keep the red cross at his side--by git>ing m the 1 9 4 s w...

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Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 194 S War Fun r ^ - ' ' " 'i ' '' ' ^ ■■ ' ' '■ ' ' ' ' ' ^ ~ ~ ^ - ' ' - 1 yOL. 27, NO. 271 .Tw in ,FALLS, ibAHO,'Ti?yi!sbAY, “•5SLW -SiJ-.'sW ,W i“ PEIOE 5 cm fis's LASI DEFENSES BEFORECOLOGNE PARIS, March 1 (U.R) — American tanks a n d shock ' troops battled yard by yard through tho last German fensea before Cologne today on a blazing Bix-mile front looping to within six m iles of the Rhineland fortress. Berlln-apparentlj' vu-prepailasi tbs ft«me /ront ror word of & Ger-' mim relreat bthtnd th# Rhine, oer- m u i proposimillsU tojd the U. S. first and ninth amlea had Uirown tU onnored and IJ inlontry dlvl- ilons — perhaps 220,000 m<- ihe olfeiulre. ». Behind them, a great ftrroy of men, guna and amor -was racing up to Join the batUe, thel^. poasaie •pctded woimouily by the capture of two Zrft river brtdgea capable of handling the heavlut tanlca aad artillery. - Report* say 100.000 O erm ah civil- Ians and slave workers axe working feverishly to throw up a screen of . fortlfleaUoni In the western suburbs: of Cologne In preparaUos for a taouse>to*hcut» defeoM of th e city aod Its Rhine croulngs. Cologne ItMlf Is under heavy American sliellflre, centered on (he highway crossings, railway yards and supply dumps In Use city. ATTACK REBURIED LONDON. March 1 OJiS — Nazi broadcasts reported today th a t the red army has rcswned Its attacks along the Oder 30 miles east German accounts niggest MorBhe] ZhukoV# first white Russian army Is probing nail defemes preparatory to a full>«eale offensive aim ed at Berlin in amJuncUon with the allied drlT* toward the Rhine In the west Roosevelt Tells Congress Must Lead W orld xX!ollaboration^^ o^ More Waij 17«M K S DIEINIIWAE WASHINOTON. March 1 Anny and navy casualties since Pearl Harbor have mounted to 813,CM. ^ ---------------.X>N. March 1 wj-i-All but the Dotthem third of rockjr UtUe a third Btrfleld.' &Tot No. 3, which was under conatruc* tlon when the Americans landed m . IS. An Important supply problem was licked when transport-planes flew t h a t army losses now total 723.6D5 while the navy placed Its euuoltlcs a t 80.337. th e ’aggregate represenU an Increaeo of 11,870 from the last week's report, of which the army accounted for all e«ept ST3. atimson also disclosed at bis news conference that army losses In Italy, from the Invasion on Sept. 9, lOU, to Feb. 29, IHJ. amounted to 100,700. including IB^as killed. 70,403 wound- e d , and 10.499 missing. A breakdown on army casualties, itlon of Individual C^b. ai and corre- ............ - ------ J for the previous week follows: Killed 140JW and 138.733: wound- ed 430.7S7 and 430,463; prisoners eo.635 and 60,OM; missing #1J)J7 B3.233. Of the wounded, SUi said. 318.fl4a have relumed to duty. Similar figures for the navy are: Killed 34J53 and'33,863; wounded iO^KM and 40,783: prisoners 4.4T(J and ■4.474: mlssjng 10,674 a n d 10^46. JAP I R NEEDS Song PunPoints Road to Cologne This road to Cologne Is pointed eat--from the popnisr tonr of.praetleally the nine nain©—near unres. aenaany. Fonr allied arales ripped thrbngh G«nnan;'i wesUni defenses on a blailnc IM-mlle batUefront ln > general offensive (hat has roUed the enemy'. -rtUl Ehlneland line baek to C o l^C «>«UMront OIFFICOLTTOGET IN 10 HEAR FDR WAfiHINQTON. M arch I OtttUig Inside the caplUjl to hear I President Rooeevelt’a Ulk today was I iiulte a feat.' Only by identifying hlmaeU, by means of various colored carda, as a member of congrcss, diplomat, eon- iresilonsl employe o r rlghtftU hold- er of a card of admission could any- one gr‘ .............. tteUon for the President. A\ mlUlary poUce were sUUonedj around the capltol srounds and on the roofs of the house side of tho building. The imial all-nlght police piard Iwas augmehted last night Xor the 1 occasion. The police force ' today numbered approximately ISO W ash- ington city patrolmen. 100 regular ,capltol olllcers and an uzUcnown number of secret service m en Except for the soldier guard, ___ ever, Ihe precautions taken were about the same as those In effect when Mr. Roosevelt laat addressed a Joint seulon of congress In January, 1843. ighfights in FDR’s Report NEW TOttK. aUrch r wi-wu- Uacn l<. .Batt>sald today war pro* ductfon must tentlnue full'speed fo^ big BjlUtary laHdlnSaln the i>»cUlc and laDd .flgh^Ug on perhapi the Stxrqpe«n.sc»!e. ' '.The. - ped“ to flgflK the war produc* tlon board/rjc m art sold In ah address pj*pa r a Rotary club tmcu (vu uutB oy snip. Complete conquest of Corresldor opened Manila's great boy today .for *lUed shipping and a iteody stream of supplies, to American troopa Luxon. V, B. paratroopers and Infantry- men annihilated practically the en* enemy gairlson on Corregldor, UUIng Japanese at the rate of i than 30-tO'I. :^,500 strike in D etroit F actories DETROIT. March 1 ftlJO — Pour thousand employes of the Brlggi Mfg. Co. Mack avenue plant struck today, bringing to three the number of war plants In Detroit cJoscd by strike action. More than 33,S00 work- ers are off the }eb. I A B ^ g s spokesman said the TTnl- Auto Workers (OIQ) presciited AO grievance, but It Is assumed the walkout Is In protest against dis- charge of Hven union offlcera for teadins ptvrtcus strikes. PantiesI Rayon Hose! Cops Curb Shoppers P E O E m r. Arls., Mareh 1 ( / n - | nve FhoenU policemen were needed as guards today when a downtown store offered for sals Items th a t in pre-Pearl Harbor days were regard- ed u commonplace....................... Bash- shoppei wa* pennitted to purchase: . . Two bntes of paper tluues. One alarm clock. Pour towels. _ _ _ ' Ptour'wttsh doth*. Two sheets. TWO pairs rayon hose . Two pairs panUes. One.braalere. One sUp. Shoppen Uned. the ildewafts around the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand. ' Well, Thai?s Lucky ! -for cMlUn __ _____„ •nnouoetd by ^ m a o -Oriel, d i - rector of the Wbolenle Ttitueo DUtrlbUjOT^o* Kew YotlC.-ine. ar Sirlkta for elviUnns ftra aennany'K fall wiu pennlt less than a 20 per. cent reconversion to peace- time goods. *‘I can tell you that our jnllltary men may not use much of the e<julp- sy have employed In Europe the Japonese," Batt said, slnco other types of materiel are needed and the task of assembling and rcshlpplng across the world Is "simply not pracUcable," B att disclosed in his address that this country has sent 28,4T1 heavy bocnbcrs—Liberators. Fortresses and the huge new superbombers—Into the air. ITiese were among muni- tions- totals announced for the first time, covering the period from tha start of tho defense program In July. 1040. to the end of 1944, *” *—«s of planes numbered 349.- ............ which 79,776 were fighters I and 19,547 were transports. • ' Senator Spurns U. S. Judgeship WASHINOTOW, March 1 Ben. Pal McCarran, D., Nev, today ho has turned down a i tlon that be accept a federal ship In Nevada. - McCarran. chairman of the judiciary committee, said he was “grateful” for the offer but added: "I am going to remain In the United States senate.” ■Those of us who have the en- florscmcnt of our people at home.*, tie said, “must at this hour lay aside their personal ambitions for rest u>d security, and remain at their post. This I have definitely deter- mined to do.“ |M arijuana Given T o H ig h Schoolers BE:VERLY hols , Caiu, .March 1 QJJU-Confession of a pret» denial nurao that she distribute marU school today spurred ta- ---------------1of a possible widespread school do~> Norma ly perlng. Jean Qraybea], 19, a eoma- * arrested on sui- j, atoltted ah* distributed n Lawyer Would Quiz Joan’s Men Frieinds court peimlsttoQ t two. mal« trienda of « ! .« . ..c«n oTher pat«w Riie^'iowlirN eV V^ai*53 of tbe men from whom'he wiaJedi H* dld :not J d e n t S ^ om«r, but It wu nealUa u it So OhapUoH. pateralty trial iu t n Z ' U» tUcrn^^ed • pStI J.PaalOet- Incumbents File; Koehier Out, Urges No Opppsitibn .By Al. WEEKS. Mayor B ert A. Sweet-Bnd Councilinen' Oryifts^. Coleman, Truman T. Gwehhalgh and Kenneth Shook^re nominated to Bcek reelection St the April s priiriaiT^hiro in petitions 'IftjinijVere by 34 qualified felectors. ', • .V \M eantlm e Joo K. Koeh\er, lom cr m ayor,’announced-for- mfllJy that-he haa withdrawn from the race; Koehler urged th at other posaible candidates also withdraw,, leaving the Sweet-Coleman-Greenhalgh-Shook;ticket unopposed and eav-: the city several thouaand' [ars expense by avoiding a possible run-off election. T h crt waa oUU no word from O. J. Bothne as to'whether or not he. would eetk th e office of mayor..He, was approcicbed several weeh by friends and following a.setl meetings by his supporters __ nouneed that he would be a candi- date If they saw fit to-nominate him. Blgned, Kot Filed Difficulty w as encountered in ob- taining.a fupportlng Ucket to.nin with Bothne arid although petlUoiu nominating him as a candidate have been algned ^ley have not been'fUcd. There was Uttle Indication Thurs- day aftemooo that Uiey would be presented to Olerk Lanen. slgnen of th e petition nomlnsUog the inayor and the three Incumbent councllmen wbo are up for reelec- Uon were: T. O. Bacon, J. H.. Blandford, J. Q. Bradley, H . H. Burkhart. J. A. Cederqultt, th e Rer. O. L. Clark, F. Cook, .0. S. Ciabtree, tbe Rev. Mark C; Cronenberger, S. I>. Crow- ley. O. P. Duvall. Clarence O. Pord, R. J. Holme?. BUnche B..UUiam. O. 5- Milligan, Verle L. Moser. E. W. McRoberta. noy. Painter. Thoaias C. Peavey, Dulley E. Reed, R. L. -Roberts, R. L. Schwarts, C..E. Sleber, J..D. Sta* ema. Stuart Swan. W- O. Swim, Paul R. Taber, Ralph M.-Tulloch. Eldon C. VawdJey.. John E, Wagnw, H. W alters, Qeorsre C. WiJey, Reese M. WlUlams and John H. Vaple. He W ont Say O. Rh tUabbil> MSeis. ,ie*Vdetit of i a newly annexed city, area, has been (C«pUm»4 B B .ru* L c*l<aia l> flags beorins Uie Red^Cross, sym- of mercy, flew from the.lamp- '■ ‘n downtown Twin lills /.•heraldlng:Uie..epenifig of the 19« war fund campaign of Twin Palls Red Cross chapter and Its four branches. 'Ihe chapter gosi-*38.100 to ear- r on the servlcM of the greatest civilian army In thcworld. Ihe tJo^l gMl is ment of Twin Palls county resU dents,, the generous response sur< prised many volunteer Bollcltorj- Ucns dub membm, who ' began their canvass of. the .business and warehouse districts, following a kickoff breakfoat at-6'a. m. at tho Park hotel, m et with what they termed ‘'exceUeht'cooperaUon." rCuslneumen rcsUted th a t tlie SB Lions club members parUclpaUng In' the campaign were taking time off from' their business and profes- sions to visit thcm.ind receive their contributions, and gave thiem cour- teous, -generous receplion,” Victor PlUlet. chairman, of Uie Uons par. tlclpallon for th e second, year, said K illed on Luzon March arrived like a lamb today , but the lamb'a rival In the old adage Iof March 1—the Uon-was near the naUonl border and roaring for a. chance to change ellmatlo eondl* I Uot ' Beetlooa of the naUon. ‘Die ooly »w- Uona where th e Uon-represe&Ung disagreeable weather — had any: claims to victory over the meek'lambl were over part# of New SngUnd and hi northern. Minnesota where light «now was reported, and In cz< -- s.aouth'Toxaa, which reported centra] and western tUtei today. , Tha fprlog-Jlke .wuther, fo !cast<rs'Bald, «U1 be broken tom row wbea a^cold'anap mom l UlnneaoU and cpreadt Intn'Oiam west McUoni. ' Aceordlng to; tha March l Uabii lion mpenUUon. tha Iloa geti.ivl*' oilty on March 9M I Mucb.t:eBan , in like a lamb It soea out Uk« a Uoa. Iand:TlM.TenHu------------- .. . figures at i p. m. Thurs- day showed cdntrlbuUona soared tc IS.eiS. lnclude<t In the amount were, several donoUona securcd by thei advance gUt committee, wlUi Tom' 0. Pe»vcy as cholnnan, and early returns handed In by Uons dub members. • Twin Falls Elks lodge, w ith a 1500 gut to this Red Crouwar fund, was Uu largest single contributor to date.'Urs. Ada W . PowcU,.war fund chalmiao. announced T h u r s d a y . Tbe Magic Valley Navy MoUsers' Oub.'Wlth a >10 contribution, was the first organization to subscribe to the campaign. ................... Ko residential or n n l district re- turns were available Thureday after- noon. Ihe Amerlcan'Ijeglon ausU- Ui7. .Vith Mrs. H. A. 6sllsbut7>as -------- chairman, Is dlreeUng rest? ............. - and Oranges • ■«/6QT.:CLIFT0N'HARRIS,., ■. . . AlWn member of a pxn- tUder company, killed in acUon oh Luzon'Feb. 7. (SUff cngtavtng) Prisoner Killed PHENIPINS IP E O N M WAEHIKOTOH, M a n b 1 (AO — President Roosevelt believes the United Nations conference. a t Son Pronclsco can rm ove.the “^ U U ^ . cconomla and social oaiues ol war." ln.ale»ler to U of'thrVifnerteai^-' ................... ..........g April as ho said be feels certain the- mteUttS '*^rUl successIuUy completo” tba plans for an International orsanUattoc prevent future wors. • .• Ihe letter was dated yesterday and foraially invited the eight per- sona to serve on the delegaUon. It was relessed by the White Bous ' <iv- It had been announced PVsb. 13 Uisl the following would be lnvltedi Secretary Stettlnlus. former Secre- 3f State Hull, Chabman Con* D.. Tez., of the senate foreign. committee; Sen. Vanden* Mich.; Chairman Bloom, 1., of the house foreign af- rs committee: Rep. Eaton, R, :J.; ■comdr: Harold' E - Staffien. Dean Virginia Olldersleeve of Bor- nard college. PVT. CAIIL O. HARWIW; : . One of more than l.dM V£. piiMoen of , war who drowned when an American nibmatlne' ter-. pedoed a Jap »hlp lait,B«pt,’1 jCMtlMW ta P«t» H. l>. Cinderella Curfew ' Spawns Speakeasies up? TORK. Msrch 1 • «V-ThO three-dsy-^’CIndereUa eurfew al- resdyjsas spawned the speakeasy in , tsW In a stonr.by David Chama? wbo;sald a'iwt-mldnight tour.toolc him to five places .whers Uqtior wa« deat!ali;W«re-^uirtd.: a « r a drlnk to C30fort aboard. (Staff engravlDg)...... .... * V* Jerom eBoyD ied O h P r is o n e r Ship ,JEaiOMB,'Manh X-Mr. and Mn. Burley. W... Harlow, Jerome, ,havo received eohllrmation from U» war deportment Uxat their son. Prt. Carl P enicillin C uring Social D iseases WASHINOTON. M arch 1 (UJ9-, Five yean from now syphlUls and gonorrhea may bo removed from tha list of major health problems, the office of war Infonnatlon sold today. Dr. Thoffias Porton. suigeon gen- eral of Uie U. 8. pubUo health serv- ice. said In the OWX report th a t In the last 18 months penlcilllQ has had a "cure rato" of 96-per cent among all gonorrhea patients and also "cures some case of IsfecUous WASHINGTON, M atch 1 Pieddent tB a congress and the nation today th a t America will have to tal|;a the responalbiUty for world collaboration "or we ahan.h&v^ to bear the reaponsibility for another world conflict.", .'r.;, _ Mr. Rooaeveit said he returned home from Wa hng JotUM ns7 “with a firm belief tliat we have made a good start'<» th e road to world peace." I Sitting in the well rf house chamber at a joint sion of the' two branches .0^ congrcss the .President 81 in a peraonai ^ r t ;onvt Crimea conferences :t^ t'i allies will not desist /br<<3^ moment ^'until surrender”' is won. Rouevelt a sM rteS^ltha'sc^ and house would be reprenated-ai the. San Francisco DUted K a U ^ conference AprU » , .wlUi.’b ^ parties havhig equal repruentatloil "World peace,” he said, " I s .n ^ party quesUon—any more than^JT mlUtary victory, “nie stnielur#'fl* world peace cannot be the woi1te« one man, or one party, or cm s'^ tlon. It cannot bes strocturale- complete perfecUon at fln tt Discussing a t lengUi tbe big th n agreement for united action in tb poUUcal and economla fleld t a ^ erated areas, tbs Presldeiit' men Uoned the spedfle agreement jrt gardlng Poland's future bouiAaxlt oA an outstanding example of n » i Joint action. AsserUng th e wbtde PoUth tlon was'a potential soune of tnnu b is in postwar Europe and tbe Talt parttclpanU ww6 dttennlned to W a common ground.for its Mlat(o the President said: *^0 did.” PeUab Cewpraabe The dedslon to'parUUon PcOai) ho described os a b^pramlsf undi which the Poles wiU RcelTf. eoi pcnsaUon in territory'hi tti -nolt a n d west in exchange for what tb .lose^eurt ol t ^ ' C u ^ 1^;'; T WAaamOTON. March 1 (ffj- Hlghllghts of President noosevelrt report to congress today: I come from the Crimean conference, my fellow American?, wlUj a firm belief that wo have made a good start “ 1 the road to a world of peace. I am cenvlneed that the agree- ment on PoUnd, cnder the clrcsm- ftanccf, is tbe moil hopefnl ape«- ment poulble far a free, tndependeol aad pn>ii.en»tis Polish sU le. 'A t V alu . . . our combined British . and American - staffs made their plana to increase the attack against Japan. The Japanese war lords know that- Uiey are net being orerlooked. . rer before liava the m ajor al- Ues been mere elesely •«nlted-not only In their war aims but In their peace alms. The Crimean conference . . . speUs the end of Ujc lystem of unilateral action and ezeluilve alliances and spheres of influence and balances of power... MblUty for SMtber world i Tnta now .on Americas a n d Brit^ ish heavy bomben wlU be used . . . In ■ direct support of th o . fiovlel .armies as,well M In .support of ,o?ii ra'.the.weJtem Ironti • render can they begtn t« ree*tab> llshitheaselrei u peopi* wBbn the world might aeecpt as^ecent ctlfb- ‘■ars.. Unconditional, s u r r e n d e r . >. means the complete disarmament of Oermany; Uie. destruction of its mlUtarlsm and its military equip- ment; Uie end of Its-production of It means that Qermaay will bsvel to make reparations in kind . . . in ' plants and machinery and rolling itock and raw materials. .... U i« ........... .. problems of a n y ______ irated from the nad conquest. in a Joint respoulbUity of aU Ona sypmuis." say with reasonable as-1 surance that within five yean eyphlllls and gonorrhea need no longer be major health problems;' Dr. Parran declared. All Right, Now Let’s Get on With the W ar HOLLYWOOD. M a rc h 1 M V -T o , Iqulel a tempest In this tespot-on-| Ithe-Pacillc, those were not bedroom I m the beauUfiil subject herself I this word: I -jey were suede sport shoes, with I flat heels.’ And she added, "as flat 'as I can get them." ' The bedroom slipper issue was Ihooked in.wlth the general reaction when Ingrid appeared smartly but Informally atUred In aa afternoon dress, her hair brushed neatly but carefully back to. ettrl over her. shoulders, and no Jewelty. pedoed ,,a > Jspaness ■ freighter .'carry- ing Americah prisoners last Sept. 7. A>.-far>as'ls koowiJ,.Pzlvate Bus. Ww -U the first reported 'Msglo .VfUey.vleUm of .tb* .prisoner.ship sialdng.'! '■ ............... . He;was a inerober-ot.lh«.,'18M . sradtiatlng class'-of- Jerom6'hlgta I sohooL .Barlow, enlisted lu IMO. ' Jta. October, iM V ha w u .sw t to' the .PWUpplnes..;He''sened u ':a Dta>ber,.of FSB -air. force:'ground ercw. He .^..capiorB d- foUowtng;.Ui« cajJ^ , of; the • Philippines-, by^ th«. Nothing in German Papers but Gocbbelsi Ur VdIUA P tm jta to ^ urging thOT to fight to A DNB irirtlesa dispatch, rw sad- p i by PCO. sald:aoebb#b' -rt«lit. hand man. M u Amiuia. p r e s e t of tha rtlch prw* c h a B ib irf^ tte d .S.SUB1RINE SliSYAiSHIP WABHINOTON, Bdarch 1 -i T^e navy today announced the lou' of three naval vestels. including tha Ismail salvage veuel C etnetor, sunk ' by a United States submarine result of mlstakm identity. The other ships lost were tJie M.- ajo. ton cargo ship Serpens, manned by coast guard personnel, and tha large Infantry landing craft 600. The Serpens was carrying amm. nlUoa and aU personnel aboard, ap- proxlniately 300 offlcera and men. -ere lost. . Thi* tnfaatry landing craft w sunk In the central Pacific with loss of two dead and one mlasln«. Survivors of the Extractor were rescued by tha attaddng subniarine, the navy sold, whUi made a thor-. ough search of tbe area upop dis- covering, the error. Thera were tlx -- reported mlsslng.from the ve»-' complement of about 00.- Mayo Clinic Looks Over Harry Hopkins BOOHESTEB. Won.i M a re H l (110 I Harry Hopkins,-confldanttt'-.aija 'closest advisor to President Boo*^ velt, was-undentolng “exainlQatkn ig d^enrstioo- at the Mayo eJlnlo Hopkins arrtvtd hen by plans ^esday oa his return from the big- «nfereiK« at)Yalta. .:. Tlopklns Is-ta'Bochestrt-for' laOn-ai)d cbtenratloo' of > wcurrewa or » condlUoo b e Im had s a i ^ year<,-- » cUnlo staUi I Ration Board Won’t Let Itself Have Oil BBU WMMi.M,___ ;Wabaa;».-.GeBl«Jt 6 an.-.arguneoti-^l) aoa)lty.;of atatM.-.w«vaer,:-. lose east of the Curxpn Unel' - Xhl ore- predomlnantty .white- Runu ■and DiMlnla^. .^ d the o f the line predomlnaatlr Polls Aa far back as ISIS tbs im ca^ Uves-of tte allies s g re e d ^ t tl Ou«oa lino represented, a ifa boundary between the two p Roosevelt said he wss eoi .... «« th e agreement on Poland, u n d tf ^ circumstances, is “iha.most h agTMment possible for:* free, pendent and prospenns - p ^ tinlty of the' major , a •’— (ire determined. t_ « Jilted so that “the ideal of lft IWerring to som#'' agreemen reached a t’Valta as “mmtaiy'sei rets" he sold the nadi are i s ^ about some of them already "to tbs sorrow," and they will learn ‘taoz about them tomorrow and ths'at; day—and every day." ' '' <Cutl.M « Pot I FLASHES of LIFE' bo noises In the bahackaof tb ^^a student training reglm^ at tn Infantry officer « .......... waa-flnaUy solved. Chew of Los Angeles, r c b ta a w American offtcer candidate,, perfect English la-theidayum-i perfect C^eseto^'sl^-.-.V ^ RABBrr - ../•''S' P m S B D R a B , Maidi-, i - . i ^ must be at least ■ constn toibslE. visible giant rabbit of I h e .B m^ comedy bit, “Hamy.»w<*Sov5^ hero by ^ hunter.' - visible, thfl rabbil wis'tha 1«jf3 and 'hea;riest.rabbit em .to.thig hla -way . measured Inches potinds. TVro books-loaK iiilHtog ftW tr r e tu ^ ItoDxiheiiWdb^ COOKIES-'/

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Page 1: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ar Funr ^ - ' ' " ' i ' ' ' ■ ' ■ ■■ ' ■ ' ■ '■ ■' ' ' ' ' ~ ~ ^ - • ' ' - 1

y O L . 27 , N O . 271 .T w i n ,F A L L S , ib A H O , 'T i? y i ! s b A Y ,“ • 5 S L W - S i J - . ' s W , W i “ P E I O E 5 c m f i s ' s

LASI DEFENSES BEFORECOLOGNE

P A R IS , M arch 1 (U.R) — A m e ric an ta n k s a n d sh o c k

' tr o o p s b a t t le d y a rd b y y a rd t h r o u g h th o la s t G e r m a n f e n se a b e fo re Cologne to d a y o n a b laz in g Bix-mile f r o n t lo o p in g to w ith in s ix m i l e s o f t h e R h in ela n d f o r t r e s s .

Berlln-apparentlj' v u -p re p a i la s i tb s ft«me /ront ror word o f & G er- ' mim relreat bthtnd th# R h ine , oer- m u i proposimillsU tojd th e U. S. f irst and ninth amlea had Uirown tU onnored and IJ in lon try dlvl- ilons — perhaps 220,000 m<- ihe olfeiulre.

». Behind them, a great ftrroy of men, guna and am or -was racing up to Join the batUe, thel^. poasaie •pctded woimouily by the capture of two Zrft river brtdgea capable of handling the heavlut tanlca aad artillery.

- Report* say 100.000 O erm ah civil- Ians and slave workers axe working feverishly to throw up a screen of

. fortlfleaUoni In the western suburbs: of Cologne In preparaUos for a taouse>to*hcut» defeoM of th e city aod Its Rhine croulngs.

Cologne ItMlf Is under heavy American sliellflre, centered o n (he highway crossings, railway yards and supply dumps In Use city.

ATTACK REBURIEDLONDON. March 1 OJiS — Nazi

broadcasts reported today th a t the red army has rcswned Its attacks along the Oder 30 miles eas t

German accounts niggest MorBhe] ZhukoV# first white Russian army Is probing nail defemes preparatory to a full>«eale offensive a im ed at Berlin in amJuncUon with th e allied drlT* toward the Rhine In th e west

R o o s e v e l t T e l l s C o n g r e s s M u st L e a d W o r ld xX!ollaboration^^ o^ M o r e W aij

1 7 « M K S D I E IN I I W A E

WASHINOTON. March 1 — A n n y and navy casualties since P e a rl Harbor have mounted to 813,CM.

^ ---------------.X>N. March 1 wj-i-Allbut the Dotthem third of rockjr UtUe

a third Btrfleld.' &TotNo. 3, which was under conatruc* tlon when the Americans landed m . IS.

An Important supply problem was licked when transport-planes flew

th a t army losses now total 723.6D5 w hile the navy placed Its euuoltlcs a t 80.337. t h e ’aggregate represenU a n Increaeo of 11,870 from the last w eek's report, of which the army accounted for a ll e « e p t ST3.

atim son also disclosed a t bis news conference th a t army losses In Italy, fro m the Invasion on Sept. 9, lOU, to Feb. 29, IH J. amounted to 100,700. including IB^as killed. 70,403 wound­e d , and 10.499 missing.

A breakdown on army casualties, itlon of Individual

C^b. a i and corre-............ - ------ J for the previous

week follows:K illed 140JW and 138.733: wound­

ed 430.7S7 and 430,463; prisoners eo.635 and 60,OM; missing #1J)J7 B3.233. Of the wounded, SUi sa id . 318.fl4a have relumed to duty.

Sim ilar figures for the navy are: K illed 34J53 and'33,863; wounded

iO^KM and 40,783: prisoners 4.4T(J and ■4.474: mlssjng 10,674 and 10^46.

JAP I R NEEDS

Song PunPoints Road to Cologne

T his road to Cologne Is pointed eat--from th e popnisr t o n r of.praetleally the n in e nain©—near unres . a en a an y . F o n r allied a ra les ripped thrbngh G «n n an ;'i w esU ni defenses on a blailnc IM-mlle batUefront ln > general offensive (hat has roUed the enem y'. -rtUl Ehlneland line baek to C o l ^ C «>«UMront

OIFFICOLTTOGET IN 1 0 HEAR FDR

WAfiHINQTON. M arch I OtttUig Inside th e caplUjl to hear I President Rooeevelt’a Ulk today was I iiulte a feat.'

Only by identifying hlmaeU, by means of various colored carda, as a member of congrcss, diplom at, eon- iresilonsl employe o r rlghtftU hold­er of a card of admission could any­one gr‘ ..............

tteUon for the President. A\ mlUlary poUce w ere sUUonedj around the capltol srounds a n d on the roofs of the house side o f tho building.

The imial a ll-n lgh t police p iard I was augmehted la s t night Xor the 1 occasion. The police force ' today numbered approximately ISO W ash­ington city patrolm en. 100 regular ,capltol olllcers a n d an uzUcnown number of secret service m e n

Except for the soldier g u a rd ,___ever, Ihe precautions taken were about the same a s those In effect when Mr. Roosevelt laa t addressed a Joint seulon of congress In January , 1843.

i g h f i g h t s i n

F D R ’s R e p o r t

NEW TOttK. aU rch r w i-w u - Uacn l<. .Batt>sald today war pro* duc tfon must tentlnue full'speed fo^ big BjlUtary laHdlnSaln the i>»cUlc a n d laDd .flgh^Ug on perhapi the Stxrqpe«n.sc»!e. ''.T h e . -

ped“ to flgflK the war produc* tlo n board/rjc m art sold In ah address pj*pa r a Rotary club

tmcu (vu uutB oy snip.Complete conquest of Corresldor

opened Manila's great boy today .for *lUed shipping and a iteody stream of supplies, to American troopa Luxon.

V , B. paratroopers and Infan try­men annihilated practically th e en*

enemy gairlson on Corregldor, UUIng Japanese a t the rate o f i th a n 30-tO'I.

:^,500 strike in D e t r o i t F a c t o r i e s

DETROIT. March 1 ftlJO — Pour thousand employes of the Brlggi Mfg. Co. Mack avenue plant struck today, bringing to three the num ber of war plants In Detroit cJoscd by strike action. More than 33,S00 w ork­ers are off the }eb. I

A B ^ g s spokesman said the TTnl- Auto Workers (OIQ) presciited

AO grievance, but It Is assumed the walkout Is In protest against d is­charge of Hven union offlcera for teadins ptvrtcus strikes.

PantiesI Rayon Hose! Cops Curb ShoppersP E O E m r. Arls., Mareh 1 ( / n - |

n v e FhoenU policemen were needed a s guards today when a downtown store offered for sals Items th a t in pre-Pearl Harbor days were rega rd ­ed u commonplace.......................

Bash- shoppei wa* pennitted to purchase: . .

Two bntes of paper tluues.One alarm clock.Pou r towels. _ _ _

' Ptour'wttsh doth*.Two sheets.TWO pairs rayon hose .Two pairs panUes.One.braalere.One sUp.Shoppen Uned. the ildew afts

around the store to the curba long for

chaadlsa'l&.hand. '

Well, Thai?s Lucky !

-for cMlUn __ _____„•nnouoetd by m a o -Oriel, d i ­rector of the Wbolenle T ti tu e o DUtrlbUjOT^o* Kew YotlC.-ine.

ar Sirlkta for elviUnns f tra

aennany 'K fall wiu pennlt less than a 20 per. cent reconversion to peace- tim e goods.

*‘I can tell you tha t our jnllltary m en may not use much of the e<julp-

sy have employed In Europe the Japonese," Batt said,

slnco other types of materiel are needed and the task of assembling a n d rcshlpplng across the world Is "simply not pracUcable,"

B a tt disclosed in his address that th is country has sent 28,4T1 heavy bocnbcrs—Liberators. Fortresses and th e huge new superbombers—Into th e a ir. ITiese were among muni­tions- totals announced for the first tim e, covering the period from tha s ta r t of tho defense program In Ju ly . 1040. to the end of 1944,

* ” *—«s of planes numbered 349.-............ which 79,776 were fighters Iand 19,547 were transports. • '

S e n a t o r S p u r n s

U . S . J u d g e s h i pWASHINOTOW, March 1

Ben. P a l McCarran, D., Nev, today ho has turned down a i tlon th a t be accept a federal sh ip In Nevada. -

M cCarran. chairman of the jud ic iary committee, said he was “gra te fu l” for the offer but added: "I a m going to remain In the United S tates senate.”

■Those of us who have the en- florscmcnt of our people a t home.*, tie sa id , “must a t this hour lay aside the ir personal ambitions for rest u>d security, and remain a t their post. T his I have definitely deter­m ined to do.“

| M a r i j u a n a G i v e n

T o H i g h S c h o o l e r sBE:VERLY h o l s , C aiu, .March

1 QJJU-Confession of a p re t» denial nurao th a t she d is tribu te marU

school today spurred ta----------------1 of a possible widespreadschool do~>

N orm a ly •

perlng.Jean Qraybea], 19, a eoma- * arrested on sui-

j, a to ltted ah* distributed n

Lawyer Would Quiz Joan’s Men Frieinds

court peimlsttoQ t two. m al« trienda of « ! . « . ..c«n

oT her pat«w

R i i e ^ ' i o w l i r N e V V ^ a i * 5 3of tb e m en from w hom 'he wiaJedi

H* dld :not J d e n t S ^ om«r, b u t I t w u nealU a u i t So OhapUoH. pateralty trial i u t n Z '

U » t U c r n ^ ^ e d • pS tI J .P a a lO e t-

Incumbents File; Koehier Out, Urges No Opppsitibn

.By Al. WEEKS.M ayor B e r t A. Sweet-Bnd Councilinen' O ry if ts ^ . Colem an,

T ru m an T . G w ehhalgh and Kenneth S h o o k ^ r e nom in a ted to Bcek ree lec tion S t the April s p riiria iT ^hiro in p e titio n s

'I f t j in i jV e re by 34 qualified felectors. ' , • .V\M e a n t lm e Joo K . Koeh\er, lo m c r m a y o r , ’announced-for-

mfllJy th a t - h e haa w ithdraw n from th e r a c e ; K oehler u rged t h a t o th e r posaible candidates also w ith d raw ,, leav ing th e Sw eet-Colem an-G reenhalgh-Shook;ticket unopposed a n d eav-:

th e c i ty several th o u aan d '[ars ex p en se by avoiding a

possib le ru n -o f f election.T h c r t waa oUU no word from O. J.

B othne as to 'w h e th e r or not he. w ould eetk th e office of mayor..He, was approcicbed several weeh by friends a n d following a.setlm eetings by h is supporters __nouneed th a t h e would be a candi­d a te If they saw fit to-nominate h im . ■

Blgned, Kot Filed D ifficulty w a s encountered in ob­

ta in in g .a fupportlng Ucket to .n in w ith Bothne a rid although petlUoiu nom inating h im as a candidate have been algned ^ le y have no t been'fUcd.

T here was U ttle Indication Thurs­day aftem ooo th a t Uiey would be presented to O lerk Lanen.

s lg n e n of t h e petition nomlnsUog th e inayor a n d the three Incumbent councllmen w bo are up for reelec- Uon were:

T . O. Bacon, J . H.. Blandford, J.Q. Bradley, H . H. Burkhart. J. A.Cederqultt, t h e R er. O. L. Clark, F .

Cook, .0 . S . Ciabtree, tbe Rev.M ark C; Cronenberger, S. I>. Crow- ley. O . P. D uvall. Clarence O. Pord,R . J . Holme?. BUnche B ..U U iam.O. 5 - Milligan, Verle L. Moser. E.W. McRoberta. •

no y . Painter. Thoaias C. Peavey,D u lley E. R eed , R. L. - Roberts, R.L. Schw arts, C ..E . Sleber, J..D . Sta* ema. S tuart Sw an. W- O. Swim, Paul R . Taber, R a lph M.-Tulloch. Eldon C. VawdJey.. Jo h n E, Wagnw, H.W alters, Qeorsre C. WiJey, Reese M.WlUlams and Jo h n H. Vaple.

He W o n t SayO. Rh tUabbil> MSeis. ,ie*Vdetit of i

a new ly annexed city, area, has been(C«pUm »4 B B .ru* L c*l<aia l>

flags beo rin s Uie Red^Cross, sym- of mercy, flew from the .lam p- '■ ‘n downtown T w in l i l l s

/.•heraldlng:Uie..epenifig of the 19« w ar fund cam paign of Twin Palls R e d Cross chap te r and Its four b ranches.

'Ihe chapter gosi-*38.100 to ear- r on the servlcM of th e greatest

civilian arm y I n thcw orld. Ih e tJo^l gMl is

ment of Tw in Palls county resU dents,, the generous response sur< prised many volunteer Bollcltorj- Ucns d u b m em bm , w ho ' began their canvass o f. the .business and warehouse districts, following a kickoff b reakfoat a t-6 'a. m . a t tho Park hotel, m e t with w h at they termed ‘'exceUeht'cooperaUon."

rCuslneumen rcsUted th a t tlie SB Lions club members parUclpaUng In' the cam paign were tak ing time off from' the ir business a n d profes­sions to visit th cm .ind receive the ir contributions, a n d gave thiem cour­teous, -generous receplion,” Victor PlUlet. chairm an, of Uie U ons p a r. tlclpallon for th e second, year, said

K i l l e d o n L u z o n

M arch arrived like a lamb today , b u t th e lamb'a r iv a l In the old adage I o f M arch 1—th e Uon-was near the n a U o n l border and roaring for a. chance to change ellmatlo eondl* I Uot '

Beetlooa of the naUon. ‘Die ooly »w- Uona where th e Uon-represe&Ung disagreeable w eather — had a n y : claim s to victory over the meek'lambl were over pa rt# of New SngUnd and h i no rthern . Minnesota where ligh t «now was reported, and In cz< -- s .aou th 'T oxaa , which reported

centra] and w estern tU te i today., T ha fprlog-Jlke .w u th e r, fo !cast<rs'Bald, «U1 be broken tom row w b ea a^co ld 'an ap m o m l U lnneaoU and cpread t Intn'Oiam west McUoni.' Aceordlng to ; th a March l U ab ii lion m penU U on. tha Iloa geti.iv l* ' o ilty o n March 9 M I M u c b .t:e B an

, in like a lamb I t soea out Uk« a Uoa.I and:TlM.TenHu-------------

.. . figures at i p. m . Thurs­day showed cdntrlbuUona soared tc IS.eiS. lnclude<t In the am ount were, several donoUona securcd by thei advance gUt committee, wlUi Tom ' 0. Pe»vcy as cholnnan, a n d early returns handed In by U o n s d u b members.• Twin Falls E lk s lodge, w ith a 1500 gut to this Red C rouw ar fund, was Uu largest single contributor to date.'Urs. Ada W . PowcU,.war fund chalmiao. announced T h u r s d a y . Tbe Magic Valley Navy MoUsers' Oub.'Wlth a >10 contribution, was the first organization to subscribeto the cam paign....................

Ko residential o r n n l d istric t re­turns were available Thureday after­noon. I h e A m erlcan'Ijeglon ausU- Ui7. .Vith M rs. H. A. 6sllsbut7>as-------- chairm an , Is dlreeUng rest?

............. - and Oranges

• ■ «/6Q T.:CLIFT0N 'HA RRIS,.,■. . . A lW n member of a p x n -

tUder company, killed in acUon oh Luzon'Feb. 7. (SU ff cngtavtng)

P r i s o n e r K i l l e d

P H E N I P I N S I P E O N M

WAEHIKOTOH, M a n b 1 (AO — President Roosevelt believes the United Nations conference. a t Son Pronclsco can rm o v e .th e “^ U U ^ . cconomla and social oaiues o l war."

ln .ale»ler to U of'thrVifnerteai^-'................... ..........g April as h o saidbe feels certain the- mteUttS '*^rUl successIuUy completo” tba p la n s for an International orsanU attoc prevent future wors. • .•

Ih e letter was dated yesterday and foraially invited the e ig h t per­sona to serve on th e delegaUon. It was relessed by th e W hite Bous ' <iv-

It had been announced PVsb. 13 Uisl the following would be lnvltedi

Secretary Stettlnlus. former Secre- 3f State Hull, C habm an Con* D.. Tez., of th e senate foreign.

■ committee; Sen. Vanden* Mich.; Chairm an Bloom,

1., of the house foreign af- rs committee: R ep . Eaton, R , :J.; ■comdr: H aro ld ' E - Staffien.

Dean Virginia Olldersleeve o f B or- nard college.

PVT. CAIIL O. HARWIW;■ : . One of more than l.dM V £. piiM oen of , war who drowned when an American nibmatlne' te r - . pedoed a Jap »hlp la it,B « p t,’1

jCMtlMW ta P«t» H. l>.

Cinderella Curfew ' Spawns Speakeasies

u p ? TO RK . Msrch 1 • «V -ThO th re e -d sy -^ ’CIndereUa eurfew a l- resdyjsas spaw ned the speakeasy in ,

t s W In a s ton r.by David C ham a? wbo;sald a 'iw t-m ldn igh t tour.toolc him to five p laces .whers Uqtior wa«

deat!ali;W «re-^uirtd .:

a « r a drlnk to C30fort

aboard. (Staff engravlDg)....... . . . * V *

J e r o m e B o y D i e d

O h P r i s o n e r S h i p,JEaiOMB,'M anh X -M r. and M n.

Burley. W... Harlow, Jerome, ,havo received eohllrmation from U » war deportment Uxat th e ir son. P rt. Carl

P e n i c i l l i n C u r i n g

S o c i a l D i s e a s e sWASHINOTON. M arch 1 (UJ9-,

Five yean from now syphlUls and gonorrhea may bo removed fro m tha list of major health problems, the office of war Infonnatlon sold today.

Dr. Thoffias P o rton . suigeon gen­eral of Uie U. 8 . pubUo health serv­ice. said In the OWX report t h a t In the last 18 months penlcilllQ has had a "cure rato" o f 96-per cent among all gonorrhea patients and also "cures some case of IsfecUous

W A S H IN G T O N , M a t c h 1 P i e d d e n t t B ac o n g re ss and th e n a t io n to d a y t h a t A m e ric a w ill h a v e to ta l | ; a t h e responalbiU ty f o r w o rld c o l la b o r a t io n " o r w e a h a n .h & v ^ to b e a r t h e r e a p o n s ib ili ty fo r a n o t h e r w o rld con flict." , . 'r . ; , _

M r . R ooaeveit s a id h e r e tu r n e d hom e f r o m Wa h n g JotUM n s 7 “w i th a f i r m b e l i e f t l i a t w e h a v e m a d e a good s t a r t '< »

t h e ro a d t o w orld peace ." I S i t t in g i n t h e w e ll r f

h o u s e c h a m b e r a t a jo in t s i o n o f t h e ' tw o b ran c h es .0^ c o n g rc s s t h e .P re s id e n t 81 i n a p e ra o n a i ^ r t ;onv t C r im e a c o n fe re n c e s : t ^ t ' i a l l i e s w ill n o t d e s is t /br<<3 m o m e n t ^ 'u n til s u r re n d e r ” ' i s w on.

Rouevelt a s M r t e S ^ l t h a 's c ^ a n d house would be reprenated-ai th e . San Francisco DUted K a U ^ conference AprU » , .wlUi.’b ^ pa rties havhig equal repruentatloil

"World peace,” he said, " I s . n ^ p a rty quesUon—any more than^JT mlUtary victory, “n ie stnielur#'fl* w orld peace cannot be the woi1te« o n e man, o r one party, or c m s '^ tlon . I t cannot b e s strocturale- complete perfecUon a t f l n t t

Discussing a t lengUi tbe big th n agreem ent fo r united action in tb poUUcal and economla fleld t a ^ era ted areas, tbs Presldeiit' men Uoned the spedfle agreement jrt gard lng Poland's future bouiAaxlt oA an outstanding example of n » i Jo in t action.

AsserUng th e wbtde PoUth t lo n was'a potential soune of tn n u b is in postwar Europe and tbe Talt parttclpanU w w 6 dttennlned to W a common ground.for its Mlat(o th e President said: *^ 0 did.”

PeUab Cewpraabe The dedslon to'parUUon PcOai)

h o described os a b^pram lsf undi w hich th e Po les wiU RcelTf. eoi pcnsaUon in territory'hi t t i -nolt a n d west in exchange for w hat tb .lose^eurt o l t ^ ' C u ^ 1 ^ ; '; T

WAaamOTON. M arch 1 (ffj- Hlghllghts of President noosevelrt report to congress today: I come from the Crimean conference, my fellow American?, wlUj a firm belief th a t wo have made a good start “ 1 the road to a world of peace.

I am cenvlneed th a t th e agree­ment on PoUnd, cnder th e clrcsm- ftanccf, is tbe moil hopefnl ape«- ment poulble far a free, tndependeol aad pn>ii.en»tis Polish sU le .

'A t V a lu . . . our combined British . and American - staffs m ade their plana to increase the a ttac k against Japan. The Japanese w ar lo rds know that- Uiey are net being orerlooked.

. rer before liava th e m ajor al- Ues been mere elesely •«n lted -no t only In their war aims bu t In their peace alms.

The Crimean conference . . . speUs the end of Ujc lystem of unilateral action and ezeluilve alliances and spheres of influence and balances of pow er.. .

MblUty for SMtber world i

T n ta now .on Americas a n d Brit^ ish heavy bomben wlU be used . . . In ■ direct support of t h o . fiovlel .armies as,well M In .support of ,o?ii ra'.the.weJtem Iro n ti •

render can they begtn t« ree*tab> llsh ithease lrei u peopi* w B bn the world might aeecpt a s^ e c e n t ctlfb - ‘■ars..

Unconditional, s u r r e n d e r . >. means the complete disarm am ent of Oermany; Uie. destruction of its mlUtarlsm and its m ilitary equip­ment; Uie end of Its-production of

I t means that Qermaay w ill bsvel to make reparations in kind . . . i n ' plants and machinery and rolling itock and raw materials.

.... U i « ........... ..problems of a n y ______

irated from the nad c o n q u es t. i n a Joint respoulbUity o f aU O na

sypmuis."say w ith reasonable as-1

surance that w ith in five y e a n eyphlllls and gonorrhea need no longer be major h e a lth problem s;' Dr. Parran declared.

All Right, Now Let’s Get on With the W ar

HOLLYWOOD. M arch 1 M V -To, Iqulel a tempest In th is tespo t-on-| I the-Pacillc, those w ere not bedroom I

m the beauUfiil subject herse lf I this word: • •

I - jey were suede sp o r t shoes, w ith I flat heels.’ And she added, " a s f la t 'as I can get them."' The bedroom slipper issue was Ihooked in.wlth the general reaction when Ingrid appeared smartly bu t Informally atUred In a a afternoon dress, her hair brushed neatly bu t carefully back to. e ttr l over her. shoulders, and no Jewelty.

pedoed ,,a > Jspaness ■ freighter .'carry­ing Americah prisoners last Sept. 7.

A>.-far>as'ls koowiJ,.Pzlvate B u s. Ww -U the firs t reported 'Msglo

.VfUey.vleUm of .tb* .prisoner.ship sialdng.'! '■ ............... .

H e;was a inerober-ot.lh«.,'18M . sradtiatlng class'-of- Jerom 6'hlgta I sohooL .Barlow, enlisted lu IMO. '

J ta . October, iM V h a w u .s w t to' the .PW Upplnes..;He''sened u ' : a Dta>ber,.of F SB -a ir . force:'ground ercw.

He .^ ..c a p io rB d - foUowtng;.Ui« c a j J ^ , o f ; th e • Philippines-, by th«.

Nothing in German Papers but Gocbbelsi

Ur VdIUA P t m

j t a t o ^ urging thO T to f ig h t to

A DNB irirtlesa d ispatch, rw s a d - p i by PCO. sa ld :a o eb b # b ' - r t« lit. hand man. M u A m iuia . p r e s e t of tha rtlch prw* c h a B i b i r f ^ t t e d

.S .S U B 1 R IN ES l i S Y A i S H I P

WABHINOTON, Bdarch 1 - i T^e navy today announced th e lo u ' of three naval vestels. including tha

Ismail salvage veuel C e tn e to r, sunk ' by a United States submarine result of mlstakm identity.

The other ships lost were tJie M.- ajo. ton cargo ship Serpens, manned by coast guard personnel, a n d tha large Infantry landing c ra ft 600.

The Serpens was carrying am m . nlUoa and aU personnel aboard, ap- proxlniately 300 offlcera a n d men. -e re lost.. Thi* tnfaatry landing c ra f t w

sunk In the central Pacific with loss of two dead and one mlasln«.

Survivors of the Extractor were rescued by tha attaddng subniarine, the navy sold, whUi made a thor-. ough search of tbe area upop dis­covering, the error. Thera w ere tlx - - reported mlsslng.from th e ve»-'

complement of about 00.-

Mayo Clinic Looks Over Harry Hopkins

BOOHESTEB. Won.i M a re H l (110 I Harry Hopkins,-confldanttt'-.aija 'closest advisor to President Boo*^ velt, was-undentolng “exainlQatkn ig d ^ e n r s t io o - at the M ayo eJlnlo

Hopkins arrtvtd h e n by plans ^ e s d a y oa his return from th e big-

«nfereiK« at)Yalta. . : . Tlopklns Is-ta 'B ochestrt-for' laO n-a i)d cbtenratloo' of >

wcurrew a or » condlUoo b e Im had s a i ^ year<,-- » cUnlo staU i

I Ration Board Won’t Let Itself Have Oil

B B U W M M i.M ,___;W abaa;».-.G eB l«Jt 6 an.-.arguneoti-^l) aoa)lty.;of atatM.-.w«vaer,:-.

lose east of th e Curxpn Unel' - X hl

ore- predomlnantty .white- R u n u ■and DiM lnla^. . ^ d the o f the line predomlnaatlr Polls A a far back as ISIS tbs i m c a ^ U ves-of t t e allies s g r e e d ^ t tl O u « o a lino represented, a ifa boundary between the two p

Roosevelt sa id he wss eo i....« « th e agreement on Poland, u n d t f ^ circumstances, is “iha.most h agTMment possible for:* free, pendent a n d prospenns - p ^

tin lty of the' major , a •’— (ire determined. t_ «

Jilted so th a t “the ideal of l f t

IW erring to som#'' agreemen reached a t ’V alta as “mmtaiy'sei r e t s " he sold th e nad i are i s ^ ab o u t some of them already "to tbs sorrow," and they will learn ‘taoz ab o u t them tomorrow and ths'at; d a y —and every day." ' ' '

<Cutl.M « P o t I

FLASHES of LIFE'

b o noises In th e bahackaof t b ^ ^ a stu d e n t training re g lm ^ a t t nIn fan try officer « ..........waa-flnaUy solved.C hew of Los Angeles, r c b ta a w American offtcer candidate,, p e rfec t English la-theidayum-i pe rfec t C ^ e s e t o ^ ' s l ^ - . - . V ^

R A B B rr - . ./• ''S 'P m S B D R a B , Maidi-, i - . i ^

m u s t be a t least ■ constn to ib s lE . visible giant rabb it of I h e . B m ^ comedy bit, “H a m y .» w < * S o v 5 ^ h e ro by ^ hunter.' - visible, thfl rabb il w is 'th a 1 « jf3 a n d 'hea;riest.rabbit e m . t o . t h i gh la -way . m easured Inches potinds.

TV ro books-loaK iiilHtog f tW t r

r e t u ^ I to D x ih e i iW d b ^

C O O K IE S -'/

Page 2: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

T IM E S -N E W S . T W IN F A L L S . ID A H O ITiorBday.Mardi 1,1848:

fORIPOmSONIWATyALlA; (Vna Far* 0>«

.1IB b is fpM ch ' to concru i th» 'P m ld e a t »aid th e big t h m ftcrced Icn vo ta jg proeeaure In Uie proposed — '1 aecuilty council—® point not

td A t.D um borton . O aks,-and W ded:u “I t U p o t yet poaslblo to aoiv 42u tenxu of th a t agrccnient 11el7, bu t I t »1U b e in « n r y time.”

H » M «l) for th e (wreement, he «ald, woa an American proposn] •»hlel» • ftfter fuU dlicuwloa, wm Sm salm ouilj ed’opted bjr the two caier aalloni,"' Fn&ce I s Fntsr*. A lthough Prance wm no t repre-

jented o t the conference, the P m U 'deot so ld *^0 o n e ehould detract 2rom th e recognition (here accorded or her role In tb s future ot Europe W d the world •;:h # pointed ou t th a t Prance b iKcn invited to accept » w oe eontral i n aerm any , to Join u Iponwsr o t the U nited Natlona co ftrence, tb a tah e w ill have a peraia- Bcnt meoit>er on the tctenuittCFnal w curltr (wuncll w ith the other four Jjujor power*, and abe will be aw o. elated In the Jo in t reipoMlbUlty BTer liberated areas.“ Ose resu lt of th e agreement to ^ a s g e dal); InlormaUon between Uie aUled armies under Oen. E laen' liower.and StaUo, a n d thoae In Italy, vltbout the neeeaalt)' of going tJirousb m e ehlefs o f staff In Woah^ Ington a n d U adon os In the post, he said, waa the recent bombing .................... - ■ --------- 1 aircraftby American and EngUih t

AnEqiert Twin Falls News in Brief

Jinss FLOBENCB BEES . . . Twin ralU b l|h sohool d m -

mallet dlreetcr i t natlenally known fer her work h e re . (BtaftengnTlnil

N a t i o n a l H o n o r s

T o D i r e c t o r R e e s

A n d H e r P l a y e r s

n Berlin.' n pur.

:nce, the f irs t toHe cald th e n «

p(W8 a t th e eonfi.............................. ..defeat O cnnaay w ith the g rea tttt poMlblo apced and th e smalleat pog. alUe toss of allies lives, and the second to eontlnuo to build for la s t­ing peace.

As to th e f ln t purpow, he said that U ro w being carried out In n e a t force. Ai to th e second "a tre-

‘ 1 made.'

"must rea lise tha t th e sooner they llTB up a n d lurrender. by. groups or u Individuals, th e sooner the ir I^e u st Agony will be over. They mUft reallM that w ith only complete rarrender can they begin to reea- (abllsh thesuetves aa people whom tbs world might accept as decent

s essential as th e defeatSHB3 ”U o u r U aas fo r world ____ire to Bueceed," h e declared, add' Ing th a t Japanese m U ltarlsn musi e wiped o u t as thoroughly as aer«

Beports « n TalU Rooserelt went before congress

n th his personal report on the ilftorlc conferences ^ t h lOUa a n l Prime M inister Church­ill a t TaltA a< hours after his re< turn to th e White H ouse. Be descrlb- »d the b l f three meeting a t Yalta - - - - 'u l e ffo rt to find

— d for peace.I the end of the oystem

._ i a l action and exeluslva . spheres e l innueace

I of pow er and a ll theJtber eried for centuries—a n d have fall- r h e s a k l .

propose to substitute for all if'tbese a universal organization In fhlch all peftee*lovlDff nations will toally have » ehance to ioln.'-’I am confident t h a t congress and hs American people wUJ accept the ^ t s of th is conference aa the legtonlngs o f a perm anent struc- urs of peace upon which we can

to build, u n der Ood. tha t ietter world in whlcU our children ftd grandchlldrtn—yours and mine, he chUdren u i grsndehlldrcn ol hs whole w o rld -m u a t Ure."

C P to B enaton *nie P resident tem lnded the

OT they eoon will h av e aunity to moke a g r e a t _______‘which w in determine the (ate of he United e ta te i—a n d o t the world -tot generations to come.**He apparently referred - —

irolected world security crganlsa- lon. Amerleao participation In italch wUl be paued o n by the s - tort some tim e in th e future.Ee expressed hope eongress would

ledde his Journey w as "a fruitful ns."T o r unless you h erti In the halls

{ the American congress, with the npport of th e American people, oBcnr In th e decUlons reached a t ralta and give th em your active opport," h e said, “th e meeting will lot have prodjieed lasting results."

By RATllBYK GBAVESMaybe you're too close to home

to -know It, but Tirtn ra ils h igh school drunatlcs and 2>Uss Florence Rees, dramatics director, hare w on plenty of national mention.

Recognition thli week o f several of the student* In a featured picture sponsored by a nationally known dramatics publishing house led to investigation of the num ber of tim es the dranutle department of th e local high school has aclUeved n a ­tional reeognlUon under th e dlrec- Uon of U lu lUes.

Two KaUonal ContestsTwin Falls high aehool dramaUcs

studenU have won lecond place In the United States In tw o national contests. The flr« award was fo r the cleTereat programs eubnltted. and the second was for th e second largest honorary dramatic group in the nation.

Miss Rees has been reauested to furnish detailed accounts of how to stage particular plays, a n d her b l- o g rap v has been published fo r dramatics students snd teachers. She Is a rcgloool director for K a- tlonal Thuplas. and has certlflca- , Uo&'th»t because of h e r xtpeated' use of the double cast system, she Is credited with being one o f the few directors in high lehool dramaUcs to give moTB etudeots opportunity for participation la productions.

Betom Ifeae Mr. sSjd Mrs. L. E. Hinton a n d

' er. Edwins, have je tum ed ttip to Mont.

ISn. H. R Allred h u returned from a trip to Seattle and Portland, where she vlslMd two sisters.

Prank WiUu to In SeatUe. W ash, visiting his son, Dill Wlllcs, who recenUy was dlsjnlMed from a hospIUl there.

................ ............ lor Den'ver to visit their husbands, Corporal “ S i Jensen, lo r

Leave* For Duty Pvt. PVed P. Poss, jr , son of Mr.

and Mrs. Fred F . Fou. returned Tuesday .to duties In the arqvy a t Boca Raton. Pla. Ha h u been vlalt- Ing In Twin PaUs.

Beeelve* Promotion Mr. and Mrs. L. 0. WUdman re­

ceived word th a t their son, Robert, has been promoted from sergeant to technical sergeant. Sergeant WUdman Is stationed al Pocatello.

Submits (0 OperaUon Mrs. Everett BechUI submitted to

_ a operation in St. Luke's SoUe recently. She is coa t the homo of her sister, U r .___Mrs.Welden Haskins, 1233 Seventh avenue east.

Translerrtd Air Cadet WUllam Wildman has

been transferred from Gardner field, Taft, CaUf., to Florida. He la taking radar training. Cadet Wlld- man Is the sob of Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Wlldinan.

Enters TralnUit Pvt. Martin L. Fe»s, air cadet,

enlisted In the reserve, Islt Sunday for army specialized trslnini In re­serve a t the Dnlverslty of Utah. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Foss.

Stadle* Pharmaey BeaUlc# Price, tUughtw ,o!

and Mrs-.O. H. Price, eiJMaIn nue north, left Wednesday for Poca- tello to study pharmacy at the TTnlversIty of Idaho, southern branch.

Here Frexa Poyetto Mrs. Blmer Bow benr 1* here fnsm

Payette -tor a brtef visit w ith her parents, Mr. and M n . O.- B. Splel- ber».

Sinner G neit . Miss Earlena Massey. Tivin FaUs, who is now attending the Colorado Woman's college, was a dinner guest

Cotapletea Training pvt, M artha B. Burrlngton. . . .

merly o f Twin Palls and now serving with th e WAC8 has recently com­pleted training a t th e first WAO training center In F t. Des Moines, la . She Is now stationed a t Will Rog-

field; Okla, for duty with the

Ucenscs Issued Marriage licenses were Issued here

yesterday to Qeorge T . Watanake, Chicago, and Lucille Vashlko NltUi. Hunt, a n d WlUlun F. Mason Mary H . Mason. Elmberly,

Collision Fender damages amounting

“about *30" were the resulu of a eoU IWon Ja te yesterday on Uje trudt

a n d Eighth street south follow, a oolUsIon of cars driven by

Oeorga Wobb and N. O. Rountree, both of Tw in Falls.

Olscbarge Iteeerded James Ray Cagle, who did not

give an address, and who served u a motor maehlnlsl’s mate second class in th e navy, recorded bis hon­orable discharge from service yes­terday in the clerk’s office in the court hoxue. The dlscharce. dated Feb. 29. m s , was Issued a t the gov­ernment hosplUl a t Oakland, Calif,

INCUIWBENISFILE; JOE-K STEPS OUl

meaUoned os a po tential candidate for one of the couneU .posts, but Thursday afternoon be refused a statem ent to the Tlmes*Kews -- whether o r not b e would be« candidate.

He h a d not, however, obtained any notnlnaUog petitions (com the clerk’s office no r hod any of the ‘'btmdreda o t frleads'"w hom bo bad

• • asked him to it blanks for his

ominauon.Koehler's SU tem rat

K oehler's sta tem ent w u :U k e th e late President Calvin

CooUdge. and on th e advke of my physician, 1 don't choose to run for the office of m ayor In the coming city elec tion

"W hen Bert sw ee t ormounced tha t he was not goliig to run for re- elecUon. i t was m a n tha t I threw my h a t in to the ring. Also when Die Ju n io r Cham ber oJ Commerce set thenuelves up aa a political dcbs- InaUon body, I know tha t It would not be good buslneaa on my part tooppose them u I t o o , --------------of th a t organisation.

'A nd, a s I have often stated, the itmbers of the Ju n io r Chamber of

jommflrce never s ta rted anything that they didn't c a r ry out to a sue- cesaful conclusion. I can't go back on those statemenU-

Asks Others to Withdraw "So I guess th a t 1 had better con­

tinue w riting V -m all letters to the boys overseas, work qn all the drives, make dona tlona .to an worthwUla wsr causes, run D bcle Jot K 's Roxy theater, a n d stlU b e Interested In all municipal enterprlK s for the good of tbo community,

'Also, to saveithe expense of elec­tion, I ’d like to suggest tha t all other parties withdraw. T his Is for the good of the commuiJty, '...........

Seen TodayChules W . Rank going a long

«l»ne e tn e t car»7 ta g .a hankie, the dainty ifanlnlne kind , in o n e h ^ d j \ . . Sign on dairy biJard: “ Quemsey bill] to ue fm- hts keep ' . . . Insur>

y ..cm the jo b u j i a the

- — ...ww and B ill Q a m e tt more U m bustling as' th ey form ally take over Kew C entral m arket. ex-Vogel% • > ■ Red Oroea posters in a to re win­dows,.Red Cross sten<^ed message

— Window*. Red Cross flagsam dow n to w n ..................

-------- -kIs of prisoners _____ _____with rakes on courthouse law n, and another sweeping th e east entrance

with big s tr e e t broom . . . New----- jles 'going o n half a dozenhouses around town, remodeling Qimlt«d to m eet W PB rules) under- way on several o th e r* . . . P ic tu re a front page of 'ClaaBUicd Journal, ahowlng young lady In stage satire cast from Loa Angeles Exam iner staff wearing costume m ade of po­tato ssek labeled 2 - a No. I . Long

D i v o r c e G r a n t e dMrs. Maytle Blones was gran ted ..

• divorce from Peter Blanes d istric t eeuit, a n d the

right to real property, acijulred «o re her m arriage.•nw court also restored h e r la m e r

ame. MayUe Logsdoa ‘n jo prop- rty consUts of th e SE «N E H of

..*01100 33.10-ieS. Mrs. Blanes. who married Blanes M arch 37.1M3. gave desertlmf as th e grounds fo r seeking a dlToree.

while we m ight necessarily have to hold the nom inating election, there would be no danger of the - of a runoff election. T hat r ... least, would save $3,000 or *9,000.’

Purchase of the Buhl F l o r a l___any by David B. Pox, T w1q A lls. — — ,u n t entomologist of

------------------eauof en to m o lwp l a n ^ n r u ^ hero w ns

My, Fox rolgned his entflmology u t and took peesession o f the-west ad Qoral concern Thursday.‘n te . purchase was m ade from

H arry J. Taylor, former Tw in Falls postal woricer who bought th e Buhl Ploral from J . 3. Brennan la te last year after Ur. Brennan, operated It since 18W. T ^ lo r said TTiureday th a t 111 health foned him to relln-

the buslntss. He In tends to I to California for h is health.

___h u Men an assistan t ento­mologist since 1928. Be began with the bureau a t Richfield. U tah ; thm resigned to attend U nlverelty of Minnesota for compleUon o f most of the necessary work on his doctor's

He returned to T w in Palls

Churchill Receives Vote of Confidence

LONDCIT, March 1 Oiff Prime churchin, satisfied w ith an

.................. vote of confidence,called off a speech w ith w hfch he had been scheduled to close out three days of oommons debate on foreign affair* todoy.

Foreign Beeretary Anthony TAm will wind up the debate fc government late today, m ent originally waa h took I t over when a conservative group rebelled against the Crimea conference sdeclslon on Poland.

Commons voted SSd to 39 against ' amendment denouncing b ^

three’s a

^ The AsMelated K E A T 8, PATS, BTO -Book four

r e d stam ps «5 through 63 good through ' M arch 31. Stamps T t th rough X6 good th r o n g AprU js . Btamca 'VO and ZS and A3 through 0 3 good through June 3^ Nextserlee —E3 through J3-WU1 be vsUdated, M arch 4 and be good^through June

PO O D S-Bort: JoOT b lue Btampe z b tbi^Aigh ,Z& and A3 t h r ^ h B3 good through March 31. S tam ps C3 through 03 good tbrongh April 38. Stamps H3 through M3 good through June 3. Stamps. K3 th rough S3 good through Jane 30.

SUOAB - Book v a lld 'fo r nve poun<3. A nother stamp validated May 1.

SHOES — Book three airplane s tam ps 1 .3 and a .valid Indefinitely. O PA aays ilo plans to cancel any.

GASOLINE — 14-A eoupoos good everywhere for four gallons through M arch 31. B-S, 0-9, B-« and c.g coupons good evetrwhere for five gallons.

i c h M K t o b.

P Of

national committees for speech and dram a departments for secondary schools.

Pictures ot the following plays produced In Twin Palls h ig h school under the direction of M iss Rees have been printed In a naUonal dcwnatU* mtgaxlsie; "H o More Frontier,” "Lajt Horizon.” "Our Town." 'Death Takes a Holiday," “The Taming of the Bhrew," 'P ro ­logue to Olory," "Charley’s Aunt" and "Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's court"

The Hospital

______ county general hospitalpmrsday.

ASMTrTED ' Jtalph- B um s. Mrs. Jennie Ford, a rt. Max CatoUvera, C lan . ReSnke, Shanin Hlgbee, Mrs, A lbert Wegener. 01 of Twin Palls; J . B . Breedlove. Ufflberly; M rs. Charles. D. Brown, Sistleford: Mrs. O lena Prot hibl: Mrs. VlrgU H ite . Eden, fi*. Boy W ebb, CasUeford.

PZSMISBEO Mn. H oward Bird a^Jd son, Je r-

mej M it. B o y Hobbs .and daughter, <rs, Edward W arra a n d daughter, lad M h. lUchard M orris, all ol iuhl; Mrs. O . K Cockxum, Harold ---------------- - Condon. Venlta Tur-

lond'Howard. Jr, a B o f Tw in------ -rromie I M n . HoUlster, and Mrs, le u ; Schwab, }r, E den .

s e e p a t W h U t m s ot Ea/etv nvijig

v X h o u t

O n c e M o r e T h e y

D i d I t i n C a m a sFAmPIELD, March 1— Camaa

county went over Its R ed Crow war fund quota last n igh t before the actual start of the nationwide campaign today.

Probate Judge Ray o . Jones. ‘ chairman bf the Red Crocs drive and chairman ol all w a r bond drives, announced that donaUona have exceeded the 11^00 goal for this county.

Camas and Jones habitually do the same thing on v u bon d cun- palgns. ’The county was f i r s t In the nation In the lu t w a r loan.

C . o f C . S e c r e t a r y

S t a r t s H i s W o r kJames A. Spriggs, ]r.. w ill attend

h is first meeting of the board of directors of the Twin Fall5 Cham­ber of Commerce Friday as new ex­ecutive secretary of the 0. o f C.

The meeting wiu be held a t i.___t the Park hotel 6;^;g8, w ho was ---- - 2} •—

Jay M. Merrill, president of the Chamber of Commerce, assumed hla duties Thursday.

echools a t Hunt relocation center. He had previously been principal of the Roosevelt and Bonneville ele- m tn taiy MhwU a t PocateUo.

l i t . and Mrs. Sprign Uve a t 230 Seventh avenue north. Sprfggs has been a resident of Idaho for 35 year*.

S t o l e n C a r F o u n d ;

A l l G a s U s e d u pThree hours after a car belonging

to Dwight Kerlln, route th ree . Twin Falls, was reported missing from Its parting place Wednesday nlgbe in the 600 block of Shoshone inorth, police recovered the »ut<___bUe, abandoned Is the 1400 block of Poplar itreeL

Miss Vln^nla Kerlln, who parked - le c ar on Bhoahone, told offloers th a t she left It unlocked.

The. car contained approximately ftvs gallons of g u wbea I t was taken. When discovered by poUce th e fuel tank w u almost ems>ty.

to BnihneU . . . Nurte Betty MeVey. da

ter of Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Mi ISO Blue Lakes boulevard north, left Wednesday for Bushnell general hoe- pltal a t Brigham City, ciah. She had been here on a five-day fu r-

1 visiting her poreoU.

BirthsA son waa bom to Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Loinor, Twin Pallj. and a son to Mr. and Mr*. Qwrge Brewer, Buhl, both on wedneylay; a son to Mr. and Mrs. Burgess Lawler. Tw in Falls, on Thursday, all a t the Twin Palls county general hospital m atem lty home.

F ou r Sol*Four aviation students at the

municipal airport here have com­pleted fln t solo flights, It was an ­nounced 'by Charles “ '

a re students ot Paul Puller, li tor.

Klwanls TonightNo noon meeting of the local Kl-

w anls club was held today b...... .o f annual fanners' night m . . ^ ; which. wlU be held a t the Park hotel ton igh t starting w tlh a bawy** ’ O rlo n iff, publicity chairman, i nounced. Each club member ' ... h ave B farmer as his guest a t to­night'* session.

VIslU FarenUS 3/c Jack Allred w u recently

hom e on leave visiting Ws parents. M r. and Mrs. H. R. Allred. Seaman Allrod, who was sUtioned a t Mem­phis, Tenn., b now sMUoned a t Korman, Ckla. He is taking ord­n ance training. His brother, M 3/o Jam es Allred, is suuoned at Orosse Isle. Mich.

A n t-m a i CenterS/Sgt. Charles V. Nichols, son of

M rs. E. E. McOee, Twin Palls, has suTlved a t the army a ir forces redis­tribution su tlon a t Miami Beach for reassignment processing following complettlon of his tour of duty out­s ide the continental United States. E e served 35 months In the south a n d southwest Pacific and holds a disUngulshed unit citation. His wife, Corrlne, resides In VldaUs, La.

anested by police yesterday after­noon in th e 300 block of Shoshone \ street sou th and charged with i ilTunien driving alter the pick-up truck he waa driving allegedly struck another truck driven by Jim Barry, police reported.' The accldtnt was reported to police by Kenneth I Shook, c ity councUman. '

Concludes Visit M n. w . A. Van ffiigelen returned

W ednesday from Bremerton, Wash., where she visited a t the home o t h u daufh ter, Mrs. Ben Hicks, the for­m er V atu ra Van ^ g e le n . Dorothy V an Engelen, Junior a t the Univer­sity of Idaho , met her mother in Spokane fo r a brief visit. Mrs. Van Qigelen en route home visited her brothers, J . D. and A. H . Ro'berts, and Mr. V an Engelen’s sUter, Mrs. B . H. Foakett. all of Portland, Ore.

5)C0lltHl DROPS Iw rm coupo ti ■

TW'N" F \L IS STOPSu n m u r 1 0 2 N o r t h M a in p h o n o 6.0, o w n m a

Magic Valley Funerals

. . _ ------------ ssrrJoee forUn. H aity Denton wffl be » e U a t

:30 p. m . fiiturday a t the K tm ber- r Methodist cburoh. T h e Rev. leorge O. Roeeberry. Twin P»U s, a<-

Jlated by the Rer. M, H. Oreenlee, sbB bany . wm offlolate, In ten n e n t w ill be OS Sunset memorial park tm d tf direction o t Rey&olda funeral

H e l l e r W i n s H i g h

R a t i n g i n C o n t e s tSecond place hi the national mar­

a th o n contest for managers of State F a rm Bisurance companies in states w here no state farm life Insurance . companies are carried out, has been w on by Lou Heller, It w u announced W ednesday by officials of the n tlo n a l company.

H eller Is local manager ot the : S ta te Farm Mutual Auto Insurance I company, an afflUate of the SUte “ j msuranee companlei. He also___ jd first In the managers’ contestf o r Idaho. Both contesu were or - basis of premium sales. . ..

$ 1 0 P l u s R a t i o n

B o o k B R e c o v e r e d“Thank* a mUUen for my 110 and

ra tio n bookj.”* n u t w u Josephine Roublntk's

s ta tem en t to E. B. Granville, mem­b e r o( the cUy. street cleud&g de­pa rtm en t. who found her pun* in a a a l l e y l n the r e a r o f tb e m block o f avenua west, and turned It o v e r to police.

“ hrough Identlflcatloo papeipurse, they returned the loe__

t i d e to the owner, who lives a t 493 T h ir d avenoa west.

Weathern Falb u d . vielaltyi Ugbt ‘ - '- •■ t and F r td v i waimer

___ — let FHday. yesterday's^ M. low M ; tU a a e n la g 'i Ugh WALGREEN’S . . . DRUGS WITH A REPUTATION

Page 3: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

ThMBday, 1,1946 ,, ,:T IM ES.N EW S. T W IN F A L L S . m A B O

W e n d e l l S t u d S i t s

T o P r e s e n t P l a yW E N D E :^ March I . — Btudcata t W endell Wg3» tchool «w »poM<»-

Inff ftQ aU'Kbool p ity , m u Night o l J a n u u 7 Mih” under the dlree- Uon o ; Mrs. Ja m u Eaton, with the assistant dlreelor Laura Shumacher. I t will l» pTOtnted f tld a y altcr- noon, M arch 3, and Saturday, U arch 3. ftt 8:16 p. m. The pUy .takes place In th e supreme court of New Yorlc.

.M ew TORK. MKCh I w v-R us- slaa doctors lu r e solved tbe cen­turies-old e lfort to UM alcohol ta M aneatheUc by lnJecUng « In the army... Complete anealhesla tot * u rt- ... w ith alcohol os the only aouthetlo. la-described In the February Iuub of the Amettean Revtaw «t Bavttt

. Medicine. The story of SO co«a In th e last two months Is told by E. V. VeikhoTsKayo. s e n i o r operating nurse a t an evacuaUoa hosplt^ to th e QorU and Kirov region.

A lot of alcohol Is given, about three ousoea for a 130-poimct man. I t Is Bilxed w ith tTilCB m taucb glucose, a fommon tnuuluilon so­lution, and given through ordinary biMxf transfusion apparatus.'

Nurse Verkhovskajra wriUs-. 'T h e patien ts themselvta note their su ta

■of • Inebriation soon after Ui# ad* ministration of alcohol bcglas. The cye -U ^lo^, lace aad ncct become red . pupils contract and then stop reactlna to light."

-Sleep cones on wltu the first 40 t o CO ccatlm clcn «{ iJcohd. vU ch ia onc-thlrd to ono-hall the total dose. Wlicn th e paUent b uneon- Bcloiv, thfl transfusion apparatus li a h ttt olf. but lemfllta In and Li tu m o d .o n a $ a^ 1( ilgiu of awakening «ppear-’'

Sleep lu ts two to five hours. When th e paUtDlJV awaken they are Irra­tional /o r ’a tlw e and hare to b« wAtched. About six per cent hava hangovers In the fonn of nausea a a d lour per cen t have ht&Suhes.

Tho report says alcohol Is a bet-

ThisIsTiny

FOiNEWPARH■WASHIHaTOH. M arch-1 O i» -

A dralrar SelM -KobaM hl resigned as minister without porUoUd In Iht Japan tse 'M b tatt today tem al rumbling# over w hat T o tjo admitted vas a "grare" tu rn In the war'Situalloa.

Ho quit »1th the .avowed-purof leading a drive (o form a and all-powerful totalitarian party to irulde -the govctitmeat'a h a n d In the direction of the war. 'm e party would replace the present Imperial Rule Aulsunee Poiitieal 'Bocloty, ' which KobiD'ssht b president.

The rcsljoatloa was acccptcd Premier.Kolso “with Imperial sanc­tion” as both houses of tho diet, cfliially. conccmed over tho need for A new poUUcal force, pressed immediate reconvening o f . Jiiambcrs.

Oomel said the two houses were inxlous to get a lln t-h an d report

a Kobo and hU.cablnet o n "the grave developments of tho w ar situ- auon."• Tho poUUcal crisis coincided with tho continued American advances on Iwo, an increasing num ber o( American D-M and corrlcc-plans raids on Tokyo and Japan proper and tho liberation of the PJhUlp. plnca. •

m e l o r r wlU’ b« Qhosm from ’ tb* audience. ' -

Tho ch o ractcn «W Neal Ambrose, Mary Jo Ohrlsteruen, Wayne Croff, n ichatd E aton, Patrlcta PteeniMi, Wanda OIU. Dorothy QOlIer, Don arlm es, B o w ^ H um s, Leonard Bartley, Eleanor Huffaker, EUa Mae Hulet, D«Ua IvenoRj O lea Koch, LUa K urtz. Meredith Kurtz. Bette McCloud, Edmund McOIurc, Robert McOlure. K enneth Moon, Jock Nel­son.'Ijoruile Rentraw, N athan Smithand Wayne Schultg.______

REXD TII^ES-NEW S WANT AOS.

A p p e t i z i n g- c o ^ ^

S c h i l l i n gV A C U U M P A C K E D ^

C O F F E E

The World’s Largest Buyer' of Fine

AutamobllesFRA^K HINES

W ILL B E IN TW IN FALLS

Saturday and Sunday;P a y i n g C a s h f o r

Late Model Cars & Trucks( • •

S a m e L o ca tio n

361 Main Avenue West(Next to Conoco Station) •

Phone 1M« — or — Bogexaajj Betel

Page 4: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

s '.ro n r . T IM E S -N E W S , T W I N F A L L S /ID A H O . _____

' b im d u Moend'*lu> d4Q im IUt April <BMtoUlM la Twia Fill*. J4»h». ood|r U>. »rt of MutSL t. II

BUBSCQIPTION BATES B7 CASaiEB-PATASUI IM ASVAKCS

I W oan U tCnuiUu a m ••nlc* e: itx AmmUM Pnw u<l UbIM

All Mtka n«i>Ir^ b> U . t t bT oHcr ««JirtidleUoo to b» poI)1l«W w.«klr. will -- - - - - - handw lus* ct Uil> pap» ponuaot la 6«clloa ( t -10 l!I M xlM U>«r«l» br CUdKt IB<. SmiIss

T A " ,

HATIONAl. BEPBESENTA'nVES

ONE O F WAR’S TRA G ED IESOne of.the tragedies o f w a r l3 tho 'lnc llna-

) tion on the p a r t o f some A m ericans to rcpudU . a te the underly ing p rin c ip les of citizenship

of our free dem ocracy w h ich Is made up of many nationalities, colors a n d crecd3. -

Although th e re are m a n y Japoneae-A m erl- ' iMtrm ffbo a re Ju s t oa m u c h citizens of this i conntry as G erm an-A m erlcans, the loyol \ Japanese bom In the U n ite d S tates a re be­

ing unfairly abused . A trocities com m itted by enemy Japanese in th e p resen t w ar are. usually given a s the excuse fo r the re sen t­m ent against American c itizen s of th a t race. But the fac t t h a t the h e in o u s crlmcs which th e Germans have com m itted against all humanity do n o t arouse a sim ila r resen tm ent proT^ th a t th e prejudices of some Americans are based largely upon a n un-A m erican dif­ferentiation ag a in s t color.

Surely, If a citizen of th is country Is good enough to f ig h t a n d die l o r O ld Olory, he de­serves more re sp ec t and p ro tec tio n under th a t ftmblem than som e ore w illing to 8 e him . If h e doesn't, th e n w e should rem ove one of the foremost p rincip les of o u r constitution.

A pathetic ca se serves t o dem onstrate th a t something is fu n d am en ta lly wrong w ith the

; American conception of a cosmopolitan de- ; mocracy.

5 Frank T. H acblya, te c h n ic ia n th ird class. Iw as one of th e iS 'Japanese-A m ericans whose Hnames w ere.stricken fro m th e honor ro ll a t

Hood River, b r e . On Jan . 3 rd , F rank died os a ^ resu lt of w ounds suffered a t Leyte Island on KDeo. aoth, w hile, as an A m erican citizen, he swos fighting fo r h is country .

This should h av e p a r tic u la r significance ;ln this vicinity bccauso b o th h is m other and ifa ther lire a t th e H unt re lo ca tio n ccntor.I- V/lth o ther A m erican boys and girls, F rank !T. Hachlya w as g rad u a ted from th e Odell [high school a t H ood R iver. W ith other Amerl- [can young people, ho s p e n t tw o years a t Ore-

Bgon university. W ith m llllona of other Amer- Blcans, he took iip arm s fo r h is country. And Nllke thousands o f others, h e h as died on the [ifleld of battle.

Hood River shou ld be ash am ed .

T U C K E R ’S N A T I O N A L

W H I R L I G I GCUnFOV-nnderljrl&g rcMCn for J u n u T . Byrnn'«

cnrfev Isw and borse-raem s bao, u «eU u for more m trictloiu on DoncuenUdl mUvIUu, Is Uio twUef Uitb Uie turba a re needed fo r the li e(/ec( on Uss piy- cholDiv of tha cJvtUan and m m tar7 populauon. NdUiar

m oral nor direc t cconomlo faeUin entered In to hl» decWon.

O ab e e t owners' eontahtloaa U ut' thB consenlar and nonabatemJoui w ar mobUUer wtia Inntiesced by the d ry lobby a re dUmUsed a» ao much noruenac. AlUiough Uio proWblUoa- latd hare riUaed n hu<e fund for

,VolattadInn purposu, they are to w eak on capltol hUl Uiat Uiey cannat oven obtain a committee hearln s on d bliJ to d ry up the naUon for Uu duratloQ.

I t la also admitted In war-plan> nln*( drclea th a t the U o'clock d o t­

ing will contribute lUUe to th e over-oll military e « o rt Ejcpcrta do not. a n tlc lp s io 'th a t many lighter* or in- diatxlal worltcra will be draw n trom the kitchen, serving or perform los personnel of night dubs, aaloona and other places of entertainm ent, w ith worm weather approaching, there will be hardly any aavla* of luel.

nESENTMENT—T he naed lo r maintaining a criil* paychology has become acute beeauie of allied aucecss* es In Europe and American galna In the Pacific. Men like Byrnes. W ar Secretary Henry L. fitlmaon and Production O hainnan j . A. Krug are afraid whon Qcrmsny craelcs u p folks in the factories will head for home, rtgardle&s of work-or-flght atatutes con- grcai may enact.

. . . . written altnllar views to their senators and repreaentatlves. M any vets osalgned to duty a t home have aticed to be ahJpped bode overaeas In riagalnit the seeming Indifference to their hardships and sierlflces a t th e front.

Moreover, If th is sh o t in th e arm does not have U>e desired effect, and If a letdown follows nasi surrendtr, neV7 curtaiUnents, such as nationwide prohibition of travel, professional baseball a n d oven further ahort- enlng of hours fo r am usem ent centers, may be Im-

MR. C H U R C H ILL 'S SHAPKA . Prime M inister C hurchill w ore a new h a t a t the Crimea conference. I t w a s a becoming h a t

shapka, I t w as called—m ade of black lamb's wool. T h o u g h said t o h av e been a p res­en t from th e C anadians, i t w as of R ussian design. And i t looked w arm a n d comfortable, as well es handsom e.

Many A m ericans m ust h a v e fe lt a twinge of lenvy when th e y saw th e p icture of Mr. Churchill w earin g It. A nd i t m ay have oc- (Curred to them , a s i t d id to us, th a t h a t re ­

f o r m In th is co u n try is lo n g overdue. T here plenty of fru ltle sa a g ita tio n fo r more sen ­

s i b l e men’s b usiness attire ,' especially in sum - ^ n e r —a sort o f fo u r freedom s, from coats,

neckties, collars, long sleeves.But the re fo rm ers seem to sh y away from

t n a t s . This Is o p ity , for m e n 's h a ts a re both K bnpractlcal a n d u n beau tlfu l. They blow off

to the wind. T hey o ffer s c a n t w arm th In w in­ter time where w arm th Is needed . They afford little protection a n d less c o m fo rt In sum m er.

And the m onotony o f s ty le and color. [There is no b e tte r m ateria l f o r a b itte r solll-

li^jquy on our reg im ented life th a n the parade of headgear on one 's 'fe llow m e n os they file along a city s tre e t—snap b rim a f te r snap ijrlni, all snapped precisely a t th e sam e angle; irown after crow n, creased In conventional

Icimlformlty.I t ’s enough to m ake a m a n s ta r t a revolt.

Sut of course n o m an will. No, he will c a s t a oglng look a t M r. Chxurchlll’s shapka, a

lashing, rak ish h a t th a t a lso keeps th e ears ^ a r m and s its lig h tly on th e brow. Then he

Krill go forth B5 u su a l In th e sam e old felt, stlU looking uncom fortable, u n fla tte re d a n d un-

KSmaglnatlve.

Afi.MS-Krug waa responsible for the anonymous _nnouncement th o t American forces transferred from Europe to ths Japanese sector would be equipped with new weapons manufactured here , and th a t billions of dollars' worth of planes, artillery, tanks etc. would bs warehoused on th s continent. He will be asked to justify thb program when th e house approj^aUons commltlee s ta ru hearings on the war department's budget.

Sllmson rushed a major general to tho office of

Uon and details. A fter plsb-plshlng the newspaper article, which waa originally distributed by a highly reputablo press association, th e emissary admitted that an extremely secret memorandum contained the recommendaUon w hich StUnson had repudloted.

Principal sponsors of the Junking project a re Krug and Robert P. Patterson, under secretary of w ar, who handles producUon matters lo r his superior. I t Is un­derstood on capltol hill th a t Uiey cooked up ths schema without coruultlng the secretary of war. \Vhlla Housa aides ore supposed to be In favor of It because It will stave off a n Industrial slum p and malnUln employment.

Congressional people In close touch with the WPB and war department regard th e tentaUva decision as evidence that Russia wUl figh t Japan after th e liqui­dation of Moscow'a continental enemy. American arms In Europe could be shipped or flown moro quickly and expeditiously to tho M anchurian or Clilneso theater than to o u r unlls In the far east, now that Turkey luis become a flghtlns member of the United Katlons and has opened Uio Dardanelles to mUltary

tlcal jccrclary. P a u l Lockwood, will probably ____twice before they a tten d ano ther exclusive dinner ar­ranged by 0 small Rroup of WitslUngton correspondenU self-labelled aa "serious th inkers and moldera of public opinion." I t w as Uils.same coterie th a t helped to obtain a "bad press" for th o late Wendell WllUcle.

\Vhen the Republican 1M4 presidential nominee came to tho capital to deliver a Lincoln day address; his first public tabc a fte r his defeat, he was urged to stay over for a banquet to be Blvea by newspaper men who had been on h is train during the campaign. Un­fortunately, the arranger, w ho represents a Boston Journal with lim ited circulation, picked his friends, not Dswey’a,

Tho le reporters, who paid »8J0 per for the party. Included many who had no t accompanied the Kow York governor on b is travels. Bome of Washington's leading writers whoso names a re household words were excluded, although they had been members of the candidate's entourage. The combined clrculntlons of tho papers represented by those present totaled less than 2.000,000 readers; a political wTlter whose New York newspaper goes to 3.000,000 people wos le ft out.

The man from A lbany has been subjected to sharp criticism and Joshlns although h e was In no way res­ponsible for the a ffa ir . He and Lockwood are now ex­plaining that they w ere merely guests a t the dinner, not hosts.

The Bear’s Hevenge

“ W A S H I N G T O N C A L L I N G ” B Y

M A R Q U I S C H I L D S

V I E W S O F O T H E R SRIG H TS OF WITNESSES

Congressional InvestlgatlnK committees obviously.1.. . . . . . . . . . . . .......... xedures Umn courts

resolute respect forneed greater flexlbUlty In tl

•EMOTIONAL REGIM ENTATION’ m a recent se rm on , th e Rev. H arry Em er-

lon ]Posdlck w as speak ing o f th e dangers of ■emotional reg im en ta tio n ." W hen th ings go sell the natlonfil spirits g o soaring ; a m lli-

WTeraal a n d .w e get a case of country- gfrlde blues. D ifferences be tw een th is country S ftnd its allies d ep ress us o n a transcon tinen ta l

"cale; the C rim ea conference announcem ent ■ a cause for gen e ra l e la tion .

The eoun^ also seems to be suffering from m ass detennlnatiOQ to g e t th is w ar over

rith as qnlckly a a possible, a n d to Join In an D tem atim al o rgan lea ilon f o r enduring «ac«. M aybe.that’5 em otional regim entation.

I f a ^ 'k n o w n os n a tio n a l unity .

O lK nchm . torsoolc h is c lg an j I n . Arabia I j r o e r t J ta XBgard«l a s s in fu l to smoke. The IG uns to c e r ta in c lgo ra wd’ve smelled B l b t Iter* Jn e r i c a la te ly .

~ M id t h a t apes are so -vmya m a y have been

'foo ti n u c h l s o . >

'b 0 7 '4 l^ ta to . becom e a U wyer L T b lnK o f th e m oney - t 6 ! lU r e | i i a w y e t , - r - — -V

of Justice. But they need a l s o ........ ........ ....the rights and reputations o t the citizens hailed before them.

To this end. RepresentaUvo P rank Hook, o f Michi­gan, has urged enaotm ent of w hat he terms a bill of rights for men being Investigated by congressional commltiees. He w ould assure such persona legal counsel a t private bearings, access to stenographle rccords of ajiy testim ony cited by a committee, a full opportunity to reply to accusaUons and to fUe a formal swtement a t the coficluslon of testimony. These are such elementary principles o f fair play th a t I t is shocking to reallto how flagrantly they have been disregarded In the past.

The whole system o f congressional Investigation, a vital adjunct of th e leg ls la tln process, has been brought Into disrepute by tho excesses of committees such as those headed by R epresenutlve Cox and former Representative Dies. Soma of them have become organised atrocities. Congress as a whole, for the sake of lU own presUge, ough t to put a checkreln of the sort proposed by Mr. H ook on the activities of memben whom I t vests w ith Investigatory powers. Committee membero ought to keep careful check upon any chslnnan disposed to m ake Individual pronounce- ments for the com m ittee as a whole.

Of course, the m o st effective control congress can exerdjs over In^-estlgatlng groups is care. In th e first Instance, In establishing them, i n this regard. I t Is worth recalling th a t M r. Hook Is also the au tho r of

resolution calling f o r repeal o f the amendment creat* aanent committee on un-American activities, of this w ould be Uie best erldeace congress

give Uiat I t w ants th e rights of witnesses respeeted.-Washlngton Post

THE SDOB OF OBURFAnON f^ir about a decade, ths a ir t j i s been filled with

charges that the P residen t seeks to reduce congress to a rubber stamp. O n occasion, those charges have been Justified. But. as W alter L lppmami b i l w out, the shoe a t Uis moment la distinctly o a the oUiar foot.

I t is. says Mr. U ppm ann. th e President's prirUege to appoint hSs cablnct. TTje constltuUon says so. If wngress undertakes to block a n appointment on any­thing less then grounds of treason or personal dis­honesty, It undertakes to substitute tta Judgment for a Judgment conferred exclusively on Uio President. I t Is. u short, usurping an execuUve power—and the agents of usurpation. In th e nam e of sUblUty and cosaerra. Usm, a n *nsortlng to acts th a t are radlcaUy toiea to the American system .- .

Walter uppm ann. b e U rem m b ertd . U anything - I t a len-winger. E a Is a close student ot coasUtu- tlosal goTtmment H is oounaet U one th s radicals «l

a#TH TACTICAL A I R COM­MAND. in H o l l a n d - w in d blows

Uie field, and Uie gray sky seems pulled down Ught to th e hori­zon, y e t P - iT fighter bombers take off from th s airstrip th a t bi­sects a sea of knud. The s q u a d r o n , p a rt of th is tac­tical air command, has w a i t e d aU morning fo r mini­mum visibility In order to go out and get another

crack at a railw ay bridge near Neuss which, fo r tw o days, ttiey have been to'lng to Im ock out.

Thtje flyers a ro constantly slug­ging bridges, railw ay trains, hlgh- waj’s and other targets In advance of the American n in th arm y. I t Is a never*endlng cycle of danger.

T h( wont th ing about th o danger is Its bnpersonol quality. T h e F-47 pilots these days rarely see any ene­my fighters, bu t the anti-aircraft fire In the Rocr a n d Rhine valleys

I Is persistently h eavy and th o pattern of the flak Is constantly shifting. Losses among pilots, who do over 80 missions In the course of a tour of

I duty, are heavy. T h eir scorcs do not show up In the number of German fighters shot dow n, but In th o num^ ber of locomotlvcs and bridges de< stroyed.

! fighter-bomber g roups I visited, feels that the public back home doesn't apprtclate or understand th o Job our tactical air forccs aro doing. A vet­eran of 137 missions, hs w as a rug talesman In Philadelphia before the war. He calls h is plane Maglo Car-

!t, and U certainly has been Uiat . . r him. pulling h im out o f moro than one tight a p o t since th e first doys of the N orm andy Invasion.

Holt's complaint Is that th e public thlnlcs of the a ir forces alm ost en­tirely In terms o f plane-to*pIane combat with the enemy, a n d rates pilots on tho num ber of enemy lighter- shot down. They fa ll to un­derstand what I t means to dive- bomb a target w ith heavy fla k bu n t­ing all around.

What Is even harder to under­stand, It semis to -me. Is th e u tter boredom of w aiting out weather through a rainy, foggy, snowy wln-

,ter. Pilots sit a ro u n d In draughty, dimly lighted ten ts , Ulklng o r play­ing cards against a background of Incessant radio. W hen r a re good

I days come, they work round the I clock.

One such day b a a occurrcd while

w hat may have been a record fo r the n in th a ir force, and was cer­tainly a record for this command. I h e score rolled up on that good day was Impressive. I t included th e destruction of M loeomoUves, 187 railroad cars, 3 railway bridges, and 53 cu ts made In rail lines.

' W hat Uie 39th has oehloved Is p a rt of th e war's greatest aerial offensive, w ith American and BAP bombers dropping thousands of tons of bombs on the battered rtlch. Tho work of the heavy bombers in the strategic a ir forces Inevitably seems more r e ­mote from the war than that of th e tacUcal pilots so dose to Uie battle lines. Here, ground and air forccs work together ■ " ‘....... objective, which is to knock o u tthe enemy in a fixed area.

Every morning, Brlg.-Oen. Rich­ard E . Nugent, commander of th e 29th TAG. meets with ground-force officers to discuss operations for tho coming 24 hours. They go over the targets to be h it from the a ir, and set up priority ratings based on the order of the targets' Importance.

Nugent. 42-year-old West Pointer, has worked out an ingenious plan for Improving the understanding between ground and air forces. Each week, five of his piloU ar^ selected to go up to the front with the ground forces for a week, and five m en from tho ground forces go to flgh t- er-bomber bases. When they go back to th e ir respective units, they have a new understanding of the dangBra and hardships faced by their oppo­site numbers.

Tactical bombing is a never-ceas­ing process. The destruction across

,m e Bhino U undoubtedly wldc- I spread. However, the men h m know 'how thorough is aerman organiza­tion for the repair ot damage. Ten m inutes after bombs severed a m ala roll line, a reconnalssonee plane found aerm an repair aew s a t work

tho site. Major targets must beIt over and over again.W ith the coming of spring and

be tter weather, overwhelming air a t ­tacks will bo thrown against the releh. ITien progressive deteriora­tion will moke repairs almost Im­possible. T hat is why here, where...............to guard against false op-. . . you can begin to detect signs of something like hope that th e end of this weary war in Europe may not be too many months away.

P o t4

Sh o t sH !S rASBW OOD AWAT FROM

IIO M E --T O T BU0T8"Dear Po t.B ho ts:

Oct ready to stroke your beard and look wise *n run and do some- Uilng e x tra nice for Mrs. Pots (so's she won’t th in k you're conceited), lliea teU Je a n Dinkelocker to go make a n o th e r hat.

You see, your AnU has been travelln* Vvay back east. I t was the D enver bus staUon tha t I Join­ed In w ith the group of gripers obout trave l problems, and I ses,I : - m Joinin’ right in w ith you. a.._ furthermore, when I get home I ’m goln' to w rite i t all up la Pot Shots."

Eyebrows arched — looks—a n d two seats away up. Jumps a young soldier and ssys,' 'HeUo T w in Falls."

Tlien waa my face red. as I'd been a th ln k ln ' after Je an had been menUoned on the radio and all ond

aw ful proud of her thlnkln'I was so aw ful proud of her thlnkln' she'd m'ttde Tw in Falls famous—and Usn't h e r a tall , it's our Po t Shots.

Townsend Gub MeetsJEROME, M aith 1 -T hlriy per­

sons attended the Townsend meet­ing held in the civic club rooms where State organter Albert E si- llng. Twin Falls, outUned ths acti­vities of his oflica and.pledged his support to aid the Jerome club in every way possilile,' ..................

R alph CoUlngs, elub president.

ppy though t for the dsy.- . th e nazls and nips are going

to have T urkey on the ir menu, tool —E x-Tnreler

SERVICE.MEN’S DEPT.Pot S hota has a plea from Uit wUe

of a serviceman. They have c child, a n o th e r expected this iprl - b u t c a n 't find a refrigerator. A.... you know bow necessary a refriger­ator is w ith baby foods and what- noL And w here she lives, she can't I get Ice so ao icebox w on't do. ~lady will be la Twin Falls u n til__ _day—anybody who knows where she can buy a refrigerator, telephone

HISTORY OF TWIN FALLSAS QLKANBD fS O U THB FILB8 O F XHB TIMES'NETVB

15 'TEABS AGO, ftlABOR 1, U39 I h e Rev. Jam es MUlor, who recsntly

accepted a call to occupy tha pulpit of th e First Piesbyteriso church of

'Tw in Falls, arrived yesterday with Mrs. MUlar, from Buhl, where he

lied Uie pulpit of Uie First y teriaa chureb for twe and a

h a lf years.

CTYEABS AOO, M ABCn I , 191B 6U refrigerator c ars arrived yes­

terday nomlng, f o r the transporta- Uon of potatoes a n d word came tc the depot tha t a lo t of fre ig h t cars for carrying bay a n d o the r < modltles were en route.

ftank O. S a n fo rd , returned this week alter a stay o f esreral months in the east, d u r ln s which h e en- couDtcred much co ld and tribulation

icfsplrlt.

'nia Twin F a lls Canal onmpany this week moved f ro m Its otltoea ap in front of Use building In t h e ------

E igh t new carriers, Including three InsUuctors and five high school student*, ware m ealed yes- tarday a* .« result «f tb t culture testa. I t was stated l u t eranlog by D r. aeorg# 0 . HalHy. dlree ta of Uie Tw in Flails county heiltb unit.

FLEAS, ETC.Pot Shots:

There have been many parodies Mary a n d h e r l l t tb lamb but I r_.. onto th is one and thought I t rather cute;I always though t th a t fleas were

black.But I t n tolstaken, quite.

For Mary b a d a little lamb And aU Its fleece was white!

—Mary Fan

MORE, CNFOBrONATEl.Y Dear Pots:

What's you r opinion. Max Brown, a sp o ru dealer who bad plenty

of ammtoiltlon for th e Minidoka deer h u n t b u t none to le t a Midler, on two weeks' leave, have for ths Mevada deer h u n t? '

However, tbrougb the courtesy ofj a civilian SPORTSMAN the so ld lr ' got his shells anyway.

H O W T f i l N G S A P P E A R F R O M

^ P E G L E R ’S A N G L E, -nie people o f' the sU U of New lYork apparently are ccndenuw ' “ a period of bedevUmeiit by a _ ... su te board charged w ith the duty I of preventing dl»>! o r lp ) ln a t lo n In 'e m p lo y m en t on ;the g r o u n d ol ,race, creed, color or naUonal origin.

T h e RepubU- j a a s . Including Governor Oewey, seem to haVe de­cided th a t votes are more precloua than principle for they are engaged In a n unseemly

grab credit fo r a pernicious heresy against the ancient privUcge o f hu ­man beings to hate oollectlvel.-----selectively a n d .to choose their sociates. C arried to lU logical _ . tremlty, this law might be invoked some time to c o m ^ a CatboUo parish to hire ft rabbi fo r Its pastor should he be first u n de r thp wire with his application fo r th e Job in esse of a vacancy, o r a Jewish family to engage for th e duUes of buUer In th e ir home a n unrecon­structed ex-member o f the nazl' American bund with papers to prove that he came from H am burg or

'Munich. O r a producer o f a movie or play could be forced to h ire a colored girl fo r tho U tle role of ’Oentlemen Pre fe r Blondes."

AU sUch-proposals a n d measures. Including th e national device im ­provised for th e Industrial emer­gency ol tha w ar, are th o works of the communists and th e ir hind whose la ten t is not to open oppor­tunity to Negroes but to cause fric­tion and provoke disordera by creat­ing Intolorable personal situations. They flout solid facts o f life be­cause birds of a feather do and wUl

lUnuo to flock together. In busl* j . a t work a n d In th e ir social Ufe.

The United States/ lu c lf . as a n a ­tion, discriminates against all orien­tals on the ground of race, color and national origin. 6o do our good neighbors to th o south a n d our ally Russia, has sim ilar stou t aversions. In the city o f New York, many Jewish employers reveal a marked and undor&tandablo preference

complaint from other groups, who also seek compatibility In the same way. Hoosler cries to hoosler when a Job is open a n d brother to broth­er in thb bonds of the college fra ­ternities. We a ro divided Into groups

ur sympathies. reUglons. old____ latlons and naUonal originsI and such preference in h iring has I always been regarded as a r igh t and, by many, as a moral obligation.

I t will b» obsened a t a glance that thU is a hypocriUcal plan In its baslo pretense. I t pretends to sbhor discrimination because ot creed. Creed means belief. I be­lieve no American should be com­pelled to Join a union a s a condi­tion of employment. B u t In circum­stances which a re common and a l­most prevalent I could bo rejected

1 employer for th a t belief and nU-dlscrimlnatlon board would

rule tha t I t served me righ t.I note th a t dlsCTlmmatlon on the

ground of pollUcol affiliation is not mentioned. T h is may seem to bo a

.concession to th e sound prejudice lot Americans against communlsU but It Is more likely to work tho

I other way. In practical effect. It Is I moro likely to compel employers to ! favor registered Democrats lest they find themselves denied priorities or facilities for th e operation of their plants by th is o r that agency ol the

. -FoUtlelaos natunlly would dodge th e subject of poUUcsl qualifleatlon. Dewey cleauKf- out • the Democrats - vlthln a reasonabU time, a s p ^ t l -

u always do when one p a rty un- ts another, and Roosevelfa prin-

been a loyal party worker In ths campaign. That was rank dlscrlm. Inatloa against Jests Jones whose work In the Job Roosevelt wai forced to praise in kicking h im out. DlscrimlnaUon. on family grounds was flagrantly'apparent w hen hs appolnUd his son tem ar to a 110.- 000 Job In the Whits Bouse, soma years back, and his cousin to a |9,- 000 Job selecting curtains a n d bar- monlous furniture In ths embassies and ministries abroad. .

tolermice of, hla poUdes than for t._____ .. .of the tradlUonal qusllUes of mind

' and balance. Here was political dis­crimination again.

We should not forget, even In tha clamor and confujloi! of w ar, tha effect of a slmllsr prohibition against discrlmlnnUon under tho vlefous Wagner ac t By virtue o f this evil writ, agents of the labor rela- Uons board made it possible fo r ths----------------- - ------er of a nor-

rjpaper sUff

. . - ................................. agitaUonagainst the peace and efficiency of his colleagues. If he was fired, the reason then was ‘iinlon acUvlty" and the boss had to reinstate hlni, w ith occrued bsck pay. In one notoN lous case, a group of men w ho ap- piled for work and didn’t ge t I t be­cause no Jobs were open, were deem­ed to have been rejected because they were union men and awarded backp

t on employer as )b could drag t

___ ; pay for a purely orbltrary andhypothetical period of employment, although they had not been hired. T heir union cards thus became drafts on tho company’s bank sc> count. A dark sUn, a foreign ac-

• or a certUlcste of membership.......religious j « t could be used tosimilar effcct under the New York scheme.

The New York law would encour­age and protect Incompetence, losf- Ing and other mlabehsvlor o n the Job by any complainant who claim­ed he was fired for any of th e for­bidden reasons. And any applicant for work who was turned dow n on

unsuitable fo r tho........................... 'the executives ofthe firm through long, expenslw proceedings merely by proving that he was a colored man. a Baptist, Jew

lor native of Italy, Folsnd o r Bui. Igarlo; I t probably did not occur to the archltccls of this monstrosity th a t In some cases sppUcants for work have been rejected because the country o t their origin w as the United Etates ot America o r some particular scctlon of tho country.

The worst of It all is th a t Judg­ment of character and personality is denied the employer as a guide In . hiring. And. in the end. he Is not merely forbidden to reject a n ap- pUcant because of certain consid-

.eraUons but required to h ire him because of them. Far trom erasing such taboos this law would empha- size origin, creed, color and rac e and result in tho Hitlerian rule of quotss by which Jews in schools a n d ths professions were restricted In pro­portion to’their number In th e en­tire population which was abou t one to 400.

A N A L Y Z I N G C U R R E N T N E W S

F R O M N E W _ Y O R K

JUktH U aaa

—A (

PANTS •Dear Pots:

I'm worried! W ork or. fight! Bow can my m a n work without PAHTS7 I mean overalls. Well, be has worked fo r n igh onto 80 yean, so maybe h e c an p u t on those fancy duds and be a play boyl No p aals^ no vorkl

(SelT tred Farm { .W o , Mayb*»

FAMOUS LAST LINS ^ . . H ah , bvtterlets TBesday—

wt've h a d -bstterle*) WEEK a t bsmet

TO E aCNTLEAlAN IN ---------- X B BX m SO BO W ,

„ ....................

FOOD—Perhaps your m an of the house Is one o f those h earty eaters who throws down his newspaper and exclaims, "1 rea d here th a t the gov­ernment says there will be plenty of food In 1945. Then w hy c a n t you

serf’s something 1 e t t e r t h a n th a t r ' — and be points scornfully a t a n ice dish « t| stewed tripe. i

As a n aid to d o m e s t i c h a r­mony th e follow- i n e explanation of t h e current I dinner table crisis] Is presented by spokesmen of the big naUonal food

organizations In New' York:The country a s a whole will get as

much protein a n d as m any calories os in peacetimes. Statisticians base their estimates on what th o average consumer will receive. U nfortunately that rare bird la almost never found except In reports and estimates. Most people will continue to find shortages Is meats a n d canned

,goods for m any months.The former low Incomo

buying more beef and a g reater y a - riety of groceries than ever before. Distribution from producer to comer store is snarled by snow , floods,, desrth of fre ig h t cart, loss of m an­power and o ther handleai>s.

And when everything aeems to be going smoothly the Arm y Quarter- mssten walk In to the mairket and announce, “We've got »ome hungry doughboys oa o a r hands," and they strip the warehouse*.

CANNED—T h s A mericas In sa tute of food distribution reports that for the last seven weeks pur­chases o t canned goods h»ve so re- ■........................t»' stocks that Job­bers and rsta llars are lim iting aales in many places.

Chain stores have so t aa mucb onj hand as have th e Independents. But u most of the la tte r are B lvlnieus- tomers e rerythlng they ask for, trad* oracles predict tb a t local, gro­cers will run o u t ot supplies couple ot m onths. Then tbare ... bearea lfam ine unlU ibe newpaek* arrive next summer.

The iw g-range future f o r canned | ngslables appears lood; th is year's! ample amount o f moUtura in th e I wu should help a boo&teoui harvest.

, Orapetrult a n d orange juice In- IraitoriaialrMdy .arslo*: they « 1U

bo even more so. TTie worst shortage will bo In carmed fish. The got-em- m ent Is requlait''nlng 78 per cen t of the pack, which means that coosiui- ers will be cut at least 30 per cent.

The tightest market will be In sar* dines and mackerel: sardines are standard d iet for Uberated FUlpi- nos. Lste deliveries of the 1D44 sal­mon and tuna fith packs have eased the situation In thosa two Item s fbr the moment.

Two FinedSHOaHONB. March I -Jo s cp h A.

Potchad and Aaron Ultchell wore arrested by Marshall John Deakin and fined by Justice of the Pcace A. I. McMahon. Potchad was f ined t5 and costs; Mitchell, yM and ordered to leave Shoshone.

B O B H O P E

It Says Here—Japan's been making th s head­

lines again. They're really worried there now. Last week they h a d a thousand idane naval a ttack on Tokyo. UacArthur sewed up M anila,

.and to clim ax It lall the n e x t day- Ithey gave Blnatra a now physical Frankla sp en t aU d ay s lU K ic g , “Don’t lence m i In* from Gover­nor's Island. The morning be arriv­ed for his physical they gave h im a four.gun sa lu te— well, it w aan 't ex.

IsicUy a (our-gua salute — Crosby stood o u t s i d e

ig his bands logethsr. I t wu........ a big avenU Tbs d a y hew ant down they dtelartd I t a legal hoU dsy-all the girls under 18 low­ered thslr bobby socks to half mast.I w ant to say a word on F ranW el behalf. It’s not Us fault be w aan t In the army long ago. Ib re e tlm is ha started fo r hb draft board and he wou'd have made' U to o -b u t the girls k tpt whlsU ini'lt h im 'a n his way down and th t wind drift carried hUn oft hU eourse. The reason

: Frankie's esse has sttncted to much ' atteaUon Is because It's th a I trs t time to th f htotOT of ths a rm r tb a t anybo(^ ever mod* the usualtsr- list-.

i to te a ta w a ilB d w tM , : .

Page 5: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

n r a J w . J lm h J , 1 9 « T IM E S -N E W S , T W I N FALLS, ID A H O

F O U N D .. .Sm nU g lrb «h lt« rabW t lu r juuir Jaft ] In o u r itore eeverel w eeks kgo.

' t o g r e e n h i l l t o p s e c h o e s i t s

c l a r i o n c a l l w i t h i t i f r e s h l y r e ­

f u r b i s h e d r o o m s , w h e r e d u l l w i n t e r g i v e s w a y

t o S p r i n g ’s n e w v i g o r . S p r i n g C a l l i n g t o

n e w b l o s s o m s b r i n g s f o r t h c o o l r c o l o r , r e f r e s h ­

i n g t o l i v e w i t h , d e l i g h t f u l t o o w n . S p r i n g

C a l l i n g t o t h e f i r s t b u d d i n g t r e e s f i n d s a n '

a n s w e r i n s m o o t h s u r f a c e d w o o d s o f g l e a m i n g

g r a i n — i n f u r n i t u r e t o f o r m a f i t t i n g r e p l y

t o S p r i n g ’s c a l l t o y o u r h o m e .

i m m A H m . .W e m u f t k A s p y e o rR « d C ro 8« a t h b s l d af o r o 1o n 0/ I e n g t t n i t t

cniEm m '

6 i n'M f f ju e /

S p r in s t im e charm effectively combines

w ith p e r io d d ign ity In th is outstanding

bedroom srroup in select walniit or ma­

h ogany. A n d th e low price of these well

c o n s tru c te d picces 'inakes i t easily pos<

■ible fo r y o u to le t your bedrooms an­

s w e r th e c a ll o f S pring , too 1 Four beau­

t i f u l p iece s — bed, chest o f drawara,

T an ity a n d bench, a ll specially priced

f o r you n o w .

S pring tim e ch arm coals Bttle—brighten your h o m e w ith

sp ring filled davenports—lounges o r barrel cha irs o r cock­

ta il tab les ^vith rem ovable g lass topa or two d ra w e r coD>

modes m m ahogany com binations. Directly above i s a selecfc

liv ing room su ite exquisitely designed by Levin B ro th e rs .

They fea tu re beau tifu lly carved French frames. Thesei& re

on th e road and should a rriv e a t any time and a ll a r e m ost

a ttrac tiv e ly priced . W e cordially invite you to com e in and

browse a round th e sto re and see th e many, m a n y iteios

av&Uable to dress iip your hom e fo r th e a ev sea so n ahead.

F U R N I T U R E G OELKS BUILDING

‘W e W a n t N o M a n ’s M o n ^ W i t h o u t H i s G o o d W i l l ’TWIN F-

Page 6: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

P a g o S ix , T IM E S -N E W S . TW IN F A L L S . ro A H O T linnjaw ,M «rck 1. 1011.

0ISSOF aOWSMlR■when tverybody’a sot An (mbroldfr- o d aluminium tablecloth llk» the D u k a or Wlndftor . . ." M e ? Drunk? No »lre#: I'm Jiut t r y in g to teU you I rt join* lo be a woodtfful wodd. RIchKrd S. Zteynolds, iho Aluminum maker, Buaranlec* It. Ho went to the

1 t o t«U the im all builneu commltt«e K t h n t he /liured the gtpvemmenl bivo g h im the short end of II2 Aluminum f d e n i sore a t Jesse Jones and

h e thinks tho TVA U charging him to o much lor power, but ihil's not Im portant to »m. Or to Remolds.

: , H e torn the senators n o t .............a b o u t him. H e’U make pow er It TVA doesnt cut ths price, ■ m e O-year-old H«ynold», who combs hU ha ir over hU bsld ipot a n d who epeaka with the accents o l Tennejsce, readied under the ■other rtasona why he's not wony- lia b le and camo up with some o( thi o th e r rtajro why he’« not worry-

■*” pcUow husbands. I thbk hg has t h e answer to our problem. Ifo produced Ilrst a woman's dress, w oven of aluminum Uiresd and tin te d gold. I t shimmered under th o OYstal cnndel&bra and caused S e n . James E. Murray or Montana to nsk w hit made It such a tolor.

“ Hie n«u«U ahade 1s silver," re­p lie d neynolds. “ but ladles Uko gold b e t te r than allver and m) wo made It ffoJd. We can make It any color.

H era wo have & dress which .....a o t-s a f . I t won’t stretch. A cig­a re t te can t burn a hole In It and ir tho Little Woman spills gravy

hold It • -h o t water lap.

T h e beauty o f UiU dress Is that It I s n 't soing to

New Market OwnersJZHOME, March l-A i_____

m e n t Is made by Qali Huiton, who h a s been employed at Jerome Gafe- «ray atore the p ast two ytort. th».v m will assume co-parUienhlp vtth

R.- B. Lowe, In the meat market onnerly openited by Axmand Pars* Us. Paradis h u operated (h« mar* » t , which waa fonnerly known as J ie Baby Betf market, for the past 1 4 'years.

H uston and Lowe will take pc«« lesslon March 1.

L EG A L ADVERTISEMENTSSUBIM0N8

N THE DISTRICT CJOtfRT OP T H E ELEVENTH JUDICIAL DIB- TIUO T OP THE STATE OP ir»AHO. IN AND FOR TWIN FALLS OOtlNTY.M A 3INE HCPT. by her QDARD- I A N AD-LITEM FREDA 0 8 - B O nN , plalntUf.

RALPH HOTT. deJcndant. tH E BTATB O P IDAHO SENDS

OREBOTIOa TO THE ABOVE KAMED DEPENDANT.T o u ore hereby notUled that a

n a p lo ln t has been llled against you L th e District Court of the ElerenUi u d lc lal District of (ha 6Ute of daho . In and for Twin Foils County r th e named plalntur. Tou are e reby «Urect«d to'appear and plead >■ oald tcimplaJnt wlUito twenty' a y s of the service of this summons, o u are hereby further notified la t tiniest you do so appear and lead to said compUlnt within the

herein specified the pl&lntUf 111 . toko Judgment against you

Good Old Filipino Custom

Looks like a bad clrareUe ihorlage on l u u n when you see (he gali pDfflng away on huge, black cigars. In photo, Pfe. William O ra m of Indianapolis, gives a light lo one of the natlTO laondressei who keep Y anks looking apniee.

Jap Islanders TIu’ew Children From Cliffs, Navyman Asserts

n u i ’He has s(

rayed In said complaint. This . . o n U In&Ututed by plolntUf to ob- iln a decree annulling aAd cancel-^ th e manlAge of plaintiff and

W ITNESS my hand and the seal f . t h e District Court this the 14lh ay of Psbruary, 1815.

C. A. BULE8, Clerk.

. 0 . HALU: A tto n e y for Plaintiff,T w in Falls, Idaho.u b .; Feb. Ig -a . March 1-8-ls, WiJ.

NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY OlVEN: h a t la order to satisfy a Uen for o rk done and storage furnished on la foUowlnj personal property by a lach Motor Compan>-, Twin Palls. lAho, and will be sold to the highest d d e r for cash a t publle auction at a lseb Motor Company, 309 6ho> tone Street South, Twin Falls, Ida- J, a t 10;00 o tloek. A. M , on Wed- » day , March I«. 1915, the follow.

I L .___ I93S Studebiker CouAbearing 1M3 license No. 8R

S a id personal property will be soL u t l s f y • atomge and repair Hen $93.60, and accrued costs.

D ated : February 28,1BI5.BAlBon MOTOIl COMPANY

_ , By HARRY DAI60H, Owner >UbUsh lliursday, March 1, IHJ iS Tuesday, M arch 1}, 19UJ

NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lA T X Daniel Williams will, a t the x t regular meeting of tlie Idaho a te Board of Pardoos, to be held th e Statehouse, Boise, Ida., on the at-'Wednesday of April, lfl«, make pUcaUon' for a Pardon and/or 'munutaUon of Beatence from that ■tain. Judgment o f cor.vlctli urder, fm t dcsree, made M to the cou rt o f the n th Judl. I D istric t of th e State of Idaho •a n d for th* County of Twin Ila o o 'o r about U>4.-29.

, JJANIEli w nilA U B , Boise. I d a , Peb. 30. W i.

■ m i l l ! M u th 1, M S.

COLDS COUGHS P w e a i M O N i A

onmeoBtdltjens. - We.«ad ..«oa you

' - p -h r » D . ^ S ; i f o b n B o n i -

' • ’■ n s n . x

... the flncat ship, the grnnd* est skipper and tho Oroce of God, I made Itl" .

T h a t 's the w ay 80M l/o FrortcU L. T -ru c , Mur- taugh, sums up IG montlis of activo duty In the eouth Pacific. He con: Uirough without scratch.

B u t when he says th a t he has seen "Just about

• I'ievtTjFthtnj" t h ■ — goes to make ,

the hell o a l l c d war, he bin't rta tln s the

.... ................ everything from thofirst etrtke of American forcee on the Qllberts to the Invasion of L uw n. wllh a t^ h o o n throviTj In for good measure.

Jump (« Death E b has seed fanatical Jap Inhab­

itan ts of Paclflo Islands stand on cliffs, hurl their children Into the ocean below; puah their wives In a lter them, and finally leap to their own destruction. In tho face of con­quering American*. T h a t waa made public by the navy In press dis­patches and Time magaalne, but it's hard to believe im tll you hear It from one who saw It.

And he has secQ Jap soldiers, ‘p lay ln s dead," p ile up in a heap, sometimes u m any os nine a t a time, and as tho Americans ap­proached, be blown to bits. One of tho n in e w u luslgnod to pull the pin a n d explode th e grenade. In (he hope o f klUlng "American dertls" os w ell u themcelvoa.

I h e U. S. naval re.terve recently concluded a 30-day leave a t the home of his mother, Mrs. E . B. True, M urtaugh, and le ft fo r the west coast to. rtport. f o r duty.

Ho wears the ribbons of Ulo Amer­ican. Aaiatlo and Philippines cam­paigns; a silver s ta r , a l^ lfy ln g five major cngagementa, and four b ronu stars, representing four more, or nine altogether.

^Vhca it comes to chilling, thrUl- Ing experiences. I t 's a tossup to de­term ine which waa the m ost night­m arish, True admits,

Sulelde Attacks Tho suicide attacks of the fanat­

ical J a p s make w ar In the Pacific “paiUftular htU" on occi&lons.

Rescuing fellow navymen after a typhoon, wasn’t any picnic, either, bu t T ru e wasn't seared until the next morning. T h e typhoon etruck with such fuiy th a t the roll of the ship "Stood me up straight in my hunk." he declared. Several Magic Valley men died In tha t 1 phoon.

T tu e sold th a t I t Is difficult to comprehend the complnccncy of the people a t home. "They seem to think tho t th e war Is prnctlcally won, But the ne a re r we get to Uie Japs' home­land, (ho harder they fight," he declared.

'T h e Jtija are Just like nnta. Von th ink you're got th em exterminated one dny, and the next morning the islands are swarming with them again. The e a r th seems honey­

combed with thetr brown, wriggling bodies."

FIrtt Vote In NavyTYuB, now 31-. came of age in the

south Paclflo, nnd cast hU Ilrst voU by absentee ballot. Be was sworn Into the navy Dec. 7. 1M3, the Ilrst anniversary of the a ttack on Pearl Harbor. His recent trip home was the first he 'd ’ had since Bept. 7, 1DI3.

A graduate of Murtaugh high school, he waa a t^nd lng Albion Slate Nonnal schc .listed.

He's proud of the way his family la backing him up on the home front. His mother, who has been

dling the night shift, has resigned, and Is returning to 'th e True farm on March 3.

There are cow’s to be milked: crops to be planted, and the tenant needs addlUonal help. E. 8 . True, the navy man’s stepfather, does everything possible to aid In tlio home front war effort. This ranges - from black- smlthlng to helping harvest the benn crops of M urtaugh vicinity farmers.

A slitter. Lnurcl, continues In her teaching Job a t Glenns Pcrrj'. rath-

than seeking more remunerative ,._r work. She volunteered for the WAVES but was unable to pass the physical exnmlnatlon.

Another sister. Ina Mac. who is ittending Twin Falls hlgti school,

has been serving as a sub-rcllcf op­erator a t tho M urtaugh telephone exchange on week-ends.

•The way we look a t (his war Is th a t there's a Job tha t's got done, and we're In there

TRAINING SCHOOLthetraining school held In Twin Palli for the past two week* waa marked by the group vote for a contlnuallon of classes once each m onth during the public school term , the Her. H erm an C. Rice, dean of the whool, announced following the eloaing

The group also expressed their g reat appreciation and thanks to the host church, the F irs t Christian: tho press and the faculty members who have come from various tbwns to Instruct the six classes.

Ue Will Fonder . . telegram, in answer to the wire

sen t Oov. Charles Gossett last week regarding tho group opinion of the

should the blU come to his desk, much consideration would bo given tho matter.

T erm ing the entire reaulu ol the course as "tope." tho Rev. Mr. lUce announced th a t members of ths c lass.-'The Church and Social Ac- Uon.” would hold (heir f irs t monthly meeting a t 7:30 p. m. Monday a t the ChrlsUon church w ith the Rer. George G. Roseberry continuing as Instructor. In preparation for the coming classes, tho Rev. Hugh O am er waa elected chairm an of the counselling committee: Mrs. Howard Burkhart, secretory, and Mrs. A. 6. Martyn, Mrs. P . Sanders, Mrs. N. B, Nesb}'. the Rev. K enneth Hendricks and Dillard Requa as chairmen,

r u n Committeemen .E ach of the other classes which

m ust arrange reorganization for the

cooperating church to appoint mitteemen to work w ith the Mln> Isterlal association in 'p lann ing the monthly meetings and the two week session for I04S.

Rev. Mr. Rice slated th a t credits earned by th e students will bo com­plied and given the paaton for an­nouncement Sunday.

During the intermission, soloist, Virginia K erlln. former Twin Falls realdent, presented several oumoers.

N e p h e w o f L o c a l

P a i r F o u n d D e a dMr. and Mrs. E. M. Quest have re-

turned from Bolso where they at­tended tho funeral of their nephew, eeniuan G erard N. Smith.

Tne body of seam an Sm ith, who ad been mloslng from his bate car Berkeley. Calif, for six weeks,

..OA recently found In a remote sec­tion of Uie University of Callfonila campus by two students.

Leaving h is base to attend 0 sltnl concert a t .the campus, the sailor failed to return. His ha t, wal- sailor failed to return. His h a t wal­let, concert ticket and bus ticket were Inter found about 100 yards from where the body waa discovered.

OAKLEY

the quicker the better," True said. ■'Funny thing, though, a sailor has .nore concern for hU ship than him­self, when tho battle gets toughest."

S k i t I s F e a t u r e

F o r R o t a r y M e e tJEROME, March 1—Vera I. Ro-

malne. Instructor of auditorium studios, W ashington school, pre­sented 12 of her sixth grade stu- denta in a comcdy presentation, "Tlptoo Pete," from the school op­eretta, "Mulllgan'a Magic," before members and gucsta of Jeromo Ro­tary club Tuc.^day.

AVUred In cwtumes of dcltcUvcs. those who presented tho skit In­cluded Kenneth Shimmln, Stanford Rupert. George Bird. Gall Hansen, Jun ior McLean. Ronald Emberton. Ronald Uem ian. Howard I^ron, Bobby Andrui*. Keith Potter, Jackie and 'njmmy Wilson.

David Lewis, also a sixth grade pupil presented two readings, "Fish­erm an’s Luck," and "No Fun."

Charlotte Van Riper, high school student, played two piano selections., Among other gucsta were P\-t. Guy Hays, who suffered serious wounds In battle recently In Europe, and Is home to visit his famlb-; Kenneth Lnvens, A. H all and A. Oochran, guestfl of L. H. Van Riper.

William I. Spaeth nnd Parker Fillmore won tho attendance war stampa.

John A. C lark made a t r S a lt Luke City to sco his son. Donald Clark before he left for Uio service.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivan W. Holt.Mrs. Darwin Crane nnd baby

daughter have been dismissed ^om Oakley hospital.

Mrs. E. H. LaRose nnd two small .wns. Howard ond Robert, a re visi­tors a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Craner, parents of Mr*. La- Rose.

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Nelson and children. Ogden, are spending a f days a t the J . J . Simmons home.

Bernice HowcUs Is vUltlng his porentfl. Attorney and Mrs. B. P. Howelk, and his brothers, Byram and Stanford HoTi-ells and families. In Los Angeles.

A daughter wos bom Feb. 38 lo S/Sgt. and Mni. Sam Poulton a t the OaUcy hospital, blrs. Poulton Is the former Miss B etty Mltton.

W ord camo to Jim Anderson U ut hi* son, Delano Solomon Anderson, with an engineer regiment in Ejig- land, b In a hospital receiving treat- mcnt.

WilUom B. Robinson. V-13 aturisnl a t UISB, Pocatello, waa homo re-

K i l l e d i n A c c i d e n t

PFC. JO SEPH OKELBEBRY , , , Oakley vA O a a tatteo td a t

Camp U aa a . Calif., waa tUIed Feb. U n e a r Rlrerslde, CaUf., when a c a r driven by bla father- la-Uw, N orm an C. Kidd, for­merly of D ecio, eraahed into an «a track. M r . Kidd w u >bo klUed. the 23-year-old •oldler'i wife, M n. E ld a Kidd Okelberry, wai Krionaljr lajared. (Staff en- gravlng)

centiy. Ha la t b s son or M r. and Mrs. Loren J. Robinson J r . .

Doreae. 7 m on ths old daughter of Pfe. and M rs. Alvin Benard, Is n patient a t th e Oakley hospital suf­fering from bronchial pneumonia.

ARM 3/c P p ll Mills. San Diego, If home on a 7-day leave, visiting hli parents, M r. and M rs. Harvey

Aberdeen, c h ie f seaport In north­ern Scotland, has been Important since the IS th century.

LEnniNGlISTSyESESl

, 'Suggested booka for L enten read­ing ha re been,arranged In a threfl- aheU bo<rfc case a t the r ig h t o f the central circulating desk a t th s Twin Falla publlo library. Jessie Fraser. Ubrariao, announced Wedneaday.

New books on religion oa weU aa Inspirational texta w hich have t>rond popiilar with lib ra ry reatlerii dtiring former Lenten eeaaaons, arc numbered la (h# coUectlon.

Among the new volumes Is "The Church Looks Forward." a complla- Uon of seiBion* and addresses of th e late William Temple, archbishop of Canterbury.

'I t Is a guide to thought and ac­tion In the soluUon of th e mcmen- tou* problems faced by th e free­dom-loving nations. Tho archbishop, who was a commanding figure, no t only In England but in -world-wido ChrlsUanlty, made this perUaent comment In one of the addresses printed In the volumes

■To win tho war is no t enough . . . Lot us be sure Uiat o u r AlUcfl armies marching across Europe taka with them a Iinng faith in Cod our Father and theirs. U t u a be sure th a t our countiymen who fpllow in the occupotlons of trade and com­merce go In tbe spirit o f coopera- Uon rather than of rivalry. But for nil this Journeying toward a friend­lier and happier world we m ust have our "feet shod w ith th o prep- araUon of the Gospel of Peacet"

Another of the new books suUr oble for Lenten rcBdlng is "The Case for Christianity" by C . S. Lew­is, fellow of Mogdalen college, Ox­ford, who served as a sccond Ileu- U nant with the Somerset light in ­fantry during World w ar I .

Either ChrlsUanlty 1* a fable or i t is a matter of life and death , the author maintains, driving hom e the essential truth of universal faith.

The author believes “ th a t until right Is reeogsUed, religion has no meaning.'*

1 5 I n d u c t e d F r o m

M i n i d o k a C o u n t yRUPERT, M arch 1 — FourUcn

Minidoka county men and one transferee left Rupert by special bus for F t Douglas, to report for InducUoa and assignment in the armed forces.

Included In the group were John J . RoUhelser, Raymond T . Ham­m ond,.F red O. Abrams, Orrln O. Jenka, K enneth R. Ihom as , Don J. McCombs, n d o n Miller. Norman P. Mai, Arland H. WUkina, Wilbert J. Miller. Theodore Ketterllag, 'Mel­vin B. Stark, Calvin W. Knopp and O tto Moier, Minidoka county and Richard G raf, transferred from Salt Lake City.

Harold Roemer who waa to have reported w ith (ha group WM gli a 30 day deferment.

BOOKS AUDITED SHOSHONE. March 1 -T he

nual recorda of the Big Wood Canal company were audited by Fred Ring, accountant, Idaho Falli.

LEG A L ADVERTISEMENTSNOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT I, WlUiam M. M ount will, at the nex t regular meeting of the Idaho SU (« Board of Pardons, to be held a t the'S taU house, Boise, Ida, on (he first Wednesday of April, 1645. make application for a Pardon and /o r Commutation of Sentence from th a t certain Judgment of con*

STO K ERSIndustria l Modela Now Available a tABBOTT’S

133 Shoshone N. Phone M

LEGAL A D V E R T ISE M E N T Sviction of auauK w ith a deadly weapon, m a d e and en tered la the Court of t h e iK h Ju d ic ia l Distrlet of (lie S ta te o f Idaho In and for the County of Tui'la Palis on or about n-a4-'i4. '

Dated a t Boise, Ida.. S^b. 30. IPiA.■W m jA M MOUNT,

Applicant. PufaUsh: M aroh 1 ,8 , 16,33,1945.

NOTICE N O nC E l a HEREBY OIVEM

THAT I, O ordcn L ucas will, a t the next regular meeting o l the Idaho SUte Board o f Pardons, to be held a t the Statchouse. Boise. Ida., on the first W ednesday of A pril. IBiS, make appUcoUoa fo r a P a rd o n and/or Commutation of Sentence from tha t certain Judgm ent d l .coavlcUon of burglary, f i r s t degree,- m ad e and en­tered in th e C ourt of th e UU» Judi­cial D istrict o f Uie S ta te of Idaho in and for t h e County o f Tw in Falls -n or about 13-3.'43.

Dated a t BoUe. Ida.. 7 e b . 3 0 .194S.GORDON LUCAS.

Applicant, Publish: 'M arch 1 ,8 , i s , 23,1042.

fo r c o u g h s d u e i & m o r

really too th ing b a ca u t* Ihey’re reo lly

: dvetlielrtlirestalSmiouleM oUi- . : &g, comforting treatm eot thsl ; rtsehei tK« uay <f<Kin . For

eoo|h*,thros(lniUUon«orboar»e.X _____Tj___

S A S T J D A H O B R E W IN G C O , POCATELLO. ID A H O

' d-

N e w _ Cream Deodorant

'Sd/efy M / j

Stop PerspirationS . D on not itriuts tlin. Doe*

noc rot <iretset«( Dcn'i thiRt ■3 . PieTCQU undec.tfm o^lotj

Helps itop pmpifsuon u fdr.X Apu«,w&«.aotiKptic,Kaii. .

• In i Tiniihin* cmra.4.N 0 « iw ig w d ry ..aa be

uwd right tfter (tiiTinc,5 . Awstded ApfroTil Seil of

AmerieintnBjtuteofUaadfr. ing —hutnlni to fibnc.UM Arad itgnluir.

aS.*?W kn

^ ^ ^ a i iR iDTHt U l t m Hunia DmotAMT

iH H ^DOWNSTAIRS STORE

FOR CHILDREN

COTTON and RAYONSIN A YOUNG S P R IN G M OODL

Ju s t the dress for tem ping o r schooll Shell love the full fly-away sk ir t, Uie b r ig h t gay color and dashing styles

$ 3 . 9 8

, $ 2 - 9 8

YOUNG MISSES’ COATS

With An E a s t e r A irF itted Styles with back b u tto n trim m ing nnd tie belts In rich shades.Sisea ft-M ------------------- $ 9 . 9 0

BAYON BRUSHED

Sport type raj-on brushed Jaeketa. Lively young two'toned combination A a a a to r BChool and oUier occasions 9 »

AIXWOOL CREPE 8EURTS

Crisp W ith p ic a U F itted , lide-cloalng w aistband. Colors, rich and lusdou^ tha t speak of approaching Spring.}-I4 . $ 3 . 9 8

H a t a n d B a g S e t

Ite Match a n d Coniraall

9B<t ea.Crisp falUe whlsi>en of sp rin g I s a bumper calo t a n d pe rt disw * atring purse fo r young girls,

llie bag la small,< dainty, and ruffle edged, a n d the h a t slU prettily back of h e r curls.

Alio other c lerer atylea.

lOOMNG AHW..W m m u t t k M p y o u r R » d C ro s s a t h U s ld o f o r a l o n s r l o n g H m o

n * iKMtadtd . . . Ibt diKfurxid

G i v e L c m^ M o m

Page 7: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

Thursday, March 1 , 1B4B . T IM E S -N E W S . T W IN F A L L S /ID A H O P « g s S

IN POLL SWINGthB hi

MBl!

end quouT ^ year i i MJOO. s t u w ith th e tm oun t set iX nfiOO. tha d istric t trent o v e r ths top * t

■with h la general com- mlllee co-members, K en Curtis and

r WUllam sliKlebaker, a re l o c ^ g lo r anoUier '‘ove r the top* finish In «)rd time.

Those w h o wl»h m a y Jnall ehecka to the ir u rea loUcltorv, E u tn iu i stated, a n d h u Issued a Utt or dis- ttlct chatrm eQ.ead asststasts.

D latrict SoUeltert .fiyrinsa, Clartnco JageU, chatr-

oian, F tanlc Herzlnger and WUUomH. D lerlier: WUIowdale, P r a n k Chiuidlcr, chaltm an. and Harvey King; C edar Draw. J o h n C. Brlclcell; P^lnlew, Kudolph P e ten o a, chair­man. Em il Haha. Jo e Mrsz, Helen Prilucek, B m est U Peleram and John P . PrUucek: Lucerne, Mrs. norenec B ing , chairm an. Mr*. Lyle Wlnana a n d Mm. aeoiB o Smith; Deep Creek. Carl H arder, chairman, Doy)o Shrlver. M argaret LlvlnsstoQ. Waller Pem ber. Mrs. O ran Howard, John Von U ndom , M rs. Bay WllKln- Mn. 0 . W. anrm on. M m . L, fl. Tilley, John W. Bcagcr and Orville Hyde. Riverton, P a u l Hunt, chalnnan, andI., E. R oberts.

Northvlew. U. K . Ciurlngton. chairman, Leon M orris and -acr- tnide Blswell; Superior, RudoU Mar* tens, c h alnnan , H; J . Llennan and Martin L. HolUen; Simnysldc, Fos-. ter j . Borenson, chairm an. Ross Stoner; CasUeJord. M rs. Charles Shorthouse. chairman. Mrs. Ed Lo* gan. Mrs. S . E. K ing . Mrs. S. A. Brabb, M rs. Ous Kudlac. Mrs. George W achtric, M rs. Leo Peter­son. Mrs. Thomas D ailey, Mrs. Ed Monroe.. M rs. Frank Sample, Mrs. Johnny BUck. J. 'P . Houghtallng.

I Mrs. Pred B utkhaltcr. Mrs. W. U. Haught. M rs . Bert Conrad. M. W. Cook, Mrs. P re d R lngert, Mrs, Pfonlc Kinney, Mtb. M artin MUler, Mrs. Edvard C ox . Mn. Isaa c Todd, and Mrs. Riley HUl.

Sebeol DUtriet OuUldeBuhl schoo l district ouUlde Uie

city llmltfl will have the fallowing eollcltors:

McCoUum AddlUon, Mrs. D. 0. Brannon. MI^b. 0. V. Hobson, Mrs. Raymond H ire . Mrs. E . A. Owens, Mrs. Lettlo Drake; Section 3, John H. O oodhue; Section 3, Amanda Howard; Section 4, Billy Taylor: BeeUon 6. Jeanjie C. Harvey; Sec- Uon 6, Lloyd H»ys; Section 7, H. E. Wuebbenhorst; Beotlon 8, Elder Schaerer; SccUon 8, Ted Sand- meyer; Section 10, Sorea Jensen; Section 11, JaniM M cHenry; SeeUon IJ, Harry W . McCauley: SecUon 13, Elmer H annon ; Section 14. Gcorgle Orodeon: Section 15, Dudley Ru­therford; Section 18 and 17, I ta a WiUon: SecUon 18, P ra n k M. south- wlck: sec tion 19. Mrs. l* J. Schaub; SecUon 30. Mrs. R obert Max«Tll; Section 31, M rs. Harold Nelson; Sac- tlon 33, M rs. John D enordls; Sec­tion a«, M rs. P. M. Cagle; Section 25, Mr», L eland H udson and Mrs, Roy em lth : SecUona 36 and 37. Robert M . H ays; SecUons 2S and 39, B. W. Q off; Section 30. C. O. Smith­son; SeoUon 31, w m Hawkins; Sec- tlon 32, E noch W all; Section S3, John K rai; Section 34, Jam es P. 01- son: Section 3fi. Mrs. Henry Leh­man and K enne th Shrader.

B n h l a ty Leaders • Buhl includes: B . T . Albert­son, W alter Harm, L . P. Runyon, Claude K aelln , T. H . Norris. Leon­ard Almqulst. Jess Holmes, John Rhoads, J . E . Meyer, Everett Hu- iteod, O. E . Tepley, Charles Shsd ' duck, Mrs. T . 0 . Blankenship, Law­rence Q uigley. Mrs. C lin t Paux, Ed Manning. S . A, W ebber. 8heUcy Howard. G eorge Moore, Marlon Am­brose, W illiam Roberts, Augiat Aver- ett, Mrs. J a m e s Pence, Mrs. Harvey Oreshaber. E a r l Mills.

___Hotels , ^ d ,fcbvefe’d by J iiclt ________________nie Clinton. M rs. J. E. Dennis. Theo Splelman, M ias Jscklo Emlth ond Dr. C. L. W ainuTlght; and business houses by O lln Sm ith, Roy Palt, Pred H artln s and J. H . Shields.

A group o f girls fro m the Pep dub. with Imogene Love as their chairman, w ill prepare

Looking Things OverIV«ft J.R.CEAWFORD

I.teel deeply Indebted to my ad - fo r beer to bob te r our morale, then

1. B. Cr>irf.H

m litr from orer Jerom® way . . . holding the m lm t to Z could see m y Image, even If _ the mirror t o one of those crook, ed th in g s that make you all dis­torted, m the (Int place tlr . Heoru " s n a a re d * him- self In the eyes o( the voter far be­yond my p o o r power to add or detract, by hli fallore to see the dire distress of the Jobless and the fumers losing the

of a Wetlzne.. . . second plade, I voted for

Mr. Hoover In 1W8 because I didn't like the wet appcaruice of A1 Smith, tho Democratls candidate. Also, the first time I voted (or Presiden t, I voted lor Theodore Roosevelt, whom Z consider after Abraham Lincoln the greatest Republican. I heard him speak a t Silver City, N . M„ in 1913, and sow him greet several ot h is eld Rough lUdcr boys, as he singled them cut from th e crowd and called them by n a m e. I proud to shake the hand o f so great an American. He didn't g e t alo; too weU with the WaU s t r e e t ba dlts, elUier. I have never voted straight ticket but once In my life.

Not Always Christian I have read lo my ow n church

„agailne8 that the Soviet i s no t an­tagonistic to the churches o r Chris­tianity. Private enterprise is not nlwo}-s Christian In a rriv ing a t Its goals. In fact, when our lo c a l banks were calling In their loans In the time when the UXW b onks failed under Mr. Hoover, I was to ld I t was a t the InsUgatlon o( the b is bankers In the cast. Since I Iwt the la s t cent I had on earth In a ban k failure, and never received a p e n n y from the binl^. 1 have some fu n n y Ideas about big bankers. They c losed the door while I wts I n ^ e b onk , took my money, and nen r opened the next day. t owed (he bank, though and I had to pay up, because of a simple Utile device known a s a chat­tel mortgage. .Kow the b a n k gives me a sort of cluttel mortfiaBe when I make a depoelt, and I fee l better.

And 11 feeling sorry f o r poor folks and those in distress la a crime. I 'm guilty, end I do profess a cer­tain degree of Christianity. Z bellove It w u Christ who ssld, "Inasm uch as ye have done It unto th e least of these. My brethren, ye h a v e dons It unto Me."

Also. "11 b esilir for a camel to go through the eys of a needle than for a rich man lo e n te r tho kingdom of Heaven." Seem s that riches tend to liirden tlja h e a r t of a

■human l>cUig. You have probably noted that people are aU pretty friendly and neighborly In a newly setUedcountry.butas some g e t bet­te r elf they tend to draw aw ny from their neighbon. No. 1 d o n ’t know Mr, Jones, but I know th a t ‘ ' "Danders seem lo think w...........

ley than they do of people, and i t Is loti easier for a man w ho docs no t need money to borrow i t than It is for a man who does ne ed It,

And Just one more th in g .' I be­lieve I have (Men consistent In ad­vising the saving of as m uch of tho present •‘easy" money a a is pos­sible, for the nilny day th a t we hope will not come, yet f e a r will follow the present conflict.

Too Much Liquor SupjM rt I . have this criticism of t h e pres- i t administration, and a lw ays have

had—It has been too a rd e n t In Its support of the liquor IntcrcsLs. Here' Is another buslnias thot I d o some­times "smear," and you w ould be surprised to know how It tic s in with much of the other big business of our country. I t was said th a t the Mellon family wu among th e na­tion's largctt diiliileni o f liquor, -whllr A ndriw -^^U f'tK e-'ireitsuiy

• int. Many a ttr ibu ted tlie .......................... to enforce

LEGAL A D V ER TISEM EN TSN6TICE F O B rUBtlCATIO N

THE T IM E APPOINTED FOB PROVING ^VILL, ETC.

IN THE PROBATO CO tlRT O P THB CO U N Ty OP T W IN PALLS, STATE O P ZDAHO.

In the U & tter of the E sU te of Al­bert L. H arper, also known as A. L. Harper, Deceased.Purcuant t o an o rd e r of said

Court, m ade on the 3 Ist day of rebruoiy, 1945, notice is hereby given th a t Friday, th e 0th day of March, 1945, a t Ten o'clock A. M. of said day, a t the C o u rt Room of said Court, a t the Courthouse In the City of Tvrin Palls, County Twin Palis, Zdaho. h a s been ap­pointed as th o time e n d place for

m o v l^ on to hard liquor and the repeal of the prohltlon amendm ' w e have steadily advanced the uo f th e liquor interests, unUl w e __f a s t becoming a nation of Imbibers. E ven the teen aged boys and girls o re being recruited into th e army o f boose guzzlers. Now we have reached a new high In boose buying a n d our blU for liquor is one-third

>, worn

the prohibition laws of our land , to thU fact, I don’t know. I o n ly know w hat I read In the psperi.

However, starting with t h e pUa

national debt, age of over >54 for each mot a n and chUd, In 1944.

Worse Than WasteI t was five per cent of i

U onal Income and was twice the value of all milk produced In our land . We sometimes say th a t five p e r cent Is too high a rate of Inter­e s t for us to poy on our working cap ita l. Y et wo willingly waste that am oun t; yes, worse than waste It, fo r every drop is a detrim ent to the d rinker and his friends and as*o- e lates,, not to mention hla family. Booze means wasted time, wasted money, wasted manhood and worn' onhood, delinquent adults and Juvc' n ils , lowered morals.

A bill to tighten tho liquor con' t ro l in Idaho was killed by the su te senate and a bill Is before the leg­islatu re, m aking sale of liquor by th e drink legal, and providing for licensing the sellers. To m e It seems c learly a rerenuo measure, bu t If we were ever able to support our s ta te government without Uquor taxes. I t would seem thn t now Is the tim e. Much of our law enforcement e ffo rt Is now aimed a t liquor viola­tio n s and crime growing ou t of the

of liquor. I believe, as a ’state, . . . :ouId much bett h ighe r taxes than boore bills.

‘The effort of the drug Interests > shu t out the local men who

m ake the ir living by going about the countryside, selling drugs and no- Uoiu. U also a b it on the selfl&h side , and can hardly come "under tho ti t le of "free enterprise" th a t we h e a r so mucli about. In view of the f a c t th a t drug stores have Invaded BO many of the other fields not r ig h tly the ir own. I t seems th a t any legislator would h e iiu te to bring su c h legislation up for considera­tio n . I sincerely hope this bill will bo defeated, as well as the one tc legalize the sale of drinks by the d rin k . Let's hold tha t line. I f we tu r n the nation over to lawlessness a t home, victory abroad will avail lltU e to our naUonal happiness ond security.

JEROME, M a rc h 1--Sgt:. Manferd Drlesel and ’T/S Alfred I*, nobblns, (wo Jercme buddies, a re a lu r t of the famed 70l8t ta n k destroyer bat­talion, unit of th o fUlh a rm y which his repulsed t^ o .foe in a l l encoun­ters In the E uropean a rea .

’They were buddies before the war and somehow h a v e rem ained to­gether throughoO t the campaigns, though each h a s served In widely different fields o f action.

Both men, n o w 29. le f t Jerome Uareh 10 ,190 , trained a t F t . Knot. Ey., with the ta n k corps, a n d landed In Ireland to g e th er June IB, 1942. Later they w ere sen t to N orth Af­rica and are w ith th a ta n k destroyer unit Which recen tly set a n outstand-

4S0 day co m b at m ark . Neither..:sel nor hla p a l has been home

since leaving th e states f o r overseas duty.

The TOlst, considered b y Its s "tho best d a m n outfit” has been

attached a t one thna or ano ther to amiles of eight a llied notions, and to eight divisions o f the Amtrlcan army. •

EftecUve Peb. 28, 1945, the bat­talion has been overseas 33 months, and is still going on high In enemy

C h u r c h e s J o i n i n

P r a y e r D a y E v e n tCASTLEPORD, March I —Baptist.

Methodist and L. D; 8 . ehurehes held their Joint amiual world day of prayer a t the BsptUt church.

The program Included prelude Plaj-ed by Mrs. Orpha Peterson: duet. PhylUj Reese and L eora Ham­mond; blbls reading; g roup alngtng; vocal solo, Mrs. George BUck; re­sponsive reading: prayer, R oy Haley, Jr.: sextette, Betty McCoy, Mildred Bomes, Marie Barnes, Clols King, Maxine Bradshaw - a n d Bonnie Wheeler and responsive reading by Cloyd Berry.

■■ nt' prayer was offered for . . . . In the service of o u r cotmlry

with dosing by Mrs. S. A. Brabb and prayer for mlulonarles a n d church workers with response by tha Rev. Donald Campbell.

There was olso prayer l o r leodera throughout the world, withaponse by Mn. Martin M Uler; group elnging, ted by Frank W ells; prayer to r pardon and peace: vocal solo, Mrs. Mary Johnson accompanied by Mrs. Wllda Carlson: responsive reading, silent prayer and prayer by Marlon Hammond.

A pantomlina was presented by Jean Conrad. Benediction was pro­nounced by Rev. Mr. Campbell and Mrs. Or^ha Peterson played the posUude.

m u . pnE srrvr o p M iirr rA

Can Hold Hands at Movie Shows Again

. BELFAST. MMCb 1 «V -B o. mantle couples again may hold hands a t the movies In O lon^ a lltUs county Omaghaa market town.

A two-year-old ordlnanw un­der which unmarried couples v,-ere not allowed to alt t^ether has been lifted. Now girls no longer havo to s it on oris side ot tha theater luid the young men on th e oUier.

LEGAL AivERTISEMEMraSUMMONS

IN THE DIBTRIOT OOTJRT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL DIS- TRIC7T OP THB STATE OP IDAHO IN AND FOR TWIN PALia couw nr.

DELLA THRASH, Plaintiff,

ALLEN THRASH, Defendant. ■ The State o t Idaho sends greet­

ings to the above named defendant You ore hereby notified that a

complaint has been filed against you in the D istrict Court of the Elev­en th Judicial District ot tha State o t Idaho In and for Twin P^IIs County by the above named tjalntllf

L E G A L A D TER TI8 E U E N T 8and you are hereby directed to ajH pear a n d plead to said complaint, within twenty day® of the eervlce ot th is summons upon you. and you a re hereby further notified th a t im less you do so appear and ;dead to aaid complaint w ithin the time here in specified the plaintiff will taka . Judgment against yon as prayed In said oomplalst.

This acUon w aa insUtuted' by plaintiff to ebtaln a decree of dl- vone from defendant.

W itness by hand and the seal of said D istrict Court th is asth day of February, I9U.

O. A. BnU,ES,- • Clerk.

O. O. HaU,Attorney for plaintiff.Twin Falls , Idaho. -

Pub.-March 1. 8, 15,33. M. 1948NOTICE

j n C E IS HEHCB7 GIVE THAT Z.' Pedn B . Morales wm,.i

Now AvailableC O M M O N W E A L T H

B A T H T U B S

LEGALAt h e . Bert i-ngmaj*.. meattofVljaf! IdJdwBUte Board c n S a & i ; L beld ,a t,th e 6 (s ite h o u e .B (^ K I#

.-,.,W*dD«Iayi'.it)f;-Apf4-: -■ppUaUai { (c .a . Psm di^:

of, Sent*M «iftora th a t certain JadgmenB o f eot^ Tletlen of-,8nrglaij>,';ieeoiuJ’ ■*-— made and -n itered In .the .O the ll tb ' Jnillclal D istrict'

; i i s h ' : March 1.8, IS,

KIDNEYS MUSTREIl..., EXCESSACIDS

DECLOM r. and M ra C. H. W hitaker have

been In Salt Lake City vlslUng their daughter, Mrs. Don WUcox, who Is a paUent In th e LDS hospital fol­low ing a m ajor operation.

Mrs. Katherine Richardson has retu rned to h e r home in Oak B1T cnn . She had been v is i tin g ___a n d Mrs. 8. B. Richardson, and ot- tended memorial services for her l a te husband, Sgt. Josper J . Rich­ardson . . I

Mrs. Mabel Rlchens has returned f ro m Salt Lake City, where she a ttended the wedding of he r dough- t« r, MlM Louise Rlchens, and CapU C harles Tennant.

Mrs. M argaret Nielsen has been I n Ogden w ith her daughter. Miss M aurlne Pulsipher.

Mrs. Rex H. Jacobs left Wednes­d a y for Texas to visit a t the home o f h e r son, Capt. Ray Jacobs, and fam ily.

Mr. and Mrs. Woyne D. Lewis, son, Dicky, and daughter, Margaret, are In Boise vlsltUg with Rep. Hyrum 6 . Lewis and Miss Rachel Lewis.

M r. and Mrs. Darrell Darrlngton have returned from Salt Lake Cltv w here they visited Mr. and Mrs. Jo h n O. Dorrlngton.

M rs. Robert P. Ptsher has returned -from aaU-Lake-Clt.y.wbere.ahe»au-. ed a t. the home of her son, E lsll'B . P lshcr, and famllj'.

• 'r s . Ray Whipple, seriously 01.___ taken by ambulance to a SaltL ake City hosplUl early this weeli

Hoy Dros Is a surgery patien t a t th e Rupert hosp ital

Sgt. Driewl U th e son o t Mra. Myr­tle Whobrey. a n d has a broUicr in overseas service, Orville Drlesel, who Is presumably In France. His other brothers are E a r l Drlesel. Jerome, and Ernest D rlesel, Twin Palls ,

T/8 Alfred R obbins Is th e son ot Mr. and Mrs. S. S . Robblnn. He and Sergeant D rlesel, and hLi cousin, Don Drlesel, ond other Jerom e eerv- Icemen held a rendesvous during tlie campolgn In th e I ta l ia n sector.

In a reccnt le t te r to h is parents, Robbliu, now w ith the mcdical de- taciunent of th o bntlallon. writes

r hc 1* well, o-s does Drlesel, who his mother h e appreciated ciga­rettes she had s e n t him.

Among souvenirs sent hom e by her m. Mrs. Robbins' most recen t ones re pieces of I ta l ian o n d French )lns of small denom ination*, anap- lols and I ta l ian men’s rings, In-, :rlbcd With th e nama Rom a, sup-

In Rom e; a n d a hand'»led leather

SEA.MAN TRANSFERRED JEROME. M orch 1 -8 2 /c Rlch-

anl Lowe, son o t M r. and M rs. R. B. Lowe, has been transferred from Hawthorne, Nov.. to 8 a n Bruno, Calif., his p a re n ts were Informed this week.

proving the W ill ot sa id Albert L. Harper, deceaaed, and for hearing tha appUcatlon of A lbe rt Edward Harper fo r t h e luuanee to him of letter* testam entary when and where any person Interested may appear and contest th e same.

Dated F ebruary 2 lit . 1642,MART SALMON,..........................Clerk.

Publish: FVsb. a , M arch 1, 8 , 104J.

ATTEN TIONTRA PPERS!Ship o r B ring In Your

R aw F u rsn ig b e at Market Priees

E spec ia lly W an ted Now BTOSKBATB

Idaho Hide & Tallow Co.

P.O. Box m s I i f t a T$Omor IH M Ha East, % BovUi

of B a a t i ] p £ t a

Plumbing & HeatingIN S T A L L A T IO N S

. . . We S e ll a n d In s ta ll. . . Commonwealth B ath Tulis

Day and N ight H ot W ater H eatersT roable Free>-OU B om ln t

VmiULER STOKERSCommercial M odels N ow Available

RUDY FURNACESa n d B loaert

I

Stover a n d Zero WATER SOFTENERSOur y e a rs o f experience, o iir ac> quaintance hero i n Tw in F alls— qualifieB lu s to tio a f i r a t class job . . Call or d r o p in a n d see ub i o r ati estimate o n your w o rk o r equip- ment n eed s . I

SIAAMONSPlumbing & H eating Company285 Addison W ^ l . . " ; . Phone 2004J

.. ........... : ( In ,S m ith Roofln* Balldlnj)

Page 8: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

3 5 P a ^ ,E ig l jt T IM E ^ N E W S t TW IN P A L I S , ID A H O - ...Thursday. 1948

- OHIOAaO. j n , M M th 1 - BttMUl but tidy Him 6l |3,000, ;e« t*u , perlups.enought to MtUttlie lr :_____ __U iroujh Twitt —

• Y«klm», Waalw for C__________o tb o r reU U ru of Mr*. Sbel- ton . CM Weir. V ho would b i tba

n i l s b«cam« kDonb. here tod»7 ' when'W alter O. Ooz. probate ecnul*

DglBt. took c lu ree o l the m rc h irlth aeaa t cUiet o a wblcH to proceed.

iSr. Cox, who specializes In tn d n i fam ily trees and Aliasing relsUret to setU* catatcs, said, however, that I t la k n m s (hat Mrs. Shelton Urcd in Tw in Falls In 192Cr and 1631 and Y aktm a Jn i033, a lte r apparenUy

• -------- - h e r huibaad Inleb. '

K n o w H e r ?. Surrey arnon* Twin Fall* old- tlm ars failed Thursday to llnd th o whereabouts of Mri. 6ftdle SbeJton or her children. -If you Icnow t tc r f . or where Ihoy can be reaohed, contact the Tlmcs>Newa.

"Mrs. Shelton," Cox eald, “wai bom badle Weir, In 18C0 somewhere in Ohio, the daughter of Jane Block and M r. Weir, her husband, whoje f irst-jiam e is unlcnown.

“Sho married WUUam - Uenry Shelton, either m Ohto.or Nebraeka prio r to 1693, And from that, year un til 1017 the couple Uved. together to I*lncoln. The following year they

iwero HVlng apart, and continued to 'do £ o ,ln widely separated parts of

' the country.**niexe Is'good reason to believe

Mrs. Shelton was accompanied to Tw tn Falls and Yakima by children o r o th e r relatlvw.

CASTLEFORDMIm AugusU Klnyon arrived home

roccntly trom Loa Angeles, to vbU h e r mother, Mrs- Orace Klnyon,.and o th e r friends and relatives.

“□randpa" Senften Is seriously in I n St. VolenUne's hospital, Wen­dell.

M r. and Mrs. Bud Bemardl < th e parents of a daughter bora the Tw in Falla general hospital n._ te m lty home. Mrs. Bemardl It the form er Thelma Taylor.

W ord has been received that U eu t . W arren Ellison, Ueut. Paul Spradllng and SUl Lcaper enjoyed a retm lon recently In Honolulu, ih e

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTSANOTDEB SDMJIONB

m TH E DIBTWOT COURT OP T H E ELEVENTH JUDICIAL D18- H IO T OP THE STATE OP IDA- H O . m AND FO R TH E CODHTT O P T W IN F A L L a

ROBERT CHARLES BH08B. A MINOR. BY M. IRENE O'KANE, GUARDIAN.

PLAINTIFP,VS.

O. H . SHERMAN. IT AUVZ, «r If dead, the unknown heirs and the unknow n devisees of O. H. SHER­MAN. doccased; JANE D OE SHERMAN. wUe of O. H. SHER­M AN ' (whoee true name li u know n to plaintiff) if aUre; or .. d ead , the unknovn heirs and the unknown devisees of JANE DOE HHER1,WN, dceeased; FIRST NA­TIONAL BANK m SPOKANE, suecesaora In interest of the Fidel­ity N ational Bank of Spokane, a na tional Basking Corporation' T h e State of Idaho; TWIN FALLS OOt7NT7, a political aubdlrislon of th e sta te of Idaho; ALL UN- KNOWN OWNERS clahnlng any In terest In and to th a t certain real iStAtc situate h i Twin Falla Coun­ty. S tat* ot Idaho, described aa follows, to-wlt> SEU of BWH. 6 U of SEU of SecUon B. NU ot N W U . SWU o t MWU and NH ot SW U of SecUon e. au h i Twp. 14 Sou th . Range 17 East of BoUs M eridian,____ Defendants.T B B BTATE O F IDAHO again

lends greetings to the above named Defendants;

. You are hereby notified that _ eomplalnt has been filed agalnat you In th e District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District of tba State of Ida­ho. in and for Twin Palls County by the above named plaintiff, and you a n hereby directed to appear and plead to the sold complaint within tw enty-days of the service of this summ ons: and you are further

, tined th a t unless you so appearplead to said complaint w ith in __time herein apedfled. the j^alntUf

, will take Judgment against you aa prayed. In said complaint.

'n i a t aald aeUon is brought by the above named plaintiff against the above nam ed defendants to quiet tl- Ue to th e premises and real estate described in aald complahit and here inafter described and to deter-

. mine a ll and cvwy claim, estate or Interest therein of said defendants or an y o r either of them adverse to

' pla intiff, and to have the Utle of the plaintiff to aald rea l estate adiudg- td to b e th a t of owner In fee slm-

' pie, a n d to bar the said defendants and eac h of th a n from a s s e r t

■ 'a n y r ig h t, title, c la im .o r latereatvhatsoerer in and to said real estate or any po rt thereof.'advene to tald olainUff, and for liich other and fu rther reUef as may be proper and

. aqultabte. ‘Ihe aald real estate Is alt- '.- ,M te - to th e Oounty 61 Twin Fall*.

-^ ta tar o f Idaho, and described aa . :foUo«a. to -« lt: SEU of BWH. 6H

e C iS n i o f SeeUoo 8 .'ItH of NWU.. . fiWU o f NW% u d NU of SW% of

. Seotloo B, aU la Twp. M Sontt n a p w M E u t o t XSolw . WTTNKSS may band and seal of

■ ■ • ^ P h r t r ^ w u r t , Uil» 3Wh day of

V . , . v : * O .X S U H E 8

-vw 'w iiJjtobB oiaL '’- '" A tta rB ^ .'iB r lia h tu r . .

addrtti*■'VTwargM^-ldtCho..

1 .1. XI, 19

S a f l d r I n B t n j c t i n g

N a v y L a u n d e r e r sSpeclallaC F ln t Olasa W. B . Boe­

der, T w in Fallf, Is one of the in> itnietoTs 10 the navy laundry school a t M uboetia , D, O. T h e school -fur­nishes a n eight-week -course, tra in ­ing enlisted men fo r laundry duty aboard wixrahipi. T h e classes, num­bering 100 men, are so rotated th a t ons g rad tiates every two weeks. The graduates receive a rating of ship's aem cem an laundry, third class.

' SOLDIER V18ITB DECIX3. March 1—Pvt, Hownrd

Manning, so n oi Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Manning. 'Dnlty, la spending a short furlough in D edo wltH tils wife, Mrs. Fem Vosbcrg M anning. Private Manning h a s been stationed a t Camp M oxey, Tex., a n d will report March 8 to Fort Meade, Md„ re- Iscement depot, fo r rc'iuilgnment. Prior to entering service 18 months

ago, Prlvftte Manning wos a Twin m ils county school tcocher. He also owns a f a rm a t Deelo.

bofs a ttended high school together and a ll graduated w ith the aame clui,

8 1/c O aylard Thomas has been in the hospital a t Areata, Cnilf,, suffer­ing from a n infected foot. He is with the engineering detachm ent of the AAF.

Announcement has been received of the b ir th o f « »on to Mr. and Mra. Vincent NordUnj, a t Dolae.

Urs. BIU KInyon is in Boise visit­ing St th e home of h e r brother-in- law and sis ter . Mr. a n d Mra. Vincent NordUng, a n d family.

Twin Falla Jayeees, a t a regu la r monthly membenblp dinner-m eet­ing a t the Park hole] W ednesday night heard L. H. PattersOT, c h a ir ­man of their remalion acUvlties committee, outline a propoied p ro ­gram of sportt to be offered th# boys, girls, men ^ women of th is city Uils summef.

First tickets were sold a t the meeting for a fonner’a n ight b a a - C[Uet to be sponsored by the Jayeees a t the Park hotel on the n ig h ' " M arch 1«. Each Jaycee attendlx expectod to bring a farmer of sector as a guest.

Slnplol ta Speak

•. This feature of the meeting alone, the group ohsened, weuld servo to a ttrac t many iareitra from th is area. Members were asked to b ring farmer* in the 31-3S age bracket with the idea In mind tha t they la t­e r become Jayceea and thus fo rm a closer farm-towD unity on m utual problems.

J . HlU. reporting on recelpU from tlie piano concert given here T u es­day Dlght by Teala BellUU, said th a t the Youth center would reoUza some tlfiO as a result o( the recital. Ho suggested tha t the Jayceea sponsor an annual concert by Mr*. B e " - '

To Pnrehase Canvas In regard to the program outlined

by Patterson, the Jayceea voted to purchase canvaa ncceaary for con- atrueUon of an arena for boxhig a n d ' wrestling matchea.

Softball, badminton, a golf d riving range, track eveijts, baseball, touch football. baaketbaU, tumbling a n d handball will be Included in th e rec ­reation program that will be carried

i t chleny a t Hannon park. Discussing preTlGUJly-made p ro ­

posal th a t the city utUke Blue :.akes water to replace Ita p resen t lard canal »-ater, the Jayeees voted

In favor of appointment of a survey committee. The group wilt be in -

INCOME TAXA B C s

WHEN NOT t o USE

WITHHOLDING RECEIPT

A SPEED: If you want io • know your ta x ciulckly,

w ith o u t w olllng for Ihe col* le c to r 's nollee. (You figure It

. o u t on the th o r t form.)

B KIND OF INCOME; If you • raeelvad m ore than $100

f ro m dividend*. In iareti or w a g e s not subloet to with­h o ld in g , o r If you received a n y income from any tourea o th e r than w age*, d iv "a n d in le re il . {Then you MUST

use form 1040.).

C BUSINESS EXPENSES: If • you frave fan ta l ex-

p a n so s or loue* from lole or e x c h a n g e of p roperly lo de­d u c t In computing tolal In­c o m e . (These co n 'l be listed

o n wllhholdlnB receipt.)

■trueted to .prepare a full survey o( probable cost, w ater analysis and other factor* Involved in the Blue Lakes proposal,.

COLLAUIEIIBACHINLOZONDRl

OoL H erbert o .'tA U to b a ch , Twin Falls, now is serving w ith flr*t cwpa. United StAtea army. In the current Invasion o f Luion. oceardlng to ta -formaUon released X:------- ------military cenaor. S a a

O ther r :« a nthe two HoUandIa a n d Blak opteo- tlons which cut o ff n n entire Ja p ­anese a rm y and advanced Oen. Douglas MacArthiur's forces more than 1,000 mllea n e a re r the FhiUp- plaes.

The arm y’s first co rp s U n o w ___manded by Ma].-Oen. Innta P. Swift, formerly commanding general of the llrat cavalry division, who led the task force which w rested Los Negros and the other AdmbiUty lalands from the Japanese h u t *in1ng In a tirilllantly executed campaign. Ha served in th e PhlUppinea for three yeara as a lieutenant, as aide-de- camp to O eneral J o h n J . Pcrahing.

O ther Id ah o m en aerring under Oeneral Sw ift h iclude Ool. Charles 0 . W. AUnn. Boise; ZJeut.'R ichard P. Blovlaciek. Cottonwood; Tech. Sgt. Jo h n M. Wessellng. Nampa, and P v t W ayland R. W eiden, Council.

Colonel liOutcrbach last fa ll wl_ awarded th e sliver a to r for courage In action a t Blak is lan d in th e P a ­cific. H e le f t Idaho fo r Fort Lewis, Wash., in September. 1040, aa com­manding officer of th o I16th engin­eers regim ent, Idaho national guard, He has been in various combat ac­tions overseas. Ha is a former H an­sen rancher. Mrs. L auterbach lives a t the Belleville apartm ents.

= L irr t i s =D esludse Y o a r M otor , ve gas and oU ,time and money,

Ask about I t a t IB A L L E N G E R S I

-VELTEX" SERVICE I Shoshone E. a t g th Phone 019

S m a l l B o y s ’ S u i t sFor Boys

Age 4 to 12Hjes* sm all boy*' su its

are. tailo red Just Itke

‘■Dnds" a n d arc cute too.

Buy one for the lit t le fellow a n d , let him s tr u t

bis stuff. Tho two sty les are regu lar a n d tw o-

tone, colors blue, brow n

and ton.

$8.90

A Dobbs Breton is spring's *msrtest ipectator hat. Fine crown detail. , , beautiful

swing to the brim ■ .. nnuauat braid trim.In spring town and country colon, . ,

Dobbs-aized to your head.Ligfit co lo n tUg/itfy higher.

M AIN F L O O n READY-TD-W EAn DEPT.

$11.90BOY’S BALCONY,

Small Boys’

E A T O N C A P SM a d e of f in e s t auality Gaberdine, in s ix piece to p , i l in e d and trim m ed with layon cord. Colore o r ( t a n . Sizes B?4 .to

J p r ic e d a t

BnDsilrmgHigh P r i c e a t A u c t i o n

Teelerday's atoek tale at the T w inf tU s Uvestock CommlssloD com-------*t(f>ped.the market for a new. price on bulla," ,Tom Callen - - owner of th e ecmpsay, reported.

* ^ p price yesterday oa 'buB s.' a price th a t was a nev blgb In th ia area, was *13.10, a. hundredweight,' Callen said. . •

Callen reported that his com pany ’disposed of 'abdut MO bead of catUe.-.

Top B tw prlcea were »liM , w ith a load being sold for Paul Stralberg, Bvhl, for «1U0; ’

H eilen wets toedluia. to s tro n g

«rwa aM>Id fOT «10.7S to »13.7». .•Tteeder cows, o f which there was s m a ll nipnber. . brought anywhere

f ro m 'M to^<9J0.-“ CaUen said.'.

W i j f e o f B u r l e y ■

D o c t o r I r i j n r e dM arch 1 io s . O. O,

nose, a s a resu lt’-o f'* coUiilon In- volvtnar eais drivcn by C.'A.,Bauer. Burley hanker. and F rank Campbell. H upert; on tho H eybum bridge — ••

jrtib"w itr* 'rrttm >lM ftw > « p tu k , a sd wera e n ma^ B om a whan t t e accident cectirTed..‘X be-other oeeo» paiils were ahakea a n d b n i i ^ fag|

carwaa aleo dam age^

READ TD IE S-IIBW S WAHT AXMI.

After you’ve -Kore a Bportltleh fo r itveral successive seasons youH agree SporUelgh Classics arc a "must" lor every v,-ardrobel Sportlelghs look smart with ojiytlUng. . . any hour of the day...any p ln c c you say . . .a n d they haye an.atnazlnK ability to wear and wear and wear. •

A BO V E: The Covert Topper

R IG H T : The Fleck-Ch'ock Paddock

Cowboy Boots Boys’ JacketsANOTHER SHIPMENT

JUST RECEIVED

Those fine quality Acm* booU

w ith the extra (juality lea the r

upper*, flna grade leather soles.

BUlched In hannonlting blend

w ith lolay pattern.

A n Exceptional d»Q Q p T V alue a t .........

Leather Trim Zipper Closing

Boy"*- L ea the r T r i m Zipper

Jackat. A truly spoH jacket mad*

oriOO p e r cent wool fabric and

trlmme'd with cape leather. The

Jacket la dressy and fleece Used

for w w tn th . Oolorv brown or

tan. A SM > t« 18. priced a t

$ 7 9 0BOY’S BALCONY

" I f I t I s n ’t R i g h t , B r i n g I t B a c k

$24.75A LUSCIOtrS NEW ZEPHYR-SUEDE

<Luscioua n ew L ushia i s .S ^ rt>

leigh’a newest sp rin g tim e fabric

triumph. You’ll g lo ry in t h e feel of

its deep sucdc s u r f a c e ^ ^ delight*

ful, z e p h y r- lig h t com fort. P re .

aented 'in four, glorious shadesi

Hunter Pink, T u rquo ise , Lime, Navy.

LEFT: The E ton in

IiU iW a ,

$29.75

a l l SPORTLEIGHS ~ 1f t t t o n t h e - f a m o u s

ERL-GLO LININGSfe r : b n n t 7 » e o m fo r t « n d

to n ? w w ‘ .

s M p

Page 9: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

iTiimiaay, M irth 1,1945 T T B IE S rN E W S , T W IN FALLS, n > A H O

" ' P i o n e e r s R e c o t i n t

F o r m e r Y e a r s o n

5 7 t h A n n i v e r s a r yOne o f t h e eatly e e t tU r s o f

V. Kaasas, J a m e s I. H ollow ay, , route one. T w in FoUb, re ra l-

niBccd a t t h e fam ily p a r ty given in h o n o r of him and hlB wife on th e i r 57th w ed d in g •annivoraary held W ednesday

•: evening a t t h e home o f t h e i r non, Mr. a n d Mrs. E a r l UoUo-

■ way, K im berly.^ “We w ere in K ansas w h ile “ they w ere a ti l i huntinff b u f ­

falo. I knew th e inen w h o e s ­tablished W ichlte. I t i s fltill vivid in m y m ind th e n u m b e r of times ’w e were fo rced to evacuate o u r homo a n d go in­to the s tockade due to In d ia n raids," ho s ta ted .

UsUomgr tma born In Wella coun- t;, IncU Aug. 39, ieS8. aod bU wUe, UoUy E. crewsc wai bom near SindyrUle, Ift, Sept. 25, J87I). The couplt ma muxlei reb. 39. ISdS, In Uorton count?, Kan.

Ur. &nd Mrs. HoUovny moved to Tsin Falla county in 1913. Uvlng In FUtT. HoUlater la i H&ultos, before eetUlng ta Twin FaJla.' Tie pioneer couple had 11 chll drea &nd aUo rftlsed Uireo grand- ehlldrea to omturltj. There aro elgbt ot tbelr childrra etlU living. Tbou decenJied oro JcnnloButcher, Mrs. Vlrl«n DurfM and Mrs. Ua Tr&U.

Children llTlng Include E. B. Hollo­way, Vancouver. Wuli.: J. B. HoUo- vru, IL A. Holloway, ind O. Hol- lowty, tU oI Twin Falla; Mrs. Leat«r Blulc, Burley: E u ) HoUowaj'. Kim­berly; P. w . Holloway. Jerome nnd Mr*. Wilbur I^rlMn, Twin Palls.

OuMt4 attending the p a r t y Wedoeiday evening vere Mr. and Mri. J. It. Holloway, Mr. and Mrs. OtMS* KoUoway, Mi. and Mrs. VfU- bur Lorlicn. Mrs. Usyd Mnthewa,

i., ISii. Uejy Klncheloe, ell 'of Twin U Falls; Mr. and Mrs. licitcr Slack and

Mr. and Mrs. Irvla noUowoy. all ot Burley and Mr. and Mrg. Ftoyd Hoi' lavay, Jerome.

Bom Mr. and Mr», Holloway an. <U11 active. T&ey are membera ol Tnln i’Uls Church of Brethren, 'niey have 31 grandchildren and 2Q great grandchildren.

♦ # ♦

F a m i l y C o n c l a v e

H e l d i n J e r o m eJBIOME, March 1-The.home of

Mr. and Mra. F*. R. Mann, Jerome, waa the sceno of a family reunion of the Musaer family.

N A dinner WM «er«d In honor of Mr. and Mr*. O. S. Huaser, Upland, Catlf,; Harold MuiJo-, Ontario, CklU.; JackMuaser,Sci% Mrs. 2.D. Hobson and daughler, Ann. Poca­tello, and Mr. and Mrs.T. D. Walker, nier.

Mrs. r. B. Mann, daughter of the late J. D. Musscr, Filer pioneer, who HKCumbtd tvjo yeejrs ago la TJpland, OalU, «M raided lo Filer. They moved later to southem OalUomla tereelde. ■ •• •

One brother, N. H. Musser, alao of Ontario, wa« imablo to be present Set the reunion dinner, p, R. Mann M also a pioneer ruldenC of theFiler community. Both were lo------

' (chool teacher*.II Out^f-town relatirea left thla T veek ‘ior their homes after they

visited friends and other relatives in Filer and Twin Falla, v, >

¥ ; * *

,Have Dinner Party

no-hosl dinner party and cords. OuetU vere M r. and Mrs. R obert Adclph and family, Mr. and Mra. Bdwln Llerman. M r. and M rs. A rn­old Oler, Mr. a n d Mrs. M artin U e r- aan , Mr. and Mrs. Reuben U erm an.' Mr. aivd Mis. Axthut KostcT and their families. Prizes went to M n . Sdvln Uerman. Martin Llermim and Mr. and Mrs. Oler.

* ♦ *

• Brother HonoredSOUTHWEST o p BUHL, M arch X

—In honor of h e r brother, CecU Osrtln. BeatUe. M rs. Dudley R u th ­erford entertained a t dinner. Guests were Dorothy Rutherford. Louise Fappenfuss. Don Amos and th e hon-

) oree. who left fo r New Vbrk to en­ter the merchant marine.

¥ * #

Class Has Potluck.BUHL, M arch 1-Homa Build­

ers cUss of th e Ohrlatlan church met with Mr. and Mrs. John Payne for a pol-luck dinner. A social eve­ning wag held. M r. and Mrs. Pewel Chlsham end P lx le were guesta of the group.

B r i d e

Blrs. James H. Puro ti, for- inerly Jeanne Oritrio, Laa Tegas, Nev. H er htuband Is the m ef Mrs. Florence Pulley, nagmnao. (Staff cntnvlAg)

H a g e r m a n Y o u t h

W e ( J s i n N e v a d aHAOERMAN, March 1 — Sgt.

James H .P o rro tl, son cl Mrs. Plor- ence Pulley, Hagerman, and Jeanne arlff ln , Loe Vegas, Nov, were — rlcd Feb. 31.

In tho o lr corps. Sergeant Parrott is stationed a t Palm Bprlnp, Fla. Sergeant ParrolVs eltUr, Mrs. Virgil Norwood, also'resides In Kagerman. The couple plans to make their homo in Palm Springs.

♦ ♦ *

J e r o m e R e b e l c a h s

H o n o r P r e s i d e n tJEROME. March I — Assembly

president. M n. Oraee Babrd. Cald­well, paid an official visit to Jerome Byrlngo Rebekah lodge.

More than EO attended the dinner served In the Baptist church, and arranged In honor of Mrs, Baird, who la ter addressed the assembly In tho lodge room ■ She spoke on legulai lodge duUts and tm lce to the commulty.

Mrs. Cora Borden, Jerome lodge, offered graco precldlng dinner. Mrs. Elizabeth Nebon and Mrs. Alvirla Dougherty presented Mrs. Baird with a corsage a t the lodge meeting.

O. W. Dougherty and W. H. Claar, members of the lOOF, also present­ed Mrs. Baird With a bouquet.

Announcement was made that the district meeting would be held a t Shoshone, March 18. n iere will be an afternoon and evening meeUng, I t was announced. A delegation from Jerom e plans to attend from Rebekah and lOOF lodge.

¥ * *

W a r d P r a c t i c e s

F o r A n n u a l B a l lJEROME, March 1-PrsetlcIi.

for tho annual Gold and Orcen ball followed regular doss work of the sccond w ard M. I. A. a t their meet­ing.

Mrs. G ertrude Henderson led the alPglng. T he huflness meeting which preceded, was conducted by Chair­man Rosa Lee, Special Intereste groups conducted their regular class work, a fte r which the members prac­ticed the dances for Uio annual ball, which will be announced later.

Kid Party Held by Get-Together Club

Graham . Mia. Ted Comfort. Mrs. L. a . r iah e t and Mt». Roy Smith, entertained a t a Ud party a t the home of Mrs. Boy Smith. Mrs. Earl Samels and M n. Walt Moore were dressed as small boys. Mrs. Gra­ham received the prlie for the best attire and characterUatloa that of a Negro child.- Mra. Boy Smith, aa “teacher," awarded a prize to Mr*. Samels for receiving the best grades.

Refreshments were served by the hostesses. The next meeUng will be a covered dish limeheon a t the home of MrSj^Ma^ I^pper.

Hagemian GuestsHAOERMAN, March 1-Mr. u d

Mrs. Jess Roberts and Mr. aod Mrs. WlUlatn Hendrtckaon and daughter, Gwenlvere, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thompson and daughter, Frelda. were dinner guests a t tho home of Mr. and Mrs. James Thompson. Hagennan. 'James Thompson U a brother of P red Thompson.

Care of Your ChildrenBy ANGELO m o i

When a child becomes 111 h is p a r- ecu call the physician and p u t the patient In his honda tnuUuUy. They do sot tell th e doctor how to tr e a t the ch ill l l te y do not tell h im hla manner li too brusque, his tr e a t­ment all wrong. They stand by prayerfully while h a does hla worlc. H would be a good thing for teacher# and children, AND their fathers and mothen. If pa ren ts looked a t the teacher la the aam e way aa they

at the p h y s ld a a or the clergy­man, or the plum ber.

Teaohers a ra trained for the ir . work and they understand It. T hey ’ hare had experience with children

tha t give th u s a Jedln* for them , I tu y fee] a child 's feel hla needs, feel hl« rcsponsee, in & way that enables th em to attend him properly and rohUster io his needs accurately. Tb6 p v e p U h a n par* enta] fteUng tb e lr cUUien. T tiey too know his v a n t* . his ways, his refponut, but they cannot m inister so wall to him a s tb« teacher be­cause their emoUoos a n bilxed with their understanding and the ir ao> UOM. . , •' A teseher loo3cs a t a pn^A a s the

cbyslclao looks At m s patient, c s to ' b , with the f u m e a s of a prao-

professional m ind. Be la n o t te u M about the pupU t tillttre , h l i

' mladeedt, toA tii t blank apota. H a knew* how Is go a b o a t itiengttaea*! Ing h li wnknesaea. brlinlcg m « to UiD .b luk places a o d he doN a c t

"Miss K ate Is so stem with him. He la only a ehlJd. He can t be supposed to get his work done eo fast, nor so correctly yet. She made h im do h is work over three timea' unUl It was right. That's too hard on a child. She ought to be kinder.”

Bander? There's the rub. Is Ik U nd to le t a child suffer' because th e medicine Is bitter? No' would dream of refusing the u .— h is b itter dose If the doctor ordered I t but when It Is the teacherl duty to order one mother protests, feth- e r growls. G ranny sh n in her ahoul- deiB and *ays, “W hat else could yoa expect from a n old maid?"

Tlie teacher is a responsible pro- Sessional worker and should be re­spected as such. Her duty Is to see th a t a child develops normally In body and m ind and chancier and flho ahould be upheld by those whSse grea t Interest I t Is to see that the child has th e beat possible help.

Be careful abqat the selecUon of th e teachr bu t once having acept> ed tier, stand by her and help her ATtcr a ll aba Is helping your to grow up. A nd she knows how to do her work, knows ta r better you can knew.

A A U W S c h e d u l e s

F o r u m M e e t i n g* ^ u c a t lo n for World Ollitentnio/

•wtn be Om theme fo r the forua m eeting s la te d AprU 10, under spon­sorship p t American Association of University Women.

Pour e p ea k en will be present. P lan s fo r th e affair were made - th e executive board meeUng h i.. recenUy. T h e toplo to be discussed b y the speakers include “Education fo r Intem aU onal Security." "Inte- natlonal O rganisation for Educi tio n and cu ltu ral Developmeni. "Rebuilding the Education Program i n D evastated United. Nations" and "Reconstruction of Educational Pro* grains of t l i e Axis Countries."

The n e x t regular meeting of A A W. will b e Saturdoy, March ir

a t the ho m e of Mrs. K enneth K&l A luncheon will be held at-1 p. m.

S u n d a y P r o g r a m

S l a t e d b y G r o u pH ie R e lie f society will be m

charge of services a t 7:30 p. m. Sun­d a y In t h e first ward L. D. s church.

Mrs. E s th e r Bates will be in chorge. T h e theme of the program

'w ill be “H om e." Mrs. Flora Blsr- w ill direct the program. Mrs, H elen Johnson and Mrs. Ooldle Tol-

inn wUl bo speakers.Others o n the program Include

M ra. Connlo Hansen. Mrs. Betty Freeman. M rs. Bdna Tilley, Adrian Wooley a n d Mrs. Bertha MUUr. Musical selections will bo In charge o f Mrs. Z e ra Tonks.

Mrs. B om Vates will pm e n t the closing program . Mrw. Miller and M rs. z a u h -Wells w in .e lfer the In. vocnUon a n d benediction.

¥ * *

C a l e n d a rB . and T . club wlU meet a t the

hom e of M rs. Emma B urtt a t the Colotilsl apartm ents a t 1:30 p.

Board o f control of th e Twentieth Century c lub will meet a t the home o f the president, Mrs. Reese M. WU' Unms. a t 10 a . m- Friday.

¥ * ¥Members o f 'th e Plremen’s auxil'

la iy will m e e t a t 8 p. m . Friday a( th e home o f Mrs. Isaac Miller, 339 I,ol« street.

« V «Royal Neighbors of America will

m e et a t 8 p . m . Friday In the Odd Fellows ha ll. AU visiting neighbors a ro welcomc. March birthdays will bo eelebraled.

If. ¥ ¥T h e T. a n d M. club will meet

I p . m. luncheon Friday a t the of Mrs. E m m a Baisch, 271 Buchanan stree t. M embers will do Ited CrossU'OtlC.

¥ * ¥BIckel P . T . A. study group will

m e e t a t 3:30 p. m. Friday In the school auditorium. Margaret Me- C la in will b e guest speaker. Mrs. D ell Glenn will give a book report

“The T w ig Is Bent.”¥ * *

Addison GIub .Gives To Red Cross Work

Addison avenue club meraben do- no te d 15 to th e ^ d Cross a t Uielr meeting he ld Wednesday afternoon. T h e group m e t s t the home of Mrs. M elvin Saclcctt. The business meet* Ing was conducted by Mrs. Glenn S m ith In th e ntaence of club presi­d e n t. Mrs. A lb e rt Wagner, and Mr*. E a r l Walker, vice-president.

M rs. W. I . sackett was a guest o f th e club. K efreshments were ser­ved by the hostess assisted by Mrs. M elvin Sw itcher and Mrs. Ralph Kohntopp.

T h e group will meet again Wed­nesday, M arch 14. for the ir annual potluck luncheon a t the home of M r*. K ohntopp.

M a r i a n M a r t i n

P a t t e r n

. ^ B E R K L E Y —

JET PUMPSMoat e ta d w tf r o m 5 t o 390-lDOt UtU

ABBOTTSm ShesheiM K . P b e ss M

M a r r i e s

........... ...................!"S S!?e Kinyon;Casllefora. who becam e the bride of T/BcU Beaofard Johnson, sen ot Mr. a n d Mrs. A . 0. Johnscn. Buhl. (Coad ilad lo pboto-«taff engraring)

* * * *

J o l m s o n - K i n y o n

R i t e s S o l e m n i z e d

I n H o m e S e r v i c eOASTLEFORD. M urch 1—In a

candlelit home hackground. Au­gusta K inyon. daugh ter of Mrs. Grace K inyon. Costleford. and- - “ - - • of Mr,and Mrs. A- O. Johrison, BiUil, . . . married in a double ring service, The -wedding todt p la te a t 8 p. m. at the hom o of tho bride. The Rev, Muri M. Jones, C hristian church, officiated.

For h e r gown th e bride chose a white floor-IcDgth dre&a of silk

■ I te . Her fingertip veil

...0 wore a gold bracelet tho t be­longed to h e r great-grandmother for something old; a new dime in her slipper fo r something new and a borrowed b lue hankerchief.

Mrs. R oger a b w as m atron of honor. S h e wore a white floor- length Jersey dress a n d carried bouquet o f American beauty ro: and narclssiu .

The bride w u given In marriage by her brother, D enver Kinyon. Roger Erb w as best m an .

The bridegroom's m o th e r w c .. navy blue nitcm oon dress and tho biSde'# m o th e r was dressed In r Both had corcages o f gardenias.

Mrs. G eorge Blake sang a solo, accompanied by Mrs. Harvey Kin- yon. Mrs, K ltu'on a lso played back- ^ u n d m uslo for tho -wedding.

^FoUowlng the ccretaony a rccep- t(bn was he ld . A three-tiered wed­ding cake w as featured. Mra. Roger Erb was In charge of the guest book. T hose assisting w ith the re­ception w ere Mrs. G uy Kinyon, Mrs. D enver Kinyon, M rs. Bert Con­rad, Mrs. H . R. Semsten.

For h e r traveling o u tf i t the bride chose a g ra y blue s u it w ith brown accessories. Following th e reception the couple le ft for S a n ta Monica, Calif., w here the bridegroom will await reassignment.

The ] b r id e attended Oastleford schools, graduating tn 19<2. She a t­tended Albion State Normal for a year and McGill business collcgo in Los Angeles. For the po st year she h u been emplo^'ed a a a comptom­eter operator for the Richfield OU

impsny in lios Angeles.The bridegroom attended Duhl

schools. He entered th e service In March, 1942. He tra in ed a t Shep­pard field, T«s., a n d took aerial tralolog a t iJncoln. Neb. in July, IBU. Johnson left for overseas duty. Be has been In action the past 19 months. T h e war veteron was awarded th e a ir medal and an o ' leaf cluster.

Press Women Name New Board Member

Mis. O la lr. aolflainltb. New Ply- tnouth, 'was e ltc ttd as » th tid board member a t la rg e of th e Idaho Feder­ation of P re ss Woman's clubs,-ac-

Dg to M n . OUvo May Cook. G oldsmith was formerly a

member of th e NaUonal Press Wom- antt club.

Other m em bers of th e board are Uti. John E . Hayes a n d Mrs. Oook.

Q U IC K R E L I E F F R O Mtym ptam a o f O lstrsa Arising from

STOMACH ULCERS nnro EXCESS ACIDM m tK.I»erltwqC M tV <H K ,tIilB«

5dS I25;2l5ui2S ffiitoY S ir!5S

F a r e w e l l S o c i a l

H o n o r s P i o n e e r sMr. and Mrs. w . O. Morse w ere

hcnoted a t a lartwell p a rty a t t h e Berger sehool house Sunday, w hich T O ^ v e n by (o nelghbon a n d

Mr. and Mn. Morso h a v e been Idents of the Salmon tra c t for so years and recent^ purchasec’

mch near Filer, w here they lake their home. 'A gUt w u presented them by th e

anmunlty. PlnMhle and bingo. played during th e evening. Prises in pinochle were w on by M rs. Marguerite Lanting a n d W arren Stroud. Luncheon was served. M rs. Morse gave a reading XoUowliig th o lunch.

¥ ¥ *

J e r o m e C o u p l e s

G i v e P a r t y , S o c i a lJEROME, March 1—M r. and M rs.

John ParUnion. Jr.. a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. Bhermin Church were hoots a t a flTe-tsble pinochle U ii Parkinson residence ban Jerome.

Prltes were atvarded Mrs. N eil McKay and Mrs. A. W. H a r t G uests were Mr. and Mrs. H orry Morris, M r. and P»u5 Jertte, M r. and M rs. Nell McKay, Mr. and M rs. Paul C a l- len, Mr. and Mr*. R a lph StJ Mr. and Mn. F rank Mobley, and Mrs. A. W. H art, M r. and M rs. Malcolm Stuart.

RefceshrRenta were served.- ¥ ¥ ¥

M a t r o n s S c h e d u l e

F a s h i o n P r o g i - a m. Past Malitms club o t th e E as tero

'S tar will meet a t 8 p m . Friday a t the home of &lrs. J . R . Douglass, 3M Eighth avenue n o rth .

Ih e program will bo a 'T ashlon Parade." Mrs. E. J . London a n d Mrs. Horace Koltnes w ill be program

National Book Uses Times-News Photo

K picture ot Twin Pa lis C am p Fire girls, taken by Twin F a ils Timea-Nen’s suiff, which ran In th e Tlmes-News recently, w as repub- llshcd In a book called "CooperaUon Between the Parents Teachers Aa« soclatlQti and the Camp R re a i t ls ." The book ii publUhed b y the Jo in t committee of the NaUonnl Congress of Parents and Teachers and Cam p Fire Olrls.

The photo shows tho g irls working with P.TA. members canning v ic- toiy garden surplus for the ir school hot lunch program. Mrs. Alfred P u g - liano. one of the Twin Pa lls guard­ians. 1s also in the plctiire.

G i v e s R e c i t a l

D a n c i n g R e c i t a l

G i v e n a t A l b i o n

B y M r s . C h u i ' c hALBION. March 1-Mrs. Sidney

Church and her school of dancers of Burley were presented by the W om­an’s Athletic sssoeUlIon of Albion State Normal In an afternoon a s ­sembly program held Wednesday. The rtoital was held )n Bocock a u ­ditorium.

Mrs. Church, formerly B arbara Boden. was graduated from tho sla t* normal In 19U. she was a council member of Uie organlallon.

Her program Included solos a n d group numbers In ballet acrobatic, tap dance and songs by children o f all ago groupe.

Ilozell Sohm, Burley, studio a s ­sistant. aaslsted during the r e c l t^

Numbers Included Mrs. Church, baby class, baby buck dancers. R o - sell sohm, Sheny Paskett, B e tty Chttuvln. Intermtaiale group, L cicn Nichols. Jo Keith. Darleen P latts,

................................I Harris. R ial: and Toby, Dolores I

V o w s E x c h a n g e d

B y B e n s o n - S r n i t b

I n C h u r c h R i t e sW edding nuptia ls vxii\*A Sonthy.

M argaret Sm ith, daughter of Mr. and M rs. H erbert A. Smith,. IMl Fourth avenue east, and Lieut. <)g.) Carl E tn ll Benson, son of Mr. and Mrs. O arl O . Benson. IS8 Lincoln svenue.

The couple recited tows Sunday. Feb. ( , in th e wedding manor tn Los Angeles, l l i e Rev. JuUui Du Bose, B ap tist, church, officiated at the service.

For h e r wedding the bride chose a two-jrtece winter-white wool dress trlmme<l w ith matching chenille yam a n d sm all gold buttons. Her accessories included white doe-skln gloves a n d beg with black pumps and chartreuse hat. Two green or- ehlds, u e d -with th a rtw ise ribbon, composed h e r corsage.

Mrs. D ean Burge, formerly Msr* Dyn Brlzee, Twin Falls, was matron of honor. She wore a wins velvet dress w ith matching acceswries. Don R y an was best man. He was form er^ o t Twin Falls.

Relatives and friends witnessed the double rin g ceremotjy.

_ .. jBTvice a . . . . . . . .__ ________ th e Storllte room a tM elo^ lane. The couple spent ;eek In l/os Angeles.Those a ttend ing the wedding w i. .

Mrs. D on Ryan, Mrs. Marge Her­bert. form erly Marge Salbbury; Phyllis T hom eta and l« Is -aUbert, all form er residents of Twin Falls. Several o f M rs. Benton's classmates from C hildren 's hospital also a t­tended.

A g rad u a te of Twin Falls high sehool in 1035, Lieutenant Benson was g raduated as an architect De­cember. 1841. from the tmiversUy ot California, Berkeley. He enlisted in Uie novy September, 18*1, and took port of h is military training a t An­napolis. H e relum ed to the United States in December a fte r a year's overseas du ty .

Tho b ride was graduated from Twin F a lls h igh school In 1838 and was gradua ted from Onivenlty of Idaho so u th e rn branch tn 1941, She received nurses training a t the Chil­dren's h o sp ita l a t Denver. Colo,; the MUler h o sp ita l a t St. Paul, Minn.; Onlveralty of Minnesota, and Min­neapolis general hospital.

¥ ¥ ¥

Stakers HonoredAOEQUIA, M ard i 1—A reception

and d a nce w as given a t the LDS hall honoring Pfc. and M n . Don Stoker. F riends artd relatives were present, a n d th e ' '

• Club Plays Heai-tseODTHWEST OF BUHU M arch 1

—Friendly Dosen met with Mrs. J o ­seph Sucera. Hearts was the d iver­sion of the afternoon with prizes go­ing to Mrs. Bette Brown and H elen Baxter. GuesU were Mrs. Fred Bpl- ker and Grandma Palat. Lunch w as served. Next meeting will be w ith Mrs. Baxter, March I.

R e c i t a l O f f e r e d

B y M a r y D e a g l e sMaiy Je«n'.-x>eagle-presented's£.^

piano re c ita l, W ednssdar. nJghs earn her Oamp F ire honor. lo r t« o b f r- b ta m crafU m ssahlp in-muste..'

Miss Deagle is the pupU of-Mrs..-. rd lthL .F c»8 a n d ths p reseatatloa , was given a t h e r home, 937 Bheebon* , street north. M lae Deafll®: was .es- , slsted by L o rra ine Desglo> ' ' '

Utbeis.wera JJorralna Deagle and ’ Joaa Fisher. P u n c h w si eerved from • a Jaee covered tab le by J e s a Fisher and Lois soper. . ' '

The program included two doett-. arxl leven num bers, lea tu ttng two by Ohopln. ^ ^

P i o n e e r F e a t u r e d

A t D U P M e e t i n gMrs. M artha B . Tolman w u bon- /

ored guest a t th e Lo*Ea»-Bo-Osn ,.j monUily m eeting of D aughters cJ ' the UUh F loneers held recently, -

She told incidenU In h e r life a i . ' -jj early pioneer a n d aetUer In M or-^ . taugh terrltcry. now know n as the Twin Falla tr a c t.

Mrs. M; E. B . Smith also Wit _ guest a t the session. Three.wom en were accepted a s new members into- the camp. RefreshmenU w ere se rf , ed by the hostess. Mrs. Ifi-le Atkta»-": MO. . ■ • '

¥ ¥ ¥ Inductees HonoredBOOTHWEST O P BOHL, March 1 '

-Gerald Jen sen and D on Wilson, ; who have been Inducted- Into tbft army, entertained St & chicken fry - a t Ihe Jensen home. T h e JoUowlng friends were th c re t Misses Delva Curtis, Audrey Husted. Im a Jean ' Love, Janet Love, June T a te , B e tty ;; Cain, Marjorie G raham , Oaroltns ! I tn u n and K M n Htldel. BUI B K - : ner, BUI Webb, BUI M urphy, m d Taylor and V aun Boimgbroke. AUi.; declared the^oys^go«^ cook^

Name DrawnBUHL, M arch 1 -H . Y . H. chib •

met with Mra. Claude C nuner. Sew- , Ing was dona by the group. Ths nune of 6 I /o Benny Jones wss drawn for th o soldiers package awarded a t each meeting. The host-

served relreahments.

Childs Coldsv a sM nsUUtTy

Ttei-Testsd

Relief At Last ForYourCough

S w c rth esn d h e a l raw, tender, Jn - Oooed bronchial m u c o u s m em - branea. Tell y o u r druggist t o sen yotf a bottle of C r e o m u l/^ w ith th s m -d m ta n d ^ you m ust Uko th e w v l i

allays t h e e o u ^ - o r FOB « fto have your m oney .

s s i a M

F r o c k S h o p P r e s e n t s U i

In an array of b e a u tifu l spring: colors. . . .

See these coats t h a t a re fa sh io n -rig h t,

fashion bright fo r S p rin g ’4 5 1 B riU fant in

co lor.. . See the d ash in g boxies o r th e sm ooth

casuals. All sla ted fo r sprinff success, all

moderately priced a t —

This group o f lovely c o a ts is all fully lined, all wool and sh o w n in the newest s ty le trend. . . Som e with black v e lv e t trim m ed collars. Truly an ideal co a t fo r t h a t all- around spring w ea r.

Shown in the Newest Colors o f . . .

Melon, Gold . .Blue and Green

' Sizes 12 to 20 '

Shown in “The Frock ShopDOWNSTAIKS STORE

IDAHO DEPARTMENT S" I f I t I s n ' t R i g h t . B r i n g I t B a c k " ^ i : k

T

Page 10: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

T i m ’ N E j y S , T W IN , FA LLS,. IDAHO '^ar&dsK> March 1,1846

IMG-AWAITED CAGE SERIES OPEM ® TONIGHTThese Coaches Will Lead Teams Into Class B District Tournament Opening in Kimberly Today

G E N E COOPER B IL L P O W E R S HAROLD BROWN PA U L McCLOY

Acequia—th c y ’U be In Ih c ir f irs t . The tournament wil! nlso bo th e f i r s t <for J a c k M artin , H agerm an’s fino youn^ coach, whose photograph w as no t avaiJnblc fo r this edition. Jlowcvcr, lournamcnts will be nothing' neiv foe Coach

JEAN PARSONS

T h e annual d o ss B btmkclball to u rn a m e n t, opening a t 2 p . m . today in Kimberly’s epacloufl new Bym nasium , Is nn o ld story fo r Coaches Cooper, G lenns F e r r y ; Urown,P a u l; Rush, Hnzclton, and Maellndalc, llsiley , but not for M iss Parsons, Kim berly; Powers, S hoshone , and McCIoy, Powers, he having led s ev e ra l team s into class A touma-

DORYL M ARTINDALE

m en ls . T h e tournam ent will be new to on ly one o f the sch o o b en tered— Acequia. Never befo re in t h e h istory of t h a t schoo l has i t over won a cham pionship trophy , as it d id in t h e rccent sub-district event a t R u p e rt, a n d for th a t reason w ill be a sentim ental favorite o f m a n y basketball followerB. (S ta ff photo-engraving) ,

EXPERTS SEE CHANCE FOR ‘DARKHORSE’ IN TOURNEYB u t P i lo t s W i l l B e | ^^’'^ |U .S.-SpousoredR ifle Training

To Be Given by Local ShootersC h o ic e a t K im b e r lyT hey were off in the a n n u a l class B d is tr ic t basketball tour­

nam en t n t 2 p. m. today a n d ju s t w h ic h of tho eigh t teamsill breast the w ire a w in n e r in the fin a l game Sot-

lay nIgiVt is the big q u estio n t h a t will tlanglo before the idc^eds ^ spectators w ho-

j into Klmberly’j ' new gym nasium

____ „ .i this three days.The season’s record book

says th e winner should b e Coach ^ n e Ckioper’s speedy end close-checking G l e n n s F e rry Pilots, who have b een runners-up in the two p re ­vious tournaments, b u t m a n y o f tho experts were s tr in g ­in g along w ith darkhorses.

Tbesa foUowen oi tho case eaine point out that Coach’BUI Powera' Bhosbcme RcdsUoi ihoKcd th a t tbcy were eapabls o( dcCeallDS Glenns Ferry w d , of course, s iu a t

Bivf>n B chance.'Inied to the trouble th a t

» Actqulft I n -10 polnio I Paul I.

gave tho PiloU when they met about ei month ago.

Then others thought Co&eli E. J . S uB hl H aulton team, with P a t Bo h back, could slip In there.

Not % tew believed the two Stronlu, who stand «lx-alx and s lx - sOTca, j ^ l i t prove such a pualo for the ir opponmts that jc a a P w - eoa's Kimberly Bulldogs, who a rc p ly in g oa their home floor, could •Up up nod take the buntlns.

Toumamcnt-vlso nuotd Brown -was 8l?en a chance to Itad his Paul Panthers through to the chomplon- ahlp. Youthful Jaelc Martin's H aser- toan Pirates, the only class B team outside of aienns Ferr; to defeat Shoshone, were not out the running. In the cnUcs' opinion, vho pointed ou t th a t team's experience and abU- Ity from the free'throw line.

Coach Boryl Marttadalo’s Hnllcy WoWerlne# have flashtd champion­ship posslblUUcs a t times and have one of the finest plafen hereabouts to Scott Bowlden.

But so matter what team wins I t «U1 be a fine tournament—Sup t. i . D. Frtdley Of Kimberly, a toum a- jnent-managtns veteran, a lw

T o u r n e y F a c t s

KIMBERLY, M arch 1 — FacU en the a n a u a l class B district tonraa. inent w hich opened today In Kim­berly h l*b uhM l’a ipaclooi (Tmnaaltun.

M anager— Supt. J . B. Fridley. Xlmberljr*

Beferecs —Floyd Bowers. Castle- ford; M orrle B«th, Twin Falb,

O fficial sc Twin Foils.

O araei

■X — Joe Berenler,

M.i; Acequia n . Klmber-

Oam ea this erenlnx — Uallty n . Paul; U axeltan vi. Glenns Ferry-

FRIDAT GAMES No. 5— 10 a. m , loser ef No. 1 and

laser o f No. S.No. 0— 11 a. m., loser of No. X n .

loter o f No. 4.No. 7—2 p. m., winner sf No. 1

winner e f No. Z.No. ft—3 p. m., winner of No. i

winner o f No. *.No. 9— 7:M p. ro.. winner of No.

S and w inner of No. 0.No. 1 0 -a :3 0 p. m.. loser of No. 7,

and loser of No. 8.No. 11—SiJd p. m.. winner ef No.

7 and w inner of No. 8.SATUItDAY

No. 13— 10 a. w . winner of No. ifl and loser of No. 11.

No. 13— 11 a. to , winner of No. 9 and w inner of No. IL

No. 3 •winner o f No. 12 and No. 1$. '

Richfield Ring Team Winner

YTendeli.

uled fo r Ooodlng when they defeat­ed the Jerom e rlngmen, four bouts to th ree , la s t night. There also were two d raw s.

Results :Devries. llJ , Richfield, lost to

•WUdmftxi. 113.Bowersky, 120, drew wllh Barlow,

220, Jerom e.a B y rn e , 123, Richfield, drew with

Rubier.R, R y m f. 128, won over J . Trap-

pen, Jerom e.H elderm an, 12S, Richfield, lost to

Kober.Vaugh. U8, won over SonslcksQn.

Jerome.Bell. U 4 . Richfield, wrm ovei

wa.Rogers, HO, won over Humphrtes,

Jerome.CapiK. l i t , Richfield, lost

Bames.

c a s t l Cf o r d w in sOASTLEFORO, M arch 1—Coaclj

George BUclc's Castleford boxers Cook •three of th e ir seven bouta with Wen- deU he re .la st (light. T*-o others suited In draws.

H jb featxire wa* a second-round technical knockout scored by Virgin, 104 pounds. Castleford, o rer Bobdey, 104, WcndcU.

Other results:K lm broush, lia , OoAUeford. drew

with a u n n ln g , 104. daOjlblUon). ^Reese, 80, lost to Anderaoo, 89,

ay. 120, CaaUeford, lost toluitJuu. i20.

• W ^ S d ^ won o w R06M2T, ■ C a sU elb rd ." ^

tJTES M E E T BYD DENVER, March 1 tffM Jt*h-i In-

dlani go Cougar him tlnv tbIs.Teek- end a n d will decide w hether the Big Seven baakethiJI conference scalp will d a n e le fron the ir edlectlvs belt, A e lu h between U tah and Brig'_____ u n lv e w l^ of Provo, Utah, at

:6a ltX «ka w ai n o red u p to th is 8«t* un lk r n l d l t . and U the Utes take BYD t^ e ^ B m n crown is in the

5 1 F OI d a h o R a c in g B i l l , u p f o r V o te T o d a y , D e c la r e d C o n s t i t u t io n a l

B O ISE , M n rch 1 (/P)—The bill to legalize p a r i-m u tu a l b e tt in ? a t h o rse races nnd set up a s ta te r a c in g commission comes u p fo r fin a l action in the h o u se to d a y and A ttorney G eneral F ran ic Langley said y e s te rd a y th o b ill is constitu­tional.

The measure w h ich members have to n a c h the floor

of tho low er cham ber was Intrc^uccd several weeks a g o by the forestry and public lands committee, headed by Rep. Robert H . Mills, Boise.

I t was referred to the ways and means commlttco which now ' reported Jt out w ith a favorable . . commendation. W ays ond means Is headed by M ajority Leader Ed Gaff- ney, R., C learw ater.

Langley’s op in ion on the bill’s constitutionality w as asked by As- sb tnn t M ajority Leader Lloyd P. Barron. ' R., Cam as, a member of ways a n d means.

No Conflict The a ttorney general said the

meosuro conflicts nelUier with the constitutional b a n on lotteries the prohibition again st spccIaJ calls legL IntlDn.

"I am exprcsslns no opinion cenUng houM bUl 139 other than th a t U does no t violate any provi­sion of th o constltuU on of the state or Idaho,” Langley wrote. "In my opinion th o bill Is cowtltutlonal."

Only reports o f race track Inter­ests considering Idaho have come from Spokane w here newspapers said th a t a real esLato flrm’s opUon ■n land in K ootenai county, Ida.,

ear Spokane woa for the purpcoo r developing a track .

Unnoticed Rep. O. W. M onlux, B., Ada. chalr-

..lan of th e house printing commit­tee, has sa id the rac ing commission bill slipped th ro u g h his committee u n n o tlc ^ and w ould have tKen killed th e re h a d members been aware of It.

B cu J zeH u iUSCORES

Indianm 65, l il ln o b SS.C a n b iss S2, S y ra c n e 44.Wayne 34. D etro it Si.New Y ork UnlTcraily 85, Temple

Army U . M aryland Jl.Long Island 43. Ofclahama Calver-

sity S3.

Bruins Beat Bxu'ley for 1 Itli Win Against Big Seven Teams

If their reco rd ag a in st B ig Seven conference toams, their opponents in th e class A d is tr ic t tournam ent next week, is considered, th e Bruins h a v e a good chance to gain tho tour­ney title and en te r th e s ta tetournament.

When th ey defeated B ur­ley, 35-28, l a s t night, i t w as the 11th tim e in 14 gam es that the B ru in s tr iu m p h ed over B ig Seven opposition. They sw ept se r ie s w ith B u r­ley, Oakley, B uhl, F i le r an d Gooding and lost tw ice to Jerome and onco to R u p e rt .

Although they played w ithout Bob Woles, regular forward, w ho suf­fered on ankle Injury Tuesday and Is probably lost fo r the rem ainder of tlio jtajon, tho Bruins grabbed a 0-7 first quarter lead, were In f ro n t 10-0 a t the half and he ld a 25-20 advan-

iRc Qt the three quarter m ark . Stams made IS points fo r the

Bruins. 'Johnny D rlju, resen’c forw ard,

also euUered an artkle Injury during the gome and tnay bo out fo r the rest of this season's play.

’The game m arked the r e tu rn of Kllnk, star Burley center, to the lineup after being out with Injuries for more than n m onth. However, he played only a few minutes.

In a prellmlna}7 game. Coach K em it Perrins' Cubs defeated the Burley Junior varsity, « -3 7 . They led otter ti 8-D f ir s t quarter.

SNEAD FAVOBED JACKSONVILLE. Ha., M an

W>-6am Snead Is ranked a top favorite to win th e Jackson ­ville open golf tournament s ta r tin g today. Byron Nelson. Toledo. O.. still the leading money w inner of

circuit, loomed a s filam -mln’ I

0 -yard . par 72 B ren t-

bali coach a t Northwestern unlve'r- ilty. has signed a three-year, ptwt- rar contract us head ' eonch a n d gcn- :nil manager of th o Clilcago club In thB propMcd all-America ioo tbali conference.

RSAD TIMES-NEWS WANT AOS.

T h e re ’s o n ly o n e b en e r buy in Bonds. h O N D S l

G leom ore D istilleries L oalsv lU e. K e Q C u ^ f

VARsmr OAUE

T H E TIMES.NEWS

FARMS AL E

CALENDAR★

SALE DATESMARCHS

J . M. T ucker & Son A drertisem ent, March 2

Otear Elaas. AueUonetr

MARCHSC arl Wooley w d Loj’d Atwood

A dverliM m ent, March 2 nollenbeck * Holden. Aoelionttn

MARCH6Roy Andre

AdverUseineiit, March 4 J . Holleabeok. AncUniecr

' MARCHSN .G .R u ih

A dvcrUseinent, Miirch 6 Ok Iw Klaai, 'AMil«neer

MARCHS. , -J .F .'S y k o ra ' A d re r li« m e n t, March 6 W. J.'Halltnbeefc AwUcneer

MARCH 9D. A. McGuire

A dvertisem ent, tiarch 6 BoUenbcck A QoMen. AnetlgDeen

■■ #■ThursdayylMarch 8

■ N. G. Riith . A d rertisem eh t March 6

OK«r K la u . A«cL

A T T E im O N FARMERS

niTOcd forces nro to bo given an op­portunity to receive rifle matbanan. Bhlp tm in lne under a nation-wide program sponsored by the National R ifle association with the coopera­tio n of th e war department. Regna P rj'or, secretary of tho TwUi Palls R ifle and Pistol club, announced yesterday.

Official sanction of tlie scliool has been given by the National Rifle as­sociation. M rs. Piyor said. Prepara­tions already are under way for the opening classes by March D. The In-

be used by the lo c al club will fol­low closcly those recommended by the NRA for all sm all arms firing schools th roughout tho country.

Joe L. Roberts, president of the local club, h as received NItA approv­al as ch ief Instructor of tho Twin Palls school, Mrs. Pryor said. Five

Moore’s Repair shop, 244 Main a

SimplotsWill Facie Trotters

BURLEy, M arch 1 — T hs firs t game o f th o th ree-con test series — the H arlem Globe- Trotters v e rsu s tho S im plo t Produce—fo r w hich t h e cage fans of tho M agic V alley have long awaited, w ill be p la y e d a t the high school gym h e r e to - -i night with R iilon B udge, th e 1 Bobcats’ p o p u la r m e n to r, as tho referee a n d m fis te r of ceremonies.

Ths Jtartlng line-ups will probably ba as follows!Simplsts ■ Pos. H arlem ites ■F. M orrli______ F ________ SlooroB. PuUnMn _ _ F

ABdtnon

__J>rice- P r m l y

_ .G -..C om berU ndThat Is tlio greatest galaxy

slats that has ever appeared on ono floor In the history of Idaho. Bemle Price, who has been averasing bet­ter than 20 points per game on the Ifarlemlles’ p resen t tour; -Babe" Presily and ‘’D uke" Cumberland all have been eclectcd on all-Am erica teams at ono tim e or th o other, while Morris, Porlcinson, A lqulst and Anderson have received nll-AmerIca

Craner was o... of Idaho's best.

At Twin Falls F rld a rAfter tonight's, game th e two

teams will leave fo r Twin P a lls for tliB second gonio of their series ot tbe Brains gymnasium on Prlday— a contest Uint la expected to draw close to S.000 fans. Then o n Satur­day night. R upert will bo given nn opportunity to seo the th ir d i —a eonttst th a t m ay be a •' affair.

Both teams have fine p layers In reserve. The e im plots will a lso show Jack Phoenix, six-foot-nine center; CWe Mc-nis, F loyd’s b ro th er who also starred n t th e U niversity of Utah, and "Slclrmy" Pullmcr, former Brigham Young s ta r .

Other stars w ith the G lobe-Trot- ters ora Everett Mareell a n d Lor- enio Davis.

ACCEPTS OARDEN BID NEW YORK. March 1 WV-St.

John’s university. Brooklyn, today acceptcd a bid to play In tho na- tlonal Invitation basketball tourna­ment slartlng In Modlson Square garden, March 17-

IT WILL PAYT o P l a c e Y o u r O r d e r s .

T o H a v e U s

R E = R O O FY O U R B U I L D I N G S

RE-ROOFNOW-DURING MARCH

WMle Help is AvaUable W hile We Have Ample Stocks^

ADVANCE O R D E R S TA K EN

Complete Installed

Contract Jobs

This m on th we a r e o ffe ring special

large selection o f Tarioua types,

colors and g rsd ea o f roofing. S « os for fr« e e s tim a te of a finished

iob on y o u r ro o fin g .

WE OFFER TERMS IF DESIRED .

Page 11: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

M a rc h 1 , . . . . T I M S h N E W S ^ ' T O P a g a B I « T « a™ _ , . y

OESEFACWDIIIGESTIIira

Approximately three a s d three- v u r u n miuion pounds o t cbeddar u ^ w u BumurMlurod a t t t u W n no is p lan t o l the Jerom e Co- opfnUT# oream eiy company, ,ln leU, maktttg th « plant ttao largest uieew factory l a th# w est. I t waa anacwflced Thursdajr by Lyons SmlUi. p lan t a a a a se r.

Bmltb said t t i a t ol th e aniounl nunolKtured. appnolm fttely SO p e r

ct .it was packaced a n d a lte r H Inspcetlon and oeeeptonce by BOTemment Inspecton, wa# deslg. nftiM for o m y use or w as export- cd. i t e balance, alter regular in- *P«cUon, was eonslsned to domesUo eenwBiptlon channel*.

W alker Eeele«l*dAnnouncement wtu also made th a t

0. 0. Walker, nomseD, w as reelected to a tive-ycar te rm , aucceedlng him ­self u a director of the T w in Palls Cooperative DalrTinen's association, at Uu recent 30th annual meeting held St the h igh school In Tw in Pills. Following a mofnlng business session, the members w en t to the American t«g ton ball w here lunch n 'u urvcd by members o f the Twin Pallj Orange.

Mr. Walker presided a t th e meet­ing S3 chairm an and A. H . Jagels, Buhl, was secretatT.

Principal spcolccr a t th e meeting was Dr. A. O. Adnms, president of Uia Spokane Banie for CooperaUvca. who talked on “Cooperative Low.” Hlj talk was a discussion .of the tax I s n . relating to cooperatives and eonccmed particularly th e national statutes.

Iteporta Given

of the Jerome C o - ^ p la n t there; 8. C. .Ward, Tw in Palls, general, lleldmoa for the . company: Hoy D. Emltli, Jerome, general m anager of I the conecm, and I<yotis Sm ith. '

Also speaking wna Prof. A. J . Mor-

A m e r i c a l C h i e f

rls, associate .in charge of da iry manufftcluro a t Utah state Agricul­tural coUrgc a tL o jan . Hlj loplc w as. tlio production ot high quality millc' -n farms.

The general Jerome Co>op session will be held later a t Jerome w ith exact date to be announced.

LOOK O in ', UlTLEB TEHERAN. March I (/F>-Iran

(Persia) declared war on Japan to ­day and declared the state of be l­ligerency effective from yesterday.

W R A T H IS I D E SUFFER

W ASHmOTON, March 1 M VA red p o in t food program, termed 'th e stlffest since rationing began." goes into effec t Sunday. I t assigns high, er va lues to a wide range of cheap- er beef and poik cuts.

T he OPA, announch)g this today, tem pered the bad news somewhat with tw o and thre«*polnt-8-pound reductions for choice beef steaks and roasts. These, however, are scarce In m o st p a rts of the country.

T he eeneral tightening up n ................................Chester 2

said, from "heaTy military . . ments and th e fact tha t hog ketlngs are running below mates."

W hile point values for all lamb and m ost veal rtinaln unchanged alooff w ith the current 3<*polnt ra ­tion coot of butter, these boosts, for example, hayo been ordered:' Ham burger and bacon go from

four to six points (i pound. 5o does beef chuck, up from three points. Short ribs go from one to three points, boneless brisket from two to four, and flank m eat from three to five.

Among pork cuts, end chops arc boosted one point to six a pound. Boneless hams, whole or half, go

I f I t s

S E R V I C EY o u W a n t . • •

r — P H O N E — ,

8 - 0 - 9 111

Ouco again we ar« able to say th a t cow w e Jfavo a complete s ta f f of experienced and well tra in ed service meD. F o r prompt arid effecient service ju s t call 809.

1' f1

1 ( i W E S E R V I C E A L L M A K E S O F : . 1■ • WABHINQ MACHINES • WATER HEATERS | '

• STOKERS • OIL nURNEDS

SEE U S FO E 1 ' BeaUnr — Flamtitnjc — Sheet Metal Wotk : ]

Hetae.Instilallen — Water Seftencn 1 I

DETWEILER'S !Phone 809

........ t

................. ,1 to eriba from t h r e e ......................backs, hocks and Jowb to two points from one o r tcro. lo in rossts go from six to seven points.

M any sausage products now ra- tJon«free. wUl cost points again, as will a num ber o t liver items such

braunschwelger and liver loaf. Many canned meats, such as coned beef h a sh and deviled ham, cither

3me o ff the point-free list or get to o s t in ration value.In th o few exceptions to the gen- ral beef hike, porterhouse and T - jne steaks, for instance, will cost

.Jne iru tcad of 13 points a peund. Round steak is reduccd to let points from 13. while a round tip beef roost will have a value of nine points ra the r than II. A boneless

A l a s k a M d , S a y s

F o r m e r R e s i d e n tMr*, j . M . Maxwell and daughter,

,Ja n a Maxwell, former Twin Palls 'residents, arrived Wednesday from Anchorsge, Alaska, for a s to ' “nlt« stay a t the home o t M r .___U n . ir. R . G rant. M n . Maxwell is a 'alster of M rs. Grant.

They have spent the last seven years at Anchorage. Mr»..MaxweU Is th e widow ot J. M. Maxwell, p i­oneer Twin PWls banker.

Refuting the idea th a t AUskn Is "tho froien north" In a ll loeallUes, Miss Maxwell ‘n iu n d a y said tha t the winter h a d been unusually mild this year, a n d only twice had the thermometer registered below n

The ocean voyage home was _ eventful a n d without excitement, aha said. A s for w artime lusards, civilians In Anchorage feel relaUve- ly safe a t aU time*, Mias Maxwell commented._______________

RED CROSS FUi< rn ii Fix* Cat)

of the county, headed by Ben OHarrow, th e rural districts.

A n oKlco was se t up Thursday momlog in the lobby of the Idaho Power company building, wljere con. tribuUons Will be received. Lions club members w ere Instructed to check I th e ir eontributloRS «C th a t plsce.

Mrs. W illiam Middleton is I charge. T h is Is the th ird year s t has served the Twin PalU Re_ Cross chapter ln this capacity. She will also receive contributions from persons w ishing to make Red Cross

downtown.

retail stores and wholesalers' cool-

B arring an unexpected change In

E n t e r N e w F i e l dBURLEy. March 1 — Robert H.

Sinklcy, managing editor of the flerald-BulIetln. wUl move to Eden

uture, ofb

, S. came to Burley In June.

IMl. nnd bought out lUlcy Emmons' ■ Of lnfftre.it In Lie Burley Herald,

ilch h e owned with W.' A. Shear it November, when they sold

He ho.^ purchased Jack's Drive In,

heir new home.D istric t governor of the Lion's

lub, H lnkley was a cliarter n

Clayton Dorrah, formerly r... .. glng editor of tho Idaho Dally i Itatesman and now with the Lewis- on Tribune, will succeed Mr. Hink- :y as m anaging editor of the Durley

Battlefield epidemics, common to

FALK’S Selling: Agents BV)r,.. ■ T w i r i J ^ Phone 1640

Cdw oid'Cooper, treasurer ot the Tw in Palls Red Cross chapter, will have charge of the w ar fund money and keep ttie public Informed of the amount coUccted. '

Team s Annoaneed Captains and team members for

the resldenUal secUon, conducUng, the house-to-houso canvass under] the direction of the Amerlcao Legion auxlllajy, w ith Mrs. H. A. Balljbury os clialrm an, are:

Mrs, P earl McKean, captain. _ slsted by M is. Don Murphy, Mrs. E verett Rice. Mrs. RusseU Harbiess. Mrs. Cedi Jones, Mrs. Emma Dslsch, Mrs. M. O. McVey, Mrs. O. J . Bothne, M rs. 0 . P. W urster, Mrs. O. A. Buf­fington. M rs. Jim Busby, Mrs. H. C. Q cttert. M rs. L. W. Vorhecs. Mrs. A. Ringwood, Mrs. L. M. Winters, i E dna Graham .

, M rs. W. F . Salmon, captain, _ ,I slsted by M rs. C. O. JelUson, Mrs. I a . W . Bice. Mrs. Vaughn Price. M rs.' Noel Bailey, Mrs. L. L. Brecken- rldgc. Mrs. Holmes Lashi Mrs. H. J. Wise, Mrs. L*e Logan. MerU Sal­m on. Ida BiUlar.

M rs. E. H . Oyer, captain, assisted by Mrs. A. L . Russell, Mrs. A, L. Richardson: Mrs. Rosa HlgginlMth- am, captain, assisted by Mrs. James Sorseant.

M rs. Alta Dickey, captain, assist­ed by Mrs. J . L. Hobson, Mrs. Elmer Ross. Mrs. H . E. Ryan. Mrs. John F la tt , Mrs. Michael Throckfliorton, Mrs. Carl O llb, Mrs. Jim Howard. M rs. Bob Bcpt, Mrs. C arl Ritchey, M rs. H. A. Sm ith, Mrs. H. A. Sails- bury. ■

Mere Teams M rs. R. M . Anthls. cspUtn. assist­

ed by Mrs. Harley Pox, Mrs. Verna Scofield, M rs. A. L. Richardson. M rs. Roy Butterfield. Mrs. Kennon Whitesides. Mrs. Vera Munson, Mrs. A rlon Bastian, -Mrs. Vic Ooerlzen, M rs. Al Nyc, Mrs. Betty McLean, M rs. Sterling Martin. Mrs. Claude Chaney, M rs. Fred Spencer, &trs. R obert atevcns, Mrs. Ralph ElUott, Mrs. Robert March. Mrs. LUlle Con- dle, Mrs. Jam es Benham and Mrs. ~ Punke.

Charles Sleber, captain ol th e Jay .C -ette group, assisted by M rs. Joe Covey, Mrs. Dick Dlmond, Mrs. B. Saulcy, Mrs. William SUmp. ■■ . James Harmon. Mrs. Bob War-

r , .M n .. Clifton Slnunons. Mrs. Icy Beer, Mrs. Ross Benton, Mrs.

. G . WaLstra. Mrs. O. W. Hose, Mrs. Lyons Sm ith. Mrs. Clyde Carl-, son, Mrs. A . O. Carter, Mrs. Johni G entry, Ml-s. George Scholer, Mrs., J . O . Carson, Merls Nowlon and Jessie Praser.

M rs. Helen McKlsslek, captain, as- slsted by M rs. Verne Melton. Mrs. R. L . BUe, M rs. Henry Dorcyi Mrs. W. T . Seal, csptaln, assisted by H elen Busse.

M rs. H. U Almworth. capUln. s lsted by M rs. Bert H arris, Mrs. P. D. McCreary. Mrs. Q. M. Ferguson. Mrs. Arlle W hite, Mrs. H . Melvin S m ith , Mrs. P . E. Hanes. Mrs. C. A. McMosUr. M rs. WUlUm Orlppen, M rs. Q. T hatcher, Mrs. Harold Fel- lon.

S tm More M rs. R alph £■ Smith, captain, as-;

slsted by M rs. J. P. Orr, Mrs. H. O.; Lautcrbach, Mrs. G ertrude John­son, Mrs. M . P . Kenworthy. Mrs. M. c . Dahlln. Mrs. Howard Larsen, Mis . Chris Sims, Mrs. Neal Haiard. M n . Paul Moseley, Mrs. Karmoli W olfe, Mre. William BwUher, Mrs. A ustin W allace, Mrs. HelUe Griggs, Mrs. P . a CorgUl, Mrs. P . C. Daw­son.

M rs. W. L , Hsy«'ard. captain, as- s te d by M rs. T. 0 . Bacon, Mrs. Or-

. J Puller. M rs. Duncan Munn, Mrs, O. a . McRiU. Mrs. WUUam Baker, M rs. Leonard Avant, Mrs. John Yaplo, Mrs. Sturgeon McCoy, Mrs.

ill. O . Evans, Mrs. Solon Lewis, Mrs. 'B . V , Ellsworth, Mrs. C. M. Smith.

M rs. Christina Peterson, captahi.

34REGISTRANIS SHIFTED INI01-A

T hirty-four registrants of - the Twin Palls county d ra f t board Ko. 1 were reclassified .1 -A following a meeting of board members here Wednesday night.

Of tha t number 37 were moved up from a .p rev leu j classUicatlon.of 3*

IS B . Parker, Ralph 0 . Ulahn, Lester J . ih o m to n . Bernard J. Punke, I^ewis D. H eaps, Benjamin E. Leno, H arry L. B eer. Howard W. RusseU, D onald K. B ell, Jess L. B art- lett, H obert L. Pragmon, Dlok A. Miller, Benjamin J . I>awson. Melvin, D. AUrcd, K enneth E . Hungerfordj. James O. W aite, L aV em W. Routh, Myron P. Proges, Elvcrett J . WUeox, Arthur E . Day, B e ll R. Munger, Donald K. Johnson. Oliver R. Lov- 1ns, E vere tt Turley, Robert B. Shults, R a lph E. H arris and Melvin A. Monson.

Moved from J-B Jnto 1-A ___Leonard A. Monson. Wallace 0. O r- cutt and George B. Price.

Oft-en E. Qrout was reclassified 1-A from 3-B-P.

Laurel T . Pugm lro. and Thomas iE. Clavi'son were moved from 3 -0 Into 1-A.

Eugene H . Jtousscau was reclassi­fied from 1-C into l-A .

Ex.gtnrleemen Four Inductees w ere reclassified

iI*C following their discharge from the service. They were Harold M. Miller, C arro l L. T yler. Irving Wll>

« Mid W illiam S. Burton. Closalflcatloas of .six registrants

formerly classUled l-A were chang­ed. James T . Wynn a n d H arry Cole were placed In J-A': Leslie J . Mc­Cain was p u t In 3-A -L: Arthur W. Craft In a-C -P ; n n d Prederici- L. Klmes and Max E. W hitney in « .F .

Moved from 3-B to S-A was t>on- ald W. A lbott, Hoy O. Lokey, MU-

. reclassUied from 3 -0 to 3'A and Byron p . Sheridan was moved from 3-A to 3-A-F.

Charles A . Joslln arjd LaVon O. Oilman w ere changed fro 4-P to3-A-P and Don B. TlUey from 4-F

3 3-0-P.Five Into S-C

Five registrants were transferrod from 3-A to 3-C, T hey were Sher­man D. Mullins, Ambrose N. Lock­lear, Ray P. Po tter , Ralph O. Thompson and R clna J . ItoVrles. Charles D. EMhrer w as moved from

4 -P and Charles L. Terry from 3-A to 4-P.

Five registrants were changed from 2-A to <-A. T hey were Harry W. Bodenstab. F ra n k A. Satter- whlte, Horrj- M. W alters. Charles P . Brliendlne nnd Jsclc W. Relgel,

Fred a . McNlel w as reclassltlcd4-A from 4-P.

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

M ark e ts a l a G la n c eNEW YORK, Uirth 1 VP>- •■—'i klibari •flKtira tt

NEW YORK, M arch 1 t/PKStocks I generally entered M arch with leo-| nine tendencies today _and, while

: scattered market leaders eventually turned s bit lamb-like, selective

. strength persisted throughout w ith tiew highs since 1937 numerous.

Buying largely was nttrlbuted to Idle invMtiscnt funds seeking refuge from Inflstlon tears recently cented by bankers and others.

Tranilcrs wero a round 1,700,000 shores.

Plus tifns ranging from I to 0 points St the best wcro attached to ' Nickel Piste common a n d preferred. Allegheny preferred, Pe re Marque'tte common and preferred. Southern Paeltlc, Great N orthern. Morris & Essex, n . 8. Steel, J . C. Penney and U. S. Oypsum.

Railway bonds resum ed the cUmb.

New York Stocks

. NEW YORK. M arch 1 The market closed higher.

__________ 33tt__________ _ 45AllUChs

_ Cederqulst. Mrs. Mel . . . Mrs. R , A. Parrott, Mrs. PhU-

Up Uvely. M rs. William Scott, Mrs. Azalea Schroeder.

Cocnmlttea from the T w in Falls post, American Legion, aiding the atixiUary a n d women volunteers In the residential dlsUlcts Includes P e te r O oertaen. Joe Commons. M. M eU a na E rn es t BJork.

REJECTED FO R T B M rrH , Ark.. March 1

, —H arry Peldm as of Port Smith. New ^ o i l t O lant pitcher, said h e w u re. 'j e c te d tor s m y serrlce a t Uttls .n o c k becatua ot a reiplratory all- I m e a t and probably will play ball I v lth th e O ^ t s again thU seuon.

-W ANTED-v' Live Poultry

H O L M E S P R O D U C E m M 8 « . n u m . MI<W

E v i d e n c e T o p i c a t

O f f i c e r s ’ S e s s i o nA delegation of officers from Twin

F^Us and th is a re a attended the monthly meeting of th e Maglo Val­ley Peace Officers Association th a t was held in Oooding Wednesday night.

. They h e a rd an address by E A. McMillan, P B I ag en t who is station­ed here, o n presentation of evi­dence In crim inal eases. His talk was followed by rem arks on the same subject by Police Chief How­ard p ille tte , secretory ot tho sociatlon. *

Sheriff P rc d Cral?, Oooding. host to the 30 olllcera who nttend- ed and he presided in the absence of Sheriff W anen W . Lowery, pres­ident of th e group.

A banquet was served following the meeting.

, Those attending included, besides I those m entioned were Deputy Sheriff 'Charles Pa rro tt, S ta te Police Of-r, ,lleer John E . Lelser: Clyde Pryor.l night poUce chief a t Buhl! City

..... Charles Vance, T w in Falls: Po­lice Chief H . S. Cunningham. Buhl: Clinton McKinley, F iler: Jack Yelt- er, brand inspector. Buhl: Parley Harmon. Caatletord, and J . A. ~ ' Hagermon,

M r s . D e n t o n , 5 5 ,

K i m b e r l y , P a s s e sKTMBERLY. M arch 1-M rs . Louise

Denton, 55, wife of H arry Denton, died suddenly a t S:30 p. m. Wednes­day after being rushed to the Twin Falls county Beneral hospital.

Mrs. D enton was bom May 30.U9. in Olenwood, 'C olo, and hadten a residen t o( Kimberly for SB

..ears. Her husband Is the owner and operator or the bean warehouse In Kimberly.

Mrs. D enton was netlvc In the Methodist church work, having served as a n olllcer w ith the V 0, S. and th o Ladles Aid. She . . . . also a past prc.ildent o t the Pioneer club and a member o f the Kimberly Book club.

SurvlvinB In addlUon to her hus- Iband are tw o tens. Robert Denton I and Louis D enton, b o th o t Kimberly.■ and three grandchildren.; Funeral services w ill be held o t :3:30 p. m. Saturday a t Kimberly Methodist church. The, Rev. George O. Roseberry. T»ln PallA asMsted by the Rev. M. H. G reenlee, Kim­berly,.wUl officiate. Interm ent win be la Sunset memorial park under direction of Reynolds funeral homo.

S h o s h o n e B o x e r s

N o s e o u t S o l o n sGOODINO, M arch I—Shoshone

boxers won a narrow victory here last n ight ove r Goodioc mittm en. S to a, with one dnw .

Goodhig w ill eppoM Jerome box-n here n e x t Monday m g h t.T hi sum m ary:Knlgge, 103, Shoshone, declsloned

taphenour. 103, Oooding.Outhrle. 07, Shoshone, declsltmed

Blank. lOO, Oooding.Jones, 1S3, ehothona, decblooed

-niomtoa, l U . Ooodioc.Smith. 109. Goodins, dedslooed

■niroer..io«. Sho«hoae. •.Prince. O oodlnc. lS l , and Burk-

dull, 118, ..Shoshone; fought tO 'm

I Timken Roller Bearing

!%• -dep th or O ra n d canyon a t

American Smelt. Si Refln____ 47TiAmerican Tel. & Tel_____ _183HAmerican Tobacco, B____ 73!iAnaconda Copper------- ------ 34Alchlion,‘ f>eka<fc S a n ta Fe..,. 84H

..... ............. 7414— 20 y._ 38W __ 34 U— 134

3D9iCanaflUn Paclllo _

Consolidated Copper Con OU Del Com Products____

- 31% _ C3H -.I03W

EHectric Power As L ight ..

International H a rv e s te r------------Intemotlonal Nickel Canada _ 24HKennecott----------------------------30 HKresge ------------- :----------------- 37S

KoUonal Biscuit _ National Dairy „ Natlonil Cuh -

North American A viation _North Pacific____________North American--------------Pickard______________ r -

- 25M _ I IH- 22% - 23%

Pennsylvania R R _

Reynold! Tobacco B _

Socony Vacuum _ _

Btandard Gas Si B ectrlo _ Biandsrd.OU CalUomia. -Standard Oil N. J . ______Biudebaker____ ________

_ 64T4 — I IH_ a s l i_ 87H -.12SH

LivestockMarkets

L’iS i f f i 'S

.b f . 's f t a F a 'S s ’rss

...............' «»tlr bidi fat l»iaU Meer mon

h » \„ . —• tbolc*

) LIVEBTOCItPOnTi.AND!‘*H«rch“ Y ’«>^TwrA) —:m, toUVTlOi actln,

......_________________l i u t t l«4ikr wiUbU anil 11

S S S i p S S ;

• pu» 130.

S.704I ctlTM SI9I liaufbUr tiMn itow^ • Uadr to wiili: slhtr cUih> moaUr

f ' 1M' I bi? BJ' s'lVio * Shnpl <,««0i abwi IlmllrJ

Juir »cb>ninl to D«. >i.:s<D,.

G iN FUIURES REGISIERGAINS

strength o f securitlei‘and tofUtloa psychology resulted In. ta in s t h a t ' ranged to m ore than a cen t in grata futures m arkets today.

At the close w heat was K e to Is higher th a n yesterdsy's close. May ' <i.e4Ti>K. Com was up S o to Ho, M ay I1.13U-H. C a u were Ho to Ke higher, M ay 68Hc. Bye was tip Tie to l>4e, M ay lU H -H . Barley was 7io to 10 h igher. May IIX S H ..

i :5S":S sLT

mmIKl!

i!» IB* SIS

I n s t i l iS i t iiiis

J . » l.»H 1.IIH j J l j j

CjLBK OUIK . . ■/

t IIJO to fMd ,

cent tl.SS.C r rterlotai Si W Icr I j flaw 'es «ra Sj cau l ; aUUwd 10.. . . . .

KANSAS c rr r

aind hard Si.M to' " ’iiS iis f

m ^ '~UIKHIlAFOLIS.'umh t (S>-rUx.}(a.

UnmEAPOLIsr^reh I Vn—Tknt ta< ehuiitdi ahlpmanU Si,W.

B utter and E g ^

L ...tT tm ».»e U. ..to M.tti o thtr pi

CHICAGO FSODUCI

-f!S i4 isS =X m alpu U J t i dUUa SlJ«i ehacln:,

Stock Averages(C«a»ll*d br A«KUf«4

i a

Potatoe&UnibnsCniCACO . ..

CHICAGO. Marth I (f)-(WrA}~ar< rlraU (S. on tnck t«. toUI U. S. aU»- ’ nanu ««. 014 il« k offtrin*. w Jlfhl, >mati< cxoNdi'avalUlh track otrarioa. .

Catondo'awaa? O^nUli ll.tS ta Sl.ll.Uleklsaa rall«m It.lO.

Warner Bros. Pictures . Wslgreen Drug . Western Union ■;

h'EW YORK CURB New Yorlf, March I UFi—

Bunker HUl________ ______CWes Service — ....... ...........neetric Bond & S h a re ..... ......Electric Bond & Share P f ___

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION OF TUE TOIE A PP O m iC T F O B ' PBOVINO WILL, ETC.

IN THB PROBATB COURT O F THE COUNTy OP T W D f PALLS,,

, STATE OP IDAHO.I In the Matter ot the E sta te of P e te r i

T. Roberts. Deceased. IPursuant to an order o f said Court. I

made on the 18th day o f Pebru • 194i, notice Is hereby given , Friday, tbs Pth day of March. IMS, a t Ten o-cloct A. M. o t sa id dky, a t

Palls, 2 tat« ot a t the Uths vrm

3 lty o t '____f o(. Twliv n i l s a n d

4IWI0, h as bout,appoin ted

and to r b e a r tn s the aptOl- Uory Robert* .(o r the to-, her of le t te n tcjtam en-l I and wber« any persoi n a y 'ap p e a r .1 eahtesi

,the same, v.' •• patftJ-.Tiljnary M t l t . i m

. U A R -r.aA L U O K ,.• Cleric.

iJgU ih! Feb. ,33. M arch i

Twin Falls MarketsUJVaTOCK

CbolM bsuhtn. 200 lo 270 IbL-----Itt.SS" ----- ■-••• buUMtv m 10 IM lba..ll4.«0

tuuli«rt. •**DEANS

-.......b»wCt^°i^to no.0»»r««ui>l bMUhtrt. 27S to OrerwtliM buKlitn. ItUndarwUibt buulxn. n0*370...... .........t.Ifht batcbtn. 119 to tIS lt«-__SIS.00....... ................................................

Page 12: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

p a g e T w rfv a . T I M E S - N E W S , T W I N F A L L S , I D A H O ;

BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE RED RYDER'

TITB STORY: Aa Frederlo b drestlns Tar hit cooccrt a t the Btlla H eyel, .# letter a itlre* from bb sister In W srsatr. She ItUi ha» U>e rricnd i irhe Hided Freder- ia'% e su p e from P s ian d hsra been csn*ht a n d beilen to^deatb.

XIXn i E SAL1.E ri.E T E L

Til# Balls Plfyel nnd Prcdcrlc knows. Certainly ho knowa. Kon- s tu c ja and'LouU picyel and Mon­sieur Plcyel propwlna a concert for CiurUt blood men. T rn la , trn In, tra la. In Purls they glntr. In Wfir«aw they weep a n d eierywhero feet, but soma Me In bools a n d the dlffer-

" enca every tlw o la w here your heart la. Indeed, Madsmo. Thnnk you. Monsieur. Very charm ing Is the world tonlglit- Aiid th e Iny, who Is »he? Ah. yes. Madnmo Sand. She wares from ft box. S h e lauglis ni J in and she laughs o t W u«, JIa, bol—not you. Jan. F o r Jan Is beat­en snil J s ji is dead b u t he will IIIl hli head. O h . most ccrlnlnly. Al- fredl P re tty AUredl P u t your el­bow to him. Fran*. A h, Llsztl-niid he too Is w aving from th e box to the

* * ^ ^ 6 n ig h t Is hot a n d tonlshl U here, bu t M om rt anyway iintl al­ready they nppliiud, yes, bcIoVe iho /In t note b struck. W all, my trlcncls, and you will iJcar Uie slnBlng nnd the groans, fo r Jnn will IIU his head nnd (rom Ijla dead m ou th will Usue ftrth—No, I don't Joke, i’ou rHI hear. 8h— m y Polonalie will delight, yes, delight, a n d frlfihtcn and ter- rlly. Pu t aw ay the Inna , put away the lergnettcB and ho ld your iioa- trtl* from th e perJumo and ihc Hench whllo th e dead v o lc e -N o i- tho volcc'ol th e dead.

—Do you know , M adam e, I have heard the scandal and I do not bc- Ilevs a blessed word or I t but per­haps tliat Is because I Have not been In Paris very long. Y et I Uilnlc I would not believe It anyway, al­though I love scandal aa much na anyone. Now 1/ you w ill cxcuse me, Msdame, I w ill put aw ay the Mo-

■ *«rt tha t you have come to hear— or would you have a m inute while Poland bleeds? I do indeed believe you would. Forgive m e, Madame. Forgive me, Monsieur.

—Beady? Yes, ready! Fingers ready?- Yes. ready. BcginI Not— wait, not yet—wait. Let tiiem all get Mated. Let them all s e t comlort- able. Let all th o scraplns stop. Kow they ate quiet. They a rc very quleU Nowhere has I t ever t>cen so quiet. Re&dy? Yes, ready. F ingers, ready? Yea, ready-- I n Paris th e y alng, In Warsaw they weep and everywhere feet, but some are In bools aad the dllferenee every Umo Is where the heart Is. And w hat can 1 do so far Bwsy? O roan. groan and sulfer •Rd pour ou t despalrl

Tib fingers s t r u c k —harder— hirder—the eyes fastenedbleeding homeland. T hey ___blind to tho astonished, frightened.

The eritlo K alkbrenner broke Into rude laughter.

—'m e fury, th e sound, th e tumul­tous c&ordsl

The audience ro u am id Jeers and laughter. T h e gabbllne, moving, shouting th ro n s had no e a r for the thunder—th u n d e r to r e n d tyrants asunder! Tho Polonaise, th a unfin­ished Polonaise, the s r c a t Polon- aliol'

The Bollo Pleyel was empty,■ Louis Pleyel coBfront«d J o K t Els-

aer. He threw o u t his ba n d s . “OuU r w e u s r he ecwamed. “Outrage- o u tr

"Louis—Louis—"Til# w ords choked Joref E snc r. ••I.ouls — I can pU lo -I vrlU e x p la ln - lt w ould n happen again—**

“I asure you I t will n o t!"Then Louts Pleyel loo was gone

and Jotef £ lsn e r in the s tr e e t looked

till* way, tlien Utat, b u t FYederlc was not anjwhcre about and there was no one to say a word, gtx>d bad, to the old master,

Joief Eisner was In P o ris-a lone. Frederie returned to No. 37 Boule­

vard Poluonlere comctlme In the nIghU Ttie riosco a t Uie 6olle Pleyel was nothing; the theme of the great Polonalie was CTerythlng.

The rooms were dark. He did no t light the candlcs. He d id not look inlo Jozef Eisner's room, but w ent immediately Into his own. He was not sleepy. He ra t on his bed In tho dark, fully clothed.

-T lia world wns the same. Noth­ing had happened. Tho evenis oi

(cw liours~evcti Izubcln's ic 10 Professor Elmer—seemed i r Through the window h e saw stars, and they were real, nnd ne in tlie dtiUnce a few ligh t they loo were real. Paris was usli But not one in tho g rea t ami capital of France had h is ht I FVederic Chopin,

Ho took off his clothc.^ llo fltrelehcd out on the bed but he could not sleep. Tlie Polonniael— i t was bentlng In his head. He closcd his eyes but the sleep would no t

Then suddenly he was asleep, s nwakc also, Tlie tliemea th a t

raccd through hls hend. nwnke (islccp; dlsturljcd him, added to 1 exhaustlpn.

Then ’he sni up. Ho rubbed hU vyes. He listened.

—"fredcric, you have done li . tlie right thing, and it was no iUscg, because you have given voice—"

•'Who are you?"H« peered inlo the darkness. •'—You will play before a tlioa^and

people, ond they will all be shoullnB, eacti.and every one ot them . •Urnvo! Bravor Ah. there will be talk i they hear you-"

"Professorl"NO answer,"Professor!”••—For tha thousands uiiri i

sands who have no voice, wlio n o t speak—you will speak, not from your llllle cave, but from tho public platfonn—”

•'ProfciBort Help me, P ro fcsio r- help met"

Frederic was still asleep,(To Be Continued)

H i n r s d ^ , - S I u ^

: By FRED HARMii^

WASHTUBBS

OUT OUK WAY By W nXUM SWEI.L. CAtJ'T VOU WAIT \

TILL W E GIT TO TH' NEXT I H O U S E ? IM TH IS W INP \

COUNTRY YUM <50T TO KMO/J | A LOT ABOUT ELEVATIOW, i 7 tW J6CTO R>' V E LO C iry AN‘ 1 WINPAGE TO GIT TMe (,TOBACKER MID A C1GARET }l PAPER.— AKIP l(3l»J1TIOrO.' y

CHALK TALK PUESENTEI) JEROME, March I — Dr. William

Crosby Rots. Salt Lako City, ileld representative for the board of na- llonal misfloiu nnd board of ClirLi- tlaii education, gave a chalk talk of plans (or the yeur, durini; a meel Ing of officers and teuchrrs iind nf ficial board members o f th e Prcfby- terian churclu

READ TIMES-NE^VS WANT ADS.

HOLD EVERYTHING

. PAPER. TARGETS ’ ‘ •"ij.l

LIFE’S LIKE THAT„ 3-1

By NEHER

P wven THE PQIHT5 ARC gTDPlEPBy LESLIE TURNER

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By EDGAR MARTIN\ c o o v o

Pt'S W sV S H’E.'O

K ttV i VORW. \ k j I TW t

OK>•VtA 1 0 V M tS V\\V\ n------- ^ V \ \ 0 0 \ K > S ? |

GASOUNE ALLEY By KINGt>»Te <iT Nicirr >wi7 mctv w iH£ M n u m s rrs basiss.M O THivee OMINC 1H;CK£C ^ 1 ? F,lSt£t:. HOIV 15 fHAf

THE GUMPS B y GUS EDSON

a free office visit by answering m y phone v

[THIS CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSON SIDE GLANCES

________ .TO KEK1£>NELV PEN-77iOiA5W /

N o r o j i r e s o L o N E L y . / A ovy / ^

I BITOKe AW WORT>

A \Y i.«7iT H E TEMPTA1 WftSTOOAUJCHPOK — i AWEAK6AJ.UKB

MB-

By GALBRAITH DIXIE DUGAN By McEVOY and STRIEBEL

T U N S S T € NW IR E

AtANUPACTORED POR USB IN THREB* WATT LAMP5, IS DRAWN SO FINETH4TA POUND WOUlO REACH

£ 6 2 M /L S S /

'•^SteWNtAL PUNT OP THE ULY A

DEPINinON fpR M V A r p

UNITED STA TES •' HU OMiycNE SUCH ANlA^AL..

TMa 0FO5SUM.

s . f

SCORCHYl

THIMBLE THEATER STARRING POPEYE

AMP S O m see h o u j h i c c u p s . H OUSe-M A iD S KNE6. eER I-0ERl m h K i t i r r T W PANCTRUFT CAN 0 6 G N J A T Z /^ ^ ^ ^ ^ C E P PlRECTWTO

r g P lN A C H - J

By EDMOND GOOD GALLEY OOI>

'Q U l H T y ^ o u V ,HAVeW'T SOT THEaooR/

( 1 POW T REALLV OlANTtT-BUT J U S ') ^ T O SHOtU VA, I K IN TAKE IT—

. I ' . ' ' ' /

By y .T . HAMLIN'V > e s . s iR . . . i r ^ 5 e c » ? ) ' r n A t i | M C / H u a v $ e e , iT O o jP x x f / v D u c o n c K A iH o w a » is? . V A LLOP.,.GtAP }tP \& V fttI> \>cwpiPNT., / v s u B ta e A T l

^ O O T , CMSrjM

/:>

Page 13: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

Thanday, M arch 1, T lM E S .N i3 W S , TW IN F A L L S , ID A H O

AUTOS F o n SALE

’‘A s A 'S , ^ : i s z T & i

. HIGHESTCASH PRIGES ,paid fo r late model

DBEO OAltS.TBCCU.

AHV SnlES( I t pays to shop around)

• p ^'A-ien CMC, nt« 14-foot bM U<t STiln bid.^nd<n uJ« «rlr«.149 FlrmoBlh

LEGAL ADVERTI8 EMEKTS

NOTICE TO CREDITOnS IN THE PHOBATE COnRT OP

THE OODNTT o r TWIN ?ALLS, STATE OP roAHO.

ESTATE OP Robert H. HoweU. DE­CEASED.Notice Is hereby glTta by tha

derslencd nilmlnlatratrlx ot the .. ta t« ol Robert'H. HoveU. deceaAcd. to tho creditors of ond all persons liavina elalma against Uie lald de« ceased, to exhibit them vlth tho necessniy vouchers, within Xour m onths oXtcr the (list publlcatloQ of this noUce, to Uie said adminis­tra trix a t tho Uv office of A. J. Myeri, TVln Palls Bank and TViut' Butldln?, Twin Fnila, County of T w in Palls, atote of Idaho, this be- In s the plaeo Xlxtd for the tranuc* tlo a 'o f tho biulneu of said estate.

Dated FcbniMT SSth, 1913.LOUISB'M. nOWELL,

Administratrix of the eaCate of Rob* e r t B. Howell, Dcceued.

Publish; March l, 8, IB. 22,19U.

IN THE DISTRICT COOBT OP T H E ELEVENTH J U D IC IA L DISTRICT OP THE STATE C P IDAHO, IN AND PCR TWIN FALLS COUNTy.

a U Y L. PETERS and EPP IE PETERS, husband and wife,

PUlntUfa

W . HOMER CRAVEN, Mmetlaws known os W. H. Craven, If llvtaff, nod U dead, all unknown helra and devisees of W. Homer Craven, deceased; GENEVIEVE L. CRA­VEN, wife of W. Homer Craven, sometimes known os W. H, Cra- veo. If living, and U dead, all __ known heirs and devisees of OEN-' -EVIEVE CRAVEN, deceased: C. W . ECKERMAN, IT llrtnj, and, U dead, all unknown heirs and devls* ees ot C. W. Eckennan, deceased; JANE DOB ECKERUAN. Wlfe Of O. W, Eckerman, IT llvln;, and, U dead, all imkhown heirs and de- vlseei of Jane Doe Eckennan, de­ceased; JOHN NELSON, If llvloff, a n d U dead, all unk:)own heirs and devisees of John Nelson, de> ceoscd; ROSS NELSON, some­tim es known as Rosa Nelson, wlXo o f John Nelson. H Uvlnj, and, U dead, all unknown heirs and de­visees of Rose Nelson, deceased, CHARLES B. UHL, soroeUmes known as Chas. S. Uhl. and 0 . S. U hl. U Uvlng, and If dead, all un ­known heirs and devluea of ■Cbnrles -S.- Uhl.*dcceasedrANN3C H . UHL, wife of Charles B. Uhl, sometimes known as Chas. S. Uhl, a n d 0 .8 . U h l U living, and It dead, aU unknown heln and devisees of A nna H. Uhl. deceased; J. W. CHRISTENSEN, U Uvlng, and. If dead, all unknown heirs and de­visees of J. W. Christensen, de- eeoaed; CLEMENTINF CHRIST­ENSEN, wife of J. W. ChrlJlensen, U living, and If dead, all unknown he irs and devisees ot ClefflenUne au-lstensen, deceased; NORMAN S. UHL, If Uvlng, sad. If dead, nil unknown he ln and devisees of Norm an S. Uhl, deceased; JANE DOB UHL, wife of Nonnan B.

P a g e T h l r tw i

L E O A L iA p V.Chl,'tmkzumt)' U ’ U rtari' i f Bll.uoksDwn b e ln . axid .denwes:'!.

' o f Jane D o e UUf dpcaued}-iUOH«‘. v ARD P. . x r a i . 'U Urtajr;-jftad. U. -: dead. aU tm taow n (le tn aAd derl*. - t e t t of R tc b u d P . Ohl, decased; - SLIZA R O S UBZ. (wboM cbrUU :

-ened u m e U a ik n o v n ^ wlft o t -:. Rlehard P . OU. t f UTtn* dead, an tm k s o ra b e ln and dOTli« ees of EUza-Boe Ulil, dw ew ed i' NELUB M . L U m iA K . tO O f -: times know n u IT. M ..Leuttman ' • n d N. M . LQtbBKD ' to d .N. U . : iMttman Bickford, If-Uvtng, and IX dead aU unknown h d n u td da>’ Tisees of NeUl« IX. LuttnU a. d ^ ' ceased; DANIEL ENOEXS. U Ur- Ing. and I f dead, a ll unknown he ln and 'd e r is ra of D aniel Engeli, d t- : ceased; ZNOER E N O Sfi.-w ife « ; Daniel Engels, deceased; PTTERS' & ENGELS, also w ritten p r m t s & ENGLE.- I t no t being known-if this Is a T rade Nam e, o r a pa rt- ' - nenhlp; ne ltner a a a o a nam s nor a portnershlp belns shown of rec- - ord; PEOPLES SAVINOS AND TRUST COMPANY O P p r rK l- BURGH, TRUSTEE, a fortlgn Corporation with its offlea and place of business a t Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania; I t i e unknown own­e rs and unknown claim ants of tb s ' loUowlng described real estate la . Twin Polls Cormty. to-wit:

tag.Defendants

THE STATE O P IDAHO BENDS O RECnN Q B TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEPENDANTS:

Vou are hereby notified th a t » implalnt h a s been fUed aeainst

you In the District Court of tb s Elovenih Judicial D istrict o f tba. S ta te of Idaho, In a n d for the Ooon* ty of Twin Palls, fay Ibe above - named p latatifls. and yoii are hereby directed to appear a n d plead to tbs sa id complaint w ltbln twenty days ' o f the service of tb ia summons, and you are fu rth e r notified th a t unless you 10 appear and plead to aaid- complaint w ithin th e time herein specified, th e plolnUffa wUl take Judgment offoinst you as pnyed In so ld ecmplaint.

Sold complaint prays a decree'of th e Court quieting In the ploIntUIs ngolmt the claims of a ll defendants o n the u tle to' lands tn Twin PaUa County, Idobo, described u - fol­lows:

W 'i NW K of Section 18, 1)1. 'la 8. R. J0. E. B. l _-WTTNESS my han d and tb s seal

o f the tald DUtrlet Court thls Slst d a y of Petaniary, 1645.

C . A. BULLE8Clerk •

S . T, Hamilton »Attorney fo r PlalnUffs ■ResidenceTwin Palls, Idaho ;Feb . 73. M arch 1, 8, 15, S

NOTICEN O nCB IS HEREBY OlVZlf .

THAT r, Jlobe rt M. Stevenson will, a t the nex t regular meeting of the Idaho BUte Board of Pardons, to be he ld at the Statebouse, Boise, Ida., o n the f i r s t Wednesday o t April, 1945, make nppUcaUon for a Pardon and/or Com mutation of S este from that certain Judgment of a viction of B urg la rr. first degree, m ade and entered In the Court of th e 11th Judicial DUtrtct of . th e ,- s ta te of Id ah o in a n d fo r the County o f Twin F a lls on o r about

Dated a t Boise, Ida., Feb. Ifl, IMS.ROBERT M. STEVENSON.

Applicant,Publish: M arch 1, «, 15,3 3 .1M5. .

NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY QIVEH

THAT I, W illiam Blades win, a t tba n e x t regular meeting of the Idaho S ta te Board of Pardons, to be held a t the sta tebouse. Boise, Idaho, on th o first W ednesday of April, 1915. m ake applleaUon fo r a Pardon and/ o r CofflmutatloB of Sentence from th a t certain Judgment of oanvlctlon «£.£W geiyrniade a n d entered in the 'C o u rt of th e U th Judicial District o f the s ta te Of Idaho in and for tbe County of T w in F a lls on o r about B-23-'<l.

Dated a t Boise. Ida .. P6b. 19.1945.WILLIAM BLADES,

' . AppUcant,Publish: M arch 1 ,8 ,15;a3,194S. .

ACROSS LAbrHnth1. Point t». ConcuniB*4. nitson&l <0. Orltd plum*

:1: S i i i S i . , .

.7. U omonlu la Cnitcolor 41. rom ir l<ae-

a s iT s ri t ...

>p«U>r* le. GoijM et lh«

Completion of a Soutb American transeonUnental railroad,'.'UnU ng.;. th e opposite coast ports of SastoiL'..' BratU and Afrtes, Chile, Is scbedaled.; forlM T.

a » w o rn , '

a l i ^ o g a ^ E i i | B E ^ ■

Sslutton'Of Y s « t ^ ^ FuBlil -*. aotur y'm

Page 14: Keep the Red Cross at His Side--By Git>ing M the 1 9 4 S W ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF074/PDF/1945_03_01.pdfaround the store to the curba long for chaadlsa'l&.hand

• P a g e Fo'urteori . T IM E S -l^E W S . T W I N F A L L S , ID A H O ; Thurrf»y; MbicH 1 ,194B

ill# enemy «port b ttu lT th liU ndln ths

___- j« re p o r te d bjTokyo t«l»7• to l ia re landed on 373»mUe-lon8

P«law nn liUnd, westeinmMt oi the - PtiUlpptne*.

t t ^ w a n . U. true, w iu ld b « ---------------------------. PbU lpplnet UiTftded by.American

unptU bloui lorcea.A IVDlcyo broadcMt Mid (he Amer*-

leans landed a “regiment* ot troopB o a PAlttwao. KinaecUiig link betw een Mindoro In the FhUlpplnes and S oraeo In the Dut«h Euc in . d lu .

T tio broadcut »dmliKd the Jip> knesa h sd only a small gairbon on th e 4,097<«quiire-ml]a Island, but c laim ed I t w u otferlcs “Tlolent" resistance.

■ O en . Douglas MftcArthur reported th a t a tio n s formations ot American a tta c k bomber* hammered J&p to- BtftUaUons a t Puerto Prmceea.

T tia t island, ISO miles e u t ot BaigOD, In French Indo-Ohlna, s tre tches from southwest to north­east a n d b flanked on the west by the S o u th China sea and on the east b y the ^ulu sea.

German Resistance In Italy Continues

R O M U March I tf ) — Oennon raid ing parties, striking ecrou the Senlo river soulh o t the Russl-Lugo road. 17 mlica inland trom Ihe Adrlatlo coast, have driven eighth army troops from some ot their poslUoru. Allied forces counter-. •ttaeJced and took a number p risoner* .:

R e^ Aition—Not a Pose :

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTSANOTUEE BCMMOKB

IN T H E DISTRIOT COURT OP T H E ELEVENTH JUDICIAL DIS­T R IO T CP THE STATE r OP IDAHO, IN AND FOR TWIN PA LLS COUHTT.

TirgU McBride and Ida L. Mc­B ride . PlalntUfs,

TS.Belen S . Delong. EUcn B. DeLong,

Ja m e s O. DeLong and AnlU B. DeLong. husband and wile; Pred- e rlck T . DeLong and Mary 6. De- Long, husband and wife; The U nknow n Heirs and the Unknown DeTl£ees of the foUowbg named pereoaa U they be dead, to wit: H elen E. DeLong, EUen B. De- Loog, James - C. Delong A n ita B. DcLOQg. husbandw ife; SVederlck T . D eLong___M a r ; B. DeLong, husband and W e ; The Unknown Heirs and TTnknowa Devisees of Martin B. D eLong. deceased: The Unknown O w ners o f the loUowlng describ­ed re a l estate situated In the C oim ty of Twin Falls, state ot Id ah o , to wit: Lot Thirteen (IS) a n d a ll of Lot Fourteen (14)

of, I n DeLong Addition ______City of Twin Falls; that said Lots aro platted upon. and are a p a r t of the Northwest Quar­te r o f the Southeast Quarter of5e6Uon Elgli' “ ...........S ou th , Range

. D efendants.‘n io S ta te of Id«ho sends greet-

ings t o the obOTo named defend­ants:

• You a re hereby notified that a com plaint has been filed against you In the District Court o( the I3eventh Judicial District ot the e u t« o t Idaho, in and for Tivln Palls CotiDty, by the above named p lain tiffs, and you are hereby di-

' xected to appeor and plead to (he said com plaint within twenty days ot th e scrvlco of this summons; and y o u are further notified that unless y o u so appear and plead to sold com plaint within the tlmo herein specified, the plaintltts will take judgm en t against you as pray­ed In s a id complaint.

You a re further notlfed that tliU action la brought by the pialntUts

. to recover a Judgment and decree of sa id Court against the defend­ants a n d each of them -as foUoTs;. H ia t th e defendants, aiid each of them, b o th known and unknown be rt<julred to set forth the nature of their c laim s to the real

: described tn the title of this pro- ; ceedlng a n d tha t all.claims ot the

detendoote advetM to tlie plain- ' tiffs b e determined by (ha deaee .of the C ou rt; th a t by said dccree I t be declared, ordered, adjudged

' and decreed th a t tho plaiotlirs the o w n e n of and entitied to the pomwssloTi of said real properly and each a n d evet7 part thereof and th a t t ^ e UUe ol the plalnUfts therein and thereto la good and Valid: t h a t by said decree it be xtnther declared, ordered and ad- iudgrd th a t the defendanU and each o f t l i e a , both known and un­known. have no estate jlght, title

P fc . Max Xlymaa. BprlniOale, IHt, anS a comrade' In G eneral Mae- A rtb n r'i tOtb In tbs phlllpplnrt were in real action—tU i I sn 't Jo*t a posed picture— when an army pbolograptier snapped th e above photo In a m ortar fox bole. (Oftlelal army pbote-stafr cftgravinf)

* * * * V * . * * *

Cassia Family Spots Son in Photo of Philippines Combat

BURLEY, M arch 1—Members cf the Oeorge A. Uymas family. Spring­dale. recognized tho m an on the left in the above picture, used for war bond sales w hen i t appeared In the November issue of the (Treameir Co- opcrntor, as th e ir son, Pfc. Max Hymas, 32, with Qeneral MaeArthur's 06th In th e PliUlpplnes.

A copy was sen t to Max. and he wrote that he remembered when the p ic tu re was ta k en , but had no Idea thot it was an oftlciol picture, and was surprised to leam tho t It was being used for bond sales. H o stated th a t th e grim look on ihelr faces isn't Just a pose for the photographers, bu t w as an oc tuai photogmpli while they were In action.

P rivate H ym as was inducted Peb, 10,1M<, and rcccivcd his bnalo train­ing a t Camp W hite, Ore., where he ranked high as a sharpshooter. He was homo on furlough last June, and went overseas. shortly thereafter. He h o s participated in tho invasion of the philipplses from th e begin­ning. H e stated th a t ho had been at the front for DO days, and w ns spend- ing a few days o t a re.it camp.

Private Hymoa was bom in Burley, and Is a graduate of the Burley high school. In the p icture he is shown dropping a mortar shell down th e tube.

S t a t e I n c o m e T a x

P a y e r t o G e t A i d

the c ou rt house in Twin FalU Martli 6 to 15, InciUfllvc. for the purpose of assisting taxpayers in prepars- tton o f thtir s ta te Income tax re­turns, the Boifio office of the (ax commissioner announced yesterday. Anyone contacting this representa­tive should b r in s a copy of the IS4< federa l return for reference. Any single person having a ne t income of »100 or m ore, or any morrlfd person having a n e t income of S1.S00 o r m ore Is required to file a return, I t w as reported. '

T Inter r In or to t■aid above described real property or. any p a r t thereof and that the title to Bald real property be quieted In the p la intiffs; and th a t the de- fecdonta and each of them, both known a n d unknown, be forever re-

. a tra ln e d ,. enjoined and debarred I ro a asaerting any claim whatever in ',9f- , to the real property herein referred to and - described as Lot T U rteen (13) and a ll of Lot Four­teen (14 ), except the west one h T O i M _ ^ h t y seven (1871 f « t th en o f. I n D e lin g addition to the City- o f Twin .Pans. Twin Palis Cdtmt7. Idaho , said lota being pUt-

- I ted u p o n and ' a portion of th# N orlhw est Q uarter of the Southeast Quarto*.' o f Stetion Eight (B),

rT m n u h lp T B n :0 0 ) South, R a ^ :eflT*ttte«» (17). B. B. M , r e f e r e ^■ eelDff be ieb y jn a d e to M id complaint ap:fUfl.;haretn for further particulsn o r jalfl' ,' 'W itness m y hand and the seal

: : of n id 'C c m rt th is SMb'day of Jan*

0Se»l>7'

R u p e r t C u b s H o l d

B a n q u e t S e s s i o nRUPERT, M arch 1—Cub scouls

held th e ir m onthly, pack meeting In a banquet session a t the Christian church annex, attended by about SO cubs and pa re n ts of several.

Arrangements were In charge o W all and den molhcnr. Mrs. Ear Buttcftne, Mrs. L . Potter, Mrs. Rod­ney Goodman a n d Mrs. Carl Car­penter. Mn. D . E . Alien was guest sponsor.

Tlio boys a ttended ser\-Ices a t the C h ris tian church In a body foUow- ing th e dinner a n d biuincju meeting.

Brazilian Dictator Figures on Quitting

R IO DB JANEIRO. M arch 1 CU.PJ —President G etu lio Vargas, virtual d ic tato r ot B rozll nearly IS yean, may announce retirem ent. He last n igh t granted h ia cabinet's request for Brazil's f irs t general election in 10 years and speculation mountfd th a t h e would n o t bo a candidate.

V argoa m archcd into Bio a t the head o f an a rm y of Qauchos In 1030, farced P residen t Anazoeio into exile, a n d proclaimed himself pres­ident.

Stronger Ch/tks Life Vigor Vitalityu u t h

RANCH-WAY CHICK STARTER

S tU n i V

Tw in F a lls F lo u r M il ls G ooding E le v a to r H an se n E le v a to r «

H az e l to n E le v a to r F a rm e rs E le v a to r , J e r o m e

K im berly E le v a to r R ich fie ld E le v a to r R u p e r t E le v a to r

Buhl E le v a to r E den E le v a to r F ile r E le v a to r

T w o i n C o m p a n y K

G i v e n P r o m o t i o n

gion hall, Lieut. O n in Puller, pub­licity otflcer, announced.

Those promoted were: CpL Paul Mosley to sergeant, and Pvt. Charles Wilson to corporal technician fifth grade.

DrUl practice consisted prlmahly. of rio t formaUon. which was con-

e m ln g ’c meeting. Second______the seadon was devoted to 'regular guard duty d r ill

TtoUowlng* the drills. tion.conunls- aloned'offleers discussed the toeoia- lag enlistments. .

“This Is a fine thing," Lieutenant

PoUer ita tc d , “ a t we find th a t th e a m y - t a k e s Ihceo-Tecndts-as-aooa u they become tnem ben of c pany K ," .

Be u r re d the enlistm ent of youths between th o sg e i.o f is and 17 years of age **who w ant p reliolnaiy mili­tary tralfilng." > • ..........

H i0 olflcM also <llisctiaed p la n a f o ra rthird battalion btroQaa vZUCb'vUI be held later in t i t e spring.**

Ot a group of suteslan v s U r areas in Australia, o n e . the G re a t Australian bsstn, ta k e s ta an a re a ' of 600,000 siiusre nillea.

d e l i c i o u s b r e a k f a s t i d e a• P o s t's Ilaisin Bran Is a brand- t i n s . . . right In th e aamspack*new breakfast Ideal A combina< age. And tbs nUslna In P o s t’stlo n o f nut-brown, crlsp-toastcd Raisin Bran ilay te n d e r , thanks

. P os t’s 40% B r a n Flakes, plus to Pott's Tender-Sured process,iw e e t CaUfomla seedless i*l- I f 'yoa h m n t y e t tried th is

m ade CCSlB« » rare t r e i t l Z oenrtw au ought to know abou t Post's R a i­s in Br il So deUclous, u d s o nourishlRjr. tool D on ’t le t a n ­other day go by. S ta r t enjoylne the downright /Isc o r mc^le o f Post’s Rtlsla Bran today.

A P ortC erea l

1 = ^ POST'S BRAN

I ,

O v e r 1 0 0 0 P q in

Children’s ShoesN e w S p r i n g S t y l e s i n P o l l P a r r o t s a n d R . J . R . B r a n d s

WE TESTED* . . WE COMPARED WE’RE CONVI NCED. . .

- ' ' I - -—

(! V '.JS'tS 'V ;

P O L L - P J k E I R O T Sc v t e

AMERICA'S OUTSTANDING SHOES

^ ^ 0 ^ a*teC I

'■ ’ I

One trial. . .one actual wear test will convince you, too. Poll-Parrots arc built to the dictates of millions o f mothers! Their correctness en-

icourages healthy ^ o w th ...an d we carefully fit tliosc prccious youhg feet. See Poll-Parrots... prepare for an "eye»opcner” in buying chil­dren’s shoes.Poll-Parrots do set a new standard . . . tliey’re right for young fee t. . . there’s e.xtra miles of wear in their rugged construction inside and

»out...there’s new pride-building smartness in their "big folks” styling. Everything you want at very moderate prices. . . quality considered.

/ 10 W AY

1. Aoom lor growing loti2 . Coffo/oled heoMo-bolJ3 . No-bfnc/ing Imiep4 . Ago-conforming erchtt5 . AnHo.hi/sging lop llntt