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«IAKB EVERY PAY DAY BOND DAY JOIN THE m-IOLL UVMU PU| A ReffloniU Newspaper SerrltiK Nine Irrigated Idaho Counties WAR BULLETIR MOSCOW. March 4 (BnaUa broM-j cut rMorded hj Valui.Tnm la In-.’ den) — The Uth Nui umj at SUnya tMUkbi m »p « thb rin r'«t thmrft •lOBnd It bjr (he SBsalUM, «f> (lelal Miiroca Mid (o'nifht, »ddlBC thst the Germaiu are btlax Bcthodlealljr d«* •Irojtd. yOL. 24, NO. 275 TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 4, 1942 PRICE 5 CENTS JAP HORDES SCORE NEW GAINS • RAF Raids Paris Industrial District Vichy Reports 650 Killed, 1,500 Hurt In Night’s Attack LONDON, Marclf « Ml _ A r«< * bre«<Jc»»t recorded today l>r f*- ehuixc telcfTAph uld thxt at leMt 1.SM people were killed and ter. er»l hnndred In/und darinc Us(«n(ch('> rifrf on the *a6orfti of r»rii. i»r Sidney J. williams , United rrcn SUfr Correspondent LONDON, AI«rch 4 (UR) — British bombens, itltjickiji;; Frcnch industries producing war mnterinls for Gcrnmny, fiflttencd buildings “like pnckg of cnrds” in a two-hour raid on industrial tarRCta in the Paris suburbs durinj? the niffhl, Air Minister Sir^ An Sinclair told the h o u s e of * commons today. (Vichy reported 650 per- flons killed and 1.600 wounded in the raid.) Dfscrlhlne the o p e m llo n s m •'hlRhly BUCCCMfu!” the BrlU.nh air mtnLiter nold royal ntr force pIloLs reported tlint several licavy bombs blew bultdtnss huiidreib o( teet Into the iilr. The principal tnrget In Krnncc wns the big Rennuli motor and taiik work.1 at Billancourt. .iouth«c.it ot PkIs. Bombs nUo vare dropped on ' thtt ForlaUn Indiutriol'dlatrlct^ ot Bouloffne»SDr*Selne aod Nuilly. Ma*« n<n I^dueUu) .'TWe cannot allow Qerman pn>- • doeOon or tank*, tonk ensjnw. alr- pjftae.engtoea »w l lorries to so un- lilQdcred merely bbcauae thtM plftnta are' I ocated in occuDled t«r- rtfory'ttod mnce." he «ld. .t Sinclair added U>e Rcnaull work* uere "notorloiu for Ihelr activity on behalf Of Ujo enemy." An air mtnUtry communique Mid reports lndlca\p ‘•in\Jch dajnnto" infUct«d on (h« n ^ u }( works. Th o l»st nlRhi'A openUotu,'Which also tneluaed an ntuiet on Port 2Bnden. Oermftny, nnd the mining of enemy wrtKrs. ^ ^ Sinclair inlifVMrKe port of the RcnnuH worta \cpctiVert on »n Islwjd in the Seine river was attacked. "A number o! our hfavJest bcmlu fell on UiU Islnnd ” he &oId. . Authorltntlve s o u r c e s tald bowUs ten on Paris pracfJ'- .The KAF's sudden shllNlrom tnr- Kct« In Qermriny to the nennidt innlt nnd motor Jactcry may nuKurato n hcnvy. new campivlRtl nKftln.'.t "cnpllve'' nrm.'v Industries ihroufflioijt Jvuropc whlcl) Die NmIs have seised for their own purpose*. More Acec^lble London oii'Cfrew »«/<! Uiat mo.<l cl the captive plants were more ac- ccMlblo to DrUlah bomben than the 0 >*rTn(in tJlontjt. mffny o f rftich have • been moVed ea-itunrd. >. The diplomatic commentntor said ;a.it niffhfs mid *'«•■« made part/y n .1 a result ot appeals form Prench* men who have escaped to EnRland, lie RUld tUcxe Fnnchmen had told . DrltUli nuUiorltles that the French Cgliiii t> MARCH 1 H 9 SET FOR iiyciHs BOISE. March 4 m-Dntes for the llrst l;vlucilons under Uie new .'yxtem of mu-iterlns men Into the army a,-, won a.’i they p a « phyal- ca\ exRn\lJ\^Uon^ «ere anuounced io<lny by jelecllvc »crvlce head (}uartcr5. RetfLitranLA from the 10 western counties nnd from Twin KalU. Jrrome. Lincolg. ComaA. GfKKllnr nml Illalnr rountlrs will .be examined and Inducted at Bol!< Marcll W-19. Men from the remalnlnt: 18 fouih- ern nnd soulheaitem eountle.^ report Marcli 32-2«. Inclusive, at the at the Pt. DouKla.^ Utah. Induction Matlon. and Uioso from the 10 north- cm eounUes at the PU Lewis, Wash. Mntlon March 10*2S, Inclu-tlve. Under the new mtUvad ottlccrs , will be present during phy&lcaJ eX- amlnntlona nnd will Induct draf- tees a.f noon as the medical board pronounces them physically fit. . I»h>-*lcnl ,exnjnlnaUons for Idaho- ans will be held only at Uie three Induction «taUo:is„ Port Lewis. Port DoiiRla-s nnd Boke.' -In ca.w of an emerKeney." said Llf'ul. Col. Norman D. Adklawn. •■afi^r a man has been outfltwd by the army he may be granted t furlough not to exceed 10 days! Dur- ing this time he may apply for deferment," Charge Filed in Accident D eath OOISE. March * l/r> — A man- Blaughter charge has been filed agaUut Marlon Jorgenson of BoLM by PTMeculor Kenneth O'Leary In fhe death of Oeorge Wayne Barber. Jr, 15. fclUed when struck by an au- tomobile. The aeuon was (flken upon tJte order of District Judge C. E. Win' *te.-»d. Convicts Object To Slowdown on Government Job SAN FRANCISCO. MnrcJ. 4 (U.PJ—Tlierc la jMUrloLhm i«i Alcii- inix prison. Nine men ••nKniicd Jn a flve-mlniite riot In Uie jirl.-.on luimdry twcause u convlci .'ux- Kcsted n "flowdowTV In oixrni- Uons. Warden James A. Jolin.iton revealed todu’. AJcatru prUon. where only Uie most hardened of crlmlnab are confined, handles U>e laundry for the United SlAt«3 army trans- port service. Wat- demaiids have fonTUftlil aa exceptional Increase In- work. The prisoners oven agreed to forego ihelr usual hol- Idaj'i OQ New Year's and Wo.ih- tnaum's birthday. Johnsign said. When thfl "slow-down” siigRcn- Uon was bmched yesterday, flats began to fly. It took fire minutes for guard.« to break up the flgbt. One prisoner went to the hospi- tal with head Injuries, rccclvcd Ing m^ctiiae paddle. . , • ’ <AF SCHEOULES ORIVEAiEOil AXIS-HELO AREA IJ/ EDIVABD W- DEATTIK LONDON. March * <U.PJ-Alr Min- uter Sir Archibald Sinclair hald to- day Britain would reiiunic Uie tnrs- pauibM bombing ollenaivc iRalnst Germany at the earliest pos- sible moment with the aid of Amerl- •wi dive IjomblnF: planes markedly iU[»crlor to anj’thtnff Oernjnny had. T a c t i c a l and recoiinol.-isance «iundron.s of the royal nlr force ore ow belnB reequipped with the best merJean f/fiJitlnff plane.i. h e .isld. ‘The Americans ore nlso going to send U.1dive bomljers." he nald. "Air- craft of A type which Li marlcedjy ■superior M a tllic bomber to thr •lunker-S7 will shortly be aviillable," "I have full • confldrncp In the Judgment of the nlr .itaff that a Iwmber offcjjalve affnln.il Orrmajjj' h IndWpeimble menns of winning Small Plants Will Be Given Munition Job WASHINGTON, March 4 (-T) — Production Chief Donald M. Nelson ordered the army and niivy today to bring thousands more of the tlon's 200,000 factorle.i Into war pro- duction by su,'>pendlnr: competitive bidding on arms contracts, . ••Perfectly capable .-.mnll 'flrm.i' had been blocked from getllng Into war production. Nelson expUlncd, because under compeUtlve blddlnK Inrge concerns which already hold exten.Hve war contracLn are often able to underbid .nmall manufactur- ers who arc not doing any war work at oil." Nrbon, In the dIrecUve ls:>ued lost Uial V itandardlted articles must be ord' ered by the nrmed .sffrvlces and the maritime commUslon from smaller concerns, leaving tJic larger plants free, to concentratc on accelerated production of such Items as tanks, planes and big guns. The new order makes ncKOUated contracts mai>dator>- unlcft.i the wa) production board glve.-i specific per^ mLvilon for Invltlnit bids. It wa.*i understood Uie trPtL^un procurement dlvblon immediately would get puch pcrnil.-alon. itnil per- haps some other agencies. Primarily, 11 was sold, the order was aimed nt the pu^clla.^lnl: policies of the army navy and nmrlUme comml.'jlon. Nclton'6 office was deluged, mean- while, by pledges of labor and mw;- agement support for hL% Monday night order for an Immediate creaic In arnw production. EXCItANGK SEAT SALE NEW YORK. March 4 m — a memberslilp in the New York itock exchange wns sold today for 118,000. a decline of 11.000 from the la.st traniacUon and Uie lowest price since 1807 when one sold for *15iOO. luii Sinclair sold. _ :nU \rrlvc r plai He »ald reinforcement.^ continued to arrive In Uie fi ern war theaters and that aji evcr- Increoslng number o f Drltl.nh plane; opcrallng on the nu.«lan front. Explaining Uiat the royal nlr forei personnel sent to Russia had nov been recalled. Uio minister .v-Ud that It hod been Uie main l»sl« of Uie air force since la.it June, when Germany attacked Russia, to give Ru.-wla its utmost aid. He said Uwt Uie wlUidrawnl ot air force personnel was deckled upon by agreement with Premier Jo,-.ct Stalin “some time ago." . RecounUng Uie fight In'Uie air. he saM Uint during Uie 13 month.i' Uic royal'nlr forcc'la of- feailvo fighUng outside tho Brltlsl; defense zone had destroyed ni3 enemy fixhter planes ngfUnst a BrUl- Isli la-J of 037. Production Out a result of bombings, Sinclair snld, coal 'mines and factories. In Belgium aild northern Prance which are working for Germany hnd-suf- f ered. severely. ' ' "Fur cxnni|ile. for five monUd In- dastrlnl acllvliy over a wide arci: iuo\md U lle -Ktu-. curUiHtd — for m.iny wecljs by as much as 50 pei ci'nt—on account ot diiniage to pow- er plant.',” he said. BISHOP ASKS FOR SOLOIERLEITERS Appealing to lils audience to make n more definite effort to con- tact by mall the men in Uie armed forces of Uie United Sta^s. Bishop Bruce Baxter, I’ortlnnd.' told the eastern dLstrlct Methodist confer- ence here today; •Tlie boys In service are niaUlnf far more letters than U^ey are re- ceiving. Their lives have been up- rooted. and they need Uie support nnd help of your mewnge.i. com- mnndlns officers tell ii.v" Ask Recrullem It was {.uggc.-ited ‘ thut any re- cruiting officer could ittniLih Infor- maUon nbout the correct mailing ot letters, post cnrds, .■'mall gifts and such to the soldiers, sailors and In yoi) Hw wlmt icllcal "DoiV golnr ^vlce. dLscUM the Tliey want U 1at.home.^’ wa liLi p Tlie two-day conference clo.-;ed a noon tod.ay at the loc.il MethodLi church, of wlxlch Itcv. II, a . Mc- Calllitcr Is pastor. Rev. Dallas McNeil. Wendell MpthodUt pastor, led the devotional .•.ervlces thb morning. BUhop Baxter. In liLi final ) •■mge 10 the mlnliters, p.^rtlcularly emphn-sUed the need for forceful, Thousands More of U. S. Troops Land in Ireland LONDON. March 4 (/!>-Sev- en! hundred L’nltrd States troopi antved In London today from NerUiem In;Und. wi^ni u. S. TROOPS IN NOR-ni- ERN IRELAND. March 4 (-?) — niouiands more cheering, husky United states flghUng men have arrived In a northern Ireland port to augment the force that has been In Ulster for more than a monUi, it was announced today. DetaUi of Uio landing of Uie'fleet of transport* and supply ships were, withheld unUl the soldlen. Uielr gun? and othfr fIghUng equipment had been scattered to Uie sccluded spots throughout the six northern Ireland counUcj and the alilps had left port. Ccmparrd, wiih the eercnionlal landing of the first contingent of Uie AEF to Europe's part of the World war last monUi. U»e latest arrival was a routine Job carried out wltli Uie typical army and navy clockwork precLilon. Like-the Ilrsl conUtxRCt . the latest arrlvaLi are mldwestemem who have been in training In south- ern army camps for « year. But there are some represent*Uves of every part of Uie country. ■niey' came In full field equip- ment wlUi Ihelr guns feady. The whlte.lxatred troop com- mander wa.^ a colonel from the mid die west, a veteran of artillery cam. palgning In Uie first World war anc five .years commander of the same unit, which WM with the Rainbow dlvLilon, ICtB . r.«. Commandos “Frisk” Prisoners r.SE.\ Radlo-Telepholo) Grrman prlionrrm taken during the Feb. 27 blllz raid on a Naxi radio ■tatlon near Havre. France, get a tiioroujli ••going over’^by Dritlih commandei nhn ’•broughl ’em bsek allvf" with .plenty of Information. Tlie surpriiF raid wai the fln t of notable xlie on tlie Citrapean con- tinent since Dunkerque. U. S. Pilots Shoot Down 16 Bombers WASHINGTON. .March 4. (U.R)— Aliiui.st complete aiini- hilatinii of a Jnpanc.sc attjickiiif: force of 18 heavy bombers by a .strong' unit o f tlie Americfin fleet nnd accompftnyinir fishtcr 5 >li\i\cs today RupywrVed the c\nim» Tnihtary experts here have been making for weeks— that American fliers are, ovenvhclmintfly siiperior to the Japane.sc. - - Given only half a chance, these expert.^ have .said, Ameri- -------------------------------------- II can airmen will best the FLASHES of LIFE FOUR JAP SHIPS By EVKRETT B. JJDLLK.S WASUINGTON. Marcli .4 lUPt- eii. DoURla.1 MacArthur'8 I forcc. following up his Siirpi , ,, S.1UII lust week Uiat Hma-ihcd enemy advance pa-.ltlons on the Ba battlefront. hn.i sunk at lea.vt bnilleshlps ha.i sunk at least lour Japane.'ic ships In Subic bay In a ' iriiiK ulUck. the war dcpanmcni iiiounced today. WlUi only n handful of little P-40 fiRluer planes to challenge Japan' bombers, dlvc-bombcm and flglitcr; MncArthiir's dauntles.s akrme caught tlie Japanese by comiilete. Mirprl.se nnd earned havoc In Suble bay. JuiMiu’s chief means Q( supply for the Dnlnnn front IS to 20 mllcj south. Tlicy dr.iiroyed one 10, 000-ton ship, one 8, 000-ionner, and two 100-ton motor Iflunclicj. Troves Superiority Tlie feat of •MacArthur'a'planes pTOv«i Uit hecond cvldenct In •.!< hoitr.-i to support what military ex- Peru have been clolmlng for week; —that American filers are superior lo the Japanese. Almo.'.t complete annUillaUon of Japanese attacking force of 18 heai. bombers by a unit of. the American iltei nnd accompanying lighter e v e a l c d in a naVT last night, was saU by DKI.AYKII LAS CRUCES, K. M.. MnJCh 4 —Dlilrlct Attorney Martin 'Threet niLvied liU IlrM court opening In nine years. Reason: Tlium dental work watli in progrrlh. BKTTEIt '01,E SALT LAKE CITY. March 4 —Tills slRn on the door ot Charles E. Jftffa’.i printlns .■'hop espLihn everythin!!; •'Clo.'-.ed for the duration. Gone to help whip the axis." He's In the navy. MO.M.'VIVS HELrEK KANSAS CITY, Mnrch 4 - MoUier blu.slied nnd the cop pre- tended he didn't hear when thtce- year-old wnny 'vhl.-ipered; "Tell him to r.ljut up ond go nasy from here.'’ A ticket for running n red light wns Imminent. But when the youngster wrlKglnl Irom lii.s tnoihcr'.s hunfl iniiKlf nnd .ihouied: ''Get out of here and mind your own bailnc.nl " Llnii. Daniey Mahoney threw up hit hand.'>, "I give up. You can go ixheart, lady," Allies Hold Most Of Wheat Surplus WASIIINOTON, March ♦ (^r,- 'The United NnUons hold about I.- 271.000.000 bushels of the world'; known wheat siiTplus of lW4,ti00.' 000 bu.\hels, the agricultAire depart- ment reported today. Tile remaining 353,000.000 bu\hfU Ls held by a westenT hemLiphcre neutral, ArgenUna. The . United Nation .lurplu-' i-i about 210.000.000 bUsheLi larger than myear aga. The United States has pror.pecls for a 1043 wheat crop, of at leatt 100.000.000 bushels In excess o f iis requirements. Germany Erects 4th Defense Line KUIBYSHEV. March 4 The German armies have been pushed back wlUi luch speed that they have been-forced lo erccl a fourth de- fense line from the Baltic sea lo eiovaklft. U « PollUtal Commiaaat Y. L. Karobko disclosed In i Iccture here. The 60.000 Germans In the Staraya Russa sector face annlhlUUon and Nazi armies In oUier garruons al*o ■re surrounded and faced «’lth db- aster, he said. ' enemy. In almost every i ment In tlie .-rfiuth has been announc have come off a : Americans, That v or Mr engase t Pacific Uiat thr Japanese - second wlUi true aKaln ln ................... -nt la.-,i night of Its eecond .'.ucce.vlul ucllon In about a month In the Gllbrrt l.ilands area—2,500 mile;, southwest nt Hawaiian Watid.s, Tlie navy’s communique revealed that a strong American nnv.il force —an aircraft carrier, 'cmiiers and destroyers—WA-, o|)crallng we.st o the Gilbert Ls1iiiid.s •'recently ' wliei attacked by ID heavy enemy botnben In two groijp.-i of nine each. Ameri- can airmen took off from tlie car rler ond anU-alrcraft guns on tin surface shlp.i went Into aclloti, ,*nie resuiw after engaging th enemy "clavily nnd vlgoroa.'ly": Sixteen of the 18 Japane.-.e bomb- cri, shot down- Only two Amcrlcaji flgi; loM, hlp;i. r planes 1 pilot r Her In addition to tliiii bo\ .^t•ore. the navy ha.s a new hero—Llcur ijunloi KVMlel Edwwd \l. OllAir. U, 8 niivy fighter pilot—who .Miigle-hand- ed, shot down .six ol ilip Japanese planes. It won Uic larKr-:! nu ' ot enemy planes crixiiinl lo Anirrlcnn JUl6L'ln any •im;le action during Uie war. In r,ni. officials heic could not recall any ^1 ' fecit, Klncc the 'Use nl thv RlTplMit as a war wenpon. The magnitude <il Olliirc's wa.i empha.sH:cd bv tiir lijit that he wa.-i on his own in n ..Mngle-sentcr flghler. whcre.■^a the i>!niie\ lie wa? flKhtlng were'Tiuijc wiinbers which •Iirobabl.v' were manned wllli -crew c( pilots, aus^ners nnd bomb:\rUlers, G'Harc's home l.s In Ai, He will be 28 on Mnrch 13. • Award Loom> Tlicro was little doubt here Uiat hit remarkable Job uoulil be offi- cially recognised soon wltj) a dis- tinguished award. Aviators lo World tUitlaiH »i Tix* }. Calaufi Training Schools In Jerome, Burley POCATELLO. Mnrch 4 W- 'TrMtiln* k J ico^ s for 4-11 club lead- er.i Uiroughout souUieaslern Idaho will be conducted during Uie few weeks. District extension Bgent Duke announced this .schedule Jerome. March 23: Durley. March 24; Grace, Marcli 33; Pocatello. March 36; ■Rcxburs. March 37—aU for livestock, crop, forestry. •*'eed control OLfld garden club leaders. Rexburg. April 27» Pocatello. April 29; Grace. April 20: Kurley, April 30: Jerome. May I-fo r cloUi- Ing, nutriUon . and n n n ln g club leaders. ^ MACARTHURP-40 the experu to be solid proof 6f the American's superiority In the air. • Given only half a chance. Uiey .-mid. -American alrmca WlU best Uie enemy. Tlic -Kar department said that ”ln .A.iUldden.surpriie attack" MacAr. thur's little «7i"forc8 "swept' over Subic bay desU-oylne several Jop. anese vessels.” Fire* Started In addition to the four slilps listed destroyed '•many small craft were damased." It was said. "LntKB llrca were staried on the docks of Olonga- po and Grand island, Tlie.so were followed by many heavy cxplojlons among enemy stores." Olongnpo is the chief port ot Subic bay at the top of Datnnn penin.iuln and wns Uio western anchor of.tho line ol MacArtJiur’s Bataan outp&sis until'Jnn. p when Uie Amcrlcan- Flllplno troop.-i fell back .southward, .Grand island lle.s in the entrance to Subic bay. occupying much the same strategic importnnce as Cor- regldor at tJio entrance lo Manila bay. Military experU said that no air IC«nUn«t< •<! r> i« J. }| Dutch Defenders .Apply “Scorched Earth” Policies By ROGER D. GREENE Associated Pres* War Editor '7 Jiipun’.s iiivn.sion hordes scored new jtains a;fainst out- numbered American. British and Dutch troops in tho criti- cal four-day-old battle of Java today, and the danger was .«io acute that NEI head<iuarters announced the major part of a scorched enrllv defense jKilicy hnd already been carried out. A Tokyo .broadcast said .Tupane,se mechanized unit-t reach- ed a point we.si of the bis Dutch naval base'at Soerabaja, in ea.*itern Java, and there dash- ed with "allied forces trying desperately to hait^he Jap- anese onalaught.” ^ Other enemy columns were atrlk* . ing toward the caplui city ot Ba« tavla. In wejtem Java, where de- mollUon squads already had begun lo blast the picturesque 330-ye*r- old town, and toward tho allied headquarters city of Bandoene. Once again, a tragic ilory ol allied numerical Inferiority — in planes, aldps and • mim — emersed from the struggle for the United Nations stronghold In the Indlai. Ullle Uelp Dutcli quarters in London said Uiat only about &O.OQQ allied tcoopa, among Uiom "a few thousand American and British.” were fight-' Ing at Iea.1t as.OOO Japanese and Uiat Uie United NaUons naval force - had suffered •'a crlppUnj' blow- la attempting to halt the Japanese in- •tasJon neet, •'••• Previous reports' caid th* Duteli :iad an army of 100.000 to 300,OOq troops, reinforced by "many thous- ands ' ot Amcrlcftn.' BriUah and Australian soldiers, to combat' the atuck. New War Hero Bashful—Born On Friday, 13th ST. LOUIS, March 4 <,r>—Quiet nnd re.served, Lieut. Edward H. O'Hare Is a new hero America con take to Its heart. "Tlie 28-year-olrt fighter pilot was credited today by Uie navy with the unparalleled feat of destroying six Jopanese bombing planes hi one day Of acUon with the United SUxtes fleet, Ollare was born on Friday Uic I3th, In Marcn. 1014, but there's been noUiIng unlucky about It. Tall, dark luid luindsome. he tUII hn.sn't overcome Uie personal reUcencethat mnde him a bash- ful boy. His mother. Mrs. Selma A. O'Hare. was a bit doubtful Uiat he would wanL any publicity, even aa a luxtlonaf hero. O'Hare wa.s -a very good boy ^'ho was always cnu^ about alr- planes.^’.she recalled. CRIPPS ASKS FOR A M I BATTLE LONDON. Mardi 4 ./Pr-Slr Staf- fonl Crlpps. govenunent leader In Uie house of commons, ajipealed to the Ignited NaUons to follow the ■'all-out'' example of Rii-«la In Uie world flfflit against NnrJwn am! Pna- ctsm In a broadca-sl speecii to the United SUtes todny. •'We now are all iililrs logcUier to drive agtmesslon and Fa.vl.'m frorr the world.” Sir SUifford Occlarcd. "After the victory let us remain In the same gallant comimny lo re- build n stricken world ui>on thr fouiidnUons o f Juitlce iiml equality Uiat will secure for u.s, for thrm and for all people of Uie w.uld u liapiili'r. saner and more peacrfiil future," He warned repcatrjly iliai the nl- lle.s’ rccent heavy ^cli)llcks would t>e followed by furUier rfrvpr^cs. but In- .■•.IslPd that "modern wnr. on the gl- ganUc and far flung tcalc upor which It now is being wnged. U noi finally won or lost n.^ the result of territorial gains here or there. "It eventually will be won by thr rewurce.s In manpower and mate- rial that can be mcbllUed behind one side or Uio other.'’ New Evidence ^ Is t)^ered '£fi Miu’der Trial PRESTON, Idaho. March 4 Tlie prosecution offered ^another batch of arUclcs as evidence today at Uie murder trial of Mrs. Gracc Coppard of Bodn Springs, but de- fense obJecUons kept some of, the gadgets out of the official exhibit. There were buttons allegedly found on a bridge over tho strerun that runs into Soda Springs reser- voir. In which tlic body of Paul Tipton, nr., was found lost August. Other arUcles included a watch ca several parts of a watch and •fl slUrt. 10 prosecution contended the shirt was worn by Tipton when he, vanished several days before his body was found, but defense coun- sel objected nnd District Judge Jay L. Do«7ilng took the quesUon under advisement. Walter Byron of I>nver. a special' InvesUgator hired by Caribou coun-' ty. told Uie Jury which will decide whether Mrs. Coppard U guilty of slaying Tipton, details of the In- quiry. He corroborated testimony offered previously by Sheriff Charles McCracken. E:zra Lakey. Soda Springs fai told of seeing nn automobile pass his house Uie night of Aug. 23 and atop about a mile and a quarter away. He said he saw the back door open, heard a number of gun ghots. then the door closed and thi car drove nwny. Meanest Thieves Steal Tire and Slash the Rest 0 make Janet Young. 520 Fourth east. Is certain today thi thieves will go to extremes i It "tough" on people. She reported to police that tire and four tubes had been slot from her car while It was parked in front of her home address. Then she added; “They also cut the other tires." U. s. Awake but Leadership' Lags, GOP Executive Says By O. A. KELKER Americans are awake, and 'ar« ready to sacrifice for the war win- ning cause, but Uiey don't know what to do and reason for their In- decision is "lack of leadership In Washlt^lMi." • This was the way Ml.is Marlon E. MarUn. Bangor, Me.< assistant chair- man of the Republican national commlttee.'iummed up the situation In the United -SUtes as she spoke before more than 300 party leaden at the American Legion hall here iMt night DUpstea ' &Ira. P. D. R. During her talk she took Isius wlUi a recent statement by'Mrs. Prankllfi J3. Roosevelt to the effect the people don't, know Uiey are in the war. . ' "The countnr is aaake.” Miss Mar- Un said, "but the lack of leadership In Washington Is what is holding us back.” She continued; "At least Mrs. Roosevelt did do Uie naUon and the Republican party a fftvor on another score. e\^en though ahe wa.<i wrong u to whether c we were awake. "By attempting to get Melvyn Douglas and Mayris Chaney Into the defense setup sht dramatised th-* basic follure of this administra- tion slnee 1033. that of putUng ,un> qualified people in public appoloUve ofllcea.^^ want Facts She further chaned that Ameri- can people want the facts con- cemins this war—with ezcepUon ofi those which «-ould be of value to| the enemy. <C«iilUi*4 u Tm* C«l«»a A bulleUn from NEI headquarter* conceded that the InTadera '•«uc-^ . ceeded In maibit (Qm« Sieuiwa^ at ' The extent of Japancsa Caloi as not specified While there itill appeared to be no radical change in the situatlofi. the n signs were ominous. ■Ttic principal (scorched earths destruction in'Java has sow been carried out.” U » Dutch cominand said. London sources declared Japanese . submarine victories had reduced Dutch naval strength to such an ex- tent (hat the olllea no longer were able to undertake a counter-oJfen- ve In the far Pacific battle the- . Continue Fight - Dutch headquarters gave this (er!.e nummary of the land fighting: "It can only be reported toda]i Hint our troops fight with stubborn • - ttsliUince and in ollertilve spirit. "In all places where the enemy al- lempts U) advance ha Is strongly engaged by our troops, wbp try to., prevent his advance." British dispatches late yes'terday Mid allied troop# had launched a counter-offenilve. and the Jopanew weit itportcd thrown back seven miles in one sector. Local successes agabut Japane.«e forcc.1 were reported by British > t)1- unteers. who took part In fighting at <c«i.tlni.d .■ r*c» t. C.Ifli>a «) Japs Claim Full Success in Java Landing Attacks TOKYO. March 4 — (Jnpaneso bro«idca.\l« recorded by U P in New- York and London—Docnet news ngmcy .said today that Japanese forcea In Java have gained com- ilete control of the Batavia-'Ban- loeng railway and have severed rommunclatloiis between tiie tfnlted NaUtms^ fronts on Uie<island. T^ere were report* from the front Uiat JapaiicM troopa were withUt 18 miles of Batavia and thot another column hod readied the Ixnmedlate vicinity of Bandoeng. Japanese air forccfl executed a violent raid on Bnndoeng despite stout resistance by Dutcli plane.<i, It wn.i said. Domel said thnt followin* Uie na- val bnUlr.< off BaUvla and Soer- abaja. Jnpwese naval aTlaUon flew southward over Javanese watei^ nnd . shot down 10 enemy planea. They In- cluded 11 four-motored heavy typ* bombers, four. four-moUir?d sea- planes and one U-motored aeaplane. British Ship Sinks Off Eastern Coast LEWES. Del, March « , • British Gypsum Prince. 3.B15 tool, sank two mites off LrWes today after a collision with tba 8X»0-ton. oil lunktT Voce. FlirB men a » n ix - ing. I laaded ..-A About 30 survlTor* ' at the coast guard cUtlon. Navy official* aald tilt Voeo. owued by the Standard 'nM>(parta> > ...) tkm compazu' of LoaCUn and char- ;' Kred by the Sooooy • Vacuu* OU-. . f, company. Taitii&td tba Ojp«am Prince. ............... . Six (urrlTon w«re picked cp t m a raft and W.otben wer« by coa*t gwaro bo*ti.. . \ The Voco, damaged ta wa* Ued up al LewM paadlBt t ve*UgaUoo.
Transcript

«IAKB EVERY PAY DAY

BOND DAYJOIN THE m-IOLL UVMU PU|

A ReffloniU New spaper SerrltiK N in e Irr igated Idaho Counties

W A R B U L L E T I RMOSCOW. March 4 (BnaUa broM-j

cut rMorded h j V a lu i.T n m la I n - . ’ den) — The Uth Nui u m j at SUnya

tMUkbi m »p « thb r in r '«t thmrft •lOBnd It bjr (he SBsalUM, «f> (lelal Miiroca Mid (o'nifht, »ddlBC thst the Germaiu are btlax Bcthodlealljr d«* •Irojtd.

yOL. 24, NO. 275 T W IN FALLS. ID A H O , W E D N E S D A Y . MARCH 4, 1942 P R IC E 5 C E N T S

JAP HORDES SCORE NEW GAINS• RAF Raids Paris Industrial District

Vichy Reports 650 Killed, 1,500 Hurt

In Night’s AttackLONDON, Marclf « Ml _ A r «< * bre«<Jc»»t recorded today l>r f*-

ehuixc telcfTAph uld thxt at leMt 1.SM people were killed and ter. er»l hnndred In/und darinc Us(«n(ch('> rifrf on the *a6orfti o f r »r ii .

i»r Sid n e y J. w il l ia m s, United rrcn SUfr Correspondent

LO N D O N , AI«rch 4 (UR) — British bombens, itltjickiji;; Frcnch industries producing war mnterinls fo r Gcrnmny, fiflttencd buildings “ like pnckg of cnrds” in a two-hour raid on industrial tarRCta in the Paris suburbs durinj? the niffhl, A ir Minister Sir^ AnSincla ir told the h o u s e o f

* commons today.(V ic h y reported 650 per-

flons k illed and 1.600 wounded in the raid.)

Dfscrlhlne the o p e m l lo n s m •'hlRhly BUCCCMfu!” the BrlU.nh air mtnLiter nold royal ntr force pIloLs reported tlint several licavy bombs blew bultdtnss huiidreib o( teet Into the iilr.

The principal tnrget In Krnncc wns the big Rennuli motor and taiik work.1 at Billancourt. .iouth«c.it ot PkIs. Bombs nUo vare dropped on

' thtt ForlaUn Indiutriol'dlatrlct^ ot Bouloffne»SDr*Selne aod Nuilly.

Ma*« n<n I^dueUu).'TWe cannot allow Qerman pn>-

• doeOon or tank*, tonk ensjnw. alr- pjftae.engtoea »w l lorries to so un- lilQdcred merely bbcau ae thtM plftnta are' I oca ted in occuDled t«r- rtfory'ttod m nce." he « ld ..t Sinclair added U>e Rcnaull work* uere "notorloiu for Ihelr activity on behalf Of Ujo enemy." •

An air mtnUtry communique Mid reports lndlca\p ‘•in\Jch dajnnto" infUct«d on (h « n ^ u } ( works. Th o

l»st nlRhi'A openUotu,'Which also tneluaed an ntuiet on Port 2Bnden. Oermftny, nnd the mining o f enemy wrtKrs. ^

Sinclair inlifVMrKe port o f the RcnnuH worta \cpctiVert on »n Islwjd in the Seine river was attacked.

"A number o! our hfavJest bcmlu fell on UiU Islnnd ” he &oId. .

Authorltntlve sou rces tald bowUs ten on Paris pracfJ'- .The KAF's sudden shllNlrom tnr-

Kct« In Qermriny to the nennidt innlt nnd motor Jactcry may nuKurato n hcnvy. new campivlRtl nKftln.'.t "cnpllve'' nrm.'v Industries ihroufflioijt Jvuropc whlcl) Die NmIs have seised for their own purpose*.

More Acec^lble London oii'Cfrew »«/<! Uiat mo.<l

cl the captive plants were more ac- ccMlblo to DrUlah bomben than the 0 >*rTn(in tJlontjt. mffny o f rftich have

• been moVed ea-itunrd.>. The diplomatic commentntor said

;a.it niffhfs mid *'«•■« made part/y n.1 a result ot appeals form Prench* men who have escaped to EnRland, lie RUld tUcxe Fnnchmen had told

. DrltUli nuUiorltles that the FrenchCgliiii t>

MARCH 1 H 9 SET FOR i i y c i H s

BOISE. March 4 m -Dntes for the llrst l;vlucilons under Uie new .'yxtem of mu-iterlns men Into the army a,-, won a.’i they p a « phyal- ca\ exRn\lJ\ Uon «ere anuounced io<lny by jelecllvc »crvlce head (}uartcr5.

RetfLitranLA from the 10 western counties nnd from Twin KalU. Jrrome. Lincolg. ComaA. GfKKllnr nml Illalnr rountlrs will

.be examined and Inducted at Bol!< Marcll W-19.

Men from the remalnlnt: 18 fouih- ern nnd soulheaitem eountle. report Marcli 32-2«. Inclusive, at the at the Pt. DouKla. Utah. Induction Matlon. and Uioso from the 10 north- cm eounUes at the PU Lewis, Wash. Mntlon March 10*2S, Inclu-tlve.

Under the new mtUvad ottlccrs , will be present during phy&lcaJ eX-

amlnntlona nnd will Induct draf­tees a.f noon as the medical board pronounces them physically fit.. I»h>-*lcnl ,exnjnlnaUons for Idaho­ans will be held only at Uie three Induction «taUo:is„ Port Lewis. Port DoiiRla-s nnd Boke.'

-In ca.w of an emerKeney." said Llf'ul. Col. Norman D. Adklawn. •■afi r a man has been outfltwd by the army he may be granted t furlough not to exceed 10 days! Dur­ing this time he may apply for deferment,"

Charge Filed in Accident D e a th

OOISE. March * l/r> — A man- ■ Blaughter charge has been filed

agaUut Marlon Jorgenson of BoLM by PTMeculor Kenneth O'Leary In fhe death of Oeorge Wayne Barber. Jr, 15. fclUed when struck by an au­tomobile.

The aeuon was (flken upon tJte order of District Judge C. E. Win' *te.-»d.

Convicts Object To Slowdown on Government JobSAN FRANCISCO. MnrcJ. 4

(U.PJ—Tlierc la jMUrloLhm i«i Alcii- inix prison. Nine men ••nKniicd Jn a flve-mlniite riot In Uie jirl.-.on luimdry twcause u convlci .'ux- Kcsted n "flowdowTV In oixrni- Uons. Warden James A. Jolin.iton revealed todu’.

AJcatru prUon. where only Uie most hardened of crlmlnab are confined, handles U>e laundry for the United SlAt«3 army trans­port service. Wat- demaiids have fonTUftlil aa exceptional Increase In- work. The prisoners oven agreed to forego ihelr usual hol- Idaj'i OQ New Year's and Wo.ih- tnaum's birthday. Johnsign said.

When thfl "slow-down” siigRcn- Uon was bmched yesterday, flats began to fly. It took fire minutes for guard.« to break up the flgbt. One prisoner went to the hospi­tal with head Injuries, rccclvcd

Ing m^ctiiae paddle. . , • ’

<AF SCHEOULES O R I V E A iE O i l

AXIS-HELO AREAIJ/ EDIVABD W- DEATTIK

LONDON. March * <U.PJ-Alr Min­uter Sir Archibald Sinclair hald to­day Britain would reiiunic Uie tnrs-

pauibM bombing ollenaivc iRalnst Germany at the earliest pos­sible moment with the aid of Amerl- •wi dive IjomblnF: planes markedly iU[»crlor to anj’thtnff Oernjnny had.

T a c t i c a l and recoiinol.-isance «iundron.s of the royal nlr force ore

ow belnB reequipped with the best merJean f/fiJitlnff plane.i. he .isld. ‘The Americans ore nlso going to

send U.1 dive bomljers." he nald. "Air­craft of A type which Li marlcedjy ■superior M a tl lic bomber to thr •lunker-S7 will shortly be aviillable,"

"I have full • confldrncp In the Judgment of the nlr .itaff that a Iwmber offcjjalve affnln.il Orrmajjj' h

IndWpeimble menns of winning

Small Plants Will Be Given

Munition JobWASHINGTON, March 4 (-T) —

Production Chief Donald M. Nelson ordered the army and niivy today to bring thousands more of the tlon's 200,000 factorle.i Into war pro­duction by su,'>pendlnr: competitive bidding on arms contracts,. ••Perfectly capable .-.mnll 'flrm.i' had been blocked from getllng Into war production. Nelson expUlncd, because under compeUtlve blddlnK Inrge concerns which already hold exten.Hve war contracLn are often able to underbid .nmall manufactur- ers who arc not doing any war work at oil."

Nrbon, In the dIrecUve ls:>ued lost Uial V

itandardlted articles must be ord' ered by the nrmed .sffrvlces and the maritime commUslon from smaller concerns, leaving tJic larger plants free, to concentratc on accelerated production of such Items as tanks, planes and big guns.

The new order makes ncKOUated contracts mai>dator>- unlcft.i the wa) production board glve.-i specific per mLvilon for Invltlnit bids.

It wa.*i understood Uie trPtL un procurement dlvblon immediately would get puch pcrnil.-alon. itnil per­haps some other agencies. Primarily, 11 was sold, the order was aimed nt the pu clla. lnl: policies of the army navy and nmrlUme comml.'jlon.

Nclton'6 office was deluged, mean- while, by pledges of labor and mw;- agement support for hL% Monday night order for an Immediate creaic In arnw production.

EXCItANGK SEAT SALE NEW YORK. March 4 m — a

memberslilp in the New York itock exchange wns sold today for 118,000. a decline of 11.000 from the la.st traniacUon and Uie lowest price since 1807 when one sold for *15iOO.

luiiSinclair sold. _

:nU \rrlvcr plaiHe »ald reinforcement.^

continued to arrive In Uie fi ern war theaters and that aji evcr- Increoslng number o f Drltl.nh plane;

opcrallng on the nu.«lan front.

Explaining Uiat the royal nlr forei personnel sent to Russia had nov been recalled. Uio minister .v-Ud that It hod been Uie main l»sl« of Uie air force since la.it June, when Germany attacked Russia, to give Ru.-wla its utmost aid.

He said Uwt Uie wlUidrawnl ot air force personnel was deckled upon by agreement with Premier Jo,-.ct Stalin “some time ago." .

RecounUng Uie fight In'Uie air. he saM Uint during Uie 13month.i' Uic royal'n lr forcc'la of- feailvo fighUng outside tho Brltlsl; defense zone had destroyed ni3 enemy fixhter planes ngfUnst a BrUl- Isli la-J of 037.

Production Out a result of bombings, Sinclair

snld, coal 'mines and factories. In Belgium aild northern Prance which are working for Germany hnd-suf- f ered. severely. • ' '

"Fur cxnni|ile. for five monUd In- dastrlnl acllvliy over a wide arci: iuo\md U lle -Ktu-. curUiHtd — for m.iny wecljs by as much as 50 pei ci'nt—on account ot diiniage to pow­er plant.',” he said.

BISHOP ASKS FORSOLOIERLEITERS

Appealing to lils audience to make n more definite effort to con­tact by mall the men in Uie armed forces of Uie United Sta^s. Bishop Bruce Baxter, I’ortlnnd.' told the eastern dLstrlct Methodist confer­ence here today;

•Tlie boys In service are niaUlnf far more letters than U ey are re­ceiving. Their lives have been up­rooted. and they need Uie support nnd help of your mewnge.i. com- mnndlns officers tell ii.v"

Ask RecrullemIt was {.uggc.-ited ‘ thut any re­

cruiting officer could ittniLih Infor- maUon nbout the correct mailing ot letters, post cnrds, .■'mall gifts and such to the soldiers, sailors and

■ In yoi) Hw wlmt

icllcal

"DoiV

golnrvlce.

dLscUM the Tliey want U 1 at.home.^’ wa liLi p

Tlie two-day conference clo.-;ed a noon tod.ay at the loc.il MethodLi church, of wlxlch Itcv. II, a . Mc- Calllitcr Is pastor.

Rev. Dallas McNeil. Wendell MpthodUt pastor, led the devotional .•.ervlces thb morning.

BUhop Baxter. In liLi final )•■mge 10 the mlnliters, p.^rtlcularly emphn-sUed the need for forceful,

Thousands More of U. S. Troops Land in Ireland

LONDON. March 4 (/!>-Sev­en ! hundred L’nltrd States troopi antved In London today from NerUiem In;Und.

wi^ni u. S. TROOPS IN NOR-ni- ERN IRELAND. March 4 (-?) — niouiands more cheering, husky United states flghUng men have arrived In a northern Ireland port to augment the force that has been In Ulster for more than a monUi, it was announced today.

DetaUi of Uio landing of Uie'fleet of transport* and supply ships were, withheld unUl the soldlen. Uielr gun? and othfr fIghUng equipment had been scattered to Uie sccluded spots throughout the six northern Ireland counUcj and the alilps had left port.

Ccmparrd, wiih the eercnionlal

landing of the first contingent of Uie AEF to Europe's part of the World war last monUi. U»e latest arrival was a routine Job carried out wltli Uie typical army and navy clockwork precLilon.

Like-the Ilrsl conUtxRCt . the latest arrlvaLi are mldwestemem who have been in training In south­ern army camps for « year. But there are some represent*Uves of every part of Uie country.

■niey' came In full field equip­ment wlUi Ihelr guns feady.

The whlte.lxatred troop com­mander wa. a colonel from the mid die west, a veteran of artillery cam. palgning In Uie first World war anc five .years commander of the same unit, which WM with the Rainbow dlvLilon,

ICtB . r . « .

Commandos “Frisk” Prisoners

r.SE.\ Radlo-Telepholo) Grrman prlionrrm taken during the Feb. 27 blllz raid on a Naxi radio

■tatlon near Havre. France, get a tiioroujli ••going over’ by Dritlih commandei nhn ’•broughl ’em bsek allvf" with .plenty of Information. Tlie surpriiF raid wai the f ln t of notable xlie on tlie Citrapean con­tinent since Dunkerque.

U. S. Pilots Shoot Down 16 BombersWASHINGTON. .March 4. (U.R)— Aliiui.st complete aiini-

hilatinii of a Jnpanc.sc attjickiiif: force of 18 heavy bombers by a .strong' unit o f tlie Americfin fleet nnd accompftnyinir fishtcr 5>li\i\cs today RupywrVed the c\nim» Tnihtary experts here have been making fo r weeks— that American fliers are, ovenvhclmintfly siiperior to the Japane.sc. - -

Given only half a chance, these expert.^ have .said, Ameri- -------------------------------------- II can airmen will best the

FLASHES of LIFE

FOUR JAP SHIPSBy EVKRETT B. JJDLLK.S

WASUINGTON. Marcli .4 lUPt- eii. DoURla.1 MacArthur'8 I

forcc. following up his Siirpi , ,, S.1UII lust week Uiat Hma-ihcd enemy advance pa-.ltlons on the Ba battlefront. hn.i sunk at lea.vt bnilleshlps ha.i sunk at least lour Japane.'ic ships In Subic bay In a ' iriiiK ulUck. the war dcpanmcni iiiounced today.WlUi only n handful of little P-40

fiRluer planes to challenge Japan' bombers, dlvc-bombcm and flglitcr; MncArthiir's dauntles.s akrme caught tlie Japanese by comiilete. Mirprl.se nnd earned havoc In Suble bay. JuiMiu’s chief means Q( supply for the Dnlnnn front IS to 20 mllcj south.

Tlicy dr.iiroyed one 10,000-ton ship, one 8,000-ionner, and two 100-ton motor Iflunclicj.

Troves Superiority Tlie feat of • MacArthur'a'planes

pTOv«i Uit hecond cvldenct In •.!< hoitr.-i to support what military ex- Peru have been clolmlng for week; —that American filers are superior lo the Japanese.

Almo.'.t complete annUillaUon of Japanese attacking force of 18 heai. bombers by a unit of. the American iltei nnd accompanying lighter

e v e a lc d in a naVT last night, was saU by

DKI.AYKII LAS CRUCES, K. M.. MnJCh 4

—Dlilrlct Attorney Martin 'Threet niLvied liU IlrM court opening In nine years. Reason:

Tlium dental work watli in progrrlh.

BKTTEIt '01,E SALT LAKE CITY. March 4

—Tills slRn on the door ot Charles E. Jftffa’.i printlns .■'hop espLihn everythin!!;

•'Clo.'-.ed for the duration. Gone to help whip the axis."

He's In the navy.

MO.M.'VIVS HELrEKKANSAS CITY, Mnrch 4 -

MoUier blu.slied nnd the cop pre­tended he didn't hear when thtce- year-old wnny 'vhl.-ipered; "Tell him to r.ljut up ond go nasy from here.'’

A ticket for running n red light wns Imminent.

But when the youngster wrlKglnl Irom lii.s tnoihcr'.s hunfl iniiKlf nnd .ihouied: ''Get out of here and mind your own bailnc.nl " Llnii. Daniey Mahoney threw up hit hand.'>,

"I give up. You can go ixheart, lady,"

Allies Hold M ost Of Wheat Surplus

WASIIINOTON, March ♦ (^r,- 'The United NnUons hold about I.-271.000.000 bushels of the world'; known wheat siiTplus of lW4,ti00.' 000 bu.\hels, the agricultAire depart­ment reported today.

Tile remaining 353,000.000 bu\hfU Ls held by a westenT hemLiphcre neutral, ArgenUna.

The . United Nation .lurplu-' i-i about 210.000.000 bUsheLi larger than m year aga.■ The United States has pror.pecls for a 1043 wheat crop, of at leatt100.000.000 bushels In excess o f iis requirements.

Germany Erects 4th D efense Line

KUIBYSHEV. March 4 The German armies have been pushed back wlUi luch speed that they have been-forced lo erccl a fourth de­fense line from the Baltic sea lo eiovaklft. U « PollUtal Commiaaat Y. L. Karobko disclosed In i Iccture here.

The 60.000 Germans In the Staraya Russa sector face annlhlUUon and Nazi armies In oUier garruons al*o ■re surrounded and faced «’lth db- aster, he said. '

enemy.In almost every i

ment In tlie .-rfiuth has been announc have come off a : Americans, That v

or Mr engase t Pacific Uiat thr Japanese - second wlUi true aKaln ln

................... -nt la.-,i nightof Its eecond .'.ucce.vlul ucllon In about a month In the Gllbrrt l.ilands area—2,500 mile;, southwest nt Hawaiian Watid.s,

Tlie navy’s communique revealed that a strong American nnv.il force —an aircraft carrier, 'cmiiers and destroyers—WA-, o|)crallng we.st o the Gilbert Ls1iiiid.s •'recently ' wliei attacked by ID heavy enemy botnben In two groijp.-i of nine each. Ameri­can airmen took off from tlie car rler ond anU-alrcraft guns on tin surface shlp.i went Into aclloti,,*nie resuiw after engaging th

enemy "clavily nnd vlgoroa.'ly": Sixteen of the 18 Japane.-.e bomb-

cri, shot down- Only two Amcrlcaji flgi;

loM,

hlp;i.

r planes

1 pilot

r HerIn addition to tliiii bo\ . t•ore. the

navy ha.s a new hero—Llcur ijunloiKVMlel Edwwd \l. OllAir. U, 8niivy fighter pilot—who .Miigle-hand- ed, shot down .six ol ilip Japanese planes. It won Uic larKr-:! nu ' ot enemy planes crixiiinl lo Anirrlcnn JUl6L'ln any • im;le action during Uie war. In r,ni. officials heic could not recall any 1' fecit, Klncc the 'Use nl thv RlTplMit as a war wenpon.

The magnitude <il Olliirc's wa.i empha.sH:cd bv tiir lijit that he wa.-i on his own in n ..Mngle-sentcr flghler. whcre.■ a the i>!niie\ lie wa? flKhtlng were'Tiuijc wiinbers which •Iirobabl.v' were manned wllli -crew c( pilots, aus ners nnd bomb:\rUlers,

G'Harc's home l.s In Ai, Hewill be 28 on Mnrch 13. •

Award Loom>Tlicro was little doubt here Uiat

hit remarkable Job uoulil be offi­cially recognised soon wltj) a dis­tinguished award. Aviators lo World

tUitlaiH » i Tix* }. Calaufi

Training Schools In Jerome, Burley

POCATELLO. Mnrch 4 W - 'TrMtiln* k Jico s for 4-11 club lead- er.i Uiroughout souUieaslern Idaho will be conducted during Uie few weeks.

District extension Bgent Duke announced this .schedule

Jerome. March 23: Durley. March 24; Grace, Marcli 33; Pocatello. March 36; ■Rcxburs. March 37—aU for livestock, crop, forestry. • *'eed control OLfld garden club leaders.

Rexburg. April 27» Pocatello. April 29; Grace. April 20: Kurley, April 30: Jerome. May I- fo r cloUi- Ing, nutriUon . and nnnlng club leaders. ^

MACARTHURP-40

the experu to be solid proof 6f the American's superiority In the air. •

Given only half a chance. Uiey .-mid. -American alrmca WlU best Uie enemy.

Tlic -Kar department said that ” ln .A.iUldden.surpriie attack" MacAr. thur's little «7i"forc8 "swept' over Subic bay desU-oylne several Jop. anese vessels.”

Fire* Started In addition to the four slilps listed destroyed '•many small craft were

damased." It was said. "LntKB llrca were staried on the docks of Olonga- po and Grand island, Tlie.so were followed by many heavy cxplojlons among enemy stores."

Olongnpo is the chief port ot Subic bay at the top of Datnnn penin.iuln and wns Uio western anchor of.tho line ol MacArtJiur’s Bataan outp&sis until'Jnn. p when Uie Amcrlcan- Flllplno troop.-i fell back .southward, .Grand island lle.s in the entrance

to Subic bay. occupying much the same strategic importnnce as Cor- regldor at tJio entrance lo Manila bay.

Military experU said that no air IC«nUn«t< •<! r>i« J. }|

Dutch Defenders .Apply “Scorched Earth” Policies

By ROGER D. GREENE Associated Pres* War Editor '7

Jiipun’.s iiivn.sion hordes scored new jtains a;fainst out­numbered Am erican . British and Dutch troops in tho c r it i­cal four-day-old battle o f Java today, and the danger was .«io acute that N E I head<iuarters announced the m a jor part o f a scorched enrllv defense jKilicy hnd already been carried out.

A Tokyo .broadcast said .Tupane,se mechanized unit-t reach­ed a point we.si o f the b is Dutch naval base'a t Soeraba ja, in

ea.*itern Java, and there dash ­ed with "a llied forces tr y in g desperately to h a it^ h e Jap­anese onalaught.” ^

Other enemy columns were atrlk* . ing toward the caplui city ot Ba« tavla. In wejtem Java, where de- mollUon squads already had begun lo blast the picturesque 330-ye*r- old town, and toward tho allied headquarters city o f Bandoene.

Once again, a tragic ilory ol allied numerical Inferiority — in planes, aldps and • mim — emersed from the struggle for the United Nations stronghold In the Indlai.

Ullle Uelp Dutcli quarters in London said

Uiat only about &O.OQQ allied tcoopa, among Uiom "a few thousand American and British.” were fight-' Ing at Iea.1t as.OOO Japanese and Uiat Uie United NaUons naval force - had suffered •'a crlppUnj' blow- la attempting to halt the Japanese in- •tasJon neet, • •'•••

Previous reports' caid th* Duteli :iad an army of 100.000 to 300,OOq troops, reinforced by "many thous- ands ' ot Amcrlcftn.' BriUah and Australian soldiers, to combat' the

atuck.

New War Hero B ashful— Born

On Friday, 13thST. LOUIS, March 4 <,r>—Quiet

nnd re.served, Lieut. Edward H. O'Hare Is a new hero America con take to Its heart.

"Tlie 28-year-olrt fighter pilot was credited today by Uie navy with the unparalleled feat of destroying six Jopanese bombing planes hi one day Of acUon with the United SUxtes fleet,

O llare was born on Friday Uic I3th, In Marcn. 1014, but there's been noUiIng unlucky about It.

Tall, dark luid luindsome. he tUII hn.sn't overcome Uie personal reUcencethat mnde him a bash­ful boy.

His mother. Mrs. Selma A. O'Hare. was a bit doubtful Uiat he would wanL any publicity, even aa a luxtlonaf hero.

O'Hare wa.s -a very good boy 'ho was always cnu^ about alr-

planes. ’.she recalled.

CRIPPS ASKS FOR A M I BATTLE

LONDON. Mardi 4 ./Pr-Slr Staf- fonl Crlpps. govenunent leader In Uie house of commons, ajipealed to the Ignited NaUons to follow the ■'all-out'' example of Rii-«la In Uie world flfflit against NnrJwn am! Pna- ctsm In a broadca-sl speecii to the United SUtes todny.

•'We now are all iililrs logcUier to drive agtmesslon and Fa.vl.'m frorr the world.” Sir SUifford Occlarcd.

"After the victory let us remain In the same gallant comimny lo re­build n stricken world ui>on thr fouiidnUons o f Juitlce iiml equality Uiat will secure for u.s, for thrm and for all people of Uie w.uld u liapiili'r. saner and more peacrfiil future,"

He warned repcatrjly iliai the nl- lle.s’ rccent heavy ^cli)llcks would t>e followed by furUier rfrvpr cs. but In- .■•.IslPd that "modern wnr. on the gl- ganUc and far flung tcalc upor which It now is being wnged. U noi finally won or lost n. the result of territorial gains here or there.

"It eventually will be won by thr rewurce.s In manpower and mate­rial that can be mcbllUed behind one side or Uio other.'’

New Evidence I s t ) ^ e r e d '£fi Miu’der Trial

PRESTON, Idaho. March 4 Tlie prosecution offered ^another batch of arUclcs as evidence today at Uie murder trial of Mrs. Gracc Coppard of Bodn Springs, but de­fense obJecUons kept some of, the gadgets out of the official exhibit.

There were buttons allegedly found on a bridge over tho strerun that runs into Soda Springs reser­voir. In which tlic body of Paul Tipton, nr., was found lost August. Other arUcles included a watch ca several parts of a watch and

•fl slUrt.10 prosecution contended the

shirt was worn by Tipton when he, vanished several days before his body was found, but defense coun­sel objected nnd District Judge Jay L. Do«7ilng took the quesUon under advisement.

Walter Byron of I>nver. a special' InvesUgator hired by Caribou coun-' ty. told Uie Jury which will decide whether Mrs. Coppard U guilty of slaying Tipton, details of the In­quiry. He corroborated testimony offered previously by Sheriff Charles McCracken.

E:zra Lakey. Soda Springs fai told of seeing nn automobile pass his house Uie night of Aug. 23 and atop about a mile and a quarter away. He said he saw the back door open, heard a number of gun ghots. then the door closed and thi car drove nwny.

M eanest Thieves Steal T ir e and S la s h the Rest

0 make

Janet Young. 520 Fourth east. Is certain today thi thieves will go to extremes i It "tough" on people.

She reported to police that tire and four tubes had been slot from her car while It was parked in front of her home address. Then she added;

“They also cut the other tires."

U. s. Awake but Leadership' Lags, GOP Executive SaysBy O. A. KELKER

Americans are awake, and 'ar« ready to sacrifice for the war win­ning cause, but Uiey don't know what to do and reason for their In­decision is "lack of leadership In Washlt^lMi." •

This was the way Ml.is Marlon E. MarUn. Bangor, Me.< assistant chair­man o f the Republican national commlttee.'iummed up the situation In the United -SUtes as she spoke before more than 300 party leaden at the American Legion hall here iMt night

DUpstea ' &Ira. P. D. R. During her talk she took Isius

wlUi a recent statement by'Mrs. Prankllfi J3. Roosevelt to the effect the people don't, know Uiey are in the war. .' "The countnr is aaake.” Miss Mar­

Un said, "but the lack of leadership In Washington Is what is holding us back.” She continued;

"At least Mrs. Roosevelt did do Uie naUon and the Republican party a fftvor on another score. e\ en though ahe wa.<i wrong u to whether c we were awake.

"By attempting to get Melvyn Douglas and Mayris Chaney Into the defense setup sht dramatised th-* basic follure of this administra­tion slnee 1033. that of putUng ,un> qualified people in public appoloUve ofllcea. ^

want Facts She further chaned that Ameri­

can people want the facts con- cemins this war—with ezcepUon ofi those which «-ould be of value to| the enemy.

<C«iilUi*4 u Tm* C«l«»a

A bulleUn from NEI headquarter* conceded that the InTadera '•«uc- . ceeded In maibit (Qm« Sieuiwa^ at '

The extent of Japancsa Caloi as not specifiedWhile there itill appeared to be no

radical change in the situatlofi. the ■n signs were ominous.

■Ttic principal (scorched earths destruction in'Java has sow been carried out.” U » Dutch cominand said.

London sources declared Japanese . submarine victories had reduced Dutch naval strength to such an ex­tent (hat the olllea no longer were able to undertake a counter-oJfen-

ve In the far Pacific battle the- .

Continue Fight • - Dutch headquarters gave this

(er!.e nummary of the land fighting:"It can only be reported toda]i

Hint our troops fight with stubborn • - ttsliUince and in ollertilve spirit.

"In all places where the enemy al- lempts U) advance ha Is strongly engaged by our troops, wbp try to ., prevent his advance." ‘

British dispatches late yes'terday Mid allied troop# had launched a counter-offenilve. and the Jopanew weit itportcd thrown back seven miles in one sector.

Local successes agabut Japane.«e forcc.1 were reported by British >t)1- unteers. who took part In fighting at

<c«i.tlni.d .■ r*c» t. C.Ifli>a «)

Japs Claim Full Success in Java Landing Attacks

TOKYO. March 4 — (Jnpaneso bro«idca.\l« recorded by UP in New- York and London—Docnet news ngmcy .said today that Japanese forcea In Java have gained com- ilete control of the Batavia-'Ban- loeng railway and have severed rommunclatloiis between tiie tfnlted NaUtms fronts on Uie<island.

T^ere were report* from the front Uiat JapaiicM troopa were withUt 18 miles of Batavia and thot another column hod readied the Ixnmedlate vicinity of Bandoeng. Japanese air forccfl executed a violent raid on Bnndoeng despite stout resistance by Dutcli plane.<i, It wn.i said.

Domel said thnt followin* Uie na­val bnUlr.< off BaUvla and Soer- abaja. Jnpwese naval aTlaUon flew southward over Javanese watei^ nnd . shot down 10 enemy planea. They In­cluded 11 four-motored heavy typ* bombers, four. four-moUir?d sea­planes and one U-motored aeaplane.

British Ship Sinks Off Eastern Coast

LEWES. Del, March « , •British Gypsum Prince. 3.B15 tool, sank two mites off LrWes today after a collision with tba 8X»0-ton. oil lunktT Voce. FlirB men a » n ix ­ing.

I laaded ..-AAbout 30 survlTor* ' at the coast guard cUtlon.

Navy official* aald t ilt Voeo. owued by the Standard 'nM>(parta> > ...) tkm compazu' of LoaCUn and char- ; ' Kred by the Sooooy • Vacuu* OU-. . f, company. Taitii&td tba Ojp«amPrince. ................ Six (urrlTon w«re picked cp t m a raft and W.otben wer« by coa*t gwaro bo*ti.. . \

The Voco, damaged ta wa* Ued up al LewM paadlBt t ve*UgaUoo.

Page i wo TIMKS-NEWS, t w i n f a l l s , IDAHO Wednesday. March 4, 1U43

BATTLE STARTS TO SAVE SUGAR QUOTA MARKET SYSTEM ^lO R lO A SOLONS Another Mltchell

FIGHIPROPOSAWASHmOTON. Mnrch 4 m -

Congre“ n>«n If®” * wealem nugar b « t Rtnt«s preparcrt lodny to resume tvn old botUe nlons new lines, n»er repre»enUUvc8 Irom eame-itrowlna riortdn had launched r move » ellmlnftta the tuitar quoin markei- Inc ayilem by Btrlklng out an np- propriatlon lor condiUoniil. or ben* cfU, pftj-merit*.

liCd by Rep. Ooffcfl, Neb., the beet (lUBor men were wnrmlna up uatn Jor house debut# on the mcrltj or the suenr control act. extended Just iMt Decrmber for Hirer yenra.

Cofire, ehnlrman of the lioiiw augur bloc. Knid he would npealc sooh for relenUon of-'Uje (lyoUm, Sot which an opproprlntlon of «!lght- Jy more than »47,000,000 wm eon- tnliicd In the nurlculiiiro npproprlft* tlon bill.

Would Cat Fnndj TJjo ainleulture ecmmlttee’.< reo-

ommrndnUons woultl reduce by tMKl.OOO the tunds iivnllnble lor ad- mlnlsterlnB tJie net. Tlio new I'umI would bo J7M.000, The fotnmlllre cut wM propo.'cd by Rrp, Hcndrlek.i. D.. Flft . oilP of the IrndcM In the move to ellmlnnl/? the present syi-

ncp. Potcr»on. D„ Ain., promised "iiirUier tvnd more utrUiKenf sucnr nmenilmenti, ftmonK Uiem probably one to deny Ui# HRrlcullura depart* ment *uthorlly to npend money for opcrtiUon or the quotn nyntem.

The committee snld In lOi reporC that It «nw no ren-'on for continu­ing benefit paymenui to uroweri now free to produce without rc.itrlc- tlon'.

Coflee. declwlntt that Iti ot\iy one year (1041). have there been ncre* ose restriction) tmder Uio nuRnr con­trol inw. predicted that opponent-i of the MiBar appropriation wouldn't

T hey don’t seem to understand wh'ftt W Involved In tW« (ji'esllon," the NebrAAkan snld. "nnd I think we can devoatate tlie Tlorldti con­tention"

Mutt Foltow Ruirt Benefit payments, he emphaalEcd.

were not based solely upon compll- anea with the restriction of produc­tion, but oj)’ many /actom, amone them child labor regulfttlons. Mil

■ conscrv'tttlon and other conditions, “Ui^er the price control blll,‘*_hc

explained,."If beet and cane pro­ducer* Rot no per 6ent of parity, the elimination of benefit paymenU would mean the price of (lugar would have (0 be ralMd 30 eenti to 1.M) » hundred pounds. That would cost the coniumer obout 1100,000,000 to <160 000.000 additional a year, bued on & e,000.000>toii uinual conaump-

VICHY REPORTS(Fnm Put 0(ta>

were "^iirprUed" that »uch faotor- • les at tlie Renault plant had not

been attacked, before.■They wanted these type of raids

tlienuelves," Uio commentator said.He denied U»e P*rb raid repre­

sented a new Brlti.ih policy to­ward Franco.

“Our policy alwayi hna been and will be to attack Uie enemy wher­ever and whenever ho cnn be found. The raid iott night represenla n continuation and proJecUon of tliftt poUcy." he said.

The commenlntor mentioned tliat the British radio previously' had warned tho French people Uuit'the Paris area might bo raided ''anj'- time".

nope Wamtnn Heeded"I t was the alneero wlali of Uie

BritUl) government that many rreneh lives may have been saved by these warnings," ho said. In view of official reports from the continent that tho Nasi Industrial machine ha* been strained to pro­duce suns and maehlnca lor AdoU Hitler‘s spring offensive, last nlght'a attack* were considered of particu­lar Importance.

Morale ol worken forced to pro­duce munltlona for tho enemy Is less likely to be good U Britt.ih bomtainR raids .are carried out, the

News of RecordMARRIAGE LICENBEB

March * — Bura Keeney, 30, and KoxellA James, 37. both of Duhl. March 3 — Jnck 0\'crland, 38. and Isabel Unsoeld. 32, both of lako, Nev.

BIRTUf}■lb Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Clay,

Twin rails, a girt, last night at the Twin Palla county general hospital maternity home, and to Mr. and Mn. M. B. Qulgste, Twin Falls, a sirl. last night nt the home of Mrs.

• O. TeU. <S3 Third avenue ea.it.

Keep the W hite Flag 0/ Safetu F lv ing

N

N ow 47 daps w i i io u t a tra f/tc Oeath in o u r t ta f f to VaUeu* • '

A detemilncil Corp. John E. niiUbetl. icn of the late, alrmlnd- ed DHe,-Cen. U'llllam (Dllly) Mitchell, reports for duly at Ft. Knox, Ky.. armored force officer aebooL lie'll train In U&ks to be- eome a aeeond lleatenant.

BUHL MAN FOUND O E A O O F A '

SDllL. Mardt i —WiUlam Henry Orllfln. 77. retired Umber man, was found dead of a heort attack at noon yesterday by ,hls fraoddtughler, who went to his room to call bhn for lunch.

Mr. Orlffln walked uptawn yester­day and relumed to home at &0S Thirteenth avenUe north, where the family has resided for the past H years.

He was bom Oct. 1, lU i. at I.an- caster. Wh., and was married at Rawlins. Wyo.. In lOOa. He was a member of Uie Methodist church.

Funeral 8er\^cs will be held Fri­day at 3:30 p. m. at the Evans and Johiuon funeral Iwms chapel with nev. Cecil O. Hannan. Methodist laator, officiating. Inlermeot will 10 In the Buhl cemetery.eurvlvlDB are Uie wife, Mrs. Grace

H. Orlffln: Uiree daughters. Mrs. Winifred Bcheare. OasUeford: MIm Margaret Orlffln, Washington, D. 0., and Mrs. Hannah XlmbaU, Buhl; a brother, FTonk 0. Orlffln, Ingle­wood, Colo., and four grandchildren.

U .S.PIL 6 JAP B O IE R S

(K^m !■»*• Ob») rt who shot down five plane.i^

___ncccsoorlly in one engngcment—were cullea "aces,"

The .....................lat

tack .......... -................... --two (troujrt of enemy bombers, at' lacking ntMut one half hour apart, concentrated on the carrier, the lead enemy bomber of Uie group even seeking a suicide dive on It.

•'Only Uiree enemy planes of the flrat formation reached their bomb releose' Holnt over Uie aircraft car­rier whldi avoided all bomb hits by IV split second maneuvering,'' the communique said.

"m e leading bomber of this group attempted a craah landing on the carrier and waa shot down by heavy, close.ranRO nnll-alrcraft flre'whcn barely 100 yarda from 1L» obJecUve.

No HIU iicored "In a second attack, only five

bombers of the enemy formation reached the bomb relcttifl po nt. In UiU lattnnce Uia calvo of enemy bombs was claicr to Uie carrier Uian In Uie first attack, but again no hlt

ere obUilne<)t::Thus only eight of tho enemy

planes were ever able to cet within itrlkUt^ distance of th^xarrter. >'

The last of the action “west" of the Gilbert Islands made It an even more darlnc foray Uian Uie one on Jan. 3t when a similar naval tn.nk nent 10 Japanese warships and aux- lllarlM to the bottom and destroyed 41 enemy planes.

“W « f of the Ollbert Wanda would place this task force at least 'on the edge If not In -Uie midst of hundreds of Japanese-controlled laloniis In that mandated area. Ja­pan has bn.<rs In Uie OllberLs and Mar.''halis, from which Uie enemy bombers annnrently cnme

No Etplanatlon There was no official esplanaUon

of Uie mla-ilon of the task force, 'and 11 tuMumed that It was on e.'^i.ilve reconnaLnance and seek- Inrt any enemy forces'In. the'area. Weflt of the Ollberbi woi'M nl-'e it Rbrmt half way between Hawaii and the piillluplne Lilands.

Tli6 Iale.• t action brlng.i to 3J3 the mimbcr of Jananese planes shot

LEADERSHIP LAGS. SAYS GOP TALKER

<rna rm Oai)"What we wat]t are honest facU

when we-get them," Miss Martin said. “ What'we are getUng Is pro­paganda dished out by the admlnls- tmtlon."

During her address she asked that a ‘ 'flRhi” be maintained for pre- MrroUon of the two party system, saying that "we need a strong lee- ond party which has the courage to fight. We need honesty in govern­ment.

" I think we should preserve the two party system so that when the

aircraft fire. The number probably la larger bccaa<ie neither the army nor navy report planc.n shot down unlf.« certain they have been de- stroved. Th^-e have been «rveral CMe« where they hAve ttporled only tlir'l ‘'manv” planes were shot down.

The army haa accounted for 215 of the enemy craft; the na\7 68.

U . S . A R i y U i S • L A i IN IRELAND

(Fnm Par* On<)Plr*t nrhr-e from the flrtt uhl')-

load, the colonel s.iluted MaJ. Oon. Russell P. Ilartle, u. S. commander Ur norUiem Ireland, and said, "Glad to be here, sir."

Meanwhile, his toldlen lined the rolls, cheerlnir and loAslns Amerleaa clRoreltea to tho pier to start scram* blM amonK the clMkwe'kprs.

The honor of being flnt mo.. tho ranks to land was given to Mas­ter Sergeant Dorranco Mann of Council Dluffs. la., who served In tlie erst World war with the colonel commanding his conUnsenl.

•Ttt-enty.four years ago I never thousht T’d be on this side again," Mann K(ild a* he stepped onto the dock. *'It‘s not much different, thoufth. than when we landed at Liverpool on Dec. 1. 1017.”

S Majcr KngogcntBU Mann was In five majo^ engaae-

ment« and flnLnhtd ovemeas with the American v ray of occupaUon In April, 1B19.

The . Iowan, who Is 4fl, left hU wife and 18>year>old daugnter In the itates.

*7 figured the old regiment was BOlng over and I couldat see how they’d get along wlUiout me," Mann fleeured.

In th ecooUngent were IS aurtet, tlx Bed Cross neld renresentsiUvea

In London the newly-arrived con­tingent waa described, as lanter than the first group which debarked in January.

Th# builder o* the natural brldgs fn VlrglnU U atui aUve, It being tlia small streaid that trickles «inrtw tbe bridge.

r*«tor Retnms- Rev. £. Lcallo Rolls, vicar o( As­

cension EpUcopal church, rttumed Tue.*<day from Boise where he went to visit Dean FTank A, Rhea.

Retom From CoaslMrs. H. A. Pierce. T

her son. Luther Pierce. ................returned from Tacoma where they went several days ago to vltlk El- bum Pierce, wlio haa gone ofer-

wlth Ills company. He la the of Mrs. Pierce and brother of

Luther Pierce.

PromoUon GrantedMm. Emma Olbson, Twin PalU.

ha* been promoted to the poelUon of special trainer for a naUonal corset company, and will leave March 10 for Portland. Ore., where slie will make her headquarters. Her terrlUir>- will extend to Beattls and Spokane.

Parents Leave Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Cate,

Carey, returned to their home after spendlns r.everal days vUltlng nt Uie homo of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mn. Marlon J. Murray. Filer, Mr. and Mrs. Cate were both released from the Hailey hosplUl. having undergone' emer­gency appendectomy o p e ra t io n s there. Their son, Stephen Gate, re­mained at Carey during their ab­sence, and will visit his sister at a later date,

cut a revolution. H we don't fight for our liberty now it might be too lat«.-

Dlienttefl OtumMla.1 MarUn also dlscU-ue'd at

length the backgrouM ot the Jolli­fication sltuaUon at Guam, an island which Is now in the handj of the Japa. Bhe laid blame for non- fortlflcaUon of the Island In Uie lap of President Roosevelt and said that

.-as tho'^one man" who had the power to see that It wos fortified had ho wanted to—Uirough a rubber stamp congress."

Regarding a statement of Uie Democratic naUonal chairman that tho Republicans were at fault In the Guam sltuaUon, she emphaU- cally denied Uiat Uie O. O. P. had anything to do with It,

She aald that people were being misled by official Washington state- menla and singled out tho maritime commission as an example. She said that the first report caused people to assume that during January wo ■were building a ship every 24 hours while, when the truth was known, wo turned oilt 17 in January and 19 or ao In February.

January Only"And mind you the goal we

thought we were reaching was 62 for January alone," Miss Martin ■aid.

Mlsa MarUn, who spoke earlier at a banquet at tho Park hotel, was introduced at the publle meeUng by Mrs. Eqima Cloueliek, Twin Falls. Idaho's national commllteewoman for the Republican party. Mrs, Clouchek was Introduced by.Miss betta McCoy, president of tho Wo­men's RepubUcan club of Twlo Falls county.

In Introducing the speaker of Uie evening, Mrs. Cloucltck described her as being "a woman who Is not afraid to fight.-

PU N E S DESTROY FOUR JAP SHIPS

Twin FoUa News in Brief

BISHOP ASKSFOR SOLDIER LEHERS

(rr*« Pm « OaO IhsplraUonal sermons during the present emergency.

Addressing <00 laymen, mlnlsUrs and other interested persoiu at a mass meeUng last night at the church. Bishop Baxter, etretsed tlfe

declaring, "Wo must disenthrall ourselves from the tyranny of things," and stated that the present restrleUona on material eommodl- Ues may bring that condlUon about.

Possession of good character; de­velopment of the ability to itand up and lak e 'It : development of the ability to live togeUier agreeably, especially when feelings are. so In­flammable, and the development of a faith in that which Is eternal, he listed as the "spiritual prloriUes needed by everyone.”

Youth MeeUnr PrecedlnK his’ address last nlRht.

Mark Moorman, president of the older younR people's division of Uie Methodist Youth Fellowship, ad' dres.icd a youth meeting.

Rev, M. H. Oreenlee, Nytsa. Ore., confcrcnce director of ChrLitlan education, spoke on young people's work In U\e conference.

Conference tinging has l» fn led by Itev. Cecil O. Hannan, Buhl, with Mrs. Brooks Moore. Qlenns Fcny as the accompanist. Rer. MoNell has been conferervce publicity director.

At A baptismal service last eve­ning. Mary Ellrabeth. daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Harold O. Cowdrick, Aberdeen, waa bapUsed by. BUhop Daxter.

Dr. W. H, Hertzog. dUtrlct super­intendent. rctilmed from Kansas City to attend the confercnce and pre.tlde at the buslnc.u sttslona, Mrs. Hcrtzog. who recently under­went a crltli ’ •In icansa.1 Olty. Rev. H.’O. McCal- lUter was boat pastor ot the con­ference.

Vltll !q BoUe Twin FalU visitors In Boise tho

first of Uie week Included Carl E. FronU and Z. N. Day.

Dan MeCook Circle Dan MoCook circle,-Ladles of the

Grand Array of the Republic, wlU meet ftlday at 3 p. m. at the Ameri­can - Legloa auxiliary rooms.

Osb w m Meet Gem 8tat« Study, elub wUl meet

Friday at 1:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Zelpha Lincoln. Memtyirs are asked to bring l^ lr quilt, blocks.

Returns to CaldweUDr. William W. Hall, Jr, president

of Uie College of Idaho, CaldweU, has relumed to Uio school. foUow- Ins a. few days' visit In Twin Falls, during which he Interviewed pros> pecUve students and assisted In the organization of a’ College of Idaho Aluaml assoclaUon.

Undergoes OperaUon Mrs. Hftity BtephtM, who rocent-

ly moved to Boise from Twin Palls, last Monday submitted to an opera­tion at St. Alphonsus hospital and Is getting along as well as can be expeoted, friends here were Informed today. Her condition has been re- ganled as serious. Mrs. Paul Me- Comb, Ura. Stephens' daughter. Is in Boise wlUt her.

Couple Marries Mrs. Goldie Stany, Twin FalU.

and Uiren A, Conner, Mountain' City, Nev., were married Mondav bv Rev. Mackey J. Brown, Naxarene minister. Mrs. Cora Slevena and Mr». Eunice KlUlan, Twin Falls, were the witnesses. The eouple will live at MounUiln City, where Mr. Conner la engaged In mining,

AlUnd Wedding Mr. and Mrs. M. A. WlUIanu,

Gooding, were In Twlti Palls Tuesday to attend the wedding of Uielr daughter. Miss Rhea Jo Williams, and Hutiert Peck, ton of Mrs. Mar­garet Peck and Wilton Peck, Twin Falls, at the home of Mrs. Lenna B. 'Wilson, grandmother of tho bridegroom. They returned to Good­ing late that o l^ t.

ApymisGAiN G M N D IN IA V A

Seobang, 40 miles south of the In- dramajoe bcachhead and the pojnt of deepest Japanese penetraUcn to-

The volunteers said the JapaneM had been pushed slowly out of half the village of Soebang when th«y left and that Dutch forces «e r « at- tempUnc to recapture the rest of thetowni InflltraUnff Japanet ^ ^ ^ t t o u t «x(^tiOT" had b--------- up and.shot, theseteers, members of a home guard unit, reported.

The Dutch command reported, that In heavy aerial counter-blom against the Japanese, four enemy bombers and a fighter were shot down (md serious damage was In­flicted on hangars at a Japanese- held airdrome.

Bandoeng Raided .Bandoeng was raided again by 3S

Japanese planes which swept over the city In waves. Aneta sswt ngtney reported. AnU-alremtt guns oopned with a roaring barrage. Other parts of middle Java, were raided alto. Flqhter planes went to opnose the Invaders.

Aneta reports from Batavia said exploidoru so heavy that they«iaiat- tered window panes attested to the thoroURhness wlUi which the Dutch were carr>-lnK out their scorched earth pollrv In the vicinity of the Indies copltal.

Against the sombre bnektrround of the Java-conflict, reoorts from tho Burma front declared that sharp ol- lled aerial attacks had slowed the Japanese drive toward RnnROon and that the enemv wr« being heW vir­tually at 0 aland.'ilin.

Seen Today

(rni iFMtlreinforcements appeared to have reached MaoArthur snd Uiat he un­doubtedly relied on hU P-40 fight­ers to carry out the surjirise attackl

Previous reports had told of Mac- Arthur having only a "handful" of the P-4D's left and Indicated that he was using them carefully, large­ly for rcconnaUsance.

Snrprtse Action Howtver, MocArUiur probably

realized that the Japanese are con- centraUng the bulk of their air power In the attacks on Java and Burma, shifting planes from the PhUlpplnes, and decided to strike by surprise.

It would be feasible for pursuit planes, which have a range of about 600 miles, to take aboard conslder-

dUtanco as Sublo bay, MacArthur's airmen, probably used 200-pound bombs and thermite Incendiary bombs In the AtUek.

MacArthur did not Identify Uie types of big ships desut)ycd but It

aasumed that they were cither

easy to Identify.ITia feat of MacArthur’s airmen

and. the navy's In the new Pacific acUon matched the daring of other U. S. filers Who hare aeWevcd Im­portant victories over the Dutch East IndliIcally superior

s numer-

Three Leave for Final Naval Test

‘nireo Magld tralley men today left for Salt Lake City where they WUl taka flnti tesU' for eniuiaient

They K n Elmer B- PatUnwi, 30. QoodlDg. two ysart, machinist; Ar­thur Oalvla Shirley, 34. WeudaJl. three years, maehlcut; aJid Georgt EUraid Wellman. 3«, fouryears,

OfficerB Watch F or Stolen Cars

The Bheriff's. office today lUUd two can'as being stolen at Pocatello last night.

One Is ft 1010 Chevrolet coupe carrying Id a h o license (19«I) 3A-5400 and the oUier U a MSB Chrysler sedan carrying IS43 Wyo­ming license I/4-4«!3,

The coupe has the front bumper mltalog, the report thowc.

The HospitalTwin Falls county genRrsl hotpltal

had no beds available this afternoon. ADMITTED

Merle Burton, Mrs. Tex Boude, Miss Vera Barnes, Twin Falli; Joe Stastney, sr., Hansen.

DISMISSED Kin. Joseph Chavez and daughter.

Twin Polls: Master Darrell Pierce. Bulil; Baby Laura AnderTion, Eden,

$ 5 .8 5 . feJiewobW otavMv ho«t el ihi dey.

HUDSON-CLARK

Spuds scattered, all over five polnu east after truck and OoU- fomla car stage a slight melee. . . Juvenile Officer Jolin Brown re­laxing at his desk, and ot>lnlng he never had so UtUe to do before at thLi lime of year. . . Color har­mony or someUilng: One high Rcliool girl wearing red Jacket with’ blue sklri. her companion wearing blue Jocket wlUi red skirt. . . Prosecutor Everett Si^Tcley walking along sidewalk and tliumbInK Uu«ugh magazine at same time (safety crusade advis­able?)... Olrl bringing her bicycle Into police aUtton. where it will remain for 10 days because she was caught riding double.. . Twin m ib Information requests from Vernon. Te*., and Moline. HI. , , That same Iowa two door sedan, mu time stalUng at postoffice in­tersection, whilst driver behind slAnu on brakes and wonders whether to give ’ar a push or no... Bob Werner fixing up a UtUe note for Lora Roberts, stamping tho official seal of the board of com- mL'uloncra on the document twice, and leaving It for Lora when She returns to work after present 111- ncr.i. . . ‘ And auto stopping on PourUi avenue north, all doora o p e n in g tlmultaseously; eight men climbing out.

I BY*NTS’ZINE, I

Buster Wo WNSHOES

par boyt ani! g ir li « l oil o o « i-~They’re here— all the new Spring Buster B row nt.M td vertiied in Parents ' Magazine and L ife . They're ttyle-suK ind health-sure, made over scieatifie “ Live-Foot" La iU h r peHea fit and comfort. Locs o f wear, too. Bring the chil- drca In Saturdiy^or loonerl

$ 2 .9 8 t o ? 3 .9 8

HUDSON-CLARK

Mishap Scatters Spuds Over Road

'^m e OS loaded tacks of Idaho potatoes — each containing 100 pounds of ipudo—were scattered over the pavement near the five points east Intersection Uils morning as a result of a sideswipe accident In­volving a heavily loaded Iruck and a couoe, the latter driven by a Cali­fornia man.

Police records show that Uie trucka.5 drlvin by Lloyd Hlncs and the

jirlvai* car by L. D. Shane, 'who is registered at the Rogerson hotel. Damages to both machines was slight.

The es tacks, part of Uie load carried by the truck, tUd off the mochlne bed as a result of the crash and several split open on hit­ting the ground. No personal in­juries resulted to elUier driver,

Williams FmieralBURLEY, March 4-Funeral ser

Ices for Sarali Caroline Williams, 73, wife of George WUUams. wUl be held at 1 p. m. Friday at the Burley first ward L. D. S. church with Blahop ClartSKe Olbeon oftlclaUng. Burial will be made In tho Heyburo eemctery under dlrecUon of Vera Mcculloch,

Albion Students. PresenfrProm m

Albion SUte Normal school Ul- eat will present a program at 8:30 p. m. Friday, March 0, at the Hey- bum high school audltoriuia In con- necQon with the Heybum lOth an­nual art exhibit.

Wide Uterasi b being shown In th« tehlbit, according to those in charge. ArUsta from Utah, Idaho. Colorado, North Dakota, California, Pennayltaola, Maryland, South Car­olina. Washington, D. On ^ d CtAh

have entries this year.Humorotia and dramatic readings

wlU be presented by the QigUsh department of the Albion Stat* Normal school Frldsy night; selec- Uons will be tung by a mixed chorus, representing the mutlo department, and tquore dancing will be demon­strated by phyaieal education stud­ents of the Normal school.

J tt a e a a / t i o ^ h a n 0

Y esterda y ’s priccs today. T heso' last chance bargains w on ’ t lost Ion;;. I f you arc In need o f dependable transportation, Jt w ill pay you to chcck these over.

30 PlymouUi DU Coupe .38 Chevrolet Sedan _____35 Plymouth Sedan -____34 Port Tudor Sedan ___'..|1503T Hudson 8 Coupe ________ $3M57 Packard 0 Coupe .30 Dodge Pickup .

...MB3-1225

30 IntemaUonal P. U . ___ IM IS37 Ford Pickup ---- fi'JS38 Pord-Tr^ick--------------» 2 »

M A N Y O T H f:ilS

41 Hertnry Bo Coupe 30 Chev Delttse Sedan 3S SIsdcbaker Comm Sedan38 Plymoath SedanM Ch«v Delaxe Sedan V 40 Lincoln Zephyr Sedan ^ 37 Ford Coupe39 Llaeein Zephyr Bedaa40 Ford Dlx Fonior

M an y others, o il tnaketi. a ll models.

rOHD . LINCOtW ..M m cOBT

u r n HEUm = 5 ,*TTl

G E T O N Y O U R H O BBY

H O R S E FO R A B IG

L A U G H R O U N D U P I

■ -O f tUUfU .U Ur Jusb' "A TUn. 4 TuU' - ALSO

PASSING PARADE “6mnc« Ttttwinl'’

-.S>r.ca>nll><f UlllUtT Infornitlsn" A NEWS

PTTT-llliig -tirtTOMORROW!

"RELLE STARB-

Ib TMhnkoIor lUNDOI.Pn

BcorrasKB

ntnrr7a>l4«Jua

IWaBtU“WII.DOBEDB

CALUNG"

The Season begins with these

t/et us help you cotnplcto y o u r onsemble from our n ew ly a r ­rived assortment o f bags.

' Air Srq>I The shoe you ’ve seen in Life aad Vogue. The shoe that has cnchanted every wearer with its IJght. and feminine smartness. The shoe that g iv a your feet tfartllt o f spring with ia soft and cushioned M agic Sole.

A ir Step Shoes arc designed fb rw om en who • know their shoe fashions — and want to keep

their shoe comfort, too.

Come in and try them on. Sec how the eoted M agic Sole absorbs bumps and jo la tpd keeps you “ fresh at five.”

ih u ifm k zC la rk //// i/r/j

t

Wednesday. March 4,1042 TrMES-NEWS,'TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PageOTiree

PUPILS AID WITH ID E L A IR C R A F

Swlnslnc cnthiuljuttcally tnto Un cle Sam's nationwide model alrplu)* project, boys of Tw(n FWla Junior hlch school are helping In the war effort.

They're miUdng Uie model planes In shop clciucs. The little ahlpa will be u.1 by the U. S. navy “

-train lullors to meognlie the i tlonalUy and typo of plantfl Instant­ly. Pluies of all nations are bring zncule, American. Brltbh. Japoneje on<l Oeman, Thwws modeLi are solk: reproductions and are made of soft white pine. The airplanes are roadi on a definite scale—one Inch of « model U equal to Mx feet of a real plane. Tliew must be obsoluUIy per­fect because they are a l » used Jor range finding.

- Earn Certificates I I f Uie boys mnke a good model,

Uiey are presented with a cerUfl- cate. The raUn« on the ccrUflcate U <lelermlned by the number of planes ihe boy has completed. A ranklnir of •ciideL jUrcroft«nan ti given If one model ti completed, en- Mirn alrcriitljjnnn If ihree mo<lcl.i are complet«l. includlm: ft »coul bomber or nn observaUon plane, lieutenant alrcrnfi/anun Jjunlot (initle) If five models are completed Includlna one twln-niBlnc bomber and plnnes from two nations.

Lieutenant tvlrcraftnman smde Is awanlBd If seven models arc com­pleted. Includlns: n .seaplane or twin- fuwloite fU'liler; lleiilenont com' mander alrcrnftxman, If elRht mod- eLi are completed. InqludinR one tor- pedo bomber or blplajie and planes from tliree nations; convnander nlr- cmfLwuin Jf HJne motSrli nre com­pleted Including one four-enfllre bomber and planes from four tlons.

top nallng\Vlien II boy hu.<i miide nil tlicse

planes plas a four-engine potrol bon^r and his plane# rtTJrewnt five different nations, he receives ihr nvUng of captain alrrraflwnan.

Tlie junior hW» boys, under dl- reeUon of 1* H. ^tterson. /Jiop In-

' ntructor, have completed 20 accept­able planr« and plim to finish 30 more models In Uie next five week-i, T^e (yp<-« of plujirs vtiry fn»n flj-lng fortrcM to a Dper cub.

Tlie Jiuilor high .ncliool student coimcll Is buying Uie maleriaLi from which Uie plane« are made.

Navy Asking for Binoculars Loan

yoUowliJR a precedent entabll.ilied ln*hB first World war. the U. S. navy Is asltlnB for tlie loan of binoc­ulars from patrlollc cUlMn.s. ac­cording to C. A. Edmoaion. T^ln Palls recruiting otllcer. .

•'T^'o sixes only will meet navy'.n jipeclflcaUoiui. Six by thirty binoculars are wanted for ordinary navlgntlonal purposes, and seven by fifty Rltuises ore desired for extreme dLitnnce work,", said Edmonson.

Beeaa*,e of the dlfflniUy of ob- i.ilnlng spare parLi for numeroas lypcs of blnoCTilars, the riAvy will »ccept the loAij only of Zetss — BftUich nnrt Lomb Rlowes. ' ' -

■•Tliey slioiild be sent, carefully packed, to ihe naval bbier\-aloo'. Washlnaton. D. C. Each Ijuitrument (i^ould be accompanied by an Iden- aricatlon tag bearing the name and address of the sender," said Ed­monson.

The navy will then pay J1 for each set of binocular* accepted for use, and will return them to their own­ers, at Uie-end of hosUIlUea If the glasses are still In use.

[ RICHFIELD\VlUlam Branen wt^ able to re­

turn to school lost week following Ills release from tiie Ooodlng hod- pllal where ho undenwit an ap­pendectomy.

Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wilson are the parents of a son bom Wednes­day, Feb. 25. at the Ooodlng hospl- laj. Mrs, Wilson Is the former Elea­nor Conner.

Mr. and Mrs. Claud McKla.ilclc were called to Bellevue recently by tiie serious Ulne.'vi of his father.

Leslie Sweat left recently for Salt Lal^e where lie has nnploj-ment. Hla wife and baby daughter ftre re­maining wlUi her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Dewls. for the present.

A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Prank Sowertjy at thrtr ranch home Feb. 10.

Mr. and Mn. Ben Kirkpatrick and Ills mother. Mrs. E, J. Klrlcpnirlck. Dietrich, left Friday for a three

During winter months, the sun Is seen to rise and set In the Pacific. In Santa' Barbara. Calif.

Registration Begins for Ski Toui-ney ^

Iju t In the combined men's and women's »iil raeei'Iajil ?£“ '■ monnlaln. Jiek Bralth, Twin Falls,was tint to reslster for tho tliird annual (oumry Ihia year when retlstraUon opened at .Macle Monntala Ski clnb meeting last nisht at th<- I’ark liolel. Awaltlne hla Inm to rrcclve the Un'e nnmemJ two fmm Fred Rex. tenmey eliairman, h Jim Savlrr^. local lii|h school itudent Seated. Mn. Dorothy Ijirson. eommlltee member, took reffslmWon* from many »kl ejufr member*. (Tfmeii<Ne<ra Fboto and Engraving)

¥.

Movie Feature Postponed but Ski Carnival Plans Go Ahead

Limited time has made It iircc;;- would be engraved silver skis, bearsary to pMtpone Uie "evenUiK of .■\kllng via Uie movies" unUl Uie forc- imrt of April, but plons for tlie iliirtl annual Magic Mountain Ski club tournament, to be held next Sun­day. March fl. are profiresshiK njp- Idly, commlttec officials unuounced this aflemoon.

Originally planned for rrldiiy eve­ning.Mnrch'fl. at the Idaho tlienter, Uie "evenlnB of skiing'' will now be enlarged lo Include movlr .ihoru nn hunting, fWiIng, archery and many oUier sjiort.i when It In MnKcd-

I April. PYed' Rex said loilny.WlnUr Carnival Week

Lapel buttons proclaiming the week of March 1-B a-i winter carni­val week will go on sale Uie last of the week/through ski club membcr:i.

Mr. Rex.and hLi committee. Slier- an Osgood and Mrs. Dorothy L<vr- m, gave detailed accounts of com­

pleted contests for Uie ski tourney and uiov sculpturing contests next Sunday at a special ski club meet­ing last night at the Park hotel.

Men's downhill races from Uic top of Magic mountain will begin at U a. m.. followed Immediately by the women's downhill contestfl. Men's and women's slalom races will follow .tha slalom oxhlbltlons. ..

' Exhlblllon Racers At I p. m.. the double slalom ex-

lUblUoiu will be presented, nccord- Mr. Rex who .............. "

Joy, Sun Valley ski liLitructor. and Henry Molony, Twin Falla, akl In- stnietor at Magic mountain, will present Uie combination men's and 'omen’f exlilbltlon race^Miss Bethene Hagler-and Mrs.

Betty Kelker will perform In the women's exhlblUon and Homer Buchanan and Paul Hardesty will, perform In Uie men’s exlilbltlon

Snow sculpturing entries must be completed by 1 p. m., and Judging will be done by Mrs. Helen Ross, Mrs. DoroUiy Larson and Vic Ooert-

;n. Tlme.s-New# photographer.Any Magle Valley resident wish­

ing to enter any of the contests l.i asked to contact Mr. Rex. or write him at 710 Main avenue south. Twin Falls.

It Is planned by the club to sell the' lapel tickets at the akl slt« next Sunday, with funds to be used In keeping Uie winter sports area open to everyone In Magic Valley during Uie season.

N'a Tieketa Spectators will not be required to

purchase Uckets, but all will be asked to contflbute their quarter to keeping the roads In good condition In this manner, aocording to Dick Heppler, vice-president, who con­ducted the meeting Tuesday.

Oene Ostrander reported that the state rotary plow was now at Ketch- um, but that It was hoped to have It for.use Friday on the Magle mountain road.

Officials pointed out that .there wiU be no enUiince fee for »kl con­testants, and voted Uiat final prire.n

Ing the words "Magic Mountain Ski Club TJilrd Annual Tournament, Mureh B, IIH3." and first, second or Uilrd.

Awards PlannedRlbboiui will be presented lo first

three place winners In men's and womeil's downhill and slalom racc.v and the engraved pins will be given to combined winners In the men’s events and the Women's cvcnt.i.

I t was reported that Bill Dlnslcy has contacted all high school prin­cipals In Maule Valley concerntng entrants in the snow sculpturing contest, and Uiat Miss AgncJi Schu­bert. Twin FalLi high .ichool art Instructor, has Indicated that her class will be repreiented in the con­test,

BUses will leave for Mnglc moun­tain Sunday morning at 7:30 a, ni. at Uie Washington school and from the high school at 7H5 a. m. Per- sorw wLihlng to travel Oils "share expense" way are asked to make rcs- er -aUons by Friday night If pos­sible. by colling either Paul Hardesty at 0300-R4 or Bob Meigs, 1080.

Named ChairmanUNIVERSITY OFlDAHO. March

4—Marjorie Tliompson. Ooodlng. has been named lo handle the annual Ag Club-Home Economics club party seheduUd for thb week-end.

HAILEYEdlUi Knoy Is employed at the

NftUonal laundr>’ olflce. Ukln^ the place of Margaret Ben>'. who re- cetiUy resigned to go to Ogden and Suit Luke City.

BUI Schwamb left last week for Las Vesas where he will be wlUi his brotJier. Claude, who recently ■wpnt iherc and la now employed.

MLvs Ilovock, superintendent' of Uie .HiilIey clinical honpltAl for the post tevi monUis. left.Thursdtiy for Conper. Wyo.. where aho wlU enter anoUier hospital. MLia Hovodc ha* made many Irlehds while here and will be greaUy missed, 'While here she served In place of Mrs. Julia McCasAlIn.

^w are Coughs' from common colili

That Hang OnCreomulalon relieves pr---- ** ■ ‘

cause 1C goes right to the__________trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and lUd nature to soothe and heal-raw. tender. In­flamed bronchial mucoua m em - b^ea . Tell your druggist to seU you 5 botUe of Creomulslon with the un- CeptMdlng you must like the way U quickly allay* the cough or you ure to have ymir money back.

CREOMULSIONfor Couehf, Chesr Coldt, Bronchitis

Idaho Sheepman Paid Last Honor

CAREY, March * — Funeral serv- Icc.1 for Jwnes Coleman, promi­nent sneepmiui of Corey who died of pneumonia Isjt week In the Hailey hospital, were held here at the L. D. S. church Sundny.wlih Bl.\hop R. E. Adamson offlclnilni; and Presi­dent W. L. Adam.vm as Uie npeaker. Tlie male quartei sajig "Abide With .Me" and "Rock of Ages." and Mrs, William Phllllpi and Mrs, W. W. Kirkland .lang. "T liu t Beautiful Land.” ax a duel. Max Barton gave the Invocation and ^Ixhop T . 8. Patter.01 the benetllcilon.

PallbetiTcrs were Lionel Hutton. John BuAlmrt, Dnvc Baird, Don Blackwell. Roy lX)we ond Etl Oreen. all members ot the Dovid Davis ptul of the American Legion of which Mr. Colemsn was a charUr member.

Chaplain Buford Kirkland offici­ated at the graveside services. In­terment was In the Carey cemetery.

Mis.? Anna Coleman and her brother, Jacob Coleman. Provo. tJtah, .sister and broUier of James Coleman, alunded . the ■ funeral.

Joins Attic GlubUNIVERSITY OP IDAHO. March

4—Wllma MonlBomerj-. Rupert, re- cenUy win elected »ccrclar ' of Attic club, organization of art and archi­tecture majors.

C IIYC AN TQ U INSURANCE FUND

BOISE. March 4 (;i>-'Hie only’fty Twin Fnlls can leave tho stite

Insurance fund, as demanded by the city's council and major. U by a change In Uie law. Governor Clark said yesterday.

Commenting on a comptolnt by T«-ln FnlU Maj-or Joe Koenler and the council that Uielr Industrial accident Insurance rate had been ralse<I 30 per cent Ihe governor added;

.“in my Judgment 11 l« very Im- portani to Uie Interests of boUj employers and workers that the In­surance fund be maintained on a good, Aolld financial basU.

“ It l.» a great protection to Uie sUte," lie said.

Under a merit system adopted by the fund pollc>--holdcrs wlUi a fa­vorable accident record are given a reducUon In rates and those with an unfavorable record are required to pay more.

Stale law requires that munlclpnl- lUes lii.Mire with the state fund.

Clark nnd lllghwoys Director S. & Joliii.-,oii returned yesterday from a trip 10 north Idaho. '

Swift Promotion For Navy Youths

Renular and rc.serve U. S. navy recruits now are being advanced Ihe Inwfsi peliy ofllcrr grade Im- medliilely upon completion of six week.1' iralnlni;, ilie T#ln Falb .Mib- stailnn was advised today,

■''Tlil. means that a recruit wIionp prevloiw service or civilian occupa­tion IndlcBte.i adequate technical ijuaUfIcatlon.1 will be rated and re­ceive the pay of his new grade,«' explained C, A. Edmonson, recruit­ing officer.

In the past, a recruit wlUi petty officer quallllentlons would not re­ceive his rating or advance In pay unUl he completed four months servlcc.

HAZELTON .Mrs, If. E. Oundelflnger recently

cnterlalned her bridge club,Chrlilinn Endeavor society o f the

Prc,ibyi(Tlan church gave an eve­ning's enteriaJnmeiil at Uie,local church recrtitlv. Mystery boxe.s were auctioned off by Rev. C. A. Hawley.

A no-host meeUng of Uie Presbj’- terlan ehureli Ladle.s' Aid society was held at Uie church basement la.*;l week, and a pot-hick luncheon was .*ierve<l at the home of Mrs. Charles Hohnhort recently-, the Ume being occupied with Red Cross sew­ing.

Ffwt Noble Ornnds club of Eden and Uaj.ello]i Rebekah lodges met last week at Uie home of Mrs. Lester

for a dessert luncheon.r'Acid Indigestion

Victory Bulls Will Be Given To Daii’y Men

Tlio line forms -tin the right for souUi central Idaho's oharo of the 1,000 registered Jeraey bulla which aliorUy will be given to dairymen throughout the jyUon who own grade dalrj- herds, according to a plan developeti by tlie American Jersey CatUe ciub.,

Board of directors of the Idaho Stale Jersey CatUe club has named a committee of three to itandle the program In Mogle Vttlley. Tills can- mlltee consL'ts of Sam Kayler. Twin Fulls, procurement: Herman Stoker, Burley, distribution: and B. P. Hifle, Rupert, allotment.

Cenlact Them . Anyone Interested in the program sliould contact one of the conimli- twmen.

"Tlie Idea." said Kai’ler. "l.s .... aldered a gift to the naUoti to call to altcnllon Uie need of outstand­ing bulls for profitable production of milk during war or peace,"• ''Thfr«) Jcrxry sires, wlUt prfrved Inlirrltance for economical produc- Uon of milk, as ihey replace s?rub biill.i will lirlnK dlreci material benr- llt.s lo the Ittrmers who receive them," prMllctecl Kaylor.

"Victory BulU'* ' llic bull.-i to be donated will be

callrd "vlctorj- bulls" nnd will come from Iciullnc hrrds of the nation— outrlnht kIIu Irotn tho purebred brceder.i. he luUIed.

Dradllno for ai^lcaUon.-! is May 15, he reminded. stuUng "UiLi U a most opi>or.une program -now. when lncreii.v>d production of dalb’ product';.b ;/> vlial to our war-time

and efficiency 1.5 so Important to Uie future of America."

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT AD6.

4 -H A C H IE V E lN ' DAYS ARRANGED

OOODINO. March 4 — County Agent E, 3. Palmer announced to­day that club committeemen have completed plana tor 4-H achieve­ment days to be held In the Gooding and Wendell secUons March 11-13. Achievement day# may also be held In Bliss. TutUe, Hagerman and West Point..Vanco SmlUi, ciub

agent, Pocatello, will be present to &how flljns on 4-H club wofk. Beals, certificates and medals won by 4-H club members last >-ear will be dls- tribuied.. There will also be talks on 4-H club work, what It means, how to Join and what projects are avail­able for the years work.

Mr. Palmer Invites all boys and girls of 4-H club age and their parents to l>e present at Achieve­ment day meeUngs. He aald ttiat the work of the chibs Is more Impor­tant now Uian ever before because 4-H workers have been asked to give tlielr full share of aid In llonal defense, wpe^lally In ■ nlng projeciii.

THE WHISKEV WITHOUT REGRETS

•rt Klrcher went to Lon wrek-end lo Join her

Is employed In Uie ilane fiictoo'.» - Llnd-iey Hutchlwin

returned last V'^ck from a Uiree weok.s' trip to California. TTiey vis­ited Uielr son. Lindsey, at Wa-sco, Cnhf., where he Li employed In an Implftnent hou.-w. En route to Was­co U)py vlsHed n sMer-In-law. Mn. Jack Hutchison, who was vrry ill. and on Uielr return trip through Utah attended her funeral at Span- I.-J1 Fork.

Vital to America'* victorr pro- -•m Is the frcquenc. low.eoit ■ntportxion provided BOTH ir great atrole*— military and

civilian — by the Union Paelfie Siageil Thui Atotrlca keep* gelog — conveniently, comforiably. eco- nomically— yet conMrvei cuenllal materUli for Natloaal Dc{eni««

U N IO N BU S D E PO Tl i : 2nd St. East rbooe SOOO

WlKn )«i<!rlnk * whakty th« butt lay you ever tautd—

PRIZED

For. all folb jgiTt:li'j.Thf Whiiey Without Regrm*.

GftECN RIVER BUNDED WHISKCY. «8 Proof, 7&%C<ilnK«ulrtI Spirits.

- F O R A SKILLED P ILO T T O CLIMB THIS INTERC EPTOR . PLANE A a i L E .(MAXIMtJM SPEED A M ILITAR/ SECRET )

. . . O R F O R .y o u t o

G E T T H IS F R E E P R O T C T O N F R O M

T R / ^ IN E D g T A N D A R D § E R V ( C E M E N !

C P S J }fC 0 A < lV 7 0 C H £ C K

you/i o/iMAy myou/! BSKmes-J

MA K E Y O U R CAR L A S T L O N G E R . . .

Pago Four TIMES-NEWS, t w i n f a l l s , IDAHO Wednwday^ Muvh 4.1942

ilM M r«b. It. >•«*. •( tk* Ktte BmlMa In l»M. aaJ U- Twl» n ib K»*^ ..uUltob«a

>ttir4>r. *n4 0aiB rtlk. Idtluk I

tr*d u Mtond tlu* pi&Il DXtur April I. • In Twlo Kill*. Id»ix>. o»<l«r th# *ct ef «

BUn»C*irTION RATES BT CASKIES—PAYABUe IN AOVAXC

■ « f th« AiMKl«t«4 rm « aiiJ UbM

All nnlli-nAiuirod h........ . h< n II b< pablUM I

. BMllon M-UI : ]B1J li«tl4a

NATIOMAt. nrPnttSENTATIVEa • WfJiT-UOU-IDAV <-0, l^' •awt/. :S0 I!u»h PUt«U S»n *1 c*ur.

IT T A K E S O F F E N S IV E W A R F A R EWhen Hannibal’s armlc-s were nt the very

gatcfi of Romo, Uio Romans sent an expedi­tionary force oRalnat Ills homeland In Car­thage. And Rome won the war.

When the Infidel Turk threatened all ChrJs- tendom. >the West did not wait for him to come ond conquer. The crusadcra advanced to the Golden Horn, defeated the Turk and threw him out of Europe.

-At the first battle of the Marne. Foeh dis­patched to the indecisive Joffre this mes­sage: *'My right is expo.sed. my left Is heavily attacked, my center is unable to hold Its posi­tion. I cannot redistribute my forces, The situation Is excellent. I shall attack."

One of America's active soldiers — no gents’ room general or saloon strategist — now declares the only way to win the present war is I'ot America to attack the heart of the enemy, specifically to strike against Ger*- many through Italy.

His name Is Lleut.-Col. W . F. Kem an and his now book, ■•Defense W ill Not W in tho W ar," carries much the same message as the implications of President Roosevelt's recent fireside chat.

The message is thot America and her allies cannot hope to win by attempting purely defensive actions before widely scattered points once so fondly called •‘fortresses.’’ That as long as Hitler and his bloody crowd can count on escaping dlrcct attack them; selves, they can always choose their battle­field and smaih the strongest defense by assembling a mobile, overwhelming force at one point.■ History Is on Colonel Kerna-n's side— recent history in Europe and the Fa r East, and an­cient history wherever war.s have been fought. Defense docs not win wars, and that goes for the type of defense that employs a strong navy with no army capablc of winning de­r i v e victorV on land.

Britain, while still possessing her mighty fleet, felt tho hot breath o f defeat and still feels It. Britain first built her navy to trans­port armies to win wars on the other fellow's home field. When Britain came to rely on that navy as a force for defending places like

• Singapore all around the world, then Britain stood in peril of her very life.

It would be difficult to soften Colonel Ker- nan’s indictment of the defensive method of warfare.

His own special brand of offensive Is some-' thing else again. He thinks we can get Into lU ly with .200,000 men, send in another 200,- 000 every month and whip Mltler In the air and on the ground — In Germany. Few men arc qualified to pass Judgment on such a spec­tacular plan of attack. Few should attempt It.

At any rale. Colonel K ernan’s Ideas should reach the public, for they are stimulating.

T R Y IN G T O “ P A S S T H E B LO T ” ^One of the dying walls of the "pensions for

congress’’ fiasco comes from Representative Ramspeck of Georgia, co-author of the legis­lation which went down in inglorious defeat. Says he:

•'The newspaper campaign of misrepresen­tation against it will forever remain a blot on the pages of the free press of the United States."

A ll that'thc press did was to point out that congress. In. the midst ot a global war. had voted Itself pensions. Representative RamS- pcck doesn’t consider repeal of such pensions to be an acknowledgment o f original error.

The real tip-off came in other speeches. One member said that tho newspaper cam­paign of “misrepresentation’’ made Immediate repeal “politically expedient.” W hat he meant was that a congressional election Impends, and prospective pensioners didn't dare face their constituents.

Where the blot lies on this record seems obvious. Mr. Ramspeck would doubtless have preferred to repeal the freedom of the press than to repeal his pension. < -—

B E N IT O B R A Y S W hat with direct communications to Italy

shut off, things have been pretty quiet so far as- tho Great Man, Boldy Benito Mussolini, Is coaccmcd. W e have sorely missed the btay- Ings of this emplre-builder. ’Tho comic strips are fine, but whflt our morale really needs Is the Incomparaffie comedy which rolls from Rome every time Mr. Great s tu ff sounds off.

’Therefore, our gloom has gone, .thanks to atl alert journalist of Berne, Switzerland, who supplied a Now Y ork newspaper with the intelligence that Benito had “broken his of­ficial sUenC?' with a blast at Italians who talk continually ol peace.

So the Italians are talking of peace? It must be so because the AU Highest aoya so, and such an admission-tfom him means only one'thing a great many good Italian people are alck and tired of the w a r and of Musso­lini. Does that .make Italy undeniably the weak sister of the axis and the p lace 'to

• strllw?

. A woman tan do most anything with a hair­pin except make It stay In her 2ia lr.

■TUCKER’S N A T IO N A L

WHI RLI GI Gpin* t_______ .......... ..................................................preelpltaKd anoUier ’•Itlondlke nuh.” .Every 'owner ot property empfcUd of centalnlne oro la axUng for a chunk of the cuh whlcli will iUiAnie nurglnal crop-

~ ' ptnn if the icheme m vlvei. Ui# cold aerutlny of concreu ind J«ue K. Jonei. ^

Th* bor&nzA boys and boom*tcwn boosters should not «p«nd or morl- gag* Uielr antlelpaUd rlclies loo far in advance, however. Every appli­cation for federal autstanee wlU be carefully oximlned both from an englneerins and a money anjle. It 1( admitted ofr the record that the bureau o f minea; which must cer-

-------- --- tlfy tlie vftlldliy of each project, hasEAir TUCKBB been la* In maVlnj surveys or tlie

potentUUUes of chrome, manganese, aJunlte, etc. A burenucraUc agency In normal times, it has suffered from starvation treatment nl the hands of Capitol mil. Its expiuulOQ has been blocked by private In- tcrfsLa wWch feared government compeUuon In thU field. I t has been the Cinderella of the department of Interior. —

Tlio time element may cripple the full development proposed by SecreUry Ickea and the Wyoming lesis- laior. Probably thre* or four years will elapse before nny digging can begin In eameit. Only an extremely long war would warrant U^e tremendous expenditure involved, tlie drain on Ujo natlon'/i store ot machinery and Uie resulting dlBtorlloii of mining economy. The power (rntiire alone cnlLi for funds as largo os will be needed to build Uie at. jjawrenee CAnal.

SI.NKH—The apptirent dUrepute Into which congress h<ii fallen troubles the more thoughtful members of the home and senate. Tlic far-reaching implications of the problem frequently figure in tlie corridor con- vcrtationi of such veteran lawmBkers as Qeorge W. NorrU of Ncbra.O:a and Hatton W. Sumner* of Texas. The public furor over the congressional retirement plan und the farm Woe's demand for still higher prices have focuwd current attention on tho topic.

Tlje legislative branch of the Rovemment, according to Uieso men. stands oa the great safeguard of the people in theae crltlcnl tlme.i ond In the pMt-ww ero of restoration. It nlonc can rulit demands for ex- ccMlvc grnnts ot power to tlie rxecuUvc and In.iW that tiieie be returned when tiie nnerKcncy has pa.ved. It Is In n position to demand etflclmt prosecution of the cbnfllct. nod whcn'nece.v;nr}-. force chnnKCS and 8h»ke_upi_to- Ui#t end. More Uinn ever before. Uieje xolchs cinpiia.’ilte. the reprcseniAUve. txxlles must watch out for Ihelr pre.itlKc.

Axlomallcnlly whenever capltol Hill sink* In public estimation. tJie President's atock rises. And althouch the members burdened with thU self-exnmlnatlon are r . D. R.’s frlcnd.1 and ailmlrrr.i, UieJ do .not believe that undue aKgrandUement of one agency of the na­tional cstibUahment at the expense ot another Is wIm

D(LLi(—Demark liiw admittedly-enjoyed compara­tively Iclnd treatment nt the hands of Hitler. In con­trast u'tiu oppjt&alvc 'practlcts In Poland, Oreece. Prance and tJie BalKan.1. CopenhnRen has been spared the worst. But one cannot tell uint to dlplomat.i in a poflltion to know how their little country has been ayntematlcally exploited.

When tho Germans took over, they promised to increase Industrial shipment.-? to their "ally" In return for foodstuffs. Tlie proposul wiu a straight swap nnd the Danes anticipated no Kreat boait In Derllii'a debt to them. 80 the authorltlcA recommended Uiat Uie ^ n lsh NaUona) bank advnnce to domestic exporters the sums involved in the agricultural transaction. But outgoing farm and other products. especUlly Rhtpi and flaJi. have been much larRer than expected while receipts from the Nasis have fallen far below pledges. Tliu.1 tiie smaller naUon L-» financing this one-way trade.

Tlie Invaders have^^Uo laddled on the naUves un­usually heavy charges for the army of occupaUon. Mote than sixty thousand workers liavo been removed to the lUIch whereaa the original figure was placed at only six thousand. Through another typical device tho WllhelmstrojuB deceives these migrants. The latter notify their employers how mudi money they wish to aend home to their fomlUes and the DanLih NaUonal bank l.>i required to pay these s\ims. which then are added to'the steadily mountlnK ohllBiUlona. Local con­tractors tried to retrieve RomelhlnK by aaklnff ex- cev.lve prlce.i for work performed for the forces In pos-iesslon. But the Oermnn.i laughed “at .Uils ru;.c. They pay the swollen blUa willingly, knowing that )iie underdog eventually will foot them.

AXE—Tliose dainty snnbols of “hands acro.« the Pacific"—Japanese cherry trees along the tidal basin here—will blossom without the traditional song. pag> cniitry end exchange of feUcltaUons this year. Nor •wlVS tho womenfoXt from Tokyo's emba.uy srolle and pose benettli the boughs as visible evidence of world­wide friendship.

The greater naUonal capital commUtce, which su- pervUea formal ceremonies, has not decided whether to abandon them but It Is almost certain that the fes­tival and customary promotion stunts will be called off. For one Uilng, a Washington unable to house the steady Influx-ot new federal employe* need* no arUflclal advertising this year. The thousands of visitor^ attrncUd by the beauUful sight would bum up a lo t of gasoline, further crowd the city’ and *'dls> combobul&te tho st^f ettort," m the PreMdent phrased it. In fact many countrywide organliaUons which ordinarily hold their conveoUoru here In the cprlng have been asked to stage them elsewhere.

The trees, which were presented during the Taft admlnlsUaUon as a "token o f good will and high es­teem by the people of Japfon for the people, c f the United Biates" have not b«en called "Japanese" for aeveral years. They are known officially as "Wash­ington cherry trees.'TThey last appeared In the head­lines when, soon after Pearl harbor, several vandals UJed to axe them,

VALVE—SuRRCitlons tliat movies be curtailed to conserve materials find no favor with morale builders- at Uio capital. Here as In Qlglond people seeking re­lief from war tension have broken all atlend-'vnce and box office records,

In many great production centers tlieaiers are re- malnlOK open almost around the clock for the benefit ot workers with unusual hours. Tlie tcndrnry wlU becomc more marked ns additional plaiii-s threeahlftj. Hollywood recognliea the popular demand for relaxation by emphasiilng comedies, furccs and musi­cal extraragnnzas. Directors working port time for

film performers haa provoked controversy. Washing ton regards piclUre-maklng as an “ essential indus­try." and not solely for It* propaganda value.

O th e r P o in t s o f Vievi^ME510KABLS SENTENCE

One r.entence In the testimony on which I^aura In- Balls. woman aviator, has been convicted of. falling to register as a paid Oennaa agent deaerTu to'be re- tnembered. ■

Thb Is the sentence In which Baron Ulrich von Olenanth. former second secretary of the German emba««T in Washington. Is declared to have discour­aged a plan of hers for flylns'to Germany and aald aha could accomplish more for the Narl cause by “con­tinuing her work for the America first committee."

This need not b« recalled-aa casting a.tperslon on the loyalty of men and women who formed and sup­ported the AmetUa Itrat commlltee from alncttt mo- Uve«. But U ahould cerUinlj- open their eyes and the eyes o f othera as to hor; easily they were hoodwinked by isolationism into playing the game of Uie dictators, ■nus should be remembered in months to come when almost certainly there will' be efforts to fiuter and condone a “negotiated peace" whicl> would leave ag- Sreasors In possmton of their spoils. — Christian 6tlence Monitor. - '

..A.chap who atoppcd in Nampa th« other day after a trip across the country may have put lils finger on the rmtlonal pulse. He aald: “The west U mad at the Japs, the east Is mnrt at the- Germans but the middle

Un't mad at tmybody.'*—Namp« Pree-Press.

Enemy Ships Aren't AU We'Need to Sink

B14>CKA1>I — MocU InNaw Ycrk and W a s f f i c S T ^ ^ fcwly latarett4d in Uw rtporta that

to the famous Captain tWdld who to tuitata as

chalnaaa of en« of America's big- ceat oil corpora- 1 Uons because of oafarorable pub- lleltjr over > hli friendly rtlaUoni wllh Hltler’i com. nerdal ••nvoy.

ha former iklp. per. who Is {tc- ocnlted avery- Where as » Terjr smart execuUve,

Ch2J5 f f * 8®*0* A U n »T LEMAft ■■■■ rard and d ry d o o * company

nms many of the actlvlUes connected with one of the nation's vlUl navy yanls.

The tycoon became the itorm een- Ur ot a case which Involved Dr. Oerhart Alois WaatrlcJt, trade coun- selor of the German embassy, wtien the authorlUea discovered thU the Nazi agent possessed an aato bought with funds (uppllfld by lUeber’s company and that the mysterious doctor had given false InfonnaUon on an auto registration. “Cap"— as his friends have called him sines hla Norwegian seafaring days—de­nied that his association with West- rick had poUUcal significance, claim- Ing that tho motorcar. tranaacUon

P o t Sh o t swUft th t

GENTLEMAN IN THE TH IRD RO W

iiiG ii rne-ssuRE r e m a u k s .- AT A TIRE 8TEALER1

Pot 8hoU:I Uke niy typewriter in hand so can get sometlilng off my ohejt,

A few da>-s ago some low form of animal life (excuse the Insult, ani­mal life) swiped a tire off my auio- mobllt. That sort ot man gives me' a 'pain In th# foot. That aort of man doesn't deserve to be shotr-'l- would rather nail his hide to the barn door.

Since Dec. 8 I have not.been ro- Ing over 40 per. I have stopped slowly at slop signs. I pa&secl up a movie that 1 hnd been walilnR lor weeks to see only to pass it up to

rubber, only to have tt>nt low down *0 ond so swipe my tire. He'll never go to heaven. In fact he'll have to break into Hades.

—W.EU

SOLVED, THAT CALIKOONIA PLANE SCAREI

Pot SboU:A tourist from CallfornU telU

me the real lewdown on that Los Angeles “enemy plane" scare. He vowa that aborlly before tlir scare, a big flock of pelicans was teen headed that way.

This doesn’t agree wllh the offl- ela] versions but I'm neither army nor navy. Me. I'm neutral.

I fay It was pelicans.—Justa Reader

.WE FAVOR A CRUSADE— (NOTE. CITV I>AI)S)

' Pot Shota buckles on hh crusade armor today. We cock our sword at whomsoever should be cocked-a- sword-at In this matter, nnd relate tho following sight we Bllmpsed Shoshone street north at exactly 11M74 a. m, yesterday. . .

Tho outside door of a rooming houso 'entrance In the 100 block opened. A woman emerged, vigor­ously swlnRlng a broom. She swept dait nnd dirt from the stairway out onto the busy slclowulk. Then she departed for tlie upstairs region once more, leaving the dust and dirt plnnked smack on tha Mdewalk.

Tliat's not the only place It hap­pens. either. Just try strolling along Main or Shoshone on nny windy day.

SLIGHT MATTER OK AGE AND RFXA-noNSHir:

Dear Pol Bhoti;This comcs under the heading ot

'party harmonj-."Mrs. Carlisle Smith. Caldwell,

itate clialrman ot the Republican party. In acknowledging the intro- ducuon of Mr*. Sturgeon McCoy, re­marked:

"Oh. you're Miss Isetu McCoy's mother, aren't you?'

Quick on the pick-up as ustial. Maude McCoy countered. "No. Just her older alsUr.”

And unless Mrs. Smltli has been Informed otherwise, she stui thinks they're related—which they aren't.

—ClaodltM

CO.tUlISaiON 10 CENTSPot Sliots understands thai-Cora

etcvena, who county treasurers over at the courthouse, made a big com­mission out ot a msxrlage ceremony the oUier day.

It happened thift a certain coupli matrimonially bound, stopped nt her office. It also happened that a cer- Uln minister was In tho office. So the marriage was performed then and there. -

The happy (we hope) couple paid tlie minister. When tho dominli walked out. he left a dime on tl)i treasurer’s desk.

WANTED, SOME SOLO.MONS! Dear Fotsle;

Over iti Camas county, the ration eers need the wisdom of Solomon.

I nouce the March quota Is Uie. usual flguro-^ne tire and one tube for pauenger cars.

There are 1JOO residents in Camas county. ' . .

What geU me i.i how the rationing board at Fairfield keeps from get- tins lynched when It tries to distrib­ute that one Ure? And Just what does the board do about the regu­lation tJuJt only so much o f the quota can' be given out by a cerUln. time each month?

—Sage of Se«ond Street

HO HUM DEPT.."Soap Rationing Bring* No.

Hardshlp"-Londen dliixitch.Any wne-year-old Twin Falls kid

could tell 'em that.

WELL, 'n ils n LLS SPACE. ANVWAY!

Sleuth JH wandered In. sat on our desk (narrowb' missing a very sharp spindle) and said he saw In Uie paper that Ireland has now ordered newspapers to submit to the cenwr everything except stories on sporting and social events.

He says if Ireland Is determined to liave censorship, he thinks they're nuU to leave out the social page. Wliy doggone, says he. a smartrsoc- ial editor could put across mllltar>- or sabotage InformaUon easy as pie. And Sleuth JH handed us a sample toclety item to show what he meant. It went like Uils:

"MIm Maureen O'Shaugncssy was married today to James Shane In a ceremony at St. Bridget's church, at the corner of SUlh and Erin. Her RolnR.Jiway hat resembled an Im- pr**ii»e tower. wltJi a well-known ancestor's initials. TNT. inscribed at the base. Mr. and Mr*. Shane will leave on a wedding trip at S p. m. next Wednesday.

Sleuth JH says that social Item coxild be a blueprint tor sabotage or bombing. Inland, he says, belter quick start censoring the social news.

FAMOUS LAST LINE - . . . PTlc«a art. rUlng, m - i V t a

twe-bll defense damp for all er- . rw>ds Bowl . .

THE GENTLEMAN IN THE THIRD ROW

HISTORY OF TW IN FALLSAS GLEANED FROM THE rzLES OF THE TIHES-NSWS

U YEARS AGO—MARCH *, 19CT

V. 0. Wray of Casper. Wyo,. had purchased the lea.ie on the Perrlne cafe and dining room from W. G. Marquard.

assistance and cooperaUon of the state gome department In opcraUon at the Cedar creek cpawning place.

Mn. J. A. Keefer was hostess to the Episcopal Guild ThutsdAy. Mr*. Phil Thomas, vlcc-presldcnt, pre­sided.

n YEARS AGO-MABCH 4. I91S

Away fron home and in the ter. rltory of thalr opponents, tlie T*ln Falls high school debate team lost on the affirmative side o f the ques- Uon: “Resolved, that the United States should cease to uphold the Monroe Doctrine." While giving their opponents a hard batUe and putting a good argiunent. tht Twin FaUs boy*. David Blssett. Ronald Bocne and Cwlyte Plckeiv were un­able to offset the prejudice in favor of the present policy of tWa cotmtry.

C A R E OF Y O U R

CHILDRENBy ANGELO PATRI

NEVER BIND A BABY’S HANDS Babies soon becemo acUve; then

the molheis' trouWes begin .a What Is to bo done wlUi tho child who sueJts his thumb? Let him alone mosUy. Take the thumb out, gently. Impersonally, smile, put a ratUe or a aoft baU or doU. in hU hand, and smile. Say nothing, and fmlle unUl the hand dutches Uie doll and the baby sniles back.

Don't bind a baby's hands. Don't slientho his arms so that he cannot bend hla elbows. NoUiing more hurt­ful to a baby's mlod and body can be Imagined than such treatment. Babies must more their hands and their limbs, exercise their Joints steadily. In order to have Uiem fuac- Uon and become stronger. Nothing that interferes with such exercise and sucli function Is to be allowed.

Don't bind a child's harul and don’t hold them. Man climbed out of the depths of halplea^neas and Ignorance by Uie lue of hU hands. Through the ages Uicy havo been his connection between what he was nnd what he hoped to be, between where he was and where ha wanted to be. On Uiem he depended: and « je y hnvo never failed him.

Binding 8Ur«'Emotion ■When you hold or bind a cJilJd's

hands, anybody'a hands, you lay hold on his spirit, you shackle him to his very depths, and you stir In him an cmoUon that rises to fight or die. Don't evPT roaie that In a child. I f you do Uien don't expect that ho will ever forget It and your part In it. You will do great harm and no good to anybody concomed.

You muit keep the baby ' safely wiuiln'boundi. that is true. Ho will

about the fence that in, the pen that b his

enclosed yard that Is his _1 . He Is free: his hands

.... arms, and his logs are free, and he can more about in his little world to his entire satisfaction.

A Wise Granny ■you can even tcUier him and he

won't mind. I have seen a wbe Granny left to tend a creeping, crawling child, swift aiul active, take a 'Wide strip of muslin from her workbag, make a belt and fasUn a long strip to it and say to the child, •Tills Is our orchard. You’re Billy- goat. You're to be tethered to this tree where you can play and kick and eat grass ahd maaa maaa. and have (treat fifi." And It was done.

That kept ^ l l tU e BlllyRoat ou out of the kUQTen where the can ntng was going on. It held him un der Granny's supervision and saved her from trying to keep up wllh him. for Gratwvy was not spry on her feet any more.-And the wee Billy- BOftt was weary of bucking and maa- ing. Jumping and rolling, he cUmb. ed Into Granny's lap, listened to a tale of Three Goats, and fell happily asleep, /

Don't bind a child's hands, or limbs, so that he feels fettered. Don't tie him and leave him alone. I f you tether him stay with him and do tliat only when the situaUon ' mands It.

mS? »mvI« d/»llk» hlB? or M Jtt Annlo pttrti beokkt, ■'AnM Ini

s«nd tor It. •nclotlnt Un ctni In telB and S-nnI aUmpwl. Addrv* An »'lo l*»m. MN r. o. So> 71liutlsB O. New T»rk. N. Y.

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

FROM NEW YORK

was “merely a business courtesy" to ■ om tho petroleum

h»d lefa l deallnjs...... —. with whom thocorporation 0 In the Reich.

H « admitted Chst hfs firm had sold fuel . to boUi Germany and Italy prior to Uie outbreak of the confHct in 1939. but that since It had not delivered *'a single barrel." He had done a lucrative buslneM with General Franco during the Spanish civil war and aft«r«-ards "with the full knowledge of the U. a government." Also he had gone to Berlin afUr September. 1938. seen Admiral Rader personally and per­suaded the Nazi chief to releue a tanker owned by Rlebor's concern. The ship had been built in Ham' burg In exchange for petroleum be­fore the war. Later the craft passed safely through both the axis and allied blockades. Washington com­ment In high circles ts marked by

inqulslUve rather than a friend­ly r

llVTiDD—The United Slates and Brazil are fast awakening to the potenUal value of the Amaion val­ley from which many products such as rubber, _ nuts, cocoa, cordage fitxv.'soap oils', drufs and other tropical goods which formerly came from the far east may now be ob- talned.'The foreign relations branch o f the United States department of agriculture Is cooperating with the northern agricultural InsUtute of Braill In ccnductlnR an experi­mental staUon In the heart ot tho Jungle.

Staff members are carrying thdr research with funds supplied by the Import-export bank of the United State*. Rio's portion o f the great river basin Is approximately ao per cent ot the entire area. It Is the largest equatorial region in the world suitable to crop development.

The laboratory headquarters, al­though located In the heart of the wilderness. Is on the outskirts of Beleln. a city with a popuUUon of

900,000 paopls. Modena nCrlgeratlon and air coodlUonlng In the official bt^ldlngs msko It possible for North American scientists unaccustomed to tha humid heat to perform their -w k In comfort,

8o rn ,* -T h is Ttar'a brides will bo obaged to learn how to cook- sooner than th«y had"anticipated. With Un from Malaya cut o ff and can factories making torpedOM and shells, a tremendoui ahortage ot eontalaera Is on the way. espedally as Uie mau sergeants o f Uie ex­panding armlea must stlU reqtiisl. ilon Uielr “goldfish" - and “corned WUUe.’* Kormally tht kitchens ot Annrtca ttcelvo fifteen WHlon of- Uie popular cylinders hi th< course - f a year.

The government h u just ordered ,000 manufacturem to maki a sur­

vey of botUes. Jars, cartons, -bar- . rels. «oxes. steel driirns. collapsible tubes and every other pukaglng devjce fashioned from metal., plas- Ucs or paper. The InformaUon will be used In allotUng such material*‘ farmers and food producers. At

! same Ume Washing ton hold.. .( a ray of hopo to InsUtutlons and homes which preserve their own berries, fruits and vegetables snd 1* earmarking fifty million can.i for this purpose. This aide lino will consume only 100 tons o f pure tin.

So great Is the container short­age in SouUi Africa that bottle booUegglng flourlahe*. The Wlt- watersrand professional companies which manufacture glaaa products complain that street peddlers are buying from housewives everything from medicine rials tip to big vases and selling (hem to stores and fac­tories. Scavengers have discovered a profitable buslne.ts - In ' combing dumps and salvaging their finds.

RANOOOI^The strategy of the hasd-pressed A. B. C. D. forces which bar Japan from Burma and India

itly affected by the terrain Salween basin. Although the

name was practlc&Uv unknown to .Americans befor* this month, U Is Ml one of the longest of Asia’s many ^ streams whose mighty flood plunges through some of the most precipi­tous mountain regions In the world. There Is no official record of any­one having followed Jho river's en­tire awe-inspiring course.

Its cradle Is In the anowbound crags of Tibet. Durtnir the rainy season from June to September mll- lons of gallons of icy current pour Uirough the narrow gorRcs and crc- iite such rapids as make -crossings exUemely difficult or even Impos­sible. Often there ts a difference of 100 feet between high and low water.The nsUve sailors on tho navigable parts float teakwood from the in­terior to the. markets,4-A1Uiaugh the Salween I j ' 1.500 miles long, steamers can use with safety only about 100 milts from the river's estuary, a reason that Rangoon always has been of more commercial Importance than Moul- meln st the mouth. Annual reporLi from the munlcipol commissioners for the tOTTOcr port have Just been received In New York financial clr- cle- . They show that la jt yrar the Income ot the dty almost doubled its expenditures, American and BritUh shipments of goods for eventual transportaUon over the Burma road are mosUv responsible for this spec­tacular shoving although oeabome trade amounted to approximately five million tons o f cargo.

W A T C H IN G ID A H O A N G L E S .

AT 'WASHINGTON

LOOK FOB THE LABELA Uny two'lnoh stainless steel tag

goes to each soldle and gives the army a pateanent personal hUtroy of extremS value. AddlUeoal inlor- maUon Is oootalned en the new ta v Just being Issued by the quartsr- master corps. Not ciily Is the aol- dler% name given taut the tag also contains his blood type, name Imd addreu o f hla nearest relaUre, a record of his tetanus TscdnaUon. hU religion, and his areiy serial number. All of this Is stamped In Just fire Unes of type.

Twice as tfiany used cars— art Mid each y^ar as. new .automo*

PUSHING-W IUi the pushing around ot alien Japanese and Uie Nisei, together with alien Qermmis and Italians; the war department Is ready to exercise semUmarUal laiv In the northwest. A rough csUmate has been made Uwt the shifting of these aliens and the American-bom

Japanw will cost the government ap p roxim ate ly UO.OOO.OOO. Paul V, McKutt. Of so­cial security, an­nounced that his organisation was prepared to pro­vide locaUons for th e s e potential enemies unUI he learned the esU- mated cos t. It

iO nN W. KELLTwould mean that someone w ou ld

have to go lobbying congress for the money.,

It has come, to the congressional delegations of Idaho, Oregon and Washington that there Is grave donger of graft attending removal of the aliens: of "patriots" schem­ing to acquire valuable property now held or leased by the allemi. This Is more especially probable In California, where the Japanese. Italians and Germans-have larger property interests.

^ Usually, the coveted .truck farms. In Oregon .............principally In Marion. Hood River Mid Muluiomah counUes: around SeatUe and Tacoma In Washing­ton end along the western and east­ern fringes ot Idaho, while Japa­nese have been working tha soli In the vicinity of army airports and adjacent to power company trans­mission lines (Uius pUdng them under suspicion) they also havo been culUvatlng some o f the cholc- cst lands- in Uie northwest and made Uiem pay because the Japa­nese are real farmers, just as thi alien Italians are adapted to the vineyards of Calltomla. These farms are either owned by. Uie Nlscl. the alien faUier acquiring UUe In the name of a Son or daughter, or are operated xmder lease.to'elther event the Japanese have a legal claim on the land'irtilch will not be in- ralldated by’ Uielr being shoved off into tho deep Interior..

BVBINESB—Japanese not en­gaged in agriculture are lo-~busl- nea, operating httle stores, room­ing houses or, being fishermen, the pwnen of boats and some of these boau are very seaworthy. PracU- cally all of the tlshlnf fleet of Japa­nese ownership "hu been tied up- Brltlsh Columbia has Interned hun­dreds. for example. »nd other craft •re anchored In Puget touifid. T^eae lltUe stores, rooming houses and

I fishing boats will, eventually, come

under control of the alien property custodian. This custodian has'not been appointed, as for monUis sev- eral influential members of the ad­ministration have been pulling strings to capture Uie Job. There were scandals in the first World war over the disposition of alien property, and history mny repeat.'A few west Coast cltluns have already requested their congres-nmen to in­dorse them for the Job ot tAklng over Uie property of the Japanese.

COST-The cost of moving the aliens. esUmated at WO.OOO.OOO at least. Is an Important item, but It Is asserted Uiat this ti Insignificant as compared wllh the devastation which could be caused by fifth col­umn salwtage. This Is the first time that a’holesale evacuation haa ever been proposed for such a large mass of people anywhere Jn the United SUtes. It means tmnjporatlon prob­lem*. feeding' and nheltering the evacuees until they arc locsted for the duration. The aliens (and Nisei) regarded .as dangerous to public safely will be Interned and placed under guard: many of them In a concentrailoii cnmn nrnr Blsmark. N. D„ where German sus- pecU are now behind the barbed wire,

Allens not' under lusplclon. but under wrvelUance, nismbertag many thoussnds are the principal prob­lem of the war department, E\'ery- one of these can be moved, and prob­ably will be despite petitions re- • celved by President Roosevelt signed by clUteiu of Japanese ancestry who are asserUng Uielr loyalty. (Among theae are signers from Portland and the Puget sound aren). Congressmen from Uie northwest want all of them given their walk- Ing papers, the sooner the better; the congreislDnal group wrote to the President their vleWa and requested an Interview.

No Interview was granted but -while the delegaUon was walUng.. ready to dash to the Wlilte House on a moment’s noUce, Uio President beat Uielr Ume by Luulng his ex- ecuUve order to the war department to clean ou(- Uie alien*' froih any sone that the army officers conirtd-- ered essenUai One eongres-iman '■ore I formal cutaway coat for a week In order to appear at the ex- ebiUve mansion suitably garbed.- The hablUments are now back In the mothballs. ■*'

Paul McNutt of social security had an Idta of ooloaUns the evac- uea la soma part o f I d ^ o or Ne­vada and a«t Uiem to culUvaUng Uie soil but It U reported th it McNutt and thi war departmsnt are ftow in a wrangle over what to ao »lu » the Japanese and who- Is to take charge ot Uiem when they have been moved. The probtan li pUU cooking.

Wcdneaday, March 4.1942 TiMES^NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Page-Hve;:;!

Resort Workers Leave for Navy

PRISONERS’ P M8AM ITRANCISCO. March A (U.B

—The GalUorolft S («t« Federation ot lAbor todftjr Bought amendmenC ot rpeent letUIaUon cmpowerlnff the n*rr to prortdo for dependent of elvlUtn irorkcra captured on VttXe and Ouun Islands. .

Secrttar7 Edviird D. Vandeleur udd the tcderallon prepared a bill “ for Introduction some time thla week'* try Sen. David I. V/alah, D, Meie^ chairman o f th senata naval affaln- commlttce. pruvldlng for amendment of H. R. M48. Feb. 8.

Tha federation’s announcement v u made aa the navy'dlseloBcd It had directed contracts to pay »100 a month to nest to t in of worker* captured on the two Islands.

rro»Uloti»’Tha federaUon maintained during

deb»l« on the measure the men were not “adequately cared for" by the na\7. Vandelcur aald "plain facta were presentea to Wobh and others of hl5 collcBuea: the dependenU of thrao men had received only *100 In January and were informed that no more money.would t « forthcomlns: no provision at all had been mnile lor the captured employes them-

Vandeleur said “ Ihtat tocls, ply backed Up by evidence, then presented by the federation to

■ a Joint conference eommltWe of the house and senate confcrrlni? on II. n. 6« 0. Apprised ot the sJtunUon.

• members of the commlttce exprrssed full sympathy for these men and an­nounced their Intention to trent these onptured civilian employes In precisely the juuno manner aa U\e dvJlJan empJoyea of the govern­ment were belns eared for under II. R. 6« 6.”

rromUed Fall Pay These workers, Vandeleur said,

"under their contract of employ­ment were promised full pny from Uie time they left the mainland • til they returned.”

He itald "at present It seems Uie only source ot opposition" to amend­ment of the Jaw "would be the navy dtpartment. The California Stale PederaUon of Labor earnestly hopes thstthe navy will withdraw from Its po*lUon In rejrord to these men «h>re the attitude of the other sponsible officials In Washington who desire to treat these men In the same manner as the (rovemmenl's civilian employes who were also CRptured.*'

LEW INCREASES WIN APPROVALS

sUBfferlnK Income tax Increases pro­posed by the treasury, for both In­dividuals and corporations sot an iinexepcledly favorable reception to- <lny from hou-ie ways and means rommltteemen, aU h ou R h some ihnuBht the boosla might prove too steep.

Tliose who thought the Increases were apt to be too se\cre exprcMod the opinion that “a more: palnlcsi”

. method—such as a general sales tax —mlRht be decldcd on to help raise the $7,000,000,000 In new general revenue which Pre.ildent Roosevelt has asked.. It was evident that the committee Intended to ro ahead with pinmi to write Its own bill Independently, ev»n though Ita members for tlic most part appeared In Renerat ac­cord with the broad features of the reeomroendatlons submitted yester­day by Secretary Morgenthau.

Morgenthau aaked that. congrc.*j raLie MJOO.000,000 for In Individual \neoroc taxes—with a doubling of payments In the middle brackeUi— and another *3,000.000.000 from In- creased excess proflta taxes and new war surtax on corporntlowi.

Increased and new excise taxrs, revised estate and Rift levies .and closing of tax loopholes would rnLie th« remainder.

Rep. Duncan. D.. Mo.. ,, tho.ne who said that the commlt^c would want to make an Independent annlysLi of the prospective yields of varloai Increased rates, an well as the soclologlcftt and economic ef­fect they mlBht have "consLitent with demands to meet the problem."

3-Point Gain for Idaho Farm Index

BOISE. March < — A Uiree {Mint Rain In tlic Index ot Idalio ftirm prices was noted between mld- Jnnvary and Feb. 15. the ngrl- ciiUural marketing service reported today.

This was Ute same measure of gain In prices as was ahown during Uie period a year ago.

Most groups shared in the ad- vnnce. aald staaiUcian Richard C. n<»8. with the price 'of potatoes up ID cents a bushel. This helped bring hbout a nine point increase In the fruit and vegetable classlHcaUon.

A sharp drop of three cenLi down for egga caused the poulto' group to decline nine points.

Other Important changes were: ObU and barley up three cenU t bushel and hay up |i a ton; dry beans up 16 cents; hogs up co cents and beef cattle and lambs up 10 cents a hundredweight,

DiitUrfat and milk (wholeoalel remained unchanged. TRotarians Honor

Women at BurleyBURLEY, MarcJi Annual Bur­

ley Rotary club ladles' night was celebrated last week at the Ka- tional h o t e l with Mrs. J. Earl Powers. Albion. In charge o f the program, and Roma Rombo', p ru ­dent of Rotary, aa toafltajastcr.

Community alnglng was led by Mrs. II. O. Hall, and Clifford Mutli- kan. of Atblon Stato Normal lactd* ty. sang a solo asd presented three of hL< Btudenta In ntanbers. iTie ma«ter tap team, under dlreetlon of Mias Irene Buckley; gave four dance nunAera, and Ml-vi Barbara Boden Bave a dance number. Her broUier. I^vid, cave two Dumben.-Olfla of

- d r fe n » itairirw. were presented to the wanen.

Mr-n. A. M. Solemon had charge of the patriotic decoraUotu.

EXAMS SE f FOR G A I J I S H I S

BOISE, March 4 (ffV-CompeUUve civil serrlee examlnaUons for po­sitions In the Idaho fish and game department will be held during the second week In /pril. It was ' nounced today by^arvin S. Rol

m. examination supervtior.The testa will cover all types of

positions In the department.Application blanks, which may be

obtained from Robertson, must be filled out and filed .not later than March 38.

ClUei in which the examinations IV to . be held will be

nounced next week.Salarle.n and positions to be

ered Include':Chief clerk. *3,lOO-M,GOO: secre­

tary, tl200*tl,760; accounting clerk, ti;i3&-tl,760; supervLior ot Informa­tion service, not exceeding 13,000; fish hatchery superintendent, tl.SOO- ta.lOO; fish hatchery a.-ulstant. tl,* 200-tl300: 8»me farm superinten­dent, 13,100; game farm assistant. »1300-$l,BOO; consen’atlon officer, Il,500-»3.i00.

Biologist. 11.800-t2.COO; awihtant biologist, tl,SOO-U,tOO; supervUor Plttman-Robertaon projects, $3,100- $3,000; leader, Pltlmnn-Robertaon research project, $1.BOO-»3.000: leader. PlVlman-nobertoon survey projects, |lj00-$3.600.

Separate application blanks must be filed for each poslUon.

Two employei of Sun Valley leave Twin Falls for In tiieV, S. nary. Receiving final onien from Reemltlng Offleer C. A. Ed* moHMn are (left (o rightl Karl II. Gebbert. St. and O. B. Haliowt, Z&. Gebbert, now a natnrailxed rlllien. left Germany at the afc ef 16, worked >tz yean In Buenon Aire* >nd the past alx year* aa headwaitcr at Run Valley, Far the next two years hell cook and bake aboard a U. 8. wanhlp. tiallaws, a Colorado-bem Son Valley goWe. expre*»e» a preference for a maehlnlil's life aboard ship.

(Tlrae«-New« Photo and EngraTlag)

Yank Troops Change Java

Cafe Menus

Public ForumAPPRECIATES FORUSI LETTER hi* signature appears at the bottom

BY MRS. MILLS Editor. Ttme«-No»-*:

In the Public Forum Pe*). 33. 1 read a letter written by Mra. Howard Mills. I enjoyed It very much. I am enclosing a letter to her and will you plea.'se write her full address It. It Is stamped 'and all It needs is tiie rest of the oddrtM. Thanking you In advance for doing this I main '

Youra sincerely,JOSIE KLUS.MEYE31.

3401 Hawlhonie Avc„Omiain. Neb.. Feb. 27.

(Editor's note: Mrs. Klusmeyer'i letter wia be held at tlic Tlmes-New omce for Mrs. Mills, pending rfc- coipt of her correct mailing ad- drerj),-

AAA FU.VOS COt;t.D BE USED BETTER IN* DliFENSE

Editor, Tlmes-Ncws:1.1 it necessary to keep up the A.

A. A. and W. P. A. while we’re at wnr7

About Uirce wpclw nco my hm- baiid received n chccic from the A. A. A. fDr $aJ3 ns hti payment for 1041. He hnd done atx-iolutcly noth- InR to get thLi check except perhaps slRn Ills name, and there’s i doubt ns to whether or not he did Uiat.

Today.lie got hb allotment iilieet Jot and wo know very deflnUe ly Uiat he nc\'er signed It although

Marian Martin Pattern

Pattern OOSO may be ortSerecT only In misses’ and women'a sUcs U . 16, is, 30, 3a, 34, 30. 38, 40 and 43. Slia ID requires 3S yards 30 Inch fabric. To get this pattern Mnd'FlFTEEN CENTS (plua ONE CENT to C07W cost of mailing) to Tlmes-News, J^ttem Deportment. Get ready for Spring with our new PatUm Book. It costs Just TEN CENTS and brings you colorful make-at»home faahiotu lor every acUvlty.

of the sheet. Who gets a big enough cut out of these payments t iai th^'re 30 anxious for all the farm- en to be algned up?

Of course, this payment Is small, and yet there miut be millions farmers receiving payments doing no more than thb. Surely this money could be used lo better advantage in our defense program. U would certainly buy a few air- planes or battleships.

Yours truly,MRS. RAI-PH BAUGHMAN

Buhl, route 4,March 3.

EALTH COUNCILS PLAN APRIL l E T

aoODINO, March 4 - Gooding Health council held the regular Maroh meeting Monday In the office ot Mrs. Pearl Kirkpatrick, county nurse. Mrs, John Komlier presided. Members gave reports ss to what Uielr organizations were doing to help with defense work. .All reported doing Red Cro.u n-ork, and the northeast community first aid class has been completed.

Announcement was made again concerning Uie annual pre-school health check-up being sponsored by Uie Gooding Pnrent-Tcachcr asso­ciation to be held thli spring. Im- munluitlons for smallpox and diph­theria will be Riven.

Plans were discussed for the — nual meetinR of the five, Health counclU of Gooding, county at a 1 o'clock luncheon In Gooding In Aprli, date and place to be an­nounced later. A special speaker will be secured. Committee appointed to make arrangements for the meeting was Mrs. Ernest Fields and Mrs. Kirkpatrick.

BEET SUGAR SUPPLY EASES RATIONING SPECTER

Editor. Tlmes-Ncws:I read wltlj hiterest your recent

editorial. "Don’t Wnste 8UKar,"jind since sugarls being so widely dis­cussed the-ie days I venture to call attention to certain facts not always understood by consumers.

Tlie need for rationing sugar . . r.ulls principally from these condl- llons; (a) Apparent consumption of sugar in the United States In 1041 was at least 1,000,000 tons greater Uian normal, which depleted normal re-icrTe stocks; ib) Sugar from the Plilllpplne. , ordinarily amounting to another 1,000,000 tons annually, has been cut off by Uie war, and it ap­pears not unlikely that the usual supplies from Hawaii and other off­shore areas will be reduced: (c) ITie United States l.i committed to make Inrge stock.n of sugar available to Great Brltalni Canada, Russia, and [Mijslbly others of the United Na­tions: <d) A siibstantlil part of the Cuban crop, which haa been pur­chased by the defense supplies cor­poration, will bc'converted into mo­lasses, for the producUon ot alcohol. In war, alcohol Is a prime necessity since It is used In making d>-namlle, smokeless powder, etc;

However. Uie ouUook Is not entire­ly blue, for even with wartime ra- Uonlng consumers ot the United States will liftve larger per copita supplies than are ordinaril}- avail­able to con.iumcrs during peacetimes In certain other countries. Our sup- plle.H of sugar are not comj>lot«ly de* pendent on sea-borne rtlpping, which l i always subject to the hai- ards of war. We have, in the beet sugar industry of the United States, a source ot sugar within our owr continental borders which in peace, times supplies all the sugar needs of 30.000.000 consumers and which, with raUona In effect, can supply ao,- 000,000 coiuumers. In 1M3 Uie indus­try will, according to Leon Hender­son's caiculaUons, become the most Important single source ot our sugar supplies.

Since the first World war the pro­ducUon of beet sugar in this country has more than doubled, and to that extent our consumers are independ­ent of foreign and insular sources of supply. Beet sugar and cane sugar are technically Icnown as sucrose and In purified form they are IdenUcal In appearance, taste, sweetness, food value, and all other properties. They may bo used Interchangeably for all purposes.

I f consumen could be mad# fully aware of these facu, it seems to ms that Qome o f their current mUap- prehenalons could be dUpeUed.

Sincerely yoursN m , KELtY

(Sec'y. V. S. Beet Sugar assoclaUen) Washington, Feb. 3(1.

PIONEER IDAHOAN DIES BOISE, March 4 0U!>—Mn. Mar­

garet Adella Upchurch, 84, a resi­dent of Idaho for about- 85 yean, died at her home yestenlay. Mrs. Upchurch was bom la Ashton. JU., Nov. 7, IB57. Funeral arraogeo wera indoraplete.

.MONEY TO LOANON

r A R B f* CITX raOPESTT

PEAVEY-TABER CO.m Bbnhon. St. Kut

' FBONE 2 0 t

Scholarship Goes To Hazelton Girl

JERO.MZ. Marcli 4—Mlsa Virginia VauRhn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Vau«hn, Haiclton. haa been awarded the Carl Raymond Gray scholarahlp award, according to word received recently at the Jerome county, extension ngwifs offlce.i. The scholarship l.i awnrded by the Union Pacific railroad to one of the 4-H cltib members in eacli county each year. MIm Wilma Tallry. dnuRhter of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Tal- Icj’. Eden, was selected ai alternate.

•nie wJioliir.^ilp provldra ilOO to Uie wlmitT after flic eiitrrfl the University of Idalio at Mo:;con’, nnd. enrolls in Uie home econcmlcs iigricullure depnrtmenti.

Miss Vaughn has complel<!d seven years of 4-H club work and during thU time has completed Uie foUon'- iOB project.i: Five clothing proJect. three cnnnliig projecta, and otie nu- trultlon project. In addlUon slie took part In three demonstraUons and awlsled In leadlng^her local club.

CASTLEFORDRobert Earie Glllett has bt;en

named fire warden for Castleford by O. H. Coleman, Twin Palls c ty fire warden.

Mrs. Mack Stevens. Mr.i. Luther Rouse and Mrs. Trltz Heilman celved word of the death of their father. M. Howard at Marble, Ark., last week. None were able to attend the funeral but all three had vL-slted their father recenUy. .

Alvin Harmon, who finishes hU normal training at Albion this term', has accem/;d a poslUon In the Ketchum *}unlor high school i merclal teaching March 3.

Mrs. George Blick and son, Gar>% Zlko, Nev., are vlslUng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henr}- Senden.

” wi Hall, Glenns Ferry, wh» U . Joyed at Anderson dam, vCTlted

hU graodparents, Mr. and Mrs. John King, for Uie past several days.

AnnouncemenU have been receiv­ed by friends ot the birth of a son, Eddie Leroy, to Mr. and Mra. Elmer Rogers o f Fresno, Calif.. Feb. 16. Mrs. Rogem Is the former Miss Le- nore Mallory who attended high school here before moving to Cali- fomlA two years ago.

SOE31ABAJA. Java, March 4 American doughboys who

liavo been coining here in increas­ing numbers to f l ^ t the Japa­nese have changed the menus of_ Java restauranta. .

Hot dogs, hamburgers and apple pie have Iwome standard items on the bills of fare. When Uie first United Stales troopa arrived they 'aald they liked the food except for two deficiencies—STk-eels and Ua- dltlnnul American dishes.

Tliougli Uie Javanese- do not have the sweet tooth that cJiarac- terires Uie Americaai and BritL%li. Java hoicU and restatu-ants sn'lft- ly Mt about remedying Uie dlt- untion. V

Dutch and naUvc chefs learned to make Amerlc.\n-styla pies in many lu.-»:lou5 varleUe«, to fry liiun and cBKs. and to grind meat for {ronkfurtcrs and hamburgers.

NAVY RELIEF UNIT ASKS lOAHO HELPBOISE. Ida., March 4 OJ-RJ—Three

repre.ientatlves of the Naval Relief society today asked Gov. Chase A. Clark to direct a campaign In Idaho U> raise $14J73 for Uie society’s fund.

Gov. Clark was' expected to ap­point a sUie director for the fund­raising campaign in Uie next few days. •

Repr«Keiilallves of the organiza­tion said (S.OOO.OOO would be ral.ied Uiroughout Uie country. AddlUonal funds were needed, Uiey said, be­cause the larKe nimiber of ca.iualUes

a re.iult o( the Japanc.v> attack Pearl harbor drained relief re­

serves.

GOODINGeru. Pat«y lOaclt and mncteHnwr!'

to Twin Falls Friday wter# t W . •nt one day attending tb* Dld«. -

13INJUREDW 2 TRAINS CRASH

LOS ANGELES, March 4 — Eight railroad men and five passen­gers were Injured as Union Pacific' Pftrlftc Limited sldeswiped Ui engine of a Santa Fe train, o Dri'am, 10 milea aorth of Vlctor -llle, lost nlRht.

All of Uie Injured, none reported scrlou.ily hurt, were taken lo iia’ pl- tah.

Union Pacific jiaid Santa Pe train­men presumably, mistook a U. P. signal for Uielr own and sUirted onto Uie main track from a slcllng. Tlie Santa Fe engine was demlled, but no other cars left Uie track.

Tlie Pacific Limited prpceeded In­to Los Angeles.- three and a hnlf hours late. Tlifough trains were routed onto the sccond or the double tracks and none 'was delayed,

Oliver P. Anderson. U. P. second cook from Ogden, probably the most serloujly injured, was scalded by hot soup.

Albion Instructor To Teach Aviation

EDEN. March 4—George Cronk- lilte, wlio ha.i been an Instructor in the Alljlon State Normal wliool tor the pa.st few years, has accepted a position a;, ground school Instructor In the navy air corps at Puget Sound.

Mr. nnd Mrs. Cronklille will lei Albion for American Falls, where they will be a short while before le ttlll leave for Chicago, wiiere he ■111 study one monUi before leaving

for Puget Sound. Mrs. Cronkhlte will Join him later.

U. S. Calling for Aircraft Workers

■’Several thoasand men nfid men between the agea o f' 17 and 45 who can report for training in various aircraft trades at centers In Idaho. Oregon and Wa-shlngton arc needed by Uie government." ac­cording to nn announcement by tlie llUi U. 8. civil, service district, Seattle.

Perr.on.1 selected will be apt>olntcd at JOOO a year for the training pe­riod. Student trainees are ellRlble for po. tlons paying *1,500 to $3,000 a year.

Appllcallonn may be obtained from the Mcretary of Uie board of U. S. civil service exnmlner.i at Twin PalU poslofflce. or any first or second class postofdce.

STUDYSAGINAW, Mich.. Mnrch 4 (U.B

—Police were summoned today to invesUKate jiu.'.plclous characters poring over pai>ers In a car parked near a Saginaw'defenie plant.

They found five Mexlcain study­ing Uie coaitltullon of the United States,

FORWARD . . .You take a lii'x tlrp forward In reonomr and enmfnrl xlirri jtoa hum ULUK IILAZK CO.M.. Il iiai IcM aiU. Riora uirful hral and betirr .bumlnic ptnprriirt —thanLi lo •eiemiflr prfparn- tien.

BLUE BLAZE C O A lHydro<lr4inrd— isnI -Ihitlprooltd

ITTAH-S LOWEST ASH STOXER COAl

WARBERGBROS.

Phone 246•HLUE BLAZE COSTS NO MOnE

Whhkat « Ua.A ♦ 06vh iilln , gntin u o itn l ipiriit ♦ Frmhi. hrlD iH ilU riti.ln t..L ' - - - •

BURLEY

CLASSIC COATSIn N ew , Luxurious

H a n d Loomed Z ephyr

74M r'(.

Mr. and Mrs'. John Storm and son. Portland. recenUy of Rupert, have iirrlvod in Burley wiicre Mr. Storm will be employed at Uie radio sta­tion.

Supt. George E. Denman spent last week In San Prancbeo. where he attended Uie annual meeting of Uie American ACoclaUon of School Administrators.

Rev. Raymond S. Rees, MeUiodl.-.t pa.stor, ha.n announced Uiat special Lenten services will be conducted each Sunday morning prior to Easier. E.ich theme will carry out Uie pre- Easter program of Uic church.

Burley bethel of Job's Dauglitera entertnlned their "secrct dads' a party at Uie Odd Fellows hull last week, with .Ma.sonlc lodge, member.l al'O guest.-,, After listening to Pres­ident Roo.' evclt's address, the girls presented a patrloUc progrom which Included a pageant. ••Wauhlngton Speaks to Ills Co,untr?’mcn." Ml.vn Janice iciink was In cIiotm of fre.shment.s.

Mr. and Mr.s. Joe Draddlsh __Uie parent of a ion born rcccntly at the Cotingc hoapiuil. Mrs. JJrod- dlsli was formerly Miss Jean Den- mon, daughter of Supt. and Mrs. George E. Denman. Burley.

Mrs. Sarali Heist, Sho.shone, has arrived to visit her sister, Mrs. Fred Hill.

Mra. Violet Jones has receivedword Uiftt her son. iieiUi. who l.i__tloned at Fart Lewb, has been pro­moted lo Uie position of first ser­geant of Company B, llOth engi­neers.

Garth Bufei. who has been dated wliTi the Peterson Market

$ 2 4 7 5

nUlMl ra\nr hanil-li«imr<t (ra'd In Ni»r. Hunllffhl T«n. Ho'l-

eiillr affnrilnl

5 Quart Can

CROSS COUNTRY

MOTOR OIL

$2.35Tn Bulk. Your Container, Gnl. .. v w C

2 Ral. Can

ARGOSY

MOTOR OIL

5 Gnl. Can 5

Croe.s Country' |

BUY NOW TO SAVE!

5 <!1. Can

GOLD CREST MOTOR OIL

7 9 5$ 1 . 4 9

48c16 QL Can Gold Creal . IN BULK, GAl..

IN YOUB CONTAIMZB

FALK’S, Selling Agents for .

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.Twin Falls, Idaho

-P a g e S iX '---------------- -• TIMES-NE-WS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO W ednesday, M arch 4 ,1 9 4 ?

D i e S i K K K S STAND OH ALIENSCons. Henry O. D«-orshttk today

notified lUy J. Holmes, president, Uiot bo wu In full nceorci wtUi re­cent rcsoluUons of the Twin FbIIs Chamber of Oommeree ur^lns con- contnUon campi for JapaneM all* ens, nnd cUmlnaUon of non-ea*cn- tlftl non-defense federnl expendi­ture*.

ncferrinc to pensions for ■ creismen. Dwonliak said: "The pub­lic TcacUon to the nomspecle r- tlrement bill undoubKdly ecrved Bood purpose In coneentiatlnK the

•nttentlon of all Americans on the essential need of'folly uUlUlna all our national resources lo ochleve military vlctoriei.

•'I have Ion* been disiicartcned by the apparent lack publle In­terest In lefitslatlve acUvltles. but letters from the Twin Falls Chamber

• Indicate Uint rinally #omo of our re- /■-Twrvilbla sroups are dUipIiiylnR Brave concern In tho ouUrome of thU eon/llct."

DworJiak said he had rccclved many letter* from Idaho "reflecl- Intr opposition to'the removal of lUlen Jftponea® lo our seeUoa o f the counlry."

" I am In accord with your contcji- Uon Uint such aliens «^ o are ap­prehended by the depurtment o f Jus­tice ahouU b« placed In Uolated concentration campn and It ahould not be necessary Co utilize such labor In nffricultuml orcM such as Idaho."

N ew Apple Type Ready by Spring

InforroaUon resardln* .Idared. a new appio ToriBly which will bo re­leased to ffTowers and nunierymen Uils Bprlns. may ba obtained Rt the University of Idaho a^rlculturAl ex­periment ataUon. Mo«cow, or from CcmntySM^t Btn BollnsbTOke.

He wild tho new apple Is a croaa between the Jonathan and Wa«ener •\-nrletles. It Is not especially aus- cepll>Io to fire blight, ad Is Jona­than, nor U It cvtbiect to Jonat^iui

Is a trifle larger than-either parent and Ita shape l i a cotnpro- mLie between the two. I fa moat jitrlltlng oharaclerisUc It la color, nearly aoUd brljht red," he ex­plained.. Bollnsbrolu aald It haj unusually Hnall core a » ] creamy whlt« flesh which Is crisp, tender and Juicy. It rctalna Its shape alter baklnff as

' well 09 Romo Beauty, and Is aupcr- lor to It In flavor. '

" I t remains toiv^ and In Rood eatlnff quality In air-cooled stocmre until April and latar. Th* trw beara at an early a(te and Is mod­erately vigorous." sold Dollnebroke.

Twelve thousand apcdllnsn were RTOwn and tented lo produce Idnred nt the experiment stAUon’s npple breeding project.

Religious Drama Given a t Burley

BURLEY, March ♦ — “The Houie on the aand." a religious drama by .m iolt Field, was presented by young people o{ the Durlcy ChtiaUan

• church Tliuniday night and o«aln at the state youth meet In Tn-ln Falls Saturday evening, under tlie direction of aienn Wj-att. assUtcd tjy Mr*. Atvln L, Klelnfeldt,

Those taking part were Raymon Soffer. Elaine Pike, Lowell Hunt, Ruth Oochnour. Everett Oochnour, Lyman Cliambcrlaln. Doris Ooch« nour, Dora eager and MarHjn Arbo- eosu

Jack Holbrook was stage manojter. and Mn. Olenn \V>’att and Mtsj Shirley Oochnour assisted with the make-up.

Burley young people who attended U)e me«Ung at Twin Fulls were: Ruth. Doris and Everett Oochnour. Shirley Oochnour. Anna Johnson. Nooml Dick, Nadine Hunt. R*ymon Sdser, Don. Bagtr,. Ruby Schenk. Opnl'Sclienk. Nadine Toner, Lyman Chamberlain. Jack Holbrook. Lowell Hunt. Delpha Sager, Mildred Shade. Jennie DotAon and Marilyn Arbo- gast.

Rev. Klelnfeldt had charge o f the .H program, and Mn. Olenn Wyatt

planned the worship at the meeting. RAj-mon Sager was president.

Grange GleaningsB y A . H A R V E S T E R

HANSEN—Oui nt Hanneij thfy started U;e meellns wim a pot luck Bupper at Uielr lo.it BC.islon. imd about 35. mts'»bcr!i were cm hunil to make It a pleasant untlierlns. Rep. H, E. Poa'crfl and Mrs. Powers, of Kimberly, i l believe that rcprc- sent*Uvo should be “fX") were sueala o{ U\e evening cind Mr. PoTf- ers fumlsJied the main part of the prpgram wlUi a fine dl«UMloi» of the new Income ta* report re­quirements, a subject Just now very timely.

During the builnewfllon the Orange voted to cooperate wlUi Klmbrrly. Pleasant Valley and Excehlor anuwes In puiuns on ft community Red Cross Benelll auc­tion, l » ^ ie near luture. TJie com- mittee named to have Uie auction In charge lor Hansen 1* Mrs. D. F. Diet*, Rev, J, H. Couiwr and Ralph Simmons.

Ttic OranRc alw voled to j.-pocistjr lu amiunl fattier and son banquet, in lino with a regular custom. Tlie committee for thli event Is the ex­ecutive committee. Uie Jlnancc com­mittee. J. R. Hall,' J. L. Prior and BUI Wtieman. Tlie tentaUvc date act IJ Mlirch'lO, and Uic lnvlti;Uon to fatlier-1 and sons Is not coiiflncd to Uie Hansen comnniiUty, but any In Uie ren.nonnblc dl.'itance may come and enjoy the tine mcrUntf Uiat tills pvertt Insures- In ncliUtloii a fine program and rxccllcnt dinner Is In store lor all who iitlciid. with tlcketa going on sale foon. Tlianks Hansen.

FILER-Pller OranRc took In two . . ! « members ot II.1 last mfetlng and named the commlticr.i for tlu* year. Mrs. Ororiie R. JoSin.-ion, chajJlaUJ. Is chairman of the flower corrtmlt- tee: Earl Johnson Is clialrman of the resolution commlltec; Mra. Claude Oliver Is clinlrwan of Uie decorating commlttce.

Durtn* the lecturer's hour. Betty- lou Walters and Marian Carter played a piano duct: Carl Leonard held a quiz and LouL DinU nang a solo, occonponled by Mrn. Lee En­nis at tho piano. Bert BollnRbroke. county agent, w-a.i present and Intro­duced Clyde wmianw of tho U. 5; labor office In Tu-ln Falli, who npoke on the labor situation. Mr. Wll- Uwna f* lt U ftt iho labor probltm might be handled' effectively if fannera cooperated.

Ralph Simmons, Hansen commit- tee. were present and conferred with the local Orange. ThU Orartge also voted to keep Uie Japanese out of south Idaho. Kimberly Orange Is contemplating Incorporating and the executive committee. Roy Durk. John tirecson and William Chase, wa* aakcd to InvcsUgate.

Excelsior OranKc furnished Uic program, and we are told that they are ^uch too alive to surrender their charter, though I believe iliey have decided lo do so. Mrs. Oeorge Henry was In charge of the follow­ing program: "Idaho," sung as a group number: duels, Leila Henry and Ivernla Hill: '(the glrU sang Ujrce numbers, interspersed Uuough the program); reading, Floyd Pau terson; .poem. "The Mule.” Charles Patterson (four years old); onc-r duet, banjo and harmonica. D. Pattcraon; miwlc, ^he EScelslor Troubadouii. a kitchen variety ol band, playing all sorU of kitchen uten.ills, and making them click, too. The members were D. A. and Floyd Patterson. Mr. and Mrs. A l­fred PcttyRrove, Mr*, acorgo Henry and Wayne Henry. Wayne Henry also Kttvo a reading. 'T lio Mumps."

Refreshment*, were served In the basement and a social hour follow­ed, on Wednesday night the Orangcrs Joined In giving tlie Roy Haverlnnd family a farewell send- off. Roy has purchased a fa,rm on the northslcle. neai* Jerome, and we

this good family In tlila county and In our Orange circle. Luck to you. Roy and family. It Is understood that Mr, Haverlaad wlU continue as Pomona Orange secre­tary,' ft position he now holds. The next meeting of Kimberly Orange ■111 feature a jironram by,the Kim­

berly Juvenile Orange. (Folks, It you’ve got the kids, you need a Juvenile Orange in your business).

HOLLISTERAnd over at Hollister Orange they

want pacific time but no Pacific Japs, and they are making Uila plain (i« a Oranse can do. Seems very few want the Japs. Tho

from Twin Falls Orange

t West

>3.t were sold in the amount of

HANSENMr. and Mrs. W. Tysor and daugh­

ters. Marjorte, Dorothy and Eileen, -are making an extended visit with relatives at Anthony. Kan, whera they went two wtefci ago.

OlrU of Uie Hansen high achool home economics classes, under <51. rectlon of iheir instructor, Mlsi Jos­ephine Moncher. are working on a complete layette for Uie Red Cross

■ as Uiclr tharp of th# Hansea xinlfs work.

Olrl Scouts completed work on the • 20 seLi of booUes and many

yards of bias Upe for tho Red Croes . at their meeUng Tuesday.

Mr. and Mrs. L. H. F«nnewald left Thursday for ttelr homo at Ap­pleton City, Mo, after a three weeks' vlttlt wim her alxten. M n. J. Yost and Mrs. W. Fennewaid. L-H.Fen- newald 1» a brother of W. Pennc- wald, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Conrad, eon- in-law aod daughur of the Missouri­ans. returned from Bremerton, Waah., where they went after ar­riving In Hansen, lo Join her porcnU lor the homtwaid Journey.

Friendship Sewing club met Thurs­day at the home of Mrs. Dora Daw. AsslstUig hostes was Mra. Sam Wbe- maa. Mr#. H. Foruwait conducted

- the progrwa. Mra. Irrla Kevin was a guesL

Mr. and Mre. Willard Flake, who have been on the farm of Paul Scott for Uie put year, recently moved to a fa m two and a haU miles south of the Clalbom comer. Kimberly.

Paul Ptaocls Clonts. reported to have Joined the United SUt«s army at Christmas time, returned to Ran- aensPrlday for a few days visit with relatlrea before leaving for Boise

. with hi* faUicr, Earl Cloata. Twin PWU. where he will attempt to get his birth certificate before enlUUng In tho nAVal cadets. He has been at Burbuk. CalU.. breaking hotK* to T * used D7 th* toremmeat, for tha past two monUu.

' Mn. OaUiarlns OltaMr, Salmon City, who has spent the past lotir mpnthi vith her aoa-la-law and

•daughter, Mr, and Mra. Ben L*uer. . left recently for Spokane, WaaJuior

•S fKtCDdtd TlSit,

WEST POINT-And Point Orange there were 50 mwn- ber» present ns Ornnee opened In due form and snnK "Wo Are the Orange of Uio Future" n.s an open­ing number. Four now member* were accepted by ballot and the de­gree team put on the degree work to keep In nractlce. (and by the way. folks, Uieta will bo a demand for three or fc ^ good degree teams to

Irgrte work at Uie State Orange aesilori at Twlh Falls this coming fall, stryou better be on-your toe:<,) A committee was appolntMl to work vrtUi Uie draft board in determining deferment of fturo ln» borera. the committee to n\Mt In Obodlng In the future. OranRo also voted to have pictures shown by a forest ranger. TJij-sday evening. March 24. In keeping wllh the cus­tom in Uie Rimimcr seoion. tlio time of meetings was cliaruiM to 6:30 Instead of 0 as at present.

State Ma-iter E, T. .Taylor present and gave a very interesting talk and called on Orangem to be awakn lo the problenw of the farmer at Uils time. Also present wivi Mr, Bakes, representaUve of the Omnge Mutual Life Insurance a.vioelatlotJ. Mr. Bakes comes from Nampn. Oranse clwed In due lorm. with •"me Battle Hymn of th# Repub­lic" as a closing Kong.

The lecturer's hour opened with the,Orange singing "Old Folks at Home"; reading. "LlncQln.” Ervin Ra^t: reading. “Abe Lincoln." Mr«. 0. Kurta: reading, "aeorge Wash Ington," Olenna Mae Brand: read Ing. "Freeclom Is Made of Simple Stuff." Mrs. Irene Bill: rending. T o ­day." Mr*. Coffman. In a spelling contest. Marjorie Connor proved Uie champion. Then there wa* a pie- eating content In which Ronald smith. Robert- Brand, Bernard OoWe and Don Connor strove val- lanUy, with Robert Brand winning by a gulp, and were they pie facesi

Refreshments were served at tho clo.‘« of the meeUng. followed by the usual social hour. We ate by the papers that Ray Smith Is quit- Ung the farm. Don’t know what you are going to do. Hay. but wo wish you success at It. (Hope he Un't going to stealing horaeal.

BUHL—Buhl Orange met last week with a good att<ndance, Mr. and Mrs. Drake were given the third and fourth degrees of the order and are now full fledged Orangera.

A resolution was paAseS asking that this secUon of Idaho be placed In the Pficlfle Ume dlvl5ton for ihe duraUon. A resolution was received from the Twin Falls Orange asking the fair board or other authority to hare the Orange booths Judge'd for artlsUo arrangement before the pro­duce In the booths is Judged ao that the booth* may b« aa they tire ar­ranged originally for (his judging. It is hard to place the articles of exhibit as Uiey were when they are taken back from the Judges' table, ftfter-brtng'ludgtd.

Another IlOO bond wa-s purchased by this live Ofange. Tho aucUon wm announced. ITiLs sale, by the way. netted Northvlew and Buhl Oranges MO each and tho money will go t< the Red Cross war benefit. In ad dltlon ft larger community sale will be held later with the west end Oranges cooperating.

During the • lecturer's hour, .roll call was aniwered by giving ft cur­rent event or telling a Joke. Mm. Lehman read ft poem. A tfature of the program was the revue given by the KeAworthy dance studio. In ft series o( tap danctx, much en­joyed by the Orangers. Mr. and Mr* Fred Hartwell. Mr». Olbba and Er- mina Bell served refreshment* at the close of the meeUng.

S H A G m E m i ( I ® 1941WIUI nearly 12 Inchcs more unow

Uinn at Uie corre.ipondlng period last year, Uie ciunuInUve snowfall at Hailey U recorded ftt tO.l Inches, according to Charles I. DauRherty, supervisor of Snwtootii naUonal for- est.

One year ago It was 87i inches, and Uie 3l-yenr average la 732 inohea. he noted In hia weckljr re­port dated March 3.

Ketclium 33 inches DepUi at Hailey Ls 20 incliea. cctn-

pated lo last year's 15, DepUi at Ketchum 1.1 33. compared to 33 Indies In I941. DcpUi nt Galena is <0 Indies. Uiree above 0 year ago.

OUier . tnUoiis In tlic Qls Wood river drnlnngc area reported <5 inchcs at Old Baldy No. 1; 60 Inche.s at Old Daldy No. 2. and S8 indies at Old Bnliiy No. 3.

In Molod drnlnngc Area, depth li 30 Indti-s ut &]ldlcr ranger staUon. and 30 Inches at Fnlrlleld, running between H niul 13 Indies abovo lOil. DcpUu arc 14 to 20 Inches atxn’c IMf.

In Salmon river drainage area. deiiUi U 39 UichcR at WUllftm* ranch, and IR Inches at Stanley, all three anti one-half to nine inches abovo la.H ynir.

niere ha.-i been no snowfall in the post week, iiolrd Daugherty. elUier at Hailey or Soldirr crceki

The Cumulative Fliurea Snowfall rciullng.s at Hailey since

Oct, I .-ihow '0.1 Indies o f snow wlUi 6.40, water content; 4D9, rain: and and 10.45 toUl preclplUUon.

Last year compiirnUve figure* at Hailey Indlcnletl ITTJ luclies o f snow wlUi 0J3. wflicr content: 24J7 ral:i; and O.ID. toUil prvclpltaUon.

Kalle>-',% 31-yeor average record-s 73J Indies nf snow, with lotol pre- clplUtUon floured at D.42.

During the lecturer's hour a palrl otie aklt, written by Mrs. Pierce and acted by members of Orahge. wa.s very good. Questions on Java were a/tked and answers given by Prof. Thomas of Berger. History of Pranrls Scott Key and the writing of the "Star Spangled Banner:" vh? uniuied tomb In the While House, a tomb that was to hold the remains of George and Martha Wa.slilngton. but was not used because the member* of their JamlUfs would not consent to thtlr burial there and removal 'from Mount Vemon, was a paper by Dolph Kunkel.

Refreshments of fruit salad and ftngel food cake were nerved by the committee and a social hour waa enjoyed at the clo.se of the se.sslon.

T\VIN FAI.LSTwin Falls Orange met last week

wllh ft good attendance. A report of O. T. Ko.iter. general chairman In charge of the Red Cro.is benefit auction, showed that Uie commit­tee turned over to A. Wilton Peek, treasurer ot the local Red Cross chapter. $522.75. one-fourth of this amount to be credited to each ot the aponsorlnK Orange.i.

Mrs. Harriet Capps reported Uiat the Orange had received a net of MB from the part of llitd lnner that tho ladles had seri/UKi' Uie Jerome CooperaUvo Creamery mem- bera, the expense* being nllKht be­cause the OrtkUBtr* i'ad coopCKitid, so well. A vote of thank.1 wn.s given to each of the committer.-, for their efforts resulting In so favorable reporta.

TliB OronRe voted to buy anotlier MOO worU. of defense bonds, the money to be taken from the build­ing fund. Thl* makes a total of $800 the Ttvln FalLi Orange has ihvasted In defense bonds. Nice rq- Ini. Twfti Falls. They aLio voted favor of Padflc standard Ume. I opposed the use of enemy aliens local farms.

Tho reslgnaUon of worthy Secre­tary Fred Locke was received and accepted and Mrs. Miller waa elect­ed to fill the vacancy. Mr. Locke Is leaving this county to locate in Opodine. where he will ^ into busi­ness

During Uie lecturer’s hour a gllmpae of the work done at tho recreational association wa.s nhown. The work and projects were ex­plained and those present were In- vlU!d to visit the hall and ee for themselves what U being done. Sam­ples o f woven bftskeu of several types and also lawn omiinientii were shown, these being made at tl e hall.

Mr. Sackett and Mr, Pnc were ap- pointed to confer with jrlrcUve .service board No. 1 regarding ihe farm labor quoation. A garden con­test was held with Mrs. Wark. Mr*. CIoo Bell and Mrs. Miller as win­ners of prizes.

Bert Bollngbroko dLscuA.sed war garderw, atid answered ma iy ques­tions In connection with the same. Refre.ilimenl* were .-.crved at tho close o f Ihe meeting by a commit­tee and some of the le(io\’er* from the wOe were sold after which they vUlted ftwhUe.

The refreshments were served by Mr*, Anlauf and Mn, Metz.

ThU Orange, Incldenully. held ft benefit card party foe the Red Cron, and coUectod in.2a for ihat worthy orsanlsaUon. There were H tables ot pinochle In play. Fifteen Idaho products prixes were awarded. Th committee wa.s Mrs. R. C. Wark. Mrs. William'Woods and Mrs. doe Bell.

$100 Check M inus Funds Draws FineOOODINO. March 4 — Dob Pow-

ell was returned to Ooodtng Satur­day from Idaho FalL-» by Ooodlng county sheriff. Clair King, for a hearing on charges o f paaalng a HOC check without funds in Uie bank to Jim Smith In payment for apple.-i.

Judge H. D. Jackson ordered Pow­ell to pay Uic amount o f iho cheek, court coit.s and 125 fine. Powell wos r.Ull being held Monday evening pending jmymeni of Judgment.

Powell hiui been working in and out of Idaho Falls a.s ft triickcr sell­ing produce. He was apprehended on a return trip to that city.

DECLO

And Kimb«rly Orange had Uie pleasure ot listening to the Prexl- denfs "fireside chat’* night as they convened for their regular meeting. The Ormnge went on record as far- oriog the change to Padflc ataadard Utne as w many of the Oranges are doing, araoge roted to Join Cxcel- alor. Hansen, Pleasant Valley and put ®n an aucUon lor the^benent of the'Red Cross, at a date to be set later.

Mr. and Mrs. Dooald DUt« aad

Wartime Waikiki--Beaulie9 Still Sunbathe N E W D iG S IO R E OPENED M B O H L

BOHL, March 4 — Modem In all details, U>e new El-Say Drug store at the comer o( Main and Broe^- way. owned by Claude O. Kaelin and Waller Ljon. registered phar- maclala, opened to ft large throng Saturday,

Baskets of flowers, courtesies o( business houses of Buhl, lined the walls and stood upon the counters an floor. Receiving; customers were the two genial proprietors and Mrs. Wanettft O’Reilly, who returned last week from Colton, Calif, and will be ftfflUated wiUi the store. Also assisUng was Pat Hamilton, who Is employed by the store.

Mra. Clauds O. Kaelln and Mrs. Walter Lyon were hcetessca during the day. receiving friends and e.s- cortlng Uiem through the atorc and pre.scrlpUOR department. Compli­mentary gifts were given to ciu* totncra.

Riley Awlerscn has Rone to Ari- tona where he will spend the next monlh.

Mr. and Mrn. Robert P . Plshcr and Ei.slI, and dauRhtecs, Leone

and Lots, have relumed to Uielr home In Decio after being CAlled Rcxburg to attend tho funeral of their father and grandfother. Rolj- ert Flst\er, who wi\s B3 year: oUl, and who had vl.-ilted In DecIo n num­ber of times with hts son and fnmlly. Mrs. Lucinda Olsen returned to her home qt Ogden last ftlday after vis- lUng al the home of her dauahler, Mrs. Harold Anderbcrg.

Don Olllelt has relumed to liLs adiool work at the Brigham V ouiir university at Provo after spending few days wlUi relaUves.

J. L. Hun-saker. who has spent the pa-st monUi visiting nl the home his sister. Mrs. Hyrum Lewis. 1. turned to his home at Starrlis Ferry rccenUy.

Mr*. Thedford C. Mnrlon was en tcrlalned recently at a pink and blue shower at the home o f Mrs. John Hill.

Mr?. LotUo Winn haa returned to her home In Paul alter vlilUns sev­eral days with her daughter. Mrs. Charles Oatklll.

Mr. and. Mrs. Bill Dalton have moved to Burley.

Mrs, Olivia Bantier ipenl last week in Salt Lake wllh relatives and friends.

Friends In Decio received word of the deaUi of Mrs. Henrletia M. Bel* lows, whoso funeral waf held In Nampa Saturday. Her dauuhter. Mr*. Oay Fellows Nielson. Decio. was wlUi her mother when she died,

Mrs. Wesley Monson. Sitlt Lake. Is here visiting relaUvw anti friend*,

Mra. Robert McConnell and clill- dren are vUillng In Wendell at the home ot Mrs. McConnell's mother.

Eldon Koj-le. shlh grade teacher, went to Spanish Fork. UUh, Friday to attend the luntral of his crantS- moUier. Mr*. Anna Lewis Is teaching during hi* abscnce.

‘Single Gei-m’ Seed May Cut Beet Expense

Single germ beet seed balls will be planted on an experimental basis

. looAV 325 acres In the .Twin dl-strlcl thU scasorf, Harry A.

Elcoek. Idaho manager of the AmaU snmaied Sugar company,, said thb afternoon.

SuRor bed seed ball* contain on tho averago more than one germ each, Elcock pointed out. This menus . Uint regular seed, when planted, may produce several seed- linns which must be finger thinned In order to obtain a single stand of several strong plants,

SUy End lUnd Thinning '"Tills new single germ develop-

nieni may cvenlually make possible the elimination ot all hand thinning of .'URar beet plants." E3cock said.

Mn.li of Uie segmented seed will be planted on five-acre plots so that rrsuliji can be carefully checked. 'Ilie Amalsatnaied' company has purdin-sed 20 special drills for the handling of thl* single germ seed ball. The seed will be segmented In OKdcn on machinery constructed for this purpose by Vera Jensen.

Tlie segmented method was first dhcovered last winter by Roy Baln- er. a.ssoclat« agricultural engineer at the- University of California ag­ricultural .experiment staUon. The first device for breaking the beet seed pods Into segments, cadi con­taining approximately one germ, wa* built a year ago. More recent developments now make the process commercially practicable.

Can Use Hoe OermhiaUon t r ia l s comparing

whole seetls with the new sheared

Burley Boy Wins District Oratory

BURLEV. March «—Tommie Oru- well, Burley high achool atuderit, won fln t place in the fifth district American Legion oratorical conlcst held at the local high school Wed­nesday night. enUillng him to a trip to tho suito conlcst in northern Idaho the latter pari of March.

Bill March. T*ln Falls, placed second aftd Norma Darrow. Ca.sUe- ford, was third. Seven conte*Uintii competed from Decio. Twin Falls, Ca.sUeford, Heybuni. Rupert. Kim­berly and Buriey.

Contest Judges were O. W. Paul. Rupert, fifth dLsiricl American Le­gion commander: J. 13. Fridley, su­perintendent of Paul schools, and Louis A. Soderberg, Burley high school teacher. .

EDEN

sugar beets planted with these seg­mented seeds has been entirely done with a long-handled triangular shaped hoe. which greatly speeds the thinning operation.

"A final stand of 130 beets per 100 feet of rows was obtained wllh no finger Uilnnlng." Elcock said. 'The use of segmenting seed will also permit more succtsiful crois- blocklng. and thus further decrease the hand labor required for beet culture."

ALBINO, MUSKRAT.S M A l^ , Ida.('March 4(A>-Three

albino muskrauVhave been trapped thb year by Leonard Hughfks. Fleas, ant View, VemctttfB, Rich, state con- servaUon officer, report.s. •

The fur wa.s White. '

—ARE YOU—troubled with alnus InfecUon, mucous, colitis, faulty dlges- UoaT B ee- ______

D R * H U i I ilU Main ATcnae Weet

FAIRFIELDMr. and Mr*. Don Bntucher ....

Ihc parent* of a dnuKhier bom Tuesday. Feb. 20, at Uie Ooodlng hosplUl.

Forest Ranger Wallace s.tllng. Hailey, gave a talk before the high school *tudtnt» Friday'and ^howed moving pictures of fo m t and eon- servatlon scenes.

J. O. Burdette has returned from a three week.s' trip to his naUve slate of Oklahoma where he at­tended to business mailers and vWted relatives.

Miss Hazel Clemmetu. College ef Idaho student, Is subatltuUnK for tu-o weeks in the high school here for Mrs. Frankla Barnhart, who t*convalesclnB front an lllnM-,.

Mr. and Mrs. L. E. MdCU accompanied by Luclle and iTi Graham, mado a trip to Oolse the week-end.

TRAILERSWo ipMtaUce In bnUdlnt 4-wbeel mbber tired wagon trailers that may ^ B*ed for ellher tann wagona er trailer* . . . atock tnuiert . . . ether apeela) tnll- m . Let u dcslrn *» trailer to fl( yosr needs:

T A R RA U T O W R E C K IN G CO.

rbcaa (71

Mr. and Mre. Elbert Hamilton and family and Mr. and Mrs, Carl Ocorge left Saturday for Seatlle and olher western points, Mr. and Mra. Oeorue went to sec their son, OarUi. who la In the navy, and Mr. aQ;tj Mr*. Hamilton, to visit their sonr Junior.

The Just-A-Mere Briduc club met last week at Uie'home of Mrs. Gor­don Newbry. Ouer.ts were Mra. T. J. Hanks, Mrs. Delmar Jones, Mra. Jack Qocrtzen and Mra. Price. Prises wero -uwarded lo Mm. Wll- llard Lattlmer, Mra. Carias Knlfonp and Mrs. Ooertzen and the all'

‘. to Mrs. Harold Fisher, r, and Mnt John Claiborne, la , who hoa tpent some time

In Oolconila, Nev.. were recent vtslt- :s of Mr. and Mrs. Julias Swcn.son. Anyone having books to donate to

Uie army ond na\-y may leave ihcm at tho Hawley ilore.

Relief society of the L.D.S. church met last wCek at the home of Mra. Raymond Henry. Mrs, Henry had Charge of Uie nodal sen'lce leason.

Mrs. Laurft McMlllen, Alaska and Mra, H. C. Lemons, Canby. O e.. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reynolds. Mrs. McMlllen and Mrs, Lemons are slstera of Mr. Reynolds, They were called here by tho serious Illness of ^{r. Reynolds, who l,s In Twin Falls hospital, but reported Improved,

EARLY SPEED-UP ASKED ON A i S

WASHINGTON. March 4 (>D—An immediate speed-up In arms produc­tion to an output even greater than Pre.sldeiit Roo.sevelfa goal 'was ord­ered yesterday by War ProducUon Chief Donald M. Nelson.

Strejalng Uic desperate urgency of ie war slluaUon. NeUon colIe<l for

nround-thc'clodc producUon lo boost output 25 per cent on all cxlsUru; machines and launched a four-point promoUon campaign for full labof- manngement cooperauon.

A.1 outlined by the producUon chief in a radio address last night, Uie campnlRn Involves:

1. E.stabllshment of Joint labor- management committees In each wivr pltknt to direct producUon "up lo and beyond Uie Prc.sldcnt's goals."

3,' As-slfnunent of production quotas > each prlmah' producer, wlUi {!*- t’Klay scoreboards in eoch ahop,3. Awards of merit to wottaven

"miiklnK Rpeclal conlribuUons grcaler protlucllon."

4. Speeches and oUier reports, by ioMlers and *alIors who use the wraiwiui, to Uie workmen who build Uiem.

Nelson called upon labor leaders to RO Uie limit In adjusting dlffer- ei'.ce.s wlUiout'flopping production mill uakcd mixiingement to remove any caii.se of Just complaint by workmen.

Australia G ir d s For Early Thrust

By Jap InvadersMELBOURNE, Australia, March

4 </T> — Thousands ot Australlan.-s were Ilablo to a labor draft Uxlay— on,army terms and at army pay— as the •ommonwealUi enforced droaUc new measured to gird against an Invasion thrust its leader* be­lieve may not be fax distant.

Tlie new warume edlcta were aimed at profiteering from the les­sons Australia ha* learned from tho vnr In Uiff PacificaoMr^tJio urgent

(lion millUuy cooperaUon.Theso were aummarlicd in yester­

day's report of Major General Gor­don Bennett, ttie Australian com­mander at Singapore who escaped the Japanese,

Besides calling civilians for com­pulsory; service, Uie govenunent also abolUhed major hoUdoyt and welded the Australian Imperial forces. Uie famous volunteer army. Into one unit «-lth Uie mlllUa and

permanent garrison.

•READ TIMES-NEWa WANT ADS,

-POTATO-GROWERSW e A rc Always In Ihc

Market for PotatoesPhon* Ui fer Ijitnt Market

quautloni fttACK DRIOUT II. J. HTAVCD

Twin Falli Flierrtion* 111 Phoa* tt

Buyers for H. H. Zlmmerll

ALBIONThe Tuefliay bridge club met la.st

week at thl home of Mrs. Bernelce Rhodes. ClBb guests Included Mra. C. E. Slmouon and Mrs, James A. Tracy. Mrs. R. H. Snyder and Mrs. J. Eftrl Powers won prise.s.

Mra. Jiune* A. Tracy entertained Mrs. Clifford MulUkan. Mra. Oeorno Cronkhlte and Mra. F. E. Woodle nt ft bridge luncheon at her home Fri­day.

COMMON SENSE., proved (houfcnds upon

' ^ t a r f t l

L ^ a il-v eg e t a b leLAXATIVE

• In Nn (Nature's l^emedy) Talilct*. there are n« chemical*. n« mineral*, n- .................. NRTablelaa: ••phenol derivative*. NR Tablela are dif­

ferent—o(f di/Iertnt. Purilr ptiiioblt—a combination of 10 vegetable Ingredients

today. . . or larger economy aizc.M/I TO-M/OMT; TVMOflHOtr AUttOHT

TUm tOWPTl<o>ttd]

5 /You trust if* quality

/ M nia In I c « o ld Coe».Colo a thing IhoJ I t g o o d -o pui»,

ftom e drink w ilh tho quality of g«nuln« goodnci*.

Cocc^CoIa dalights y o u r taite, y o u r ttiirs) and leaves

yOM h a p p lly 'r e fr o ih o d . ' r

' lo xTn o UM6 11 *v i.w o »n ’i .c r th» c o c ft .e o i* «

T W IN F A L L S CO C A -C O LA B O T T L IN G C O M P A N Y

I

Wcdncadny. M urch 4, 1942 TM ES-N EW S, TWIN FALbS, IDAHO■ - .'ft ' P a g e S O T ^

SOCIAL. EVENTSa n d C L ' t r

Women Leaders of G. O. P. Confer at Dinner

National, s ta le and county intere-stA o f the RepubKcan party w ere represented a t the speakers’ table last niRht a t the P ark hotel, when .M iss Marjon E. M artin, assistant cha irm an 'o f th e Republican national com mittee, was hon*' ored a t d inner. L e ft to r igh t are Mrs. C. H . KrenRel, who read mcsAasrcs from Sen. John Thomas,' Coni;. H enry C.

Dworshak and E x*G ov. C. A . BoltoU scn ; M iss M artin , Bnn;:or, Me., M rs. Em m a Clouchek.. national Republican committeewornan fro m Idaho; Miss M . Izettn McCoy, pre?s- ident o f the T w in FnlLs county Republican Womcn'H clulj, and Mrs. Carlisle Sm ith, Caldwell, s ta te chairman o f the Republican party .

(Tlmes-Ncws fboto and Cpcravitif)

Mean Business When You Sign In War Work, Says GOP Head

By JEAN DINKELACKER W ljn t th is cou n try needs in il.i w w e ffo r t is m ore enroll­

m ent and leas rcR istration— Icsa fligTiinjr o f name.s and then not backing: i t up w ith action. ^

Th is is cspcciully, true as fur as the women arc conccrncd. accordin;; to M ias M arion E . Martin, adsiHlnnt chairman o f the Republican national com mittee, who addressed a public mectinR a t the Am erican LcRion hall last night.

“ W hen a wom an enrolls fo r some phase o f em ergency war w ork o r vo lu n teer services, sho should re ga rd tha t aig- naturo as a solem n pledge to do the .task sho has signed up to do— when called upon to do iL ” . .

No Tine for AlibU M!u Martin, whoso handsome. In-

Ullleent rnce tA trequenUy Ughlcd br * ready', nUtnulaUng amlle, U'U ip«ikbiE In her room st the Pork howl. Jual before iihe went down- •talri to the banquet room to aU- drcM 110 Republican party workers ••orf the record."

ah« w u not iiieaklna ot lust part of the country when she rather •'apaakcd" Uie womeo who are w ea«»r to "do »oajethln«" and never got beyond the reglJtrttUon phjise ot their -war worlc.

“One woman w u boasUns that SOD ivomcn ot her particular organl- utioQ had registered lor war work.•nd ya( when t. t«ak that required 10 women to acconpllAh, came up, more than 800 at that croup were called bctore the 10 were tecuied." she protested.

Blae Priat Needed tJaUl the O.OJO. give* the women

ot America a blueprint ot what. Is wanUd o( them, " i t Is toolhh to get all excited.” the added. ‘‘Ixit the women bo merro etilclent home­makers. betur mildness and proles- alonal pcrsoni, on their Job*; let them conUnue their -biuiy work— knitting, sewing, nutrition, first aid, lor the present," was her advice.

Asked about the probable con- •crlpUon of women. Miss Martin de­clared, "1 do not think the women would accept conwrlpUon until we have exhauAted all mao power. Of course U>ey are going to do whatever they can to help wUi thU war, but •our main Job It learning to adapt ourselves to changed conditions, to ‘keep Uie homo fires burning.’ That may not sound dramatic, but It's eMcnUal. because live American way

" of lUe means a proper home back- gfound.“ , \

Miss Martin, who represonU the best Wellesley college traditions, ad­justed her charm bracelet, unper­

turbed by -the hectic Ume nho hod In getung to T » ’ln Knlla.

By Plane and Train She miucd the train at tipokanc:

took a plane to Boise, where U;o train was Waiting for her, and came on to Shoshone, where she was'met by local friends and whisked to Twin Palls.’ ■

Not a hair ot her silvery gray pompadour was out of place. It sweeps up from a pronounced wid­ow’s peak, ond Is one ot her most dLiUngulshlng charncterlsUcs,

SjwiilAneous. witty she Is a. Scotcli-Irlsh a« her ancestry Im piles, A woman who has "found lier poUUcat tongue," elie Is positive, but positive wltii dignity, i t explalM why Ml.« MarUn. who has served two terms os state senator In Maine. Is regarded as one of Maine’s leod- Ing citizens.

Introduced by Mrs. Emma Clou- chck. national Republican commlt- teewoman. Miss Martin's remarks at tJje dinner session were "oft the ord."

A( Blnner Meeting Mlu u . uctta McC«y. president ot

UiB Women’s Republican club of T*'ln Falla county, sponsor ot MIM Martin’s visit to T»'ln Falls, wel­comed the guests.

Paying a compliment to party leaders who had assembled from a wldo area ot this eectlbn ot the state, Miss MeCoy first Introduced Mrs. Carlisle SmlUi, Caldwell. stat« chalman, and Uieh observed, ’ e r e ' no one present who Is not entitled

IntroducUon tor good work In U\e Grand Old Party,"

Mrs. c . IL Krengel read tnessage5 trom Ben. John Thomas. Cong. Henry p. Dworshak and Ex-Oov. C. A. Boltolfsen, sent to Miss MC' Coy In response to her Invitation to. attend the dinner. All expressed regret at being unable to attend.

Cong. Dworshak's message Includ' ed. "Our nation today faces many

ItIs essential that aU p&UloUo Amert* cans contribute unselfishly to our war effort. We must not be un> mindful of the necessity ot main­taining our two-party aystem, ,ot government."

Ladies’ Aid Group Sews for Welfare

QaUt blocka 'K tn cut and wwcd lor Community ’Weltaro CouncU at the meeting o f the South divi­sion of the Immanuel Lutheran LAdles' Aid society last week at the home of Mn: Edwin Holtzen.

Member* present Included Mrs. Edwin Bilera. Mrs. August Ude, Mrs. Otto Ehlera. Mrs. Ed Dohse, Mrs. R. Martens. Mrs. Edgar Ehlen. Mrs. MarUn Holtzen, Mrs. Bertha Wellhousen, ‘U n . H. 'WIU and Mrs. a . siren.

Oue.its included Mrs. A. Holt- ren. Mrs. George Pubanx, Rev. and

-isn . M. H. Zaget and Miss Vema Holtzen.

¥ ♦ •Turkey Dinner for

Lucky Twelve ClubLucity Twelve club memben and

their husband* wera ■entertained by Mr. and Mr*. Jack Winkle and Mr.

' and Mn. James Blakley at a turke; dinner Saturday evening. The ta- blu were decorated with mlnlaluro American flags and patrioUo nap. kins were used.

. -.Oefensa-stamp* vera'awarded ai Plnochl# prtrt* to Mr. and Mr*. R. emalley and Mr. and Mrs. a. Mc- Olnnis, and tnvellng prlta.to Mr. ind Mr*. Ed Crjwfonl.

Children in War Topic o f Adult

Education Head“Children in Wartime" wna the

topic of an addreu by Mrs. Julia Harrison, Boise, state adult educa* tion leader, at the study group meet­ing ot the Waahlngton Parent- Teacher. association Monday after­noon at the school. The study group session followed an executive board meeting.

During her address. Mrs. Harri­son told ot precautions to be taken to keep chlldrtn trom being fright­ened. and -gavf recommendation* for keeping them Interested In nor­mal, BTeT7d*y living.

A round Uble discussion tolldwed her address. Mr*.-Ralph Palmer pre­sided as study group leader.

Mrs. Barry :Baisch prenlded at the executive board meeting, when It was announced that the regular associaUoa—would.—mtet_.14Qn4a5, March p, at 3 p, m. Children of the school, directed by their teach­ers, will present the program.

¥ * * • ■ ■ UCENSE QUANTED

SALT UUCE crry, March 4 (m A marriage Ucenke was issued Tuen- d*7 to George Milford Sparks, 48, jnd Muriel B. Yearsley, 27. both o f Carey, Ida.

Mrs. Kleffner Nominated for. PTA Presidency

Report of Uie nomlnatlnK coin- mlltco was pre.iented ot n mceUiiK ot the Twin Foils Parcni-Tcach»r ojuoclotlon council Monday night the homo of Mrs. J. R. Nellsen as follows:

For prcoldent. Mrs. F. O. Kleffner; flrnt vlcc-prtsldcnU Mr.s. D. P. Groves; spcond vice-president. Mra. Albert inama; ixeasurer. Mrs. Rob­ert Milner; secretory, Mrs. Floyd Lincoln.

Mrs; Kleffner presided ond Airs. Lionel Dean wo* acting secretary'.

Hummer Kound-UpSummer round-up wa.i announced

and all local P.-T.A. units are urged to begin summer round-up plans. Tills U a feature of the Notional Congress heolUi progrom. a dieck- up to determine Uie physical flt- Htsa of children who -wJU enter school next September.

It WM moved that Uie council in­vestigate the possibility ot securing xlmple Identtflcollon devices tor children. Next broadcast program was announced tor Saturday at 10:30 a. m.. in charge ot the Lincoln school.

The council voted to send the newly fleeted president to the sti convention at Nampa April 14-16.

P.-T.A. MembershipAnnouncement wa* made that It

requires only an average of <lght more members In each ot the 1B7 ^.-TA. associations In the state to exceed last year'* memberahip, the greatest yet for Idoho.

The question ot sen’lng a* block mothers In time of emergency was dbcussed and the group agreed to work in close cooperation with lire raid wardens already appointed.

Missionaries of LDS Church Are Honored at Meet

' Honoring Jay Farmer and Bill McArthur, »1io will enter the' mis­sion training school at Salt Lake City March 9. a mls-'.lonary testi­monial meeting wo* held by the llrst and ucond wardfi ot the L. B. a church at Uie Twin Falla stake tabernacle Sunday evening.

Mr. Farmer, *on of Mr. and Mr*. Fred C. Former, will serve In the eastern states mission, and Mr. Mc­Arthur, son ot Mr. and Mrs. L. W. McArthur, wiU serve In the Span­ish mission wlUi headquarters at El Paso. Tex.

John Wells, who left today to be­gin duUes in Uie U. B. marine air corps, w u also accorded tecosnitlon at the meeting Sundaj’ tor hi* work in Uie wars u -. clialnnim of the lesser priesthood. He U the son ot Mr. and Mrs. Alma Welb.

“n ie program was conducted by E3wood Whitehead with congrega- Uonal slsglng led by Arlan BasUan and Jay Sprocher at the organ.

J. W. Rlchlns offered prayer, fol­lowed by Ulk* by Bishop J. C. Fred- erlckson. Jay Fam er and hi* J*- ther. Junior Farmer » ttutn-pet 'solo and talk* were. given by Mr. McArthur and Bishop N. W. Arrington.

WUtoa Pock sang -Service," ac- wrapanlod by Ferd Haruda.,an<l Mr. well* gave a brief farewell Ulk. Cloaing prayer by Lyman Schenk.

Wayside Stages ' Wsh Program

An informal iriah pragram ... honor of St. Patrtck'a day was pre- ■etited by Mn. Henry Quaat at the Wayxide chib meeting Tuesday at Ui« hone of Mr*. Leo amiUi. Mrt. Wayne Sooggln* was a club guett.

Ur*. Quast aUo caodixt«d tho brief butinraa meeUng In the ab- w o of Uie president, and Mr*, amltb gan the Rorat rederatioo r*«

Soph Girls Win Progi-am Praise A t League Meet

Preieutln®* tliclr Ilrat general Olrl.i’ lengue progriim this year. Aoplioinore alrLi of Tskln Palls High .'.chool won the praise, "beat-pre- inired proKrnni of Uie yen-." wlUi their novel pnirlotlc droniotlKktlon.i with girl-'.’ elioriis ticcompanlnient Tuesday nlteriioon nt the High Kchoot BUdltorUim.

Appenriince of Supt. A. W. Mor- ..jn, wlio naiiR -Tlic Tnimpeter." nccompftnlcd by MLvt Marjorie Al­bertson. w’os UioroUKhly cnjoyeil by Uie glrl5. During a brlct business session. Morgftrct Dctwcllcr on- nounced tliat the annual mothcr- dnughter bonquct would' be sen'cd March 31.

"Marcli Mllltalrc," n piano duet by Martha Barnett iind Corine Mc- UeUi, opened Uie proKrnm, Ellen Goodykoonta |>ortrnytd the sleeper and imOKcne Dcntli, the bugler, when Uiu soplioniorc clioriu ; "Oh! now I Uatc to Get up In MornUib'." “ "d Jco'i Llndeinur Katy and Bob Mills, the JioWler boy. when the chorus satig "K-K-Koty."

-Last Cla«s" Presented ^DramaUaiUon of •Tiie La.it Cln.u"

followed Mr. Morns'.-solo. Belly Joe Knox wiis Uie tcocher, iiiid pupils were Eva Stokes, Orphn Stokes, Vnneita Paddock. Elaine Durllng. Shirley McDowcll, Harriet Haller. Virginia McBride. Marjory Hitt. .MtidKc Hayward. Vlrln Bell. KaUlIeen Kins. Martha Bnrnrtt, Alice Pe«Ky Lu Lint*, l-'iicFreeman. Ror.emar - Seaton und June McBride,

Evelyn Shlrck was the mother when Uie choriw .iftng "Dear Mom.” and Marlnn .Murplii'. Gladys Hyde and Edith Dillon portrayed the nurses while "Angels of Mercy" wa aung.

PaUent# were Mary RuUi King. Nadine Boettcher. Vlrla Bell. Doro­thy Kuhn. Margaret Ryman. Doro- thy^Halpln. Colleen Pennock nrtd Lucille Connerly.

Vocal SololitGloria Richardson sang the nob

part of ■•Just a Baby's Prayer at Twilight." accompanied by Lois Williams and Uie choir. Mias Albert­son directed all chorus numbers.

Mtis aeorgla Dean, sophomore tmlt sponsor, ond Mias Florence Rees orranged the dramatization •cenes.

ConcluiJlnB number was "Olrb ot America." written by Dorothy Von Engelen and sung by Barbara Rah- dall. after which all girLi Joined In singing the original number.

Sophomore student* In charge Uie program Included unit officers, chairmen, and Margai'et Froder, Barbara Price. Charlotte Tliompton ond Elaino Durllng.

Sweets Sent to Service Center

By Norsk UnitA box o f cookies and handles—

tor-which the Norsk group Li fam­ous—v u packed and sent to the United BUtes service men's cenUr In Portland. Ore.. when the club met last week at the home of Mrs. Uvla Westby, Buhl.

Mr*. Olat Halverson was program chairman.' ,Mr*j Ame RomHietvedt won the stunt game. Mrs. W. Hintz won honors In the punle contest. Card* itcf* played later., and Mrs, Westby served refreshments in two course*. Red Cross work was dis­cussed. The group win meet at the home o f Mr*. Halverson the last Friday in March.

port. NomlnaUons were posted in pceparaUoo tor -the elecUon at the -ext.meeUng'. «

Contola. guessing games and nov­el relay* ln«the Irish theme were conducted by Mr*. Quasi wlUi Mr*. E tn •Doueherty and Mr*, Quincy Norria winning prttes.

Mr*. Blalae Votburg ga\-e a read- (ng oa the shamrock, and refresh­ments, In an Irish moti;. were served br Mr*. Albert PhQipPj, assistad by Mn.BaUn Korrl*.

Club proposes Cancellation of .BPW Gathering

T«ln Falls 3 u*lneoa and Pro- feuinnal Women's club meeUng Monday night at the Park hotel, Po.«ed a rcsoluUon recommending Umt the suite convenUon not be held next June,

Re.>.oluUon read In part: "Since IhLi year's session of Uie state con­vention does not Involve establish­ment ot pollele.1 or elecUon ot of. fleers, Twin Falls Business and Pro- trMlonal Women'.i club recommends that the slate conVcnUon. schedued for June, 1042. at Sun Valley, not bo held, and recommends further Ihai greater emphasis bo placed or district meellngs."

Mrs, Frankie K. AlworUi. presi­dent, conducted the meeting, follow- Inu dinner.juid Mrs. Coro Steveai. tlnancc Uriflrman. was in charge of Uie iirogram.

.Mrv. llarrUon tipeak*Mr.v Jiillo M. Harrison, adult fam­

ily life coaiultont of the state bu- reavi of vocnUonol educaUon ot Ida­ho, RUMt Rpeokcr. spoke on Wo- men's Relation to War Needs.-

Aiiiiroxlnmlely 30 member* of the dull had their tinger prints taken by KrnneUi Borcloy of Uie Twin Pall.'! police force. ThU Is In line wltli Uie club'B defense progrnm, since 11 hft.i bern pointed out that flnper prints ore the easiest menni of lilenlltlcatlon In lime of emer­gency, *

.MLvi Be.v,le Corlf'On led Uie coni- munlty^lnRlng. with Mrs. Effle Rlherd Hinton at the piano.

Mr<, Lleuru Li:cke. souUi central Idaho dl.ilrlct B. P, W. president, Gooding, announced thal n dl.ilrlct conference will be held April 10 at Goortins. the time lo be onnouneed loier.

Aceomponylng Mrs. Lucke to the menlng were Sllss Moreland, dis­trict KecreUiry. aiid Mrs. Day. Jer-

•ne, a dl.ilrlct director,Otlicr Buest.1 were Mrs. Florence

Schuremnri. aporvsor. and MIm Inez Alartra. Mrs, Fmnk Wells, Mla.i Ln- Vonne Lowe and Miss Betiy Han­sen, neU Oamnift club mertibert, and M t« Alrilft Seckler and MUs M. Butler.

Ttie nominating committee re­ported two llekets, election U> take place In April,

Candidate Named Nominations are a* follows: Ticket Nn, 1. prefddent. ML«

Myrtle Anderson: Orst vlce-presl- denl, Mr,i, Flo narrlngton; second vice-president, M l.« Lora Roberti; recording »reretar>'. Ml.is Gela Miller: corre.ipondlng secretnrj'. Mrs. Genevieve Dwight; trcMur^r. MLm liny SmlUi.

Tlckei No, 2. president. Mrs, Betty Hnll (nominated from the floor); flmt vice-president, Mrs. Elliabetli SmUli; second vice-president. MLii Mildred GUI; recording secrelarj', Mr , Ha?.rl LrlRhton; correspond- Ing !.ecretnr>’. Mr:;, Mnrgnret Peck: treo-mrer. Mrs. Flora Dumas,

Announcement was made that t club p.'irty will be held .March 10 at the Idaho Power company audi­torium, to which members and guesti are lnvlte<l, Cardn and oUicr games will be played.

.y. if.

Possibility of Credit School Is

Topic of SpeechPos.ilblllty ot conducting a credit

school was dbcur-'.cd by A. M. Llght- fooCat a meellnh' of the Twin Falls Credit Women’.i Urciikfiuit yester­day mornhiK i»t Wray's cafe.

Benefits that would derive trom attending such a school were enum­erated by the iii>enkrr. "ne curious In your Job; Iciirn more about your organlMUon than just the Job In which you hap!>en to be working. I t will pay you dividends," wo* his advice.

Miss M, B, Kocli, crcdit mnnaaer ot Ui8 C. C. Andcr;.on company, waj o special guest.

Mcmberslilp and other club mat­ter* werff dlscuascd. Next meeUng will be In charge of MIrj Penny HoMldoy. U was announced.

Because the moon wns sUll up when Uie club met for breakfast, the probability ot changlnK the Ume ^t meeUng was discussed Informally.

B. and H. Club Sets Red Cross Behefit

Plans tor a Red Cro.is benefit parly, to be held Friday evening. Match 13, at the BeiRer schctol hou.ic were made by B. and It. club member* at their meeting la.it week ot the home ot Mrs. Florence Carter.

A pot-luck dinner will be sensed . . 7 p. m, and pinochle and bingo will be the diversions later. Each family Li to bring Its own table service. All proceeds will go to the Red Cros.i,

Mrs. Harvey Gartner. Mrs. Homer Hudelson and Mrs, E. Orlff guest* of club.

Recent Bride Rhea Williams Bride Of Pvt. Hubert Peck

Quiet flimplicity m arked the tapcrlisht m arriaffe o f M is * . Rhcft Jo WilHama, d aush tcr o f Mr. and Mrs. M . A . W iUlams, Goodingr, and H u b ert Peck, eon o£ M rs. M arfforct Reck and W lllori'Pcck, T w in Fa lls , Tucaday evening a t the hom e o f the britlegroom'H grandm other, Mrs. Lcnna B, W i l s o n , 219 E igh th avenue north . R ev . G. L . Clark, pastor o f the P res ­byterian church, p erfo rm ed •

Nuptials Unite Miss L. Slatter, Willard Hensley

Miss Lila Slatter. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Slatter, Filer and Ttt-ln Fall.1. becamc the bride of WIU lard Frank Hensley, Hailey, ot rites prrSormed at 3 p. m. Sunday ot the Churcli of Uie Naxartne In Twin Falls.

Ilev. L. D, SmlUi. pa.itor. pcr- fornied tlie cerenlony In the presence of relatives and close friend* ot the couple.

M1.1S Clara Slalter. sLiter of Uie bride, was brldewnold, and Clyde SlalU-r. broUicr of the brJde, wns best-man.

For her wedding, Uie bride cliose a street dress wlUi shee/ blue top. black skirt, black accessorle.i. and r conttige of roMbud.1 and swertpea.1.

Miss T>7ler Horp. Filar, and Miss Marjorie Blatter. Twin Falls. sLiter of Uie bride, play’ed Lohengrin's wedding march as a piano and vio­lin duet, and Mbs Blotter sang "1 Lave You Truly."

Mr. and Mrs. Hcn.iley left i. sliort wedding trip, attcr which they will be at home In Hollej- where Mr. Hensley Li employed.

* 3f.

Farmerettes MeetTlie Farmerettes were entertained

at a deverl luncheon Friday by Mrs, Carl Boyd. Next meeting will be o pot-luck luncheon scs.Mon at Uie home of Mr.i. Ernest Ullcry who recently moved to Buhl.

If Your Chilli Catches

Cold Listen--listen to millions o f experienced mother* and relieve mlserie* wl th the IMPROVEO VJck* treatment that take* only 3 minutes und make* good old Vick* VopoRub give m m nun m t ttm ni rPACTS 3 WAYS ATONCBtobringtaief.

f tm m m to upper

aicln*lT»por*. m n u m chest *nd taek Riilace* Uka ft ^WMttlngpoulUee..

vnew rw «Motocosecou^TdScve

To set thla improved treatment... Just m***age VepoRub for 3 minuta ONBAisCasweUu throat and chest. Ftr B«ttirlMaltt ^eo tpm d thick • bycr on chest and \#ICKS cover with ««tmed ▼ Va»oRu» d o th .T ty li l^ ^ V »lm n m 4 'Kn

Mn. W'llUrd Frank Hensley, who wa* Miss LIU BUtter, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. D. B. Slatter. Filer and Twin Fall*, prior (a her marriage Sunday In Twin Falls.

(Tlmes-New* Engraving)

REQUESTAll social, club or calendar

news should be tclcpUoned or brought to Ihe Tlmes-News office by 10:30 a,.m. or earlier each day for Inclanlon In that day's l.iaue. Items tor Uie Sundoy Lisue musl be received by 10 p. m. Friday or before 4:30 p, m. Saturday.

Tliank youl

the flingle rinj? cercm ony a t 8 p. m. '

The coupic chosc to be un­attended, und only the bride and bridegroom ’B purcnt.'i anti h is grandmother witnc8.scd the ritci).

Vowi Before FireplaceVows were cxcliangcd before the

llreplace. where llghtod white ta­pers nanked o bouquet ot wlilte car- naUon* on Uie monUlplece, Light­ed toper* were on Uie nearby piano and elseri'here about the room.

Varied arrangement* ol imapdrag- .jis and daffodil* were oUier floral decorative note* at the V/llson home.

A spray ot snapdrogon* ond light­ed white Uper* flanked Uie decor­ated wedding coke at the loce-cov- ered refreshment table.

For her marriage, the- bride .. pastel blue plaid 'spring sulL Her corsage was of pink rosebuds.

The bridegroom wore his army un­iform,

Colorado StudentMm. Peek alunded St. Marj’'e-of-

Uie-Wasatch at Salt Lnke City and will return to Denver next Sunday to complete her first year at Colo­rado Woman's college.

Mr. Peck. 0 graduato of Twin Falla high school, ottended Univer­sity of Colltomla nt Berkeley two years and Woodbury'* college In Los Ahgeles.

Fhvate. llrsl class, he Is stoUon- ed at Indian Town Oop, military reservaUon in Pennsylvania, wiUi the Ijath infantry. He came by plane fran Pennsylvania, and he and his bride will leave the last of Uie week for Salt Lake City. Sun­day he will ny back to Pennsylvania, and Mr*. Peck will conUnue to I>cn-

Calendar-Noel club will meet Tliutsday at

1:30 p. m. for dessert luncheon at the homo of Mm. Earl OHorrow.

♦ ¥ ¥Ladles' Aid society ot Immanuel

LuUieran church will meet ot 1:30 p. m. Tliursdoy. Instead of 3 p. m.. at Ui8 church porlors.

♦ ¥ ¥Presbyterian Ladles' Aid society

wlii hold llA last meeUng os a separate organUaUon . of the cliurch Tliumday nt 3:30i p. m. nt the church parlors.

¥ ¥ ¥Navy MoUier»‘ club will meet at

Uie Y. W. C. A. roonw Thursday at e p. m. for o business meeting. All oftlcers are urged to attend.

¥ ¥ ¥MounUln View school will en-

terUln Uie Shamrock dLiUlct Frl- tloy at & p. m. at the Mountain View school house. All patrons ot both districts ore invited.

¥ ¥ ¥N. A,,C. of F. S. A, ■s.’ilMioId on

open meeUng at Uie Hollister Orange hall Friday. March 0, at 2 p. m. All membcr\.,ore urged to oticnd.

District Rebekah Report Offered,

Staff InstalledReporu ot the recent 01*Lrlct

mceung pC Buhl and reorgftnlxaUon of Uie officers' sUft—mode oece*. snry by the resignaUon of Mr*. Ednft Block as new noble gnind~hlgb> lighted Primrose Rebekah lodgv meeting Tuesday night at the I. O. O. P. hall. Mr*. Cora MclUU pre­sided as noble grand pro Um.

Following reorganliaUon, Mr*. Olady# Shaw wa* insuuied a* noble grand; Mrs. Pearl Straughnr vice- grand: Mrs. Jetuile Feam*ter, chap­lain; Mr*. Ella Cogswell, right *up- porter to noble grand; Mrs. Hilda Torr. rtg'.'t supporter to Uie vice- grand; Mrs, Effle. WaUclns, left sup­porter to Uie vice-grand..

PtlrehBM) »100 Bond It was voted lo purchase a flOO

defense bond, and >18,40 wo* do­nated to the educoUona] fund.

Mrs. Arllne Kinney waa admitted lo membership.

It was reported Uiat T*-ln FoUa lodge; wlU be. host at next year'*, district meeUng. and thot Mr*. Clar* Anderson was named district presi­dent; Mn..Annett« Mahnkea, vlce- prcsldent, and Mrs. Shaw, secretary- treasurer.

Official* In attendance ot the Buhl mecUng Included Mr*. Lulu Watts, Pocatello, assembly president; Mra. Mabel Oarlsnd, 9olse, assembly sec­retary; and Mrs! Myrtle BaUantyne, Twin Polls. Mr*. Cobb*. Filer, and Mrs. Temple Ellenwood. .Buhl, wero district depuUea In attendatue.

Appear on Prognun Twin Foil* women appearing en

the program included Mr*. Klor- garet Watts, who gave a tribute to the n*g; Mrs. McIUll, who gave a popcr on "Friendship, Lovo and TruUi" and Mr*. AnderMO. who spoke on 'The Value ot District Meetlnga."

At Uie meeting Tuesday night, re- tresliment conynlttee Included Mrs. Beverly Hlckok, chairman; Mrs. Zelpha Lincoln, Mr*. Tlllle Ford, Miss Thelma KroUi and Miss LoU Kroth.

¥ ¥ ¥

■ Election Planned. ElecUon ot officers, postponed . from Monday, will be held Mon­day, Marcli 0. at Ujo Y. W. C. A, rooms. BeUi Oomma club officials ■Announced today. A pot-luck supper will be served at 7 p. m. preceding the business session;

CASH-Paid for dead, old or disabled horses, mules and cows. Call col­lect Percy Oreen at MABV ALICE TROUT FAOU

Twin Fall* Ph. C2W-J3

Van Engelens ^ '"

N O W Is the time to

buy YOUR BLANKlETSIrregu la rs from n fnm-

ous raill.

49872x84 Doubles

5*4 Pounds

/ !! I_V 55

Use The Lay-

Away Plan If You Wish!

S p e C i d l Irregulars of Beacon 0. D.

ARMY BLANKETExtra heavy for long service. They’re the ideal camp blanket i . , , . .

=Van Engelensw ■

‘ Page Eight TIMES-NEWS, TTWN FALLS. IDAHO Weanelduy, Mirdi 4, 18«

TURNER SETS NEW NORTHERN DIVISION SCORING RECORD

Bi-uiiis Rally To Triumjjli Over Rupert

/ brJlllwit ln.il.quart«r scoring punch that brouBlil llJcm out Irom behind a filx>poliiL deflcJi liut nlKhl gnv# the Twin FoJU Urulns a 32-30 trlmnph over the Huperi PirnUs In a M6«ed till plnjctl on Uio loeor court. .

nic vlcton' wfts tlie cceomJ In n row for Uie Dniitu over the J'lruio —gtncrnlly rnlcil at, Iciul n.i one Ot llie fuvorlles to take the tllstrlet champlonjililp wlicn the Clii.s.i A meet tfeti uncleru-ay licrc next Tiies- dnjr nlKlit,

■' Ud by tlie Kreal Ed Sclienclc, Cowli Jerry DellliiKcr’o ercw pii.ihcci Into R atX'polnC. Icac] Inte In the third quarter nnd U looked u tUoiiiih

U>« UJnliloluv county cliiu wouldn’t be ilopj>ed. Kupert wns In Ironl 35.I9 At l ic lU rt of the {Inal frame when Olcnn Glbb decided to quit plnytne lib man and lake part In Use ba-ilcelbnU coiital.

- Unilni ICccoverrcrforinlng Uic brilliant basket­

ball o f wliich he 1.1 cuiiablc. lie rneed under Uio basket for n pair or let'Upj to put ■l'»-ln Kall.n back tn Uie same unU Tommy Cartiiey polled n Kill shot to make the count a5-2* fo r Uupert. Then NJnx Petcr- *oi;camc In as ft subsumte und took a nice pa.y from Otto Florence to put Uio Srulai ahead. SQ-2S.

Cumey canio tliroueh with a long 'one to moke 11 38*35 and Olbb got

• ftnoUier set-up, aller D. Goff had made tho Ilupert score 27 und Twin Fftlij 30. Hero Schcnck ioulcd out and on tiie next play Mel Hulberc of Uie Z3ruliu followed lilm to Uie bcnth.. D. O off Bol nnoUier gift shot to make I t 2S for lUipert. but Florence came right back wlt i a tlp-ln and Iho count was 32-2B wlUi seconds

, to fo. Then aomcr slipped In one JU£t as Uie final whUUe blew to

' moke the final count 32-30.The outatandlng jwrformanees of

the evening were turned m by the two centers. Bchenck and Florence. Otto blanketed Uie widely-heralded Pirate center most ot the time—two o f Bchenek's three Held goals com­ing when riorenco had to step over to help a team-mate.

Kree-Throw IlccordOne ot Uie features ot iho Riunc

■was Uio brilliant free Uirow tossliiB of tho enUro Rupert club. Fog« misted the tlrst gift shot ot tiie same and the Pirates sank H con- secuUvo tosses to give Uicm a i i out of 13 record for t5ie evening. Meanwhllo tho Druln.n wcro Just average In Uils department, con- necUns on nine out of 14 attempts.

Scoring honors -went to Schcnck with 12 points—six'of Uicm on tre£ throw. »1U18 Olbb collected 11 counters—five from Uie free throw

■ line.Preliminary snw the Twin Falls

Cubj eke out 6 22-21 victory 0»er Uie Rupert reaervc.n pllcr leading 13-10 at. the half. Olmslcnd topped the

• winners «im six points, wlUlo Sta­ples picked up seven tor the losers.

■ Lineups:TWIN FALLS FO FT PF TPCartiiey. t .....— ...3 2-a 0Terry, i __________ 2 0-0 I *Florence, _________ a 2-3 2 0Glbb. B ......................Hulbert. B ... Mahoney, c Peterson, f .. DavlJ. 8 —

.0-02- 0

r>. ao ff. f — Fass. TSclirnclc. e ___H. aotf. g _____nawon. g .....Oamw, c ____

•niLla

r a IT P FTP

.1 0-0 0 2

...,S H-IS 10 30Hilf-tlmo score: Rupert 12, Twin

Fall! 11.Ofllclftls: Bond and Williams.

Top-Ranking Golf Stars Gompete in $5,000 Tourney

CT. rCTEBSUURO. Fla.. March 4 iFi— Tlie iu.'.lre of J5.000 prlM money nnd Uie necfMlly of Broom­ing their Bunc for even Ilo!tdPr fu-

■ tur# Xarf broucht prncilrnlly the nnUon'B entire ca.-'t of ••nnmr" koU pros Into action today in the an­nual St. PctersbUTK Open at the l.Akcvoo<l Countr>- club.

At lea.1t tour well known players •who have not made the winter clr- .cult — NaUonal Open Champion Cralj Wood. Squire Gene Samzen. BUly Burke and Ben LovlnK—were In tho Held of approximately 100

A»Id«5 from the purne, tho St. Peunburgh Open drew it.n Julbomr army o f alajs beeau.ic It ts a natural wamup for next werk’a invltatlon.tl four-ball tournament nt Uiaml and for.lhe Augaitft Mn- t rs champlon- «hJp,. the most hlchly regarded priaa o f the spring.

WEDNESDAY. IWAnCll * Ulnar teagoo—Alleys 1.3, Con-

cumers' l^ k e t ts. Dctvcller's No. 2; alleyi 3-4. Tlmea-Newa vs. Orten Cob; alien 6-G, Falk-Sears No, 1 vs. Pnlle-Sears No. a.

ComaiereUI leagae—Alleys 1-2. Twin Bank and Trust ts.

■ ldAh9 B a : oUeyi 3-4, Safevsy Mo. 347 TS. Truck Insurance: al- Utn * - « » Stkay n . Safe­way No. asor »ne3rs 7-®. 20-30 club

a c. ifidtfMx.

- n '

Actiori-Plus for Bruins

: ________3 1

Taylor, f ................Wren, f ____________ 3Marshlk. ■Andrews, k —-P. Jack.wn......... -.... oNewland, f ............._.lChristensen, f ..........0Fuhrman..... f ..... .....1L. Jackson, c ........... 0Klrscli. 8 ___________3Mnynord, g ........ .......'0

Mls.ied free throws: PredekInd, Turner 2. Taylor, Wren 3. Marshlk, L. Jackson. Andrews, P. Jackson 2.

GI?i»n Terry, Twin Falli Urtiln forward. lait nitht provided tho T1me«-NeiTi cameraman wllh a fine bit of ncUon aa he leap^ high In Ihe air to collect two points tor hl» elnb. Jumplnt with him In backcronnd Is Fa ir of Ilui>ert. Twin Falli won game, 32-10.

(Tlmc9-New» Photo and EngraTlng)

Four T ie for Lead In Tournament for Billiards Crown

Frank OroL-n iincl Harry Po ■ .•y a-it nlKht won Uielr mutcliM in tJie Twin Falls handicap blllltirxl tour- n.unenl to niter n fo\ir-w;\y Lie for flrr.t placo wlUi Dr. O. T. Pnrkliiwii and U. H. Atklnran.

Four mtn'iiow are tli'il for fln.l .acc wltli Uirro wln.n and on(‘ la’ 'i;

five tied for fifth plaec wlUi two wln.n and two Icv^e:.: two llrtl for lOth with 0110 win nnd tlirce lav.e.i. \nd one man in Uio cellar wlUj no wln.1 luiij fmir 1o.mw.

Orvf-n (125) dcfealttl E. L. Pat­rick (IWI. 125 to 50. runnln« out In 3fl Innlnw with nn untlnlMifxl nm of 25 for Uie hlKh run of Uie eve­ning.

rt)v<-y (150> defeated Mult Be«liui ;00). 160 to CO.

TonlKht’s mixtche.i. jiccordlim to Toiimi? ManiiKcr E. O. Uracken ut Jie H. nnd M. Clj>ar store, are Dr. Parkinson v.v Atklnron: and We.i Arnold %-fl. Beslan, all plnylng for iOjxiint.i.

Winner of the Pnrkln.son-Atkln.'.on mulch w’lll .imtoniallcally take tlie

on 11 penrcntnse ba.ils tonlghL

Cage coresWEST '■

Howard Payne 58, SouUiwestem (Tex.) « .

Tc-xa.% A. and M. W. Tcxa.i 42.Wyoming 40. Colocndo 33.OreKon 53. lOnho 39.K-v\tern WrwilihiKton 50, West­

ern Wa-shlnKtpn 40.^ ;a s t

Ur.ilnu.i 53. Bticknell 40.l^nnklln-M*ir.'.hall 49. Muhlen-

ber« 43.Wr.'.tiTn Maryland 4B. Mount

St. .Mar) ';. 31.WiL-.hiiiKion colIrKC W). Johns

Hopkins 3'J.Holy Cron.n 54. Pro\'ldence 48.

SOUTltLoyola fNrw Orleans) CO. How­

ard 50 (Dixie conference ftcml- ftmil-M.

David Liivtcomb 44., Tennev.eo fJ. C.) 24 (Mlvi-islppl Vnlley fln- ab). •

>nDWE8TK aaw 45. Kaniuui Slate 28.SouUi Dakota State 39, North

Dakota 30.Momlngslde 33, fjouUi DakoU

30.

DET-t UEME.MBER MILWAXnCEE (/p) — ••Remember

Pearl harbor" la a very much per- sonallied aloffan for Oil ljr»on. Jr.. sophomore aprlnter on Uie • M*f- Quett* university track team. Liir- son prepped ot Roosevelt Mlgb school, HOQolulu. and his father. Dr. OUbert Larson. D. B. N.. escaped in­jury by a narrow margin the day Uit JAps attacked.

Spring Camp News Items

By Tlie Associated Prew TAMPA, Fin. — Outfielder Mike

■McCormick, leadlnu Cincinnati hlt- ... la.st sea.ion, will be used as a second strlnR Inflclder. probably at thlnl base, ilurlnK the training sea- Ron camp Rame.i. TIk? Rrd.i have nine outflcUlera In camp but only '.icven Intlelderji.

s r . prTERSDuiia, n.i.~joo Gordon, Uie holdout New York Yankee second ba.’jriiian, Is so .eager 10 plaji ball tlial ye.iterday ’he plckcd up a mitt and "caddied" for ManaRcr Joe McCarthy, who was bnttlns to SliorUtop Phil Rlsuto.

. HAVANA—Don PadKl-tt back­ache and his crop ol bolb have subsided enough to permit the hiu ky outfielder to rejoin hl.i Brooklyn m at« on the pracUce field.

LAKELANrt Fla.-Mnnnuer Del Baker of Oie Detroit 'nKcri a good exntnple for lib players. He's the first on the practice field nnd the la-it to lenvr.

" I wl.Mi I had n dollar for every fungo drive I ’ve hit." said Unker. who ha.1 ht"! chn Ke burning nil over ihc lot with nccuratoly-placed drlve.i.

PASADENA. Calif. — AlUiough Uie Chicago V^lte Sox had (me of Uie.l>eltcr plt^ilng Maffr, la.M year. .Manager Jimmy Dyke. t:. looking for even n finer record In thi;, coming c.impalgn.

He plans to earn- 10 fllnKVrs In­stead of the ca-stcmnry nlite.

Wliereaboiits Of WilliamsIs Mystery

AnNNEy^POLIS, March 4 f^V- Whereabout.1 of Ted Wllli.ims. .ilug- glng Boston Red 8<y; ballplayer, was somewhat of a mystery today, wlih some folks who should know giving out confUcUng report.-!.

From his hotel In Princeton, Minn., where he has been doing somo huiiUng Uils winter, came the dec- laraUon that WUllams was not "ex- pected back until Thursday.' At a friend’s house lost night, Uie state­ment was m«d.e that he had ‘'left for illnneapoll*."

Friends In Minneapolis, moreover. Insisted he had left for the Red Box training camp at SarasoUi, Flo., and lntlmat*d he might atop' at the Great Lakes, 111., naval training sta- Uon to confer ^Ith offlclaU.

At <uiy.rain, Williams could not b« located.

Vandals Lose^ Blit Ray Gets 13 More Pomts. E U G E N E . Ore., M arch 4 (/Pj— h Ih Klua.HCS w ere broken And hlH fncc bloodied, but blK R ay Turfier came through fo r a new 16-(famo banketball Hcoring record in northern di­vision coa.st conference play.

Tlio-'8 foot. 4 Inch Onlverslty of Idaho center lo.v,ed In 13 points In his team’s 39 to 53 loss to University of Oregon ln.it night, boosUng hla. season's total to 102. That erased the old mark of IB7. established by Wally Palmberg of Oregon State in 1030.

Turner hod'to-ised In seven polnL when he was Involved In a collision with another player lato In tho flr.it half, broke his glas.ies and left the game.

Then wlUioul hti spectaclcs, he returned In the final period, lipped tn a rebound to beat Palmbcrg's mark and with the pressure off tOMed In four more points before ho went out of Uio game on per- lonols. ’ .

Tlie game waa a nli»-and-tuck battle most of tho way with the score tlrd several times. Oregon held a imrj’ow 10-18 lend at Uie half-time. Tlie Webfeet spurtecf to their margin of victory In the •Clos­ing moments of piny.

Bcc S' IDAHO TJionipson. (Steele, f ___Turner, c -... Benson, g . ..~ Hopklivi, g ..._ Hooblng, f ....

O P PF TP

.._15 0 IBa F pp TP

Attention Gets Attention in $50,000 Race

MIAMI, Fla'.,'March 4 (flV-Tlie public’s money will l>e riding on Market Wise In Saturday'B 150.000 Wldener handicap, but anoUier horse has tho cagey bettors at Hialeah pork worried.

They are keeping a wary eye on Mrs. Parker Coming's Attention, and the trainer and Jockey agree Uial tliey’d better.

Tlie bay colt atnrled ngaln.il the best horses In the WIdcncr field last Saturday, nnd finished a strong second—two lengths behlntf .Market WLie.

"I never hit him once." Jockey Don Meade revealed today.

•■Attention can win tlie Wldener."Max Hlrscli. Uie veteran trainer

who ha. saddled some of the top Uioroughbre<lR during his Ioiik ca­reer, said Attention wilt be In the pink.

The four-year-old colt has run only '14 limes, yet won seven races. He was second three Umes, and rat\ out of the money on only four caslons.

Watson to Handle Concessions for Idaho Falls Parle

IDAHO PALLS. MareJi 4 Owin Watson of BoLms has signed a contract with Uio Ru-vieta to run eonccMlona at Highland jxuk dur­ing the 10*3 Pioneer Ifague Keason. BuslnHS M anagerl«u Garland said today.

Watson wlU make his home here and will conUnuo to handle conces- slon.1 at the Twin Palls ball park. Garland sold.

Nampa Beats Boise as Tilt Ends in Fist-Fights

Dy The Asaeelated ProB -Idaho's district high school bas­

ketball tournaments were barely un­derway today but Nunpo's Bulldogs already boosted a sUrUtng upaeU

Conquerwl twice by Boise In reg- tilar-sea.ron ploy. Uie Nampa quin­tet turned In a 23 to 17 victory over Uie Braves In Uie first round of Uie .loiithwMi dLitrlct Class A tourney at Nampa.

The meet Is a double-defeat elim­ination affair so BoLse. champion of Uie southern Idaho bis alx confer­ence. aUIl Li In Uie running.. The game, last night ended In a free-for-all. wlUi players, spectators und police Joining in. It ended quick­ly. however, as cooclies and offlclaU heudcd the players for the showers and officers took care Of the epecta- tors.

Another upset victory In U tM ^ - ley gave Bnmett a 3S to 23 wlirfever

Play dLu t>c«an In the southwest- em district Class D tourney at Wil­der. Plrst-round games saw Frank­lin beat Roswell 23 to 18, Wilder wallop Star 43 to 19, PrulUand trim­med Parma 30 to IS and Mountain Home trounco McCall 33 to 30.

Dlstrlet tournament play will be widened tonight to Include Clau B mecU at Soda Springs and RaUi- drum and boUi Class A and B meeW at Lewlstonr-.^

Claas B meet* will begin tonor- row at Idaho Falb and Wendell and Uie Class A tourney wlU gtl tmder- way at the same Umo at Coeur d'Alene.

■Three Cla.n,-i A tourneys will wall untU next week, at Twin Palls. Ma- lad and Shelley.

Opening r^und gunes fn Uie Southeast Class D meet at Soda Springs today mAtc!ie<l these teams; Roeklapd nnd Lavii'llDt Springs. Moreland and Soda Springs. Downey nn<t Bancroft, Thatcher and Aber­deen.

M ajor LeagueHIIERWOnU TYPKWrilTEn I.

IDAHO l-OWEK 1 .1h.rw«Ml Trp«>rll>r« •

T..U1* ........

RobellO Will Arrive Here This Week-End

T on y Robelio, probable new manaKcr o f tlic Twin Fa lls Cowboys, w ill a rrive in Tw in Falls Satu rday afternoon or Sunday morninB.to discuss terms and lay plans fo r the com- intr fleason. ■ , •'

I ’his report by B u .iin ess 'M n n am r' Carl Andcnson was ffiven the b oa n j'o f.d ire c to rs o f {h e T w in Fall.s Cowboys ut a genera l HC.H.'iion licid yes­terday afternoon.

Robello will talk over future plans at Uie meeUnK here.with Uie or- ganbaUon and will probably put his name on the dotted line of a contract that will probably call for at least $1,500 for five monUis work —with the poMlblllty ot added bonuses If he con field a good team and draw at least 60.000 cu.itom«r* through the lurnaUles al Jaycee park.

Action nelayed Tlie directors at their noon lunch­

eon yesterday atio delayed action on .relecUon of a ba-dness manager for the coming season. It wa.t thought Uiat word with Robello would' be awaited before taking final action on a RUcceuor to Anderson.

While noUilng definite was decid­ed. It was reported that Prcd Stone, veteran spori-i fan ot this area, may land some kind of a Job In the front office. However. It Li possible Uiat Robello may handle the Job of gen­eral manager of the club as well as being playing manager.

Robello Anxioiu Robello wrote Anderson that he

was “very anxious" to start work lor the Cowboy organization.

Writing from hti Texas home at Fort Worth. Robello stated ho had Ju«t completed work cm his new hou.ie nnd would start immediately for Twin Palls.

"I can hardly wait to get started." Robtllo reported, "and I'm sure we’ll be able to a.i.iemblc a club Uiat will give a good account of Itself In Uie Pioneer* lenkue."

Bill McRobcrt-i reporUd to Uie directors yesterday Uiat he was sUll about »500 shy of Uifc necessary 15,000 Uiat wan needed to promote the Pioneer league team here thU year—but proml.-.cd to have 11 In the treasury by Uie time Robello arrived.

t. John.on .... ....!jjs

rnii.urfl t. sTtiwcnAKKR •

Wyoming Nips Colorado Buffs

IiARA.MIL'. Wyo.. March 4 (AV-' One point was the morgln that blasted Colorado’s hopes lor an tin- defeated sciuon of Big Scveji confer-

b<v.kcUjall and gave Wyoming a ) 30 triumph over tho Buffaloes

last nbilit.Tlie feverish Rome readied an ex­

citing climax three minutes before Uie flnl.- h when a spectator grabbed

Uio le« of a Wyoming player

_ _ and ushersfull minute to clear Uie that play could be re-

onlo Uie fojiBhl for hardwood sumed.

The lend clionged hands eight limes tn Uie eecor.d period.

Giant Future Under Ott Takes Turn for Better

By GAYLE TALBOT MIAMi; Flo., March 4 (^V-The

^ne Uilng that can be sold for sure about Ui8 New York Olanl-i of 1C43. providing they complete Uielr spring training without freezing to dealh._ Li that Uiey will be a better ball club than they were last season.

That Is not giving the Glanta any Uie best of 11,'because Uiey were pretty bad last season.

But they are going to ba better. How much better Is anybody’* gues.i. This obaerver, Just after having watched them spill a couple ot ex- hlblUon ‘ games to the champion Brooklyn Dodgers In Havana, has a Blrong hunch they will pull up Into fourth place- xmder the li«plr- Irg leadership of-thelr new manager. Mel Ott.

Oil Is one of those aU too

any pitchers, whlcli Is what tilt Giants need most of all, but he snar^ some veteran hitters who will ease Uie burden on tho existing mound staff.

From ClnclnnaU he obtained BUI ■Werber to play third base. From the St. Louis Cardinals he got Johnny Mize, a great big man who can hit a ball a long woyTSM Play « accepU able first base. PVom . the Chicago Cubs, he wrangled Hank l^lber, who will give the Giants another pow hitter In their ouUleld.

Potentially. It Is a dangerous line* up that has Werber. who sparked Cincinnati to a world championship In 1I>40. In the Ind-off apot; Johnny Rucker, who Wt J88 last year, at No. 2. and then Ott. Mlae and Lelber to pound them aeroes. ,

the choice was the correct one. It Is obvious that Uie whole outfit la happier and more harmonious un­der Ott than 11 wos under Bill Terry. As for Terry, he Is supremely con­tent In his new Job as general man­ager. and the general oplnion ls that he will make a good one.

Perhaps of equal Importance to the cholee of a manager, the Glont4 dug up socne money and permitted Ott to get himself some pUyen. He did all right wtth It. toa Be bought himself a batUns llne-up that vlU drtTi tn » lot of nnu. B* gvt

Indian Boxers Tip Richfield

SHOSHONE, Marcli 4—Shoilicmc high school boxers lost night whip­ped Uie Richfield mlttmen by -win­ning alx out o f nine matches wlUi one bout a draw.

Batanan of Slioolione kayoed Klmi of Richfield In 60 seconds of the first round. Youn« of ShofUione won a loclinlcal knockout over Simp­son of Rlcliflold In *0 aeconds of the second round. ..............

Slioshone InvadwrfuehHeJd far a ring duel tenUUvely set for March 30.

Hlchfleld men who won decisions were RoRcnt over BarUone: and Vaoghn over Boeslacr on a foul. Lowry of Slioshone battled to a draw wlUi DeVries of Richfield.

Shcolione youUis who won deci­sions were Berrlochoa over swaln- ston; B. Warrington over Riley: O. Warrington over Tanner; and Ne- Dcker over McGnughey.

Officials were Edwin Fmnke. Slio- Bhone. referee: Pete Brown. Rlch- lleld, and William Halm. Shoehone, Judges.

Fight Results•TJt The AsMclated Pr*M NEW YO RK—Chester lUco. IM,

New York, stopped Mike Dellolie, J3I. New York. (7).

LOS ANGELES—RlUhle Leao< 134. Lmi A » * e l« . slopped Ray Lsnny, 134. San Frmnclsce, (6).

WnrTE PI-A1N8, N. Y,—fleorra Kochaa. 150. Akron. O, stopped Aofie Awrarono, 181. nairbbttrx. N. Y „ (1).

BBOOKLTN. N. T . — Petey Sealzo 134.-f<cnr York, ootpolnted Nat UlfJn. IM . New Yerk. (81.

B O X I N GKIMBERLY vs.'

IMS. ’« SUU ^CHAMPIONS O

P. M .

WED. NFTE • MARCH 4

JEROMEIM lH TATE

CHAMFIONS

COMEEARLY!

/y Ha/ Wood

An. envelope on my desk—post­marked CasUeford.

And always looking for Uie worst, I expected a very generous kick on account maybe somelxxly didn't get a write-up for his ”oul- siaadlng’' performance al some baskeUjall game.

But It wasn't any sucli Uilng. In fact It wa.1 someUilng enUrely new U) us; An alibi for winning a sub-dlsUlct basktjlball champlon- shlplThe note was. from young BUI

PelUJohn, business manager of Uie CasUeford Wolves, reccnt winners In the BouUi Side sub-dlstrlcl. And Mr. PetUjolin IbU some of tjie hardships hU club had to--«*de Uirough to gel to Uio wp .In tlA sub-dls;rlct and to the district meet opening al Wendell on Tliursday.

We give you the letter:"As 11 was not menUoned In the

paper I would like to tell you some of Uie hardships CasUeford had to go Uirough to win the South Side sub-dlslrlet tournament.

"In U)c draw for places' we drew the hardesl brackel because when we lost a game we had U) play six to win (more than any oUier team In the tournament).

"As you can tell from Uie scores II of our games wlUi the excepUon

of Uie Murlaugli Ults were very hoUy contested.

•'When we played Hollister Uiey played their best game of Uie - whole season. The Eden vs. Cast- leford game was the closest of the tournament and since Kimberly had been labled as one of Uie best teams In Uie sub-dliLrlcl you can see Uils must have been a hard game too.“We had to play Uiese four games

n a day and a half and on lop of 4ll this we had U> travel In this day and a half about Uiree hundred miles lo.and from Uie games.

'1 might abo call to your alten- Uon Uial Jack Shaver of CasUeford was high point man for the tourna­ment and Moose Thompson, also of CasUeford, was second high point

"We would appreciate II If you would mention some of Uils In the paper for some of the CaaUetord fans who have not heard Uie story of the tournament yet.

"Y^urs truly.••BlllPclllJohn, "Buslne.is Manager, •'CasUeford. Ida."

No comment except—If Bill Uilnks the competition was tough In the f.ub-dlstrlet he ain't seen nutUn’ yet!

However, we're sure Uut CasUe- /ord has a very fine team and will give a good account of Itself, fn fact, after all Uie iroubIc.i in Uial sub-dlsWct meet. Uie dLitrlct tour­nament at Wendell should be Just a breezcl

Incidentally, picking Uie winners In Uie district Cla.is B louniament al Wendell Uils year Li going to be like looking for that needle In Uio proverbial haystack.

Two yeara • ago. It was. that I picked Uie final placing of every club In Ulc meet. Last year. If you’ll recall. I didn't pick anybody—and were Uiere a bunch of guys and gals sore alvthls department!

To be truUifuI. you’re a smart feller If' you're right—you’re a dumb-bunny, heel, scum. Idiot, etc.,' etc.; if you make an error. And that was Uie general descrlp- Uon a year ago.

'Tills season I ’d be .imart to be ncutrftl-but Uiere's no fool Ilk# , an old fool, so I'll come out wlUi my predlcUo:i.i tomorrow.

Be awalchln’. And get your own supply of adJecUves ready.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

COMFORT .+ STYLE + GOOD LOOKS +

EXTRA W EAR = JUST WHAT YO U at G ET INI A PO RTIS LIGHTWEIGHT HATCent* In /or yourt todays

■' U 't Amerlca't best buyl

?3.95—$5.00 ■

Van Engelens

Gooding Trims Filer Cage Quintet, 43-31

FILER, March 4 — Ooodlng high sdiool cagera last night led aU the way to defeat Piter, 43 to 91. In * contest which featured a scorlnc duel between two forwards.

Adamson meahed 15 polnU for Gooding, whllo Oaiey was count- hig 13 for Filer. The losers played without the senrlees of Slater and Blakeslee who were on the sick lUt.

Gooding led 10 to 4 at the quarter, 31-14 at the half, and extended its margin to 34-33 at the third.

Ooodlng likewise won the fresh- man-sopliomore opener, 39 to 28.

Box score:GMdlng Poa. pu«rPetersorKS)--......P ------ (3) ShaffAdamson (15) - l_P.____(13) GareyOrooker ..............C . .^ (8) WalkerSehraltt (8) ------O -C : <3) MaloneJordkn ( 4 ) ------- G-----(3), Vincent .

SubaUtutea: Ooodlng-M e^i'f II; ' Boyer; Peterson; CroswalUi. Filer— Wood; Blastock; Anthony 1.

ABCToui-ney' Opens Despite Strike Thi-eat

C0LUMBD8. O.. M a i^ V oj.H)— Und annual American Botrllnr

congrc-u opened for a lOW-week run tho slate falrground-i coliseum

It nlglit after a threatened alrlks a de-

and play bcRan aliorUy after Qov. . John W. Dricker of Olilo aenl the first "loken" boll sliding doVn the' ' alley.

Early bowline was. taken cnrtr by lomftown "booster" teams. Then

the first eontlngenl of a record number of 4.00C ‘’regular" teams had their first chance on the 38 alleys,

n ie five I. T. S. Rubber Heels :am of Elxyla. O.. took ah early

lend In the atandlnga by rolling 3.7S3. Tlie Lakewood Lanes of Dal­las. Tex., and the Da-Llte Bleach quintet from MU Proe Ued for second wlUi 3,

Oakley Tangles With Jerom e Club

O A K L ^ , ^arch 4-Oakley -Hor- nets gel a chance to go Into leader­ship of Uie Bis Seven conference tonight when tliey tangle with the Jerome 'Hgers here In a postponed encounter.

CurrenUy lied with Burley and Rupert, the Hornets could gain al least a temporary league lead by defeaUng the Tigers. .

nORICAN RUNS MILECHICAGO. March 4 (/T) — John

Borlcan. twice winner of the 1.000 ynni event In the C ilcago relays, will get his chance at the Banker's mile Uils year. Relay officials said today they had.Rranted Borlcan's re­quest to run Uie mile. In whlcli he •will be oppoaed by Indiana’s Camp­bell Kane, defending UUeholder.

T i m n o

“Defendera” hoTve thnl feel ol good Icnther, nnd that "on the line” look that just natumlly belong with uni­forms. And how they snap up a suit of tweeds, o rn pair of ilacks, or a more conservative business suit. Good meaty leathers give them, o rail custom look. Get on tho "beAia" to Robtee “Defenders.’’

HUDSON-CLARKIn the Men’s Den

:aa

Wcdnraday, March 4,19.12 TIMES-NEWS, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO FageK liieo

S iT G y H B U S ISAW AIT M S

WMm welcome ot hot Ie»d aw»IU »ny or «U «i**ny ttoops who Inw lo Maska Valley, declared CouoLy Pros­ecutor ' E.' M. Sweeley •ddrwsin* the Twtn PaUs Rotary club today in Ui8 clubrtwms above Bl|Iey‘« CoJ* fee chop.

-In the hwMia o£ Amerietin* today « r « no leu Uian 10 mlUloa fihol* ffuns,” taUl Swelfy. nrcurma cx» pert who liM perJectwJ h proceu «4ileh converts ohotsuns into deod- Uer weapons.

rirntr of 8haU«•ISon than one and onB-half blJ-

llon Bhot«un ehella w avAlt^B for tnuwrormatlon Inw^lHllen which can knock an Invadtf' out oX action, 4ven thousT) tho cmnnerl aim be Inaccurate," he said.

In Twin PWlla county alone, than 300.000 shelLi tco available for converjJon. The process already has b w i Adopted by law enforcement officers and RuanU at atrate«lc si («.<!.

Con Pierce Auto"I f an officer advl.wn * molorist

to hall durlnir a blackout. Ihe driver should atop Uie ear," aold Bweele; ••because tiie charge Li capiiblr < penetraUng tiie body of an «»utc mobile."

Swcclry. 'liiio holdi-Uio runk < captAln after service In Uie Spar l?h-Amerlcaii and World wnni, lonij has experimented wlUi flhot«mii which have a muzilo velocity c 1,450 feet per second.

VtslUtXB tloltLrtans were M. E. ToU ivtr. Pocatello, and BUI Pnle.i. Good­ing. Ouc«U were KennrUj Dnrclcy of W. H. EIdrldi?e: Probate JudKe C. A. BiUley of II. R. Omnt. and J.A. McOee (ind Charles P. Larsen ofB. n. Tlllfr>'..

R. S. Tofflemlrc, president, was In charge. Stuart Taylor arranged tlio proffTTun.

Life’s Mte That By Nehcr 350 FARMS TAKE CROP INSURANCE

ApproxlmaUly 550 farms In Twjn Polla county ilgnett up lor fedtial crop Insurane# on wheat, on AAA checkup dlacloied today. Deadline for signing was Saturday, reb. 38.

"Approximately ajtOO acres of wheat land are covered and the farmora are guaranteed at lea.it , IS per cent wheal crop next fall, said WftUer Reese, county AAA chairman.

All natural and unavoldabli ha*ard» are covered by the Insur ance. Only one application wo* re­quired to b« signed by a farmen this year to cover all his wheat In county.

l*s t year 447 farms were covercd by the Insurance.

M A R K E T S A N D F I N A N C E

P R O F m e i N G

RITES HELD FOR NOTED M E R m NIDAHO PALL3, March 4 WV-Pu.

neral services for E. W. Rowles. 00. Idaho msrchant who died Monday from Injuries received In a traffic aocldent. were held today at, the family home.,

Coronet Pred Porter sold today he “probftbiy would call an Inquest. *

Rowles was .itruck by a truck driven by Warren Mc.«cn8cr, Idaho Falla, Police Chief C. A. CarUon said.

He entered business In Blnckfoot 4J years ago and came here In 1014 to open on Idaho FalU store of the Rowles-Mack company which he at Hugh MacCosliam had organlicd few months before.

The company had stores In Po- cattllo. Palls, Idaho Palls. Rex- burg and Blaekfoot, but the Black- foot and Rexburg stores have since been sold.

He waa a member of Eagle Rock lodse, A. F. and A. M. and Idaho Falls Dka lodge No. 1007.

He-was born Oct. 1«. 1B75 li Chico. Cnlir.

aurvlvon Include his widow. Mrs. Eatlier Dehlo.-Rowles. Idaho FmIIs: a .non. Edward B. Rowles, Idaho PalU; and two ^Liters, Mrs. Oeorge U>cey, Blnckfoot. ana U n.Vogler. Portland, Ore.

Autoist Released After Paying FineWyitt Earnest Tliomns. 30, was

released from the flly Jnll loilnv after payment of a fine of I3S and also costA which had been a.<uej;«d ogalnst him on an Intoxication chatRc.

Thomas' car was involved In a mishap wlUi anoUier mnehlne eorly Sunday at the Shoshone street bridge and he was originally chargeri with drunken driving. Tlie charge was reduced to being Intoxicated in a public place, however, when It was determined he wss'ju^bject to army call March 12.

At first police nald he Indicated that he would remain In J«H until time to RO to the army twt later rlccltd to -pay the Una and gain his relea.w._______________

Tl'lIRD COURT SUIT NAftJEST^VIN F4LLS BAKERY MAN

Third district court suit against I'Ved Block, seeking' collection of past due bills, was on file today. Plaintiff In the latest acUon is Colorado MlUlng and Elevator com­pany (Twin Pans Plour Mills).

Judgment for 1128.15 and Interest Li asked against the bakery owner whose estobllshment I's nofr closed. Parry and Thoman represent thi plaintiff.

Slight Increase In Major Crimes

U&lor CTlmts cccunltted In United Si4t«i during 1041 sho»'pd an Increase of .9 per cent over Uie prevlou.1 year and totaled 1.531,373, A. S. Webb. local FBI special agent. Mid this afternoon.

Webb said that a recent survey of the PBI made at direction of John Edgar Hoo%er, director, revealed there was Increase 'tn all tj pcs of offeaies except robbery and bur­glary. Automobile theft gained seven - ................... - ............ ed assault

cllnc .7 per cent.a de-

StaUstlcs compiled by Uie PBI veal that a major crime was c< mitted every 30.6 secondi during 1041. A felonious homicide occurrrcd every 43 minutes, while a burglary wa.1 committed every one and three- quarters minutes.

The records also show that an au­tomobile «-os stolen every two and Lhree-Quorten minutes: a citizen wa.1 robbed every 10.5 intnutes and IV larceny occurred every 34 sec­onds. During the year 1041-there were 0J57 rapes reported In Uie United State*, or an Increase of over 1040,

OPENS MARCH 8By proclamation. Moyor Jo<

Koehler today had designated thi week of March « as “Victory Iron week" for Twin Palls.

In the proelamoUon the mayor urged resldenu to "gaUier up nil thi scrap Iron on their premises and li Ihelr possession and noUfy thi Amerlcon Legion thereof so tha Uic same may be picked up anti sent to the places designated by ihe government."

The proclamation pointed ou t that similar weeka are being held throughout the nation.

In addition to the local Amerlcon Legion poet. posU at Filer and Buhl are also joining In the scrap iron drive In their respecUve commun- lUe*.

Church School to Be Held in 1943

On Uie recommendation of ont ot the clMses. the church training Jichool voled unanimously to con- duct n similar eourse ne*t year.

Tlie five-nlght training school, with church leaders from Wa.ih- Ington. Utah and Idaho participat­ing a-n faculty'members, concluded Bes.ilon.*» T«e.**lay night at the Chrls' Uan church.

Rev. II. O. McCallbler. dean oi le school, announced Uiat certlfl, lies would be dlatrlbutrd by the

individual pa.itors to Ui&ie who had mictr.vifuHy completed the course.

Between 00 and 100 adults i tended Uie session.

ForEvejy

SHEEPMAN

Regardless of the size o f the floik , U.1C the most p r a c t i c a l caatarator, docker, and car inarkflr on the tnarkot, 8 tools in one ~ For

AvoOabU Now at

$9.95DiamondHdwe..Co.

Idaho Production Of Butter Climbs

BOISE. March 4 (,V)-An agricuV iral marketing service report shows

Idaho produced approximately 3, pounds of butter last Janu 100,000 pound Increase ov«

January, 1841.Amerle.m cherse producUon wan

1,275,000 pounds, up 33.000 poundi from December and, 458.000 pound from January a year ago. ■

The naUonal butter output foi January was estimated at 12l.410.000 pounds, the lowest since Janun J038, but American cheese prodi Uon for Uie counuy wai 60,078,000 pounds In January, exceeding all records for tho monUi and 53 per eenv higher than Oanuarj-, 1041.

Officers’ Training For Jerome Youth,

In Army 3 MonthsJEROME, Mnreh 4—Edward Matt

OrifflUi today Informed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Griffith, he ha.-* been selected to enroll in tho offi­cers’ training course at Fort Kno*. Kentuckj-.

Griffith Joined the army Dec, a. 1041. and has been sUUoned at Port Knox sinv Dec, 30. He has been nerving a.i ......

Pneum onia Fatal To Six-Year-Old

ChrlsULna Romney, 6. died at her home In Eden at 8:45 p. m. ye.iter- day from the effect of pneumonia. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Romney.

’The child was bom Jan. 8, 193C, In Col..Juare*. Mexico..

Besides her parenL■ , ihe Is aur-Ived by a grandmother. Mrs. ElU-

libeth B. Romney. Mexico, and a grandfather. Chorles W. Whetten. lOso of Mexico.

Services will be held at 10:30 ft.I. SAturday at the Twin Falls

wiortuaTy c h a p e l. Bishop Carl Oeorge of the Latter Day Salnta church, Eden, «'tll officiate.

Interment will be In Sunset mem­orial pork.

1 PERMITS M 4 5 F 0 R FEBRUARY

ToU l of 13 Ures and Ujree tubes was Issued in February to eligible owners of passengers, motorcycles, light trucks and light buses, 'accord­ing to today’s recapUulailon by tlie “ >'ln m i.i county raUonlng board.

Agk'regate of 32 tires and 31 tubes /lu itUowed heavy uuck* and heavy

buses. In Uie second clnaslflcaUon covered by Uie raUonlng quota.

In non-quota brackets, 48 obsolete type tlre.i and 3S obsolete-type tubes were Lviued. Eleven tires and eight tubes were allowed for tractors and other farm machinery.

Tft'ln Palls county rationing board ftl50 permitted tJjc purcha.'se of two Ures and one tube which will be cliarged against Custer county, and one Ure and one tube against Mini­doka county.

March quoU for Tv.'ln Palls coun­ty Is 41 tires and 34 tubes for pas­senger cars: and S4 Ures and lOQ lubr.i. plu.i 38 retreads, for trucks.

Weighmaster, 39, Called by Death

\Vllmer Farrell Green, 30, city welghmajiter and lifelong member of the Latter Day Saints church, died al 3:15 p. m. yesterday at the Twin Falta county general hospital, after a brief Illness.

Mr. Green had worked up unUl noon yesterdaj'. He had been ft resi­dent of Twin Palls since 1035. Mr. Green was bom April 33, 1002. at Bt. Anthony.

Punernl wlU be held Prl-day at 3:30 p. ni. at the ’T^’ln Falls mortuary chapel, Bishop J. C. Fred- crlction offlelaUng. •

He is sun’lved by his wife, Mr*, Henrietta Green, whom he married In the L. D. S. temple In Logan. Utah. 30 yeai

Markets at a GlanceUr.W YORK. < Ml—<v.llon lo-.n hrt*. ~Uln*.Ilondi •iMdTJ «'>• » « l-

Mtr I te»<S«" rtlmt on rrelli

W),«i U«k of PTlc* l»fUU.

, NEW YORK, March 4 </T>-Stocks made a brief try today at exMndlng Tuf.iday's upturn but encountered protii taking renUtance and flnlsli- ed moderately lower,

Ralls, nibbera and an assortmeiit of Industrial iipeclalUcs gave a good accmint of Uiemselves at Uie sUrt. TIic fop*’iird Utt received lltUe sup- port-‘*from motora. steels and olr- cratu nnrt by mW-day many ot Kaln.' hud been wa.*ihed out. Prac- Uonnl l(Asc.i predominated at Uie cicwe. Dealings logged ot 400.000SllllTC.I,

Buying was held at low ebb. bro­kers Mid, by fears of new compllea- Uons In International affairs.

Amrrlcftn Telephone luffered a . larp re%-ersal whicli ellmlnoted yes­terday's substanUal advance.

Down frotn Uie previous flnaLi most of Uie day were U. S. Steel. BeUilehem, Voungstown Sheet, Gen- j:ml Motor*, Chrysler. United Air- cruft, WesUnghouse. du Pont, Ow­ens-Illinois. Southern Railway and Ohc^Rpeake Si Ohio.

Rail loans were steady In a flulct bond market.

New York StocksNEW YORK. March 4 (UXI — Tlie

larket clooed lower,Abuika Juneau ________ ::.No' salesAllied Stores.Allis aialmer

-..stales

National Caih Register - National Dairy PriTducU -NaUonal DIstUlen_____New York Centri

American Rad. & Std. San.__American Rolling Mills........American Smelt. A: Reflnlng-Ainerlcon Tel. & Tel. .......American Tobocco B ------ -Anaconda Copper —-------------- 27Atlantic Refining — Baldwin Locomotive -Baltimore i Ohio ____BetvdU Avlat

. 20

Bethlehem Steel ------

Burrougli!CaliforniaCanadla

Paclfle.. PaclfK __________

J. I. Case Co.......... ........ 64 \Cerrode Pa,ico Corp__________ 30',Chesapeake A: O h io________33 iChrysler Corp.....Coca “ 'Colorado P. <J: I. Commercial Solvents —Con.HoUdnicd Copper -....Coiviolldnted Edl.wn .....Consolidated Oil . ConUnental Can

____ 61 v:.. 10

...... 20S.. 2V*___ 61

SLIGHT O E G L l NOTED IN GRAINS

NorUi Amerlcon (e*. div.) _ North American AvlaUoo .Northern P ac ific -----------Ohio Oil ..........................Packard Motoni__________Partunount-Pubi___J. C. Penney Co, ..

____14S---HOV,... 23U

Public ScHi-lcc of N. J. ._P-.-.llman _________ __Pure O i l ------- --- -----Radio Corp of America ................ .Radio KelUi Orpheum —— No sales Republic Steel

,ceo a __________.. 40 U _ 13H - 13

Shell Union OilSimmons .Co.____ ....Socony Vacuum ___SouUiern Pacific SouUiern Railway — Sperry Corporation .. Standard Dmndi ..

gardlng pending farm lesUUUon ind weakneiM In securiUes imparted' lit easier tone to the grala maritelA

at the close today.While the undertone wo* firm

at the start and wheat prices at times advanced as much as H cent, iniercst tn the market wu lacking And the volume of trade wu llsbt. Around n ldsesslon moat prices were ftt or sllghUy under the previous close. Most traden apparently took to the sidelines to await develop­ments and the market drifted grad­ually lower.

Wheat flnU^d unchanged to '* cent lower than ’Tuesday’s close, Mfty 1130 ',i, July IIJO H - V;

unchanged to S off, May 67 J. July BO H-%: oats \ to H

down. Soybeans 14 to I li lower. - ryo off V; to 4. u)d lard advanced

• to 5 cents ft hundredwelghu

3U

Ako iirvlvinf UirOlcnden. Elden and Arriel Greei , all of Ttt'ln Fnlh; hl.i mother, Mrs. Emma Oreen, Pocatello, and the foV lowing brothers and filters:

Elmon and Au.itl:i Green. Twh palli: Conard Green. Portland, Ore.. Ellis Green, San FrancLseo; Mrs, A.ia Hooper, Bol.-'e; Mr,i. Ida Gorreti. . . AnUiony; Mr;i. Florertce McHenry and Mrs. Ledo Bliike. San Francisco, ind Mrs. dtia WlLson, StatUe. Wash,

Firemen Answer 2 Minor Alarms

Local firemen responded to an alarm yesterday afternoon and an­other early this morning, Chlel L. 2. (Zeke) BarUett said.

The blase yesterday afternoon was a grass fire at the rear of 748 Blue Lakes boulevard and there was no damage.The alarm at 4:45 n. m. was turned In jklitT ilre broke out In the Nu rooms. 4B8 Main ave­nue BOuUi. A short chxult was ll?t- ed 0.1 cause of the fire and damage was of a minor nature.

Social Arranged at Declo PTA Meeting

DECLO, Mnrch .-T h e Dccio P.-T. A. met Soturday evening at the rec- reaUonal hall. After a short buslnest meeUng, a social was enjoyed. A mo­tion picture In technicolor was shown and a group of P.-T. A. mem- bers presented a comic skit, after which dancing was enjoyed.

Mr. and Mm. Albert Olsen w n tho prize waltz; Ora Egbert and J, Zamu and Rachel Rleheni and Billy Flynn won the prlte for the'Jitterbug con­test.

During Uie evening refreshment4 were sold and gomes were cnioycd. Proceeds of the evening went to help pay for a nullo phonograph which has been purchased for the school.

MPB MAY BE MOVED WASHINGTON, March 4 M>—

Japanese diplomaUc and consular offlclali now Interned ftt Hot Springs. Va., may be moved to an­other locaUon. It was auUiortUUvely le«med today.

HAP OVER PAIira VICHY. March 4 aiJO — Air raid

•Irens sounded In Paris at noon to­day when planes identified os BritUh. appfxenUy on reconnsis- •ftnce. flew over Uie city but drtjp* p e l tto bomba.

No Deficiency on Public Assistance

BOISE, March 4 WV-No defic­iency appropriation will be needed for the public ls. utan£e depart­ment during the 1841-43 biennium. Commissioner Albert Lee believes.

He sold the $4,475,000 approprlft- llon allowed by ,the 1041 leglslaturi together wlUi federal funds con trtbuted, wui be luttlclent with ’eareftU husbanding.”

Masonic DanceROOERSON, March 4 — Masonli

lodge of HollUter U giving a eami' yal and dance at HollLiter Saturday night. The public Is invited to tend.

No BananasBanana oil has no conneeUon with

bananas outolde of Its banana-Uke odor. In reality. It Is Isoamyl acetate, whlcli Is produced by the union of certain aceUo adds wltli amyl alco­hol.

WIUT UPHELD BOISE. Ida., March 4 (U.fO-The

Idaho state supreme court today upheld an order of District Judge James W. Porter granUui ft writ ot ftsslstancff to EdlUi E Booth of Blftlne cotmty. Judge Porter grant* ed the writ to permit Mrs. Booth to recoTer property of »hlch Flor­ence L. Shephehl. also of Blaine county, was UsUd as mortgagee.

NAl UNITS ANNIHILATED MOSCOW, March 4 (;P>-Bovlet

forces have destroyed “oboul Ba cen­ters of enemy reslstAnce" and killed C50 ocneert and men tn on offensive on the Leningrad front which sUQ Is eonUnulng, the Soviet communi­que announce today.

HODSE FIBE HALTED BURLCV, March 4-Burley fire

department was called out at 3 p. m. Monday to pui.out a fire In a houM oa.west Klgbth street' Ah orerheated stove pipe caused the shingles to become Ignited, but the

I rtportttl sUjht.

Continental Oil ,Com Products .CurUss Wrtsht _____DuPont ..... .................. ........ iiBFlre.itone Tire * Rubber,__.... 15WFreeport Sulphur...............JJo salesGeneral Eleetrio ......... ......... 35UGeneral Foods ______________33^General Motors ........ ......... 34'^

Stock AveragesOxpiUd kr rt

InilUiL ruik Ullli.rh.nM ,... !).« D.t ' VI

ymV o i»

Milling Stocks

Six Attend Boise Rites for RelativeIr. and Mrs. D. A. Wood, Twin

Pnll.1. and Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Wood, Mrs. Lora Johnson and son, Elbert, Han.ien. attended funeral services Sunday In Boise for D. P. Wood, Encle, who died at a Boise hospllal hisi Wtdntsday, {ollowlng X long Illness, ^■Surviving are liLi wife, and seven

jhlldren. Ruby. Geraldine and Don- iV. at home: Paul In a United States training camp at Tampa.

. Howard Wood, also In army training; Mrs. A. Nelson, PorUand..

, and Bonnie Wood, ’Tacoma. Wash.

.. 1 were able to otUnd Uie fu­neral except Howard Wood.

Alt-o RurvlvluK arc four brothers. W. G. Wood. HaiiKcn: D. A. Wood. ’Tv.'ln rails; John Wood. Ault. Colo.. L. Wood, Marble, Ark., and two sisters. Mrs, Eldla Lee and Mrs, MyrUe Wldcner. Purdy, Mo.

Mr, Wood was bom and reared ear BcrryvUle, Ark., and came to

Idaho with Ills wife, residing In or lear Eagle for the past 33 years.

,le was well-known In Twin Palli and Hansen.

Gillette Safety RaioiGoodrich ...................... ........ 14 ;Goodyear ’Ore & Rubber._____13',

jyhound Corp..... -...... ......jston Oilae Sound-______________ No sale;

Inap. Copper .............. .........InlemoUonal Horve:International Nickel ___________Internotlonal Tel. * Tel______ 2'.iJohns Manvllle _________ _ 03 •Kenneeott Copper _______ _ 33»;Krcsge ____ _________ _____ 2Q>iLorrllard ------------ ----------- 13^

....... 31

...,Nosalei

.. 47'-i

Standard Oil of CallfoniliStandord Oil of Indiana ..... . 204Standard Oil of New Jeney__ SOUStwlebakcr ....... ...... ..... :_____SSunshine Mines_____________ 4HSwift 4: Co_________________ 34’4Texas CorpomUon................. 35‘i

Timken Roller BearUw-------SOU’rriuaamerJca Union Carbfcle . Union Pacific’ ...

_ C4H

United Stales Rubber ..United States Steel .....Warner Brother*-------Western-UnlQU ,

N. Y. CURB STOCKSBunker Hlll-Sulllvon .....Ciues Servlcc ......... .'.......No :Electric Bond Si Sliare -

Livestock Marketsdown : rkole« fat )rMrUnn tlO.

Milk

HAS KIUSCIHCr) UVE8T0CKSOUTH «AN iRANt;laCO. llctch ■- ...

— Uirk«l

John Wells Goes To Join Marines

John Hyrum WelU. 35, Twin Fail-i. left today for epllstmeixt in the tj.

larine corps at Salt Lake City, os aimounced by Sergeant Low- e N. Lftughbridge of the T*-ln

Falls sub-station.Wells, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alma

H- Wcai, 605 Highland drive, was1 an LJ>.S. mission to Germany; outbreak of the war in 103B.He ia a graduate of Twin FalLi

high school and studied physical educaUon for two years at the Uni. verslty of Idaho (southern brand)), Pocatello.

While in high school here Wells played football and basketball later starred In boUi sports ot University of Idaho, southern branch, Pocatello.

He was also an outstanding sott- ball player and performed with the state champlonsiilp 'Troy-NnUonol Laundry club two years.

Man, Wife Waive Forgery Hearing

A man and hUi wife, charged with forgery, today through their attor­ney waived preliminary hearing In probate court and were bound over to district court under bonds of 1500 each. •, The two were Irene Starr. 37, and her husband. R. A. Starr, 30. BoUi arc now held in the county Jail in Ueu of bond. Attorney was E. U Ray bom.

When arraigned lost week the two asked for a preliminary which Judge O. A. Bailey set for tlils morning, •ni# two elected to waive Uie pre- Umlnaiy, however, shorUy before It

o Copprf --------

on, .02>4

Metals

l^.d. New York I 'iinei Nfw York J

«ul«kill..r, don»r» .p*T JI»jk o TunitWu. I

Snake River Report

: Aihus 2* liwtMt.

W ind Speed■ The highest wind speed ever reg.

IsUred la the British Isles wu Ir January, 1030,’ when 113 miles an hour was rect^ed at Qullty, County Cbttse,-Ireland.- .

Smokeless powder Is smokeless not because It has no smoke, but be' cause It \tftvca no soUd naltiut.

OCOEN LIVESTOCK OfiDK-V. U*reh 4 {,»-(USUAl •UIil.- 2D0; UirouKh 4:0; tot»I i:

» «rner» .

lo Koo<) fnxl tc

CmCACP I.IVESTOCK :ilICACO. «.rch 4 . hoci li.MO. uul tl.COO: te to I!,«•: ii>p 111.60: no to JTO ll«. in.

HO.S0 l« SIS: choir. ! » . » hulls ■tMdyj MUIM* «ti down: ft^air. til i-

ruUbI* thMp b<ur fM woolwl Un

.ivcaTock

..T O T iifil !■,?

CUICACU. U»eh

ij;r’"J

■»av»'4

iJJi: JS1.m !» :.*4%

■M% IM W l-Mli .

juiv"_;.',7r.v» ■■■'r.M j.»?h j-»wOct. ---- l.H-4 1.S8V; 141ft

CAfltl CCAIN ;Ar,0, M.n-h 1 W®. 4!»J.S Nu. i um II.M; Xrtd

6:^'*: Ka. I wfciM

lUrlfTIiU-. No. 1

1n«t No. 1 xtHo* :

4 I1.SI »d. X.IK.W I1.71H.

Potatoes

KANSAS cm ' UVEaTOCX ....NSAH CITY, Mo., Utrrh 4 lUP)-

llun > S.ooo: T»rr *k)w, bo •hlpp.r* : immU •nrlr lo >r»d«r» anniad lOc

POTATO FDTUBES (Conrtety Sodler, Wectner and

company, Elks BolUlngl.nifk Uw Om

; openl(i« uU« «h»»»

Iambi h»M »bor. »ll.*l; oarlj

il.J*ST*to *II.lS*t<J>ur»d*52«U for c •ovU. tt«l« o( S locxl rnc wooU «<r» m>da at II U> tl.O] an ,a.,ta b»u*lit

L ast Trial Based ' On Ditch DisputePinal trial of the currcnt district

court term was undenvay today.The suit, brought by Hunt Land

and livestock compaiU’. Btilil, against P. T. PorrLih, Buhl ranch- er, seeks to determine whether a disputed ditch holds easement or whether the right-of-way la pa.1t "permLvlve use' only.

Raybom and Raybom and Harry Povey are counsel for ihe land and llve-itock concern: J. R. Bothwell rcprcseiys Mr. Parrish. The is being heard by Judge J. Porter without » Jury.

March term of district court will open ot 10 a. m. next Monday. March 0.

Twin Falls Mai-ketsLIVESTOCK

• llsht btn har.. i:tloS: rrltht buUtxn. 210 U 3:

•o rr WDKAT(OiM d«Icr «1UW<9I-

OTDES CRAI»<Itarl«7 oad o«U natkfi (lactuU* »li

ocaJ (a«d«r No aalCennltr:»ll» vwuo. t'

IOb* dMlCT « m M).

•ha rrperwd iut of U» nuk*ton Rnai Nonbiraa W plntai).

tta ~ « » ”

> d««ltn QUsM).

(Oo* dnlrr quot*4).

Colerad hro*. o2 , r . ;

Coler«d reuUn, 4 Ita. k

. :_____i:.n bU: »i.»4.............U.*l 11.(0 11*0

-t;pp«r •» PAL!.a rOTATOEB

^mrkH auailjri Icw.r wlro aiM ai fiisntr'airtrw* pricaa. Cailoadi '. o. b. ewh tra<k to daafarai RoaaaU U. t. No. 1, 100-Ib. taflii, waah.4. oO* ear

mliMj. on< rar In 10-lb. aa<ka. IhrM lhl cm tlJt. ona mUad loaS tLSii I. Kn. 2. Uir«« »l.4», two ll.tS. Uim

Wl« aalrt f.o. b. ahlppinf poljUl Uuaaeta U. A. Ko. 1. 190-lb. aacka. vuhad.

»ur KM U3 t2.£i. an oc«Mton>i aaU»<«: U. S. Mu. 1 tt.U to Ctati■ n>w<n. Inilk par hundmlKftihtt R»a- a U. tL No. 1. rt.«tU ll.eo to It.10,

ocoaalonal lot falshar and lowar at a ,r polt>U; U: K Nc S. mo.l1, II, as aalonal lol hlchar and kiwar.

tiupplln llbarai. dmand ilo». Idaho___ rt marku Ur«lT aUadri ColoradoMcCtura and Nabruka TrIUBiph narkrl ilniit iUailr: nortlirrn alork mark«t .lull.

Idaho JluiMt llurbarka. 1 far bakrra IMO, i can '» . « ( ; madium tiM.’ t cara 13.00; Z fara un«aih»U »:.H: tUnilat.l trxlr, I car unwa.hft lltS ; fold iUr«t< lalM. 3 can « m U. S. No. I, traahni.

atork auppliaa modarata, ilatf atkM firm. CarloU FlofI.la I

................ . *a»hrd. 1

IlgATTLE PKOOUCK SVIATTLr.. Maich « (CD-Whol«al«

Uttar lli«alil**uha>>sa)i 91 aeon I7^e. « l acar* tic. M a«or«

U. acor. ilHa (all. ii»<han*ad|.WholaaaU acp. caMB. wWloai

LOS ANGEtES rKODUCS y i f l ANGE^.^ torch

XOc. caadM nadlsaiIt*. * ______

SAK FKANORCO

cnicAco rftODUiMDUCI8»««i

Zc^at X*.4nj /imi BKhaaaW. ’ roaltrri Ll»« n UMlus bau .gay I

tba. SI 4c. I tba. and dsn ttr. lashan

. . ^ itft tuliV iyX -J. West Tlrflalt tuppBw »>)Wit M e. per ceot of t2w «QktB« fiMl-«eD-;. turned by Um ABMrtam AmI IB*: tfustJT. ".vv-

Page Ten

TOE GOIUDOKS ASB BT£BK

CIIAPTE31 XV A MNA*S dlosnotis of Parria’ stnte

" of mind WQS correct Her ob- ■ g vntton wns n neat compound of SftUve peasant ahrcwilncss nnd offectlonnto Intuition. Parris wns

‘ apprehensive ond mlsemble ior prcdscljr Iho rw.-wns *h«» had nnmed.

Today,.for the flrst tJmc sineo— alnce thnt dreadful dnr, he Wnlkod boldly down throuRh Oie ever­green KTOves toward l io pond.

"Ilcnee, my dnrlins. I lovo you.I didn’t know Uien Iww much. J know now.7

At the soitnd of the words whlcli ■tarlicd him back Into Ihe present, nil (lensc of her presence, was eone.

Time had begun to p.iRn, It wouldn’t ever stop now. It would so every dny, fMtcr nnd fn.iliT. A e t l r r ln f f , unhappy, friKhu-iiinc V'oufrtit

A CERDEEl^ COLLEGE ciKjeti iU eollcKe year with Uic uniial

dull nnd repcllllnu.'i crromotilc.i held durloR wliat ulwjiy.i /pcmrd tlie hottest we^l: of tlic yn.nr. I’ lir- rls avoided moal of tlic cventi.

A week Inter Mndnme von Eln ]efl for St.' Louis for ho.iplln'l ob­servation, and Parris ylcUlc<i to Drake's Inslfitcnee on n ’cnniplnif

I trip. Ills ffrandmnUier returned In Klnffs Row before him, looklnc le.*is wcU Uian when she lefi.

ffe went to Anna. "Voii’vc 1. to tell me! What did the doctors »ay?"

“NoUiinK new. I rouJl tell you, Mndnmo In not well. Just ro on nn If everyUilnc were n.i usunl, Par­ris. t>on’t let her think you i worried about her.'*

It was in town that afternoon thnt Parris learned from.Colonel Skefllnjftnn of Mm . Tower’s deatli. “ Very wtmnire." the Colonel r.ild. ••Nobody knew she wns ill at nil. not at alL I f you notice nnytlilnc curious ’over there, son—**

K a u r is found Dr. Tower rend- InK. He appeared as calm nnd,

unperturbed ns always. •" I just heard n few mlnutw nRo

about Mrs. Tower. I'm very aorry."Dr. Tower looked a.i If ho were

not really Ilstenins. He Inclined his head nsnin.

Parris stammered n little, nnd continued: " I was nwny, you know. M y grandmother wns away, too,In St. Louis, or you would havo heard from us."

Aft nwkwnrd jillcnce fell be­tween the two." Parris fumbled with some papers,

“Madnme von Eln cnmo to .TOO Just before she went to St. Louis. She wanted to Icnow it you'd be ready to ifo to Vienna In September.'*

Parris’ breath went out of him. “ Oh." His tone wns dreary.

“Pnrrl.i, I undertook this work with you with decided mlsBivlnd.I eucss it's fair to you to tell you that It has been a pleasure."

Parris blushed." I hope that when you Ret Into

your work in Vienna you'll find that—all of this has been n help.

. Som«, of it has been Inadequate, «omo of it has been— is In advance of any InsUluHonnl study you icould have gotten anywhere. I think some of It wlirprove useful."

Parris felt 0 quids rurRo of curi­osity. Ue was sure Uiat this man was really able nnd intelligent— probably n very fine doctor. ^Vhat was the mntter? What landed him here in Kincs Row wlU» his solo contact these leclurcs nnd talks to a medical student?

Parris liah^. "Maybe it would bo more sensible for me Just to be a doctor, and not start out to spo- clalLto In any sort o f way, but—"

"W eiir ’"It ’s iu.1t U>nt I Uiink I really

want to. It sounds a lot mnre In­teresting."

"I t is. It Is a vast field for eenrch. I don't know if the time has come for this kind of study, not. It looljs as If It m(sht cor

" I guess 1 keep tlilnking of Lucy Carr, the—"

•'Oh, yes. The Insane woman you played to. -Oh, yc.i, yes."

"And Benny Singer.”*Tfou don’t feel such people—

erell, iwrt o f objectionable?"Parris looked as if he didn’t un-

flerstnnd what the doctor meant. ,He shook his head. “ No, sir. Nevfr.

- [liked Mrs. Carr, nnd I like Benny ■ Sinner."

Dr. Tower half closed hi* eyes.T sometimes think tho whola thing is a problem for the poet-"

Dr. Tower stood up. He pushed books and papers about Impa­tiently. "Well, I hope you've et Joyed tho chnt. I did. Now, get c with you, Parris Mitchell. Vou'va grt n summer o f tough work ahead- I u-on't fool you about that. We’ll get those letters off lo Vi­enna, and then w’e'll know in 1 month or ro how things stand."

• • •'pA lU U S was deeply concerned

for Drake, whose pride had been dealt a telling blow hy Dr. Ckirdon. That Drake w.-li In lova with Louise Gordon, Parris did not [loubt— nor that frail, pretty Louise, weakened tn strength and purpo»9 by Uie united wills of Bverwhelmlns p a r e n ts , Jo\-«d Drake.

Seca'use Drake wns eorvMdered “wild," and the *'town was talk­ing,” LouUe was forbidden to «eo him. The two of them had quar­reled. Parris InlcrcedlnB in hopes ■ of (alving Drake's petutmce. « 'Ing Louise’s pain. How, he w dered, could Dr. and Sfra. Cordon be such pillars o f idrtue in Kings Row and #t the same time m de­termined to malco their daughter mliwublet lie felt again tho itrange working of that Intuition that tnado him doubt acecpted

•— valtw*. They were steely—the OonJottf. Cotaldn’t they Be« that LoulM wa»—he «>ppo»ed “sweet*’ I m»m wetA, and rw te ,fa kiyeT

TIMES-NEWS,.TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Wednesdjcr, March 4, 194a

And that Drake, for all his swag­gering, was a tine boy, and lonely?

"Listen, Drake." - “ I 'know that tone o f voice.

You're going to have some kind of a «en.ilble niRftestion. I don't want sensible sURgestlons. 1 wnnt you to say Bomething to make me feel belter." . r

wns Just Rolng to ask you why you don’t mnrry Loui.-.e, rlRht ofT. You’re: your own borj, ns Louise snld. You've got enoufth money—■’

"I'm not 21 yet, Parris. Tlie Farmers Exchnnge Bank hasn’t sot much to say nbout whnt 1 do, but they don't havo to give me, a rent more’n they think I need to Uve on,"

"But I thouKht— ■’“ rvc sot a chocking account

Cut It's lust about three thous.inrf dollar.*!, or wns, I mean. I’ve spent a lot o f It. Cnn you ImnRine what old Mr. Curley, he'.i tlie trustee, would sny if I told him I wanted some of my money co I could set miirricd?"

H O L D E V R R Y T H IN G

"Could you start in some kind of business, do you think?"

"I've been turning that ov*r and aver in my mind. You know I ’va l>cen talking to Peyton Graves, ile'n going to work In real estate."

"Sure enouRh. Old P e y t o n Craves. I didn't know ho had any let'up about him."

"Peyton's Rot U>c same Idea I tiad nbout thnt trnct o f land rlRht up Uicrc by the public school. Ho said If I could Ri't my money out and put .fome In with him—hla uncle would let him have aomfr—

could swinR in together and make us a lot of money.”

Pnrris looked respectfully at Drake.

"Are you Koing to do It?"•'Can’t. I Just halfway hinted to

old Curley nomcthing nbout.nn In­vestment, nnd he nearly Jumped

me. Not a cent UU I'm 211 I ’d borrow It nRninst my tnherltancc, but I don’t expect anybody'd let me have It Curley'd stop any­thing, I guess.”

(To lie Contlaned)

JAKB/-'A>DR eo^^STS ABOUT I GCJOSAKJ HANJB TVIE CTP& C T ‘70M.CUXMCV OP A OPMERMES?

^•(O B0UST6R CLAKlCV'S COI^J- PIOENCE,X AM ALMOST PORCEO

. TO VJASER. OM T H E LAO, SO HEr > WOM'T 6W00M WMEfJ SOOSAW.' ESTER9TW E R|NS.'a-.TELLVO U

WHAT, X 'LL BET WOO * S 0 AT VOUR ~ = OP W O TO

■ ^TVJlS&S CAio -wouD .rrae

, MOMEV.'

' WHW/? X M iUS-TttOU&HT . ' i t w 'o e i o w 'toO RTD P , ftiN»<ERlNS VJITHTrtEM ^ Munv isivemioMs, but xCXt3 4*T GUESS VOU'O GO VlOLENJr.'-«rCERTAlNLV X'LL GWE -TWO To OM E/-V C'MOfJj LHT^S PlND TVJIG65, 0 EPORE VOU CMASj&e

INCUR MiNO rA N D WANT j

TO PUAV < , M ARBLES/

3

£ •LSEE

mo 6CT6 Tiae

TVWCr THIM© r SAVIMS •-30R MOWEy IN A.

_ >KrTRAPTioNj T n « r •jou HAVE -K> T A K e 1C> THB BAM K TD HAS/E OPEMED ? WHV. THA'TS a n ADtwMSSIOM OF WEAWCNESS'-AFttAlD •OF 'WURSELP— CAMT TRU ST 'jOURSEUP.' WH>!

1 KEEP M V MOMEV ttO , M y POCKET/

G U YS GOT A PIO •I ' BA)0< MADE \

1M JAPAW _ •mATS AMOIHER

. MISTAKE THEV MADe,MAKltJ’ aw jics -W H E W

MAKEME

FEEU

=w w= IM \ ASKED 1

CtVlLIAM DEFENSE

.•■That alizling noUe Is my hcartbumi"

WllHOUl WWCR.'A wnVtoUT It—

S ID E G L A N C E S

VOCUl., ►‘ l.U

K>C«^ \STWc>6 VT HOST S E

Cf?- W SS-C iO tiE S ' W <bCfi: ^ \ \ T\s.Too-v , ■ r

c o w a s ^ .VAiUbM?.VOO\<\Vi&c w v c r

VIA kl.’c.'PT CDDSlto-lW-UM,C>\

EHroOK Pt)SW ONTVIE. CEBei-. Ctl»JT6R WAO TMtJOWKJ OACK...DC»^CAUrnO?rT* / o a r M3U creueeAu i aM o/ TKEV vonCE ^ 'RCAOV TO T=CXJ> U P '

A RMS?Fa ttrtWTK 15 fiPEEW« AlONGT^C C0«

A , we DC£ivr9£-£>(^\/ *A !F F ) t £ T r y ) i f s K S i - s r . . . . J

11. Animal'* toot II. Alitadi i s s r s r ,SI Jn'Vo pRkcV* a. I’ronoon :i. ItAllan operm li. Occtirrlns .

. Plarlne ca:

. I'unll ollh tprrlft]

10. m i.t St. Knack IZ. Object or

brlc-tt-brao U- ConJea fabric t«. Mountain txaa

S Q D B s a a a . b q d

8»iutlon Of Yeiterday-i PuKla r«r(a1nlns l<

(S. ........ .n-nmmer

W p o s e ye Dip RociE you reowA TOtJOH SPOT.? KE5 PB}SA8t,Y RE4CUCE) A.P02EN CA,S\£6.$iNCE 1>€N AN? r6 PIAYINO AROUND WITH iW £ CUTE LITTie V ^ l

RIOHT NOW,' '

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BUT WE'VE lU , , BRING HIM TO TOI=1NOOUT/----GET ME SOME, W«TER. MICKEY? J

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- V g a n ^ y , - M arch -4 r i9 4 2 - --T IM ES FN EW S rTW ltn rA LLS , I D A H O"

PHONE 32 o r 38 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

- f -

W A N T A D R A T E S Tlmei-New»

W A N T A O R A T S S Baaed OD Cost-Per-Word

_Jo per word1 <lBy_ I days_

A mmimum ol ten vorda la qulred la uiy one clJtuUled nd. Terms tor *<1I classified ads—CASH.

C O M P L E T E C O V E R A G E A T O N E COST ' •

IN JEHOME Uftva ftda » t K. dc W. Root Oocr

8Und DEADLINES

Week diyrs, 11 a. m. euQday. 0 p. m. Baiurdoy

Thla paper lubscrlbea to Uie codi of ethics of the AssoclaUon o Newspaper OIossltlKl Advcrllalng Monasera u d reserves the rlsht to edit or reject any tlnssllled adver­tising. "Blind Ada” • caro'lnj a Tlmes-Nows box number arc ntrlcl- 1)T contldentlal and no InfonnaUon can be given In regard to the ad‘ rertlser.

Errors should b« reported Immo' Uately. No allowances nill b< made tor more than one Incorrect Insertloo.

S P E C IA L NO TICE S

RENT our “HUco Chlaf" floor snnd- er and reflnlsh your floa's. Qulut, dustless. Inexpensive and easy to we. Moon's.

B IR T H C E R T IF IC A T E SARB OP VITAL IMPORTANCE!

TO Obtain employment In airplane laclorles, shipbuilding,yards, (ed> era] offices and ether major In* dustries proof of blrUi la required.

Let the TIMES-NEWS .Photo and . Engravlnf Dept, make a photo

copy of your birth record or of any other papers or documerts of special value to youl

PE R S O N A LS

THE OsteopaUilc Physician Is sUU' fully trained In every branch of Uie healing art. 6ee Dr. L. A, Pelenion, 130 Main NorUi.

JESSIE, m n k . Monica—whatever your nUme. have It printed on a sdecUon of flno personal station­ery now avftllnhle In the Tlmcs- Nows Job Deporttnent. Reason­able prlccal

T R A V E L & RESO RTSBIIAJIE expense trips many places.

Travel Bureau, 6H FourUj Ave­nue easU~10BO.

SCH O O LS A N D T R A IN IN G

TRAIN yourself in the Interests of national defense. Many poeltlotui now available. Get (his neodod training at U}» Twin Palls Busl- neu Unlvorslty, Call or write for tnformatlon.

. C H IR O PR A C TO R S

TOR stiff, sore elbows or knees take adjustmenta. Dr. Alma Hardin. I30 Main North.

B E A U T Y SHOPS

HALF pries special on genuine oil jwrmanenU. Beauty Aits Acad- 'tmy.

PERMANENTS, I3.S0 and Up. Nee- ley-Beamer. over Independent Market. Phono 353.

•4.00, i9.00. tfl.00 permanents, half price. Idaho Barber and Beauty Shop. Phone 434.

S IT U A T IO N S W A N T E D

WANTED: Waihlne, 10c per dosen. Shirts Gc. 103 Jackson street.

MARRIED man wanta work. Farm work preferred. Box 18. Times. News.

o m L dcftlres work ba wallicss oi clerk. Inexperienced. Box 31, Tlraes-Nws.

ALL around ranch hand and wife want w ort wife experienced code. P. O. nox —

UARRIEO man, experienced farm­er. small family, atesdy work. Able to handle Itvsilock. Box 20, Times- News.

OENTT.EMAN, With years of busi­ness experience, desires tmnll or part time bookkeeping poslUoa, Box 17. Tlmes-News.

H E L P W A N T E D — W O M E N

COOK wonted. Lady preferred. Ap- piy In person, Myers Hotel. Eden.

WOMAN for hcruseworlt. country home. Two tn family. Box 16, Tlmes-Newi.

WANTED: Experienced alteraUon Udy. None other neM apply. Boet 14 Tlmet-News.

V r^ T E D : Part Ume slenotrrapher. Maka appUoaUcm to Box 13, Tlmea-Nws.

on tL for bookkeeping and office work, out of town poaftlon. Write Box 137, Boise.

H E L P W A N T E D — M E N

MAN with trailer'house, for fL .^ ' work. U. Allen. 3 north. .U east Clear Lakes.

WANTED—Married man for generai farm work. « north, % east, U north filer. J. B. Murray.

T w o men for salesman work. Expe- rlenco not necesury. Kxcellent o^rtun lty. Apply In wiaon, 138 w ird *Ttnue wuth, B*ll a. tt.

UARjtlSD man, general ftnn work, year round Job. Box S8. Gooding. Idaho. . .

T H IS CU RIO U S W O R L D B y W illiam Forsuson

a sG \V i,R O C H B S T B R .»

N . v : , Z O O r IS BBUIBVEO TO B S TH B ■

\ A ^ rO C A A M e QA K I IA \ A L .

A M E R I C A /HlC

W MiTO ccuvrI f USEO A S A

T M s r. IN -ravfrsi®

FIVE roan modem home, good lo­cation. Nearly neW. cxeepUonally attractive. Write Box 33. Tlmes- News.

E S C A P E D ^ ^ '^ ** -^ '^O O L D F IS IH

MAVe BBBN KMOW N TO REACH A W E (© H T OF»

75*tJA/Vr M / o /0 oc>vN /A r.

B U SIN ESS O P P O R T U N IT IE S

FOR RENT: Fountain service sta­tion, llagerman. Gas, oU, lunoh room. Excellent opcnlnR for good operator. Phone 03, Buhl.

1 DUCK PIN bowling alley, pins and balls complete 190.00. New Cole­man sasoUne range ISS.OO. InQUlrv Roosevelt Club. WendelL

U N F U R N IS H E DA P A R T M E N T S

THREE nice rooms, bath, fumnce, water heater, hardwood floors— 0487-R3.

FIVE rooms In modem duplex, sto­ker heat. Adults only. 321 ElghU) avenue cost.

FOUR ■ rooms, private baUi. ntolcer lient. clectrlc range, hardwood floors. Phone 3428.

FINEST four room apartment In town. • Heated, redecorated. aJr conditioned. eSO Main nortli. Phone 1175-W.

F U R N IS H E D , A P A R T M E N T S

Bccond avenue north. Ptione 149SJ.

FOOT rooms, modem, sleeping porch, stoker, garage, garden. Phone 544-W.

THREE rooms, prlvnto bath, stoker. Close In. 433 Fourth avenue east. Plione 1607W.'

NICE one room apartment. Reason­able. Adults only. 333 Filth ; nuo oast.

THREE rooms, private entrance, -garden space. IH .mllca out— 0381-J3.

FOUR Rooms, bath, circulating heater, electrlo range, garage. IISI Dth Avenue east.

THREE room modem, stoker heat. Bungalow Apartments, second avenue easL

THREE Rooms; private bath at California and Boston apartments. Also vaconcy at Cottage, children permitted. Inquire Callfomla Apartments No. 10. SSO Second enue north. Phone 1004.

THESE are for rent: Modem apart­ment, stoker'heat, ea.it part. Mod> cm apartment, north port, two bcdrocms. Robert* & Henson. Phono fl(J3 or SS3-J,

B O A R D A N D ROOM

.F U R N IS H E D ROOM S

NEWLY 'decorated front room ad« Joining batli. 443 Second avenue north.

BEDROOM, downsUlrs. kitchen prtTllegcs. Adults. SIS 6«oond ava« nue north.

F U R N IS H E D ROOM S

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

TWO room unfurnished plastered house, south Parie. >11. K. L. Jen> kins. ‘

6 ROOM house, l^i acre. Kltclien range. Phone 30-JS. Murtaugh.

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

THREE rooms. baUi, garden, clilckcn hou.ie, bam. 1 mllo—1430-M.

nV E room completely modem. .... fumlolied or partly furnished house, stoker, garage. East snd. Call 1600. evenings.'

F U R N IS H E D H OUSES

W A N T E D T O R E N T O R L E A S E

FIVE or six room modom house. Lincoln school district. Perman­ent, relUble tenant. Phone 184S.

VOUNO> married man wants OQUlp- pfd farm. Especially interested in dairy cattle. Experienced. Ptione H. S. Piper, 3107-W.

WANT TO RENT four or five room fumlsl)(>d liou-ie by responsible renter. References. Write Box 401, Twin f UIs.

R E A L E S T A T E L O A N S

FARM and city loons. Northern Life Insurance Company—Fred Bates. Phono 1379.

WANT to borrow up to «,500 for D montlia on 1st mortgage farm se­curity. Box 10. Tlmes-Ne*-*.

H O M ^S F O R S A L E

FOUR room modem home, good lo­cation. largo garden spot. Phone 1570-J.

OWNER leaving—must sell n« room modem dweUlng with fire­place, stoker, air conditioner. New district. W.OOO—easy terms. Phone 3041.

EXCEPTIONALLY attraoUvo, new strictly modem a bedroocn home, near Waahlngton Khoot. Bln feed stoker, fireplace, Ireta, flowers. Phono 1S50J.

H O M ES F O R S A L E

TEAM young marefl. Wotild trade for diiiry Mock. I cast, 4K north Bulil. Z. W, Miner.

FA R M S A N D A C R E A G E S F O R S A L E

WHY pay commission? Buy fn»n owner—Well Improved 60. Q. A. Bcck. two north. 3^i u'cst Jerome.

130 ACRES go6d soil. 43 new seed­ing alfalfa, balance red clover and pasture, t i l per aciv. good terms, nabcr McMulion, Gooding.

LOW DOWN PAYM EN T- CONVENIENT TER M S- .40 acre farm, good location. BW of Buhl on. oiled rood. See me at Hotel Buhl, Marcit S-0. or

~ 8 . M. CHADBURN -JEROME, IDAHO

Phono 337-M

FA RM S A N D A C R E A G E S FO R R E N T ,

ACREAGE, modem house. Confec­tionery store In back yard. 404 Locust.

FO R S A L E O R T R A D E

IMPROVED King HUI 80. B7 Indies 0/ water, for cltj- property. Mrs. McCall, Mua«ravc apartments,

■ Flier.

FA R M IM P L E M E N T S A N D E Q U IP M E N T

LAST i'cnt'n John Deero cultivator. IS mlli-s north, 3 east, W north. Hansen bridge.

SEED S A N D P L A N T S

ORDER Certified seed potatoes now I Globe Seed and Feed Com­pany.

RUSSET seed potatoes, fitat year from McCall. I. D. Amos..four miles nortli Curry.

WILL YOU NEED FIELD SEED TH ia YEAR?' Dependable stocka of aU

ALFALFAS.■' CLOVE31S.

GRASSESA shortage Is anticipated In some Items—buy early while stocks are complete.INTERMOUNTAIN SEED CO.

H A Y . G R A IN A N D FEED

GRAIN-FEED: Wheat, barley ond oaLi. Leonard BroUicrs, Filer— 62-J13.

CUSTOM GRINDING 1 or 3 ton 60 cwt; over 3 tons. 7o MILLER MILLING SERVICE

Ph. 73J3, FUer, Ph. calls off grinding

MOLASSES MIXING and PEED dRINDINQ

MORELAND M ILUNO SERVICE Ph. aia, FUer, Ph. calls o ff grinding.

FEEDERS!FE E D W H E A TTake It off the car 6Io PER BUSHSL

Place your order for, the next car.W8 grind - <Vo mU

GLOBE SEED i i PEED COMPANY

L IV E S T O C K F O R S A L E

TEAM work horses, 3.8^ pounds. 8 and 7 years old. Ouarantced to work any placet O. D. Mccialn. 1 south. H west South Pork.

L IV E S TO C K F O R S A L E

SIX gdUoii Guernsey, rrtahen soon, guaranteed sound. lU west ol Clo­ver clmrclu

TEA.M 1700 pound horses, perfect In iTy wuy. J. W. McDowell. 4',4 jUi. cast ond Main.

GOOD Swtted Poland CTUna boars. R. f;. McOulRon, two miles souUi Klinbrrly. Phono 4S-R3.

ONt: HUNDRED head good younn work horses. Some nice matchedp:ilr:<. HiiKlie.i A: Smith.

B A B Y C H IC K S

SWIFTS baby clilcks—Hatches each WtTlncsday uml Saturday. Call ot Sttlli's Hatchcrj-. 384 FourUj uve- nuo i.ouUi. Plic-'O 183. . .

ABOUT 200 Oc Chicks each Tuesday. ni'KiilM elilck.1 J11.50 per 100. 300- CBK, R. O. P. sired Leghorns. Cus- tom hatching, 3Sc per egg. Hai'cs Ill-arado Hattljcry.

GOOD T H IN G S T O E A T

MILK — Cream — Eggs. End of Second Avenue west. E.O. Holtzen. Phona 108S.R,

W A N T E D T O B U Y

WANTED: Wood or wire hanscrs. In good condition. Ho each. Troy or National’ plant

A PEW two row bean cuttcrs. In­quire Self Manufacturing Com­pany. .

VE are aUii in the market for magndnes, Iron, copper, brass, rags and other Junk. Idaho Junk House.

WANTED to buy: Scrap and cast Iron, also nil sorts of metaLv No Quantity too small. L. L. Langdon, Truck Lane west. Phono 1503.

STEADY 300 gaUons milk per day. Will pay top price. Don’t answer imlcss you )»avo more Uian 00 kiU- lons per day. Box 10. Tlmos- Newa. .

M IS C E L L A N E O U S FO R S A L E

1038 HARLEY DAVISON for wile. Perfect condition. Eureka Hotel, Jerome.

SEE our complete line of'Johniioni wax. paint and vamWies. Sweet's Puraitiu’c.

ELECTRIC refrlRorator. pcrfctt. ditlon. Cash or tcrm.i. 830 Slio- olicme caiit.

FURNITURB Upholstering and .. nalrlng. Thometz Top and Body Works—730.

PROTECT your family. Have that broken glass repaired today at Moon's.

STOCK Salt. 810M per ton. Bring sacks; L. L. Langdon. Truck Lane west. Phone 1303.-

AUTO glass; canvas, canva. repair-' Ing. Thometz Top and Body works. .

10x10 WALK-IN Ico box, ammonia Compressor, l horsopower motor. Jolin M. Barker Agency. Phone “ Buhl.

C. C. C. salvage goods. Raincoats. Gverihoe.1. horse blankets, army cots, quilts, bath tubs and sinks. Idaho Junk House. -

H OM E F U R N IS H IN G S A N D A P P L IA N C E S

BREAKFAST set and drr^er. Ii> good conillUon. Reasonable. 443 Walnut.

SEVERAL cood second hand conl Iran 830.00 to 875.00. Hoo-

slcr rumltiiro Company.

O.NE uoixi pliino. Walnut finish,. swmbly priced. Hooalor Furniture Coinpiiivj'. ■

GOOD lurd General Electrlo Re- frlKcrator, Only «CO.OO. Co-op Oil Company.

USi*D W'-siiiiKliouse electrlo ranii#. Good coimiuon, 835.00. L . K . cnmblnntton ranee. 803.00. Terms. Wilson Dnte.i Appliance.

USEID GlbiDn rofrlRerator, perfect condition. »5t>jpS. Terms. Wilsoii Bates Appllanc'a.

USED General Electric rflflgerator. Rood condition, $40.&O'at Gamble Siorc. .

AL.MOST new, rcpoMCSsed bedroom . ullf. Repor 'f.wed 8 piece dlnlm: room suite. Good condition. 870.SO. Howler Furniture Company.

ONE u-ied Westlnghouso sealed unit refrigerator, $51)4)5. Alw B foot Cold Spot, nearly now. Glow Maid coal range. Robt. £• Lee Sales Company.

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAt.

DIRECTORYAutomotive Service

Batha and MaasagcBThe St»-Well. 837 Main W. Ph. 185

SALARY LOANS • Strictly confldenUal

>S to 8S0 to employed people m your own signature

CASH CREDIT COMPANY Rma. 1-3. Burkliolder Bldg. Pb. 776

Bicycle Satea and ScrcleeBLASIUSGYOLERY. p a 181

Curtain ShopsWindow Shop. 803 Main S, Ph. 814.

DiamondaR. L. Roberts. Jeweler. 115 8ho. N.

Floor SandingA-BB Floor Co. Floor scrvlce. ph. 711

Odder As Sons. Bll Main E.' 1450-W.

For Flro and Casualty Insurance. Surety and Fidelity Bonda, sei Swim lavestment Co. Baugh Bldg.

Job Printing

POUR piece bcdrooiri suite. MflJlO. Cedar chutn still lit old prices. Sco Uicso before you buyl Moon's.

SWING clmlrR. velour covers, assort­ed colon <13.30. End Ublen tus. Davcnoci, hardwood construction, excellent quiUlty S33J10. Moon's.

iO POUND cotton felted mattress for only 49.85. We have only 7S at Utls price. Full or twin sizes. Moon’s.

LINOLEUM remnants, all qualllics Sizes average 0 fcot' by 10 fed. Uiesc are not scraps but end.) ot rolls. Priced nt low ao 4c per wjusro foot. Bo iiurfq to bring your rooiQ measurements. Moon's.

R A D IO A N D M USIC

REPOSSESSED Consols walnut piano, your chance to save money. See Adams Music. Store, formerly Dayncs Music Company.

A U TO S FO R S A L E

1043 PLYMOUTH clut> coupe, tale or trade. 4,000 miles. Dunn’s Auto Court, Cabin 3.

1037 V-8 coupe, good Urrs, A-l con­dition. StrotiS's Service Sales. 403 Main north. Phono 358-J.

1940 PLYM O tm i deluxe sedan. 14.- 000 miles, excellent condition. $700. Plione SOI daytlmen.

1041 DE SOTO sedan, lorf mllesge, A-l condition. Would trade. Piione 3. After 8 p. m. inquire 237 Sixth ovcnuo north.

LEAVING for anny-Musl sell 1030 Ford Deluxe four door srdan, good condition, good rubber. Phono lUl.

TR U C K S A N D T R A IL E R S

THREE TRUCKS With seml-trollers and Van bodies

1-1040 Ford! 1—1030 International, 136 wheel bnae; 1—103S InUroa- tlonal, 18} w4iepi baae. All with ex­tra gears and large motorn. Cars and Urm In good condition. Hay­den Truck Unc, ph. 0390-J3, j . O. Hayden.

Ancient CemeteryAn old Indian cemetery, believed

to date bock to the days before tlifr Spanish conquest of Chile, has been found try workers in that country.

UNEXCELLED QUALITY . la

LEHTERHEADS MAIL PIECES BUSINESS CARDS BROADSIDES

PERSONAL STATIONERY Engraving, letter press, llUiogruphy

Bdiool Annuals, buslnesa forms a specialty

TIMES-NEWS Commorciol Printing Dept.

Key Shop

Landscaping'For a landscape plan, ons U>at Is

arti.itlc, sensible and practical— W. E. Hawley, Landscape Architect Sunset Memorial Park Phono 303

MimeographingRoom 10. FldeUty Bk Bldg, Ph. 418.

Money to LoanAOTO loans. Bob Reese at Magel'i.

Eotarians Attend Luncheon Meeting

SHOSHONE, Marcli 4—Slioshons Rotary club met for luncheon' cently at tho Legion Menu , building, A paper on China In world affairs was read by Charles U. Allg. program chairman,

Truman C. Anderson, Bozeman, Mont., former Lincoln count>'agent, was present and give a brief descrip­tion of hfi work in bOll conser>'atlon work In the state of Montana.

Tom- Ooodlng. Retcl)um, former Shoslionian, was a guest, as was Donald Vincent from tho local high school. Ho was Introduced by Z. O. Hartman.

Birthday PartyFILER, March 4—Mrs. Fred Mun-

yon gave a-dinner Friday evening honoring her Imband's blrthtloy an­niversary. GuesLn Included Mr. and Mrs. Earl Murray, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Munyon. Miss Lois Walke^. of Filer, and Mrs. H. O. Munyon. Jr.. Chenyvale.’ Kan., who arrived Fri­day for a visit with relatives.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

Money to Loan

AUTO LOANS• present contract—

reduce paymento->«ash advanca.

W E S T E R N F IN A N C E CO.Next to FldeUty Bank.

$25 to $750O N Y O U R C A R

L FOR ADDITIONAL CASH ^ Z TO REDUCE PRESENT

PAYMENTS.3. TO FINANCE THB SALE

OF YOUR CAR.’

Consumers Credit Co.

Naturopathic PhysicianAntha Leo Harbert. 1303 Klmb. Rd.

OsieopatMc PhysicianD. O. W. Rose, 114 M. N, Pb. 937*V

Photo Finishing8 prints any roll 19a. Sav-Mor Drvf.

Plumbing and HeatingAblx>tt Plumbing Co. Pb. 95-W.

Home Plumbing St Beating. Pb. 383.

S chool and Training 'T. P. Business University, PbOQs 34L

Shoe Repairing—DyeingRalph Turner at Hudson-Claik.

Now Era. oppoelt* Idaho Theater.

TraileraGem Trailer‘'Company. Phone 439

TypewriteraSalea. rentals and service. Ph. 90.

' Upholstering

Water SystemsFloyd Lilly. Ph. 3030. 314 6ha B.

Rea l E a la lc T ransferaInformation fnmlsbed bjt

Twin Falls TIUb and •Abstracl Company

THURSDAY. FED. S8 Deed: C. E . Holmes to E. V.

Cummln.i, >600. Lot 10, Blk. 4, Elm Park Addition.

Deed: H, WUkUon to C. H, Ryan.810. Lot 3, 3, in BU. 4. Terrace Park Place.

Deed: L. E. Hajden to M. O. Kuykendall, 88.000, Lot 1 of Eoff Tract, Twin Falls.

Deed: Tl»e Union Central Life Ins. Co. to J. O. Yragul, 13,350. NESE 30-10-17.

Deed: L. Dayley to Union Central Llfo'Insurance Co. to J, O, Yngul, ♦3,350. NESE 38-10-17.

Deed: U J. Miller to P. Dwyer, 83.750. V/M Lots 1, 3, 3, Blk. 10.Blue Lakes AddlUon.

Deed: E. E. BentJj to J. C. Busby.81, Lots 7. 8. 0. Blk. 14, Blue Ukes Addition wc.it. *

Deed: M. Costello to E. A.. Reed,I I . Ft SW SE 38-9-15.

FRIDAY. FEB. 37 Lease: B. Beath to J. A. Boyd. 83

per doy: well drill.Deed: J. W. Bouton to lu Lelch>

liter. $10: NW 13-13-15.Deed: E. Henstock to L. Lelchllter,

>50: part NENE 34-13-18,SATURDAY, FEB. J8

Deed: N. V. Nye to H, P, Howe,>10. Lots 38 and 30. block 89, Twin Falls.

Deed: H. P. Howo to N. V. N>-e,810. Lot 10, block 103, Twin Falls,

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T SANOfiiER s OSm o JTS

IN THE PIBTRIC T OOORT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL D15- .TRICT OF THB STATE OF IDA­HO IN AND FOR THE OOUNTY OP TW IN FALLS.

E D m i MONTANO, Plaintiff, vs.CONRAD MONTANO. Defendant.

, rrHE STATE OP IDAHO SENDS GRECTINOS TO THE AB O V E NAMED DEFENDANT:

You are.hereby notified that a complaint has been filed against VOU in the District Court of the Efer- enth Judicial District of the 8tAt« of Idaho, in iind for Twin FtU> County, by tha aboved named | aln>Uff. and you ore hereby directed to appear and plead' to said co^plklnt within twenty daya of the tervleo ot this summons on you. utd you « » ' further nottned tb*t tinlea you fO appear and plead to Mid complaint. . within the time allowed, ib i plain* tlfX will tAks Judgment against yoti

prayed In lakl complaint Tbla ■ - action is Inatltuted against defaad> ant by plaintiff to obtain ft dterM < of divorce.

WZTNGSS M 7 BANX> Atn> TBB - SEAL OP SAID P lg n U grO Q OBT^.. thU l9lhdsc^«r Jaa4:lM £~- . -

' WALT8IR-0.

0 .0 , Hall •Attorney foc tU latU f-..Twin PaUs. idaha - , • •...Publish, pab. 4. I t . l i ^ Match ^

i m ^ * 4

Page Twelve TIMES-NEWS, TW IN FALLS/IDAHO Wednesday, March 4, 19J2

AXIS SUBS TRY TO LURE U. S. SHIPS FROM SUPPLY LINESN M P O I N T S I O

ATTACK ON ISLEBr Jorw-M. iiiGfiTovEn

WASHINOTON. Mnrch * (/I'/-Tlio na>7 ’» cffeeUveiJwa In malntainlna oecan supply line* enemyeounier-Rctlon wna cmiitrd t«iuy •ftlth driving Uje nxla pcm'cW to mher tncUca In Ihelr (nibmnrlno cwnpftJsn lo.dlvert U. 8 . to homo wnim. i

NM-ftl experti imld Uie eneny •rnnea to b« ffrowlng more rccXIew In atUTnpl# lo creaUs a. iiatilckj' « w of coftSliil rtiWlns nctlvltlr^ Ivrr nnd In Latin AmerJcn. They clt«l M an example the /JicllmK oi Mcmii off Puerto nieo. uhere Uicni no concelviiblc milllAry n-iuion Uir enemy to » «»cll or ri.'k a

■fllilp.Uotii Uie Ocftnana and Jopftnrso

man bo fully nware. It wju Mid. Uinl tiie «tfadlly IncrenAlns flow of Amtrlcwi munlUons to Uio bntUr- fronts In Eurtn>«. Africa and A-'la will have to be broken iip Uil» Mirinn an<l summer If the nxl.i nnUmi.i nrc to prevent Its bccomlns nn ovcr- wJielmlng flood of defMt for Uiem.

Ottc meftnx ot RccoropUsUton tlvU »ouUI bo to force sueti « populnr drtnnnd for unlimited coojiial pro- twiloii In Uje AmerlcAJi tliut the navy would bo compelled to Rive up *«ne of Its offensive pntrol luid con­voy duUe.1 for purely ilcfciwlve ne- Uvlllea.

Into UiU #trntOBy of panic, nti- UiorlUcji nt Uie currwit wave of U-bont nttact^ o ff Uin AUnnllc coo.tl, flporadJc Aubmartne Ai's/iuiM on west coMt nhJpplns. Uie nhciUnK of oil centcra in CalUomln and at Aniba. and UiO bombardment of Mona l*Jan<t. • .

TTio three latter ntuck.v It wna nolrd. finvt IwHcrUowi of mkScA-

Glamor Girl

FOR OPENS lOTH YEAR AS LEADER

WASHINQTON. March 4 fU.PJ — Pr«&ldent Roosevelt. beBlnnlna Uls 10th yew In offlcc welgJtled by tlie problems of war, went to St. JohnVi Episcopal church today vlth the

. leaders of his government and prdV- ed for dlvlno guidance tn the hard day* ahead.

Pollowlnu hLi custom. Mr. noo«e- Tclt bbamed the anniversary of his first InauRumtJon of March 4. 1033. In prayer at the historic old church Just across Lafayette park from the White House.

The President heard the Rev. Endlcott Peabody, headmaster emer­itus of Oroton school. Oroton, Mom . where the chief executive received his preparatory educaUon. offer prayers for the-onned forces and for our leaders ond men to contend fearieasly "ogalnst evil, and to make no peace with oppTMslon.“

Tho President Joined the select conmgnUon of cabinet members and other ranking leaders of the Kovemment In readlnj trom U e 37th pMlm:

'Though an host of men were laid against me. yet shall not my heart be afraid; and though there 'rose up war analiut nje. yet will I put my thist in Hlm.“

Wnr time precauUons forbade ad­vance notice of the President’s af tendance at the church, and only handful of spectators 'saW Uie dis­tinguished congregation arrive.

BOISE. March 4 («D — WlicUicr aoveroor ClMk wttins to renounce his candidacy for the Idaho federal Judgeship, vncntcd n month nco by the retirement of Judse C. C. Cav- anah. to seek a second term as govr error today remained a matter of conjecture.

The Kovernor declined to nmpllfy his Rlatemenl ot several dnya aro that " I am making no cnmpalRn for any other Job," bin Monday nisht In n speech ijt Corur d’Alene he re- roafked " I do not WRnt to be llred."

Some political observers Inter­preted the latter remark a-i Indl-

aintr he mlKht .leek a .leconrt teri i. He earttcr said Uls ret;ponxlblllly

•Tight now la to try to make n good B,.e*nor."

Four montlu oko he statetl he ua.i lnt«rc.ited In the $10,000 ft year JudRCShlp. apd yesterday he pointed out none of hls remrtrk.i since have contradicted that statement.

Cavanah H andles Pocatello C o u r t

BOISE, March 4 (U.PJ—JudK« C. C. Cnvannh. who retired as Idaho fed­eral JudRe a month aro. today was deslsnnted to hear the ^{arch term ot court opening In Pocatello next Monday.

JodRc Cavanah wa-i o.ikeit by clr cnlt ecMit ollVcUlJv Xo hear iho ca.nes becaaw a suceessor had been appointed.

Watson SucceedsArney as Idaho’s

Defense DirectorBOISE. March 4 (/ry-aUtr' Budget

Director Lynn r. Wat-wn today suc­ceeded J. E. Arney a.i coordinator of civilian defense.

In making Uie appointment Oov- emor Clark announced NVaUon will retain the budget directorship.

FILERMrs. O. J. Chlld.1 WAS hostc.vi

niurtday to her brid«e club i dessert luncheon. Mrs, A. B. Herron and Mrs. J. T. Oullck were guests.

nier chapter No. 40. Order of EoAtem Star, will meet Uils evening. March 4.

• Mr. and Mr*. lUcliard Graves hftTe moTcd frem TVln P*alls to f i ­ler nnd will operate Uie farm c ... ed by John M. penny. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Pleenor. who have fanned Uio Penny Und for scvenil years, have moved to Uie A. B. Herron ranch two and one-Viulf miles soolhensi ol Pller. ^

SBt.'Eldred T h o m a s ond wife recently visited wlUi his parents, Mr. and Mrs. RAj-raond Thom­as. while en route from Fort Lewis, where he has been stationed, to Port Sill, Okla.. where he will take an officer's training course.

Mrs. N. L. Lanon n-ft niursdfty to visit her daoghtws. Anna Mae and Llnnca. who are taking nurse’s training at Dcnwr. Colo.

Cedar. Draw Orange and Ceeter Draw club sponsored a lied CroM ftucUon sale at Uie Cedar Draw school house Saturday evening. Feb, 28. and xtallzed about t3D0 from the sale ot potatoes, onlotu. machinery, chickens, sheep, merchandl.w and Other thlng< too numerous to r Uen.

Mrs. Earl O. Waller will be hont- e*s Thursday to the Women’s So­ciety of ChrlsUan' Service.

Mlsa Betty Johnson. M l» Betty Orthel and MUs Charlotte Monna-

■ han. jtudenL-i at the souUiem bnoch unlmslty.at Pocatello, • home for the week-end.

Mr. and Mrs, A. M. Hudson have moved from Filer to Twin Palls, wher# they recently purchased .. home In the Blue Lakes addlUon.- BlUy Davit has severed his con­nection wlUi Uie DQlon Pacific rail­road station jit Filer, and left Sun-

. d «r for Pocatello for a position of

.Bttmiolloo. Oordon Hosier will suc­ceed BlUr Davis' av assistant to the agent at Filer..' Vlrtan amlUi. who arrived at her Itth birthday aQnlvertarr aundav, care a party that afternoon lor a.

'number of her

Glamoriullen of Shirley Tctnple beclni with llili photofrsph by llurrell, acc llallywood lensman, and will continue tn her forth- eomlnr film.

CLARK OEC STILL

EMERSONMrs. R. E. Coriess Is In Idaho PalU

visiting her son. Howard, his wife and their new baby.

Mrs. Nan Carroll visited her hu.i- banil. who Is employed in La.i Vcga.1. Nev.

At Uie mecUng of the Minidoka County Lamb Pool iLv.oclAtlon In Uui>crl Thursday, C. C. Barlow was cho. en os president,

Mrs. Ray Ijir'cn rfliirne<! Tliur.i- day from La OrAndr. Ore.. where she had been called by tlie dc»lli of her moUier.

Mr.i. Showaller. Pm)l. b .-.liiyinR at the W. A. Drew home A.vilsllnK wlUi the work while Mr,i. Urew is treoied foe e, broken arm,

Mr. nnd Nfr.s. Je.we BraKa and family recently moved Into their new home. ,

The Home Demonstrallon cUib met Tliursday at Uie homo of Mrs, EXliel Nelson. A demorutratlon on CRB cooker>- was given by Mrs. Mar- Borci Hill Carter.

Quite a number from Uils .com­munity went to Heybum Tliursday nlRht to sec Uie play. "Ohost Tmin," put on by Uie senior cla.vi. Ellen Short. Nell Dorup, Jim Toone ntid Majc Peterson were In Uie cast.

AP PLANES RAID AOSTRALIA

MELBOURNE. Auslralla. March 4 (It.n—Japane.ie planes made their second attack ot the today Dorwln. the Kreat north coast Aus­tralian naval and ,alr force base.

It was Indicated' that at least two qravcs of Jopanese planes dropped bombs In a savage attack.

Japane.'c planes swept down or U o Darwin alrilromt. machine gun nlng planes and In.stallatlon. It woj odmltud that sonv damage had been done.

Tl\e tilr mlnl^try cotnmunlcjue said thnt Australian air force In­stallations at Darwin were damaged but Uierc were no air force cas- uallles.

Ttirrr were a number of alerta diirtng the afternoon. It added, but no further attacks.

Japanese pliiiie.i raided Darwin twice on Feb, 18. In their first ot- t ick on continental Australia. Only yesterday the Japanese had extend­ed (heir attnck.< 100 mlle.n by at- taeklnR Wyndham and Broome.

Australian planes bombed a Japa- ne.ir airdrome and Japane.se ship*, pmtt at OaimatA, C80 miles north­west ol AiislTftUa on U e coast of New nritAln t'<lftnd. durlns the nlsht. A communique of the royal Australian air force said,

RECRUIT8AN FRANCISCO. March 4 (/P>— '

nve veiv s-ftRo. James Beckham Mc- Corkle retired from the navy to try hts hand at praipecUng for gold In the Sierra. Deep Into tlie mountains he went, virtually Isolatlna himself.

In fact, he imdn't heard unUl Just Uie otlier day that’ there U a war

^Mfcorkle walked Into Uie 13th naval district hendqunrters. .an­nounced Uiat someone Just told him about tJic war, and said he wanted to go on acUve duty. Tlie navy re- enlLited him Immediately m a first class wAtertendcr, his post during much of hti 10 years service.

Then McCorkle received onoUicr big surprise, a check, lor. more thAn 12.400 in occumiiloted rcUrcd pay. McCorkle. panning gold In Uie mountains. Just hadn’t bothered to drop armiml lo pick II up. The navy had lost trace of him.

RUPERTSupt, RaliiJi T. Nyblad and Mrs,

Nyblod spent last week In Sun Fran­cisco wliere Mr. Nyblad attended educator’s convention.

Word rccclvcd here telLs ot Uie deaUi of Mrs, N. A. SUunmer, moUi- er ot Mm. Edna Sinclair, nl her home In Santa Rosa. Calif.. Monday, Feb. 23. Mrs. Sinclair, whof.e' home Is now in Burley, vLslted Her mother last summer.

The Red Crof.s nurslni; cIilvi now has an enrollment ot 20 women. mectlnB Monday ojid We<lnef,diiy atlemoons nt Ihe LeKltrn home.

aeorse BueJl. jr„ comlnR from Uie M. H. KInB store In Hurley, ts n<»w manajjer of Uie ftuperv Store, ,stic- ccc<lln« M- W. Moore who was trtin^- ferred to Uu: .store at Dlilon. Mont.

John McKevltt. Portland, came Ja.« week to attend funerol'services tor Porter Warner.

Youn« i>eople from tlie Rujwrt Christian cliurch who attended the YouUj FoUownlilp meet at ’Twin Palls Saturday And SUiiday were' Ro.<< Marie Guard. Jean QiuilLi. Aubrey Poindexter. Helen Lons. Kathrj’n Kohler, mil Carpenter. Carol CiinnlnBham, Verna Moj' Deno and Re\’. Eiwene Stiiinp.

Helping Hand club met niiir;<lAy at tlic home of Mrs. Itilph Bowman,

FORWOMEN'^m f

It JOM fttBw fnan ctm

............jTing iiirn paui ..,.4n«r\-oui fe«Une» c{ »ompn'« "aim- euli <uys." rouow label dirrcuotu.

Explosions Rock City of Honolulu'

KONOHn.U, March 4 (/l'>-’niree heavy explo^oiis shook Honolulu Im­mediately after scrcamlng oir mid sirens wakened the city at 3:10

:. Ipdny.Army officials said, however, there

was no air TOld and that t^e sirens were smimled Inadvertently. Tlie caMse of the cxplo.slons was not dl.s- cloned.

Honolulu police wild a number ot wlndons'were broken by the ■ cUA.tlons,

Telephone switchboards w

' O T A T O I N I P TUTE

BOISt;. March 4 UP)—Idaho wit] seek the coopcTDtlon of other agij- cultural slates In adopting a stand­ardized . ubsUtutc for burlap bags for packiiRlns potatoes, beans and sim­ilar products,

Tl\c step wa* decided upon at a meeUng of a committee represent­ing farmers and dealers croups call­ed to dLscurj tlie burlap shortage.

ARrlcuUural Commissioner Jasics

B. ‘ Newport »al?l "we will work through dealer associations and do- parttneuls ot agriculture In other states tor an agreement on some standard type so Uiat wo can. as a group, take the matter up with the United'States.department of ogrl- culture and WPB otflclaU In Wash­ington.

”In this way we will be able' to secure ’ the materials and looms needed to make Uie containers."

It was suggested a heavy coarse cotton bas might be develop^, since cotton probably wUl be available In

ntlty.

ATTENTION FARMERS!Just Received—

Fresh New Stock of

Irrigation BootsPcnncy’a score aRain in-hrinKltiR you these UsvrtMo-Rcl rubber bt>ot« a t 1911 prices. W c were luck.v in th tso in com pk lc s ires anti typc.s. Slock up now nl E X ­T R A S AV IN G S .

Liehtweight Ankle Fit!The boot you have been u. injr year nftcr' year . . . Cunhion insolo.s fo r added com fort.

49Penco Heavy Duty!

The Penney proven qu a lity , B iiitt fo r cxtn ihard wear. Stock up now a t the same old price.

. Economy Priced!’Ihe last obtainable at Ihls low price . . . You have used Uiese year after year . . . Again Penney’s have Uiem at Uils 3en.ifltlonolly low price.

98

% UnffthTlie popular over the knee height for tuira prolecUon, Complete sizes, but lUnltcd guanUty. 60 hurryl

Hip BootsMode for the heaviest «ear yet •t minimum weight. Suitable for canal work or sporting.

Cork trees may be stripped of Ihelr cork once every nine or 10 years.

Grange Proceeds Buy U .S.Stam ps

JQIOUE; March 4 — One hun­dred Jerome resldenUi the benefit card party, sponsored m - doy by the Jerome town Orange. There were 23 tnhlcs of cards In play. Ihe proceeds will go toward purchase of defense bonds.

B. E. Craig and Harry Messenger won awards at pinochle, while flalph Shawvcr and Horry Prltaler won Uie ' prlrcs for bridge. Women’s prUes were received by Mm. Ef/Ie Web­ster and Mrs. McClanahan.

Tlie Orange quilt was received by lAurel Ploss, while Stacy Johnson

won the prize for selling the largest number of tickets. Prom the project ,

LICENSE SALES GOOD BOISE. March i>lVldaho auto- '

mobile license sales are "very good." according to Uiw Enlorccmcnt Com- mlssloner J. L. Balderston.

The deadline tor purchasing plates Is March 31.

WHAT CAUSES EPILEPSY?

-A beoUil centtlnMc fh* oplnloni et r«m> MS doctw* on tMi Inttmtln* n<>l«et w4tl b* Mnl tu t. mUI* ^ lat. to Any rudw WTlllnc t» lh« Uijctllonsl dvltlgn. S3S Fifth Aw, N«* Yark. N. Y, Dwt C38«

The Place Where Wise Mothers Buy For The Entire Family!

Sm art mothers eve ryw here come to I’c iw ey ’ft fo r th e needs o f their fam ilies ! I f yo wi.sely ua lch you r budRct . . . you’d better wa lch our prieeal Now is (he lim e to take ( nrfnintjiKc o f thcwe low prices*, and ou tfit your children o f all a^es from head to tue! Save money a i P en n ey '« — Buy more Defen-Hc Stumps!

W ith A n Eye T o Fa-nhion!

>mart little niUs will choo.'.c one of frock.s Of her o«n nccordi Oiiy

novelty cottow. spun rnyonn or crUp roj'on taffetas In the best stylw. Si:e.-.

□ Nciit «Iou.se.sla broadcloth or poplin. Oay ‘colors ......... 98c

□ Sport JackclH BovlAh or boxy typc.i, Solids or Kaj» plnlds

53.98

For SprinK’n L iR ht Hreezc.sl

GIRLS' DRESSES GIRLS' COATSCrc:«y and ‘ coi.i il types In prlncc.-j and double brenstcd mod- eU. Sizes 7 to 11,

Cunning styles to set off \cont! Stars In bon-

net, brimmed nnd ott-tlie- face.

O SweatersKnit of oil wooll Springcolors .... .........98e

□ Girl'.s Ank le lsKnit of tine cotton. In *o:id.% piiticrn.-. 1 5 e

Q SnuR Panlie-s Tnliored or trimmed. Smooth knit rayon.

296

□ Sm art Sk ir lsWool In pleated or swlnKstyles ...... ......51.19

E ve ry th in g For IJoy.-; All A r cs !

Jim ' Penney Poplin

. Wash Suits$1.98

Tlic finest wni.h sulUi JV ,, wc can makel Neatly tailored ot .Miper- < ' poplin . . . mercer- \Ited. vat djcdl WlUi plenty of room y V pockets, tool 2-0.

For Regular Kellow*:’Rugby Suits

$6.90Boys’ grown-up sult-i In single or double breasted styles wiih long trousers. Uug- ged fabrics In tweedy roloral

Zelan-KlnljhedJacketsS1.98

Ot llKhtwclRlit pop­lin that U wlhd re-sSsUint, wnUr Ttptl-lenL Talon front, neat—Practical.

I spread leRS . . t/*>, \ DeiiullfUlly p 'J ip f - '''- > ' vnmlshcd. |Nfc»eeitY ujAPEus — Soft blrdseye u-eave. 0 for . .. 6 9 6 TRAINING PANTS — Dou­ble ihlck-<ih»orbent .... 355^ ABSORPENT TEItUY IlIO S ^ White with.pink or blur ..56 RECEIVING HLANKKTS — Cozy cotton, stitched

ends........................2 9 6

' ( ' « % . 'A l lU IA G E

? 5 .9 0

i>Ri:Rs niM UP F O R S PR IN G

BOYS’ SUITS, $14.75Pull bodied stamina packed. In ex­clusive new spring patterns. Tliese smartly styled sulU will give your boy that ’•Million Dollar" look. And

.yet at such low prices. _

Boyi* F»«t Color Percale Dress Shirts-;------Boy*' All • Wooi SlM«Jeis ijweatem --------Boys' Handsomely iltyled Jr. Lonrlea .......-Blaier HtHped Colton Slack Sock* ..............Boys* Fine Qoollly Bhlrts. Shorts. Briels —■

llnK—easy old! With pro- .ectlve hoO^

d m s r e s — Rjb- boo—embroidery trim, ^ 9 6 - T INT COTTON A.VKLETli— • \Vhlte or dainty pftstels 1 5 6 j CHENILLE SPREADS _ De- /

.signs in pink or. blue S 1 .2 S .I iUANDY DIAMTR BAG—BUb- Jber llnlnt. Pocketa ....9 8 6 1

Smart Comfortable Shoes for Children!Topoiar Tan er BUck For Sunday Beat!

PATENT PUMPS$2.49

This sparkler has nil Uie foot-mark.t ot bljt' sUster’a data pumpi T r im m e d w ith elosUclzed gnbardlnel Sizes 13

Boys’ OxfordsS2.79

Shoes for boys, styled like Dad’sl JVIth Penl - Flc* flexible In - s o !« and lo n g wearing Jeother soles. 1-8.

Men’s OxfordsSmooth block leather up­pers, soles — — “ ft&d heels -

L IT T L E T E A C H E R H IG H SHOESOf soft B lo « leather. “Cuddle-Back" construc- tlonl Banltlzed lining. SS to 8. ............. $1.69

For T h e A c liv c M iss!School Oxfords

S2.49Smart In two-toncd b ro w n i Weathcr- repelient le a th e r solesi lS-3.

■ Scer.«?ucKcr.s! Spun Rayon.st

DRESSES

1.98Excellent for casual wear at home or out-of'doorsl Smart nimple styling that you'll find rlRht for all occiuiloiusl Spring colors iri sizes 13 to 44. Volucsl

For VBihlon&ble .SIimne»a!

FOUNDATIONS

S3.49C o tto n ond myon balbte. 'Lostex' Irwn

RAYON tL COTTON GIItDLEWltii Tnlon -cloolnc. Lined with tlrm sateen __--...496

LACE i llATISTE BRAFirm yet light supporti Built- up shoulder simps.......596

SprinR’.s Most E xcU ^ ff Fabric!

tWILL 0’ SERGE59c Yd.

Wool and royon . . . In en­trancing solid tones'. . . 60 easy to launder . . . So ewty to keep pres-ied. Capture the maRic of spring with sklrU. slack suits, or sport jackets with Uils-p«rfcct.oU-purposo fabric. 30" wide.

DUUnctlve SorerltrIIA Y O N P R IN T S

A myriad of breath - taking spring colors, guperb qunllti’. Hand • washable. 3fl-


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