you price 5 cents. mm allies unleash java...

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FOR VICTORY '■ Buy IlNtTEO mns DEFENSE BONDS* STAMPS Nine Irrigated Idaho 0>unl!es T GIN RUMMY appcMi iodjijr on tbo wclal p«cea. you 24, 'NO. 'ZG6 TWIN FALLS, IDAHO. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1942 , _ . *tnit ^ a«i.Uc« ---------- ----------- ------------------------------------------- , --------- ------- ----------------— ---------- ----------- ~ ' AmmUM and UnlM PRICE 5 CENTS. ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWER RGH APENEiESON PHILIPPINE ISLE •WASHINOTON. rtb . 21 (-fV-Tlie Japanese Invaders of Uie Plilllpplncs are mceUn« with growliiB rc.il.itonce frocn ClTllliins. U was reported lodny in communlquFii whicli dUcloscd . abo Uiat Ocn. DourIm MncArthur hiia the use of-some <-lnch nixviU ffuns In hla deren.:e ot BAtnnn pe- ninsula. The war department sold Mac. Arthur advised that "clTlllan re- itslAnce to the Japanese Is Rrowlns in Intensity and is' bccomln; in- , •^creaalnnly etfeeUve.” lUs dispatch eltcd as cxaaiplcs; ■•Many Informers have mysteriously disappeared . . . A secrct soclcly known as the 'FPP- or Tlshtcrs fdr Freedom' has been formed to foster dvUlan resistance . . . A Sett days ago Japane.ie mUltory authorlUes woko up to find that proclomaUons -fcWch they had plastered Ujrough- out Manila and the countryside had all been Btmneely altered. This proclamation enumemted a, number He Lost Teacher declared that for every Jnpane.ie killed. 10 Filipinos would be shot. The alteration made the pfoclnmn- Uon read that for every Filipino killed 10 Japanese soldiers would low Ihelr lives." Eipcct Victor^ Tills resistance. MacArthur said. was fostered by tlie Filipinos' ■ ' Jldence In ultimate victory and hope UiM Use Japastse soon may be «:(• pelted from the Islctnd.i.*' The report was token here to mean that &niUo Agulnaldo. Uie tglng;. onetime leader ot the Ph'" ploe insurrection, had U.tUe u . «nce among his people. Recently AgulnaUo called for a surrender of the FblUpplnn to the InTftdars. » pronouncement which brou«hl upon him the desJgnaUoa of ■•Philippine QulsUng.” A nATjr department communique (Slscloieil th a t Bun* salvaBed Ira n the CaiTlte ij»v*l but when United B ta ^ fprceib withdrew, from, it were ders. Japanese bis guns were reported • to bo hammering at Amerlcon-Plll- plno forces on Sataan peninsula and '■fortifications In Manila'bay. but there was no Indication tlie enemy wa* yet ready to launch a new .,.1«naJve. Patrel SklrmUhes Infantry action, a war department eommunlque said, was litnlled to niunerous skirmishes between I the forUflcatlons in Manila bay were subjected to fire from the Japanese batteries on the south- 'east side of the bay and were reply- ing with their own ffuns. The enemy continued, however, to concentrate on Port Frank. Situated on Carabao island, this fort Is only about a mile from the bay shore held by the Japanese. UNITED \ TAKE OEEENSIV BATAVIA. N. E. I,. Feb.,31 (-T>- American and Dutch warships and warplanes, on the oficailve In wliat prbmlscs.to be.thclr most powerful Joint effort » far, art RmnsWng Japanese invasion fleeta off the em and western ends of Java. So vast and overlnppinK wen air and sea blows In defeme of U)is Island stronghold of Uie United No- tions that an accurate nfcuuntiuft of tlie successes already r^orcd wiui Impossible, but At len.\t one cruiser WHS blown up. two dcMroyer.i sunk and several other warslilps diuniiRed. Although sueces.-slve communiques here.and In Wa.ihin«tbn today told of at least tB separate bomb, torpe- do or cannon blows on Japanese ahlps It was probable Ujst seveml of the shlpa had fljcurcd In more tJion one of Uie attacks. In addiUon to tlie crulner blown up. two cruisers and two destroyers certainly were damagM In n naval battle Friday nl^ht off Ball, at the eastern end of Java, when Dutcli cruisers and Dutch and American destroyers attacked, a Netljerlsnds communique declared. Early radio a n n o t^ m e n t , that-, the alllei lost a destroyer is-the action wnj not bome out by latter communiques. Idahii Draft Call - Sets New Record BOISE. Feb. 21 M>-Idaho'«'Sec- ond seiecUve service call for March was received today and stat« head- quarters said the morflh's quota was more tlmn three,UmeZ^e nvcrage monthly call for IMI. mducUoQ' dates for Uie first call were to end about March 17. Dates for tha.sw nd call are March 38-ai. ISLAND BEFUGEES SAFE MARACAIBO, Ven&lela, Feb. 31 ' MV-PUty womcQ and children Hved ben aboard Dutcli and Vene- euelaa planet today from tfle axis- attacked Dutch Island of Aruba, an additional ISO are expected tomor- RALPil C. >VILSOS' . . . ThU Twin Falls Hylnr c.det, former eounly AAA lecrtlary, made the headlines all ovrr tlie nation two days ago. On WiUon'i final check flight a* an advanced student at Yukon. Okla.. liU (lielit Instructor, Ceorie Dale, fell out of the plane. Dale landed uM y by parachute. WlUon li at the air eorp* primary fijltij «cliool a t Cimarron field. (TImts-News Knirsrint) Rescued Crew Sees 20 IVJen Die ill Blaze By E. V. W. JONKS JACKSONVILliB. Fla.. Feb. 21 (A'l —Ei«:ht«cn survivors who ^aw 20 shlfcnates die in the blozlnB Infcmo of Uie torpedoed oil tanker Pan Massachusetts off the soutlieast coast spoke wiUi heartfelt praise to- day of Uie bnkvcry ot a rescue ves- sel'B crew. up to tlie rescue. •rtiey even broke radio sUcnco to coll. for help. Our radio waavjcnocked out by the first blast,- . •'H iat wft.s bravery,” Raid CapL Robert E. Christy, howse frrsn awal- lowlnK smoke and sen water. "We had ho Idea any sljlp would risk tlie wime Icito Hint struck l. i In or- der to help survivors. After navin« all tJie llvlnip^iey picked up two of ■jr dead. Mfeboats Bum ^ ••Ail our llfeboftis burned. We had 0Idea imy r.hlp would brave a sub- marine ntlACk on Itself to come to our aid. But the men of tluit other slilp came on. "Ten or IS.foot was were run- nlnK. Tlie water wo.i wiinn but n cold rnln was falllns. U wiui In Uie water about two hours before be- ing pulled nboiirit n- lifcbont. “Dodse. my iJiIrd offlccr, from Baltimore, hud no lifebelt. He found Ills cloUies dmRitlnB him under «) stripped In tlie water, he told me lotcr. He snld tlic rescue ship mi»*wl him nJUiouk’h he shouted as loud ns he could. U went on about two mllc.s. He Kave hlmscU up a.s lost, and Uien D navy planes po.v*d over. Just (CanllnoMl .n r»i» 3. C«t«-n J) Five Cargo Ships Launched iirDay WASHINQTOr^. Feb.' 21 (,?)-Flve cargo ships, aggresaUni; more Uian 60,000 deadwclHiit loiv;. were Isunch- c<l today In United States .ihiijyartLs, tlie miu-lUme commlsjion announc- ed. •Two sill,a of lOiOO toa-, were launched euriler in.,Uie wfck. Tl\c cwnmlnilon.-snylnft ■thiit H keels were laid Uifs weck, predicted a two-a*<lfty lauiichirg rate would be altalneti-bv laic April or early DOtlGliNtJTS BISBEB. Arls.,.ftili.Jf m* - I sent . .on Jack, cadet at K naval flir ba.se. a' botch of douBhnuts ond asked If he'd like another. Back came Ihs repli” 'K eep •em.fr>-lnKr' FARMER THRI WILL TAKE O^E CITY Twin Fulls will be turned over lo the fiiTTnera next Tlmradny as the flfUi annual Farmers’ Concre.w Li staBe<l and the completed priiRram, announced lala Saturday nlslii Indi- cates there will be someihlnK dolnB ever>‘ minute. Tiie ConKreis tliLi year wiii be much more complete than those held In piuit years and the attention of the farmers will be Lakcn up from 10a.m. when It all staru to well Into tJie afternoon past 3 pjn. Horneahoe ritehlni Latest feature attracUoii added to the program will be a demotuiratlon In “barnyard golf by 0, E. Jack- son. world's champion trick liorse- .shoe pitcher who fonncrlj' resided at Dluc Mount. Kan., but'who now re-, sides right here' In Twin Fnlls, Jaik-soii.holds many national rec- ords Including 05 ringers out <>f 100 shoes, 22 consecutive ringers and 40 ringers out of 50 shoes. Ho wo.s Mississippi valley champion for three years. Iowa stole champion two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . , The cliamplon will perlorm In a special arena which will be set up.ln the lOO block of Second .street soilUi between Uie Idaho Department <tore and Uie J. C. Penney companyi His •'acf'W ill start at 3:15 pjn. •, Spelllnr Dee , AnoUier feature for the afternoon, unannounced until last nlchl. Is Uie spelling bee whlcli will bb.held In the downtown area aBng' Main ■Street durlnK Uie (^tem6dh hours ' a notmd truck will lour u p ^ d down the area and vLsiilnji fohhtrs will be a.sked to spell various words. Tliose spelling Uie wordi correctly will receive defense stamps os'prUcs. Tlien too. along Main street, the Ts,-ln Falla high school band will be heard in concert between 2 and'3 pjn. For Uie farm women a special cooking school will be sponsored'l>y the Idalio Power company at thb company auditorium. TTie cooltlng scbecl'cesslon.wui get undern-iiy. at 10 ojn., Uio same hour set for sUrt of the apeftklng prognun which Uie men (and those women who want come) will attend theater. niree speakers will be heard be- .ir'een 10 a.m. and noon.'‘Two of Uiem have been named to dale and the third will be selected shorUy, repre.senUnK the Unlu;d States em- ployment sen'lce, and talking oti Uie proper procedure for recrulUng farm labor. Prominent Figures Tlie otiier two speakers are Hnrry A. Elcock. Idaho maniuter of Uie Amalgamated Sugar company, who will discuss Uie labor situation, and Milford J. Vaught, BoLie. state AAA chairman and also head of the state USDA war bonrd. Me.viages to be given by both of Uiese speakers will prove to be vlto.1 for farmers of Uie Magic Valley wltlj :Ontli<g.J .n Tit. I.Ctann 71 Tanttp Roxy Swift Induction Set for Draftees duct followhig physical exomi- naUons, and after Induction, may . for furloughs ln‘ ca.se of any hardsliltn. It was announced at state selecUve service hcndquartcrs to- day. •,l36tween the first •screening’ tes,t. (physical ex.nmlnaUon by a locAl physician) and the army phys- ical examination.^' explained Lt. Col. Normwi D. Adk^on. selective scrv. ice execuUve officer, "the men must miiko any applications for clianges of clft.sslflcaUon for appeal from selective service orders." Banbury in Coma W|i:NDELL. Feb, 2 l- j; W. Dan- bury. 83. Buhl pioneer, toillght.had filled to regain coasclousnCls at St. VolenUne’s hospiial. 60 hours after he suffere<l a airoke In Wen- dell. Dnnbury. founder of Uie Banbury natatorium, fell unconwious Tliurs- day afternoon. Late tonigla hospl- Late War Bulletins WlLUaiSTAD, Cdfacao, Feb. 21 (ffV-Thlrty-nlne members of the crew of the Norwegian tanker KoQCKmord were betleved tenlght to have been drowned or burned (e death In a torpedoing off the western Up of Ansba. Seven crew members were rescued. ' SAN FRANCISCO. Fel>. 31 UT)— Tlie biggest ro i raids <'of the war yielded more. Uion Japanese, German and Italian aliens — some of them linked wlth'crganlmUoos In enemy raids, whlclv. were loosed today all along Uifl PacUJo coast and In.Arliona. Federal bureau of [nvcstlgaUon agent seized more Uian 200 aliens m the Los Angele.i area. £an Diego, a vita] defease base, yielded 35 more. -There-Were five arrests and more \hao GO aliens queaUoned la Arliona. CANBERRA, Australia. Peb. 31— The Australian government ontlci* paUag furUier direct attacks on the mainland by Uus Japinese. ordered civilians today to evocuate Uie norUi coast naval aUUon of Darwin, po- tenually a vital supply base In Uje Unjted NaUons' souUiwest Poelfic strategj". Prime Minister Jolin CurUn em- Phaslied. however. Uiat he was not. Invoking marUal Uw. MOHCOW, Feb. 21 (-?>)-V*llsiit Russian troop* atucked tnrloMly along the eaUre l.IM-mlle wm- froot tenlxht, kiUlng Germans by the thensands 'and piling tip gains which the hlfh command Is cs* Peeted lo annennee drvnaUesUy on the Red army's annlTerssrjr Monday. > VIGOROUS SENATOR BVRD GOES AFTER FACTfi ON UNION FEE COLLECTIONS 'VASniNOTON. Feb. 21 — ifoV mucii money have unlon.i collected for Issuing work i>crmlts; by what right do Uie unions charge a fee for an American to engage in war work; whal becomes of this money? Tlie.^e are qucsUons be-, ing a.ikcd by Vir- ginia’s-Byrd, nnd' when Senator B>Td asks ior in- formation he usu- ally obtains it. Tlio senator's In- quiry Is general, aut It will iiave particular signifi- cance . i n the northwc.1t where' Uie unions iiave' been selling per- KELLY mlt-i to work in many war lnclu> and where Uiey are prcpnrini; :t up olllce.s to collcci Uils frc from Uiose looking for Job.n on tin cantonments at Medford and Cor- vallis. Contractors. It appears, make ar. agreement wlih Uic unions that the latter will fumkh all Uie labor re- quired; Uicreiiftcr the coiitracior:, have notliltig lo iiiy about workmen, the union iicUuk as the employment office. -A.1 the unions do not uWi to Incrc.iic Uiplr niember.ihlp un- necc.«orlly. Uiey l.v.ue work permits Which give Uie unions' auUiorlM- Uon for non-union men to yort- For UiLi work permit vnrloa-, fnv, arc chorgedj.iu one factory on Pu- get sound it I.-. Ji n shift for i!.r higher pAid worker.'.. TllU l.i nmrc money tiiah would be paid In a^i due;. If the worker bclouK^d to Uie union. Tliere ti no means of learning linw much revenue tiie unions are ob' talnlng from the work permits, init Senator BjTd niiiy smoke a out eventually by n law compelling an accounting. Labor conUniies lo worrj' member;, of congress. Tlie welders in tlic norUiwest, the demands In the lum- ber indintry for traji.-iporutloii, de- mands for anoUier J1 n day lo meet Increasing cost of living, shut-downs In Important Industries for trivliil reasons. Congre-ns does not 111 10.000 men In n plant quit an hour as a demonstraUon, . Uils meaiw 10.000 lioun, or 1J50 days — 30 weeks. Tliiftl/ weeks In certain plants will represent 400 olr- planes and a fleet of tanks or a car- go carrier. nice to It Vork ion.'for Frem Cabinet gorge on Uie Mon- tono-Idaho line to R om dam on the Skagit river In Washington, and to Detroit on the SnnUam Tlvcr In Oirgon, the latest iwwer develop- m&it for the norUiwest Includes every potenUal , site In the Uiree Congress is requested lo mate tc<ntlns.4 .a r«i* *. C»t»mm T) Forty-Hour Week May Be Abridged DES MOINES. la., fVb. 21 (,V,- Prlee AdmlnLitrator W on Ilenderr.on uld today volunlAry abridgement at ihe 40-hour w e^ in a number of Indastrles is probable. •TTie 40-liour week la IncOnsUtent In a period oL stress like Uils.“ he declared in a press conference. 'I t was designed to prevent abuses In Industry and labor groups have said they are wllUng to give It up i It Is not to the sole advantago of manAffcment.^’ C. of C. Demands _ Alien Jap Camps J:iimnusc uIIlmi. s—if anti when they are transferred ffom the Pacific coaat to south central Idaho—.should be confinod in concentration camps instead of being allowed to labor in tlio fields of Magic Valley, dependent upon-a vaat irrign- lion .sy.stem which is “inadequately protected.” Tliat «lmii;lil-trom-Uie-.slioulder Informiitlon will be placed tomor- row on Uip tii-j.ks of Oov. Ciio-^e A. Cliirk, Sen. D. Worth Clark and Sen. John Tlioinav^ong. Henry Dworsliak nnd CotiK. Coripum' Wlille, nnd W. T. Loci:wood. Idalio dln-clor of Uie offttw. of yrjj ment rej»rt.i"at BofiC. Members of Uie bonrd of directors of Uie Twin Fall.% Chamber of Com- merce, mectinic Friday noon In Uie Rogcriion hotel, also la*lied out against •'congrc.vsnpn debaUng pen- sions, Donald Durk nnd fan danc- ers." Slop “Horatplay” "Cut out the hotbeptny and toke Immediate .it-'p. for the proirctlon of American cltl.-v-ii.*.,” tliry dniianded, "lent Uils country trcxl Uir name JWth toward defeat as FYoncr " Committee of Chuide H. Di-tweller. . S. Tofflemire nnd H. Chris Reinke, stiite n-proc-titutlvr from Twin Falls coiuity. wii.s doiijniited to lay the fncti b«'/orc Uie men in Boise and Wa.ihliuiloii, appniis probable Uiat alien Japaiure from Uir coiu-,l will be moved Into tllL^ terrlt/iry," Uiey ft-v.erted, In lrilrr.% dL'.jwiclud yc.^- terxlay-trt Uie Idaho nnd n.itlonal pllal.:. Farmers Opposed "South ccninil Idaho fmnii'iN are’ tsoluleV oppa-.ed." llicy .siiil, lo ly policy tthlrli would niili.-<- ./iij)- ie:.e labor in Uils lerrltori’ lor larm labor. lni.tcad. "aliens iJiouUl be confined to l.'.oliitfd concentration ciuniM under hea\->' guard, ^lol only Idalio but Uiroughwit Uic coim- /.'• j.aliTthr commltU'c, jHr/;rlblnfr Uic chnmbcT'.i opimsUlon fo /n y im- iwrutlon plan. "Our vast irrigation .'.y.'.u-in is In- ftdequalely proteeted a«um.M flfUi colimin acllvllie.^,•• the eomniittee' advised tliL- Kovrrnor and the cn|lgrefi.^lcnal delcxutlon "Ol)vlou:i- ly our great- irritjalloii w.Mi iii em- bodying rrfime 3S0.000 acres of high- ly 1 I b>f a [NCH.FIGH1 S REPAIRED VICliy, Unoccupied France. Feb. 21 (/1->-nie 2(J.500-ton French bat- Ueshlp Dunkerque, crippled by the DrUWi In the melancholy naval bat- tle off Mers-el-Keblr In July of 1040. has readied Uie French home naval ba-ie of-Toulon from Africa under her own steam, Vice-Premier Ad» mh-al Dorian lold'the Vichy cabinet today. Tliere w u no elaboraUon on Uie announcement. However, It was re> ported last November Uiot Uie Dun- kerque had been repaired and^ade ready tor service, Toulon, her pres- ent port, is on the Mediternmeon cixist. The balUeslilp was Isuiiclicd In 1D3S. Slio ha.1 eight 13-lnch guns and sixteen S.l inch guns and » speed In e3tces.< of 30 knots. Clark Investigates Blackfoot Claims BOISE, Feb. ai </r>—InvesUgAtlon of complolnti he said he had re- ceived'concerolnR U« state hospital south took Governor.. Clark lo Bladcfoot lodny. He declined to elaboralo>4)n the italement other than to any It ap- peared .a qucsUon of unity amons employes w u Involved. FLASHES of LIFE K»;AR-vinr far GAINESVILLE. Tex., Feb. 21 W>—For 80 years Mrs, B. B. Askew of Marietta. Okla., an3 Mrs. George W, Myers of Oalnesvllie unknowingly hove lived within 25 miles of each oUicr. The sisters, who have not seen each other for 05 yclirs, will hold a reunion when they recover from current Illnesses, Mrs. A.skew Is W, Irer sister, ■J7. Mrs, Myers found her sister through a newspaper story on Uie death of Jim Alexander. SS, Mar- letui city marsiial. last week. She had had a broUier by Uiat name and.oUier facts in the Atory check. Mrs, Myers «ent rcIaUves lo Mar- ietta and estabUshed the kinship, TJie sLslers are natives of Flor- ence. Ala., which Uiey left as yo«nB slrls. St'UF. FUN ■- EVANSTON. Hi., Feb,-31 Chff Groh, former Northwestern university student who is serMng whh American volunteer filers de- fcfnding Uie Burma Toad, sent this cnbie lo his porents: "We’re knocking the tails off tlie Japs. Wouldn't change places wiUi the richest man in Uie world. Having wonderful lime.- Tough: Kraut Can Shortage Seen for ’42 FREMONT, O., Feb. 21 1-1'^You may have to take your ,spare ribs "Mralghl" (rjuis sauerkraut) one of Uiesc days. Processors In Uii.^ iireu, one of Uie large producing centers of the na- Uon, report Uie wur producUon board hn.s.alloiied only half enough tin cans to p<ick what's left of the 11X1 crop and will promi-''B no for 1042. Manufaciurrrs. wiv Uiey can't go back to bulk handling of Uie "poor man'* favorll® food" becau-se coop- erage facillUes are not avallab]e. W hat's worse. Uiey claim. U Uial toiw -of Itraut now In curing vaU will spoil and 50 U> 75 per cent «' Uielr employes will be thrown out < work unleaa containers are iound. n ie entire Industry is Uirentened, they odd, becou.se cabbage growers, fearful Uiere wUl be no market for' Uielr crop, are ready to switch to other crops if no solution is worked OUL Tht packers contend Uiey tliould get an even brvak with apples, car- rels and beets whone Un can quota has been cut only 25 per cciii, ' (hough they can be obtained fresh produce Uie year around. Sauerkraut la seasonable artd per- ishable,-they say, oddlna Uiat the navy for years haa considered It the best of scurvy prevenUn* foods. DEFENSE AREA . OLYMPIA. Wash., Feb. 21 Opy- WashingtoD state. VOS pcpdalffled a protecUve defense area today by GOT. ArUiur B. LoRglie. He ordered all Japanese to surrender to. the sute patrol all'flreanos. ammun- nltion, explosives or other instru- ments which rnight be used to eo* dancer property or lift, by ses( Thursday._______ I Japs’ Ships Sunk As Dive Bombers JFein in Attacks .. ....... Dy The Aiiioeisled Prtis The United' Nations unleashed their aea and air power yesterday to smash hard at the invading Japaneao in tho Dutch EuKt Indies and there were indicution.i the action as continuing today. , ... ........................... ... . Thrown back onto the j>opulous, truiisure-trove i.‘»land of Java, 'United States-, and ORUGUAY’S CHIEF CALLS OUI A l Y OOUELLEM By RAFAEL ORDORICA MONTEVIDEO. Feb. 31 f/?>—Pres- Idenl Alfredo Baldomlr. backed by Uruguay's army of 11M0, strength- ened his rule over this republic to- day with a swift defensive edup lo pre.ient the leader foe of inler- Amerlcan coot>erallon. Sen. Luis Al- berto Herrera, from maneuvering himself Into power. In dramatic aeUons shortly be- fore danii, the president dissolved congress, ordered troops to surround the parllamcntarj- building and oth - er public plnces. cancelled leaves of other soldiers nnd called off an elec- tion set for Marcli 30. Gen. Julio RoleiU. mlnbler of -.ar, resigned and Foreign Minister Alberto Guanl assumed hU duties. Uruguay, a. leading proponent ot cooperation with the United States and its allies, severed all relations with the axis at the recent Pon- Janelro. Its ba.*.es on Uie broad Plotle rlvec separating llvls country from Argentino are strategic. 'Uruguay's . tiny navy is held reodines.1 . -f. . , R es^U Gosrlntece Tlie president'atenily malnlAlnejt UiBt he would respect all guarantees established by the consUtutlon. ’ The election had been eoiled by the president- to secure authority to draw cabinet officers only from the majority parly. Two minority representatives now are included, and BaUomlr contended this weak- ened hU po.'ritlon. The senate pas-ied a Ttaoluljon re- pudlaung the government's election stand and Baldomir's reaeUon ’^as - swift dUsoluUon of congres.% Herrem long has opposed Uie pres- ident's foreign policy arjd has been out-ipoken ogaln.it Baldomir's plan (o build naval air air bases with U. S. funds. Two years ago, he clilded Uie president for seeking coopera- tion with the United Sioleji, wlilch he called ••imperiUllsUc." Troops frustrated an attempt of Uie Herrerlatas lo hold n njmp se.s- slon wlUiin the parliament building this morning In -defiance of the pre.ddenl's order dls.solvlng con- gress. Tolalllarlsn Sympathies Instead Uiey met in front of the buTIdlng and adopted a resolution declorlng Bnldomir had ceased to hold U:e presldencey nnd tliot his powers automaUcally po.wd Uj Vice- President Cesar Charlone. The vice- president, though i»mlnB.lly a mem- ber of Baldomir's party. Is widely recognized 05 enteruilnlng toUlltar- lan sympathies. He was a, candidate for Uie presidency In the cancelled elecuon. The HerrerbtA rump congre.ss provoked Uie only violence today. Police eharsed Uie group when II refused to dl.^band. Injuring -Sen. Vlglola. Two senators and several bysUnders were arre-ited. ELiewhere order prev^led. ........ .. , Four Youths Home From Island Jobs BOISE, Feb. 21 (,n—Four BoLie youths, one ot them John Olveas, a son of Supreme Court Chief Justice Raymond'L. Givens, arrived home today from OASIgnments as con- strucUon workers on Midway and Johavin Uland In Uie far Pacific. ■Young Givens ond Jack Leach- sn were on Midway Island but ..ere cauUoned not to relate details of tt}e Japanese shelling of the is- bnd.'' Dutch seamen and fliers join- ed jji an all-out offensive action. There were no announced r lasses by the United NaUons but communiques of various comiT&Mnir* indicated these tc&ses for the Japo* Helper KANSAS CITY. Feb. 21 Four-year-old Bruce Lockett's d id ^ often told him their cor might be stolen. If they left the kej-s In It. WhUe his moUier was In a den- tist's office Bruce .walked down Uie street io buy an Ice cream cone. On Uie way he noUeed eight cars with i^ U o n keys In them. Bruce, remembering what dad- dy said, took them. •Tliey were bad. mommy," he explained later. “They left the« k^s in tt»elr c«r»—Fm toxins core of them.'' . Bruce cotUdn't remember the cars he tooK them from. The par- ents. Mr, aod Mrs. Walter Lock- ett, spent the day Itylag to find One cruiser blown up; fotir cruls- rs damaged. Two deslroyen sunk; one deatroy- r damaged. Five transports sunk or dami . The engagement marked thW trst ottlclAlly-teported use o( the United ' SUtes army's new dive bomber. In addition four-molored tambera and pursuit ships were-TOrfftcd. Seven of tlie type of dive-bomber planes which Uie tUr forces dcslg* nated as Uie A-24 took port In one • pliase ot the running fight, the war department reported, and “ser- iously damaged." a Japanese cruiser. Two Shot [town Two, however, were shot down along with two of an escort of 19 army P-W lighter plants. The A -24.is.a two-pl»ee.> olnftle engine, all metal Douglas plane. The department reported Uat «um- . .. at preliminary testA that It would “oulpcrform dive bombers now in use by foreign naUaas." A highly specioUzcd crftftTor use porUcuiarly against moving targets; the dive bomber supplements other ormy types, such as the long rangA heavy planes whlch MaVe scored aevJ eral times In Uie southwest Pacifie fighting, two-cnglne medium bom- - btfrs, and theiight A-20 atlACk b o % ' ber. ' ' . With 'the sliiile exception bJ'tlia ’ batUe of Macoosar .straits, Tokyo'* • i-ivoslon forees had'sw ept througit Uie ouUylng porUon* ot the rlcb archipelago with only sacrlficttl k^orebed-earth Uetlcs and delaying ' acUons to Impede tlieir protrress. Bu( now tho allies, finding themselve^'. literally with their backs against th e - flnal wall which bars the. Japanes« from Uie sireteglcally vital Indian ocean and Australia, have looeed the offensive blows which were p ro m l^ os soon as they couid concentrate all Uielr available strength on holding the one most Important poslUon. , Heaviest AeUon •Hie heaviest action — * bolll* which promised to overshadow the biosUng toll InfUcted on a Japanese lnva.ilon fleet In Macas.iar straits—> raged In the reef-slrewn. shark-in - fested waters off the peaceful, Idyllic IsUnd of Ball. It was there that Uie Japanesa liad launclied ihelr newest invasion Uirusl, one which threatened to lab- iate Java froih east, north and west' and presented an ominous danger (o Uie allied naval base of Soerabaja a m:.e i:o miles lo the west. And, In their aim to put troops oshore on Call, llie enemy seemingly was suc- cessful. But Ills air and naval forces were *1 2],m -RySSIANS- ‘ W IMED K ILLED By liie Auocbted Freas Adolf niUer claimed last night ^ e destrucUon of 31,000 Rus.ilan * 1 -' dlers but there were IndlcaUons U>e. a.vierUon moy liave been made only to off set ejtpecled annouDcemenU Qy the Soviet high command Umed for publlcaUon Monday. 24Ui anni- versary of the Red army's creaUon. .The Soviet high cotnmand, aguin reporUng advances all along the World war's longest single, front has couclied lls communiques In re-, cent weeks In only the most gen-' eral terms. It has been predicted Irecly Ihot Uie Russians would wmt unUl Mon~ day to specify the key ciUes which might have been retaken from the . Nails. Therefore It appeared that IllUer might have tried to beat the Rus- sians to the punch. The claim from Oerlln-whlch has no high repate for accuracy, was that N«1 tank-: uoops In the cenlnl scetdt bave Wiled 27,000 Russlaa soldier* and captured S,OQQ more th the p u t four »-eeks. Tite Soviet command, bowercr, continued to speak In generallUes— onchecked drive# In nortliwwt, west and southwest, more toviu tU>-> ' er«t«d. thousands of enemy vSped. out. The only deUOla concemedi the fighting around. LcnlngnKl.;;. vhert Ute Red ohny, lUll blMtln«: at tbe Q n u A beilegen. wm Mid ' to ha*r 9fcrra.two-llzwi of d«-..c fensea. / LAST DAT — • B O B S , .F ib . a i .« > ~ P e b . M.-.wUI ■V-'Ai be the last dC7' cm~irtalcb' fnrmiur'T a y a i^ for crop lagmym'^j "'

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Page 1: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

FOR VICTORY'■ B u y ■

IlNtTEO m n s DEFENSE

BONDS* STAMPSNine Irrigated Idaho 0>unl!es

TGIN RUMMY

appcM i iodjijr on tbo w clal p«cea.

y o u 24, 'NO. 'ZG6 T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O . SUNDAY, F E B R U A R Y 22. 1942 , _ . *tnit ^ a « i .U c « --------------------- ------------------------------------------- , --------- ------- ----------------— ---------- ----------- ~ ' Am mU M and UnlM PRICE 5 C E N T S .

ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERRGH

A P E N E iE S O N PHILIPPINE ISLE

•WASHINOTON. r t b . 21 (-fV-Tlie Japanese Invaders of Uie Plilllpplncs a re mceUn« with growliiB rc.il.itonce frocn ClTllliins. U was reported lodny in communlquFii whicli dUcloscd

. a b o Uiat O cn. DourIm M ncArthur hiia the use of-som e <-lnch nixviU ffuns In hla deren.:e ot BAtnnn p e ­n insula.

T h e w ar departm ent sold M ac. A rthu r advised th a t "clTlllan re - itslAnce to th e Japanese Is Rrowlns in In tensity and is' bccom ln; in - ,

•^creaalnnly etfeeUve.”lU s d ispatch eltcd as cxaaiplcs;

■•Many Inform ers have mysteriously disappeared . . . A secrct soclcly known as th e 'F PP- or T lsh tc r s fdr F reedom ' h as been formed to foster dvU lan resistance . . . A Sett days ago Japane.ie mUltory authorlU es woko up to find th a t proclomaUons

-fcW ch they had plastered U jrough- ou t M anila and th e countryside had a ll been Btmneely altered. T his proclam ation enum em ted a, num ber

He Lost Teacher

declared th a t for every Jnpane.ie killed. 10 Filipinos would be shot.

■ The a ltera tion made the pfoclnmn- Uon read th a t for every Filipino killed 10 Japanese soldiers would low Ihelr lives."

E ip c ct Victor^T ills resistance. M acA rthur said.

■ was fostered by tlie Filipinos' ■' Jldence In ultim ate victory a n d hope U iM Use J a p a s ts e soon m ay be «:(• pelted from th e Islctnd.i.*'

T h e repo rt w as token here to m ean th a t &niUo Agulnaldo. Uie tglng;. onetim e leader o t th e P h '" ploe insurrection, had U.tUe u . «nce am ong his people. Recently A gulnaUo called fo r a surrender of th e FblU pp lnn to the InTftdars. » p ronouncem ent w hich brou«hl upon h im th e desJgnaUoa of ■•Philippine QulsUng.”

A nATjr departm en t communique (Slscloieil t h a t Bun* salvaBed I r a n the CaiTlte ij»v*l b u t when U nited B t a ^ fprceib withdrew, from, i t were

■ ders.Japanese b is guns were reported

• to bo ham m ering a t Amerlcon-Plll- plno forces on S a ta a n peninsula a n d

'■ fortif ica tions In M a n ila 'b a y . b u t th e re was no Indication tlie enemy wa* yet ready to launch a new

.,.1«naJve.P a tre l SklrmUhes

In fa n try action, a war departm ent eommunlque said, was litnlled to n iunerous skirm ishes between

I the forUflcatlons in M anila bay were subjected to fire from the Japanese batteries on the south-

'e a s t side of th e bay and were reply­ing w ith th e ir own ffuns.

T he enem y continued, however, to concentra te on P o rt F rank . S ituated on C arabao island, th is fo rt Is only about a m ile from the bay shore held by th e Japanese.

UNITED \TAKE OEEENSIV

BATAVIA. N. E. I,. Feb .,31 (-T>- American a n d D utch w arships a n d w arplanes, on the o ficailve In w liat p rbm lscs.to b e .th c lr m ost powerful Joint effort » far, a r t RmnsWng Japanese invasion fleeta off th e e m and w estern ends of Java.

So vast and overlnppinK wen a ir and sea blows In defem e of U)is Island stronghold of Uie United No- tions th a t a n accurate nfcuuntiuft of tlie successes already r^orcd wiui Impossible, b u t At len.\t one cruiser WHS blown up. two dcMroyer.i sunk and several o the r warslilps diuniiRed.

A lthough sueces.-slve communiques he re .an d In W a.ihin«tbn today told of a t least tB separate bomb, torpe­do o r cannon blows on Japanese ahlps I t was probable U jst seveml of th e shlpa had fljcurcd In more tJion one o f Uie a ttacks.

I n addiUon to tlie crulner blown up. tw o cruisers and two destroyers certainly w ere dam agM In n naval b a ttle Friday n l^ h t off Ball, a t th e eastern end o f Java , when D utcli cruisers and D utch and American destroyers a ttacked , a N etljerlsnds communique declared. Early radio a n n o t ^ m e n t , that-, th e a llle i lost a destroyer i s - th e action w n j n o t bom e ou t by la tte r communiques.

Idahii Draft Call - Sets New Record

BOISE. Feb. 21 M > -Idaho '« 'Sec­ond seiecUve service call fo r M arch was received today and sta t« he ad ­quarters said th e morflh's quo ta was more tlm n th re e ,U m e Z ^ e nvcrage m onthly call fo r IM I.

mducUoQ' dates fo r Uie f irs t call were to end about M arch 17. D ates for t h a .s w n d call a re M arch 38-ai.

ISLAND BEFUGEES SAFE MARACAIBO, V en& lela, Feb. 31

' M V-PUty womcQ a n d children Hved b e n aboard D utcli a n d Vene- euelaa p lanet today from tfle axis- a ttacked D utch Island of A ruba, an additional ISO are expected tom or-

RALPil C. >VILSOS'. . . ThU Twin Falls H ylnr c .det,

fo rm er eounly AAA lecrtlary, m ade th e headlines a ll ovrr tlie na tion two days ago. O n WiUon'i final check flight a* an advanced studen t a t Yukon. Okla.. liU (lielit Instructor, Ceorie Dale, fell out of the plane. Dale landed u M y by parachute . WlUon li a t the a ir eorp* primary f ijl t i j «cliool a t Cim arron field.

(TImts-News K n irsrin t)

Rescued Crew Sees 20 IVJen Die ill Blaze

By E. V. W. JONKS JACKSONVILliB. Fla.. Feb. 21 (A'l

—Ei«:ht«cn survivors who ^aw 20 shlfcnates die in th e blozlnB Infcm o of Uie torpedoed oil tanker Pan M assachusetts off the soutlieast coast spoke wiUi heartfe lt praise to ­day of Uie bnkvcry ot a rescue ves- sel'B crew.

up to tlie rescue. •rtiey even broke rad io sUcnco to coll. for help. O ur rad io waavjcnocked ou t by the f irs t b la st,- .

• 'H ia t wft.s bravery,” Raid CapL R obert E. Christy, how se frrsn awal- lowlnK smoke and sen w ater. "We had ho Idea any sljlp would risk tlie wime Icito Hint struck l.i In o r­der to help survivors. A fter navin« a ll tJie llvlnip^iey picked up two of ■j r dead.

Mfeboats Bum ^••Ail our llfeboftis burned. We had0 Idea imy r.hlp would brave a sub ­

m arine ntlACk on Itself to come to our a id . B ut the m en of tlu it o ther slilp cam e on.

"Ten o r IS.foot w as were run - nlnK. T lie water wo.i wiinn bu t n cold rn ln was falllns. U wiui In Uie w ater about two hours before be­ing pulled nboiirit n- lifcbont.

“Dodse. my iJiIrd offlccr, from Baltim ore, hud no lifebelt. He found Ills cloUies dmRitlnB him under «) stripped In tlie water, h e told me lotcr. He snld tlic rescue sh ip mi»*wl him nJUiouk’h he shouted a s loud ns he could. U went on about two mllc.s. He Kave hlmscU up a.s lost, and Uien ■ D navy planes po.v*d over. Ju s t

(CanllnoMl .n r» i» 3. C«t«-n J)

Five Cargo Ships Launched iirDay

WASHINQTOr^. Feb.' 21 (,?)-F lve cargo ships, aggresaUni; more Uian 60,000 deadwclHiit loiv;. were Isunch- c<l today In United S tates .ihiijyartLs, tlie miu-lUme commlsjion announc­ed.

•Two sill,a of lOiOO toa-, were launched euriler in.,Uie wfck.

T l\c cwnm lnilon.-snylnft ■ th iit H keels w ere laid Uifs weck, predicted a two-a*<lfty lauiichirg ra te would be a ltalneti-bv la ic April or early

DO tlG liN tJTSBISBEB. A rls . , .f t il i .J f m* -

I sent . .on Jack , cadet a t K naval f lir ba.se. a' botch of douBhnuts ond asked If he'd like ano ther.

Back came Ihs repli”'K e e p •em.fr>-lnKr'

FARMER THRI W ILL TAKE O^E

CITYTw in Fulls will be turned over

lo the fiiTTnera nex t Tlmradny as the flfUi an n u al Farm ers’ Concre.w Li staBe<l a n d the completed priiRram, announced la la S a turday n lslii Indi­cates th e re will be someihlnK dolnB ever>‘ m inute.

Tiie ConKreis tliLi year wiii be m uch m ore complete than those held In piuit years and the a ttention of the farm ers will be Lakcn up from 10 a.m . w hen It a ll s ta r u to well Into tJie afternoon p a s t 3 p jn .

Horneahoe r i te h ln i L atest fea tu re attracUoii added to

th e program will be a dem otuiratlon In “ba rnyard g o l f by 0, E. Jack ­son. w orld's cham pion trick liorse- .shoe p itc h e r who fonncrlj' resided a t D luc M ount. K an., bu t'w ho now re-, sides r ig h t here ' In Tw in Fnlls,

Ja ik-soii.holds many national rec­ords Including 05 ringers out <>f 100 shoes, 22 consecutive ringers and 40 ringers ou t o f 50 shoes. Ho wo.s Mississippi valley cham pion for th ree years. Iowa sto le champion two years a n d Illinois sta te chom ; plon tw o years. . ,,

T he c liam plon will perlorm In a special a re n a w hich will be se t up .ln the lOO block of Second .street soilUi between Uie Idaho D epartm ent <tore and Uie J . C. Penney companyi H is • 'a c f 'W ill s ta r t a t 3:15 p jn . •,

S pellln r Dee ,AnoUier fea tu re for the afternoon,

unannounced un til la s t n lch l. Is Uie spelling bee whlcli will bb.held In th e dow ntow n area a B n g ' Main ■Street durlnK Uie (^ tem 6dh hours 'a notmd truck will lour u p ^ d down th e a rea a n d vLsiilnji fohh trs will be a.sked to spell various words. Tliose spelling Uie w ordi correctly will receive defense stam ps os'prUcs.

T lien too. a long M ain street, the Ts,-ln Falla h igh school band will be he ard in conce rt between 2 a n d '3 p jn . •

F o r Uie fa rm women a special cooking school will be sponsored'l>y th e Idalio Pow er company a t thb company auditorium . TTie cooltlng scbec l'cess lon .w u i ge t undern-iiy. a t 10 o jn ., Uio sam e hou r se t fo r sU rt of th e apeftklng prognun which Uie m en (and those women who w ant come) will a ttend theater.

n i r e e speakers will be heard be- .ir'een 10 a.m . and noon.'‘ Two of Uiem have been nam ed to da le and th e th ird will be selected shorUy, repre.senUnK the Unlu;d S tates em­ploym ent sen 'lce, and talking oti Uie proper procedure for recrulUng farm labor.

P rom inent Figures T lie otiier two speakers are Hnrry

A. Elcock. Idaho maniuter of Uie A m algam ated Sugar company, who will discuss Uie labor situation, and M ilford J . V aught, BoLie. sta te AAA chairm an a n d also head of the sta te USDA w ar bonrd.

Me.viages to be given by both of Uiese speakers will prove to be vlto.1 for farm ers o f Uie Magic Valley wltlj

:Ontli<g.J .n T it . I .C ta n n 71

T an ttpRoxy

Swift Induction Set for Draftees

ductfollowhig physical exomi-

naUons, and a fte r Induction, may . for furloughs ln ‘ ca.se of any

hardsliltn . I t was announced a t sta te selecUve service hcndquartcrs to ­day.

•,l36tween the first •screening’ tes,t. (physical ex.nmlnaUon by a locAl physician) and the arm y phys­ical examination.^' explained Lt. Col. N orm wi D. A dk^on. selective scrv. ice execuUve officer, "the men must miiko any applications for clianges o f clft.sslflcaUon for appeal from selective service orders."

Banbury in ComaW|i:NDELL. Feb, 2 l - j ; W. Dan-

bury. 83. B uh l pioneer, toillgh t.had fille d to regain coasclousnCls a t S t. VolenUne’s hospiial. 60 hours a fte r he suffere<l a airoke In Wen­dell.

Dnnbury. founder of Uie Banbury natatorium , fell unconwious T liurs- day a fternoon . Late ton ig la hospl-

Late War BulletinsW lL U aiS T A D , Cdfacao, Feb.

21 (ffV -Thlrty-nlne members of th e crew of the Norwegian tanker KoQCKmord were betleved tenlght to have been drowned or burned (e d e a th In a torpedoing off the w estern Up of Ansba. Seven crew mem bers were rescued. '

SAN FRANCISCO. Fel>. 31 UT)— Tlie biggest r o i raids <'of the war yielded m o re . Uion Japanese, G erm an and Ita lian aliens — some of them linked w lth 'crgan lm U oos In enem y raids, whlclv. were loosed today a ll a long Uifl PacUJo coast and In .A rliona.

Fede ra l bureau of [nvcstlgaUon agen t seized more Uian 200 a liens m th e Los Angele.i a rea. £ a n Diego, a vita] defease base, yielded 35 more. -There-W ere five arrests and more

\h a o GO aliens queaUoned la Arliona.

CANBERRA, Australia. Peb. 31— T h e A ustralian government ontlci* paU ag furU ier direc t attacks on the m ain land by Uus Jap inese . ordered civilians today to evocuate Uie norUi coast naval aUU on of Darwin, po- tenually a vita l supply base In Uje Unjted NaUons' souUiwest Poelfic strategj".

Prim e M in ister Jolin CurUn em- Phaslied . however. U iat he was not. Invoking m arU al Uw.

MOHCOW, Feb. 21 (-?>)-V*llsiit Russian troop* a tu ck e d tnrloMly along th e eaU re l.IM -m lle wm- fro o t te n lx h t, kiUlng Germans by th e thensands 'and piling tip gains w hich th e h lf h command Is cs* Peeted lo annennee drvnaUesUy on the Red arm y's annlTerssrjr M onday. >

VIGOROUS SENATOR BVRD GOES A FTER FACTfi ON UNION FEE COLLECTIONS

'V A S n iN O T O N . F eb . 21 — ifoV mucii money have unlon.i collected for Issuing w ork i>crmlts; by w hat right do Uie un ions charge a fee for an American to engage in war work; whal becomes of th is money? Tlie.^e are qucsUons be-, ing a.ikcd by V ir­ginia’s -B y rd , nnd ' when S e n a t o r B>Td asks io r in ­form ation he u su ­ally ob ta ins it.Tlio senator's In ­quiry Is general, aut It will iiave particu lar sign ifi­cance . i n t h e northwc.1t w here 'Uie unions iiave ' been selling p e r- KELLY mlt-i to work in m any war lnclu>

and w here Uiey are prcpnrini; : t up olllce.s to collcci Uils frc

from Uiose looking fo r Job.n on tin cantonm ents a t M edford and Cor­vallis.

Contractors. I t appears, make ar. agreem ent w lih Uic unions th a t the la tte r will f u m k h a ll Uie labor re­quired; Uicreiiftcr th e coiitracior:, have notliltig lo iiiy abo u t workmen, the union iicUuk as th e employment office. -A.1 the unions do n o t uW i to Incrc.iic Uiplr niember.ihlp un- necc.«orlly. Uiey l.v.ue work permits Which give Uie un ions' auUiorlM - Uon for non-union m en to yort- For UiLi work pe rm it vnrloa-, fnv, arc c h o rged j.iu one factory on Pu­get sound it I.-. J i n sh ift for i!.r higher pAid worker.'.. T llU l.i nmrc money tiiah would be pa id In a i due;. If the worker bclouK^d to Uie union. Tliere t i no m eans of learning linw much revenue tiie unions are ob' ta lnlng from th e work permits, init Senator BjTd niiiy smoke a out eventually by n law compelling an accounting.

Labor conUniies lo w orrj' member;, of congress. T lie w elders in tlic norUiwest, the dem ands In the lum­ber in d in try for traji.-iporutloii, de­mands for anoU ier J1 n day lo meet Increasing cost o f living, shut-downs In Im portan t Industries for trivliil reasons. Congre-ns does not 111

10.000 men In n p la n t quit an hou r as a demonstraUon, .

Uils meaiw 10.000 lio u n , or 1J50 days — 30 weeks. T liiftl/ weeks In certain p lan ts will represen t 400 o lr- planes and a f lee t of tanks or a car­go carrier.

nice to It Vork ion .'fo r

Frem Cabinet gorge on Uie Mon- tono-Idaho line to R om dam on the Skagit river In W ashington, and to D etroit on th e SnnU am Tlvcr In Oirgon, the la te s t iw w er develop- m&it fo r the norUiwest Includes every potenU al , site In the Uiree ■ Congress is requested lo m a te

tc<ntlns.4 .a r« i* *. C»t»mm T)

Forty-Hour Week May Be AbridgedDES M OINES. la ., fVb. 21 (,V ,-

Prlee A dm lnLitrator W on Ilenderr.on u ld today volunlAry abridgem ent at ihe 40-hour w e ^ in a number of Indastrles is probable.

•TTie 40-liour week la IncOnsUtent In a period oL stre ss like Uils.“ he declared in a p ress conference.

' I t was designed to prevent abuses In Industry a n d labor groups have said they are wllUng to give It up i It Is no t to th e sole advantago of manAffcment.^’

C. of C. Demands _ Alien Jap Camps• J:iimnusc u IIlmi.s— if anti w hen th ey a re tra n s f e r r e d ffom th e Pacific coaa t to so u th cen tra l Idaho— .should be confinod in concentration cam p s in stead o f being allow ed to labor in tlio fields o f M agic V alley, dependen t u p o n -a v a a t irrign- lion .sy.stem w hich is “ in adequate ly p ro tec ted .”

T lia t «lmii;lil-trom-Uie-.slioulderInformiitlon will be placed tomor­row on Uip tii-j.ks of Oov. Ciio-^e A. Cliirk, Sen. D. W orth C lark and Sen. John T lio in a v ^ o n g . Henry Dworsliak nnd CotiK. C oripum ' Wlille, nnd W. T . Loci:wood. Idalio dln-clor of Uie offttw. of yrjjm en t rej» rt.i"a t BofiC.

Members of Uie bonrd of directors of Uie Twin Fall.% Cham ber of Com­merce, mectinic Friday noon In Uie Rogcriion hotel, also la*lied out against •'congrc.vsnpn debaUng pen­sions, Donald D urk nnd fan danc­ers."

Slop “Horatplay”"C ut out the hotbeptny and toke

Immediate .it-'p. for the proirctlon of American cltl.-v-ii.*.,” tliry dniianded, "lent Uils country trcxl Uir name JWth toward defeat as FYoncr "

Committee of Chuide H. Di-tweller. . S . Tofflemire nnd H. Chris

Reinke, stiite n-proc-titutlvr from T w in Falls coiuity. wii.s do iijn iited to lay th e fncti b«'/orc Uie men in Boise and Wa.ihliuiloii,

appn iis probable U iat alien Ja p a iu re from Uir coiu-,l will be moved Into tllL terrlt/iry," Uiey ft-v.erted, In lrilrr.% dL'.jwiclud yc.^- terxlay-trt Uie Idaho nnd n.itlonal

pllal.:.Farmers Opposed

"South ccn in il Idaho fmnii'iN are’ tsoluleV oppa-.ed." llicy .siiil, lo ly policy tth lrli would niili.-<- ./iij)- ie:.e labor in Uils le rrlto ri’ lor la rm

labor. lni.tcad. "aliens iJiouUl be confined to l.'.oliitfd concentration ciuniM under hea\->' guard, ^lol only

Idalio bu t Uiroughwit Uic coim- /.'• j.aliT thr commltU'c, jHr/;rlblnfr

Uic chnmbcT'.i opimsUlon f o /n y im - iw ru tlon plan.

"Our vast irrigation .'.y.'.u-in is In- ftdequalely proteeted a«um.M flfUi colimin acllvllie.^,•• the eom niittee '

advised tliL- Kovrrnor and the cn|lgrefi.^lcnal delcxutlon "Ol)vlou:i- ly our great- irritjalloii w.Mi iii em ­bodying rrfime 3S0.000 acres of high­ly 1 I b>f a

[NCH.FIGH1 S REPAIRED

V IC liy , Unoccupied France. Feb. 21 (/1->-nie 2(J.500-ton F rench bat- Ueshlp Dunkerque, crippled by the DrUWi In the melancholy naval b a t­tle off M ers-el-Keblr In Ju ly of 1040. has read ied Uie French home naval ba-ie o f-T oulon from A frica under her own steam , Vice-Prem ier Ad» mh-al Dorian lo ld 'the Vichy cabinet today.

Tliere w u no elaboraUon on Uie announcem ent. However, I t was re> ported last November Uiot Uie D un­kerque had been repaired a n d ^ a d e ready tor service, Toulon, he r p res­en t port, is on the M editernm eon cixist.

T he balUeslilp was Isuiiclicd In 1D3S. Slio ha.1 eight 13-lnch guns and sixteen S.l inch guns and » speed In e3tces.< of 30 knots.

Clark Investigates Blackfoot Claims

BOISE, Feb. a i </r>—InvesUgAtlon of com plolnti h e said he had re ­ceived'concerolnR U « sta te hospital south took Governor.. Clark lo Bladcfoot lodny.

He declined to elaboralo>4)n th e ita lem en t other than to any It ap ­peared .a qucsUon of un ity am ons employes w u Involved.

FLASHES of LIFEK » ;A R -v in r f a r

GAINESVILLE. Tex., Feb. 21 W>—For 80 years Mrs, B. B. Askew of M arietta . Okla., an3 Mrs. George W, M yers of Oalnesvllie unknowingly hove lived w ithin 25 miles of each oUicr.

T h e sisters, w ho have no t seen each o ther fo r 05 yclirs, will hold a reunion w hen they recover from cu rren t Illnesses, Mrs. A.skew Is W, Irer sister, ■J7.

M rs, M yers found he r sister through a newspaper story on Uie death of Jim A lexander. SS, Mar- letui city m arsiial. la s t week. She had had a broUier by Uiat name and.oUier fac ts in the Atory check. Mrs, Myers «en t rcIaUves lo Mar­ie tta and estabUshed the kinship,

TJie sLslers are natives of Flor­ence. Ala., which Uiey le ft as yo«nB slrls.

St'UF. FUN ■- EVANSTON. Hi., Feb ,-31

Chff G roh, form er N orthwestern university stu d e n t who is serMng w hh American volunteer filers de- fcfnding Uie B urm a Toad, sen t this cnbie lo h is porents :

"W e’re knocking the tails off tlie Japs. W ouldn 't change places wiUi the richest m an in Uie world. Having w onderful lim e.-

Tough: Kraut Can Shortage Seen for ’42

FREMONT, O., Feb. 21 1-1'^You may have to take your ,spare ribs "M ralghl" (rjuis sauerk rau t) one of Uiesc days.

Processors In Uii. iireu, one of Uie large producing centers of the na- Uon, report Uie wur producUon board hn.s.alloiied only half enough tin c an s to p<ick w hat's left of the 11X1 c rop and will promi-''B no for 1042.

M anufaciurrrs . wiv Uiey c a n 't go back to bulk handling of Uie "poor m an'* favorll® food" becau-se coop­erage facillUes a re no t avallab]e.

W hat's worse. Uiey claim . U Uial toiw -of I tra u t now In curing vaU will spoil and 50 U> 75 per cen t « ' Uielr employes will be throw n out < work unleaa con tainers are iound.

n i e entire Industry is Uirentened, they odd, becou.se cabbage growers, fea rfu l Uiere wUl be no m arket for' Uielr crop, a re ready to switch to o the r crops if no solution is workedOUL

T h t packers con tend Uiey tliould get a n even brvak w ith apples, car­re ls a n d beets whone Un can quota has been cu t only 25 per cciii, ' (hough they c an be obtained fresh produce Uie year around.

S a ue rkrau t la seasonable artd per­ishab le ,-they say, o dd lna U iat the navy for years haa considered It the best o f scurvy prevenUn* foods.

DEFENSE AREA . OLYMPIA. W ash., F eb . 21 Opy-

WashingtoD s ta te . VOS pcpdalffled a protecUve defense a rea today by GOT. ArUiur B . LoRglie. H e ordered a ll Japanese to su rrender to . the s u te pa trol a l l 'f l r e a n o s . am m un- n ltion, explosives or o th e r instru- m ents which rn igh t be used to eo* dance r property o r l i f t , by s e s ( Thursday._______

I

Japs’ Ships Sunk As Dive Bombers JFein in Attacks

.. ....... Dy The Aiiioeisled P rtisT h e U n ite d ' N a tio n s un leashed th e ir aea and a i r po w er

y e s te rd a y to sm a sh h a rd a t the invading Japaneao in tho D u tch EuKt In d ie s a n d th e re w ere indicution.i th e ac tio n

a s co n tin u in g to d ay . , . . . .............................. .T h ro w n back o n to th e j>opulous, tru iisu re-trove i.‘»land o f

Jav a , 'U nited S t a t e s - , a n d

ORUGUAY’S CHIEF CALLS O U I A l Y

O O U E L L E MBy RAFAEL ORDORICA

MONTEVIDEO. Feb. 31 f/?>—Pres- Idenl A lfredo Baldomlr. backed by Uruguay's a rm y of 11M0, s tre n g th ­ened his ru le over th is republic to ­day w ith a sw ift defensive edup lo pre.ient th e leader foe o f in le r- Amerlcan coot>erallon. Sen. Luis Al­berto H errera , from m aneuvering himself Into power.

In d ram a tic aeUons shortly b e ­fore dan ii, th e president dissolved congress, o rdered troops to surround the parllam cntarj- building and o th ­er public p lnces. cancelled leaves of o the r soldiers nnd called o ff an elec­tion se t for M arcli 30.

G en. Ju lio RoleiU. m ln b le r of -.ar, resigned and Foreign M inister Alberto G u an l assum ed hU duties.

Uruguay, a. leading proponent o t cooperation w ith the U nited States and its a llies, severed a ll relations with the ax is a t th e recen t Pon - Janelro . I t s ba.*.es on Uie broad Plotle rlvec separating llvls country from A rgentino a re stra teg ic .

'U ruguay 's . tiny navy is held reodines.1. -f. . ,

R e s ^ U G osrln tece T lie p res id en t'a te n ily malnlAlnejt

UiBt h e w ould respect a ll guarantees established by the consUtutlon.’ T he e lec tion had been eoiled by

the p residen t- to secure au thority to draw c a b in e t officers only from th e m a jo rity parly. Two m inority represen ta tives now are included, and B aU om lr contended th is weak­ened hU po.'ritlon.

T h e se n ate pas-ied a Ttaoluljon re - pudlaung th e governm ent's election s tand and B aldom ir's reaeUon ’ as - sw ift dUsoluUon of congres.%

H errem long has opposed Uie p res­iden t's foreign policy arjd has been out-ipoken ogaln.it Baldom ir's plan (o build n a v a l a ir a ir bases w ith U. S. funds. T w o years ago, he clilded Uie p residen t for seeking coopera­tion w ith th e United Sioleji, wlilch he called ••imperiUllsUc."

Troops f ru s tra te d a n a ttem p t of Uie H errerla tas lo hold n n jm p se.s- slon wlUiin th e pa rliam ent building th is m orn ing In -defiance of the pre.ddenl's o rder dls.solvlng con­gress.

T o la llla rlsn Sym pathies Instead Uiey m et in fro n t of the

buTIdlng a n d adopted a resolution declorlng Bnldom ir had ceased to hold U:e presldencey nnd tlio t his powers autom aU cally po .w d Uj Vice- Presiden t C esa r Charlone. T he vice- president, th o u g h i»mlnB.lly a m em­ber of Baldom ir's pa rty . Is widely recognized 05 en teru iln lng to U lltar- lan sym path ies. H e was a, candidate for Uie presidency In th e cancelled elecuon.

The H errerb tA rum p congre.ss provoked Uie only violence today. Police e h a rsed Uie group when II refused to dl.^band. Injuring -Sen. Vlglola. T w o senators and several bysU nders w ere arre-ited. ELiewhere order p r e v ^ le d ........... ,

Four Youths Home From Island JobsBOISE, F e b . 21 (,n—F our BoLie

youths, one o t them Jo h n Olveas, a son of S uprem e C ourt C hief Justice R ay m o n d 'L . Givens, a rrived home today from OASIgnments as con- strucUon w orkers on Midway and Jo h a v in U land In Uie f a r Pacific.

■Young G ivens ond Ja ck Leach- s n were on Midway Island bu t

..ere cauU oned no t to re la te details of tt}e Ja p an e se shelling of the is- b n d . ' '

D utch seam en and f l ie r s jo in ­ed jji an a ll-ou t o ffe n s iv e action.

There were no announced r lasses by the United NaUons b u t communiques of various comiT&Mnir* indicated these tc&ses fo r th e Japo*

HelperKANSAS CITY. Feb. 21

Four-yea r-o ld Bruce Lockett's d i d ^ o f ten told h im the ir cor m ight be sto len . If they le ft the kej-s In It.

WhUe h is moUier was In a den­tis t's office Bruce .walked down Uie s tre e t io buy a n Ice cream cone. O n Uie way he noUeed eight cars with i ^ U o n keys In them .

Bruce, rem em bering w h a t dad­dy said, took them .

•Tliey w ere bad. mommy," he explained la te r . “T hey le ft th e « k ^ s in tt»elr c«r»—Fm toxins core o f th e m .'' .

B ruce cotU dn't rem em ber the cars h e tooK them from . T h e par­ents. Mr, a o d M rs. W alte r Lock­e tt, spen t th e day I ty lag to find

O ne cruiser blown up ; fo tir cruls- rs damaged.Two deslroyen sunk; one deatroy-

r damaged.Five transports sunk or dami .T he engagement m arked th W tr s t

ottlclAlly-teported use o( th e U n ited ' S U tes army's new dive bom ber. In addition four-molored tam bera and pursuit ships were-TOrfftcd.

Seven of tlie type of dive-bom ber planes which Uie tUr forces dcslg* nated as Uie A-24 took p o r t In one • pliase o t the running figh t, th e war departm ent reported, a n d “se r­iously damaged." a Japanese cruiser.

Two Shot [townTwo, however, were sh o t down

along with two of a n escort o f 19 army P-W lighter p lan ts .

T he A -2 4 .is .a two-pl»ee.> olnftle engine, all m etal Douglas plane. T he

departm ent reported U at «um- . .. a t preliminary testA th a t It would “oulpcrform dive bombers now in use by foreign naUaas."

A highly specioUzcd c rftf tT o r use porUcuiarly against m oving ta rge ts ; the dive bomber supplem ents o th e r ormy types, such as th e long rangA heavy planes whlch MaVe scored aevJ eral times In Uie southw est Pacifie fighting, tw o-cnglne m edium bom - - btfrs, and th e iig h t A-20 atlACk b o % ' ber. ' ■ • ' .

W ith 'the sliiile exception b J 't l i a ’ batUe of Macoosar .stra its, Tokyo'* • i-ivoslon forees h a d 'sw e p t th rougit Uie ouUylng porUon* o t th e r lcb archipelago w ith only sa c rlf ic ttl

k^orebed-earth U etlcs and delaying ' acUons to Impede tlieir protrress. B u ( now tho allies, finding them selve^ '. literally with the ir backs ag a in s t t h e - flnal wall which bars the . Japanes« from Uie sireteglcally v ita l In d ian ocean and A ustralia, have looeed th e offensive blows which were p r o m l ^ os soon as they couid concentra te a ll Uielr available s trength on hold ing the one m ost Im portant poslUon. ,

Heaviest AeUon•Hie heaviest action — * bolll*

which promised to overshadow th e biosUng toll InfUcted on a Japanese lnva.ilon fleet In M acas.iar s tra its—> raged In the reef-slrew n. sh a rk - in ­fested waters off the peaceful, Idyllic IsUnd of Ball.

I t was there th a t Uie Japanesa liad launclied ihelr new est invasion Uirusl, one which th rea tened to lab­iate Java froih east, n o r th and west' and presented an om inous danger (o Uie allied naval base of Soe raba ja a m :.e i:o miles lo th e w est. A nd,In the ir aim to pu t troops oshore on Call, llie enemy seemingly was suc ­cessful.

B u t Ills a ir and naval forces were*1

2],m-RySSIANS- ‘ WIMED KILLED

By l i i e A uocb ted FreasAdolf niU er claimed la st n ig h t ^ e

destrucUon of 31,000 Rus.ilan * 1 - ' dlers but there were IndlcaUons U>e. a.vierUon moy liave been m ade only to off set ejtpecled annouDcem enU Qy the Soviet high com m and Umed for publlcaUon Monday. 24Ui a n n i­versary of the Red a rm y 's creaU on. .T he Soviet high cotnm and, aguin

reporUng advances a ll along th e W orld w ar's longest single, fro n t has couclied lls communiques In r e - , cent weeks In only th e m ost g e n - ' e ral terms.

I t has been predicted Irecly Ih o t Uie Russians would w m t unU l Mon~ day to specify the key ciUes w hich m ight have been re taken from th e . Nails.

Therefore It appeared th a t IllU er m ight have tried to b eat th e Rus­sians to the punch. T h e claim from O erlln -w hlch has no h ig h repa te for accuracy, was th a t N « 1 tank -: uoops In the c e n ln l sce td t bave Wiled 27,000 Russlaa soldier* a n d captured S,OQQ more th th e p u t four »-eeks.

Tite Soviet command, bowercr, continued to speak In generallUes— onchecked drive# In nortliwwt, west and southwest, more tov iu tU>-> ' er«t«d. thousands of enemy vSped. out. The only deUOla concemedi the fighting around. LcnlngnKl.;;. vhert Ute Red ohny, lUll blMtln«: at tbe Q n u A beilegen. wm Mid ' to h a * r 9f c r r a . tw o - l lz w i o f d«-..c fensea. / •

LAST DA T ■ — •B O B S , .F ib . a i .« > ~P eb. M.-.wUI ■V-'Ai

be the last dC7' cm~irtalcb' fnrm iur'T ay a i^ for crop lagmym' j "'

Page 2: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

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TIME'S,NEWS. TWIN PALM, IPAHP ___ Sunday, February 22, 1942

200 AXJS^LIENS ROUNDEl) UP IN CALIFORNIA AND ARIZONAJ A P S J E W N S .

l A W S lAKENBAN FRANOIBOO. F*b. 31 UPf-

M ore UioL 200 Jnpanew . liAltun and 0 « m * n »U «n' whtw* wUtIUm con* vtnced I h t federal bureau of In- vaitlEsU on U u t they wcro potentltl- ly danffvroiu «.er« U ken Into cus< t ^ y Uxlay on U j^PaclU c com( »nJ tn Arlzonft.

A ' reliable lourco dUcIosed Uint ROme were member* o f ontanlMlloiM controlled Jrom enemy counlrlej by enemy govemmcnU.

One hundred FQI OBcnU, aided by m ore ttiim 300 police, county o fd - ccra And «t«ta highway policemen, took pnrl In Ojo northern Cnllfomia rxUds—the Intest o f a (lerlfci which havB fonncd out dally Into alien colontei near m ilitary (ttab llih - tnonta. . .

F ind Contraband A num ber of aliens wn5 found In

po»2eulQn of forbidden Boodi, Con- U ib an d selMd Included bum ond am m unition, c sn ie ru , blnoculara. flashIlchC.1. radios, alien flnRs. and dj-nomlle. Tlie dynamlto—7J (tic lu a n d 45 d>*namitc cn[»—wm seized In nn FB I raid In Arizona.

B y lato afternoon STS a lltn i h id been taken Into custody and booked a s cn route to thC' U. S. Immlgra- t lo n departm ent. FQI nRenlA snld

' tlie raids were continuing. ^ K nt'p lopcr. who dlreoted ttio raids

In no rthern Oallfornla wlilch reach­ed into 40 dU ferent communitlen,

. H id InvestlHation by (ho f B f dis­closed Uint some of the I tallan i ap* p rsh cn d td «ora members of an or- ean iia tio n which had iieadquarwri In Rome.

Naal la b o r Unit Among tiio G erm ans arrest«d. It

waa learned, v e ra member* of an oreanlsaU on affiliated with the O ennan labor Iro n l whlcii l i headed by 0 r . B o tx rt Ley.

FB I Investigation aUo ravealed th&t lo q a cil th e Ja p a n u * n lte d b tlonged to groupa which were itrongly nationalU tio ancj which had aided Japan tso oooiuU tM in collBct- ing money. M l ( u t p a rt o( this money found lt< way Into tha cof- f a n of th a Imperial Japanese anny.

B e in FUb H arberA t iM A ngalu Pi< governminti

• t th e itq u e i t qI navy officials, aalted fUh harbor, w hich adjolna th e huge naval aitablUiim ent on. tw m ln a l Island. T he action will c lear a ll a llcn i from Uio area and p e rm it expansion o / flee t faciUUes.A acoro of Japaneae were a rrn le d .

M o rt th a n tQ aliens wer« arruM d In th a eeatUfl area. Oregon reporiad }S MTOsta,

A t S an Slego, federa l and naval tntelUgence Vganta arreated 3B Jap - •neae a llen i^d e n tU led aa ’'leaders o t Japai ......................................

What a Premium!

tn ono of th e a w an im a ralda I fluanUtiaa of

vemmenVa la rg tit that- area. Large

iraselii '

upert Besii Called by Death

for the paat aeveral yean.— B unlv lng ia h er -hu*band, f t U i

tAmbari.M ra. Lam bert was bom Nov. 10,

1B60, In Ire land. Bhe had lived In Id ah o (or 47 years, M of thoM ipent « t RuperL

P unem l aervleea will be held lV as- d ay a t 10 a . m . fit 6U Nicholas Cath-. ojio church.

The HosjiitalTwin l^uia co»inly‘general hoa

plUU had Ho bod* avallabla last night.

A dm ltM W alter Maaon. Ban Jacinto. Nev.;

Baby Jam ea Kllllon, M aster Bugene Oalllcao, M ri. William BuUer, Mra. l*« « a Cowan, T ^ j ^ U a .

Sco tt Jones, Sden; Oharies Brown, M arlene HunUey. Mrs. O. B. O lani a n d dnuffhtcr, Mr*. Homer Quinn, nodndy M adron. T*-ln PoUs: Leslie M cln tu rf, A. M. Seott. Klmbwly: M ra. Rex Davis. BulO; Mereedca Rice. K ctchum : Aaron Adamson, MurtAUgh; H arry Moraliouse, Pilcr; M m. J . R. Len-l*; Jarbldge, Nev.; M rs. J . M. Tucker. Hansen.

N e w s o f R ecord

MARRIAGEA S^b. 30—Harold E rnest Peterson,

34. Ogden, and Norma Alice Britton, . 31, New P o r t Beach. Calif.: WllUam

B ond T h o m u , 3a. Tw in ralU , and A naa tte jCaxxtl Morae, 37. BuhL

BIRTHS T o Mr. a n d Mr*. WllUom W att.

B uhl, a boy; to Mr. and Mr*. LouU

A rth u r Bo am. HaUajr, » >lr|, y w te rday , a ll a t th e Tw in Falls county C e n m l hoopltol m aternity home,

Keep tha Whit* Flag . o f S a fttv Flvlng

N

Now 37 daii9 tDithoiit a tfQ fttc 4 n t h in our liaole V a lU y . • ^

o f ^ m p. . . . him Ihe b n iih off, Corp. W alU ee TiBUhtr

Calian, Ban DIege, oaibed In on "Love Im uranee." H li *‘bene« llo llrnood dalo t>lth Cclnm bk alarlet ^ e t B lair. He didn’t

-Itnew a k lsi w ehrw H b 11.

Eai’ly Sellout Snaps up All Those Pecans

An estim ated 1,S« Twin Falls houiewlvea were disappointed Inst n ight bccftu« 1,030 "carly-blrd" slioppers bent (licm to the prize bargain of th e wecic—pccani a t a dime a pound and every red cent dettincd for th e American Red Crosa w ar relief fund.

"Al’O,” rem arked 'Dr. Cltaclc* R. Scott, cam paign chairm an lor the Twin Falla county chapter, “ ap­proximately fi.IOO pounds of pecgns were diatrlbtiled to about 40 *iofc* In Twin Folia In the morning.''

r r a n tlc by Neon By noon, a checkup revealed,

m anagers w ere'franU o, seeking tn obtain more pecans becauio the customer* h ad gone literally “nuta about Uiem."

One basem ent counterman "We sta rted the m orning with 300 pounds And every sack was Rone

' jetorc noon." ,grocery a to c ^ m anager. laid

vaa allo tted 300 pound* "and Uiey ran o u t fas ta r than tha tandi of tim e."

Tlie cashier o t a hardware store (of a ll plucesi) suld she sold 100 pounds, bu t waa unable to obtain any more.''

R ed O w w om an a t a booth In _ ir l^ ftfcU ire said they dlipented

witli fiOO 6W nd* "In the afternoon alone."

D r. Bcott f i ^ b l ^ h t waa figuring p th a t a ,100 poundi'-of pecnnj

10 cenla per pound should nef-tlia war relief fu n d aomewhat In cxccu of ts o a

Negligible Expense" S h o u ld 'n e t ISIO,” ho rcckoncd,

''O nly expanie Incurred wu« (0 corn* paid to a m an who helped carry (oma aacka In -the morning."

If by any clianca there are a few >cka left in Tw in Palls atores, he dd.- they will coi&UAr'carealu to-

roont)w. 'Hauling to stores waa donated

ye-itcrday by nU erm ountaln Bccd and Fu(}l com pany; S..McCoy Coal and T ran sfer: Ford Transfer; W«r- bcrg Broj. Coal and T ranaler com-

Boy Scou t^aaslsted In tl)o distil- tiutloj). Red Cross women holiicd (ell the n u u . Comp Fire Oirl* Mcked tho pecans, w ith bsRs and string llkewliQ contributed. A Kim­b e rly -w a rc h o u it—stored r u io nuta a fte r O. R . Orcgg, Oaney. Kan., do­nated iJis:. pecans.

Don’t Be Pouter, Evangelist Says

Rev. E. D. Young, Lincoln, Neb,, and prc-Mdlng elder in the Mcoiion- Ite ciiurch, spoke J u t nlgiii a t the M ennonlta church on the subject, 'Tl>o Church." He sold In p a r f "Jt 1* g o ^ wo have d llfe ren t orthodox churohe* or denomlnaUons beoausc each o n r 's l r o u c s one tru th more Uian tlie o ther. CJuirch member* shouli] no t be fault-finder*. pouvUh and p o u tc n , b u t aee the good tralta In other*."

R«v. Young will p rcach today a t t^ e local M ennonlte cluirch a t ' 11 a. m . and 0 p. m . before leaving for California th e f irs t of the week, ac­cording to Rev. C. W. Severn, pastor.

Patriotic Music On Concert List

K IM BEnLY. PVsb, 3 l-K lm berly M sh school band, determined to do Its p a rt in th e "alU out effort to bring about Am erican unity through music," will pfaaen t » free program Monday, Feb. M. a t 8 p. m. In th e K im txfiy h ig h achool auditorium. U ■A. T hom as, superintendent, an^ nounced laaV nigh t.

• Program wjlj include ■ patriotic numbers, Teatur# « toloUt and en- «tmblct, aelectlons of lAtln-Amcrl* can origin, as well as contest piece*., and a hum orous m usical atory.

-Will Serve TimeTed Givens, w ho waa fined 13 and

aaseased oosta of »s,40 in Buhl late Saturday ftfternoon on charges 'o f beln« intoxicated , waa lodged In th e oouatj> Jail th a t n igh t when he faUad -to provide p ay m en t The case w u before Justice of th a Peace R. H . a t a w t . BuhL_____________

D i y i N B U l S 'A IO L E O CLAIMS

Member* of th e ^ ' I n Fall* County Coopcriitivc D airj'm cn'3 nMoclatlon today, by rrsolu ilon . hnd tukcd con- Krcu to prohibit ah lp m en t In lpter> RiAtc pr In foreign cominerco of olcomarKftrlne con tain ing Ingredl- cnLi cau.iLng H to txi.ito o r look like butter or con tain ing .an y m ilk or mllK product*.

'Hie sharply worded resolution va* adopted h rrc Friday afte rnoon d ur­ing closing u u ilo n s of Uic onnual dairy meeting a t th e M eUiodlst churcl).

Util (or W hat I t la- The reioluUon d a te d th a t "If

olcomarRarlno.il to be m ade and Hold In Uic U nited B tates It should, bu required to bo sold for exactly w hat It Is" and In n a m a n n er should

produced or m arketed "In Im ita­tion c

sent to Idaiio's congrcM lonal delega­tion w ith the renue.1t th a t congres­sional a a tlo a be takan along Uia llne.i se t fo rm Ih 'tl ie resolution.

program which 1* now being-carried on with ita to approprin tlo iu under the departm ent of public health .

A th ird re.iolutlon passed called for the aasoclatlon to use " l^ , best effort*" tow ard prom otion and *uc- cMsIul comi>lcllon of .a n odvertlslng program for dairy pr'oducu,

llem plrm an Reelected Only <ma director post wu* open

a t tha m octlng th is year, tlio term of O, H. H eniplcm aii having been completed. Muniburs roolected him for anothe:' term .

0 . C. W alker. H anson, proslded a t the session and A. H. Jagels, Bi4)l. U secretary. Full reports of speeches Klven ware carried In tlie Tlmea- News Friday.

Rescued Crew Seesj20 Men Die -in Blaze

(PtlB Pis* Ol>t) nftar tlie planes pjiMod tiia re*cue slilp tu m rd . m adu directly for him. a lino wo* tliro^ 'u um l hu wua pull­ed nbonrd. D odgr bellriiTs tiic navy nicTs d lrrciod h is rcscue, und 1 tlilnk h e 1* right."

Talo of llo rro r T lic atoiy of h erobn i by Uie crew

of Uie unnam ed roa«ue th ip mingled wlU) a IaIc of h o rro r for iJiom oboant th e ill-fa ted Pnn Mas.ia- oliusott.n. 31st alilp officially an ­nounced attnckctl In tho curr«;nt m?- rle* of alnklnu* In A tlantic c o u ta l w-at«rs.

TWO torpedoe* exploded In rapid aticcc.vJon TluirMlay a n d tn*tantly tiie plodding tanker, hoavlly laden wltti &0.000 barreU of gaaollne and an eoual am oun t of kcro*cne and fuel oll.ljecam e an Inferno. T lie un ­seen lubroarlne flnsd th ree o r foiu- shells th a t spread th e (lame* and knocked out Uie rad io faclIlUei and wheelhouse.

Eight m en m lraouloualy aacaped Injury. T an a,ro in k hospital her*. Seme of thcsn illghUy burned, otii- cr* burned te m b ly aa they floun­dered In a le ii of flam e* th a t spread for nearly a mUa arourul th e Pan

Mother of Pair Requests Divorce

Mrs, ....In. d lstH d c o u rt y e su rd ay against tAwrance Jones.

The coupio m arried Sept. 33, lOM, a t Jerom e a n d has a son. 7, ancj daughter, 8. Mr*. Jones asked vui- today of th e two ehlldren. H er a t­torney U W . L. D unn.

412 Seek DfegreesMOSCOW. Idaho, Feb. 31

Ras'Utrar, Ella 0 1e*en 'roportad .to­day 4ia applications b a d bean mad* for bachelor'* dagrtea to be grmntad a t tha Unlveralty of Idaho’a-4 7 th annual com m encem e^vyuaa L '

a t AT HOME F tan k J . Hcaly. c ity plum bing ln>

(Ptctor. li lU At h l» hoae> «ccar(U&«ieJrtifflli.----------------------- ------------ —

ESUNLEAS PACIFIC POWER

irrvBi I ■>« ypaying a tremencious toll—k to ll In* fUcteiLby tlie coorclinatfld ocUon of D utch cruisers (amply belaying a prem ature Tokyo claim th a t D utch paval strcnKlli had been wiped ou t), American aiiU Dutch destroyer*, and the .m ost potent units of th e A m eri­can a ir force, Including fortress bombcm, dive-bombers a n d . fleet, deadly -P«(0 fighter plane*. In th e ir strongest concentration* » fur,

Deflnlie iflt*

............ ................................. B m ji Jap ian ts* crulicr, which blew u p a fte r being le t allra by a torpedo h it, an4 two (tutroyers. which th e U. B. navy -departm ent reportatf wera lunk by American war*hlp*. Qom'

war*hlps and transport*, mo«^ of them of (levaatatlng accuracy, bu t undoubtedly a number of then> w*rc on the same siilii*.

.T he 'allied action ranged for tq the west, too, for there . In B anka a tra lt between the S u m atra c o u t arid the liland of Banka, U . S . pi rained bombs on three large i

niport*. ati4 (cor- two .other*.

all .............. .ed near*mlue* ................

77ili *}l'OUt of/»/)fl^t, In whlc)] Tokyo claimed It* (orce* h M IMnk tw o Q ittch d iiiroye ri, c jam u e d «pt o the r and Kor*4 tofpedo n it« on two cruisers, dwarfed a ll o th e r op­e rations In the paclflo w here, ontha ft., ____w ha( more h ia i

Native . .. ftem the Pliillpplnei Qaperal

MacArthur lent wofd tha t native retUtance to the Japanaia ocoupa* Uon force* li on the rUa through'

' ■ ...... " TBih-

....jklng civilian Qpt}oi|t|an tve ry - where. Q n 'B a tu n pen insu la , w here naval gilns rescued from th a Cavlta naval liuio now ore know n to bo helping I Uie A m erican - Filip ino forces; 'Japanese a rtille ry sheliod M acArthur's line* and tho fo r t In M anila buy. b u t there s till w as no sign ol tlie expected full-scale enemy Offensive. '

I n Burma American vo luh tcer pl- loU and HAF filer* roansd to Uie offen.Uvc In m achlnc-g(m nlng a t ­tacks on the Ja p an e se ' lines along th e Bllln river. Tliey Inflicted h e a>7 coauallles and apparen tly d iscour­aged any enemy a ttem p t to force a new crossing of th is key defeoae line.

Sharp ProtestT he Jnpanesa occupation of T im ­

or. ha lf Portuguese E as t Ind ies Is­land wiUiln 450 miles of D arw in. A m tralla. brought a sh a rp prot«bt from tho Lisbon governm ent, which long has been allied wlUi B rlU ln .

T lie BBO. In reporting th e de- ^truQtlU) of 700 Japanese p lan is since f}ic s ta r t of th e Pacific war. claim ed th a t rising sun planes had bombed ona of tlieir own ship* In raid bn Keopany, cap ita l o f U D utch portion of tha Island.

O n tlie American fro n t axis action agaInK ano ther neu tra l—Braall — aLio brought forUi a sh a rp protest, fUed by the Braaillnh government against G erm an subm arine attack* whlcl) h a s *unk two B raclllan *hlp*

w hich already ha* broken Off rela­tion* wlUi U it M b , m ight go fur­th e r by orming and convoying it* m erchant ship* and extending th i range of Its eooatal patrol*.

C. OF C, ADVISES C A f S FOR JAPS

'F or thl* reoaon tho T w in Falls Oliixmber of Oommerca reouesis your aid In urging th a t th e governm ent immedlaCely taka th a reaponAlblUty for having our dam s, re*ervoln . c a . nals and the Ilka adequately guant^ ed by federal troopa.

Tlie penalona-for-congTeaa *pl»Qd*, ho congreesnen will be Informed, 'w ith oil Its a tten d a n t horaeplay,

bickering and.qu ibb ling , U on ou t­standing axample of congreaslcnal oomplacancy a n d Irresponsibility."

The cham ber urged th e Idaiio con< greoilonal. example " to le t a n ex­am ple by concerning thenuelve* clilefly w ith ou r p a rt In th e W orld

R eiterating tlia t th e concentra­tion o | all enemy aliens is an ex­trem e necessity in order to "fru s­tra te the ir plan* for our destruc- Uon." th e commltU a quoted reliable authorities a* w arning the enem y Is p lanning ano ther "Pearl ha rbo r" on the we*l coast w ith native Japanese p lanning to assist.

V et, they obscn cd , “ there ha* been no dafUUte action tow ards conccntratlng these naUve ene­mies."

'H i* cham ber declarod "confuslor} and troutile has resulted In tlUs vi­cinity because th e CIO rig h t now (s

^tempting to organise agricult nd IndustrUl worksTS."■nie Twin Pall* Cham ber

Commerce, they d«clared, "baUsves th a t (or our country 's own good, congress abould m ake a d e u rm ln id effort to curb euah ibtlvltiea for the duration o t th e wa{."

Idaho 's coagrcasmen also wera re< quested “to « t* n d every e ffo rt In oppoaltlna , to any fu rth e r govern­m ent spending for non>essanilal»— th a t a ll our. efforts and ratources be confined to our one m ain ob» Jectlve: w inning th e W orld war,"

94 Men Register For D raft a t Paul

Amy Clark. B lanche B ennett, Q uy O can. .Janet Ooon and V eta Lo- caoder; lU Ristratlon vaa he ld In the □ range hall, v b e ra M m a were

-?*Bl*t««L---------------------------------------

Twin Falls News in BriefCallfertUa VUltar*

M r.-ond Mrs. A rthur Requla have returned from Glendale. Calif., a f ­te r several weeks' visit there.

Here From B a lse -M lu M aurlne Luke. Boise, _

spending the w eek-en4 w ith h e r parents. Mr, and Mr*. 0 , L. Luke.

M etU ot PU nned New camp of the D aughters of the

U tah Pioneers wilt m eet Tuesdny. :^ b . 34. a t 8 p jn . a t tlw homo of Jhvi. Evelyn Mllvord, 471 T)Urd .

^ tue north.

Wrenohea flUdeq Police record* ihow th a t • M t of

*ocket wrenehe* and IS lockets ' stolen from a Boden Electric c .... pony truck. The loss wa# reported Saturday morning.

Talk en China Rev. E. U Ikenberry, O liurch of

th e B rethrin peito r, will be guest •peaker a^ 7:S0 p.m. today a t the ploslng service of a special le rle i on "In ternational Relations." a t Ute Presbyterian church, Rev. O, L. Olarki p u to r, announced la*t n ight.

Lesde......^ .............. .couria 'l n religious education for adults, will begin.M onday a t 7:lfi p.m. a t tha C hrlitlan church, under th e spniiiorshlp of several cooper­a ting churcliss.

Mr*. Oocrge M'oa te*, M urtaugh. who 1* under tha care of a local

filiyilclan, I* etaying a t the home o t rlend*. and l i ho i a pa tien t a t . th e hospital, friend! were Informed to ­day.

O ran ie Thank*Red O rou benefit auction com m it­

tee of the M ountain Rock G range,

avenue eist.' S a turday n igh t report­e d to police lh a t she ha* lost a brown

vaiusbla ........... ........ ......................papen . I,os* was believed to have occurred ln th a downtown section.

I n Ja il H ue Oscar ila ll wa* returned to Twin

Falls Ssturday n igh t from Pocatello and lodged In the county Jail, *her- Iff* officers reported. Hall I* w ant­ed for passing Insufficient check*. Deputy SherU ft Ed Hall and Bob Baker w ent to Pocatello to bring Hall here.

ReU Uvn VIsK Mr. and M rs. H enry P. P«ellnB .

J?ortlond, Ore., a re visiting Mra. Prlellng’s mother, Mrs. O tto ' Jo h n ­son. They aUQ visited Mr. Frlellng'n rela tive* . in Billings, M ont., and Oreyball, W yo, coming to—Twin P^IU vlo Yellowstone p a rk . M r. Frlellng U foreman of th e Oregon

llder*' corporallon of Port-Shl|^bull(

Undergoea O peration Mrs. H. 0 . Lauterbach. who

derw ent a m ajor opera tion th ree week* ago In a Tacomo, W ash., hos­p ita l, wa* scheduled to be dism issed iM t week, according to word re ­ceived from frlend.1 a t K imberly, Mr*. U u te rbach has been In T o- eom a since Col. L auterbach h as been In oommand of tha i ie th e n |ln ec rs regim ent a t F o rt Lewis.

Lea** for Coast Mrs, B*muel O’O rady a n d daugh­

te r, Joan, le ft S a turday fo r the ir hom e In Los Angele* a fte r spending 10 days with Mra. O 'flrndy 's p a r­en ts, Mr. and Mr*. A. F . Blaser. M rs. John D uncan, Jerom e, a *1«- te r of Mrs. O'G rndy, took them to Sun Valley while Iney w ere hero- a n d Mr. and Mr*, J . U . H tm tler, Shoihone, h e r b ro thcr-ln -law and sis ter arranged a dinner party In th e ir honor, Mr*. O'giwdy wa* for­m erly M lu D ora Blaser, T w in Fall*.

A I n , A. R. Meet Mra. R. R. Spafford, a ta te trea s­

u rer of the Idaho chap te r. D augh­te rs of the American R evolution; Mr». A. R. Soott, H anaen. regen t of the Tft1n Foil* chap ter, ond Mr*, W llbtir S, Hill and Mr*. H . J . Wall, a il member* of th e I x a l chapter, re lum ed last n igh t from Bol*e w nen they attended the luncheon yastor. day noon, honoring Mr*.- W illiam Pouch, Boston, p resident general of na tional organlcntion; Mrs. E. M. Sweeley. nlv> a member of- Uie local chapter, was among the lunch^^*^ KMC*U,

Tfebraska ?1*ll«r

vlsU with h e r m other, M rs. C. A.

n e x t WMk for Boise to v lt l t a t the .hotna of Mr. and M rs. W alter D u- fresne, and will Join her husband In Minneapolis, M inn.. M arch 6. Mrs. Redlngton wa« form erly Mis* H elen Luttm an.

B n lh rc n Serrloa ~ju iilo r high school g irls ' double

seste t, dlrectetl by Ferd H aruda, w |'l slpg two numbers a t 11 a . m. today the C hurch of th e B re th ­re n , Rev. E. L, Ikenberry o n n o iih c ^ la* i Bight. Personnel of m uilcal grottp Include* Bobby B ingham , P b d e Henshaw, M argare t Moser, L eona Walls, B etty Ann Ikcnbem ', B arbara Burdick. B ah Ball,- Jan i a W lrschlng. Vivian Beals, P a tty Jo Aodersop »nd Vadus peterson ,

T * 'M ertlng r - ‘ ,a ; W. eu jin ln te n d en i or,

th a Tw in Falls school ayatem, and E dw ard B. Rogel, h igh achool r ' '* ' elpal, "Ialt-yes4eraay m orntng te te n d the m eeting of the AmericAn aaaocIoUoa of School A 4m lnU trators Fab. ai-3« la 8 a n PrancU co. O ther sou thern Idaho adqeators also leav­in g for the aassions Include L. A. Thom as, K lnbarly superlntn^dent, a n d O e ^ a DenmaJp, p u rley super- Intaadent. n>ey o ip w t to b* foa*

in BeUeMr. ond Mrs. j ; w . RoberUon and

E . N. Da>-, Tw in FalU, were buslnas* visitors In Boise la s t w eek-end.

Afland Concert Mrs. E. M. Sffealey a n d son. M ar-

llq Sweeley, w ant to Boise to a tU nd tha Seattls sym phony orchestra'* concert la*t week-end.

Ea«t«r RabeartalaMcUiodlst c ljoir will rehenme

E aster m usk T lm rsday a t 7:30 p. m . a t the church, Rev. H . O . McCollUtcr announced today.

Long Beach, Onllf., to en ter busi- new school. She Is th e dau gh ter of Mrs. P earl Brown.

last n igh t for en .ttcm Idaho and Xltah to vUlt rela tives and friends. Mr. Phillip* will r e tu rn Sunday eve­ning, bu t Mrs, Phllllp* will rem ain In S alt Lake City for a week's visit.

C a n CrashM inor (lamog'cs w ere noU d S a t­

urday a t 11:15 a . m . w hen c a rs op­erated by W illiam C. Q rlffln and J . R. Morris, bolt) of Tvi'ln Fall.i. c ra sh ­ed o t Uic Inlcrscctlon of Second avenue north and T lil rd s tre e t. Ho penonol Injuries resu lted .

Will Build Vault Appllcotlon for a p e n n lt to build a

tsed concrete sto rage vau lt n t 281 W all s tree t f o r 'th e K inney ’Wl«oJa-> sale company w as m ade today a t the. ?Uy.-l!R?! by th e T w in F,(ills Lumber company, records fhow.

Answer 4l*rm Firem en, Soturday a t 9M5 a.

responded to an a larm a t the stuc je- baker garage. 3S1 M ain nvenuo west, where some raR* h a d cau g h t fire. T)icre wiw tlA dam age, fire officials sold;

Initla tlnn Planned - B e the l..F o .. 10, T w in PoU* Job 's Dau{chter*>' will hold In itia tion and a regular mccUng a t 7:30 p. m- Monday, Feb. 23, a t th a M asonic temple. All paren ts, guard ians. S ast- em S tars and M asons a re urged to attend.

W eek-end G oeit Mrs. Florence Lewis, O gden, U tah.

to spend the week-

Lewls, and h e r b ro th e r , R e e d ...........She plans to re tu rn to U tah Mon­day. • ______

Fatriatlo Sermon In keeping w ith W ashington'*

blrUiday anniversary. Rev. H . O. MeCallL-iter will p reach a serm on on -Two O ren t Am ericans" today a t II a. m. and a trum pe t tr io , D r. O rrln Fuller, B ert C hriH lanson and F ran k W arner will Play "TJie Heaven* Resound."

GueaU Leave Mr. and Mrs. R ay L edbetter have

returned to Uielr hom o in K lam ath Fnlls, Ore.. a fte r spending several ahiviX 'lth-M r*, LedUottor’s pa re n u , M ?rand Mrs, C. n . Burkholder. While here, Mr. and M rs. Ledbetter, Mr. and Mrs. B u rk h o ld e r,a n d 'M n . Frank Modlin visited th e ir *on and brother and sis ter-in -law , M r. and Mrs. S. R. B urkholder, Pocatello,

E pivopal iiervlcea Sen'iccs today, th e f irs t Sunday

In Lent, a t A scension Episcopal church will include H oly com m un­ion a t 0 a, m ,; c hu rch school o t 10 a. m., and m orning p ray e r a n d ser­mon a t 11:1ft a. m . H oly com m union and meditation will' ta k e place W td^ ncsday a t 10:30 o. m . nnd L itany and Instruction F r id a y a t S p. m., according to Rev. E . Leslie Roll*, vicar.

Marry in BelieO zatta H ough, T w in Fall*,

liu t nifiht announera th e marriBRa of h«r daughter, Mis* D orothy Hough, to Paul B cott. Jr.. Feb. l l In Boise. Rev. L Q . Roddy, B aptU t minister officiating. T h a bfhte.- groom I* tha to n of M r. ond M nT Paul Scott, H anson. M r. a n d Mr*. Loo Trlpple, G lenn* Fe rry , a ttanded th l cQuole. M r. a n d M n . Hough nra a t homa on a ra n c h n e a r H an-

W E P.ROUDLY

' P R i S E N TP a n o r a m

B0UND1E8

A m o rI(» 's L a te n t F o rm

of M usical E n te r ta in ­

m e n t .

SEE and HEAR THESE PA1<DU3 ENTERTAINERS

• Palfl WoHer• The Coffbffians• The Korn Kobbleni 9 M cN am ara's Bant)• Della R hy thm Bel's• G ertruds Nieaen

and o th ei'

^ B se la a ln « t /

THEHORSESHOE Cl-UP

o i T BlilCT-. B I , . ;

P K M G i(r>*s r«f« ob«>

war condiUon* w hat « • present.

A fter Elrock'l UU(, w hloh Will deal w |lh possible (Riportatlon. o f alien l^ber ( iuch as U>at from Mexico) the fanpera will bo given

opportui^lty to ballot on w h ith e r no t they object to auch a move

should It become necessary during the spring planting Uma o r a t th a harvest. Ecock H ab«> expected to dliRiHs *niipy alien ta lk w filch h a s been circulated In Id ah o a n d th a Macic Valley of IaU.

In th* downtown a*ct(oi} t h r o u ^ - ou t thii iley, local fm plam ent deafars will show Uia la test |n f a n n aqulp- p iept from gadgel« up to "{uU grown" mechlnes.

Cooperating In Uil* year*! q o n - gras* will b* th« T w in Fall* Im ple- n e n t DealirC asioclaUon, th a M er-

nanU ’ bureau of th e C ham ber of Comn]*fc«, tha Idaho Pow ar com­pany and the T lm e i'N aw i.

In th e Tuesday Issue of th o T lm e i-

In th a Wednesday Issite ''d iv e r doHar day" ya|ue4 will be lUtad In th« advertising. M erchanU will faaturo special dollar values for benefit of tlie larm er* both Thur*day a n d Fyi* dayi

All In all, leader* proml*a tha t «i(* year Ilia congres* w JJ b* "felggor and beUetNhan ever'* an4 every farmar Ir? t h a ^ g i o V«H»y to in­vited, and urged, to coma to tho event axui to bring his family withhim.

Seen . . .Amarlcftn of Japupeoo dcseent.

In collector’* offlM to poy hi§ In- cwpa tax , . , Qargantuan truclc- dr^ver, overiliadQWlng Blx-(oQt two-inch njorlne recruiter, do-

bootijlock v,-hLiUlng oliecrfully — learning Uie pavy no* now wolved fla t feet disability fo r m ess a t - t«ndants . „ . C l t lu n Oourt«cu** ly opening poctofflce d o o r fo r mat) aicenillnfl stops wiUi aid of cane . . . M ldw lnU r to u r is t iaa> son mojbe; Cars jxirknd dow n­town Saturday n ig h t wlt^i llccpies from Wisconsin, low a, CalU onila nnd New Vork . . . T » 'o women w alking along, vary c h a tty , ond on* remarking so n e th ln * about how RJio feels unpa trio tic bocaa-vo (he used some rut)bcr by driving her c a r rion-ntown . . . M an , c a r- r i'lng two half gallon mlUc bot- Hm In cardboard carton , c a tc h ­ing them beforo they h i t g round a* c anon handle breaks suddenly . . . Auto from New Je rsey w ith six pAlrs of skis on top. t h m m en and Uirce women inside . . . And

Sroyer book In Tbne*-Newa edl- »rlal offlSes, d la t^ e rc tf wMen-on* desk was moved for tho f i r s t thpe in ten-twenty yeans.

Young School Boy Answers Sumniong

8L h w lU I. WTO«1,following a lingering Ulneaa.

Son of Mr. and Mrs. W alte r M e- Carthy, WendtU, ho w as bocn Ju n e 4. 1991, a t Condo, U. D.

He was an e l ^ l h gnut« g tu d e a t la t h l W endell achools.

TS i^ b s e i c u sJtso d a n from pow (heee Jiargalaa Will be ^ard ia find, th a t> w hy wo eaU them la st ph an ct b a r ­gain*.» P)yjnoi|th p e lu io C pupt, onaowner, good rubber------------«39S30 a ie v . M asU r Sedan —-_4348 3S Btitdebaker Sedan .... -„-||7a

10 Oldimoblla t o u r tn f Sedan ____

MANY OTHERS

40 Fen) D |s-T n4> r-B e4an— ; 40 Ford DU Fardar M m

r« rd DeioM Coupa 18 Chrysler Royal Sedan 3B rard P l« Tqdar SedanIS Ferd PelqM Fordor H*dM IB U neeln Kephyr liadan 18 UpeelR z e p h n ^ d » a 40 Ford SU tlan W»K*H • sa U erevry Town Sedan n Oil**. M aetar Deluxe Sedan

TR U CK S T R U C K S

IB InU m atlonal P . XJ.SS Ohev. T ruak D. W. —419S J6 Ford T r u c k ................. .......4880

Ma^ny o lh e r a . a l l m a k « S | a l lm odeK

llfUDNMDTOR-m

FORD - U N O O O f '-V ig B o lB iif

d 0 °j T A

. C A I N I ’

Start*TODAY!

OPEN I S i a 2 S « t i l 2

“Who Is thera to p o in t a linger a t me? every w om an will know th a t , such a love comes b u t once . ,

[wiDmi coiMir '.

.10HNPA\NE—A U O -

Jtka KfiWtttt"WE PO I T BBOAUflp"

oni.oB CARTOON and nrws

lA G A IN 2 MORE BIG HITS!^ t a r U

t o d a y

KID STiffiS WISHED UP

i AT 161

UNTHETlU U l

l A C K i r C O O P t R • S U S A N N A f O S T t R

FEATDRE N o.8-3 te a lL ife Air ThrUla

Page 3: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

7 :■'

Sunday, February 22,1942 .....— TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS. IDAHO- FageThrM

*RYMR LIFE OF FOUNDER

B ert A. Sweet, m em ber of th e locml RotAry club, wlU te ll of tt)e life of P au l P . H v rU , founder of the mova- Dient. w hen regu la r weekly meeUng lA he ld he re W cdnesdRy. K w m « j - nouncecL SoturOay.

Sw eet b personallyw ith KnrrLi w ho orsu ilzed Uie firs t club w hen h e waa a youns Chicago ■tlom ey. T lie f irs t club aU rted on r c b . 23, 1065. Today, a t ' 73. Ui© founder U stilt vUally Interested In n o la -7 .

Since lt4 Inception, Rotary has grown In to a world-wldo organiza­tion. Today. Sw eet points out. there are 8,100 R o ta ry club* In more th a n 80 countries over th e world w ith « m em bership o f some 213,000 busl' ness and professional men.

.T here ore now six n o ta ry clubs In A laska, s ix In KawaU. one club In Ouaxn. e igh t clubs ,ln the P h ilip -

. pines, 13 active clubs in C hina and one In H ong-K ong. on# club in T hailand , seven clubs In Molaya. one In Saraw ak. 28 In the Mother­la n d s Ind ies , one club In the Fill lsland.1, 25 clubs In New Zealand and 90 clubs in A ustralia. W ar is now d isrup ting som e'of th e club acUvltlcs

H e pointed o u t th a t there have been no clubs In J iu ian or Mnn- chukuo since th e Inlter pa rt of Sep­tem ber, IMO. when Uiose unlt.'j te r- m lnat«d llielr membership in R o- to iy Intem ntlonnl.

SELL i W l E S"Person.-s who own new tires and

lubes can n o t sell nor ren t them to o th e r motorist!!.'' according to Carl N. A nderson, ojinlrm ajj Of th e Tw in Fnlts county ration ing board.

^ "A new tiro o r tube Is considered rubber w hich h as Uoveled 1.000 miles or lc.v. T h ls 't lre rationing reg­u la tion affec ts dealers. oLio." he said.

\ However. If a m otorist w lilifs to ^ e n t o r purcha.no a new tire o r tube

from a p rivate Indlvldutil. applica­tion m u st be mndo a t the county ration ing board.

"TJie n tnle raU onlng board also announces the period of filing appli­cations fo r delivery of automobiles sold before Ja n . 1 hnd been extend­ed th rough Monday. M arch 2." said A nderson. -

"Two new types of proof of Inten­tion lo purchase aUo have been re ognlzecl. one belns an eiiiry In standnril order book aui^ the oUier on a s tandard order fonn. Tlie la t ­ter proof m ust be substantiated by a s ta te m en t ffcm the m anufacturer th a t the order was on his books by Jnn . 1." the stjvto board Informed

■Ander.-ion.M en en tering llie armed forces

nnd having IM3 automobiles Uiey dr.Mre to sell m ust obtain a perm it before M arch 9 from Uielr county ration ing board,

‘ “As J ut as X knqw -Uiere Ln no re> 1 s tr lc tlon on imle o f m odels.o lder

^ th a n I0«3." said Anderson.

Founded Rotary

PAUL P. HARIUS . . . O rgM lxer o f th e Rotary

elnb 57 y e a n ago M onday, Mem- b m of the local elnb will observe th e annlversar? a t regular meeting W ednesday w ith appropria te pro* gram .

GETACQOAINTEO, ■WARDENS URGED

R . J . Schw endlm an, a ir raid w ar­den for Independent w hool district No. 1. which Includes th e city of Twltr Palt% Sa tu rday n igh t iirscd all block ond section worden% to "get acquainted WlUj Uie persoiu in th e ir a rea a t once."

Schw endlm aji sa id th n t r.corr.-i n( calls have been received by proplc o s iln g the quesUon:

'•W ho's the a ir raid w orden for my block?" •

U nder the presen t se tup nil nlr m id ^ 'nrdens are to vLilt ench homr In th e ir block and bccome acrjuitltii- ed w ith tlie per.'.ons living tlicrr. T liry should n lw m ake notes nr. lo how m any rooms a rc In each houM'. how many people live Uiere. how m uny Invalids o r old person.i live there , ond o the r rela ted datn . 'lliry should olio determ ine how many firs t old workers, nurses o r (locinr.% live In the ir block whose servicrx would be Im m ediately avollnble -in case of on emergency.

"A{r raid w ardens-should know eochNiou.se In th e ir sectlou ntid should ho able to nld persons hi pre- paring t b lackout room or tlicm Inw oy woy possible." Schw m- d lm an said. “A pparently some w ar­dens have done no th ing slnn- ih rlr appointm ent. We a re no t ploying nt Uils th ing ond It Is u p to th e viiriou.i w ardeas to get th e ir p a rt ot the Job Immediately.'*

ON CHECK CLAIMJEROME. Feb. 21—Cliorged w ith,

forger}-, a T * 'ln Falls m an and -a Tft'ln t'a ila youth waived the ir right lo prelim inary h e a r in g before Pro- bate Judge W illiam O . Comstock th is aftem oon and were bound over to Jerom e dla trlet court to await trial.

Tliey were . Q eorgc K reuucr. 30 and U oyd MatUicws, 17. T h e com- pla in t signed by D eputy Sheriff Pau l

Jessen allegesthe »27 check w hich was passed by Kreuger a t a Jerom e ghoceo' the first week of Februar>-.

Took the Charge Kreuger. Jessen. a sjerted . oblalned

$7 In groceries and $30 In change. Tlie check bore Uic assertedly forged slR naturo.of N. W. A rrington. Tw in Falls. I t was endor.sed by "F rank Sylvester."

"CooperaUon of the T*-ln Foils county sheriff 's office and c ity police departm ent enabled as to apprehend tliese men." said Jea.sen.

He rela ted how Uie youUj tempted to.pa.w ft *27 check i Ttt'In I-'alLs f<rvlce sta tion . O fficers nutsllohed the boy a fte r the at- lemlont becAnte SM.-'Plclou.i,.

-He Uicn Informed us of K reuger's wb'reobouLs." sold Jessen. "KteUKer already wa.s sus!>ected of ca.shlng - Mmllnr *27 check In Jerome."

Arresled In Canyon KreuKcr wos a rrested P rldaj

murulng a t . hLs log. aliantj- In Uic Snake river canyon one and one- qmirler miles below Blue Lakes ranch, ■

Tlie arrr.-.t wos made by J cmpu, Chw)I>' Jflller R. W. M llUap and NiKht Policeman P rank Prentice, al! Cl' Jerom e, and D eputy Sheriff Virgil n . Dorden and As.ilstant Chief Lee McCracken, both of T a 'ln Falls.

1941 ^ b y CroR^ I ^ a r g e s t for Last 2 Decades

WASHINOTON. Feb. a l (-1V The census bureau today acclalui- •ed the IIMI crop* of A m erican ’ babies aa the largest In two d e ­cades.

H ie birtlui num bered about 2.500,000 and were second only to Uie 2,000,000 record sol in 1931.

One reason for l a s t year's big crop was the fac t, tlie bu reau sold. U iat a large num ber of th e record

A 1031 babies Uiemselves were n ia r- '•Vled and producing children la st

yeor.The d raft, wlijcli helped boost,

marriages lo a record of 1.503.000, alsp may have had som ething to do-wlth it.- - • --------

In 1531 Uiere were m any bable-i because the AEP h a d Just come home, from Prance and was busy re-ei>tablLshtng fam ily life.

The baby crop wos so big la st year Uiat It exceeded d e a tlu by 1.000.000, thus Increasing th e n a ­tion's popuIaUon by an am ount approximately equal to Uie |iopu- lotlon of the s ta te of Oregon.

HEAiHmeonCAN BE ELECTED

Former Oov, C. A. D ottollsen. Arco. who served from 1030 Uirougli low , "la more populor th a n ever and In my Judgment can ' be reelected Rovemor If the proper w ork and type of campaign ^ conducted," ac> cording to jo m H eath, Preston .

H eath .'In a le tte r se n t yesterdoy lo 1.200 Republican pcurty o rganisa­tion workers. Including those In T * ln Palls, uraed "all p a rty m em ­bers to MJi)port th e ir s ta te chairm an , Mrs. Carlyle Sm ith. Caldwell."

Regarding Republican S e n . Jo lin Tliomor,. Oooclhic. and R ep . H enry

*. Dworsliak. Burley. HeaUi de­clared *"tliey can be reelected if party workers will suppo rt them — build Uiem up-liuitead oX-crltlcizlng them doOTi."

"Tliey objected to w ar," said HenUi. "because tlie country was no t p repa rcd 'fo r war and th a t U behig proved evcr^' dny, T l\cy o,rc now bemllnK Uielr effortJi to furU ier Uie wor effort so our boys will have tlu; tools w ith which to flRht."

”I expect to lend m y efforts to­ward the reelectlon of Oottolfscn U he Is a cundldftte,- u 'ro tc ’ H eath ; "and 1 think he will be."

Federal PossessionsT lje .supreme court o f ilio Republic

of Mexico ruled a i r th e country’s orchoeoloKlcaniscoverlc.^ w e u n der the Jurl!!dlctlon of the govemmetiU

Precious Object “AirXocked up;' It’s a Good Tire

There w m a “precious object" k ep t a t th e tlierlff's office under lock and key Skilurday.

___ 3^ou.guesicd lU It was & prac-Ucally new lire , mounted on a truck w heel,^ _ _ _ _ _ _

The l i r e and wiitei were found by M. M. U ngdon. Jr.. a t « point eas t of B uhl Baturctsy m orning.

8herlff'.<i ofllcers said It can be h a d by th e legnl ouTier a fte r he Identifies I t - b u t they are giving

ou t s o clues Ki to size, nw ka or anylhlng-«U*,oU jcr th a n t t .U ia t • a tiuck.. ■ ''

• N O R TH H U P K IN fc

;FLO W ERand VEGETABLE

SEEDS Bulk or Package

P lan t a garden th is jre&r to '&ld In your country^ defense.

J . H IL L R ECO RD IO320 AUin So. P b . t

Two Buhl Youths Get Marines Okay

•IVo Duhl men w rrr nlven f in a l rnllslm ent tests in .gujl Lake City, It was announced yesti-nlay by S taff SprReant Stanley ' J . Jarjlr.yk. non- commlwloned officer iti charge of the Ttt'ln Falls sub-M ntlon In, the Fidelity NaUonal bank building.

Tlipy were D ate Toni Ru.well. 17. son of Mr. and M rs. W illiam R us­sell; and Cecil W nrren Reed. 17, son of M r. ond * Ira . Alec W. Reed.

Navy Starts New • College Program

T lie U. S, navy hos announced, ef- “ fectlve todoy. Feb. 22. a voluntary

tra in ing proarum for 00,000 eollcKC studen ts between the ages of 17 ond 10. according to bureau oC mvvlga' t lo n orders received a l the Tw in Foils sub-sta tion .

T h e m en will en list In cioss V-1. ro v a l reserve, b u t will conUnuc in college a t the ir oft-n expense for two academ ic years. Em phasis will bo

Before the tw o-year course ... plrea. th e navy will select 20,000 of th e m en for f ligh t training. An ad - diU onal I9XKI0 men will be placed in c lass V-7 to conUnue the ir stut" ' ’ Uie baccalaureate degree. Navi.. . . s e n 'e commissions aw ait successful studen ts.

■Pive-thourtm d of th e V-T* continue In follege to study stand ­ard engineering and obtain ml.islons.

T h e rem ain ing 45.000 m ____com pletion o t two years college, wilt be ordered to du ty wlUi the fleet. '

PurU ier

Man Fined After Shooting Terrier

W illiam H . W inters, Tw in Full-.. Soturdoy was fined tlO and o.v,e.v.cd ewUn of t3 by Probate Judge C. A. Bolley on a ciiarge of "bcntlng and worrying an animals"

According to com plo in t nlRned by FVed H aggnrdt. W inters sh o t and killed "one ScoU h terrie r dog." which belonged lo KoRgardt. ■

Tho crim e Is a m isdem eanor and .. was charged th o t Uie defendant did "cruelly Ill- trea t, nhoot and kill

. . one Scotch te rrie r dog." - W in ters paid Uie fine and co;ib >d was releasetl, court records

show.

Junior Hi Offers Music and Skits

Ju n io r h igh schc^l students p a r- Uclpoled In an hour’s assembly pro­g ram of music, rec ita tions and short sktLi th is week.

T he boys' choru.s, under the dl- recUon of Fc rd H aruda, sang 'T lie W reck o t Uie 'J u lia P lanU '," Geof­frey O H a r ra ; "Roll Along, Cowboy," 8>’dney K ing Ru-weli; and- "Strike up th e B and." Oeorge Oershwln.

O erald ln# McDonM d played a vio­lin solo, " In lc rm ea o " from "Cava­lier RusU cana," M ascognl.-D orthe Andrews and O eraldtne itcD onald played * duc t. Schubcrt^s "Sere­nade.”

M elba H olt rec ited a poem. "An Ita lian 's Account of Oe«rge W ash' Ington": M arilyn W hile nSid L etter of the Cr6wn Prince Wlllle to .Uie K alter”; Tom Pennock celved "Seeln ' Thlng»,” _ _ ___

An original sk it In Negro and"iia l- Ian dia lec t was prewmted by Robert W ebb. -Vlrglnla Fuller aod-PhylU » K lrby. -*

Harris,Takes Over As Milk InspectorVernon L. H arris. Boise;'Saturday

(took over tlfe duUes as city m ilk Jn- spector fo r T w in Polls.

H arris, who h as been connected wlUi the s ta te departm en t of public health for the past year. sueceeHs

. 11. 8 . Post, who has hod the c ity lo> specUon Job for tho post two m onU u. Post wllL.alucc H arris tc 'k over the local Job, now devote his full tim e to 'th e poslUon o( distric t san itar* ■an. w hich ha has held for the past seven ye k rs.-H e-w orks ou t of the o ls trtc t h e a lth un it.

P os t took over th e city poslUon on ft ten jpo rw y basis a fte r Dr.

- n . Prtfa.M«-c*tled-tet<>»tOTTTttai sen 'lce.

Truck “Retreads” Quota Set at 78

February quota of truck retreads U 78 for Tw in Palls county. Uie Idaho nUite ration ing boord odvUed the T w in FalLi county board yester- <lny.

AppllciiUons will be occepted M on­day for the truck retreud-i u t ra tion headquarters in Uie T w in Fulls Chamber of Commerce office.

Board membera sold th a t un til Miu-. 1. no comelbock of any kind inny be Used for retread ing or re­capping pa.v.rtiger-type Ures. "C am - plbiick" mean.1 th e uncured rubber conijwund applied to Uip worn tire to makc*Uie new tread In the p ro-

icc.'j of recapping or retreading.

Stores Open for Washington’s Day

"All bu.MneM establishm ents In Twin I' vlln w lll'rem o ln open M on­day." Voy H udson, chalrm on of Uie 'I'wln Fall;; McrclOAnts' bureau, nald Soturday 'nlK lit. ■»

M onday, Feb. 23. ho.'i been p ro ­claimed an Idalio holiday for Uie observance of W aalilngton’a blrUt- day annlverearj', h e cxplolned.

"Banks nnd certain goveninient offices wilt be cltwed." he reminded, "hut a ll stores will be kep t open."

Ministers Put on Tire E ligiBlO Sst

Ministers now a re rliRible for a u ­tomobile tires nnd tubrs, the Idaho sta te rationing boord Informed Uie county ration u n it yeslerdoy.

New tire raU onlng reKulaUons. d e ­scribing ellRlble vehicles for tires and tulv^s. Includes:

'A vehicle which l.i o|>erotcd by ' ' ' il.ster of

Buhl Stores OpenBUHU Feb, 21—Duhl stores will

rem ain open M onday, Feb. 23 B u ia bnnk.s,_hlgliyi'ny olllcc .and_UqUQr store will be cltwed In com m em ora­tion of WoshlnRton'fl birthday , S u n ­day, Feb, 22, ,

religious follh and which la iir.cd principally In n n d Is iipcp.-.sary to the perforroance of h is rdiRious duties."

PROTECTIONEL PASO. Tex.. Fp1>. 21 ( ,T )-R rv.

Tlieo H, E\'ers. pa.^Uir ol 7,ion LuUl- eron church. In annoiuiclng Lenten ser%’lces for Wcdnrul^ty nvonlng, aUo odded;

"W atchm en will be Atutloned to protect your tires."

" T h e T l m e 'D c n ”

YOUR FINE HELPTo

Uncle Sam's Defense Bond Campaign

In

^ TW IN FALLS and VICINITy _

Gratefully Acknowledged * ¥ ¥ * * ¥ ¥ * ¥ * ¥ ¥ * ¥ > » *

Today We Have Presented O ur Check to tlie

fIr s t s e c u r it y b a n kf o r

$4500.00FOUR THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS

Evory ConI of WWch Is lo Bo Use'd 6i tho Ptirchase oi U. S. Defonso Bonds. — The Old and New Loyal CustomGra of Eddy's Broad Have Mad© This Fino Pur-. chas© Possiblo. We Arc Proud I of You and Wish to S<iy — I THANK YOU.

S d d u 's B a k e r u

MR. FARMER★ ★ ★ (and Mrs. Farmer, too)

Will Herald This

ALL STAR PRQGRAMfor the 5th Annual

CONGRESS■ V •

This year it’s bigger and better—and more important—than ever. Here’s a • day set aside to air farm problems, to welcome our farm ers and to provide entertainm ent for them!-It’s all on the tpwn and every participating merchant and institution welco'raes YOU, the farm er—and your family to enjoy the pro­gram to be presented! ■

THURSDAY, FEB. 26rA U M E R S* C O N G R E SS S E S S IO N -R o x y T h e a te r . S tn rb i n t 10 A . M; Sp'calc- cr.s will be M ilfo rd V nut?ht, o f th e s U tc AAA, w ho w ill sp eak on tfie im p o rta n t topic o f “ P r io r i t ie s and th e F a rm e r .” S econd sp e a k e r will bo H a r ry Elcock, m iinaK cr o f th e A m nlK am ated S u p a r C o .. in Idaho , w h o w ill speak on “ P rob - lem.i o f F a rm Isab o r in 19‘12.” C e rtn in ly . no tw o m o re im p o rta n t top ics could he p reacn ted f o r a F a rm e rs ’ Congress. H ea r th o se m e n l M ee tin g ad jo u rn s a t noon, s h a rp ! A d m iss io n is F R E E !

FA RM W O M E N 'S COO K IN G SCHOOi:— P resen ted th ro u g h th e cooperation o f th e Id ah o P o w er Co., 10 A. M . Idaho P ow er Co. a u d ito r iu m . U n d er d irec tio n o f L ucille Jo h n a to n , hom o eco n o m ist. R ecipca, m e th o d s and m enus to p a r tic u l­a r ly in te r e s t fa rm hom c-m ariagers. L ea rn more a b o u t th e p a r t th e fa rm w om en w ill p lay in t h e n a tio n a l dcScnsc o f o u r nation.

M ER C H A N T S B U R E A U D O L L A R D A Y S -^ P re sc n te d ' by T%vin F a lls m erch - an ts . H u n d re d s o f e x t r a values w ill be o f fe re d fo r $1 on BOTH T h u rsd a y a n d . F r id a y , W a tch W ednesday ’s p a p e rs fo r more de ta iled in fo rm ation .

. LU N C H E O N H O U R -T w in Fall.i cafes m enus f e a tu r in g Id ah o F a rm Products.

nnd re s ta u ra n ts will o f f e r - s p c c ia l -

★ A I'T E R N O O N B A N D C O N CERT— F e a tu r in g th e T \vin F a lls H igh School b n iid .m nder th e d irec tio n of M r. B e r t C hristian .son , d ire c to r . T his will bo held on th e do w n to w n -streets f ro m 2 P . M . un til 3 P . M.

★ S P E C T A C U L A R H O R SE SH O E P IT C H IN G E X H IB IT IO N — By C. E . Jack - .son, w o rld ’s ch am p io n trick horse ahoe p itchcr. Scheduled fo r 3 :16 on th e dow ntow n s t r e e t s . D on’t m iss th is un ique an d s en sa tio n a l exhib ition .

★ PU B L IC S P E L L IN G B E E — W ith p rizes of D efense S tam p s fo r th e successful-'^ spelling o f e v e ry d a y w ords. B e on th e s t r e e t s d u r in g T h u rsd a y a f te rn o o n a n d „ jo in in th is pub lic con te st. I t will b e fu n fo r ev e ry o n e ! ~

★ D O W N TO W N D IS P L A Y S b ] f ’ F A .R M l\U C H IN E R Y -L o C ill- Im p lem e n t-d c a U - - c r s will di.Hplay lO-l'i m odels o f fa rm m ach in e ry on o u r dow ntow n s tr e e ts al!(lay. Ix)ok th e m ov er— lea rn w hnt your m n n u fa c tu re rs and dea le rs a re do ing to a id you^in m a k in g y o u r p roduction b e t te r th a n e v e r fo r 1942.

SPECIAL BALLOTING AFTER-SESSIONS!A fter you have heard the discussion of Farm Labor problems by Mr. Elcock, you will have an opportunity to express' your opinion on 'alien labor, enemy alien labor. Be on hand a t the morning; session and express your opinion. Re­sults will be tabulated for publication Thursday afternoon. ' ,

Farmers’ Congress Is a Magic Vnilcy Institu tion Sponsored by Your Newspaper, TwiU

. —EaUs Implement Dealers and Members of the Twin Falls Merchants BureauT^

iT ik ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ -k'-iT-k ★ W

Page 4: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

P a g e F o u r TIMES-NEW8, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Suodftjr, February 22, 1942

» r>b. I t . jMt. w tb« la 1»M. ta* th* T«la r*n> H«*«. «*

wwk « w la n . fotardar. >" • ' !■

EbUM •* Mwnd *tn* BtH miiur Al>ni t . 1*1« ■ »«.Uirrie« IB Twin W lf. ld*Jx>. otidw tli. mi of Mmrch

8T CA»5«2Sr!frASLBYf??DrAKC» t r tw » m k ----------------------------:-----------------------

Oould* liu u of U«boi

•.lledoa to b« publiihH vxVIr will U publlihol l< •<lir U>u* o( ll>l> |ii>p«r runuant U> S«llon 6*>10S I I] M «d(M lh<r«(« br CtimcUt l i t . JPli l / »

NATIONAJ. BWHMENTAT1VES

flO W E W A N T A LIEN H B L P ?In d ic a tio n s a re t h a t the B overnm cnt In ­

te n d s to move a l l Jap an ese aliens fro m th o w est co ast In to m ore Isolated s ta te s su c h as Idaho . W ord h a s mode th e ro u n d s t h a t In view of a n a n tic ip a te d fa rm lab o r o h o rt- agc, th ese a lie n s cou ld be employed o s a g r i­c u ltu ra l w o rk ers In vlcln ltlcs lllcc ours.

A t a re c e n t confe ren ce In Boise th is Issue w as discussed a t g re a t length . At Ita re g u la r m eetin g F rid a y noo n , th e Twin F alls C h a m ­b er of C om m erce concerncd Itself ch ie fly w ith th e p o ssib ility of any such d evelopm ent. A nd a t th e a n n u a l F a rm ers^ Congress, to bo held In T w in F alla n e x t T hursday. a ll a t te n d ­ing fa rm e rs w ill be given a n o p p o rtu n ity to express th em se lv es In th is connection.

I t Is easy to u n d e rs ta n d w hy th e g o v ern ­m e n t Is desirous o f rem oving alien Ja p a n e so from o u r sh ip p in g , m u nitions and In d u s tr ia l cen ters, b u t n o t so easy to com prehend w hy It,con tinues to m ollycoddle a ny of th e se a lien s In th e slig h test.

We have re a c h e d th e po in t w here we h a d b e tt« r come to o u r senses. T h is Is w a r a n d we’U be w ise I f wo face cold fa c ts . T ho N orm andie d iaaa te r, incend iary p lots, a n d evi­dence disclosed by F B I raids on enem y a lien se ttle m e n ts sh o u ld bo su ffic ien t to d e te rm in e o u r policy. - I n a n y o th e r country a t w ^r, one of th e a x is pow ers p a rticu larly , a ll en em y a lien s would be ro u n d e d up In s h o r t o rd e r, a n d If th ey fa re d n o worse th a n b e in g c o n - ftrnsd to c o n c e n tra tio n cam ps th ey Indeed would bo fo r tu n a te . U ndoubtedly th e re a re som e Ja p a n e se a lie n s who m ay bo h a rm le ss , b\)t w a r loaves n o ro o m for supposition .

F a c t j>f th e m a t te r Is. If th ese a lie n s a re a m enace to th e w est coast, th ey ’ll be a m e n ­ace to so u th c e n tra l Idaho .o jifless th e y a re kep t u n d e r g u a rd In co n cen tra tion c en te rs .

We shou ld b e a r In m ind th a t we h a v e one of th e la rg es t i r r ig a tio n system s In th e w orld , com prising som a 350.000 acres of h ig h ly p ro ­d u ctive lan d , a n d t h a t each a n d everyone o f us In ,M ag ic V alley Is dependent u p o n th ls system .

Obviously, th e d es tru c tio n of th ese w prks would be a m a jo r objective fo r any s a b o te u r w h o ' m ig h t be Included am ong th e a lie n s b ro u g h t In to Id a h o , p a rticu la rly If s u c h a lien s

—w erc-pennlttcd_to_operA te_at.lajE ,c_jw _farm _ laborers.

Even now . th e se d am s and reservo irs , d e ­sp ite th e ir s tra te g ic Im portance, a re Inade-. q uate ly g u a rd e d to cope w ith any se rio u s enem y a t te m p t to destroy them . W ere I t n o t fo r a h a n d fu l of g u ard s s ta tioned a t k e y p o ­s itio n s by th e C a n a l com pany, th e re w ould be n o p ro tec tio n whatsoever.

I t is easy to u n d e rs ta n d why C a lifo rn ia , th e s ta te w h ich h as long exploited th e se a lien s fo r th e ir c h eap labor, now ho p es to w ish th em off o n us. a n d It behooves Id a h o to p ro te s t a g a in s t b e in g m ade a ny su ch d u m p ­ing ground.

60 f a r a s Iso la tion Is concerned.' C a lifo rn ia s t i l l b o asts v a s t ex panses of v irgin te r r i to ry , f a r rem oved fro m s tra teg ic areas, w h ich a f ­fo rd Ideal lo ca tio n s for concentration cam ps.

As to Id a h o ’s f a rm labor problem, no m a t te r w h a t we w ill h a v e tp do to get th e work done. I t w ill bo b e t te r th a n ru n n in g th e risk of accep tin g th e h e lp of enemy aliens.

I f th e g o v ern m en t Insists on b ring ing th ese a lien s In to Id a h o , le t i t keep -th em -iso Ja ted in every sen se of th o word—a n d un d er a rm e d guard!

H E W HO GOT SLAPPED T h e very le a s t R . J . Thom as, h ead o f th e

■ U n ited A uto W orkers, could do was to o rd e r back to work m en who thrice h a lted p ro d u c ­tio n of e ssen tia l bo m b er p a rts because so m e­body got m ad a n d slapped som ebody else. T hom as d id o rd e r th em back, a n d th e y w en t.

Y e t so ch ild ish a p erfo rm ance m a k e s th e h e a r t sick a t a tim e when m en a re dying, l ite ra lly dying, fo r th e lack of a irc ra f t w hoso p roduction w as th u s held up. T he U.A.W. Is n o t d irec tly to b lam e, of course, fo r n o r e ­sponsible u n io n o ffic ia l would co u n tc n a n c c

- a stoppage In d ay s like these Tor so In fa n tile a cause. B u t I t does prove th a t th e "b u s in ess a s usu a l” psychology Is common to a ll groups.

I t w as n o t a n a u to wockman who g o t s la p ­p ed In th is l i t t le tragl-com edy. I t w as som e soldier, c rouched In a fox'-hole In B a ta a n .

TU C K EK ’S N A TIO N A L

W H IR L IG IG' BCLPnO—Adds from the fin s flgb tlns quaUUes

o f our ioMler* And JolIor# when properly equipped, th o one b right apot for the oUlcs h u been the demon straUoD Cliot sunrlcol and medical pTOBreMjllI reduce CMU«lUe« fur below Uie awrul totoU of th e T ib l Wcrid w ar. B a u a n and HawaU proved th a t the healing

sciences have kep t abreast of Im- pnn'ementA In th e a r t of organlied slauRliter.

Dcccase: or am putation of thi fcctcd Umb was the In te of burned and wounded m en In th e last . . . . n ic t. If they could n o t b« rushed u> a fa ir lr elaborate (leld dressing sta> Uon alnsost Im m e d liU ly .'P atttliles from poisoning ran high . Out** M Pearl harbor there was only victim of RM RanBrene. The num ber

------------ ---------- of BUfferers from fractures andRAY TUCKLR vere hurUi who wUl soon bo on Uiclr

fee t again, cheered medlcoe. TJie salvaging was a ll ihi more miraculous becau^ the doelom did not alw iys w ork under favorable condlUon.v Besides reducing deaths, tho new methods will p reven t absenc ' trained officers and privates from acUve service for Jong periods.

Principal reason for these gains Is th e widespread use of the so>called sulpho dniRs. A quick sprinkling o f the compound around blistered or Injured * a rrested infection pending trn a ife r of th e wounded Co trea tm en t centers. Even unskilled civilians were d rafted for th e ta.nlc of Riving iMa form of f irs t aid. W ith rem arkable forrsl«ht' our nrm ed forces have piled up n trementloiLi re.'crve of IhLi medicine In nii- llclpatlon of tJie far-fliiiiB battle line wc m ay be called upon to hold. On many sectors Utere will be no hos­p ita ls available.

\VEEI>—WaaliinRton's sober reaction to axis Vnlen. t in e day coups a t HlnRapore and In the n r ltlj li channe haa been a m ixture of di-spiilr luid blllerne.ns. TliroiiRh- o u t the capital, from Lincoln memorial lo "the Hill.' long-faced m en demand a sweeping shako-up or adm it o ff the record tha t the United N ations can Ifxn the

In Uil.1 hour of self-examination it Rave noBody con-iolatlon tlsat the dUastcr.i ciippcd .weeks of blun­dering. log-rolllnR and smuR preachmenLs from Uie very h ighest quarters. Tlie blame wa.i d istributed with « Bcncrou».haad and w ithout regard for whom It hurL O.P.M. was denounced for Its Inexplicable delay In converting key Industries to m ilitary production. Con- gre.um en conceded th a t the ir enactm ent of a retire* m e n t blU a t th is Umo was alm ost a cap ita l crim e. The adm lnlstraU on was flayed for Its tendemeiw toward enemy aliens, carelessness a t P e a r l e d N ew 'Y ork harbora, faUure to supply the D utch w ith more ‘arms, refu-nal to abandon the reform enisade till th e fight Is won. Secretaries Knox and 8tlm>von were pictured a s too elderly and Inejflclent, F.D.R.'s self-a-viured a n d defiant respoiue to con.->tmctlve c ritics was held to be symptomatic of the official a n d n a tional spirit.

All cries fo r a hounecleanlng. however, were tem­pered by the realization th a t congress ha* plaM d con­tro l of w ar-m aking machinery In th e hands of one m a n — Presiden t Roosevelt. And even h e canno t weed o u t tlie Inep t figures around him . No m a tte r how com pet<nt they m ish t be. new m en in war. navy, a ta to or W .PJ3. would have to spend m ontlis learning th e n idlm enta and catchlnR up on the post. You can­n o t d iangn Renerals, captains. corporaLi and .ntretcher- bearers when the battle Is going the o the r way so rapidly. _____

SWARM—T lie fall of Slnicapore and Uie reunion of th o Nazi fleet have given a tw ist lo th e wur which dism ays our naval experts. T he tw o countrlr.i which h ave dem oaitjated tlielr superior prepnrcdnc.i-i and tac tics o a land now threa ten to win suprem acy on Uie deep. T h a t Is the Inner meanhiB of these succf.iscs.

Tokyo has kep t her capital ships In home waters w hile she entrusted penetration of O c e a n ia 'to task fo rcci covered by airplanes. Now, w ith th e only m ajor ba-ie In th a t a rea in he r pos.se.Mlon. she can sh if t her g re a t battle.nhlp* and heavy cruisers southw ard. She a pparen tly has sufficient control of Uie n lr to afford Uiem th e coverage tho Oermatw Riive Uie anelneiimi. th e SchartihOrtt and Prince Eygen In the ir e x ap e from Brest to Kiel. Our people will n o t be -•.urprlsed if th e M ikado makes this move In n gigantic e ffo rt lo UTest tiie Ind ian ocean aa w ell'as ad jacen t coasts from Uie United NaUons.

H itler. In our ebiervers' opinion, ha.'i a w m b led an arm otla of one hundred and fifty thou.-uind tons of f a s t "and heavily armored vessel.i: Drcntlnaunht.i. pock­e t editions, heavy cruisers. T hey do not Incliido two

_E0Hlhl9_alrcraft carriers (Uie Europii and Bremen I o r n swarm of submarines, destroyers and auxiliaries. I t la no secret, for Churchill confessed It. th a t Uie alUed navies ore scattered across the seven se.is. T lirre Is doubt If we ha re anywhere a concentrnllon equal to U iat of e ither of our foes. Tliey constitute a grave m enace to our Pacific ond A tlantic sujiply lines — a potenU al m eans of dlsmemberlog Uie "democraclc.i" atrateglcaUy.

DARQAIN—Tlie civil ser\-lce cnmmls-ilnn's lack of In terest In petty m atters ha.s been kep t a t a high slan- d a rd even during Uie m ost politically m inded reRlmes. I t ha* been llk» Caesar'a wife in « city of portUnn bondage. B u t Its foot slipped and it lost U.s reputation du ring the tum \oll over congtesslonal pensions.

W hen Senator H arry Byrd declared U ial a lenl»- la to r could re tire merely by poylng a dollar and th irty - n in e cents {five per cent of his salary- for hls-flnn l d a y ). representaUves who favor the scheme branded Uie Virginian a s a ll acturarla l prevaricator, or some­th in g like U iat. T he honorable* howled wltli pa in be- cau.<io th is b it o f adverse publicity was w h at f irs t pro­voked a fierce popular reaction. T hen Uie commission, w hich Is a fact-finding and n o t u verbose body, entered th e controversy and Issued an .offlc lo l stn tem cnt In­d irectly endorsing tho annu ity program and denying th e tru th of th e senator's charge. . »

C hairm an H airy B. M ltchcil subsequently confessed th a t Ills' pronouncem ent w as forced from him by In- Iluen tlal members of Uie lower clmmber. where the leadership approved th e move. I t was obtained under a polite form of duress. T he guardians of nonpartisan­sh ip In go%-emment have since Retracted and conceded th a t the Insurance can be bought a t basem ent bargnln

BALARV—Censorship DU'ccior Dyron Prlcc can sup­p ress o r revise stories except those about himself. He Is n o t a mon of war and th e re fitf i his m ovem enu may be described by W ashington w riters.

T lie ex-new.spiiperman wW irs th a t hln niiihnrlty U> b lue-pencil Included articles In w hich he ri«urc% lor reccnUy a popular magozlne carried o piece Unit «iv.i allghUy Incorrect. U said U iat he o*-ncd a luxurloiii hom e in a W ashington suburb valued a t *100,000. He onco pa«essed a <2S,000 rwldence. bu t he sold It. He Btm holds Utle to a tlO.DOO house, bu t th a t Is rented u nder a long lea.ve.

lUs federal aalarj- was placed a t JIO.OOO. wlierea.'* he ts a ll- a -v e a r man. His form er employer carries him on the pay roll, but no t a t the fancy sum — 135.000 — m enUoned by the uncensored a u th o ^

D A l^ I G S T a L NOT G ER M A N I t a ll s ta r te d over DanzlgV T he G e rm a n

F u eh re r , w eeping a n d pounding h is c h e s t, in ­s is te d th a t th e re could be no com prom ise be­tw een G erm an y a n d P o land o n D anzig. D a n ­zig w as G erm an , G e rm a n by h e r ita g e a n d b y p re se n t p o p u la tio n . No compromise. So th e re m u s t be w ar,

Jlow th e K oeln ische Zeitung Is q u o ted a s te llin g of th e G e rm a n dU flculty In “ G e rm a n ­iz ing" th e tc r r l to ry aro im d Danzig. I t seem s th a t G erm ans In W est P russia a re a c tu a lly In a m ino rity , to t h e d is tress of G a u le ite r F o r ­s te r . T h ey in s is t on-epeak lng Polish , resist-; in g “G c rm an lza tlo n ."

O n su ch ^ u n d s a s these, H itle r p lu n g ed a w orld in to w ar.

R a tio n in g of s u g a r causes th e b eek eep ers

Other Points of View■ PLENTY OF DA.NCER8

According to some views expressed In Wa.ihlngton, dancers are needed In the w ar program , n ie y m ust be needed badly a s the lost quotaUon on salaries was M.600 per year. Lemhi county c an furn ish dancers fo r a lo t less money Uian U iat and Uie^- are cood dancers, too. We have some Ind ians hero th a t have been dancing all the ir lives and Uiey can be .had in- q u an tities a t the rate of a dollar a day cacti. Tlicy a re n 't fan d a n ce n either; they 're w ar dancers.—Sal­m on Recorder-Herald.

TH E RIG H T TO SPEAK I f yoii lake from Uie'Individual h is right to speak as

h e please* by word of niouUi. have e.vt«bllslied Uie p r ln c lp le 'th a t all Individuals—yoursflf among them — c an bo deprived of the ir r ig h t u> speak as they please by word c f m outh. If you take'from one new spaper lU r ig h t to speak as I t pleases through Itx ed lto rlal'co l- um na. you have established Uie principle U iat all news* p a p e ra -y o u r favorite among Uiem—can be deprived of th e ir righ t to speak as they please thrtfflgh th e ir edl- Uirlal coJuma*. Doing this, you have n o t only destroyed (Wmocracy—you*” 'hai ■ ■■■ .............................- ~ .destroyed yourself. —Tulare

We’ll Take it Straight

P o t S h o t sc i th th e

GENTLE3klAN IN T H E T H IRD ROW

PICTURE O F A GUY WORRIED HY TH E H R E SIRKN!

Ahoy, Pot ShoU:Jack M cKinley, prim ing u l e t - '

m an. doesn’t chose f^re englnci: B u i when the siren blows Jack

wastes no tim e In reaching the n e a m t telephone. Calling his h o t n « h e a A a breathleuly: “W here’s Jo ck Junior?"

Jun io r, age (ivr, has set liis house on fire FIVE Umes. no Iru . and they have bad the fire de­pa rtm en t (wire.

Jack th e filler claims lo have broken hU young son of the fire­bug habit— but lie's taking no rhancea.

------------------- =C dT i6 ilie -ja liit~* » ¥

U E HASTEN TO D E raN D ONE V IR G IL KELLY DARUON!

As you con-nUtuents noticed In Uie Friday Tlnic.n-Ncw.-i. VlrnU Kelly Uiirroii. of tlie s u tc coiuiuibuhirj'.

p ic tu red w ith a hawk. T ho itlve UicrcwlUi said V. Kelly an w inged the hawk with his

pUtol, th rew It In Uie back of his found I t alive next day and

dl!<pa-»;d of it wltli iinoUier

V. K . Bai 3.Pol !jhOt«

.Vo oMUrrxt him Uiat dclendlng >plo *lnndcrc<I by oiher.i. but not

by us. Is one of our favorite diver- . So he Kave ili hts story and ive it to you:

V. K. .says he did NOT shoot Uie hawk while It was parked on a l»st. Says lit .ihot It In fllRht. WlUi his tru.ity j a police revolver. •' Twaa nothin' atall.’' .wUKhc.

(b) V. K. »iay.% he did NOT cause IP hawk to become decciLscd with second shot after finding It alive

..!Xt day In Uie back of tiLs cor. Says he rclea.ied the hawk Irom tho “ ck creek bridge.

'I been mnllBned." lie .■lald. Or lybc we put Uiat word In his mU). Come to Uilnk of it. wcVe ver heard V. K. say "miUlgned.- !Ve never heard nny siaip olflcer

■•niallgned." Allhoiich they often

^nyway, con.’.lder liLs dcii-iv.e of-

JO T T IN G S AROIINII TOWNB rilliantly - plunmiied plieosant

:almly w andering uround in mlddlo )f ESghUi avenue pilh. In :oo block, ;o unconcernedly th a t he must have t poalUve knowledge of c l« « l seo.son

And ft fellow of peitilon oge. sit­ting In cafc munching hamburger.

Jin lng hendUnes iumI muttertnB him self, "D am n that cnngre.«" 3ne.%t. s leu th T J heard l,im).

X M A RK S 'TOE SPOT, l l i a t old mcftnle. OuVnor Chasi

Clark, has pulled a whlzzer on Uii local C ham ber of Commerce boys.

Personally, we Uilnk Uie guv’noi Is dodgtaie th e quesUon th e boys put up to h im . H e 's pretty c rafty about It. Uiough, a n d m ay cause sl lltUe squirm ing before a n answer U ahlp- p ^ bock to h im .

T he cham ber, you’ll rccall. poasect a resolution ag a in s t 'unnecessary non-<lercii:.c speeding . Sam e kind of iTsoluUon th a t a num ber of Magic Valley ou tfits have e ndoaed . We guess maybe th e o th e r ou tflta d idn 't send a copy to.,the suv ’nor.

Anyway, back came Chase’s 're- p l y ^ o casod -ln to U w lth a .loglca l m ention Uiat W PA. by keeping men on its rolLi in Idaho . wUl have the m en available for farm labor come spring . B ut ’Uien he pu,ilied In the kiilfe and tw isted It a. trifle. He aaked Uie cliam ber, a n cn t th o re­quest fo r ellm lnaU on of non-e.«en- tla ls, to give h im Its approval of such projccta a s the rlin bridge road, liu h l-to -H an sen Improvem ent o f U. S . 30. p lu s'som e others.

See the ai>ot7If-you don’t, some of th e boys do. Ju s t for th a t, wc’rc tem pted lo

hope the Kiiv’n o r doesn’t ge t hl-i Juicy SIO.OOO a yeai: Judge's Job.

¥ ¥OU R B U L IX T IN ^O A R O

T o sleuths JD . O K . H alrbreadlh H arry and al.io the unidentified s leu th wiio ]la.^ box 212. £ho.ihone. we say tlia n k s - fo r th e cople.i of “ W liat to Do in Cose of a n Air R ild ." We app recia te you r rem em ­bering us. B u t to all o thers who m ay come acrcva Uiose slightly nuij- a ir raid hu trucU ons. w e sa>- we p rin ted Uiaie In strucllo tu a monUi o r two ago. T lianka anyway:

SOME rtO PLE HAVE TERRIFIC TROUDLE.S.NO?

D ear Po t Shoot:A cerU ln Burley girl (ells mo

■bout a new dJfflcuily Ih a t 'i crop , p ing up in th is m a tte r o f eetm tlng-

fheT his gaJ coun ts iheep li trad ltlona i uay . a ll right. Bi says, with a m ost worried look an h e r face, th a t p re tty quick she geU to listening (o th e bell leader of th e sheep. . . and .then can’t hear th e b e ll. . . a n d therefore can’t ge to sleep fo r worrying , aboat the th ing .

Some people a in 't go t a u c h to de. huh?

—CasanoTs of CassU>

FAMOU.S l As T U N E ^ . . T hU m u st b« a war ah irt

—(be eolU r sh ran k two sliest . .T H E GENTLEMAN IN

TH E TIIU U ) BOW

HISTORY OF TW IN FALLSAS GLEANED FROM THE FIL E S. O F T H E TIM ES-NEW 8

13 YIIARS AGO—I-ER. 21. lO tT .

One of th e m ost novel dances of ..le week took place a t Danceland W ednesday evening when the L. D. 8 . Sunday school and the Y. L. M. I. A. en terta ined wlUi a George ,nd M arthn W aahington dance, the

guesta com ing In appropriate cos­tum es. Reed B itter, as George, and Miss P h y ' l s K lrkm an. -as U a n h a W ashington, received the guests.

Mr. a n d M rs. J . T. Krlvonek and family are leaving Monday to make the tr hom e in Longview. Wash.

Albert. H ansen returned today to RoseworUi a f te r vlalUng hb daugh- ■ - M r*. B en U nit.

n YEARS AGO—FEB. 21, ISIS

l l i e Id ah o L lg lit u d Power corn- pony la m ak in g a rrangem ents to m ore Uielr office to the Swim build- lo s on Shoahone street. The buUd* tng Is being f itte d up In a nice man> ne r, a n d th e com pany will have plenty of room fo r th e office force.

T lie Kappa D «ll« eigma.sorority en terta ined th e ir gen tlcm tn friends w ith a dancing p a rty Tuesday eve­ning.

A large dancing parly w u enjoyed T tiesday n ig h t a t Moose hall by the m em bers ood friends of th e M utual Im provem ent A s ^ la U o n of th o L. D . 8 . chu rch . A n excellen t luocb w u aervwl a t ipJdnlgbt.

C A R E O F Y O U R

C H I L D R E NBy ANGELO PA TRI

THINKING IS PAINFUL EFFO RT Thinking Is painful e ffo rt seldom

Indulged In by the m ajority of peo­ple. Young and old alike avoid thinking things through because of the stra in and tho fatigue the pro­cess Imposes.

ConsequenUy there is a g rea t deal of loose talking, loose In th e sense Uiat It Is no t tide down by reason, foresight and wisdom. T lio thought crossed the mind and U iat was enough. The tongue did th e rest.

Nobody expecu U iat conversaU on t>e weighted w ith U iought a t every turn of Uie clock. We UUt fo r tho run of talking, lo keep, ourselves from feeling alone and helple&i,' to

:iuie ourselves and o th e r people, id quite r ig h t too. "But w hen we mure lo U lk about questions of .Uonal and In tem aU onal Im port- ice we ought to w ait u n til we have

Ther ) hove thennd knowledge a n d under-

iduig th a t would qualify Uiem for Uiflt kind of th ink ing on th a t and of subject. .Y et th e n lr rings vlUi tpeeche.v advising, prophesy* ng, demanding, denouncing and lireatenliig. Young people whose ■xiierlence allows Uttle knowlod .nil le.'.

) Uie

- '- -F a w -T ry - lo T h in k Older people, who oug h t to know

letter, lead the chorus. Few try to •hlnk Uilngs through . T liose few leldoiu are heard. T liey do not .peak unUl they have te sted the ubject in Uielr m inds. How, when, vhat. where, who? W h a t Uien? W liat price? W ho pays It? I t U

th It7 Steadily the m ind pursuesthe qiie; lt.1 loKlcal Cl

Even Uier

3 w hat ■elusion.

a ppea rs to be

. Hf<

In .iplrlt bees•lUier In flesh he one essential

.......... ill life Is grow th, wlilch't involve change. M inds m ust

be free to change, and th e be.it wc lo make Uie changes count

. good Is to th ink Uilngs ou t In Uie Qulet places and come to the best conclusion pos.iibIe fo r us a t the Ume.

3ur young people are beset by iny puzxllng questions a n d they : bewildered by Uie .lolutloiia 'of-

fered from aU directions. In terested groups of older 'people seek to In-

nce them the ir way In order to Uiem for Uielr selllsli ends. All

quesUons. social, religious, pollUcal many soluUons a s the re are

self-seekers am ong th e groups.Youth follows Its leaders as Uielr ders follow theirs. nespon.nlbmty

for this leadership m u st r e s t squarc- Uioee le ad e n and i t is upon

whom the du ty of th ink ing things Uirough to th e logical end m ust evolve.

Young people shou t th e slogans provided for Uiem; according to the creed of Uie leaders. P lckeU ng has become a pasUme for Y ou th , always under the leaderslilp o f some older group. Upon them th e n , rasta the

-ipon.'ilblllty fo r the ir leadership. YouUi is m experienced. eager.

Idealistic, b u t no t though tfo l. Youngsters m ust have un.ielflsh. en> lightened, thoughtful leadership. We Aliould concern ourselvej m ore wlUi . . . . leaders o f Y outh th a n w ith the slogans and movements of th e young pn p le . The rad ical you th of today Is often Uimorrow’s cansen-a tlve , b u t

ilderly rad ical o f t o d ^ is Uie radical tomorrow a n d he may,

or may not be a good leade r for Youut.------------------ ;-------------

If rour ehll.) »how. .Iih> of h.ln« too

tr It. cncloali J Tl."8tauia W!‘y:

■nd Olh«'Ian Mnt»ln mln snd

r. o.

ZING C U R R E N T NEWS

rNEW YORKdawn>tn'U w>inoath mood. 'R iey or* conrlnoMl th a t labor l«aden &ra de . U rm lned to c a n y on a social revo. luUoD almultODeoualy wlUt th e war.

new U odalkl* In* EiSly dem onstr& t«

ft r e o o ^ tlc B of atr»> her fo ru lg b t. 'While

................. th rough batteredM artohan toward Rangoon, a new hum an avalanche gathers In the no rth T hailand m oun ta ln i ready to plunge down tn Uie reap and buryi th e outQiunbered]A.B.O.D. powera.Here in an InaC'

or naUve princes,I rule a hot. fever>l c u n ed jungle flU*edwlUiUgers. e l e > „ . ^ _ . m . m p h a n u . wild bo a rt* “ “ * LZMANand crocodiles, the Japanese, years ago. built for the Siam ese a rail­road U> rtm ot« Ohleng Mai.

ConservaUve bankers proclaimed it a stupid btuiness b lunder, ta p ­p ing a pest hole which h a d no com- modltle.i worth shipping. B u t the Mirewd Nipponese know w hat they were doing. Now Uiey are sending guns, planes and soldiers over this “worthless bankrupt lli>e.'’ from the end of whlcli 'a Bood d ir t road con­nects w ith K engtung.. a large vll> lage se t In a broad valley surround­ed by a seven thousand foot range of crags. Tlie area once held a huge lake 3S miles long, wlilcli makes It lui Ideal location for on a ir bose.

H ere will be ano ther springboard from which U> leap a t th e ribbon of tracks which Joins C hina’s vital B urm a road. The B ritish had a ^ a l l force In this back coun try con- slsUng of ha lf-trained naUve m oun­taineers and the B urm a fronUer force backed by some R ^ J* . planes and American voIunte«rs In P-iO pursuit ships under daredevil Q en. O. L. Chennault.

S Q U IE M lN G -n ie p resen t blunt demand by unions'for fa tte r pay en­velopes in defense Industries is no t the only red llgh t.b llnk tng In fron t of capitalist eyes. L abor U o u t to Insist upon a feet-under-the-deak share In m anagem ent. A broad h in t cam e from President R. J . T hom as of th e TJiUted Automobile W orkers when he w arned th a t wage Increases alone will n o t mollify h is resUess members. Pull pa rtne rsh ip in pro- ducUon Is the aim of both O J.O . and A, p . of L. reform ers.

Influentia l elements In th e adm in­istra tion favor labor appeasem ent— especially with a w ar on. and ah elecUon In Uie offing. A n argum ent used is th a t G re at B rita in —w ith i government stuffed w ith Torle»-ral' ready has granted s im ilar conces­sions to Its workers. Confidential Information from trade g p u p s In London reporta th a t NlkoliU-Shver* nlk, seeteU ry of the Soviet unions. whoAe delegates have been vlsUlng British factories as a good-wlU ges­ture. advUed British friends n o t to be satisfied w ith mereli’ advLiory positions on industrial boards bu t to request common auUiority wlUi straw bos-Ks and superin tendents. ’• W all s tree t and other big business

clrcle.1 here are no t saj'lng anyth ing foe publlcflUon but they are squirm ­ing and fuming privately over Uie pos.ilbllltles. and stock m arkets In New York and London reflect the ir

•w eetening aho rtage ' 1_ ___ . . _Ukaly to atlM uU t* th e Oarlbbeaa cane business a n d m ake sugar atoek one of th e •‘w ar bablea" cf Uila p r « - e s t conflict. T lie commodity la tre> meadoualy tu(ceptlblQ to4p«culaUoo. aa waa dem onstrated lo F irs t there waa % tem porary fam lae, then a wild boom tn which produc* Uon Capacity zoomed to exc«ca. T hen caise a slum p w ith companies un> loading on th e banks, which In some . casea spen t f ifteen y e a n in straight* cnlng ou t ru ined flrma.

The houseliold necessity In 1914 was three cen ta a*pound and w ent to seven centa In New York a t the time of th e ormlsUce. L ater Uie price ran away u n til I t was tw enty- th^ee cents and more in IWO. After tha t—the financia l headache. Today empty bowb have develoxd which aend reflnera* agents scurrrlng to Guadeloupe. MarUneque. L atln - Amerlcan countries and a ll o ther sources. T hey find th a t' moat of the A ustralian stores have been sold to Russia (ind thoee from S a n Do­mingo to B rita in .

Candy, ice cream , cake fruU ngs. and so rt d rinks will bo less r ich bu t BUll b u r prospeeUve per capll* sugar consumpUon for iOU ahould be TT pounds. In a n o r tn o ly e a ro th e r n a - Uona e a t Uie stu ff In thU order per person: R um anlan '13 pounds annu- oUj’. T urk 14. Ita lian 30. Russian 20. P renclunan u , G erm an 68, Hol­lander 04. B riton 100, and a Dane 190 pounds—n-hlch m *y account fo r his famous pastry.

SKY—New Y ork shipping men hear th a t Downing street's brow U wrinkled over OlbraltAr. Now th a ttho O crm iin-flect-haa e»coped ,.^ie--------cabinet fears th a t H itler wlU try to imcork the M editerranean a n d allow MussoUnt's ahlps sllp t through the bottleneck Into Uie AUanUc. Recent heavy blows o n M alta—oveiloolced ^ here because of the more terrlhle U news from th e fa r east'—catued an* ~ xlety am ong Allied stra tcgb ta lest Uiese assaults were a dress rehearsal fo r a stroke a t the g rea t rode.

G ermany filled the a lr .6ver Uie island off I ta ly w ith bombers which B ritish H urricans eventually batted doa-n. ^ e base U protected by Uie - - • thbrough anU -alrcraft defens­ive system In the world. Its ah elte n clilseUd ou t o f soUd stone—some­times a mile undergrouiul—and hence sim ilar In many ways to Uie famous fortrens between Spain and Africa. S ince U}e form er .basUon sUll stands a fte r a Uiousand attacks, th e w ar office hopes G ibraltar can do as well. .

The lu ftw affe. how «'er. is well prepared for an a ll-ou t b llti. Allied agents have aecuredtevldence th a t................ ................ - ___________ e In330-squadrons, each im lt composed of 13 planes actually available for fligh t. wlUi an equal num ber boUi In r e se r\ 'w n d repair. How gliders suppIemeiTKacarclUes caused t>y loiuies over i t i s s la and Africa. De­spite Uiese handicaps and also the Inferior quality of la te r N asi pilots, the British do n o t beIle 'e their enemy's sky power Is greatly weak­ened.

n a t i o n a l : C A P I T O L___ ,____ ,(FlQ ci\sf«.Q Be) ______an InvesUgatlon and report In three inontlw anti Uien. a-vsumlng congress glve.1 Its blc-viliiB. Uie en tire com- prehenilve program Is lo s ta r t build­ing.

Every jwoposed dam and oddlUon- ol turbine suggested In the report U feasible, logical; and some day will be uUiixed. presum ably with government money as Uie plan la In­tended to shove ou t of the picture any and all private uUllty companies In th a t region. Tliere Is a potential power development In pracUcally every eongre.vlonal d is tric t In Ida ­ho, Oregon and-W aalUngtoUra po in t which has not been overlooked in fram ing Uie recommendaUohs.

Tlicre are ver>’ few new propoaals In Oie power program. T h e .s am e sites for dams, the ixyjilbllltles of tucking In additional waterwhe«ls In exLitlng dams, etc.. have aU been twed In oUier pronouncemenLi from the federal power commission and the departm ent of Uie Interior. T liere has been a rekrouplng. but wlUiout exCepUon each t/rospcctlve kilowatt has been pubirtUcd In Uie past.

If bu t a p a rt of tli< should be sancUoned liy congi would require two or Uiree yean to a tta in a point where power wouli be generated. Dams require about

' program

tw o .yeara_ ta ._build ;, U ublnea-from -----13 to la m onths depending on s lu .If Uie even flow of business proceeds.W ar will lengUien Uie tim e. Tlie m a tte r of prlorlUes is becoming more difficu lt w ith each passing m onth. S teel a n d concrete cannot be ordered like a aack 'o f potatoes; the holder of a priority order stands in line, waits hU tu rn . The water* wheel m ust be designed and built, and factories m aking turbines are now swamped w ith navy orders and witn equipment fo r 1.000 m erc liant vessels now under contract. Labor is ano ther elem ent ond becoming scarce .-T h(ae-pow er-dam » -require — hundreds of w orkm en wiio for some time t« come will be more interested In war Industries than In dam build­ing. _____ .

In the naUonal capita] the power ^4 program looks nice on poper, b u t V there are so m any aerlous obstacles In Uie way th a t there b little belief expressed th a t I t will- materialize wlUUn BO years o r more. ‘There ti a pooslblU^ th a t some one o r two dams may be au th o rlre d ,. up In northern Idalio and on Uio Skagit river, or even a t Umatilla, b u t no wholesale authorlzaUon ts anUel- pated. Besides, th e president pre­fers Uiot h is own pe t project, the St. Lawrence waterway, shall have the rlght-of'wai*.

Life’s Like Tliat By Neher

-x:L

Page 5: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

Eunclay, February 22. 1942 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN I'^LLS. IDAHO Page P iv i,.

• B.P.W.ABANDONS '42C0N F E K E

C«nceUstlon of th t reclon*! coq> U teaeo o f th e w estern reslon, Na- tlosAl F edera tion o l Business and j ^ e s s l o n a l W omen's clubs, sched­u l e to r n e x t Ju n e a t Sun Valley. Vi-u A onoiinced today by mim m . IM IU McCoy. T w in ra ils , rtjlo n a l direc tor.

11WM cancelled by Uio unanimous action of th e national cxtcuUve com tnttt«e. New Vork City, accordlns to MlM McCoy. Dr. Minnie L. M af.

. IctU D allas, Tex.. U national presl- • i_denU

S la te federa tions alfected include CallfomlA. ldal)o, MonlAna, Nevada, Oregon, U tah . W asliington and tlie U rrtto rles of Alaska and llawaU.

•T ills acUem was prim arily nee- e s iu y because of curialled tm nspor- ta tlon th rouehou t tho United States. T ires fo r automobiles a re already rationed, a n d th e rationing of b<lso- llne Is very possible In Iho near fu ­tu re. M any au thorities say Uiat prio rities on tra in a n d plane travel are In Immedlnte proapecl.” aeeoi-d- Ing to MLns McCoy.

Suggentlon has been m ade th a t each s ta te pay the regional confer­ence assessm ent fee to the regional treasurer, M rs. A nna Powell Bull, D lse tfoo t, by June . 1B<2. and tha t th e reg ional treasurer Invest Uils fund In defense bonds.

"I a m sure th a t every s ta te In the w estern region wishes to have Uio organization In tac t nnd In financial condition to carry on when victory Is won.” MLis McCoy declared.

GUILIY VEROIC ON A TIA CK CLAIM

W ASHINGTON. t< b . 31 flJ.B-A federal d ln trlc t court Jury today found O rm an W . Ewing. 53-j'Cftr-old Joim er D em ocratic T\aUonol cotn- m l t te e m a u f r o in U tah, guilty of chargca u S f ^ e raped a 20-year.oId governm ent Ktenograplier In her room ing homo bedroom la st Oct. 20,

Tlic Jury did no t recommend the d e a th penalty .

T lio verdict, returned after - hou rs a n d 20 m inutes of delibera­

tion . m a d e Iho w id illt a s e d ’delen- d a n t liable to a maximum penalty of 30 yearn In prison.

E >ing showed no emotion :Jury forem iui announced tli cW on. A i th e Jur>- was bchiB polled h e tu rn ed to h is wife, who was .sit­ting In Uie courtroom , and noddnl. H is th ree daughters, who accompa­n ied th e ir m other, broke Into tcnrs.

18 More “Safety Sallies” on Hand

E ighteen additional "Safety Sal­lies" h av e arrived here for place­m en t In T w in rtilLi, Jerom e and

, Eden. I t w as announced la st night by Joe D onahue, chairm an charge of Uie 20-30 club project.• T w enty "Safe ty Bailies" already

have been placed a t school cro.islngs • In tho T w in P a lls a rea. The signs

w arn motorlstii to drive slowly and ^ carefu lly In school sones.■ ••Of th e new Mruk. foi\r be

lo c a le d .ln I V ln PaU*. fU In Etlen, , and e ig h t In Jerom e, where th e 30-30 J club I" cooperating w ith the Idaho

h ighw ay pnlTol and the Jerome Llotis rliib,^’ Mkld W llllnm s.'

_______.Thirty weight .a lio ttb '-w lll. bc .illie. num ber of wom lng .■slRtvi placed,

Defense Aides to Receive Training

ijO ISB . Feb. 21 m ~ A proRram for f irs t a id tra in ing of a ll clvillart* defeiuo workers In Idalio was ap- proii'ed today a t a m eeting of lied Cross a n d civ ilian defense ottlcUIs tn U ie 'govem or's office.

H enry B aker of San PrBncLvio, a lstan t m anager of the Red Crons ro c lf lc .a rea ..a t ten d e d ths-m catlng,

Porrcjit S tew art, s ta le Red CroM represenU Uve, said his organltaUon would provide the first aid Instruc­tion.

S tcw o it a n d Hotner UudeUon, la charge of practice blackouts In Uie sU te . p lan to a ttend civilian defense

' m eetings a t Lewiston Saturday and CoetJr d 'A Ieae W ednesday.

Food Stamp Plan Won’t Be Dropped•T ho food stam p p lan of the sur-

.p lu s m arke ting admlnlstraUon is colng to c o n tin u e" A. W. McConnel, head of th e Tw in Falls county sur­p lus comm odities commltlee, sold la s t n igh t.

••Jletallers have been ordered — halV th » us* o{ cot\tlnuaUon c&TdA.'' explained McConneU ••and some have tn lsunderstood th is change In p rocedure to mean th a t the food stam p p la n Is going to fold up.-

j “T h is Is definitely not the case." h e decla red ..nT ie stam p plan is go­in g to c ontinue.”

study Series for _ M arin&s, SlatedB U IIU Feb. 31 - Mwlncra- club

m e t M onday evening a t the home of M r. a n d M rs. Leonard Leth. Rev. j . A. Howard Insutuled th e study

t on “Builders of the Kingdom;^ Uie In itia l atudy o l th is series laU ng up th e b iography o f Kagawa, th e great Jap an ese ChrlsU an. who In form er years haa to u red the United States giving lectures. Oroup dlseussloi followed.

A social h o u r of gam es,w as v.,- Joyed following the program . Next meeUng of th e ciub will be a t the home of M r. a n d Mr#, Cheater Noh,

Teachers Planning To Take F irst Aid

E ast O ld S tudy group, meeting recently a t th e M ountain View school hous^. m ade plans for a first aid study course to begin a l A n earlj date. ■■■- ■ ■ ■

T entaU ve p lans were m adeSor the P lay day, to bo held In the early ■spring. wlUi Tim Drown. Mr*. P ran ­ces Satte rw hlte . Mrs. Fern Prior and Mrs- T u rn e r a s the commltlee In charge.

I . M ountain View school teachers were th e hosta .,and 13 ln»\nicUirs a t- trndejl. RefreshxnenU were served.

Amateur Inventor May Have Answer to Blackout Problem

R aiph E. T urner, amatatu- Jnyenlor snd shoe rep a irm an of Tw in Palls, may have the-so lu tlon to a nation­wide warUme problem —Uiat of tu rn ­ing off a ll lights a lm ullaneously-In any community, particularly In busl-

e « d ls trlc u . In th e e « n t of an ir raid a larm .S o g rea t h sa becom e th ^ in te rest

In a device Invented by T u rn e r th a t th a Tw in Palls county civilian de­fense council h a s discussed Its pm- slblUUd w ith Oov. Chase A. Clark, who. lo tu rn has w ritten Sen . D. Wor^h C lark In W aahlngton. inqulr. Ing as to tlio ncccasnxy procedure In bringing I t t o ^ e a ttenU on of proper goremmentarotdclalfl.

~WhlIo I have applied for a patent on my InvenUon." T u rn er explained today. " I realize th a t the rou tine of secitflng a p a ten t would cause delaj- In pu ttin g my d isw e rj* In to gen­eral use. Inasm uch as ou r country Is faced wlUi a serious emerRcncj'. In whlCli UiLi Invention m ig h t play ftU Important, p a r t. I have dctlded to avail th e governm ent of m y de­velopment w ith th e hope Uiat my patent rig h ts will b e protected.^*

Neccs.ilty for su ch a device was recognized by T u rn er when T a’ln Fnlls civilian defense authoriUes wfrc m aking preparaUo'ns for the city 's f irs t 'blackout. T lie Cham­ber of Commerce dlsc\i.wtd a t IcnRih how It would be pojulble to tu rn off all llRliUi In store fronun. illum inated slK>u and such a t o n e Ume so a.*: to make th e b lackout Immediately e(- fcctlve. a n d there seemed to be no ioiutlon.

••Obvlouab’, I do n o t care to reveal Iho technlealltlea of my Invention. T u n itr poin ted o u t. “bwi I have dem onstrated Its effectlveneui to Judge J . R . Dolhwell. clialrm an of the county civilian defen.>ie council, and he w as so Impressed Uiat my dLtco\Try Li now being cnllrd to the a ttention of governnient authorlilr*.

•■The Invention Itself Is compara­tively sim ple, m ak ing It pOMlble for one m an a t a c en tra l location to lu m off a ll lights In a city n t onn Ume, and y e t not Interfere wlUi Mich electrical equipm ent an stoker?', re- frig rrato rs and Uie like. E\'en HkIiUi In 'certa in room.i. which wniilil not Interfere w ith blackout requirements, could be perm itted to burn. .

"A simple electrical ln.siallatlnn. perha |» co.illng no more Uian »15 and as little e.\ t 2 should such units be turned o u t In ma.'Ui production. Is a ll th a t 'vould be required In each home or place of buslne.vi.

••Dy proper ad ju stm en t of mcli In- .lUllntlon. th e IlghM coukl be c o n ­trolled In any chosen inimner throughout th e c ity, by

Solution?

SlilifULPK E. TO R N E a

. . . Ill* Invention U u K r te d to taU e the prabt<cn q( U irnlng ofC Ilfb ts throughout a com m unity— yet leaving vital eleotrleal nervlce* sUlI operating. (Times-News Photo and (:nrravlnc).

RATE INCREASESArrest recordi' of. IM l show th a t

crim e am ong'women Increased I I J per cent during Uiat period as com­pared w ith an Increase of only 3.8 per cen t among men, A. S. Wobb. special agent for the federal bureau

Investigation, said here last n ig h t Webb mods tUc aunoui\ecm ent a f ­

te r receiving word to th a t effect Irom J . Edgar Hoover, director.

Of Uie 630i08 arre.-.t records . amined by Hie FBI during 1911. 0 - per cent were of women. In 1040.

per cent of Uie tota l were women and tn 1B30 only 7.6 per cent. At th e same Ume the records show Uint m ote tnei\ thM\ women « e rc a rre s t­ed for all types of crim es except comnlerclallred vice.

Wlille fewer women Oian r...............arre.itcd during 1041. a br'eakdown of th e a rrest records dl5eIo.^ed tiia t 12 out of each 1.000 women arrested were charged wlUi m urder, as pared w ith lO otit of ench'l.OOO

M en viredomlnated In arrcsls to* crimes ngalost property, such as rob ­bery. bui^lnrj- and au to tlleft. W o-

were proporuonately arrested ' o rtcn thnn men, however, for

larceny.O f each 1,000 m en taken Into

tody during 1541, the F B I's records stiowed 58 were charged w ltii drlv* iiiR 'fclrtle Intoxicated. Only 11 ot each 1,000 women arrested were charged with a slmllnr o tle

eraUng from a cen tra l control s ta ­tion, whlcli likewise would be s simple operation w ith etjulpnicnl a l­ready In existence and operaUon In every community.

"W ith a ll hom es and buslne.^ houses thtis e<inlpped.'* T u rner p]aJried.""UiLs43nc m an could be sponilble fo r a ll ligh ts In th e city. He could tu rn Uiem o u t a t a m cnfs notice In the event of ni raid alarm."

T urner Indicated U iat h is Inven­Uon. toward wiilch ills wife g him considerable help. Involve.! lnno\-atlon In electric au tom atic mote control, a field In w hich lie has done considerable experim entation. Should Uie K ovem ment find his blackout control feasible, he explains, Uie discovery could be p u t In to gen­eral a ie wlUi lltUe difficulty . No extra wiring of any kind Is neces- so o ' ajid the Ume required of Uie average liu la lla tlon would not cecd half an hour.

conrideni, I t will do th e Job,“ 1 •'Ifs Just a m a tte r of the

op- government pu tting It to use."

Nevada Editor Prints Dispatch From His Son—Killed on Wake

By NICK BOl3nNE RENO. Nev.. Feb. 21’ (U.PJ — The

Nevada Q ta le Jo u rn al carrlcd a •'de­layed" dU patch from W ake Island

l u f irs t page today under Uie •'by-line- of Uie ed ito r 's son, Joe P. •McDonald. J r , w ho was reported killed In acUon la.st. Uccenvber.

J t was Uio .iiory wiilcli ed ito r Joe. sr., had w alled fo r liopeftilly be­tween,Dec. 7 when th e Japanese a t ­tacked P ea rl h a rb o r and Dec. 22 fvticn Wako Island fell lo Japan . He lcv't_hoDc_VijicJi_Uic Jauaucsc-Q ver- caine the Murdy g a rrb o n and two days la tr r he received a le tte r from the URVy depurU neut. reporllng Uiat J ot. Jr.. h a d been killed. •

B u t Uie dl.spatch, w ritten Dec. 20 . / Joe, Jr.. U nited Pre.'.s special cor- rr«*Tndent. was received on ' Uie

JH ilted P re.v teletype m achine lost n igh t a fle r I t inut been flown trom Wako to Midway Island and tra n s­m itted to Honolulu along an undis­closed' rou te.

I ts seven parag raphs reported th a t Japanese p lanes h a d bomb<!d the Island n tim es and th a t naval c ra ft had shelled-it oncc b u f th n t “a ll U well as thLs d ispa tch Is w rliten ."

"I ought to bawl h im ou t fo r no t wrlUng a b e tter sto ry ,” commented his fa the r, a ve teran newspaperm an who has -worked in N evada lo r ^0 years.

T lie e lder M cDonald's f irs t reac ­tion was one of revived hope. He broke hla rulo w hich bars local new* from the f irs t pag« and w rot« an accompanying arU cle telling of his le tter, d a ted Dec. 24. from th e navy departm ent.

l ie explained Uic naN-y h a d re ­ported receiving noUce by le tte rO ec. 23. from navy officers a t P earl harbor th a t Joe, Jr., waa dead. I f his ran had w ritten th e d ispatch Dec. 20 (Dec. 10 Uils aide of the In lem a- Uonal dateline), Uie ed ito r reasoned, the navy could n o t have reported his deaUi correctly unle .u m all com­m unication betw een H ay a ll and W ashington was faa to r th a n h e had believed possible..M cDonald found a n o th e r ray of

hope In th e fac t U ia t Joseph T . Mc­Donald, Cody. Wyo.. was carried In the Japanese- p risoner lis t released by th e navy departm en t yesterday, lie though t Uiere m ay have been confusion betw een th e two Joseph McDonalds. '■

Joe. Jr.. a cjvll engineer, w ent to W ako island la s l Ju n e d and served as a volunteer m em ber of an anU - a irc raft u n it. He form erly was football p layer a t th e U niversity of Nevada and was g raduated from the San Diego arm y a n d navy academy,

. ^ e Jo u rn al displayed th a W ake dO patch prom lnenUy u n d e r a two- column headline. W hen th e report o f Jo e 'i d e a th w as p rin ted ..!^ was

Gooding Recruit ^ Tour Set Feb".“24

Ooodlng county lour b scheduled for Tue.sday. Feb. 24, it waa a n ­nounced UKlay by C. A. Edmon.son. Ttt’ln PalU recrulilng officer fo r Uie U. S . navy.

k He will vl.ilV HftKermnn. W endell •and Gooding In one day. M en be­tween the ages of 17 a n d 50 miiy reach Edmon.ion a t the O oodlng «e- lecUve ser^'Ice office, o r th e poAt- offlces In H agerm an and W endell.

ME TOg>SiuU > o^ui2

• cw aa D o n u M ta . 1 b m l MtfaaMtow*

TMr«nct<M

carried under a one-colum n he ad ­line.

Tlie elder M cDonald look Uic afl- ^rnoon off U iat day b u t rciu rned to ills o f f ly to worlc th e nex t m orn ­ing. A few days la te r h e wrote editorial about Joe, Jr.. under the heading. ••Jlls IleflUigc.'^ In Uiat lie siiBKcsled UiLi c p iu p h for his

" lie did Ills Job."

LICJ-N.SK TO HURLEY PA IR SALT L.\Kfc: CITY. K b . a i '

A marriage ;icense waS Lisued today to John H arry C arring ton . 30. and Gladys Tennant, 34. both of Burley. Idaho.

O l E R S I O L DEBT OF DEI

WASHINGTON. Feb. 31 (.IV-TJie D em ocratic national coinmillee nald today I t was expectwl th e national scries of W arhlngton birthday d in ­ners on M onday.night would h f t th e mortRftKe on Uie isnjty— cjiUmai- ed ,»600,000 In debt.i hanKlng over from Uie 1040 presidential cam paign.

The fund raW ng dinner.% will bo coincidental wUh Uie nchcduled ra« dlo addrr.w of Prer.ldent Roosevelt on world affairs, Tlic Pr.Mldenl worked on the ad<lre.vs—exj>ected to be a new accounilnn of the trend o t tl\e w ar—UwoukItomi today.seeing no callers,

TliB dinner will be aildre.vsed d i­rectly by Vice Prp.^ldnit W allace. Speaker of the IloiL.e riiiybum ojid D em ocratic Chalrmiui Edward J- Flynn.

An announcem ent by Uie naUonal com m ittee xald there had been 'phenom enal rr.^pon.vr.i'' from all

Uie country u> invltaUotis to

‘Dad’ Bales Is Back-, Maybe With Find of War-Vital Tin

a ttend th e various dinners,The m ain dinner will be In 'a

hotel ballroom iiere. a ttended by m any of Uie adtnlnlstraUon olficials.

Revenue Offices Open on Holiday

In terna l revenue ofllce in the Tvk'ln Falls postofllce will be open tom onow d e s p i t e W ashington’s birUiday observance. It wa.n announ­ced liu t niRht by Cecil A. Pfost, deputy eollccior.

A deputy collector aUo wiU lour tills section’this week glvlnu Infor- maUon to a v is t taxpayers In maic- Ing out Ihelr I04t re tun is . No charge Is mnde for a.vil- -tance.

•nie deputy will be a t M alta to- m orrox i—Aililoiii—Thi e » d a -y ~ a n d Declo. Wedne.iday. Meanwhile, a deputy will i>p on du ly dally n t iHc- Tv,'ln Fall*, Internal revenue ottlce.

Police Hold Boy, Oregon Runaway

Robcrl Solvog. 15, w ho a dm ltta l to police th a t he was a .runaway from Portland. Ore., was picked ui> In Tw in Falls a t 1:30 n. m . S a tu r­day, records show.

Tlie youUi said th a t lie left lil' home In-Portland four o r five days ago and has been traveling tn thi.*. dlrecUon since th a t tim e.

Authtrrltle.i and his pa ren ts in PorUanil wpfe notified h e wa'< in castody here.

O. L. (Dad) Bales U back tn Twin Falls today w ith » la r aw ay loolc in h is e>es a n d . w ondering If. a " - all. he has located In Oregon

body of m agn itude and rlch- ncM beyond question. .

•T lie United S ta le s needs Un, doesn't It?" Inquired Bales. 7« years old and pensioned, b u t wlUlng and able to pack equ ipm en t on h is back and s ta r t out search ing lo r strategic minerals.

■eruin spo t In O regon — I don 't wt.-,h to te ll Uic exac t location—I believe there are paying quanUlles of sold, platlniun. tin and tungsten."

.Sever l i l t I t Bleh Diile.v who h a s followed prospect­

ing and placer m ining since 1014. admlLs he never h a s struck It rich In 29 yrars of prospecting.

"Hut." he spark led , “my health ' good, my back's good, and I^m am blUou.^. If 1 w asn 't, 1 would no t b« going out pro-ipecllng each year."

■'Dad" came in to T w in .F a lls , wlUi ne .■vaniplea and s.lopped to pull

them out ot Ills |>ouch lo r la ipec- tlon wlUi a pocket-slie magnllylng gla.u.

•Take a look." he sa id . "See Unit gllni? .MIkIU be nickel, eh?"

Bale!, m nnlpulotcd Uie h a rd rock much In the m an n er of an ctjg candler and urged:

"Now, look a t th is side. See Uiat red stulf? M ight be r ln iu b a r . Mlgiit mean iliere's m ercury , eh?" —

Dales w rapped th e sam ples and tucked (hem Inside h is m iner's Jack­et. filled his pipe wlUi smoking to­bacco and lighted u p . .

Awaits repo rt "1 don 't know w h a t It Is. and I

won t fcnow tm til th e a*aiy rejxirt comes In about two o r th ree weeks from now. But. It's undoubted ly niel- al." he said betw een puJfs.

Dales belleve.s Uiere is a tin lode In Oregon "with enough ore to keep .IQQ m c n .w orkhig-day .and n igh t for 100 years, to p u t I t mildly."

In Uie s.-inie a rea , the re ara a num ber of d ifferen t precious meUils "sUcklng riKht up on top o t Uie ground In places."

BalM. who lia s lived In T a 'ln Falls Uir p iu t U years, cam e upon the slle a fte r an ab.*.ence of seven or e ight years.

"Used to be a m ine Uiere.'^ he ad- m uted. "D on't know wiiy Uiey stopped; In fac t, th ey never even got fiUried."

Old Proapectui Bales drew from hU pocket a

prtoiK-ctus, yellowed wlUi age. Is­sued by Uie com pany before I t aban­doned Uie .site in Uie pre-W orld war N o^l days.

•Never could figure why Uiey qull,'^ pua led Bales. ••Anyone can tell by Ui« iam plea the re 's pletiiy of m e u l around there . P a rdner and I are playlhK It sa fe ; he 's up Uiere and I 'm down here."

Dales scanncd Uie prospectus, which mlRht Have come from the ruins ot the ' old cookliou.se. bunk- hou.^e. office and b lacksm ith shop above the de.^frted pilne.

"Blsvck^mSU^-^Uop Isn 't In loo bad shape.'*- revealed Bales, puffing iiti pipe.

He i)lck«l ou t a paraK raph 'Irom the prospectus and read:_ " T h e richest ore body th u s far located has been found In Uie fourU\ ledge, which lias a w ldlli of 200 feet and carries pla tinum from two lo (J52 ounces l«-r ton , and tin Icwn 20 to 80 per ceni.'^ -

T h e i)ro.ipccliu w en t on lo prcdlct th a t “the combined efforts of the mo.st m odern ninehliiery and asand skilled inUierr, working every•anr^in-thO T nrT rouia-T inr-rxT jn iisr the deposit In m any Kenerntlons."

Three IXientlaK Bales pointed out ilini, vn a Ren-

eral way. U irre are three e.irntlaU In m ining ~ Uie properly, the capl' ta l neces.'iao' to drveloi. and operate name, and the mnnaKcnient.

On the w alk back to hLs cabin In T w in F a lb . Bales said he was

He Wonders

convlncetl he Hiiow* where Uie mln- ing proi>eriy is located. He wouldn't nuiHl (.'efdric « Rtubxukc.

'Tills Is a tunnel iiropoMtlon qulrhiK no initial c.NpenOlture for expeii.Mve pumping machinery and

continual maintenance fund for' luiwaterlnif the mine." he said.

■'And," lie a sprtcd, •'there ne good advantage.’., it 1« close lo

railway iramiiortatlon with a first- claw wnKoii roiul connecilng. Tliere

timber and water rlKliU at l In amiile quantities for all mining purpows.'^

Perhap, If someone could fore- •e whnt ilip as. ay report -will show

there would be plenty ot folks eager to Krubitake •'Dad' Dales . . . wlio'.< been over there knocking on rock.s.

r -D O Y O U -nsu ffer-w ith backache, headaelie.

arm s or legs aching?

Consult PR. H m135 M ain A»e. W.

Here’s a Sensational Value!

Daveno and Chair SaleWhile Present Stocks Last

Heavy Velour Cover.s - Choice of Colors

ONLl

$54,50• 18< CoU S p rtn f U nit.• SO N »-fla( SpriBf*.• Triple D oveird and

GIned Joint*.• Soft «u>d Com forU ble.• Eaally M akes In to Be<L• b a rr* Bcddlnjf Ceiajw H-'

m eat.• PM lUre AeUen Illngea.• C hain T orU nci' of H lgbeat

G rade T h a t W ill Net B r ta k : -

-------------^~Ru>t• Blue y# V 'ln■ *9 T nrqaetie

O nb’ a spcclol purcliasc m akes a value like th is possible a t th la Ume. O f excellent fcardwood construcUon. thla daveno U completely upholstered fro n t and back *0 th a t It will look a ttracU ve anywhere or th e back covering m ay be used for re­pair.

H.AR M ONIZING

S W I N G CHAIRS

JU ST '

$22.50^_____WIlh_Daveno .

NO S rS C IA L O nPERS A T THIB LOW P R tC I

M oons F u r n it u r e S to r eSOI M A IN A V E N U E W E S T

noL liiisC i n i E A C H E R STcaclK^s from all Sunda}' schools ere eajwclally urged today to a t ­

tend Uie train ing school' for adulbi. beginning Feb. 23 a t the F irs t C hris­tia n church here. T he seliool eon- tlDued through Feb. 34 and 35 and resumes M ard i 3. for tw o-day fina l sesalons.

First class period will be from 7:15 lo 8:05 p.m.; general a.v«mbly will-be from 8:05 to 8:38 p.m.. and second c la « iierlo^Pwlll be from 8:35 to 0:25 pm .and follow it Uirough the two pe r­iods. Tlie .training school is In ter- denojnlnatlonal.. Mts. E. L. Ikenberri' will be charge of 'T lie Chrl.iUon T ask Abroad;" Dr. Wllllum Crosby noss. •'Understanding Oun.elves;" Dr. Era Duncan. "Church's O piw rtunlty in A dult EducaUon:" Dr. W. O. M w e- ley. •'How to A dnilnlstiv the Sunday C hurd i School.-' ->

Exiwnses of Uie school Is financed by the pM ilclpatlng chu rtiits .

C as tle fo rd 'YoutH W b u n d e d -in -A c tio n -l-^CASTLEPOnO, y e t j . « r .

and Ur*. Walter *niomaber;r » • celved word thts wett {Ten tlw United autes war depftrtfflCQtth a t the ir *on. J im T hom ilw rT . waa sUghtly vounded In 'ac tloo In Uie Phllipplno Islands Sunday.Feb. 8.

Holiday ClosingSHOSHONE. Feb. 31 -> Pedera],

s ta te , county and bank employes o( L incoln county will observo Waab* Ington’s birthday M onday. Such, places of business will be closed.

O. L. (HAD) DAI.E.S . . . Vltorous 74>jear*ol<! p r ^

peclor, returns w ith »ample»'Tfotn Oregon «pnt Uiat m ight provide »ome ot the tin A merica need*. (Tlmn-.S'rM Photo and Kngray-lu r l ------------- ---------------------------

.MAKItlAGE MCKNHKS SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 31 (/l',—

A marriage llcen.se wos L-uiuc<l to Roy 1^0 nc« l. 21, Lorenzo. Idalio, and Lola Hunter. 10. Roberts, Idalio.

t r a i l e r sWe ipeclallte In ba lld lnf 4-wbe*|- m bber tired w aien trallera th a t m ay be Dsed (or e ith e r C am wacona er ( ra lle n . . . itock tr a i le n . . . o the r tpccla l tn D - er*. Let us .detlgn a tra i le r ta f it your needs.

T A R RA U TO W R E C K IN G COV

' rb one B71

Ddn’t ForgetTHE ALBUM

GLOSE^OUT-Thank You

Tor your splendid response to our closing announcem ent. V on have'm aoe us fed th o t our efforts hdvo been truly appreciated.

C. of I. Students Win Honor Posts

M c M in n v il le , o re .. F eb . 21 i-t) —Two Collt-KC of Idalio s tu d e n u were electod to offlccn In th e Mu- tU ni cotignw-. of Intcr-A m crlcan af-

a unlciimrial Icsl.'.hitlvi' .'c^- ••'Ion hekl In connection wlUi Uie nn- nual UiillPid colIc«e Inv ita tional foreti-ilc loumamont.

Elglily tennus from 33 collcgc.'i in five slates ore p.irtlclpatlnK in Uie tourney.

TTio C. of I. ofllcers a re H arle j’ D anihart. .sprakrr pro lA n. and Duke Young. parlliimcnt4«riivi.

but PLEASED on'l pmljxine your p lans lo hove a poru-all m ade as we caii opera to oniy a.s long 03 our present, supplies last.

MOTHERSA vail y o u rse lf N O W o f I h b la s t .o p p o r tu n ity fo r nn A lbum p o r tr a i t o f y o u r baby .

For Appointmenta Please •Phone 402

Buy U. S. Defense - STAMPS and BONDS

YOURGUESSIS JUST AS GOOD AS ANYBODY'SIf we could seWnto the future w« wouldn’t hesitate to advise you about the Jiorae appliance situa­tion. But in view of the latest gov­ernment re/?uIations we wouldn't like to say just how long you will be able to buy these needed items. This we can say . . . we feel sure that you won’t be able to buy to as good advantage as you can right NOW.

Our present stocks of HEATING and PLUMBING eouipment ■—: are complete. We Iiave available anything you need. We nave'full ' stocks , of FRIGIDAIRE RANGES, REf'RIGERATORS and WATER HEATERSi When these are gone there will be no more.Our stock of GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGES and WATER HEATERS is large at the present but with no more available we don’t expect these to last long. In view of conditions in general we fee! wc owe it to Magic Valley people to urge you to buy the appliances you need JJOW.

EASY PAYMENT

TERMS ARE STILL

AVAILABLE ON

THESE APPLIANCES!

RECONDITIONEDIRON FIREMAN

STOKERWe hare on# used iloker. ' N 'Will sell thla with -a netrBttarantee. Ootne tn and bm . . . : • ■I t o r call 800 for --- - •

D E T W E I L E R'S

Page 6: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

Page S: - -TIMBS-NE-WS, TWIN PALL8rU>AH0 - ' Sunday, February 22, 1042

S O ei-A fe= E V E N T Sand C L U B i^ E W S

Evolution of Musical Art to , Be Department Program Motif

F in e A r ts 'd e p a r tm e n t o f th e T w e n tie th C en tu ry club will be cn tc rtftin ed w ith an h o u r’s projTriira on “ The Evo* iu tio n o f Muflic ft* tin A r t ” T u tsciny n t 2 :3 0 p . m. a t Iho P reaby tc riH n c h u rch parlors, Kivcn b y M rs. E ff io R ihcrd H inton'H p iano pupils, nssint- fld b y M rs. C a th e rin e . P o tio r, voicc.

MIhs JTnriaii T o lb e rt will Rive a flhort synopsia of m usic

• in each c c n tu ry , beg inning v i t l i th e G reeks, up to th e p re se n t tim e . I’iano o ctet, q u a r te t , duo and piano solo n u m b ers w il| be played to r e p re s e n t cnch ccn tu ry , and M rs. P o t te r w ill sinff selec­tio n s fro m th e M th , IC th (ind IG th cen tu ries,

r tc te r la l Backcround Aa » bftckcround. Mra. Hinlon. In

c*»iirgfl o f Uie progrftm, will nrr»ngo ■ picturf.i rcjirpscntliiK minle nlncc

the bcRlimluR o ( tlm p; llliuitritlloiu of mujilcftl itMlrumpnui. dftUni: Irom 3,000 ycftm before Clirlst. ana bvula' of tnu&lcliins of^lIT^reni.peilcKls.

M rt. Wimjun>S&ker will T>realde M depATtment chklnnKn. and M n . F. W. H ardur will b« h o a ltii com- m litea chairm an. b u U W by Mni. H. A. e«verln, Mr«. P . R. Tliomp- M n, M n . O tcar W alker, Mm. o . p . W urster and MU# AJberU simond.i.

Q uinw t num ber will b« played by M1.1S Ja n e t P ink. M lu Bntburn lU ndatl, N orm an Johnson. Donald NclUen and R obert N ell« n : oci*t by MUs Jo a n WlUon. ML« Tolbert. MLU Pink, MlM Randall. Norman and Arnold Johnson and Donnld and R obert Nellscn.

rU n o Duo. SelcM Duo will be preucnlcd by

M orsle Robertjon a t piano number one. nnd M urray N orth a t piano num ber tw&.

P lano ootos will bo played by M ur­ray N orth, repreM ntlns th s IDth c en tury : MIm W lbon. I7 th century; Mlsa T olbert. 18th cenlurj-; Mli^ R andall. 20th century, and MLw Robertflon. I8th c en tu ry .^

Ouesta will be welcome. Election of ofllcera Li uchedultd for the buiU nesa session. ^

U. P. Boosters’ Auxiliary Host

At Card PartyU. P. Boosters' auxiliary membeni

-fn terla ln etl th e ir liii.ibnndi a t .a curd pa rty F riday ' ji l ih i nt the Ida-

everffTceiia on e ither hide.T lie »t«K« wfts decorated wlUi

small c reea loRn. with red hatchets stuck In them . Table. decoraUons and Tcfre.tlimenL'i were patrlo 'lc in them e. .

P inochle prizes went to Mr>. M. P . Ocheltrec. A. J . Aulb.tcli. Mlaa rio rence I,U4lc and Fred Pnrmer. Mrs. O us Blaaer and M. Pntton won tha Chlne.'.c checkers prizes,

Jom m lttcc on arrnngem euu In­cluded M rs. J . P . O rr, chairman; M rs. L. H. Luik. M n , J. O. Doolittle. Mm . a . j , Aulbnrh, Mrs. J, H,'Allen and Mr*, D. L. Moon, —

* * *

Salmon Social Club Benefit Successful

71ie benefit d.incc a t whlcli S a l­mon Social club members en terU ln- ed Friday evening a t the American Legion M emorial hfill was termed a n out-'tAJidlng success yeiterday by

- Diflclals, who said tlia t more t lu n 300 persons a ttended th e affair.

Proceeds from the dance are used to carry ou t the club's extcnilvo wel­fare projects.

S upper was served a t midnight by women of tlie club, uiider Uie direcUon of Mr«. EstJier O'Dell, president. Elmo l''arrar and hU or­chestra pnnlrted music.

Castleford- Pupils Entertain Friends

CASTLEFORD. Feb. 2 t—Gladys and Modelyn L ockliart wera host- ease« a t a d inne r pnrly Saturday evening a t the ir home, Tlie 18 hlch

- achool s tuden ts wero seated a t one long table. Following dinner a num ­ber o f KTuneB w ere playet!.

P resen t were M ortlyn Heller, Dor- o thy B r w n , B e tty Conrad. Betty M urphy. R u ih V an Zante, Norma J e a n DOTTOW. Ja ck Hill, Gaylord n io m a a . G«m Brown, T ed Tliomp- oon. BUI RoeldeK R a lph nobens. O Uck W ebb a n d Johnny Dartnaga.

* ¥ •

CalendarH ie ta R ho O lrU ' elub wiu meet

« « *H leh league fellowship will meet

today a t fl;30 p . m . to r tho regular evening hou r serricefl a t the M eth­o d ist church- AU hl«h ochool boys a n d glrU are tnvlj«d to attend.

♦ ♦ *Wlmndtttisl club wlU m eet a t the

l io n s of M n . L enna B. Wilson, 319 K tsh th avenue rtorth. Wednesday

— ror a 1:30 l». m . luncheon. M rt. W ilson a o d M n . s . H . Taylor will

' C lrd* Ko. 3, W . a . C. 5. of U»e M etliodU t church , will m eet a t the

• church p u lo r* ia r a po t-lud t lun-

. to a . Mcmbera a re asked to b t p rep ftred 'to do Red C ro u oevlne.

G.O.P. Organizer

National Republican Head to Speak Here

T w in F a ils c o u n ty R epub lican W om en'a IcaRue^ hafl a r - ranffcd an a rea-w id e p u b lic m eeting TucHday, M arch n t 8 p . m., a t w h ich M isa M nrlon K. M arlin , a s s ia ta r t f c h a ir ­m an of th e R epub lican n n tio n n l-co m m itted ,’ Will be th e p rincipal .Speaker, Mls-"? M. Izetl.i McCoy, c h a irm a n , a n ­nounced ye.sterday .

T h e HO.<tsion, w hich intero.'^tcd men and w om en th ro u g h o u t th is .section a r c ex p cc ted to a tte n d , w ill p robab ly be held a t th e A m erican L eg ion hall, nccordinff to Mi.ss McCoy.Precedifjff th e pu]l;lic m ee tin g , a d in n e r will be se rv ed a t 6 :110 p. m. a t th e Paric h o te l, honor- injr iMIas M artin .

R«Kulivr oieetlne of (he W omcn'i Republican league, scheduled foi Fab. 23, hos-lM cn-canceildd bA0Aiu4 of It-i’proxlmlly to the da te of the nutlonal leader’n visit here.

MLvi M artin hoa been Identified w ith the national com m ittee since June, 1030. Her In terest In politics besan In her Initial college day.i a t Wellesley. She continued h e r poll*Ucal observations a n d studies n t the U niversity of M aine, a n d a t Yale milverslly. where she w m ntudylng law a t th e time of her acceptance of the directorship of th e women's division.

She Is one of M aine's leading cUI- ,....‘na .H e r contribution t4 public .ler- vfee began in ISSO when she was elected to th e M aine house of rep re ­sentatives. She served tw o term.i, and then was elevated lo the .lenaic.

~ d -

Two Birthdays Honored a t Gay

Dancing P artylIonorlnB a irousT of he r friends,

Miss Shirley Scliwendlman en ter- Inlnetl a t an Informal dnnclnR party Friday evenltiR In tlia recreaU on room a t th e home of h e r paren ts, M r. and Mrs. R. J . Sehwendlr

^hoshone s tre e t easU U) Miss Schw endlman and Miss

Bnrbnra Beymer, one ot th e aur^t.1. celebrnred Uielr b irthdays durUig the week.

In keeping w ith the se u o n , O eorge W ashtnston m otifs figured In the decorations and cherry punch was irrre<t d u r in g , - th t- o v e n ln i w ith tiny, open-faced sandwiches.

Guests, besides Miss Bchwendl- an and MI.-lS Deymer, Included

Ml;.i J a n e t H unter. ML« OeorBla Burve-ns, Mlaa Gene OkVrander, Mias P a t Campbell, Ml.ss D onna G raham . M lu Lois Pettycrove, MUs C a th ­erine G raves. MI.m M arilyn N orth.

Shlrl KnlRht, J im Campbell. Enrl Barne.n, Jack Goodhue, Dick Victor, H arry Slradley, Fred Van Engelen, Tom 01m.itead, Don Balsch and John Hood, ^

¥ ♦ ¥

Home GardeningProjects Urged

HOLLISTER. tYb, 31 — Salm on T rac t Home Makers club m et W ednesday a t Uic home of M rs. Rose Dobbs. wlUi .Mrs. F rank E a a ta a n a-Mlstant ho.iiejji.

.Mr.', Nora PIcrce called the club's itientlon to the need for home gar*

dens thU: spring. T he Red Cross dimes collection was |t,4Q. BerUe' Sclm lU cr r c c tlv rd -th e ..white ele­phant.

Mrs. M argare t >UU C arter save a dem onstration on m aking of p ic ­tures and ta lk on home accessories ana Uie .remodelW* of clothes.

T he remodeling class will m eet M arch 4 and 5 a t th e home of Mrs. PearJ Berry for a l l - d a y meetings, under MLns G allatin 's Instruction, Those participa ting in th is c la s i ' a re urged lo be on time a t 10 a, m, A pot-luck Juncheon will be served

noon.Gur.'iLs were Mrs. n rck le P n rro tl

and .Mrs. Goldie L rlchllier. ,R elreahm enla were served by Uic

hostess. N e»t meeting to be held a t the home of Mrs. Nellie Pasloor, All members are urged to be pres­e n t fo r the eledtion of officers.

¥ ¥ *

Monthly Social for Dan McCooU Circle

Mrs. Haxel G ardner en terta ined -Dan McCook circle. U d ie s of Uie G rand Army of the Republic, a t the montlily social Friday nfternom j a t her home. A&tlslant hontesses were Mrs, C lara WlrUi. M n . M arUia SmlU) and Mrs. Addle .Moore.

Mrs. OHIc SmlLlj was lu-clinrR c of a patrloUc prosrnm , durlnR which Mrs. Hasel Lelghion won th e prlre In an a rtis t's contesU and M rs. Nel- Ue Personette and Mrs. G ardner,- p r ta a In a •president's contest.

ML-a O eraidine McDonald, accom ­panied by Mrs. G ardner, played -Humoresque" and "God B lc« Amcrlca" as violin solos.

■Themanus M em bers. Entei-tain_HusbaridsCAffTLEPOnD. Feb. 31 -M o»bO T

of ‘H icm onus club en terta ined a t a p a rty recently fo r th e ir hus­bands a t th e homo of Mr. a n d Mrs. A lbert H eller. Ftoltowlng dinner, four tables o f Pinochle a n d th ree tab les o f bridge w ere In play.

Prizes a t p inochle were awovded Jo h n Thomaa. A lbert H eller aod C he tte r M cO ala a n d a t hrtdge, U o Peterson and F red JUngert. -

Miss Marlon T~ M artin , a sslston l chairm an of the Republican n*« tlonal committee and direc tor o t the women's dlvlsinn, who will a d - d m s an area-w ide meeUng her* Tuewtsy, M arch 3.

D.A.R. Qhapter Sets Washington Luncheon Party

day luncheon for TwiniC ton t: F a lls I

McMasters W ill,Be Chairmen of

Elks Card P artyMr. and Mrs. W illard M cM astcr,

Hansen, are chairm en of the Elka bridge party Wednenday evening.Feb. 35, In the V enetian room a t Uie Elks hall.

T hird of a series of^lx, post- ho1l< day card parties, tlie even t will begin a t 8 p, m. A.uliUng Mr. a n d Mrs. McMaster on the hM t“ coni“ m lttee will be Mr. and Mrs. H arry D entoh and Mr. and Mrs, C harles Coiner.

A buffet supper will follow the bridge games.

¥ ¥ ¥Mrs. J. L. Berry Is

(<5em State HostessM r«r3 .-L . Berry was hostess lo

Gem S tate Study club members a t h e r home, 730 Third avenue west, a t luncheon Friday afternoon. H onor­ing W ashington's blrUiday, a p a trl­oUc rto tlf figured in the decorative' scheme. -■

Mrs. Amanda Llncoln assUied her daughter in serving.'-

Mrs, Hilda T a rr conducted a brief business meeting, during which members voted to make a qu ilt fo r

needy family-.Honors a t cards ae iii to Mr,i,

P earl S traughn anfl^M ru Zelphn Lincoln. "DlrUiday P«r*“{!lfta w ent ^ Mrs. Del Tucker and M rs. ^^am c3, PefTRy Ju n e Dowe’and Dor- Btraughn. othy YounR in charRc. Next nieeUng

Mrs. Russell Ham will en terta in wllW>e held a t the home of DoroUiy the club M arch 8, | and Dorla Young,

Feb. 33, a t 1 p. m. a t a p riv a te dh>. ing room of the Rogersoa hotel, chap ter oJHclals announced yester­day.

G eneral rha lrm an of iarrangC' m enta for tiia. a ffa ir, social high ' llglit of the c u h e n t season fo r thi chapter, ii Mrs. W. H, EJdridge.

M™. Hill In C h a r te Mrs. W ilbur S. Hill Is chairm an

of the committee plan tilng th e pro­gram In tribute to th a F a th e r of our Counlry. and Mrs. S turgoon 8 McCoy will preside a t tooHtinoatfr

Decorntloiis, appropria te to the occa.ilon. are under the direc tion or M rs, A. A- Gordon.

I t u an ticipated th a t chaptei m m ibrrs who attended th e lunch* eon In Boise yesterday a t which M rs. William H. Pouch, W aahlng- ton . D. O.. pre.ildent general o f the nn tionsl D. A. R„ w u honored guest will give a repoy of th e m eeting.

At Del»« Meet Mrs. A, R. Scott. H ansen, chap ter

regent, and Mr.i. H. J . W all. Mrs. H ill and Mr*. R, R. S pa fford were among Twin Palls ch ap te r delegatesBt th e Boise luncheon.--------------------

T hey were e jpeeted to r e tu rn to Tw in Falls late la.it n if h t . ,

¥ ¥ ¥

Pocatello GuestFeted a t Supper

Honoring Miss Ju n e Sorenson, Pocatello, a cWlI aupper waa given Wecliiesdny evenlnR a t th e hom e ol MlM Beverly Woolley. G uests were Mlsa L avern Bchmldt, Miss Doris M n ^ MlM Neola P a trick , m u j F rieda HarUey and M rs. J. Clark, .

L ntrr the RueaU a tten d e d ths theate r. Miss Sorenson has been a house guest of M iss W oolley the p a s t week.

¥ W ¥

Smiling Through Officers Chosen

Mrs, E dith W hitehead wa.'jtnamed ..cw pre.'.ldent. o f tlie Bmlllnir T hrough club. Auceeedlng M r s ^ a r ^ C. Richards, a t th e m eeting t^lda} afternoon a t the home of MrsyUen- n le J i. Crowley. /

Named to rerve wlUi h e r wers M n . Pearl Swenson, vloe-prealdenl, nuoceedlns Mrs. Crowley, a n d Mrs. N athella W hitehead. s e c rB ta ry ,'r -- ceedlna M rs. M yrtlS’ A lnaworth.

HlRhllBhtinB song sung by sro tip wa.1 "Smiling ThrouBh Uie Y ears," w ords a n d m usic of which were w ritten by M rs. M yrtle O, Dib­ble, form er member. In tribu te to M^s. Mae Price. I t w as the firstU m eTlie ftO ng-had-bectt.Jun£-_____

'M rs. Price read two tim ely jimms, ..ud Mra. Cleone BeU gave In.itruc- ilon.V ln .kn lltlng . Mrs. Bell was also nam ed to con tact the Red Cross to secure m ateria ls so members may

for th a t group At the next m eet-inR.

( A M P m i 3 - ^ « 1R L S

KODATAHI K odatah i Camp Fire croup m e t at

the home of Mr.i. W, A. Van E nse- len. aM l.itnnt guardian. Dorts Y ounj pre.nlded. T he collection of can ­celled Ktamps and tinfoil m j ex­plained. Requlrcm cnu for tlie rank of flrem aker were dUCTis.''ed. Plana were m ade for a d inne r fo r tlie g roup w ith DorU Young, B arbara

A “FARM CONGRESS”FOR O u l l . . . .

FARM WOMENa t the

FREE COOKING SCHOOL

IDAHO POWER CO. AUDITORIUM

THURSDAY, 10 A. M.F arm hom e m n n a p e rs w ill en jo y th is special ' Kcaaion devoted to p r e p a ra tio n o f defense foods. L c a m to p ro lo n g th e u se o f e lcctrical npplinnces by p ro p e r lyire. L e a rn , too , ho'T to . p re p a re in ex p en s iv e foods th e Inexpensive w a y !

Cottie!. and bring cTfriend!

Red Cross Takes Over In “L ab” of Scien tist

By JEA Jf filN K ELA C K IBT he Red C ro ss g o es ev e ry w h ere— «vejr I n to - th e la b o ra ­

tories o f the world’a f f rc a te a t Bcientiata.S ign ifican t of th e s e t im e s , w hen th e w orld Is v e rg in g

into b laek o u ta and o th e r d arknesaea, has been th e r e c e n t d iam an tlin j o f a fam o u s lab o ra to ry in Sw am psco tt. M ass.. under th e d i r e c t i o n 'o f M ra. E llh u T hom son, w ho F r id a yconcluded a v isit in T w in ------------------ —Falls..

K nittinsr m ach in es a n d can- tecn supplies— sym bols of th e Red Cross, " lig h t o f th e w orld" — h a v e rep laced th e equ ipm ent o f th e l a te E lih u Thom abn, w h o in ven ted th e three-coil a rm a tu re f o r d y n a­m o a n d m o to rs , a n d th e m e te r f o r d ire c t an d a l tc m a t- ing cu rren ts .

“S l n n u o w Task Mrs. Thofflion. 'ilrlhood friend of

Mfj, J . H . fieaver, Twin Falla, u the widow of P rtif, Thom son, one of the foundirs o f the G eneral Elec­tric company, w ith 700 pa ten ts to his credit.

"atrenuoui" wo* the word Mrs,ThORUon us«d,'ln describing the re ­cent transiutin o f the second floor of the old cosch house, a t the rea^ of her larg* h r lck home. Into ator- ace Q uarten a n d sswine and k n lt- tln ( production units for* th e Swampscott lU d Cross ch ip te r .

Accessible in d ta fi , (he laboratory 1.1 port of an e a u te of three acres of rround, lM *t*d' n ear th* town hall and thb police slaU on. She bou jh t th e knitUng m ach ln u , and la loaning th e n (o Uie Red Cross "for tlie dursilon ."

"All o t a ludden I h ad a hunch to come ou t to T « 'ln Falls, 'my sec­ond home.'-acd-»«e the J.JC -Seavers and a ll of m f other very good friends," M n, T hom son explained.She llket sptfd A nd action, and pre- feri plane Usv^l to any o ther farm- ah* took the SU-eamllner to Chicago, and from Uiera boarded a n Am eri­can Alrwayi p la n e for Boston, on her re tu rn trip.

She- bellevei I n "obeying th a t Im-

Former, Burley Resident Weds

BURLCV. r e b . J l - O f In ttres t to Burley people la Uie announcem ent of the m o^tRO of T had Sulkeley, son of M r. snd W ri. flam Bulkeley, Burley, to U la s R ita Voorheea. daughter o f Mr. a n d Mrs. Reid Voor- liee.i, Gunnijon. U tah, th e wedding taklnit place W ednesday. Fob. 11. in the S a lt Lake X^D3. temple, w ith President Chlpman, of th e temple, ofriclaUng.

Parontj of t h e bride. Ui« brlde- RToom’s mother ana Mr, and Mrs, Preston Stocks, of Burley attended the couple.

. W Ktdlni D inner Wedneoday evening a d inner was

served a t a StU t Lake City lYoui h onoring 'th» couple. wlUi members o f both famine.*! and a few (riend.i pre.ient. Tlie tnble waa centered wlUi a th rei.U ered wedding cake.

Mrs. Bulkeley wore a w hile sa tin and n e t gown w ith * conage of talism an rowbuds, Mr. and Mr*. Bulkeley will b « a t hom o' In Balt Lake City alter M arch 1-

Mr. Bulkeley 1-4 a g raduate of Bur- •lerh lgh-sehool-U U SJiuiQ tL attfnrtz eh the U nlverilty of Idaho„southern branch, one year . He received ffpe- cinl tralnln{ In radio a n d %-orkrd a.'t announcer a n d prer.i m an a t the Twin Falla rad io stau o n for some time, before en llx tln i In the army last July, ifa la a ttach ed to the fir»i oommunlcatlon flciuadran a t the Sa lt Lake a ir bsie l u a radio operator. H e filled a two-year mlaalon for the L.DB. church in the w estern states.

IU ner«d a t Ball Mr,i. niilkelcy ^attended Brljtham

T h e t i r l t h a t a l l

th e b o y s a d o r e Wears iatlortd shlrU by

BROADCLOTH SHIRT$ | 2 9

O a r c t u i e a « r t e o n * baek acaSa aad « c a b for th la tal- Io r« l a h 2 n . . . ta d tt 'a mor* Uion tb« lev p rice th a t n a k n It M p o p o k rl Tha t^ le r is c ia flawkM. iP a c n ftiQ aad it w o n 't sbrlak oot o f atxe.S«T«n lorslr vatHlred color^ ab«rf«>Iy waahabk. W hlt^ B l tw ^ D s s ty P ia k . H a l x a .A ^ 8 l M a 3 3 * a « X

Bertha Campbell’s Store

*rswt« •k .u ic * M M t. I %

pulse," b e au se "51 per cent o f Uie things you do, tu rn oift for th a best, anyway,'' and so a few veeka ago she arrived here for the fo u rth visit In Uiree years.

But no t lo spend a •■quiet" Ume, for u one of Tw in Palls ' m oat wel­come lueaU. her arrival was h e ra ld ­ed by a whirl of luncheons, d lncera and parUes,

B leiraphy PUnned a h a le ft with a renewed energy

for another special task ah ead of her, a uU t|ng David O . Woodbury, New York City, son of the fam ous marine painter. In preparaU on of ProT. Thomson's biography. T he west has a sUmulaUng e ffec t on her. Mrs. Thomson contends.

She believes Woodbury to be an excellent choice a s biographer of her husband, because of his own scien­tific background, and his profession­al association a l th Prof. Thomson,

"For a long time we have w an t­ed a biography th a t would be Inspir­ational. sparkling and yet techn i­cally perfect. Rclcntlflcally accurate," aald Mrs. Thomaon. Houghton, M if. fUn will be Uie publishers,

Woodbury has already eondueted exUnslve Interviews wlUi friends and auoclatcs of the scientist, who was acting president of Boston in - sUtut4 of Technology from 1030 to 1621. and who was the Hrst to receive th e rd lsc n medal.

Woodbury, au thor of 'T h e Qlass O la n t of Palomar." and "Colorado Conquest," will "bury" himself m th e archives of th e American Ph ilo ­sophical society In PhlladelplUa, perusing the papers. letters a n d rec­ords of Prof. Thomson, geiUng final d a ta for the book.

Thomson. Franklin Prof. Thomson's notable papers

w ritten for various socleUes. h is ex­tensive correspondence th ^ u g h o u t the world, and other rccorda of a rich, productive life, are kept as the letters and pspcrs of Benjam in Franklin are kept by Uie noclety, the papers In large red leaUier-ljound books, p u t In a safe, nnd all of the le tters In catalogue files.

Mrs. Thomson, who has malnt.-iin- ed an enriching friendship and cor­respondence throiish the year.-, w ith Mr*. Seaver, made her first tr ip to Tft'ln Fall,i three years nKO, b u t one of her m ost exciting experiences was learning to ihoot, slie sold.• J . H. seaver, Jr.. local d rn ft board

hesd. started her on this pastim e up

Young unlverfllU' and took bualnes.i' traliilng-Wi 8nlt Lnkc City. She ha« t>e*n employed a t the M orrHon-M cr- n il Lumber company ofllcr.

Saturday evenlnft the EnaiRn make of the L.D,a. church held lu "Sw eet­h e ar t Ball" In th e la fay e ttA room of the Hotel U tah, and Mr. an d Mm. Bulkeley a-«re crowned, k in ? and (jueen of awecthearui a t the dance.

Panhellenic to Have ^ Guest Event M^y 2

Panhellenic asao c ia tio n ’a a iraual g u e s t d ay lunchcon h a s been ca len d ared -fo r-M ay 2 r - U r f l^ o b o r t W e rn er, p re s id e n t, announced a t th e F e b ru a ry luncheon o f th e g ro u p y e s ­

te rd a y a t th e P o rk hotel.

Mrs. Blodgett ■To Tell O.E.S.

Gf ‘Polio’ WorkMrs. &nm a K. B lodgett will d is­

cuss the organUaUon o f InfantUe raraly tla FoundaUon U ia p ten la Idaho, wlien she addresses Twin Falls chapter. Order of th e E astern S U r. Tuesday a t B p. m. a t the M a­sonic temple.

>trs. E. Clifford Evans wlU be tn large of Uie program . W llle tU ^arber». daughter of M r. and M n .

Qeorsc Warberg; will play several piano soloa. Bert Sweet, Jr.. will give - PatrloUc reading. Preston H enm an

111 present a whistling aolo.Mra. Paul Rowan will be in charge

of refrtshm en ii

in the Sawtooth range la s t year. I t was Uie first Ume she had aver handled a pistol. Now she haa a ta r- Bet shoaUng range righ t on th e lower floor of the old coach house in Swampscott,

When will she be back again? W hen she "geU a hunch" to see the Seavers, or dKldes th a t Ufa In Uie east u a b it too strenuous, momen- u n iy .

. M rs. L y le F ra z ie r , c h a ir ­m an ; M rs. A . L . N o rto n and M rs. M. K . J a rv ia w er« h o s­tesses.

f ttr lo U o decoraUons, Including ru m drop cherry trees, formed the decorations.

M r^ Olen T rail and Mra. Howard Hall wen honor# a t bridge. '

Mra. D ulfy R«ed was Uie guest of M n, Gordon D. Oldham- a t ths luncheon.

« « «

Miss Rutherford ■ Feted a t Party

MUs O n o ra Mae R u therford was honored a t a surprise b irthday party a t the home of Mlsa Je an H ayward Friday nlghU I t was tn celebration of h er n t h anniversary.

Singing, dancing and games d i­verted the 'g roup, and gltta were received by the honoree. A p ink and w hite decorated cake, bearing the name of the honoree, form ed the centerpiece, and the patrio tic them e prevailed.

T iny hau h e t^ were Uie iavora th a t m arked places for u is a Maxine N lm en,'M lM Luclle Jacklln . Mlsa Stella Orene,-' the hcmoree an d the hoAtess.

K N O W the difference inLusteri^d Cl

Loiterislnc U an ADDED (reatm eni th a t reittlta in rM toring th a filler or siting (rand in new m ateria ls. I t Is a disllnet Improvement ever ordinary mathodv

andSta-Press

Pressing aasurea you th a t year eioUies '^ l i really HOLD th a t, rraaee n a o h longer.

20% D ISC O U N T for CASH arid CARRY

£xaas/v£C /£ /! /V £ /2 S

( ; v e r p W W l W W a « - -

rn rU . t ) n v in g s ic a u iij , tw o cab lcs >n »»• ^

^„cnch for 1600 W ; /in i tc « « ' '• *" ’ . ^ c o m p l c w d

1, is a major & f o r .He

TH[ inOUnTflin.STATES p p p n E l TELECRBPH CO. '

fo r Fmhirw : . . B uy D r/tn tc D c»dt a n d Stamp*

Page 7: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

S"nHny, February 22, 1942 -TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS,IDAHO

SOGI-AL E V E N T S a n d CLUBv N E W S

Annette Morse and { W. B. Thomas Wed

B U H L , Fcb._21— T h e hom e o t M r. and M rs. B . C. M orse. B ilhl, th e sccne o t a q u ie t. ■Rimpic wcddinpT S a tu rd a y a t - p. m . w h en th e i r d a u g h te r , M iss A n n e tte C aro l M orae. becam e th e b ride o f W illiam B. T h o m as, son o f M rs. C. D. T h o m as, T w in F a lls . T h e sm - Kle r in g acrv icc w a» read by Ilcv . Cccil G. H an n an , puHtor o f th e B uh l M e th o d is t chu rch . T h e b rid e w as };iven in m ar- rlnRC by h e r fa th e r .

N u p tia l \-0 W 3 -w e r e , cx : ch an g ed in f ro n t o f th e f i re ­place, in th e p rcscnce o f th e im m ed ia te famiiic.'! an d a few in tim a te friend.s. T h e m an te l w as banked w itli flnapdraKon-s in p'aHtcl colors, (ind held cande lab tti o f liR hted candles in ro se a n d w h ite .

W e n n S p r in t Suit----- T h 9 brtdB chose to t h e r Wedding

ft »prlns *uU of beige .unci brown plftld, w ith ftcceasorlcs of lugBBBC u n . H er corsage was rose carnft- Uons.

» A liendlns Uie wedding besides Ihe bridal pa ir were Mr. a n d Mrs. n . C. Morse. M iu G eraldine Morac. Dulil; Mr*. C. D. Thom as, T w in Kftlla, Mr. Rex Thomoa wid Mr. nnd Mrs. Rex •I’homiia. Jr., Tw in FalLi; Mr. and Mrs. W arren Starkey , Mr. and Mr.i. O. A. L lniy, flnd Rev. H nnnan,B uhI.

Im m ediately followlnB Uie ccre- mony. rcfrcshm enla were served In Uio d ln ln s room. T lie dining inblo was covered w ith Ince cloU» w id held an w ra n se m cn l o t RnopdrnRon.i and candles In cO'fVil holders. T lie iwo- Uered weddlnk cake, Iccd In rose and whllo and lopped wlUi Uio brid­a l m otif, was cu t In iradlUonal m an-

T» ld ih » FalU, T he bride nnd bridegroom went to Idftlio Pulls lal« U iat aficm oon, w here they will make Uielr home. M r. Thom as, who has been affiliated with the Puller Brush company for a num ber of years, working a t Buhl and for the past two monUis a t Baker. Ore.. has been tran.ifcrred by Ujc company to th e . Idaho Palls te rritory.

T h e bride Ln a graduate of the B uhl high schoo l.'and 'a lU nded the U niversity o f-Id«bo n t^ o s c o w and n t th e lo u tl iem b ranch . Pocatello. She aUo a ttended tlie U tah Agricul­tu ra l COIICBC a l Logan, U tah, for p a rt of a year, nnd for Uie pant seven m onths !io.i been lib rarian for

■ th e Bulil public llbrnry.TJie bridegroom Is a g raduate ot

the Ta-ln PnlLi hiKh school, and n l-__tended ..the_U ulvcrslty_oLJdhl»a_atl

Moscow, and Uie souUierii bru iiih . . . ^ ‘Pocatello.

Bridal ShowerT he bride was the InsplraUon for

a pa rly ond shower a t Uie home of Mrs. W arren Starkey Wcdne-^dny evening. Mrs. O . A. L lnry was o-vilst- Ing hostess. Covers were m arked n t qua rte t tables for 30 guests, for ~ 1:30 p. m . dinner.

E ach smaU table ’ held a clever cent*rplece of m irror, an im al fig­urines and BTcenery. T lie evening's diversion was con tract bridge. Mrs. LcsUo Jackson was aw ardrd the prize for high score, and M rs. Rene Ber- theau for .lecond h igh scorc.

* * *

Vitamin B Foods .' Speaker’s Topic

Program h ighlight a t Uie meeting of the Ttt'hi Palis Home Economics a.voclaUon Friday n igh t f t Uie home of MUs Lucille Johnston v.aa the In­form ative addrfR.1 on "Tlie Vltninln D Complex" by Mrs, Ru.-jcll Mll-

Durlng her S lk , she cniptia.',lzp(l ( h e - n e e d o t- In c lu d in g cnrlched breads nnd whale g rain cerrnls In the d iet, since they are rich In vlta- m an B — th e v liam ln . often

' lacking in Uie avernge illct.Speelftl guesLi'w ere Mrs. Bcii R.

T illery and M rs.'^e lm u Johiwoii.P lana lo r the meeUng M arch 0

a t th e home of Mrs. H orry Ball were m ade during a brief buslnc.-u m eet­ing. Miss Bonnie Lnng will be In charge of the progm m ' on vitamin c .

Paul PTA Has Founder’s Day

PAUL, Peb. 21 — Founder's dny. honoring Uie beginning of P . T . A. 45 yeara ago. a banquet waa held

. WMlnesday a f lh e P a u l high sthool. Plftcca were laid for 30 members and Interested patrons.

T lie homemaklng domeaUc science clas.1. sponsored by th e ir teacher, ML-.1 T heda Nelson, d id Uie serrlng.

Mr*. M argare t K ip C arter, home , dem onstm lcr. gave an InteresUng

talk on nutrition , wlUi th e beneflta for naUonal defense.. MLu Ryan, domesUc science teach­

e r of r j ip e r t CKpl^lnetl, about the ' c lo it on nutrlU on, which is being

held each Tue.^day and haa Ju st been a tarted In Rupert.

A Pounder'* day program followed the hiiiquet. In charge o t P .-T Jl. president Mrs. C. D . B arclay, 'a nd under Uie leadership o t Mis* Nel*on.

Reports were given on defense committees. T alks by county super­in tendent, Airs. C lara H ansen and Mr*. C. O., Sanford. Melvin GruwcU Jed d iscuulons and ta lk s were given by Uie high scliool epeed i elaja.

Mrs. U. U. Locnnder and Miss Vlr- Clnla Schodde were appointed nom* inaUng committee who will le iee t sn o th e r member, and th e th reo will choose • president fo r the- coming

—i’car.________________

Alpha Iota Unit Honors Founder On Anniversary

Z ela Eta chap ter. Alptia Iota, in - lernnUonal honorary buslnc.vi sor­ority. celebrntfd Its flr.it ann iver­sary Friday evening n t Uie home of Mrs, Edyth KoonU. 2C0 Taylor street.

Mlsn Shirley D unlap, president, lighted Uie one w hite candle on Ihe '•V for Victory" birthday cake In iionor of Mrs. Frances Carver, founder of Uie local chapter, who Is seriously 111 In a S a lt Lake Oily ho*- plUl. T lie cake was cu t by Mrs. Max Phillips, sponsor.

Mls-s D unlap then unwrapped Uie anniversary gltt—a gavel tied with blue 'n d w hile ribbons, th e .wr* orlly'A colors—which had been -lent to th e chap te r hy Mrs. Cnrver. E ar­lier In Uie evening, some of the members h a d talked to Mr.i. Cnrver by long distance telephone.. Pestivllles Included a waffle sup­per; a pntrloUc program nnd a farewell g ltt show er for Mrs. Hnrold Molenkamp, who Is lenvlnir next m onth w ith Mr. Molenkamp for Denver. Colo., where they will establlsli k-csldence.

Jam ea C. Rej’nolds snng "We Must Defend A merica" nnd "Wrnp Your Dream s In the Red. W hite and Blue," accompanied by Mrs, O. P. Duvall. At prc-'.ent ih fre is but one copy of Uie form er -song In Twin Falls, property of Mrs. 31. L, Mog- se lt. H e sang It f irs t by special re­quest n t a TwenU eth Ccniurj' club luncheon, and has also prr.ienled It a l a Kiw anls club meeting.

Mias Jean D lnkclackcr. nn honor­ary mem ber o t Uie chnplcr, gave an ouUlne o t w hat Tv.ln r a ils women can do lo r national defense. American beauty rosebud corsages, chap te r flower, were presented to Mrs, Duvall nnd MLvi Dlnkelackcr,

¥ » ¥

Mother-DaughterDinner Given ByBuhl Church MenBUHL. Feb. 21 — MoUicrs

dauglitcra o I Uio B uhl Presbyterian churc li were honored guc.iLs annual party given by m en .. . church who prepared nnd sen 'cd the dinner W ednesday to 85.

As wnltcrs, yw nK men of Uie cliurch, dre.v« l In « ie gay nlUrc of toreadors u i d . holding a lo ft large Irays, perform ed nn elnbornte drill

Jof-U ic oiit»rU>lnnieiit of iheirBue?rt.T preceding d inner. Mrs, W. J . Illp - pUnger wim pianist. T able decora­tions were In Uic patriotic Uieme.

Mrs. J . A. Howard presided n t d in ­ner, Introducing Uie program bers.

Robcrl Aupj>erle sang two soIm . "Drink to Me Only WlUi T lilhe B)-cs." and "Inv itation ,” accom pan­ied by Mrs, lUppllnger.

Two humorous readings given by Vera Mae Ambrose and Elit-ibeUt Webber.

Ctie«t KpeaiierBurton D rifss . M iperlntendtnl b t

Ihe S ta te School fo r Uie Deaf and Blind n t Qoodlng, pre.senled four young women from the scliool. who favored wlUi trio number*. " I Passed by Your Window." and •T lir W lllte Cliffs or'DOVer.*' I n vocal p a rts were MIm DoroUiy MacMillan, form erly of AusU-nlln: MJ.M Josephine OLv:n and MIm DoroUiy W eaver. Mrs. M ildred FcrrLs was piano accom pan­ist.

Imprevilve RcadliirAn ImpreAslye p a rt o t h is subject

was Uic Tending. 'T l ie Cowbc^'s Prnycr," Mr.i.-BurtoiUirlgBiIt in Uie spoken word while Mr. Drlggs gave Uie reading In slgn.i. At Uie conclu.rlon, MLw O rn Lucille Drigg* sang, "A Child's Prayer," bj- A. A. Milne.

Chfllrmnn nnd chief chct for Uie dinner was J . H. Barker. J . H. Bhcr- fry serving as Xlr^l osa lslan t chcl. 0 . C. Voeller was chairm an o f-th e program, committee. ‘ FdlioWTnr tfie d inner, contributions to th e church building fund were made by tha wo­men. who gave U. S. defense stam ps, for Oils purp<»e. _

« ¥ «

Mrs. John Thomas Hostess a t Br4dge

SHOSHONE. Feb. 21—M rs. Jo h n Tliomaa en terta ined member* and g iiesu of Uio D J ^ .O . Club Uil* weeic a t a 7 o'clock supper. Bridge wan In play a t th ree t a b l e s

“w ith Mrs. Edwin Orosse a n d M rs. L anjberl Q peld lng w inning high scores for Uie club, nnd M rs. C h trie s MnrUn w inning high gu«st p rlie . Mrs. P au l Haddock wa* a lso a guest.

• * * ' * Episcopal Pastor

. Addresses RotarySHOSHONE. Feb. 31 — Shailitm o

R otary club m et W ednesday noon for luncheon In Uie Legion M emor­ia l building. Lee K ennedy, program cliairm on. Introduced Rev. Edward Birch, EpLicopal m ln lsU r from Gooding, who pave an InteresUng ta lk on the h i s t o r y ^ and p resen t

.conditions In Ireland.Edwin aroase Introduced & u ig n

O orden Custer, home on leave from Corpus Christ!. Tex..- who gave a sh o rt ta lk on naval avlaUon.

Defense stam p* were *-on by How­a rd Adkins.

F ou r guests v e re p rese n t from Ooodlwr, Incltidlng E arl Bolte, Jo« M ePadden, .^ d g e Doraix S u a h e n and Wayn> H u^etsoa.....................

Gl'edit Women’s Club In s ta ll 's

At Dinner MeetTwin PalU C redit W om en’s Break­

fast club m et fo r a dlrm er session Thursday evening In th e private dining room of the R ogcrjon hotel, 20 guests attending.

Officers were Installed a t a can- dleilghUng ceremony. T lie s ta ff In­cludes Miss Leone Father, president; Mrs. Phoebe F ra n tt. vlre-pre.%ldent: MUs Vera Babbel, s ^ e u r y , and Ml.u Arabelle Brown, treasurer.

Ntrs. Fran tz and Mrn. Ida May Pendry were members o f the hoste.vi committee, a n d Mrs. Pendry was toastmaster.

Mls.1 Jewell King and MLvx Ann Fnnkliau.ier furnished m usical r bers during Uie program .

Al cards, played la ter , M rs. Claude Dctwcllcr won honors i\t bridge, and Mrs. Lois Pool a t pinochle.

S ta t /* Official Of O.E.S. Visits

Chap^fer a t PaulPAUL. Feb, 21—M rs. Agne.i An­

derson, Parm a, worUiy g ran d m atron of the Order of Enalern S ta r , paid her official annual vl.ilt lo th( E -dah-ho c hapte r of P au l Wednc.i- day In the M asonic hall.

Mrs. Loula C arpen ter. Salmon City, grand secretary of Uie Idaho grand chap ter. O .E 3., was nl*iO t guest, and Mrs. M arie Sm ith , B ur­ley, grand page of th e Id ah o grand chapter, and he r dau g h ter. M ks Marie SmlUi, honored fjueen of ihe beUiel of Job's D aughters, were nl present.

Presided over by Mr.s. lU lp h Ben d id . worUiy m nlron. h e r offlclnl staff, exemplified the work of the order, and two new member.i. W al­le r M anh and W heeler McOlIl, Initiated Into th e order.

Be.sldes Uie grand officers, other chap ter vLillors Included one oUier frSm Uie Evergreen ch ap te r, Burley; Mrs. Turner, of th e R u p e r t chnpter, Mr.s. U la B enedict and Mrs. Oeo. Moser, nnd Mrs. J . B. Fridlej>, Al­bion chapter. '

Honoring Uie worUiy grand tron and ns a com pllm eiil to he r 18 officers, Mrs. Ralph B enedict wm ho.Me.« o t luncheon Wedne.sday, sen ed a l Uie Mo.ionIc ha ll d in ln j room wlUi Mrs, B enedict prepiirUig nnd serving th e mcnl. Following the luncheon n school o t h is truc llon for Uie officers w.xs conducted bp Uie worthy grand m atron.

* * * Birthday P arty for

Aged Man a t Buhl.BUHL. Feb. 2 1 -C c lcb m lln « his

83nl blrLhdiiy niinlversary reccnUy WM -O. p . B u rne tt, w lio h a s been bedfast since Iasi April, following a AU-okc.-Uls blrUiday wn.i a happy oc; ciislfHi for him . bccau.ie niiiny Irlciids and reliillvex cniiixl during Uie dny nnd brought h im g lf ti. cards and U idrgw xl wWies.

Packages were received from rel- aUves residing away from Buhl, Many Valentine cnrds, wlUi Uielr wi.ilies In vrr.ic, w rre nm ong the trensured glfui received by Mr. Bur-

He fecLi quite well, conifortnbie and cheerful. In spite of hnvlng lo remain conUnuously bedfn.il. Caring for him. and sollclUous alw ays for hU comfort nnd hopplneas -is his wife, who enjoyed w llh him Uie pleasureable IncldenU of h is blrUi- day.

O.E.S. C a r d P a r t y

Given a t Shoshone. SH 03H 0N R Feb. 21—Member* of Lincoln chapter. O.E-S-. en terta ined n t cards Tuesday evening lt» the Mftionlc hall. Bridge p rliea were won- by Mrs. Frank O rosse nnd E, P. Tttiut, and pinochle p rlte s

Copy of Noted Sargent Mural Given Y.W.C.A.

T hanks th e generous h e a r ts ot two eastern women, who cam e to Twin Falls ab^ut a year ago and "like the west so m uch th e y ll never

back to Ihe town of ih e ir birth,'* ; new Y.W.C.A. rooms In Twin

Palls now boa.nl a s tr ik ing copy of T h e Prophets," orlglnnl o t w hich is one ’ot the m urals on th e wall* ot the Boston Public llbrarj'.

Done by John S. S a rgen t, rioled modern artis t, the work a t th e li­brary and Uie ro tunda of the Museum o t Arts In Baston is called the crowning work o t a ll h is a rlls- try.

T lie women w ho guve Ih e palnUng to the Y.W.C.A, room.s. d id t o be­cause they werfc going fu rth e r west to live and "wanted a pe rm anen t place for the picture," w hich had decorated a room in th e ir family home In New Jersey.

Alice, and C harlotte P n rke r. who left recently lo make th e ir hom e In Tacoma. W ash., told Mrs. P ra n k E. Well.'i, secrelary of th e T w in Falls Y.W.C.A.. U iat Ihey'd never go east to live.again becaiwe they liked thetrlendllnea.1 6 fU ie"w est.-------- —-------

Tlie picture they gave t9 TW’ln Falls b atw ut two feet In helghUi, six feel In width, Li done predom i­nately In rich brown nnd blaek-i. nnd will be placed on th e w est wall of the Y.W.C.A. rooms, w hich enlarged and remodeled la s t fall.

At a meeUng of th e executive board of the V.W.O.A. th e f irs t of the week, sincere nppreclntlon for the gift was exjire.iied lo Uie two sillers by membrrs. headed by M rs. R. L. Reed, retiring board president, and Mrs. Helen H enderoon, newly 'elccled pre.ildrni.

¥ ¥

Patriotic Note At Council Fire

In obsen'a jice of the “m ortth of b irthday." a pa triotic m otif featured in decornllons n t th e c . ... try home o t Mr. and M rs. Claude M. O orden one evening la s t week when A council fire p rogram was arrxnged by Oklclynpl group of the Camp F ire Olrls. directed by the ir guardln.i. Mrs. A rthur S. Dockwlts.

American flags nnd m any lighted • ed, w hite and blue inper.-. formed the background for the council fire ceremonlea. them e o t w hich wan "Give Sen'Ice." T a ’cn ly paren ts and friends wltncs-sed Uie rites.

Program of service Included: Wohelo call, proccsaloniii, .salute

to the flag by the girts, singing of ‘■atar Spangled B anner" and llKht- In:; of ihe wohelo candles: work, Joan O orden: health , Evelyn Dean; love. Hortense H night. _

Pre.'ifiitatldn of honors wa.-i bj Mrs. H. G. H night. Tollowed by ront •'Last BlrUi of A m erica" and «. shori tnik on ••Give Service" by the guardian. A C am p F ire rending, "Cradle o t Cam p P lre OlrL-i," was given by Jackie B eym er: .short Inlk on Lincoln, DoroUiy Sm ith , nnd W ashington. M nry Lois Boling- broke.

Singing of ■•Shellerlng Flnme" and "T aps" concluded Uie cervices.

□ Iris Inking ran k Included Billie BockwlUs nnd Evel>-n D enn. fire- maker: Colleen C arter . Jack ie Bry------ , Dorothy Sm ith , B arb ara Leh-

I and Sue W Itham . woodgather- , Bee Morgan nnd M ary Lois

Bollngbroke, irallsceker.

won by Mr. and M rs. J . J . Loekle.Retre.-,hniei^ -wer? served by a

committee which>Jncluded Mrs, E. O. H artm an. Mrs. C haJm er MarUn, Mrs. E. U Sciiwager nnd M rs. Harry Oault.

Appolntmentfl were In Uie patriotic moUf, and prUe.s w ere defense stamps.

Kicardo Mai’tiii at Work

Everyone U playing It. you can. too. W ltnl l5 It? Q ln rum m y, of course. T lie la tes t riallonal card crare. I t 's almost aa popular a* buying defense bond*. W illiam El. McKenney. America’s c a rd auUior- lly. ha* sen t the T lm es-Ncw s the lowdown on rules and regulations. Ttil*. I* the first of four concise. easy-lO'UnderstAiid les.sons, to Ap­pear In tjils paper on auccesslve daj's.

Her# we go— ,

I f yoQ're a foltaw rr o f th e fashion m araunei, yoo a lreaay knnw Ricardo by reputaU on. L eading xlyllil far the In tem aU snal D cauty KIidw held annually In New York City, he's retpecled aa a genius by fathion ro n u ieu s women. In Tw in Falls Ihe p n t week, Ricardo U ■howlnr Mabel K ollck. r t f h t . hew he mode the etirLs w hen he c a t and ■tyled^ber ha ir th e preceding evening. Here, the model is LaVonno l.a n ri i. (Tlme»-New* P hoto and Jlngravlnj).

¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ' ~ ¥ ¥ ¥ . ¥

Cut I t Short, Girls, ifYou Want Stylish Locks

I.CCILLK K N IG H T D U EftlCW liafs your favorite h a ir .style,

glrlj? Long, loose 'and fluffy? SUff, nrtlllclal-looklnB rolls? Over your enrs? Hundreds of liny p in curls?

W hatever your answer, I f s wrongl TIiBl is. It you would w in the ap ­proval ol Ricardo M arlin , you’d be wrong,

Ricardo, as he Is known to ha ir styllsti ihrouRhoui the world, was in Twin Kaih the ln.it of th e week . . . and he minces no words when he dc.icrlbes how Uie fem inine hair -Miould be worn.

Must be tthorl Bhorl—three Inches n il over, with

modiried varlntlons, depending on the texture and thlcknc.w of Uie ha ir nnd Hit weight and helghUi of the Individual—Ln h is one ndjecllve for ha ir tliw ,ieii.-,oi;. (Or nny sea­son, lor tha t m atter.)

•'As your coiffure Ls. .so will your face appear lo be.'’ wiys Rlciirdo. lending tityitii for the In tr rn a lla n a l Beauty Bhnw. held In New York City annually.'

"Long linlr nnrrows Uie ahoulders, Uirowlng Uie hipji ou i of propor- Uon. thickening the neck and in genefnl. iii;iklng Uie entire body ou l- of-biiiance,

• 'r iie hend nnd hiilr -should l>e Ju st one-tenUi of your en tire body for bc.st propotuon; lengthen nndflu f t.J l .ou t., G !D Cdiillj--lI.i'D a're_a sh o rt perwn, und lyou'vr increa.ied It to nn eignth or n fifth of your body

Artls'l'ii Outlook ■■A linlr style mail have pcrfccl

proportion, line and bnianre lo ’do Ihe nio.li’ for the indlvlthnil."Ihi-s man who In liir full of !0<0 cngaKcd to de.ilgn coltlures lor stcw- nrdev.cs of liie «•orthwc t Airlines.

Dc-ilgner ot Uic pin curl w ••Victory Roll." nnd num erous oUicr •■trlck.s’' by which' your fnvorltc benuty operalor Is enabled to do your hair In the moM >ip-in-dnij* m anner. Ricnrdn was In T a in F a lls to give ituitnicllons to a group of beauty operator.'. In th is cliy.

•'Crasliing the parly" T liuraday evening. I w atched him a t work on

new •Tlircfl Inch'^ i.tyle. w hich h e polnta out can be dres.ied to look Uiree Indies or six Inclie.i long.

No m atter w iial (]ueitlun nn op- e m ln r would .nk him. he could give nn nnswcr th a t convinced nil p res­e n t th a t he ’'knew w hat he was ta lk ­ing nbout.^'

■TclUng them Uiere wns no excuse fo r a wave made w ith pin curls to

We’ve a Fine Feeling £or E aster Fashions

Your B udget May B e Lim ited—But, Your

Choice Is Not

Be well “suited.” A suit is a MUST, this gc<ison, and your choicc is not limited here. The Ilbthmoor suits arc all 100 Vi wool and of the finest tailoring^..

Swansdown suits arc beautiful and FIT, the price is not hish for such lovely 2}crchandisc.

h a v e a BX.OUSE WARDBpBE^And such an assortment to choose from! You will find the frill- iest, to the smart tailored type blouse here, and the prices range from $1^5 to $8.90.Accessories are proportionate | ^ d bags, smart millinery, and gloves that f i t Costume jewelry and flowers are always good.

BERTHA CAMPBELL’S STORE131 I\Iain E a s t

be too tight, too loose, uneven . . frttzy, he dem onstrated th e correct method of m aking curls ao th a t the wnyo would bn nny w idth desired, lie in nny direction bcal aulled to Uie hair style, and comb In ta a loose, na tura l wave wiUiout 15 m lnuies or holt an hour of .strenuous b riu h - Ing.

Proved W hat He SaidAnd even with his m odel's ha ir

still wet, he’d comb out Uie curls he 'd made and Uicy’d go In to the kind of n.wnve he nnld they would,

" Ju s t because your h n lr Is cu Uirec Inches In lengUi. i t doesn' have to look Uint .-diort,

• 'T hat’s simply Iho best lengUi to dre*.s nnd expect to 'keep looking' the way It was m eniil to look, re- gnrdle.vi of the wenther. P in curls correctly done will keep your ' . .. or soft rolLi, In shape u n til you^re ready to shampoo i t again.'" aald n icardo. wiioie tw inkling eyes nnd engaging grin pu t hK n tu d en l ope ra ­tors. nnd thLi reporter, n l ca,.',oon ns he sU rted tnlklng.

Everyone’s Playing It: Here’s Gin Rummy Help

G in rummy Is taking th e re;. .. the counlry Jiisl a.s I t took Holly­wood where It iiaa. JusL '^boul re­placed movie making as th e town'* firs t InteresL

The game Is *lmple. Tw o or i___u i t)Iay. And probably 130 million

people ore elUier playing i t now— w an t to. Tills and Uiree articles follow will tell you how to play

Uie game.O ln rummy began as a ••minor'

pasllmo In the New Y ork bridge clubs, notnbly th e K nickerbocker ;V hlst club, where dupllcnte bridge wai first played In A m erica. The ••mlnor’ games a t bridge clubs are Uiose two-handed and three-handed game.s plnycd while w aiting »for a lourUi to complete a table o f bridge, ~ .{tsckgammon

Backgammon, a game .a-s old aa cheas; bu t lltUe-played In U ib coun- trj'. flwept Uie counlry a f te r It was revived in the card clubs. Pinochle, casino, and plauci have all had

spurts of popularity fn sB th e sam*- cause.

O ln rummy, a* Uig nam e Im ll* - cates. Is one form of the sam e of rummy which is played la m w different ways. All form s have tbU in common, howmrer—Ui# object oT ' th e plaj-er. Is to form h is hoad-ln to sots o r melds. Each se t m ust com- ' prise no t less Uian .three cards, and Uiere a re only two kinds of sets tiia l count; Uiree or four cords ,of the • same denomlnaUon. such as three queens, and Uiree o r more cards of Uie' same suit In sequence, such u Qlght-nlne-tcn of spades.

In some circles, a sc<iuence U limited lo Uirco or lour cards, so Uuit ir-'B.'iU n o t have an adran lA r* '" over. Uiree or four of a kind, bu t thLi Is ft -house rule.** T he general laws of rummy perm it »e<iuence3 to be built wlUiout llmitaUon.

-S e t..- Term UsedI t Li belter to use the U rm •'set*'*

than -melds.^^ By melding la ukutvUy m eant the placing of some cards face up on Uie table to score pohiU for Uie comblnaUon., In m any forms of rummy. Including Oln. there is no melding during Uio course of the game. Ploy ends w hen one player can lay down hU whole hand; and then a ll hands are expcoed.

Two oUier term s shoukl be under­stood before we go. Into the rules of gin rummy. By ••odd cards’* we mean the cords In a player's hand which are no t m atched up In sets. Dy ti "complete hand" we m ean one witli!, no odd cards, a ll cards being formed Into acta.

T he avocado pear was Introduced into the United S lates from Mexico In 183J.

Pioneer Woman...-Of _Castle,ford...-

Feted a t PartyCASTLEFORD, Feb. 21 — Mrs.

Jenie O nm er, who was 80 years bid T uesday, was Uie guest o f honor At an all-day party a t th e hom e of Mrs. Steve Hudson. T w enty-five friends were present lo pay th e ir respects lo one of Ca.iUeford's e lderly resl- denLi.

Mrs. G arner wav.^omplclely su r­prised when a large tray contain­ing gifts was placed on h e r lap, as nhe had .lupposed she w iu brought to the Hudson home for th e lunch­eon and a QulIlIng party .

Mrs. O am er and h e r husband. Uie late II. D. (Doc) G am er, came lo Castletord from M arble. Ark., a l ­most 22 years.ago and she still oc* cuple.i the same large two-stcry hou.se to which they moved.

For mnny years UiU w as Uie only hotel here ond woa th e favored

. re;ildenec for teachers, people from Arkansas nnd oUiera. M rs. O am er rented nparlmenUs to people until tli /i w inter, when h e r h e a lth h a a become loo bad tor her to a tten d to busi- ne.is. She still c arrs fo r her own home and does her own cooking, howevc^

Mrs. G arner was born In Sum pter county. Ala., 80 years ago and was taken to T eias by he r pa re n ts when p ^ h t year* old.' la te r m oving to A r-

She has no clUldrcn o f her

, foaler son. Mack Steven*.. , whom she cared for since h e wfts four years o t age. farm s a t Caa- lleford.- She hiLS ttlways hetped ftnyTn’ riecd and la known and loved for he r sw eti disposition and rem arkable character.

The women o t the party le ft wLih- Ing h e r m a ^ mote happy b ' " ‘

AnniversaryRUPERT, Feb. 31—Mr. and M is.

Puller Fenton enterta ined S a tu r­day n ight a t a ' pInocWe p a rty In celebmUon o t tlie lr 1BU> wedding anniversary. Three toblM were a t play, prliea going to Mr*. A. 0 . Frederick and Olover Acock. M any gtfi.1 were received by th e coupjp. '

Spring Conditioning that's

TAimCDTOYOURm!Come in N o w h r a FREE Insptdhn b y Auihorixed Factory-Trained

Meehanics thaf Will Show Exacfly what Attention Y O U R Car N e w k '^ r''

WANT lOHOii n x i 'v r r r fr i tu tm/tti/M/ rim . o o o o u a k u m ia n sa rnY nut. B n i t i d»j%» TtmtmUr tk t ipanT I f y ' l t Ut M imirei U irpt Im f r t f t r eJjin lm tn l/tr ta fttj

a l f t . i n h n l i a l a f " » ^ " tr*ur llrti, w*rHm[ l i t iMr» <• m irrt U e I t u:,J. tcek Urt • u l t f l h t H n j n k a tf will h ». tk* n « j9 * lj /tmr fi/lhi a> murk s t mimA N il n - '

- luU: Ilf, from !k> tam i fu l l u t. '

1iCK*,VND.A*PR0M iSE S p r i n g c o n - d i t i o n i n g w o n ’t d o t h i s y e a r ,

m i s t c r l ^s

■YouVe got something more im­portant to think about than just changing oil and grease — you’ve got fl whole car that will have to ' see yoti through the dtiration, and you can’t afford to overlook any port of it.

' That’s why Buick spring service is tailored to your own parties ular car.

We change oil and grease in the regu la r way, of course —wc check batteries, cooling systems, wheel alignmtSnt and other routine matters.

ri$»U in un»ntt%arilj inrfyaiti Urt mrar. fo r ' ii$l rnmlli, 1,1 Bmltk mtn ajjmtlrtmr drnlch h ’ai4$I tD o ltk /M try ip K ifie tt l,; .

Your whole car lasts longer when it is conditioned as a unit — especially when trained Buick specialists do the job.So we write your spring condi­tioning ticket to fit your car's needs — not to make up a ready­made “package” accordin'g to average requirementSTThe cost is no higher than for a comparably good job anywhere else. I t’s actually lower in tho long run, because it pays to havo a^job done right.Drop in for a FREEcheck»up by our authorized factory*trained

' mechanics and let us detail tho • servicc your car should havo this spring.

BeHerBi Buick S IM MAsk About Our C Y .C (CenMrv* VMir Plen

MILES J. b r o w n in g , INCSccontl A v en ae & Second S tre e t N o rth

T w in I^ U s , I d a h o : •

Page 8: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

^ Page Eight TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, JDAHO Sunday, February 22, 1942

COWBOY BOSSES TO BE SELECTED AT MONDAY NIGHT MEET

Kimberly Fight Team Triumphs Over Preston

KIMBEIU^y, Feb. 21—Conch Ray Baker'# t lu iH o s K im berly Buimoa boscr# nOUed from a weak aU rl hero Friday n lgb t to ccoro » Q-3

• deeW on over the InTadlng: Preston tleht«ra from w ulheM tflm Idaho.

Feature punch or th e e re n ln j w « tos»ed 'by lU y Joh iuoo . 147-pound ■preston batUer. H o acn t » Jab to th# chin o l J ; D. B uchanan In the th ird round of th e ir bout th a t laid th e Kimberly .i» y o u t cold.

One other bout w m called a t the end of th e first round when Ken^ n e lh e talcy . 137, K imberly, lost ot * technical luiyo a fte r tu sialn lns B cu t o rer the* eye In the Initial Btaani.“‘ W inner f b s Charles Hull. J35. Malad.

T he bouts were referred by Bud Travla. Tw in FalU, while JudSB O. A. Bailey a n d T ed V/elkec acted u •Judges.' Complete resulta fo r the evening’s nu tchea ;

•• Earl Staley. D3, K lm brrly , scored a tiCM decision over Ned Bodily, SB,

" P r e s to n .-------------- ------- -' Jim C arter. 100.-Preston, dccli* •loned C arl H ordlni 101. Klmbsrly.

Leonard Bower, 1L7. Kimberly, declsloncd MUUra H ead. 119, PrcQ; ton.

' Qeorge QuesnelU 137. Kimberly, '•and Hod W lnfcr. 123. Preiton. fought to draw.

Charles Hull, 125. P reston, scored a techaicol knockout In the t i n t -round over K enne th SUIey, 137, Kimberly.

. .• Ray Johnson. 147.' Preston , scored knockout over J . V . Buchanan . l 4 ? K im berly. In th ird round.

Mel T anner. 130. P reston, and 'O le n PUka. 13S. K im berly, lougbt to draw.

’ C harley B ean. 141. Kimberly. de> clsloned Russell H ull. 141. Preston.‘ P au l W atkins. 167. Kimberly. Bcored decision over R onald Dalrd. 153. Preston.

Rex W eech. 173. K imberly, scored c lean-cu t decision over D tan Pal' m e r, 178. P i ta ton.

Market Wise Wins $10,000 Hialeah Event

MIAMI. Pla.. Pt!b. 31 WV-LouU T ufano ’a M arket W ise shook off the 'effect of two H ialeah pork bcatlncs today and streaked- to victory In tlie «10W1 M cL ennan handicap - the th ird rank ing horse race of Uie w in tar.

R c tu m ln s -to th e form which m ade him ItMl's U tc sum m er three year-o ld scnsaUon, th e ‘•Clntlerella h o n e ," a« iu lred by T ufano for a m ere tiOO, storm ed down the stretch to sna tch llra t place from 14 others I n th e classiest field of th e seiuKjn a n d before th e m eeting 's biggest crowd. 18.114 fans.

Jo h n H ay W hitney’s G ram ps hung o n to take second place by a hall leng th over Edw ard S . Moore’s O e t Off.

L eft In th e ruck were such cam­paigners aa W ar Relic. O ur Boots. I>tt. ‘Ponty . Royal M an and Red Dock. • ~

N ot only d id M arket Wise collect tll,83& for hla o«-ner. b u t he sped M iutroly Into th e p ic ture as a good be t for th e U0.000 W ldener handl< c ap to be ru n M arch 7.

T he .^rowd. w hich Installed W ar R ella as Its choice a t th ree to one. liked M arket Wise third-best—and th e m utuel re tu rn w as llOiX), $9.10 a n d 14.60 o c ro u the board.

Rupert Host to : Sub-District Cage Tournament

RUPERT. Feb. 31—Class B hoop t«am s will convene In R upert Fe4>. 30. 37 and 38 to deckle the cham - plooalilp team In th e MlnUCassla sub-d lstrlc t. Six boys’ teams will e n te r cccipetltlon. th e gam es In the tourney to be played round-robln laah lon . C co testan ts In Uie bo>-s' Held rcprecent the schools of Ace- <iula, Albion. Declo. Heyttum. M alta a n d Paul. G irls ' team s entered ore from Acequla, P au l a n d Aiblon.

O araes wlli be played 'Thursday _ . fi{t^rno(>n and evening, PrWay ••.'fnomhlB, {iftemoon and e ten lng and

S a tu rday m o m ln t a n d evening. M orning ffames s ta r t a t 10 and 11 o 'clock: afternoon snm es a t 3 and 3 a n d th e eren lng sessions wlU s ta r t a t 7, s and 0. «

T he opening day 's schedule In­c ludes 3 p. m , M alta vs. Paul boys; 3 p . m , H eybum vs, Declo boys; 7 p . ffl.. Albion n . A cequla boys; 8 p . m .. Albion vs. P au l girls; 9 p. m , M a lta vs. H eybum bojw. •

Supt. J . B . Frtdley Of Paul is tour-, n a m en t m anaeer.

Arkansas Set for Greatest Racing Season in History

H OT SPRINaa. Arte.. Feb. 31 WPV- 'f f l th slables Jam m ttl w tlh some of th e best thoroughbreds seen h « « since th e reb irth of A rkansas racing e ig h t y e a n ago. O aklaw s pa rk wUl open 1(« 30 -d ar m e e t M o n ^ w ith th e ll/XlO M ayor Leo P . McLaughlin hand icap fea tare .

■Jockey c lub qUi^lals said d t t n tU t w ea th e r.- trc ro v d of 10,000 was expeeted fo r tAe d g h t- ra c e opener. O w ners nom inated 38 sp eed sten for t h e ilx fu rtoag < » ta r» race.

Plane Baseball Talk

’ 8 f t. U ank Greenberg ehsU w ith Yankee clipper Joe D IM afgle from seat of plane a t MacDIU field, Fla., w here form er D etroit slugger Is sUllooed.

Boise Braves Capture Most Big Six Honors

B O ISE, F ob . 21 (/P)— A s la n t a t th e 3tuti.slica todny show ed w h iit p u n d its o f th e Bijr" Six con forcnco h av e .sur­m ised fo r a w eek— th a t Boi.se h ip h Hchool’rt BravcH a r e th e a ll-a round b aako tba ll championH a n d Redd F ay lo r, th e N um pa redhead , th o leag u e ’s to p h an d aa a n o ffen siv e th r e a t ' W hen th e B oiaeans dazzled Caldw ell 54-21 F rid a y nifrh t th e y rack ed u p th e ir e lR hth loop tr iu m p h i 'u g a in s t two de­fe a ts , fin iah in ff a fu ll ^am e ah ead of N a m p a and P o ca­tello, w ho w oro tied in th e

Robello SendsTei-mstoRim Wranglers

T ony Robcll6, th e h u sk y P ortu ffueso Tnaniiger o f th e S a l t L ak e C ity B eea f o r - th e p a s t tw o y ea rs , to d ay w ired h is te rm s to C arl A n d e rso n , b ufliness m an ag e r o f th e T w in F a lla Cow boys, an d a decision on th e new boss o f t h e W ranR - le rs w ill p robably b e reach ed a t a m ee tin g s la ted f o r M on­d ay n i g h t

W hile term s of the con tract were n o t disclosed. Robello offered to take over the handling of the Tw in Falls e n tra n t In the Pioneer league

:lther as playing 'm anager alone )r to Include the duties of busi­

ness inonoger-.Tlie m eeting on Monday' hoa been

#et for 7:30 p. m, a t th e Pa rk hotel and a ll baseball fans a re requested to a ttend . At th a t Ume It will be k n o w n ju s t how much h a s been col­lected tow ard raising' th e IlS.QOO needed to s ta r t the 1943 Cowboy Kason off on a sound financial basis.

- Coal Nears R eports toduy were U iat tlie goal

.'(u Hi Mftlit ik'nd that canvasAlng would be completed by Moncluy night., Robello, In nn.iv.xr to a wire sen t h im fiUKRCstlng ho m ight be under consideration for the Cowboy Job. pointed ou t th a t ho still considered Tw in F a lls a very good boscbftU town oJid he believed he could "bring.Tv,-|n Fulls baseball .back to the high plane cn w hich It perched In 1030."'

Monday Business A t the Monday m eetliig It will

probably be dcclded w hetlier Corl A ndirson will .itay on the Job as business manuger—o r If he’ll step ou t and let Robello run th e whole show. T liere Is also th e possibility th a t Anderson may lease tho ball tlu b from the d ltecloro and as­sume th e presidency, w ltli Robello doing moot of a ll the labor.

O n tho other hand. A nderson is still very much undecided on whe- tlie r he 'll liavo anythlnu to do w ith bascba)l In ’Fwln Falls during the 1043 season.

All tlieae questions a re expccted t^ be Ironed o u t before the meeting la concluded. Monday evening.

Franldin and Pastor Mieet Tuesday Night

ny^UAY BLOSSER CLEVELAND. Feb. 31 ( fll-T rleky

fiecond spo t.T lm t w asn 't all. T he Craves posted

the best offense In the IcnKUc by scoring <08 points , an average of 40.6 points per game. They were scored on th e least, 3C3 points, for

n average of 30.39.D m lns Second

Twin FalL'i came In scconcl best In th e scoring colum n w ith 35.4 polnt.i per game while N am pa hnti the s c cond best defense, holding oppon­e n ts to n 30.1 polnt-per-gnm e hver- age.

A rcchcck of ■ttanie.i played nhow- ed th a t only Pocatello and Falls could boost victories Boise nve. 'Tlie Broves spilt those series and sw ept th e rem ainder of th e game.i. Only one d u b . Caldwell, foiled to win a conlercnce gome. The Cougars wound up the seiison fa r In the cellar w ith Just 310 points scored against -402 scored against them.

Faylor had the point to u l. bu t had to sp lit wlU) Fred Williams. Idaho Palls ccn ter. on individual statistics.

-N am pa a te h a d .102. points and tossed In more field gonls than any o ther p layer In tlie circuit. 52. Williams, however, ‘was the m ost accurate from th e free throw line. Tho Uger pivotm an h i t 3B gift tosses. .

Glbb Seor«* 124 O lcnn Olbb. con.ilstent scoring

Tw in iSills guard, h i t 124 points for the year to come in second, w il- Hams was th ird In the scoring, w ltli

. points. Bob B arbour nudged post H al Sites In tho scoring column to take fourth honor# w ith BD points.

'S ites posted 88 points, good for fif th place In th e league.

O thers in th e top ten:...Jc ijien , Pocatello. 78: Parro tt. Caldwell 7 J r-K e lly . Pocatello 71: Relneeker. .Boise 6B: Cartney. Twin Falls es; T ak l. Id ah o Falls 00.

Buhl Quintet 'rims Filer

______ _ Feb. .at—B uhl h igh schoolq uin te t today boasUd a 37 to 30 vic­to ry over F iler h l ^ school cagera. achieved during a class A contest he re Friday n igh t.

Buhl led 10 to 4 a t Uie qua rte r and {tended th e ir m argin

to 19 to 8. FUer trailed the end of th ree periods.

Bulil » o n th e freahman-soj3Jlo» more opener.. T h e lineups:BUHI< Pos. FILERM ahachek <8) F (4) O aryH am ilton (7) T ■ (J) S later H ustead (2) O , (8) W alker Holdecnan (3) O <4> M ala

iledsoe <0>— O '(3 ) Blakeslee SuteU ta tM t Buhl—Stuart. Corbin.

SeDey 3, SUaon. F U e r-a h a f f , B laa- tock, Vincent.

* T he woodpeckerg a re (he cniy bird In D. S. th a t can dig holes In solid tree*.

3 Indian Hurlers Hope to Fill Feller’s Shoes

CLEVELAND. Feb. 21 — three p ltchers—trj-lUK to h it the comeback trfill to make up for Bob Feller's absence—boarded a tra in here today to s ta r t Uie Cleveland Ind ians’ tr tk to the Clearw ater. Fla., spring tra in ing camp.

Veterans Mel H arder nnil C lint Brown hojiecl to rcI otic more Benson from the ir unden t .nnn.% a n d southpaw A1 Mllniir. who was Qblo to win only 12 Kumes la.1t year while loslns 10, hoped to recxpture his 18>vJctory style Of IMO.

I t wos th e ^lr^l Ume .since 1038 th a t the Ind ians went .loiilh w ithout R apid Robert, who has changed to tt’nnvy unilorni. Tho batterjim en alnrt Uielr workouU Monday, w ith Uie Inllcldrrri and outfielders followlnc two days la ter.

Brooklyn Boss Praises Rookie

lU V A NA . |> b . 31 (,T>-ClUf Dap. per, rookie <^lclier up from UolI>'- wood of th e Pacific Coa.'st league, and Augle O alan . ve teran outfielder who played In only 17 Kunn-s !or Brooklyn la st year, were ulnxlcd out today for . praise by MnnsRcr Leo D urocher of Uie Dodgers.

D urocher said th a t U w iun 't m uch on D apper’s record a t Holb'' wood, w here .he h it JT7. bu t on Un way, h e looks h e r j ^ h a t he h as t good chance to sttclT

T h o D odger m aiiager nUo said O alon had surprised him the he 's been hltUng.

the n e x t h eavy itlR h t c h am p io n - tapered off today for a 10-r6und scrap w hich m ay clarify the race for Joe Louis' crown.

Given a break In th e weaUier. Prom oter Bob Brlckm an reckoned 13,000 custom ers would e n tn u t *9S, 000 to h is care to see FranW ln. one Ume Cleveland hotel porter, mix it up T uesday n igh t w ith the fancy Inxer who dodged Louis n tocnl of 21 ro u n d s 'In -th eir Iwo mcellnKn.

"I Uilnk I 'll-knock Pastor out— any round between th e first and tenUi.” declared Fran)<lln, a two- fljtcd slugger who dhpa ied oi Tony Musto a n d ponderous Abe Simon In quicker time thiui LouLi made Uiem.

A carefully-planned battle v ... Indicated by Pastor, w ho suyed ou t of Joe’s way for 10 rounds wiuie dropping a decision In Uielr first Kiatch-—ejvd w en t U before l»lriK on a technical knockout In a retlim go Bcheduled for 30 sU nros. '

■■Too m any fighters a re walking aroim d on Uielr heels today becau.ie they le t some aggravaUng slranger w ith a powerful ringside ’ voice change th e ir enUre p lan of batUe." explained bicycling' Bob.

Judglnic from the ir workouts. P as­tor is likely to concentrate on Frank lin 's mld-secUon. while tho Chicago Negro's lavorlte ta rge t Is right under Uie heart— or on the button. I f the h eart Is guarded too well.

Murtaugh Defeats Hollister, 25-22

MURTAUOir, l'>!b. 31—M urtaugh Red Devils scored a 25-23 victory over Uie H olllstcM tuwks here Friday nUiht In a hard-fought biiillc,

M urUiugh led 18-0 a t the half. High scoring honors w ent to Colion of Uic losers wlUi 11 i>olnt.i, while Bronson topped M urtaugh w ith eight.

Prelim inary was won by Hollister by a 25-18 count a fte r Uie two clubs Ued a 10-all, a t Uie lntrrml&.'.lon. GrlRgs of Hollister got seven polnLi, while Savage of M urtaugh got nine.

Ciasey Stengel Sees Open Race for National Title

LO S ANGELES. Feb. 31 (/?)—The genUeman from Boston w ith the ra ip ln g voice, wide g rin and rollick- inS 'h u m o r w ants to know w lia t a ll Uie sljootlng is abou t over wheUaer IfU be Brooklyn o r Uie S t. Louis Cardinals In the NaUonal league.

"Say." said Casey Stengel, for th a t 's the genUeman's name, " D o n t go o m b o a rd for those two. I t m ight Just as easy be ClnclnnaU, o r maybe New York."

T h e brave m anager of Uie Braves, shoving off fo r his Florida train ing camp. conUnued w iui the Stengel uneopyrlgbted analysU of NaUonal league prospects. H ere It Is:

Brooklyn—Stole it (the pennan t) la st year. Lots of b rea k s .a t crucial limea. Dangerous again w tth W yatt and Hlgbe..

SU Louis—Maybe IM l w as the ir year and m issing I t will leave a "hangover.- P itching could b«_veT7

good or very bad. If catcher Ous Mancuso gets h u r t o r sick. It'll be too bad.

New Y ork -M U e ot f irs t and W er~ bcr a t th ird , together wlUi new life under M el.O tt, may transform club in to a tough one.

C incinnati—Steadiest, most fool poof pitching s ta ff In the league. A revival of hltU ng could bring Uiem back.

Boston—Long hlttUig lineup gives chance fo r f irs t division, especially U LombanU comes back., C h lca g o -N o be tter th a n la st year.

PhU adelphla—Can’t see anything hare.

P ittsbu rgh — Showed flashes of greatneas la s t year. W on't miss V aughan too much.

•'O ur biff n eed -laMrseason was long h l t tm ," Stengel observed. “I th ink we've go t 'em th is time in Lombardi, i U x W est. C he t Roas, and a few lo o d Jo o U n f jp o U e i." ____________

Mangrum at Top In Orleans Open

BY MORTIMER K R E E G tB NEW ORLEANS. Feb, 31 W —

Lloyd M u h g ru iiro ro iirF a n fr ill ..U\6 field today a t the hallw ay p o in t o f th e 85,000 New O rjeans Open O olf tournam ent, b u t form er Open C ham pion Lawson Little of Son Francl.ico sh o t the best round of th e m eet th u s for. a flve-under-par 33-34—C7, to move up a stroke behind h im In « second place Ue wlUi Biun Snew i.

M angrum had a 30-hole toUil of 138 to L ittle ’. 139. a fte r adding a35-34—08 to yesterday’s 60 U iat tied Chick H arbcrl of BatUe Creek. M ich., fo r 'Che fjrst round lead.

H iirbcrt. Uie sensaUon of tho w in ­te r swing, had trouble, pu tting and .illpped .to a pa r 3T.3J—73 b u t sUll

In Uio running a t 141.

S nead , the H ot Springs, Vo-, belt­e r . who was followed as usual by th e largest gallery of Uie doy, had a 35*33—88 on top of yesterday’s 71. He would have been In a lie for f irs t except for' the stroke h e docked h im self yesterday when hU ball moved a s ho addressed it. a lthough no one « lse .,aw IL

LltUe's p u l tk was red ho t and h is clilpplntf wa.1 excepUonal too, but h e U iree-putted Uie HUi hole, a par four w hich he term ed " th e easiest on the course,'*

M aiigrum sank a 15-footer fo r .. birdie on Uie fourth and a 40-footer on Uie sIxUi. H is best sh o t was a long approach rig h t down Uie fa ir­way to w ithin n few feet of the cup on th e n U i.

Bruins Whip Oakley Jinx, Win 38 to 29

O A K L E Y , Feb . 21— C oach J . S . (M onk) H iillldny w u .h iiturtiiiK to w onder toduy ju n t w lin t k ind o l th e j in x tho O uk ify biusketball flo o r h e ld o v e r— o f nil team s— hisi ow n OuUlcy UornctH .

T h e local q u in te t d ropped iLs fo u r th consecutive K 'lnie on th e hom e c o u r t F r id a y n ijih t

Pin Leaders-Clly league — W rller 185.’ F re ls

17G, K. Coleman 177. Bert-ich 178. J . Vw lka 175. Pullm an 173, Ford 173, C. Colemon 173, Cox 172. K llbom leo.

M ajor league—Boone 100, Jones IBI. Brlnegar 180, Frets 187, CarLion ISO, B rrtsch 183, C. Coleman 183, W. I . Johnson 101. K . Coleman 180. O lsh 170,

.Minor le a r ie — B rlnegar 101. M, Roulh 174. J . Wells 171. W esterKren no. E- John-wn 108. Allan 107. M ul- Irn ICG, Hnl Wood 185, D. Wood 104. Rur.n Welln 103.

Commercial league — K uper 103. Cnlron 104, Honsteln 103. W aU on Ifil, Diivl.t 160, Craig 153. Cowiin 150. K lrlnkopf 158, Shaw 157. BellLi- ton ISO.

Magic Clly league — R. Rogers 175. L. Vnrqucz 157, D. B ertsch 185, M, Gllkry 153. R. H enry 153, R. O rren 151. L, Buhler 150, J . Stew - iirt 140. JI, Weller H7. E. P a tto n 144, ,

l.adrni' .Minor league — D, Bet;uch 156, E. .McVey 133. M /C obb 131. B. McRoberts 130. G. Rleke 137. K . Hoover 121. M. B udiannn 130. O . I llchardw n 120. L. Lavender 117. R. llong 117.

Two Pocatello Hurlers With Sacramento

SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 31 OD— Ba.iebnll’s i>enniint vhaso In tho Pa* clflc const IciiHUc UiLs year a lready Is shiirply outlined. I t Ls a ca.io of b e a t Siicrom rnto for the cham pion­sh ip ,

T lie Popper M artlnlred S ena tors enjoyed Uir .nime sta ta i- la s t season. T liey were only bcalon o u t fo r the tit le In the .stretch nm .

Pepper MiirUn, form er S t. Louis C ardlnnU hero; had h is gang of m o d em gas-housers far ou t in fro n t In th o first three m onths of th e 1041

"w ee. A t one time they had a lead o f some \^ Kumes. Aa th e schedule w ore on they wore out.

New men In place of Uiosc w ho folded In Uie drive and capable r e ­p lacem ents for thase who advanced to th e major le.igues m ake the S e n a to rs look every b it as strong as la s t year.

T h e pitching shapes up high bo th from a quality and quantity s ta n d ­points Tony FrMma and 'B ill Schm ltlt. veteran/m ainstays, will be bock. Henihel Lj'ons. rank ing r ig h t h a n d er for Rochester o f th e In te r ­n a tional..league lost season, and K em p Wicker, form er 'N ew Y ork Y ankee, made -up a.-m ound four? ftome U iat should cause M anager M a rt in very little worry.

T h e tw irling corps also Includes B in Capllnger. fonnerly a t Pocatello, "B llx" Donnelly, L uther F rench , E ddie Green. Lawrence Kempe, H enry PolI>' and Harold Dobson, also from Pocatello.

Bowling ScheduleMONDAY. FEB. S3

Ladles*’- Minor league — Alleys 5-0. Soden's vs. PltLiburgh P n l n t : ' alleys 7-0. Bowladrome vs. S -H P ark -ln .

C ity league—Alleys 1-3. Castle C a te Coal vs. Tw in F a lls L um ­b e r: alleys 3-4, Detweller's' No. 1 vs. Cw grlff's: alleys 5-8, Elks N a 3 v'ST-Harry's S po rt Shop: alleys 7-8, Idaho- Packinif.vs. T w in F a lls F lo u r Mill.

TUESDAY, FEB. 24 M ajor le igu i^ A lleys 3-4. S h e r­

w ood Typcrw lters vs. S tudebaker: alleys 6-8. National L aundry vs. Id a h o Pow er: alleys 7-0. ph iu ip s Je w e le n vs. Elks No. 1.

WEDNESDAY, FEB. Z i M ino r league—Alleys 1-3. F a lk -

S ea rs Ho. 1 vs. Green C ab: alley's 3-4. Consum ers' M arket vs. F a lk - S ea rs No. 3: alleys 5-8, T im es- Wews vs. Detweller's No. 3,

Com mercial league — Alleys 1-3. E ddy's Bakery vs. 30-30 club; a l­leys 3-4. C. 0 . A nderson vs. Safe­w ay No. 530: alleys 5-fl. Safeway N o. 347 vs. Idaho ^ g : alleys 7-8, T w in Falls Bank and T ru s t vs. T ru ck Insurance.

THURSDAY. F E a i&M agle a t y Ladles* league—AJ-

Jeys 1-3. O range TransporaU on vs. S terling Jewelers; alleys 3-4. K im ­berly Boosters vs. F arm ers’ Auto In su ra n ce : alleys 5-0. R -O Jew el­e rs "vs. B a lsch . Motor com pany: a ^y!T 7-8 . Rofferson Coffee shop vs. B u n frea .

to th e T w in Falla B ru ins a n d th e Bcore wa.s 38-2D, ~ H O w ever.-thB f wouldn't be KO'Bod If I t w asn’t for Uie fact U iat In 10 Rtunes played Uils y e a r - th e Oak­leys have lost only four, giving Uicm

record of 15 wins, Tliey haven't iBt a contest away from home. • T h e defeat hung on Uie Hornets

w as Uie first tim e Ttt'ln FalLn had posted a victory on Uie Oakley floor In the memory,of mo^t local citizens. However. I t w as well-earned and the g rea ter height of Uie visitors gave them a ‘d istinct advnntage.

O utstanding perform ance was tu rned in by tow'erlng O tto Florence, B ru in center, w ho connectetl for 13 po in ts to lead a ll scoring for the gam e. G lenn Glbb, usually ^lgl> scorhig Tft'ln Falls guard, of the game In the second <juarter on fouls and counted only two points for-Uie evening. •

S p u r t In Third Tw in Falls led 0-8 a t th e ciuorter,

14-13 a t the half. TJilrd period saw Uie big B ruin spuft, wlUi the local c lub logging behind by 10 points— 37-17,

T h e game was played a t a terrific pace and both sides were about equnl

I ba.sket tossing—but some super. :pert free throw work By th(

B ru in s spelled the victory. Twit F a lls connected on eight ou t of 13 g ift shots, while Uio be.st th e O ak­leys could do wos three o u t of 11, However. Uie Bru ins also tossed In

VO m ore shots from the field to u u re th e vlc to ir.

H olberl Clicks Mel H ulbcrt. Bniln guard, made field goal—and Uien added five

. 3lnts on five free throw attem pts to to ta l seven counters to r the eve­n ing. L an o n was top m an for the local qu in te t wlUi. 10 points.

I>rellmlnary also w ent to th e Tft'ln FulLt club—Uie Cubs scoring a 38-24 victory. M cM urray got 13 po in ts for Uie losers, while four T w in Falls p layers tied for top honors w ith six po in ts each.

L ineup for varslly game;OAKLEY Pos. ' TW IN PALLSLarson (18) ...... F ____ (4) CartneyM arU n <3) ...... P ............ (8) T erryPeter.ion ( I ) __ 0 _ __ (13) FlorenceM atthew s (fll ..;.a..... ... <3). GlbbM cM urray (0) ..O!...... (7) H ulbert

^utw Ututlona; OaWey — Poultoif. C lark (3). S im pson (2). SUmger, M U b;. T a in .?>Uls — Potersqn , T . Florence. Malioney. Davla <4).

Rupert Downs Burley Cage Quintet, 34-15

BURLEY.' Feb. 31—Burley ^ b - c a ts and R upert F iratea ended Uielr season's series here Friday n igh t and th e /c su lt Uiat tho two clubs held a s tand-off for four games.

WhUe tho Bobcats were annexing Uie first two encounters, th e Plra tes came back to w in tho lost two—and th e one on Friday was a lop-sided a ffa ir th a t boded no good for the Bobcats in th e d istric t Class A to u n u m e n t la M arch.

T he fm al score was 34-15 and the m argin of difference was th e 19 points scored by big Ed Schenck. generally considered one of Uie f in ­e s t sll-around center* in Idaho’s high school ranks.

I t was lack of he igh t on Uie Bur- lev quinte t th a t spelled the ir defeat —m ajor cdate o f m ost losses lately. However. Uie Bobcats p u t up a sUff ba ttle th roughout dfsplte the ir d is­advantage. ^ l e two team s batU ed to 0 -7-7 deadlock In Uie f irs t quarter, b u t the P lrato defense held the hom e team scoreless In Uie second s t a n u as they ran tho count to 15-7. T h ird period- was 33-13 and th e DObcats scored only two polnU In the fina l fram e.

Prelim inary w en t to Uie Rupert froah 'soph by a 20-30 In a mucli m ore excIUng batU e th a n th e v< a lty engagem ent. Burley led 18-11 th e Intermission.

Lineups for varsity conflict: R upert Pos BurleyFagg (5) P JonesD. Goff (5) F (3) Roberts Schenck (10) _ C (5) Robertson Rawson (3) G (3) Brod.ihaw H . Goff (1) G (3) Klink

SubsUtutes: R upert—G am er (3); Burley—G a rre tt (3), S^^ans, Woods. Baker.

Wrestling, Fight Card Slated at Rupert Wednesday

RUPERT. Feb. 31—T he .wcond In a series of w restling ond boxing m atches for th e benefit of w ar de- fep.ie octlvltlen being sponsored by O eorsc E . M arshall post, American Leelon wtll be he ld W ednesday n ight a t R upert's civic gym. TTie card boii.it.1 retu rn engagem ents o f Chuck Pridn who will wTcstle Ron Mawkes. husk}- R upcrlte. Dean Anderson. R upert crane operator, will take on M elvin Growell, Poul concli.

In th e boxing r.ectlon Chuck Hal!. J33. M alta CCC vs. Ru-ss Ford, 135, P au l CCC. V em Moore. 130, MolU vs. Pau l W llbum 130, Paul. Elwood Adkins, 150, M alU CCC vs. Robert HuUicock. 154. Paul CCC. Robert McNelly 140. M alta CCC vs. Ed Me. K le tiien. HO. P au l CCC. O ne amo. te u r wreaUlng bout wha-.e winner

Charles Hall. 170 pound M alta CCC lad and Mike WUllaiw, n o pounds, Of Cam p P au l CCC......................

PASSES FOR SERVICE MEN NEW YORK. Feb. 31 (U-PJ-The

New Y ork City defense recreaUon com m ittee will distribute free passes to more th a n 000,000 service men during th e 10*3 season for u s^ a t New York's th ree m ajor leagu* parks, "m e Y ankees, G ian ts and Dodgers have nam ed the ccsnmlttee to dLitrlbute th e posses. It announc­ed la s t n ight.

ATTENTIONCash paid for worthless o r dead cows, horses a n d price of pelts fo r dead jheep . * '

Idaho Hi* &Ja!lowCo._C all C ollect N e a re s t P h o n a Twlo Falls 3 1 4 • OeedlDC 4 7

5 5. Hides, pelts, tallow, fur. and

Junk bones bougbL

Shoshone Cage Quint Trips Glenns Ferry

SHOSHONE. Feb. 31—Shoshone defending chitmplon Class B Ind ians piled up a big firs t-quarter lead here Friday n ig h t and sw ept to a 34-20 victory over th e Invading G lenns Ferry R iver Pilots,

Tlie victory evened th e season's play a t one each becau.ie Glenns Ferry upset the Shoshones a week ago.

In this BO. however, th e Ind ians ere tak ing no chances, and led

by "Skid" W inders, Uiey ran up a 12-3 lead In th e first quarter. Tliey were sUll In f ro n t 10-9 a t th e half a n d the th ird period f9und tlie. count a t 20-18.

W inters scored 17 points fo r his cb'cnlng's work to lead a ll counters. Shrum got ilve for the top point m an on th e losing qulntetA

Shoshone’s frosh-soph q u h H ft___Its season's record to 10 wins a n d two losses by downing the Glenns Ferry seconds by a 34-31 score. Only 101.1CS on the Jayvee record we: Burley and R upert seconds.

Varsity lineups for ' the Friday Eome;Shoshone P a i G lenns F en y Baum ann (0) F (4) Wlieejer Cannon (41 F (4) J . Boboran W inters (17) C (4) RiceAndren.ion (I) G (3) Robertson M urphy (2) G (5) Shrum

SubsUtutloiis: Shoshone — Jones (2). Hsndw erk (3), Andrews, Glenns I^'crry—L. D obaran (1). BclihoU ,

Hazelton Triumphs In dver-Time Tilt With Hansen Club

HAZELTON. Feb. 3 t ,— H aiclton h igh school cagcrs Friday n ig h t won an overUme basketball game from H ansen h igh school, 33 to 30. Uianki to the w inning field goal by P s t R 0.V1.

Hazelton waa off to an 11-0 lead a t Uie end of th e f irs t period, but H ansen s«’ung in to a 18 to 15 half. Ume lead. H ansen continued lt.i of- fm ilve a n d completed the th ird pe. r lod wlUi a 37 to 17 lead.

H a u lto n rallied in the final quar. U r, with R ots leading th e a ttack against H ansen.

Rois scored 11 points for the w inners while Parm eter looped 10 points fo r H ansen.

I n the opener, H aiclton freshm en' sophomore qu in te t whipped Hansen, 30 to 3. High Haselloti m an was Dale Clwlslopherson w ith 13' points. A rm ent dropped In two. points for th e losers, who trailed 7 to 3 a t the holf.

Paul Wins Over Heyburn Quint In 3rd Overtime

HEYBURN. Feb. 3 1 -A perfect toes o f a gift allot In th e th ird overtime period by W inn gave the Paul PanU iers a 33-33 victory over Uis H eybum q u in te t hero Friday n l ^ t In one of th e m ost exclUng court contests ever staged In th is territory.

After taking a 18-K lead a t th e half tim e. Paul slum ped and Hey­bum mov^ed In to a 30-30 tie a t the end" of th e regular playing Ume. In th e Hrst overtime period, ead i side scored two points and In the second sudden-deaU i sUtnza, neither team was able to score. T licn W inn m ade good on h is gift shot In th a t th ird period.

Scoring honors w-ent to W arp and Holme* of H eyburn a n d C m - ven of Paul. eacl> wIUi 10 •points.

Pre llm lnaiy w en t to Uie Paul frosh-soph club by a 28-20 score over the local youngsters.

Jerome Boxers Trim Malad Fighters, 6-2

Jn iO M E . Feb. 3 l-^ n io BlUKBlng Jcynme h igh school T laers stored n 8-3 decision over th e vLiltlng M alod boxers he re Frldoy. n igh t before a • ncar-copoclty crowd. T hree bouts ended In draws.

,L_T>ie fights, were featured te c l i n l^ kiiockout'scorcd by Mum- l^irles. 120. Jerom e, over Evans of Malad In Uie second round.

O fflclnb for Uie f lg lit were LouLs Denton. T w in FnlLi. referee: Delano «,, McMalion. Jercm e. and Sam G ib- I J f son. M alad. Judges.

Complete results follow;W illiams. 03. M alod, drew w ith

Stone. 03. Jerom e.Main, 08. Jerom e, decisioned Tov-

ey, 08.' M alad.Jones. 100. M alad. drew wlUi F lsli-

er. 100. Jerom e.M orion. 118. M alod, decisioned

W estfall. 118, Jerom e.H umphries. 120. Jerom e, scored

teclmlcol koyo In Uie sccond round over Evans. 130. M alad.

Williams. 128. M alad. won decision over KlnsfaU ier. 128. Jerome.

H u rt. 130. Jerom e. W 5n decUIon over H unsaker. 130. Malad.

Spencer, 142. Jerom e, fought draw wlUi *niomas. H3. Malad.

Hall. 134. Jerom e, ncorcd decision over W ilson, 134. M a'.id.

Hill, 148. Jerom e, won over B\'ons,148, M alad.

Holloway. 133, Jerom e, defeated Anderson. 133, Malod.

RIGGS Me a t s k o v a c .sBIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Feb. 21 m

—Bobby R lg js defeated F rank K o- . vacs. 0-3. 8-0, and ZKxi Budge down­ed Fred Perry, C-4, 0-4. lust n igh t * In m atches sU ged by Uio touring W professlonol tennis troupe. ^

D U S T P R O O F . . .DT.UE DLA2E CO /i\. I r i lm . s •tientlfle oil hiaiuiia siii] ' ficlal to m ike it permanently dnttlei*. I t'i clesn s i a pin In ifae bln.

BLUE BLAZE COALH y d r c K l m t d ^ i f d — DuUproeltd

(TTAira t o w m ask stoxeh coai

WARBERGBROS.

Phone 246BLUE BLAZE COSTS NO SIOUK

a)

P U B L - ^ C S A L ETUESDAYAFEB. 24, 13-12

SALE STARTS P R fjH rT L Y AT 1 O'CLOCK '5 miles west and miles D oH hiot Twin F a lls or 1!4 east and *i north e f Flier. As I have decldedllo dlseenU nas farm ing I will sell a t pobllo aneUon, th e following: A _7 nO RSES—O ne U am bay m aretJIS > rt.'o td . In foal, weight 1700; one roan m are, eem lo r 3 Trs.; two bsy flUies, com lnr Z years.; one smooth m onth bay horse, weight ISOfl; one w eaner eolL 9 C A T T L e-O n s D orham -H oU l^n eow. < yrs. eld. giving 4 gals.; one roan D v h a m heifer. Jost f t ta h i 'one G uem sry heifer, calf by side: one D nrham -H olsteln helfcr. calf by tide : one GneTnsey-Dar- ham heifer, b red ; one holsteln belfsr, bred) one yearling D arbam - HoUteln heifer. .2< I IO G S - ^ a e sow w ith five pigs: th ree brood sows, to farrow soon: one fnll-bleoded Spotted-Poland C blna^bosr: U feeder pigi; 4 w eaner piga.MACUINERY—O ne iS -lo . OUver two-way t r a t le r plow, new ; «n« OUver 7 -fk trac to r mower, new; one Moline 7 - f t tan d en disc; ene Mellne dooble-bar. beet a n d bean calttra to r: ene McCormick-Deer- ing box-type bean p lan ter; ene Mellae 8 - f t g rain drUl; one Me- Cotinlek 8-ft. b inder: ene S ailer Iwo-roii bean c o tter; one Krengel cerm gaterj one spod p lan ter: ene John Deere m ano re spreader; one low-whe«t wagon a n d rack; one New Idea side delivery rake: two da m p rakes; oa« 3*secUon harrow ; one e i l r a heavy A-type derrick.MISCELLANEOV&-TW0 MU good work harness: four good collars: one 600-bnsbel Un g rana ry : two portable bog houses, 6xlJ f t? ene D eL aral c ream separator; SOO bnsbe! m l n : IM bosbe)w heat; U tons good ehopped hay.T D R 'T R IT A T C SALE ONLY—O ne portable hay eheppeff com­plete w ith SO-ln. Lets chopper, 48-horse W akaosha power imit, SO n , •• in . m b b er belt, * seU knives, J e c r ^ S t S e h e s . etc. 1830 Chevrolet track . ^

LUNCH SERVED ON GROUNDSG E R A L D M ILLER . O W N E R

BILL BOLLENBZCK. Anetloneer ELMER HAAG. Cierit9 )

Page 9: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

B\mday,’F tbniiry 22,1942 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO P a g e N ln ^ t

LATK OREGON RALLY BEAIgLIDAHO VANDAL CAGEBS, 35 TO 30

S^nuhd^ b ^ M W o o d

VANDALS MOVE

OUT O F COAST

LOOP CELLAb '

W hal‘# Uils I hear o u t of Mos­cow? >

Tlie Unlver&lty of Id ah o b u k e l- bnll qu lnU t h u left th e cold, dork dompncM of th e n o rthern dWl»Jon. Pftciric CoM t conference cellar.

U m ay n o t be for long—b u t w h at a grand feeling to we In thU ataUi

•who follow so closely th e dcsUnles 0* VmidoJ a thletic teams!

I t npp?ara th a t the new se t-up In Vtnitlalvllle Is ah-eady s ta r tin g lo show itsu lla Uic tu tu ro loolc-1 even b r l« h l« r -w h a t wlU» Conch r ra n c b A . S chm id t sclied- ulcd to bo bock a ja ln In 1M3 for football and Coach O uy Wicks aUll bulldlns on his cage squad.

‘ A goodly share of the success of the University of Idaho bfisketbail qu in te t can be Inlcl. of course, to BuiigllnK and be.ipccUiclcd Uny T iir- i i t r of Tw in F a lls -p to b a b ly one of the g ren trst court i>ciUormers, evrr

'- iu rn rd ou t nt th e Idaho Institution.Currently n a y Is on Uio road to

settliiK iin nll-Ume a ll-n o rtliem d l- vldon confcrcncc scoring record anti i n i take some vciy eUfI jjua rd ln s ou the p a rt of a ll opponents to stop him.

Aflcf ln.1t n lsb t’s encounter. Hay had onl>’ five sam cs le ft to play will h a d ttvtiage som ething

• les.1 Uian 10 points per game— whlcli Is nearly Uiree u nder w hat he h a i been collceUng for th e rest of ihe conference »ea%on.

Tlie Cowboy baseball d tu a tlo n Is shaping up well.

But I ’m of Uie opinion U ia t th ings a re n 't running a s unooUily as they should be.

U Vs my belStl U ial th e stlecUon of a president, buslne.is m anager aw l p lnylngm anngcr should be com ­pleted' no t later Uinn Uie m eetlns

•slated for Monday night.Who will hold the new posts l.i

Im m aterial—as long as th a t m an hfw baseball expcrlcnce and know s whnt he Is going about. Tony Robello. of courKc, looks like JUAt tJio m an Umt the Tw in Palli club could u.ie.

He h a s good Da-.eball scivie. he’s a s tr ic t dl.wlpUnarlan. has proven himself to be a good m a n - , a ser and would be generally well' thouKht of by T tt’Ui PulU ftuis.However, ohe of tlie biggest asseL-i

would come If he were able to hold down a playing position regularly . In Joycec park h e would sm ash o u t many home runs tha t would go for nop flies In Uie wide spaces a t 0 « - ficn nnd Idaho ra h .i and h e wtmltl be n tlireu t ut the p late th a t Uic Coi*boy;i haven 't enjoyed shice tlie

Jlden days of 1030.However, writing nbout nobello Is

putting the earf^before th e horse.WhRt has to be done—and I DO

menn righ t now—Is aettio th e local set-up ^ o ^ h a t Uicre will be no more puzzlement on the part of local luns and flnnnclnl supporters.

AnoUier prospective p layer or m anager for Uic Cowboyji showed up yi'nli'fdiiy wlyjii Oeor«o K. W es- Rd.i. a v e tc rn n ^n tch c r o f mucli experience Innded In town.—sent down by President Jack Ilalllwell and Owner H aydn W alker of BoUe as a possible a id to U>e Cowboy biucball fortunes.W cisels was se n t by the Brooklyn

Dodgers to manaBe a sem i-pro bah club n t 'O re a t ra ils . Mont., b u t found tlio t his Jo6 there to be held In tlie w in ter M n th s when U itre was no bnsebalT couldn’t be held because 'le wasn’t a union m an—a n d thi inlon w ouldn't lee him join.

So. Mr. W euels. who has a wife In 111 h ealth who m u s t live In the west, Is’ hero Icwklng for w ork— and a b o a baseball Job when the time comes.

He asked for th e m nnagershlp, bu t If UiBt Un’t nvallsble. he 'll lake one ns a plaj-cr. Only 33 years old. he mill has a lot of catclilng d a j’s ahead of him. He h i t .207 playing Xor W in­nipeg In tlic Class C N orthern league lo:,l year and before th a t played in the Florida State league, had a try ­o u t with Rochester In the In te rn a ­tional league and later caugh t for B u to rd .' Q a.. ntkilonal r.cml-pro champions a few years ago.

He abo pu t In a couple of sea ­sons as c au h e r for Uie g rea t S a t­chel Paige, w orld-fam oai Negro Jmrlfir. w hen th a t character was hurling for Uie Bismarck tN. Dak.) sem i-pro c lu b -a k o u team

'th a t 'w o n Uie national cham pion­ship.W ith experienced help probably or

a raUoned 'basis Ui)s year, h e m ight prove to be a valaable . aide to tlie Cowboy fortunes in 10«.

Manager Swap Denied by Bee Secretary

SALT LAKE CTTY. Peb- a r (,!>>_ Reports 'U ia t Tw in Kails and Balt Lake City of tlie Pioneer Da.'.ebikll league would trad e manoRcrs th is

'yeaT 'found no conflrm allon tonight from Cloude Engberg. sccretarj- of the S a lt Lake club.

The Salt Lokc Telegram today printed the report th a t Andy H ar- rtngUin. It cast ad rlU by Uic Twin m ii* Cowbo-s. as has been fore­cast. "would be signed to direc t the Bees and th a t Tom Ilobello. la it year’s Bee boas and n o « a free ttgeot. would 50 to T w in Falls.

Engberg, however, said there hiid J»cn no dealing* w ith H arrington. It'-w as pointed ou t, moreover. Umt ft, league rule forbids one club ne- gotlflUng wlUi a p layer under con- tn ic t to anoUier club!

The Bee secretary announced the ■signing of E arl Owen, ha rd h lt- tln»>outfieIder. who was w ith the Bees In 1040 bu t was burred hi.Nt year under a rule U iat forbids u player from ,being employed by any otner organization th a n th e ball club-

He fjild.' aliio. llm t Vaughan Buiker. Knowlw Vlercy, Dob DoilKc oiid.W orUi.JcuM n, i-ookles w ith the Bees la it year, have been r.lKiied for the 1042 season. Contrnct--; hiive been mailed, he added, to Wlllla Etws, Ben OutnlUM. Fred Moresco, Johnny CaviiIK. I'Tiink MorrLs. John Pudllk and Joe L;i Forte.

Lo Porte was • purchu.ncd from Bakerfleld of Uic CaUfornla SUite

,league. --T lie.rem alndcr- the Bees last season.

Of the 1041 Bees, pitelier.-. Nig T ate and Mel RlsUiu arc now u'l the anned forces as is Eddie .Mur hara. purchased 'from Bakcri.ficld,

S ho rt shots:I f s toum sjnent tim e In’&outh ce

tra l Idaho—and breathes Uiere boy with soul so deatl w ho doesn 't hope h is club wUl win th e d lsu ic t .championship (at least)? . . W a-ih-

- •■lngton-8tat« Cougars nre curren tly resting on th e lop of the h e a p In U>e norUiem division conference

t sUindlngs o f Uie Pacific conference —but the odds are very m uch against the ir repeaUng la s t year's trium ph . . . The Couears stlU Imvc a tough row to hoe. with W ashing­ton and Oregon S ta te r ig h t oh the ir heeLi . . .

Now's the time of year I ’d like to be ia baseball player—in th e big Ume and heading lor the w arm er climes of the . spring tra in in g camps—w ith no w orrle i.other th a n how many thousand dollar* In - crease In pay was forthcom ing th is Reason . . - Ju s t a dream , of course.

BROTU En ACT POCATTXLO. Feb. 31 A n­

o ther brother act will be p e rto n n e d tn the Plot\ccr Q uebaU league thU season.

T he Pocatello CartUnala have ‘signed Jo h n W schUer of O m aha,

-Pitcher, whwfl b ro ther,'IJIII, wUl ploy In (he ouUleld.

Husky Coach Staff Signs George Diiggin

SEATTLE, Peb. 31 (,V,-Coinplc. lltm of the ■ new U niversity oi Wa.shlngton football coacliinj; ;iUif; w as' announced today u iili llu apixjlnim eni of aeo rgc I lf rU m Dugglns of Purdue os an iiv>i.'>tant to head coach Biilph “P o r Welch.

Dugglns. 20. six feet tiircr Inchc.-i ta ll and welgliUlK 315 pounds, wil; a n end ot Purdue In l9:il-a'J-33 and played for Uic prok-.v.lonnl Chicago CunllnaU In IUJ4. A fter oblijlnlng nis iua.',tcrs degree a t Purdue In physical educallon In 1035. he went to Louisiana T ech u t H uston. La., where he woa aasAiit- a n i football coiich aiiu varsity baji- ketbull and track coach until 1040,

Two years ago ho retu rned to hU Purduo alma m ater where he wau an assLitant under Mai Elwnrd. who renlgned tliLi week.

D ugglns and the veteran D om ett V. “Tubby" Graves will be in charge of the line and th e ciid.i. Elm er H uhta, fonner WiL-Jilngton guard . I: frosh coach.

University ofdcitils also r.ald Dug- gins would bo a mem ber of the \vnsa jnp ton"pnysica l~ on (j~ heu iu»educftUon deparlinent. whlcli will bo expanded btcnusc ol w artim e dC' mands.

Gooding Club Trims Wendell

GOODINO. Feb. 21 — GoodInK high school cagcrs sm othered W en­dell high . 43 to 33, in a Friday n igh t game here.

Ilox Adamson, w ith 15 points, led the Gooding nttack. which - wu.i btrong enough to roll up a 1(J>0 lead h i Ih t llTsl tinaiVer and enable th e winners to take a 33 lo 10 h a lf- Unie Bdvanuige.

W endell rallied h i the Uilrd per- loa. bu t Gooding conUnucd to lead, piling up a 3G to 23 m argin. Scliou- weiler led the Wendell offensive w ith e ight polnt.1.

W endell .won the fre:,hman-i,oph- omore opener, 23 to 23. In a th riller. Cralin led Gooding with e ight points: Gooding led 10-15 n t naif.

JOCKEY SUaPENDEDMIAMI. Fla,, Felj. 2 i M v-H lnleali

park stewards suspended Jockey Leon Haskell today for the rem ain dcr of Uic season for grabbhiK Un. bridle of Tower Q uest during the second race yesterday.

H askell's m ount. AnnB-ft-Vl.ih. flnl-shed eleventh. Tow er G uest fifth .

— Left-Winger

• '- K

1

VSHNOUeoMEZC H E a S ’ LEFT AI?M WHICH WON 1 8 3 6 A M JE S f O e Y A N K E E f . . y r WONP£I?S IF r r HA$ I 7 M 0 M IN IT : TH lSyEA & SO H tC A N J O I N 2 0 0 a U B . —WfTH THEHal>OF FlPEMAN JOHNNy M U W V W HOFEfQUENUY C/J$HEPTO T H E C E SC tif LAfT S E A m U F T yH O P E J TO DfiAY ■ mYm ^mE wHUE l o w i n 6 u p a t p a « i n 6 ? i m s .

OreHon 35. Idnl^o 30.Hfcinford 30. U.C.L.A. 28.Cahfonila 43. Southern C ali­

forn ia 34,Rlck.s college 43. Alblun S ta te

N orm al 36.Brigham Young iinhvrslly S7.

UUdi a tjiie colk-ge 5'J.Utiih 3d. Colorado a u t e 27.Colorado 50. Denver 'JH.A labiuna 30. Spring Hill 14.HowarU Payne 53. Srwiuit-e 40.\Vc;,t Vlr«lnlu GO. W a.ihlngton aind

Jeffer.son 49,NorUi Dakota S ta le 37. NorUi D a.

ko ta university 31.M ichigan Buxte 47. M arquette 45.BuUer 33, Depauw 3U.Texius A. & .M. 33, Texa.^* a ir l s t ln n

U 27.n ice 05. 3MU 31.St. Louis U 37. Drake 25.Oregon S ta le 51, W ashhigton 41.New York university 54, L afayctlo

college 37. _____________l-’ordhain 52. M anliattan 38.Texa.1 5B, Arkaiea.'i 37.N. C. aiHte 44, W ake r o r c i t 38.G eorgia 3B. Gcol-|:ia T ech 37.South Carolina 54. Tlie ClUidel C3

(overUme).A nny 40. Drown <2,

3C,MT'corKclown 55, Yale 53( overUme)

NWUlwe^lt^n unlver-sUy 42, U ni­versity of .Maine 40.

Synicu.\c. 54, Jluigers 43.TcnneMi'C 39, Vanderbilt 20.U. nj Hoche::tcr,41,-ColgBtc 33, P enn Kiato 33, p l t t 28. Pcnin.ylviinla 52. D artm outh 40. Kn.ns;\s S'M lf 42. MlnsQurl 35. Oklahoma 40. Nebraska 41.Notre Dame 70, W estern neservi

30.Illinois 4B. Ohio S laie 31, ,Inwii 59. .Mlchliian 38.Wl;.con.'.Ui ,50. N orthwestern 47. P unluc 51. Chicago 27.M lnnc'.oia 47, Gri-at Lakes N aval

T rain ing St.itloii 30.C reighton 40, T ulia 30.

, .SI. B t to t -23. 'lown S tate T eachers 47, O m aha U .

•13. . ■G eneva 47. Carnegie T ech 35. P rinceton 58, Cornell 39.K entucky 44, Xavier 35,V erm ont 30. T rin ity 23.W illiams 40, A mherst 30.M arshall 80, Columbus university

By PAUL SCHEFFELS --?fE W • YORK, Peb. 21 - CU.FD-- P re« -b o x sport* paU er;

Baseball’s ’ trade .paper, Uie BporUng News, offers a p layer— W ayne Osbome by nam e—who m ay r,upplant th e D l« y D ear«. Duck Newsoms and B ranch R lck- cys when It comes to sntirlng d ia ­m ond headline.' . . > Osborne, a pitcher, won 13 and lost 13 w ith Hollywood of th% Pacific Coast league In 1041 b u t relum ed h is Ilmv '43 coniTfict unilgned . . . H e" cxplalnod Uiat ho thought th e o r i­g inal oootract called fo r too m uch money and as he did n o t believe h e .w u wdtUi ss m uch as h e got la s t year, suggested a reducUon . ; . W hen club officials recovered, O sbonie_K is signed n t his 1!>4I salary.T here are few priority w orries a t

O hio B u te . . . An inventory re- enough m aterial to ouU lt bU

athleU o u a m s lo r th e nex t th ree y e * n . . . o U u lc sports crack of th e year w u m ads by New Y ork’s m ayor LoOuanlla who. In backing n ig h t baseball games, said: " if we a re to be bombed. I ’d Just as abon tM In ft ball park a s In my a p a r t­m en t." . „

T he naUonal »eml-pro basebail

^congress comes Uirough w lU i.a p lan to register an estim ated h a lf mllhtm m alts tn o age T tslrtcilons) a t 8.000 sporting goods sUDres In a program designed foi" all persona wanU ng to play bo.-:eball . . . Did you know dep t.: Tlioma.', W in ter w4s th e firs t fighter to adop t a n allaa In the ring . . . As Tom Spring h e won the EnglWi heavy- w elglii' UUe In 1824.Pen n S tate , led by Barney £w cll.

han nom inated a team of 22 a th ­le tes lo r th e 21s t annual 1C4A track a n d field m eet M arch 7 a t M adison Square C arden . . . NYU’s baskeU boll team , rated a n-outs ide choice to r tnvltAUon to th e naUonal to u r­n am en t a t M adUott Square O a td ea . Jo ses'tw o of Its o u tsund lng player* —Bob Davldoff and Jim Coward— to Uie arm ed services nex t week . .

Coacli D ana X . Bible says U iat th e University of Texas foolhall te am will have 23 IM tennrri avalJ- ■Dle f o r - n m season's team . . . He lost 11 s ta r te rs from la st yeor'a “g rea tes t team In Texas’ h isto ry” along w iu i f ive oUier le tte rm eo . . . NaUonal Champion Ned Day will soon p u t h is bowling trick* on th e screen lo aid Uie game'* duffers . D ay has bowled IB pc rfec t 3Q0 .p unc»._;_________

Ricks Cagers Sweep Series With Albion

'A L B I O N , F e b . 21 — R ie k a coUckc V ik in g s , w i t h t h e i r .slam -bn iiK ty p e o f b a t t l e , c o m p le t e d t h c i r sw fe ] i o f ii tw o - K am c H eriea w i th t h e A lb io n N o rm n i P a n t h e r s h e r e t o n i g h t b y a n n e x in g a 45-;J8 v i c t o r y — j u s t tw o point.^ b e t t e r t h i i n

I h e w in th e y Iiu iir u p F r i - d jiy i iiK h t . T h e s c o re in t h e 'i r . s t K Jinie w h .'J III-HS.

For th e .\ecoiid night In a row, Brlm hall led tlip VlkinKn to victory, ^corlng 12 point.' In ton igh t 's en ­counter. T lie locals made a ba ltle of llie engagem ent frotii .Unrt to finish, a lthough Rlck.1 always had Ju s t a Ittle Uie better of the a rsum en t.

Tlie Vtklngn were In fron t 18-10 n t the InlermKHlon,

Friday night';, rnnagpm enl saw Uic two qulnleU battle Uirough. the llrs t five m inutes w llh n e ith e r club scoring. Tlien Albion took a m om en- larj- lead u n til Uic VlkUifts w etil

1 the w ar-path to lake a 23-17 lead : Uie half-tim e.Albion camo bnck to Uc Uic i.core

: 34-all and laU r a t 30-all. T hen R J c t t led by Jorgenson and D rlm - hftll wenl.on u scoring r.pree lo take

12-polnt lead before Uie I’anUicrs covered sufficiently to trim the

marglo down to five p o in f .rim iiell wlUi 13 polnt.s topped the

tos(;r% Iti scaring. «<iUc Jots«n:.on got 12 and Brlmhall 11 fc • th e win­

ed back inio Uie lepd cloning minutes.

■ Idaho LeadsIdiilm ran Uio coun t to 24-18 ...

Uie r.ecoii(l h a lf opened, b u t'b e« iin fouling as Uie Oregon offensive pick­ed up .tpred. Calmly Uie O regonlani dunked Uie gift goalFaiid . wlUi Paul Jackw n Bceurntc from Uie field pulled even with t^ e h(»>, club a t

138-all a fter nine m inutes.T liat was Uie m om en t T u rner

btmed cu t and Uio outcome again ww in doubt;OnEOONAndrews, f ...........Maynard, f .........Wren, f ..............Marshlk. c ...........L. Jackson, c - .....KIrjch. g ......Taylor, g ...........P. Jackson, g .....

17.

—UnoujM. f<Albion

Uicws (10 Cnnnrll (Oi .Vflllard U21 McCombs iDlSand t (I) .

tonight's b a ttlrv - — Hick.-;

(121 B rlm hall <1) nobla^an

(0) Packer (0) Jorgcii.-.on

(7) .

.core: Idolio 20, Oregon

Free throws missed: Andrews 3. M aynard, W ren 3. M arshlk. Taylor, Jackson, Turner, Rosenberry, H op­kins.

— Referee: Hal-Lee, Wo.nhlngton.

Substitutions;Hale.i. Andreasi Arnolds < ll). W illiams ( . .

Results ot Friday’s gam e: AlbionMatUiews t5) C ann tll U2) M illard (0) MeComb.1 Sanders (2)

Substltutloi

Rick;

10)

F ( ID Brlm hall F TWbln.101'C (0) Packr: Q <12) Jorgen-ion O <41 Jau^^l

.A lbion — Ot>och.

St. Louis Kegler Favored in Boise Invitation Tourney

BOISE, Feb. 21 Lowell Ja ck ­son of Bl. LouU. wlUi a a io average In 11 years of league bowling ojid with ft record of 15 perfect, tanic.1. tonight wa.*! favored over 60 other keglers In the MOO firs t p rlee two- day TwcnUeUi CenVury alleys to u r­nam en t r.tarUng tonight.

Bowlers were entered from Den- ;r. S a lt L.-Ucc City, T w in Falls,

Porllond. Pendleton, W alla W alla. Elko. Nev.. nnd Nampa, according

Charles W olfenborger, louniey manager. E ntry fee Is 120.

F ifteen entries were from Soil L*ke City, two from O W en and - - - from T w in Palls.

12 S t Louis Card Batteryiiien Sign

ST . lX >tns. Feb. 31 (/TV-The C ar­dinals, who th is year c lianged Uielr form er policy of m aking piecemeal announcem ents on contract4. Issued th e f l r . t report today on th e i ' o t th e ir b^tterymen.

T he plUdiers and catchers■ ' to s ta r t spring tra in ing

o t SU Petersburg, Pla.. M onday.B m nch lUckey, vice-president and

g tn tra l m anager of th e club.Ui4t 13 battery men had signed trac ts. THey are:

P l tc h e n Jo h n Beazley, Morton Cooper, I r a H utchinson, A1 Ju r- Islch, Howard K rlat, BUI L ohnnan , Oeorgo' M im ger, Howard Pollet, Clyde Bhoun and Lon W nm eke: Catchers O us Mancuso a n d W alker

CASH-Paid fo r dead, old o r disabled hOTMS, rou lts and w n . C all co l­lect Percy Green a t MABT ALICE TBO TIX'FA tlM

Tw in Fall* P h . OZU-JX—

P PF TP 4 1

Wk\\NX\\N\S\\\NN\\\N

Baseball Fumbles Chance In War Aid, Says Leader

fiALLAS, Tex., Feb. 31 (/P)—BMC-

Turner Boosts Scoring Mark Witl 18 Points

MOSCOW, I d a h o ,. F e b . 21 (iP)— R allying f ro m I h e e fr fccUi of a ( i r s t h a lf ram paR C Ktagcd by Bay T u rn e r , Id a h o ’ft one-mnn Rang, O regoi) p o s te d a 35 lo 30 baak e tb a ll v ic to ry toni^ftit and b o u n ccd o u t oC th e Pacific C o a s t c o n fc rcn cc noTtliern d iv ision b a se m e n t, puahing th e lo sers b ack to th e bottom ru n s .

Score a t th e h a lf w a s T u r ­n e r 11, Idaho 20i O reg o n 17.

Tlie Idaho hopes of rem ain ing ou t of Uie cellar e o l l a p ^ ' w hen T u r ­ner. Uie basketball add ing macshlno th a t walks and ta lk s and te rro r- iK a MsWng coaches, to u ltd ouV o l the game midway In th e second ha lf.He lind IS points. Ju s t two riio rl of his own ono'gam e m a rk o l 30 se t earlier in Uic schedule.

Foul Breaks TieTlial final loul perm itted Porky

Andrew to dunk th e free th row U iat cracked a 28-30 deadlock a n d sen t Oregon ahead to stay .

Turner opened th e fesUvlUes w ith a li tc thrcrt? nnti. Id aD o -x aa -u ' count to 9-3 while O regon was u tangling ltd m an -to -m on defcm Big Ray was In th e m ids t of i elglit-polnt spree w hen O regon swlidied to *ono defense a n d U\e vmior's were U'alllng 15-7 before Uiey got lined ou t on the new tac- Ucs.

Quickly Uiey erased th e m argin.Warren Tnylor potUng Uie goal U iatu« Shot“at-Title—

PORTba ll Is tumbling its chanco to

r a service In Uie war e t to r t and reesubllsh ItselX firm ly as Uio

.Uonol pastime, says s tra lg h t-U lk - Ing j . Alvin a a rd n cr, prcaCIent o f Uie Texas league.

-Presiden t noosevclt pu l h is s tam p of approval on (he game a n d gave It the green ligh t In w ar Ume." G ardner declared. •'Theix u-liat d id basetoall do hi returo? As fa r as I, can find Uie Texas lesguo Is Uio only one m aking a direct con trlbu - Uon to Uie war effort."

T h e Texas l e ^ e . jv t.l ta -a n n u a i schPdule"tileeUhg, voted to hold e igh t F ranklin D, Roosevelt n igh ts

and give all proceeds to the Bed Cro&s.

O srdner advocateil investm ent ofI least SO per cen t of sa laries above

ti io o a year In defense bonds, th a t baseball surpluses be likewise Invest­ed and UiAt th e world series make a bl0 contrlbuUoD to w ar fund. And h e doesn't th ink ball players Bliould hold ou t for more money wlUi so many young men now nerv Ing tlie lr country a t 131 a m onth.

•Rie m ajor leagues decided to twld two a ll-s tar games ai>d contribute Uio receipts to a ball and b a t fund for th o soldiers. 'T h a t’s fine, splendid gesture, bu t I t docMi't , fa r enough."- G ardner said.- *That‘8 Just baseball helping Itself by dC' veloplng plaj'ers",

Ray Robinson Would LUve

.t. f .......Tliompson. f ... Fredeklnd. f .Hooblng. f ....Turner, c ......Itosenberrj', c Hopkins, g ....Bewon, g .....Crnner, g ......Newell, g ........

a F P F T P

NEW YORK. Feb. 31 (/?>—T hey call him "Sugar." so Hay Robinson ruUoned one lumi>—on Uic litsd — to Mnxle Berger of M ontresl I n the ir weltcrwelKlit fight a t M adl- sott Square Garden last n lgh l.

Like a pocket edlUon of Jo e Louis, Uie skinny Harlem ham m ere r slop­ped Berger lt\ one m lnuto and 43 second.^ of the second s ta n za of Uielr scheduled 13-rounder, dropping lUtn tw ice before Referee F rankie Pu ll­m an ordered hosUUUes to cease.

F o r Iloblnson. who never haa know n d e fe a t,. It was th e SBth s tra ig h t triumph nnd th e 33nd knockout ’since he tu rned profes- slonnl lesi than two years ago a fte r w inning B9 figliU as nn am ateur.

His performanco earned him a sliot a t Red Cochrane’s w elter­weight UUe. but Uiere was U»lk th a t he m ight be matched w ith M arty Servo, Uie Schenectady c o a s t . {uardsman.

I n h is dre.wilng room, M axle sa id he Uiought "they slopped It too ioon." 11 was Uio first knockout icored ngnlnsl him Iti nearly a h u n ­

d red fights. "I wasn’t even h u rt," he luxld, adding U iat h e w ould Ukc lo m eet Robinson again.

Robinson made no secret of th e ic t he Uilnks Uie w elter crown

would look good on his h ead . '’I 'd like a clisnce a t Cochrane." h e said, •■but of course tha t's up ; m y m an­ager.'*

A.crow d of 13.104 paid SSS.ISO to e the show, wllh 10 per c tn t going > the naUonal InfonUle paralysis

fund .

Ashton Ready For Annual Dog Derby

ABirrON, Ida., Feb. 31 (,T) — Comeb' A lta Van Sickle, only woman entered, tJrtw th e No. 1 poslUon Uxlay lo r the an n u al American Dog derby a t th is east­ern Idaho community Monday.

Tlie Ashum woman, a strHclng brunette, will a ttem p l to win the race which her hu.ibflnd. Lloyd Van Sickle, twice has won.

OfflclaLi predicted 13 or 13 d riv ­ers would be In th e race before post lime, I:<5 p. m . (M\VTi M on­day.

Ten driver* drew these pavilions:No. 3, BUI SmIUi, Jack.wn. 200;

No. 3. Ray Peterson. S t. AnUiony, Ida.: N o .' E verett Heseman, A s h to n t 'N o .-8. D w igh t-6 tc \-c ia ;- Jackson; No. C. Celey Baum. Ash­ton ; No. 7. Lloyd V an Sickle, Ash­ton: No. 8, Delbert a room ; Rigby, Ida.: No. D. H. J . Casper, W est YellowsWne, Mont.; No. 10, AusUn Neeley, Fe lt, Ida.

ASHTON. Ida., Feb. 21 (Wldo W orld)—Neighbors o f Uils m ile-high town perched on Uie con tinen tal d i­vide acknowledRcd w ln trj’ rep- utaUon of the ir vicinity today as they completed preparaUons tor the .SOth annual running of th e A m erl

in doe derby.Probably-the oldest dog-sled event

In the country, th e m ow classic Monday will find th ree tw o-tlm a winners seeking a th ird w in and p e rm a n tta possession of th e K ug lff- HolHngsworth trophy. ••—

Cash, prizes, a trophy lo r Uw n er regardless of p ast performance.^ a n d a cup for th e fastest lap on th e tvo-m lle track aw ait th e 13 drivers who have entered speedy dogsled teams.

Bverett Heseman o f Asliton. wln^ n e r the. la st two years, a g a in will race a team of h is own special breed — iiaU Irish se tte r and ha lf sUghound—will en ter the contest tavortta to n p e a t.

“Outsider-Gatches Eye of Golf Boss In Winter Tourneys

NEW ORLEANS. Feb. .21 (,n — Fred Corcoran goicd Into h is cr>’s - ta l Rolf ba ll today anil saw a 20- year-old, lousle-hended C alifornian nam ed Ja c tio n Bradley w inning tournam ents.

Bradley h a sn 't been In Uie head ­lines o r even in Uio money on UiC w inter swing, Uie f lrsl of h is carecr. B u t F red 's crysUiTball b somcUilng of nn en trance hall lo Uie headlines and the money. I t wns Uiere th a t such perform ers as Sam Snead . Ben H osan , DMUh llanU on , Clnyion Heafner and Chick H arbert wore "dl.icovered." . ^

Corcoran, sUck-haired B ostonian who Is Uie P. G . A.'s w un ian ien t m anager and Idea m an. pointed ou t Bradley a t Uie tS.CKX) New Orleans open now In projreas n.< " a fellow who w o n t do a Uiing here Uils year bu t m ight win Uie Uilng n e x t time." _ B ju Jackson was doing one Uilntf h e r F T l io n ie has" wanted "to do i long tim e. H e was playing v,-lth By' ron Nelson, h is idol. And he wai p laying well. Nebon took 35-38-73 and th e young Long Beach s ta r had 38-38—74.

•T’ve watched Nelson up a n d down Uie coast," said Jackson, "an d I’ve tried to copy him. He h its ever>-- Uilng stra igh t. He h as a w onderful style."

Oregon State Club Wins Over Huskies

SEATTLE. Feb. 31 </I>—O regon S ta te college took undfiputed pos­session of second place In th e n o rthern dlvblon of the Pacific Coast conXerencfl tonight by de feaUng W ashington. 51 to 41. In i clQoely-fought basketball game a t th e W ashington pavilion.

T h e defeat vlrUially elim inated W ashington as a division UUe con' lender.

I n 1775 John H ancock 'signed commission making Samuel Nicholas a m arine captain. Uie first commis­sion o! th e U . 8 , m v y .

Bright Cardinal

iptaln Don Bom ess, a ward, has been Inilrum enU l In keeping Stanford on top rang of ta u lh e m d lrb ion of Pacific Coast conferenca basketball ladder.

Jolm Borican Ties World 880-YardMark

NEW YORK, Feb. t l OPh-l- Gregory lUee, (be tittle m aa with the Iron lefs. wen bis 42ad rac« la a row (m lgh l by defeatli^ Qlt> bcrt Soddj ot Bw lon by a scant Uiree yards in (be TeBStaint‘tw»* mile at the annnal New Tark A.C. lam es.

The form er N atre D an e ha rrlef Jumped Into the lead two and is ha lt laps from heme a ad fe iv h l o tr (he bespeetacled <Ur{nl(y sta* ' den t a ll (he way (o r«M h the U p* in 8:53.2, * m eet record a a d . lb a .—

't h i r d fastest two-mlla c v tn t luA Indoors. '

By HAROLD CMA8EN NEW YOIIK. Feb, 31 MV-J<*Q

Dorlcan, Uie young Negro po rtra it pa in ter from Asbury P ark . K . J , opened th e New York A. C, tn c k meet tonight by equalHag th e world Indoor record for the h a lf m ile .’

Borican. already the holder o t t h t - 600-and l;00i>-yard world Indoor rec- (Vds. snapped th e U pe at 1:31.4. m aU hlng th e m ark Lloyd Hatm established on a n eigh t-lap N«w - York arm ory track in 1938.

T onigh t Borican, running in a n 11-lap affair, took tho lead a t Uti very first stride and finished six feet ahead of Charles BeeUiam. th« form er O hio S ta te r from Colum* bus.

Cnta.Mar* •Borlcan 's e ffo rt snipped one and

tw o-ten ths second from tho m eet record he se t a year ago. I t was th e fastest B80 yards e>-er ru n in Madl*

in Square G arden.Alfred Diebolt, Jr.. powerful Col­

gate runner, caugh t Roy Cochran of Bloomington. Ind., In the final strides of the Buermeyer flOO and tln b h e d In &7.I, a second laaVei th a n Uio accepted Indoor -world s tandard se t by Eda-ard P . O 'B rlea of Syracuse In 1037.

W ins PoU V aslt Earle Meadows of Uie S o u th tm .

C alifornia A. A., won th e pole vau lt a t M feet a n d A1 Bloxls. Oeorpe- lown's m an of muscle, trturapiied In th e sh o t p u tt w ith a heave o f S3 fee t AH Inches.

G eorge Gilson, slender Roly Cross hurd ler, registered a m ild surprise by defeaUng Allan Tolm leh of De> tro lt m the finals of th e 60*yard h igh hurdles, th e Hew E nftaodcr U lum phlng to ;0 7 i.

Leslie M acMitchell. who «<]ualled the world indoor compeUUve record

4:07.4 In w inning the Baxter mile year ago. trium phed In th e same "

event b u t w ith a time of 4:Q94.

Walt-Price Gets Call to Active Duty in U5. Army

MOSCOW, Idaho, Feb. 31 W V- W aller Price, line coach for the University of Idoho foolbnll team , has l>een called fo r active duty w lU i*the army. He Is a first lieu tenan t In th e infan try reserve.

P r ic e camo lo the university from the coaching poalUoii n t PocfttcUo high school in 1038 and was elevated to a.uU tant under head coach FmncLi Sdjijiidt.

A V h l e l l c Director Ocorge O recne said no appointm ent to replaco Prlee Mould be consid­ered unUl la te summ er If the university decides to hire a ' new

Beglan Wins Over Griggs in Close Billiards Match

Closest, m atch In Uie T»'ln Falls hand icap billiard loum am etil. waa recorded Friday n lgh l a t the H. and M. c ig ar store, where M ntt Beglan defeated B. B. Griggs. 80 to 77. BoUi cuo compcUtors wcro ploytog for 80 points.

In th e opener. Sturgeon McCoy defeated Don Worley, 80 to 44, wlUi both m e n ihooUng for 80 points.

T m o rro w n igh t’s games will m atch F rank Green. T w in FtUb. 125 p o ln u vs. B. H. Alkln.'son, K hn- berly, 80 points: and H arry. Pove>’, T w in Falls . 150 points •« . Wes Ar­nold. K imberly, 80 points.

Green>^AUclnson m otch will com­mence a t 1;30 p. KL, u-tUv the Povcy- Arnold encounter dua a t 8:30 p. m., according to E. O. Bm cken, tour­ney m anager.

Claudette Colbert Joins Ski Club At Sun Valley

SUN VALLEY. Idaho, Feb. 31 -F ilm la n d 's Claudette Colbert to­day became & membc: o t th e Bun V alley Ski club s

on hand for the downhill and slalom m ces w hich fcre to be h t l l W several classes tomorrow.

A group of colorful spectators a t Uie even t will be a ha lf-dosea South A m erican skiers who are vlslUng Sun VaUey a s p a n of » goodwill tour sponsored by th e Ka> Uonal Sk i assodatioa.

O fficers of A e club for m j win be nam ed a t a meeting of the board of directors, wiilch inclutlta W. A. H arrtm an , A llred I>. U n d - ley a n d O tto I ^ g .

Los Angeles Trades Hurlet for Catcher

LO S ANGELES. Feb. 31 bP)—T he Los Angeles baseball club anaounc- ed today th a t P itche r Vance' Pago h a d been swapped for b tity M Todd, Milwaukee catcher and Tet- e ran of m any m ajor league cam -' palga-<.

Both players were shipped by the Chicago c u b .1 to Milwaukee a fte r ' the 1041 season got underway, but Page w as sla ted to have hurled for Los Angeles th is season.

W A T T E N T I O N m i m . . S H E E P M EN..--

Price o f pe lt paid fo r old and dead sheep.

m A B O H ID E * tX L L O n ‘M lo Falls rb .S l«

G oedln« r b . <7 B opert R l U

. Unfailing Sign o f

Good Seeds for 58 Years!

F o r more than half • oeBtnrjr—d n riac pe«ee e r tra r , tb n tix h je a ia o f deprea* ston or i\I«otT—th is f a m o n A m e rtc n firm has no t telled to snppiy tbe f a n w w ttb blgbeat (jttaaty. tw te d seed- IW a T ear, as a lw ay s (be n y ta r O e e w on th e U ffU assaraa ee efD E P E N n iu B Z X aeed.

Northrup King S Co.

Page 10: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

i'age K n . TIMES-NHWS, TWIN PALLS, .IDAHO, : S u n d ay , F e b n ia iy . 22 , 1849

SHORTAGE OF BOATS DELAYS SHIPMENTS OF WAE MAf ERIALLES

UP A T l A R V E SWASHINGTON. Feb. 31 (/P> — A

shortaee or ships w u reported today ' to bo Uio principal ob.iUclo to db- U ferlng much ne«de<J wur «upplle.i to th e Jar-aw ay ba tlle tron ls of Uie U nited NnUons.

W ar materlols. c ra led and ready to be stowed away In cargo hold.i «e r« a ^ d to be plllns up or w harves.

O f course. Oie otntaelo was cxpect- ^ lo be only a temporary one, alnca tJie American iililp bulldlns p roeriun la actually Jtu l svinRing Into full tu t, a n d production Is scheduled to reach a ra te of ivi-o latmchlngs a day soon.

A ppearing recently before a nenato appropriations • subcommittee, A d­m ira l Banor^• S. Land, In c h arse of

. th e sh ip bulldlns proRram, repo rted ­ly said th a t every e ffo rt was belnu m ade to avoid shorLa«e.i of &hlp* building materials and prevent the . labor disputes which In the p a s t have lmpedf<l construction.

Shlpbulldlnf Fund 'Tlio subcommltlcfi. ha.i been con-

BlderlnJr a 133,070,901,000 arm y-navy supply bill which Includes »3,U3.- 000.000 In appropriations and a>i- thorlratlons for tins. iJilpbulIdlns

■ pCOihiujji. 'In aplte of Incrcwcd activity by

enemy submarines, lo.ues due to enemy action «-ere sold to bo re l­atively small. A n Im portant fac to r In th e shortaso was niUd to be the lone distance to be covered In earry- Ins cargoes to Uie fa r Pacific ba ttio

Building Healtk in Democracy’s Youth—Sample From Filer

!■ H D B I B B B i

sphere defense board would ta ie under consldem tlon Uie ques­tion of convoylnir ships running be­tween North and Soutli America. I t could be taken for Rranted, he sold, th a t practical meajiures for pro­tecting such ehlpplns would be worked ou t In Uie near future.

SnperrUM Pooling4( t th e same time. L and announc*

ed the creation of an, Anglo-Am eri­can orsan liatlon to supervise the pooUng of cargo vessels for w ar operations. Land will represen t Uie U nited S tates and S ir A rthu r 3 a l- te r. speaking for the British w ar

• tran sp o rt ministry, will represen t England In WashlnRton.

A sim ilar se t-up h as bee« e stab ­lished In London, with Averell H nr- rlm an. lend-leaae expediter, speaK-

. ing fo r this country, and Lord L eathers, m inister of w ar transport, lo r G re a t Britain.

Kiwanis Ladies’ Night Arranged

BUIIL. Feb. 31 — A nnual K i­w anis Ladles’ n ight dinner was giv­en by members of the club for 45 Kue-its a t Uie. Aurom cafe d in ing ha ll W ednesday evening. In com - memoraUon of W ashington’s b ir th ­day. i la rse picture of W ashington graced the room, and a ll lighted tapers In red. w hite and blue were grouped along Uia lengths of Uio tables.

Presiding a t the dinner and p ro ­gram was President B urnard T , Al­bertson,

t>r. noya l Dye. returned Clirlstton .m lj s lo n a ry frotn the Dclslon-Congo,

gave A descrlpuve talk on conditions In A frica, and told Incidents of tils experiences In th a t mLvlon U>e post tw e n ^ years. He described h is 10,- 000 m ile Journey to the African po rt o f Dokor on the w estern coast of

, F rench W est Africa, and of th e a r ­duous Journey to Uie Inland country o f Uie Belgian Congo.

M r. and Mrs, Ben W inkler, Tw in Polls played several m arim ba selec­tions.

Defense Aid Will Hold Legion Eyes

OLENNS FEIUIY. Feb. 2 1 -A b a n ­quet a t 0:30 p. m. In Legion ha ll wtU open Im portant fourth d istric t Am­erican Legion meeUng here Tuesday. Fully 115 Legionnaires a re expected from Blaine, Jerome, Gooding, E l­more, Camas and Lincoln counUes.

A m erican Legion's rolo In civilian defertse work of the presen t w ar will be Uia chief -topic of dLvusslon. Q uests will Include such s ta te o ffl-

. . d u l l - a s . Sam Vance. H azelton, d e ­p a rtm en t commantler; Mrs. Vance, s ta te presiden t of the aux lllan ': L es­te r P . A lbert. Boise, departm ent a d - ju u in t : WllUam O .lla ll . Boise, *Uit« service officer, aj>d Homer Hudelson. m anager of Veterans' hospital and s ta te d irec tor of bta^kouts la civilian defense.

Filer Man Gets Car Okay No. 11

Eleventh perm it for delivery of a a Automobile sold before Ja n . 1 w as announced yesterday by th e county raU onlng board. I t allows H a n y H el­ler. Filer, to obtain a sedan.

sev en permits for th e pu rd iase of new a n d obsolctc-lype Urcs and i^bca also were gronicd. New rub­be r wlU be obtained by a Kimberly la rm er, two Urea and tubes lo r

■ one tiro for truck.Obsolete rubber was approved fot

a B uhl fann rr, one Ur« for fo rm tra iler: a Kimberly, laborer. Urn trac tor, and a Hansen truckm an, and tube for trailer: a Buhl farm er, two tlree for passenger car; a Tw in P a lls fan n er, two Ures and tubes fo r tra ile r; and a B uhl m an. one tlra fo r passenger car.

Airlines to Turn Over Transports

WASHINQTON, Peb. 21 M > - Com m erda] airlines, i t was a n ­nounced today, have agreed to tu rn over 23 transport planes to th e arm y.

T lie w ar departm ent said care waa . taken to aak planes only from Unoo

and rou tes where removal o f e<iulp-• m en t would cause th e least jw ^ b lc• dUrupUon, in- a lr - t r a r e l tm p o rtan t

to tho w ar effort.Cab recommendaUona, th e de -

p v tm e n t said, formed th e baali fo r t}>9 requM t ior th e p la n e t -w hich w as prom ptly rocognlied by th s a i r ­lines.’

DnlldinK heallhy bodies aa well as h e a llh f m in d i 'h a i-b f« o m e th e n tle In Macio Valley schooU ra th e r than the “ let ’em play It they w an t to" a tllinde of America’s schools fn past generations. These plclnres, taken a t V lc to ij school In Filer, prove It. Tlie slide Is one popolar spot when (he w in te r sun shines. Ju s t ellmblng the steps gives plcDty of ezeaclse and 's liding down h as a th rill a ll Its own. Plsy- groond e<iBlpment lik e - th is n o t only develops llltle bodies ba t also Uache* children to get along together, f irs t s tep in th e m aU og of a democracy. **

If you don 't th ink th is develops about all tlie m uscles you have Junt try It :iomrtlme. Theso two boys proved th a t there’s nothing to i t if you’m In ronillllon a n d conUnuIni lo be conditioned' In th is inan - n r r will find, as they grow up. th a t Uirre’s nothing to the bum |w of life—providing yoa're ready for them. The lUlie *lrl w as nex t in llpo 0 hang by tvec. knres w hen th is picture was taken. She was going

I t used lo be the practice. long ago, lo p a t np th e playjm ond'erinlpm ent and then let th e children I t If they Wanted to. Now ll’a encouraged and th e play , even a t recess, i-i organised. Children going throngh th e ir pacts fo r the Tlmes-News photographer fn Ih ls series were Barbara L ea Sm ith, n o n a le r I.eeper, M arilyn Schweltxer, Cart C heney. Glcnn W inkle and Dan Williamson, a ll F iler Victory school students. Swlniring b one of the popola r pastimes—It develops Irg and arm mnseles and also coordination In the child . Il'hnios by O. A .^K elket^T lm es.N ew s Kngravlng)

Magic Valley Educators Stress Health of YouthBy 0 . A. KELKER

A democracy is only m stronR as Its you th . More and more school leade rs , are rea llilns th a t outdoor exercise for all s tu d tn ls Is one of llie best body builders possible.

T ake, for Instance, years ngo w hen lltUe glrU—all prim and p roper— d id n 't take much exercise of any so r t b u t perhaps U iat obtained by w alk­ing to school In the mcm lnB nnd home In the afternoon.

Now times have chansed. Sport.s -e sponsored for the glrLs as well

as th e boys and tho glrU Uike lo U like fish to water. M uch of UiLn cl ange In Uie atUtude of healU jy bodies for a ll youngsters Is due to public school systems like th a ie now opera ting In the MAglc VaW y.

Youngsters Included N ot onl}' do Instructors a rran g e

com petitive sports fo r Uiose In the upper grades bu t those of th e lower grades a re no t fortfotten In Uie nw h to tu rn out a finished product. O rganized pla}' lias been subsU tutcd for the old " lilt and mLw’ system . M ost grade scliool teachers h av e , a t one tim e or another, com pleted on various athleUe teanu and th e y pas.s th e InformaUon learned on to th o youngsters. They encourage a ll youngsters to parUclpate a n d b e ­cause of th is encouragement, a ll th e youngsters do take an acUve p a r t In a ll gam es plarmed for them .

Flaj-ground equipment Is now as m uch a port of any grade school as a re blackboard.s, pencils, p a p er and books.

K eaem bef Uie D raftSince the f irs t d ra ft bill w as pass­

ed. a n d men were called In to th e service o f t!l\elr country, thousands have been found lo be u n f it fo r mlUtarj- duty in a n a tio n . w hich considered itself itrong . ‘

“Tomorrows'* geaeraUon — now w h lz tln s down Uie slides, sw inging h l£ h o r using the .^ linn lng b a r some grade school—will no t be th a t w ay If th e teachers have any th in g to say abou t It.-

I t m igh t be only n roiiicldcnce — and i t m l«ht be .sonictliinK rk e —but when th li w riter plckixl mil one of Uie schools where Alinlriits are en- couroeed lo uike part, in Kiimcs and w ent to Flier lo gel plcmrca of the jo u n ss le rs n t the kind of [ilny Uiey engage In cvco ’ day. h r iL-.kcd one of Uio tciichprs the niunc of the scliool.

"Iffl Uie Victor}' rcluiol," the ICRchcr replied.

Let Uiftl be nn cn in i. . . victory can 't help bu i come in iii.r m d lo a n a tio n where <lemocrnllc ulrals are encouraged, where rhlldren are ta u g h t to w ork and pl.iy togetlter. where one rule of ihc schools li to build strong bodies and whrre they BO on Boy Scout. Comp r ir e G irl a n d G lrc Re.icr\r ouUhks in ­s tead Of to a propagiuidn comp.

FA TEIt'S NA.ME noU O flTPiriLADEXPHIA. Kcb, 21 (,7V-Tlie

imrcha-wd for $40,000 Uie nam e, «ood will and As- soclatcd Pre.vi mcmberalup of Uie de- funct E \'cnins Ledgrr.

Air Wardens Will Carry Own Cards

Every air rnid un rden In T a in Falls county will c a r ry nn itlentl- tlcatlon card -slRiied by Gov. Chiise A. C lark and Jutlge Janir:. R, Bolh- well, d ia lrm nn of the T\k'ln Falls rounty civilian defenr.e wMinclI. 11 was announced lasl n igh t.

Tlio cards were being prepared for dU tribullon in th e dcfrn.ne offlcb which Is located in the courthouse, .ilioiing space in Uie county com- m Usloners' office.

The card will te.itlfy th .it the bear­er Is "an auxlllnrj' mem ber of Uic volunteer participation committee." and on the back wilt be Uie follow­ing wording:

•TliLs will Identify . . . us a ir raid warden of block (o r ^(^:llo^) . . . . c ity of for counlyt Tvi,lti Palls. Ida ­ho. Please lend your cooi>cralion."

TH E EUGENEB eau ty S tud io

. VICTOR & BLUEBIRDU ccords from th e la tc s l h i t p a ra d e —-35c plu.s la x

o v e n THK WHITE C o r novE n-

CItnn MUIrr, niiKblrd

-1 DOST WANT TO WALK WITHOUT VOU-

Dlnith Bbarr. niurblrd

-DgEP IN THE Iir.,\nTTEXAS"

.. . Alrlao JUT. Blnrbtrd •

S O D E N E L E C T R I CU itenlag Sooths for Yot

N e x t to O r p h c n m Ph. 270

Use Maps as f . D. R. Gives Monday Talk

WASHINQTON. Feb. 31 (U.PJ — P^e.^l^leni Roosevelt su8Rc.itc<i today th a t Uie American people have world iiiaiw or Klobts ready for reference when they listen lo hL'< M onday nlKhl fireside chill. Indicating he will review tiie war on a w orld-front scale.

White I^oa^e Secretary S tephen T . Early .i.ild th st In? believed d ia l when Mr, Roo.'cvelt. lin.? flnl.-<;ied ills nddrc.vi, tciicdiiled for 10 lo 10:00 p. ni. EWT Monilay n ight, - i t will have been made very clear th a t Uie oceans on cach of our coast lines are no longer Uie protecUon lo Uils country they were said to bo by

ime not so long ago." 'Tlie iirr;.ldeni, became of head

cold, was unable to meet h is regu­la r Prltlsy morning press confer­ence.

"If Uic people will be good enough to oiien (heir iloorii and le t him in Monday iilnlit,’' Early said, " th e pre.-.ldcnt liojici they have a m ap of Uie world or a Klobc of th e world so Uiey mlKlit very clearly o r m uch better unili'rstapd h im as ho talks w ith them. "* Early said he Uioughl Uie p resi­den t's nililri'.'in would be aim ed in Uie principal direction of "KivinK Uie picttirr of the world n t w ar a.i h e sees it."

Early uildeil th a t Mr. Roosevelt sees the war -ihrouKh Uie copies of every- - nrmy—and— navy- <lUpftcli, through oilier cha'nncLi of In form a­Uon avatl.iblr to the governm ent and to the Interchanges of Inform 'a- tlon amouK the yn lle d N ations."

Tlie nddre.v! will show th a t m ili­ta ry actions anti naval engagem enu. Uiough they may be fought Uiou- sand .1 of mlle.i away from th is coun­try, win (lircclly affec t cach com ­munity m ihe U nited. S ta te s and each man working on llic production lines. Early said.

’ I the

The Same.

C A R PWith Everything

We ean GUAflANTEE sa lb fac - iion for th e same rare is exer­cised with t i t r y Hem wa clean or preit. Voo'11 pronotinee tho results T e rfee t.-

AlIJJul for vrctory=y Jre-

quent c cleaned a t regular In ter-

„vals la st longer and look fresh and r

SAVE 20% ^CASH & CA RRY

C l B A N E R S j

IN THE OLD STAGE DETOX

B tre ^ N ortl

SCHOOtLEAOER SEESL0NG1IAR

SPOKANE, W ash- Feb, : i (/T>—' President George 8. Benson of Harding. Ark., predicted today Uio wivr would last a t least Uiree, possi­bly five years, and urged Americans to make plons now for meeting post- w ar problems, •

T he naUon's f irs t concern, he told Uie final session of W estern Retail Lumbermen's convenUon. m ust be to achieve victory bu t he pointed out lh a t over-lndebledne.vi. m ais unem ­ployment. relief psychology and gov­e rnm enta l control of industry were problems the nation Miould be a c t­ing to prevent even whilff-flghtlng

Hcrnwen of Baker, Ore.. president and chose Portland.' Ore.. as the 1U3 convention site. T lie associa­tion voted to move lti m ain office from Spokane to Sea ttle .-

T he folowlng vice-presldenls ■ elected to represenl the ir home sta te s: '

C harles H, Bolirer. Pocatello. Ida,; Jess L. O dette. G reat Palls. Mont.: A. L. K ind. Helena. M ont,: Ira Snydcr_Enusrprl.se. Ore.; Lro C or- m a n . Astoria, Ore.: E. Lee* Sm ilh, SpolWine, Wa.Mi.: Al Mogren, Y aki­ma, W ash,: c . B. Sw itt. Longvlow, W ash,: L. V. Supp, Elko, Nev.

New directors named were:J . D. Jftcobi, Lewiston. Ida.: E*rl

Amclule, MksoijJ.1, Mont.; H. C, Hein-sch, Dccr Lodge, Mont,: H .'P , McDaniel, Eugene. Ore.: W . A. WlrtJ!. Bend. Ore.: D, E. Sm ilh, Lo­gan, U U h: Pred Epperson. P o rt An­geles, W ash,: Ed L. Rowle.s, Spokone.

Navy Construction _Firms Need MenNeed for men between the oge* of

n to 60 to enlLst In U. 3 . navy con- strucUon companies was reiterated S a turday in a communication from Uie navy deparlm ent to Uie Twin PnlLn aub-staUon.

Men are rated according to the ir experience when they Join the non- com batan t units.

Oreate.sl need Is for plledriver men. launclunen. electricians, steel­workers. pfpcmen. welders, water- lenders, blacksmlUis and copper- sm iths.

T liero also Li demand for super­vising electricians, w harf builders, crane and s^eamshovel operators, engine operators, helpers and oilers.

Men who have operated rock-* cnw hers in (juarrles, have blasting experience, or know rigging o r »ea-

^nil."* "’•y

FALLS BRAND MEATS

Rich in VITAMINSG uaran tee the good health o f your family by aenring m eat regularly the year a round. "F o lb Brand" meat* a re an economical source of nil n a tu ra l vltom lns. W hen th e vitam in content o f m e at 1* com pared to th a t of o the r foods, few of th e la lt« r ean boasl the high record ' of m eat. Serve m e a t today for Ihe sake of your fam ily 's health.

Falla Brand Quality la Baeke^ By

I n d e p e n d e n tMEAT CO.

'A Name You've Known for Years

A t t e n t i o n F a r m e r s !

You will want' to see these motion pictures!

'Thunderheads Over the Pacific"

and ■"In Our Own American

Way"

AMERICAN LEGION HALL. Twin Falls

-~^:00 p.m.— Thursday, Feb.26thThese entertaining and instr\ictiv^^otion pictures are sponsored by the Minneapolis-MWine Company and the Sawtooth Company as part of the grand program to be presented for you during the annual

FARMER'S CONGRESSThis year, when America is depending on you to produce “The Food for Freedom,” it is more important than evorfhat you at­tend this annu^get-together. We will be looking for you, in Twin Falls on February 26th. ' V

^ THE SAWTOOTH COMPANY

Boise t w in FALLS2 U -S h o e h o n e S t r « e l 'E a s t

C ald w ell

Page 11: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

Silndfiy, February 22. 1042 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO / Page BJevra^

NORTHSIDEHERDi S l - D A T H f l l D

-B ibe ,’* w elsU red H o liU in In Uii hc ra o t o . j I.MocJc. W endell, la lh« h lsbe«l t«4t cow in th e Ooodlng*

. Jerom e D aliy H erd Im provem ent usocU U on, according to th e Janu* %X7 rep o r t of Clarence R . KnuU on. fupervuor.

H U heit herd mverajes were re ­corded b7 P- O. MftMcy. Q oodlns, over 30 cows; iL L . H ording, Good­ing. between 10 a n d 30 cows, and CUrence W elli, Ooodlng. under 10 cawi.

SI Uetd* Tealed Number of herds te sted w m 33

and there are 318 cows In the aa- M cUtlon. Cows mUklng num ber *53. ATerage pounds of mlUc produced per cow. Including dry cow*, were 010. Average pounds of b u lU rfa t produced p e r cow, Including dry cows, were 24.7.- • •' " In addlUon, the re w ere 63 producing *0 or m ore pounds of bu t- te rfa t," said K nutson.

lU U n j of "Bsbe” wa* a tta in ed I W pounds of mlUt. ’J iS pounds of b u tk r f a t and a UH.

Second highest cow w m "Nora, registered HolsU ln In th o herd of Wells, w hich produced 1307 pounda of mlUt 703 pounds of b u ttc r fa t and a 3.7 itsU

Top Uerd lU tln *MaAsey's high he rd rfttln s w m ob-

tatned w ith ttvcroso tnlU productlor of 025 pound.i and nvcrngo fa t pro- ducUon of M ^ pounds. In th e reg lv tered Holstein lierd. 39 o u t f f 41 cowa were milking.

G raded HoLitein herd of H arding, which was first In the class bC' tween 10 and 20 cows, avernljed l,03i pounds of milk and S73 pounds of fftt. Nineteen out of 10 were mllklns,

Wclla' registered and g raded Hol- etelns. f irs t In Uio cla.%s under 10 cows. oversRed 1,107 pounds of milk and 41J pounds of fa t. 8 U b u t of six were mllklnB.

F A R m N U N I l I K OFFICERS

RUPERT. Feb. 31—R u p e r t N( tlonal Farm Loan aM oclatlon held the annual meeting a t th e L.DS. tabernacle. Tuesday, PebJ 17. P re ­ceding th e afternoon- program , d in ­ner was served by women o t the

■'L.DB. churcJj to 102 persons.Talks were tflven by W illard M.

Reea, reslpnal manngeT fo r the land bank, and by O. D. T nylor of U» stato AAA.

A. C. DcMary, secretary , gave i report of the year's activities.

Roy D. LaRuo was reelected dl. rec lor for the th ree-year te rm , and T hom ai Dlackcr appolntod to serve Uie unexplred term of How ard Has. ton, was reelected for one year.

A t tho OTRanlraUon moetlnff o Uio board of directors, A rthu r T Sm ith was named p residen t; P . P. Shy, vlce-pre.'ildcnt; A. C. DcMor>',

, secretary: P . P. Shy. Ro>- D . LoRiio and T liom aa'B lacker. lotin commit­tee.

Members of the .board w e ArUiur T. em lth . P. P. Shy . J . A. Handy, Thom as B in d e r tind Roj’ D . LaR ui

W illard M. Rees reported on Ui Farm Credit A dm lnl.itm tlon's p a rt In the war effort and O . B. Tuylor, of tho s ta te AAA. spoke on Uie farm program for 10« In crop production.

A. C. Dc.Mor}-, secretary , reported tlia t Uie lUisoclaUon Is now R e n 'lc lf HlQioaiti am ountlns to |1.401;000,

P. P. Shy. who has ncrvccl contl) uoujily on Uie board of direc tors sin the Inception ot th e R upert National Farm I>3an auoclaU on In 1032, was presented a certlflcato of apprecli tlon.

KIMBERLYMrs. Carl Pendleton and daughter,

PeKcy. le ft laU week fo r Vallejo, Calif., where Mr^. Pendle ton Is cn- BQRcd In defetue work.

Rev. and Mrs. S . D. T refren have relum ed from S a lt Lake C ity where they a ttended a conference of evan- Kellcal churches. Rev. P a rro t t of Ru­pe rt accompanied Uirm.

T he Red CrM.i kn itting class will be held In the home economics room upstairs a t t)ie hlRh school. Instead of the west room as waa formerly announced.

LcJtcr P . Dailey, son o f Olive E. Dailey. KeUo, Wiish.. fo rm er resi­dent^ of Kimberly. Li tra in in g os a r a d l^ p c r a to r In the navol reserve. He Is stationed a t San Dlcgo.

Mr. and Mrs. C arl R iggs en tcr- U lned a t a V alentine d in n e r Sun* day for Mr. and Mrs.. B ill Gordon and children. ^Llnda a n d Jerry, Eden; Mr. a n d J^ r s . Le.5tcr Oolijen, Tft'ln * "<1 M*"- M rs. Harold James, m r ta u g h .

Leonard/'Emcmon, W alla Walla, Wash., who Tblted Ia.it week with his m other. Mra. C harles Emerson and brothers, E rnest and Carl. L eft

• Saturday fa t WoUa W alls and h as Joined th e na»y.

Tho VouUi pe llow th lp groups . was hosts to UiB Jerom o and Mui X u u g h groups Sunday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Roy H averland have sold Uielr ranch a n d w ill, move to the Norlhsldc soon. They have been acUve in the local G range m menta.

Justice of U>e Peace a n d Mrs. L. E. W ard moved to Uie L acey resi­dence la st week.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pendle ton re­ceived ' word from the ir son , Bob, sUUoned a t Pearl ha rbo r th a t h e Is well and getUng along fine.

Mrs. Clinton Sudweeka. Merced. .(Calif.. Is vlslUng th is w eek a t thi

L . A. Sudweeks home.Mr. and Mrs. R alph B ann ing were

.hosts to th e T ortn lgh t B ridge club last.week. Mrs. H arold B anning T hurm an T ate won high.

W s farm e n of th« good old U B A .ie«m to th ink th&l raU oolng U' clomping down on us p r« tty h a rd , bu t mayba we ought to look a t some of the f a n n m of o the r countries and climes. We lUU havo Ures and c a r t to go too m uch a n d we m ooaga to get gas enough to keep Uia c a r OQ the road about as usual, though 1 do believe th a t we a re drlTln* a b it slower to save the tires.

We have no reatrlctlons on food of any U nd except suga r a n d to fa r th a t has not bothered some of our grabbing kinrf o f folks th a t would see th# w ar r ig h t In o u r own bacic door before they would give up any of tho things Uiat t^ey feet they a re enUtlcd to. Nor does Uiere so to b* any prospect o f a ahorUige food of any o t the essential so ru

will only try to be a s nearly s . itupporUng as I t Is possible for us to be.

o u te rs Leas FortnnatoB ut th is Is f a r from th e casi

m ost*any other country you may name. Even In South A merica where

war has hard ly reached except a b it of subm arine acUvlty ou t lea. there Is evidence of a sh o rt­

age of some commodlUes. And ii t h t to u n trlts of Europe th e re « e I: many cases near fam ines due to the grabbing of food stu ffs fo r Uic G er­m an arm y by th e relentless lUUer. Normal pursuit of form ing can hardly be possible In mo.it of Uicse

itrlts and this furU ier nggra ,.s th e sltuaUfln. B ut-Sw ltacr.

land. landlocked and blockaded by aJl sides. Is solving Its food prob­lems In a .very practical way. The

if mucli o t the land for pas­ture waa welt enough du ring norm al .Imcs, bu t now It hos been reasoned ou t th a t I t requires 7.4 acres of pas­ture land to raise th e equivalent of food for one person, while If this same acreage Is pu t In to potatoes I t will feed 18 persons. So th e s*-lu:h to more cultivated land Li being made.

In addlUon land U tat wn.i more oi less wasto Is being cleaned up or 1j being drained and Is being cu ltiva t­ed, and persons In tow n who have lawns o r flower gartlens available are asked to raise vegetnbles In such plots; n i e cow populaUon Li down some 20 per cen t since AURUst, 1039. o r Uie time of the s U r t o t the prc.i- e n t H itler sulcJdo a ttem p t. Many of the foods will be au tom atically ra ­tioned bceau.15 of th e high prlcc th a t they will command.' The m otor car W bi'lng replaced w lih the horse draw n vehicle and even then an

itc fuel shortage la felt, boUi for nesUc use and for technical pui

poses, and Uie supply of wood Is be­ing drawt^ on raU ier heavily.

Jap an Even Wonie - B ut If you w an t to nee a country w U «x there ' 1.1'a lw ay s a shortag ' o f thiM iecMslUes of life, let's Imvi a look a t Japan . H ere the averagi farm er and hU family have to ge a ll Uie e.i.ientln4a of life from a bl of land only 34 yards square, or con' ta lnlng one-fourUi acre. From th is m iniature farm Uie Japanese farmei mu.it no t only feed and c lo the-hb family, bu t h e m ust pay taxes and provide for a ll o ther expenses. And now comes th e b righ t side of Uie plchire, 'T h e govem m ent of J a p a n now takes Uirce-fourtha of a ll he produces to help support the w ar m a ­chine. and Uie Japanr.iQ furm er's lot Li very unhappy. So sorry.* And try to think w hat we in th is coun- trj- would do on one-fourth of an acre i>er farm family. We w ouldn 't buy many defen.ie bonds, bu t how we rould .lave gasl

W ith people J.0 crampcd for living room and so poorly nourl.ihed and carrd for It Li ea.iy for the w ar lord.i of Japan to ^prc^^d Uie Idea of a war of conquest. For Uic sol­dier is fed U a ll QtUcra ko l\u«Kry;

Id he U cloUied If a ll oUiera arc In raf3. Perhaps Uierc are no g rea t fortunes tn Jap an as we know them • thLi countrj-, bu t Uie gap be-

:en the rich and the verj- poor la g rea lcr Uian here. A nd wlUi th a t background, strange to rela te , Uic Japanese Is easily convinced ih a i he Li of a superior race; U iat he Is a

m of Uie Sun God.C hrlitU ns F au lt

And right here. In m y opinion. Is where the ChrLitlan folks have fallen down, 'D uring the lo st 12 years o f

call.it depression (th e Ja p an w c would have called.them 'boom Umes) th e ‘-ChrLiUan people of Uils and oUier English-speaking countries have almost ceased to send mission­aries to Japan , and have sha rp ly ;urUilled Uie support of Uio m ls-

slonarlM Uiat were a lready there , lo Uie tcaclilng of Uic w ar lords if Japan have gone alm ost unclial-

le n se d ., and Japanese Christiana have been almost helple.is to stem Uie tide In favor of a w a r 'o f ag ­gression. I t Is IntercsUng lo con­jecture j a i t w hat Uie effec t would have been If some of Uie b'llllona

‘i "pending to trydefeat Uie Ja p o n tse . could have

been spen t In trying to C h rls tian lie

a r t In th is U nd today.'peopla w hoss' anoM ton fought to f r te thU U nd from L n g l l s h tyr*nny e x c u a please), who for pecuniary galu would risk sacrificing U ib land to the w ar lords of G erm any ojid Japan . C an 't they Just th is onco b« whlt« folks and forget th a t per cen t w hich by some aort of book­keeping magic, they pyramid to as m uch a s 40 per cen t o r lOO per cent.

And w h at of Uie labor gangsters th a t a re extorting such union fees from defense-w orkers? W hat, too, o t th e apartm en t owners th a t a re reap ing such rich harvests In r e n t­als? Is the very soul o f A merica dead U ia t only Uie soldier of u s a ll can lay anything of value oi^ the a lta r o f Liberty th a t those heroes of Valley Forge suffered to ordain and esUbllsh? We are In grave dange) of oeelng Uiat a lta r crumble Into dust u n der the feet o t Invading hordes, and yet m any of our people

re holding o u t for a higher price.W hat Priwi U berty?

\VSat will th a t p rice be worUj If .u r liberty Is gone? T he soul of A merica m ust awake or a ll of thi proud boa.1t of American IdcallsiL Is as sounding brass and tink ling cymbols. If the God o t our faUiera Is to be w llh us In th is struggle we must acquit ourselves as C hristian people. We m ust have done w ith pettiness and grasping for adviin t- n«e. financial o r pollUcaL AmcTW m ust prevail, bu t A merica m ust d ^ serve to prevail. T h e Id ea li. and acts o f ChrisUari m en m ust be the Ideals and acts o t America. T he w ar wlil so t be won by singing "we did It once, we can do It again." Those bo>'s singing over Uie rad io will no t b* the ones w ho will do Uie fighting, onyway. T liey will have to sing to u s who stay a t home to ke«p up our moraSc. Boshl

Kau]ed hay today, and Uie scenes were so peaceful' a long the c o u n ­try-side. T he (censored) was (cen­sored) b righ t a n d -th o u g h It was (censored) early In th e m orning, it warmed up nicely by noon and was a beautiful day. Lambs were p lay ­ing as only lambs can play, w ith a ll the oontorllons of Uielr nimble little bodies. CatUe were licking th e m ­selves, a sign th a t spring Is n o t too fa r away.

Tho ducks along Deep creek were talking among themselves, pe rliaps irj'lniT to decide where lo spend the summ er. In fac t G od's creatiu-es were happy on th is beau tifu l day . All excep t God’s Oivn children, hU highest creaUon. Some wonder why God le u things go as Uiey have. God d ldnriK ive an j'th lng Jo do w ith It. G od's children dLiobeylng h is commands have pu t us In Uils mess.

Reminds me of the sm art Negro. A folored brother a.iked him- Ivhat was m ean t by Uie "sta tus quo." T h e sm art Negro replied U iat I t was LaUn fo r "the mess we's In.” A nd someone Is always trj'lng to ge t back to the s ta tu s quo.

C. OF C, HELPS IN G A i e i N G l I A tJEROM E, r«b. ax— A nother. Im ­

p o r tan t naUonai defensa program In w hich every farm er In th e county m ay help, and w ith ■■■'•

plan t-

to himself, U U iat of gaUierlng « ld ' -inglng In tc junk dealers, a ll k inds . . s o a p m eU ls. i t was em phasised W ednesday by Glen VJnlng, Jerom e, w ho addressed members o t the Cham ber o t Commerce a t luncheon.

Sponsoring the program also will . B members of th e Cliam ber of Com­merce a n d 'th e Jerom e county ACA. V iu i need for'p lac ing th e m aU rla l In hands of Junk deslers a t once was stressed by Mr. V ln ln g . who s ta ted th a t a t tho pre.ient tim e there a re five gigantic umBlters lying Idle because of Inadequate m a teria l w lt£ which to work.

Japanese Labor A representaUve of Uie A m alga­

m a ted Sugar company, Mr. Tnylor. w as presen t a t the se.islon W ednes­day to speak on the J a p labor alt- uaUon. The company Is seeking an opinion of the farm ers In th is sec­tion, on Uie m a tu r o t b ringing in Japanese laM r to work during th r ha rvest season.

I t was polnUd out U iat a t th i p resen t Ume, Uie governm ent will

irlly have to work ou t some ) do someUilns wlU) Uid- J a p - a iid Insiead of placing them

)nccntraUon camps a t Uie gov- len t's expense, li was believed

. . . they sliould be required to work la a ll crops requiring liand labor.I t was carried Uiat the C ham ber of

^ m in e r c e pass a resolution favor- inevaie removal of Uie clilld labor' law A strlcU on on such law as I t now itands.

A nnouncem ent was m ade th a t the an n u al elecUon meeUiig will be held h e re M arch 18, D irectors whose term s expire Include A. W. T lngw all. B erwyn Burke, R . u . 'F reem an and Jo h n Uosmon.

A com m ittee was nam ed to woikLn :ooperaUon wlUi the c ivilian de- ense council regardm s Uie g a th e r­

ing, storage, and packing of w aste paper and products of like i^ te r la U

Utady Chemurgy also announced th a t A. L.

W oodliead, m anager of th e Jerom e Idaho Power company office, has been selected as chairm an of the fa rm chemurgy com/nlttee, appo in t­m en t being made by th e p residen t, I>r. R. C. Matson. AsslsUng Mr. W oodhead will be R. O . r tc c m a n , C lark L. Helss. Ray O. Peterson. Jo h n Woolley, Gus Callen and WU- 60n Churclim an. v

P rim ary objective of th is com ­m ittee locally will bo to m ake a

irvey of pavilblllilcs of In troduc- g new crops Into the county and

. .1 c reate new uses for surplus farm products.

A projec t was conducted la s t year Jn th is county — thn t of soy beans, w hich registered h ighest oil con-

it o f any sim ilar p ro jec t In Uic fitatc.

C iY S liE R BOOMS TO YEAR’S HIGHMarkets at a Glance

BUHL

rPOTATO-GROWERSW e A re A lw ays In^ th e

M afkct fo r P o ta to e s 'pb«n* [)i tar L au it U w ket

qaotjtl»a(MACK DRinilT It. J. yvZAVtB

Twin r»tu riict rnaa* 7u rtioQ* m

Buyers for H . H. Zlm m erll

p r . And Mrs. K. K . S ho tt w en t to F o rt Collln.1. Colo-, r t ld a y . w here Dr. S lio tt will o ttend Uie Colorado su ite V eterinary coUese for two weeks, continuing hLi study In r>ur- geiy. Mrs. S liolt will vLilt friends a t Fort Colllm and Denver. T liey will vUlt for two days In S a lt Lake City

n routo to Colonulo.Members of the NuUonal -Iil . . .

society o f the Buhl high school e tec t- 1 officers recenUy: Jock NcLion, resident; Dole Hob.ion, vlcc-presl- !0t, and Lj'dla Kuccja,- secretary. Salea of U. 8 . defense s tam ps have

been conductcd In tlirce Buhl r.chooli during th e winter moiiUis. rcaultlnR to dale In a total of $475 sold In Uie h igh school, junior high scliool and Uie Lincoln Interm ediate mJiooI.

Harold NeLion. who since h is dls- clionte from Uie U..S. arm y la-st O c­tober has been a m em ber of Uio Buhl hlffti scliool f an d ty . teaclilng hLitory and bookkeeping, was called back to Uie army. H e resigned hLi leaclilng position Tuesday to rep o r t a t Fo rt Douglas. His hom e is in H a i­ley. Mrs, Ben Drn.wn Is subsU tute

iBcher a t prrr.etil.Floyd Lutt. who taugh t a t

Buhl h igh (icJiooi for a num ber of yearn un til UiLi pa.it y ear w lien ho has been aftlllated w ith U\c P ackw Elpclrlc company, enlisted in Uie t B. navy. He went to his hom e li G arfield . Wa.ih„ lliLi week U> a w a it liLi call to service.

Roe Poppelwell, who has bi employed a t Uie Studebaker groci-ry In Buhl, w ent to S a lt Lake C ity Tuesday lo enter Uie coast gua rd service.

Uieti .Tlien, loo, Uie Japan i

proud race and our pa tron ising way of dealing wim all people of forelgi

B e.-(pecla"" • •blrUi, was e.-tpedally d is taste fu l to these children of Uie rising sun X wonder why we do patron ise Uie folks of oUier countries. Q oodneiu knows wo are the least pu re of any of the countries w hen i t cornea to racial origin. S o rt o f like th e calling Uie kettle bU ck. Maybe . . . w on't have such a case of big head by Uie Ume we have safely defended m r country ag aln it Uie aggrcssora. : sa>-, we may have a little m ore r e - ipcct for Uie m ilitary p row »a of oUier countries, ei’en If we don’t ex ­actly adtnlra the ir tactics, though w« may be forced to adopt sim ilar ta c ­tics In our. efforts a t self-preserva- Uon.

, In terna l Trouble Maker*And by the way, I Ju st can ’t ge t

I t off my mind th a t th e re are peo* pie who ha re received Uie benefit o f living In this land o t opportunity , so fru itfu l of a ll benefits th a t m ake life more worth living and allow one U) gain a home and a competence, ana yet are ready to sUck a knUe In Uie bock of Uils friend ly coun­try, Nor are they alone. T here

•MONEY TO LOANON

• FABM A C ITY PEO PCBTT

.PEAVEY-TABER CO.

FAIRFIELDMrs. P . E. Neeley and daug;

O rpha. spen t Uie post week relaUves In Pocstello,

CasuttlUes a t the Sfew arl ekl l i l t located between Fairfield and G ood­ing. Sunday Included I3-year-old L eta Mae Stewart, who suffered a sprained leg. and Dick Toone. high school freshm an, whose ankle waj broken.

Allen Batticher and four f ra te r ­nity brothers from Uie U niversity of Idaho stopped overnight M onday a t the home of his parents, M r. and Mrs. Henry Bauscher, w hile en route to D enver to a ttend a naU ooal convenUon of Delta T au D elta.

Cb'de M artin of the Hill C ity d ls tiic t has been nam ed to succeed Mrs. F red McNeu. who resigned recenUy. as a member o t th e C am as county ru ra l high school boa rd of trustees.

Edw ard P ra tt returned Sunday from D enver where he spent several da>’s as a repre-ientaUve from th e l o w G amble store.

\ MARKETS ANE) FINANCENew York Stocks

J ? - b L

NEW YORK, P^b. 31 OI.R)-Chry- sle r corporation fea tu red the sh o rt session on the stock m a rk e t today by raising, to a new h ig h lo r the year a t SO'.i up m . T h e Issue h as been strong slncc the d irectors “ th e dividend earlie r th is week consen'B capital fo r w ar work,

Enough rolls advanced to send th a t average up sligh tly , UUlltles were firmer on outlook fo r possible saipenslon of Uie d e a th sentence on holding companies.' O ils sagged w ith m any a t new lows a n d chemicals failed to rally a fte r re c e n t declines Coppers were steady to easier, build-

, Ing Liiues tlrm and fa rm equipm ents lower, J . I. Case m ade

I a t 03 ', off I ' i points. tAllied made a new low a t 130'

o ff \ and du Pont p referred made a new low a t 131 off U w hile Union Carbide equaled ILi low. Dow Chem­ical lo.1t a fracUon. E as tm an Kodak

:il a point- . w lows for th e year were made

by PhllllEe. Pure OH. S ta n d a rd OU IN', j . i niid Texas com pany. U. a. Rubber preferred m ade a new low

■) off 3.'. new low for Uie y e a r was made

by Becch-Nut packing n t 81 off 3H points-from th e previous close and o lf 13H points on th e w eek. T ho is^ •• sold a v n o > re a r l lc r in Uie year.

«w Jones prelim inary closing rages: Industrial. 10537, up 0.37;

rail. 37.00. up 0.13; utU lty, ISifl. up rO i; and <1S stocks, 39.34. up 0.13.

Stock sales approxim ated 310.000 iharcs against 170,000 & week ago. C urb stock sales w ere 33,000 shares compared wlUi 30,000 la s t Saturday .

D E C L IN E ID E IN ::;l E A T - F O l U R E H

CHiOAao, Feb. 31 0U9 — a n ^ fu tures drifted nikiTOWlr today.

W heat closed* off M to U eeo t » bushel; com eft H lo H :-o«U ub* - 'langed to u p .^ ; rye uncbangvd to

:t ^ : a n d soybeuu up K to t Prices slipped ft.Jrac^on In

trad ing o n uU lns by prolesslonal traders w ho acted on over-night rep o ru th a t P realden t Roosevelt, would ve to tho pending farm^bloo bUl If It is approved by congrcss.

W M m '

Eleven Men Appear Before Army Board

RUPERT. P^b. 31—A ppearing be­fore th e arm y examining board a t Tw in Palls, the following group of boys a re subject, depending on p h y s­ical flU iess,'to the nex t call;

R euben Klein, Cliarles A. Bailey, Ja k e B oldt. Clayton Bdward HelM l, A lrln W alters, On-llle Eugene Pot> ter. a ^ an sfe r , D m n LeRoy H o ff­m an. Jo e W arren Broodhead, a ll of Rupert, Palm er E m m ett H athaw ay and Jo h n Wayne Sm ith , Paul, a n d Joseph A rthu r ColUns, M inidoka.

Ir b a d t d j^ k e w s w a n t a d s .

W AS inN O TO N . Feb. 21 (U-R) ,— n i r e e south Idaho boy.i n lim tril by Rep, Dworsliak (R-Idaiio) tortny for.appoin tm ent to Uie U nit­ed S tates naval academy a t^A n- napolLi. Md.

T hey were Ezra T . C lark, neph­ew of W llford Clnrk of Georgetown In Bear Lnke county. W aU rr l»ay Jr.. ton of :tlr. and M rs. WsU of M urtaufh , and C harles 8 , Cnr- lisle, son of Mr. and M rs. P au l Car- ILile of Diirllngton,

I f ihe lr nomlnaUdns a re ncn-plec by Uie secretary of navy and Uiey pass the examlnaUons, Uiey will begin th e ir studlc.i n ex t Ju ly 1,

T liree alternates w ere nam ed for each. T hey were:’

Por Clnrk—Harold B, Craggs; Jr.. non of Mr. nn<l M rs. H arold B. CrnRgs of Idaho FalLi; Robert I. Ru.ih. son of Mr. a n d M rs. Clyde I . R ush of Boise, and R obert D. Barbour, of BoLie.,

For Day—Jack Fjirt Nelson, son of M r. and Mm. L « lle N ebon of Ui.1.1: R obert Klmhrough of Castlefonl, a n d George C. Lenfest, Jr., son of M r. and Mr.i. O. C. L enfest of Bol.ie.

F o r CarH-ile-M ariln 3 . Sw erlty son of Proieculor and M ra. E. M Sweeley of Twin Kails; Jam r« L. Broclde, son of Mr. and M rs. Rob­e r t Drockle of Rupert, a n d Robert E . PelcMon. son of Mr. aw l Mrs. R . U Petenion of Blackfoot.

RUPERTMr. and Mrs. W illiam Armstrong

And son. R ld iard . P o rtland , and Mr. a n d Mrs. Robert C arpenter. Wlllov,?. Calif-, le ft TuMday for th e ir homes, having spent the past week ‘ T hey cam e to a ttend funera l Ices for Carl U pps. fa th e r of Mrs. Arm-itrong and M r . C arpen ter,

Funeral services for B u rton D ur­a n t. form er resident of R upert, were held Tuesday afternoon. Feb. wlUi bu rial In Mill Valley c e m e t. . , .

Mr. and Mrs. W alter MorrLi..of S a n Francisco, who h th e pa.1t 10 days vLiltIng Mrs. M or­ris ' parents, Mr. nnd M rs. Andy W atson, le ft for the ir hom e Tuesday accompanying Mr. W atson and Mr. H ord. who will look for employment In California.

Dr, O. A. Mocllmer U in Denver, Colo., th is week a ttend ing a medi­c al meeting. He will re tu rn Mon* day.

Circle No. 3, W. S, C. S, of Uie M cUiodlst church, m e t a t Uie home of Mrs. E arl Goode. T uesday. Mrs. O. E. Boaie and Mrs. Jam es Clark were clialrm en. M n .-L lla H. Bene­d ic t led devoUonals. A rticles on Clilna'w-ere read by Mru, M, A. Bi

m and Mrs. Acock.Circle No. 3. W. S. C. S . of UiB

MethodLit cliurch, m e t T uesday a t home of Mrs. Rosella Renner.

M rs. Harvey 'B llde rtack wos devo- U onal leader and Mrs. W alter T ay ­lor. program leader. Mra. Gerald Jones gave two readings.

C lrd e No. 1. McUiodlst 'W. S. C . S.. m e t a t th e home of Mr*. F u ller F e n ­to n Tuesday. Mrs, F en ton and Mrs. A. C. Frederick were chairm en. De­voUonals ^ r e conducted by Mrs. T helm a Welghell. ArUcles token from th to MeUiodUt M lsslonaiy m agadn# were given by Mra. F e n ­to n and Mrs. Frederick.

Mr, and Mrs. Charles OummersOi h av e returned from a n extended Tlslt to the west coast.

E lders of the Springdale and U ni­ty w ards enterta ined th e ir wives and pa rtn e rs a t the U nity w ard hall M onday evening. A banquet was fol­lowed by progrom. comic s tun ts and m ovlrg plcture-1.

M r. and Mrs, Jolin R- Cr«tne B rem erton. Wash., visited from W ednesday to Saturday wIUi M r C rane's parents, Mr. a n d Mra. Al­fred Crane, sr. Jo h n Is working as a carpenter's helper tn the ship­ya rd s In Bremerton.

M. I. A. Fireside circle was held Sunday m-enlng following L. D . 8 Services a t the home of Mr. a n d M rs. E zra Bingham.

M rs. Dale Richards, form erly of O gden, who w ife he r sm all daugh­te r. Shkron D ali, has been visiting h e r fa the r, ^ r a iT huham and fam ­ily fo r th ree weeks, lias now Joined h e r husband In Burley where th«gr w ill m ake Uielr home. .

U te ra iy leason was given for B e­lie f society Tuesday afternoon by M rs. Elwood AlhTd. Bubject was '^ u m o r In O ur Reading.”

•hM lo<i*7 m<on«d out en O m t Korthfrni kn

CAREY

Alaska. wlUi Its m any bordering Islands, has an estim ated coast line o r 2S,000 miles.

Mr. and M rs. K ay P ickett and children arrived la st M ondsy from Tacoma, W ash„ and were guests for a few days of M rs. P ickett's moUier, Mrs. F red Pa to r. "niey a re now liv­ing In th e Dlx a p a rtm e n t house and will make Uielr hom e here.

M r. and Mrs. W illiam Briggs, who a ttended the funera l o f Mr. Brlgg's broUier, l ia a k Brlggg, in Spanish Pork. U tah, la s t w eek-end. retu rned here la s t W «dnesday,'

MLis Beatrice P a rke of Carey and Mr. and M/s. T im Brow n of Hailey le ft Sunday fo r Tacom a. W ash , to visit Ronald Brow n, who wlU leave Uia sta te s soon wlUi the U. S. a rm y for an-unknow n ^esUnaUon. W hile

Miss Parke U In Tacoma, she wUl -also vUlt her uncle, George Parke.

Mr. and M rs. “B u a " R ichardson moved here la s t week-end from Sal­mon City, Mr. R ichardson U em- plowed with the lU te highway survey crew working ou t of Carey.

Carey people who a ttended the 1.. D. 6 . union meeUng In Jerom e U st Sunday were P resident W. L- Adam­son, Bishop R^ IE. A dam sm , Buford K irkland, &lrs. Charles UaskeU, D. E . Adamson. Miss Iris Pace. M n . W. C. Eldredge, Mrs. Owen Barton. M organ S p o r^ , Je an WUdes. Wal­lace M echam and eon, Cloyd. U n . Asael DUworUi and Berle C u a u o o .

Miss O rpha SmlUi. who taachet a t A m erican Fails, spen t th e week-end wlUi h e r m other, M rs. l . A. Sm llh. who la lU.

**HeV»VVooii^& *■ " ■ ..............

Denver Beans

ROGEBSON

th e ir hom e after « Tiilt li relatives. .'Vjs' •. U r . tttd U n: Brew * Bpmekr.rad children TlslUd M r. and X R .Bums la Twin FfcltoaoD dW .C-; •Mr.

Page 12: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

page Twelve TIMES-KEWS, TVyiN FALLS, IDAHO Su n d ay , F e b ru a ry ,22, 1942

STORY'

a y 'H E I ^ R Y . 'S E i a ^ A M A N N ’;'

- V nit-.HTOIITt

■ dar** Ilia v^itlrh BT«iidB»<litr. Ka«aata Tea Rial plara>al» «aachl>r aC *«a l:ia Mlate o rtr- •Mri •‘all.boT* Kraka Mcllashl

»«»< ly Kaaaskaai lMas>- ttr») Caaaaadra Towrr, wkaaa n - ■litaa daatsr (a l W U t v n Kya- tei7 | I ^ U a RsMaii. daasklcr mt l«a<llas tfHralrf*** t>r. Towrr. fanooa at a»«lal aaab t M Mra. Oordam. (akra CaaaUaal of arkoaU Olkaar ckaniefrni l»wr*t 8k«<Bac' t M . adllar Mlira Jarkaan. kalf- w it llanar Bia««r. tinial a( arkpol'

' h « r taaa lac . P arrla aT»wa ekild ' tak Ivra (o r p rc t t r IUar«. .

•; m s l T LOVE—A ND TB A G E D 7

. ' CH A PT E R VI A ■ r o w days In te r w hen Uiey ^ w ere com ing homo from K hoo l th e y overtook WlUy ^ ladn toeb . H e looked v e ry » lc m h . .

“M r p a b - a w f u l .* ld c . - H o b lu r te d th e w onia, a n d tcorv stood 10 h is b ro w n cyca.

"W hafa Uio m n ttc r w ith h tm 7“ e sk cd Renee.

imonslroLj, te rrib le dog— tom or- ‘ He eould n o t k « p U> th e

path.

JcancjI.tJfvcr J ilm . "PBrfl*,** M id very softly.

"Yej," l ie tried to m ove.“S-nJil N ot now. t -------------

talk, I>crhBp3."

henrd qu n lio iif , a n d tr ie d to .. flwer. Fncea w llhou t bod ies a t ­tached to them fcem ed to float ove r the bed. T hey cam e close, and enorm oiu eyes looked n t him . Ho tr l« l to ge t aw ay b u t could n o t Ho tried hnrd to Uilnk. H e tt.iid nence—neneo— Renee, ove r nnd over. W lint w as h appen ing to her? Maybe she w iu a tlll ly ing on tho noor behind Hint locked door.

W hen he awoke It wna d a rk o u t- fllcle. Tlicre wna a ahnded U d it in

“ I don’t know . T crrlb lo bnd H'® « m « n e w m Inthough . H e's go lnB -to hnvo onoperntiof) today .” - , In n .moment h is g rnndm olhe r

T hex w nlked alowly, keep ing

H o Bturabled up tlio stepa o t <Itho terrace. H e heard A n n a ’s s ta r - I Ho wnketl and s le p t a n d w nked jU td M tln inn 'lon na slopped • Bguln b u t ne v er fo r v e ry long . iJnlo the blinding lamplighl,* and i T hen one m orning ' th e ob jccta In •Uicn his grnndm olher say ing , the room w ere s lend ler and •elcftr^ ••Nam do DIoul A nna, v ile , d e i e r, bu t the Inside o f hla hend v I'cnu. . . jhe iivy ns lend.

D r. Gordon came, b u t P a r r i s ‘ H e Iny ha lf aw nke nnd tr ie d could no t nee h im c lenrly. l i e once moro lo tlilnk. A w ngon ra t­

tled niohg tho drlvo below the terriice.’ He he;ird a whip crack. A <iuick lUtie cry cscnped his lip*.

His erondm olher w as In s ta n t ly ' besido Uie bed. "P a rr is , w h a t Is j

'W here's Itcnce?”M.idamo lnid one o f h e r w rin ­

kled m uc hami.i on h b . "R eneo | h.is Kone nwny, Pa rrla .” . j

"Gone? Cone nwny? W here?’’ i "Welt, I don’t know , denr._ I (e r

fu th rr moved nw ny eomcwh’ere.'* All o t Uie b reatli w en t o u t o£

him.(To B« C ontinued)

ste p wlUj W illy,' w ho delnyed an m uch aa pow lble. W hen tl;ey cam o to tlie crosw onds w here tho b ig w h ite M ndntonh liouao stood In a g rove o f trees they saw a buggy stand ing n t th e gale.

___ ..“T h a t 's . D r . - G ordon's buggyW illy sa id a s If lo p rove h is sto ry . “ I guess h e ’s pe rlo rm ln ' th e oper­a tion ."

“ W ell, W illy, I hi>po your pn p a’U—” Ileneo’fl apeech w as cu t s lio rt by n d read fu l sound. A lo n g s lra w n c ry com e from open window#. I t wa» m oro lik e the how l of a dog. I t m ounted nnd m ounted n.i thouch I t w ould never atop, then broke Into ccvernl aho rt, qu ick sobs a n d d ied ' In

i T H B Q S /n rs ltM & IT IS A U M O S T

Castleford Pastor /' Welcomed to Area

CASTLKTORD. rvb . 31—A '‘liirKe rrowri the iill*day m ectliicnnfl btu\k« rtlnnir n l tho Btvptl.-vl church Sunday'In honor of Rev. nnd M n . R. II. D urke'tind children.

Rev. Jimic.i Cain. DiUil. wa.' tJie m ain itflernoon spenker; p raye r wn.n offered by John OuTiby; MIm Della Drabb nnd Mr.v Alex M ellon sanK n duct;-M l** Nomift Lehm an. Cuhl. 'nnd Mm , Roy Haley. Jr.. aiuik: Henry Onrdner plnyed the electric «>illtir, ftccompiuilKl by W ilm n'D y bee.

• - Rev. luid Mr*. Cain annn n duct>long m oan. Rcnco tu rned palo Mrs. Rufiw HHris played th e «c- a n d caugh t Pa rrla by tlie arm . I cardlon and MLn Brnbb 'n nd Mrs.

•‘Good gracious. W illy.” R enee Mellon plftyed a .ln m ip e t nnd clarl- Epoke In o l b u d w hisper, • 'd idn 't i nrUUiei.,D r. G ordon give your fa the r I D inner « , i u i served on long lablcs d ilo ro fo rm ?” ' ’ ’ In Uie church bn.ipment. H n tcheu

“I —I hcnrd M ntna say ^ e • uiid red nnd blue s ln rs n rn th e tables- u .— , -----. tt-ere In keepmK wlUj W iuhlnnton'«

bIrUidny. Uie ihem e'w ed .ln th e dec- ornilon.i. i

Rev. Cecil /Himniy d itc h bcaide Uic .Toad. JUs lo w RcUeduled to w as crim son, and h e was 'crying a loud . T lien ho began to ru n to - w o rd tho house. ”H c’a go t to q u it th a t," h e sobbed. "H e’s got to q u it th a t. I ’ll— r u k ill th a t o ld d u ^ fo o l doctor!”

T lie n e x t d a y fit school Pa rrla o v e rh e a rd Mlsa Colt say to M bs V enab le th n t M r. M acintosh had d ie d from Ehoek, H o w ondered j u s t 'w h a t t h a t m eant.

O no th ing , how ever, he w na c tr - ta in . of. H o wa* a fra id o f Dr.H e n ry Gordon.*pA K R lS a n d R e n w would hnvc

fa llen qu ick ly in to th e ir ac­custom ed sum m er pastim e hnd it. n o t been fo r Uie sudden, inexplic­ab le striotnesa of Sven , her fitUicr.“T h ere b d n n se r In m U ing c lasaes,” h e to ld G udrun . ‘’M o re ^ now U iat bo th of Uicm are grow ­in g up .”

T h e n e x t w eek h e forbade Re­n e e to ronm th o plnee wlU» P nrris

» she used to do, yirash ing her

O f n il th is s h e told Parrla nothing u n til , one stolen afternoon, they w e n t u p th rough th e spruce p lan t­in g nnd dow n tho o the r side t o . th o pond—th e ir ‘‘.lecret lake,” u

• th e y a lw ays called It.'T n r r b ,” she »nld soliSy.H o k n e lt beside h e r. ■‘W hafa

Uie m a tte r, R enee?”S h e to ld h im , h e r h a ir. sU ver in

Ibo green sHndows. falling over h e r fnco to h id e Uie tears. “So you see, I cnn’t be you r KweeUieart Buymore,” she w him pered.

"O h , no. R cneel” ho cried, tak­in g h e r aw kw ard ly In h b arms, k issing h e r checks, ^stroking her head , rock ing h e r gently.

••Papa K ild thn t If I—look!’*, Sho le ap t to h e r fee t and cowered

ig a ln s t th e tree .“P o r r b , th e re w as somebody In

thodo bushea— som ebody »-ntching M aybo P a p a .’'

“C om o on . RAnee, le t's t» ”“N'o.” S h e though t a m inute.

"Y ou stay h e re , and 111 go flrst. Y ou w a it a good w hile.”

L a te r h e w e n t slow ly down the (sm e w ay she h a d gone.

W hen ho cam o in a ljh t o f the i UtUe co ttage h e w as surprised. I T he .doo rs v<crc 's h u t nnd tS\e i th a d ea w ir e dm w ^ . H e w as about , to puss w hen ho heard voices. I t w as S vcn—C u d ru n , too. Witl^out

.th in k in g ho ra n up the w alk to th e door. .H o could he.ir Svcn ; cu rsing , and G udrun saying .-ome- j Ib lng v e ry loud . I

T h e re w aa a Uiud on th e door , M though som eone hnd been th ro w n ngalnat It. T hen he heard th e u n m b tn k a b le sw ish of a heavy le a th e r s trap . H e heard U a trlke Beah nnd heart! R enee’s plcrclng •c rcam . H e hu rled him self ngalnst th e d o o r a n d shouted. ^

“ Svrn ! S v cn C ylllnson—S v o i— S v c a . . ■

B u t S ven d id no t hear. Svcn «ras c u rsing louder th a n ever. The sh a rp slap o f th e s tr a p came foster u id faster. R ceee 's scream s ran io g e th cr in a continued stre.im of w a n d . SUU th e tuurderoua blows w e n t on a n d on . Tl^e scream s chan Bed. T liey ' w cro suddenly

'b o o rsc —like th e c rie s o f a n an l- n a l.

P o r r b fe lt b lm »elf tu rn icy cold. B 6 k n e w bo w as going to bo alck. H o th re w o u t h is h a nds as h e sav/ th e ground s lan ting s h a r p l y to w a rd hU face. ''

a • •T T w as a lm o s t d a rk w hen tio

opim ed h b eyes. H e rcm cm - , bc re d once w h ere ho w as and

w h a t h M happened . H e craw lcd d fe w pticcs a n d listened. The bouso w as s i l e n t H ad Uiey k ille d ' b e r7 H b b re a th shook ou t o f him In ga»p^ H e fe lt te rrib ly UL T o- morrow<-4ic’d te ll h is grandm oth« e r a b o u t S ven . T hey’d take Renc« a w a y fro m h im . To.-norTow—h * c o u ld n t do A nything now . T om or- co>H>_8vea—th e d itty , ho rrib le .

Visiting Missionary Honored a t R upert ‘

RUPERT, Peb, 31 — Dr. nnd Mni. A. E. Jnlilison rn lrrta ln ix l T u rs- diiy evi-iilii« n t a d inne r hniiorlnK M n, &lnn OI:Ji, n m lv.lonnry In China for many yriir.i. now a t hom e i due to un r condliloii.s. \

Mra. OWi hii.i been here thU week , w ^klnfi m Uie- mtcrcfit o f t l i o ,"Emecvi'ncy Million" movcmnnt. Sho j Je lU ic tc JP iu r-d a y -n lsh ia o r D u ttc , . M(«il.. lo 1111 Mrvcrnl BiienlclnK < gimrmrnl-i.

Oursl. i wprr Rrv, EuKi'nr S tiunp . , Mm . O. W. Paul,' Mra, O . W. Doyle

'w id Uie honor tairni,

MISKS LAID LONDON, Feb. 31 {A’, — D rltl.ih

plane.i. nppnrriiUy .^leeklnc *o tfup the Oermiiii bnlllcihtpa Scharnhorsc i nnd Onelscnnu nnd th e heavy c n ib - ' er Prlnz Kuneii In th e ir porta. Inld ;

• " V E S T A " , -A HOUATBIM COW OW NOO BV THE N B B ftA S K A GCHOOt. OF* A&RtCULTURCr 0 _ ;» T IS , NCBft., PROOUCCD C N O U ^H J V U U C l - A 4 r V E A R TO 5UPPLV A CMtU? PROM

TO C O f. / ^ C fU r .

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o a N C R . 's . u c c M s e . .

Page 13: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

'm .

. Suhdajf, *Fcbnmr>’ 22. T IM E S -N E W B ,T O T N PA LLS. ID A H b __ P agoT W ri^

PHONE, 32 o r 38 C IFI-EB A D V E R T 'l S I N G RESULTS

■ at LOW COST

{.W A N T A. D R A T E S

nm es-N ew a W A N T A D R A T E S BoMd on Coat-I>er<Word

1 day— c per word

. A m inim um o{ le a Us u l r a l Is a n ; one clftssUlcd a d ^ n n a to r nil clAUllled ad»—CASH.

C O M P L E T ^ C O V E R A G E A T O N E COSTIN TW IN PALLS

»HONE 33 OR 38 FO R AD-TAKER IN JEROM E

L«ave ads » t R . t t W- Baer

DEAPI w eek daya,

Sunduy; fl p . ra- 8Aturdft7 T h is paper Bubacrlbea to Uio code

o t e U llu o t the A ssoclnlion of H otnpaper O lauK lad Advorttsing W onaser* a n d rcMrvca llio r le h t to ■dit o r r«]ect any elas&l(lad adver* Uiing, "BUnd Ads” corrylnR a T lm et'K ew i bos num ber a r t lU lct*

” l J eonlWcriUiiV and no InfoimoUon can b« gtven In regard Ui Uia ad> VcrtUPT.

Errora-ahoiild bo 'rep o rted Imme- Alstely, ) io allowancM wU] b< m ade for more th a n one Incorrccl ln»erUon.

SPECIAL NOTICESTELL your landlord abou t rcnUng

th e portaWfl "HUeo" w nd lng roft- cliJno to ren iw Uio floor* of your office, store or home. I t 's quiet, dun lle* and aaally tv«r#t«d.

I Uoon's.

^ R T H C E R T IF IC A T E SARE O P VITAL IMPORTANCE!

O blalij cmplo>Tnent In a irplane XactorJe*. sWpbulWlna ya«l». fed­eral offlcea and o ther m ajor In­dustries proof of tjirth la required.

the TIM E8-N EW 8 P hoto nnd Engraving Dept, m ake a photo copy of your b irth record or of any other p ipe ra or docum esta of special value to youl

P E R S O N A L SW IL L ito ra piano for prlvlleffi of ’ u.ie. Christine M urm y, R t. 3. K im ­

berly.OLANDULAR trcntmcnC m akes

der-developed clUldren hcalUiy a n d happy. See Dr. L. A .-Patorton. OsteopaUilc Physician. ISO M*ln norths

JE SSIE. Pm nk, M onica—w hatever yoor nam e, hava U p rlnK d on ft nelcctlon of fine personal sU U on- t ry now ftvnllftble In the TUncn- N «v( Job D epartm ont, Reason- aW< priaw l

TRAVEL & RESORTSSHARE expense trip" m any places.

Travel Bureau, 517 F ou rth Ave­nue cast— IDOC.'

SCH O O LS A N D T R A IN IN G

HOLD E V E R Y T H IN G

H E L P W A N T E D — M EN

Tlmes-NcU’s.

MEN vantkd to lutndla dLttrlbutton of famous W fttklna product.-s in Tw in FiUls, se llln s and RcrvUiK hundred# o t sa tisfied cu.'.tomrr.s. Excellent opiM rtunlty fo r rlsh t PM tv. No Investm ent. WtUc J . R,. W atk ln t Oo.. D-OS, W inona, MlniL

MAN WANTE3> - EXTRA large Incoma can be se

e<l d istributing Watkln-s Produrt.\ In nearby ru ra l locality. Must be over 28 and own a ear. No exi^r- letjce or cash re<iulrcd. Wrlta N. A. NlcUan. 1303 34th S t., Danyer, Colo.

RELIABLE experienced meehanle to ne t as nhop forem an for Twin Falls Implement Ilrm . MU5t be experienced In truck , txactor and automobile repair. T hU It a po- Rltlnn th a t ^^aulrc!I a n exparlanced mnn. Pay will bo adequote and the .Job p e rm a n en t W rlta Box iS Tlnies-News.

H E L P W A N T E D — M EN A N D W O M EN

UAH and.nU o-Ji'halo iQ W .how and Ukfl to raise eh lck i.'M ust hava car knd bo wllllnB to live In hou^e. IIo>-es IlRWhery.

TV PISTS. n tc nographen and book­keepers ore needed now l Equip yourself to fill ono of th e maru- openlncs now available. Enroll now. Tw in Falls B u iln a u Uni- VBrjlly.

C H IR O PR A C T O R SFO R sores UiQl will no t heal. tAk«

adJuxUnents. Dr. Alma Hiirdln. 130 Moln norUi.

B EA U T Y SH O P S■■ H A LF price apeclol on genuine oil

perm anents. B eauty A rts Acad­emy.

|4JK), ISM , IS4KI ponnanvnto. half prlc«. Idaho B arber t n d B oau t; Shop. Phone 434.

L O ST A N D PO U N DLOOT ba tw tin T v ln Falla, Crystal Snrlnga-.er%v*l boreen. C ijl 38 Filer; aJ6-J, Twit] FWU.

LOST: Q igllsh P o ln t ir pup. about H grown. W hite wlUi brown m ark- Ingi. Call 30-W.

TWO Rooma, grtiund floor. R efrlg . e rator, range, stoker. 3B3 F ifth north.

S IT U A T IO N S W A N T E D

FARM work. Can give good refer­ences. N. H. W lben , M urtaugh. Idaho.

O m L desires hoaiekeeplntt posi­tion. Good rtfcrenecs. Inquire H. N. Wilson, M u ru u sh ,

OROINARV. farm work. C an glv«-----racammendallotui. Bo* 114.-MUP-

taugl), Idaho.

O IR Ii -attending imlvartU y wants work for board u id room. Bo« 3 « .

, Twin PalU.

H E L P W A N T E D — W O M EN

H E L P W A N T E D — M ENMARRIED m an. F a rm work. Harold

Bro^T). mUe n o rth , m il l v u t Ourrey.

ENQINB la th e opara tara w antad. K arris Ice M achtna W ort*, 638 N orth TUlamook S treet, P o rtland , Orwoo.

YOUNO.men. 10 to 25. fo r employ- m e n fln ln.iiallatlon departm en t of la rse elfctrlcal com pany. M ust be high school gm dua te-and abl« to travel- No Mlllngl Box 60.110164- N»wb.

FO U jt men w ith car* to call oti f a r m tn in th ti dlntrltt. E xperi­ence no t easenUal. Men now eam>-Ing between forty and sevanty do l- _________ ___

— JarB-iieelL. Qw A. CiiilUto; C o r e y f ItO O K T tH a t O w l. C i ^ Mo. 30. - •

RELIABLE person w anted to call fiirmcra' In Tvi'ln FlUla county,

.aiendy work—no lay off* In our line. Some m aking tlOO.OO In a wM-k. W rite F iirs t McNrsa Co., 3423 MnKnollft S t.. O akland , Cajlf.

S A L E S M E NWANTED: M an w ith c a r fo r profit­

able RAWlelKh route. M ust b« *at- Liflcd wlUi good living a t start, W rite RftWlelRh's. D ept. CDD-374- 101, Denver, Colo.

Q U SIN ESS O P P O R T U N IT IE S

TWO Milk route* and truck*. . . . , MorUj Broadway. B uh l — 353J,

Buhl.

FOR BALE: Com|ilet« beau ty ahop equipment, reasonable. Good lo- c n tlt^ , only shop J n tow n. W rite o r Inqulro o f l# n n Coon, Paul, Idaho.

U N F U R N IS H E DAPARTMENTS

n»ar Khool. A ddreu 383 j

UfTOSUALLY nice four rooms, ba th . Private en trances. A lr-condlllon*

000 M ain n o r th , phono

F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S

FOUR rooms, m odem , aleeplng porch, stoker, gara«e, garden. P h o n t 444-W.

FOUR Rooms, b a th . clrculaUag haaU r, electric range, garage, llf ii tith Avenue east.

T H REE Rooms, h o ^ w ater, (toker. MQ Second A’ etiue'tM cth, Phone 710-W.

THREE room m odenl, a tokar heat, Bungalow A partm en ta .. Secooa avenue east.

^ A R T M E N T suitab le to adulU. P r lra ta en trance. 35ft F o u r th a n ­nua e u L

age. 8U K intrt nyenue no rth .

THREE Room i. p riva te ba th Bogton A partm ents, AUo vacancy Bf X o lla g e , children perm itted.

. Inquire O allfom la A p ar tm a n u No. 19, MO B tem d AviQua nortii, Phone I M . •

T30ARD AND ROOM.. _-m caI» ir deal

Bhoylio^ Rort}^ P hona M

BOARD AND ROOM

W A N TED T O R E N T O R ' L E A S E

FURNISHED KK»n wlUi kltclien privilege*. Olo^e In. P . O . Box 801.

80 ACRE farm . Would com lder buy . Ing «U)ck and equipm ent. Inquire Bo» 48. Tlnu-s.NcWfi. .

R E A L E S T A T E L O A N S

FARM and city fd.m3. N orthern U (e Insurance Com pany—Fr«d Bates. Phone 1370.

HOM ES FO R S A L ES ACRE, modem honu-.'liirKo cJilck'

en coop, cow, fru it trees. UciU luic- rlflcsl Bos 741, City.

HOMES POR SALE

NEW five room strictly m odem home. Bln led atokor. flrcplnco, flowera, Ixecs. Phone l.')50-J.

A O R B B --w W v -M x t< modem home, stoke r. nlr-condl* tloner, water softener, Clo.se In. Pliona 1333,

HEDUOED price! TJirre iiparLmcnta. Fine ihape. 137 N in th avenuo fo rth .

o n TRADE for proix riy In Pocatel­lo—equity In mo<!i-ni t«iij_Rtor5' h ouu , 'cdmplela u p u runen t 'a i each floor. A rciil buy! Phone 1734,

ATTRAOTIVB new (Ive room dwell­ing, furnace, hardwood floors, in - *ul*Ud. N«w dLitrlct. clo.'.c-ln. $7fi<> down. 831J0 per mo. Phone QCt or » 0.

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

TWO rooms, g a rden spot. 110.00 monUily. 344 H arrison . Phono 1430-J.

FIVE r«im m odem hmiK. TlOrd nortli; J33.50. A dulU . Ilctcrcncc!i. 0197-R3. '~-

PARTLY fuml.iljed tw o fooins; un - fiimLilicd th ree room s. 195 Nortli Wa.%lilngton.

THREE Rooms, bo th , hardwood floor*, a e a n . 171 Addison. Call 0187R8.

THESE are fo r re n t: M odern a p a r t­m ent. stoker h e n t. ca.it p a rt. Mod­em apartm ent, n o rtli jw rt, two btdroom** Four room boiuc, close In, Rob«rV> «i Ilen.ton. P hons 363 or 302-J.

NICE 4 mi. mod. liouie. wltJi oil bunier, w ater h a i t r r . 8iira«<.‘. $25. nn. mod. duplex, iiiirdwood floors, funiace, w ater henUT. MO.

Tft'o 3 mi. duplex npLs. Hardwood floors, alec. raiu;o. w at«r heatc-r. W ater funihaiecl, S1C.50.

BEAUCHAMP &i ADAMS 135 Shotfione So. P h . 304

F U R N IS H E D H O U SE S

I. un ten lai4^

PARTLY furnW i»d nmall hou.se, w ater. giu-nBC, »13i0 . A dults. 614 WoaJilngton •trec t.

T im 'EB room*, bftlh, cellar. Well loeatcd on bus line . Inquire 26(3 Blue Lukes norUi.

TWO rooms. nleepln« porcli. iJiowcr, •leotrle rans* . w ater haalor. AdulUv-713-R..

COZY two rooms. klt/*henelie. ba th . Light*, watflr fun iU hed . G arden spaoa. Phone 1261, 13-3 and a fte r 7:30.

FARM S AN D A C R E A G E S FO R SA L E

S E E D S AN D P L A N T S

Kimberly, Phone ftW t.

HAY. GRAIN AN D F E E D

60 TONS good BlfBlfa hay located 'A mile went nf Haeelton on high­way. Chnrlps W, Barlow, phone 3S.

UOUAaSES M IXINO ftlKl FEED GIUNDINO

MORKLAND MILLING SERVICE Ph. 318, Filer. piiTcalla off grinding.

CUSTOM ORINDINO 1 or 3 tnn So ewt.: over 3 ton*, 7o MILLER MILLING 8ERV10B

Ph. 73J3, Hiler, Ph. call* off grinding

FEEDERS!FEED w h e a t ’"Tuka It off the car

. 03c PER BUSHEL Plnco your o rder-for tJie nex t car.

. '• Wo grind — We m ix GLODE SEED FEED COMPANY

MISCELLANEOUSFO R S A L E

LEATHER collaiulbl* baby buggy, good condlUoii. Phone 307. 838 Q m.

FURNITURC uphobterlng and f i r i n g . ^W omcta T tjp and Body

PROTECT your family. Have th a t broken glas* repaired today a t Moon’s.

T h* fita<Well, art M ain W. Ph. lU .

STOCK Salt. *10.00 per ton . Bring sacks. L. L. Langdon, T ruck Lane Vt-M, Pliona 1563.

AUTO gla*.i. cunvas, canvas repair­ing. Thomet* Top and Body Work*.

LIVESTOCK FO R S A L E

ONE HUNDRED head good young work hnricj. Some nice motclied p a in . liiiKbvs & Sm ith.

33 WCANER'plgs; 4 year old cow, Jiv,t ^rc^Jl. 1, norUi F iler. Homer w m u n u .

GOODING acrcaK f-Ilvc o r U n acre*, E*ci'l!<'ni Improvements. City water, T c r ia r S. E. Fnlth , Gooding.

T iriR T Y hrtul ytwng ho ra ts ; r.___well matched teams. O ne-half mile aoutl) cost Fivo Points. C a rl Wool-

137 Acre* In Buhl UTrltnry, Fotir room house. Bmull ou t buildings. All imdcr culilvmlon. Price »U5 per acre, on inmy tcrm 'i. ElBhty acre* southcn.M of K im berly. Sev­enty acres under ciiltlvutlon. B al­ance pnUure. F a ir ho ld ings. 814J300. F . C. Gravc.i a n d con.

NEAR FIL E R -8B A.. goo<l stnl£ cid* UvaUon, J12.000. Sm all bltlRs., Kood lunil for b|)ud:i ni'Xi yciir.

NEAR TW fN PA L L S-115 A. fine land, , good s ta te ciiltlvutlon— Moik'.i north and cast. F rc r of nox- lou.% weeds. F a ir , bldgs. *325 per

• P. C. GRAVES & BON

110 iu:rr-', on puvcid hlahw ay.I20.acrc!i on Kniveled road Ifsa

lli:m mllo from ixivcd hlKhway.Drrp. hea\7 . well fiTtlllzt'd M)ll

watering imusunlly well. In my JiiilKmrnt, best lnventmcnt.-i on wiuUisldfitmct.

C. A. ROBINSON

FOR S A L E O R T R A D E

1030 Clipvrolct Roynl ncdan. ^lx-n!y Urr-1, over drive, ratllo. 5,000 miles 431 aeconcT>winu* w oit.

FARM IM P L E M E N T S , AN D E Q U IP M E N T

JOHN Deere b tc t p lan ter. $75. Mon­roe, 34i west, l i n o r th , South Park.

S E E D S A N D P L A N T S1,000 BUSHELS *e«d oa ts , Swedish

Select. Conrad MnRcl. 0 snuUi, eiiit, Kimberly. Phono 71J3.' "

ORDER Certified leod potatoes now! Globe Seed and F eed Com- P ^ ’.

ONE good ii'am, ^lx and e igh t years old. Wi;lKht 1,750 cacli. P . H . P rin ­gle. Phono 7H.J2, K imberly. Ono mll^ AouUi, U e4«k of Kimberly.

S IX good yoiinK team* d ra f t ho ru s. broke: three team* tu rn ing smooth. W anted: Sum mer range for 1,000 ewes and their lamba. B. Brlnglr, Phon* 0483 R3.

BABY CH ICK SS W IFT S biiby cJiIcks—Hatche.i eacli

Wrrlnr.vlny and Snturriay. Call *1 Sw ill’* HaU^liory, 3S4 FourtJi ava- nue BouUu Phono IB5.

A B O irr 300 6o chicks each Tuesday. R eguluj clllck.1 111.50 per 100, 300* CRB. R. O. P. elred Leghorns. Ciis.

GOOD TH IN G S TO E A T

M ILK — Cream — Egg*. End of Second Avenue west. E. C. Holtzcn. Phona 1085-R,

IDEAL hcw»e do«»—r«jltt«rod Pocn* eran lans, th rr« to six mnnihi. Uire« to nix pnundA,-133 NorUi A3- bldn. Phone 250-J, Burley.

W A N T E D TO BUY

WANTED: Wood or wire hanpers. In good eondltlon, U e aaeh. Troy or NaUonal plonU

A FEW two row bean outt<T». In ­quire Self M anufacturing Com l>ony.

13-INCIl biuul »aw and m otor; m etal la the and motor; 1< foot boat and motor; 12-Kauge nholKtin; Craig rifle, 321 Locusl. Phone iflDD.

HOME, F U R N IS H IN G S A N D A P P L IA N C E S

PnX cnO A L L Y new Apex washer for *3S.tS. Term*. W ilson Bates Appliance.

HOUSEHOLD fum lw ro In a ic r l- lent, condition. Lawn fum lU ira, pi­ano. etc, Piion* ISSO'J.

USED fite v u rt V J u n ir radio. 1041 model, 145 value, only llO JS. Terms. WIL',on Baten Appliance.

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

DIRECTORYAutomotive Service '

AUTO loon*. Bob Reeso a t U a i tl 's .

Bathe and lUasiaffee

Bicycle SaUe and ServiceBLASIUS OYCLERV.

Coal and IVoodCLEAN - HOT - ECONOMICAL

ABERDEEN COALIn tcnnoun ta ln Seed & Fuel Co.

AUTO LOANSfUflnaneo your Drej«i» co n trag W

reduco paym enti' em h advanoa.

WESTERN FINANCE CO.N ext to Fidelity Bank.

C u r t f l i n S h o p B

Window Shop, 603 M ain 0. Ph- 814.

C u rlfh i >i D rapery SJiop, 335 6th E. A lio Mllp covers. carpeU . P h . <63.

DlamandaR. L. Roberta, Jeweler. 115 Sho. N

— Floor SandingA-BB Floor Oo. Floor.aervlee. Ph. 711

Heldar 8a Sons. Bll M ain B. 14S0-W.

InsurancQF o r Pir* and OMuH»y Insuronca.

Surely atid Fidelity Bond*, *«t Swim Invo*tm*n» C a Baugh B ld |.

O. A Robinson A gtncy. *poclalUti la flra, au to and life Insurnnco,

' A. HOWARD HALL, M anager

Job Printing

BUY your new refrigerator todayl Complete line*, low prleen. En-ny terms. C. C. A nderson Company.

OLOSINO ou t stock of six Spark oilheaters. SubAtantlnl rcducUon. Two u*«d oil heaters . Robt, E. Lee S;>lc:i O otnpany^

F E B R U A R Y - F U R N IT U R E S A L E

SW ING clmlrs, vcloiu- covers, as- .virted colors, $13.50. End ta b lti.

• IU 5 . Moon’s.

POUR piece bedroom suite. 850JO. Cedar cheats sUll a t 'old prices. See Uiese before you buyl Moon's.

SEE o u r buTKoln ba.senicnt of new used and ' unflnlrhed furniture. Bwcefs F u rn itu re .

SO POUND cotton felted mattres* for only 8089. We have only 7S a t 11)1* p rle i. Fu ll o r twin ilte*. Moon’#.

SALARY LOANS s tric tly confidential

$5 to 150 to employed people on your own signature

CASK CREDIT COMPANY R m i. 1-3. B u rkho ld ir Bldg. Ph. 778

LINOLEUM rem nants, nil qualities. Bltca average 6 feet by 10 feet, th n g a r t n o t tc raps bu t and* of rnll.i. Priced a t low nn 4c pe tiq u a ro

.foot. Be sure to briiiK your'room measurements. Moon's.

R A D IO A N D M USICBEP0B8ESSED Consol# w alnut

piano, your chance to sava money. See Adams M uilc Store, formerly Dayne* Mu.ilc Company.

A U T O S F O R SA L E

UNCXOEl^LED QUALITY In

L irrrE R H E A D a m a i l p i e o e sBUSINESS CARDS BROADSIDES

PERSONAL STATIONERY E ngm vlne, la tte r prew . lithograph

Bciuiol Annual*, buslne** form* a specl&lty

• TJM ES'N EW S Commerelal P rin tin g D e p t

Landacapina

Money to Loan

. $25 to 5750ON YOUR CAR

1. FO R ADDITIONAL CASH a. TO RCDUCB PRESENT

PAYMENTS.S. TO FINANCE TUB BAL»

OF Y oun o A a

Consumers Credit Co.(Owned hy Pnclflo Flnnnw>

339 MAIM AVENUE NORTB

Naturopathic PhysicianAntJm_Lee H M bet^ 1303 Klmb. R dt

Oatcopathlc PhyaicianDr. L. A. Pfltcrjon, IW MoJo H-, 183*Dr. E. J . Miller, « ia M ain N. Pb- 1ST7

a a W. Rosa, 11« M. N, Fb. 8 )7 'W .

Photo Finiahtng8 p rln ti any roll lOc, Sav-M or D ni* .

Plumbing and HeatingAbbott PlumblPS Co.Home Plumbing <i Heating. P h . >83.

SehooU and TrainingT. F. Business Unlver*lty, Fhone

Stwina Maehinea

Shoe Repairlnfh-Du^tngRalph T u rner a t Budson*CUrlc.

New B ra. octpcslu Id aho 'TtiBatv*

MimeographingRoom 10, FldeUty Bit Bldg. Fh . 418,

Money to Loan

TrailersOem TValler Company. Phona 489

Typeuirtlere____Sales, renta l* and tervlce. F h . 00.

Uphoiatering ■

Water SyatemfFloyd LUly, Ph. 3Q30. 114 Qho. I

A U T O S F O R B A LE A U TO PA R TS— T IR E S •

1037 Dodge sedan , good condition; good rubber. Phone 123, Buhl;

1040 TUDOR deluxe *odon. Five Ure*. 13,000 mlU*- N o tiTides. Sum HatmBkcr, Jerom e.

I extra, good 7J0*a0 truck Unx. H south , U west, e u t end of Uoin> Allen.

TH U C K S A N D T B A H J B S ^ — TRA ILER houso, now. O u a r a n W ^

Glvo ow&y price—<oine and m tU ’ Dr. T anner. 1411 Ell»ab<iUi,

1BJ7 STUDEBAKER plrkup . Rood L E G A L A D V E A T ISE M B N T S rubber, good motof- 1031 Cltevro- Jct coupe. Term*. Robt. B. Lee Sales Company.

1940 HUDSON super alx Aodan, ra> dlo. heuU r, a ll new tire*, 1B37 s tu - dcbnker sedan, overdrive, hcntcr, rodlo, good tires. 1030 T erm plane

...coochw ad 1035 L inco ln sednn .bo th A -l condition. S trong ’s Scrvlce Sales. 403 M ain no rth . Phone 350-J.

NOTICE O F APPLICATION T O DISSOLVE COaPOBATHON

IN TH B D ISTRICT COURT O F TH E ELEVENTH J U D I O I A I . DISTRICT. IN AND FO B T W IN F A L I^ COUNTY. W A T S O P

_ IDAHO. _ _ ____m TH E M A T T ra d F 'T H B T JIS -" '

SOLUTION O F TH B MAOIC CITY FEED FUEL GOMPAMY.A CORPORATION.NoUea la hereby glvan th a t t h t

Magic C ity Peed & Fuel Compahy a ^4rpora tlon,. formad under th a Lawa o t th e B tata of' Idaho, has presented to th e DUtrlot C ourt of Uia E leventh Jud ic ia l Dlstrlat, of T w in Falla County, Idaljo, an ap* plication pray|n(t to be allowed to dlslnoorporata and dlssolvci a n d th a t Friday th e IJ th day of U aroh . 1043, a t 3 o'clock In th e a ftem ooa of said day. o r a i soon the raafta r as counsel can be heard, h u be«» appointed as th e time, and th * courtroom of Uie D latrlc^C ourt. a » _ th e County ' Courthouse, In .Tw in FalU. T w in FalU County. Idaho, a» the plaoe a t which said appUeatloa I* to bo heard.

IN W ITNESS WHEREOF, I h»v# he reunto atC 'm y 'h tn d and affixed th e seal of *ald DlstriDt C ourt i<ar«- ■ald. UiU 6U) day of February. IM X

W ALTER 0 . MOSGRAVB, (SEAL) O lirk .

By PAUL H . OOW)ON.0»puty cn trk .

O, P . DUVALL.Attorney for applicant, / *Residing a t Tw in FalU,PublUh, F»b. 8, 15, 33, »»«:>} I , K

m ? . ___ . . ..Castleford’s Men .

Resrister for Army» O A STLEFO RO cl^Ix 31 SereD tjr-

eight m en rtgU U red a t Iba B apU ct church a t Co«tlaford t e a rm y w r r - loo a t lh a UUrd regU traU A dlCM K U F" F ib .1 8 . ■ -------— ;

a . A; Br»bb, ehit{ r c A tr w .tw isted bF R tv . 8 . B . l w i 1 l* r | l r K ? i Arnold Robartfc S.'Mr*. B «r( g o m u L - K n . •Thomafc M rs. E . P . f ' —

Page 14: you PRICE 5 CENTS. mm ALLIES UNLEASH JAVA POWERnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · two years and Illinois state chom; plon two years. . ,, The cliamplon will perlorm

I'a g e fo u r te e n TIMES-NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO

L'PEG ’ PRICE UTH IDAHO

*‘A beU «r price In 1043 for the sou thern Idaho wool clip," Is the opinion o f T . Clyde Bncon, T w in J^ IU . upon exnm lnln j Uie price for

— y ooL .under- Uie, celling esuibllnhed by Leon H endrrson.

H enderson, sdm ln laira to r o f the OPA. h u announced prices fo r long stap le voa l. c tran . itnd Innded in Boston, .which IndlcAtca Increased pu rchasing power In Mnglc Valley th is year.

Office of price ndmlnLitratlon prices a re hnlf-blood wool. 11.15; •4. »1.M. and >A. M crnUi.

I n T erm s ot Idaho .' •• "In lerp rc ted In term s of Uje Id a ­

ho wool clip. U Indicates a price of to «7 c en ts-p e r pound In the

sreiLse a t Boston." w ld .B acon , fo r­m er p residen t of the Idaho V/ool- g ro w m ’ a.ttoclntIon.

• ^ n d e r Uils scale, « ecnta per pound probably a-ould be the Idaho price for * good average clip, pro­vided It b a Illtle ctraner nnd hrun less shrinkage Uuin the nvcrnRe," explained Bacon.

•T o get O centfl per pound, the grower would have to prc.vsnt

rfonslderably better than the aRe,” he commented.

Top. Not Minimum Bacon cautioned (trowcni th a t this

Is ft celling price for wool and not a floor.

••It U Uie highest pavilbte price Uiat Uie KOvernmenl will jwrmlt anyone to buy or -lell wool." he em- p h a s lrc d .'T h e celling does not nl^nIl th a t anyone nece.«arlly will be \ible to ge t th e highest p rice". Bacon commented tJiivt tlie ad ­vance In the price of woo! is If.i. th a rj th e ndvnnce In the j>ro<luctlni cost of wool. Price advance npprnxi' mat<a 10 per cent, while production costa In the la.it yenr alone have gone up 30 per cent.

"Lost year.” recalled Bncon, " th r Idaho cllp.1 were averaging from 35

■■■lo”3B 'c c n U 'a poUtld,'WlthMO CPUU considered a lilgh price."

A I jirg t re rc rn ta ce I t Is understood south cen tral

i j ^ o wool growers have contracted the''l!H 3 clip a t prices of 31 to ^ l centa. Several well-known clips In UjIs area have sold for 40 to 41 cents.

Red Cross Food, Clothing Will Go To U.S. Prisoners

An eoUnuitcd 3.200 American cl- vUlans, soldiers, sailor* nnd m u­rine# held prisoners by Uie Japimese

■ will receive food ond cloUilng from th e A m erican Red Crots w ithin tiiree weeks.

“ m is U he arten ing news for tjie pa ren ts a n d relaUves of souUi cen­tra l Idaho m en VpI io were tnlcen prls- onem a t W ake Island, Outim, Uic

■ phlllpp lnea o r China,” decUirod Dr. C haries R . Scott, war relief fund cholrTTtan of tiie Tw in Falbi coiinty chap ter.

S co tt la s t n igh t was advlsc<l Uie A m erican Red Croes plans to b « ln dellverlca wlUiln th ree weeks, ac- eord lne to word Issued by R ichard F. Allen; naUonal vice-chairm an of th e Red Cross, Pltlladelphln.

"Allen AOld the arrangem ents are being m ade/How w ith Uie Jnpanoftc authorlUes," added Dr. Seott.

Opinion v a a expressed Uiut pur- entA and relatives will be able to a.i- cerUUn th e locaUon of prUon aim p» th rough regiilnr w artime Red Crons channels. Possibility arises th n t Ict- terv m ay be exchanged.

, Hopeful

2W0i N U i U R AS AUIO CRASHES

Tw o women occup.iiiU of nn auiO' nioWle r.irni>r(l IfiJilrj' fi/iflirdnj' mornlnK w hrn Ihe mnchlne In wlilcli they wi-rr rlilhiK nvcrlurnrd iiflrr IciivlnK hlRliway 30 near C urry, wr.n of lirre.

lifcords nl t l i r .ilirrlff'n office .'how tlin l Mrs. SiHIa Shrp lirrd , who rr.Tldcs sotiUi of llie city, wn^ d river of the nmclilne. Iden tity of Uie ttom nn w ith )ier ^ n i no t Icnnird.

O ff lc n s Mild th a t the two uonit-nere rrtimilMK from n benii wi«rr-

liou-^e a t Kllrr where they were employed on' th e niKlit sh ll t . Mrs. Shepherd snid. tlin t nhe lo.^t. control of .the mnchlne. No o ther e ar wn.i Involved, T lir m W inp occurre*] b r-

n 2 nnd 2:30 n. m. T lie car no t bndly dnniticed.

County and State Holiday Feb. 23rd

I n obnervance of WnslilnRtoii'o blrU iday. n il county and sta te o f­fices tn T w in Falls and Uie Magic Valley w ill be e la v d Monday.

M onday wns dt.'clare<l nn offlcliil holiday by Gov, Cliu-ie A. CInrk be­cause 'W a.ih lng ton 's lilrUiduy ann l- venmry falls today.

T he postofflce In Tu-ln P ^ lh nl.m ‘will bo clofted all dny Mbndiiy 'a iid th e re Will be no rum l deliver^'. One c ity delivery ot mnll will be made In Uie m orning, however.

I n Tw in FnlLi, m errhniiis for the m ost p a r t will o l iv n e "buNliic.-i lu usual."

Mrs. Alwine Meier Succumbs at HomeM rs. Alwine C. Meier. 58. wife of

M artin Meier, died ye.ilerdny n l - 4 : i 5 - P - - m . - t t t h e r home west of

T w in Fall.vShe was bom Ja n . 3. 1084. a t New

Wells. Mo.Surviving are h e r hiLsbnnd nnd

Uie following children; Mrs. Normn B otlclirr. M rs. Wllmii Bodrero, Mt>«. XXiroUiy Doh;<. Mrs. Lucille L ln d C ahd"A llen M elrr. nil of Twin Pnll.v

■ Tlireo brotlie rs and Uiree stitera also survive. Mrs. Meier wn.n n m em­ber o f Im m anuel L uthrrnn church.

F unera l ser\'lccs have no t been com pleted, bu t Interm ent will be In Sun.'iet m em orial park. '. T h e body re.iU a t Uie W hile m or-

•luary .

Keep Youi’ Sense of Fun—Odd Items of the Week Will Help

It's >n 111 wind. etc., ete.. Uilnks B rn jam ln S lrln , veteran liame^n- niaker In I’lll.iburili.T fho. »r«i In th e rublwr anil au to renlrlrUon* a ft)o<l omrn for. h li future, lie'* t>ren mahinc lia rnm im for 50 year*, rrportu » Iiu iImcm plrk>up.

Filipinos Offered Navy Mess Posts

N nlu ra llm l Plllpl/ioii m ay rn!L',L1 mens ntt,rndftnLi In th e U. S.

n u \x J t Is nniiouiicpd by rccn ilte rs a t U ie 'Tw in Fnll.^ Mib-sUtlon.

Retiulrementn fo r Ne«m m e « n t- tendiini-1 tmvp.*been reliixrtl. th r nnv>- d rp .ir tm en t advL'.etl the ro- crullers.

BY TO.M JOIINHONl l i e Jnps knocked m o skids ou t

from under Slngaporo la.il week. Tlipy're a fte r Ja v a next.

But liang' on to you r sense of humor. If you ever needed It, you nen l It now. No gloomy nation

Lei's have a look a t oddities In the news as Uiey flowed In during th« week.

Hr W ants t« VoleOf course, th e re wiu-i Uie th ird

(Irnft signup. Down In Ttic-vsn. Arls^ i;in, nfler rending a jid rereading .'elective .wrvlce jeK tstratlon

lice 1 Uie f Ikedelrvator ope ra to r ojid In

fjulred:"Siiy. fthrre doe.'i a m an ko t<

vole on tht^ here w ar rjueiitlon?” • In T u'ln I'Vlln, nn ob.ierver no

llcc'd a few men nbove Uie n«e of 44 »erc dropphiK In to American Lenlon hall, nni fo r Uie purpone of reKUlcrlnK, t>iii fo r the purixme of b*-lti[; seen by friends who whls- jxrrrd:

•n ie ro Kws, Zcke, Well, well, I thoiiiilil he was n cn re r 51 ihiiii 44 . . . "

On the other h a n d . It may be ..u c wliat they .Miy nbou t women'; liiin(l1>.iK .‘ A N'('brn.Hkn m atron drop- l)cd hiT.% iincl [)H ^ epara lc nnd .lundry llein.i lum bird out.

Hr I trally fo rk e d One Twin Full;, n io to rls i wh\ fined . for i)nrKlnK. Me d id n 't even bo ther 1 park In from of a f ire plug. He

pitrkcd In front of the fire stiitlon.On Batanii |)OlMll.‘:uln, MaeAr-

Ihiir'-i men nmnnt:e<l to ijrlii. N ine Jti]w Ciune out of Uie un<lerbru.ih nnd nurrendrred. T lie InuKh cmno

lien the eniborra-vied Nipponese lid they mu>l have been captured hllp wftlklim In th e ir sleep.The Twin KiUs county rniloiilnK

tward ntlmlKfvi O m t 08 per c en t <3/ America'.-, niblirr Jiupply b In the ■ ir HUM, -Hiid I t mny be cu t off

>r a While....................... - " -So-o-o, L.irry Mat-son lrlr<l lo vill-

ciUllrr n feminine Klrdle. T lie re.iull: •, He tind luck wor.ie ihnn

Hiller In Uiwla.The LoUM

By llie wiiy, nn A m erican medical Journiil prr.M'nled a srlenU flc Uiesls III dl.'.ea.v.i of Uie ESiropeiin war nd Diilneii. "Tlie louse U haiK nlng

th e Orrmiui re trea t."“Hm*ni-ph," snorte<I PoL 8hot.i.

" Is ihnl so? I IhoURht he had pu l Ihe Rrnernls In c harge flgaln."

In Idaho FalLi. MU'-i Snlly Rnnd . Line forth with th e declara tion she Is KoliiK to,becom e n m other "and I hope ll's twln.1," S h e ben t W alter W liirhell to the punch by annoiinc-

-iier-ielf. M r. R«nd (T urk OrcenpuRh) l.i accompaiiyhiR ihe fan dancer on h e r tour, which In- c ludrs Ogdrn nnd S a lt Lake City

cclved n letter from Jack Benny saying ‘'Tlinnks for the Idaho po t«- t0«8,"

Benny is the fellow on Uie Roch- e ilcr program,* Speaking of Food

While we're on Uie subject of food, Tom aine of Uie Jun ior Cham ber laid In a hupply of brown bread nnd beans for Uie losers and tw o-inch steaks for tlie winners In th e Ja y - cce nicinbershlp drive,

•'But they raraed me." confessed Sine. " It wns discovered Uie brown bread wusn'l made In Tw in PnlU."

S till ^pcnklng *of food and M r. Sine. Uiere was Uie sligh t m lxup of the hnm nnd eRgs. The-Jaycee m em - bcr.ihlp breakfast was booked for W edpr.vlny. Tue.idny morning, 24 hours early. Uie hotel called up Sine and mournfully reported 35 orders of hum and prks were walUng, For a ll we know. tlicyVe still w^JUng.

W ar TImo B ui the nation wu-'i ge tting accus­

tomed lo ni.V time which W. tv Mlke.^cll. Twill l-'alls farm er, confex-^- ed "I'l about a.i plain lo me as D n -

In's theory of .relaUvliy.I wake uj) In 'U ic n igh t heorlng

voice.-!.'' he complained. " I t proves lo be Ihe children who ore taking Uie bu.'i <(>i: M-liool."

fdaho.-i D. WorUi Clark, burdened 1th a loKii in the r.enate, m ade the r.ii rditlon.-i Uie o ther dny by

liiK he u-a-i proud to supposl pen- tins for cDnKrcs.imen.W hrn hi.i fon.itlUienls recovered om -slH-ll-.sliock. D. W orth declare<l,

" I would ru tlirr he nung as a n. ber of A iiack of selfish politician;, ihnn n» a nicmlier of a pack of ■ nrds nnd fools."

T he Tlmes-Newa, In nn edllorlnl 77iiir.^<in3'. prnctlcftJly offered to sup ­ply the hemp . . . so did a lo t of oUicrs.

News analysis of S enator Clark';ninrk»-wii*.-'N iits,“--------- —

Dr. Charles R. Scotl. as If Inspired by use of Uinl word, proceeded to

on a highly succe.ufiil sale of pecnn nut.-i. l l i e Red C ro u geta the money. Tlils la the f irs t Ume In h is ­tory nny Red Croas ever sold "nuLi

I you" nnd made a profit.And to lop off this pot-pourri, ..

Indy In Tw in Falls filed nnnulm ent su li because she snld he r hu.iband drcclvcd hi-r. W hich niakea 00 . ..

Ill of Magic Valley husbands liable court acUon.

CenUnusui InUrna- 'nnal Cofrtl

-____Kevival Services••Render to Caesar the Uilim.-i

t h a t a re Caesar's, nnd lo Odd the th ings th a t ore Ood's." was the them e of Rev. D. C. Stout n l Uie N ozam ic revival here Frldny eve- ■nlng.

Mr*. S tou t, also a m inister, wife of > tho evBogbUat, will speak a t the

Sunday K hool hou r today n t S:45 a. in . a t ' th e chu^c'h. T he cam paign will con tinue onoUier week dally ex­cep t S a tu rd ay a t 7;45 p. m . i ' Sundoy « t 11 a. m . and 7:30 p. R e r . Ii. D . S m ith U local pastor.

Good News For ' , Coloti Sufferers

T he M cO eaiy CUrfte. HE814 Elms • Divd.. Excelsior SprlnglpM o.. la pu t- U nK 'out a o up -lo -the-m lnu t« 133- pose book on Colon Disorders, Pile# a n d CooaUpatlon and commonly aa-

— to d a t< ^ cbronlo allmenta,- - T he book Is U liu tra ted w ith charts, d lo-

, Jgnxat ftDd X - i ^ plcturca of thcsQ ftO m entx.' W rilo ' today—a post­card. ^ d o - ^ b Uie. ftbove address and ihU la rs o ’b o ^ will be se n t you PR Eg 'and poetpald. ' ____

Itui/ U. S. Defense Stamps and

liondH

....YET!RANGES RANGES

n H H 2 2 3 5 i ^

COAL, ELECTRIC and COMBINATION-Priorities -

Now la the Ume to check, up on yinir cook r.tove nnd If 'th e old one w on't do for Uio •'duraiion'- you had best replace H NOW. At th r prpsent tim e our -lelectjon of Mun- aiclts !.■( complete b u t It Ls tiucslloimbic If they will long be available.

Monarch ElectricHere Is' A merica’s mo.-it popular rnnne and you 'll' find a"'M onarch 'w llh rvcry 'mbdcm feature. In Uie oven or on the top ii U th'" hL-.i word In m odern cooklni:, 'n iere

a .^ize for each and evcr>’ hnii.'iphold in iu lrem ent. T lie niodrl pictured has llfT triLsh bu n ic r nnd w ater heater.

Monarch CombinationHer6 Is Uie rnngp th n t Klve.-i you the kind of h em you wani and w hen you wnnt It. You can have iiie coiivenlencp of the elecirlc rnnKC as wrll a-i the econoniy and w arm th of th r coal Ijiinicr. 'm e co.M Is surprL-.liiKly sm all ^oll■' l(ll' lnR Uie value bu lll Into these cooklnK marvels.

Monarch Coal RangesIie^c's th e ranse w llh ever^-thlng IneludlnR the faniou.^ four'ftiill con.^tr\icUon. vltrifu.ied n u t- proof oven walls nnd tr ip le cooled porcelain rnnm el arm or. I t 's th e king of the coal ranges.

There’s a Monarch to Fit any Pocketbook!

LOW Down PajTnent

EASY TERMS B u i l t t o L a s t a n d L a s t

Wilson- Bates ApplianceR upert Twin Falls Buhl

HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOtJR SEWTNG-NEEDS! '

NationalS E W a n d S A V E

W ^ kFEB. 21 THROUGH FEB. 28

11 rV j (

T h e G overnm ent In UrRinR w om en to do m ore

o f th e ir ow n .scwinR th i s S p r in g ! Do y our p o rt,

nnd Nave fo r o iir c o u n try . . . a n d yourse lf! Lovely

fa b ric s , cu.sy-tO'fnIlow p a t te r n s m ake sewinK a t

h om e fun! So clime in to d a y to pick b u t y o u r

f a b r ic s t o ‘Sew and S ave fo r y o u rse lf and o th e r s l

.

Choose from the Complete Stocks in the

Dry Goods Dept

PRINTED,, RAYON CREPE '

New spring pa tterns nnd color comblnnllon.1, 3D in, wide. FN-ery piece Buaruntced wash-

Sl^UN RAYON PRINTS

69cAll are Crown Tested fabrics, 30 In. wide, O uaranleed w ash­able. New ip rlog colorings a n d styles.

BEMBERG SHEERS

79 cN ew .spring' sh e e r print.s in. w id e and all a rc w a.shablc. W c h a v e th e nicc.sl .‘iciection _ t h a t in pos.'iible to ob laiti. A ll th e newc.'tt pattcrn .s,

FINE 80 SQUARE PRINTS

SANFORIZED PEASANT CRASH

59cSoJid c«)ctr« o r pririt.H. Hfl in. wide. V iit color.i. Ideal f o r drc.s.sca and slack su its .

TUXEDO PRINTS

29c 25c

PRINTEDSEERSUCKERS

4 9 c to 6 9 ch av e se v e ra l q u a lities o f eecr-

K ticker to ficlcct fro m . T u b driff ■A'car, th e re i.‘$ n o iron itig n cccssary . A ll g u iira n tc c d w ashable .

SPUN RAYON UNW EAVE

Tij}).-most fa.shioii priiilH. IlG in.w ide. G u aran teed fa.st colons. Allthe;, new est .spring p itU orns o r .solid color.s.

KALOLA SPUN FAILLE

69cA fine (luulity Fa ille t l ia t % ill

Kivi.' (‘xcolleiit -service. .'iO in. w iilf.

Solid colors. A ll th e newu.st .sjimlcs.

J u s t received a new .shipmeiH. of Ih c w ell know n T uxedo p r in ts . G iian in leed fa s t colors. 36 fn. w ide. • All now sjiriiig p a tte riia .

4 9 c

Sew and S ave W ithSTANDARD NOTIONS

4C,„n,. ScT h read — Buttoii.s — S n ap s — H ooks and Eye.s and othcj ne- ces.sary no tions.

T h e noarc.st fa b r ic to linen t h a t h a s been p roduced . 39 in. w ide. Solid colons only.

RAYON SPUN GABERDINE

59cP la in ■ color.s in a good w elR ht

g ab e rd in e H uitablc fo r nil ty p es of Bponls w e a r . 39 in. wide. E very piece is w ash ab le .

from the ECONOMY BASEMENT•NEW!

DYED YARN SWISS35c

S<ilid colors navy , m aroon , ru s t , lin h t blue, peach , p ink a n d b lack w ith w h ite d o t o r w h ite w ith black dot. T he m o s t b e a u tifu l as so r tm e n t o f fin e sh e e rs . :5G in. wide.

NEW ORbANDIES - IN PASTEL-SH ADES -

25cAll ‘1-1 inches w ide in th e mo.st w an ted colors.

NEW! SPUN RAYONS35c

In floral, s tr ip e , and geom clric design . A com bina tion and as- .siirtm ent o f colors fo r e v e ry <ic- siiH".

NEW■ CRINKLE CREPES

25cSolid colors. piriT c.ligH njltie . o r­c h id ,' yellow , peach a n d w h ite . M aku y o u r go\^^l.s and p a ja m a s now an d save.

P r in te d P a t te rn s 29c

PERCALES - PRINTS

15cDoUs, checks, p la id s , str ip e s and f lo ra l p a t te r n s . M ostly tan , brow n a n d b lue colors. .IG in. wide.

NEW! PRINTED PERCALES

19cG ay new print-<i o f fine count

• p erca les , h o ta o f p a tte rn s to choose f ro m . A ll new colors in check, flo ra ! a n d s tr ip e p a tte rn s .

FAIRY PRINTS AND PLAIN PERCALES

23cS p a rk lin g new sp rin g print-s p re ­se n te d in b ig aa-sortm cnt o f p a t te rn s .

'ITRUTH PRINTS! SANFORIZED!! i;

3 t 9 c . ■ ' I, TJjese p erca le p r in ts w ill n o t sh rin k , g

N ew sp rin g co lo rings. Sec them . . P- . r.r--I'.- -I ■ - - i . ; . :_^ - . . . » ^>-rrr:-J

Defense Stamps For Sale a t

Idaho Dept. Store“IF IT ISN’T RIGHT,"BRING IT BACK”