin g , M rs. R ose H ill , sp eak er I 7:80 p . m ., evening o v a n g e lia tlc service. In c h a rg o o f Bethel T em p lo c h i l ­d re n ’s e h u rc h ; sp e c ia l m usic w ith th o ch ild ren 's ch o ru s a n d the c h i ld re n 's o r - ch e a tro : flag B o rv lcc ; sc rm o n .su b jcc t, " B e ­com ing a C itiz e n o f tho K in g d o m o f G o d " ; Tuesday. H p . m.. B e th e l T em ple B ible school; W ed n esd ay , 8 p . m -, ch u rc h p rn y e r m e e tin g ; F f id o y , 8 p. m .. ch u rc h fellow ship m e e tin g , w ith com m union s e rv ­ice ; S a turday , S p . m ., c h ild re n 's church^

IM M A N U E L L U T H E R A NF ourth avenue a n d Second a t r e c t east

M. H . Z ag e l, m in is te rn Ji W qnnr^njr - th r - d t r c g

tion o f -E d w a rd W e in e r ; tho o d u l t cloiis mcet^ in tho c h u rc h a u d ito r iu m ; 10 a. m ., d iv ine worship w i th sermon b y tho R ev . E. Kichm ann, v ice -p re s id en t o f tho O re ­gon and W ash io R to n distric t o f the L u ­th e ra n chu rch : 8 p . m . T h u rsd a y . B ib le s tudy hour o f th e W a lth e r Ica true s o c lc ty ; R p. m.. F r id a y , tho adult m e m b e rsh ip g roup meets fo r th o study o f C h ris tia n fundam entals.

C H U R C H OF GOD Q u in c y street

C laud C . P ro t t . p a s to r 10 a. m.. S u n d a y school, L e o C arney ,

B uperfnlendent.: 11 a . m., p r e a c h in g ; 7 p . m.. Young P eo p lo ’s m eeting. C l i f f P r a t t , p rea lden l; 8 p . m ., p re n c h ln tf : p ro y e r m eeting W ed n esd ay n ights, 8 p . m.

A M E R IC A N L U T H E R A N Tlilril S ireo t a n d T h ird A v en u e North

(S ev en th -D ay A dventist B Jdg .)E. W . K o s tcn , postor

T h irteen th S u n d a y a f te r T r in i ty . 10 a< m. Sunday school. I I a, m. D iv in e w or* sh ip w ith s e rm o n by tho p a s to r : "T h o Call to the K in g d o m and You,'* M atthew 21 :28-32.

INeighbors’ Churches. F IL E R BIETnO D IST

10 a . m.. S u n d a y school ;v n a. m . , m orn* Ing w orship w ith a sermon by t h e p a a to r : (hu open a ir . s e rv lc o and b o sk e t d in n e r announced fo r A u ir. 25 to bo h e ld In Sho* shono basin h a s been postponed to Sun* day, S ep t. I a t w h ich time D r. K e r tto g , o u r d is t r ic t su p 'c rln tcn d cn t, w il l pccach . P lease note th o c h o n g e in date . T he L a* dies' A id w ill m e e t Wedneailoy, A ug , 21 , w ith M rs. F r a n k A lb in as h o a tc s s ; p ro* g ram . “ W om en o f th e DILle,” I n ch a rg e o f M rs. E. E. H a u g ; tea com m ittee . M rs. Peek; M rs. O rm , M rs. Chosd' n n d M rs J ack so n .

JE R O M E G O S P E L TA B ER N A C L E Second A v e . an d Lincoln S t .

M rs. N eva R ussell, shcpherdeas S u n d ay m o rn in g aorvicri b eg irt a t 10

a. m . followed b y picnic In th o p a rk . 8 p . m . S u n d ay uvening pralK O serv ice , co n g reg a tio n a l a in g in g ; evnnuclijitic m es­sage, "T he S u p p e r o f th s G reat G od ,"

A SSE M D L Y OF GOD H anson

Mabel S ch ae fe r, pa sto r Services In th e M.W.A. H n l l

10 a . m. S u n d a y school. M m . G. B. W ren . Supt. 11 a . m. M orning w orsh ip . 6:30 p . m . Y o u n g people's m e e tin g . 7 :80 p. m . Ju n io r C h u rc h . B*.00 p. n u e v c n ln s service.

(Conthiuoiu from 1:00 P . M.)

i s e to 2 p . M . - 2 0 e ‘0 8 P- M. EVE. 2 S C r>>u Tax

Kiddles l O e Anytime -------- UNCLE JO E -K 'S --------

H m g e A i r Conditioned

LAST TIMES TODAY!

6EOR6E HOUSTON— ^AS W H O BILL H I C K O O "A CAAND NATIONAL RttEAsV^

3 Stooges Comedy! Cartoon 0 Serial % ^ew s

— TOMORROW —

m sT cnuncii op i Bb nnETHRENT h ird a v e n u e and F o u rth s t r e e t n o r th

A . C. M iller, p a s to r ;10 a . m ., ,Sundoy schoo l; U a . ra ,, m o m ^ '

Ing w o r s h ip ; icrm on sub jec t, " T h e B usl- ncjs o f Re*ngion": evening se rv ices a t cltT park.

SALVATION ARMY217 Second A ven u e-b o u th

f l|45 a . m . Sunday Bch<?ol. U a . ia. \ - H oliness m eetin g . ,6 :8 0 p. m . Y o u n g P e o - . p lea L eg io n . p . m . O pcn«alr .tnec tln s . ' •« P. a i . S a lva tion m eeting . C a p ta in V. V andersh iis w ill conduct the m o rn in g and / evening m eetin g s. Tuesday ev en in g c o t ; / tago m ee tin g , 8 p. m .' T hursday even ing .8 P. m ., p u b lic m eeting, S a tn rd a y , 7:80 p. ra . O p c n -a ir m eeting. ' ,

F IR S T PEN TE C O ST A L .C o rn e r S th and 3 rd A venue’s E a s t . .

E llis. Seism , pasto r 10 a . m . Sunday school. J n o C alder,

Supt. 11 0 . m . M orning w o rsh ip . 7 p. m. Y o ung People’s m eeting . 8 p , m. R vangelistlc service. Wed 2 p . m . Chil­d ren 's h ou r, 108 R am agc S t., S o u th P a rk . Wed. 8 p. m . p rayer m eeting . T h u r . 8 p. m/ C h ild re n 's service conducted in - D r u r y park. F r id ay 8 p. m . Weekly se rv ice . This • t'T lday a n anefimbly business m e e tin g w ill lia conduc ted . Sal. 7:4tt s t r e e t m eeting , in f r o n t M cComb's m a rk e t : a lso a .s tree t BtTvice w ill bo conducted in F i le r a f te r tho T w in F a l ls i tre « t s e n lc e .

U N IT E D B R E T H R E N R ev. C. E. L lch ty ,' p a s to r

C o rn e r 3 rd St. E . and Srd A ve. E .9:4r> a. m . Sumiay school. 10:4I> a . m.

Mornipif w o rsh ip w ith s e m o n by E v a n ­gelist P rn n k N nrris a n d spec ia l musio by Mrfl. X en a V. H . W eothcrby , B . S., (Mus. E d .) U n iversity o f Idaho . 7 p . m. C hristian Endeavor* 8 p. m . . evening evangclistlo service. Special ev an g e lls tlo ' services io progress now a t th e church will con in u e Indclin lte ly . T h c ro w ill li« no S a tu rd a y evening service. _______

C H U R C H O P C H R IST I.O .O .P. Holl

A rn o ld W atson, m ln la te r ,'10 a . m . Bible classes fo r a ll ages.

11 a. m . R e g u la r m o rn in g w o rsh ip hour. S erm on; "PosUW e DWlno L aw ,* ' s. m. Com m union service. 8 p . m , Itegu* Inr even in g w orship hou r. S e rm o n : “ P ra y ­er—W ho C an P ray a n d W h a t to PrAy For."

YOU CAN’T BEAT THESE USED CAR

VALUESI

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESEBARGAINSNOW

‘3S) P l y m o u t h D e L u x a

$ 6 4 9Sedan■30 Ford V-8 C oupe-

H eater .... ............. . - $ 5 3 5'39 Cbovrolct Coups . - £ 6 6 5

, ’37 Ford V-8 Coupo . . . .$ 3 9 5 '37 Studcbakcr Sedan— -H eater, R a d io ............ - $ 4 6 9 .'37 Chevrolet TownSedan .... .... .... . '. . . .$ 4 5 0'37 D eSoto Coupe—Radio, H e a te r .... ......... $ 4 5 0'38 Chevro({4 Coach —$ ^ 5

$ 3 4 9.'36 C h ev rw ^S p o rtSedan ______'30 LaFayettc Sedan... £ 3 4 8 '34 Chevrolet Coach . . . $ 2 2 5 '34 Chevrolet Coupe . - . $ 2 3 5 ' '32 Ford 4 door Sedan . . .$ 9 5 '31 Chevrolet 4-door Be.d a n ........................................... . $ 1 0 0 .'30 Ford Sedan ............. $ 8 5'30 Ford T u d o r .......... ......575 .■30 Bulck Sedan .............$ 7 5 ,30 Ford Roadster...... _ . .$ 8 5'29 Ford S ed a n ..... ...........$ 4 5

TRUCKS'39 d ie v ro lc t I'.'j Ton Truck,20x750 Tires ............... $ 6 7 5 '38 Chevrolet H i Ton Truck,35x6, lO-Ply Tires .... $ 5 2 5'37 Chevrolet H i Tou W uck,32x0, 10-Ply T ire s ...... $ 4 7 5'37 Q M .C. 154 Ton Truck,G rain Bed .......... ....- . . $ 4 7 £'39 Plym outh Pick-up . . $ 4 S u '37 F ord ;,i Ton Stake $ 2 9 5 '37 Chevrolet VA ton Truck

'lOHB W. S .. lOlO trucklicense .... .................... $ 4 9 5'35 Chevrolet 114 ton Truck ........... ............... ^ 7 3 .

, Maiiy Cars nnd Truclts to ChooBo from

S tart From ?20X/jiAll Cnrs and Trucks

, Over $200 Ilnvo O.K. ’' Guiirantcc.

For the Ilcsl Deal In Town See

LEARN TO SAVE THE

m■ ''V ■

Page 6: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

Page Six IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Saturday, August 17,1940

Bolsters Bengals

\8Couiilin&o»LD.

IbSPeLu cmm'/GEHmsBn D U R im A B t T t tR sv nrcHWivs

p3H t h b m m N T .

MBisH wiLmm T fie S o d l f m N ASSK /A iro»

IN HOMERB ANDm s o m e n IN w h e n

BK>U6Ht UP pRcm f o'MiLL.e.

ANBmVJOP&fiDCOMUDUTCH M E W , TfIB D B T n o tt PIPOKIB CAU&HT p a s s e s F/!0M S 4 M ' / BAU&H ^HILE

s m m s r - f ^TBMS CHWSfAtJ.

ii Cowboys Battle for ! $7,000 in Prizes ; At Sun Valley Rodeo

SUN VALLEY, Aug. 17 (Special)—When the ace cow- [ boyB of the world stepped into the arena here this afternoon■ for the opening of the annual Sun Valley rodeo, they started■ battle for prizes in the richest two-day show in the nation.

With the total offered for RAA (Rodeo Association of : America) events being well over ?8;000; the “ special” prizes ■; going over $2,000, ana.the added entry fees bringing another

?2,000, the total that will be

i Rainiers Lift Lead Again;; Acorns LoseI • (By Cnltcd Press) t Seattle Increased Ita PacUlc Coast ' league leadership over O akland by ; > half some last night w hen It gpllt t K double blU wiUi Sacram ento while t San Diego’s Padres were nosing out I the Acorns In an 11-Inning cncoun'; ter.1 T he Ealnera took 10 Innings to > beat Sacramento, 6 to 4, In tha llrst : game, ond required the services oj . thre* pitchers to keep ih s Solons In check.

■ Hal T urpin missed winning his 20th game of the .season lo r the Halijlera In the teven-lnnlng night­cap when th e Cardinals rapped him for 11 hits an d a 2 to 1 victory.

Young Bob Welland o f Los An­geles became the fou rth leodlng pitcher of th e cli«ult w hen he .turn­ed In his 10th v lc to^ against five defeats, and Los Angeles took a 4 to 1 decision over Portland.

S tan Sperry sent G eorge McDon- [ aid home on a single with one away I In the 11th Inning to give San Diego ' a 2 to 1 win over Oakland.

Hubert K ittle won hla firs t coast league gome lost n ight when h«

I pltehed San Francisco to a n 11 to 4 : win ovpr Hollywood.

Firal Gome

S co ltlaR U B

.000 000 I t l 1 - 5 0 I ....... O il 001 100 0 - < 7 IS irra m c n to

‘ W#bb*r, W « lk tr . 8crlb n # r a n d K e in i , C im p b c ll; J u d d and G rllk.

O nkU nd ........ ........ 000 001 000 0 0 - f 10 I. 8«n D U io .............010 000 000 O It -J 0 0: S i lv « o n a n d Conroy j I l u m p h r t j i and ‘ O ito r t . ,

'P o r tU n d .....................-.000 100 0 0 0 - 1 * ^ 0-Lo» AnwlcB ...............000 OOJ O X x-4 8 0

U llcher a n d A d im i) W tlla n d an d Ih lm . . R H R

Hollywood ...................018 DOO OOO— 4 9 2;8 a» F ranelaco .......... 016 OJO 2 0 x —11 12 0

. . B Ithom , G ay , . i lo n c r lif a n d B re n ic li iD au o , K iy i# a n d H prlni.

1 Second Game■ f i ia t t la ................................OJO 000 0 - 1 S 0

iS v r a m f n ta ......................n o ooo x - 2 11 1Turpin and ^ .............

Ogrqdow ikl.C im p b e li; M ung^r and

Sam Snead Takes leadensliip in Canadian Open

TOnONTO. Aug. n (U.PJ-Long- drlving Samm y Snead fro m Shaw­nee-on Delaware, Penn., le d tl)o low OO nnit tle« Into the fina l 39 holes of the Canadian open go lf tourna­m en t today w ltli « Jlve-stroke lead over h li nearest rival. Hay M nngrum of Ottlfniont, Penn,

Bpead tu rned In ■ five-under-pur es I t ti ll end o f yeiterday’n IB-hols I'ound, whioh coneIi|ded qu tllty ing play, b ttte rlng tiie oourit raoord ofS 2 “ • « » » • h i m •?«-hol» to U l of M w grum

ned In tw in rouniJi o f W for

won in cash amounts to over ?7,000, a c c o r d i n g to Bob Miles, rodeo director.

T hot to tal m akes it far and away the richest tw o-day show In the Isnd. In fact, th e to tal cash offer­ed tops many o f the ‘‘big" three ond four-day shows.

The result Is t h a t tlie spectators today and Sunday will be witnessing some of the g reo test riding In the nation as top-hands bid for the big money.

Such famous cowboys as Paul Carney, a ll-around national cham ­pion in 1935; B a rre l Mulkey. the Idaho s ta r who w on the all-around championship In 1038; Buckshot Sorrell, Tucson, A rii., 1039 ca lf- roptag .champion, a n d m anj o thers are participating a n d gunning for the rich prltes.

Sunday's pi'ogram will be pretty much the same os today’s, with th e program getting u n d e r way a t 2;30, featuring the g ran d entry parade tha t Includes In d ian s, stage-coaches and o ther m em entoes tliat bring memories of Id ah o ’s earlier days.

Special feature o f the day's events will be the two motorless gilder planes th a t perfo rm over-head d u r­ing the afternoon’B festivities.

WESTERN INTERNATIONAL Salem 7, Yakim a Vancouver 4, W enatchee S

Bob Feller Cop 721st Victory;Reds Capture Two

' . B y G EO R G E KIRKSEY

NEW YORK, Aug. 17 (U.R)—Joe Cronin hasn’t much to smile about these days as he watches the' miracle he pre­dicted—the fall of the Yankees—come to pass, as his Red Sox squander opportunity a f te r opportunity because of their woeful pitching staff. B ut mention of James Emory Foxx makes Cronin forget hia troubles.

Foxx volunteered to go behind the bat to help the Red Sox July 81 and has played an important role since in keep­

ing the Bostonians clinging to.

SCOREBOARD

BY IIABRV QBAYSON NEA Service , S ports Editor

It could happen only In Cleveland, the Indians of w hich city are th e only outfit in professional basebaU with two parks to bo used to th e best advantage.

A lter playing a ll i t s big and S u n ­day and holiday gam es hi the $2 ,~ 600,000 lakefront m unicipal stad ium with a capacity of m ore than 70.000, tllC Ulevclim rmanagehSent robk tlie ' two-game series w ith Detroit, th e hottest of the year, to old League park, where no m ore than 20,000 can bo accommodated.

Cyril C. Slapnlka’s plon was, of course, to give the T ribe a bulge In the direction of a 200-foot r ig h t field fence, while handicapping th e Tigers, whose power is preponder­antly right-handed.

Tlie scheme worked all right, as far 05 the result of th e fhst gam e was concerned. H al Trosky, B eau Bell and Roy W eathorly were c red ­ited with home runs over their f a ­vorite target on balls which would have been caught easUy In the sym ­metrical stadium.

But the switch was unnecessary witli the fabulous Bob Poller a n d Mel H arder pitching, and D etroit's Big Three cought out of turn.

Slapnlcka. only outsm arted th e club o u t of some 40,000 paid adm is­sions.

He also succeeded In getting thousands more mad a t him, which comes close to m aking it unan i­mous.

Slapnlcka. who has a (acuity fo r doing th e wrong th ing a t the r ig h t time, was the'only person associated with o r interested In the American league who underesthnated th e draw ing power of the series. '%

H ere were the Indians returning Irom a road trip and batthng th e Tigers, with whom they were tied for th e league lead.

Feller, the greatest hidivlduol a t ­traction in the business, was to pitch.

So Slapnlcka moved the show from a modern stadium , which th e city practically gives the club an d where there would bo room (or all, to a dilapidated orchard, where thousands were turned away, tu rned away and turned away, but who stayed to mutter and wonder why the gam es couldn’t be played down- .town In copifort.

I t w as b?d enough the (Irst day, but even with this warning, S lap­nlcka brought 'em back the follow­ing afternoon to do the whole silly act over again.

As one Detroit official, badly shortchanged, rem arked, some blokes never learn.

But. It.seems, Cyril C. Slapnlcka shnply h as to mastermind.

Perhaps he was saving wear and. tear, o n the stadium, figuring th a t Cleveland will have a good team again n ex t year and wUl need it.

Conmakers in tlie United S tates produce about 12,000,000,000 tUi cans annually.

third place. Yesterday Foxx’s big bat boomed out two homers—his 30th and 31st— to increase his lifetime major league production to 495, one more than Lou Gehrig. Only Babe Ruth himself has hit more major league homers than Foxx. Foxx has quite a jbb ahead of him to flirt with Ruth’s lifetime mark of 714 but he’ll stay in there and awing.

since Foxx stepped behind th e b a t for tlie Red Sox h e 's batted a t a .358 clip and h a s clubbed 10 homers. T he two he h i t yesterday against W ashington w ere .h ig h ly Im portant pokes M they k e p t th e Red ’Sox frorf~li1ftivlng a g am ^ a f te r getthig a 4-run lead. Foxx h i t h is f irs t w ith a mate on h i th e f ir s t Inning and then won the gam e, w ith his secoftd in tlie ten th a f te r the. Senat6rs had pulled ahead in th e n in th . Bobby Doerr|s shigle scored Tabor w ith the tying ru n in th e n in th and th e Red Sox tlien w on. • 7-6, In th e ten th when Foxx d id the honors.

Ind iana Climb Cleveland m oved three games

ahead of D etro it w hen Bob Feller w eathered a 12 -h lt a tta ck by th e Browns and cam s th rough for h is 21st victory, 8-3.,

The W hite Sox b lasted three D e­tro i t Tiger p itchers Jor 14 hits an d a 13-4 trium ph.

The C inctonatl R eds came out of th e ir hltth ig slum p an d blasted o u t a double victory over the Chicago Cubs. 9t4 and a-3.

Spilt D ouble Bill Tlie P ittsbu rgh P ira te s and St.

Louis Cards sp lit a doubleheader, w ith Pittsburgh scoring a run In th e n in th to win th e opener. 6-J, b u t dropping the n igh tcap , 0-5.

Nick S trinceilch pitched the Bos­to n Bees to a flve -h lt, I2-innhig 2-1 victory over th e Brooklyn Dodgers la s t night, dropphig 6 >4 games be­h in d the Reds. A crowd of 33^00 Jamm ed -Ebbets field to celebrate "Fred PJtzslmmons" night.

T he O iants cam e from behind to m ake nine h its good for a 6-3 vic­to ry over th e PhllUes.

• BOX SCORERED SOX 7, SENATORS 6

WuhInff*B a b r bC u t c f LewU r f W alker If T ravU 8b B loodU lb M yer 2b Pofab) n F « m )l e U on t'do p WelaJ X C arra ique l p 0 G«lbcrt XX .0 K rak 'kaa p 2

B oaton ab DlM afffflo c f iC ra m e r If F oxx e W IIliu Q i r f C toQ lti la T a b o r Sb F in n e y lb D o err 2b O it« rm '« r p D lc k m a n p C a rey s W ilio n p

. T o U b 48 6 IS T o U la 40 1 x ~ f ia t t« d f o r M ontaagudo i n 4 th . x x ^ B a tte d f o r C a rru Q u e l i n € th . i> -B alt«d f o r Dlekm«Q In Otb.W a ih in s to n _____ — ___001 001 202BM ton ---------------- ------------2 1 2 000 001 1 - 7

E rrors—T a b o r, D lck m an / T w o ba«e hita -L e w U . F e rre ll.. O iU rm u e lle r 2. W illiam s. Thr«« b u a h its —P o fa h l. H om e runs— W alker, B loodw orth . F o x x 2 . B oerr. Stolen basea—C arey . S ae rlf lc e a -^ O iU a se io . Fin* n e y . ' D ouble p la y a ^ D o e r r . C ronih an*! Finney, W in n in ? ‘p itc h e r— W ilson , loslnit p lu b e r—K ra k a o s k u .

WHITE SOX 13. TIG ERS 4Chicago a b • r h D e tro it ab ' r hW ebb 2b 4 I 1 B a r te ll ss 4 0 0Kreevlch c f fi 8 2 M cC osky cf 4 1 4Kuhel lb 5 2 1 G e h rin ire r 2b 3 0 0Bolters If 4 1 ■ 2 M eyer 2b 1 1 1R osenthal I f 1 I 0 G reen b ’s If 4 0 1Appling SB 4 t 8 Y ork l b 4 I 2W right r f 6 1 1 H iffg in a 8b 4 0 0Tresh c 4 1 2 F ox r f 8 0 0Kennedy 8b 8 0 I T e b b e tta c 9 1 0Risney p 4 I I B rid g e s p V 0 0

N ew h’c r p 0 0 0A v erlll a •1 0 0S m ith p 0 0 0

Totuls SO 18 14 T o ta ls 82 4 8I —B atted fo r N ew houaer in 8th.Obleaso _______ ____________000 J02 001— 18D etroit - ___ ____________~...001 000 0 0 3 - 4

Error*— K ennedy , T eb b e ta 2. McCosky, Fox. T w o b u e h i ts — S o lte rs . Appllnir, McCosky. M eyer. H om o ru n s— Kuhel, York. S to len basea — K reev ieh . Treah. B a c r lf lc e S '^ e n n e d y 2, R ls n e y , Bridges^ Double p taya— W ebb. A p p l ln s and K u h e t; Kuhel, A p p lln i « n d K u h e l. Losing pitcher— B ridges.

INDIANSSt. L ouii a b rH effner 2b 6 1Grace r f 6R adcli/r If 6Judnieh cf 6Oiift Sb 4C ulle'ne l b S B ersrd ino ea iSw ift e SU cQ uinn s 18iwce c 0A uker p 8lie a c XX 1T ro tte r p 0

8, BROWJJS 3 C le v e la n d abC h a p m a n If W e a th 'ly cf B o u d re a u i i T ro sk y lb Bell r f K e l tn e r lb M ack 2 b H e m tle y c F e lle r p

w . L. P e tSalt Lake ....................... 69 30 .639Boise ................ .58 49 .542Ogden ................. .............52 56 .481Idaho FolU ......... ............ 61 56 .477Pocatello ......................... 50 58 .463

65 .398

Fishing Trip Ends As Auto Overturns

SHOSHONE, Aug. 17 (S pec laD - A fishing tr ip ended in near-trag ­edy for M r. and M rs. W. A. Am­brose, Bulil, west of Shoshone, Wed­nesday. Qohig to M agic dam for a fish ing trip , the Ambrose car left th e road when som ething appar­en tly happened to the 'ateerlng jnechanism , w id the oar turned over a n d landed nose down In the bor­row pit.

M rs. Ambrose, w ho was driving, suffered bruises an d cuts on her r ig h t arm an d a sligh t conclusslon. M r. Ambi'ose had only a aprahied w rist, n je l r M odel A Ford was a com plete wreck, and tlie couple a t­tributed th e ir good luck to their m oderate ra te of speed.

l a k e IIONOBS SAM DALEM onraO M EFCY , AIb. «1.B - The

new 800-acre lake a t tlie Pea River s ta te forest had been nam ed "Tho- locco," afte r Qen. Sam Dale, Ala­b am a’s fam ed In d ia n flght.er. Tlio nam e, given h im by the Choctaw In d ia iu , m eans "Powerful One."

Mac Finally Gets a Pat on the Back--And From Golf Champ, too

BY HENRY MoLEMORE NEW VORK, A ug. 17 (U.PJ-Most

of the letters th a t come In lor me at« so poisonous I have often con- eldered engaging D r. Dltmars of the reptile b u reau of the Bronx loologlcal gardens as my private secretary. E ither tlia t, or have William Beeba ta k e the mall down In his ba thysphere where It can be opened under w ater.

So It was a g re ^ t aurprlse to - dsy when a le tte r came that n o t only had "Dear H enry" and n o t something like "Y ou Bum" for a sslutatlon, but w liloh thanked m e for a favor or tw o and generally g»ve the im pression the writer d id not cbnfldef m e as something with horps growing oiit of my forehead and hoofs growhig where feet sliould bi.

More rem arkable, U was from an athlete. I any “more rem ark­able" becaiiie a th le le s make It a Iimotlce of com pletely forgetting the nice tliln ii you say about them, and writing only when you have w rltlen w onla crlllolting them, fciiher they don 't read th e complimentary rem ark i, or e lia t|i«y take them fo r granted.

Tills letter w as from Lawson th e 6p«n golf

.1110 lovi.r wnaI IillUi, who w o n

championship of Uio United States o^Cantci'bury in Cleveland In Jiuior'TJeaplte a heavy exhibi­tion kcjjtdule which keeps him In a.Jowier bertli when h e Isn't tee­ing o ff on one course o r another, he took the time to wish me good health, and, believe It or not, thank m e for helping him win the title In the play-off with Gene Barajcn. If you'll peek over my shoulder I 'll show you, where L it­tle sa id I was a contributing fac­tor In h is biggest victory.

“f t wan my piany pro-am ateur tnatchea witli you, from Florida to California," Little writes, “tha t brought my game to n poin t where It wad good enough to beat the greatest bunch of golfers in tho world. I hadn 't played with you more t h a n th re i tim es—at St. Augustine, a t Phoenix, and a t Lakeside hi Los Angeles, I be­lieve—tlu it I knew th e iimwer to perfect golf. All I Imd to do, I rea.ioncd, wos to play n Ranie tha t was th e dh'cct opposite of the M eU m ore one. Y our batkswlng- was sh o rt and rem indful of a woodphopper hoisting nn axe. I threw th a t out r igh t quick. Ifou f downswing was pattorned after a woodchopper felling a tree. I threw th a t Out, too, And 'wllh it wont your stance, wliloli resembles

nothhig to m uch os a m an slioot- Ing dice. I discarded your hn- m aoulate lifting o f th e head, your graceful body swoy. and your re­fu sa l to use few er th a n four pu tts . I n studying you, my dear am ateur partner, I saw all of th(> pitfalls of golf and was able ,to gua^d against them . I camlot th a n k you too m uch, and am counting on you to play with mo n e x t w inter and spring and pre­p a re mo fo r the defense of my ti tle . My very b es t, to you and yours, eto. . .

Maybe I sliouldn’t have let you see this le tte r. P erhaps I should havo been m ore n todeit, and n o t ac t myself up n i a mouWer of t^iamRlons. And I don 't think 1 would have h ad I not felt th a t tlie le tte r provided a Up for nil o f the flther professionals ond s ta r am ateurs whoso ambition it Is to win the open.

Lot them tu rn to hacker, a duf­fer, a chopped-, a w hlffcr, a biffer, a dud, a bust, and a swacker, for he lp . Let them study, a t close range, the wild gyrations of a l |0 shooter and thUB learn w hat libt to do. I am n o t th e only avail-' ab le inodei of horror, n ie r e are hundi'cds—well, dozens, well, iter- h ap s tlx Or sev en -o th e i' gitflera Ju st as bad aa I am In the country,

T o u U 30 g U T o t i l s U S 11 X— R atted fo r S w ift In 6 th In n in s - XX—B ille d f o r A 'ik er In 8 th innSns.fit. Loui* .................. .................110 000 100—SCleveland ....................................110 0o3 12x—8

Two b a se hits— B e ra rd in o , K«ltner< llenu ley , C h ap m sn . T h re e bo*o h its— C h ipm an . W ea th e rly . S ac r if ic e — Fcllcr. Double p lay s— B arard lno , H e f/n o r and Cullenblne. L oslnv p itc h e r— A ukcr.

UEDS D-6, CUBS 4-3 F Ira t g a r n e t - ft

C inclnnfttI • ...........102 coo o s i - 9C hicaso ........ ................ 000 000 022 --I

M oore a n d L o m b ard i; O ln rn . Pnge. and Todd. '

H R I . 0 0 2 Root

Second g a m e ; C in c in n a ti ab W crber 9b 6 M M cC'k c f 8 Frey 2b S P McC’k lb 5 Goodman r f 4 A rnovich If 9 B aker c 4 Joost la 4 Thom pson p 2 U u tch ings p 2

Chi('uc<Huck Sh f

ab r h

H erm an 2b 4G lefson If 4N icho lson r f 8L lebcr c f 2B onura l b 4Collins c 2RoKell a 1Todil c 0W a rs t lc r ss 4

p 8D a lle s 'd ro t z 1

S2 8 8Totals 37 6 13| T oU la »—B atted fo r Collins In 7 th . s t— B atted fo r Lee In 0 th . ' ^C in c in n a ti ...................................0 1 2 000 1 0 2 -6Chicago ................................ - .....0 20 100 000—a

Two b a se h its—Gipcflon. Thomi'Boni B onura, W e rb e r . T h ree b a a e h i t—Frey . S tolen basa— B onurs. S acH flcea—M. Mc­C orm ick 2. W inning p lteh e i> ^ H u lcb in g s .

Boston BUti 8b Cooney c f Uowell 2b M oore r f Boss if M iller ss l la s se tt lbB4frea " 8lrinc® 'ch

BEES 2, DODGERS Iab r h B ro o k ly n ' a b

R eise r r f 6 W a lk e r c f B C am illl l b Z P he lps c B M edw lck If 6 L a v a g e t to 8b 4 IIudRon na 3 W asdell X 1 C o a c a ra r t 2b 4 T am u lis p 4

98 1 6T o u ts 44 2 6! TotJiU X—B attod fo r Uudton In 12 lh .Boston ................................. 000 100 000 0 0 1 -2B rooklyn ............................ 000 100 000 0 0 0 -1

E rro rs— llu d so n 3. Boas. T w o basa hits — M iller. H om e ru m — Roaa. S to len base — Cooney. D ouble plaVs—H a a a e tt , M iller anti H a s s e t t : K uw dl, M iller o n d 'l l a i u e t t ; llu d n o n ,' CoAcurarl and C u tn i i l i i M iller, Bow ail a n d U a s s c tt

CARDS S O. PIRA TES 0-5F irst gam e; R H E

Pittsburgh .....041 000 OOl— 6 15 2St. Louis .........010 000 040— 6 14 1

Lanahan, Helntzelman, Lannlng and Davis: Bowmap, Lanier, H utch­inson and Owen.

Second game; B H EPlttiburgh .012 000 020— 6 11 1St. Louis .........400 3 02 OOX— 0 11 0. Butcher, MacFayden, B a u e r s,

f le lp tiehnan ond D avis; Warneke and Owen.

Job Advances On Building Fish Hatchery

HAGERMAN. Aug. 17 (6 p e c la l) - Work la progressing on th e sto te Ilsh hatchery and bird refuge, under agpervlslon of J. J , Boyle, Boise.

Funds ore furnished by tho P ltt- mnn-Robertson act. I t w ill consist of 11 ponds, the average size of each about' an acre. M ore will be added la ter. Each will h av e nn In­dividual cbptrol tower w ith a con-

_ MortuaryB n n i K. H M h U ' o 'r4 « E . llltV cIi I Day < NigM Amliulane* Jrh. I I J

Budnick,Duezabou Swing Fists as Cowboys Lose, 6-3■ IDAHO FALLS, Aug. 17 (Special)—Big Mike Budriick, who was sent down from the Western International leaglie to the Twin Falls Cowboys to see if he couldn’t cur.b his temper, lost what could have been a perfect game last night when the “curbing” didn’t work. -

The final score of the contest was 6-8 for the Idaho Falls Russets, but going into the fifth inning Mike had a perfect game behind him — retiredthe first , three men to face him in each of the initial four innirigs.

Then in the lU th he h it Mel Duez- abou and th e latter charged out w ith fh:e In h is eyes. The dim inu­tive. second basem an and the gang- Ung pitcher tangled and they couldn't be separated until the police got things under control. Meanwhile, th e two umph-es looked on and decided to le t both players rem ain In th e game.

However, from there on out Mike was n o t a t h is best and after p itch­ing to two batters he was relieved by A rt C arp en te r,, The ace Cowboy relief hurle r h a d an off night, ond it .fhitJly took Jack Hall to quell th e uprising—b u t not until five runs

PIONEER LEAGUE

had been pushed across tho plate. In the Inning the re were two singles, two errors and two bases on balls.

All the Tw in i'alls runs came in the seventh when BlU Randall doubled and tlien scored on Venie Reynolds' single. Then Johnny Ar- nerlch. who h aa been the hitting sensaUon of th e road trip for the Cowboys, stepped up and sma.shed out a home run to drive in the o ther two runs.

The loss le ft the. Cowboys still seven games h i the cellar as the fifth-place Pocatello club also took a beating. The defeat wos only th e fourth out of th e 'la s t 15 games for the Wranglers.

For tonight’s game, pitching se­lections are Damon Hayes for M anager Roy Jocobs and A1 Em - mertson tor M anager Ted M ayer of the Russets,

Box score;T\vJn Falla abM arcb l lb 4nU liop 21) 4E ndress lb 4HuBhcA r f 9 RatiiliiU cfReynolda If 4A rncrich ss 4Moyem c 4Oudnick p 2 C iin ien tc r p 0Hull |> 1JacubM X 1

hlldaho Falla ab 2 A rle tt es 8 O.McConVll cf 4 1 C anon r f 9 0 Deutabou 2b 1I Rc»cr l( 2|Ueard c 21lnt«N lb I Oldenb'ff 0 Dabr p 0

TolXylll

> U ls 35 3 Ol inttod fo r H a ll in ninth.

•roials...OOO 000 800— 8T w in F alls

Idaho F alls .............. ...... - ......000 050 Ol.t— 6Krror>—Endre.sa, A rnerlch. R eser. Ru

ba tted in -E e y n o l t ta , A rnerk 'b 2, A r lu t t 2, Reard, D atea 2. Oldcnbertr. Rasea balla—C o rp cn te r 1, Hall 3. D ahr 8. S tru c k o u t—by Diidnick 5. Hall 6, D ah r 6. L e f t on b u e a - T w I n F a lls 8. Idaho K a l l a , 4. Hom e ru n —A rn e ric h . Two b ase h its — Botes, O ldenber* . R andall. Double p la y — Unhr to A rie tt to B ates. L o s in s p itc h e r — Bodnlck. U m p ire s — McQulllat) a n d D rolle tte . T im e 3 hours, a tten d an ce 000.

DOG’S ESTATE. TAXED SACRAMENTO. Calif. (UB — Tlie

state of Calltoi-nla has assessed $34.65 In state Inheritance taxes against Buddy, o pet dog left $25 a month by th e will of Emma C. Heard.

Crete kettle attached, and each will be furnl.ihed w ltli fresh water, sep­arately controlled.

Tliere are eight men employed a t present. In addition there Is a con­tract filling of dikes, Tliere will be approximately 10,000 yards of clay used for banks and partitions of the'iionds. Fish to be propagated will be mostly small mouth bass. The property will also Include refuge for mlgfotory waterfowl. A por- lon of tlie area will bo utilized for tho raising of beaver, m uskrat ond otlier fur beorlng animals. A house will also be ereoted for th e super­intendent and bunk houses lo r the nece.isary help.

3 Pointsto Rememberwhen you buy

Automobile Insurance Seri ice

Safety Stability

I Phone 03I.OOALAflKNTB

Jay M. M,rrrlllJ«>. K. r«nen«tl«

Bees’ Roolde Takes Lead in Batting Race

NEW YORK, Aug. 17.(U.R)-Cnrvel CBama) RoweU, Boston Bees’ sur­prise rookie second basem an, wrested the National league batthig lead from Harry Dannlng, New York O iants' catcher who h a d held It al­most continuously since the season got underway, by adding 11 percent­age pohits to his ba tting average the post week and climbing to .339.

Donning slumped 10 points and dropped to .324 for th ird pioce be­hind Dixie Wolker, Brooklyn out­fielder, who is hotting .325. occord- ing to the figures th rough gomes of Thursday.

Rip Rodcllff. St. Louis Browns' outfielder, molntalncd h is American league lead with an average of .350 despite on elght-pohit slump. Lou ,Phuiey. Boston Red Sox outfleldcr- flrst baseman, moved Into second ploce wlUi a mark of '.347. .

Freddy Fitzsimmons, (Brooklyn veteran, held the N ational leosue pitching lead with 12 victories ogoinst two defeats and 3uc{c New­som, Detroit rightlionder, continued to ■ pace tho American league moundsmen w^th 15 victories ogoinst two losses.

Leaders in other departm ents fol­low:

H lts -(N ) Hcrmon, Cubs. 130; (A) McCosky. Tigers, 140.

R u n s-(N ) Prey, Reds, 83; m . Wllllomi, Red Sox, 05.

Doubles—(N) P. McCormick, Reds, 33; (A)' Boudreau, Indians, 41.

Triples—(N) R0.5S, Bees. 12; (A) MoCosky, Tigers,'P lnneyl Red Sox, and Keller, Yankees, 13 each.

Home runs—(N) Mize. Cardinals. 34; (A) Poxx, Red Sox. 29.

Runs batted In—(N) F. McCor­mick. Reds. 8B; (A) Greenberg, Tigers, 104.

Stolen bases—(N) Reese. Dodgtrs, 15; (A) Case. Senators. 20. . .

Rain Spoils Semi-Pro Meet Opening

WICHITA, Kan., Aug. - 17 (U.PJ- Nobody Is looking for a cliomplon a t the notlonol sem i-pro baseball tournament because the re won’t be one for two weeks. B ut 10,000 "first nlghters” w ent down to see the op- enhig last evening and s a t tluough a rain.

Tho donTipour d idn’t s ta rt until after George Slsler, h igh commis­sioner of tho semi-pros, had pre­sented visiting notable's and read a congratulatory telegram from Pres­ident Roosevelt. ’The P resident hoped "tho best team would win with plenty of base h its representing all the sandlot players in-America.”

’The' home town W lohlta Stear- mans pulled a pleosont Eurprlse out of the bag by beating the favored Gdldeh,, Colo., Coora brewery, 7 to 3'

In the second game th e Houston G rand Prize, one of tlie tourna­m ent favorites, defeated tlie Wil­mington, Del., Allied ball club, 17 to 4.

Bees Neai'ly Clinch Title With 2nd Win

- - (By United Press) ;The Salt Loke Bees m ads i t two

stra igh t over th e Boise P ilots la st night, 6 to B, before 3,000 fa n s la S alt LAke City.

A roaring three-run ra lly I n ‘the n in th tied th e score for th e Pilots, during w hich L arry Jansen, ac a Bca righthander, h ad to b,e n jsh ed ln , to rescue M el Marlowe a n d Nig Tate.

■Jansen 'opened the Bees’ h a lf of the n in th with a walk, m ade his way around to third on a sacrifice and a inlleld h it, and scored on M anager T om Robello's sacrifice Dy for the w lnnhig marker.

Jack M entz wos found fo r nhie hits for th e Bees. The S a lt Luke victory puts the Robellomen 10 li gomes aliead of tlie Pilots, an d only a miracle could stop them from w in­ning the pehnon t now.

The Idoho Falls Russets evened the ir series with tlie ’Twta Falls Cowboys, w ith a 6-3 victory a t Id a ­ho Palls. ’The Russets sen t Mike Budnlck to th e showers, for h is sec­ond defeat of the season. Budnlck and Mel Duezabou of Idaho Falls mixed It up a b it hi the fU th, when Duezabou was h it by one o f Bud- nlck’s fost ones.

Ogden ham m ered out a 17 to 1 victory over tlie Pocatello C ardinals a t Ogden. O’Boyle, Mills and Kempo were used on tho mound by the Cords, with Ford holding th e Po- cotello aggregation to' 5 hits.

Box scores:h

fP

c

P ocate llo abRriilircns »s 4W hite cf 4A ndrade lb 4J o r a t t If 4

'k c r r c 4W aldron r f 8W ald ron r f 8 K akoliris 3b 3G alindo 2b 2O 'B oyle p 2blilln p 0K cm pe p 1

Totttln a i ] 5

Ogden • b r hDuff cf 5 8 3Laybour’a aa K I 2Joseph rf £ 1 2Sinnott if 4 a IMcCon'ell 8b 5 8 4Adnmi 2b 4 8 IW elting lb 6 1 .1Steinbeck a 5 0 IFord p t 2 0

Totals 42 17 17 E r ro rs — W a ld ro n , K akoliris. G alindo .

O 'Boyle, J o r a t i . S to len bote—D u ff . H om e ^ n a —M cConnolJ, D uff. Three baae h i t— Joru tE . Two bane h its— W eitlnjr 2, Jo ecp h 2, D uff. R una b a tted in—W eltine 4. M »- Connell 8. D u ff 8, Stcinbcck 3. Jo a e p h 2 , L aybourne 2. F o rd . J o ra tt . D ouble p lay — A dam s to W e iiin s . S truck o u t —by 0 ‘Hoylc 1. F o rd 6. Baio on b a lla —o f f

—Kem pe. U m p ire s — W agner, 5lerpfi.K cm pe. C irplingcr. T im e 1 :60. A tte n d a n c e- 1 1 3 0 .

BoltK* ab r b S a lt Lnke a ll r hW illlam 'n 8b 5 0 I Moresco is 3 I 1Sheehan , ns 8 0 1 H eniou r f 6 0 2£ g n u tic cf 4 I Q Terry ‘ih a \ 0Lowe lb 5 1 1 Rofiello lb 6* 0 IJ)ennlB ton e 2 0 1 Owen cf 4 1 1L o ren ien c 3 0 0 P artee c 8 \ 0H a r 'n g ’n 2b 4 0 1 B urlrjon Sb 4 1 2D auer r f 4 1 1 H atrhe tt If 3 0 0P rico If 4 1 2 Marlowe p 3 0 1M ents p 2 1 0 T a te p 0 0 0

Jansen p 0 1 0

T o ta ls 36 s 8 Totals 38 6 0Bo Iso .................. ____ __OOO 002 008—fiSalt u k c .........................no no on—6

E rro rs—H u n atic . Burleson. R u n s b a tte d In— W illiam son. Sheehan. H a rr in ir to n S. Price. Robello 2, Burleson, M uriow e. S ac­rifice h lta—P e r ry , "Moresco, S tolen baaes— Burleson, Robello, P e rry . Two b aae h i t— I.^wc. Three .b ase h its— Dsuer, D urleaon . L eft on basea— Doise 0. S a lt L a k e 8. S tru ck o u t by— M ents 6, by M arlo w e 8, by Jn n aen 2. Base* on balls o f f— M enta S. M arlow e 4. T a te 1. W innins p i tc h e r— Ja n se n . W ild p itc h — Ment*. P aased ball — Dcnniaton. U m p ires — Cam pbell and M rS hane. T im e 2 :25. A ttendanca. 8,000 estim ated .

AniERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 13, Detroit I Cleveland 8. St. Louis 3. Boston 7i Waalilngton 6. (Only games scheduled).

PISHING CONTEST

ENDS SEPT, 15lh

3 m en 'a p rise # . , an d one la d y ’a « V - p rise . N oth ing (o b u r. Coma in a n d rc g isU rt

Snow ball’s Sport Stio"Complete Line Fishing

Lunches 0 Candy f Tobacco Beer # Soft Drinks

'S)

MONEY SAVING USED VALUES

T ru c k s ^ C a rs ^ N a q h in e ryLOOK THEM OVER ON THE LOT

1984- Ford Model B Vk T truck, diinls.

1936 l)/» T. Chev. tr'iick, new rubber.

1930 Erskine sedan, cheap.

1984 Chcv. Copchi Good, clean car. ' ‘

1936 P l y m o u t h Coupo, Origiiml pnint, new tirca.

1986 Ford V-8 Coupo.

1938 Stude. Commander Sedan, radio, heater, excel-Iqnt condition.

1936 Dodge Pickup, Good value.

1936 Plymouth Sedan with radio mid henter. Nowpaifit.

1935 Chev. IH T. truck with bed.

19l)9 Chev. Pickup with 4- spccd trnimmisBion.

1 All-StccI Uenn Ilulicr. Cheap.

1 Ncir Allli C liolm en Model D

Tractor Rt Good Dlseoitnl

MeVEY'S InternntlonnI Trttcki SniM and Sorvic*

Page 7: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

Batutday, A osust 17,1840 IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN PALLS; IDAHO

Acconllog to « n annouDcemeot recelveil' b ; R ussell B laskesshlp irom O istrlct Engineer 0 . A, Kell?, Shoshone, logging of th e Bellevue- O annett road h as been completed by engineers, and olUng la expected to start.-'Logging o t th e EaUe;> ITorth S ta r road up east fork h as also been completed. Federal a id vUl probably be utUlzed In tb s work, -state highway officials, Sen. 1 . P . Heagle and Gov. Bottolfsen having recently Inspected' the rout*.

MeiUn a . Eaybom , son ol E. 14. Baybom w d nephew of K h. Ray^ bom, attorneys, T v ln lU ls , was r e ­turned to Hailey from Illy, Nev., by Traffic Officer J . B . Lounsbury to face charges ot driving vhUe under the Influence of liquor. He entered a Plea o t n o t miU^v, If i probate coy and bond was sel a t $200, fum lst by defendant’s attorneys. Date of trial has n o t been set.

Mr. and Mrs. H erbert BoIUger and children and M r. a n d ' IiIrG. O len' Schlevely, Abolene, K nn., are guests ot Mr. and Mrs. F red MlUer.

Charles J. D augherty anlved In Hailey Tuesday. H e was formerly a residen t.o f this d istric t and sue* cceds F. S. Moore a s supervisor o t tlie Sawtooth forest. M r. Moore goes to Boise to assume new duties.

Mr. ond Mrs. P red Good an d daughter, Los Angeles, an d U rs. A r­thur Holgate and nlfece, Nanoy H ol- gate, Reno, are guests of Mr. and Mrs, Hassell Blankenship.

BOIBRi A u j. 11 O IJ^-Btat* W sh and Game D irector Owen W .'M or­ris reported today 3360 young pheas­an ts had been, p lan ted In four Id a ­h o counties th is w eek by members ot cooperating gam e clubs under dl' rectum ot s ta te gam e specialists.

. T he birds were hatched , th is spring a t th e Jerome hatcheryLand_n»l5ed a t th e Eagle gam e pens. They were released th is week, M orris said, so they may become acclimated to condition; In th e ir new environ­m e n t by the tim e the two-weeks pheasan t season opens Nov. I.

O f the birds, 1,050 were released ln~ A d a counter, 1,OSO In Canyon county, D60 In G em -county and 800 In Payette county. N early UOO more pheasants will be released tomorrow an d Monday—350 In Adams county, 480 In W ashington county and 680 In Elmow county.

F lans are also being prepared for release of several hundred more pheasants In o ther counties later, M orris said:

j KETCHUM t

Mrs. Tom Reid Is home trom sev­eral weeks spent a t P ortland and In, California, where she visited h e r son, Tom.

Mr. and M rs. August Paralun , Boise, are here lo r a m on th ’s stay.

Miss Jeanne McDonald, who spent the past few m onths In Ketchum, has returned to California to re tu rn later with he r m other, Mrs. R. B . McDonold, and two brothers, Doug and Rob Roy, who will rem ain In- dettaltely. Mr. M cDonald Is build­ing a group of guest cabins on the old Price property.

American Legion auxiliary m et Tuesday, the hostesses being Mrs. Fred Turner, Mrs. Russell Werry and Wilma Walters.

Sewing club m et recently a t the home of Mrs. Pred Trowbridge.

Mr. and Mrs. M arvin Obenchaln spent s week In Boise on vacation.

M argaret Pulslfer, who spent the summer tn California, returned th is week for a visit.

Mrs. Ray Sweat, ,a recent bride, entertained a t luncheon, relatives and friends from Hailey and Carey being the guests, 'R iey were Mrs. Joe Clark, m other of th e bride, Jennie Clark, Charles Clark, Mrs. Herschel Wllde and.,daughter, Shirley Mae, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Pam w orth and son, Eugene'; Donald Dixon, Elcloii Sweat and BUI King.

EDEN'B uilders’ class/ of 'P resbyterian

church m et BusSday In the church basement. Mrs. B. E. Gordon and her committee served refreshments, after which all w ent to the audi­torium where picture's of Palestine were shown by Rev. CJlarence Beall, Boise, which he took while there. He was accompanied by' Donald Wells, Boise. They were guests Sun­day ot Mr. and M rs. B. E. Gordon.

Miss Lois Smith arrived last week from Colorado.

The 82nd birthday anniversary of Mrs. Anna Roundy was observed Saturday a t her hom e w ith a pot- luclt dhiner. Among those attendtag were Mr. and Mrs. M cCrae Roundy. Salt Lake City, Mr. an d Mrs. Ahnon Roundy and son, Paul, Eureka, Utah, grandchildren and great grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Les­ter Juchau and fam ily and Mr. and Mrs. K enneth Roundy, ’Twin Palls; Mrs. Eva F airch ild and son Jerry, Jerome, and Miss Madge Lit­tle, who spent the summer In Hailey.

' • ---------- - -------------------------------•RUPERT

Mrs. Roy C u n n ln g h ^ and daugh' ter. Miss Carol Joy Cunningham, re. turned last week from Joplin, N«' osho, Springfield and Anderson, Mo.

Bible school orchestra - of the Christian church w ith director, Mrs. Floyd Britt, was entertained Mon­day by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Barton.

Mrs. Qeneylove Dumble, who was called here lost'm onth by death ot her father, W. A. H unt, le ft Satur­day for her home In Bakersfield, Calif.

Mrs. M attie Smith, form er pioneer, who has been guest o t her daugh. ter, Mrs. Charles Easton, left this week tor her home in Los Angeles, Calif.

As a cou'tcsy to Mrs. Clara A. Valentine on her 81st blrtliday an. nlversary. friends called Wednesday.

Alter a brief visit w ith tils brother, Roy Cunningham, Rev. John P rank lln Cunningham, pastor of Christian church, The Dalles, Ore., left Tues­day with Mrs. Cunningham and their daughter, Jean, for Lake James, Angola, Ind., where they will attend a special conference on lead­ership training. They were accom­panied to Rupert by Mr. Cunning, ham's father, J .. P. Cunningham, former resident, who will visit In­definitely with his son, Roy Cun' ningham.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bush, daughter. Miss Donna Jean Bush, and Miss M argaret H unter returned Tuesday from Sheridan, Wyo., their foi-mct homo. They were Joined In Lovell, Wyo., by Ike M organ and Mrs. Susie Stewart.

Roy Cunningham, Jr., left thli week for Spokane, WojIl , and Lew- luton.

Mrs. Nora McKovltt, former resl- dent, who has spent six weeks with her Son, Jack McKovltt, and tomlly, loft 'I'uesday for her homo In Lot Angeles, Calif.

Mr. and Mrs. William J . Squance who Bppnl tlielr vacation In north Idaho, Spokane, Beattie, Portland and Sim Pranelsco, will bo gueiUi of Mrs. Sqimnee’o parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cunningham, until tho end o t Hilf month when they will go to Kimberly, where Mr. Squance Ii member ol tho taoulty, ' '

Uotnry club met W ednesday for luuclicon' a t Caledonian hotel. I’co- grnin was group singing, with Mrs. ISdiiA Olnelalr VI the piano, and « cunllnuatlon ot Inst woek'i dlaoui- •lon on draft.

i -HANSEN

Guests of Mr. an d Mrs. Charlea Wiseman last week were Mr. ond M rs. A. Blakley, Kemmeror, Vljo. M rs. Blakley Is niece of Mrs. Sara Wiseman, Buhl, w here the couple also stopped.

M r. and Mrs. A. J . Prior, Mr. and M rs. L. J. Prior and daughter, Mrs. iUlce Holllfleld, Tw in Palls, return­ed la st week from S an Francisco.

Two sons of Mr. a n d Mrs. Charles Sm ith, Joe and C urtis Smith, left la st week tor M arch field and Ham­ilton field, Calif., fo r service In the U nited States army.

W . and Mrs. C harles McFarland h ad as guests for tw o weeks their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Andrews and children, S an Diego, Calif.

W ith the W omen’s Society of C hristian Service outlined by Rev. J . H . Coulter, w om en’s Community council voted to become an active m ember of the new national o r- ganlzatlonr However th e group will continue to be known locally as the Women’s Community council, w ith present officers continuing to serve. Investigation of credentials of those desiring to become ch a rte r members will be placed In the hands of the executive board and chairman ot membership commlttce. Plans for a chicken dinner Aug. 20 were com­pleted with Mrs. M. P. Kenworthy In charge.

Mr. and Mrs. M ax Galley and Mr. and Mrs. Pay P rahm are spending th e week a t Yellowstone natloniu park, having le ft here Tuesday.

Dorothy and Geneva Holllfleld are vacationing In California, hav­ing gone by way of Bbulder dam.

All civic organliatlons are urged to file Intentions If they plan to en ter a group exhibit In the county- wide flower show on ’Tuesday, Aug. 20, which will be held a t the Grange hall, sponsored by H ansen Epworth league.

Installation services for officers of Epw orth. leogue w ere conducted Sunday morning by Rev. J . H. Coul-- ter. New otflccrs Include president. Miss Phyllis Voux; f irs t vice-presi­dent, Norman P arm eter; second vice-president, Edwin Coulter; third vice-president, M arjorie Rambo; C harlotte LatMn and M arvin Wash­burn, fourth vice-presidents; Bar- old Warren, secretary, and Deward Blevins, treasurer.

Harvey Pomwalt received word of tho death of his 80 yea r old moth­e r In Kansas, and le f t early Tues­day for the funeral.

Opening date of BIckel school has been se t tor Sept. 2, w ith f t s t part of the day to be registration and tho afternoon to be Labor day holi­day. Mrs. Prank Satterw hlte will be teacher there . th is year. ’The school building has recently received a new floor and In terio r walls.

Royal Neighbors m et a t the home ot Mrs. Vergil Ball Tuesday evening. A brief business session was called by th e new oracle, M rs. cleo Weech. f i coqimlttee was appointed ton the group exhljilt a t tfie fjower aljow. A punch bo^rd program and contests furnished ajnusemerit. under direc­tion of Mrs. Ball.. W aterm elon waa served by Mrs. Joe G leh and Mrs. F ran k Truiikey. Mrs. W. MusMlU received the white elephant.

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Chappell. Ray­mond, Wash., w ith h e r fa ther. 0 . 0. Herd, and daughter, a nurse at Seattle, were guests W ednesday ot M r. H erd’s nieces, M rs. Gene Mar­lin and Mrs. Rose W right.

Convention reports w ere given to Ladles of 0 . A. R. ’Tuesday a t the home o t Mrs. Carrie Galley, by Dele­gate M ary ’Trunkey. ’The circle voted to en ter an exhibit In the flower show Aug. 20. P lans ’ to entertain P as t Presidents club o t D an McCook circle. Twin Falla; Lincoln circle, Eden, and Bherman clrole, Hansen, were made tor Aug. 27. ’The group a ttended the picnic a t th e pioneer home of Mrs. Lucy S trieker Friday, T he circle will a rrange to place a m arker on the grave of the veteran grandfather ot Mrs. E dna Bailey, a t G irard , Kan, W hite e lephant was taken by Mrs. O an le Galley.

Dr. and Mrj. P. O. W estfall visited two days a t the home of Mrs. Mae Hill, en route to th e ir hom e In Cali­fornia.

I MURTAUGHM argaret U ndiu and Eidward

Jones took priies lor most appro- p rla te costumes at the kid party given by i^iw otlh league la s t week a t th e George Pliher lawn, com ­m ittee In chaxBo was Lois Fisher. Celia Moorman, Bob U e a n d Mer­ton Samples, '

O . D. Simpson and daughter, C harlotte Ann, lelt last w eek-for M ttaburg, K an., colled by d ea th ot M r. Shnpson’s , aljler; Mrs. Hazel McCool. '

M r. an d Mrs. 'WllUam Klelhkopf, M r. an d Mrs. Mote T urner and daughters, Mary Lou and K ay, are vlaltlng In Novelty, Mo.

U ra . E arl Barmen and children, Jerom e, moved here last week to Join h e r husbond, the new sta tion agent. - -

Bob W right, Earl Wright, Eldon Johnson and Arvllle Johnson, have re turned from Yellowstone park .

M r, and M rs. P . L. Johnson had as guests last week. Mr. and Mrs. D onald Klopplng and daughters, Doralle and Judith, DnderWood. la .

IS li . ElUs Walters returned to Nyssa, Ore., la st week alter vlslUng h e r sister, Mrs. Pay WUlhlte.

M r. an d Mrs. S. J . Perkins left la s t week for Herford, Tex,

JUd H arris, Logon, Utah, was a guest o t M lts Betty Perktos last week.

M r. and Mrs. Ralph W hittle and son, Spokane, Wash., and M r, and Mrs. Lloyd Larson and children, Payette, were called here lost week by illness o t Mrs. Whittle's and Mrs. Laraon,’s m other, Mrs. David Moyes.

M r. and Mrs. Everett Goodman and children, Prescott, Arlz., are visiting M r. Goodman's m other, Mrs. Armle Goodman.

M r. and Mrs. William U ndau and daughters, Margaret ond WUma Jean , left last week for St. Louis, Mo., where Mr. Llndau will a tten d th e , national rural letter carriers' convention.

M r. and Mrs. Darrel M cFarland are paren ts of a son bom Aug. 2 a t R upert general hospital.

M rs. William Morrison has guests M r. and Mri. Wllllnm Dur- keo an d Rev. Norman Durkee. Page, Neb.

Elvln Blackburn and son, K en­neth . accompanied Mr, Black­burn ’s sister, Mrs. George Hoppe, and husband. Boise, to Ogden last week to attend the tuneral ol their step-father. Robert Lelshman.

ik u ren ce E. Turner, school super­intendent, arrived with his fam ily Sunday trom Berkeley, Calif., where he a ttended summer school. IV an ­nounced school starts Aug. 20, which will be registration, and th a t tho book store will open Aug. 22. 23 and Monday, Aug. 26. He atmounced those having books to sell, must have them In .before Thursday. Aug. 22.

Miss M elba Walker,■Rocjj'6prln8s, Wyo., and Miss Belva^ O raham i' G reen River, Wyo., are guests at the D ave Moyes horns.

U rs. Ray Guymon, Logan, U tah; Mrs. Sam Hudson, El Monte, Cnlll., and M rs. W. A, Hole, Oakley, sisters of M r, Dayley, who were present al theD ayley family reunion a t Oakley,, spen t several days here a t the Day­ley home, leaving Wednesday. Lee Dayley and sons, Douglass an d Al­len, Ogden, U tah, and Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Dayley, Elko, Nev., spent S un­day a t the J . N. Dayley home.

Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Moorman re­turned recently from a seven weeks’ trip to San Francisco, Los Angeles, C atalina Island and Long Beach.

Mr. and Mrs. David Adamson, Sandy, U tah, are vlaltlng a t the William Adamson home.

Miss Eugenia Morrison, who s tay ­ed w ith the Turners a t Berkeley. Calif., durtag th e aummet, haa re ­turned.

Annnbelle and Aujbome Savage, Chattanooga, Tenn., are spending the sum m er With Lewis Savage and lamlly.

Mrs. Kendell Dayley Is sp en d ­in g this week a t the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. Peck. Tw in Palls, while her husband Is a t Scout camp.

Miss Edith Tetmey, Prescott, Arlz., Is a gueat ot Miss Bessie Goodnnan.

Charles Scheck, Rochester, N. Y., la visiting a t th e Francis Johnson home, and will leave this week for Wells, Nev,

KNULLWaldo Jones and daughter, Carol,

Black canyon, visited recently a t his poren ts’ home, Mr. an d Mrs. Ray Jonul.

Mra. H. Slnndloy an d son, Jim, have returned from Maglo hot springs after a week’a vacation. ,

H. A. Gleso «i)d aon. P rank, have le ft for Texas.

Mr. and Mn. Carol Holloway re oetltly entertained Mr. a n d Mta. ^ y Holloway a t their cab in a t Easley l^ot springs.

Miss Mary Ellen G rieve ' enter­ta ined a group ot frlciulg Wednesday evening. "11» evening waa ipe iit In games and cards, each gueat receiv­ing tavori.

Ibu ill Uraiigo m et Wednesday evenlhg 4 t the loliool house, After a brief bualneii meeting, conducted by M aster Oaiol Holloway, a water­melon toed was acrvdd by Mr, and Mrs. n ay Jones. ^

Mr, and Mri, H, J , Oolbert are tpendin* the week i t W arm springs cabin, Ketclium.

BUHL

Mrs. M. P. Carlson and children, Nadine and Gordon, have returned from South Dakota and N ebraska by woy of Yellowstone national park.

Mr. ond Mrs. J . S. McHenry le ft last week for Portland to visit theh: daughter, Mrs. Victor Sommer. They plan to visit In Seattle with M rs. McHenry's brother. A son, D w ight McHenry, and children, Sandpolnt, will meet hla parents In Seattle.

Fay and Helen Finn, Cliloago, are visiting their father, Ed Finn.

Mr. and Mra. Jerry ’fasco an d baby left to r th e ir home In Silver City, Ala., after a visit.

Mr. and Mrs. R . D. Noyman an d Miss Ella Neymon lelt recently for Topeka. Kan., to attend a fam ily reunion.

Mrs. Oeoige C luft and sb te r ond daughter, San Francisco, were v is i­tors this week a t the Belle M artin home.

Relatives have received word t h a t Edward Boehlke, Howard, Neb., h a s been accepted as parochial teacher to a congregational school n e a r Boone, la.

Mr. and Mrs. Anton Hocssler a n d tomlly, Wllcbx, Neb., arrived recen t­ly to visit Emil Jagels,

p r . Edwin I. Bartlett and fam ily, San Francisco, are visiting Dt. B a r t ­le tt’s parents, Rov. and Mrs. PW lo E. B artlett, and hla slaters, M rs. Clydd O. Sm ithson and Mrs. E lva Mason. Dr. B artle tt came here w ith his Intlier beforo tho opening of tlie Buhl tra c t In 1005 and proved up on hla farm north of Buhl, Rov. B a r t­lett, pioneer m inister aivd church orgfiuljer of tho tract, will re tu rn to San Francisco w ith 'h is son to bapllio his firs t great grandehlld, Annabel B artlett, In tlio M ethodist church o t San Ftanclaco.

Junior Cham ber of Conwierce an d wives and women ttleiidir held th e aecond ailftual plcnlo and g e t-to - gclher Tuesday In th i grove * t C lear lakes golf course. Jolm II. B arker welcomed tli* group, Dinner was served by M ercer o»te, followed by group singing led by Harold P ackcr asslsiod by H. 0 . PalKufulj. M r. Papenfusa played acConllon lUimbcri and UUi U n iy pKiyed itiltar tpIM.

!’ JOve,TlFFIVHV,l HWE A 6 B .E N 0 I0 IDEA.' ?UPP05e ¥ cW IW , LOOK WHO*&

0VR

W e o m GO ON OUR VACCTON TD&tTHER*'. t HAVE A LtTUB NESTE6& REIAMNIN6 FROM .FOKTUNKre W AT 'mE RA CE6/ E 6A D ,IF ONLV T KNEW WHERE TWOSE KNDW16H

'BOARDERS WERE STAVES, IT WOULD BE A PLEASUEE TO BARSB IW

iANDL001<,DOWM f OUR MOSES AT

f LAR&E B E E R ?[B W ttEN D ER /

HERE.'— SHALL! PRBTENO' NOTTORECOSN17E 'E M ?

NOPE, THE rtASQUERADElS O^/ER.SUMLEV— VOO'VE 60T AS MUCH CHANCE O P E5CAP- |N6 DETECTiOM A 9 a QUARTET

iM A M E S T lB U U E /r^ r

I

Page 8: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

Page Eight IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO Saturday, August 17,1940

I LIVESTOCKD E N V E B LIV ESTO CK

DENVER-CfittU* t«5 itetdyi beW • t e e n ID t o < 1 1 ^ . - . .

' HoffBi 1 0 : s o m in a lly lU id y : to p 16.76, " S h eep r F a t sp r in g Umb* i tc a d y to !So

'h ig h e r ; t r o d ln ir W r ly tcHve on m oderaU • n p p ly ; c a r lo a c U 'C o td . '‘Iim bs *01(1 up to 10 .40 ; top w e a te ra ip r ln g tom bi In car- lo tj I8.C0 p a id fo r tw o Id a h o i ; ewet an d fe e d e r lo m b i t te a d y ; receipt* 8,000, m ade u p o f e lffh t loads Colo*., le v e n loadi

. O rcgons a n d fo u r load* Idahw.

C niC A C O LIVESTOCK CHICAGO— H og*: 800! only a few amall

loU o n « « le : n o e a r ly sc tlo n ; und erto n e •leady-; f o r w eek IfiO to 240 lb. bu tchers closed I6o to 25c h iffher: top tT .lO .

- C a tU e : 200 j c a lve i none; fo r week, i l r l e t i y '» r a ln fed i i « n and y e a r lln s s 50c h ls h e r : fed b e tfe rs 2Sa U> 60e u p ; bulU 60o h iffh v r: v ca lc rs I I h igher; ex tre m e top fed at«er» $12.60.

S h eep : 1 .0 0 0 ; fo r week, b e tte r a rad s iprlnff lam bs |1 lo w e r: fa t iheep e tead y ; belt ip r in e e ra a t cloaa IB.IO.

O M A H A LIVESTOCK OM AHA — H offi: 1.700: n o m ina lly

•U ftdy ; choice Ilgh tw elghU rep o rted up to ')6.G5. ’

C a t t le : 7 0 0 ; calves 60; for w eek , fed llcers, y c u rlln g i and heifer* utronjr to 2Sc h lfiher: cow* fully 25c h lirhcr; vcaler* •Iro n s to 60c h ig h e r : bulk fed s te e ra and yearling* 10.75 to 111.26.

S h eep : 2 ,0 0 0 ; for week, fa t lam b s 00c to I I lo w er; yearling* BOc lo w e r: sheep weak to 25c lo w er; fecdlnif Iam bs weak to 15c lo w e r: closing top ran g e ap rlng lamb* 18.85.

K A N SA S CITY LIVESTOCK K A N SA S C IT Y -H o g s ! 26; n o t enough

offered to te* t v s lu e s ; nomlnolly a U a d y ; l*te to p 10.80.

C a tt le : 1,800 ; calvca <00; fo r week, lla u g b tc r a t ^ r s and yeurllnsa 26c h ig h e r ; uraln fed kind* closed firm n t ttjivnnce; vealci^ tfcnu rally 60c h iE h ir: cho ice to prime Neb. fed yearling stoem Sil.OO; •I'rictly choice 1.140 lb. stccra 111.85.

S heep ! 1 ,000: for week, aprlntr lumba around 76c lo w e r: sheep und y ea rlin c* iteady to w e a k : Colcj, sp rin g lamoa to ahip* per* |0 .7 6 ; top natives early 19.26.

) O G D EN LIVESTOCK OGDEN—H o g s : For week, s teady to 15c

higher; top 17.40 on choice 180 to 230 lb.■ butchera., C o ttle : F o r -w e e k . 1,023; bIo w ; prlcca *teady; m edium good ilau g h te r grn** iteera a n d he ife r* m ostly S7»26 to 18.25; bulls 15.76 to 16.60; calves 10.50 to 110.60.

S h eep : F o r week. 70.707: lamb* u n e v e n ­ly lo w e r; local fa t iamb* IH.IO to IH .26;

' choice f a t lam b* in tru ck divi*lon 17.76 ■ to 18.

WIEPilSESCH IC A G O , A ug. 17 ( U P W L a t« b u y in g

acllW ty p a r t ia l ly inspired by firm ncB S a t M inneapo lis c arried w heat p r ic e s h ig h e r today.

W h e a t e loeed Sio to Tie h ig h e r . C orn wo* u n c h a n g e d to up H c i o a ta o f f %o to up V*c, a n d ryo ’/iC to %o h ig h e r . Soy­bean* w o re b id unchanged to h ig h e r .

GRAIN TADLB C H IC A G O — G rain ran g e :

Open H ifh LowW heat}

Sept. ...... .. .<30% .08Dcc....................11% .60%M ay ____ .71 .72>4 .71

C o m tS ept. ____ .60 -60 'a .60Dec. ____ .64% -% .5 4 li ,tV AM ay ______ 66% .66% . B6>^

O aU i.27 •27«i

Clo*«

Sept. Dcc. ... May ...

R yst Sept. ... Dcc. ... May

^ybei OcL . Doc. ... May ....

.27«,<■m.20

. .37

. .40 .43

. *.«7%

. .fi7%

.38

.40%

.67U■rnii

.27

AS

.71-711^

.7 1 % -7 2

:SSr

.20

v37%.4 0 %.43%.07',3.07%.60

I N. Y. STOCKS— -

N E W YORK,' A u « . I T (U P )— l i i i m a r k e t cloud firm .A la sk a Juneau .........................................J J o it le *

A m erican K ad la lo r A m erican S m cltinff . A m erican T elep h o n e A m erican Tobacco B AnncomlB CopperA tchison. Topeka . A A u b u rn Wotor* D altlm orr A Ohio Dendix Aviation Bethlehem Steel B orden Co.

PO R T L A N D LIVESTOCK PO R T L A N D — H oga: 8,S00; com pared

«eek ag o , a ro u n d 10c low er; lig h tw e ig h t trucklna 17.25: carload* to 17.70.

C a tt le : 6 5 : salable for )veek, 2,050; calves 88 0 ; com pared wccK ago, m ostly 26o lower: g ra in fed steers IS0.76; bulk g rass /a t s te e rs 18.60 to |9 I25^ -

S h eep : 2,150; com pared week ago, s p r in g limba 60c h ig h e r ; ewes sU ady; bulk good tholce s p r in g e rs 17.76 to |8 .

BA N F R A N C I^O ^ L IV E S T O C K S O U T H S A N F R A N C IS C O -H o g s : F or

fivs daya . 2 ,2 0 0 ; w eek 's closing n o m in a l top 17.40.

C attle t F o r f iv e days, 1,400; . fed s te e rs 99.76: v ea le ra 110.60 to 111.60.

S heep: F o r fiv e days, 4,600; good choice vooled Iam bs IB.75.

CASH (;ilA INCHICAGO 'W h .'u t: No. 2 h a rd 6£>Uc:

No. 3 m ix ed 70 ',-jr.C orn : N o. I yollnw to 64'>4c: No.

2 yellnw 0 4 '^ c to Ob>,aL'N; No. 8 y o liow Qi%c to 6GcN.

O a ts : N o. 1 whl(«> 20c to K o . 2w hite 2 0 V jc ; No. 3 w hite 28>/ic; N o . 4 w hite 27>/jc to 27')ic: No. I h eavy m ix ed 2 0 c ; N o. I heavy red 20o; No. 1 h eo v y w hite 2 0 ') ic t« 30r: No. 4 h eav y w h ite 27Vic to 2B‘4 c .

Ryo: N o 8ulf.ii.S o y b e a n s: N o ib I<h .B a rlp y : N o. I mulling 6 6c: No. 2 m a l t ­

ing 60r to r>2c ; fccwl 36c to 46cN ; m a lt in g 48c to &6cN.

POTATOES

FUTURE POTATO TRADES(Quotatlona furnlshetl by Sudler Wegener & Co.)

J . I Cm Co.C hi.. Mil.. St. P a u lChry*l*T .Corp.........C oca C«la ....................Commerci*! S o Iv en U ..............Commonwealth & S o u th e rn Contlnenial Oil o f D e law areC o rn I’rwlucts ........Du Pont de N em o u raE_____ ■ ......................B lccU ic I’ower A L i g h t G en e ra l Klectrle G enera l Kooda G en e ra l Motors G oodyear Tire Internatlonftl H a r v e s te r In te rn a tlo n si T e le p h o n t J o h n s blBnviilo ,K cnnecott Copper M ontgomery W ard N a»h Kelvinator

4fc P ae lflo aales60^

N atio n a l Dairy P r o d u c tJN ew York C «nlral ______I’n ck a rd Motors ' ....... .ParBm oiint P ic tu re s ____J . C. Penney Co. w...........P e n n a . I(. II.P u re OilR adio Corp. ......................R adio Kellh O rp h e u m R eynold* Tobacco B S e a rs Rtwbuck S he ll Union Oil Sim m ono Co.Socony Varuum S ttu thcrn I'acific S ta n d a rd UrandsS ta n d a rd Oil o f C a l i f . ____ ________ 18S ta n d a rd Oil o f N e w J e rs e y ............... 84S w if t and Co. ...------------------------- ,....N o aale*T exas Ciirp.......................................................4 VjT rnna-A m erlea .,Uni«>n Cartildo &U nion i ’ariflc ....U n ited Aircraft U niti.‘d Corp. .

Nov.11.76.,

d e l iv e ry : No aalca] c lo s in g a sk .

W OOLBOSTON—F leece wool demand w a a a

little m o re a c tiv e th is week.Klne D e la ine b r ig h t fireco woola a d ­

v a n c e to 84c to 8Ge In tlie g rease. Mo> dlum g rad es received m ore inquirlea and moat dea le rs w e re unw illing to *ell la rg e lota o f g ra d e d % o r U blood b rig h t fleecca. at . th e low a id e o f th e range 8Bo to 40c in tha g re a se . O ccaaional lot* of ^ and

blood c o u n try packe<} b rig h t fleece wools moved a t 88e to 80e In t h » tr e ta e delivered c u t.

Local Markets

Buying PricesSoft w h ea t Soft w h e a t

S O F T W H EA T

Barley Oil* _ Barley OaU

O T H E R G RAINS

(Two d ea ie ra q u o te d ) .

_ .75c_..76c...66e-..76c

CH IC A C O POTATOESC H IC A G O — W fulhor c lear, t e m p e ra tu re

80. S h ip m en ts 277, arrlvnU G2, t r a c k 101. Supplies m o d e rn lc , demand m odera te , m o r* ket best q u a l i ty s tead y ; stock a h o w in g heated o n d dertfy , all ivctions, w eak .

Ida. R ii««et Hurlianiia. under ice , w a s h ­ed. 1 c a r m ix ed U. S. No. 1 12.10 a n d U. S. No. 2 11 .2 6 : U. .S, No. 2, 2 c a r s 1 1 .2 5 : 1 c a r m ix ed IluHsrt ilu rbanks, U. S . N o . 1 (2.10 a n d UilsH Triumpha U. S . N o . 2 11.66; B liss T rium phs, un d e r Ice, w a sh e d , 1 c a r ll.GG, 1 c a r ll.tiO, I 2 cars 11 .65 ; 1 ca r ah ow ing decny 11.26; 1 c a r m ix e d , show ing d ecay . U. .S. No. 1 li.4 0 a n d U. S. No. 2 11 .1 0 : I.ong W hites, u n d e r Ice, w ashed, 1 c a r SI.TG. 1 c a r t l .0 5 ; sh o w in g decay, 1 c a r 11.40, t car 11.36.

Neb. ' C obb leru , geniTully good to good quality , w ash e il. 2 cars 11.86, 2 ca r* eh o w - ing som e spott4.-<t Hacks 11.26; u n w a s h e d .1 c a r 11.30, 10 c'ar* 11.26, 1 ca r $ 1 .2 2 V j: ahow ing sp o t te d sack*. 2 cnrs 11.20, 1 c a r 11.16, 1 c a r tl . l2 < ^ j; nilfln T riu m p h a , goo d quality , w a sh e d . 2 r a n ll.CO, 1 c a r . | l .G O unw ashed , 1 c a r 11.30; I c a r a llow ing s p o t ' ted sncka 11.15. Minn., Sandland a e c tlo n E arly O hiun. g enera lly good (lun llty , s m n jl S andland se c tio n Karly Ohios, g e n e ra l ly good q u a lity , nmoll to m edium, 3 c a r s t l . lO , I c a r S I .05. Wla. DilHa T r iu m p h : .2 ears m ix ed U . S. No. 1 I I and a izo B BOe.

BUTTER. EGGSS A N FRANCISCO

SAN F U A N C IS C O -B iittc r : t)2 s c o re SOc; 01 s c o re 20o; 00 m-nrc 2Sl{,c; acoro 2(ic.'

E g g s: L a r g e 26>{|c; medium 22'(,c ; amuH. U U c.

DENVER BEANS

U. S. Steel, com. , W a rn e r Uroa. ,W este rn Union ...................... ......W eatinghouie E le c t r ic ........F . W. Wofllworth C o .........—A m erican Rolling M i l l s .......A rm o u r ..A tla n tic llefining .................... ...U(M!lngB rlffus M anufac tu ring C o ........C u rtlM Wright ......................... ..K lectrle Auto L ite ..................ilouBton Oil ....................................N a tio n a l Distillers ...................N o rth American A v ia t io n ,Snfew oy Stores .............................Schenluy Distillers ...................Stu<iehakorU n ited Airlines ............................W h ite Molori C h icago I’neumatic T o o l Ohio O il .PhliU p* IVlroleum ...................n ep u b llc .Steel .............................V anad ium ....................................H rew fltrr A eronautics ..............

D E A N SGreat N o rth e rn * No. I ........ ..Great N o r th e rn s No. 2

. 12.00 $2.10

(Three d ea le rs q u o te d ; five ou t of m ar> ket).Pintos ............................................................ 12.10

(One d e a le r q u o te d ; seven out of m a r ­ket).Pintos .................................. ................... ..... ...12.00

(One d e a le r q u o ted ). Small red s , 08s Smill re d s , 06a Smill re d s , 04s

(Two d e a le rs quoted on e n i q u o ted o n 04a).

---------- $2.10.......... .... $2.00................. 11.80B8i and OGa:

D E N V E R — P in to s 12 .10-to 12.25: G re a t N nrtlicrna $2 to $2.16.

JARBIDGE

L IV E P O U L T R TColored hena, o v e r 4 lb s. ___Colored hen* , u n d e r 4 lbs.Leghorn h en s , o v e r lb*. —Leghorn h c n i , u n d e r 8Vj lb*. _______Colored r o u t e n . ov e r 4 I b i . ___.......I je ih o m b ro ile rs , be tw een lV j-1 lb s..Colored f ry e ra . 2Vj lo 4 Iba. _______Colored cocks ................... ......L tghoro cocks

No, 1 b u t te r f a t _ No. t b u t te r f a tE g ji , e x t r a ----------Standard* ______ —.Medium s ta n d a rd s Medium e x tr a s ......C o m m e rc ia l* ______£ bci. In t ra d e

Pn O D U C B

Small e g g s ..............................................L IV E S T O C K

Choles l ig h t b u tch e r* , 176 to 110 pounders

O verw eight b a tc h e rs . 810 to 160 pounders

O rerw eik 'ht b a tc h e rs . 260 to 800 pounders

C n d trw e ig h t b a te b e ra , 180 te 171pounders

rack in g sow*, h eavy Packing sow a, l ig h t . .. Steer*Hei/era — _____ _F a t r o w s ______________V e t l e r * .................... ...........Cutter*

^17.00-18.00........IG-IG.60

... |4< |5 .26-1 8 .0 0

Spring lam b* — ..........Y sirlin g lam b s _____ ______ _

H I L L F E E D■ ra i , 100 p o u n d * __________■ran, 800 pound*

.IB .0 0 -1 4 .0 0_______ 17.00_______ 16.00

■totk feed , 'lOO po , . Ilocli fe ed . 100 po ao d s

PerishableShipping

Oouritsy F r t J C. Farmer, Union : racU lo fre lch t aient,

X ifln F iiU i

Otrlond llilpm enU of ptrlshnble tom m odltlu lo r Aug. 10;

Onldwell dlBtrlct — Fotatoci 41, pcnchcs 10, on lo iu 14, pcn> 1, nilxcd vcgolnblcs 1, ;

Hnlio Unlla d istric t—I’ciis 13,T»ln Fnll* d is tric t—Potaloci 7.Nysia d li tr lo t—Potntoet 10, onloni

(, ixnclics I.Utah d ljtr lo t—OnntBloiipci I.

Markets nt a GInnco■InW #lrw in d qnlel.

Uftndi Irrvffutsr,.€utb •toeks fosltr.Fbnlin •irhaitk* *a*r>

: 1 ■ ■

Howard Hooper, Rio Tinto, Nev., foitmer Jo rb ldgc resident, visited la s t week.

George H udson, Costletord, visited Bill H udson Sunday,

Shoppers In Twin Palls last week Included M r. and Mrs. Howard W il­lis and ch ild ren , Mr. and Mrs. T o m ­my C harles and daughters. C liff Drake, W a rre n Albertson, Bud an d Jean N pukam , Douglas Bailey a n d Dave M arqukrdson.

A. M. Ross and Lester Aker drove to Salt L ake City with Elmore A ker taking a tru c k load of hluii g rad e ore to th e sm elter from tlie Rosa mining claim s.

Mr. an d M rs. Carl Sprague a n d Jack C orbett ore In Yellowstone park on vacation.

Mr. and M rs. M. E. Brady an d Mrs. R. E. B aty had dinner a t H o t Hole Sunday. Mrs. Baty and M rs. Brady were girlhood friends In Al­bany, Ore., b u t had no Idea they were living so clo.se now until th e Bradys cam e to Hot Hole from T w in Falls for a vacation and drove to Jarbidge to see the mining camp.

Mr. and M rs. Pred Mocliey an d doughter. M eridian, spent lost w eek­end with M rs. Lena Dougherty. T . A. Perkins accompanied liiem to Twin Palls fo r medical ottention a n d H. E. P an g b u m went on to Boise to enter V ete rans' hiispltal for t r e a t ­ment, hav ing become ill with th e nerve Infection wliich kept him In tlio hospita l a ll lost winter.

Mrs. S a ra h Steward ond Mr. a n d Mrs. Ed S tew ard , Duhl, spent la s t week-end a t the J, W. W illiam s home. M ary Williams occompanled them homo fo r n visit a t the E d Alilmj hom e.

Mr, an d M rs, J . H. Hicks cc le - brlited th e ir sIxUi wedding a n n i­versary S u n d ay with o dinner a t which M r. a n d Mrs. H. A. H arm on ond daugh ters were present.

n . E; K n ig h t ond John K n igh t, neliflower, Calif., orrlvcd M onday to visit II. L. Pangbuni. Mr. K n ig h t Is n Toriner Jarbidge resident, be in g employed by the original E lkoro Mines com pany, during tlio W orld wnr;

Extremely d ry weather Imj m ndo Jntbldge M ain street dlsngreenbly dusty, vvlth m uch comploliiing by housewives t l ia t .ovcry time a c a r Msseil, one w as nblo to write o n lio furn iture, n , O. Oaniozjl, G ra y

llock .mine superintendent, donated some old m ill ell nnd Davo M n r- qimrflson, H erm an Binnflem nnd UiHl Ncukoni Bprcnil It In llin w heel trncks, w ith th e old of flUnflold'* tnick, Jn rb ldg« folks wore nl»o niucli ch fcred by tim nows th r i t 8om« work w as lo b« done on th o ciinyon road before winter nets In, dm lo llm gcheronlly of Twin F b IIj nurclmnU.

-> aale* . . 82

: = } | ; - 61 ')i

-4_ 04 I . . 81

saifl*

;;. . 18... 18‘.. B'Ji . 82 ... 20>'i

. 21J)i sale*

. \H sa le s

. O'lk

. 10

. B

. 82

. 16',t

. 21)‘i,

. 8^

N. Y. C U R D EX C H A N G EAnierli'Uit Sujicr P o w e r ..............................7 /1 6C ltir s Horvife, new ................................N o sa iosK lcotrip Hand 4 S h a r e ........................... 6 'JhF o rd Motor, L td ......................- ......— N o aales

MDWIIESN EW Y O n K , Aug. 17 ( U P ) - T r a d ln g

dwindled on tho stock th a rk e t today a n d prices r u le d firm a* th o fin in e ls l dls>tric t a w a i te d th e a ccep tan ce speech W endell L . W ilikie, ;

L ea d in g Uaues firm ed to sm all ne t g a ln i a f te r a n ir re g u U r op en in g . In a U w In ­stances . su c h a s ; du P o n t, which g a in e d 2Vj p o in ta . the lis t m oved o u t of a f r a c ­tional r u t .

G ra h a m -P a ig e opened o n a block o f 11,000 a h a re s and fea tu red In activ ity . I t *old a t D /16, up 1/16, C h ry sle r and G en ­eral M oto r* had sm all advancei. S te e ls were q u i e t w ith prices steady, H a g m a gained a po in t but o th e r coppers he ld near th e prevlou* cloie. S tandard O il o f New J e r s e y gained n early a pofnt W est- Inghouse E lec tric w u u p mora th a n i point.

U tility ahares made a m a ll gains a n d m e rc a n tile Issue* were b e t te r . J . 0 . P e n ­ney rose P A points to 60 o n one tra n a a c - tion. U nite< I A irc ra ft waa th e firm s p o t In the a ir c r a f t s .

The m a r k e t ignored th e German block ' ade a g a in s t B rita in and favorab le b u sin ess new*.

L e a d in g *teel centers w e re scheduled to *tep up o p e r a tb n s next w eek and I t w a s believed th e ir l if t would ra lie the n a ­tional a v e ra g e above 00 p e r cent o f c a ­pacity.

D e p a r tm e n t *tore *ales. o s reported by the fe d e ra l reserve for wceV ended A u g . 10, vvere e ig h t per cen t ab o v e a year a g o , eom porrd w ith a gain of 6 p e r cent In th e pravloui w eek .

Dow J o n e s prelim inary clo sing a v e rag es : In d u stria l 121.06, up 0 .70 ; ra il 28,27, u p 0.10: u t i l i t y 21.68, dp 0.18, and 65 a to ck s 41.41, up 0.22.

Stock s a le s app rox im ated 110,000 s h a re s comparwf w ith 180,000 In th e ih o rt aea- slon a w ook ago. Curb a to c k isles w e re 22,000 Ahares ag a in s t 84,000 latt S a tu r ­day.

SPECIAL WIRECourtesy of

Sudlcr-W cgener & Company Eiiu Bldg.— Phone 010

BOISE. Aug, 17, (U,R)—Two con- tracLs to ta ling >39,391 today h ad been aw arded by tho Idaho depart­ment of public works fo r Improve­ments o n 16 miles of highways In Tvi'ln P alls and Conyon counties.

Tlie Hoops Construction Co., Tw in Palis, w as aw arded a 914,785 controct for construction of roadbed, dro ln- age structu res onfl, placing a rood- mlx su rface on 1.185 miles of ro a d from Castleford west and a road- mix su rface o n , 3.5 miles of road northeast of Biihl In Twin Palls county.

M orrlson-Knudsen Co., Inc., Boise, received a $24,000 contract lot su r­facing 3.763 miles of tho Narapa- Murphy highway from Walter’s ferry n o r th and 3.516 miles of th e Areno valley road from Roswell south In Canyon county.

FAIRVIEW

IN V ESTM EN T T R t/S T SF u n d . Inv, .. ..................................... I 1 M 4F u n d . T rust, A............................................. t 4.11C o rp . T ru jl ................................................I 2.05Q u ar. I n c ......................................................... I 8.

H IN IN f; STOCKSM tn . C ity C«piht .....................P a r k C ity ainitoli.Uu>d ...........S ilv e r K ing Coallilon ...................S u n a h in e Mltu-n .............................T in t ic Staiiiiard .............C o n d o r Colil K ec ia Mining U u n k e r illll and S u lllv n

.. s : .7f__ t>»3c-7c

No ualcfi N o s a le s

. .1 2 .3 5 -5 2 .5 0 " i c - l c

.. Nn Halea .... No Ball

M E T A L SN E W YORK* l-'ullow inu a re today 's cu a '

lorn am cltrra priiu-K fo r tioliv'crcd m c to la , c e n la p e r IIj. uiik-as o lh e rw is t ' di‘Hlt;nut«*d:

C o p p e r? Klci'trolylic IO^k to I I ; e x p o r t f. a . a . O.OOi cuniing f . o. b. n-fincry 10 > /j; lak e delivered 11.

T i n : Spot i tr i i iu clnsc*! .Sfttunlay* d u r ­in g sum m er.

L e a d : New York 4.76 to 4.fl0; K iu t SL L o u b 4.60.

Z in c : New York 6 .8 0 ; F.ast S t. L o u u O.BO.

A lum inum , v lrirln : 18.P la tin u m , dnilurii p<>r ou iu-r; 36 to 88.Q uicksilver, dollor& tx^r Dnnit nt 76 lb s . :

183 to 186N.W o lfram ite , Chincae. <iollMri i>«t u n i t . 1

p e r c e n t melalllc c o n te n t ; duty p a l d t 22.60 to 24N.

CHICA(;0 ONIONH CH IC A G O —No imii»n m arke t loduy.

U U h -Id n h o Sugar ............ 1 1 .0 5 -S t.lR

SHOSHONE

County commissioners officially canvassed the prim ary voted T liu rs- day afternoon ond found only m inor changes .In the resu lts. Paul H a d ­dock secured th e nominotion as county attorney o n the Republican ticket by the w rite-in method.

Tlilrteen m embers of ShcSlione I . O. O. P, took.the friendship gavel to Gooding lodge M onday evening. P our members from RIchtleld also attended .

M r. and Mrs. WUllom Burdett a n d daughters, Evanston, Wyo., and R oy Qlllesple, Salt Lake City, arc visiting n t th e Frank B urdett home.

M r. and Mrs. W. D. Vaden, Y a k i­m a. Wash., and ch ild ren ore h a v ­ing a family reun ion tills w eek. Tlioso who were h e ro for tho ev e n t a re M r. and Mrs. Yaden, Y ak im a; Mrs. Delia Rhode Sorsoieil, S e a t­tle; M rs. Minnie P erris , Long B each ; M rs. Janice Vredenburgh and M rs. B etty" Bolmon, Y ak im a; Mr. a n d M rs. W . T, Foulk, Los Angeles, a n d M r. a n d Mrs, M erlyn Davis, Y akim a.

A t ,a brief session of the C ham ber of Commerco M onday noon, p la n a w ere complete fd o r tlie cham ber's participation In th e coming fab:. '

M rs. Frank Clem le ft lost w eek fo r Portland, w here she w ill. m e e t her son. Jack, who Is coming fro m W ilmington, Del., fo r his vacation . Tlioy plan to spend a week v isiting In F oitlnnd before ro tu rn lng to B lio- shone. '

J ob F uW of Ila lloy Rotary c lu b gave ft view of h is recciit tr ip to R o ta ry International n t Hovana to th e Bho,sliono c l u b . n t W ednesday hm cheoii. Visitors w ere y/olt R ab y and Burton Driggs, acoding, n n d J , 0 , Robinson, lla lloy .

WAIVES IIEA IIINO PAY Crm !, Ida., A ug. 17 (U.R)—W .

J. T. Wlllliuils, fo rm er Pnyolte c ity clerjt, today wolvwl iirellnilnary honrliig beloi'o I’robiUe Judgo M a r ­tin O. Lullicr on n chnrgo of e m - braallng Pnyotl* city funds nnd w as bound over lo d is tric t oourt for t r ia l .

n rnvD n iB n M E a w a n t a d s .

Falrvlew Kensington was enter­tained W ednesday a t tho home of Mrs, R udo lph Peterson. New of­ficers, M rs. Pember, president, and Mrs. O rp h a Denney, secretary, pre­sided. P rog ram chairm an Is Mrs. Orpha D enney. Roll call was an ­swered w ith pet superstltutions. A talk on th e status of women In India w as given by Mis. Emily Tverdy; ch ild brides and marriages In Indio w ere discussed by Mrs. Ida K ramer; how children's names ore selected w as given by Mary Noh. After a d isp lay of handiwork from Indio a n d pictures of life there, the program concluded w ith a contest wltli p riz e going to M rs. W. W. Doum n n d low to Mrs. Fred Hohn.

Mr. o n d Mrs. Rudolph Benda, Chicago, w ho were morried lost week In ChlcoBO. ore expected this week to visit h i s uncle, Albert Kolarik.

Mr. a n d Mrs. Roy H ahn ond chil­dren, G ra n d Island, Neb., came lost week to v is it his uncle, Otto Hohn. Tuesday th e y returned to Nebras- ka,.accom panled by Mrs, Otto Hahn, who will enjoy on Indefinite visit.

The' A. H. Jagels ore receiving poles th is week from Chcr0 creek, w ith w h ich they will erect o itotato cellor.

About 35 from Falrvlew Orange visited K im berly O range Mondoy. Falrvlew O ronge presented a Major Bowes p rogram , with H. Hoiger of­ficiating. Program was under dl- recll[(n o f the lecturer, Mrs. 0. a . Brooks. A chorus, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Novock, Mr, ond Mrs. 0. G. firooks, a n d Kotherlne. Mr. and Mrs. P.- L . Atkins, Mrs. Ernest P rit­chard, M rs . George Baxter, Miss R uth H ard ing , Ardlth Mario Harger, Jack C am pbell and J. R. Crawford, sang "H eaven, Heaven," and “Beou- tlful D ream er"; Carol and Betty Jensen g a v e a song and tap dance; an Impersonotlon of Ted Malone was given by J . R. Crowford; song by Mrs. F . L. Atkins; a Negro tap dance, T h a n o Roberta, and o song by J . R . Crawford. Refresliments were served by Kimberly Grange.

WUlowdale 4-H poultry club met Monday o t the home of Frank Hud­son.

Mrs. J . B . Polmcr. Springfield, O., Is visiting her brother. Waller Da­vis. Sho Is accompanied by Mr. ond Mrs. Iso m RadcUlf.

Ed C o n rad 1s delivering mail dur­ing tho Illness of A. E. McMu;trey,

Fred C arson wos surprised Sun­day on h is bh-Uidoy anniversary when a la rg o group of friends ond relatives. Invited by M rs. Carson, cnmo lo r d in n e r and o social after­noon,

Mr«, E rn e s t Leo has h e r nephew, Bhclton,- W osh., visiting her this week.

Mrs, J im Forrest ond two chll- dren, S co tts Mill, Ore., arrived this week Vo v is it n t the Ilnroljl Forrest home.

Mrs. A gnes Dowd, Bladen, Nob,, nnd Mr. n n d Mrs. Paul Robinson, nnd sons, nro visiting tho Jimmy Dowd hom o. Mrs. Agnes Dowd Is mother p f Jim m y Dowd.

RODEO CATTLE UOVNDED VP EL PABO, Tex. (U.ID-'l’wo catloads

of what cn ttlom cn call a vanishing b ro cd -longho rn rodeo stcors-lm ve nrrlvcd fro m Iho Mcxicnn slnlo of Olllhunhun for shipment to Madi­son Bqiinro Onrden snd other rodoo nrenns, H io steers came from an Atnctlcnu-owiied roncli near Oasa arnndcs, Mcnlco, nnd numbered ago iiMd.

M f i m. s te p p in g up deliveries o f male In -

fop ts. th e stork brought 37 boy b a ­bies I n July compared w ith 20 girls, according to the report m ade p u b ­lic to d a y by J . 0 . Pm nphrey, couD' ty re g is tra r of vital stotlstlcj.

T h e re weren’t , any tw ins Ib te d for t h e month, Mr. Pum phrey’s re c ­ord show s.

J u n e blrttis previously unreported show ed five girls and o n e boy.

T h e summary:J u n e births not reported;J u n e 1, Mr. and M rs. Joe E dgar

B ertram , Kimberly, boy.J u n e 16,. Mr, and M rs. Joseph

Busch. Kimberly, girl.J u n e 20, Mr. nnd M rs. Elbert A r­

thur F a r tin , Buhl, girl. ,J u n e 34, Mr. and M rs. Clifford H.

H am m ond. Buhl, girl.J u n e 28, Mr. and M rs. Henry E b -

bers. Buhl, girl,J u n e 27. Mr, and M rs. Doyle A n

derson. Buhl, girl.July Births

Ju ly 2—Mr. and Mrs. W taton R, Lytle, Buhl, boy.

Ju ly 3—Mr. and M rs. Jomes E. Cook. Tw in Palls, boy; M r. and M rs. B. C. ,Davls, Murtaugh. boy.

Ju ly 4—Mr. ond Mrs. E . E. W hite, Twhi Falls, girl; Mr. a n d Mrs. B ed ­ford H . Mlley, Dietrich, boy; M r. and M rs. Paul 8 . Strolberg, Buhl, boy; M r. and Mrs. Thom as C. Buck' llii. F ile r , girl; Mr. and Mrs. Lyle K. W eatherble, Twin P alls, boy; M r. and M rs. Kenneth D. M cComm on, K imberly, boy.

July 5—Dr. end Mrs. V em H. An^ derson. Buhl,' girl; M r. .and M rs Woodrow Wilson Lurley, Tw in Falls, girl.

July 6—Mr. and Mrs. Leonord L, Leth. Buhl, girl; Mr. and M rs, Clarence E. Bottorff, T w in P alls, girl.

July 7—Mr. and Mrs. Wllford S, Duim. Buhl. girl.

July 8—Mr. and Mrs. G eorge Dew> ey R ay , Flier, boy.

July 9—Mr. and Mrs. Thom as J . M etzler, Buljl, girl; M r. and M rs, S. A. Ylngste, Costleford. girl.

Ju ly 11—Mr. and Mrs. Wolloce B, Livingston. Twin Foils, girl; M r, and M rs. WlUiom N. Oliver, Tw in Poli.s. boy; Mr. and M rs. Henry 0, Jones, Eden, girl; Mr. and M rs. Rube Perkins, Kimberly, boy.

July 12—Mr. nnd Mrs. Cloude F, Cri.sp, Buhl, girl; Mr, a n d Mrs. O, D. Palm er, Buhl, boy; M r. and M rs, Hubert Anderson, M urtaugh. girl.

July 13-M r. and Mrs. Lloyd K . W right. Ktoiberiy. boy; Mr. a n d Mrs. W illiam R. Black, Contact. Nev., boy; Mr. ond Mrs. Wllliom O, Stonger. Honsen, boy; M r. and M rs. Howard B. Tegan. Filer, boy.

July 14—Mr. ond Mrs. J . B. M ur­ray, F ile r , boy.

July 15—Mr. nnd Mrs. Ralph S, Hatch. F iler, girl.

July 16—Mr. ond Mrs. D. B. E as- lerday. Buhl, boy; Mr. and Mrs, Oerold W. Young, O akland, Calif., boy.

July 17—Mr. and Mrs. M. L. P o in ­dexter. Twin Falls, girl: Mr. a n d Mrs. W ayne K. Hogue, Eden, boy; M r a n d Mrs. Chester F . Coleman, Twin P a lls , boy.

Ju ly 18—Mr. ond Mrs. Leslie C. Ude, T w in Falls, girl; Mr. and M rs. D onald F. Bacon, K imberly, g irl; Mr. a n d I^rs. Sherman L. W right, Buhl, g ir l ; Mr. ond Mrs. f l . V. Cox. Buhl, g irl.

Ju ly 19—Mr. and Mrs. Calvin R . Parley. Twin Falls, girl; M r, a n d Mrs, K en n e th C. Beach. T w in Falls, girl. .

Ju ly 21—Mr. and Mrs. H arry M. H anger. Giltner, Neb., g irl; Mr. an d Mrs. R a lp h L. Brown. C astleford. boy.

July 22—Mr. and Mrs, Joseph W . Huber. Buhl, boy; Mr. ond Mrs. A l­len A. Olsen. Hansen, boy.

July 23—Mr. and Mrs. Lelond A. Hansen, Twin Palls, boy; M r. a n d Mrs. J o h n R. Armstrong. T w in Palls, boy.

July 24—Mr. and Mrs. L . M cD an- nold. T w in Foils, boy; M r. an d M rs. K enneth A. Linneli, C aitleford. boy; Mr. a n d Mrs. Horold W. Cam eron. Eden, boy ; Mr. nnd Mrs. C larence A. Wilson. Hollister, boy.

July 28—Mr. and Mrs. M elvin E. A nderson. Twin Palls, boy.

July 27—Mr. and Mrs. B . P . B om - house. Tw in Foils, boy; M r. an d Mrs. R o b e rt L. Turner, B uh l, boy; Mr. a n d Mrs. Clinton E. A nderson. Twin P a lls , girl; Mr. ond M rs. Har- ry E. Rhodes, Twin Falls, boy.

July 28—Mr, and Mrs. Law rence L. K irk lan d , Kimberly, boy; Mr. an d Mrs. H ow ard W. Tucker. T w in Falls, boy; M r. and Mrs. Glenn O . W hite, Filer, g ir l ; Mr. and Mrs. E vere tt L. P ohlgren , Mountain H om e. Ida., girl..Ju ly 20—Mr. and Mrs. M arvin J .

Muao. Custleford, girl.July 30—Mr. and Mrs. G eorge J .

Rl^gS. M urtough, gh-I.July 31—Mr. ond M rs. C hrist

W ogem an. Buhl, boy; Mr. a n d M rs. Leo R. Pearson, Buhl, g irl; M r, ond Mrs, F r a n k Gellotly, K im berly, boy; Mr. a n d Mrs. Wolter R . Boyles, Eden, g irl.

CASE OF MISTAKEfJ IDENTITY SAN FRANCISCO 1U.R>—Mrs. P .

K, De Shields excitedly callod th e police t o come on the ru n a s Uiere was a S cotch burglor In h e r house. The po lice took time out, befo re dnsh- Ing to h e r old, to n*k how sho knew he was Scotch. She replied h e k ep t saying "hoot." n io police arrived nnd ex trac ted a lorge owl th a t was cnught In the chimney.

Wilikie Backs Draft In Acceptance Talk

' (fro* Out)Of any emergency a n d any defense,' WUUde said, “T h a t la a pledge of m a te iM nld to G re a t Britain In a Jlfe-i'or-death ■ s tru g g le with Nazi Germany.

■’I nhould.lUcB tO Btato th n t.I m on agreement w ith th e se two (Roos­evelt) pripclples, as I underatnnd them —and I d o n ’t understand them M Implying m ilita ry Involvement In th e present hostU ltles. As nn Amer­ican ,.! am glad to pledge my whole hearted rapport to th e President In whatever notion h e m a y take In ac­cordance with these principles."

T h a t led Wllllde to a slashing at­ta ck on Roosevelt foreign policies.

" I cannot, follow th e President,” ho said.

“U iere have been occasions when m anyto f us h ave wondered If he Is deliberately Inciting u s to war. tru s t I have m ade I t plain tha t In th e defense o f A m erica, and our liberties, 1 should n o t hesitate to s tan d for w a r ." ,

“Inflammatory. Statements'B u t Wllllde sa id th e President hod

“dabbled In inflam m atory stote- m ents and m anufactu red panics" Instead of fulfilling th e first duty of

Presldent-;“ to t ty to maintain peace."

H e said Mr. Roosevelt had caused bitterness nnd .con fusion "for the sake of n little political oratory," secretly meddled lij European of- fa irs and unscrupu lous^ caused o ther notions to hope lo r more aid th a n the United S ta te s could offer.

“ ‘Walk softly and carry a big stick’ wos the m o tto o f Theodore Roosevelt," he^iaid. “I t still is good American doctrine fo r 1840. Under the , .present -adm in is tra tion the counti7 has been placed in the false position o f shouting Insults ond not even beg inn ing to prepare to ta k e the consequences.

■‘B u t while he h as th u s been quick to te ll other n a tio n s what they ought to do, M r. Roosevelt has been slow to ta k e th e American jeople into his confidence. He has lesitated to rep o rt facts , to explain situations, or to define reolistlc ob, Jectives,

"People’s Business"“As President, I p fan to reverse

both of these pollclej, ..I should threaten forelgET goverhments only when our country w as threatened by them and w hen I w as ready to act; and I should consider our dip­lomacy os part o f the people's busi­ness.

"Candor in these times is the hope of democracy."

In few more th a n a score of words, Wlllkle disposed of conscription— the d raft—which has h ad congress In throaty uproar for m any doys:

'Solne form of selective service is the only democratic w ay In which to secure tho trah ied a n d competent man power we need fo r national defense," he sold.

'Honestly foce our relationship with Great B ritain," h e urged—and demanded admission, fronk ond open, thot the loss o f the British fleet would greatly weaken' our de­fense and perhaps enable Germany to dominate th e A tlan tic oceon.

"ThL'i would be a colam lty for us," he said.

"W e rhust loce a b ru ta l, perhaps terrible (act. O u r way of life Is In competition with H itler’s way of Ufe.

"This competition is not merely one of armaments. I t is a competi­tion of energy ag a in s t energy, production a g a i n s t production, brains ogalnst brains, solesmon- shlp against salesm anship. In facing it, we should h ave no feor. History shows th a t our way of life is the stronger way.

rVee Men Strongest"Free men are the strongest men.

But we cannot Just ta k e this his­torical fad lor g ran ted . We must make it live. We m ust arise to new life of adventure a n d discovery.

"I promise by retu rn ing those same American princip les thot over­come German autocracy once before, both in business a n d in w ar, to out­distance Hitler in any contest he chooses in IMO o r after.

"And I promise th a t when we beat him, we shall beat him on our own terms, in o u r ow n American woy."

B ut Wlllkle w arned tha t the "American way" a s he would direct

woiUd be the h a rd way of toll and taxes, socrlllce an d suffering and that every man an d w omen would feel the biting fatigue o f emergency effort.

"You will have to b e hard of muscle, clear of head , brave of heart," he said.

"I shall not lead you down the easy road. I shall lead you down

the toad of sacrlflbe and senlc* to your countiy.”

WiUkla centered h is a ttack on U r. Roosevelt and su sp w te d motlTes and u ltim a te ends o f th e Kew Deal rath ­e r th a n a total challenge to the aC' compUshmentB o f th e Roosevelt ad m inistrations t o d a te . HeldenUfled him seU as a ‘fUberal Democrat" and co lled the roll o f h is own Ub^mllsm In a terse benediction upon many m a jo r poUoles o f th e New, Deal,

" I believe, t h a t th e forces of free en terp rise V m u s t '. te regulated,” h e sa id . " I am opposed to business monopoly."—A n d in series he en­do rsed collective bargaining, mln- Im um wagejj a n d hourss ta n d a rd s nnd th e ir constant lin- prdvem ent; fed era l regulations of In te rs ta te securities, m arkets nnd of b an k in g ; adequate federal old nge pensions ai)d unem ploym ent ollow- an ces; federal responsibility in equalizing th e 'lo t of th e farmer with t h a t o f the m anu factu re r; coopera­tive buying and . sielling; full exten­sio n o f rural electrification,

N e ^ EqnaUty I f equality fo r th e fan n er cnnnot

be achieved, “by p a r ity of prices," W lllkle said, "o th e r m eans must be fo tm d, with th e le a s t possible regi­m e n ta tio n of th e fa rm ers affairs.

“T h e government, we were told, m u s t care for those who had no o th e r m eans of suppo rt," he said, re­fe rr in g to Mr. R oosevelt's statement of re lief policies in 1933. "With this proposition nil o f us agreed. And we s till hold firm ly to the principle th a t those whom private; Industry ca im o t support m ust be supported by governm ent agency whether fed­e ra l o r state.’

B u t th a t did n o t ta k e core of Mr. Roosevelt's "forgotten m an," Wilikie sa id . H e contended th a t the Amer­ic a n Jobless m an w anted work and a liv ing wage— "Ills r igh t to take p a r t In our g re a t A merican ven­tu re ." •

Highlightson

W ilikie Talk(C o n tin u e d on P a g a l« Colum n B)

th e only democratic way In which to secure the tra in e d and compe' te n t manpower we need tor nation­al defense.

T h e New Deal doctrine docs n6t n o t seek rliUi, I t seeks safety. Let tu ca ll it the pass" doctrine. T h e New Deal d ea lt It and refused to m ake any m ore beta on the A m erican future.

I s ta n d for a new companionship in a n Industrial society.

I 4un opposed to business mo­nopolies. I believe in collcotlve bargain ing by representatives of labo r’s own free choice.

I bqjieve In th e m aintenance of m inim um standard fo r wages and m axim um standards fo r hours.

I believe la th e federa l reg:ula- tion of interstate utilities, of se- curltles marliets, and of banldng.

I believe in federa l pension, in adequate old age benefits and In unemployment allow ance.

TODAY’SBASEBAIX

• By United PreiM- AMERICAN lEAGCE

W ashington ___—______ 300 021—<1Boston ____ .'._____ L___ 212.0 0 0 - 8. Iieonard and Perrell; T e n y and

Poxx.New York a t Phllndelphla, ppd„

rain .Chicago _________________ 401 0—8D e t r o i t________ ;_________OOl 1 - J

K n o tt and Tresh; Trout, H utch in­son (1) and SuUlvnn. .St, Louis _____ ___________ 0 0 0 -0Cleveland __ :______________ 000—0

Nlggellng an d Susce; H arder and Hemsley. ' ,

NATIONAL LEAGUEP ittsburgh ____________ P10 20-aChicago ...... ..................... 000 00—0

K linger an d Davis; Mooty, R oo t (4) a n d Todd.

P h iladelph ia a t Sew York, ppd., rain .C incinnati-----St. Louis— — ,,

T iim er an d Lomliardi; Cooper and P adgett. .

(O nly games scheduled.)

Moser’s Wins Over Texaco Club, 16-11M oser’s Jun io r Pee-Wee league

baseball team today blasted o u t a 16-11 victory over the Junior T e x ­aco club.

Leadbig h it te r for the w inners wos Keevon, while Bolley led the losing attack.

B atteries; Moser's — Daly an d K eevan, Robertson; Texaco—Long, Bailey and Bailey, Whitehead.

I 'believe th a t the federal gov­ern m en t has a responsibility lo equalize the lo t of tbe farmer w ith th a t of th e manufacturer.

4-11 CLUBS INCIIEASE MOSCOW. Ida., Aug. 17 (U.R) —

Idaho 4-H clubs now hove a to ta l m em b^sh lp of 7,161, on Increase of 828 over a year ngo, U niversity of Idaho agricultural au thorities reported today. ,

’ ALBION * » — ------------------------------------------------------ •Carl Albertson, who spent tho

sum m er in Greeley, Colo., where he attended sununei' school at Colorado S tate Teochers’ college, re tu rn ed M onday.

Mr. and Mrs. Prank Engeiklng left M onday for Los Angeles a n d Son Francisco.

About 40 friends ond officers of Relief society attended a farew ell party a t the George Goodman hom e M onday to honor of Jomes W ilde, who h a s served os an officer in th e L. D. S. church for two years.

Lost week a t a special assembly ojf Albion S tate Normal school s tu d en t body Pres. R alph Jenkins. D anbury S ta te teachers ' college, D anbury, Conn.. was speaker.

Me. and Mrs. Vem Tondlnson a n d son ,'G ary , who have spent the su m ­m er In Logan, Utah, where M r. Tom linson ottended summer school, re tu rned last week.

Mrs. L. V. Handcock, Roosevelt, U toh. visited Mr. and Mrs. J . H. M ahoney lost week.

Albion G range held Its a im u a l picnic In Howell conyon Sunday, •'ollowing luncheon baseball was e n ­

joyed by the group.■ Mr. and Mrs. Horace Butler a n d son. Dale, Mr, end Mrs. F rank B u t- A ler an d fomlly, Acequlo. and M r. and M rs. G ene Robhison, Eugene.HI., w ere guests Sunday of Mr. a n d Mrs. W . L. Cowley.

Mr. an d Mrs. Les Anderson. S a - llno, K an., arrived lost week to v is ­i t Mrs. Anderson's porents, Mr, a n d M rs. Lower.

a

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your back and valuable time—the Oliver Youcan dig more bushels per day—get your potatoes huvested faster,, because one mao on die tractor and to Oliver

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The Oliver digger pulls easy and works at even depth in level »r nnercfl ground because it has a low hitch and tha drum tracks are close lo the digger points.

The OUvM digger is titra strong add well bnced. Oliver patented digger chain Is. widely known ai the best

.designed, longest wearing chain made. The powir lift mechaniim rum in an oil bath gear case. The ilerttof beds are raised or lowered at the same tim . The power take-off conncction fit* molt tniaors. Prttnre grean fittings are on the important beariogi.

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Page 9: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

■Saturday* 17, 1940

■■ : ■■ > -■ : . ' - ; IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO

to an ip? See Opportunities in the ‘Personals’ Column |W A N T AO R A T E &

Vat PubBoAtton Is Botb x n m s in d n e w s

BA TBS PEB UNB P E B OATt 8 b day*. pei'U nt p u d a y . . . .O e T b n * d sy i. p n Use per d a ; , JBc

- O u t d « r ,- p « Um i-. i . vr;% M o

83 1/3 Discount For Cash

Oasn discount! lUlDwed U advertlie- m ent t i paid lor nltbtn seveQ dajra a t t i n t insertion.No olauU led ad tiUceii to r lesi tb&a

, 60o ta a u d ln g discount Lins of elassUled odvertu ing com­puted on bails ot flvs medium- length words per line,

COMPLETE COVEEAGE AT ONE COSTIN TWIN PALIiS ■'

PHONE 38 or 33 FOR ADTAKER IN JEROME

Leave Ads at K & W B o o t Beer

IN BUJ>ERT LeiivB Ads at Residence ol M rs. Ida Wheeler, 713 B Bt

IN BUHL Leave &ds a t J o sU n I

Shell super Service B ta tlo a 200 Broadwoj t o u t b

This pap e r subscribes to t h e cod# of ethics o f th e Association o f News­paper OlassUled Advertising M an­agers an d reserves the r ig h t to edit or re jec t a n ; olassUled. advertis ing “Bltod Ads", carrying a N e m -T ta e s Box num ber are strictly confidential and n o Informotlan can b e given In regard to tbo advertiser.Errors should be reported immedi­ately. No allowance will bo made for m ore than one Incorrec t Inser­tion.

SPECIAL NOTICESBED bug fumigation. T. F . Floral.

BED bugs exterminated. W o rk guar, antecd. Van Dorn's, 336 N . Elm.

GOOD THINGS TO EAT.SWEET CORN. Ph. 2167-M.

JEHSEY-aDBENSEY m ilk. MB6-R3

RED spuds 60c, Q, Bradley. 0483-J3.

B A R njE T T pears, 0. R, B e a 1 ml, N. % W. of W. 8 Points.

BARTLETT Pears ond Peaches, John Gourley, Ph. 6J-3, P lle r,

RED potatoes. W. O. Jaclcy, % ml, N. County Hosp. Ph. 0285J3.

EB N TnC K Y Wonder beans for can­ning, 76c per bushel. P h . 80-M.

PEACHES by bu„ truck o r c a r lota. N iagara Springs, 7 ml, S, Wendell. Lowest prlces-hlghest quality .

BATH AND MASSAGEMALLORY. U4 Main N. P b . 118-R

8TA-W ELU 535 Main W P h o n e IBS.

SCHOOLS a n d TRAININGTHE fall term opening d a te s are

Sept, 3rd and Oth, New dosses will b e organized, T, F, B u s, Univ.

LOST AND. FOUND7,50-20 truck tire and 7 - ln c h bud

wheel lost between Buhl a n d Twin Palls. Reward. Ph. 1 «4 .

PERSONALSWANT ride Iowa. Share exp, P h , 233.

MOTORISTS—Cut costs, ta k e share exp, pass. Travel Bureau. PtJ. 2243.

WANTED: 1 passenger to Denver. . Share exp. Reis, excli, Ph, 0180-J3.

WANT girl, school age, to b o a rd and room. Nice home close to school. Very reos. Box 25, News-Thnes,

YOUNO m an wonts ride t o New York City by Aug. 20, R ef. Share exp. Jam e s Braden, Ph; 0384. R 2. Burley, R t, 1.

BEAUTY SHOPSSPECIAL—genuhie oil p erm . $1.00

up. P h . 1465-J. 630 Main N.

ELNORA Dlckard Beauty S hop . 530 Bluo Lakes. Ph, 1471. Eve, b y appt.

PERMS., $3 $4. S5, to, 'h p rice . 1413 Klmb. Rd. Ph. 1747, Mrs, Beamer,

3 FOR 1 spcclal on $5, waves. Crawford Beauty Salon P h . 1674,

SPE O U L r^O wave tor 13,50; S4 and (5 waves ^ price Idaho B arber t i Beauty Shop. Ph. 424

ELECTROLYSIS for perm anen t re­moval of supertluous hair. Evening oppolntments, Beverly B ea u ty Sa­lon, Jerom e, Idaho,

MAKOILLE'S, 161 Third Ave. N . Tho shop o l unusual perm anents and finger w aves Sod water oil sham ­poo an d finger wave EOo. Evenings by appointm ent. Phone 382.

PERM. $2 to $5, Dependable and guoronteed. parlshoppe B eauty salon, 323 M ata E, Ph, 285J . Tllllo H ranac Day, Juanita Porlsh K ruse.

ARTISTIC BEADTY SALON OU perm anents IliO up. P h . lOO,

. AIR-CONDmONED BEAOTY ARTS ACADEMY

Oil P erm anents SI,00 up. J u n io r stu­dent work free, 135 Mdln W e s t

SITUATIONS WANTEDOIItL ' w nnts liawk by hr. P h . 3130.

GOOD typ ist and stenoarapUor. Kef. Ago 21, Ufaxlne Mllej, R u p e rt.

EXP. w aitress or ranch cook. G ladys Clark, P a rk e r camp, Filer, R t . l.

COMPETENT lady, cook for crcw or (16 nursing. Rm. 10, Caledonia.

FEMALE HELP WANTED1I8KPR. O, D. Lapray, Filer, K t, 1.

m id d l e aged woninn for gen. lioilsowm'k, P h , 45-113, K hnberly.

MIDDLEAOED liomokMpcr f o r «1- (Itrly coui)lo. 113 mo. W rllo Dpx 32, Tlmcs-Nows.

TAKE A TRIP TO ADVENTURE-LAND! IT’S INEXPENSIVE

WHEN y o u GO WITH THOSE WHO ADVERTISE

IN THE

PERSONALS COLUMNOF THE

TIMES & NEWSTO, PLACE A WANT A-D

COME IN; WRITE, OR PHONE 38, 32

FEMALE HELP WANTEDa iR I i for gen. hswk. Ph. 1062.

HELP WANTED - MALEWANTED — Experienced m in er to

drive tuimel. Ph. 10|2-W eve nlngs.

2 BOYS, 18, 21, free to tra v e l west and re tu rn qn Ed. tour. N ea t app. Sal. Drawing acct will be dis­cussed a t Interview, See M r. S m ith a fte r 4 Caledonia Hotel,

HAVE steady farm work fo r ^ I n g and efficient m arried m an . Not m ore than 1 child. No sm oking or drinking. Apply In person, Oeo. A. Reed, ml. E., 414 S., Burley.

MAN WANTED Close by thore Is a W atkins country

rou te available lor an am bitious m an who owns a car and c a n (urn. good refs. No money or exper. re. qulred. Write hnmed. N. A. Niel­sen, 1303 24th St., Denver. Colo.

SALESWOMEN(5 PER hour or more In sp a re thne . . showlng_loycly .Fashion,Frocks to

friends. No exper. No Invest. Give age, dress .size. Fashion Frocks. Dept, N-4613, Cincinnati, O.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESSALE: 'ft Interest In' beer parlor,

cafe, Inq, Roo-sevelt Club, W endell.

MUST sell good beauty shop by 15th, Good loc. Box 26. News- Thnes.

HOME and Income 5 ap a rtm en t court. Completely furn. $4500 cash will handle. Box 16, News-Thnes,

FOR LEASE—Modern service s ta ­tion. Good loc„ M ata St., low r e n t MOO will handle, P ,0, Box 208, T J .

FOR LEASE—Super Service station dohig nice business. Good location. Lessee m ust have capital fo r stock and tools. Ph. 410.

FOR SALE: Very deskable a p t. and auto court; best loc. In T. p , 15% n e t on Invest. Consider tra d in g .

; *5,000 dn„ bol. terms. Box 21, Tlnies-News.

MOTOR CODRT FOR LEASE 3 or 5 years

16 all modern cottages—filled all the tim e,. Located' Just opposite UISB on n . S. 30 and 01. O wner retlrh ig from business.

DOLBEER MOTOR CO U RT Pocatello, Idaho

MANnPACTURER’S,agent a n d dis­tributor for established p roduct wanted for southern and ea ste rn Idaho, No equipment needed b u t should be oxperlenced In any wholesale selling, especially gar­ages. service Btatlons, etc. $2,000 necessary. Guoronteed MOO mo. Income to right man. W rite for appointm ent giving quallllcatlons and fu ll particulars. Box 23, News- Thnes.

UNFURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

VACANCY, Brosscau Apt, Adultjs.

MODERN duplex, 3 rms,, ba th . Heat, h o t water. Garage. A dults, 504 4 th street east. Ph. 638-J.

FURNISHEDAPARTMEI^TS

2 RMS. 821 Bth Av. N. Ph. 1023 eve.

2-RM„ mod. Close In. 411 M ain W. Phone 0200-R3,

2-RM, ttlr cond. 005 2nd Ave. N.

2 RMS. Adults. 613 , Main Av«. S.

4 RMS. Garogo. 220 8th Ave. K

MOD, 1 rm . Adults. 21D-3rd Ave, N.

3-RM. f u r a Biuigalow Apts. I n d E.

JUSTAMERE Inn, Ph. 450,0asto 971

APTS, T he Oxiurd, 42a Main N ortli

fllNCjLE modern futji, ap t. e lm s Apts,, 330 JlKl Ave, N. Pli. IIBO.

a R M .'fu rn . a|)t. $19. Lights and water fu rn , 445 3rd Ave, W e s t

I l i a i l school or blinlnraa (oliool t lu - dent to work for bonixl, room niid fliiinll wnueii. Write lion 15, Nows-

: Thiin ,

APT, furn. In Old Oregon T ra il fu r- nltuio. Prlv, bntli, shower. P h , iiltiui’. Prlv, bath, shower. 1401-W.

0LI5AN. oomfortolno, nulot, R ltr«o- tl»« apt. Cull al Apt. 10, oalU . A pis, 300 2nd Avk M, p)i, lo o i

ROOM AND BOARDBD. a n d rm . 120 6th Ave. N.

RM. an d bd_ 3^5 7th Ave, E.

BOOM* and board. 661 2nd N,

FURNISHED ROOMSROOM for ren t, 163 3rd Ave, Eiurt,

RM, stoker h t. Gar, 143 Bth Ave, N,

COOL, Ig. slpg, rm, 450 2d Av, N,

NICE fro n t room, 344 7th Ave, E,

AIR-Cond, bedroom, 415 2nd Ave, N

FURN. rm . In home, Ph, 380-W,

ROOM w ith privote lavatory, lum , hea t. 227 6 th Ave, E,

FURNISHED ROOMS2 U PSTA IR S rms, ready Sept, 1,

Next to b a th with shower. Stoker hea t, air cond,, 1 rm, double bed. o ther tw in beds, ext ph. Ref, 1015 N. Shoshone.

UNFURNISHED HOUSESl-RM, p a r tly fum . Inq, 1310 4th E,

SMALL hse. 338 7 th N, Ph, 1226-W.

TWO 3-rm , houses. W, E, Sanger,

l-RM, house, $7 mo„ with garden, water lu m . 155 W, Heyburn,

NEW mod, 3 rms. Adults, 315 6th St, W. before 10 a, m„ afte r 6 p jn .

FURNISHED HOUSES1 RM,; w ater pd, $7,50, 206 Lois,

6 RMS. mod, Inq. 536 3rd Ave. E,

6-RM, m odem . Close In, Reese M, Williams, phone 218,

WAREHOUSES ANDt r a c k a g e

FOR RENT—Small nete npud or on­ion celhir. Ph, 1738-M, H, S, De­witt.

WANTED TO RENT OR LEASE

5-RM. mod. house. Ph, 1172-J.

REAL ESTATi; LOANSLOANS on FARM S and HOMES

Fred P B ates—Northern U fo Ins, Co. Peavey-Taber Bldg, Ph. 1270

Is all Land Bank borrowers are cu rren tly payhig. Why pay more? See Natlonol Farm Loan Qfftco a t 113 3rd Avo. S. In T, P

HOMES FOR SALE2-RM. house to move, Ph, 1362-W.

GOOD 7-i-m. house, well located, In Hailey, Reasonable, Ph. 767, T. P.

BOXED house, 12x24, porch and bedrm. On side, P rac. nevy, cheap. 2 w„ 2 S, CasUeford. j . R. Fields.

6 ROOM house. Ju st completed. Lo­cated East Lawn addition, FHA loan. Phone 100. Keel Wllklson & Btronk Lum ber Co.

POUR new, m odem 5-rm. hotises on Taylor s t.. Bluo Lakes Add'n. Easy terms. See K A. Moon, 108 Taylor S t.

3-RM, m odem house witli sleeping porch, hardw ood floors, largo lot, garnge. $2300; $350 cash.

5-RM, mod, house, hdwd. floors, ce­ment basem ent, furnace, eleo, hot water hea te r, garage, nlcb lawn with slirubj, close In. $3750. Terms.

REESE M . 'WILLIAMS

PROPERTY— SALE OR TRADE

CHOICE bldg. lota for salo cheap. Mrs, A, M, L eonard, 035 M ain W.

HEW mod. 0 rm , house, 1 acre, for Imp. 15 o r 25 A., close hi. Ph. lo io - j

CELL or trado equity In largo mod. home on Uluo Lukes. Ph. noo-W .

CLEAR 5 A. ornnge and grapefruit grdve; mod. bungalow, fhcplnco, onk floors. Swimming |mx)1, screen- o(l-lu sun im or homo, Chlokeu huuw, fo r 1,000 hens, sprhikllng syilrni, gornge, Prlco $IU,000, 't’lado fo r Incuino ,iirop, or tntnVniKl equip, U . II. Urhhcs, It, 110X 5011, ron tm iB , OAllf.

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR SALE

6 A ,'lm p„ n e a r Buhl, sale o r trade, w rit# Box 755 o r Ph, 263, Gooding,

160, IRRIGATED, 8 mL N ,. rim . to rh n brldg^ 'O ood land, good bldgs., deep well, elec. Joins outside nmge.

■ Terms. J . O . L&wrence, P h . 25DW, .Jerom e, • .

WELL taiproved 80-acre form , 3 ml. E. of CasUeford, $7,000-10% down, annual paym ent o f prln. and ta t , »3B5. In t. 3«% . W rite S. M. Chadbum , Jerome, Ida, Ph. 337-M.

WELL hnproved 00-ncre^ farm,' 2U ml. N. W. of Filer, on hljhivay, $16,OOP. 10% dowp, annual pay­ments of prln , and Int. $835. In t. ra te 4%. W rite S, M, Chadbum , Jerome, Ida, Ph. 327-M.

GOOD POTATO LAND IN HALE COUNTY, TEXAS

Irrigated o r UrlgaWe a t $37,50 to $55,00 per acre

dependhig on the Improvements. ■ For Information^ w rite

W. J . MoWUllanu or B. E. Rushtag, Plahivlew. Texas.

FARM IMPLEMENTSBEliP 4-row bean cutter to f i t John

Deere cult. 3 E. Wash, school.

JO H N DEERE cultivator a a d ^Self bean cu tter. E rnest Relnke, Clover.

HART feeder and weigher repairs. F . E. BIckneU. 500 N. Washington.

VENTURA bean hpller, .fair con­dition, W alter Walters. ‘ 3M ml, S, of Eden or w rite P . 0 . Box 20, T . F.

TH REE 4-row Self boon cutters to f it McCormlck-Deerlng cultivator. Several Bailors,

HARRY MUSGRAVE• BEET PULLERS

2—John Deere, 1 Mollno and 1 Mc- Cormlck-Deering P & O.

16 WALKING PULLERSHARRY MUSGRAVE

POTATO DIGQERS Almost new McDeerlng, power drive. R ebuilt McDeertag. power drive. R ebuilt Hover, power drive.Rebuilt McDeerlng. horse drawn. R ebu ilt Ohver. horse drawn. , R ebuilt Pugh, horse drawn.Used McDeerlng. horse drawn.Used Richmond Chomplon, horse draw n.

M T, STATES IMPLEMENT CO.

SEEDSMICHEL'S grass seed. Germination

tested. P rank Clasen ranch, 2 ml. S. 2 W, of S. Park Groc,

MICHEL’S GRASSJU U U S JASPER CROP

Order now for fall planting! GLOBE SEED & FEED CO.

HAY, GRAIN. FEED

CUSTOM GRINDING ,/ Grind It where U grows I MORELAND MILLING SERVICE

P, O Box 274—FUer. I d a ,- P h 218

HAY, GRAIN, FEED' O ra ln atorage and seed c lean ln j

B ags—Burlaps and Seam iest O LOBE SEED St FE ED CO.

-CUSTOM GRINDING - FLOYD MUJer, R t. 1, F ile r ./Id a .

P h . 72J3—wo pay phone calls.

LIVESTOCK FOR SALE4 YOUNG gilts. 350 H orrlson.

YEARLING ewes a t roUrood stock­yards. Ed Wells.

350 a o o D aged ewes. R o b ert Brose, 13 ml. 8 . east Five P o in ts . '

PUREBRED Hamp. r a m lambs. Raym ond Evans, 3U S. o f S. Park,

25 HEAD ot good feeder pigs. H . 0. Jam es, Murtaugh.

23 FIN CH and Beatty buck sheep. , C rystal Springs O rchard , Flier.

15 SPOTTED Poland C h in a brood sows. Choice $15. Farrow Sept. Les M adden, Rock Creek.

HAM PSHIRE and Suffolk Hump. yearUng rams, R ledem an, Phone 0386-J#: —

380 LAROE, cross-bred, solid m outh . ewes, ready to buck. P riced rea­

sonably. Ph. 51-R3, K hnberly.

22 HEAD of purebred, g ra in ted, yearlh ig Hampshire bucks. 8 buck lambs. 2 miles north, IV i west of B po ta ta north. A. J . R equa jSs Son.

440 W h ite Face, s tra igh t 4 yr. old ewea, large ond shear heavy. Lambs are off, reody to buck. Will sell any num ber, W. E. H unter, Box 206, P h . 166 Rupert.

LIVESTOGR—POULTRY WANTED

H IGH EST prices paid for 'our fat chickens and turkeys. Independ­ent M eat Company,

FLOWERS—PLANTSOLADS, asters, zinnias. P h . 1422-J.

BIRDS, DOGS, RABBITSCOOKER spaniel puppies, 6 wks. old.

Eligible for registration. A. K. 0. 320 7th Ave, E Phone 051-R.

WANTED TO BUYWE W ANT cotton ragsl

IDAHO JUNK HOUSE

CASH for used cars, P arm er's Serv­ice, 701 M ahi Ave E,

WANTED TO BUY35 T. oa ts . J, A, Flynn, P h . 1786-W

WANT snm ll safe and cash register. Phone 1818,

W?! BUY Iron and mixed metalsl Best prices paid!

IDAHO JUNK HOUSE 152 2ni} Ave, South, P h . 325W!

MISC'ELLANEOUS • FOR SALE .....

10x18 garage. Phone 3-R5, Eden,

FISH IN G boat and S'.-j H, P , motor for sale, Chcop, Ph, 219-J,

Business and Professional

DIRECTORYBicycle Sates & Service

BLASIUS CYCLERY. PH. 181

Bicycleo for RentOLOYSTEIN’S — PHONE 509-R.

Coal and Wood■ PHONE 3

fo r Aberdeen coal, moving snd transfer, McCoy Coal Ic Tnflufer.,

Curtain ShopsCustom drapery service. Curtain &

. Drapery Shop. 404 4th E Ph, 862,

Floor SandingFloor sandhig. H, A. Helder, 603-W,

Old and new work. FREE estlmotes Fred Pfelfle. Ph. 1006-J.

Household NeedsElectric hot plates, $1.15, electric

fans $U5, D iam ond Hardware.

Job PrintingQUALITY JOB PRINTING

Letterheads , . : . Mall Pieces Bushicss Cards , . . Folderi

. . . S tationery n M Z a and IfEWB

COMMERCIAL PRINTINQ DEPT.

InsurancePeavey-Taber C o , Inc. Phono 201.

Nortliweatem M ntual Life Ins. Co. M. E Helmbolt, Bp. Ag. Ph. 1834.

Key ShopSchado Key Sliop. 120 2nd BU south.

Back of Idaho Dept. Store.

LttimdrleaParisian Laundry. Phone 800.

Money to Loan

LOANSAUTOMOBILE

See your local Co, for quick cash- U k Iuco present ear payments IWESTERN FINANCE CO,

Next to F idelity Bank

Bes J . E. WhltA l i n t tor loans on , homes or bnlln^sa property. LoV

rates—quick lervlco. 13D Main K.

f a r m ond Oily loam , Prompt notion. (Iwlm In r , Co., Pli, 501.

0, JonM for lonna on homes. Itouni >, Dank t i Trust. UlJg, Pli..2041.

Moneu to Loan

Don’t Embarrass Your Friends

Use our sa la ry loans. Pricndly. con- fldentiaJ, 30 minutes’ .sei-vlce

CASH CREDIT CO.Rma. 1-2, Burkholder Bids. Ph. 770.

$25 to $1000ON YO,UB CAR

DP T O IB MONTHS TO REPAY C ontracts refinanced—private sales

financed—cash advanced

Consumers Credit Company

(Owned by Pacific Fhianr^)

226 M AIN AVE. NORTH

Osteopathic PhysicianDr. E J . Miller, 412 Mata N Ph 1077

Dr. O. W . Bose, 114 Mahi N. Ph. 037.

Painting-DecoratingE. L, SHATTOR, Ph. 1203-J,

Planing MillWo m ake sash , doors, screens, cabi­

nets, coun ters—anything of wood. TW IN PALLS LUMBER CO.

Phone 542

Plumbing ttiid HeatingR eunite W ater Softeners; oil bum- . Ing w ater heaters. Abbott Plbg.

Ra^io RepairingPOVrtlLL RA D IO -PH O N E BOO

TrailersT railers fo r ren t, 251 Fourth West,

T railer Houses. Gera Trailer Co.

TypewritersBales, ren ta ls and service. Phono 00,

VphohteringRepairing, roflnlslilng. Cress * Bru

ley F u m . 130 2nd Bt. E. P(i. 605.

Woodworking MachlmrgD elta woodworking maolilnery. Twin

Falls J u n k Houw, ISO M ain 0,

l l h i l l l "

THIS CURIOUS WORLD* By William Fersiisoo

K € N >

WILHELM.,V E R M O ,

C A U I F O R N I A ,S H O T A N

© © © V X k > R D S . . .

B V 1>0IM<3 O N H IS B A C K , W IT H T H E B O W s t r a p p e d TC> H IS F E E T , a n d U S I N f e B O T H H A N D S Tto D R A W

T H E S T R IN G . ;

r.Kuau.a,PAT.orf.

-ALASKAK A D KlO

F I F T Y V E A R S A < 3 0 .

t n

iA T A R P O M I S AS A > £ A A P O B . K I L U N & W H A L E S , A C O V E / Z ,

ANSWER; A marine fish, and a noted fighter.

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

AUTOMOBILE OLABS niom etJ Top & Body Works

NEW single bed, ■sprlnp, m attress. Rex Atms No. B l,

TENTS, tarps, cable an,d' belting. Idaho Junk House,

CANVAS-ALL KINDS Tbomets Top A Bod) Works

lO-HORSE B uda power unit. R ea­sonable, 600 N. W ashington,'

1.000 shares Gold Bottom m ining stock, 50c share. Call' John A. Flynn,

OOOD used % H, P, stogie phase 3450 R,PJiI, m otor, cheap. H. O. Bortz, Burley. Idaho,

ALMOST new Rem, noiseless, port, typewriter,, or trade for cow. Phone 502W.

NEW 14 ft. cedar boot, chicken house 18x30, puffed wheat m a­chine, 3 used trucks. Ph. 1730-M. H. S. DeW ltt.

U, S. Storm seal channeldrain metal roofing. Costs no more than regu­lar m etal roofing.

KRENOEL’S HARDWARE

1 CASH reg ister an d addtog mch„ combined, prac. new ; 1 truck van, good cond,; o th e r serv. sta, sup­plies. R. S. Stephens, Filer, Box 275. Phone 16.

August House P ah it Special Save $11.45

■ O n every 15 gallom. WlUi every 10 gallon order we give you 6 gallons tree

$220 P E R GALLON G uaranteed ,0 . Ivon Price •

512 2nd Ave. N. Phone 1507

MORECLEAN-UP SPECIALS

on PAINTClosing out odds-and-ends and dis­continued colora In Paints, Enamels and V arnishes IFor histance, reg u la r $1.10 per quart patot reduced to ........... 45c per quart.

MOON’S

HOUSEHOLDFURNISHINGS

E L E O raiC w iring supplies and fix­tures. All m a teria ls approved by Underwriters. Lowest prices!

KRENGEL'S HARDWARE

Last Call On Used Elec. Ranges!Oome in and m ake us an offcrl

HARRY MUSGRAVELATE model es ta te coal range, like

new, $75; ahnost new elec, refrig­erator, $75. P h o n e 1416,

Sale of Linoleum Remnants!

40c Sq. Yd.HARRY MUSGRAVE

AUTOS FOR SALE'29 MODEL A sp o rt roadster, excel,

cond., $50. P hone 0181-J3.

MA Rds $65, MA epa $00, Ford T cpe ww $20. Tr. Hse., $110. O'doluior.

LATE model 4S Harley-Davldspn motorcycle, fully equipped. Low mllctige. Gem T ra iler Co.

..,$040,,.$359

'39 Ford sedan ..............'30 Tcrraplane 'co u p e .'32 Chevrolet pickup ...3 bikes. Priced righ t.DA1801I MOTOR, 305 Blio. South

...$100

TIIUCKS AND TKAILEIISTRAILER house, 7x16. ‘ lilq. a t

1\)mpklns Service, Kimberly.

7x10 AIR FLOW troller house, inidershing, bullt-lns. llnlgaliil Ing. Kills T ro ller P ark ,

7x10 'I’RA lLEll house, a barualnl I’h, 73 or Inq. 130 3nd Ave. N. he- for O p. m.

TOOEl’TIOHALLV well built IrnllDr houno. I’liuil* S42. r w m rA U u s LUMDEn o a

'.V

FBfilLiEl ClABOARD PRESIDEN'nAL SPEC­

IAL EN ROUTE TO NORWOOD, N. Y., Aug. n (U.R)—President Roosevelt meets the C anadian prime mh^lster, W. L. MacKenzlo King, tonight fo r a conference which may result In an understanding on problems of dC' fendtog the w estern hemisphere.. Mr. Roosevelt had already a n ­nounced th a t conversations are In progress with Canada on defense of the western hemisphere and n e ­gotiations arc proceedhig with G reat Britain for western hem is­phere defenses aga in st aggression from overseas.

King will board Mr. Roosevelt's trah i a t Ogdensburg, N, Y„ a f te r th e President has taspected the w ar games of the firs t army In progress there, ‘ In'apptoxUttately loo square miles Irt the Ogdensburg region bor- dertag on the Canadian border, 01,- 000 regulars and national guards­m e n are slmulathig the conditions of actual warfare.

In M r. Roosevelt’s private car, th o P residen t and Khig will have dhm er together and spend tlie evening talking. The prime minister will spend the n igh t aboard Mr. Roose- velt'fl ■ trahi and Sunday m orning will accompany the President to m ilitary rohglous services conduct­ed to the field for the troops.

J . Plerrepont Moffett, A merican mhilster-' to Canada, accompanied K ing from Ottawa.

Somethne around noon Sunday K ing will go back to Canada anc M r. Roosevelt will leave for hla hom e a t Hyde Park, N. Y.

SIIEGYIVEBERU N , Aug. 17 (U.R)-Dlplomatlc

quarters reported today Germany la expected to moke an Important d ip ­lom atic move hi connection w ith th e w ar wlthhi the next 24 hours.

T here was no offlclol confirm ation of tho report, but It wos understood th e move was In no way connected w ith any sort of peace offer.

I t was s tated 'there had been con­siderable diplomatic activity hi B er­lin In the last 12 hours and th la activ ity was connected with the eX' pected move.

Beyond the statem ent th a t n o pcaco offer was to be expected, the re w as no hint as to the nature of th e move. The announcement of It was expected tonight or tomorrow.

(London yesterday charged B erlin w as Issuing exaggerated reports o f th o effectiveness of German a i r ra id s on Britain hi hope of d raw lns J a p a n and Spahi Into the war.)

Complete result* o l th e Tw in, ra ils , county prectact committee^ elections for Democratle w ul Re- . }UbUcan parties were announced oday as th e -board of county ,com­

missioners wound up Its convoia.of the prhnary balloting.

County cen tra l conunltteea are made up of one member from each . ot th e '26 precincts. S ta te law eped- fles tha t th e committees m ee t Aug.23 for organization and to name a state central com mitteem an. .

There, were eight D em ocratlo and six Republican contests In Tues­day's balloting. Complete m p - mary: .

Democratlo Twin Palls l , Mrs. F ran k Kleffj-

nor. 85; John B. Robertson, 41; Nels 0 . J an ls , 30. , . -

Twhi Palls 2, 3, E. Roberts, .;ilr Stanley Phillips, 81,

Twhi Falls 3, John B, Stephens, 165.

Twin Palls 4, Tom Ford- HIstop, 66; Harold Hoover, 50. .

Tw in'Falla 6, W. A. M tanlck, 140. Twin f a l ls ' 6, E, Fi P ra te r ; 143;

Q. W. Creed, 87.Twin ^ U s 7, Mrs. A. C. Parker,

104; Donald Waxk, 74. ■Buhl 1, Roy Shaver, 110; Buhl 2,

J. W. Campbell, 143; B uh l. 3, Will Aldrich, 106; Bulil 4, Jo h n P, Krai, ■V3, a '

Allendale, Lee Lelchllter, 17; Ber­ger, J. P: F arrar, 21; CasUeford, E 'D , Logan, ,70;''01over. Edwin A. Llerman, 17, ,

Deep Creek, A.,‘R. C arter, 30; R. R. McDonnell, 51.

Filer, K erm lt AlUson, 164; L. A. Winkle, 108.

Hansen, W. D. Wiseman, 80. HoUlster, Wlley lUff, 74; J , E.

Pohlman, 41.Klpiberly, W. B. 8avage„163; Lu;

ceme, Theodore Peterson, 25; Maroa, O nllle Creed, 40; M urtaugh, John . Savage, 70; Rock Creek, Bud Lar­sen, 5; Rogerson, Fred L. Cliite, 14'; ;: Thometz, Claude B row n,'23,

Republican 'Twin Falls 1, Ray D, Agee, 204. Twhi Falla 2, Paul R i Taber, 228;

Ehner W. Jones, 112.Twin Falls 3, J , L. Berry, 141; Roy

Nlcewonger, 45,Twin Falls 4, J . 0 . Esllnger, 114. Twin Falls 5, John C, Harvey, 106;

Leonard ElUs, 42.Twin Falls 6, Thomas R . White,

161.Twhi Falls 7. P. 0. Graves, 385. Buhl 1, L. H. VahRlper,, 100.Buhl 2, Leonard AlmqiUst, 81;

Wesley M. PuUer, 85; J . 0 . Jacob­son, 02.

Buhl 3, George 0, ,Leth, 70.^uhl 4, Jess Eastman, ,58.Allendale, P . M. Carter, 15; Berger,

E. L. Raybom, 17;CasUeford, A. E. M cM urtrcy, 67;

Clover, Henry Knelp, 82; D eep Creek, Howard Q ault, 20; F iler, J . Clyde Musgrave, 167; Hansen, WlUard Mc- Matsrc/^O; Hollister, Beryl S. Kun- kle, 20; Khnberly, 0, T. Brown,, 111.

Lucerne, J . H. Thomson, 19; George P. Smith, 7, '

Maroa, L. H. Brown, 9.M urtaugh, Howard Hall, 104; T .T .

Rutledge, 30. ,Rock Creek, Farris Larsen, 3; S.

A. Walton, 1.Rogerson,' Barney B arnett,^

Thometz, 0 . E. Orleve, 12.

New Fires Force Travel Suspension

In National ParkYELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo.,

Aug., 17 (U.P>-Slx forest fhea raged today In the southwest comer of th e natio n 's biggest playground area , forchig a suspension of trijvel be­tw een tlio West Thumb area and tlie sou th gate of Yellowstone national park .

Two nevy blares broke out yester­day , Just as rangers, got a blazo In tlio Pox park eeotlon under contiol. T lie others have been binning .for m oro than a week.

M ore than 1,000 men were on Uio f .re lines at Ranger lake, Mooso creek, Orel falls and Mountain Ash crccks. High winds and extremely d ry weather made tlie ' situation critical.

nODY jlDKNTIFII!!)NAMPA, Ida,. Aug, 17 (UR) -

N am pa police snld today they ,hod Identified a body found by Uie ra ll- i-oad tracks .west o t Welter as th a t o f <}. E. Payne, 6'Doiniell, l^ x . A utliorllles were rluveatlgallng Uio poM lblllly Payne was murdered wIilIs rid ln if« freight body thi'own from t in car.

BIREDK AKES

BUHL, Aug. 17 (Special)—BUhl Red Cross chapter will hold a ben­efit dance a t 9 p. m. next Tuesday to raise funds fo r the chap ter quota In the nationwide war refugee relief fund, according to itrs . A,' J , Ptaks, chalhnan. ' .

ITie party will be held a t Dance palace to Legion hall.

Wayne Skeem and his orchestra will donate the ir muslc'for th e b e h - ', eflt, and th e Legion Is volunteerUig use of Its hall.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSNOTICE TO CREDITORS

Estate of A lbert D. Stafforil,Deceased.

Notice Is. hereby given by the undersigned adm lnlstratrU w ith the will annexed of the estate o f Albert D. Stafford, deceased, to th e credi­tors of and all persons having claims agahist tlie said deceased, to exhibit tliem with necessary vouchers, w ith­in six months after the fh s t pubh- catlon ot this notice, to th e eald adm inistratrix with the will an ­nexed a t the office of George M. Paulson and Edward Babcock, FI- dellty National Bank Building, Twin Palls, County of Twin P alls, State ot Idaho, thla being the place fixed for the transaction of th e bushiess of said estate.

Dated August 2, 1040.RUTH S. GAMBLE,

Administratrix w ith the will annexed of th e es­ta te of Albert D. SU f- ford, deceased.

Pub. Times Aug. 3,10,17, 24, 1040.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN T'HE PROBATE COURT OP

THE COUNTY OP TWIN FALLS, STATE O P IDAHO

Eatote ol PAULINE B. PREOKEL, deceased.Notice Is hereby given by t i n

undersigned adm inistratrix w ith the will nnnejicd of the estate o l Pauline B. Preckel, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having olalmJ ogalnst tlie said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchen, withhi six m onths alter tlie, fh s t publication of this uollce, to th e said admUilstratrU with the will annexed a t tlie office of Edward B abcock,, Pldellty Notional Bank Bldg., Twin lYilU, Twin Falls county, S ta te of Idaho, Uiis'bclnK ttie plaoa fU ed 'to r tlie transaotlon of t|ie b u iln e it ot la id estate,

Dated July 13, m 'MYllTLS A, UtNOXRSOM

, A dmlnlstmtrU w itb th i WlU . onnexed ol, t in M U tt. PauUnt D. P rK kil,

Pub. Tlmen July 37, Aiii, »i W, W ilW ,II:'

-.1?;

Page 10: British Blast at REPORIERSEES GOP Head Nazi Roosevelt ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening-Times_TF... · SuTM of Uit Dnilcil Pn OFFICIAL cm NEWSPAiPBJl British

Page Ten IDAHO EVENING TIMES,- TWIN' FALLS, IDAHO Saturday, Aujrusfc 17,1940

RUSSIAN, TURKISH, GREEK

KFIEESHATHENS, Aug. 17 (U.R)—Diploma,

•tic circles here said today that emergency general s ta ff meetings by the Russian, Turldsh and Greek high commands a re expected short­ly.

The reports did not Indicate when the genera! stafi conversations would s ta rt but It was believed they would begin soon.

T ie reports said th e re would be B "series" of general s ta ff talks which was taken to Indicate a gen­eral meeting ol th e hlgh commtthds wos not contemplated, a t least for the present

H ie staff conversations were a t­tributed here to th e "tension" ex­isting In southeast ETurope, which has bein heightened by th e torpe­doing of a Greek cruiser and tlie bombing of two Oreek destroyers in the last two days. T he G reek and Italian governments each denied to­day Italian planes attacked the Greek destroyers.

Tension IncreasesHowever, tension between Ita lj

and Greece was obviously on the Increase.

Greece Is calling up reserve ape- clallsts for service Aug. 20.

. Reports here nnd abroad had per­sisted In Identifying tlie planes which bombed the destroyers as Italian but tlie government, ah-eady embroiled hi ever-increasing diffi­culties with Italy, said th e reports were not true.

Ostensibly the men called to the colors today will partic ipate In large scale Greek arm y maneuvers and tliey will report fo r duty on Aug. 20.

tleservei Called up' In addition to callhig up resei-ve officers and specialists, It was an ­nounced. the class of 1B32 was call­ed up. effective Aug. 25, fo r a short period of trolning In m odem wea­pons. The class of 1933. now to training, will be releosed on Aug. 29.

The original call specifically was lor maneuvers.

Onio bombing attack on th e two Greek destroyers by ah-plones took place as the destroyers were en route convoying passenger slilps from the Island of Thios where the Oreek cruiser Helle was torpedoed and sunk by an unidentified sub- raartae Thursday.

RAFIiOlSURE FOESCyWGi

WASmKGTON, Aug. 17 (U.f»- Members of the senate antl-con- scrlptlon bloc claimed an eight-vote ‘‘margin of victory'.' today In their drive to modify the BurUc-Wads- worth compulBort m ilitary trahilng bill.

Poes of the measiiie, w hich would require 12.000,000.', A m ericans be­tween 21 and 31 years of age to register lo r a year's arm y trahilng, said Ihey had gained four votes dur­ing the last 48 hours In behalf of the amendment o f Sen. F rancis T. Maloney, D„ Conn., which would defer the d raft until Jon . 1.

, Maloney's p lan would require the army to try voluntary enlistments stimulated by hicrea^ed basic army pay and a one-year ra th e r than three-year enlistment period. If quotas are stlU unfilled, th e d raft would become effective au tom ati­cally.

Members of the antl-consorlptlon bloc planned an Intensive drive this week-end to gahi support for M a­loney's substitute and to defeat the Burke-Wodsworth bill.

Ben. Burton K. Wheeler. D.. Mont., unofficial leader ol the bloc, has ex­pressed himself as a "last-d itch ■ opponent of any form of conscrip­tion. He objects to M aloney's pro­posal because It would compromise the Issue.

The PubBc Forum

8EE8. ROOSEVELT FIGHTING WALL .STREET EVIL

Editor. Evening Times;'As' o m an tlitaketh, so is he."

Therefore the m an who has always voted the Democratic or Hepubll- can tickets may really be either or neither. T he CommunlBts. Budd­hists. Fascists and all other beliefs vote some ticket In this country. To be the one or the other a person must h ave certain fundamental be­liefs h i economics and sociology. Perhaps never before has the d iv i­sion been so defhiltely drawn os it will be In this November election. We know definitely the lUie Presi­dent Roosevelt will follow regard­ing th e persecuting powers' of fi­nance nnd the real enemies of lib­erty th a t are centered hi Wall street.

Any well read or radio Informed man today knows that Uie slogan,. 'We w an t wlUkle," orlginattd hi

Wall s tree t. Therefore we can know that ho represents and has the bless­ing of th a t persecuting power th a t caused oil the bank failures which resulted hi the 10 lean years th a t are records of the past.

This sm all group of evil men be­lieves h e will liberate them from tlie curbs of such New Deal laws as the holding company ac t and the 8. E. C. act so they can again pyramid worthless stocks and bonds ond swindle the gullible public. Tlie thhiking men and women are de- termtaed to liberate our social structure from the hidden tenacles of this W all street octopus.

These good citizens of our coun­try will no t deviate from their course b u t will vote for Pieslflcnt Rooseveir. To them tlie third term issue h as no meaning other than they wish to return to America’s hardest nnd greatest Job tho m an whose m oral fibre has been tried in the fires of experience and emerged tempered so sti’ong that he can be trusted by rich nnd poor alike to try to find the course best suited for all in th is world crisis.

This compalgn bids fah to remove from the ranks of each party those riders or politicians who blow neltli er hot nor cold hut are out for what cash they can get for fooling the voters as much as possible. I t Is a good thing lor those whose philosophy Is agahist a liberal gov­ernment policy to protect the com mon m asses from aggression within to. come from behtod theh- smoke screen nnd openly support Wendell U ghtnpow er WlUkle.

May we ask them to set up along ti)0 highw ays as mony signs os they can financially afford so we hum ­ble citizens may know who Oiey are and deal with them accordhigly. The powers of darkness take many shapes an d forms and can best be destroyed when openly displayed to light. T h e ?vU tha t swells and grows nil th e thne hidden in the shadows a n d never reveals Itself hi sunshUie Is th e one thot leads to destruction of nations.

Poisonous lungus always grows hi shadows a n d never on light.

LESLIE W. WILLIAMS. Twhi F alls, Aug. 10.

AVells Resideuts Fight Brush Fires

WELLS, Aug. 17 (Special)—E nthe mountain side south of WcUs was ablaze Wednes()ay n igh t as a result

■ of a brush fire started by lightnhig.Citizens of Wells were Ulive with

excItcment. Preparations were made to fight the fire should a cliange of wind bring the flomes to the city limits, Tho city council instructed all citizens to conserve th o water supply for emergency purposes. Sev­eral graupa of lighters from Wells went out into the hills to attem pts to put out the fhe by shoveling d irt on tho flames.

Tho fire was started when light­ning struck near the hillside ranch ol Hubert Weeks and Mr. Simpson during a severe electrical storm Tue,?day afternoon. I t was brought under control,Tuesday n igh t by 60 CCO workers, but broke out again about 8:30 a. m. Wednesday. I t spread In several directions a t ono time, endangering orcliards and fields of W. II. Franklin. Volunteer workers fought to save Mr. F ran k ­lin's groin crop.

Shoots of fhe tire burned all around tho Wells power plont, de­stroying several poles. I t was neces­sary to shut off the power for n short time. Workers were able to save the power house. - ‘ i . '- ■ ■ ■

It' was reported In Wells tlm t tlie ca r of H. H. Oazler was trapped hi the fire. Later reports said th a t tlie c a r had been saved. As a safety

' nieanure workers plowed around the Cnzlel- home ranch.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph nobcrtson nnd miall daughter were forced to leave (heir homo at the U n lt« l lilnle.i eKperlmcnt station In Clover I 'l in y o n . However [he s ta tion was not dtBtroyed,

While there are small flrc« sllll hurnliig In the mountains, thone hcureiit Wells hav' been rx tln - tulshcd.

[OEMtniNASSAU, Aug. 17 ((U.PJ-Tlio duke

of W indsor landed a t ancient St. George's w harf today and wns sworn to otflco a s governor o( the Ba­hamas.

The duke, accompanied by his American - born duchcss, slopped asliore fronv a gray stcomer to the sound of n royal salute and the strains of “ God Save tho King."

He wore a kliaki gencrol's uniform and the duchcss wore a flowered blue and ph ik dress, a royal blue coat, a w liite-slielled turban and blue Jewelled ea r rings witli clip to match.

A crowd of 16.000 persons Jammed tho w aterfront, Rawston's sciuare and Bay s tree t to wotch tlie arrival.

S tands a t AttentionHio duke stood a t attentlQa during

llic ceremonies while the duchess smiled a t tlio honor guard and faimed herself w ith a palm leal fan as the duke reviewed the troops turned out in his honor.

Only 16 m inutes alter lie first stopped foot on Bahamanlan soil, the duke was sworn into elllee. He repeated th e ofiiclal oaUi after Chief Justice E. B. Daly in tlic colony's council cham ber.

Mrs. W. L. Heape. wife ol the act­ing governor, set Uie fn.shlon in greeting tlie duchess. She bowed when sho wns hiti-oduced to the woman for whom Windsor gave up the throne of G reat Britain, o ther officials th e n followed her precedent and bowed, too.

Crowds Line SlrtelsAs the W indsors ciunc off the

steamer w hich carried them from the Bevraudas th e crowds Uiat lined (he streets, rooftops nnd filled tho har­bor In small c ra f t cheered nnd ap­plauded.

W. K. Moore, president ol the Ba- hnmanlan IcRlslative council, wel­comed the diiko on bcholl of tho Islnnderg,

- I'oday tlieio m more lim n '^5,- l«),000 curs nnd nlwut 4,31)0,009 ino- lor triicki on lh« hlgliwnyi.

Finals Sunday in First Flight Play

Of Golf Tourneyriiinls of tlio first fllglit in tho

Union M otor bcst-bull tournament will be staged a t tho municipal golf links tomorrow when Dr. 0. n. l”ox nnd D, H. Atkinson will Iniiido with Vein Miles n nd Carl Emerson for tho lltlc.

Dr, Fox and Mr. Atkinson galne<l the final .rmiiid ycslcrilny ns lhc,V plliiilnnled Ulll Mclloherls and Kin'l Dnvldioii, 3 a n d 3.

ofAct'ordln* to llio U. 8, biironii » phhllo rfinds Iho BvernHo molor vn hlfllo 111 1036 Iravcled n.li'IO miles.

The teaiii o f Doug Sm ith and Lyle Holder took Ju st ab o u t every­thing there w as to ta k e a t la s t n ight's annual pushm oblle derby w ith the exception of th e BO-yord backward toce vjhich -was vion by K enneth Roberts an d Bob, Ander­son.

An esttooted 200 persons witness­ed the races w hich w ere held on Shoshone stree t betw een Fourth an d Sixth avenues e a s t starth ig a t 7 p. m. Thomasrecreation director, v ^ _ l n charee an d state police lu n ilsb ed th e pub- Uo address system. .

Bumps Curb Only one n e a r "m otor" mishap

occurred during th e con tests and th is came when one contestant bumped his head a g a in s t the curb w hen he lost control o f his m a­chine in the backw ard race and crashed. ' ’

Before actual races got under- woy. Judging w as held o n construc­tion with Helder a n d S m ith win­n ing first prize. Leonard Hampton a n d Bob Orandall, sponsored by the Chaney Motor com pany, came in second while th ird aw ard for con­struction w en t.to Eugene Vombar an d Kenneth Roberts.

Race results follow:100-yard straightaw ay; Sm ith and

Helder. sponsored by th e Balsch M otor company, f ir s t; K enneth Roberts and Bob A dam son, spon­sored by Mngel A uto com pany, sec­ond; B ob ' Orandoll an d Leonard Ham pton, sponsored by th e Brown­in g Motor, third.

Relay Race lOO-yard relay: Sm ith an d Helder,

f irs t; Roberts an d Adam son, sec­ond; Michel Pavld and P ra n k Krug­er. sponsored b y 'th e B row nhig Mo­to r. third.

Backward race: R oberts an d Ad­am son. fh-sti Lentz C randa ll and Lyle Hampton, sponsored by Bar­n a rd Auto company, second; HeW- e r and Smith, th ird .

Entries and th e ir sponsors follow: Delbert Puddy and Ja so n Rear­

son, Glen Jenkins; W liber Malone a n d Don Kelsoi U nion M otor; Lentz C randall and Lyle H am pton , Bar h a rd : Leonard H am pton and Bob Crandall, .Ohaney; M ichael Pavld a n d F rank Kruger, B row ning; Ken­n e th Roberta and Bob Adamson, Magel; Doug Sm ith and Lyle Held- er. Bnlsch; Harold L ockhard and K eith Malone, Tw in F alls Motor; Benny Parker and D orothy Nelson, Schwartz. OUier sponsors includ­ed the Times-News, O rpheum the­a te r , Firestone, Johnson M otor ‘and th e Stale Motor.

The Judges Judges were Mrs. D ennis Orcutt,

J e rry Crlsman, Ray M cFarland, Jasp er Stewart, O ral B a rn e tt and Jcan ln e Muse.

I n each event the fh-st prize win­n e rs received $2, second place *1, a n d Uilrd place 60 cents. Theater tickets were given all contestants by th e management of the Orpheum.

Gleii T a y lo r W ill T e l l Senate ‘T le i i t y ’M f H e W in s E lection

. POCATELLO, Id# ., Atlg. 11 (U.B)-r Qlen Taylor, P ocatello cowboy en­tertainer, su rp rise package of the 1040 Idaho p r lm a i7 election and ap­parent D emocratic nominee lor sen­ator, said today i f h e wins the gen­eral election a n d goes to Washing­ton, "I'm Just going to stand u p there and tell th e m plenty."

Taylor, to his f i r s t totervlew since wtonlng the nom lnatlcm , isid be would tell m em bers of &e senate the same th in g h e told Idaho voters

during tho three months'he, his wife and five-year-old son toured the state d u rto g the primary campaign.

"I’ll tell th e senote'the people o f the U nited States should cooper­atively own. and operate the na­tion's business to produce plenty lo r everybody, not Just profit for a few," T ay lo r told the United Press.

T h e ' 36-year-oId ac tor son of a “m h ilster by profession,'' farm er by necessity” denied such a stand was to fav o r of Communism.

i"It's n o :“ism’;’‘ hB .asserted, " it’s

Just e x i ^ i o n of cooperation."He ca ila tlie platform one of "pro­

duction fo r use." I n h la prlmaiy cam paign ho evaded m o s t Interna­tional Issues and in ten d s to do the same betw een now a n d November. Hlj only ta tem atlohal p la n k Is th a t "I’m agaln jt'seiid lng o u r bpys across the o c e a a to fight.”

Taylor sa id tjiat/' ln h is campaign ho h a d . n o ' political backing. His "political machine” consisted of. "the most TOonderful wife In the coun­try," D o ra , and his son , Arod. s' name d erived by spelling Dora back­wards. ■ S . .

I t w as Arod’s stag ing and tlie acting o f th e trio t h a t brought

c row dj to liear T ay lo r as he stump­ed th e state. H ie sam e plan—en - t d r t a i n m e n t , ‘spogs and sho rt s p e ^ e s - w l i l b e u s e d In the gen­eral"election cam paign , where h e irtU be opposed by Sen. John Thom­as, Republlcan-lncumtient, with’th e rem aining two • y ea rs of • the la te S en . W. E. B o rah ’s te rm at stake.

Teachers Ahhounced ; In Common Schools

SHOSHONE, A ug. 17' (Speclal)- M iss Angle D urfee, county schoolsuperintendent, a n n o u n c e d thisWeek Uiat 'a ll com m on school dis­tr ic ts of the county lu n a hired their

teachers for, the coming year. T h e y are No. 1, B unntth , Mrs. Stella F reem an:' NB. ‘3. Lone Star, Ruby M. ra o rp e ; N o. 7, Marley. Norten C lark; No. 8. North- End; Mrs. Irene Sinclair; No. 11. Oomes, Jessie Scanlon; No. 14. Cottonwood, Mrs. Helen. M abbutV a n d No. t3. Besslyn, Mrs. Iva L ou .aam blln .

A meethig o ( nil th e ru ra l teach- elrs will be held a t t h e county Su- pcrtotendent's office b efo re the start of school

Durtog 193S, tourist expedltures a re estim ated to have totaled |S;- 400,000.

READ TH E t i m e s W ANT ADS.

CITVIUII W d K i

T\vln FalU' municipal swimming pool a t Harmon park will close for th e season tba nlglit of Friday. A ug. 30 i t was announced th is after­n o o n by Frank Carpenter, pool man­ager.

D u ih ig the season Ihou.sniicl.s have ta k e n advantage of the opportunity to sw im lA Uio structure and Rcores h a v e learned to .swim for the first tim e after attending clas.scs which w ere in charee ol C iiipm ter and In w h ich life guards served a.s Instruc­to rs. O ther scores ol s\vlmmer.s re­ce ived advanced training during tho sum m er moiitlis.

A t the same time as aiinomice- m e n t of the pool's cloblng wns mado, i t w as also revealed th a t s ta te de­p a r tm e n t of htnlth records show the pool to be tile safest cold water p lungo in the state.

D aily- water te.sts arc studied by tho healtli deiinrtment and tlireo w a te r tests nro taken daily tor ch lo rine count.

A lthough several cnscs of eye In­fec tion have been reported th is year d u rh ig swimming activities, not one h as been traced to the city owned s truc tu re .

L ionel A. Dean, city park com­m issioner. is In clmrge of pool actlvl- ties.

THE YEAH’S BEST BUYS IN OUR GREAT

Chancc to Get a Smooth Bargain

C lcarancc prlce.il You know w hat th a t means! Wc'vo cut prices to tho bono for this sale of guar­a n teed used car bargaliu.

19!)6 PONTIAC SIX Do Luxo Sedan. H eater. Large triinlc model. Car Ihoroughly re ­conditioned. Now iinlnt. Ilcduced from $450 to

1935 CHEVUOLET COUPE Kxtra good nnd priced at

$295KAHV <IMAC l'Kil(l\IS

MILKS J. BROWNING INC.

Ilulck Dpnifr

this littleCOUPONtells a 4-ply story of

y

Times-News Pulling Power

.The success story 'told by this little coupon is typical of th e successes local merchants are enjoying day iif- tec day through newspaper advejr- ti.sing in the Idaho Evening Times, and Twin Fulls Ne\js.

Why such successes are possible can ' be easily understood. Going into more than 16,000 Magic Valley homes ev­ery day, the Twin Falls newspapers offer the most complete advertising coverage available through any media.

IW hat’s more, these daily now,Hpai)crs arc bought and paid for, bccause they’re in demand in tho Magic Val­ley honio.s into which they go.

Through no other media can your advertising have such a welcome re­ception. Through no other media can an avertising message be so heavily concentratod upon the great buying market in southern Idaho.

Tho Times and 'News offer you an 857o coverage of all the homes in Magic Valley. As M. H. King's litlo coupon has demonstrated: IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN YOUR DAILY NEWSPAPERS! '

In last Thursday’s Idaho Evening Times and last Friday’s Twin Falls News, M. H. King and Co., placed a four column by ten inch ad. Filled with the characteristic values offered by this firm, it was fully expected the results would be good. But when a final check-up was made through the coupon included in the ad as shown, Mr. Rus­sell H. Jensen, manager, found that more than 400 persons had avail­ed themselves of the coupon offer! A real “result-story” — and here’s what else it told:

I n proved that newspaper advertising pays, andis one of the easiest and most effective ways to invite prospective customers into your store. It

™ proved tha t your daily newspapers are media upon which you can depend for actual, tangible results.

2 It proved that both the Times and News have li'omendoua pulling power. Of a total of 429 cou- pons returned, 212 were from one paper, 217

® from the other. That means that Twin Fall."! mer­chants have at their comntand two lively news media" with an equal amount of reader iifterest.

3 It proves that ^y ec tiainiif is real news to news- paper readers and th a t even b i^ “Irontriage news" cannot crowd merchandising values aside,

® Inafimuch as the coupon in M. H. King’s ad ap­pealed well inside, it proves that the Twin Falla newspapers nro so designed so as to carry reader inlorcst throughout.

j It proves, too, if you have mercliandising nows / 1 , to tell, your daily newspapers can best convey

your message; that n'visual presentation of tho ■ ® goods you have to sell is the surest way to mcr-

chaiidiBing aucceas.

IDAHO EVENING A \ THE TWIN FALLS

TIMES & NEWSTHE TWIN FALLS

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$

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