nine irrl^tcd idnho counties solonsforecast eno ofiusk...

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' •: • r/ / , E V E N IN G A RejdonnI Newspaper Scrvins Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties TW IN FALLS. IDAHO, KlUDAY EVENING. JULY 28. 104-1 PRICE 5 CENTS Jap War Chief I fapannf cahln^l. Hr lo.tl .f »UJf Job m hlel> <•' ihaktop l!i.H folloB-cd cl Ilf raid on Truk by U. m Fcbrnjrr. JAPS OENYYANK [|['RSE)(ECUIED SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK PEACE PLANNING WASHINOTON, July 28 (,r»-Ti«lk of the chnnccs lor »n early victory over ocrniaiij’ »atpl optlmUtlcnlly nnionir coiisrcu nifmbers toclixy. modprnleii by advicf Irom Rep. M c- Comiacl;- D- U»M, Uial Uil-1 Is no rt Imnjill) •' • siilllr : for recoiivcralon of I Ky.. of t; il Ocrmal broadcnsl ol 1 for Siipcrforin Japan. Inlcncltd lo i 6iipcrforlrpj.s filers,; olllclnlly Tokyo* i of the cjfculloii of who bombpd ToKyo , - Tok: 110 crashcd 1 huicllns npiiarci r only c the Uni lowlcdiimcnl of the filers ;hc Dooll' duslry tro Chixlrni] house ml ventured Hie forecui would cnpltulalf by Dcc. 1. . Tliomas, D„ Okla.. licnd of llie se n - ate !!ub-commlll« on military ap- proprlAtlonR. commtntcd: "I d o n ’: scf how aemiany can Inst through the rp.n of this ytar." Caution I'rr Much lew hoj)tful v allied Ihti-iicrs as hnylnit •'iiiiy i Mirmeii alio falli or balls out I will be B-29 filers Rho c«me down lind m et •Uie tanis fal* which wua melt nut to the r*ldcr» of Tokyo son: two years mo '• Today’s olllclal denlnl. brondcni from Tokyo and recorded by it; J,yoclnt«l Prca. fald •'Uicre Is ii ».indailoii Id reporLi ihnt Amcrlcn T l'ots who eni.shert on Jopnne.'^e so have been executed or would t execuletl." EY BIIIEREY lUNCESFISH ALBANY. N, Y.. July "8 tU.PI-As- •ertlng ihnl "iitiyonc who Injcct.i ti racial or rcllglon.i l.wiie Into a po- lUlenl cami’aign h RUllty of a dL<i- grnceful, mi.American net," Gov. Tliomas E. Dewey, Rcpubllcnn presi- dential nominee, today repurilntrd tlie cntiUltliicy of Rep, Hamilton ~ ' - . , N. Y. Dcui read K n bj' J which It. Jiunci C, in prompted by nn Interview with Kish printed In a New York City news- paper. Tlie Interview. HtiKerly .suld. npi>enrcd in the New York Post ^ d '\h d Fhh n saylr lhal "thi r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment i lime. , I publicly oppasci iid eleciloii of Con Dcft-ey .-(aid. -T h knyone Rho injccti ft racial or rrllRloiu Luiie into n iwlltlciil cam* p,tli;n b sulliy of n dl.'^Kraceful un- American act. I have alwuy.s fought Uiat kind of thing all my life niid ......I'l'pi'aya.-'KlU,.rcBiirdlcs.1- of- p.irtl.'ian jrl of In.ipcctlon tour lliot Ev^p^n war "Ij i ent" lo the Uoop' <1 IrK, and dpplorcil ■ ROl BEAIIiEiS «a Friday by Anillam 1 r of Hoops Cnnstr •, BUece.Mful bidden c from llif wc.'.tern city llmlt.i of Tv.-li FalLs to the Hoclt creek brlclKe we.-> of the cfliinty general has'ltnl woiil< be carnal out *l npproxlmaicly Uii cd thal Uie detour for Uie w est side work would probably be the pole line road, or el>e a coinblimtlon which would brinit Uaffic In on Shoshone street. Detour for the ea-n end project bcuecn Tuin Pulls and Kimberly will be the sugar fac- tory roml. Arningeinent.1 for d e to rr between Klinbctly and Hnn.-ie:) (tlic first enst end portion to be rebuilt) prob.ibly will nllUie a graveled ounty.roiid bn; mile north of ihi* re.sriit U, S. 30. Fedenil npiiroval ol the Hoops bid tu for$U3338,''‘“^‘‘‘“^‘ Work should bt roniiileted .'ceks lo two montlii after the * B re st L ito v sk F a lls to R e d s a s E n em y R e tre a t F ro m R u ssia N e a rs P an ic; Y an k s H am m er D iso rg an ized L in e in N o rm a n d y Capt. S. C. Turner, Tarawa Hero, Killed MURTAUGil, -I Japs Blasted on Five Fronts in U.S. Drives ny The A»soclatrd Presi. IK jBpatiese empire bled todny fron rvajtatlns U. 8. stnb ' plane.s and rcducetl ck to the Philippine! B and Innd bnlllcfic lahist the underdOK t Pfllau. Truk, Saba j R»ia PaUu atumbllng block o (July 2 :nrollne ba.ic.-i for i 25>, sinking ft rncrlcai d other ^0 dayi ilneiny. smaller day 26 Date for Use of Food Stamps S et WASHINOTON, July 28 (U.PJ-The iffice of price odiiilnLnration today validated five adilltlonal blue m ' .tnnip.1 and three red stainps. Jluc stamiw. to JO Into use riie.sday, are B-S, C-5. D-S, E-5 F-5, ______ The new r< e good tor an Indefinite pc- America Insists on Vacation Despite Pleas Not to Travel By JAMES MAtlLOW WASHINOTON, July 37 mid-summer now and—In spite o all Rovenimcnt appenl.s for them t . slay off ihe trains niid spend their traveling at a tremendoiis mte. underjlMid.wUat-Uicy-nre Ing fii' ilibi third yeor of war. «l -'itomoblle travel has been cut > Mini packed to capacUy. Seme Effect 3. The office of defense tmnspor- (atlon hubeen hammering awny nt a eampalgii to keep people off the -..•ins. It's been a "don't travel" campaign. One offlelal of trr said he Uilnlw the eampaign U -'having eomo ef- fcct” .and that the “mtc of In- crease, in roilroad travel Is slow- , Ing down.” It'^U .difficult lo »ec-ln view of Ihe capacity tro*-d* at summer re- itrls—that the campsiBn la having much effecL If «n>-on« h u arty tlluslon* about curiillmciM oC nllroiitl imvel. he are some figures for June rut ' from 1939 through lust month Travel ntporled In June, 193D. Uie AssoclaUon of Amerelcan Rollroads reported 2,074.- 085,000 pnsscnRcr,mlIcj.lraveled:-la •June.-1B10 — 3,053jl6fl00: In J u n e . June. 1043- 4Jaai72,000: m June. 104J-7J13.- 2J4.000. And In June, 1844. although flsures axe not complete, tlie aiso- elallon esUmates ilie passenger mllea Tel. C, Jl. - - ^ ■ . .................... of l4«^ocliiUon.t*;-i thVriliroada ^Id^handlB in eicea of a D,000.- 000.000 passenger diIIm. ^ ■ Troop Intel Drop* Perhaps the full HpiHlcance of me Incnasect pasHnger travel can be seen from this: TJwp move- mtnta have tapered off a bit but ttie tom number of paurngen carrted by the roads his increased. T hat Increase must be made up of clvU- In 1943 orBonlied ttoop move, .nenls on ihe niticoadj.averigcd 1.- 600.000 a month. TWs year they're' aveniBlng IJMW), and .decUnin*. escori or rgo ves-scl.? ni ., On the firs , de.itroynd. On the sec- ond, no encniy Inlcrccptors were seen. Five U. 8. planes were Io.«t bul four pllot.1 were saved, Islanis nt- t.icked were Arakadc.^an, Pelellu, Angnur. Malnkal and Korot In the PnlftU croup, nnd Yap and UHlhl, which are between PaUu n n d Ouom. Adm. Chester W. KInilti told of Uie raid last night. Another stlnglii* blow, Inflicted by bombers of Gen. Douglni Mue Arthur’s command, snnk one :hl and tired three others ol a flvt ship convoy 160 miles south t Truk. The llfUi ves-^el escaped, British Hll Sabanc A third sea blow by a Brlttih directed fleet hit Sabang nt the .aoctt\weM t i p of Sutualra wrecked Us liafbbfTvIlaTlo'i; of the Japanc.se supply line tc nm via SIngajjor*. London announced today, I ditton. (Jut British submorini stroyed 21 Japanese supply othe .ihl|u i . - . ind damaged several by torpedo and diinflre, Allied land gui mfklcl -cut I lories. On Guam and Tlnlsn In the Marlnnas U. S. troops pressed the Isolated enemy garrisons clcner to annihilation. Tlie Tlnlnn Invadera, killins 10 Japs to every marine slnln. held n third of tile Uliuid and were putting Ushl airfield In shape for American use. Tinian cuualUes: 3,089 known JaponMC dead: 150 U. S, dcnd.-«l woundcd..32,mlisln«Jn six days fighting. Nlmits Lwied no new wofd on the Germans Unleash New Robot Raids LONDON, July 28 (UB - Robot ..jmba strewed mote deaUi and structlon through London southern England today ind the authorlUUve mogiuJne “The-Aero- plane" warned that nazi producUon of Jet-propelled aircraft may be sufficiently far advanced "to con- stitui« a threat lo allied Mr su- premacy over Eunjpe," , Several rues were storied In the British caplUl and In oUierdtstrlcla during the niaht. ReKCutrt In one area worked by tUres In an eflort to tunnel tlirouth debris to rtacli trap- FLASHES of LIFE THAIFIC ELKHART. Ind., July 58-\Vh. . traffic bccunie tangled nt Main and Jnck-son ^trccl.s Pollcemon Walter Cnrter rttshcU Into action. He found It WAS caused by a bal buBgy crossing the Intcrsecili agnln.-it a red light. In the bugg^’ wius ft thrpe-yenr*old Rlrl and pro- vas her four-ycar-oM lellliiB rter M>ld the hlklre _____- .iiy irom home and "bor rowed" the bURgy from In front of i furnliurc store. SURPLUS PUEBLO. Colo., Juiv 28 - Uti Isiibel hius too many fl.ih. too lltfli fksh food Rml-too-few-fUiermen.— So the ,stnte gnmc und fish de partnient has raised Uic legal hml to 20 a day. any dzc. In nn elfer to ntuoct nuglets. I t said Ka.'.ollne and tire ration Ins had helped the fish over-jwp- ulntc. TRAP SALT LAKE CITY. July 28-Oro- •r Leo R. Jensen always left IQJO I smnll chnnge In his cash teglster, with the drawer open, believing ihnt If burglars entered they'd take Uie ige the costly depository. It worked c burglar better thiin tJiat. ...................... 1. took Uie money •nd left without dnmagliiK anj’tlilng, A nt^he wu-1 convicted of_lhtrd de- gree burglarlyV too.' after jwllce caught him elase Uy-wlth exactly *3.50 In Rtniil! change In hli pocket, 21 Persons Hurt In Bus Accident KLAMATH PALLS, Ore, July 28 (/P) — A Bouthbound Portland-San FYnnclsco Greyhound bus akldrted and overturned here last night, sending ai of lu 37 rassengen to hospitals. The bus went out of control on r^-w e t pavement as It entered ttie city, careened two bloelca down a sUght grade, nnd crashed on Its side ■i the front yard of a house. ' Pusengers, hurled from their seate by Uie impacl. were removed through the etnergency door, open- -d by th e . driver, V. J. Wrlgstes- ■•ortii. Eugene. : . ALLIES PREPARE FINAL ASSAOLIS ON IIALY CIIIES K nM li. .Inly '2H (UR) — Tin lilisli (‘ij,'lilfi arm y, u((vnru-- tr vard by yai-d tlii-outrli ler enemy resislatme, •stonneti to w ithin huvoii mile^‘ 111 ' less of Florence today lilo A m evican ntnl GcrTiM\i\ force.t to the wo.st niu.sae(i for tlie battle of Fisa nnd chiinjjcd heavy nrtillery wwt of n o need ns mu( ; Vallrccljlc y moved Into i>03mon fc . on Plsfi. inuler hea\T Hr n iirtilleiT coinilcred hciiv HEARING SET ON mepiing of the local war price ration boartl, alntc represcn of the OP/ will t call- :iv Twin cd probiiblv tlip middle of nexi week, Clnuclr Dclweller, pre.iidcnl of the Twin FMb Chamber of Com- merce. announced following a 0 of C, board ol directors' meeting Frl- lay. ic a roimrt table dL-i- ’A rcRUlatlQiui will be ify s o m e mlsundei \nSlurc"w"l'nt'r'’f t .0 of the rulings, Det- , the local OPA board icrcha aihlns I prt iltlon ."ilsncd by local husl- 1, was recently pre.wnled to cr nnd th e Chamber of Commerce. Tlie bonrd of directors of the chambcr will meet with the county jommlssloiiers nt public hearing Monday niomlnir, urging Uint a con- iolWnlVon election be htW, alvlTig Twin Kalis and Rock Creek highway dtlents tlie opiwtunlty to express their opinion If consolidation. Detwcller urged all members Uie Chamber of Commerce to i Und.Uie.ftucUon-noxt-Wednesday 3:30 p, m. nt Twin Palls Co........... compai grounds. 35 Japanese Face U.S. D raft Charge BOISE. July 58 (/D—The federal -_reau of InveiUgotlon has ehnrged 3i Japanc.-ie and Japanese-Ai lean* wllh stlecUvc ser\-lce v tion, Aulstnnt U. S. Attorney Robert Beckwith said 12 warrants had been served, some on residents of Mini- doka relocation center at Hunt, Some of those charged live outside Idalio. Meanwhile. Robert PhlUip Otlen, Nampa,' and Winfred Earl Walker, Boise, were 'arraigned on chargee of fniling lo r:C|>ort for Induction and were bound over for federal court trial on tt,Doa bonds. LONDON. July 2S—Brest Litovsk, la.st great fortress position; licfni'o Warsaw, was abandoned to th e onrushing Russian armies today atoiifi- with Kaunas in Lithuania, Berlin announced. Si'viel ti'oops charged within 80 miles of the PoUsh capital. In a 17- milo advance beyond the San river, they penetrated to a point 128 niik's fi'om G erm an Silesia. Iltv>l [,ii„v.-;k and Kainii.-M Kuve tlu' Kii: liiniu^'h tile Baltic statf.s, Poland lui Cnitun .Silr.sia jiiul Czechoslovakia. Til.' (;.>rman IiikIi lid of Litlui enfc-st Russ aftpr ,rd the tn. liiiiH troo])a were i^.-*ians 10 majcir triumphs in -i-i hours as they wiiip- lid the C;iirpatlii;:in r.icithills toward East Prussia, ;d i Ik' cviiiciiaticM 1 t.f Hiest Litov.sk ill jl.s daily coni- ■ceiiii atren cy a.lt.lillfd the lo.-^-s of Kauiiaa, the old -10 miles ()f Bcrlin itself witli the capture of Gar- * wolin, 30 mile.s southeast of Bradley’s Tanks Smash New Gains By VIIKilL PINKI.EV SUl'RK.Ml-: HEAIJQUAKTEKS. AEF. .Itily 2 8 (U.P.) Anieiican jununcd forcc.s, ImmmLTiiig lliu Gurtnaiis .sotUh- wiird in a chaotic {'cnerul retreat, drove lo w ithin a little nuiiv Ihjin Hv« mile.s of Coiitanccs today iiml oiilf!aiike<i the wwt coa.st .sli-ont'hoki with a deep thni.-^l to the .sontlicast extending the first arm y’.s breaktlii-ouRli to 15 miles. United Press W ar Corre- spondeiit Hoary T. Gorroll re- IKirled fi-oni Nortriaiuly that liiiik vanj'uard.s were otilv two aiKi oiielhird miles from Coii- lutices al 7:1)0 a. ni. (1 ::!0 a, 111. I':,\V.T.) and the fall of the ivml vailwiiy hu\> v.iis colored i: ildnlRht. Tliese « 1 the ballet nniofiK thci favorite t inants II y cli% Adolf IlitlL. (ia.s reich SS divlflioii, last reported di'iiwiiiK .southwuni from tlio Pericr.s-Le.'^say area bohimi little more than road guard resi.ilaiico. nsl of Coi; still t •r colia Corre.^pondcnt Jam es McO rriioried from the front, ndvn three and n half mile.i to w a mile nnd a half north of T. 6ur-Vlre, 10 miles due .louil St. Lp. necoiuials.snnce pilots said Te.i'V njijienred to have been cvncunled by the Ocrmnns. Panicky netreal Tlie Orrmnns appeared to be li panicky retreat all along Ihe 40 mile western half of the Normnnd: front ns the gTcnte.st tank offen.'slvi ever mounted In western Europe, went into Its fourth day. Sup hcndtiliartera m UI there nn Ic was "any (lUesUoii o t s. tine or Untied Stntes front." 61a.ililns forward nt will ii a mighty umbrella of dive-boir flghter-tombcrs nnd figiitcrs. Ueut, Oen. Omar N,'Brndley's Uink .. unms enRulfed dozens of roadside hamlets and vlllaRes and appeared veil on the way townrd breaking ;omplctely out of the Normandy bottleneck, paving the way for a drive on Paris. Mai Tlie Prl% proportlon.K of the Germnn rmiUl"JL->«i<ju^nf:.jLltno.st hourly. More than 3,000 prisonerrw i-if laVeiV In Die first tliree dnj's of the of- fensive nnd Gorrell said he countrd T RANGE B KILL U. S. TROOPS NINTH AIR FORCE QUARTEns. Normnjidy. iDelaycdi-(U.PJ — Ab- r Fortrf.we.s and niedlur HEAD. July 21 iO Klylng ................................ of their as- signed area and killed and Aniericnn soldiers durinR yesterday's rccord 3,000-plane bonibardinent of .enemy, lliies we.st o f . Hi, Vo, LL- Ocn. Lc«li Brereton ncknowledgcd today, Brereton. commander of the nlr force, told uorre.spondcnts that feared down 10,000 ynrdii sli scheduled area. Olhcj Immedlntely r e Broup of Hav the bombing r n the lend plai onibs pluinnieti niuvi ol boi » not Mitlsfled wlUi ' the mass bombardment, ly becauH- of its failure lick breakthrough by tan McClusky Trial Set for Monday BLACKPOOT, July 28 (/II — Dr. I. A. McClusky. superliitcndent ot 10 Blnckfool State hospital south icing a "neglect of patient" chargc. Ill be tried before a Jury Mondny t 10 a. m., c. C. Harris, justlcc c‘ le peace, announced today. In the charge stlU facing th jpcrlmendent. It Li alleged "tho clequntr......................................... se Ja w WB! •.Hid leinilrrrl-by-twe—of—a-5 MiotJier patient iicglcct ninst the doctor was dismissed It week. 3,000 Bombers Heap New Riiiii On Reeling Nazi War Machine LONtJON, July 58 lUPJ— Mmost, 3,000 Avnerltun heavy bombers and fighters from Britain and Italy rocked axis Europe by daylight today, smashing at the vltats of Uie nail war mnchlne In central Oermany and the Ploestl oil fields in southern nomaala. The mighty two-wny blow was « i in nioilon by a fleet of 2.o6o U. 8. eight)) air force Flying Fortresses. Llberaion and fighters Uint Berlin said skirted the Ocrmaji cnpllal to hit the .big aircraft nnd chemical eenWTTof-Dessnu, Halle nnd Me burg. Simultaneously. Italian-based hea- strong fishier foi 1 estimated £00 :i. covered by iatlon.'(. heaped Ploestfs bat- The oil InstallaUons. ......... Heavy Flak - - .......... Toujid defen teiTlflc rink barri ...................se smoke screen bck* tlia vlUI oil fields, bul retumlni Aiuerlcan filers said their bombs touched off great fires and explo- sions through the Uireet area. At least 1,000 Flying Porlresses nd Liberators and an equal nuni* •r of lons-rnnge Mustans, Llght- and Tliunderbolt fighters par* center of ihe reich, llrsi reports from reluming crewmen Indicated Ihe luftwaffe put up only n feehli defense. N'aU Fire Thick .Antl-slreraft fire over Uit torgeta was 50 ihlck. however, that a t otie stage of the attack the escorting American fighter pilots found their vlslbUlty dimmed by the black bursts of exploding flak. One large formation ol bomben nnd fighters was Jumped by a Br°up of 16 Me&aersehmltt 109'a Focke.Wulf 100'* • during tho hour fUghl. Thi enemy fighters bamlled down through the bomber foona- Uon for one llehtnlng attack. wlUi swarms of MusUng tlghWrs ridln* hard on ihclr tails. At least tour nasi pUnes went splnulnc down in flames nlihout the loss of a, alngle American ship. es ^or five were the victories: St UiovF,k, historic city of 111 the ttestcrn Bun river, ‘s cnst of Warshaw. Moscow yet confirmed its capture Iriually was surrounded lii^t nd hiis been leagues behind tbound frunl for two weeks. 1? radiate from there to . all secllcns of East Prus- D-,cow, Minsk nnd Wllno. •nicre In 1916. a iwace trea ty In ^nk.1. belllBerent revolt-t allied Capital 2. Kaunas, lomitr capital of U th- uaiiu nnd lu itcond largest city with a 152J85 pojiulaUon. K aunas hnd been Invested for a fortnight or more; the 1«.« lost night of Slmillal made lls position untenable. I t lies 55 rail milts from th e EosC Pnii-^la frontier, half the way there from captured Wllno which became the Lithuanian capital by Russian decree during the war. 3. Lwow. third city of oW-Poland and one of R'rtipe's greatoil rail eciiwrs. lopplffliwt'niglit after tiny* of street flKhfing. I h e city, of 317,- ' 700 Is pn the liuclinrest-Warsaw,- Derlin railroad and w-as a t>arrler to Cl^tchoslovnklft and Hungary. Moa- cnWs Izvestla said Lwow still wai! bumlnff from German demolitions and that "dou'ns of thousand.<i o f in- nocent people" had been slnln In a nail rcIgn ot terror. Third City Falls 4. Slaulial. third city of LlUiu- nnla wllh 3I,2» person.i, fell last night. Thus the last major railway was cut by which the estimated 300- 000 troops of the 30 divisions o f the Gennan 16th nnd 18th armies could escape or be supplied. The rlctory placed Ihc Ruulsn.% 75 miles north- enst of the East Pru.'ulan city of Tlliiil. 83 miles northeast of the Baltic port of Memel and 125 mllea nortlieasl of the Ea.'t Prussian cap- ital of KonlRsbcrg, TlUlt »Tia bomb- ed lnj:l night and Moscow said five military trnlns Wfre destroyed. 5. Daugavplb, third city of Lal- lu wllh 4S.160 population. tcnllnuhl Nil ». Cl.-in »> om su.s.siA i Dy United Press Oovemmenis throughout Central Amcrlcn todsy gave evldcncc . ot hcmbphcrle wlidar^iy by voicing their approval of the United Staie.i stand In lt.i current diplomatic crlsU wllh ArRenlina. In Buenos Alrea late yesterday a .j!__ tiiipK rrn g-fl iinmrled the streela, expressing Uitlr support of Argen- tlnn's foreign policy. . Guatemala. Honduras, HalU, and the Domlnlean Republic by early today had reaflimied their Intention of not recognltng the Argentine denied the Jnlted States charge that Its eeo- lomle course favored tlie axis-and i-as ngalnst the interests of the United Nations. Tlie Ountciiialsn government said ; would not '■reeognlre the present Argentine regime while It falls to fulfill Its intcr-Amertcan obllgaUons and lo reeUIy Its attitude In favor effective continental solidarity the defente and security o l tha hemisphere. AMERICAN tB A O U S— " —' Washington —----- ------------ 101—3 Chicago ..... ------------ Lefebvre and Evaiu, Lopat - ai)d - • Treth. •••''. - ! Boston ____ — 301: 8 I 0 - W ; ' Detroit ------- : -------; ----- * » JOOr-. 3^ 0-H411 and i.Wagner: :T to u t -.^ w a J .■ _<•( ■■ Chicago BraoUyii CtilpmanasdWUllanutB Bwm.-' ------------- ~

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Page 1: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

' • : • r / / ✓ ,

E V E N I N G

A R e jd o n n I N ew spaper S c rv in s Nine I r r l ^ t c d Idnho Counties

T W I N F A L L S . ID A H O , KlUDAY E V E N I N G . J U L Y 28. 104-1 PRICE 5 C E N T S

Jap War Chief

I

fapannf cahln^l. Hr lo.tl .f »UJf Job m hlel> <•' ihaktop l!i.H folloB-cd cl Ilf raid on Truk by U. m Fcbrnjrr.

JAPS OENY YANK [|['RSE)(ECUIED

SOLONSFORECAST ENO O FiU SK PEACE PLANNING

WASHINOTON, July 28 (,r»-Ti«lk of the chnnccs lor »n early victory over ocrniaiij’ »atpl optlmUtlcnlly nnionir coiisrcu nifmbers toclixy. modprnleii by advicf Irom Rep. Mc- Comiacl;- D- U»M, Uial Uil-1 Is no

rt Imnjill) •' •

siilllr

: for recoiivcralon of I

Ky.. of t;

il Ocrmal

broadcnsl ol 1

for Siipcrforin Japan.

Inlcncltd lo i 6iipcrforlrpj.s filers,;

olllclnlly Tokyo* i of the cjfculloii of who bombpd ToKyo

, - Tok:

110 crashcd

1 huicllns npiiarci

r only c the Uni

lowlcdiimcnl of the filers

;hc Dooll'

duslry tro Chixlrni]

house mlventured Hie forecui would cnpltulalf by Dcc. 1. . Tliomas, D„ Okla.. licnd of llie s e n ­ate !!ub-commlll« on military ap- proprlAtlonR. commtntcd: "I d o n ’: scf how aemiany can Inst through the rp.n of this ytar."

Caution I 'rrMuch lew hoj)tful v

allied Ihti-iicrs as hnylnit •'iiiiy i Mirmeii alio falli or balls out

I will beB-29 filers Rho c«me down lind m et •Uie tanis fal* which wua m elt nut to the r*ldcr» of Tokyo son: two years mo '•

Today’s olllclal denlnl. brondcni from Tokyo and recorded by it;

J,yocln t« l Prca. fald •'Uicre Is ii ».indailoii Id reporLi ih n t Amcrlcn T l'ots who eni.shert on Jopnne.'^e so have been executed or would t execuletl."

EY BIIIEREY lUNCESFISH

ALBANY. N, Y.. July "8 tU.PI-As- •ertlng ihnl "iitiyonc who Injcct.i ti racial or rcllglon.i l.wiie Into a po- lUlenl cami’aign h RUllty of a dL<i- grnceful, mi.American net," Gov. Tliomas E. Dewey, Rcpubllcnn presi­dential nominee, today repurilntrd tlie cntiUltliicy of Rep, Hamilton ~ ' - . , N. Y.

Dcui read K n bj' J

which

It. Jiunci C, in prompted by nn Interview with Kish printed In a New York City news- paper. Tlie Interview. HtiKerly .suld. npi>enrcd in the New York Post

^ d ' \ h

d Fhh n saylr lh a l "thir Pre.iidenl Rotte

crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment i lime.

, I publicly oppasci iid eleciloii of Con Dcft-ey .-(aid. -T h

knyone Rho injccti ft racial o r rrllRloiu Luiie into n iwlltlciil cam* p,tli;n b sulliy of n dl.'^Kraceful un- American act. I have alwuy.s fought Uiat kind of thing all my life niid

......I'l'pi'aya.-'KlU,.rcBiirdlcs.1- of- p.irtl.'ian

jr l of

In.ipcctlon tour lliot E v ^ p ^ n war "Ij i ent" lo the Uoop' <1 IrK, and dpplorcil ■

ROlB E A I I i E i S

«a Friday by Anillam 1 r of Hoops Cnnstr •, BUece.Mful bidden c

from llif wc.'.tern city llmlt.i of Tv.-li FalLs to the Hoclt creek brlclKe we.-> of the cfliinty general has'ltnl woiil< be carnal out *l npproxlmaicly Uii

cd thal Uie detour for Uie w est side work would probably be th e pole line road, or el>e a coinblimtlon which would brinit Uaffic In on Shoshone street. Detour for th e ea-n end project bcuecn Tuin Pulls and Kimberly will be the sugar f a c ­tory roml. Arningeinent.1 for d e to rr between Klinbctly and Hnn.-ie:) (tlic first enst end portion to be rebuilt) prob.ibly will nllUie a graveled ounty.roiid bn; mile north of ihi* re.sriit U, S. 30.Fedenil npiiroval ol the Hoops bid

tu for$U3338,''‘“ ‘‘‘“^‘Work should bt roniiileted

.'ceks lo two montlii after the *

B r e s t L i t o v s k F a l l s t o R e d s a s E n e m y R e t r e a t F r o m R u s s i a N e a r s P a n i c ; Y a n k s

H a m m e r D i s o r g a n i z e d L i n e i n N o r m a n d yCapt. S. C. Turner,

Tarawa Hero, KilledM U R T A U G il, -I

Japs Blasted on Five Fronts in U.S. Drives

ny The A»soclatrd Presi. IK jBpatiese empire bled todny fron rvajtatlns U. 8. stnb ' ’plane.s and rcducetl

ck to the Philippine!B and Innd bnlllcfic lahist the underdOK t Pfllau. Truk, Saba j R»ia PaUu

atumbllng block o

(July 2:nrollne ba.ic.-i for i 25>, sinking ft

rncrlcai d other ^0 dayi

ilneiny.

smaller day 26

Date for Use of Food Stamps Set

WASHINOTON, July 28 (U.PJ-The iffice of price odiiilnLnration today

validated five adilltlonal blue m ' .tnnip.1 and three red stainps.Jluc stamiw. to JO Into use riie.sday, are B-S, C-5. D-S, E-5F-5, ______

The new r<

e good tor an Indefinite pc-

America Insists on Vacation Despite Pleas Not to TravelBy JAMES MAtlLOW

WASHINOTON, July 37 mid-summer now and—In spite o all Rovenimcnt appenl.s fo r them t . slay off ihe trains niid spend their

traveling at a tremendoiis m te.underjlMid.wUat-Uicy-nre

Ing fii' ilibi third yeor of w ar. «l -'itomoblle travel has been cut

€> Mini

packed to capacUy.Seme Effect

3. The office of defense tm nspor- (atlon hubeen hammering awny n t a eampalgii to keep people off the -..•ins. It's been a "don 't travel" campaign.

One offlelal of t r r said h e Uilnlw the eampaign U -'having eomo ef- fcct” .and that the “m tc of In­crease, in roilroad travel Is slow-

, Ing down.”It'^U .difficult lo » e c-ln view of

Ihe capacity tro*-d* a t sum m er re- itr ls—that the campsiBn la having much effecL

If «n>-on« h u arty tlluslon* about

curiillmciM oC nllroiitl imvel. he are some figures for June rut ' from 1939 through lust month

Travel ntporled In June, 193D. Uie AssoclaUon of

Amerelcan Rollroads reported 2,074.- 085,000 pnsscnRcr,mlIcj.lraveled:-la •June.-1B10 — 3,053jl6fl00: In Ju n e .

June. 1 043 - 4Jaai72,000: m June. 104J-7J13.- 2J4.000. And In June, 1844. although flsures axe not complete, tlie a iso - elallon esUmates ilie passenger mllea

Tel. C, Jl. - - ■ . ....................of l4«^ocliiUon.t*;-i thV riliroada ^ Id^handlB in eicea of a D,000.- 000.000 passenger diIIm.

^ ■ Troop In te l Drop*Perhaps the full HpiHlcance o f

me Incnasect pasHnger travel can be seen from this: TJwp move- mtnta have tapered off a bit but ttie to m number of paurngen carrted by the roads h is increased. T h a t Increase must be made up of clvU-

In 1943 orBonlied ttoop move, .nenls on ihe niticoadj.averigcd 1.- 600.000 a month. TWs year they 're' aveniBlng IJMW), and .decUnin*.

escori or rgo ves-scl.? ni ., On the firs

, de.itroynd. On the sec­ond, no encniy Inlcrccptors were seen. Five U. 8 . planes were Io.«t bul four pllot.1 were saved, Islanis nt- t.icked were Arakadc.^an, Pelellu, Angnur. Malnkal and Korot In the PnlftU croup, nnd Yap and UHlhl, which a r e between PaUu n n d Ouom. Adm. Chester W. KInilti told of Uie raid last night.

Another stlnglii* blow, Inflicted by bombers of Gen. Douglni Mue A rthur’s command, snnk one :hl and tired three others ol a flvt ship convoy 160 miles south t Truk. The llfUi ves- el escaped,

British Hll Sabanc A th ird sea blow by a Brlttih

directed fleet hit Sabang nt the .aoctt\weM t i p of Sutualra wrecked Us liafbbfTvIlaTlo'i; of th e Japanc.se supply line tc nm v ia SIngajjor*.

London announced today, I ditton. (Jut British submorini stroyed 21 Japanese supplyothe .ihl|u i. - . ind damaged several by torpedo and diinflre,

Allied l a n d guimfklcl -cut Ilories. On Guam and Tlnlsn In the Marlnnas U. S. troops pressed the Isolated enemy garrisons clcner to annihilation. Tlie Tlnlnn Invadera, killins 10 Japs to every marine slnln. held n third of tile Uliuid and were putting Ushl airfield In shape for American use. Tinian cuualUes: 3,089 known JaponMC dead: 150 U. S, dcnd .-« l woundcd..32,mlisln«Jn six days fighting.

Nlmits Lwied no new wofd on the

Germans Unleash New Robot Raids

LONDON, July 28 (UB - Robot ..jmba strewed mote deaUi and structlon through London southern England today ind the authorlUUve mogiuJne “The-Aero- plane" warned that nazi producUon of Jet-propelled aircraft may be sufficiently far advanced "to con- stitui« a threa t lo allied Mr su­premacy over Eunjpe," ,

Several rues were storied In the British caplUl and In oUierdtstrlcla during the n iaht. ReKCutrt In one area worked by tUres In an eflort to tunnel tlirou th debris to rtacli trap-

FLASHES of LIFE

TH A IF IC ELKHART. Ind., July 58-\Vh. .

tra ffic bccunie tangled n t Main and Jnck-son ^trccl.s Pollcemon Walter C n rte r rttshcU Into action.

H e found It WAS caused by a bal buBgy crossing the Intcrsecili agnln.-it a red light. In the bugg ’ wius ft thrpe-yenr*old Rlrl and pro-

vas her four-ycar-oMlellliiB

rter M>ld the hlklre_____- .iiy irom home and "borrowed" the bURgy from In front of i fu rn liu rc store.

SURPLUS PUEBLO. Colo., Juiv 28 - U ti

Isiibel hius too many fl.ih. too lltfli fksh food Rml-too-few-fUiermen.—

So the ,stnte gnmc und fish de pa rtn ien t has raised Uic legal hml to 20 a day. any dzc. In nn elfer to n tu o c t nuglets.

I t said Ka.'.ollne and tire ration Ins had helped the fish over-jwp- ulntc.

TR A PSA L T LAKE CITY. July 28-Oro- •r L eo R. Jensen always left IQJO I sm nll chnnge In his cash teglster,

w ith the draw er open, believing ihnt If burg lars entered they'd take Uie

ige the costlydepository.

I t worked c burg lar

better thiin tJiat....................... 1. took Uie money

•nd le ft without dnmagliiK anj’tlilng, A n t^ h e wu-1 convicted of_lhtrd de­gree burglarlyV too.' after jwllce cau g h t him elase Uy-wlth exactly *3.50 In Rtniil! change In hli pocket,

21 Persons Hurt In Bus Accident

KLAMATH PALLS, O re , July 28 (/P) — A Bouthbound Portland-San FYnnclsco Greyhound bus akldrted and overturned here last night, sending a i of lu 37 rassengen to hospitals.

T h e bus went out of control on r ^ - w e t pavement as It entered ttie city, careened two bloelca down a sU ght grade, nnd crashed on Its side ■i th e fron t yard of a house. '

P u s en g e rs , hurled f r o m their seate by Uie impacl. were removed th rough th e etnergency door, open- -d by th e . driver, V. J . Wrlgstes- ■•ortii. Eugene. : .

ALLIES PREPARE FINAL A SSA OLIS

ON IIA LY CIIIESK n M li . .In ly '2H (UR) — T in

l i l i s l i (‘ij,'lilfi a rm y , u((vnru-- tr v a r d by yai-d tlii-outrli l e r e n e m y resislatm e,

• s to n n e ti to w i th in huvoii mile^‘ 111' l e s s o f F lo re n c e to d a y

lilo A m e v ic a n n tn l GcrTiM\i\ fo rce .t to th e w o.st niu.sae(i fo r t lie b a t t l e o f F is a nnd c h iin jjc d h e a v y n r tille ry

wwt of n o need ns mu( ; Vallrccljlc

y moved Into i>03mon fc . on Plsfi. inuler hea\T Hr

n iirtilleiT coinilcred hciiv

HEARING SET ONmepiing of th e local war price ration boartl, alntc represcn of the OP/ •

will t call-:ivTwincd probiiblv tlip middle of nexi week, Clnuclr Dclweller, pre.iidcnl of the Twin FMb Chamber of Com­merce. announced following a 0 of C, board ol directors' meeting Frl-lay.

ic a roimrt table dL-i- ’A rcRUlatlQiui will be ify s o m e mlsundei

\n S lu rc " w " l'n t 'r '’f t .0 of the rulings, Det-

, th e local OPA board

icrcha aihlns I prt

iltlon ."ilsncd by local husl- 1, was recently pre.wnled to cr n n d t h e Chamber of

Commerce.Tlie bonrd of directors of the

chambcr will m eet with the county jommlssloiiers n t public hearing Monday niomlnir, urging Uint a con- iolWnlVon election be htW, alvlTig Twin Kalis and Rock Creek highway

dtlents tlie opiw tunlty toexpress the ir opinion If consolidation.

Detwcller urged all members Uie Chamber of Commerce to i Und.Uie.ftucUon-noxt-Wednesday3:30 p, m . nt Twin Palls Co...........compai grounds.

35 Japanese Face U.S. D raft Charge

BOISE. July 58 (/D—The federal -_reau of InveiUgotlon has ehnrged 3 i Japanc.-ie and Japanese-Ai lean* w llh stlecUvc ser\-lce v tion,

A u lstnn t U. S. Attorney Robert Beckwith said 12 w arran ts had been served, some on residents of Mini­doka relocation cen ter a t Hunt, Some of those charged live outside Idalio.

Meanwhile. R obert PhlUip Otlen, Nampa,' a n d W infred Earl Walker, Boise, were 'a rra igned on chargee of fniling lo r:C|>ort for Induction and were bound over for federal court tr ia l on tt,Doa bonds.

LONDON. Ju ly 2S—Brest L itovsk , la.st g rea t fortress position; licfni'o W arsaw , was abandoned to t h e onrushing Russian a rm ies today atoiifi- w ith K aunas in L ithuan ia , Berlin announced.

Si'viel ti'oops charged within 80 m iles o f the PoUsh capital. In a 17- milo advance beyond the San river, they penetrated to a point 128 niik's fi'om G erm an Silesia.

Iltv>l [,ii„v.-;k a n d Kainii.-M Kuve tlu ' Kii: liin iu^ 'h ti le B a lt ic s ta tf.s, Poland lui

C n i tu n .Silr.sia jiiul C zechoslovak ia.Til.' (;.>rm an Ii ik Ii

lid o f L itlu i enfc-st R u ss

a f tp r ,rd th e tn.

liiiiH troo ])a w ere

i^.-*ians 10 m ajc ir tr iu m p h s in -i-i hours a s th e y w iiip -lid th e C;ii rp a t lii ;:in r.icithills toward E a s t P r u s s i a ,

;d i Ik ' cviiiciiaticM 1 t.f H iest Litov.sk ill jl.s da ily c o n i-■ceiiii a tre n cy a .lt . l i l l f d th e lo.- -s of K auiiaa, t h e o ld

-10 m ile s ()f B c r l in i ts e lf w itli the c a p tu re o f G a r-* w olin , 30 mile.s s o u th e a s t o f

Bradley’s Tanks Smash New Gains

By VIIKilL PINKI.EVSUl'RK.Ml-: H E A IJQ U A K T E K S . A E F. .Itily 2 8 (U.P.) —

A n ie iican j u n u n c d forcc.s, ImmmLTiiig lliu G u rtn a iis .sotUh- wiird in a c h a o tic { 'cn e ru l r e t r e a t , d rove lo w i th in a little nuiiv Ih jin Hv« m ile.s o f C o iitanccs today iim l o iilf!a iik e< i the w w t coa.st .s li-on t'hok i w ith a deep thni.-^l to t h e .son tlicast ex ten d in g th e f i r s t a r m y ’.s breaktlii-ouRli to 15 m ile s .

U nited P r e s s W a r C orre- spondeiit H o a ry T . G o rro ll re- IKirled fi-oni N o rt ria iu ly th a t liiiik v a n j 'u a rd .s w e re o tilv two aiKi o i ie lh i r d m ile s f ro m Coii- lutices a l 7:1)0 a . n i. (1 ::!0 a,111. I':,\V.T.) a n d th e f a l l o f the

ivml va ilw iiy hu\> v.iis

colored i: ildnlRht. Tliese «

1 theb a lle t nniofiK th c i favo rite t

in a n tsII y cli%

A d o lf IlitlL . (ia.s r e ic h SS

divlflioii, l a s t r e p o r t e d di'iiwiiiK .s o u th w u n i f r o m tlio Pericr.s-Le.'^say a r e a bohimi little m o re t h a n r o a d gu a rd resi.ilaiico.

nsl of Coi; still t •r colia

Corre.^pondcnt Jam es McO rriioried from the front, ndvn three and n half mile.i to w a mile nnd a half north of T. 6ur-Vlre, 10 miles due .louil St. Lp.

necoiuials.snnce pilots said Te.i'V njijienred to have been cvncunled by the Ocrmnns.

Panicky n e tre a lTlie Orrmnns appeared to be li

panicky retreat a ll along Ihe 40 mile western half o f the Normnnd: front ns the gTcnte.st tank offen.'slvi ever mounted In w estern Europe, went into Its fourth day. Sup hcndtiliartera m UI there nn Ic was "any (lUesUoii o t s. tine or Untied Stntes front."

61a.ililns forward nt will ii a mighty umbrella of dive-boir flghter-tombcrs nnd figiitcrs. Ueut, Oen. Omar N ,'B rndley 's Uink .. unms enRulfed dozens of roadside hamlets and vlllaRes and appeared veil on the way townrd breaking ;omplctely out of the Normandy bottleneck, paving the way for a drive on Paris.

MaiTlie

Prl%proportlon.K of the Germnn

rmiUl"JL->«i<ju^nf:.jLltno.st hourly. More than 3,000 p risonerrw i-if laVeiV In Die first tliree dnj's of the of­fensive nnd Gorrell said h e countrd

T RANGE B KILL U. S . TROOPS

NINTH AIR FORCE QUARTEns. Normnjidy. iDelaycdi-(U.PJ — Ab- r Fortrf.we.s and niedlur

HEAD. July 21

iO Klylng

................................ of the ir as­signed area and killed and Aniericnn soldiers durinR yesterday's rccord 3,000-plane bonibardinent of .enemy, lliies we.st o f . Hi, Vo, LL- Ocn. Lc«li Brereton ncknowledgcd today,

Brereton. commander of the nlr force, told uorre.spondcnts that

feared

down 10,000 ynrdii sli scheduled area. Olhcj

Immedlntely r

e Broup of Hav the bombing r n th e lend plai onibs pluinnieti

niuvi ol boi

» not Mitlsfled wlUi ' the mass bombardment, ly becauH- o f its failure lick breakthrough by tan

McClusky Trial Set for Monday

BLACKPOOT, Ju ly 28 (/II — Dr. I. A. McClusky. superliitcndent ot 10 Blnckfool S tate hospital south icing a "neglect of pa tien t" chargc. Ill be tried before a Jury Mondny t 10 a. m., c . C. H arris, justlcc c‘ le peace, announced today.In the charge stlU facing th

jpcrlmendent. It Li alleged "tho clequntr.........................................

se Jaw WB!•.Hid leinilrrrl-by-twe—of—a-5

MiotJier patient iicglcct ninst the doctor was dismissed It week.

3,000 Bombers Heap New Riiiii On R eeling Nazi War MachineLONtJON, July 58 lUPJ— Mmost, 3,000 Avnerltun heavy bombers and

fighters from Brita in and Italy rocked axis Europe by daylight today, smashing a t the vlta ts of Uie nail war mnchlne In central Oerm any and the Ploestl oil fields in southern nomaala.

The mighty two-wny blow was « i in nioilon by a fleet o f 2.o6o U. 8. eight)) air force Flying Fortresses. Llberaion and fighters Uint Berlin said skirted the O crm aji cnpllal to hit the .big aircraft nnd chemical eenWTTof-Dessnu, Halle nnd Meburg.

Simultaneously. Italian-based hea- strong fishier foi

1 estimated £00 :i. covered by iatlon.'(. heaped

Ploestfs bat-

The

oil InstallaUons.......... Heavy Flak - - ..........

Toujid defenteiTlflc rink barri

...................se smoke screen bck*tlia vlUI oil fields, bul retum lni Aiuerlcan filers sa id the ir bombs touched off great fires a n d explo­sions through the Uireet area.

At least 1,000 Flying Porlresses nd Liberators and an equal nuni* •r of lons-rnnge M ustans, Llght-

and Tliunderbolt fighters par*

center of ihe reich, llrsi reports from reluming crewmen Indicated Ihe luftwaffe put up only n feehli defense.

N'aU Fire Thick.Antl-slreraft fire over Uit torgeta

was 50 ihlck. however, tha t a t otie stage of the attack th e escorting American fighter pilots found their vlslbUlty dimmed by the black bursts of exploding flak .

One large form ation ol bomben nnd fighters was Jumped by a Br°up of 16 Me&aersehmltt 109'a Focke.Wulf 100'* • du ring tho hour fUghl. •

T h i e n e m y figh ters bam lled down through the bomber foona- Uon for one llehtnlng a ttack. wlUi swarms of MusUng tlghW rs ridln* hard on ihclr tails. A t least tour nasi pUnes went splnulnc down in flames nlihout the loss of a, alngle American ship.

es ^or five

were the victories:St UiovF,k, historic c ity of 111 the ttestcrn Bun river, ‘s cnst of Warshaw. Moscow

yet confirmed its capture Iriually was surrounded lii^t nd hiis been leagues behind tbound frunl for two weeks. 1? radiate from th e re to . all secllcns of East Prus- D-,cow, Minsk nnd Wllno.

•nicre In 1916. a iwace trea ty In

nk.1.belllBerent

revolt-tallied

Capital2. Kaunas, lomitr capital o f U th -

uaiiu nnd lu itcond largest city with a 152J85 pojiulaUon. K aunas hnd been Invested for a fo rtn igh t or more; the 1«.« lost n ig h t of Slmillal made lls position untenable. I t lies 55 rail milts from th e EosC Pnii-^la frontier, half the way there from captured Wllno which became the Lithuanian capital by Russian decree during the war.

3. Lwow. third city of oW-Poland and one of R'rtipe's grea to il rail eciiwrs. lopplffliwt'niglit a fte r tiny* of street flKhfing. I h e city, of 317,- ' 700 Is pn the liuclinrest-Warsaw,- Derlin railroad and w-as a t>arrler to Cl tchoslovnklft and Hungary. Moa- cnWs Izvestla said Lwow still wai! bumlnff from German demolitions and that "dou'ns of thousand.<i o f in­nocent people" had been slnln In a na il rcIgn ot terror.

Third City Falls4. Slaulial. third city of LlUiu-

nnla wllh 3I,2» person.i, fell last night. Thus the last major railway was cut by which the estimated 300- 000 troops of the 30 divisions o f the Gennan 16th nnd 18th armies could escape or be supplied. The rlcto ry placed Ihc Ruulsn.% 75 miles n o rth - enst of the East Pru.'ulan c ity of Tlliiil. 83 miles northeast o f the Baltic port of Memel and 125 mllea nortlieasl of the Ea.'t Prussian cap­ital of KonlRsbcrg, TlUlt »Tia bomb- ed lnj:l night and Moscow sa id five military trnlns Wfre destroyed.

5. Daugavplb, third city of Lal- lu wllh 4S.160 population.

tcnllnuhl N il ». C l.-in »>

o m s u . s . s i A iDy United Press

Oovemmenis throughout C entral Amcrlcn todsy gave evldcncc . ot hcmbphcrle wlidar^iy by voicing their approval of the United Staie.i stand In lt.i current diplomatic crlsU wllh ArRenlina.

In Buenos Alrea late yesterday a .j!__ tiiipK rrng-fl iinmrled the streela,

expressing Uitlr support of Argen- tlnn's foreign policy. .

Guatemala. Honduras, HalU, and the Domlnlean Republic by early today had reaflimied their Intention of not recognltng the Argentine

denied the Jnlted States charge tha t I ts eeo- lomle course favored tlie ax is-and i-as ngalnst the interests o f the

United Nations.Tlie Ountciiialsn government said

; would not '■reeognlre the p resen t Argentine regime while It fa lls to fulfill Its intcr-Amertcan obllgaUons and lo reeUIy Its attitude In favor

effective continental solidarity the defente and security o l tha

hemisphere.

AMERICAN tBAOUS— " — '

Washington —----------------- 101—3Chicago ..... ------------

Lefebvre and Evaiu, Lopat - ai)d - • Treth. •••''. - !

Boston ____ —301: 8 I0 -W ; 'D etro it------- :-------;----- * » JOOr-. 3^

0-H411 and i.Wagner: :T tou t-.^w aJ.■ _<•( ■■

Chicago BraoUyii

CtilpmanasdWUllanutB B w m . - ' ------------- ~

Page 2: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

P a g o . Tw o T IM E S - N E W S , T W IN F A L L S . I D A H O

MURTEHHERO APS BUSIED IN FIVEIW DRIVES

fA sstA S \vovNni;i> WASHINOTON. July :S i l> -T t\c

x>sr ikiiArimi'iil iMyv rfix'riMl 1.* 018 addlilonnl »n!i|irr> wouiictrcl in nellon In ttip tMruiynii niiri McillO'i ranfn i vut fmiij. ITkx^p woun.lr In Uio Europfiiu mrn iiKiiirifd; l i l ' hcv-PJc, WlUlMiiC. nrnmiau; bid'll fr.'Eiirl O. nrsniisii, Hcv\ B4. AU’li'i

6 Men Added toBull! Will Honor

Four War VictimsDraft Blacklist 1 Meuifirlsl servlrei. trr t<nir I

]nnd wfM end •ervUemeii nlio 1Cases ot dtlta'iueiioy InvoUUig

sU men rt»il.<ipif<l ii th t m u Falls i-ounti' drall b>Mtd No. I were re-

lo 'l Ihelr lives in Ihf prrrem i fllri will be held ai iti- Pnhi ivxik Sunday at ,1 p n i, II n.'s

ixirttd lo the U.S. ca'Irlcl - tto n iry a t Boise. Joe L. R<it>erl.-. cleik of the boatd here, iiitiouiu'e.l l^ tdiiy

Til" Clark Cl. Fn\ |v-.M ol Amerlrnn I.cclr>n win iiaseeiiari:

The m unthb’ifpon invioded the fs'ex of Ralph SVWniorr. Rolx-rt T.

tli<> iin'inc'ilal sfivln-.v and nimi cf the -iVlii Fiills litive I n 'ked to nIteiHl If p^-lWe, ac-n

thuny L, Dilbii. Ji'hnule J . 'm 'ook anti Olln M. OltlorO, nnxiiiieii. Buhl roiiimander, liv

Itiirvrv Cook, local adjutaiil.

1 The Hospitalt^rrvieemen lo be remrmhrrec

tli r service svill he Vlr^H N. K se.imun 1 c ot ihe nnvT: t-ouh

H orses Send Two Men Into Hospital

nhouldcr. H is condlti

•o Ssiiirday for 6 0 Join her parcnti, Mr. . M. Oliiislcnd. who have Blrllo Ihr HRRi lev dovn ^ M1.-S nr-'day to \lsli Miss E>ct.

ore U-liind A rthur Tliie’ son of Mr. unci Mrs. Arthu •y; Leroy Moore, Bulil. *oi litl Mr*, m lcy Moore: Wlboi Riihl. .ion of MrJ. Dcrt Robert Don ow»lcy, H a« r

Mcrnc &icp. Goodin; ■ntl Mrs. J. E. Esteii,

of Ml

B«d.< w?r» at noon y tdsy Bi tlip Twill J'.iit voiimv i;n rral ha-pllal.

AUMlTICh Mr?. J. A. Ciiupbri:, Mflvin Ha

born, L. C. P«cf. KmiifUi K lm if Mr*. Ksrl PtTdiiin, Mrs- Ollvfr. Ai dfrson bu<1 Mn. AUtnl K»u-kcnrtn Tirln Fuli. : Cli! •Mrs. Qlcn aits<R»jmoiid WIckf.

nisM......Mrsi Jot)II Pfncf,

Schrnk. Melvin n»)bom - ........HendfrMH. Tuiii Ftiij; H rifu O bfi cJulr, JfnMsr; JlrJfn N «bl» , FJJn Viola Atn-ixxt tnd Dlaitp EVsir^toi Buhl; Jicfc Fiillfr, Miirlttusli; M r J. A. Dofrflliijtf md jon. B u r lr ’ • ’'d M rr Jee WLvraTfr amj jofii

<rt,v; M i

cl Roborl

WEATHER

Keep <fte WhIM Flag 0/ Sa/cty Filling

,Kou> 13 (fajrj tuiiAouC a tnu/lc decth in our JHapfc Valley.

.................................- c of llie ;: Ciil Ud Wi'bl) Biid Cpl. Hsl 'U Mttlcr, M h ot lilt nrniv.

e from ItiiI If’; WlltlII tlie May.

Magic Valley Funerals

(T»l fcrvlcfs for Oi *111 \T liftil Bl J ji. r

. mio Ixxly »lll t)f flilppcrtr.>y, Uln

iko pldce Mon- hr (Uirrllcti of cliaiKl, •IM.I

Bl llif n ic r Mfiiiumll* liurrh u llh ilif Ri'v. J. K. Meyfru \ cliarje. nryiiolcl^ fuiiernl hoin« 111 Jtlrecl (niri.il In ilif n ifr 1. O. O.

n -M fin o rm ! iltfs D «ln Ailnnu, iiiarlii# piMio kin'cil In nc......In the Piiddc. 1,111 be held m. Suntliv a t t]ie L D. S. le a t Osfctpy «(il» n t ranncy In chnrnf.M.

SHOSHONE - Mfmortil len lcrs Id ttqulrm h lth man for S2t,

Ju lian P. Oilbjo, nho diFd ovrr»eAi> t of wounds rtfflvcd In bc-nialt ljUud. Mil be iifid at

10:30 !>. :n., Aiik, 3. at Bl. Peier'* 'hnrtli, Sho-tinue. Tho

................... 'm « Grady *U1 b# cele-b ran u

DECLO - nmeral ttrvicfs for M rs. Harriet Hun^^^ker l.e»la will b« Itrld Simday at 3 p. m a l the D odo « r t hall with nuiiop h . T. J u o tu offlcUUns. Amnsetntnu a re briitf n>artp a t tho Paj-ni

W orker Referral Inquiry UnderwayCoinpltnnce of cmplnvor.i m " '

Volley w ith the WMc prtorii -iorral-prosram -oncL Ihi-cntlii blllratloii n e t Is the siibjrtl ■

Diirley Thll^^clny. continued h u rcjca F rldsy a n d will reu

Falls em ptoj’frs for thf

troI.» i>hou!d t» pul lnt<Labor nnd mnnRuemcut both

h fn rd thfl Btnie officials at a nitet- Uig In thB Labor tomple July 30.

purpose labor CO efffct.

Mine Owner DiesBURLEY. July 38 - Htno' :

ja rd n c r. about 80, who w».i owne if the CnltdA mine company at At 110. died n t his horhe there Wednes-

diiy following A heart attacl:.Everj- aum m er lie has come 1

..,1:1# a t Almo from San Diego, CftUf.. w here he makes Ills lion

:orlc II.S iin’lvom Includ* his wife

ive-year-old «>n. Tlie b ody___t the B urley funeral horns i>endlDj heir a rr lro l Jrom Sail Dlega

MORTUARY'Mr. A M rs. fifaniey PhHKps

^,2M 2 n d A te . N n.^rhone 31 j

Defense Council Meets Saturday

Ttt-ln Falls county eoiinell of d«. fen.ie w ill meet in »peclal session al the Id ah o Power compony auditori­um S;iUirdiiy n t 8;3o p.m. with slate officials nnd a rcBlonal cxecullve In ftltcnrtnnce, It wa-s announced Frl. day by Mr*. Fronkle Brown, secrc-

Mr.« Browi

Jew H n'

icll r

ofllclal.'i

■uibers

I the I

wlU I

Stack Burns; Farm Structures SavednUHL. July 38 -A fire of l

ermlned orlRln In the feed yard nf lohn Stewart, nine mllea north- vesi of Diihl, destroyed a, hay-jtack sntalnlnR about 15 tons o f hay, ac- ordlng to Fire Clilef Bob Stewart, t Is reported th a t a feed rack wa« i!»o burned, b u t prompt action by lie Buhl fire departm ent with the nuiual truck saved all nearby bu ll' n ij. and the loro was confined he hay and feed rack.

,:ndlnc Boi.'.e, fla te chairman

of Ihc defense council, and Owen Yoiinkln, BoLse. new state aecrelary of the council, Reftlnnal executive (a a ttend will be M ayor Oalnes, Berke- ley. Cnllf.

A-vher B. W lUon Is chalnnan of !)ie T K ln FaHs council with Frank L. e tep h n n as vlce-chalrmah.

W A N D E R ER SThe nocturnal wanderings of orsM were brought to on abrupt lose early Friday morning oca! police Insisted tlia t they

being a mcnace to traffic, round browsing In th e middle ot lue Lakes Ijoulevard by a cltlze. ho Informed police, the equine pal. Ml "leken care of," according to le police bu lletin board.

iupjiftrl; A ... __________support: John e . White, out-

Kuard: Murrcl z. Stansbury Ic Runrd; P. E. Allred, chap- ; W. S. TJielttcn. r ls h l siipporl Kranri. and F. L. CoBs»ell, lefi

conduf

CAMERAAn Eauman autoRraphle kodak Is

belns held at the bagRnRc room in Pocatello, Union Pacific raUroad BKcnls reported today, and they a re hunting for Its owner. I t wa^ left on a train July I] and officlnb believe It may belong to iwo Twin FnlL-i girls who clinnged tra in s al MlnJ- dokti for Twin Falls.

KU.V FESTIVAL aOODlNO, July 28—Cllum xlne a

thorouplily succesjifu! summer p ro ­gram for Gooding children, con- ducted under the sponsorship of th e CoodUig nccrc:illon ns.soclatlon, a fun festival will be he ld Sunday. July 30. for all children and p a r ­ents of tlie community. Bind con ­cert. foltball. parade and w ater races are Included.

Two Canadian Troopers Seek Few Days’Work

Any farm tr need some compot«nt help In the next tiro days?

Two Canadian troopcra. members of the Canadian armored corps, nrc perfectly willing lo play tho "good neighbor" to some Tain Falls coun­ty farmer Saturday.

Trooper Tommy Mooro, IB. and 'n'oaper Jimmy LaUlonct. iff. a rc ready, willing and able to pick I ru l t or berrle.^, help In Uie hay llelda. run tractors or do any other fo rm chore except can tnill. they anld when Licy called at the USD.

Hiunmlng "6t- Loulj woman

of/crcri their scr 'lc<•s, they a

lough, and are hlUh-lilkiiig Vancouver. D. C.. from Oil

Ited, loo. iliat korr.Loul.s giUi g their I y. and they n

xcheqiicr.

vcr-.»ljed hoaiemu-Ilk fee COM mlik . they bragged a I

Funeral Sunday For Tree Victim

EDEN. July 26 — Funeral services for Ous Peterson, 63. «ho waa killed early Wednesday In tha Umber on Owl creek, five miles south of the foot of Galena summit when Ktniet In the head by a dead tree, wfll b« held a t 5 p.m. Sunday at the Eden L.D.S. church with Bishop Carl S. Oeorge officiating.

T he body will be shipped to Mur- rn.v. Utah, where gravealfle ritea and Interment wlU bc conducted Mon­day morning by the Uiks memorial chapel, Ta-Jn FaJls. ^

Mr. Peterson, an elder In the S f D. 8 , church, was born In Oatero/u, Sweden, and relumed there In IJKM-

I 03 aa an L.D5. missionary. He came I lo the United Slates as a child with

ila parents, Uvlng at Murray, DUh, m ill he camo to Idaho about 37

Ho had lived In the Eden vicinity nost of that time, working for the ■anal company and more recently,

.la a logger, bringing out logs for potato cellars.

He wa.s unmarried and only sur- .•ivors are two sUters and Ihelr fam- lles. Mrs. Oeorgo E. James, Murray, ind Mrs. Ernest E. Mlllerburg. Mid- .-ule: Utah, both of whom came to rdnho to make funeraj an-angementa

' ■ •other.

F rid a y Evcnins, July 28, 1944

iilhorllles learned tha t d at the BUG of lO-nnd- got sent back to Can-

Seen Today

. Trio of yn U.san rto a r

wliti ic«k sill post office, rli

c-rn/r'”! .' KW If Einscoivil

ISO a.K they :pl Art Trai

and P.aul Oil- U'lwecn lump-

tio.»hone east. - Immigrant froii

ii EOla-letterlnK Job . . Mrs. Ve>- OL-^h.

: husbands Job ,tI

Sergeant Died in Transport Crash

Fomterly believed lo have be illcd In a B-:S crash. Sgt. Jesse Iflrke, TM-ln FiUlj, was u pnssciis 1 a transport plane ferrvlng hi om India lo a new base In Chli hen the ship cracked up In t.

hls-wlfe U week;

who a Ived here

here li

from her home In CaJd- Ian.. Mr.s. Clarke will rem ain idefinllely with her hu-sband's s. Mr. and ilrj. E. S- Clarke.

___ tly before the fatal accident.the boy's parents had a letter :' 'flt stating that he was being tran s -

rred from -lervlre as an aerial gi !r to a mechanic * job becaiLsn Is eye.slght. I t b believed th .it as cn route to his new work a l me of the crash.According to all Indications, lemy action was Involved In

* Checker Cab tNEW iVlANAGEMENT

• New cars - Efficient Drivers •; Prompt Service • Day or Nlghl

P H O N E 1000

1 nc body re.sU at the Luke morlal chapel In T-*1n Falk.

E N D S TO.MORUOW:

“COBRAWOMAN”

S tarts SUNDAY!

BOYER

1 BERGMAN \

COtTEH.

ENDS TONIGHT Olnger lloien Ray Mllland

‘Lady in the D ark’

SATURDAY ONLY

Romoncel . AdvenW rol' I . Actionl

Page 3: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

Friday Evening, Ju ly 28, 1944 T IM E S -N E W S , T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O Page Three

lyLyEEBALLV GOOD n CROPS

BOISE, July 28—W tirmcr wcnthcr rliirlnR the (Irct hnlf of July Kfncrally more Isvornblt f o r th« velopmtnt of vcseUble crops.

Hon'CMlng of thp rn rly crop of Irtliice was complclcd e a r ly In th< month. »lth shlpmpnl/. Brptiily rx- cccdlnR earlier expcctntlonfi. I i wn;

f 'CCtrd Ihot ncrrftRf p lnntcil foi hnr^Mi nilRht turn o m to bi

Btcr than nntlclpatrrt crirller be c.nu*e of the Improved w riter «ltun tlon. Ilnrvpslliis wnn RolllriR unrici uny In tl.c Frirt Hnll nr.!U by Jiil; 15 nnd the movctnpiil fro m Vnllc: county URA «pcclf<l lt> stJirt nrounii July 20 to 55.

Onion Crop Rood Onions f tw fTflipriiUy mnklnR Rood

proKTfM In fnrly July. T lir lp irpoitrrt \n Vy tiiimproii.'!. b u t i HRP wn.i tpporirri spottPd to mlcldlr nf tlip iiinnth. Som p bulbs "5 Inrne 2 In 3 ': Irichrs were rc- por^z-d, hill bulb.' were Ju s t bpsln- nlnK to fnrm In li»tp ffcWu. Enrly hnrvpjtins Is ripcctfd nboiit Aug.

Knrly poinlops vrrv bolnK diiR llmllcd (innnllllps * llh licnvy ■<hlp- mpiii.' nnl pippftrcl hpforn .luly 20. Vlplrt."' pfr arre I'avr svrriiKPd llsht In July IS hut (jilnlHy wn« Kf>o<1 ""d crowcru niitlripalptl Rnod yields Ixi iMrr fklri ,

Kaln^ Ilflp Crop*Summer - sp/ij/in tnirk crop.-, In

rentrnl. cn.'Irm nnd n o r th rrn com- mrrclal srrtlon.i recrlvpfl on ly locn' fhnwer* durtnK the firs t hnlf ol Julv, nnd hy miri-month the hot rin- irrjfher h.id tKliiCfd praipfclx from enrlirr Inrilrallnns. In thr mmmlnln Half' of Colnrndo. tll.ih anrt fdnhn, conditions were Renernl- ^ ifnvorab le for Rrowlnf: crops. fU teh havB pmcWcsWy ovciMsrne fc !»te start and are neartnK normal rtpvelopmi-nt for thH dntn.

Crops In tho Tflclflc c o n s t «tnte» made only fair progresj durlnR the period. WfsthPr In Callfomliv con- tinned enol and cropi m nde flow crouih. In OrtRon anti W nshlnston fairly Rood pmerrs* wa.i m nde. but hy mkl-Jiily non-lrrlRnted ftrraa In thi-«p urrr ne'-dlnc rnln.nnlnfall wn» rnn-ilrirrnbly bi*low nnrmal In niaM .wuttiern Rectlons. whorr the jpnron Is nenrlnR nn end.

Rome Pamaifpd Alon* tlip Atlantic srnbonrd frnm

VlrRlnln to New Enclanrt. trn ip rrn- -e hUh nnd rn lnfn ll wa.s n loeal shower*. Summerhmlled t

«ipd"t/ ■\ Bood rnln •non would improve prcvspccis mn- terlnlly, r.iptclally In arefts where »ul>-»o1l mnl.'tiire was ahimclnnt. In the Greal Ukfs*imr.» we.st o f Penn- kvlvanitt and NfW York. J u ly rnln- fnll has hrrn very llRht. and rnln U needed b.idlv, except in Minne- fota where the moisture supply Is ample to exrc.ulve.

.June prpdpllation In most of these i.'iite^ nif/i was Iwlow norm al nnd prn.'[>ocl* for mn‘t ^rnp^ h iive been lmvrr«l mnlprlally Mueh I.lie same roiidltloin B|ij)ly In ArkiinKH*. Mls- v^url. Kenliicky. Tennessee and northern OcorRla. wWi damaRlnR effecta of the rifoiiRht ev rn morepronounced In this arm.

Joly Favnmtilf In coiitreH. rondilloii;. m the

mnimlnin stales diirliiK rivrly July Invornble. Seavinnble weather

A v a iled In Colorado, w ith llRlit \o heavy .iliowm throuchoiil the vcRelable crowlnK scctloti-i of th( si.-<te. In Uthh. lavornblc wciiiher and ample supplies of IrrlRatloi water have enabled crops to over- eome their late tta rt. W armn wenther In Idaho was favornble for erop development.

Caiey Brotliei-, Sister Take Joint Navy Oath

Janet TumhuU, Carey, and h e r b ro th rr, James Tumtiull, Jr., Ottlen. are shown an they were beinc intnm ln»o the navy tnielher h> I.leut. IJ.M John IVm., IIHN. (Rel). whn odmlntsiered the rnllsimpnt oath, They ar* the snn and ttauchirr of Jam es Turnbull, ar.. farev. HKtlrlal t'. 8. navy phnlojraph-staff eneravlnjr)

Cafcy Bfother, Sister Take Oalli in Navy at Same, Time

TakinR Uie n:,ih of enlistm rnl Saturday afiernnon ai Bni'» upr- Jam M. Tunibull. Carey, and her brother, Jn m e j •nimbull. ) r , ulin now llv( a t Ogden. MIm Turnbull became a mem hrr of ihe WAVT.'? and her brother ttenl Into the imval re.serve. Thn oath uas ndinlnl'i»rM hv Llrui

R.i John K. Berns. U. R. navy-MIm Turnbull and her brother sraduirted Irom Ciiipv Inch k IiooI nn<:

later worked av tJie ORden air service command a i thr sanir iime. Shf Intervlwed mwhanle lewuers &iwl U« worked to tj^e parts depaiHRts t.

s stock tracer.Ths pair baa lh« »am# hobble*, huntln jj and flshlnR, ihmieh ML-j

Tumbul! also Indicated a llitlns fo r trac to r drivlnK. Jame.t has three small dnufthters. DoroUiy K-. Marilyn and Jacqueline.

Ml.ss Turnbull's brother ha* le ft for th e ParrnRUl naval IralnlpR center, but she will not leave for New York u n til Sept. 4.

ThB'father of Uia pair 1j Jam es TumbuU, u . Carey.

EAS[INEGG OUTPUI POSSIBLE

The prc.ient rclnllnnshlp,lJCl>’een feed co.ita anil esu prices Is s 'ltl tJial the low produclnc or even ’h' rniirKmal hen has no place In th ' flock. Profc.wr C. E. Lampnmn tienil of tlie deparlmenl of poiiitr! hUibiindry of Uiilver.slty of Idaho wurn.s that Ihii'e jellow. conrM' l>eefy hens will brtiii; more s.i i>oul-

a.s egR producers, e early moltcrs next

I nnd I 1 ROl I

Alaskan Will Get Idaho Spud News

Prom AlMka, m the offlcc of County ARcnt Elbert McProud Bonners Ferry, comes n r<^f|UMl for

to Treat Seed Pottiloes." H ere 's how It happened:

Warren Bauman, a yo tm g d»ln farmer In Boundary county. h»A a brother, Lleiit, E\'erett Bmiman fUtioned ftitu the <iunrtcrmustcr corp« In AU'ka. Lleiit. Bniimiin went bfs game huntlnR last fnll. H is guide WM J. P. Ibaeh, who Uvc!! on an Island off the Alatkan c o u t s n d eats to Juneau about twle* a y e w .

On his Island farm h# produces Rarden, IneliidlnB po tatoes. Ap-

P fren tly he hns been havlnR aome trouble with this crop a n d during (he blR game hunt m entioned his dlJflculUcs to Ueiit. B aum nn and requested that he secure Inform a­tion for him on >eed po ta to trent-

Throujh the channeU JiiBt li.ited Mr..Ibaeh will receive a copy of the Idaho puhlleatlon.

Better Methods Aid Spud Yield

Potato yields in Idalio averaged 230 bushel* per acre In 1043. com* pared to 39S bushel* per a c re for the

S*t S years, according to & report the extension eeonomlca gectlon

of Uie agricultural dlvlalon. I n 1IM3 Idaho harvested U.OOO.OOO buaheU of potatoes {nxn 190,000 acre*. •Il-Ume rccord crop.

Per acre >1elds durtag U»o l u t S yean In Idaho hare been th e highest to Itlaho {« »nj S-ytai pe rio d . b6« Itig 8 per cent above tho prevlou* S yeara and i t per cent m o re than the 6 year avemge Idaho y ie ld lor the period IBM to lOie.

Improved eullural m elhoda. us higher quality seed, and m ore

— tenUon-lo-dlsesse-eO!itrol-hav*-had

t important Influence o n ylcldi Idaho and other area*. th « re* I atatea.

a c n i t j count* when f ru i t 1* ripening, u thU 1* tb« pe riod when It 1* growing niMl rapidly. Each iddlUonal day of growth m ean*, not only better flavor, but m o re ton­nage of fruit to aclL For example, 100 pounds Df Dartlctt pears picked ot the usual time—tO days before ripening—would Increase to 117 pqunds U allowed to bccome fully ripe,—Country Gentleman.

MATTRESSREBTTniDXNO • RENOVATINO

EVEBTOM B M lra iS * C a 3U Seeead Ate. i . P bsne 81-W

iibor, an -KRs Iroin iPi^er hca«. FollowIiik .yAtcnintIc i:lirck slven lielow nive a concl rhaiire of keepliiK >'P the maximum prnrtuctlon of the flock.

Sy.slemntlc fulllnit to ellmlnaii l>oor i>roclucer«.

2. U>.e splf-Irpiiers ninre RPiirrnlK:i. Save leeii »y miiklnK hoppfnii.sle-proof.<. Ufp baliinccd rallon.s for effic­

ient production - supplement wHt iikim milk or bullernillk nnd ko(k1 quality allatfn when avullalile

5. Improve vpnlllailoii nnd u^e sawiliLit or shavlnits for litl.-r—ttiu.s cuttlPR down th e lltirr rleaiilnR

6. Pro\lde ndcnuale nesLs, wiUi sawdu-sl for the nest litter to save Inbor In ciennlnn iicsts.

7. Mnrki t cgRS frequpntiy to m ain­tain quiilHy,

8. Improve saiill.itlon to reduce lo-w.s from di.'ense.

B, Obtain Rrentcr effletency In broodlnR — remove cockerels early nnd move pullets to clenn rnnRn m a w-ell venttlatert rnniie hoii.'e a.' soon Its possible when the brooding Is

Jersey Herds in Area' Classified

Fifty Jersey breeder* were con­ducted on a tour of aurroundtng stock farms yesterday for the pur* pose of clBMlfying area-owtied J e r ­sey enttle. Albert Mylrole, T«1n Falls county agent reported.

Fnrm.s visited by the group are owned by Harry McCauley, Btihl: Sam H. Kayler, Tain Pall*, where lunch was scr\ed: Claud# Brown. P. li. LawTence and T, R. Lnrson. a ll of Twin Falls.

U D. Fourt, state farm labor su ­pervisor, acted as claMlflcatlon ex­pert of the membtrj.

Irving Blater, Boise, western field man for the Jersey club and O . C. Anderson. Boise, extension dairy­man. were also present.

HOGS BHING »11» BURLEY. July a _ Top hoss

brought I1S.M In the pool of Cassia Livestock Marketing association. A pool of i n hogi v u shipped to C ali­fornia.

Bonneville Sale Of Gilts Aug. 11

Pnllr;. All e

I Tnuiphnu* park. ;

miles will b IVTlrrt by f,lftinK’ eonunlttee. To mniply wl:

ilth chdlcrn .scrum. tl.'-Mip. nr serum Iriw viiorlnatlon. ApiiroMiiialPly

iiul.sliindliiE liidiviiiuiil' ' lU neerM .

■ I'Ulereil h

RECLAlIiOF NEW AREAS SEEN

U N IV EnSH T OF IDAHO, Mn.-,. row, Julv H -i in w (|lnu ;lll(^ ol nc-rer of (icplclcrl niiiKc laiul in .‘'0ulli''ri lilalio fiin hi- rreni.'.sed jinci brouRhl back to a hull levpl of fnraRe pro­

ion 1« >1-1 lortli In extenslnn biil- 1 No i-ifi. Just l.'sueil by thf .•rr.'iiy of Idalin nurlciiUuriil ex-

Ttip puWli T. Hull. jr .

Rlst

itlon a tten by j

and r .............U. S- forrsi service at Osden, Utali, and piihll.'iini by the exten.Mmi se ice o f the universltv aceortllnit the trrm s of n cooperative aRri. m ent maklnK thl.i material available to t l i f nKrlcultiiral intcresls of Idaho.

"Plnntlncs by Ihestoek men aru public aKpnrie.', show that succp x■

•ronnmlf.ll atanris of Rood InrnRi .specie.', -can be obtained if proper atten tion Ls Riven to cholcs of spe-

. site selection, season and meth- od.s o f plnnlinR," the author WTile.s.

i« major rmiRC problem areas nf soullicm Idnhf) in nred of re.'Cfdlnc

tie. lard...............- ....... ...... similar weedyannuals; lands covcred with dense cheatgrass stands: lands which support dense stand* of sagebrush and mountain bnmh with almost no under.-!tor>- nf palatable rtiwps and weeds: and mountain valleys when sagebrush or f'tlier low-value pUnt' have replaced the grassland meadows.

T h e "what, where, when, and how" of range reseeding are covered in 'hLl publleatlon. copies of which .nay be fecured from county rieultural agents. Also Included suggestion* on graslng use until the new stand of grass has become securely established.

CynnJtJc Fumigation Bed Bug* - Flea* - ilolhs Give s lu of house, ic » -

ORLO WILLIAMSTtrio Fall* Floral Co.

Hurry! H urry! Hurry!

A B B O T T ' S-----^AreAnnouncing-

the Arrival o fA New Shipm ent

W ater Softeners

Gel Yours While They L ast

A B B O T T ' S133 Shoshone N o. , PI

r o i i i . r n y nv aihT lie alrjilaiie i.s ejpi-cii d m

quicK ir.sinniuon of ivniltr\

Country Gentleman. Uiilvir> .Maryland rcreiiil> Miit n r, PRRS to Lew Ancil'-.', Iiy air i tlldc.l up to l?non feel Tlir werp placed in .in innih.v.

lE A T HARVESI W IT H T H E

Farmer’syou could almost believe the stories about mistaking ou r farmer friend for the local acnrecrow (and vice vertal If Ihe nation’s, <juarlcrmn.i-

G E T S U N p iyUnrvcMlnK of somAwheal Is im-

DaughterHy V m O IN rA nARflON

ters were to have to wait for a 3 o'clcck dinner.

8o Sunday d inne r on the farm Is scheduled for 13 o'clock sharp, or rhe. and mother takes advantago

hnrvestliiR of chcrrlesn nixiul cnm- pleted, Albert Mlyrole, county agent, .said Friday.

Tlie a sm t said that harvpsilnc of

You have heard a lot of talk about Sunday dinners on the farm. Tn the w ar-mlndcd population you will bc-’t luidrrstnnrt wiiat ! mean

of the ONE day of the week when the men don’t have much to do, and serves a fairly llRht lunch Instead rf the table bending menls she Is forced to prepare the other nix day* of the week.l).-,i.i.s «lil not come until al>-.ui

’ jiiiiilUcr montli" but that pc;is arewhen I .say th iit n lot of the ruddy rumors are pood propaRantlo. That Is, of course. unlc--i the city

folks decide to come out for onemo'.ily cut and wlnilrowed ready lo t>e llire:-hed. Sri;ond cUttUiR nf hay Is underway.

In the f irs t pince, blR ilaytlmo dinners are crnernliy schwiuled for

nf those blK Sunday dinner* on the farm. ,

Oeiirrnlly spcnklns "thines are limkniK Kood rlRht now." Mylmip

about 2 or 3 o ’clock—but not on the fnrni. Oiir c ity coiLslna think of Himdav as t4ie dny wlicn the can sK'p|i In until Jusl In lime to RPt

CIlAn MEAL VAU/AnLECrab nieiil Ls a valuable new llcm

in tlip iviulLry rnllon, reminds Coun­rouiiiy farm Inlxir supervNir. salii Unit a ll farm laborer.' in this n-i- iwm nrr- now worklnR iit llip pre.'riu

Kalb. l-Nler'! Duhl aiiii Castlpford.CoiiuiTiilnR pro.'.iM'ci.' lor ttovkira

ilurtni; the liilI'li'-l'e l. ll hiirvesi,

arouKrt 6rpt. 1. Il o-lll rnrrv linn

aUmt It loo , . . wiien they crawl out ol t)c'd obout a quarter till flvp In do the IrriitailnR tiiat simply won t Willi, even thoush the seventh dnv ol the- u-i-i-k Ls the dny of rest-

llirv iliink iihout It na they run

aTuirrtiur'^.Kanoii'nil'lk pnlMn each Imnil hi onliT to bent ihe milk truck lhat romes prnmptly at 7.30 iinlex,s

try Oentlenian. It Is made fnini crab w.vtc and Is a snlLifiiclory rcplncc- nitiil for fish meal nnd m eat scraps. Since 11 Ls lower In protein. < poundi nf crab meal are necde<l lo replace each 2.5 pound-a ol IWi meal. To KPt lull value of th e protein It wa.s Ifinnrt advisable t-n ii.si- li nloiiK »lUi other tourien of protein.

Mexlinn iialional.". for wnik In this

l’lio'm'ill'nl''3{w”'ni'o

itass uhrn tlie jv>or old farmer r.iiiut ..Itdi a few .-Mpa winks, and ihrn ij.r milk man wiini.s to jo flMl-

S P O T C A S HFor Dead or Worlhlef.,s HnrsCi.

hai<-h<-ri out (W iv r renl ns.ilrc-i ni ,v r i vn t for a similar rar- k-ri at IhP n-ilverr.ltj.

niR fir.,1 fiimrri lf> mlniite.s rarly, Tli-ii I.'- iii.st Ihe hpRliinliiE of a

mrirnlni: on ilie fnrm. From there thm.-< CO from " f a j f tn faster.".mcl mier a « nclnrk hiPiikfaM

Mules and Cows Call Collert OCflC-JS, Twin Falii MAtlV AI,irF, T R O irr fah m

Grange Approves War Goods Sale

FAIRVIBW, July M -W h e a the Fain'lew Orange met a t th a hall, Orangcra went on record u adopt­ing the re.soltitlon of the Deep Creek GranRe In regard to btiylns tho .. buildings and equlpthcat of tl]« gov­ernment that are being used In war projects now, alt^r Ute w ar.

The Juvmlls Orange announced that there would be a plcnle In Buhl park on Aug, S. All G rangers . were invited,

Tlie pmRrnm, under the direction of Mrs. Chester Noh. lecturcr. open­ed with group singing. M rs. Jen­sen gave tin aecouni-of h e r recent trip to WuhinRton, D. O., and Philadelphia. Karen K ram er sang necompimled by 11a Sample. A'atunt. "Are You Obsenlng?" w as staged In which the men were to not« Ute women's clothing and th e womett the men's clothing from memory. Mrs. Mary l/^lh and Tom Novacek

t.uncli wa.s served by th e Ken- - neth Kenrcher, Melvin Harrison. K.nie.'.t Vow and P. B. Johnston families.

Modern Cabins

J EV ERG REEN L O D G E

I Rimberly llnsd U. f I

1 vN^'y-'Vsji-

. i '

T h e r e is no ocher beer q n tc Kfc* Aero Club. Insofar m k i« KMOtzficaUr pomble le do to. wt have combined tikc good qoaKtici yoar bvocttc betfi kuo MK becr--A cro Ctitb. B f tssiog ibe fia* M t, e o s ^ k « m f i e s s f i e , t l w b u K r a o d s a t ia ^ < i{ |§

m a t «ul loperb bwjwia g dciO, fodom d V: ftging, we fhsolr bcfies* dcat A m Cbitb ii

at any pek*. Try it

AmEricas OUALITY Beec

Page 4: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

P a jre F o u r T IM E S -N E W S , T W I N F A L L S , ID A H O Friday E v cn ln ? , July 28. 1944 \

>s4 S»Uir4»T^ I»rjonM

S A F E G U A R D IN G FH E K SPKKCH n ic A m c rlc a n tp rn w of su rrp iid c r for G e r ­

many now b e in g d lsc u ss rd by th e E uropean Advisory c o m m lM lo n In L ondon contain a I ie t-sp e cc h prov lslos^ w h ich is p racU cal anrt, we bPllevo, u rR o n lly necM sary . I t would give the A llies c o m p le te c o n tro l o f com m iinlcn- ilons In sid e G e r m a n y , and w ould prohl&lt Q erm any f ro m con tro llln B a n y com m unica­tions o u ts id e I t s ow n f ro n tie rs o r In terfering

i t s c i t iz e n s ' ils?h ta lo l is te n to lo re lg n broadcasts.

S im ila r t e r m s w ere Included a n d accepted In th e I t a l ia n s u r re n d e r . A nd I t la cjcpcctcd th a t th e U n ite d State .^ will la te r ask all n<

T U C K E R ’S N A T IO N A L

W H I R L I G I G

whom h« flbplaccd—Henry Agard Wallnc*.

n Irom Ml»«mrl *lncer ihe lecond'pli

wlio nofi nol consider hlmaelf Iflecl lot vhe number iwo past, clAlly ai he mny be called upon Oi-f lm<i the Whire Hoiua If the

prl*on Mrne year* « frel lh»l Mr. Tri

nuge by Ills fa ir »ni

la tlo i -n te a f te r th e r In a1 to news,vo lun tary p ro g ra m o f frei

*pccdy tran sm is- ilo n a t u n ifo rm , low ra te s , nnd u n r e s t r ic te d c o m m im lca tlo n between a ll countries.

Wnr h a s In d u c e d exce.sslve governm en t c o n ­trol of new s, a m o n g n e u tra l. i a s w ell as bellig ­erents. w h ic h m a k e s n fu tu re w orld ag re e ­m ent on fre e sp e e c h h ig h ly de.Mrablc. B ut In the case of G e rm n n y . th e hl.story of the p a s t 10 years d e m o n s t r a te s t h a t som e such dra.stic lerms a s th e A m e ric a n propo.sai outlines will be vital to l a s t in g p e a c e .

The n a z l g o v e rn m e n t la u n ch e d th e first n t - tnck of th is w n r n o t a g a in s t Po land, b u t against th e f re e ly e x p re ssed th o u g h ts of free men. T h e b u r n in g o f books w ns rea lly th e opening b a t t le , a n d su b se q u e n t siippre.5,slons (il I rte spcccVi a n d th e access to brondcnsts oJ tru th f ro m a b ro a d , u n d e r p e n a lty of Im pris­onm ent o r d e a th , w ere o s im p o r ta n t to H itle r ns the c o n tju e s t o f N orw a y a n d th e blitzkrieg BRiilnst F r a n c e .

The d ie t of l ie s w h ic h th e n a z l leader.^ fed G erm any w as c a r e f u l ly p la n n ed . B iii all po.i- siblllty o f f re e th o u g h t h a d to bo rem oved before th e G e r m a n p e o p le could be aroused to fana tica l e n th u s ia s m f o r w ar w ith ta lk of e n ­circlem ent, J e w ry , a n d a u p er-s ta tlsm . before the m inds o f G e r m a n y o u th co u ld be w arped Into the p e rv e r t e d m oJd of nazlsm .

So G e rm a n y f i r s t h a d to be In su la ted from tru th . T h e n th e p ro c e s s h a d to b e repented In the occupied c o u n tr i e s . F o r t r u th w as as d a n ­gerous a s g u n s I n th e h a n d ii o f p eop le destined for a th o u s a n d y e a r s o t s la v e ry I n th e m ad . grandiose p la n o f th e “ new o rd e r."

The In v e n tio n of p r in t in g w as largely r e ­sponsible f o r b r in g in g m a n k in d o u t o f the Ig­norance a n d s u p e r s t i t io n of th e m iddle ages Into the m o d e m w o rld of fre e th o u g h t a n d Individual l ib e r ty . H lW cr w ould h a v e re tu rn e d Europe to th e m id d le a g e s by d e n y in g free a c ­cess to t r u t h w i th c o n tro l of p re s s and com ­m un ications. H e a lm o s t succeecded .

hl» rtil.itlrs to th» DemcKTau Uint rciianilmof the vlrc-|irpMr|pnt nilBlil lo.sc approximately Ilv million vole* In key .s|Hit.v Hl.» sclcctlan, nccordlng I- Ull.i canvass, mlRlil hftv« driven .micIi states na Ma&sa chiisetts. New Yorlt. N«w Jersey. Pennsylvania an< possibly Illlnolj into the Dewey coUimn.

Even now these areas arc listed na doubtful battle lonfldaiits. like th

Flynn-1

H O W T H IN G S A P P E A R F ROM]

PEGLER’S ANG LENEW YORK—Th8 Hs« Of BldlKJ

H illm an's political acUon conimltte< of th e CIO to a conuaandlng posi­tion in the DemocraUo party call for D serious study ot Illllm an's po- Utlcal and person­al history and of the p e r * la tent,t h o u B h o f t e nchnnKins methods

Martin DlcV own book. •The Trojan H orse In America." publish­ed by D odd Mead, New York. In 1040. 1] a no ther informaUve author*

lUdjQtlUpossible

Henry A. Wallace, Consetiuently, Lho tveniucxy senator received only a few complimentary nods from tlie assemblage. He lulfered severe lou of prMtlge.

"D ear Albeni" ruentm ent Is underitandnble. He Is up fo r reclectlon next foil. And

N A R R O W -M IN D E D D EM OCRACY Aren’t so m e p e o p le f u n n y ? T h ey like to ta lk

about " h a n d s a c ro s s t h e b o rd e r ." th e "good neighbor" p o lic y , a n d a lo t of o th e r th ings th a t m ake fo r c o n v e rs a t io n .

They lik e to th in k o f th e m sle v cs as being Just b r im fu l o f th e p r in c ip le s o f A m erican

• dem ocracy, s u c h a s to le ra n c e o f a ll raccs, co l­ors and c re ed s , a n d th e u to p lo n peace th a t will follow th e w a r .

But le t som e o f th e s e sa m e people have th e , o ppo rtun ity to dem on.> itrate th e s e thtuR s they

p ra ttle a b o u t a n d you’ll f in d th e m In to leran t, selfish, p r e ju d i c e d a n d bigo ted . A nd there’s

, Just enough o f s u c h h y p o c ris y in th is country ■ to Rive a l l o u r t a l k o f d e m o crac y a holloW-;— ring ................... .............................- '•

On a s m a ll s c a le w e h a v e h a d t h a t demon­s tra ted In o u r o w n c o m m u n ity . Suffice it to say, so f a r a s t h e J a p a n e se -A m e r lc n n c ltljcn s are conce rned , t h a t t h e y h a v e b e e n trea te d shabbily b y a g o o d m a n y C aucos lan -A m erl-

; cans w ho lik e t o I n t e r p r e t th e constitu tion a n t l ih e p r ln c lp le a o f o u r A m e ric an dem ocracy to suit th e m s e lv e s —o r to Igno re th e m e n ­tirely.

Recently, w e h a r e h a d a n o th e r exam ple of• though tlessness a n d In to le ra n c e , resu lting

from Im p o r ta tio n of M e x ic a n lo b o r to assist• Magic V alley f a r m e r s w i th th e ir fa ll crops.. T he fa n n e rs h a r e a sk e d fo r th e se M exicans

and have go n e to c o n s id e ra b le tro u b le and ex-_ _ iw n se _ to ^ e t_ th e m _ h e re .---------------------------------

I t would be a n Id ea l o p p o r tu n tly to dem on­s tra te a ll th i s " h a n d s a c ro s s th e b o rd e r" and

; "good n e ig h b o r” s t u f f w e ta lk a b o u t. B u t have w e tried to m a k e t h a t k in d of a n Im pression

. - upon .these v is i t in g n e ig h b o rs fro m th e south who are h e re t o h e lp u s o u t w ith o u r farm work? N ot s o y o u c o u ld n o tic e .

W hen o n e s m a l l g ro u p o f M ex icans w ent In to a local b u s in e s s e s ta b l is h m e n t to make a purchase, t h e m a n b e h in d th e c o u n te r , w ith­o u t a w ord o f c o m m e n t , p u sh e d th e M exicans’ proffered m o n e y b a c k I n to th e ir faces!

T hat, w e s u b m i t . Js a n e x c e lle n t exam ple of . th e very t h in g t h a t b r e e d s h a t t e d a n d « e t i -

tua lly c au se s w a r . I t 's t h e la m e ty p e of a rro - . gance th a t w a r p s t h e m in d s o f d ic ta to rs who • In .tu rn c a u se h u n d r e d s o f th o u sa n d s to die

o n the f ie ld o f b a t t l e .• ;I t ’s a n y th in g b u t in k e e p ln g w ith th e true W iril of. a r e a l d e m o c r a c y .

and a grasa ■ tom*.

Hli) frier waa dealt

n to ’ »iretsloni

onrier wKether. llki

>t lent y 3l« Repi

^a^ the blu,e- ibllcan sym-

Wallace, ha

V I E W S O F O T H E R S

WHAT DID HE .HEA.V?5 you suppoee FDR meant •peech he remarkfd that the

ic fourth terra he expecla lo

orccustlnR hW n»n defeat lUkely. U he expectwl thiit id Inck of aoU-conlKlence h

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

MARQUIS CHILDS

numoroiis kinsmen.W as lho exprcHlou or

lo .sxirvlvo' a totirth Churclilll liUie c of ( ■7 T h li s

loubt of his own abUlty n doubt expressed by le speechcj a* to seeing

- ............. .............. unlllCL.,ihouRh po.vlb1e. But ac tlUnk Uie more likely explana- tlon la that the Preildent Is toying ulUi the Idea of realgnlng durlns the fourth term and tu rning over the prr.sldency to the vlce-prfjldcnt, who will be Sen­a tor •m im an H Uit Dcmociatlc lickel wins.

T h is has never been done, but Mr. Roo.>evelt loves to brcnlc precedents. However he loves power and ho Is surrounded with men who keep telling him ot hi; ...... ..................................llstet

unwilling

Cor^cqucntly we rather Uilnk Uie Idea will never m atcrlallM . th a t IC Mt. Roostvtlt wins % fourth term h« wlU hang onto the prpslriency and Iti viut pon’ers a* Io n s as he Is physically able to do «o. Men who g a th e r to thcmsolvfs as much power aa he lias find It h a rd to dlvfst Uiemselves of it In an orderly way,

_evcn.ln ih» rare Instances of «-»ntlnR to,'and history record.^ tha t these are rare Indetd-Nampa Free Pre.M

U TlA rS A nOUND WOItTHrA w nr la on. Manpower is critically short. But 25 men

and boy* In the Orark* of Missouri put In a very Kreat many man-hours m-cr a period of 10 days, rescuing ona elderly hound wSUi tome reputation as a 'coon dog from atan-fttlon In a cave.

To nerve-terue city ati’cllers wha^e every wsklng hour la closely orBSnlred, to some who worry about there being Insufficient workers to maintain auppUea for loved ones In thi armed senrlcej, such an endeavor may aeem a waste of time. Yet Uip rcicuen have the tim e; time is plentiful In the hllli. And they have the IncUnaUon. If there U fault. It lies not with them but w ith a n orsnnSiauon ol man poser beyond the ir con­trol KZid probably ouUlde their understanding.

W h a fs a hound worth In efforts to save him? By lm per«onal lU ndardi, Uttle enwgh._In terms of.thos*

-w hO 'ltne ir-«nd 'loved ''or admired tiie beast, much. Some m a r call It ilaclcneu. Dut Ita other name U hum anity . And without maklns mountains of liny tncldcT\ts, the ligh t to take Ume to save a dog is one th ing th i i w ar Is about.—St. Loulj Post-Dlspatch.

W ANT A VACATIOKf CLOSE TODB BUSINESST he manpower problem is responsible for aom*-

thlng new JO buslnesj-lfa Uie closed buslntsa raea* Uon period.

We no te th a t In many sectloni of the country busi­ness houses are being closed to (ha pubUo for two week* during the luinmer »e»son In e jder th a t the usual vacatloni may b« h*d. Itli the Ut«st buslneu wrinkle.

In m e ea«t many weekly oempapcn a r t pabllihlng SO Issues a year Instead of ths eustomanr U . f a order to aUow for TacaUoni, and maay typei of b u t ln u i a n doing th e tame thing.

T he war. with lu shertotfe ot manpower and It* ra- Uonlng, h u reroluUonlied Wislnesi, with certain prac- UCM M cepiable now that would not have been toler­ated before the war. It has made Uie American busi­ness m a n more Independent Uun ever before. — M inldok* Countjr New*.

Both Wlllkie and Wallace h^ leen condemned as vlslotwtles 1 -heir respective partlp.< bccniue tht Have prcachcd world unllicntloi Yet both men have hnnfluenc , They’’

helped to path ahca of our thinking.

They even hnve some pcrsonnl Jilmlltirltlcs. They shnre a dislike foi the mtniitlne of prncUcnt polltic.i And thnt innv be one ren.'ion wli>

II the outside look-

•5 downIng In.

Of cot........... ........... .personal chnrncterlsUcs, the dl.ulml' larltlp.'i outweigh the lllcencMes. Wlllkle Li a shrewd builness man and lawyer who has mnda a fortune —a modest fortune, but aufJIclent to give him the Intlcpendence he prizes today.

Around WUlWe and Wallace, with th e Independent voleis -who*c vhtaH- Ing they have colored, a new liberal party could be formed. I t would draw cu t prosrc-«Ives from both of the old-line coalitions. Conceivably In certain states It would be the bnU an te of power. And those stntoa would in turn ba the pivot In our national elections.

ThLi would be a logical develop, ment if we were really a poliilcalty- mlnded people. Vet there la.no-slen on the horizon of such a party com­ing Into being.

What does Wallace do when he nnd hl^ Ideas are rejected? lie faces the camcras with a grta and aays he will {ollow the leader. Wlllkle. who

I’t even asked to participate In the deliberations of the OOP. knows

im experience how difficult it Is break through the em it of pro-

fe-'slonal organization.Too often we Uare our politics to

the professionals, and *ome day we may pay dearly for It. The unreality sr the old-line coalitions, auch as the I>emocraUo party with the CIO and the eonservatlre south, breeda

south de.«rvf l are inking li I reproduce ihL'

tlme.i ovrr: "Well, jur

ney Hilliiiiin

mid 1k'.wii."

The same kind of sallslnctlor rndlntfd from the KHItj, ll.i HnBues nnd Uic Crump.', dlltioiich H was not (IL<|il:ive<l fa ntiHoiuly

erloi>er.».

h out1

ipprnL'lnK the effect of the Wnl- lace rcJocllon on the result this fall,

of U.1 prolnbly overejtUnnte It. L abor and the hbcraL< will feel le.ss Inclination to get out and work; ■egistmllon of new voters may *uf- ter. On the other hand, independ­en ts on the riBlit, who want to vot« fo r nocwcveit because of ihe war

po-'t-war sltimtlon, will ^ more Inclined to accept Truman thsr

'pile ot the bosjfsm U-

/ LOST HAI.I.R

■1 irolf Tnllt MlchlKan, and

o r mor<- yc.Trs, hl& Dtily reply aliti

llic 18 111 «boul uml cltilil bnlls.

NAVV ni,UES

•cl cumljcd upim little thnURht id siUl upon Uie

■■Shlp.»-lioy

-------FAIRFIELDBaldwin, who has bttr

ployed In war work on tlio ........'.he Miller Teleplrone

•vice and will take pouesalon Inth e n .r lutur

Both the Olrl ScouU and Scouts are on camping trips. Tlie Elrl* are a t Baumgartens. under ' nupervUlon of Mrs. Elnfalt, and l» y i are a t the Anderson farm ab K etohum . with Zane Edwrds leader.

Mr*, n ie lm a Dickinson tulsled le r fa the r In Uie drug store a

.;enuBn during Uie celebration J u ly 24.

H -O F -T W IN FALLS15 Y tA n s a c o . ju l t is .Mr. and Ur>. David W. Cook.

Moscow, who visited a t the home of Mr*. Cook's parent*, Ur. and M n. r ra n k W. Brown, and *peat l**t week a t Ilasle'y'* Rot Springe, left Saturday reluming to their hooe, where. Mr. Cook will be initruelor iti p*}'chology f t the Dnivenlty of Idaho. They were accompanied *y Mr.-and Mrs. Carl H. Brown.

Mr. and Mr», DaTid J. Koenig, Mr. and M n. 0 , T. Koster and Mr. and Mrs. Harry NeUon.all of Twin Falls, »tt«nded the Minidoka dairy picnic • t Burley Saturday.

Mr. and Mr*, m uart J t Taylor and daughters wUl leave Uil* morning on 10 daya'motor trip to Yellowstone park and wUl returc.by way of Hele. OA and Spokane.

FKOM THK FIL E S OF THE TUtES-NEWS27 TEARS AGO, JU IT 28, 18H Mrs. B. W. etelnour and Mn. 2

A . Bryant entertained the M. S ■Ad 8. club very pleasantly on Wed, n e sd a y ,. July' 35. a t the Steinoui hom e, l ^ e meeting wa* Id the na­tu r e of * Red Crcaa Wa and after th e u<ual business meeting the re­m a inder of the afternoon w u spent toXormally. A large number of dub member* and guesta were present. T h e club wilt meet with Mrs. Deck- « • the fourth Wednesday In August a n d all members are requested to

prepared to pay Uielr dues for :hib y t u btginning BepltSi-

t je r 1.

Jo*eph Jea*flci. A. F.'Orover. Hen- n r M a a ^ _»d j t T .,.^ t li of.

;n you had none of those,

T h en you were drtued In lujt ■

My h eart astride, you'd gnlly ride. W ith fierce and baleful eye, E ndeavorlns to BtranBle Dad U pon hla own necktie.

As I recall thaie days of oM T h e signs were most propltlnm T h n t you would be a snllor bold A figh ter, veo' vicious.

50. a.1 you sail acro.M the sea, W here water's wild and wavT. B em rm ber you are cfear to me.My ensign In the navy.

Though-iTju become an admiriil T he picture I will see Is ju s t the tiny red-head W ho climbed upon my knee,

- J a c k Richey

Sa,F-EVIDENT FACT T h e Tot Shot* Office Boy. nibbing

hia Jaw, aays a guy who's bicfi th a n yon are 'Juat tnlslaken.

I llar.-he's

FACEW e *uspect Doo Oroome'* plctL..

r a s n ’t as handsome as he fondly hoped It would be.

T h e T-N, you know, snapped Doc's vlaage when he got. hla new ilale loh (LS director ot the burean ot anl- - la l Industries. Ih e other d»y w*

.w .,J» e .o n - th e street.---------------••Where'* th a t photographer?" he

a*ked.••Why?" «ald we.- I w a n u ahoot him," *aUl he.

g rinning.

'^FBILLY D ear Third How:

W hftt geU -in* *r« these »dver- Usementa pointing out w hat a snell h tjsbend Joe or Heniy U because he 's BOing to buy Wi wife—tin t th ing Bfter the w ir -a new elecuie fweeper, o r « new electric washer.

N ow me. 1 w ant flrit of all some of th e frlUy,''dainty stuff I cant get now . ThaV* f ln t on my list, 111 Ufce th « elactfle th lu th ^ t

FAMOUS LAST LINE • . . . Wetl, golU sU ri hunUog

again—i h e r ^ mM Ihe home oat f rso i nnder tu! . . . ”

T B E aCN’CLEMAN IN TnS^TtU lID BOW

UA iUiCttllCtO,eximperating eff -ous weapon.in be palltlcally effective but lies consequences a.i bad as nngers which It undcrUkes •nt. Anyway, there are many Americans In the conspiracy,

y Enrl Browder, a Kansan, IK to come of an old Vlr- llnp. who are Ihe more dnn-

fnr th<' Vfo' reason that

mci-nt sub.sldlaric.'t and criiii Ins the period of les.i Uian foui mh!' remnlnVriK betore elecllor •. - n ia v or us who Itflvr been al

lid be well for tlie Americans for once to take o lerjon from the commiiiil-'ts, themselves, and or- RRnlw nelghborliood "study Rto\ips"' to Jenrn how the communists op- ernte nnd who they are.

One reason why the lew commun-

nelRhborhood i

dlllKtiiltally laiy. study by

. perl(with deUUlcd Inlormatlon man and o the rs who carry the present crisis, is Beniamin ^ bWs "I Confess." aitlow Is a back- allder, Brow der’s predecessor In American communism, who told ail with such firm authority th a t the worst of ti l s old comrades couldn't eveh say he lied. This one was pulilhlied by Dutton of New York, m 1D<0, fuid mlEht be available «U11, in libraries If not Ui the stores.

Ben Stoibcrg's -Story of the CIO,- published by Viking in 1033. and hLi rcc cn t -Tailor's Progress,' by Doubleday Doran, was short and full of Information, and as an ex- ample of th e luthltss and ejTilcal treachery of the communlsu to any American w ho has served their pur­pose, even n t the risk of his life, there Is "ProlcUrlnn Journey." by Fred Beal- He was still In prison In

«lctcdh Cnrc

ot 0. cninmuntit mutder In » Illlman-Curl published •'Prnle- Joiirney" In IB37, It tells nf

iciipe to nu.wla and of hU

reiHitntlon for the very reason It a ttacked and exposed com-

Um In the Roosevelt gorjhn- -n ius, the new deal p iftli-

Randn agencies and the communist InlclllRenala Miteied Marlin Dies Into disrepute aa a witch-bumer. And. only recently, Hillman, whom Dies had exposed, was able to move Into Texa.1 w lth auch financial and political pow er that Dies knew he couldn't be re-elected to congre.M and decided to ill o«l a. lerro.

Amnnft th e people who should be reached by such study are the Amer­ican workers who have Joined unions. wllllnRly or not, who may

itrol him nnd th i CIO t:

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

FROM NEW YORKMISSAIIS - Where

whom they

From reports rf reived by the un- icrcroiind headquarli •iox'ti. Uie' ItjHowlnR ne the O crmnn revolution

led theh cominl.^.^loncd of icciiscd of runnli

UnrMt «epcd i if the w ehm iacht. Shortly before

-he AnRlo-Amerlcnn Invasion. Bcr- lln installed political eomrols.<ian! In every divblon. Tlie function of thli N. S. F . O. coriM, a i it Is called, Ij to Indoctrinate nailsm and — to quote G ocrlng— make •'unshakable, pollUcally Khooled fighters,"

WEAKNESS—The putsch did not ..lake as much headway a: " splratora had expected becau.ie many officers had been Upped off ths' heir wlvca, children and other rela. Ives were under observation by thi icstapo and Umt. a t the first slgr if disloyalty, their fttmlllcs woulc

be thro**n Into concentrallon camps, nnoccnt victims euch as these an imong th e condemned being purgcc

by Hangnian Himmler.The m ajor weakness of the Junk' •* |5 th a t none of the generals hai

.. popular following, a factor uiunliy viinl in a n y succesalnl aprislng.The two soldiers who a t the moment'Joy the favor of the masse* Qoerlng and Rommel: both

Atls.The allied governments are stump*

ed by a problem arising from tin cunen t dlsordw t, Tttcre appear* t<- ■ no group from which we could . . je p t surrender. There 1* not i single fac tion powerful enough ti • and over the aword.

•BETRAYAI^Stalesmen hope for . cleavage within the Inner circle of the nazl*—like the one among Mussolini’® *lde parlner»-but there

re few slffns as yet......................Laat year Oaulelter W«gner. Count

Relschach and other fanatics urged Hitler to "cleanse the hierarchy of lukewarm and defeatist elemenu,'

t as a ll ot the Brownshlrt lead* > now realize tha t there will ba

. . . mercy ahown by the United N»* Uons, they have dosed their rank*.

No opposition poUUcal party edsts to which we could grant an armis­tice. In th e last war the kaiser c*U' ed members ol the Relehsug "Loui: clown* In th a t dirt ihop.” But he illowed th e body to alt for he had worn to respect the constltuUoa, President \VllKin was thus able

offer hi* proposal* to Its atent*. But the officials who accepted the hanh term*, a n d ta tcr aa Ttpublltaa government tried to carry them out, were d riven from power. Hitler and person* o t hla like branded these democrats a s the men who betrayrt the fatherland.

ol t.

rfiool children of tomi lAiiBht that, In the he on ’s perU from tlin a

inbbrd thnIhe I

the bnck. ThU mny blot o u t the hnlo which the Germans hnvp nlwnya seen «ur- roundlMff every brass hat, .

And If th e deslnictlon of tsWf property by the Allies make« Oermiuis rriUlze that n war policy » no longer prolilable, their wor- uhlp of the mnlled fu t msy never be revived.

STtm EN T.S-rn addition lo the nfflcer* cortvi. there are other lln- ilerboxes. T h e agriculturists, bc.irt hv n potnlo fnininr. have a hard Int. Tliey covet, th e lorge e.itate. of the Junker*. In the event of revolt these rldi Irtnds may be parceled out to small farmers.

Student.^ Are le.M pro-narl thnn formerly. T h e thanR# ha* come through the Infiltration of youns wldlers furloURhed from the front to finish th e ir studies, A cla/w In Berlin walked out while a nati pol- lllclan waa BlvinR a pep talk. This........ could have happened In theold dayt,

•.Ithough Munich college boys e arrested for distributing their lous antl-nx ls manifesto, the fact

.. t It waa a ttem pted a t all shows th# way the w ind Is blowing. K Ip - rig youths circulaUd a pamphlet cslled "Ten Commandments f n V ' Deserter"—tip s for avoiding enroll* raentin the reichswchr.

nA T E D -L abor unions have been disbanded, b u t their members meet clantlcstlnely. T h i r t y thousand workers In a Berlin loeomotWe fac­tory struck fo r better employment condition.*. T h e ringleaders were ahot but thO'OUtbrcAk Is evidence of a new spirit of daring.

Next to Iltm m ler. labor czar t-ey is th# worst h a te d man in the rclch.H« receyvlly reduced the pay of toll-

ihlftert fro m civilian Jobs to wa» plants,

Bociallst* I n French, Danish and Italian slave labor slip oople* of antl-natl propaganda articles to their German bench mate*. 6o wide- jpread Is th e movement that Ber­lin published counter-arguments to offset the "poisonous lle*.~

A member o f th# IntemaUonal Transport W orkers federation es­caped after tw o year* of employ, ment In Berlin. He declare* tha t of Ihe 40 men In the factory to which hs had been assigned two were out-and-out nai^tfl. two _eanmunlst*.__thre#-»oclain>eniocTali and th* rest antl-natls although afraid to Join opposition group*- At the height of HltlBr's power, th# majority ^ unrker* openly farored him.

InfonnaUon irom other indu»* trial center* U th a t toUer* fre­quently express hoatlle opinion* and fall to report sabotage. The youngermen are not in terested In th# union*that existed before th# rise of the brownshlrb: th e y have their own .

ts In many ei. . . serving ■■ reservist garrison trooiM. It Is known tha t In a t Icsst four p laces In the releh and one lo Norway, these veteran* have {ormed secret soldler-worker cotm- eUi. The fire amoldert. evta It it h tf not yet m in t Into t eonium- Inf fltma.

No law has ever been pMsed to dulinate how the star* of the American fl*B ahall be amnged, bj eommon p rac tice they fotm « * »ws of eight a ta r i each. •

Page 5: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

F r id a y Evcninff, Ju ly 28, 1044

Barbecued Lamb Supper Planned by High Priests

T h e n ttrn c tiv e Karduna a n d rock f i r e p l a c e a t th e home of M r. a n d M rs. A lm n Wells, 1G9 L o is , w i l l b e th e scene of one

»< o f T w in F ulls m o a t Risln so c ia l R n th c r in g s F r id a y n ig i \ t w hen • h ig h p r ie .s ts of th e F irs t w a rd L a t t e r D a y S a in ta c h u rc h en­

t e r t a i n n t n bnrbeciie fliippcr, p r o g r a m a n d gam es f o r the ir w iv e s a m i «'ido\v.s o f fo rm er h igh p r i e s t s . A n o stim n tcd 50 p e r s o n s a re exiiec te ii to be iti n t te n d a n c e , accord inff to E . U. F r e e m a n , Kencral chairm an o f a r r a n g e m e n t s , who will nl.‘<o ------------------------------------------ — 'd i re c t t h e g a m e s la te r in the

Sailor’s Bride

Mrs. H crjl ras'more l<i her m atrlast at VJU

i\Iarj* Anclrr^nn, (

C o u p l e W e d s a t

N e v a d a N u p t i a lHAGKHMAN, July 25-Mr. ivnd

Mr.s Elmer AiuU'rsoii Imve nn- iioimccct the mnrrliiKC n( tUclr Ihclr dHliKliKT, ML« M»ry AiiderHiii, to

(1 hy III'' irlcphnne

iiUNNYSIDi;, .lulj- 28-SimiiyMilc

C A R I'] o r YO UR

A t C H I L D R E NBy ANGKLO PATIII

Foter had btcii rcnrc<3 In t> home ol rL-tincmtm. lie heard no bntl

•■Her

■sllul one of harmony

I, youblK bimi?"

M other coultln't believe hcf car*. B ut the repctllloii of the phrues cotxvlticcd her ttiat she htid lietvtd thoni, T lien she doiibtea that Uils loud, rcd-fnccd, swaKRcrln's child could be hiT.s, Dia It wns Peter. IIU moDiPf turned to her work nnd Ig­nored h is presence. By and 'ftllencc became too heavy f .........nnd he rswnKKcrcrt ngMn. (hts time no t 50 boldly and *houter, loudly, "You blR biim. you."

Chan'(C9 Tone M other Tost qulclly, looX VitpW ol

him by th e back ot hU colli 5WiftIy propelled him to Uic door

g. by which h e had come, pujhtd him throiiRh to the outdoors. Mother be- cnn to wonder K she had done right by her son. ITien he knocked. I t wn-« n polite knock conveying the idea th n t a guest jiood o t the door. Mother opened It.

The mnnll boy looked up at her pleiulingly. "Please, mother, can I come in ? ’ ’

•Why ccrtnlnly Peter. Why not?" •■You. you pul jne..oul,’-'-His-llp

v n s trembllnB noR-."You? O h. no, I threw o u t ......

tic rufflnn who got in here home how or o ther. Dut not my Peter,”

For n long time there was n t wortl of nny kind but one day ho foreol a n d called Notah an un*M- thy name. Hli mother utarted to­w ard mm but he opologUed to No- roh , taylnff he forgot. Tliat night m other h a d a talk »-ith him about (itreet Innguage. saying I t must be left there , not carried Into iUdb cicnn placcs like home and Khool a n d church nnd nice folk’s housei. Peter said h e would remember, "Dut mother, I c n n t help liking ths noise those w ords n^ake In m y mouth,’ snld he.

A M atter of Undentandint------I t U qulto-nalural-for-cliUdren tc

like the noise «uch worda make la th e ir m ou th i. Then too. they tre driunatlc words nnd appeal ta the

d r a m a t i c Instinct In a ll chlldrea. ^ J o t h c r ’s plan worked with Peter.' Some o ther ploa will work «’lt)i the

nex t child. All children htra ’ to Icom abou t the «ullablllty of words. Some arc formal words, Jull-dreM. for high occasions. Some are com­m on words for good general (errlce. Some arc lovely words to be used on lovely thlni;.i nnd lovely people. Some are fo r rare occulons nnd to

' be used like hot eplces. very, very rarely. Any word, used In the right place. Is ft good word. Many it good word haa tMcn used in a bod {ilaee. I t la Q m at« r of understanding, and th a t comea slowly to children. ,

^-.v ..in g -P r e p a r a t io n of th e barbi

cued ia m b w ill be u n d e r the d i r e c t io n o f H a r ry Binfrhair G ro v e r A rr in g to n h a s been in chiirgQ o f inviU itions unii Ar­th u r W a t.so n is in c h n rg e of t r n n n p o r ta t io n .

An ontertnlnlnB fenlure of the In­formal proRrnm w ill be plone'- storlc.i, recounted by P. L. Lawrence nntl E. M . Ouwt.

Comrnunliy .ilnRltig will be rilrec ed by M r. nnd Mrs. James CIn' who will al.to present pintio gultnr .sclcctlon.i. OamM dlreetcd by Mr. Frcom nn will be th r eo IHR friitvire of the Hnthfrlng,

All hlKh Iirlcst.1 of Ihe wai tlielr wlvo.1 and nil widows of for- m rr hiKh prlesl.i are urged

Weds Sergeant

Fai'ew ell PlannedHonoring Mr. nnd Mrs. Clark

Cameron, who have been acUve workers In the M.I.A. of Uic L.D.S. church, o forc«’cll parly Is planned Sunday cvcnlnR follow­ing ch u rch n t tlic home of Mr, and M rs, L. Z. Dartlett, 1631

Mr. nnd Mr.«.

llupcrt tovlns

V a r i e t y P r o g T a m

M a i ' k s G o o d W i l l

C l u b ’s M e e t i n g

. Diilhird, i)re.scnt.I onll wii* iiii.swcre(I ciLstonis nnd Mr*. 1

received the prize for hi of life in Colorado,

u n d e r n rock for t h e r hUfibniKl and tin Diirlnif thill lime she Ico: sc th e material ai hand : th e enrth her oien when

baktd b r«vd by puiilns I t in lied grouiul. then coverlili h d ir t and heated eoals. Shi!

used aoiip.'itone.t us broilers, nller cleaning them tliordunlily.

~ -m in u te talks on liberty......... jtcd by Mrs. Maude BprUch,Mrs. Lucllii Neltsen and Mra. Cliloe

Alsoby th e prwldenl, Mrj. Let

Smith, to Rive Impromiui Iam ou.1 person they

e clillil-

) talk to fo r a e list rrRoaievclt to Hlllc)

eluded G onernl ELsenhowcr. Admiral Nlmltz n n d n prominent nurse. Mrs.

•len MJnnlek. Iioad ol the ftudy group, uave ii tnlk on coffee.

Tlie w h ite elephom, which wn furnished by Mrs, Cliloc Carr, wn

by M rs. Mlnnlck.* * *

H e n r i e t t a M i l l e r

T o B e c o m e B r i d e

O f K . E . B r o w n’T lie 'R cv. Mark C. Cronenberger

will perform tlic ceremony which will un ite H enrietta Miller, daugh­ter of M r. and Mr*. J, E. Serjeanl, to K enneth Earl Brown, son of E. P.,Brown, a t the Christian church Snturdfiy n t s p. m.

A reccptlon for the 30 Invited guests will be held a t the Brown’s followInR th e wedding. For Ihelr honeymoon th e couple plan to go ' tlie m ounta ins and Uien will reU to live a t 543 H Main avenue east.

A g radua te ot Twin Foils high school M lsa MlHer is now employed by the M ounta in States Telephone company. Drown works for Kyle Walte_nnd- also .went to Twin Falls high school. ^ ^

Many Friends at Surprise Sliower F or Filer Couple

FItE R . Ju ly 39 -A miscellaneous shower w as Btven by Mr. and Mrs.

E sllnger Sunday nltcmoon nt......... omc o f he r parents. Mr. andMr*. O tto Sherbinske. by a croup o t relatlvca and friends. The after­noon was apen t by playing cards and Clilncae checkers alter the sr- rival ot th e KuesU o{ honor. th« affair l>elns * surprise to them. Mn. EsUnser opened and dliplayed the« iru .------- ------------------------------' -

A bridal supper was served buf> fet style to tlie 40 adults and 16 chil­dren. ’The refreshments table was covered w ith a white damask «l#th with two arrangem ents of summer fJowem as centerpieces.

- - * - * *B U H L CLUB T1CN1C8

Bm iL, Ju ly 38 — Home Culture club held lt« annual picnic Sunday la the B u h l City park. No business

tm nsac led , and the afternoon ..... spent in social visiting by mem­bers and th e ir families. Ouesti of the club wens Mr. and Mr*. Ouy Putnam. B uh l, and Mrs. R. B. Armes, PU er.

U l. chllJ «l» <1.

.■Mr*. J e rry Uynraria Mist I,ftiman. :Ila irhon . p rinr (o I.rr : r l w In U-a»hli.(fion. ffnivlnci

C o a s t a l W e d d i n g

F o r M i s s L e h m a n

A n d J . R y n e a r s o nHAZELTON. July 28-Tlie recent

Wn.shInKlon murrlagc of MLvi Edna Lehman, daughter of Halph Lch-

lan and M rs. Louise Lelunan. HU' !lton, to S«t. Jerry Rynearson, Ne»

York, has been iinnoiinced.Tlic bride wore ii while suit with hitp nccc.v.ories tor her mnrrlnBe ft*r the corcmoiiy the couple board- 1 a ship fo r ScMtle for a brief wed-

dlni{ trip.

Hnz.. nyneur: Ion h igh 5

B e t t y M c C l a i n I s

F e t e d a t S h o w e r

B y H o s t e s s T r i o

husbiind I-s Mr^. H iir r.s. McCim

clow Irleiids j f the

making n "li of the futi

Lsltlng occupied

Icil to Mrs. Me-

M r s . M . S t e a r n s

E n t e r t a i n s C l u bMrs. M ary Stearns was he

Wednesday (iftemoon to members of the sunslilne Circle club with Mr*. D.ivld Jones as a gue.st of the sroiip.

A mu^ical giic-s.sliig contest with Mrs. Joiie.'i n t the piano wm present­ed by the hostewi nnd won with n perfect scorc by Mrs. Ken Medford. Mrs. Jean MncDonell was nwnnled first sonors In o traveling contest.

Items of topical Interest were gl fn by Uie (?roup In answer to n . . :all. White e lephant ,fuml.shcd by Mrs. Goldie FuUmer 'wns won by K.n. MlntlUv Modlln. and Mrs, U l- llan Armgn w as presented the pink elephant p rize by Mr*. Ulllnn Wil­ton. Mrs. Jo n e s was the recipient ot the Rucst p r lie .

Tlie hostess served light refresh­ments n t th e close o t the aliemoon.

¥ ♦ »

P o st-N u p tia l EventF or M rs. B. Howard

nin iL , J u ly 2ft-M rs, Benny How- rd, a reccnt bride, was honored at post-nuT5tlal“showcr~al'lHe“home

t her grnndinother. Mrs. Will Bean. A social a fternoon was spent by the 30 guests p resen t, and the bride opened her m a n y gifts from a Ince- covercd tab le In the center of the

Refresl n t the

CalendarBusiness W om en’s guild a t the

Christian c hu rch will meet for a Friday evening meeting a t the home of Mrs. LuctUe Mounce. 3S6 Blue Lakes boulcvaid.- Membcis a te to

:ct a t the churcli a t 7;I5 p. m; d ears.wl_iy,CBve,at 7:3,i).p, m .___

G a r d e n F e t e f o r

2 5 M e m b e r s H e l d

A t G u t t e r y H o m eThe garden of Uie h o n e oi Mrs.

E. T. Outlcry. 100 Fillmore, w.i.v the scene of tlie m inual picnic luncheon of the Past Noblo Oninils chiU Wed­nesday afternoon for 25 nienibrrs.

Mrs. W. R. W oltcr and Mr« Inez Fletcher assisted the hosU'.is In serv­ing the luncheon n t qui.riet liibles

TIM ES-NEW S, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

sLstcr of Mrs. Mina RJi member. Mrs. E\’an Tii Monica, Calif., former 1 resident and member of also nttcnded.

Winners of fou r qi

lenbeck. Mrs. Woltf Long nnd Mrs. Qlyiin IftJdng second pliii-i- MtR. FtRtvt CoBSwelt Rldgewny. Mr.-<. In ij Mrs. Tiirr.

C l a r k B r a c k e t t ,

M i s s S i l v e y W e d

A t F i l e r N u p t i a lFlLEn, July

ey. Sweetwai irlde of Clark Dr»rki ind Mrs. E. L. Unirk

groom al.w wit Tiie ijride wore a two-j

ensemble with a gnrdeiili Mr. nnd Mr.s. D rackctt will make

their home a t Tw in Falls, where Mr. Brackett Is employed a t the nlriwt.

M r s . H a c k H o n o r s

F r i e n d s a t B r i d g eFILER, July 2 8 -

Banquet and Bail Staged in lerome

By L.D.S. GroupJEKOME, July 2»—More than 200

persons atttnded tli# bin^uet and dance, arrnnged by ihe Ilrjt ward of Jerome L, D. S. church a t the iiiiviscment hnll here recenUy, to ralso funds for tlielr nen building.

M. I. A. officers and members of ;h r Relief society wen! In charge.

Relief sodcty served the

Prcctiilna Uin dai\ce, & prognun lu filven wlUi Cliff Tliompion poy- iK tribute the pioneers, followed

lee Thompson, t . . >ry niby.

Ml.-vs Vivian Terry gave a loost hn service men; Ernest Clarkson ;i\vc a toast to wives, jweethearu ind moLlicrs of scrvictmen; Ann

>hliie Rrrd played a clorl-

ol ceremonies wai 0 . O. Accompanied by Ellen

n womim's clioru* snng. . siioke nnd Mrs. Olsen lUln^s to conclude tlie

Tllby's orchestra Jur-

Pago Five

S h a r p s F e t e d O n

3 6 t h A n n i v e r s a r yFILKH, July 28-Mr, and Mrs. N. . Slinrn, Who celcbrattd their 30th

wcdtllnj nnnlvrr.sary Buntlity. were fit hoiinr at a picnic dinner d on iliclr lawn by the mi llieir lanilly.

. . U aiul lADilly and Mrs. W. HarTl.1, Buhl; Mr. ami Mr<. Loren - ....uer anil lamlly and Mr. and Mrn. lidwnrd Elmrp ond family,

iruig.the evening Mr. and Mra....... -‘oai nnd crandion nnd Mr. andMr.i. Hill Parish. Ti'ln Palls cnlled • offer congratulations.

luncliei Mrs, E

n lor Mrs. K H. jGllI

II. Cole. Mrs. K. K. Anderson, Mrs. E. E. Crabtree, ^ r5. J. T. Anderson, nil ot 'rw.111 Falls; Mrs. S. H, Proctor. Kimberly; Mrs. Lyman Engle, Mrs. Ed Vlnrenl, .Mr . Earl Moreland, Mr.s. T. Uaii Connor and Mrs. O. J. Childs, Mler. HlKli score priie at lirldKr went to Mr Fisher. Summei

lahlcs.if. * *

H a r v e y S t r o n g I s

B i r t h d a y H o n o v e eHarvey L. StronK

honor nt a birthday p him Tuesday by '

eighth birthday.Features of the

rd pink lee croa games and a piny were given luH fiivi...Including Junior aiul Lurry Hull. Dobby Morrison. Bobby Mlnshi'W Robert Rlclmrd.s, Jackie Nrl.wn. Dennis RIgfts, Jim m y Bliu.cr, Hlevle and Bill Morsan. Buddy Hlii. j and Robert Bolton.

( A M P F I R E

5 w^ 6 I R L SPA SiniC A

Paslplka Cam p P lrf group aturduy a t the home of Mr.s.

Qlandon and Zoc Ann Oarn admitted as a new member.

During the m eeting tht learned Uie seven crufts am they symboliie. Following Uie ■ ig croquet wns pliiye<I and roup had it picnic lunch. .

CHK.SKC1IAMAV GOODING, Ju ly 37—Membei le Twin Falls Cam p Fire groi.

which Mrs. H. H . Soper Is guardian----- special Bursts of the Clirsk-

ly group he re when they mei City park; went to I for h ci^icUcn dinner, and

evening conductcd the council fire ceremonies.

Wearing Uielr ceremonial gowns nnd headbands, tlic girls entered the

, led by M rs. Soper nnd Mrn, McCloud, Bunrdlnns o t the two

groups, Mrs. Soper gave the WoJielo ill, after which the girls march-

. I In nnd a Tw in Palls girl led the (lag salute, with oUiers llghllAg the candles.

The girls answered roll cnll hy giving their Ind ian names, and (old Dt the happiest tim e t«ey■l^fia^l[ld ih Camp Fire work. Palsy Cady and rnullnc Love gave records of what each group hod done since last March.

Girls present Included Roberta Day. Julllette LIbbrecht, Margaret WUls. Martnret, llockUindM. Irxis Myers. Gladys Chigbrow. Bonnie

■’atsy Cady and Jean Prahm. Soptr p rw en tcd the trall-

seeken' awarded to Mrs. McCloud, and also awarded honor beads (o tlie Ooodlng girls. S h e aUo gave a talk, followed by a prayer w ritten by a filoux Indian before Icoving .their council fire, 'O rea t Sp irit tcacli mi

not Judge o the rs un til I hav< ralked In their moccoalna tor tw(

weeks." Extinguishing o t the candle; concluded_the_ccrcmQny^.

‘S o r ytne. fla-uor ^ depen d on Schilling

S c h i l l i i i g *Coffee

Page 6: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

P age Six T I M E S - N E W S , T W IN F A L L S. I D A H O F r id a y Evening, July 28, 1D41

BIG ENTRY EXPECTED IN GOLF EVENT

Browns Lose to Macks, 7-5, but Hold 3V2-Game Lead as Yanks Fall

S T . LO UIS, Ju ly 28 (/P/ — C o n n ie M ack’s I’hiliKielphi A th le tic !! b roke th e S i. U m i B ro w n s w inning fltrcak in.-' n lR lit by (iefciitiiii; tho Iniuif^r.s 7 to 5,

TTic BmttTO rpitilnrtl thrlr ilirt

Tourney Will Begin Sunday

Ncarlv 100 tjo lfo rs from Tw in I^ills, B u h l , .lorom e, B uricy, K im b e r ly niiil G ood­ing nrc e x p e c te d to p a r tic i­pa te in C o u rse M nst(.'r F red Stone’.i h ivnd icap lo .iriiftm eiil which will o p e n S u n d iiy a t the

Coach Eddington’s Successor at Shoshone To Inherit “Dream” Grid, Cage Material

SH O SHO N E. Ju lyton , the Sho.shone rr nnd accoptint,’ a com h is materifil h a d ru i

28— N n one c an accuse E lm er EddiriB- n to r , o f becom ing p a trio tic a li a l o n ce iiis.sion a.s en sitin in th e navy , bccnu-Ho o m . I n fa c t, h e ’s leav ing foo tball a n d

b asketba ll m a teria l b e h in d of w hich m an y coacho.s drcA b u t selclom ever

----------- Jiiccccas E,1rilnKt

Filer’s Fans Will See Half of Junior Looj) in Action Sunday

F I L E R . .Inly 2&— Hn.snlmll f i in s n l F i le r wiH be Riven nn o p ijn r lu n i ty of .<cielnK ju s t h a lf o f th e Je ro m e -T w in Fnlls C o iin lir . 'i IcaKUc in action on th e s u n ie f if ld .- N o t <nily '''■ill thu Filer clul) i>lny th e T w in F a lls LcKion ju n i o r s in a rcKulation conte.si, b u t tbu- J e ro m e loam w ill stun o f f o n its w ay buck f r

Jfcm ton* preiwH MvHal

Page 7: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

Friciny Evening. July 28, ID'M T I M E S - N E W S , T W IN F A L L S , I D A H O Page Seven''

MAJORIIILOCKRecipient of th e ______ ______ _

Ing crosj M »cll tvj the air mtdivl. M aJ. Ocorge Whitlock. 2<-ydar-oI' U bcrator s(ii>«<lron commancicr. hi been awnrdcil his tlilitl onk lei clu3t<r. upon completion of an iir. dUclosed number of mlistoiw, bc- cordlng to word rccclvtd by h li wife,

former Byra Lou Whlttlc.scy, W i n rall».

W ith Uie d sn th air force In Eng­land alfico going o\wen.\ Ii>r Uic *econd Umo In May, Major WHlt- loclc had flo'Halverson deiachmcnt, the flrnt heavy boinix:! srouiv lo gn iror America to the middle eu i. tv yeara ago. To Ihls group wi'iit th crcd lt for knocking oiil ftommel' •lipply llnc-v Tilt: entire (leMclimcii rccclvcd 0 prcsldcntUl climion.

A slur football iikv« bolU a Boise hlKh •■'Chool and the Uulvcrslt of Idaho. Mi.Jur WhIllocK wiis opcrn ilnm officer nt a Llbcrntor Iruliilii r.chool In tlil^ country after partlcl piiting III ilic African cninpalKn.

While serving In Hint capnclty h wns Cdiijiilicd by Tom Oirdlcr, prMl ripiit of Cniv>nlldalPd nlrcrntt, on th clrslgn niid ojtcratlniij of the Lib

MAJ. GEOIIGE \VlUTIX)rK . . . El£hth air force bomber

nquatlron comiinncler, added tlie Ihird oak Ifaf clu«ler to lilt fllRht awnriU « lilrh Inrludp the

Byra 1 f-rldaj

Furnace Cleaning and RepairingThnrounli Vacuum Cleanlnc

Stoker, Oil Uurner Service ;.\PEK>ENCED IVOnKMEN

R O B ’T . E .L E E SALES CO.■420.«S Main Are. S. riu ISa-.ijV

e confer- Con.‘,nll.

:allfiirniu

r u iN c i r A i . JOINS s i^ iplo t DUHL, Ju ly 28—Loren Anderson

who imd been cngBgcd to nene it principal nnd coach for the Buhl high school for the coming year, hai re.slBncd th is po.^ltlon to work for the Slm plot Profluce company In

Gleasr Sasliag'YOU PRSPABE NOW

Th« tightHl KjUMt* ihlt ytir on th« Bu-cn front will com* m hirvt« time. Many ov<r-*(t« binilin ind tKnthcn cannot »urviv* 4noih«t yMt. All Crep H arv tn tn cnuu b« pnpm d to carry an lowi.H cra 'i «rh*t you t*4 da to gel your m*chlna rwdy —• Schrdul* your All-Crop imm»di«t»Iy (or our 24-POINT FARM COM­M ANDO ovcrhiul. T h ii.l« includc.

*p«dit cropi and replying or rtbuUd* ing worn p«rt».• Lilt your machine on our loe»l Rfg. i>I«r <t ■ qtMlifitd Firm Commwdo, avaiUblc for ounidt wotk on neigh­boring f.rm*.I f you are in nwd of an All-Crop H.r. ve iler , com e in and talk (o u>. U’a m>y b« able to fucniih on< or help you locale j iu l the m«hina you a™ looking for.

HOWARD TRACTOR COMPANY1 THIIID AVE, WEST

Stork Besieges Hospital, Leaves

7 More InfantsI t ’s BCltlng to be R hnblt—this

tjuelncss of Uio storK having a bu.iy Ume n t the Tu-ln Fnll% c.miity gen- era! hospital matcriiliy homei When ho “cnllcd a h a lt" tocaich up with Wrmeir Friday noon, »rven more InfanU wero Bleeylns prarrfully In the hospital nursery. And aevernl

ArrlvaU Included:A st>n. bom PrWay morning \a

Mr. and Mra- Lonnie smith, Ti»iii Falls; a daughter, bom Frldiiy morn, ing to Mr. and Mrs. Enrl Peter*on, T\vln FiilLi; a daUKhtcr. t.orn Tliurs- day nlKht to Mr. and Mr.s. Allml KuykendfilUTBtn „ (UuirMci, Thursday, to Mr iinR Mrs. Oliver Ander.^on. Twin K.ilh: a daughter, Thuraclny, to .Mr ..................

a Mr.iitBhU

noiid

Aviation,.^ttle Industry Top Program at Jaycce Gathering

Cars Tansle i n 2 Gooding Wrecks

cd to about SlOO and «n the Kord. about MO. Settlement iiinde be­tween th e drlver.s, No one was In­jured.

At 1:38 IV, rn. Sunday Deputy Blont hnd been called o u t about one mile cn.1t of Bll.is when a IMl Dodge

1 by /from

uirtersn Malai . 1. where

........ tio n , p r e s e n t nnd fu.tn re, wh.h th e d o m in i tn t tlivnic in n .Inycct! p ro R ra m In-st niRht who.sc! f e a tu r e s r n n g c d from n verbiil ncct>tinl o f th e lin- po rtnnce o f t h e tu it tlc iiuliirt- try in M ngic V n llc y , pivon liy F rank L . U 'in z c le r , to tccluii- ro lor filmH o f t h e f iig li l n f C harles S ie b e r n n d K uiun 'tli Se lf to th e J a y c c e naiim ia l convention n t O m iilm la.-it m onth.

During the dlnner-meetliiR nt the Pnilt hold. rtVM;!.’...-.! jimlthe hor.'e show had netted SU:i7:;2 «hlle Kenneth Shook prL-.^'ni.d a finnnclnl analysis of the !inli|i,.||. dence day celebration. Previ,„u to the ihowlng of the fllni.s. Silt ron- Rtatiilaled the mcmher.H nf thr .uvia-

Monrtay.More Ihnr

to »tockinci through the

Mystery: Flier Lands in Slavs’ Area; Baclt >iow

JERO.ME, July 2 8 -A JO-day ;v.. rlod In the life of Meut. Wi^lry Crow, bombRTdlcT on a l i - n in mij*; will be very Intercitlng con- vcrsallon when he a saln --iecs his wife, Mrs, Betty Crow, or ha. op- portiinlly to wiltp her thr- ririaih.

It all happened th

received the publicity It ranted, he declared th a t Uie ra of expansion In Uil< a rea alone hi forced hli company recently build pens capable of providing for 500 m,i:e head of stot-lc weekly. By fall nr winter, W lnrolrr eMlmiiird IhM l-'OO head would be pa,-.slng

I throiich T»ln Fall.i weekly.Import Tax Aliti

He r<-ftrred to competition froi ibp ,‘ircenllnc where liie com* . np'Tatinn are much lower and froi where neef could be Rlalpped to tl tinned Slates nnd sold nt a lnw< price than dome.^tlc m eat. Howevi ^)ll||pllI; rate.s and the Import ta liiiiiK llie prtte level la a poU\lwhere native beef can competithe imported meat.

econnmlc policy of th e Atr tthlcti alloivs a "landed nrl. toi of nbotit 20,000 almont complel'

land fl ■paid

iKlil from wheel

M otorists Told To Show Stickers

Ihe stamps have been applied, le wliirishlert.s of inntorlM. ' ears.' ,s b-ci; warned by nftirlals here

iidltor11 the

ball I|x)rt control." He saw the flvc-man conimtuloii to he susRc«ted to.tJie city council, as an . organlzntlon which would cllmlnato “backlaah" nt the airport.

Self cautioned the Jaycecs to ee- led able reprcsentntlvca for scal-i on the board Baying U int they will have "n permanent stnndlng."

i^ieber reporlecl th iit the yoiil fr7i;er share ol ihe hnrse .Oio-*, l l>ei cein of Itie net. lotiiled J16D.72.

Olivlou. ly Impre^-'cd by the sen sBiimi of space and freedom whll llvliic. Sieber nbo gave nn Intere.sl In ’ nnd hiimoroii.? dlscourso nn th Icll' Ici Omsha niMl Uic natltiiinl Jay

1. Fighter e.scort v

Hospital P lane Crashes; 21 Die

Little Damage in Two Kange Fires

Little tniln<ehrouBh •

bnu *ej.tr.t only n mile south r and destroyed XM.-

ong the rnllroad rlghl-oi-wi.) orth of th a t town Thur^day. Pousht by 25 volunteers from thi

aurroundlriK area, th e largc.st of tin light u n de r control by n

back fire st:irte<l lii Its path by thfSlttllghltrs. Tl«^ orlgsn o5 the blaic

fl.t not deicnnlned.NorUi o f llollU ter the fire

controlled by rnllroad laborer*.

PROTECT YOUR CARS E A T C O V E R S

LARGE SHIPMENTJ u s t Arrived COMPLETE

LINE FOR ALL

LATE MODEL POPULAR CARS

$ 6 9 5

$ 1 3 9 5Assorted Standard Colors

High Grade FIBRE COVERS

Cool, d u ra b le ^ ro te c t and Save Your Car’s Interior. 'Freshen up those worn or faded coverings. Don’t wait. These a r e real values and going f a s t

TIMMONS HOME & AUTO SU PPLY405 Main Ave. E ast Phone 423

af thU Elnlfd at Ihe nr

ciihleKrain from I

embattled Yugwlavla, tliey'll pro ably hiive n thrlllliig story lo le

Ueuleiiaiit Crow Is a native aoodlng nnd attended school the; UK parent.', Mr. nnd Mrs. J Cron-, reside there. A hrnllu Clinrlej Crow, live.? in TVln F.ilk.

Hughes Will Take Post at Shoshone

EHOSHONE, Ju ly 23 — LeRoy liilghea, commcrelal law In.-'tni nt Tuln Falls hlgU school, will struct thbyear at llic Sho.Uione 1 school, H WHS announced tflday.

Hushes lias bcet\ lt\ the 'I Falls Khool system for many yt His wife and family will accompany him to Bho.shone In th e near future

At the same time U was nnnounc ed that Camden D. Meyer, school jii pcrlntendent, will fill th a t post fo: another yenr, having ncccptrd the contract offered h im by tJio Sho­shone board.

Air Colonel A sks Order o f Divorce

DUnLKY. July S8—Col. Rfllph Ml- chacllj. Kimberly. In the a ir coth since 15<2 and a Pacific veternn. filed still for divorce in dlswlci court here-ngalnst Betty Mlchaells, whom he murrled In 1040.

They have no children.Since he entered scrvlce, the col­

onel claims In the complaint, hh wife has failed to correspond with him, haajnoved to San Diego with­out hLi knowledge, refuses row to*how~vany-ilgn.ot.Iove.or_tmotlon''for him and refuses to live with him.

Paul Boy Scouts a t Camp N ear Ketchum

PAUL, July 28-Doy Scout troop 50. Paul, with thPlr Scout master. noM Oreenwell, havo left for (he Boy Bcout camp above Ketchum tor a week'* camplntr. Scout Master Darrell Harper wiu also attend.

AMPLEF E E D

S U P P L IE S

TWIN f a l l s FLOUR MILLS

g o l d EDGE FEEDS

•• were killed when ninhiihinei- plane

' MuU-of*GRUo*ny

wliirh »ere innkliig the trip la sniely nt an RAF Platlcm.

•nie vicilms’ bodle.s were brought tn thr Kiwn of Klrkp-itrlck In

Accidcnts Injure Two in Fairfield

FA innH.D. July 3(1—Accidents Injured men recently a t F a ir field. Harold Drook.-;, while work­ing a liAV killer knlfi', cu t Ills hunt so that fevrrnl stltelies were iiecc.i Sftry- Dean r.'krlrtge. picking up his gun, wn« sceidcntally sh o t In the hand and chest. First a id was dercd In both caje.^ In m irflc ld the patient,'! sent to Oooellng.

Hnrry Painter came In on the Portland Rose Tue.sday nnd was brought to Fairfield by th e Thomp­son Fiimlture eoinpany’s ambulai Mr, Painter suffered a fracture the leg snd other complications while In Bpokane recently.

Educator Sees No Nazi Army Revolt

CALRWfXU Ida,, Ju ly 2s’ oi.P>- A succe.'.'ful revolt w ithin the Ocr- maii nnuy 1< not likely to take plnce, Profes.'.or Chandler Dmgdon. Euro­pean history department, Unlver- r.lty ol Idaho, told th e - Caldwell Klwanls club here la.»t nlRht.

Bragdon eald th a t th e German people after the war .should bo en­couraged In form n republic and should be Rlien whatex’c r economic nld Is necef.'nry.

"II proper economic support hart been given Germany a fte r the last

s.ild, "the nazl p o n y would■t have rived/’

0. Dilworth V et ,of Saipan Island F igh t

CAREY. July 5®-W ortl was re­ceived here by Mr. and Mr*. Joe Dilworth .from their son. Or\-la, stating that he had come safely through the Slnpnn campaign. Also tv veteran of the battle of Tarawa Island, Or\’li ftTotc th a t th e battle of Saipan was "far more terrible" than Tara® !,

C A S HP A I D

FORPEAD AND U S E L E S S

HORSES — C O W S -WUl Also Pick Bp B o o

U ClOM '

CALL USWe par uuh lo r (be •!>«?•

dMd «r meleM ■ntmiitiCALL C O LLECrr

Twin Fklti S14 U U4 Does Not A naw tt

A n a e ^ 01. Fboae XSS8-W flMdtnc «1 —. ' B a p er l U ,I D A H O H I D E

6 T A U . O W C O .

M a r k e t s a n d F i n a n c esioc'k h M in

IRREGULAR SALEMarkets al a Glance

NKW YOIIK. July 38 C-TV-Stock.'

New York Stocks

ne:\v YORK, July 28 i-rt - stock market clojed Irregular Allied Chemical ................

CheMpeake A

Comollrliited

National Biscuit .. National Dairy .. .National Ca.«h Natlniiiil Power al New Ytirk Cenlrnl North American i

Pemuylvanla n f l ............. .......

Pure Oil' I'.'..'.. '..'..'.'.'.I'.'.;'.'.'..'.'.'.'.'.'.'nCA ......................................Republic S tee l............................Reynolds Tobacco D ..................8enrr Roebuck*..........................Socony Vacuum........................Simmons ............................. ......SouUiern Paclllc .....................Standard Oil of Calif.................Standard Oil of N, J, ........... .Studcliaker ..............................Siinahlno Mining ........ .........Texas Co...................................Timken ............ ...... ...............Traaiamerlca ...........................Union Oil of C alif........ ..........Union Carbide ......... ...............Union Pacific .................. .......United Aircraft — ....____ _V . 8. R ubber.............................U, a Steel ..............................Warner Pictures .......................W estem U nlon..........................Westlnghoiue Airbrake ...........We.illnghou.'!# Hectrlc ............Woolwonh ................................

N. Y. CURD STOCKSHunker Hill ..............................Hecla Mining ...................... .....Electric Bond and Share.....Utah Iduho {wg« ....................

Editors Gather For Boise Meet

BOtSE. uly la in - ld a h o 's news­paper editors a.*LsembIcd today to •talk shop" a t the summer confer- ;nce of the Idaho Wltorlal assocla- Uon.

Current and po.st-war problems operftWi* ol both tJn«y and

weekly Journals will top the discus­sion list, and Prof. Chandler Brag- don of the University of Idaho de­partment of European history will ■ a t a dinner meeting on w-tir

and eovertse.The association will draw u p a

OPA Upholds R igh t To Snore in Sleep

CHICAOO, July 3B (ura • A woman's right to anore In her Bleep has been tipheldfby tjie office of prite

A worried tenant Jo h n T. McC»rth>-, director of the ren t dl- vUlon of the OPA: "I have been anaring and moaning in my aJeep for 20 years. My present landlord dem&nda th a t uinetMRS be <too« about It, but there’* nothing to b« done. Can he evict me Just on thl* •ecount?"

UcCtrthy Msurtd her h* could not.

C H E R R IE SPick Your Own

LivestockMarkets

Ul-pl* 'ro'dfra'.nd"

A t.tVTSrnCK^^

; : K , S 'a-

G randm other at 32 To Serve Overseas

Peggy Averett Orlsnon b going the Hawaiian Islands as an airplane mechanic for the army air forces.'

Mr». Grlgnnn ha/i been a mechonlc a t Oowen Held, near Dolse, for two years.

Ten yearn ago. a t 3J, Mrs, Oris- non was recognized u tie sta te’s youngest grandmother. Now she has four grandchildren.

Clover M an Escapes P o rt Chicago B last

CLOVER. July 38-Roland Ulrich, who Is In the navj- In California, narrowly escapcd the explosion at Port Chicago, Calif., when he w-as to have unloaded cargo at that dock before his orders were changed. He L? the son of ^!r. and Mrs. Edmund Ulrich-

GRAINS OROP ON LAGGING O E i i

CHICAGO, July 3B WV-Tndenlaacktd awtis the pit to* day DS quoutlons held U

iirngo selling. 1 ........................was for commercial Interests but (ho ' demand was not great and was off­

ing preisure. tfl wheat wa.i u

* lower than ye.iterday’* finish. Seiit. $1.58. Oat.s Rtra H to H higher. Sept. 72»i cent*. Ryj vas firm n t the clo.sc and ^ to H higher. Sept. SI-OaS-H. Barley was off H•- Sept. tl,l3%. __

tnu iv TAnLB

CHTrACO. J„l, ;« N.. X

s 'g i 'i;;iK iS ‘KV5;S

S 'v? i’S . H - S S

X CKAIN’ 'i* hi?h.7;

B litte r an d Eggs

rr,irif« ertJt A H

to

P o t a l o e s - O n i o n s

AM.«I.^IOj_ .Slpra.nu^«^ fxK.I Lent

Jobbe.!, d'ltwiS.'trf.So Triumph. 0. H. N»- I. .Ix A. .Mh- ct. IS.FO; f.-w K.Oi to K.OI 4.IIT-

cnicAno ONioKaCHICAGO. Juir :) (ttPj-tO-lh. uckil Callfornji, Slocklon IKIIon nlk’’'* l.«;^thrjsMB<li or Uri». madliRs ilu,

mo.tlr ll.TSl fn. t»«

Potato and Onion Futures

^ ^NOVEimER OHtONI

CHECKSBUnLEY, July 28-W. O. Caldff-

wood has filed a dlvoreo suit against C lara Cftldcrwood whom h« married la st November. Among his chants h e atatea tha t recently his wife h u raised h is checks from U to UOO, nnoUter from *10 to *100, and a third rrom 130 to 135.

Tivin Falls Marketsuvc iio tn t

rholf* kulfh.n. 1(0 to »I1 : hiiuhiw. t *0 la

s,ir>!'‘ r o S<)eJit»ri qotM)

Page 8: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

P a g e E ig h t T IM E S -N E W S . T W IN F A L L S , I D A H O Friday Evw^tag, July 28, 1944 I

S c d id e to £ a d ij. iBy VJMorla Wolf

THE SCENEi A I/. S. n m r li' pilal In a lllllf nallve vlllafe In i h rart o f Altrrla ntiaut lli< (line the AmfHran liinilinn In Nortli Africa.

CHAT IVITII VVONNE XVI

TllOUBll Anmi'n ntvlnusly llkol nnd Mtccincil Dr. Mcrlll, hr Rnve full crcdlt for liL «|xvrty rn o n ’r>’ only to Allah, hH Ooil, IiK

I nr rxclnmntlonh lj n

ih: If Owl «llh It -Why cloii'i you bcllcii' ttu

fprct your rpllk'luii? ’ Cimrtii th t iliiy Ix’fnrc AliriiMl li'li '

untlfrstood.”"Our rplmlcin l» liiK.lrrunt

ropcan rcllnloiis.' Ahmnl ••liciw coulil Mmn Iv t/.lrt

-Wo n rr nut ' Aml•rlclln^^

••Wfll, ymir r.liiL.n In 11ropfiiii rclliiiijii II1 ,ii: th<' '

rpIlKltin I

-Why .

inch

llonnry fncl. Men nre nlwoys slow­er Ihnn women. Ymi sliould know ihn t from cx|«Tlrncc."

"I don't cxpccl inlrnclcs," xhc anlcl with the (itii6bornnf.-j or a child who doesn't' wnnt to (trow up. "A nlcp wor<l from time Ui time, or lil» hand . . . It woiilrt mrnn so miirh . . . "She broke off «iitlilrnly. n: very inniiu'iil Ihp door npciu-d nml Dr. MiTrlll cnme In.

Uhi.ihliiit like n Irappeil thief, Yviiiine rr|iiirtc(l nboiitlirr iincvrnt- fill mc>rnlii«. " It there lUiyililnK I shiiillil rlo?" fh f qiiMllonfd.

"One hiintlrrcl

BOARDING HOUSE M A JO R HOOPLEE6AD, M.R. PUNKLeTHl^ IS. A PUMS PISCATORIAL SPeCuSEM.' -^V JH ERE I ANGLED LA>iT

?UMM!iR ON OOLMUCu;TIS TM& CON&O. WE USeO AMCM0R6 FOR HOOKS — HaR-CuMPH/-»*-' AMD CAUGAT CjO LW5&E t i J e NATl'JE?- SHlMSl.ED TMEiR ; HLJT^ WlTW TmE SC.M.E&,' '

, -N& 6 ET MOSvJiLO STORw'S ACOUND WEI2E ikS '

p a . l i . ,m a 3 o r — •m e oit> W ind 6EH_ERiN' -fMRCUGH TM 'TREES BOUNDS LIKe A. -TMOU6«»JJ'BJLL FIDDLES AM' DURH.'vgOsJDER WMAT •MINDED

O ' THAT/

O U T O U R W AY By WIT.MAMS

The I mllly I...... I further ( .................evident thiit Ahniiil lilt hi cominlUctl lilmsclf loo nuic tCRcly.

One week After lil oi>rriitl le ft In (I coniinniid c:ir (im broiiRht home for final rrcov Ills (nlher'ii hiiiise. which In :-ii wn5 a p^iliitl.il In...... and 111 '

chair next to thr lierhlile of ;in \i conf'Cloiis .'uldli’r ami rninpljli nbonl 'l ie oI nitii'.

I Roncler why I mu condcmiieil wnleh him?"

•'Btcninc! Dr. MeirlU lrii>t.i 5

'""Do yon rr'aliru.mk'.'o?""Of course, Yv.iiino; It s nn h-:

Her fnrc siiddeiilv Klnwrri w; happlne.'S. "Ynii ri-ally meim ChnO’? 1^0 you kiidx how ([ck«1 Is to henr ymi .■(iiy ilmt? One lin.s miiny doiiblA. See, Iir knows I h him. I told liliii Ml. ri'im'iiilier? A he must feel it, Iwi But he ri'innlns Cftim «nd comi'oic'd mid ju'vrr s;iv: the fllRhe.'l word that inli;ht he en- couriiRliiB. SomptlniiA he .snillrs a fie, hU wlinlc bflns unlli'.i at ' ' '

I t 0 It tlml> nil!""A Jmlle b a 1

Nohodi' hn.s tuch other Ktrl here h for hersrlf. You onl nilidi a .«m11e cnii 111 linve IcMt It."

Like nil fnuMlc love car for nnyone else, vlnced th a t «hp t.% U||. iirst iriily lovlns Kin 111 the world uni! be­haves fu If she hnil jintciited llie •ccret.

"But dear, It's nil jn different With me, yon soe. NoMy run iin- tlerxtftud how i (ecll u 5s rs H lit' were n mlssloniiry i\nil I hl-s new convert. Fornirrlv I wii.? a slniirr. now I am a saint, ihit, 1 need i\

, w orJ of recomiitloii ironi niy mls- slonao'. Slioiildii't he plve It? Worcl.s nro mmle to be fiwlieii. nren't they?"

"Tlmt's a b«l .■.liulle, Yvonne. Kl- mllc.i rnn-ly ilo justice to riMllly. Hu iH Just a.i much a ni'iv cenvert n:i you nre. He. n miin of work, siul- tleiily hn.t to face a new problem — love. I t Inke.s time 1111, he nrijti.'t.i hi.-: whole iwr.^onnlliy to *uch n revohi-

s\ich a unlle

rnunit, C'liiirlotte.' .slie Inijilored, L? .sDinchinv cninfortlii([ to hnve y iiroiind. You seem so iletachcd."

ITo n r Contlnunl)

SHOSHONE

Cilrnn Hum, Portlniifl. Ore..

■Ir.-.,'-T i) Hunt.John Plnl/. 1 r. ('am|i Peter. o

HOLD KVKHVTI1IN(;

CURIOUS W O RLD By FERGUSON

EA r/W /Cff AND /JU M C rX AS WELL AS

--------------A / S f - / ' --------------

r .IF K ’S IJKICTHAT B y N E H E R

"I dut>!in . . . I teak n tiap jn<I when I woke up. I tic rc h« w asf

S ID E GL.ANCES By GALBRAITH

" I f you do decide to buy th« place, OeorRe. we certain ly won’t copj XT nclBljbora and raise w hcnt-lhaf* all I've *een on th e Xfltni* arotinl

h e r d ’

SCORCHY By EDMOND GOOD

NO s o ap / sccisxy's niftaao?T TCwr* eiMJTifUl pwNia ___

~ X . tV /fA T V A W R 0 / /6 ? J X

RED R Y D E R By FRED H ARM A N

BOOTS A N D H EIi BUDDIES By EDGAR M ARTINW la .V lV T tV V V 0 0 '.«;TlW6

VVV-t 'LV'i'c.-

Or V*Js’5 0 WORV

AfTB? TWC?W\_IsiOKKW CS Wi<a

GASOLINE ALLEY By K IN G

Page 9: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

F riday Evening. Ju ly 2S. 1944 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FA LLS, IDAHO Page- Nine

Phone38

' v ^ r '

CLASSI'F-IED 'ADVERTISING Phone38

WANT AD R A TES

DEADLINKS. (or Cl.wlflH onlri

T R A V K L AND [{K SO K T S

(:n iiU )i'i{A c:T ()R S ■

COUNT T H E COST

TO P L A C E YOUR C L A SS IFIE D AD

Phone

3 8

o f a c iflfls ified Ad in t e r m s o f re su l ts 1

TIMES-NEWS CLA SSIFIED ADS

r r a c h i n p o v e r 17.600 M;ij;ic A 'a lle y fam ilio s <lnily ».i- B iirfis R E S U L T S fnr Hio s m a l lo s l possib le i-nsl.

H H I.P W AN TED — MALI-: A N D FEM A LE

A ) B E A l iW m »E D«..

BEA U TY S H O I'S

i.O ST AND I 'O l 'N l )

S IT U A TIO N S W A N T lv n

H E L P W A N TK li— [■•IC'MAl.l-:

A I-l’KF.NTlCE S lI.K PRH SSERS :ui<l FlN lSlil-:K S

l-'U U M SIiE D KOOaiS

U N F U R N IS H E D H O U SES

fT r n i s i i e d h o u s e s

H O M E S FOR SALE

NEW 4 r flt)ors, M.500.

Bea E. A. MOON

■\\ A N T K l)— RE N T . L E A SE

ftC A D V COOK W 'A NTKL)

H ELI* \V A N T E l):i .M A L E

STEADY EMPLOYMENT1 MrtH* nf

d” f" ■ UIij». on/

Wrllen. her.

T H E T IM E S-N E W S

W A N T S B O Y S • r o a PAPER ROUTES

HOL'SIXG FACII.ITIF.S

\\ 'an to ti at. Once rfvor.il f l niir cmplnvi'.'i nrr r-'rl-

'voiild I' r culling

H OMES FO R SA l.E

—W snlcd- R E G IST E R E E P H A R M A C IST

^ro llk iD i nt«n In Uuh tn i hUho. *

W A L G R E E N D RU G CO .M ROUTHWEST TtUrLE ST. SALT LAKE cm ', UTAH

--------s w a i - a N d s e l l —

~^ & D 1 0 AND^ ^ I f f e cihS.'. urr'lhi PUM. In »™>d »•

LXi-UllCKCED dr.tlotMt u d prlowr kedili fwlihl.t. yi«.>f Phflto ----- roTATO plcUn. *mV' BU(k Pro4

_______ ATTnAcnvB

reunilcra S3 itjuCECOj 0, JONES

T»I«rl»ii» J»*l B*tik k Trnit Blif.

f a r m s a n d ACREA fiES

P. C. (inAVES ( t EON

F A R M IM P L E M E N T SWANTKD U r-u .H ■>.; l°.H.r, ‘v

L IV E S T O C K — POUIvTRV

M IS C . F O R S A L E

S E E D S A N D IM.ANTS

N A Y . G R A IN A ND FEED

h” 'l '»5~'nohi.'"'’''"' 'mhT.iV.Ih'

'•'iSTOM '<1.S mi.ri K,i.

( JO O I) T H IN G S TO EAT

Amir7TTS~ i : "

:sKw'r-1

For .S.ilc-Fan Po.w\200 A C R E S

60 ACRESE X C E L L E N T FARM

ClOM to T»ln rails Dfcp well,

Ptlc«S lo mU.

H E N S O N A N D BA K ER - P h o n o 583

AcrOM from ludlo Building

F A R M l.M PLEM ENTS

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

DIRECTORY• BICYCLE SALES & SERVICEBU.IO. C7C1.TT. Pb. HI. « l UtiB A»» t

• CLEANERS & DYERSkh.fdwo-«. i ; t iBd au W. Th. no

COMMERCIAL PRWTING

• FLOOR SANDING8*nd<r—Ediir for n

• GLASS-RADIATORS»CI«w *Kl lUd. JM J A». t .

' M O N E Y TO LOAN

• M IMEOGRAPHING

PLU M BIN G & HEATINGAbboU'i. m Sbnboni S'

• riamblBi «nd lllf. Ca. PboM t

■ TY P E W R IT E R S■ od Mrrlct. Phort PO. »k*r-wood Typ*wrlUr Ex. OppnK* P. 0

F U R N IT U R E

• 'W A T E B SO F TSN E R S

P A C E M .\T S 5 '.

ARE AVAIt-ADLE AOAIN

Approximately 10x23 InchM Ideal fo r Innululli

g ranaries or chicken houses TIME.S-NE\VS

lUns

/A N tiC D 'I'O lU 'V

ROYAL ANN. SEMI-SWECT Sweet nnd Pl«C H E R R IE S

S ta rt pIrkiiiK July 17, BrlnR eon- ttln crs , 2 \^Mt, ‘j fouth of Edtn. Form erly BROWN'S ORCHAUD

M O N E Y T O LO A N

S E R V IC E LOANSARE LOW COST

TO $300.

W . C . R ob inson

op^EltS

leoino ii.<< It!ioo:o“ To:?i silo:— ;sSi—

• KUBMIUnE• AUTOSIOBILES

• DAIRY COWaA«a

A r n o l d F . C ross, M sr .

I D A H O F IN A N C E CO.A W AN SERVICE POH EVERYONE Yea Borrow Yog Fur—

C H I C H IA T T , M gr.

n. 01. r ir it «b4 to >h«ll>.

-/Mt lU»«llan, ElUn NtlMB. * n Wi>rl w>'u^ nin> Orfxllr. IID. J» Rsbfru. Baz id . T«Ir Pilk.»A.mT-; ct ,U

Bp«tUlly prifd. kitie*! BiMBirat WO UurrouikD cuta rrilaun fort : t n r ih «T.au tu u

T O P C A S H P R IC E SPAID FOR GOOD

USED CAH.S AND TllUCKS

M A G E L A U T O CO M PA N Y

F U R N I T U R E . A l’P L lA N C E S

OVEli-T.

»»ttln». Phen» t.

mMEDIATE SERVICE" " V o ;{ » ” ‘a ’L iy ‘a . "

Your Otmlnc Pump dtolri

N E E D A N E W

ROOF?C a n GAMBLES lo r free u U m tlt

650J

PLPM BIKO F P r rPRES PIP E S—m 'n woB

Comraonweftlth B»thtut>s T r lea —Teat«(I—Proren

Oood Ktock—4u lc k aervUe BO BER T E. LEE BALES CO.

430^25 M ain So. Ph. 148W

SP E C IA L S E R V IC E SIK^nWl^.njl r«<f ^ork or .all klni!..

n r t o s F O R S A Illr«. e,..

‘” (‘r7ho^5 ml)'" inn",Ue.« f.llint nrlr». riionii IM.jtM. a~>4

.h. >.w.

I.si cuyMiniTH rl. V-.lP lr..rV. i :t >1.1,.

i-i'.il..”Xu‘ir7,*Vil-r7

A liTO S E R V IC E n n tl 1‘A RTS

w r .» * l f f T S \ « 5 ? r . . v

LEGAL A D V E R T IS E M E N T SSl'MMONS

IN' THE D is rn iC T c o u n T o f ■niF: n.EVF.S'TH JUDICIALu i.«m i(rr o r n i E . ' t t a t e o fIDAHO, IN AND FOR THE c o rM v OF -nviN f a i-i .s .

n H.inV.Mv. Drfrnrinni.STAT1-; OF JUAHO send

,c. tr. Willlnm Hnrclrsly, ihi

M y (

jmi nif further nolllied th n t unless joii .>n apiic.ir nnd plcncl lo »nltl cnm|)!iliu u ltliln tlie tim e herein siv^dllrcl. the plulm iff win lnl:c Jiidcmrnl nRaliiBt you ns prny.'d In

comnlnliil. n i l s RCllon Is for a dl«irce from yoM becniiso of your failure to provide the common ne- w jlllrin f life to pinlntlff,

Wiriic'^ my Imnd nnd the «cfl1 o/ llu- -Alti D btrLi Couii, tliLi 20th duy

C. A. DUU.ES,Clerk.

nv I^iil^.. Artnmson, Dei>\lty.

F IL E Rnoy Melcllf, lircmnn aecond cUm . hn recently returned from ovcrscm

duty, arrived Saturday from New York City to vult his al.«er.i. Mrs P. C. MvdtTfori, Mrs. E m ts t MoVset and MtM Evn MetcUf.

Oraybll! h « ret'MsHIng i

I Youn,;,1nU8tU<

Andcr

•ftB. Jnck Rnmscy. wnt !i litr imjband. Capt. . , C.rnip L")ciuic. N. I

J M r>’ Ellen Dnvts li

Mrs.D;un,

• lor his home

Mrs. Uiis E iind O'.............Ctillf...........................

uTck-cnrt at ihe home of her .Mrs- 0, T, Relshus. Tliey a route 10 Mlisoiila. Mont.

Mra. J, C. liolsto has returned from Mvprnl weeks visit a t the homo of her jWer. Mrs. WlUlanj Wojd, Snohoml<h. Wash.

Netioppcw and Wlcika-Owoson •mhera nnd

-\|15.A.illaiis, Mrs

TimI. Thot

Real E .s ta te T r a n s f e r sInlormalinn Furnished bj

Tirin F.tlls TIUp and Abotract Company

. T-, 111 Kails : Ci B. F.nn;. . lr>l 6. l.lock

H JnMi'T I

. J t: Mii.Mrr.', $1. NESW 34 Dcfit: D. Q. Sinrns ro O, J

Vev. Sl.lOO; lot. 4. block fl. nickel Addri. T. F.

Drrd: K. M. Sm ith (o J. C JIO: Ini fl. hlork ir>, Hnnsen Ts

Dcfd: C. W, Kelly to J . A. 1 W: lot S. P leketfs 8iil).Drfd: M ntrnrrt E. Kcllv (o

$1,300; ints 3, 4. of PicSub,

2<rawford to G. K.

F.niuland Sub. Buhl.Dfi<l: G. C. Stoddard lo

illman. $10; lo t 17. block 1

" ' JU l-Y 23 Deed;!, n. Hubbard to G. 7

y. $in: lot 3, block 8, DlckHT. F.

addl'

Deed; K. T. Hcndersori to C, 6. Crabtree, $1,800; lot fl, blr>fk 11, nickel. ,

Deed: Gertrude P. Sklllern lo' I., Iluqenlnbler; 84.200; lol« 12, 13, 14, block G5, Buhl,

Deed; Bremer Construction Co., to K. M. MfVey. $10: eume Innd.

Deed: Kelcii Moon to C. T . Qualls, 110; jot 4. Moon-fl 1st Sub.. T. F,

Deed; Ella C. Dro\vn to O, Benr, Jl; lots 4. S, S, 7. 8. block IS. Filer Towmltf,

Of Ihs persons engaged In mlnlitratlve or profesjlonal wo.-k In tli8 Stste Department, more Dne-tliifd are women.

«O I«L L IV IN C t K m ?

i r i g r t i i f a a T T i g t o C i a

CLOVER AND SEED OROW- ERS-Wo ore in U)e m arket the year 'round f o r Alfalfa. Red Clover. ALilke Clover. Whit® Dutch Clover nnd Rraa.i seedj. Get our bids before seltlni;. BETO CLEANINO Is our upeclal- tv. \V* do Ihe h a rd Jobs.

O. Thnma.s, Jr.. Mi - F. C. Aiuler.>.on, rrliiniod i (l.iy Iron, » ft-eek’s outlnR at C IVii.sNimen up Rock creek.

Mr. niitl Mr . Donald Braile Mm. Jut, Siik'm, Ore., briefly \ III a t the home of hla alstcr.

r TlioiLs this

RICH FIELD5/1 has Bone to O r- arload of fheep. Hi Salt L nkr City wltj s recrlvlnc medlcn .. Mark'/i he.spii. '

asley ■llie Boy

i week.rs. Alirn Lemmon has returnee 1 California T<,here she vlnltei id.'' And relftllve several week!

1 I 'c

S?t. Ted FraiiROs and Mrs. F ran - M and d.iuRliter. Boise, are spend- ni: this tt-rek vl.slllntr her pnrcnis, ■Ir. nnd Mra. Floyd Reynolds,?.lrs, Jnmej Wilson nnd dnuRhter,

hnvc sone to Freedom, Wyo„ 0 vhlt me Uoyd Wilson family

Pvt. George D enm an Trains on Bazooka

BURLEY, July 28-Pvt.-Qeorf. Denman, Jr., the holder of three

rksmanalilp medaU. Is I ra ln ln j the b.irookR jim . Is hl» compuny's

reporter for the cam p newspaper and play.\ trumpet in the c a m p ■ww orchestra.He L? Ju.'t compIetlnfT bnale tra in ­

ing Dt Camp Roberts. Infantry base In Collfomla, and hopes to be home

furloiieh In Augu.st. Private D en- n Is llie K>n of School Superln- ident George E. Denmnn and Mrs,

Denman,

BiGEIOCLOSEBhoihona Hrfet bridge will bo .

closed for "about 10 dayB" a l te r re­surfacing work jel-i tmdcr w ay Mon­day. John E. Hb)«, city engineer,

nnounced Friday.In the intervsl, during w hich Uio

rutted surface vlll be removed and a mineralized asphaltic declc con -.. stnicted. traffic will be rcrquted )ver the bridge .near tho hospital ind the one on Dlua Lakes boule- ■ ard south. lUyfJ added.

Under contract to A. D. Bobler, ^^l•ln Fall.i contractor, tho repair work had been the subject o f sev­eral and varied proposals m nd# to tho city council before the present plan was adopted last m onth . After It was determined th a t the ctructuro W.1S in no way unsafe, the councll- men agreed th it a ra-urfacinR and general iJgMenlng of th e tortflgo would be mcut practical a t th la time.

Worn plnnkA beneath tho present surface wUl ba removed wherever nece.wary, Hayjj saW. Tlien, ofter tv prime coat of s»phali has been »p- plli'd, the rock-clilp lopping will be spread. Reinforced concrete ap- proachrj will be In.stalled a t each end In order to reduce the Impact nf a veUlcIc changing fro m tho street surface to Ihe bridge proper.

Fnile.Mrlan trslllc ncroaa tho bridge will not be Impeded by tho repairs, Hayes pointed out.

Special Services f o r Kimberly N aza re n es

Kr.\fBEmV, July 2 3 -T Iio ncv. nnrt Mrs. Haiolfl WUlU wUV conduct .services frcm July 30 to A ug. 0 a t the Kimberly Nazireno church o6 11 a. m. Svndajs and a t 8:30 p. m. every night.

The Rev, Mr. Wllll,? Is pnstor of ,lho South .Side Boise Church of tho N am cne. A jpcclal feature of tho prosTram will be a "feltosram " mes- sags by ?,fr3, Willis. The R ev . Vem Marlin la pistor of the Kimberly church.

UNITY - -and Hri, Lynn C rone and

daughter. Sandra, Los Angeles, are visiting rclatiiei here and I n Bur- Icy,

Nib Dixiwrj, Salt Lake City, la visiting a t the home of Mr. a n d Mrs. Alfred Crane.

Mrs. Sophie Duxion. Burley, en­tertained Jusi-a-Mere club w ith a theater party and luncheon a t •'Ociie'a” recently.

Mr. and Mrs. !ra fYost had a fam­ily gathcrinB at Uiclr home rriday . Mr. iind Mra. lUlph H ew ard, Je­rome and Mlu Eunice F rost, Bolt LaKe City, were KUMta,

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest M aliiews and baby daughter returned to their home In San m n c h co Friday .

Mr. and Mrs. Ezra B ingham left Wednesday to visit relatives In Provo and Salt U ke City.

Mrs. Floyd Wolfa accompanied her daughter. Arlene, to S a l t Lako City, where Arlene entered Hena- Kcr's bibities eollejt for a 15 montii training period.

Ph. .M. John Banner was home on a tttck r-id pa*.i. He has been trans- ferred from Farrflgul (o hojpltjil Iralnlng a t Sun Valley.

Mr. nnd Mri, Trumon B anner and children nnd !,ll.y Mabel Banner, Pocatello, spent tho week end as guests of Afr, and Mrs. aamuel

Mrs, Samuel Danner announces iho eiigiigcment of her daush ler. .Margaret to John Koyle. •Willow Creek. The manlage will taJco plice Aug, 2.

Miss Marj;ar«t Haycoch la vlslt- ig her sister, ifrs. Beth Shaw, 'Inncmucca. Nev.Phil Crane, who has been visll-

ing hLs parents, Mr. nnd M rs, AI- ttc^S Ctane, Wv Tuesday morning for Pocaiello to be inducted In to Iho

•my. Hb wife lell the same day to •sit,her parenls In Adel!, la .Mr. and Mrs, J. Ham mer enter-

tnlned a t dinner for Mr. a n d Mrs. Fritz Hammer and daughter, Bon­nie. Jerome.

0 Claremont Omnse mcmbeni enjoyed a welner ro.isl following tha lecture hour a t their laat mecUnj,

Harold Halford was host to tho members of hb 4-H club Friday evening. Refreshments were »er\'«d.

J . rved Adams and J . W, Mathews spent tho week In Corey looking after business Interests.

Solution or Veitsrdiy'a P u n is J. Bohdom

“ 4 •T Z - I a To T i '

/3 M-

IS It I 10

i io

-a l i

23 2? 30

M iio

37 ia

& m42 U *k'.

- a iisa s r ,p. U

Vsi.

% iS SI

.0 M

Page 10: Nine Irrl^tcd Idnho Counties SOLONSFORECAST ENO OFiUSK ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · r Pre.iidenl Rotte crcisman stalemeiits altrlUiil firm my Judgment

P a g e Ten T IM E S -N E W S , T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O Friday Eveninff, Ju ly 28, 1944

! . BILL COUOERLV : - « « « » — :— n » » '? i F S '