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Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases;...

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--- CEARITY H it^ Chlldf »rtu» »trml»hi. t«rmrt •*» \h« *> ’^4 ‘'i- UmUeut tc«nc—Jhe *• »><« UU S«jiB«nd Ctappet. Bead U* column. ■Wuhlntteo CaUi&C’ d&ilr on th* lutal pMTo. A Hcnionnl Newspaper Scrriiis Nine IrrlRalcd Idaho Coantica FINAL-- CITY EDITION VOL. 26. NO. 284 'nVIN FALLS, IDAHO. TUESDAY EVENING. MARCH 14. 194-1 PRICE 6 CENTS lES IN FW ■ARV OF % By LTIE C. WILSON WASlimOTON. M»rch I* (OB - HunpahlK nrtildpntUt prelcKnw prtronTT »oi «hlch iriU ^lend -mwsh MiT U. Durlnr Ihit period k maxlrmon of la lUlfs. Indudlne N«» HunpsWr*. could lire Ihelr TOUn an oppor- vwvij to on* tonn or another ot InaiMtlns thMr prrfrrfnc* qihoik BfpubUcan «jid Dfmocmsie fantll- fl»tM tor 1M4 prrsldentlal nwnlns llou. In UW uau*. Alab*m«. Ark«n »™i Oforvl". rxrcullre ihRll b* ft prefcrcnUal votr. Among lh« c*hfr Jtalfs. »«nf fniiblr volm 10 eiprrss prfffrrnc* »monK po- Iftl I . IW Kl on lh» billo; »nd oOifrs prorldi ft tliolcr «monR national convrn- Xion tfritsft'ti •Kht' Sflif* or Pxprrxs » prrfcrrnre lo: ffftftln IndlTldual c*nc1ia«tfs- Pftrt of S.T»«nn All of the preferential prlmity procfs* Is p m of the system hr »hlth Ihp stftlts choose drIcRalM •' »he pt)UUe*\ nalJenul wwjxtnVloi SlalM which do not provide • tu lol of »ny kind tn»>- choose their dflfptra br *t*te conTrnllorx or “ »t»le polltlMl orpfttiUfttlons n\»>' Irft ihfm. AJt« Ne» Hftmt»hlrt'» vole tod*y lor fiflfsfttfs \othf RepuWJcftn ftncl I DnnocnUe nfttlonftl convrritlt (here «U1 be a lull until March *htn Nfw York holdj Its prlmirr. WlKOisln'* prtaiarr on Apnt ' •niefrifter the primartrs come ihls ordn-: Ar'U 11. Illinois. Nrbrajia: AprJl il, Mft-vokchusetts, Ptimsjrlvanl M v I. Mftryland: MftJ 3. Alabani norida. South Dakota: Ma.v 9. V,'r VlrjUilft. Ohio: May IS, CaUfomU. Nfw Jtnty: May 19. Oregon. It Arkftiufts lulds a primary. It r ' b( It l(ftst tTO mcu'ths befor« niUonil conTftiUon^. The dat( Gfortli would be selected by the K fommlttee. _ ............._..jt B«n=l' palgiitr ter the Republican pml- dfnltil nacnlnatlon. aod «pp«r«n( by a -prtponderance ‘ Dfmocrftllc-organltatlan* In f»rlm»r>' «tal«i that Pre.'ddcnt RooeeveU Till h»Tt ft fourth term nomlhaUoi. RUPERT MARINE _ ROTERT, March M — MArtne ^ Ptc. Raymond Smith. 30. <rtia kill* •d In ftcUon In the south Pacltlc Jan. I. tecordln* to a report «rt*d btie- Be v u burled the loUowtnc day and number and location of the irar* has been senv to Wa mot Mrs, BU Smith. Sprtneerton. Th« family are former Ruptn TMldenU and Private Smith srad- \s»Wd tm n \he Rupert high schoeJ In mi. He made hU home for n time alih'Dpputy Sheriff and Mrs. Jake WaU. CASSIAN WOUNDED BUftLEY. MaTTh n - s s t . Trt Oochncpur. at. jor of Mr. and Mrs. J ( ^ B. Oochnour. Burley, va-' ftwindtd iB acUon on Pph, S. some- a-here In Italy, according to a recent lelrsntn trail the var department. Ke other infomatlon «as tvleascd to th« tncssan. Sertnnl Oochnour Und«<l north Africa with the first InfantO' Inmlon mortnieni on Nor. 8. IB4i. m He «** ftcUon there, and later la ' Sicily and Italy. n\Z3L MAJi TfOrSDEU flLER, March 14—Sgt Harrey P. Allan, who has been o>-errea« fcr tht past 10 montlts, h.is been woundfd In action, acconlliv to ft-ord recelw) from the war de* partment by his mother. Mrs. KaUe Allan. 7%e meuan suted that ■oujidi »er* not serioui. MISSING fN BCTROrE WASHnfOTON. March U cry- Staff Sit SUnley C. Whitney. MounUia Homt Ida- b oftlctaU)- mUsl&i In acUon to th* European •rta, t))« war depwtment disclosed 12 Soldiers Die AsMines Explode CAMP ROBINSOK. Ark. March 14 UV-Ao accidental explostoa dur> ln« a »Mrlkce mine demoaatntion ^ took lh» llTta o( u mrroy enUsted W men yMteiday. public rtlatJons ot> nem HiMunced. and «ent l« othen to tb* bftM boapltaL ‘Ten wldleii died tastanUy. two othm RTtiml houn Utcr. Four of tti« tn}UT(4 vere «a)d to b« in crtUcal tMdllJon, Tlu KOdltn, mKabrn of t (}}nd UnkdtstR9«r battalion. entutd b pracUc* tnsUIUUon «nd renonl ol antl*penctmeL u itl' tank and booby-trap mints, the publk reUliont omc* aid. Cauui BOTT BBIS AB.XT DAT BOISS. March U (Ui9-<krr. C . A. BoUcOfMD y«*tetxlay* pR>cUlined April I M iroT day tn Mate aad OlMl UabMni to hocMT the «rmy « day hjr dbplajrlRB «w n*s bcmc aod pUet* ol bwl- Air Raids Flay 7 Jap Pacific Island Bases; Solomons Push Halted Flier Missing UEirr. R. I. UARBERT . . . HT*« hu been reported mtajRl IR »nl«.n »T»T Itaty »lrite Feb. 12 by thr war drpaHmrnl. ISUfl F.nrratlnd LIEUl M I Second Ucut. Rlchfirri Lee Hiit bert. n , who hM been ovmeas Wnc October, hfc< been ml.v«lnR l action over Italj- sJnce Fet>. 13. nt cordlns to Inlomiatloii from Hi dfliarlmrnt, received by hi Mre. Marjorie SalLibiirj- lint ben. who is IMnj In Uu Aiisele.'. n ol J. A. Harbert, Twin Fnll he h»<1 been, on about 35 ml«lon idnce he and the tactical ere ,,, orsanltfd at Avon Park. Fli».. prlnr EOlns OTtwa.', landfvl on tl land Of Sardinia, near Italy. Ututenant Harbert received hli preliminary tralnlne at Santa Aiu, Calif,: hb bombardier txntnlnB i the Victorville army IblnK .lehool i Victorville. Calll, where he receive commLvJon. and Bdclltloni iriklnlns at Carlibsd, N. M , prior Etans to Avon Park. He Is a Kniduale of Twin Palls high school, and ^erved tut a i ber of the odvertlMng staff of radio stAtlMi KTFl prior.to cnierlns the amy. “ jce landing on Sardinia, h« ... .. . crew of sevrn men hnd built 'themselwi a brick home, complet* Wth fireplace and mantef Tram materials lalvaptl trom riilned Sar- dinian clUfs: and. tumkhed U with •fumltute which they found nmong the ruliu on the Island. Besides themselves. Ihrir hou.>« occupied by an elsht-yeal orphaned Italian boy whom tlic had “adopted' before Chrlstmrui, Lady, tht tocker *panlel doe that became a part of the crew at Avon P«k. 1 letterj wttlten to his wife hU lather, Ututenant Horbert --J explained that the crew wa* able to unusKle the dog aboard .ihlp. ind thus t.^ko brr nverwa.t them, by jlvlng her a knockout shot Just prior to Hilling. Ke aUo told of leaiihlivg Uie yovsng Italian bc}' Engllih. and of their Christmas celebration. ENTERTAINMEXT NORTOLK, Va, March U - The Blair Jttnlor hUh school hai installed a Juke box In the B)Tnnt«|. um lor Irre dancing »durln8 tho I}inch period. Qrayton Datightrj', Rjin director, aald a Utht se.ulon of Jive would aW digestion, encourage the boya and slrK lo leam to dance, and enable ihroi to have a good time on Khool premLvs under aupen’lslon ot their teacher*. DODGER NEW YORK. March 14 — A roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt under a (alse name, failed to retura a quMllonnalre, tailed to appear tor a ptu'slcal ex- amination, neglected to report for Induction, and tarried no reglstra- ..... cart. I said hU elforta to dodge the law gave him gray hair, stomach trouble and nerrous disorders. LOOT PmLADKLPHIA. March 14 -Tht Uiler »ho Kole John oiU«ple'» tm-: tcmobUe did hla best to keep the law ftWB txaeln* him. OUUaple, » teehnldan. said the car conuincd a large order ot fin- ftrprtnt^ ffptlpment tor the FBI. SIMPLE PHILADELPHIA, March M - roitnf out torta 1040 la lo slmpla for one. toxuntant here that he un^rtakw to do U ortr the tele- “People ««n Bin you the conpletc uomxatloa ta aboot Ht* ul&utti en » qwAloimalre l hare prepared,' he SV5..-1 rrrpare the r»t«ms wit Ball then lo the Ukjiayer lor tic- •WASHINGTON, March U (UP) — Amy and navy airmen have struck more hard blows against seven Japanese bases in the Marshall and Caroline islands, a continuation of thoir drive to pulverize enemy defenses in the central Pacific, the navy an- nounced today. The latest attacks were made on Sunday and ail U. S. planes returned safely. The target in the Caro- lines was Kusaie, where army Mitchell medium bomb- ers started several fires. Army Liberators and (iiiiintipss divc-bombera hit fi baso.s in the cn.itcrn MiirHhiills. Thfsy bombed the cjititi ment aruii ii»il niiHo stitlfoii nt one island nnd iimmimit dump nnd Run omplnccment.s nl another. Niivy search plnne.'j hit twu other tyirmy-hehJ -Mnr-shjii) >m.scs and diimaRed .hip fiKhliTs in nn air cnRagemcnl I’onapc in the Ciirolinc.s. By lUCIIAItD C. DKROHOLZ Amoclfttcd Pres» W ir Editor Jtvpanew hopekssly trapped BouRBlnvlllc Island In the Solomoiu have been repulsed bloodily In a four-day suicidal attnck on the al- lied posltlon.1 at Eniprrw AiiKU-'ta i>y but are fciwrtcd rc-groupIng >r another nK,'auU. ^mush agnlnsv tiit iil^tineM: In northern BiimiR »ai> nnounced by poiitheii.'t Ai>la allied el«lqlmrtcr^ today. Drlllsh forrr* reuchrd encmV ilctciwe.s on pper Chlmlwin river. thu.i odd new i>|)earheiMl In the drive irnr nor^htrn BMinm anrt pcimlt' le ODenlnK ot a land .lupply route > Chlnu. 000 JapMiCM have been killed «nd iftiiy more nouiitlrd In the &)lo- lon.' battle which began last We<|. esOny. American caauaUlcs have ^en llRht. American cavalrj’men who have braiight Lo-1 Negros Wand In tlio Admiralty group under control oe- ipled two small Islnnda 1.000 yards otf the coast of Mnniw Island, larg- il In the Admlraltlr.^ Minor rr- stjince wa.-i overcome. Wewak. New Guinea, wan pound- 1 from the air for the aecond ralBhl day with a 112-Ion aa.'ault Sundny. and Rabaul. New Britain, had allied planes overhead for six hours during a 117-lon strike. Wake island... enemy-held 0. B. posse^ilon tn the mld-Paclflc. was rvlded for the I5th time when army and na^7 heavy, bomber* poured M tons of explosives on the Uny is- land's defenses Saturday. Other planes hit Nauru Island southwest of the Gilbert group and three im- dcslgnated atolls In the MarahalU. f l i TERMS FOR PEACE REGIED BTpCKHOLM. March 14 lUP.i- Ru.t<ln h/ui rejected Flnlaiid'i. com ler-|)toi>o.snl» lor an arnuslJce. r liable source* »ald today, and n i nl,i|i source.^ mv little prtxsiiecl of an early separate peace. SwrdlKh quarters. ho»e\er, said the Rufwlnn note of rejection »•« "by no means entlrelj’ nrsatlvf" and ex|)rcssed hope Of a johitlon. The tael that Ru-vilft did not piib- luh immertlawiy her rejection waj Inlerpretecl here na a ttgn that Finland would l>e given anoihrr chance to consider cftrelully vheili- er to accept Uie original Soviet provWoiiR for an armLMlce. Jack nclAcher. Ur\lted Prrw atalf corrc!>pondrnt who just has ftrnvtvl In Ilelslllkl. Indicated that an Ini- jMrtant amnounccment by the Hel- sinki Kovernment was Imminent, probably today or tomorrow. The Finnish parliament was schcaulcd to meet today, but Fin- nish clrcle.i doubted the session would prove sensatlonaL The Rus.ilan note, which arrived In Helslnjct by way of Stockholm, was uriderstood to Instit upon Pln- land'r Rcccptance ot the original su ternu lJUd down by the So\ ’lets before Any fatmal peace negotla- tlotu begin. Finland had attempted to compromise by countering original demands w i t h ...... that All ■ ...................... tlatlon. s b« left for nego- County Loses Tractor Fight; Draws Appeal A district court'case w)iicb has attracted nationwide atten- tion boRnn it.s final Inp on the route to the Idaho supreme court Ttie-stiay, when Di.strict Judge James W. Porter.formal- ly held that Twin Fails county is bound by the cmcrgency price act of 1942. County Attorney Everett M. Sweeley bcKftn preparation of a auprcjno court appeal imme- diately after receiving the memorandtim deci.sion, nnd said the appeal would bc filed ns soon as formal judgment hns been prepared by counscl for defendant and intcrvonor, nnd hns been signed by Judge Porter. The memorandum decision vir- tually wound up the local phase of cnse ol tlie eo\mly yt. WUliani .. Hulbert. with Uie CPA a* In- ter\-enor..which had Its beginning laat August. Hulbert bid 11.050 for a used tractor sold at auction by county. Bhd then refused to tho money when warned by . that Uic celling price was »723.S6. and Uiat he would be In violation If he paid tiie full amount bid. The county promptly sued, and GPA enured the case u Inter- vener. Idaho I.aw 'n ie county bused Its case on the contention that Idaho aUtute re- tiuirea public ofticen to sell publlo goods to the highest and best bid- der. and disputed two principal pointa claimed by OPA. S«-eeiey arttued that congress did not intend OPA regulations-to in- vade righU of the states, and Uiat the emergency price act of 1M3 would be unconsUtuUonai 11it were permitted to supercede atatutes such as that requiring sale of pub- lie (roods e« the highest and best bidder. The stand of >lie court on these questions became knotk-n in Jan- uary, when Judge Porter disagreed with the pialnUtfs.contentions in a memorandum ruling denying a demurrer and motion to strike por- tions of the OPA’s complaint tn lnlcr>-enlion. Appeal Certain Sweeley then formally refused to plevd furUier. and announced that he would appeal, to the supreme court »Ji won u Kulbcrt antS the OPA took Judgment by default. OJ. and the press of other business .. lemben of the iUt« OPA legal taff delayed th« formaliUes lead- JUdce Porter'k decision eipr««sed thre* principal pointa: tt) m t Uie plainutf Is subject to-and governed RAF BLASTS NAZI AHACK DEFENSE LONDON. March 14 flJJT-RAi- dreds of R A F heavy bombers dis- rupted nasi anll.invosion peepara- Ilona last night with s Thunderbolt attsck on railway targets at Le Mans, 110 miles southwest of Park, while Mo.«5Ullo , rftiders struck Frankfurt nnd otiier objective In western German)-. fitplosjvc anti Incrndlaiy bombs tore up railway tracks, set tire to cars and warehouses and wrceked other Installntlon.^ at Le Mans, one of tile main Junctions through which pnfis troop% ammunition and olher supplies for Oerman forces maiming defenses on the Brittany and Bay o f Biscay cowls. 1116 a&sault was m ade b) a force wmprUed entirely of four-englned HaUfwes ajid was one ot the henvl. « t yet directed against tions In Trance, which presumably must be pnral>Tcd tn advance of the opening of ft western front in Eu- rcpe. It wu the fifth raid by the RAPs heavywelshU in eight nights on France, including an attack t week ?o on I# Mans. Other BrltLth planes rounded out tile night's oflenslve with mine lay- ing sortlu over enem>' waters »nd Intnider patrols over E tm ^ . Three planes, including tw^ from the bomber command, wer« lost la all cperatlons. ' - Past, low>ri}-lng German planet 5mbed open land in a southern England district early this morning. One outer Ijondon are* hod a brief •Unn. but no bombs were dropped. Reds Bomb Seven Cities in Estonia STOCKHOLM, March 14 MV- Beren B tonian ciUe* haro been bcnbed by the Russians in tht last U Iwura. the Oerman-contn^ Scandinavian telegraph bureau tald todey naining them as Dorpot. v»ra, VlUadl. P»mu. Pille. R4k« •nd T»P^ .. ... lE BOLSIERED WITH IIEO RECOGNITION NAPLES. March. 14 HV-Ru.wla's estabUihmeni of diplomatic rcla- UmmirtMi PrtmVer Pietro Dodwtllo’i. sovemment aiiix®ra to have furtlirr strrnitihfned hta regime, ulrendy rndorje<l by Prime MlnUtcr Cliurcli. Ul. and lo have given King Vittorio Flriimifle • Ilrmer hold on his throne. l\ !.U»Ti »mm\inl5t iendPrs anlil they would (-oiitlnue to oppose Hie kind and Dadogllo. and otic clilrf- tain. p,olo Tr<1e.ichl. aald tJinl » Ru.yla> artlem Improved BndoRlUVj We sliall ea mir elloru to obtain a ri'all) dtmoctaMc lovrmmrnl," nrltHh Ktanil Tat tin.London. It e«ii»K:t<Kl that Brltnln wtmid aland pot—at Irasl until the inUliar>' situation Im- pnnra - rontlnulng her dciillngj w11h jfte aitdocUo government vhiiHiKii uip militnr>’ control com- mU'ioM and sllU-d DdvLwry commis- sion, Il was antlclpntfd there tliat the Unltevl Slatea would adopt similar policy. <A Washington dl'patch sni howevrr. that the United Gtntes w understood to have been willing for many weeks to rcplace the king with a regency, while leaving Ba- dogllo In alithority unUI the nllle,t capture nnme Tlie British, on the otlin haiicl, have Ix^n against any chanjje until nomc Is takrn. the dls- ('smment Declined Oniclal lirltL'h sources dccilnttl Immediate comment but II wiw, un- derilood that the Soviet decLilon was mndf without prior coii-sult*- tlon wlih ihf other allies, oltliouRh they Wore Inlormrd unofflclalU that the re<<>8iilUon was coming. Til* Riiv\ l,'\n action marks the first ty of th( glm. f the iSadogllo re- isky. 8ovlf mnnt>er on llie liitrr-nlllpd ftflvUory council on Italian nltalrs, l.s e«- Txtted hrre lo t>c named the Rus- sian amha,via(1or. Both Drllaln and Ih* United Stales have been conslderlnR ac- cording itnillar recocnlUon to Italy. It «-a,i uiidertlood. and the R<i.v«lan action la enpecied to bring an early decljlan. Gas Ration on “A” Cards Gut ToTwoGailons WASHlh'OTON. March 14 (41 -UeducUoii of Ujc basic ••A" gftsollt'ie latlon frcpm three to ta-o gallons ft week In the m id- west and tar west, effective March 33, was announced totliiy by Uie office of price admlnU- tratlon. At the same time, tlie "B” sup- p\tmtm«ry raUon ceiling on the Pacific coast will b« trimmed from 4eo to <00 giUlons a monUi. No change is sclieduled for any of the present rations In the 17 east coast states and Uie Dis- trict of Columbia, already on an allotment ol two gal- lon] a ireet .. .ike Uiese reductions re- luctsntly." OPA Administrator Chester Bowles said ot tiie west and mldwijt cuts, “but we are entering a period in which crit- ical demands will be made on our limited supplies of ga-^ollne, and we are entering It with sup- plies that are sharply llmiwd as the result of war demand.t." Preliminary figures show. OPA said, that gasoline allocations for Uie country as a whole will be about nine per cent les* for the second quarter beginning April 1 than for Uie first quar- ter. "nie ration reducUoivt are expected to save about IB.OOO to 30.000 barrels of gasoline a day. Induction Delay Set for Teachers WASHmOTON. March 14 f/P)— Rep. White. D. Idaho, laid he ha.n received a telegram from Drig. Oen, Menrin Q. McConoel. Idaho selec- tive service director, advising him “we are recommending that induc- Uon ot all teachers be postponed .unUl the end at the school year in order that schools not be Interrupt- 1 0 ,0 0 0 N a z is 'S la in " A s E ffo r t to B r e a k U k r a in e T ra p F a ils LONDON, March 14 (UP)—RuHsian troops of the Ukraine cncirclcd ,a larKe (icrman {rroup northeast of Nikolaev and the nazis lost 10,000 men try- ing to break out of the trap, a Moscow communique reported tonight. The lliinl army of the Ukraine under Gen. Rodion Y. Mnliriov.sky sprang the trap on the - formidiilile Gorniun force in the reRioii of Bcrpznegovataya, 45 miles northeast of Nikolaev, li Sii.vcjtycri'vkji. '10 niiK’s east of Nikolaev. Ten lliousaiKi Gi'i'iiian.K werr killed while trying to break nut of the.Soviet noose, the red iiy comminiKiuc reported. The Uiissian bullclin reported unbroken gains in all the key sec- tors of the fa.st-shifting lUissians R oll Westward lUthern front. Piixtihig 20 miles westward from ipturpii Kheraon In a single day. tc niuilnns cnpturecf 6lilrokaya Dnlkn on ilie northern bank of the broad Dnieper estuan-, as-well as CO oUicr locallUcs. The main drive from Kherson was aimed at Niko- laev. At the mouth of the Bug river, 35 miles lo Uit northwest. Some IJO miles to the norUiwest. Soviet larcc-H pushed up to Uie Bug river on a broadening front. Hiey captiircd KhoAliechcvala, 34 mUes south of Oman on the Bug, and nine ill ntatlons In that sector. A drive to within leM than 10 miles of VImilUft vion more than 30 to«-n.H alnd villaBe.v Including Uie railroad station ot Oummennoye, IP miles ,<outhen,a of the seml- :lrcled sUotighold, Tim raaio by CBS ifferln* ofl ..................., as the naili -I bark under sleilte hammer blow* from three major Soviet armies, day's dl.ipatclus Indicate that Nlkolser. arrow lower right. Is threat- rd by a pincers advance on this Important Black aea navsl base. Itv'kft, Just fit-lott. imiArUnt port and the nasli' last twape termlnti, alM) threatencit. Tamopal.-arrcnra.ceniei,. ts lhe-«weftl .p«1ik; s f'^ t' UDit by the third army of (he Ukraine an<) Its foil Is Imminent aC‘ rdlng to report*. Churchill Hints New Action Against Eire LONDON, March l-l (/P)— Prime Minister Churchill lold commons today that Britain and the United States plan "to isolate southern Ireland from the outer world”—a virtual qunrantinc by molhotls yet to be disclo-Hcd which would seal off that potential npy-post during the llth hour to the' open- r of the western front. ihurchlll’s words clearly Implied Dy nAIlRISON SALISBURT MOSCOW, March 14 (U.fi)-Red armies at oi)po.slte ends of Uie bloi- ing SOO-mlle Ukrainian batUefront today drove to within a UtUo more than 50 murji of the old Rumanian border and begnn a pincers advance the Black sea naval base of Nlkoliicv. <A German DNO dispatch snld lie lUi.sslans on the lower DUiepeB'"^' utnumbered the Germims 10 to n imes and still were brinalnr un rei inforceincnts. while a __ spokesman wiia heard __ broadcasting that the anfferln* t. naxl troops in the southern UKmlnB' •exceeds by far anything they had lo endure during the Icy snow storm* of Janunry and rebruary.") Lntc front dLspntciies reported new gains through crumbling enemy defenses all tli« way from Poland lo theBlarJt sea as the three. Rus- i!<n Dmlntanr 'anniet ^uialfied ' wnat'oppeared to be Uielr supreme' effort to clfor southern Russia of le Invaders. ' Marshal Gregory R. khukoT's first army, striking suddenly In a new offen-ilve between embattled Tamopol and Proskurotr at the ■m end of the front, captured Skalat, only S3 miles north of the Dniester river border of old Hu- monia and lOS miles northeast of former boundary of Czecho- tlovakln. • exleailon of rc.strlctlons .. . - border bclwcen iiorUiern Ireland and Eire, and perhops even a scml' blockade ot Qre, where President Do Valera ha.\retused to close Ger- ,an and Japantie olHccs. Restrictions on travel to Eire, Cliurclilll said, sre "tlie Urst stop ... . 1 policy designed to isolnte Qrcnt Britain from south land, and also to Isolate southern Ireland from the outer world d u r Ing the ciWcftl -period now op proaching. ■If a catastrophe were to oectir the alUcd armies which could be iraccd lo tho reteiitloii of Germs and Japanese reprcjcnwilves Dublin, a gulf would be opened bi tween Great Britain un one hand and AoutJiero Ireland on the oUier .lilch even geiierntlons would not brldpe." lie lold commoai. ChurclilU declartd Hint the Brit- ish government iiad born coiuulu-d throuehout liv the United Stales ot\ the Washington request that Eire close German and Japaiiefe con.iui- i--nnd "gave the American op- proncii lull support." . . Asked whether the domlnloiu hnd been con.<ultc»l. CliurchlU observ- ed. ■■cowpltte wnlty ot thought pre- ' ills tlirouglioiil the British com- onwealth as far os I am aware.” Navy to Need H alf Million in 1944 to M an 12 Ships Daily WASHINOTON. March 14 I-Tj — Nearly a doten new ships a tiny ore expected lo go into sen’Ice with the United Statn fleet in ISH. Secretary Knox sakl today. He made the report at a news conference attended by Vice Adm. Randall Jacobs chief of the burenu . . ..nnel. who wld that nearly half a mUiion olflcera and men Wll be needed to man Uie new cr^ltln'lhe npldly expanding fleet, Sea-Qftlng Vcaitls Jacobs added U)»l th« doien ahlps figure la based wholly a does not although Uie total _____ .. the larger landing cratt" T%e'pertenn«l chief e«Umal«d that 11 navy's total strength by the end of 1>44 Kill be 3.006.000 officers iuid men, vhUe Uie toUl for all naval Mrrim, including martnea and coast luard. b expected to be approxi- mately S.1tiO.OOO. Jacobs sdded th at the maximum itrength ot the navy ^,D 0tb * iHfih«*l u n U l ........... Knox s.-Udhe fell Uiat to meet manpower problems of the navy and army and industry, a national serv- ice ii»w would bc nfcessary. In dUcloslng the rale of ship ud- dllions. he .Mild thal the number of 5lili» In the fleet lisi increased front B13 on Jan. l, 1942, to 4,l(n on Jan 1, 1944. Average Increase* - In 1941. he sold, the bureau of a\-ai personnel provided crews tot average of one new Uilp dally, e tim« in 1943 S.4 ships were ct__________ each day. the following year Uie rate was &.S stiips dally nnd "In calendar year 1944 the estimole Is an averege of 11.7 ohlps commialoned each day." Discussing Uie w against Japan. Knox rpported Uiat carrier-borne •ircntft are destroying enemy planes al • rale o{ better than 3 to 1 In Uie current eenlral PmUIo often- alve. He said : Uiat more thin 600 Jipanew planes had been destroyed in .mnjor actions-since last Novem* ber, .against American navy .plan* lotsea of otily 45. SENATE APPROVES lY VOTE BILL WASmNaTON, March 14 (U .R) - The senate today approved the com- promL-se soldier vote bill. 47 to 31, despite the opposition ct MaJocltj Uader Alben W . Barkley. Tho vole came after two doys of debate *on the controversial mea- sure. Howe opprovol of the bill was considered orsured. It then would go to President Roosevelt for or signature. Opponents of 'Uie compromise bill charged thal it would restrict Uie number of soldiers wlio could vole. Supporten claimed that It would facilitate voting by more soldiers than oire eUsUile under prcMtil la*. Jtut before the vote, Barkley de- nounced the measure as a restric- tive bill which would deny the vole to many servicemen. Ho ssld the bill would repeol. "not directly but by impUcsllon and necessary In' UtpretRUoti," the w&lvcr In U« IRia law of poU Uxes and registra- tion for scrvlcemen voting In fed- eral elections. He added that lie Uiought con^ re&s lias an obligation as well as le power to make It easy for btra of Uie am\td Sotces to vote for president, vice' Swindling of U.S. Soldiers to Stop NAPLES, March H m - AlUed auhlorlUes Issued a crackdown der today ogsliut NeapoUtsin n chants who have been fitednt American, and British troops, per- Ucuiorly the Americans. Ueut, Col .Charles Polettl -t*. gloual commissioner for tbe.aUIed mUltars* govemmeot, s e n ^ notice UiU a Ust« (e«Uinf prtea.inuUi t eompUed . and ’ UuU 'jn N ^ L charging' cxorbluuit prictf ’and! liU- represenUng (jw ll^ will, have • liroclalmini It UialU''' to traopt. OWNER TESTIFIES WAGE HEARING The war labor board hearing for Krengel's, Inc., continued Into Uiis afternoon in Uie T*-ln Polls district courtroom, after C. H. Krengel had Uken the stand In his own behalf. The morning session of the hear- ing before n Uirce-man division of Uie regional \VLB wns devoted lo Uie testimony of Albert Shaw. Botse, WLB InvesUgator, who tesUfled to increases granted by Krengel's ..... November, 1842. "me hearing Is to determine whether these In- creases vlolat« the wage stablllcatiOQ law. Krensel, tesUfylng- in his own be- half. snld some of the Increases were Justified by promoUon. and some by -« of new poslUons being created.- !rs. he said, represented Ute ad- ,... :ement of co«nparaUvcly inex- perienced help which completed its only BChooUng in certain cratts'ln clftS5e.i formerly cotiductcd at hla place by the stale board of vocaUon* i| educntlon, • • Opemting the largest machinB sliop >n southern Idaho, Krengel's is A unit of the Idalio Manufocturtng company, whicli hos been awarded nmn:,' gm-cnunent contracts. Much ot the organUation's war work has been In sub-contracts for ship* buUt by the Kaiser ahlpyards. - Frank L. Stephan, Twin Palls at- torney,- was Krengel's representaUre before the board. ......... WLB oKlcltkls htMlii*. tti« t» » . lere J . Glenn Donaldson. Denver, cliftirmon and public member: W. Howard. Che}’enne, V^o.. Indus- try mmber; and August RosqvlM,' ’ Poeateilo, labor members. eiephon (aid It was uncertain •fcbetlicr- the board would make a . decision immediately after the heat- ing. or delay the declsicn for more J conaldcrBUon. Danger to Rome Blamed on Nazis WASHINOTOIf. March . H Wh- ' me allied naUont «1U spart.iuUr'' hls^ric ________ -T of-»ar-I biama will htti --- - )e«l to U^k*- I m,
Transcript
Page 1: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

--- C EAR IT YH i t ^ Chlldf »rtu» »trml»hi.

t«rmrt •*» \h« *>’ 4 ‘'i-UmUeut tc«nc—Jhe *• »><«UU S«jiB«nd Ctappet. Bead U* column. ■Wuhlntteo CaUi&C’ d&ilr on th* lutal pMTo.

A Hcnionnl Newspaper Scrriiis Nine IrrlRalcd Idaho Coantica

F I N A L - -

C I T Y

E D I T I O N

VOL. 26. N O . 284 'nVIN F A L L S , ID A H O . TUESDAY EVENING. M ARC H 14. 194-1 PR IC E 6 CENTS

l E S IN F W ■ A R V OF %

By LTIE C. WILSON WASlimOTON. M»rch I* (OB -

HunpahlKnrtildpntUt prelcKnw prtronTT»oi «hlch iriU ^lend -mwsh MiT U.

Durlnr Ih it period k maxlrmon ofla lUlfs. Indudlne N«» HunpsWr*.could lire Ihelr TOUn an oppor- vwvij to on* tonn or another ot InaiMtlns thMr prrfrrfnc* qihoik BfpubUcan «jid Dfmocmsie fantll- fl»tM tor 1M4 prrsldentlal nwnlns llou.

In UW uau*. Alab*m«. Ark«n»™i Oforvl". rxrcullre

ihRll b* ft prefcrcnUal votr. Among lh« c*hfr Jtalfs. »«nf fniiblr volm 10 eiprrss prfffrrnc* »monK po-

Iftl I . IWKl on lh» billo; »nd oOifrs prorldi ft tliolcr «monR national convrn- Xion tfritsft'ti •Kht'Sflif* or Pxprrxs » prrfcrrnre lo: ffftftln IndlTldual c*nc1ia«tfs-

Pftrt of S.T»«nn All of the preferential prlmity

procfs* Is p m of the system hr »hlth Ihp stftlts choose drIcRalM •' »he pt)UUe*\ nalJenul wwjxtnVloi SlalM which do not provide • tu lol of »ny kind tn»>- choose their dflfptra br *t*te conTrnllorx or “ »t»le polltlMl orpfttiUfttlons n\»>'Irft ihfm.

AJt« Ne» Hftmt»hlrt'» vole tod*y lor fiflfsfttfs \o thf RepuWJcftn ftncl

I DnnocnUe nfttlonftl convrritlt (here «U1 be a lull until March *htn Nfw York holdj Its prlmirr. WlKOisln'* prtaiarr on Apnt ' •niefrifter the primartrs come ihls ordn-:

Ar'U 11. Illinois. Nrbrajia: AprJl il, Mft-vokchusetts, Ptimsjrlvanl M v I. Mftryland: MftJ 3. Alabani norida. South Dakota: Ma.v 9. V,'r VlrjUilft. Ohio: May IS, CaUfomU. Nfw Jtnty: May 19. Oregon. It Arkftiufts lulds a primary. It r ' b( It l(ftst tTO mcu'ths befor« niUonil conTftiUon . The dat( Gfortli would be selected by the

K fommlttee.

_ ............._ ..jt B «n= l'palgiitr ter the Republican pml- dfnltil nacnlnatlon. aod «pp«r«n(

by a -prtponderance ‘ Dfmocrftllc-organltatlan* In f»rlm»r>' «tal«i that Pre.'ddcnt RooeeveU Till h»Tt ft fourth term nomlhaUoi.

RUPERT MARINE

_ ROTERT, March M — MArtne ^ Ptc. Raymond Smith. 30. <rtia kill*

•d In ftcUon In the south Pacltlc Jan. I. tecordln* to a report «rt*d btie-

Be vu burled the loUowtnc day and number and location of the irar* has been senv to Wa mot Mrs, BU Smith. Sprtneerton.

Th« family are former Ruptn TMldenU and Private Smith srad- \s»Wd tmn \he Rupert high schoeJ In mi.

He made hU home for n time alih'Dpputy Sheriff and Mrs. Jake WaU.

CASSIAN WOUNDED BUftLEY. MaTTh n - s s t . Trt

Oochncpur. at. jor of Mr. and Mrs. J ( ^ B. Oochnour. Burley, va-' ftwindtd iB acUon on Pph, S. some- a-here In Italy, according to a recent lelrsntn trail the var department. Ke other infomatlon «as tvleascd to th« tncssan.

Sertnnl Oochnour Und«<l north Africa with the first InfantO' Inmlon mortnieni on Nor. 8. IB4i.

m He «** ftcUon there, and later la ' Sicily and Italy.

n\Z3L MAJi TfOrSDEU flLER, March 14—Sgt Harrey

P. Allan, who has been o>-errea« fcr tht past 10 montlts, h.is been woundfd In action, acconlliv to ft-ord recelw) from the war de* partment by his mother. Mrs. KaUe Allan.

7%e meuan suted that ■oujidi »er* not serioui.

MISSING fN BCTROrE WASHnfOTON. March U cry-

Staff S it SUnley C. Whitney. MounUia Homt Ida- b oftlctaU)- mUsl&i In acUon to th* European •rta, t))« war depwtment disclosed

12 Soldiers Die As Mines Explode

CAMP ROBINSOK. Ark. March 14 UV-Ao accidental explostoa dur> ln« a »Mrlkce mine demoaatntion

^ took lh» llTta o( u mrroy enUsted W men yMteiday. public rtlatJons ot>

nem HiMunced. and «ent l« othen to tb* bftM boapltaL

‘Ten wldleii died tastanUy. two othm RTtiml houn Utcr. Four of tti« tn}UT(4 vere «a)d to b« in crtUcal tMdllJon,

Tlu KOdltn, mKabrn of t (}}nd UnkdtstR9«r battalion. entutd b pracUc* tnsUIUUon «nd renonl ol antl*penctmeL u it l ' tank and booby-trap mints, the publk reUliont omc* a id . Cauui

BOTT BBIS AB.XT DAT BOISS. March U (Ui9-<krr. C. A.

BoUcOfMD y«*tetxlay* pR>cUlined April I M iroT day tn Mate aad OlMl UabMni to hocMT the «rmy « day hjr dbplajrlRB «w n*s

bcmc aod pUet* ol bwl-

Air Raids Flay 7 Jap Pacific Island Bases;

Solomons Push HaltedFlier Missing

UEirr. R. I . UARBERT . . . HT*« hu been reported

mtajRl IR »nl«.n »T»T Itaty »lrite Feb. 12 by thr war drpaHmrnl. ISUfl F.nrratlnd

LIEUl M I

Second Ucut. Rlchfirri Lee Hiit bert. n , who hM been ovmeas Wnc

October, hfc< been ml.v«lnR l action over Italj- sJnce Fet>. 13. nt cordlns to Inlomiatloii from Hi

dfliarlmrnt, received by hi Mre. Marjorie SalLibiirj- lint

ben. who is IMnj In Uu Aiisele.'.■ n ol J. A. Harbert, Twin Fnll

he h»<1 been, on about 35 ml«lon idnce he and the tactical ere ,,, orsanltfd at Avon Park. Fli».. prlnr

EOlns OTtwa.', landfvl on tl land Of Sardinia, near Italy.

Ututenant Harbert received hli preliminary tralnlne at Santa Aiu, Calif,: hb bombardier txntnlnB i the Victorville army IblnK .lehool i Victorville. Calll, where he receive

commLvJon. and Bdclltloni iriklnlns at Carlibsd, N. M , prior ■ Etans to Avon Park.

He Is a Kniduale of Twin Palls high school, and ^erved tut a i ber of the odvertlMng staff of radio stAtlMi KTFl prior .to cnierlns the amy.

“ jce landing on Sardinia, h« ... .. . crew of sevrn men hnd built 'themselwi a brick home, complet* Wth fireplace and mantef Tram materials lalvaptl trom riilned Sar­dinian clUfs: and. tumkhed U with •fumltute which they found nmong the ruliu on the Island.

Besides themselves. Ihrir hou.>« occupied by an elsht-yeal

orphaned Italian boy whom tlic had “adopted' before Chrlstmrui, Lady, tht tocker *panlel doe that became a part of the crew at Avon P«k.

1 letterj wttlten to his wife hU lather, Ututenant Horbert

--J explained that the crew wa* able to unusKle the dog aboard .ihlp. ind thus t. ko brr nverwa.t

them, by jlvlng her a knockout shot Just prior to Hilling.

Ke aUo told of le aiihlivg Uie yovsng Italian bc}' Engllih. and of their Christmas celebration.

ENTERTAINMEXT NORTOLK, Va, March U -

The Blair Jttnlor hUh school hai installed a Juke box In the B)Tnnt«|. um lor Irre dancing »durln8 tho I}inch period.

Qrayton Datightrj', Rjin director, aald a Utht se.ulon of Jive would aW digestion, encourage the boya and slrK lo leam to dance, and enable ihroi to have a good time on Khool premLvs under aupen’lslon ot their teacher*.

DODGER NEW YORK. March 14 — A

roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had:

ResUterrt under a (alse name, failed to retura a quMllonnalre, tailed to appear tor a ptu'slcal ex­amination, neglected to report for Induction, and tarried no reglstra-..... cart.

I said hU elforta to dodge the law gave him gray hair, stomach trouble and nerrous disorders.

LOOTPmLADKLPHIA. March 14 -Tht

Uiler »ho Kole John oiU«ple'» tm-: tcmobUe did hla best to keep the law ftWB txaeln* him.

OUUaple, » teehnldan. said the car conuincd a large order ot fin- ftrprtn t^ ffptlpment tor the FBI.

SIMPLE PHILADELPHIA, March M -

roitnf out torta 1040 la lo slmpla for one. toxuntant here that he un^rtakw to do U ortr the tele-

“People ««n Bin you the conpletc uomxatloa ta aboot Ht* ul&utti

en » qwAloimalre l hare prepared,' he SV5..-1 rrrpare the r»t«ms wit Ball then lo the Ukjiayer lor tic-

•W ASH INGTON , March U (U P ) — A m y and navy airmen have struck more hard b lows against seven Japanese bases in the M arshall a n d Caroline islands, a continuation of thoir drive to pulverize enemy defenses in the central Pacific , th e navy an­

nounced today.The latest attacks were made on Sunday and ail

U . S. planes returned safely. The target i n the Caro­lines was Kusaie, where army M itchell m ed ium bomb­

ers started several fires.Arm y Liberators and (iiiiintipss divc-bombera hit fi

baso.s in the cn.itcrn MiirHhiills. Thfsy bombed the cjititi m ent aruii ii»il niiHo stitlfoii nt one island nnd iimmimit dum p nnd Run omplnccment.s nl another.

Niivy search plnne.'j hit twu other tyirmy-hehJ -Mnr-shjii) >m.scs and diimaRed .hip fiKhliTs in nn air cnRagemcnl I’onapc in the Ciirolinc.s.

By lUCIIAItD C. DKROHOLZ Amoclfttcd Pres» Wir Editor

Jtvpanew hopekssly trapped BouRBlnvlllc Island In the Solomoiu have been repulsed bloodily In a four-day suicidal attnck on the al­lied posltlon.1 at Eniprrw AiiKU-'ta i>y but are fciwrtcd rc-groupIng >r another nK,'auU.

^mush agnlnsv tiit iil tineM: In northern BiimiR »ai> nnounced by poiitheii.'t Ai>la allied el«lqlmrtcr^ today. Drlllsh forrr* reuchrd encmV ilctciwe.s on pper Chlmlwin river. thu.i odd

new i>|)earheiMl In the drive irnr nor^htrn BMinm anrt pcimlt' le ODenlnK ot a land .lupply route > Chlnu.

000 JapMiCM have been killed «nd iftiiy more nouiitlrd In the &)lo- lon.' battle which began last We<|. esOny. American caauaUlcs have ^en llRht.American cavalrj’men who have

braiight Lo-1 Negros Wand In tlio Admiralty group under control oe-

ipled two small Islnnda 1.000 yards otf the coast of Mnniw Island, larg-

il In the Admlraltlr. Minor rr- stjince wa.-i overcome.Wewak. New Guinea, wan pound-1 from the air for the aecond ralBhl day with a 112-Ion aa.'ault

Sundny. and Rabaul. New Britain, had allied planes overhead for six hours during a 117-lon strike.

Wake island... enemy-held 0. B. posse^ilon tn the mld-Paclflc. was rvlded for the I5th time when army and na^7 heavy, bomber* poured M tons of explosives on the Uny is­land's defenses Saturday. Other planes hit Nauru Island southwest of the Gilbert group and three im- dcslgnated atolls In the MarahalU.

f l i TERMS FOR PEACE REG IED

BTpCKHOLM. March 14 lUP.i- Ru.t<ln h/ui rejected Flnlaiid'i. com ler-|)toi>o.snl» lor an arnuslJce. r liable source* »ald today, and ni nl,i|i source. mv little prtxsiiecl of

an early separate peace.SwrdlKh quarters. ho»e\er, said

the Rufwlnn note of rejection »•« "by no means entlrelj’ nrsatlvf" and ex|)rcssed hope Of a johitlon.

The tael that Ru-vilft did not piib- luh immertlawiy her rejection waj Inlerpretecl here na a ttgn that Finland would l>e given anoihrr chance to consider cftrelully vheili- er to accept Uie original Soviet provWoiiR for an armLMlce.

Jack nclAcher. Ur\lted Prrw atalf corrc!>pondrnt who just has ftrnvtvl In Ilelslllkl. Indicated that an Ini- jMrtant amnounccment by the Hel­sinki Kovernment was Imminent, probably today or tomorrow.

The Finnish parliament was schcaulcd to meet today, but Fin­nish clrcle.i doubted the session would prove sensatlonaL

The Rus.ilan note, which arrived In Helslnjct by way of Stockholm, was uriderstood to Instit upon Pln- land'r Rcccptance ot the original su ternu lJUd down by the So\’lets before Any fatmal peace negotla- tlotu begin. Finland had attempted to compromise by countering original demands w ith ......that All ■......................tlatlon.

s b« left for nego-

County Loses Tractor Fight; Draws Appeal

A district court'case w)iicb has attracted nationwide atten­tion boRnn it.s final Inp on the route to the Id a ho supreme court Ttie-stiay, when Di.strict Judge Jam es W. Porter.formal- ly held that Twin Fails county is bound by th e cmcrgency price act o f 1942.

County Attorney Everett M. Sweeley bcKftn preparation of a auprcjno court appeal imme­diate ly after receiving the memorandtim deci.sion, nnd said the appeal would bc filed ns soon as formal judgment hns been prepared by counscl fo r defendant and intcrvonor, nnd hns been signed by Judge Porter.

The memorandum decision vir­tually wound up the local phase of

cnse ol tlie eo\mly yt. WUliani . . Hulbert. with Uie CPA a* In- ter\-enor..which had Its beginning laat August. Hulbert bid 11.050 for a used tractor sold at auction by

county. Bhd then refused to tho money when warned by

. that Uic celling price was »723.S6. and Uiat he would be In violation If he paid tiie full amount bid. The county promptly sued, and GPA enured the case u Inter­vener.

Idaho I.aw'n ie county bused Its case on the

contention that Idaho aUtute re- tiuirea public ofticen to sell publlo goods to the highest and best bid­der. and disputed two principal pointa claimed by OPA.

S«-eeiey arttued that congress did not intend OPA regulations-to in­vade righU of the states, and Uiat the emergency price act of 1M3 would be unconsUtuUonai 11 it were permitted to supercede atatutessuch as that requiring sale of pub- lie (roods e« the highest and best bidder.

The stand of >lie court on these questions became knotk-n in Jan­uary, when Judge Porter disagreed with the pialnUtfs.contentions in a memorandum ruling denying a demurrer and motion to strike por­tions of the OPA’s complaint tn lnlcr>-enlion.

Appeal Certain Sweeley then formally refused to

plevd furUier. and announced that he would appeal, to the supreme court »Ji won u Kulbcrt antS the OPA took Judgment by default. OJ.

and the press of other business .. lemben of the iUt« OPA legal taff delayed th« formaliUes lead-

JUdce Porter'k decision eipr««sed thre* principal pointa: tt) m t Uie plainutf Is subject to-and governed

RAF BLASTS NAZI AHACK DEFENSE

LONDON. March 14 flJJT-RAi- dreds of RAF heavy bombers dis­rupted nasi anll.invosion peepara- Ilona last night with s Thunderbolt attsck on railway targets at Le Mans, 110 miles southwest of Park, while Mo.«5Ullo , rftiders struck Frankfurt nnd otiier objective In western German)-.

fitplosjvc anti Incrndlaiy bombs tore up railway tracks, set tire to cars and warehouses and wrceked other Installntlon.^ at Le Mans, one of tile main Junctions through which pnfis troop% ammunition and olher supplies for Oerman forces maiming defenses on the Brittany and Bay of Biscay cowls.

1116 a&sault was made b) a force wmprUed entirely of four-englned HaUfwes ajid was one ot the henvl. « t yet directed againsttions In Trance, which presumably must be pnral>Tcd tn advance of the opening of ft western front in Eu- rcpe.

It wu the fifth raid by the RAPs heavywelshU in eight nights on France, including an attack t week ■ ?o on I# Mans.

Other BrltLth planes rounded out tile night's oflenslve with mine lay­ing sortlu over enem>' waters »nd Intnider patrols over E tm ^ . Three planes, including tw^ from the bomber command, wer« lost la all cperatlons. ' -

Past, low>ri}-lng German planet 5mbed open land in a southern

England district early this morning. One outer Ijondon are* hod a brief •Unn. but no bombs were dropped.

Reds Bomb Seven Cities in Estonia

STOCKHOLM, March 14 MV- Beren Btonian ciUe* haro been bcnbed by the Russians in tht last U Iwura. the Oerman-contn^ Scandinavian telegraph bureau tald todey naining them as Dorpot. v»ra, VlUadl. P»mu. Pille. R4k«

•nd T »P ^ . . . . .

lEBOLSIERED WITH IIEO RECOGNITIONNAPLES. March. 14 HV-Ru.wla's

estabUihmeni of diplomatic rcla- Umm irtMi PrtmVer Pietro Dodwtllo’i. sovemment aiiix®ra to have furtlirr strrnitihfned hta regime, ulrendy rndorje<l by Prime MlnUtcr Cliurcli. Ul. and lo have given King Vittorio Flriimifle • Ilrmer hold on his throne.

l\!.U»Ti »mm\inl5t iendPrs anlil they would (-oiitlnue to oppose Hie kind and Dadogllo. and otic clilrf- tain. p,olo Tr<1e.ichl. aald tJinl » Ru.yla> artlem Improved BndoRlUVj

We sliallea mir elloru to obtain a ri'all) dtmoctaMc lovrmmrnl,"

nrltHh Ktanil Tat tin.London. It e«ii»K:t<Kl that

Brltnln wtmid aland pot—at Irasl until the inUliar>' situation Im- pnnra - rontlnulng her dciillngj w 11 h jfte aitdocUo government vhiiHiKii uip militnr>’ control com- mU'ioM and sllU-d DdvLwry commis­sion, Il was antlclpntfd there tliat the Unltevl Slatea would adopt similar policy.

<A Washington dl'patch sni howevrr. that the United Gtntes w understood to have been willing for many weeks to rcplace the king with a regency, while leaving Ba- dogllo In alithority unUI the nllle,t capture nnme Tlie British, on the otlin haiicl, have Ix^n against any chanjje until nomc Is takrn. the dls-

('smment Declined Oniclal lirltL'h sources dccilnttl

Immediate comment but II wiw, un- derilood that the Soviet decLilon was mndf without prior coii-sult*- tlon wlih ihf other allies, oltliouRh they Wore Inlormrd unofflclalU that the re<<>8iilUon was coming. Til* Riiv\l,'\n action marks the first

ty of th(

glm.f the iSadogllo re-

isky. 8ovlfmnnt>er on llie liitrr-nlllpd ftflvUory council on Italian nltalrs, l.s e«- Txtted hrre lo t>c named the Rus­sian amha,via(1or.

Both Drllaln and Ih* United Stales have been conslderlnR ac­cording itnillar recocnlUon to Italy. It «-a,i uiidertlood. and the R<i.v«lan action la enpecied to bring an early decljlan.

Gas Ration on “A” Cards Gut ToTwoGailons

WASHlh'OTON. March 14 (41 -UeducUoii of Ujc basic ••A" gftsollt'ie latlon frcpm three to ta-o gallons ft week In the m id­west and tar west, effective March 33, was announced totliiy by Uie office of price admlnU- tratlon.

At the same time, tlie "B” sup- p\tmtm«ry raUon ceiling on the Pacific coast will b« trimmed from 4eo to <00 giUlons a monUi.

No change is sclieduled for any of the present rations In the 17 east coast states and Uie Dis­trict of Columbia, already on an

allotment ol two gal­lon] a ireet

.. .ike Uiese reductions re- luctsntly." OPA Administrator Chester Bowles said ot tiie west and mldwijt cuts, “but we are entering a period in which crit­ical demands will be made on our limited supplies of ga- ollne, and we are entering It with sup­plies that are sharply llmiwd as the result of war demand.t."

Preliminary figures show. OPA said, that gasoline allocations for Uie country as a whole will be about nine per cent les* for the second quarter beginning April 1 than for Uie first quar- ter. "nie ration reducUoivt are expected to save about IB.OOO to 30.000 barrels of gasoline a day.

Induction Delay Set for Teachers

WASHmOTON. March 14 f/P)— Rep. White. D. Idaho, laid he ha.n received a telegram from Drig. Oen, Menrin Q. McConoel. Idaho selec­tive service director, advising him “we are recommending that induc- Uon ot all teachers be postponed .unUl the end at the school year in order that schools not be Interrupt-

1 0 , 0 0 0 N a z i s ' S l a i n "

A s E f f o r t t o B r e a k

U k r a i n e T r a p F a i l sLONDON , March 14 (U P )— RuHsian troops of the U kra ine cncirclcd ,a

larKe (icrman {rroup no rtheas t of N ikolaev and the naz is lost 10,000 m en try ­ing to break out of th e trap, a Moscow communique reported tonight.

The lliinl army of the Ukraine under Gen. Rodion Y. Mnliriov.sky sprang the trap on the - formidiilile Gorniun force in the reRioii of Bcrpznegovataya, 45 miles northeast of Nikolaev,

li Sii.vcjtycri'vkji. '10 niiK’s east of Nikolaev.Ten lliousaiKi Gi'i'iiian.K werr killed while trying to break nut of the.Soviet noose, the red iiy comminiKiuc reported. The Uiissian bullclin reported unbroken gains in all the key sec­

tors of the fa.st-shifting

lUissians Roll WestwardlUthern front.Piixtihig 20 miles westward from ipturpii Kheraon In a single day. tc niuilnns cnpturecf 6lilrokaya

Dnlkn on ilie northern bank of the broad Dnieper estuan-, as-well as CO oUicr locallUcs. The main drive from Kherson was aimed at Niko­laev. At the mouth of the Bug river, 35 miles lo Uit northwest.

Some IJO miles to the norUiwest. Soviet larcc-H pushed up to Uie Bug river on a broadening front. Hiey captiircd KhoAliechcvala, 34 mUes south of Oman on the Bug, and nine ill ntatlons In that sector.A drive to within leM than 10

miles of VImilUft vion more than 30 to«-n.H alnd villaBe.v Including Uie railroad station ot Oummennoye,

IP miles ,<outhen,a of the seml- :lrcled sUotighold,

Tim raaio by CBS

ifferln* ofl

..................., as the naili-I bark under sleilte hammer blow* from three major Soviet armies, day's dl.ipatclus Indicate that Nlkolser. arrow lower right. Is threat- rd by a pincers advance on this Important Black aea navsl base. Itv'kft, Just fit-lott. imiArUnt port and the nasli' last twape termlnti, alM) threatencit. Tamopal.-arrcnra.ceniei,. ts lhe-«weftl .p«1ik; s f'^ t' UDit by the third army of (he Ukraine an<) Its foil Is Imminent aC‘ rdlng to report*.

Churchill H ints New Action Against Eire

LONDON, March l-l (/P)— Prime Minister Churchill lold commons today that Britain and the United States plan "to isolate southern Ireland from the outer world”—a virtual qunrantinc by molhotls yet to be disclo-Hcd which would seal off that potential npy-post during the llth hour to the' open-

r of the western front.ihurchlll’s words clearly Implied

Dy nAIlRISON SALISBURT MOSCOW, March 14 (U.fi)-Red

armies at oi)po.slte ends of Uie bloi- ing SOO-mlle Ukrainian batUefront today drove to within a UtUo more than 50 murji of the old Rumanian border and begnn a pincers advance

the Black sea naval base of Nlkoliicv.

<A German DNO dispatch snld lie lUi.sslans on the lower DUiepeB'"^' utnumbered the Germims 10 to n imes and still were brinalnr un rei

inforceincnts. while a __spokesman wiia heard __broadcasting that the anfferln* t. naxl troops in the southern UKmlnB' •exceeds by far anything they had lo endure during the Icy snow storm* of Janunry and rebruary.")

Lntc front dLspntciies reported new gains through crumbling enemy defenses all tli« way from Poland lo theBlarJt sea as the three. Rus- i!<n Dmlntanr 'anniet ^u ia lfie d ' wnat'oppeared to be Uielr supreme' effort to clfor southern Russia of le Invaders. 'Marshal Gregory R. khukoT's

first army, striking suddenly In a new offen-ilve between embattled Tamopol and Proskurotr at the

■m end of the front, captured Skalat, only S3 miles north of the Dniester river border of old Hu- monia and lOS miles northeast of

former boundary of Czecho- tlovakln. •

exleailon of rc.strlctlons .. . - border bclwcen iiorUiern Ireland and Eire, and perhops even a scml' blockade ot Qre, where President Do Valera ha.\ retused to close Ger-

,an and Japantie olHccs. Restrictions on travel to Eire,

Cliurclilll said, sre "tlie Urst stop ... .1 policy designed to isolnte Qrcnt Britain from south land, and also to Isolate southern Ireland from the outer world dur Ing the ciWcftl -period now op proaching.

■If a catastrophe were to oectir the alUcd armies which could be

iraccd lo tho reteiitloii of Germs and Japanese reprcjcnwilves Dublin, a gulf would be opened bi tween Great Britain un one hand and AoutJiero Ireland on the oUier .lilch even geiierntlons would not

brldpe." lie lold commoai.ChurclilU declartd Hint the Brit­

ish government iiad born coiuulu-d throuehout liv the United Stales ot\ the Washington request that Eire close German and Japaiiefe con.iui-

i--nnd "gave the American op- proncii lull support." . .

Asked whether the domlnloiu hnd been con.<ultc»l. CliurchlU observ­ed. ■■cowpltte wnlty ot thought pre- ' ills tlirouglioiil the British com-

onwealth as far os I am aware.”

Navy to Need Half Million in

1944 to Man 12 Ships DailyWASHINOTON. March 14 I-Tj —

Nearly a doten new ships a tiny ore expected lo go into sen’Ice with the United Statn fleet in ISH. Secretary Knox sakl today.

He made the report at a news conference attended by Vice Adm. Randall Jacobs chief of the burenu

. . ..nnel. who wld that nearly half a mUiion olflcera and men Wll be needed to man Uie new cr^ltln'lhe npldly expanding fleet,

Sea-Qftlng VcaitlsJacobs added U)»l th« doien ahlps

figure la based wholly • a does not

although Uie total_____ .. the larger landingcratt"

T%e'pertenn«l chief e«Umal«d that 11 navy's total strength by the end

of 1>44 Kill be 3.006.000 officers iuid men, vhUe Uie toUl for all naval Mrrim, including martnea and coast luard. b expected to be approxi­mately S.1tiO.OOO. Jacobs sdded that the maximum itrength ot the navy ^ , D 0tb* iHfih«*l unU l...........—

Knox s.-Ud he fell Uiat to meet manpower problems of the navy and army and industry, a national serv­ice ii»w would bc nfcessary.

In dUcloslng the rale of ship ud- dllions. he .Mild thal the number of 5lili» In the fleet lisi increased front B13 on Jan. l, 1942, to 4,l(n on Jan 1, 1944.

Average Increase* - In 1941. he sold, the bureau of a\-ai personnel provided crews tot

average of one new Uilp dally,

e tim«

in 1943 S.4 ships were ct__________each day. the following year Uie rate was &.S stiips dally nnd "In calendar year 1944 the estimole Is an averege of 11.7 ohlps commialoned each day."

Discussing Uie w against Japan. Knox rpported Uiat carrier-borne •ircntft are destroying enemy planes al • rale o{ better than 3 to 1 In Uie current eenlral PmUIo often- alve. He said : Uiat more thin 600 Jipanew planes had been destroyed in .mnjor actions-since last Novem* ber, .against American navy .plan* lotsea of otily 45.

SENATE APPROVES lY VOTE BILL

WASmNaTON, March 14 (U.R) - The senate today approved the com- promL-se soldier vote bill. 47 to 31, despite the opposition ct MaJocltj Uader Alben W. Barkley.

Tho vole came after two doys of debate *on the controversial mea­sure. Howe opprovol of the bill was considered orsured. It then would go to President Roosevelt for or signature.

Opponents of 'Uie compromise bill charged thal it would restrict Uie number of soldiers wlio could vole.

Supporten claimed that It would facilitate voting by more soldiers than oire eUsUile under prcMtil la*.

Jtut before the vote, Barkley de­nounced the measure as a restric­tive bill which would deny the vole to many servicemen. Ho ssld the bill would repeol. "not directly but by impUcsllon and necessary In' UtpretRUoti," the w&lvcr In U« IRia law of poU Uxes and registra­tion for scrvlcemen voting In fed- eral elections.

He added that lie Uiought con re&s lias an obligation as well as le power to make It easy for

btra of Uie am\td Sotces to vote for president, vice'

Swindling of U.S.

Soldiers to StopNAPLES, March H m - AlUed

auhlorlUes Issued a crackdown der today ogsliut NeapoUtsin n chants who have been fitednt American, and British troops, per- Ucuiorly the Americans.

Ueut, Col .Charles Polettl -t*. gloual commissioner for tbe.aUIed mUltars* govemmeot, sen^ notice UiU a Ust« (e«Uinf prtea.inuUi t eompUed . and ’ UuU ' j n N ^ L charging' cxorbluuit prictf ’and! liU- represenUng (jw ll^ will, have •

liroclalmini It UialU''' to traopt.

OWNER TESTIFIES WAGE HEARING

The war labor board hearing for Krengel's, Inc., continued Into Uiis afternoon in Uie T*-ln Polls district courtroom, after C. H. Krengel had Uken the stand In his own behalf.

The morning session of the hear­ing before n Uirce-man division of Uie regional \VLB wns devoted lo Uie testimony of Albert Shaw. Botse, WLB InvesUgator, who tesUfled to

increases granted by Krengel's..... November, 1842. "me hearing Isto determine whether these In­creases vlolat« the wage stablllcatiOQ law.

Krensel, tesUfylng- in his own be­half. snld some of the Increases were Justified by promoUon. and some by

-« of new poslUons being created.- !rs. he said, represented Ute ad-

,... :ement of co«nparaUvcly inex­perienced help which completed its only BChooUng in certain cratts'ln clftS5e.i formerly cotiductcd at hla place by the stale board of vocaUon* i| educntlon, • •Opemting the largest machinB

sliop >n southern Idaho, Krengel's is A unit of the Idalio Manufocturtng company, whicli hos been awarded nmn:,' gm-cnunent contracts. Much ot the organUation's war work has been In sub-contracts for ship* buUt by the Kaiser ahlpyards. -

Frank L. Stephan, Twin Palls at­torney,- was Krengel's representaUrebefore the board. .........

WLB oKlcltkls htMlii*. tti« t » » . lere J . Glenn Donaldson. Denver, cliftirmon and public member:W. Howard. Che}’enne, V^o.. Indus­try mmber; and August RosqvlM,' ’ Poeateilo, labor members.

eiephon (aid It was uncertain •fcbetlicr- the board would make a . decision immediately after the heat­ing. or delay the declsicn for more J conaldcrBUon.

Danger to Rome Blamed on Nazis

WASHINOTOIf. March . H Wh- ' me allied naUont «1U spart.iuUr''

hls^ric

________ -Tof-»ar-I

biama will htti

--- -)e«l to U k*-

I m ,

Page 2: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Pago Two TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Tuesday-Evening, March 14,1044

Indian Gunner

T R A tlO n P fEA tra« On.)

by the provbloa^ ot the cmcrRcncy price eonlrol net ot 1043, u amend- «l: (3» That tho BceUon ot Ihe Ida­ho code requiring county tommti- tloners to sell lo the hlgliest bUJder ), llm'—rf »'» prlec-.ccntTQl act nn<l Its reguIftUoiu; nnct (3) Ihnt Ihe sum of S723ifl wna the maJd- mum price for which the tractor In quMtion could be told by the plaln-

—tiff.--------------- ----Not Wholly Void

Pointing out tlml tlio county com- mtuloiicra hnd thD rlKlit U> nccept or rcjcct iiny bid. and thBl Die pltilntllf* prosccutlon nmdunted to accci>tancc of Uie defcndanfs bUl. Ihc Judne declared thiit the *nli! was not wholly vdtil, but void i.nly In Uic amount In excesJi of the n

the coimty Li enlltird to Judgment for the *um of J123 56. anil Interest Ilom Aug. 30 10 Sept. 20, 1S43, the dRlf Unit imlbcrt clopo.-illcil *1.050

nppenl«l, and Itidl th with Hulbert concDniln trncior would coiitlti'i

.tlurliii;.llic c'liursc ol tl

his npiwnlnouJd-bf b poliit. .

................... d Swcclty, "wllbe the contention thnt the cmcr-

• gency price net doc.i not. by Its re- : cltal or by Intent of consrtM, super.

sede or Invade the province of stata ilatutcs rcRUlatlng xtnta.oltlcers In their performance of publla dutlej,

; ’The other ,1s thnt where state siBtutea are #ho«-n to be In effcct, the burden la upon OPA to show surh «lftt>ite« are In violation of OPA In some provWons, or oix'raie lo affect adversely the jmrpojf.i of the act."

nrief Ueclslon JudRc Porter las brief In hla

■ mciiioramluin dcclilon cU«lng tho dlaulct court phaj« of the celcbrat-

, ed ’'tractor coae." but the philosophy of law and conitUuUonal viewpoint

• which he applied In coming 10 a de-■ djlon were set forth at greater

length In laat January’s ruling on the demurrer and motion to strike,

AC Uiat time the Judge declared , that tSs'purpose of the emergency

pric* control act, in aubstance. Is ».,,no tid In the projccutlon ot the ttV w by ftablllilng prices aiid.curb- a 'fat InfUtlon."

U tn act ptLued in an rmer- -fliney *»•* war measure." auerted ' !tln court. "The aplrlt of llie act

‘ vould ba vlolaleil. Ita purposes Uivartcd and its enforcement thrown Into conlwlon by a holdlui that the oct docs not cover tho tnnsacUorui ot 4S state govern­ments. thousands of countlrs, mu­nicipalities. achool dlstrlcu and other subdlvialoni of the states nrvd

, the InnumeraUo agenclea ot all tha

Cltea PreeedenlAi lo constUutlonuUty, Jiidgi

Porter pointed to ptecedcjii,‘Tho casea where atnto sututes

hare come In co&nict with fedcml ensctmenls hava been numerous.’ said the Judge, "and lh«! courU hav« uniformly held that under sue); circumstances the state statute statute must be conttnied as either TOld. modified or amended as the clrcumstanccs require . . The tala must be made to the highest bid­der as ptxtvlded by the state sM- tute, but not for a price Jn excess of the cclllng prices fixed under the eoiergcncy price control act.”

In Uie January ruling Judge Por- Ur pointed out that the price con­trol act had been once amended, thus comlDE at least once lo the atlenllon of congress nftcr It had been In operation for a time, and that eongrasa had not then moved to make clarification of congres­sional intent.

SUU lUghU Bweeley’8 contention that OPA

tends to Invade slatra' rights, with­out congress so Intending, wu ex­pressed vividly in his reply to the OPA's complaint In Intervention.

■7t does not now serve he1i> fully to observe that the original purpose of the act was sound," he said, “or that some courts, observ­ing the exprcM purpose of the act, but bewildered* by n typhoon of

. words engendered In concealment of the real afchemes of those charjed vlth administration of tha act. . . have had recourse to platitudinous generalities, without discerning the carefully hidden kernel of another purpose, and so have seemed to ap­prove that which never readied the oourfi realization. And so the real Issue and the real question remain. ‘Hilt if not to be set up in the tenni of usurpation by the OPA, but

EC H ER SALARY RAISES GRANIED

BecnusB teachcr salaries must be Increased, and because cost of nil mnterluls is higher, liie Twin Falls school district will Mk the state board of education tor prrnil.'-'ilon to Incrro-se the general fund levy lo 15 mlll«,

Tlio traslcc.s will rcfiiip.st the *tate board to approve the Iwo-mlU acl- Tsnce which It Li empowered to authorize. Actually, however, ttie total agsreKnle tax levy tentatively opprovfd Monday night by the locul

I will L mill >

lejl.I the

Halarj Hooit OlisjeU With the trnclier problrm

lug os the most ^erlolu Ihrcnt Idtiho «chrx)h. tho Twin KalU tecs pul thul approval on a lor Incren.'.lng fnculty saljulc-'i year. Elgnty-elghl t«acher. o

the bulk Ilf thefaculty,

Kren Ihouih ack-aek shell .tunned him and hlew out hla aiytrti ffrtlfr llnei. t'ortresn Run­ner S/Sgl. Emory Naha, Tr.v.i Inillaii, ran allll grin as he palirx hU face through hole In wing of «lilp afler rtliim from Hrrlln

RED CROSS NEAR 125,000 FIGORE

PurtJirr contributions lo Ihe Red Crcai ailvunce g if ts commltti'c bocBl«l thu T»ln I^lls war fund t< Mt.fiSOaS. Jay MlttIH. K«1 Cro. 'rlvo chnlnnan. n porteil nt noon tO' ay, Tom C. Peiivey, djnlrman o: he advance glfl coinmlttfc, ;.ak hat tlie conlrlbiillims came prlii' Ipilly from Uic downtown bailnes*

dlMrlct.Merrin declnrcd Uie chapter lU hoping to reach Its $30,000 / S p. m. Wednesday and iha tlloved this ’'entirely pos.Mble" with 10 supiwi of all local lied

workers ajid cach community Tam Falla chapter.

''Information came to mi morning Uial a few realdencc downtown business houaea hi mlised by solicitors. It Li o desire to give everyone on

make a contribution, and any- .101 yet contacted Is urged to

bring his gilt u> tlie war fund head- uarters ot tho Idaho Power com- any between I and 5 p. m. lomor- }w. If the Individual Is tinnOle to

irlng his gift, he may either call idquarters nt the Idnho Power chapter tieadt]uarMra nt 101 In

Jie public llljrar>' and someone will b**ent to pick up liio contrlbullona." Merrill said.

Speaker Selected For“Ad”Meeting

Roy Bmtl, San FriincLico. will be the principal speaker.at the seml- onnual meellnK of Uie Utjih-Idaho Advertising Managers’ association to be held here April fl. 9 and 10. it was announced Tuesday by Rob­ert II. Wamtr. Tlme.‘'-Netvs sdver- i tbing manager, wlio is president of the association.

Bratt represents the Pacific dlvblon of the bureau of QdvertLilng of the American Newspaper ~ ‘ llsher'a BssocUllon,

aging

systei

The raise* wtll |u-ogrc.vilve scale, with the aid teachers rccplvlng the iKniai. lyiwesl snlarie.i In the

.. . vlll Ko up J300, which lo If liirge.’ t raise granted,Facully member.'! luted a.i "spe- flh" • Including prlncliiala, su)K;r- I'ors, coaches, shop leachera. the irlcultiire ln.<iruclor, home cco- omlcs and music—were all granted

.lied r: Indlvlihial bn: ! aptclal . IcKlilalure's : r ^uhlly aid bill will h In IVln FalLi comicy u( .\I»Klc Valley. Il.i

) llmftert I

Twin Falls News in Brief

Meeting ChangedTwin Palls second ward prlmaiy

mi'ctlnB wlU be held at 4 pin. Wed- ne.'ilny. Instead of 6 pjn. U 11 ha« bctn the pul few months.

Company lo DrillCo. K, Idaho state guard, will meet

at 8 p, m. Wednesday at Uie legion hall, said Mcut. W, W. Tliomas. BCllns commanding officer.

Homo on Furlough Cpl. Paul R. Taber. Jr.. anlved

Bunduy to spend ft week's furlough with hLi iKirents. Mr. and Mn. Paul It. Tnber. ile will return lo Uie armored school at Fort Knox, Ky, Uie last ot Ihe week.

rarenls of HonMr and Mrs. Oarth Reid, T«.-ln

Falbi, are the jmrcnU of a non irii TiiMdny nl the Twin Palls

county general liO"pltal mattrolly home.

rallfornl* VUltor

; Ida miles «any funds.

Closing May IS Supt. A, W. Morgan advised th'

board that the school year wlU cm Monday. May 15,

Attendance report submitted by tho superintendent showed that the sj-item now has, in (he first nine grades Inclu.tlve, eight more stu- drnta than a year ago. Ttie high school nttendance Is 4J leis. The

i: nement.1T)- schools, 1,657. high 781: high school 627. prnl fund bllli totalling »I.- were approved.

RGLAR BREAKS INTO I I PLACES

A burglar who seemed to feor DL'e and light less than most of lit genlr)' entered two Twin Falls

e.Mnbll.sbnienti late Monday or early 'silay.■ho burglar used a hammer to

break a window glass m enterinK the warehouse ot the Continental Oil company, C03 SecondlUlh, ■ left all 1

departed. It was said by M. Lelnen, agent.

Although the place was thuruugli- ' ran.'ocked, and .'everal locks and nors broken. I.elncn said. It ap­

peared that nothing was inkcn but a hammer, a jialr of pliers and n pair of coveralli. The hsmmi

burglar

Puneralsi

KATIT—Funeral services and____for Mrs. Charles L. Hart will bo nt 10 s. m. mday. March 17. at St. Edward’s Catholic church with M.igr. J. P, OTXiol# in charge, In- tennent will be In the Twin Palls cemetery. Rosary will be recited 7:S0 p, m, Thursday m tho White mortuary chapel.

8T0MUAU0H - runeml service:, for Alden Earl Btombaugh will bo held at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the Evans and Johnson funeral chapel In Buhl. Bert Walker of the Je­hovah’s Wltneises will officiate. Burial will be In the Buhl cemetery.

The Hospital

be tied to and tested by that congress Itself did. win not

nd Into feSeral

ereri.by

elpU of our Bovemment that there Is • field of actloD reserved cluslnly to the lUtM, and which the powen of the fe gorenunent cannot extend, evu. direct and InUnded act. A self- efflpovtred bureau ot the federal

■ ■ 'i h u loet sight of of lis Cl ■'

_____________ with ItB -............Mdled desires ond unbtUons, snd vhich has sought and now seeks to am«ate to itself powers b those pcesessed by Its creator, b* put lo Ita idsoe by tha courts, and that place is the one shaped ‘U by congress, as found in

. .tenss of tb« »ct lUeU."Rnlbert'i attorney is A. J. (Andy)'

Mytn, and Darwla- ’Thoma*. Boise, Is htndUnr the can lor OPA.

Car, Truck CrashBDRUnr. a&rch Jt-ODon KeUon.

31, u d WajBa Loot, were drlv- enorean ooUidiflc *t S u n . today

.-at ths earner of Korth. Bsuues »ve- utu and n rst atrMt Bortlt. Ko one .wu lo^ired, and so b lan i waj Tdieed by 0«a« OnfU. d ty mtrol- « u who.investigated.. .

Ntlfon^-lMt pMitn«er cw wu I txmt end at an hU< Ubib'i 1943 piek-up 6 erathea m i fea-

ADMf.___Betty Allen, Shaton nigbee, Miss

Nike Doerr, Betty Bomnns, Poul Marlow. Mrs. Bob Owens. Mrs. Lloyd Thomas and Mrs. Oarth Reid, Twin Falls; Mrs. Llla Strickland, WendeU: Mrs. E. E. Lee. Piler; Mrs. Blrchi# Brown, Kimberly,

niSMIBSED William Waiktngton. Hstelton;

Alice Wlrschlng, David P. Clark and CTarence White. Twin Falla.

WEATHERFair tonight and WednMdsy;

eontlnoed cold. High yeoterday 49: low yesterday U. Low this raem- Inr IS.

Seep the Wfiite Plaff 0/ Sa/etu Fltrtnff

. Now t/iirteen da]/i vrtlfi- cut a traffic death in our uielcvclleti.

e of I:iod to Lelni-n. ngent Jiald tho

burglar appeared to be Interested ■' .tie but actual money, and then

only In l.-irge quaiitltle.v The cash •mptled, but the 54 hiKl was not taken.

Leliieu said >170 worth of coupon book-1 was left, even though JI50 vorih of the books were dumped on he floor and must hove been seen

by the burglar.The second burglary was at the

O. P. Skaggs store, 347 Main avenue cast, where II. H. Stokti, proprietor, discovered the plate glass In the front door knocked out when he arrived shortly after 7:30 a. m. ’Tuc.iday. Because Ihe Interior had not cooled appreciably, Btokes es­timated that the door glass had not been out for many hours. U was snld by Assistant Chief of Police Lee McCracken,

’The loot at the Skaggs store said to consist of ‘’belween llB and »M In nickels snd dimes,’'

Similarity of modus epenindl, and the flndlnj of Lelnen’s hammer In the S1CB8B* store brought officers to the conclusion that the same parly was involved In both.

30, b

incorporation dated J yeiir have been re­st. John Kvongellenl

•h. Inc., Bulil. Trus- ir Rangcn, Bam Dshs [ansen, all of Uuhl.

p.Nircp. 3<. and Dorothy n. ohtftlned a mirrUae r Monday afternoon. Ll- j TiirMlay went lo Prsnk

and Mlye Shtigl,

From Sal iLake Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Wrlghl, for.

mer Twin Falls resldenu now llv. ln>; at Soil Lake, are here vlslllng friends an drelailves. Mr, Wtlght wa.s manager of the ,Consollil»ted Wagon and Machine company In Twin Falls.

Drivers Post hond*'1‘vin iiccuswl spitMlcrs po.<ted bonds

<if sio each, U was said by Miinli Judge J, O. piimphrey. One I.*nnarel S. Plelils, Twin Falli, the othi'rrlo)<l Straughn, esilTuln I'alls co\mly.

Visits Parent!Pfc. John W, L. Bond, son of Dr,

and Mrs, WaUace Bond, Is spending Lhrfto-day furlough with his p is. He Is attending tha Unlveri Mlclilgnn mtdlcal school at t

Arlwr.

t'riim Seattle Dr. A .A, Newberry returned

Tttin Kails Monday after spending Uie piisl month at Beatlte. Whllo there he wis visited by Dr. James H. MllUr, former Twin Fslb Piei bylerlnii minister.

BeiM VUIbirs Mr juid Mrs. Aas iIoi

Mr. .and hlrs. Frank Hoi datJghter. ’.'win Palls, end Tlaiu« at Dotse.

Leaves lloiplUi David F, Clark, who received

rlotu injuries In a fall from a hay- Etack at his ranch near Murtaugh March 5. has bc«n dismissed from tho Twin Fj1L< ctAinly. general hos­pital and Lt ••re.';ting comfortably at hi.1 home,'717 Shoshone street north.

From New Galnia Cpl. Woodrow Hudson, who

cently docked at Miami. Fla., t many month-i service in New Ouluea, has arrived for a furlough visit with hLs parents, Mr. and itrs, A. M. Hudson, Twin Falls, a brother and Mstcr-ln-law, Mr,Mrs. F. II. Hud.^on, Filer.

From California Mrs. Bruce Painter. Stockton.

Calif., is vLiliinK at the home of Mr. and Mr. , Roy Pointer. parcnU of her hiishancl. Lieutenant Bnicc Painter, who Is an air transport pi­lot In the New Guinea area. - cxpecLi to Ir.TVf tti« lasi of the

Adarr-ek of Mrs. J •T sons. Robert C. ,n llr.st cloM. elcc-ilamM)!

trlclan’r.Ing service ichool at Farragut and is home on delayed orders; and BQl Ad«n*on. jJiip'i cook first class, who rccrlvrd a sprrlal lO-day leave from ht:i Ui Cahtomia to vlsl his brollitr. Rolwrt Adamson wll leave March 18 to report ai Farra­gut.

MUDHALISIIAL! BAIT

Harry P. Barger Final Rites Held

Pinal Ulbute was paid Harry P. Barger, who died at his home last Wednesday, at services conducted at 3 p. m. Monday it the White mortuary chspet ky Dr. □, L. Clark, pastor of the Presbyterian church.

Music was furnished by the mor^ tuary. and pallbeareri were O. W. Qerrlsli. H. C. Oetlcit. Frank Hoov-

V. R. Prlebe. Paul n. Tnber, ;on-ln-law, snd Cpl. Paul R.

Taber, Jr., F t Kno*. Ky„ his grand- -in.

Interment was In Twin rolls cemetery under direction of the (sortuary.

Councilmen Talk To Rotary Group

Mayor Bert Ba-Mt anil the four dly councilmen were guests of the Twin Palls Rotary clubluncheon today. Each ............—spoke briefly on his own de p o ­nent, and Mayor Sweet reviewed the past year’s -actlvllles, speaking slio of post-war ixaprorements to • e made in Twin Falls.

In addition to the mayor, guests of Rotary were Kenneth D. Shook, finance commissioner; O. H. Cole* man, parks; Truman T. Oreen- halgb’ lU ^U and waterworks, and

Bid

1 sbout «« species of

WILEY HARMON Nnr Leeated si

303 8hoahon« SU N.. SpeelalliiBC b

WASmNO and GBEA8INQ

ALLIED IIEADQUAnTOia, NA­PLES. March 14 i/TH-The westhci has improied In Italy bui the Rround remains extremely soft, holding both the allied and ' man armies mudlwund except for patrol operations which yesterday included sharp clashes near I"

> and Cassino on the n filth army front, headquarters

Allied raiders probled ths Oemw lines around Clstcrna and Uttorla In the beachhead area below Home

American troops seized prLioners and dispersed the .. mainrtcr of a Qcrman patrol. The British smashed a machinegun po­sition and repelled a Qerman at­tempt to cross the Molctta river.; Tho Oermans lounched a fairly strong atuek from three directions against Indian positions on the eighth army front last Sundsy, it was attnouneed today, and (IstiUng lasted imtll the OerroaM withdrew.

Allied planes flew 1,000 sorties yesterday, headquarters said, with

eluding rail bridges at Sanana'and Vlaregfflo as well os rail yards at Spoleto, Perugia and nbilano. Three enemy planes were destroyed for a loss of six allied crall.

The Oermins raided the betch- head four times Sunday and onct Sunday night, dropping anti-per­sonnel bombs.

Last Honor Paid Archer S. Gibbs

Funeral lenlces for Archer s. Oibbs. who died March 10 a home of his son in Kampa,conducted Monday at 1 p, m. ■.....White mortuary chapel with the Rev. Herman S. Rice, Baptist pas. tor, offlelatlni. /

Miss £dni Oraham lang two numbers, accompanied by Urs. Robert MiUtr.

PaUbeorers were M. o. Kioten* dall, C. D. Requs, I. A. AppcU, O. W. QciTlsh, 0. E. McClain and L. J. ’Tcncklnck. .

Interment was Jn Sunset memor­ial park under direction ot ihe chapeL

Mrs. ff.L. Roberts’ Death Is LearnedTwin Palls friends have learned

of the death Feb. 28 of Mrs. Waller L. Roberts, daughter-in-law of Mr. and Mr*. L. C, RoberU, Twin Falls, who have Just returned from Ful­lerton. Calif. where luneral serv­ices and interment were conducted. Their daughter. Miss Kathrm Rob­erts, uUo atiriidcii Uie riles and hn.s relumed lit-rc.

Mrs. noberUi had been 111 since Thanksgiving day, when she was stricken with a nervous breakdown. Before her marrlngc, she was Miss Ida Burnhart, Denver. Colo., and with her sWer. Lj-dla Bumhart, served os an evangelLn. twice ap­pearing in Twin Falls Bethel Tem­ple church.

Following thler marriage, she and Rev. Mr. Roberts spent several years In evanKcllstlc work, follow­ed by pastorate.-; In Nebraska and Colorado belore Koing lo Fullerton, where they a&'umed pastorate of the Fullerton Assemblies of Ood church.

Rev. Mr Robert.1 will continue as pustor of Ihe Fullerton diurch. Be­side.-; her husband, she Is sur ’lvcd b}' one son. Ernest; her parents and four Jlslers.

K TF I Radio Schedule

WB0NE3DAT

irtin Avmtiikr—nv* ■ r. tlor> and Uullitl

xRrrrilU Round-up

i s r s *^LMs/lhoutd Da Tub

Bounct-up

iii; S i s ? ”'’"■ - lUkn—n.wi

'a VktoTT rernm

^nlns tanliLt MWTi NDfr-StOO OInM

S i !:!! Kf.r.S.r.V.'MSS. . . cua—Ills Am«rici1 H>)odk«; iilO

K ! a s : ; s .- i j a ' i ' s ! , ; ? . . ' ! ; ; ;Corwin pr»iM and Mutrd Dcnn >"roni London: SilO Itap- t«)k

nio. Bflwork—«:.......................... .. Duff)

NEW, -CLEAN-BAST-

I MILKERSNow kTaUable at

CARTER’S INDEPENDENT MKT.

EMlnalre Agents

TOWN HALL WILL ELECIDIRECIORS

DccUoa of tho 1M4-4S board of directors for the Twin Falls Town Hall Association wUl be held at i p. m. today at the high school aitdl- torlum here. Plfteen directors lor the nine communities represented by the association will be chosen. Including seven from Twin Fnlls and one each from Buhl. Flier. Jer- nme. Haielton. Kimberly. Hansen Ooodlng and Murtaugh.

Nominees, from Twin Falls, oe- Iccted by the Tovm Hall nominat­ing committee, are Mrs. C. D, Bey- mer. Dr, Wallace Bond. R, F, Stett- ler. John D. Platt, the lUv. Her­man Rice, Mrs. Doris Stradley. Mrx Itoso M. North, Miss Jessie Fraser, Mrs, Roy Palmer. M lu Helen Mlnler, J. A. Cederqulst, Mrs. A. D. Gillespie and Mrs. necse Wlllinma.

Those repre.'.entlng Buhl members of T^wn Hall are C. D. Boring, E>r. P. A. Knltoky and Jack Winkler; from Filer, the Rev. E. L. White and E. M. Haybflrn; Jerome. Mr*. F. A Burklmller and H. Maine Shoun.

In each nt ihe following commu- nltle.1 only ime nominee was named and he ur fhe will automatlcnlly be­come a mrriiber of Ihe board: HaseU ton, Mrs. H. r. aunrielfinger; K im ­berly. A. n Scott; Hnmen, Mrs. Henry Coiner; Ooodlng. Burton Drlggs, and .Murtaugh. E. W, Moor

Father of Small Children Passes

JIinOME, March H - Vernon Sliita, Jerome, died at 11.0 a. m.

y at St. Valentine'.-; ho.'pital in idell following a recurrent a t­

tack of pneumonia. Admitted il days ago, he had been allowed go home, but became worse aru

..-s leturoed to the Wendell hos- pltol.

Burvlving are his wife. &'» Shad. Jerome, and two small children Mao- Anne, e, and Dixie Lee. 3. He was a former employe of the Jerome National bank.

Bond Forfeited in Misdemeanor Casee J2S bond of Leslie W. Mock, ra-s declared here by Municipal e J. O. Ptmiphrey to be for- 1 when Mock failed to appear

ETO9 TONITK

•THOUSANDS

CHEER”

Starts Tomorrow

FSULLAVAN SOTHERN BLONDELL

Twin Falls-Wells Stage LineAaaeimolnc Additional B«i Serrie* fr«m Twla F»Us. Idahs to WeUs. Nerada, 6an Fnoeiseo, Lo« Angelei. and aU polatt In Nertda.

EffecUv* February 29, 1944

TWO SCHEDULES DAILYLeare Twin Falls_______ 10:30 A . ML

• Arrlv« San Francisco___ 3:45 P. M .Above »chedul9 makes dlnct cenneetltms with PacUla Orcy- bound Uaet u d Boutbeis PadflB Railway, botb east and west

Leave Twin Falls_______ 10:16 P. M .Arrive San Frandseo___ 8:32 P. M .

F A Y B A IN JE R

M ARSH AH ilH IAiCMraaTmk

t lL A R A IN E S

m i ic B G jm i i i i

SiANmws

HE ERANek

.toimnirMOiiiis

Seen Todayfcebriale snatching hU candy bar

u police lead hltn ceU«-ard nfter eniptylag his pockets, , . Probate court windows clean(er) sftcr cajtlc jiote wrlltea In window duit wlih finger.. , Driver of coupe 6R- aisa neatly swcrvinj at police - tioa comer to atoid crackup by two feet. . . Dr. Gordon Tobin wtOklnB along Second street north, reading income tax blank.. . Auditor Char­ley BuUh ready to chew nftUs a; parade of folks CDmea In for stau tax blanks after his meager second supply runs out tnone anywhere ' town, either). . . Giant truck a »eml-trailer nirabUng t h r o u w .. downtown district with ominous signs aU CTcr It: -Etploslves”. . . aement airelfuj looking slightly bashful as lady tells him ho ' changed a lot but has the j_ eytJ,. . Pholograplier Oeonje Dcvias dashing out of shop in his shirt­sleeves, for some reason or other.. Bruin baskelballer Tom Olmstcna looking chilly as ho rides or outside of pickup truck. . . Three tall girls ushering plnt-sUed sailor Into restaurant for dinner. . . And four fellows, including anny-bound Vie Ooertzen, pushing weird-colored model A roadster Inside service sU>. tlon building.

riled after he was arrested by po- Uce at J a. m. Prlday in the 200 block of Third avenue east. The complainant was a man who said Mock had followed the other's viie home from the theater.

Uock pleaded not guilty, and polled the »Si bond lor his appear-

in court Uondsy.

formal challenge so far to the a.- cumiilaUon of delegates bj the Roosevelt-for-Prealdent fotcei

Ely's Kame UsedIn Massachusetts former Got.

Joseph B. Ely hu suthorlted the u-se of his name as an aspirant lo Uie DemocraUe presidential nccniw inatlon. It Is strictly a favorite so3^ movement designed to prevent Mr. Rooaevett from obtaining delegate support In that state. Thert was no chance of a contest between dele­gates pledged to Ely and a slate pledged lo Ihe President b^use Uo^'ichuietts statutes require that a pre-'ildenUnl candidate must file wTlttcn assent to tlie use of his name. So far Mr. noc&evell Is fol­lowing the strategy of 19<0 when he refused to reveal his poUUcal Inlen-

Neithrr Is any general test of strcnsUi llkeb' b<;twccn any of tho leading Republican presldcnlial poa- slbllltles, Oov. Thomas E. Dewoy. of New York has removed himself from tho pre-convcntlon campaign but rctrvalns available—so far as lh« record joes-lo a draft U the Re­publicans nominate him.

j;- ?;rri;v jCK S-/orfa eacC ▼ V A P O R U B

F R E E D O M"Keep your oye o n the Constitution. This is

the truarantee, t h a t is th e night watchman

of democratic representative government —•

freedom of speech, freedom of the press, tho

rig lit of public assembly and tho right to

petition the government. Save nil these things

Jn the Constitution and let the Supreme Court

stand behind it."

A lfred E . Smith, Speech a t Harvard, J u n e 22. 1983.

Copies of Cotistitution' Still Available

Ths b a lm o f B U T T ERK K U ST B m J

have already distributed w ithout cost to-tho

recipients, approximately 1500 copica of tho

threc-color reproduction o f tho Constitutioh.

Copies are still available. W rite , phone or call

, at tho Royal BfUcery, Twin Falls, Idaho.

1\) encouroca greater patriotism voosf the people ot Ms«ia VaUe>% so they vUl In- TCst la war bonds niort UbenOlr. BUTTER- EHDST li bringing you this seriei of special ftdTcrUsemesta.

Buy BUTTER.KRUST Bread

From Y o u r GRO CER

Page 3: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Tuesday Evening, March 14,1944 TIMES-NEWS, t w in fa lls . IDAHO Page Three

imv.rasiD

WASHZNQTON, March » W>— Washlngion d ip lom atic quartcni heard »1lh Inltnse InUrcit u>d no mue turprls* MonSay Uul Russia hM decldcd » exchange ambaaso- dors wlih the lUUan Borernment o l Pmnlw Monhal Pietro Badcsllo.

ScTtnil quMtlona aroee Immedi-

. Do«BU6tlft'»dechJonhavDlhBer-teci o{ itrtnsthenlns Uw Uaaoauo KOvcmmentT

In order to malnUUn equal ro MnWUon ftlth Ruisla «bouJd um United Slnle* and Drltiln nl»o change ambaisador* wlUi p d 08..«.

DofJ on exchnngt of uncasioo''?'’ have the result of rtcosnWns I aa a lull ally rather thtin a ■ ■■-bpliiger«nt?

No Ad»anc« HerdApparently official qutu-Wn Imd

no BdJancc word ol the ImpendlnB rxchanse. BHUsh andAmerican policy b based on dealing u-lth the IWdogno govmunnn, un­der King VUtorl*’ EJnanuele. tJirough (he alllM nmilsUce control commLi- »lon. K-lilch sees tJiat luly abides by tJic'srpt. 8 annktlce terms. Tlic conunl.'.'aon Is subject lo Uie nJll^^

eo«ntr>, BrSUdn and Uiiwlft.\\len m b ' enttrrO Uie war as a

fighting partner ngntmt Oennimy on Oct. IS. her »tnius ksi> oltlclnlly flf.-crtb n» ’hot of co-bclllKerenU

•e then the British and Ameri­can governments tmvi conilcltrable pressure Krtxjps to RPt rid of b and DodoRllo and nllo«

been under Ibillnn le klnrt

Wa- lilnRton I* uiiderslood been irtUlng for mivny weeks to re­place the Klng.»1Ui a nacncy. while leavlns Oodogllo In auUiorlty until the Billed nntiles capture ncme. The British, hotttwr. have been against fuvv clmnge until lUme la taken.

From ft political and mllltttiy standpoint. Italy has been rc?08- nlied a» lOoim u a prtmarr con­cern of Britain and the United Stales, mlher than of Russia. Soviet diplomacy, honever, Is viully In- t'Tr.siPd In affairs of the Balkan nniions such.as YuRoslivla directly

Uie AflrlaUc from Italj and Ru.v.iR't llallsm decliton might have some Balkan significance.

M.R. Burden Goes To South America

HAILI7Y. March 14-M. R. Bur­den. former HftUcy resident, spent » Rhort ttaic liere recently preparatory lo leaving for 5o«ith Amerka. Slnco Iravliw Hnllcy a few ytnrs ago. he has been ctnployed as on assistant crwlneer b>- Morrlson-Knud«n c> atrucUon compnny anrt tt-Ul mnie trip as Utelr employe.

lie will first go lo Wo de Janlero. then to Victoria and on Uito the licnrt of Uic Jungles. The project la for the con.slnictlon of railroad bridges so that metals vital to Tox tSlort TOUS be tiMttported U>* seaport to»m.

Bombings Add Punch to Russ-Finn Peace Tallvs

1

ThU bi flnt picture to be releaaefl ihoitlne result of Houlan CtKi.pUnp raid on HeUlnit eapllaj of 1 land, on nl|[ht of Feb. JO Willie Hnni were pondiTin* nn».i peace nverlarrv <l«unl elilmne>» utanil am imouldcrlng emben In "complclely drvMlatrd quarter In cenlral part »f rlly.' ufd eaptlon accompan; Ihli rtkdlophoto from Stockholm. INKA radio telephoto)

G range G leaningsBy J. U. C RA W rO RD

. Inrtic

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTS

UKTTED STATES DEPAttTMENT OF THE

INTtniOK CRAZING SEIlVICe Salt l ^ e City B. Utah

February 18, 19<4. INTBUOR DEPARTMENT. OHAZ-

INO SERVICE. NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that the Fed­eral range In all graUng districts established under tlie Taylor Omilng Act, as amended, «11 be closed lo the t:rnzlng o{ horses b«> 'tween March 1. 1944 and March1. lB4i. EXCEPT:

llonei lawJuHy grailng Ihere- ' on under valid llccnse or permit,

2. Horses u . ^ as riding, pack, and draft animals In connection with lawful livestock operations,

3. Horses used by pertons lawfully trailing over wch lands,

XtvdlvSd\uvl*. p»T«wnhl]», t» eor- pomtlons owning or claiming un­licensed or unpcnnltted horses run­ning at large on the Federal range, or horses not used as saddle, paclt. or draft animals In conaecUon with lawful Uvcftock operations, are hereby notified to wmov* t\ich horse* from the Federal range.

By order of the Secretary of the Interior, approved January 39, 1944, effective Febniaiy 4. 1944,

J. 11 LEEClt. Acting Director of Omdng.

Publish: March i:, IJ. 14.1944,

NORTH VIEW North View met with

crowd present. Cedar Draw niiu Buhl Grangers were gtjcsts, Harty Nelson, Twin Rills, was Uie speak­er and his subject was "Coojxira' tlon." Nelson especially stressed the advantage of n cooperatively own­ed hospital. Henry Kal*:er has UUs .same plan for Ills employi's. 'lliLi plan haa proven quite succwlul In different stales. Of course, all ihls would huve lo be o po-sHvnr projcci. Mr. and Mrs- Harold Harrtson were given the first degree woilt ol the Orange. Refrcshmenu of unnd- wiches. cookies and coffee were served and the social hour follow-

LUCEllNB The Lucerne Orange voted t i tor

Ihe Red Cross, It wtis also voted lo favor the County fair. Col, Koy Hop­kins had asked for Uie opIiUon ol Uie aninacra rrgardlng llic mu- clilnery sales that have been lulcl cach spring. A dL^caislon of iliMC sales showed tlint'the farmers were In tavor of tlw sales tielivg con­tinued. Mr. and Mrs. E^kciic Tlio- mas, Filer, were admitted a.? new r iembera by denilt. Roll cull wa* answered with current evtni.v. An article. "Surgerj’ Jlenls the Sciifs of War." was given by Ed Ku.-y. Mrs, Keyaer gave a reodlng. Mrs. Tliomai had the honor of being tlie winner of the potato contest. Roll call for next time is to be some- thlnjf on St. Piiinck’a day or a Pat- and Mike story. Snndvilclu's, caKe und coffee were sened at the cicoe of the lecturer's hour.

1IOI.USTER Hollister Ornnge met nt Its new-

ly-rcmodelcd hall nnd OranBcrs had to walk lightly as Uie floor was not completely dry as Uie re- . iilts of a good coat of perma bfuc auplled n few days before. Ta-o let­ters were read from the NaUonal Qrange and tabled for future dlscus- lon, The home economVts chair

mail. Mrs. llyle Schiillker, aniiounc- C'd 115.74 hikd been netted from the W. A. Farley farm sale. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Pierce. Tuin FalL Griiii,iC, wcrt; made honorary it um ol the Holll.stcr Orange cawie x>l Ihvlr pt\sl work »ltli Orange. Mr. Pierce gave a sliorl lalk on the Grange credit ui |)lleni1ons for niember.-ihlp cclved from Mr. and Mrs Jack Uuililun. A suKtiesUun w»s muc liutchiLse i» service Iliig for live membtfra In the artned ! icc. A talk on the Red Cro.--s given by O, J. Bolhne and Jay : rill Durlns the lecturc hour, .Mrj. Uiler Sketm gave two humoroas renilltiKs, "Ole" and "Pa Aiiyliow," 'IVo very impromptu skits were pre.^ented. Tlie first was iinixTsonatlon nf Mrs. Eleanor llouM'velt uiid the honnruble Wlllkle

1018 by Mr.'. Mnrlc Kendrick Mr. R. L. 0 ’*enj, re.spectlvely. Tlie .Hcond .skit wiu a quartet, slni. . no one could hear, accompanied by Mrs. A. C. Kunkel on » noiseless piano. We olways appreciate .. miulc, HolllRtcr GnuiBe will hold a dance and card pnriy .March All Oronge members and tl Irlencla are invited. Group hinging closed the program. Lunch was served by Mr. and Mn. Warren Stroud and Mr. and Mrs. Elmo i=Vvr-

HAILEY

NOnCK NoUc* li hereby given that

tltton was filed with the Doi.- Directors of the American Falls Hescrvolr DlsUlct on Uie Slh day of Mart*. A. D , 1944. for Uie annexa­tion lo uld liTlgaUoQ dliUlcl of adjacent lands.

The names of the petlUoneii and • descripUon of Ui* land* menUoa- rd (LT« M follows;Naz&ea •( PetiUenen:

Jens p. Jensen and An« K. Jen* aen; M. C. Bhaww and Dell* K. Shawrer; Oeorge Bankhead Mid Agnes Bankhead.

' in er lands located la Blog.

(34) East, B. M. Idoha Southwest Quarter of Nonhwest Quarter <6WKNWU); South- wwt Quarter, and Uie South* e u t Quut«r. all to Section Thirty-*!* t»K Township Twi Q) Soutii. 'tuoge Th^-thm (U) East. B. M, Idaho.NoUc« is hereby turUier jiTen t-

bU pcrsoos Interested In. or that m aj. b« affected by inch ehang. boundariei of Uie Amerlnm I

. Rosenolr DUtxlct, to tppear » t __office of th* Board of Directon of th« American Falla Reserrotr Dta- trict at the oftlee of uM district, la Twin Palls. Idaho, on Tuesday, April 4th A. D.. imatlOo^Iockus. and ■bow csute In writing If any they haw . why I h i . lands oeatloned ahouM not b« annexed to the Amerl- am r u i i Resemlr Dbtilct.

D«tn] thts 10th day of March, A. O . 1M4.<8e*U J. B. BARKER.Becretwy o( the Doart of 01« f

ot the American FaUs Rwemlt, UsMet. by S. B. Jotuuon. .

' Aslstant Seereurr. UMch IH4

CpI. Fred Allen, Drew field. Fla., arrived home lo spend a week with his parents. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Al­ien.

Mrs. Crab; Rcnibcr and son, Billy, left {or Bul^l lo spcixS s. few (Jajs vialtlng at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Wllllnm Levrke,

Ml.« Anna Ronln has been np- pointed as-ilstant cIcrK In the local draft board office,

Mr. and Mrs. Fronk H. Albro. Ten Mile, Orc„ have purclia-sed the Prank Ooodman nnd Dora Werry ranch north of Hnllcy. This property was originally toiown as the Mallory mnch, nnd contains approximately 200 acrcs of land, Tliey also pur- ctonsed part of Uio mntiilncry, Ac- ccjenpanylng them will be their ton. P^nnk. Jr.. -who will enter high school u a freshmiin next fall, nnd their two daughters, Mrs, Gilbert Horky. whose hu.'iband Is In Uie naval nlr corps at Attu. and Mrs. Arnold Elier- rnan. whose husband will enter Uieo n n ^ forccs.......

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Goodman

Idcncc c d Hilll

/ - S '

$66.15 Earned at Falls City Social

JEROME. March 1«—An old-fash­ioned pie social held at the PalU City Kiiool liDUK. resulted In one of the most EiKcessfuI txineflt parties of the yeor for Falls City, bringing in a sum of S6C.1S.

Praak Houston, school .. .. rector, actcd as aucUonecr and an evening of entertainment was pro- vided by the school children and fa? a motion picture, "South of the Bor­der Wim Disney."

Precedlnv the programUon of the flag took place. ____Jeon niooiMon and MIm Delores sndred plared a mUlloir piano duet. A piano solo was offered by mim LemeUa Shulsen and the three-reel film In color was shown.

A one-act play'was presented'by alx clcls. followed by a pontonlme.

Glenns Ferry Stages Free Clinic March 17OLEKN8 FBRR7, March 14-A

free dlnlc for the adralnlstmUon of diphtheria Inoculatlona and small­pox niictnaUons will open at 3:90 p. m. Frlda7. March 17, In the economic* toooM of the high »

I n chtTBa wUl be Dr. Polnta,:___ _head of the state health department, assisted by Miss Mildred Terry, H- moro county health nur»e.

DlphUieria tnoeuUtJimsn;oict »W lf” S e Knall^ra should be given to anyone who has not hail such a Ttcdaattoa dtoinc tb» last ttrs Tcara.

He May Love You But VVe Doubt ItWASHINGTON. March U (U.R)

—An Irntc woman, doscrlblng her husband 0.1 "bow-legged and wlng-footod," wants the dbtrlct attorney to L-aiie a warrant lor his arrest for the.ie reasons;

"Before lie went Into Ihe navy the other clay, he tried to make sure I wouldn't ci-t an allotment. He hit me wlllv Ills fist, threw me Into the bathtub, struck me on the head. Inct and body with a brick, nnd shot at me as I ran Into the street nnd then threw the brick after me when he missed.

"E\en though he i-t my hiu- band, I don't think he loves me."

Burley Planning Canning Kitchen

BUnLBY. March 14—Prellmlnorj- announccmenta Indlcat* that Bur­ley may have a community canrUiig kitchen next summer. No cannlns kltcJien was set up here last yi

t a luck of equlpmer . before a great use wfl.? made

t tills scrvlcc.James Rj’iin. In charge of 's for the state board of vocational

education, told Supt. Ocorgc E. Den­man Uiat equipment Is amiable and Umt tlie application for a caimety has been approved In Boise.

Plans now underwny are to have the cannlnB kitchen In the manual arts bulldlnB behind the high school, with a state supervisor present to aid local women can their own pro­duce.

Burley Marine Goes To Staff Sergeant

BORLEV. March 14—Staff Sgt. Bill Dtsslnger received lUs present rank last month at CheroTolnt, N. 0 , where he is stationed with a fleet marine force.'

He Is a loimer Burler resident, a >n of Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Lone, now

of McOllI. Nev., and he is a radio and radtir operator in the marine corps.

C. OF C. TO ELECT im W fS . Mawh 14 — Anmoal lecUon meeUns for memben'Of erome Chamber of Commerce will

be Wednesday evening, March 15, at the Wood cafe banquet rooms. The raeeUng will begin with a 1 ~ -- dinner*

C>t Fit «a4 tiirtalM to

BENTON’S

AllOVER SIATE POST

BOISE. March 14 </I‘f-Rcsl«na- tloii of C. E. noljcrts as .unte ffii- lierlntendent of public liiMnicHon look effect Monday with liL'i return from a scries of tiorlli Idaho fcrenccs on adminlstnUlon of new leglilallon designed to raUe teacher i.iUtles.

HntxTI.'i WHS sucfcfcle.-l (jv AcelH. Cliutbum, former Uois,' . li'iiii' turi- school |iruicl(i.il, »i)i»>iui.'d Ciiivc-rtKir Ilollollseii. Cti.iiuiirii 111 S|>oti»iie to nlt<-nd ft lurr.-l srr

mviiiber of the state land txviril-.McBi ."ichool ndmliiLstiiiior* and

coiiiily conimL*.Mon nn'iiiiwrs wiUiWluun 1 tolkfd Ui the 10 non coiiiuIps nml ValU-y coum\Inlere. ted In Uir proponnl a> outlined It." noberts .m>1i1.

■ Ho«tvei. Ult-te wici n fliNi<kNlvlon on the pan of some coiiniy com- mL"lon members to wuhliolil Vic- linn on the teacher nlcl sltliied lu nilow .i.ilnry It order lo lurtc consolicl;.'ome Miiall district.'',■' he adned. ll ie tund would W treated by n milt K,urt oae-halt increa.se In ilir county li'vy. DWlrlct.i which hii the maximum would b<- 011 the luiHl lor addiuoiml nioiiey lo puy liictriiM-<l &;llIl:u In t’ event tlie money Is exli;iu.ste<I tJ cuunlle.i could apply for part of tlOO.OOO state approprliilloa .‘irC 1 at the special legWntlvo .re.s.slon.

-1 irli'd 10 cmpha,iUr Hint thl.' purelj- an emrrRenO" measure to t lo hold tenchers In Idaho nnd pr vide adequate 1n.\tniction," Rot>rrta said. "Any reoTRnnliatlon plnn will take from four to six 5'rars to com­plete. and something must be done

Rol)ert< mel wlUi groups atI.'lnn, Ca,y;i<de, Mo-tow. Onuise- vlllc. and Coeiir d'Alene.

Robert Baker Is Named Sergeant

HURLEY, March l^ M r . and Mrs. Olln Bnkcr have learned that their

m Is now s«t, Robert Baker, sergeant B.iker wiui home on fur-

louKh la.1t monlh with the rank of private first clxvi, mid rccrlvr<l Ills promotlou lmmrdl;itely nfter hla turn to Camp Adair. Ore.

La.'t year &rRe.mt Baker waa the.' Burley sports rcjxirtcr to the Tlmca- News.

Seouters Drawing Program Tonight

Boy Sccut stiivHlrs lor the com­ing months will be outUned by Twin Falb dbtrlcl commlttcemcn who win meet at 8 p. m. today at the MetiiodW church here. Dr. Gor­don R. Tobin, committee chalrmivn, announced.

PlftM i « a sptUiR "catnpcpiw” lo be held durtiig ihr latter part of -April, or early in May. will be dts- cuiied.

HEAD TIMES-NB\VS WANT ADS.

f l AWKINSON

H awkinson - Ure tresdlivg does not ana never dW heat the tire structure from bead to bead. We only replace the Kom tirad and apply beat only to the new tread as we .vulcan-' Ise It to the (true- lur*

T I M M O N SKOM E.& AUTO S U P P L Y

Til A N S B DIESWASHINQTON, March U WV-

f4{«i». JJorttn Dlfi. D,. ‘Te»..«hftlr- iu»n ol the hoiue committee to In- ■ viUsale un-American activUles

10 Bel a first hand report (\n .1(110 coiuiufnlaiors Walter Wln-

rliell l> ready lo do some talking. Dle.v who nos Ix-rn verbally tllt- g with Wlnclipll lor some time, larged MomUy Uiat -fiilb' CO per iW of the ttftlemeuti ot some

nidln commentatoni can be proven ' utterly fiilje," and .'iild he p^opo^- rd lo fliul out II liro uU-nitlnB c«n- l>.inlM woidil be willing lo allow iimltKiuil i-er.yiii.i' an eqiml op-

ivirtuiilly to ,answer ch.irge.'S mmle

The 1 U) alri'iidy had told the the niiir network had

1 down when he a- krd iM lo iL>e part of Wln- lliiu' to reply to chargra 1 the New Yorker had

he kind of man who does >iiy kind of crltlclMn."

Wuichcll ommpiitol at Mlnmi..1 Imvii i>.<ikln([ fore liive-itlKrtted by

ry l.apiiy lo t.ll ir Inee.' tlilns^ 1lotted to tell on Uie newspapers,”

il 'rMabll.Oi IU< 1

Allt r.l NNKItV rOlIUSE FILKR, Maicli U—Pfc. Edward

VV. F4wftCd . Kin ol WlUlanv &l- wards. Filer. h.is reported to the army alrbnse al U» Vegtis. JJev, lo attend a fevrn weeks’ nerlM gun­ners’ school. Privalc Edwards was rrcentlj' home 011 furlough and ve­iled his wife and rtlaUves In Flier.

Lincoln County Tops Bond Quota

SHOSIIONB. Match It-County dialnnan Cholmer Martin has re­ceived word frow the state war fi­nance committee that Lincoln coun­ty oversub.icrlbed t-'JXl78 In tlie fourth war loan drive,

Tlie quota wm inj.OOO. Bonds pMttVinrtd t>y srrvlcemtn and wom­en from Lincoln county totaled »27.- 400,

OKAY FOR RAMPermission lo cut «utUli\»

coaMnicl ramps was given the Over- lBiid-Qreyli(xuul llncj at Monday nlsht'a meeting of the cKy ct

Tlie coinixuiy, counclljnen tolil. plan to cut 30 feel of curb on S(voiid avenue ea, l, and llierc coiuiniri n new ramp and sldrwalk, and al.vj to remove 13 feet of curb nt tJir lnter\«:ilon Of Second and SecoiKl sirrct east, the 1 of the bii:i <1r|>«t. lIlLi will jx'rmlt n niiire scientific linnillliiK of buse.v so tliiit tmir niiiy be jxirltcd 1 lime for Iim.IIiik »ml imloiidlnK.

Tlie Fcbniar>- reiwrt of MIm .lie A. J'rii.'rr, llbrurliui, Mio«v<l S1S604 In llnrs and Icen collecttrl dutln - tlie iiiDiitli.

Tliree building l>ermlta were a|i proved. TliO' went lo Vlrtor Mrltoi •J2i Keomd nvpiiue west, rwnodi tt«vwKe, «Q0', Oeoise Curt. 203 Va Biiri'n. eiMislnicl

tlKO; I D. JMlllon, who lo spend imoving a uimll frame biilkllni; the back of |> lot on tk-cond nvelll nortli and ad<llng a kitchen to It.

AUTO Kirxy COUrLE KELLOGQ, Ida.. March M (JV-

Mr. and Mn. John Vergobbl were walking arm-in-arm along U. S. highway No. 10 SuiiiUy when tliey -were struck by an automobile. Tlicy both died ye.Merday.

FORT R i PRIZECALDWELL, N. J., March 14 Ml

—A famous FWng Fortrc.Wj "Hell's •AnRcls." and seven members of Its crcw vlsUed Caldwtjll Moiiflay on the first leg of a 30-day nationwide tour of the nation's war plants, and lO-year-old Carl J, Bueliler ven' glad to see the plane.

Tlio youngster wrote to Prtsldent nooscvelt to a.sk for a ride in _ Ijomber In return lor selUna bonds nnd the w-nr department arranjed for the Ind to make a routine flight from CiiUlwclI-WriRht airport

YoutiR Buchler had wTltten Ihe President;

"I am ' ery haiipy to let you know I made flood on niy promise Ui that I would sell JSO.OOO In . ... bonds in the fourth war loan drive. My total salc. up to now are 181,- 003. . ,

"I hate lo bother you while yoi; are hnvlng jo much trouble will the lu-piibllcnns. but don't worry, I had trouble with them, too. I can't even get our Kcpubhcan r the coinniLvitoner.i except

r»llles. bweiii over the top iinyw

Ciipt. in U;ildwln, I'i. Ynklma, ■Wnsli., first pllol lo lly the plnne In eoinbiit, nnd Capt. John JohiiNtoii. 23, Orlftiufo, Fla., Itji c«imhiit pilot. »lll iilterriale lu jillot during the tour.

Tile plnnc cimipleted <8 mKrlnns over Germany. France and COMtSlTleS.

HF.AD nMES-NFTWS WANT ADS,

LO W ER ’SSTANDARD SERVICE

Oaa — 01b - Car Scr ’lclng lUQHT OP TOWN

2C0 8. Main -Try Hi

Naval Brothers Meet in Hawaii

EMiffn Bert Larcon and his b er, Zoko l^non, aviation radioman first class, recently met each' olhc'r at PcarV Jlatbor, accotdlns to worti received by their mother, Mrs. B, V. Lonon. Boise. wUfr-oObB late Twin PtilU attorney.

Doth boyi wcr« bom in TBln Palls and spent most of thiUr lives here. Zeke has t>een In the navy since April, I0<fl. wid Bert lAnea August. 100. Mift. Xjirson is now liv­ing at 1007 Broadway, Dolse.

Collision at JeromeJtntOME, March li-Cnly sll«ht

damage ctvMsed when automo­biles driven by H. a Btoektoa and Mrs. Belcn Giles collided at Main nnd Locmt Btrect-n nt 4:30 pjn. Sat­urday. Deputy Sheriff Jim Purtly stated that no pcr.vmal injuries wcro received.

IISIDICBRS

'40 Bulck. 5 pas. Coupe

•40 Oldi, 4-a60f-Bediih “ ■30 Che^Tolet Coupe, locally

owned■30 Bulck * door fiedaa - •38 CheiTOlct Coupe

iieiRAL .tKtoir/iid

SPECIAL PRE-EASTERC L E A R A N C E

O F O U R BETTER

D R E S S E Snrre*! your chance It la early spring druse* yon’ styled dark lanrv u sell as thli big ielecllnn teday . fiuhlon* you’ll be prouil lo w

e icnsalionally on thoie grand winter and e been Bdmlrlns. You'll find liaadKmely I print.i and plains In'pretty pa»leK Check

Ihrrr'i dnten.i and dozeiii of inind r Into lumrtier.

V A LU E S TO $5.00Crepes, jheera, Jerseys — »11 these and mnny «ror« In grnid color* ot tasSy »pilng- Tail­ored on# and two-piece jlylea In » wide rtuitre of aites. Mmiy smart wasli frocki are included, too.

V A L U E S TO $8.95Her* art Jerseys, woob, fine rayoii crepei . , . truely fine fabrics. In styles to flatter you. Pnicueally every tlee and half slie U included, in many styles and colors.

V A L U E S TO $12.50C1ob«out of all our better dresses. In Uils group. You'll find famom •'Name" dresses, fashions odvertlscd In Vogue, Mademoiselle and Charm magatlncs In this grand group. Pn*ty frocks. trlm}y tallonxl one and tv.-o- plecei dreises. smart sporu and street dresses, all to clear. Save today.

New Arrivals

a year eamea this pre-Easter dress clearanee, and but once a

)re«r ssch ralaea. Many ef the*e dresses were unpacked bill a few

d»y> age, but out they go dnrlnr this bif event, al rreally rcduccd

prlree. Onwid styles, lullenally advcrUsed fashions. In spring colors.

Pttnts and fabrics, ^ota* early.

R eg u lar $3.98, n o w ..........$1.88

R eg n lar $5 and $5-90, now $3.88R eg id ar $8.95. n o w ...... $5.88R eg u la r $12.50, n o w ..........$9.88

REDUCED!

AO Bizea u e included . • many styles ia each .slit

selticUon. Youir Had n than one drtu 70U tin u nsT iwve. thkt you iBur

the basis tm your,:

whole Euter wardrobe.:

Page 4: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Page Four TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO Tuesday Evcnini? March 14. 1944‘'

sui. .1

Bjr -

T H E U. A. W.'S FORWARt) STKP

Ever since Inbnr took Die no-slrlke plt-clRi hlRh union officials have expressed llH'lr ell.": approval of uiiauthorlsccl .work sioppiig'^ B lit It has remnlntd for the Unllfd Aiilomo hllc WorkDfs. C. I. 0.. lo lake ihe flrsl. long needed step to Implement this dlsapprovr w ith disciplinary meaaurcs.

U nder a new and drastic policy, t li U. A. W . w ill Investigate all work stoppages or atritca by Its members, will refuse fiervlces" to the membera responsible, a n d w ill refuse to Intercede In their behalf If m anftgemcnt takes disciplinary action against them. In addition, the International iin lon has instructed local officers to file charges nnd prosecute membera responsible for w stoppages. I f the local falls to do this. Its o ffic ials must appear before the Internatlon a l executive board to show cause why sucl action was not taken.

In announcing this policy, the U, A. W has o-sserted that "an increasing number o corporations have taken advantage of th i p atrio tic re.solve of our members nnd have deliberately pursued a course Intended to deny them thelt righU und.cc their c tract* and to provoke them Into engaging

., .4n-,W0rlc stoppages, the object helng to c ' -."creqlt our union In the eyc.s of the public, t^ e m o ro llz e un ion membership, to inspire

p lr ^ lv e legislation against unions, and •Ultimately destroy the organized labor mo

Vment.”Those are s tiff charges, and will probably

call fo rth areuments and denial. But It U interesting to read with them the almost s lm u ltaneoua announcement by tlie national l a ­bor relations board that fewer charges of u fa ir labor practices by employers were r celvcd by the KLRB In lO'lS than In tiny of the five preceding years. If, a* these Statements suggest, there have been m ore Instances of un fa ir practices lately, and few ­er complaints about them to NLRB. then It Is certainly tim e that ,somethlng he done to bring the-ie unsettled grievances to a du ly au thorized agency, rather than let them erupt In production-crippling walkouts th a t violate a pledge.

The new U. A. W. policy promises a fu lle r accomplishment of this nccessary action. I t Is s ign ifican t to note that the u. A. W. docs not recognize any provocation as being s u ff i­c ient to warrant an unauthorized work s top ­page. T h is does not mean that the un ion ’s members m ust suffer In silence. It spurs settlem ent of grievances by government m ed i­

ation.This move by the U, A. W. international

executive board is not only a long-needed one, but; a very wise one as well. Scrupulously carried out, i t is almost certain to win back m uch o f the public sympathy and good w ill w hich organized labor has xmquestlonably lost through wartime walkouts,

TUCKER’S NATIONAL

W H I R L I G I Gcrowd. whoM

UiaAlacAnTUUR—The *1 hata nooeeveH

favorlta prewar *port eoniliitd ol at Prcildenl. U llftiiuon a epanBler"# mo«t iroublfaoma

concern IhcM diys. Ho h u Been In­dication* that the “economic roy- •in ii" and “members of weU-etock- e<j dubj" Dmy swallow their diillltB for ?. D. n.’» <Ionie.iUc reform* and vote for Ihelr author on the war Lviu« alone.

The Democmla h»va made Ifie ume discovery, nncl are obvloiuly ungllng for thb clement of the elec­torate. Ccjidcj Rurroundlng lilnnrlf wtlh conttrvallvely minded men. F. D. B. bai given the reacUonarlts u ictil that his pwtbellumprogmm mny be more sntlsfnptory ere lila prt-peorl Harbor ppllcln.

i :iniiisn a number of recent appointees of the type of Bernard M. Baruch, Herbert H. Lehman itnd Will I* Clayton he ha* closer contact with the flnanclaJ communlt; than he erer had before.

'nils coterie may not commsivl mnny ballots by ItsHf. but Its mcmben po.vifas jreal Influence. They demonstrated their power when, ulnglehandedly, tliey R ’ept WendHl Wlllkle Into Uie 1040 Republican pre.iIdenURl nomination st Philadelphia. Moreover, they are usually the hcavlot rnnUlbutors to the cam­paign chfsLi.

Mr. Bpangler alw »omes lest numerically larser groups mffpr Irom the tame complex on voting day. With .Mr. IJooM-velt Uasliig sll his strntcgy on the fact

' P. rlmlrn thinks

BATTLE OF FRANCE

We he a r so much of factional strife w ith in the provisional French government that wo are like ly to forget the unity, the-bravery a n d the growing strength of the underground w ith in Franco itself. It was something of a surprise, then, to read of a report presented to the French consultative a-wmbly in A l ­giers in w hich It was dlscloscd that It Is th e underground now, and not the occupying nazls, t h a t Is presenting ultimatums.

After patriots blew up a powder factory and Cerman-requlsltloneci hotel In Orenoble, the naals seized 300 ho.-itages. The patrio ts told th e m to release the prisoners or expect reprisals. The nazls refused, and the patriots then blew up a German barracks, killing 220 and in ju r in g ISO.

This la aa encouraging os the squabbles of De G au lle . Olraud, et al., have been d is ­hearten ing. A nd it lends strength to the a p ­peal uttered by an escaped member of th e underground to the assembly: "We want you, too. to be as united- as we arc."

W ith the French patriots accomplishing BO m uch against frightful odds, It seems l itt le enough lo r the ir provisional government to give th e m assurance of appreciation a n d com mon aim , and let them know that p o lit­ical b ickering w ill be adjourned until th e great ba tt le Is won.

COMING EVENTS

A writer covering the Chicago conference of U.A.W.-CXO.- aircraft unions reports that the consensus of labor leaders there can best be summed up thus: “Both sides have Just parked tbelr ball batd behind the door for the duretJon.’*

Such a n attitude on the part of cither -labor or Industty can stymie evety effort to­ward resoiQDtloa ot ordetljr.iand pc&ceful p ro g r ^ la tbls. country. Jt divide and embitter the whole countn^. And U will, i f .bbth partlea 'do sot sacrlllcs some of their

Thera ia so much to be done. And labor and ;lttdt»tr7.A«an do' so much to help—If they

tbelt baU bats vbsre ttiay axe .,

f

Nole: Some miiinsltlon Irarters. notably Sen. Arthur 1. Vandcnber* of Mlclilgun, contend tlmt. the only :nndldnle who can chrck lhej« pro.ip«^Uv6 desertions » Oen. DouKlfis A. MscAriluir.

OUTUtJK.ST-Alben W. Bnrklrys ono-mnn rebellion ipsct Fmnlclln D. Rooscvfll'j poise morn than the top

mnn’s Irtlrr ol apology and pxplanntlon Indicated. For the foct Is thnt F.D.R. bowed to the wrong legislator nnd the wronR bmncli of congress In the tax tight.

Although Mr. RooMvelt moved quickly to repair the breach with hla senate leader, h# haa not tried to placato a far more Important figure in the fiscal field. He U Robert Ue Doughton ot Iforth Carollnit. chair* man of the hoiisa w»y« and means committee.

It Is this sroup that originates imd fnunes all revenue and tariff mea.wc.i, whereas the senate fl- nnnce commlllte merely makes minor chnnRes. And the tall, raw-boned SO-year-oId Ooujshton dominates hli! unit, Democrats and Republicans aUke, morn com- plrtcly than any other eommUtee head.

Even before the Kentuckian voiced hla rebellious utterances. Mr. Doughton dtcUred, -I must port com­pany with the President of the United fiutes when h« dictates what we shall do.' fn the vol« on overrldlni the veto, he cnrrle<1 ever)' Dtmocrallc member excep five mbld pro-labor new dealetTi.

Until a year ago, when he dcclded that the power of taxation should not bi ' ' f'jnda. Clinlrman DoUBht tiud economic reform. based on leRlslnUve control ot the flow of

Moral!—Don’t Travel in Wartime!

ntfd 1 n lor"needed"

n the Tiir Heel counir)'.

wllllnB to sen’e again If hb party and the nation wan' him.

Politicos, hoirever, tJilnk tliat Paul V. McNutfs re­cent Jarksnn day address In Des Molncji provldet courtroom evidence of the chief exeaitlve's Intentions Orcutlse the mnnu.wlpl was re.id In advance nnt praised highly by Mr. Koosevelt, the following excerpli make pertinent readlnft, especially a* they received scant notice In the pre-'s:

“On Nov, 7. ID4J. the sreat Demorrntlc pnrty wll once more win a decisive victory. A vlctorj- for the mas; of the common people who are America. And a vlcton which our allies will understand and npploud. Thi iMue before the cwintry Is one of leadership. And there l.s only one lesdershlp capsble of canylng the nation through Uie next four alilcal years: The experienced, realistic and iuccc.'jful Ifadershlp ot the Democratic pnrty . . .

"If tills country Ls to go forward and not backward. It must and wlU retain lU present'Ieartershlp. If this

ar Itself to the realities of a chzinKlng ind will retain Its present leadership. Is to hold its high placa In th# council must and Mil retain lu present

---;ry b to gtworld. U must If this country of naUoni. It leadership,

“And lo that end I ilvo jou the party of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson—the piwrty ot Orovex Cleveland and Woodrow Wlbon—and tha party of rtanklln D. Roofevelt."

V I E W S OF O T H E R S* MORE JUDICIAt FEUDING

Th* t\ip:eme coMrt. «hM* five to lour decisions a few days ago stirred the President to seek harmony by ftddlng a group of nev appointees of one mind aU rcndy marie up. is at It again.

Recent days have brought forth another tJve to four decblon. though without White House objection. TJie bsue was rotiUne. the Uablllly of stockholders of n Kcmucky bank thst was sold to b holding com­pany shortly before Its failure. Tha outcome U chief* 1y important to the ex-ttockholders and the Federal Deposit Insuranca corporsllon,

Cut the manner In which the presumably learned and detached Justices took hjue with each other b of grnenil Interest. The minority accused the mnjorlty of t^ 'lng lo usurp the Isw making functloai of con* creu. the nty thing Mr. Roosevelt aoetued the old (teal court ot doing. New deal Justices were ot course on each aide of the controversy, which promise* to continue longer than that between P. D. B. and Bark, ley, it for no other reason Itian that the Justices will bo there longer.

Wo think the feuding on the court has lU redeem­ing aide, howBver unfortunate It may appear to aome. At least our feara of a cotuplrtcy to deprive us of our liberties are relieved. These lanUemen are keep­ing Ub on each other and lettlni the world taow of

ny shortcoming! they find.FsUlurt of a court that was packed for » certain

purpose to function ax planned showi the rufgedneu ot the American pollUcal sj'ttem. lu capacity to «b^ sorb blows that t« many of lu best friends teemed likely t« prove deadly when they were aimed.—Nampa IVee Press.

)VnX OEnMANT COLLAPSE?When wUl Germany eoUapje?ThU quesUon liaa bten thoroughly <tlactts*e4 In the

United Statei wbert mUllou of people oonaldar * ‘'oollapse'' » Biagical method ot endfng a war.

I t just Isn't so. A collapse vtu come o&ly when the armed fortes o( tlie Halted StaUa batter tha nail to thetr kneea. (tvlng Uitm ntora batUa tliaa they can take. . 1 .

The procMi Un't eaiy> It meaas dsath. tufferlng u d destrueuoa. .It requlrea asm* eourafa home as well as among the adhereats of aggresalos. to kUl enough of ttte'enaaiy to make U Impoitlble for the remainder to stand up and fight.

We might al well steel eunelves, as a natloo and _ people, to the aober thought that we wont get out cheaply thU time. In the flrrt World War. the end caioe cocn after we out anay m dy to ttght and oor losae* were relattrtly tmtll, la this struggle it mar ^ many monuu of bloody warfare and we ma7 have to learn that Uie price of war is added to the tolly of peace and pacltlsm.

Iliere to a chtoce, e( course, tbat the war nay end wddeBly and (hat w wUlbe happily surprised, but the Job of the nation and Its entire population today Is to accept w.,wa|e w u and ttaui end war. — Mntdoira Oeooty M m. '

“ WAS HINGTON CALLING” B Y

M A R Q U IS C H IL D SiSHINOTON—The hill finally ciune

p 1 e federal anil ^Blvim

Jle tlie chance to vot«. One of was Rep. Eugene Worley,

irock. Tex.showed the greatent pcitlenct gli the long rtraftn out discus- In Iha conference room. But •ley knew himself, ho wos or-

mple of ghosts that ever (juiie materlnlljcd Into form >n;!lble enough to hit nt.One n*as .the ghost of the Negro

vpter. 11 hovered over Congressman lunkln’s ehslr making low. moanr Ing nobes »t spproprlote intervals. No one every really tnlked about whether ihe simplified frdeml ballot

• ■ - • '• ilble foi............

gulng V

groos t that e of

which

tJie clilcf reasons why the conX< <lbcu4jlon waa strung out to inurtnlnabls Icrtgth.

I ether ghost was the fea: to haunt the nepubll

IS ttiat the men In uniform will all e for the reetectlon of their ccm- inder-ln-chlef. 'Hie 'try fact that

they ore Irj unlfonn hw npparervtly hj-pnotlied Uiem. As I wld oner •- -'we. this teems to me dangi___onscnse. But It haunted the minds I some conferees.Among the conferee* themselves

there are u many opinions about !he strong* product of their confer* -- - there were amons the blind

It'S dfil idy. He says Uie rrglstcred ■eters ot MlssLwlppl will all have isllot« sent to them by the election ifflclnls of MlssUslppl. Somebody

knows where sll ihoje soldiers are they can llnd w t thtir afidttssR!

Senator Hatch of New MmIco. ho In my opinion Is one of the moat

fair minded men In the senate, re­fused to sign the conference report Ha snys the measure doesn't give a slnule soldier tha chance to vote without sut^emenUI s u u legUla* tlc*i. Will (h» itates act?

Here, of course, comes Governor Dea-ey vrllh a soldier vote mesaase to the New York lUte Icftblature that was aimed smack at the poll. Ucal campaign. He muds his mes­sage • *^Ute* rights” document that sounded not n mtich like New York as like the deep south.

e propoml he put forward greatly simplllirs the -otlng proce-

for New Yorkers servlnn In annecl serviwn ibrwul. '

only have to »nd a postal■ their last home addrwcs nnd

APO acldre.'s lo get a br will have all the names o)

Irccii President lo dbulct school

[""what the great and WTalthy ol Voik urn do. oUjti

sUle.1 either cannot or will not In mnny stales special leitl.tUii «»lons will have lo be eallrd. T takes money. A.i a metier of ii one of the conference commit member? who a stales rlsh expre.ised serious doubl as lo wheth­er Uie leKl.ilBture In tils own could or wouU meet., That b Uie big hole m the s rlght.i (irgument, Whsl iho rich

And why haven! the stales t ___before? Why has Dewey waiKsl ui'til the whole thing got Into politics? The soldier vote law passed by c^- grc&s In September of 1942 w u Invitation to the sUtej to act such a way that th«r soldiers could

lie. But BO far. only California has passed an adequate soldier TOte law

Southern Democrats and Bepub' lleans will unite to put o -er the bill, as agreed upon, by a wide marsln In the house. Apparently the same kind of coaUUon wlU function in the »enat«. And olhen will go along, taking a crumb of comfort In the belief that since It Is sQuarely up ■'i» sUtes. the states may now *c

ror the President the decision w be difficult. If he vetoes n. the v« will >a more In lorrow than in an­ger. Ha has recently had a sharp lesson tn what aa angrj veto : lage calls forth.

SPRINGDALE

Mr. and Mrs. ‘niomas Bowen re­ceived word from their aon « who has been In icUon In the Mar- jhsll islands, that he b now In thi Hawaii Islands. Mr. and Mrs. Bow- n have another son. Wayne Bow- n. In the service.Opal Br^en arrived trom 6.nU

take for e vblt with her parents, ' ir. tnd Mrs. John Broden.

Mr. and Mn. J. N. Dvley re­turned from Logan where they spent

few days doing temple work. Manning arrived home from

toi Angeles. CaUf.. for a visit with her ^rents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Manning.. Wayne Berlowd. Balt Lake ( .. Mrived lo take over the Oeon;* llymas fana during Mr. HymM ' Mnce.

n e Boy BcouU mad* » hmu* to house CMTati on the waste paperdrlTt.

HISTORY OF TWIN FALLSAS OLKANED FKOM THE n U B OF TBK TIUKS-NKffS

It TEAKS AGO, UABCB 14.191T, Under the ggperrlileo of the Ma-. iestle Pharmacy el thlt city, the local agente for the Edlsoa phoao>

18 TEABS AGO, UABCH 14. tS2»An act maklat Twla TUle county

_ lint' clasi county w u aigned by the gownor today, the measure be- Ing among .upwards of a doien to receive executlTe approval-

R.' R, a iu t wu elected to suc­ceed himself as president of the Twin PaUs Mutual Building and Loan aasoclatlon at a meeting of stockhoMm yeatetday In the Business and Professional Women’s club rooms. Other offieets are P. B. Wheller, vice-prteldent; B. P. Drla- kell. secretary; Reese M. WUUama. treasurer, and B. P. Parry eoussel

Mr. and Mrs, W. u Gardner. Rog- enoa. are the pareaU of a sod bom Supd» at e n te santtaitam

the Amertcan Wliard^ latest ImptQTement o( hi* Initnuaent. in whkh KUnbeth Bpencer, the popu­lar concert eoptino wlU *lag aide by side with th« machlae re-cr«- etlon ot her rolce.

With the re^lM tallsitioa ot two rotary waihen of Ute design, and an imptored extractor, WUUam U. Pearls, masagu and o n e r of tha Tny Utindry, feeU that ha now ha* oae of the nett op to date and modem laundries tn the Itate. Work has also been dooi the interior.

P o t

S h o t s

TSK.TSK TO Sl-XDRV STATE o»nri.\us

Tb> .uie «t IOjh« «Q|hl to know how lo tpell lu Ditti tnwmor’a

ih» b u •rntout IhoimndA nt | rlnl«1l itlrkers wllb the CUT'S nun* mbupelled—

A MvsiriAs—.\M> PEnrecT PHYSIC.VL SrECLMES

Just lu .«l!Oiv Jtia Twin Falls high fchool kWs I and Kiriberly H. S. foIU of recent years' wh»i an umi.su»t mii'lclan jtou-»f been Btud.vms under, we pre.sent the case ot Rich­ard Robb Smith.

The &rch(«r« Imtruetcr, as you know, weM two the u»\t m i quit*" three Weeks a»o. When they got to examtaing hLi> »i the rteelvlnK station. howeiTr, they found he was such a perfect ph]}lcal specimen that thi mutnee ;<tiapUy grabbed him — and he’s now trwlnlng at Camp Pendleton msnn» boot camp

far San Diego. ‘Our authority 'for this t* Ral •ood. ei-jpo,ts edlur ol tha T-N.

Come to think ot It, Hal htmselt presenu a no leu amulnc c«m those of us whoM thought he was

■»r underwTiBht thit ihe army wouldn't take him. H* was accepted by the nsvy last wttk and will be headed for training In about two weeks. We eonsratulste t»th our >ld friends. Only thlat. dant 'em. ts that they make us tm a bit reaUve pounding this typewrlier.

< iiir r . pLE.\sc My eyes bec^e puffy XS-hen I think ot r »Dear Senator Outty.The things that ycu do.

The delleate term Of the -roURrnr»eomln« term If pUntfd «c*s esrly May fall to the wwm.

You should wall unlU June In the d « t ot th% mooa.And not start jour lowlnt A-iotnj loo aooa

The b (^ tn the leulh Are down In tha cwuih.ThejYe teartul. Indeed.That you'ea atunUd Ita rowth.

So, stnaicr, dearie,' Just be a bit metktr:Don't weamlt hara«klrl \na the loud-ap*ak«r.

—J«k Klehey

LCCXTAmont hieky r v a n s U«oL 8her>

rttt Reed. When he and the missus , down eouth tor his m « astign-

meat, they foitad a place to Uee ta 13 minutes, la a caauMeiy modem home . . . and there were t n appUcanta tor hoeoea on the walt- tnc list In that obji lorn.

, BO BUJU DEPT.*Tw% wtvea Oata Craeity to '

SatU'u.TvN hmdttM. ISome of Ihe fecntnlne tliurea ta

sulta are votm Um oueL

FACOr Dear Pot Shots; ,

Pardon me U I seem causUc. The town hasn't had tu annual patnt-op week Tet.;;hiA aomi ol thee* *al»-l

ANALYZING CURRENT NEWS

F R O M N E W Y O R K

XlVerl L

CBAUXNQE-Presldent Itoose- velfa announcement that a third of the Italian navy will be given to the Russians has tUrred opposlUon m the Badosllo " cabinet.

B u t U n ited SUtes admiral* are not disturbed by the news. They say tha t we dont want the vessels.Those we retain WlU not be man­ned by Amertcan bluejackets and sent Into combat, as they are too fUmsy tor modem warfare.

Similar weakness In design found In the French men-of-war conditioned In American yards. To­day^ sea battles fought amid burst­ing air bombs and heavy shelMlre require mart stoutly protected ships ihon the French and Italian prewni craft.

Sven If Stalin oblalru possession of hla •’cut- before Ihe end of the conflict. U b doubtful whether hi will risk lU use In anytlilng but po- irtsl duty. Nor would .luch a irtiRU. token fleet In Mwcows l an ls b» i po6l»-nr challenge tn BrlUlu’s na vaj supremacy In Europe.

IlEDS—A much more serlmu jltu. »llc« Is developInK In Ilallnn siea; occupied by Uie Cermnn army, 1 • cars the einnBrks of cicvcr trickery 1 Berlin.Mu.-«ollnl has complrtely dL-«rd-

Pegler VacationsWestbrook Pegler Is on n

month’s racatlon. His column WlU bo resumed on his return.

ed his old lasclst s)’sl«n and Is now organlalns an ItalUn soviet, alike In stnjcture though not In spirit to that or the D. S. B. R. AS In the days of the early Russian Dolshc- vtJla. factories are turned over to the workers and military units elect their own captains and colonels.

L a r ^ estates hsve been conJIs- caied. especially those owned by persoru close lo the house of Savoy. The lands of former wcalUiy black-

j teho conspired to overihrow 11 are dlvlrtod. In fact, the Ver- monlfeslo Issued by Benito

prnmlsM an entirely new order based

Thp undftRrovind Iti tJew Vntk r - port.1 that the schi'me shots !ihreu-t1 undenitandlnR ot popular rwj-eholojD-, The fascists nnd nszis In northern Italy braidcast dslly radio me.isages to the south telllnft ■' ‘ lumhle peasnnls f

erlcan aplt.llpelllHK t ..........................

discredited nristocrncy. tlidr Ika comrades enjoy public o

ship.Thff wime Is beiunfd to F InUnjf that perhaps the redi

ARRESTED - However, aders nre suspicious of this t

llbernltty shosu by 11 duce n; nprlln bo.-k*. Tlir wnve of slrlk fffUns fl.OOO.COO Industrlnl hu tie Mllnn province Is tnereliniptOfTi.Unionists In Piedmont, I

nd Lombardi saboURc mnc nd utlllUes. In Turin and ■

employcss first <Innnnd co economic adrant.ucs which <

bo classified as poUUeal threats and Uien walk out It their retiuest* are not granted, thu* slowing war pro­duction.

Anbtliw ruse to hamper 'called republican fascist party Is that. In factory elections, patriots hostile to the axis are put In offlc4. Parlnnccl. MawoUnl's Man Friday, recently charjed that as a result of ballotlnR in a large plant two -no­torious revolutlonarie.s" were elevat­ed to the shop committee althoujh the "traitors had been arrested by the former fascist jovemment.” When Pindldates are h&nd-ptcked by the aerman-s. the majority ol lh» laborrrs do not vole.

FAMISIIED-Mllltary aulhorilles from the Pacific report what they think may prove to be an Important factor In shortening the war: Wa are now taking more Japanese prli-

n old s

foe 1

at every nip preference

>ly a beUef.

me to fire at everyone ittlform. The fanttllto.1 ••■vperalfly to ^vold t

wp butchered prisoner It whfin our doiiithboys ana me nrs "brlnl? 'em bark alive" the .s feed the nips well. Though Ics:- on the battlefield our men,

typlcnl American curiosity, d around the newcomers. They ench one "Johnnie" and sre offerlns him cUarettes. Word

t this Kcneroslty has seeped back to Illrohlto's lines and, whtn .. .ered, hla troops appear more In­

clined to hold up their handa.Experts once estimated that w*

would be compelled to dlj out resist- tea pockets in e\-ery Pacific aloU. » a result ot the ehango in enemy

-jhavlor. they are now rertstaj that point of liew.

After our forces have pushed throiiffli Uie Philippines to Por- no.ia. they will have sliced the main artery connecUng nippon wllh thi

^(mtem archipelago. Every ho»- ?ftrrlson except those on large d.-» will face stan-atlon. these abandoned men will by liave heard of our humanltar-

nmUhcd vriernns In the (treat war.

PRICES-New York businessmen >nck from the middle east declare hat variations In slate authority here have caused chaotic economio

condition.^.E«ypt Is filled with Amerlcsn. .................... .llled troops but

ivrrned almost Yet she Is In Uie ml

ice InflaUon. Ni-lithborlnit countrli

of a severe

strlclly Nations

much lower

boutrht from or sold lo Cairo mer- n(i<. The British hold n tight grip Lhe Industrial life of the Anglo-

Eayptlnn Sudan, a lerrltnry close to rndlnn markets of the Nile, nrion has e.stnblLshed an equsl-

Imtlnn proftram which Is unususlly tidal to military visitor* and lo

IT HAPPENED LAST NIGHT

B Y E A R L W IL S O N

FASIQCS LAST UNS . Tea Umw the eM »eek

Onea a«ax-aa« I etffl hed a ahM aU a» te laiM! . .

TBK O Em C tA N IN

M WU«i

NEW YORK-Just thU ............going to menUon another Broadway columnist, because I think he should

entloned.> W a lte r J

Wlnchells have done a kind and admirable th ing — Uken a 14 • month - old CSil- nese girl baby In­to Ihetr home as a foster child.

T h e y ’ re not Ulklns about It and w on t permit .pubUelty, but tha fact ts that &(n.^Ylnchell who. acconUnn to her hus' band, “likes lo play with live dolls,’ phoned a foster home agency and generously said she wanted to gl<' a home to some child whose faihi wu at war. When she learned ot .. Chinese baby that peeded a home, she Instantly chose that one, with­out wnlUns 10 tee it. She didn’t look around tor a special type, bul nt once fell In love with ihe baby, brought It home, then told her hus­band what tha had done.

In hla enthuslMlte approval, he told a trtend. 'She scooped me on a blessed eventr

Jtmmta Durante, now et the peak of his career and finishing up t rec- onl>br«aklnf engagement al the Copecabane, has Intensified Ihe ItW- dlng ot his boss, Monte Proser. "As 1 wuz cornin' ta work lunlght." Jimmy says from the center of the Hoot, "1 sees my boss canln' tuh work. 1 sayt. ■H'lo. ehum-' He eays tome, *H1o,chump.'He epeaksmore dliUncUy than what I do.*

JlramU WlU take his nonsense Into the Capttol theater for a couple of weefca and then return ta Hollywood. At the copa he tells storlei he told 30 years a^o and rocks ’em. one atoty la. “I'm havla’ chicken under •lati m.Blckford'a. I eau mosta the (lass u d teU down tuh duh chicken whea I sees a sign dat says, 'Watch ytr coat and hat.* So I walche* my eoat and hat, and what htppensT SO M e .pO D T STEALS OVH

Uroatfway has*a popcorn famine threate&lnt. IhU Is serioui to us out-of-towner* who like to chomp popwm. Joe Mosholo, who nms the

popcorn shop at Mth near Broadway, took a ^ane tight out te the Iowa popcorn belt last week. Be vent to farmeia and bened for thetr product, but they had sold out. He pleaded wlUi popcorn procctiora and they turned him down. Joe wu about raady to oooe back without popcorn M en nmebody mentioned U«inr. OOQld he p t whisky for a diy XowmnT A diy Iowan who could tn r CDly a tUth or a talloa a

month. Joe couldl Frtxn Kew Tork

Joe come back by plane with a promise ot 200 bugs of popcorn and 1 wa.i able to eat some of hll hot buttered popcorn tonight.

Grace Moore, celebrating two l:lf e\’cnts in the Stork club-(l) publl- cation of her book, "you’re Only Human Once,” and (2) completion ot plans to go-to Europe four months tor USO—took time to discuss wllh mo wmelhlng very Intimate; Tha female form.

It seems I recently described her as "bust}',” meaning It as a great compliment, whereupon Miss Moore galloped to the nearest mirror and studied her reflection. What did I mean, busty? That she was big u a house. Uko some tubby opera singer who measures a bulky iV

"I am a 38, dear," Miss Moore said, after I'd explained In honeyed phra-ses that I was merely expresg- Ing admiration, "And I'm lucky to be only that." She said singing adds circumference to women and also Informed your ehocked reporter that some skinny, scrawny uner>do- weds have talcen up singing mer^ for thnt reason.

M lu Mooro, to me one Ot th* most eolortul dame* In the world, sold that In Havana recently th* found Cubans enthuslastlo about Ernest Hemingway. One slKhtly confused native assured him h* would be as great as cote other great Ajnerlcuios ha had heard to much about — George Washlniton. Abraham Lincoln and Tom OoUIni.

A Broadway character who kipl putting dimes tn the sandwich (lot at the automat'and brtngln* out streams of sandwiches waa finally approached by an angry manager who demanded, -mat the hell are you doing? Cutltoutl" The Broad* waylta ezclatmed, ~WhaatI Quit rhen my luck's running so good!'Comedian Joey Adanu at Leon

and Eddie's has a triend who'i a lawj'er and ho knows he^ a lawyer because he sat ap all night trying . to break a glrl'a will , . , Irring notfman departed to Inspect Holly­wood . . . Tallulah Bankhead return* to Hollywood In July to star In aoth Century Pox's "Cathertne of.Bta- sla,~ directed by Ernest tubltsch, sha told me at the Elysee 1 Bern on E. asa B t: the Ueut John • Roosevelts apparently morlng Into an apartment. , . Uyrui, the OoUl- Uon Boom mentalist, torecasU' th*.-hafy {qj- . . . 'Jacoby, the gag tnan, tntormed friends on ths coast that be«n K eoM here that ResnibUcans wen willing to UitCQ to Boofereltt flr*> aids chaU,. .

I

Page 5: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Tuesday Evening, March 14,1944- TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO_____ Page KVa

Springtime Tea Given to Honor Lieutenant’s Wife

Charm ing amonfr the many spring tim e and S t Pntrick’i events this week was the tea a t w h ich M ra. Roy Painter en.

^ r t n in e d Monday afternoon in honor of her son’s wife, who A rrived Friday from Stockton, C nhf., to spend 10 diiy.s here visiting. One hundred guests called dur ing the afternoon to m eet Mrs. Bruce Painter, whose husband, Finst Lieutenant Painter, is now serving as on a ir transport pilot in tlie New

G u inea area.Colorful spring blossoms

decorated the Painter home,1015 Shoshone street north, and a striking nrrangement of pastel pens and white nar­cissi centered the Ince-covered

tea table.rrelty App«Intm«nU

Ivore U5<r& In silver holders were on flthflr.sJdff of Uib Ilornl arrnnge- moiit at Uic costal nnd silver »[>- pointed Ubic. On the plono.« brtRhl bouquet nt puM>-alUow«. hrathfr and dnftodlls In a blue patlcn'

Giie.its «ere uclconicd I ' Mrs. Ouy H. Shearer and Mrs. WlllUm Spncth, Jerome, sister of Mrs. Pnlntrr.

DurliiR Uie flr.- l hour. Mrs. E..J". Siettler and Mr*. Charli's D. Beymcr preakled al the silver servlets, and during tJie second hour, Mrj. L. 8. peiTlnc arvl Mrs. Reesp Williams of­ficiated. Mrs. Fred W. Harrier and Mrs. W. A. Vnn Eiigtltn prcslflcd during the final hour.

A»lst llosieuA.*isl2lnnU In t^e dinlns rootn

throughout the nftenioon were Mlts Ann Perrlne; Mrs. Betty Kelker, »lstCT-Jn-l&» of the honoree. and ttiM Barbara Bpaeth. Jerome, nieca of Mrs. Palnlcr.

Mrs. Dor» Oreer, BramtoioUier of Lieutenant Pa1nt/“r, w« also among ihe (Tuesl*.

Jerome Bride

(O.A.O. Members Dance Tonight

A t Gay FormalTonight’s spring formal, last

dancc of the tcason for Tain FnlLi O- A. O. club members, alio serves as Uie opening event In a wrrk of T»ln Falls fesUvltlea In honor of St. PnUlck's day.

Qupsis at tonight's Jormal dsknclt^g potW RV JUuUo Rondtvoo win be reeelvcd at 0:30 p. m. hy Mr. an<l Mrs. Chnrles Ehlrlsy, h(xit committee clialrmen, and .Mr. and Mrs. Wllllnm Middleton, Mr. Rnd Mrs. Robert M. Reese. Mr. nnd Mrs. Chic Crabtree, and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Phillips.

Dancing will bcRlh promptly at B:30. with mu.>;lc by Wayne S)cecn and hla orchestra. A surprUe In- li-nnlsslon program U plinned, and elaborate dccorflUoiis, "to mukt- tile last dance of the season a mpmornble one." are being ar- ransed by Uie host committee.

Fellowship DinnerOpportimlly clns.? membetTi of the

Ta’ln Falls Chrl.Mlan church en­tertained at a fellowship dinner BUndny at Ihe home of Mr. and Mrs. W. L, Hankins.

Marian Martin Pattern

Only on» y*rd of as.inch eotton sniXu thlt ktUactWe pln»!ore apnn. Zt'« • practical ityle, liu « ^ o rU b ly »nd la euy to make.

h u r t pocket »(Id« on tppeallnt touch. Um f«r cotton print wlib bright colored b lu blndtnt. IndU. peoHblo ror ' iitnDB cleanliu tad

Pattern 910} comes In tint SmaO MMium (lB-3a>, tarse (40<

«3>. SmmU a!u takes l fd. 35-lcch taWe. ydfcWu blndJnj.

• ThU pattern, together with • neediework p*ttem ot tu«(ul and deeonUvs motlb tor linens and e«nnent«. TWENIY CENTS.

send TWBNTT OEtfIS lo coins (or U>esa pattens to llaiea-Newi Twin FaUs. Idaho, Pattern Dept, addtet*. W nt« plUnly.BIZE, NAME, ADD&ESS, BTYLB NUMBBB.

TSK OBMT8 n u n btlsst <mV IHt Martin Martin Sprint Pattern

Now, easy.to-niake styles. Free Pattern printed tn book.

Mn^ n ’lllUm K. DafU. who «ai MIm Dor* UUlUn Walker F'or to her marrlac« Sanday ai tha homo of her pjirenls. Mr. and Mn. Frank Walker, Jerome. (6Uir Eocnrfnt)

Dora L. Walker, W. K. Davis Wed A t Home Nuptial

JEROME, March U—Miss Dota LUUan Walker. 6alt Lake City. daiiRhter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walker. Jerome, bceame the bride of WllMam K. Dnvls. son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dsvls. Vancouver, Wash-, at a wedding here Sundsy al her parenU' home.

The bridegroom is home on leave from Uie merchant mnrlna and will return lo service the latter part Ihla tt>otilh.

The couple was married at 10 m. at the home of U»e bride's p: cnt.n with Dl.shop A. Leo Olsi-n Ihe flr.1t ward L. D. S. church i flclntlnB at the .Uncle ring servi

Attenrtnnls were mniron of hnnnr. Mrs. lonn Batilcy, nnd Robert ' er. brother of the bride, best

BrlUc’a COTtume The bride wore a charming 1l!hl

hUie Rtxeet model null with ccwi'l''. menUry nceesiorlc.i and her flow uero ga«lenln.i.

Mrs. BaKlcy wns dressed In .. navy blue two-piece suit with deep pink rosebud conaKe.

Mra. Walker, mother of the bride, wa."! dre.«ed In flowered Jersey frock with white cnmallon pink ro.'Cbiid corsaKe. Mrs. I mother of the brldepnwm. wi blue dress with «{denlas.

Thirty close friends and relatives attended the nuptlali and reception followlns the ceremony. Mrs. K. E. Stratton, and Mra. T«1L-i Dlnuhsm, school chum of the bride, presld- ed at the Uble.

Lilies and carnations were em­ployed In the decorations for the >cm and table.

Brt«« CuU Cake A largo decorated cake was cut

and served by the bride.Ouesta Included Mrs. Kenneth

Davis. Vancouver. Wash., th# bride­groom's mother: Mr. and Mrs. N. B, Stratton, grandparents of the hflde, Jerome: Mr. and ^trJ. Lynn Davla, Eden: Mr. and Mrs, Mcrwln Pclerson, Durley; Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles Stratton, Mr. and Mrs, Dft-lSht Thompson, Mi. nnd trs. Byron Young. Mr, and Mrs. Ross 0. Lee. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Giles. Mrs. lonn Bnpley. MIm Lo Rue Johnson. Je. o Coats, ULshop Olsen and'hiembers ot the bride's family.

She Ln a gmduoto ot Jerome lilsh school and at present Is an employ# of the satel-McCultough radio tube factory. Salt Lake City; the bride* sroom Is a grnduace of Eden high school and Is home Irom tha D. S. merchant marine »er»tees. Th# bride plans to continue her work

the Salt Lake CInn.

USWVAuxiliary Purchases iBonds

Mrs. Louise Hughes presided at the m n tto i «! Gtntrai Lawton »ux- Uluy No. 7 of the tf. a W. V. Mon. d^y night at the Aniertcan Legion auxiliary rooms. Sum of »S was '-ol- 1 to the Red Oroas.Report was made that bonds pur«

chased by Individual ■uxlUaiy mem> bers, with the total amount the auz- lUkry thtu purchoaed to b« applied — pttrchaae of an ambulance plane

the naUonal V. S. W. V. auxU< was tQ31.S0.

The president named her <___mlttes for Ihe year, and member* Joined the O. S. w . V. for a Joint social hotir.

« « ¥

Election March 15HAZEintJN. March I4-AnnuU

election ot bftfcen will be held by the Presbyterlaaa Ladles' Aid so­ciety Wetlsesday. M&ich IS. av Uia home of Mrs, Vance. Reports of ot- fleers' for the post year wil] be mads. I

M A T T R E S SREBUILDINO • {UtNOVATlNO

SVSBTON UATTBE88 CO.

m BMond Ara. a Pbm tl 1*

Miss Helfrecht Entertained at

Bridal PartiesMK< Owen Helfrecht, whose mar­

riage to Ueul, WlUlam 8. Luka will take place this week in- Gloux City, la., was honored a l several Informal p.nrUfs prior to her rtepariute lor Iowa Sunday, She Is the dnugliter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Helfrecht. and the brldegrooin-clect U the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. U Luke. Tam Fails-

She and her guest, MLvi Mnry Skoro. who spent I lie weekend hire from Brlghnm Young iinlvcfsUy, ProvQ. Utah, were speclnl gue.su the home of Mns. Carl Shenvood.

Place enrcli at the dinner inWo were In the shajie of tlnj' Srlde."i, the central arrnngemenW was white carnations nticl while ta in co'slnl cnmklabra.

Two tables of brUlKe were nt r and members of the dull prf.wmcd a lace t <ble cloth and napkin* ' MIm Helfrecht.

Friday nlKhl .‘lie wns fntprlnln at a mUcellaniOU-' .'.hov.of al l home ot Mrs. Mitchell Hum. BiV Mrs. Hunt and Mrs. June Thny were co-ho.sic.v e.1 to 23 gut.-.ts, tiny nrrhwny ol swrcti>ea.», beneath which flgiirlnes of a bride nnd ' • ' the lacr-covi-ri\I buffet euppcr table.

A vadcty of enltrUlnec!tlie group, with Mra. Mary Biichnn- an, grandmother of tlie honoree.Winning ono of the prizes..............CMtltt 'Ka* second.

Thursday night. Mr*. Velma lor.'<( entertained the brlde-to-l nd her family at an inlormal dU

# ♦ * -

Easter Treats Slated For Bickel StudentsRoom mothers of the Bickel

school met Friday afternoon nt the home of Mrs. Berths McVey with Mrs. Jake Pope, Mrs. E. O. Tyler and Mrs. Thelma RIgdon. fourlh-grado room mothers, hoMe.«5cs.

F.viler irenu were planned Bickel school pupils and the i enioon was spent playlnit game.s.

Flfth-Erade room mothers will entertain at the

CA RE OF YOUR

C H I L D R E NBy ANGELO PATUI

Often a child ot two years r fa-.e. to take his dslly nn His niotlier kiio»s he nerds It b he rciu-ws U and Uie.e Is no wi of coinpelUnK him lo sleep, Any sitempt at lortf will drive ai: lion ol sleep out of his head. He may 8e coaxed to sleep but i forced.

After entliiK Is the bc.st lime lor sleeplnK. To cuix sleep to a child »ho Is determined not to sleep a matter of skill, detcmiliiallon nnd Kenlleiio.ss First prepnre him lUT sleep by unslilriR him ehanglng hl.s clntlir.s, Tlien him. Move o-s grntly and as softly ss po.«lbIe so that there Is no ex- clKmcnt. If he cannot be wn.shcd or changed before sleeping without a battle, forego the battle and keep him as flulct as po.«lble.

Create KItht SettlniDarken his room. Drawn shiides.

a shadowed room goes fur lo Inducing ihe mood tor sleep. Bright light, noise, nctlvlty of any kind stimulate a ctiltd and drive off sleep. Lay him In his crib R ly and If pos.-lblc, steal .wlUy of the room. II he will not allow that Kit by him and croon softly him, or tell him a sleepy story, hum to him. If you c.an take a nap at the tame time It will help tre­mendously lo sel tlie hnblt In him.

B'al suppo.se he won't sleep no matter what? Keep mlm about It. Don't scold, don't threjiti'O. Let him lie on his b«l in the shadow­ed room, talk soltlv lo him Induce a mood of c ulet in him. OlVB him a slceplnK-toy eompanlon If he want-i It. Let liiin rest for the nap period nnd before loo t ,, days pass he will be falling lo sleep on time.

Too FalJgurd for TalherIf two-year-old children do not

have their afternoon rest they a likely to be crj'tns with fatlgi when their fathers get home ... night. That Is dbcouragliiR for ihc iBlhers who reallj- wnnt a visit with their children. Tlicre can b< visit with a cross, tired, crying child •0 both are cheated nnd home life suffers. Naps are Just that Import­ant.

Don't give a clUId medicine to make him sleep. Only the physi­cian has the right to do that and he Is extremely careful about it. He w n ’t give a child medlcltw un­til necessity dejnsnds Jt. Leave all drugs to lUm. The le.ss children get the better. Sleep Is the best kind of medicine for tired children.

«4U»» lfnuM« woillr r»ntrt

U M In hb No. F-2S. ’0<Trmiklra.’* Ta obuin a copr fix

zfvri

"eel NERVOUS RESTLESS

HIGH-STRUNGOimAnDilTS'OrTbiHiitkT

qq tuMUeul pertoeio dUtiatexai

u£iB^"S3r--ssS'S:risS.;w.;:u"sna,w.s

such symptoma. Piasbam'a

S 5 K l . S « S S S S ; £ S '

as';!SSs“.>M."a.s‘fadlreeUoBS. WtU teonA Irylaet

lirOUE.PWKIIAII’S K S

Supper Time at First C. A. P. Social Future Events —Calendared_by_

Jobs DaughterspTtUmlnaiy plana lor a number

of future events were outlined at the meeting of Twin Falls bethel of Job's Daughters Mondsy night at the Masonic temple. Miss Joan Lin.

tfarch 18 for Masons ,aod their ■ wtvea. bstem Btan and thei; u- corU at the Uasonle haU. Members are requested to briny pie 6r »spd- wl^es. Hie conunitM In charge Includes Mr*. Luther Pierce, Mr*. Woody Pierce. Mn. Lewis Hack and Mra. R. R. CeUe.

Twin Falls Girl Is Mamed- in ~Jerome"

Runrdlan of the Idaho bethel, will make her official visit here May t. Ray Sluyter, vlce-assoclate guar- dlivn, and Mrs. Sl'oylCT, guaidlan ol the Twin Falls bethel, who attended the Jerome meeting at which Mrs. Bales made her official visit, ported on the session.

Plans were begtin for the bethel'i mnual sprlng'dance, to be held the latter part of April, and plans were nUo completed for a cooked food aiUe to be staged Esturday under chairmanship of Mbs Barbara '

r and Mlr.s a»n* Ostranilei.

ard, Txrtn Palis, obtained a m»r- rlage license here from the offices ot Mra. Chailotte Roberson, tl«k and recorder.

The c. .Charles 1ward LD3 church. Witnesses i . . . Leoriaxd Young and Uta. Mllditd Andrus. _______

:ouple was msnled by Bishop I H. Andrus of the second

Filer OES

CllmaKlnr festlvlllei at Ihe |;iitial n mcRilifr* al their flub room\ al th» I'j mUiff pictured here. l<en (o rl^hl. they, irt, Jo« Donshur. jhalrmadi .Mtv Ku> Mn. I.ynn Stewart aiid Afilold ndund. jSlalf Tholo-(iniT»Tin«)

Brown-Lincoln Nuptials Read

In Coast TownPIL'EJR, March U — MlJS Lela

Lincoln, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lincoln. Flier, became the bride of Kimball . Brow'n, l<ookout, Calif,, at nuptials performed Mon- day. March a, at. Redding. CnUl. by JudRe R. P. Stlmmelt.

Mi.m Clarabelle Cline and Mrs. ). E. Di!wf attended the couple. Tlie lirldc's costume was a blsck

■ ofll suit witn white acce-vvirlei.MV. *nd Mrs. Browr> will make

hilr home- nt Lookout, on a large

Mn Brown, well-known In Twin ■«ll.v wll. a llur. e ut the Twin Falls ouiuy I’.iTieral hospital. She nvd ifr hu.'bnncl arc vWllnB her p. r• nu this ucck and expect to return D Cttlllornla Prlclay.

CalendarHlshliind View club Will meet at

:30 1) m. Wixlne.Klny at tlie heme of Mrs. Hnrry Cniip-i.

Jf *ernoon OulM of A.wrmlon

Ept'copol church will meet at : 30 m. •mur.sdny at Uie home ol .Mrs.

'. 0. Swim, ISO Buchanan.♦ ^ #

Mentor club will have a Red Cro.M M-wliiH meeting 'rhurvlsy at

. :n. at the home of Mrs. W. R, Chase.

* * *Shamrock club will meet ThutS' iiy al llie homo ol Mrs. Henry .'be with Mrs. Floy d lianOy aj as-

sL'tant hosits.s.* * *

Mariners club will nieet for a pol-lurk dinner at 0:30 p. lU-Thurs- doy, March 16, at the PTcsbyicrlan Church. Program will iw In charge of .Mr. and Mrs. Slanlcy Mettler.

* if. * nickel Paccllt-Tciiciicr ORSijCla- on win meet Wednesdny, Mar^

IS, at the school auditorium at 8 Tlie Rev. E. V. Ikdiiberry will

Weds on Coast

.Mf». Kimball nrewn. whn wa* MLvi l.eU Unetiln. llle t. prior ta her mirrlsse ratly Ihta month tn Callfona*. iStalf Ensravlni)

be prliicliul spe.aker. and an orlgmal play »ill br i'rr.'rntr<l by fourth trade pupib

W. 8. C. S of the MrlhodUl chUK-h slU niret a( 9:30 p m TliutwUs «» iht chHrcll nKh Cirrli No. A u hosts Mrs. I, O , Ooort.IlnK will hsve devuilonal'i Mlvi . phlne Throckmorton, the prv'*isram, and mujlr pupils of Mra. FYnnk Fonda will ipivar.

* « MFlrsl District Nui>i-.'' aA.wiallon

will meet »t 8 p. ni. Wc«lne,\dav the Idaho Po«er comlM»nv aiidiior- lum for a blnso party. Esch mrm- btt Is asltd to bnns a '«Wle ele­phant Icr blnjo prlre-*-. Mrs. c . A. Bailey. .rtef'Jllve .*ecrrt.>n' of the Re<l Cnvj. win be pirsS .• 'e. ker-

SoIdiers-to-Be Entertained at

Gala CAP PartyPlrst In a series ot moiitlily

el*l meetliiRs wns enjoyed by c. .. sir patrol members SaUirdoj- night In the CAP club rooms nt tlje din­ing hall of the Park hotel, Dnncing

orche.stra mmic benan at a p. m d continued until a mldnlRHl but

let .supper was jrrvcd.Honoreei al this month's partj ere Vic Oofriten nnd Cinrej

Nye. member* who leave soon the armed lorces.

Tlie dining hcill of the hotel \ newlj- drcorsled for the occasl and ajTBngements were made by the enterialnnient commlltee, Joo Don. ahue, chnlrmniu Mrs, Lytitx Stew- an. Mrs. Ru.yell Larson. Mrs. Msck Oray and Arnold Oslund.

Card tables were provided for (tuest.» whn did not care to dance.

St psrly, type and time still .nnimeed. will bo held In April

. .. 5 fommlltee In charge to be selected by ,ihe entertainment com­mlltee. The event will probably honor other menibera whose Induc- Uon ts inimlnciu,

* ¥ ♦

District Rebekah

Meeting' at FilerF ilia l, Mnrch U—Annual dis­

trict Rebeknh lodge meeting will gel underway at 1.30 p. m. today nt the Filer t O.O.F, hsll, with representa­tive! pT<-5fs\t (mm Twin Fnlla. Filer nnd Buhl. Ijirve nltendnnce U ex­pected,

Mrs. Tetl Sltrer, district president, will pre.Mtle. nnd Mrs, Floy Naylor. Mascnrt', Rebelcnh n.ssembly- presi­dent. will be present. Musical num- l>ers are jilnimed. and Buslne.'iS will be trnii.sncted.

Mr.v Naylor will pay her official vwi to Filer Ilcbekah lodge tonlnht. Then wUl bt fitgree work.

A M e s s a g e t o the “ F o rg o tte n W o m e n "

o f M a g ic V a lley

about FOOT CO M FORTIn all the hustle and bustle of rntlonlng, war and shoe

manufacturing restrictions, don't think wt\e for­

gotten you ladles who need the proper »hce for tired,

schlng feci. We're featuring special brands such as

«08|f{

. . . they combine boih Reiileel style with

ctwxf>'Bt and wear. A.'k to sec our selecilon of

KsturaUxers.

S7 .SSand well woiih

your ration stamp

X - R ay F itt in g to r Com fortX'Ray mttni; checks your selection and-the good .

Judctnent of our clerka. The X-Ray shm exactly

Iww the shoe you tftoose fits >-our foot.-

Prcserve Precious ' ^

Com Cort ShoesKeep them In proper repair »ltli ex p^ regular attention.

Shoe R e p a irin gUuASeiaent. Ralpb K- Tm«r.

tiutUmt-Clofk

Make your points cover their ration period

—Low point—low price foods and home

supplies featured especially for

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY,

SATURDAY

TOMATOESSolitl pack ''Standby”

No. 2Va can, 7 points each

lO c

CORNIdade ll cream atylo,'

16 o z can. 6 poinU each—

1 0 c

PEAS"Twin Peaks," tender,

sweet. No. 2 can. 8 pts. ea.

lO c

BEANS“P ioneer" Green cut,

No. 2 can, no pointa, each

1 0 c

Pineapple Preserves 63c

Peach Preserves;”S‘",i:Z"‘‘“ “ "‘”i

PUMPKIN 12c

PRUNES S', ■’.r..:""" . 18c

COOKIES ss:- 2.SC

Baking Powderf.*'ri... 17c

COCOA ... 10c

CHOCOLATES"':'“ 18c

MILK L r ' ... 4, „39e

r OR]V * kernel. 11c

SYRUPAmiiztf Waffle Syrup

1',.;. Lb . bollle—

1 2 c

O-CEDARF u rn itu re Polish,

12 01. bottle,

4 5 c

COFFEE 29c

MUSTARD 7c

Cnrn Flakes 8c

Grape Nut Flakes u <». 11c

q V R l I P Ernjp. 69c

SNOW DRIFT frsjf 69c

Post Bran Flakes u o*. . .11c

SUGAR r,uRF,r,r..;;'“ ■" . 75c

Laundry Soap . 5 .,22c

MATCHES 20c

PALMOLIVEToilet Boap, regular bar—

3 to 2 0 c

DKY CLEANER

Aunt SMfe’s, 1 gatton can

6 3 c

GLASS CLEANER"Ocedar” quart bottle,

2 9 c

TOILET SOAPCrystal-Whlt«

3 b a r . l 3 C

Call phone No. 0 or No. 1 for fre* delivery to »I1 parUot,

the cl(y-~frce delivcrlea cach Mondij, Wednefdij «Bd

Saturday^

IDAHO DEPT.O f f K f s i r t — B r i n g

Page 6: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Page Six' TIMBS-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO TumhylEvenlns, March 14, M il

HEYBURN NIPS GLENNS FERRY IN OVERTIME FOR CAGE TITLE

Rival Coaches

Stimpson’s Free Toss Gains 35-34 Decision

W ENDELL. March 1-1 — The clns.s B dintrict chnrapion-

Bhin wns decicicd in lhc.fiiial-Knme-of-t--^'e-«n..... ' ‘ ‘here Inst nijfht—on Ihe toss of n free throw

Dwnino Stimpson, who at five.foot-niiit* Ih the UiUchI jilay- er on his tcnm, niiidff it—in an overtime jiurioti—and as a resuU Conch Denn Crofl's lleyburn Panthers, runnera-up in the Mini-Cassia siili-iiistrict. (iefeatetl Coach Gene Coop­er's nicnns Ferry Piiol.-i. chiimpions of the Kin>; Hill f district, to Kiiin the covtrled crown. The score w;is :{5-34,

The title went to Ihe .school from the eastern end of the Majfic Valley after one of the cloKc.st and hnrdest-fmiffht tonrnanu-fit-s in the (iiritrict'fl l)»nkutl)all history — a tour­nament that reqnircji an ex. tra Kume when the Pilots do- fcated the eventual winners Satunluy ni«hl.

Da.skclba!l fans KUhrml In t V/tndcVi ttyTOimshnn tiom nil i>it o( ihr MiiRlc Vallry rxiX'dliiR .. tlirlllcr — iiiirt llinl'A Jiul »liat dicy Rol, TliP Pnntlicrj Jiimpucl Inlo 8-7 Irncl 111 III!" flrM riuartrr, tthrn ihp «lrrn rnricil llie hnU 1’llnl.n wen- In front, 30-lB. Ileyb

clI.viLvsrtJ nprcd nnil tied nt 30-26 nfl the third (riui

Till* Ipnd aUtmnted In UiB mrly pnrt of the nniil qunrter. WItli iwc itilmilrs t i HO, Don IIolniM, lipybiim fornnril, ilrove under nir bn.ik l loi Iwn [K>lntJi to put hb It-nm fthcnd, 3J.30, HoueviT, Fred Bplknnii, Pllol ' iTiTrcI. ciu:te UirouKh with n pnlr ol field goals to give hl> quintet 31 sdvonUiRC.

Only one mlnut« wru lelt »hen Stimpson droppnl a tosji Into tlie basket to puy his tcnm within point of the lead. And tlien wlUi i <0 seconds to go Uie star center _ fouled by Denn Redford. tie made

throw to tic the

OENE COOPER . . . CoachM of »h« liejbum »nd

Glenn* Ferr; batkelbiU teamt, respectlrelT. who balUed last nl*hl for Ihe rlasj D dUlrlcl champion, ship al Wendell. Ilcrbum iron, 35-M. In an orcrtlme period, but boih leama <rlll fo (o the flata' tounumeni al Rupert next week. (Tlmes-N’ewa photo.enrraTlnc)

ON THE

SPORTfro ;

Ye Olde Sport Scrivener hiva lat In on B lot of bnskeibal! touma- mcnt^. both na s writer nnd lui spectator, but for the first time wlUiln hl3 memory he *aw aomc-

. thing liappcn Bt the clajs A district event here during the last week­end that waa enOrcly novel—a team walk off with the championship oc- knowlcdgcd by friend and foe alike tlje b«at team In the dlitrlct. Of couTM. that team was (he Onkley Hometi.

Generally there's a Uam burled In the toiUTiamcnt ruck that some­one bellevea the bejl—a (cam that old Dame Fortune refused to smlle on. But that va.in't the ease In Uits tournament.

The rnult of ilie'teurnaoient wai B Tlndlcatlon of the expressed be* Ilef of the l«m-* motl mrdent f«1. tower—Karl

I Oakler : told the

nets of theb a t la the history o.l a schoolmakei » habit i f prodnelnc .....teana. There were many that dis­puted his coDlentlon. but Just tell this ancient word pudler *hat team

the MttiVa'l7o“n o*Juat whal didn’t tlie team have

that raakea for a great team? It had fair height and plenty of speed wid. best of all, shooting ability. There are few better forwards thBn Dallon BquJst. What pair .. guards would one take In prelerence to Bob Matthew* and Clark? And that Martin boyl Goo, la. lal what

.* cagerl BU backbbard play was mjirreloui to benoM-hls ihootlns la r abore the «urage~hls floor play ItaTlng lltUe to be desired.

But Oakley't brilliance wazn't confined to the tournament. The Hometi have been brlllUnt all aea- •oa. Ihey (led vllh' Coach Buloa Budge-BUurley Bobcats for the Big Sercn ebamplonatilp, losing but one Kame ohd that to the Bobcata. On the acoaon'a.play^tteBobcata were

. the M c o i^ ^ t team, but

d the g

Most of the overtime iwrlnl had . Mip and Uie spcctnlors bcKnn all back expecting another tie, »1 , Rcdlord again fouled Sllmpson. Un­perturbed. the Panther ace stepped

o the foul line and sank Uie pilch. The period ended a moment

with ft lleyUum victory.In the gome between Shoshone Kcyburn. and Shoshone a

Olenns Ferry, the team excelling ... the free throw line won. Qlenns Ferry made U field goals to 15 the Panthcra. but the Intt^r m

on 11 out of IS charity tt» to the Pllot.t' live out of II,

SUmiwon set the aeorlng pace v 17 points, seven of them on ithrows. Jim Shrum, slx-foiit-i...Inch forward, was the PlloUi' leailer wllh 11. nil but one of nieni vl field goni route.

Doth tennia will eulvr the 'Umament to be held al Rupert

beginning & week from Thursday. This will be Olenns Ferry’s second straight trip to the tournameiii the district runner-up. Albion \.... the other rppreaentntlve last sewon.

llLrnuitN ij. iil.KNS r>;nnr

GRIGGS KAYOED CHICAOO. March 1< (U.PJ-Nale

BoWen. Chicago, knockcd out Fred-, die .Orlgss, Mraipiils. Tenn.. In ihi second round of a scheduled eljht-. round tight Iwt nlsW, aUhoush' Orlggs outweighed Dolden by 24 pounds. Bolden weighed I7<. Orlggi

K'beat I than

SP.OT CASHW - b « i - or;;W tliltsi HonKa

Tvta U O aUABX iU C t TSODT rABU

five times, three times In pre- tournament play nnd twice In the annuol event. Then. too. they eas­ily trounccd twice the only Big Five team In tho district—the Twin Falls Bruins.

~ e tournament waa the lint In rest attended by this typewrller

(ormenlor after covering many ill eventa tn the midwest. There Is difference to the play, he dlscorc ed.. There U mere ene-handi. ahoollnr, fewer .tip-lni and lest bcKkbo»pa pUy. riay also U mstt In • straight line and for that reason probablr faater. The referees give lets heed to charring. Ost he be-

■ (he aperumanshlp is better, : east, a player wsnldn’t Ihink

of eonaoUnr a rival who hai been pot OBt of the game for fauling

That aeems to be a pnicdee -even to the extent of delaying

n» tournament memories: _ . Broadhead. the ngrtculture In- fltnictor and quite an athlete In his high school days, timing the t< nament with a bottle ol catsup tine on the Ubie beside him, prob­ably a grocery Item that he forgot on a previous trip to the atore Hank Powers, the acorekeeper . . , Dode Cmnney, ex-Bruln and ex- Homet coftch, explaining that he wouldn’t put any player on an all- star team whose hair waa so long that he had to uxe one hand to brush It out of his eyes , . . Jeu Eastman, the OOP politician from Buhl, attending every session with a notebook and keeping busy lot­ting do«7i notes , . . btra. Walt L}on showing records of the Buhl playen —especially one that showed War­ren Sisson, the Indians' fine center, had made five field goals en lU ahoU . . . Coach J. Stuart BalUday

the HomeU' victory you would have, too. U you had coached that «ane team a year ago.

Bat there will be ether yean and ether tonmameDti and bere-i a (Ip from (be pndgy one:' Watcb the Buhl indUns next aeasont They leae only one puyef (tera a yetuf team (hat pUyed brllllanUy sp (a (be very last quarter ef tbU yew's

____________ 8EBVICE

A U T O R E P A IR SMotor, mechanical orbody irorle. We’re {cady now for your ear or truck.

G L E N G . JE N K IN S

Trout Season to Open A pril 1 in M any Magic Valley Fishing Spots

New Attendance Record of 10,000 Set in Class A Cage Tourney HereMcFadden Kayoed Pair of Champs but Never Held Title

Sccne of Big Golf Tourney

rtNKHntST, N- C.. .Mareh U — Tills “([nif e.-ipllar .rne of tlir north and >oulh oprn golf tournament, opening todjiy.

Last year, only divot dUgers past SS could perloftn, but (hb year there's no such rrstriellon. This U one of the falrwaya that will see a lot of action In the open tournament as well as In amateur champ- lonahlps April 10 through April II, and women's meet, Aril II through 21.

Gooding Bowlers Win Doubles, Team Event in Buhl Tourney

liU III-, Miiri-h M — One of the Kroiitcst tournament.s in Ruhl'.s howlinjr hi.stnry canie to an eiui at 2 a, m. Monday w itli Loo Strickliun and John Tester, Goodiiitj, capturing the doiihlM championship with a 1.2G7 tola! just before the cu r­

tain was ninic down.-Tlie victory of S trick linR

and Tc.sler the Gooding l)owlcrs two of the three cihnnipionships, the H . nnd S. c|uintc!t havinjf prained the fivu-man title when th a t event caino to a close Suiu iay noon.

N. O. Jnlinson nnd ‘‘Uiis"' Cow- hani. ’twin Falls, w<rc the bowlers iiDsrd out In the doubles by tlie Cloodlni: pair, 'nicy led tip to the Inst mluuie with 1.265. n fli;ure set Sumlii)’ ndrrnooil. Jotmson nl.vipaired wllli Hoy Fnil. nuhl, to KOln third [Mvilllnu with I,25U, while Johnny Wiifincr nnrt Enrl Lowery

Ott, Giants’ Pilot, 1-A

lly liAI(01.ll C I~\ASSf;V KKW 'I'OitK, .March M (/P)

— Sprinjf niin.s, sjirinp thaws, n liit of sprinjf fever and the ever pri'Ht'tii tnanjiowor coni- plicatidiis KMictfd tlie iilayer.s Monthly us Ihe m ajo r k■a ,'ut;s bcKun ' the ir th ir ii wur-time

traininK Krind,Tlie two New York elula, the

wnrlrt chiitnplon Ynnki-M. In the Amrrlran 5oo)i nnti tlir ri'Uar-rtwoll- InK Giants ol tin- Niaioiiiil Imip, were hiircl.'.st lili diirliin the day la llie <lraft clclby.

Mell Ott. oprnUiR hl.s third as bos.'i of the OlanUi, told his pliiy- ers al Lnkcwood. N, J., between showers iip lind bi'cti ri-clnvilflpd l- A but tind no Idea wlirn he mlfllit be called up.

The Ynnkuej, rf-'trlcted to calLi- thenlcs at Atlantic City by rain, re­ceived word that llrst bnseman Nick Etteu. only expcctcd rciurtilng regu­lar of their 1313 Infield, nl.io had been classified UA. He said that he did not expccl to be cnllfd for ex­amination until mid-.^unimer.

Caldwell Wins District Title

OALDWELL. March H l-IV-Tlic Caldwell Cougars rccovcred from tlielr Initial tournnmrnt ic.s.i here last night and copped tlie south- we.'stem Idntio cln.s.s A biuskcttwll champlon.shlp by ii|>Kettlng the Em­mett lliLsklcs, 17-30. In the llnal game of the tournnincnt.

Doth teams will enter the southern Idaho reglonni loumnment which sUirts here March 23,

The CouRnrs trnlled during the first tialf, tJul sur«pd for kard In the openins nilaute.s of the third period to hold a alx-|X)int victory margin from then until the end of the gnme.

Ocrnld Reed. Emmett center. ..- high scorer of the tournament with 118 points, followed by Dvilght Wlwlow, Caldwell gunrd, with 82 points.

Ring Bouts at Lions Smoker

nuPERT. March ' U — Tliree wrestling and a like number of box­ing boms ti\ addlHon to two boxtng exljlbitlons will be sUiKcd at a amok- : to be given by the Rupert Uons ub at the Clvie' nudltorium at & . m. Wednesday.In the WTe.'»tilng bouu. Dean An­

derson. Rupert, wUl meet Al Mor­rison, Preston; Ron Rawkes, Ru­pert. will mntch grip* with Oil ffor- rlion, Preston, and James Thomp-

^CASH I P A ID

u ►

fo r• HIDES • PELTS

TALLOW • BONES Call u»—Wfl wlU olM pay eub tor old, worthless or dead horses, cow*, aheep, bog*.

CALL COLLECT Twin rails SI«: Goodla* tit

Bsput U

IDAHO HIDE

L & Tallow Co.

I*rl7e nII wllh 1iicy wni paid to bowlers

in llie Ilrsl 12 placcs of the drmblr.i, Othrrj *Tte Bob Lyons and Dr. Osb<iriip, GcixJlng, l,2tr); Lynns iind Dale Flntterj, nuHl. 1.237; Culbort- -lon and Harbour. Rupert. 1,221; Strlckllng and "Scoops" Scanlon, Qoodlnc. IJIO; Rollle Jones and Ed Brlni'Rnr, Twin Falls, 1.216 nnd Flat­ters and Harry Bchrliorst, Duhl. 1.- 215. *

L. 0. Cobb, Bulil, was tlie pace­maker In Ihe singles with 6fl8. He wns tollowed by Meyers. Rupert. fi07. FlelKhman, Ooodlng. 831. nnd Ciirtt.i, liuhl. CI3.

son, Pueblo. Colo.. wlU oppose Dean negey. nupcrt.

The boxing program Includes; Bob Johnson vs. Andy McItotMrrts lit Mb iioundi; Bob Mend vs. Jndgy Smith at H5. and Vlrglt MUtleslcd vs. James \Vy.>ong nt HO.

AlthouRh the Rcnernl tro u t acuHon in Idaho doesn’t open until May 21, followers o f the jiicatorial art in the M agic Valley w ill be nilowed to dust off their tackle and partic i­pate in their fiivome sport long before thut time.

An announcement by the

Idaho fi.sh ami game depart­ment today revealed th a t Sal­mon reservuir in Twin Falls county will join M urlnugh lake as a year around fiahinj,’ spot,

Plnces In Uie Mntllc Valley to open April 1, aecordliiR lo the depart­ment’s annoiincTinrnl. Include:

Maind rlvi-r in Cunias »nd Blnltii counties; Manic tcjprvolr and BIf Wood nrer Ui lilnlne county ant Lincoln rcninly limn the moutli of Hock creek m ii jKilm one mile above MaKlc itiim. and Ihe uullel |X>lnt une-lialf mile below Mnglc dam to u |Nilnl niit-hiUf mile above Uie Rlchfkld diversion from a point 3M feel below the Richfield diversion dam downstream lo Uie Gooding county line.

Lar^cmouth boss season Is open now nnd will remain open until April 30. 11 will iticn ciosc for the monUis of May and June.

Oeneral sea.son on bullhead cat­fish. perch, ernpiiie and sunflsh It the year around. Magic reservoir may not be fhlicd, however, until U-out MiUion bciiliu April I. Tlierc are other I'xcrpiions ll.Ued In the 1943 synojk'.i , nnd in the 1044 Xlsli- Ing bookli'U whicii will be dl^arlb- uted soon to nil iirrsoas buying new licenses which are refiulred on nnd after AprU I,

Salmon and tlcelhead not less than IB Inches long may be cnuuhl by hook and Hue In middle fork of Salmon river oiid Irlbutarlcs ond south fork of Sitlinnn and trlbutar les. Jan, I lo U«. 31.

In CIu l fork ol Sulmon river. Pnh slmerol river and umln Yankee FNirk of Salmon rhcr up lo Flvc-Mlle creek the t.ea.'jin Is Jan. I lo Nov.

Spearing of . cilmon and steclliead Is permitted llie year around In Clearwater river, aialn Salmon river and Snake river bcloa- Swan F jUIJ.

Dccau.se nf IIbIiI tnow In niosi parts of the ftnte, coiLservalloii ol- llccrs nre predicting belter ll.ihlng

early In the

Three in Title RaceIIUHL, March 14—llie Buhl

Major Howling Icnaue will close lUi season Wediie.wiR)- night with one of llircc teams — Rotary, Sego Milk or .Mrose — the rcc- 3iid hnlf chninplons.

Le.vi than t«o points sepamte the three teauu, wllh the Kckos first nnd'the Rdary and Mowe tied for second. The American Legion team was put out of the running last week.

The winner ol the second hnlf will meet the Boring Drugs, the first half champions. In n nuitch for the full season title on Thunday night.

AKSISmONO noXES JONES MIAMI, Fla., March 14 (,V,^Hcnry

Armstrong, shosing consldcroble pep despite his 31 years nnd two "rcilremenU.” nuke? a lo-round np- pearance agaln-'t Droadway Johnnie • J here tonljhl.

Another of a series Uy BILLV ROCHE

Famous Referee

GeorKC McFnddeii was the most distinctive fighter o( them all. ElbowH McF'adden’s clbow.t formed an Impene­trab le harrier to his jaw. Hence the name.

JIcl'adden’H elbows nl.so presented a perilous hazard to the ndver.-<ary. who never knew’ whether a hlow started fo r the chin would prove more hurW ul to him lhan to E l­bows, i!(‘ risked a busted mitt every lime he threw a punch,A nd if he missed he was more than likely to find his beak pinioned on one of those liony poiuls.

The roughest fight I ei w;i-s belv,eeii MeFadileii and Dal Hawkins hi San Francuco, Feb. 28 1001. Hawkln.1 brcunie exiispcr- atcd al lho.se elbnHA that he started giving Gi-<irKe the w»rk.\ and E b<nVA replied In kind. Tlie refcri dLstiualined Hawkins, the left hook nrtLst, in ihc seventh.

McFadden contends he neve was really hurl In 332 battles ove a strctch of 15 years. And li fought Joe Cans seven times. Kid Lnvlgnc. Frank Erne, New York Jock 03rlcn, Kid McPortlond.Martin Flaherty. George SIddons, to name a few of the toimotchers.

Doeile OuUiile llie Ring Tougher than ii boarding liouso

steak, McFaddon wius us punlihlnR a flghler lus I've ever .seen. Yet he wa.s the ma-t (Iricllr baltler with whom I ever came In contact,

I .seconded McFiiddcn the night lie dropped Gain In a [ ' blood In llie 23rd louiid old Broadway A, C. In New York knockcd colder llian the frozen criiB-'i ol OretiiliMid. It was t lime the oyster shiicker w slopped, and becau.se so le McFiulden a chance, only parnllve handful siiw ll. McFad- don MihsMiiienlly drew wllh Oans nnd last lo him in 35-rnuniii-is.

McFadden ihoilKI have won I llRhtwelght Icnder.ship In I8D0. decUlon th a t many claimed .should have been a draw him Ihe crown. Following spl-ctaciilnr kiinckoiil of C McFadden wiui matched «Erne, who had held Lavlgnf, chn»nplon, even in 20. McFadden and the clever Erne met at the old Lenox A. C. In New York, and al the end of 35 punLshlni; roiinds. Old F.ngSi' Eye Charley White awarded the verdlcl Bviffolo S*l.s.s.

The dcbauible dccKlon gave Erne a retuni match with Lavlgne, from whom he took the crown on points.Lavlgne’s next start was ngaltwt McFadden, and Elbows knocked him out In the l&th, E:nie nevi gnve McFadden a second edlUon.

Uelwcen KnockauU First to knock out Lavlgna —

Immediately after the Saginaw Kid lost llie championship on a decision. First lo knock out Oana —Juat before tlie Baltimore beauty won the tllle.. Yet McFadden never n champion himself.

McPaddcti credits Lavlgne and New York Jack OUricn with glv- InK him the harde.st flght-v

Bom In New York of IrLih- Amerlcan parenU In 1873, Mc- Faddcn. 5-6. 132 at hb trIinmMt, beKnn fighting officially In 1004.

Now turned 71, George McPad- den runs a gentceJ gjTnnasium In Madison avenue. New York —

Warrime drivers find Studebaker the ideal economy car

TTERE’S what a bJg-dty phyridaii,oamt f l OD r^es t, reccatl^ said: " la 1117 gen- enl practice, 1 a n always conot oo mj Studebaker ibese war days for fcliable, low-coft pcffortQMce.’*

Thitdociorisooeofmaayhtrd-fl^rkin^ dnlliiu wbo are gettiag eiceptiotul tire,

, gu aod m»iatcnanc« ecoDomf from tbdr Snidebtkef ChampIoDs, Commtodm aad

Pcettdeau. la Uct, toda;, aftcc 'W«U <nu two years o f war, hnodr^s of tliouuDds of esieotial motorisu frtuu cout to cout are still, ienjojriog dependable (ranspor- ution at low cost, thanks co the quality, of Stndebakef crafts* msDship ttod the ad- '' viaced princ ip les of Studebaker engineering.

TWIN FALLS M O T O R251 MAIN AVE. W. PHONE 86

n o m t r m iPonm dM kAahmotiv* Pngrmt

Hbowa McFadden insbU he «•» never rrally hart In 392 billln fought over a Mreleh of 15 year.

An all-time Idaho district tournament record" o f more than 10,000 admissiona w?.r established in the class event he ld here w ith the Oak­ley Hornets th e winners dur­ing the la.st week end, Princi­pal Jo hn D. F ln tt of the Twin Falls h igh school, the tourna­ment mannger, announced to­

day.F la tt .laid th e exact num­

ber pa id was 9,066 but offi­cials, players nnd penions con- nected with the operation of the event brought the attend­ance figure well above the 10.000 figure.

Tlie receipts for the tournament wns *3J23. also a new Idaho record. Flatt sftld. ThLi was ihe giile with­out the usual extra game, made un- necessnry by the .tuperlorlly of ihe Onkley t«am. and conlra.'ited with the previous record of J3.800 estab­lished ln.1t season «lien the touma-

The »3,3J3 total regains for Twin Falls nnd the Ma(?lc Valley the stale record In thli'respoct. Last year tliB Pocatello district tournament lopijcd the 12,800 here by a few hundred dollars nfter {he Magic Vailey had held the record for many years.

The Twin Falls principal said that the even attendance at all the ses­sions of the tournament wns the principal reason lor the establish­ment of the record. He stnted thnt all the scau were occupied nnd only slandlnff room left at all the game.s,

thceo played In the morning.

KKTCHUM GRAPEnS WINHAILEY, March 14 — Kclchum

grade school bnskelball team de­feated Bellevue. 33 to 33. al Utt • Kclchum gym. HIrH point man w»-,‘ Dellevuc was Gul.sftsoU. while Hire nnd Jewpl received the honors fnr Ketchum.

BOUT POHTPONED FRESNO, Calif.. March 14 '/pi —

The scheduled ten round boxing match between Rcecy Davl&, Angeles mlddlewelRhl, and Freddy •DUon. Phoenix, here tonlghl has been pastponed one week.

P E A SIt Interested in Growing Tea*.

See Vt.IDAHO BEAN * ELEV. CO. Twin Kalli - Flier

" M e l l o w a n d B r i g h t

a s M o r n i n g S u n s h i n e ! ’

Page 7: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

T u e s d a y M a r c h 1944 TIWES-NEY/S,TW1N f a l l s , IDAHO Page Seven

iOO JAPSO lE- lHSUICIDE'ATTi

QUADAUJANAL, The BolomOM, March 1< W>-nve hundred Jipan- csfl hurled thenuehu Into Mrtun deiUi'irpoa the barrier* before the Amerieia beachhead on Bougnln- vUle liUnd In the Bolotnoiu Sal- urday. and their bodies formed »

^mjeiome, bloody. itinUna hUBiM •m a t on the barb«d wire entanjle- ^menu.

Ths Americana u*ed rUlM. ma- chlneguni. booby trap*, lund mUiea. Jl»methroatr«. hand prenadei and barooltai to halt the repeated »ul» cW&l aitwka agatnil, the northern perUntMr around the ^ p r t a Au- IUjU bay beachhead. The attack­ing Japanese knew no hope and had but one purpose—to WU a« tnanj Anierlcani a« possible before the; died. , .

Ambition Krti»tral*d Thclr amblUon waa lurBely fnu-

iralca. Amarlcan caauBltlej wera nfflclally announced sa light, wtiue

iT .S”“m:™r.rss5:«1 Jliicc the Inltlnl attaclM i Oeaflihcad begun Mtvrch 8.

iQen. DoUgUia MacArtljur'i niuW(}u« today said the Am«rtean»

ftorile* were found draped .........barbed wire In front of allied po- Btllons Bflcr the li*At of the nluicka wtm rep>il»<’d. Enemy bodle* in theJungle ouwlda the a-lrr -- -*‘coimlfd.

Tlir«e AIUcl>.• Tlicrf! were ihrce main »luii:lca

fiaturday. the first before dnwn and the othcn during the morning, At leiut tu'o regiments of Japanese ln> {antTjTnen bttcStd by furious mor- lar and artillery lire charged In »ome csBen (o within 10 feet of al- lied pillboxes.

Some Japanese managed to pen­etrate the b&rbed wire and mines and I

!<y nightfall Saturday all the en> 'emy penetrations hod been nru- trallted and lines wpre bnclc In their original positions, with other cldal attadu expected.

Has Key A ir Job Overseas

M/Hgt. VEIINE BALL.OU

. , . Thii Ituht KcrcFVit, now In England, ii ■ itrj man In one of the arniT't mott Important >erviccn — the air (cr lce cnmm>nd Irani- port unit lie irrvei aa acr(rant>rnaJor of hli oiitllt which ■■ rharrrd with the rfpalr and rcplacrmrnt wnrit nerded (o keep Amerlfan wir- plane* In the air. (Ariny air force* photo—staff enjraxlnil.

FAIRFIELD Buhl Sci’geant Holding Down

Dorothy Weaver, who Ukiig' . . yean In the locnl high school. In a house piest of Mrs. Margaret Olen- Icr. Her hujband. Lirutenant Ray Boothe, li a Bctvbee somrwhere In the touth Pacific. Mrs. Boothe plans to return to California, where the •111 be employed.

Due to 111 health MIm Betty Mae Johanson ha* resigned from the fanard achool. Mrs. Slen TVosien*

«on *111 fill out.the school term.IKpresentatlvB J . T. Chandler and

Mn. Chandler have returned from a trip through Washington and Oregon. On the way back they stop­ped at Boise to enable Mr. Chand­ler to 'attend the spcclal legislative teulms.

The Ray Ruby family from Hill City have moved to Welaer where « i . Ruby nUl be employed on a ranch,

Key Job in Aii- Service Unit

MOTHER DIES RUPERT. March 14-^Eber Carl-

l^ion has received word of the death of hi] mother In Topeka. Kan. Be- r(itt<e of difficulties In travel, Mr.

, Carlson was not able to attend fu­neral service*.

Time Tables(umoN PACIFIC. Twm falu

"RANCH DA11.Y) Wutboun4

tVriT.r,

wELii~'5iiANCn *'***•“■ )iUf B«.pt K,r-4.r>

N»tihi>ooVi<

'''uwo" Mciric'VTAOES* ■^AfTlm Wrtibeond ^

1st l«:lt p. B, l»<TM tU Oahl >ad llM>r>

:~j==r====i!!!ts K.v!j7.si" VAt ss a:t,'

U*T* Tola m il f il.J CONNECTION

(VU UfB aat KM»ltoc>

tU kairi M»t na l«a*« Bask and Tnu

la ia iifw ft's r ils jri 'SJm'tSSr •«

AN Am SEnVfCE COMMAN TRAN8P0KT Qfoup. Eilglanii - In 1S39, Mailer Bergeant Verne Ballou walked ISi tnUn, from SUvtr City. N, M.. to Duncan, Arlr., to (tet a Job with the Phelpe-Dodd* copper mine. He ilept on the desert at night, fortjed for hla own food, and shaved with a ptice of broken glasi. When he arrived at Duncan, the job hid already been taken. SerRcant Bsllou turned around and headed for Olobe, Arl*.

— r man who holds one of Uie imporlant cnltstcd man's i>oxl-

tlons in the srmy la a quiet, eoft- ipoken soldier from Duhl, Ida ,' with a phllwophic outlook on life. As the ecrgeant-major for this air ser­vice commond transport group, Ber- gennt Ballou is the llason between the officers and men, and Is rcspon- aible for lerlnc that the command­ing officer's orders are carried out thiouRh all the M'lnrtiona 'unticr this group's Jurisdiction. It is a Job which demands paticnce. foresight and the ability uj handle men. Ser­geant Ballou poucsses these quall- Uea, and he hi* Isarned them from hU own experiences.

Dom bi Oil CampHa was bom in #n ol! camp In

Idaho in IBIT, and spent hla chUd- hood moving from one Western town to another. He managed to acrapa up a grsmmar school educa­tion. and lie stopped lonR enough to graduate from Ouhl High school In 11136 with leller* in football nnd basketball, yor ono year Seneant Ballou attended Idaho State Nomal school ipeclslldng In psychology and Boclolofty.

•'I like those subjects." he plabicd “beciuse they deni with people and they give you a better understanding of what'a going — around you."

This is the understanding wh BeritaTit BMlsa has brought to Wa Job. It L« an undrrslandlng Uiat was tempered by llie months he spent 'ft-orlcln In restaurants, lumber camps and rallTMds after he had to quit achool. On Dec, rt. lOJQ. a few daya after he ended his 135 mile trek, he enlisted In the army. He was

Vet of Both Wars Seeks Army EntryHAILEy. March H—'Walter O.

LeJland. Shcnip, a fwmcr HnUty rts- Ident, Is endivorlng to enter tho service of his country for the third time. Mr. teflsnd, who served for many months over«aa during World war t, enlisted at the be«tnnln* of World war II and served for over r year In England, relumtng home duo to phyalcal dlfflcultle* only lost sum-

Mn. Lefland, a registered nurse, ..■a now entered the army nur»a corps anti Mr, Utlaoil is again en- dHTOrlns to go Into duty.

ReM Transferslofonutlon FnnUabed by

Twin Pans TIUe M d Absttad Cempuy

Mifth 10 Deed, P. c, Reed to P. M. Egbert:

110; Lot 1. Mltoer Addn.Honorahl# DJseharje. V. 8 .;«my

to H. A. Btenger.Deed, Oertnidi Doughty to W. D.

Jacob*.Honorable dbcharge, U. S. cnny

to O. H. WhIU,Deed. Jtfuiha J. Gardner to T.

Oartnwj part lot » block a, ’"-Mantl VlB».

. wslvBH deed, MarUn OUlette to W. B. Saviie; )i; biKk .7, Klm« berly.

D«d, yedetaS Und Bank to 0 .0. 5hatto: »1[SENW,8WME, p u t NE, part NEHW, U ]3 11 .

Deed, Loulu P. D anw to B. D. Whltsay; |1M; lot 3. DeLen#.

READ TttnS.NSW8 WANT MtO.

Maxwell field, Ainbsma, for bnsic training and from there to Ponamn, where he sUyed until July,mi.

Likes the ArmySerKeant BoJIou likes to think that

the years he /ipent in Pansma help­ed him from the objective opinion he holds of the army. M a tornverpersonnel .lergeant-mojor, he ____In contact with thowtinds of soldier* and learned to Judge abilities place men In their right Jobs.

dny," Mill Scrgcniit Ballou, "s , of men arc being shuflled around nnd arc likely to get iMt. think eveo' man regardless rank should be shos-n the conslcieratinn when It oomes to put- tlns him to work."

Sergeant Dsllou has another prin­cipal. It's that srmy rules and regu­lations should be used ts s giUde and not as nn al»oluie plan ol tion.

The sergeant may be resigned to the ways of thf armj-, but it’s , , optomLitic reslgnnilon and doesn't tnterfer* with the volume oS 'i.'oilt he Is able to get done. In his duUes he Is part of a steadily function­ing mobile supply and service gta« tlon that keeps the fighting units of the (Ur force efiulpped fo! action.

in this movement of material, the >lr transport group la the conncctlnn link belween wnre- Rlne has to be moved tip the line, house and fighting plane. If or if « section of the UH assembly for a nylng roru-e.w is needed lOO miles away one of this group's transport alrcrnli fly it there.

'AitmlnlilrallTe Jab Sergeant Bnllnu is not directly en­

gaged In servicing aircraft or haul­ing engines. His Is the leM exciting but equally Important wcrk of ad­ministration, the oil that keeps the gears of this transport group mesh< Ing smooUiIy and efficiently.

•■Anyway,'’ said ScrRcant Ballou, •T have a brother. Lester, who's with the navy In the south Psciflc, and another brother. Bob, who wbj wounded at Penrl Harbor, Thafi enough fighting (or one family.”

Serseant Bnllou Is the ton of Mrs. Bdgar Larson. Buhl. Ida.

ALBION

Mr. and Mrs, C. E. Simonsen en­tertained at a no-ho t dinner party In honor* of Mr. and Mrs, J. Earl Powers, who are leaving for Walla •Walla. Wash, Quests Included Mr. and Mrs. Talton Worley. Mn. Otias. Terhune, Durlcy; Mr. and Mrs. L. Q. Parsons and Mr. and Mrs. P. E. ■Woodie. A gift was presented the Powers from the group.

Members of the high school itud- eat bedy and Ja£u,lty enUrUlntd U a dinner honoring Dislin Melvin Oruvell. V. B. N. Emlgn Oruweli has acted u superlnlendtnt of the • • ■ school the past two year*. A _ .. vt* presented Wtn from the high school. Quests Included Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mahoney, Mr. and Mrs. J. Vard Chatbum and Mrs. Ethel Tomlinson, members of " school board.

R. I. Reed left lo spend a week In Boise refereeing a basketball tourna­ment there.

Mr. Aod :Mr*. Charles Olsy uid .amlly left t« *peod tneral dan vtilUng hU mother In Ogden, Utah.

Ensign Melvin Oruweli went to BolM on business.

fioiinle Mahoney, vho ii taking the nurses cadet tralolni it) Salt--------ha* been TUltlog h*r

. usd Mrs. Out Ma-

Pvt John Anm> who has bt«a attending the OolTtnlty of IndJm, Bloomington, sprat« short lurlmigli h m ^ U » t hU DUMaU. Ur. lod Urs. Wallace ATetin.

CHICAGO. March 14 W^Pollce said today that' Janies De Angelo. 43, whoeo body was found In »n »u- tomobUe trunk Saturday, apparent- ly had been tortured for days in an effort to make him talt and theorized also that he might hive been slain in another city,

"In my « years of police »nrk,“ Police Ueut. Andrew Allken Mid, •Tve never seen a case where a man apparently took as much pun- isliment as De Angelo.

“Tlirre Is every evidence that hli capior* made no elloit to klU him quickly and mercifully,"

D« Angelo's battered and bound body was found in Uie luggage crm- partment of hW own tar and ou a busy north aide street, here, bm Acting Capt. John O’Malley cl ilie Hiidion avenue stallon ihporiml thni De Angelo was not murdrred In Chicago -but possibly In Calu- met City. HI., or Springfield, ill."

Springfield came into the pin.ire when police said Mr*. Ethel nn\n Mornn. 29. former dice gam' tlrl. told them of a trip she mniir a;ni Df AnRBlo to the state f»pl':il. where , he said Do Angelo R«mbird for high stakes and wna visit'd .t hi* hotel by several Itnllans

O'Malley ssid po>l« ">•« ’*"* liivrMlBntln* whether I> AtifU' linrt been assodatrd 'whh l'»o whT men. recently slain. In nny hU l mukel actlvlUes in cheese.

ACEQUIA

MI.-JI La Verne Bill, who teaclifi Mackny. was spending the dsy Pocatello,

Mr, Mid Mrs, Hurwhrt Cullty and children. Portland. Ore.. are visit Ing hl,i porenta, Mr. and Mrs, Thur. man Culley at the dam. and wtih Mrs. CuUey's motlier, Mrs. Clesia Deno. Rupert.

Adrian FaUs and his brother. Her- man Falls, Dolse. attendrci the (u. neral of their brother-in-law, Rny Stnmk In Mackay. Mr. Slninlt dhil Hi the veterans' hospital In Whtpple, Arlr.

Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hurd hsve re­ceived word from their ion, junej. a marine at San Diego, that he h»s passed hla final examinations »lth tiie uppf’r 10 per cent of Uie Hn's and now will be sent to Onulia, Nebi. for a 14-week course In s iim- tarial school. He has been advsiirc i to a corporal in Uio marine conx.

Aerologist

LIEUT. CHARLRS A. WKM.NER . . . Naval nfflrrr who will won

be asklrnrd nvrrnean after rom- plellnr p«»tjra€l\iate course In »pt.'if>fy. ist.-iff Kn»r»vlitj:i

Wellner Will Be .\erology Officer

Wrllne:

MUlhl.

Iivi>-.i1 olr l)nlt/^d St.iii-'. ni W«-Uticc l\«s l>"'H ierciln;,v .H thr j»j.M*:ni(l-

AnnnlV)lla, Mil. He iinrt .Mrs. Well- ner wore In T«in Pnll. over ihe week-end. vWtlnR hla pircnia. Me and Mr.i. Aiigiixt Welhter, and 111; sister. Mrs, C. E. Dimn. nnd lamily.

The navnl reserve officer left Twin Pall.i Suntloy en route to hU nc|v BiilgnnKTit. He Kcrvcd in the U. $. fore.it Rcrvicr tur nine years, head- quarterlnK at Mi.wouia, Mont.. prior to ai-erptlng a nnvy ei>mml.i.'<lon.

Rvjpert Lieutenant

W ounded in ItalyRUPERT. March 14-I.leut. Blllr

Boiich, who Is In cnmmnnd rf a I.ink corps in Itiily, Is r>'|'nrti'ii to have rec'-lvpil n sIlRht wound.

A letter to hi." mother stated that he is doing nlrely and reci-lvliii; tlw l)e<t of care. tJeiitenanl Hoiirh's T«renta. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bmich. live at Riiperl. HL-i wile, Mrs. W. F. Douch, lives 111 PocaK;llo.

DUffieW’SSPlRIT I S I O H R N

ClIICAOO. Miirch H (.r— Clar­ice Darrow's |)lrlI iiiK'r<l U.i .ilxth

annual date wlili drMlny Monday. At 12:30 p. m. .leiittal \viir-UmtJ. 'X years to the inmiue since Dnr- a'«'s death. Claude P.“Noble, De­

troit masiclan unit spiritualist, n B bridKe in Jackion paiK Ingoon 111 wliidi ilii- n.' hes

of the grciit crinilniil lawyer hod been scittieicd.

J-'or Uie sixth time In lur many tars, he held out a copy of Iri-. H Stone's "Clnrenrr D:.rinw lor

ini' defense." rroind the l.or<ls

1 am here In fuillllnicnt or <mr pact and if you cnti mnnlfe.il your­self, plea.se do it nnfl',"

Nothing happened.Darriiw, Nnlilr mirt Tliurslon. Hie

inuKlcliiii. niiide iDe piTt in t'.>34. On April 1.1 .N'nliie Kill I

I Cohn

Mini-Ca.ssia Unit Elects Directors

;intl Cl. C I.|»lir> 0*1

.itUiirlnii to

Fill- ditrclors olivt'd acre Ernie Miiricle nnd TJionms Muberly, doka rouiity. anti Charles Ward, Art IlerseniT and Hiirold CoddinRtcn. Caisla county. They will nnnounre their officers lator.

A noon hinriieon wiis served bytlie Minidoka cnuiitv witfiieii of tlii- n.«.wlnilonJ directcxi' by .Mrs. Cliar-' Hasnr T;hviim

M Y E R S P u m p s

Parts and Service

fl.O Y I) L IL IA CO

DETAIl-FOR TODAY

Pin-Up Girb

PIN-UP 01RL3 are un lii.Mlt«tlon hi the »nny. In many places the actual pinning up of pkiures U for- hldden and the outcome L' alarni- inK. mnrnle sinks to a tieu' low. IritMraiUiii Is rampant, and the sale Ilf ninnn£lnr.v at Iht iiosl cxcli«nnc l-.lLs off. Where PIN-UP QfRLS iit« tolerated (thev are never foiiroseih the morale tips up ni'iv pe:iX TJir bnrracks wails look like a theniilrsl SBriifj olfler nniwriion olflrers tind it bar ih!,pei-l the ritfht obj.-cu, A PIN- UI’ CilRL nill.st huve Ihal ci'i widellnnhle snmethJng e tvimph, n lanmioroiu pxpre.'slon and a.' lew clothe? kj pwlBle.

Hailey Students Near ,$5,000 Goal

HAILm'. MaiTh H-lliii1e>- ci .vclinol Is toraiuu ahead toward goal it hiu% i«i for the ptirchase of war savincs sinmp!!. Their asplru- Uona arc lo reach the B.OOO mark, by Uie end of the school year. To date |3.gi0.0i worth of staippa have been sold. Each Friday stamps sold to tho student*.

Ex-Missionary Decorated for

Pacific Valor

(The fellawin* ktory WM wrllttn by Teeh. Sgt. rrwk J. UcDtrltt. "hlladetphlsrFiaB^a BuriMewp* .imb«l CQempeadeaU

SO-MEWHniE IN TH« 801TTH PAC ino (Delayed) (.P) — Marin* Pfc, Honard C. Bennett, Itttelur, Ida, m IlghUng Moncon session­ary. has been awarded the uvy and, martne corps medal fee hero.

Tlie 25-year-old marine, who itUl con .l \lae. to hold open-alt Mnlcea for fellow MormoTu on this Pacific Isle, wna cited by Adra. W. T. Halsey for his -bravtrj and d«ro- Uon to duty" In working with other marines to rescue personnel wwind- ed wiien a Jap bomb fired a dls- charcins mun1Uoi\s ship.

Officers said that PriTata Betinet vas one of the nrst to bran tha Intense heal and recurrent axplo- slons aljoard the burning Tewel. R« aided In Retting the vounded tshora and trenled, Ihen returned to help lfts.1 overDoard "hot" shells (cat* tered by the Initial explosion.

Ai ihVa moment Jap plane* ft- neved the attack and scwtd a *eo- nnd hli. Dennett sustained shrap­nel »-ouiids In the back, but sinea hn» recovered completely.

Kelueo l\s enlisted tn lh» jn»» rines for combat duty. Bennett vas an ucilvo missionary of the Church of Je.su-s Chrbt or'the Latttr-Day— Saiiit.i, prrtfhJnt in IlUnoU. MlefU- K«n and Ohio. On hit arrtvil *X Ills first post In the Psetflc h# becnn holding regular open-air meetings and conducting (errtce* for fellow Monnon*.

A younger brother. Wo. Wmua L. Bennett. Is serving with th« army overseas.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

We Buy

CARS AN D TRUCKSA N Y M A KE B M O D EL FO R

W R E C K IN G T W IN F A L L S JE R O M E AUTO PA R T S A U T O PA R T S

Formerly ,TWIN FAL IA JEROM E,

WRECKING I IDAHO

SHOW THE BOYS

YOU’RE IN THE

FIGHT!

P J a n f a V i c t o r y G a r d e n N o w ! U s t y e w A m e i i « n i

planted twcfity millioD Viaory Gardens— this year Am crica oeedi

two million more. Pltnt now and produce Food ftw Frecdoml A i

a service to the -public, service sttOpM tfid girage* displaying the

Standard Chevron ate distributing free a 48-page Stmdarf Gardca

Guide giving valuable dps on bow to grow delidoo^ vocables.

Askfbcacopy, ^

S T A N D A R D O F C A L I F O R N I A I

Page 8: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

T im TIMES-NEWS, n ir iN FALLS, IDAHO Tuesday Evenlnif, MnrcSH, 1M4

LIGHTNINGS to LO N D O N* By CArT 'VBKRNARirw /CRANDELL

.CopyrlRJit. 1M<, NEA Scrvlcp. Inc-

BOARDING HOUSK MAJOR HOOPLE RED RYDER By'FRED HARMAN

CnASil LANDINGri

It WII9 &(onk Hunter vlio brokt Iho nc»-» {lml plntu for tlie l AtJantIc fllEht. *t lfn.1t the

'■ (illtllni* of llicm, hiid bocnmt iniWlc property. H? rpiid- iwrlltiM of ihc msftazlne nrticle, wlUrti rcvcnlcd UiA( a elinln of air txi.scA—l brntlor, Ortcnlcvncl, nncl Icflniic)-«;i5 brliiK perfected for niip piiri»«f: to Jl)' righlrr.i *' »Pll n» bombrr to Kns- Und. With tliR exemption nf porter'tt iiccurntc niTaiiiil nt tonstnlctlnii of'tlir Lnlirii<t<ir port, the i>lnry np|>nrcnlt.v »ji.s on nhrend (tiiP;-'.-worlc. But Ifllf.villiB ».Il nllnBrthrr Im s'xxl; If thp cnrmy to«k U n> (I'rp < there fvrry r /l^oll to i

soutliern field on Orfenlnnd ' coniplftcly cJoscd in. One lltltiR ninlncd to do, nnd that wm to lieiid iiorili. At 300 feet the mnre.vi h nierrd nlonit tinder llie rellliii Knty rlouih th»t \vltlp|>frt low the nillk.blue »nler of IMe C

(■ntrnnre of the fjord lead- Ini: Inlnnd 100 mlica to the Kir* (Ironip, Miijnr Piitnnni. commnndrr

ship, got the flPkl on the wcnlher wa.i l>nd tlicre.

-piled. Putiij

With thp p« rintc, the rnl Bui thP I'lini

vHrds I nf tI iiicuiiL ciilttui:

tlllX'. i

«ny pxtrpme to cut out >inucrp. .-.,ir) rielftjs.

•Thli U Crncrnl HiintPr nfed ttic ciiiff by 10 o'c: nisht.” onp of ihp slnffm woiilil bellow liilo Ihe trlpphoiie whrn Hunter wii.i not In ihs offlre.

•■Btit . . . er . , . nh . . . Ihnfn the regtilnr procedure . . nli," thp ii.siml stiirtlpd rrply.

■Tm Qpiipritl Huiilrr nnri Ini •licnkllis f'lr C.i'iirrnl A ntnff member wdiild yrll •teriier voice of milhorlly, ’m.u. c»n be hiiBKli'Pcl. prodiucil it •Ired rpKiiliJi In doiiblp-ilmr. O Qenprnl Hunter cniicht ihpni »nrt It plPMprt him no enil.

Dy tlil.i tlnip pvrrjthliiR

Ihpy r TciiKlie t

ny llifinlME low. Iliey hiid to d«lde whPtlipr to Inml on the wnter

Inlnnd nncl criush'lnnd on t il>. 'me rocky coa.-itllnr lUelf . Ul> to JllBEPd cliff.'! Ill n the i.w1rllni; drliilp

Tlie Fiirirp.-« iwunded alons for 100 uIIpi, drnwliiK rlo-'p to llio end of iji fuel supply—mid Its rope. Tlien tiiipi>enc<! tliP mlrftcle ot nilmclp«.

cn the cllff.i und Hip rnllrrs pn ii n d 1 n r ore, TcnRiie .»poned n

•Mrip of brnch. the only l>ench on

nioiiKh for liiiiflinK n fmir-eni;lnp<l biinilH't' Up 7r»nird low ovc •ii\» ilm( n (•rll. ll-lull<llllK

lliirp wa.s n <'l<iiiice of Ml ••hll). -Jl lie liih'tK) wheel' nil or • rock uoiild liRVe »[)pllpd illML'icr, tint tlip metn' tiiiikrd nnd rnllr<l nlons :>n(l Jiimlb:_TO'iEiie<f..lo • 4ioi»- iii laiiU.'i dry «.s n t»inc.Tpiii:tie. Piilii.iin. tind tlip erew

lived for five iln\s on npplr.i mid onlnas wllli which the t'orlrr.si va.i loaded: nt the end of the fifth day i> Con»t Oiiiird clittcr. ^ent In re- spon. p to tticlr rndio nppeiit!. broUBht noo KJilliinx of K“- oHnp nnd Tensile flp' ’ the D-17 out siicec.'.i- ftlUy.

m;xT: TrouHe over Datli Jllrall.

KH.KR

FrelBhl nncl petronnpl -/errlpd by Ihe TrniiMKirt Omup ’I

. Jlfhters wpre nnderRohiR Iii.'l-m Ute Inten.slve trnlnlnu. Tliej »prp Hke off In Iwo week.i.

Tlien cnnie a tclcphuiip ti.ll »hi threw n nionkev-wrencli inlo ( works. It cnme on Ihe eniiluff June 1. from Gpnpnil AninUl Wwhlngton. to Oenenil iluuler Hsnchester. A Jup f.uhinnrlne h nhelleri n rrflnrr)- In CnhtotniH. / nold snld, snd pawlbly Hip pner • ould nttempi to Invade Dip Uiilled Eliitr.s.

As the world kncms nn*. Ihp rni was followed lip liy n<i fuili iwl

Wuy of knowlliR uhiit Ihp ,lii|)iiiie.' werr up to. Onp P-3B llnhtcr srou

ordcrpd lo the roii.il. xl» Cliiii lotte, N. C., IninH-PontUiPnliil lim Iiliig-off polnl. tS-iTs iiiul C-n c-iii ) »hltvi wer« ordered ar.slvijiri

Ml:.'. Olorhi lltud wim tins h.-pn Mllni: rc*liillvp* nt Lnkpvipw, Ore., ins relitnipd home.I>-iin Fife. .«piimnn speoiid elii.K.<,

1.11 of Mr. and Mr» W. I) Fife, ni- Iillpd Miirrh 10 nt the Amps n«rl- liluiral c'olleiie nt Amr.s. In.. In tnke riHir'P In dlr\pl c’nctiipprlmi C F. S<-lini'll hll.-* none lo Wlrk-

nbuiR. Ariz. lo vi.mi his .«nn. IJoyd rlilipll. who k III nnd 1.' IlMnB .il?/inii for hl> hpnlih.Pvt. Carl Cniilinnli, Camp Co

Cullf.. Is .%i>eiidluK n l5-dny lurloiiKli

H O LD KVKRYTHING

OtTTOIIRWAY By WILLIAMS

r-AM ‘iMocMiiTM \/ 1 r .W la THou-..vMr'I r c \-.ti

-V POIU. O;-.-.-iii-'r-'v'Dcirr. . crcsi -r vvcMDEt?- Y

-y TOI.D ME ML 15 ^MOu^.^.^JDros

- .............. ... .................................. VVHOHiHM.H hOUR -vr A, iimL -VM \ v.iIm .v^O-'IhOUi- i'.UDOEMLV BLUF.T n.H I .vmD N10R't0''oE > •i9 iMcuiMvj P tR ONE c rsj rr. amp )

. &JLL." WOVJ THli-iM' \ TAMM IPUT fOjMD OsJE Tt-tAl ,OLC' ) OFr.'

. KERC^S ACE MAPE-MCn aORM

But f the lillclrd. 111the orders «

by June II Ihe pliinp,', n - their New EiiRlund iMue fenently hoplni? Hint ihc would be eiut, not we.vt.

n ie weather wm tiukk lo mske lU menace felt, nnd cnme clu.e to claiming n PlylOK Fartrcsi wpnthcr •hip n.s Jtj victim, even before the fcrrj' flights were under »ny.

Tlie B-17 had been sent over i route to Bulhcr mcteorologlcul dn On the retiim trip from Ictlnnri It ran Into nn overcnst wlilch wiu lu op»t|ue jui potnto soup. Tlie iilint. Lieutenant Teiisue, ; ..............

"Stcnk. pork tlioivi. roast beef —,somr dny Ict’a surprise the Ijoys vlth bnked beaiur

THIS CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSON

SCAZHJANTARANnJUHAS A «RUTtlt 5TREA0 TKW

A HUMAN HA NO.

ANSWER; The geoiraphlcul tenler of the U. 8, li In Smith counU KkUM.

SCORCHY

LIMi'S LIKE THAT By NEHUR

. -Why dor wouldn't li:

.1 try enrniiiK I.F8S moriey, riPnr . . . then you ) p.iy out r.o much In tnxcs and we'd hnve plenty cr UiliiKi.”

SIDE GLANCES By GALBRAITH

•■WiUle i»ys thooe radio HirllJers are loo Ume, » he's wTltlnf t hor­ror »tory In vhlch the popuUUon of Europ* ind Asia is wiped out r a death n y r

«6PreuF£L!

By FRANK ROBBINS

vwiiE.v.ime BEAV&R’s ; " \ lET YOU F-

O OUT3IEE '

WASH TUBBS

~NltHWSeAW’S Haft SELAKOA'6 EVIOSHCC WHV BE •nWT»OKlUK> 0H6 0P<X« EMtMlESr

By LESLIE TURNI^R

, WBBAN REFUSES TO HEll> V PO HOT lWiaHAVEWKlLl5ElAN4A,/ wOftRV} IP TB3.'HOWCANl6RWaMY- J WE0AWMBS 6QFTO HURT HER? NorHElf?WU

' ' B'E.TOO. <SUUWj<M!

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By EDGAR MARTIN

V^c.'W ~h-', ^ toow. KT tiEE THt ' tHAT

07 ' ‘

'VOOTil P\-TV VAUMKt’t. "TO Pen -(wb ooT O'? wv-biny

»00-\TCANT

GASOLINE ALLEY By KING

I ASSiCA. MisBS you T«|.M< f I PSi'.irzS -sesN T S(51,-jcn. [ I R.T I CJ*J OPr(C£e£ CO I a T.j cs. A£e= co.'.'ss JR CAPT.il.SJ. (LI SWiv s

THE GUMPS By GUS EDSQN

O-OH, WR.C5LWR. A KA.VEACHA1R- J SKftU. I BKNS \

DIX IE DUGAN By McEVOY and STRIEBEL

THIMBLE THEATKit STARRING POPEYESUPPOSE WC UWI5 TIN JAPAN? }-- -

A JA'O^JUN^UPftN• l S E X TO lt« —

aiECK ONEOPTWRtC AN?tuec3-1 ?EZ. /vou DOING ftLu-BiairwmAVtWE IQ. TEST. -POPEVET -

A IX E Y OOP By V.T. HAMLINA -

Page 9: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Tuesday Evening, March 14,1944 -- TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FAXLS, IDAHO Page Nino '

* ^ f e V E R T i S I ? { G " “nV fy f. ....... ■- ------ > i. - ............. .

WANT AD RATES

SUBUNES. lor Ou>ltU4 oBl><

.*£*•« si:..rt«Tkh »>^rn«rrn Ihi ><cril Is •'lit

"niloa vU" MrTTloi 4 TlmwH*"*bo. "o iS r >rt «ntld.i.ll.l

d M InMrmMUm <hb U |I'« •» "•

{Li'".;

F o in ___

PERSONALS rin ;

T RA V EL AND RESORTS EaTTy

_ CHIROI’RACTGRS___{jEnVr. SIT.CIAUST. Ur. Aim* lUMli

r i oTusoT-Uui■Jaiaaiiii:-----

BEAUT7 aH0?5

;T«T <it«f In'Irlfiidfiit Ui«

Mc'S’U

LOST AND FOUND

SSLACK Wlllola t.KiM

SITUATIONS WANTED

EXI-KiilENCliu

fUl-COKN <in '

H

s ? .r><n. Arpir liv Txnorl, CimpUll'i

PERMANRNT t,

AN UWUSUAL

OPPORTUNITY

H E L P WAl^TED—iHALESINUUC tw». *t minl«4 •lOoat

for cvnrni f&rm work. Phon* 01IU19.

two n ,« V « ( I . n t «tk. CIl .t

■•Inilr, i mil|-hon> riltr i:--________________

WANTilCV—T«> Rtn, vlih or wIihngtTi r*rl«nea t« work Is Ur* ihop. la«ulr ^ l a P«1U Tlr* TacUtif*.

M'aN ^ . *IU> to :o

h e l p w a n t e d - , m a l e & FEM ALE

VVAim;D. « '«l pr~.«. EiNrUn^'

iMtutrr. Aseir Hiila citi

— fVu « .l wndllloni, -rlu Im- full InfomXlon on how

lU'Xh'V

U N FU RN ISH ED APTStH>WNT()WN“ ut,urr;“ w.n.«<. Un".

F U RN ISH ED APTS.NICE ihr~ Uth, .l«m U,u Hk.

F U RN ISH ED ROOMS

T lN I-U KN ISH Eh

—buiin^j.'h.rjT^a ••"M

W AN'I E U — UENT. LEASE

j. rqulppfj. T. ToJi. S

,T|m.-Si:M._

M ON EY TO LOAN

SE R V IC E LOAN

COMPANY

CHATTEL LOANS

ID A H O FINANCE CO.

4 LOAN 8MVICE fOB evtHYONE

fln.nc«d. J’honi. «riu or c»m. in

C H IC HIATT, Mrt.

A LOCAL SERVICE FOR A QUICK CASH LOAM

$50. TQ SSOO

AUTOMOBILES • FOnNITORE DAIRV COWS

with smaJ. monUily pftnccnU to suit your budget

R E A L ESTATE W ANTED

P«rt of town. Phen» mtW

80U AQE OVEB

WX^tUN fi?nON"TCl^aj^°!' C'

Dor* wmM k> Mil m m » < Isva ■trtc<<. Aptir tt

TlUE5-HEn'8 OmCB

WANTZD Onn tfmDt PM B*a.

4Nlrmb\ hat set

WANTED AT ONCE

BWERIENCED GROCERY BTOBB

UAKAQER

Ulut be alert. prtunoUont; , «t. Tfila u an excellent, per- I Buarat ^ n ln g for the riibt m m . here In South Idaho. [

WRITE. Urtns fuu porUeuIui of I *TKrten« lad (lueUUcftUooa. f

S-irooM MODERN HOME

4.noou IIOUG

SWIM INVESTMENT CO.

b o m b s f o r SALE UAY. GIIAIN A N D F BED

*»T* oSii_

w. 0. Rumt

4-ROOM houM wlih b«th- On f lol IB ,p1»ndld l(K.l!on- n.M9. T

C. A. RODINSON

IM M E D IA T E

PO SSESSION

S Room modem hou*e. funiftcc and *ioitcr on hftlf acre In city.

UEESE M. WHyLUMa

CJ/)VtlUli.fl, li.OO ton. »Ur.h.ll lun

...................

SEEDS AND PLA N T Sill .KACXS K«d Bt»J >3 k<ni hi

iiTKSET ,.«1 polilOM.

b a b V c h i c k s

I » IlKDKOOM h-

HENSOKA

FARM S A ND ACKEAGES

I'hone i« for b.irKnln priccj.

HARDINO'S WEST END HATCHERY

Buhl Phone 325-R

Swift's Bnby Chicks• ItWnt ••cl' W Innd»T timll M*r

SWll'T £i COM PANY 2(i tlli^Ar.nu.

(iOOl) THIN(;S T O EAT

~|J.VKST0CK— P O U L r i n "

M IS O F W SA LS

riTwsTArUiTM:. 1!

FURNITURE, APPLIAN CES

SC M M IIT & W IIH ’KEY

nEDUILT SUSCKR

SEWI.VG MACHINES

Willo thry U-l

WELL rMPROVro FOniV

r,\i»Tru-n». lu\i nrl wl vifcc-

REAL ESTA'l’E F O R SALEAALC.

ilANO-OS- ........................................or will for « lu irnctor unurmdlis. Elmrr Kl'niin, )lai«lujn.

' h a y , g r a i n a n d f e e BT

L.'i. Utloni.

Tl.itkK ..I,y„rrr. o.ll.. H.l-

’•’rnnlMWn

hiK SAU;:

a ’ul'l.,’ g nonh Uxir-

irinuer htlfcr.- V. r- T«4Ur. 3

^1-

‘'’lt'"ci.ptt^*

St:i.l.lN(i ..ult .luirur Utury,

i'uhlnV m.lh(’,. *'/;onh

PEI’SrimiTKVl vm- 5 n...|.«.. ..Ifl, KllHVl. lor

trjl.lr.tlon. I'h,.n» H-5J.

IliHKK ll«u.n hull.w (rrrirr puppir.. yack .nl .hll. in.ikln.t. Mr.. 0. J. r4ul.on, n..ul. 1, ll..rtu.n.

WANTED TO BU YWANTEU 10 bcri Gird«n

|Wn Sol, Klmlwrlr.l,.««.r P .O.

TVl'KlVlilTKIl in t.if con.dl.iom lur. J.

CASH pud for u>d fcroliur*. •Ui<« 4b< clreuUtliii &nun. Uwn'*. PtuM I.

n Mc-

JVoiti.ilt, ■■

*'*jSn.‘ cili(‘°i<lwn, 7^,o*»u>r. kano lUi* 3. Twin

Crw/ I’OtATO »r ' - r i r t e

WANT Tt) IlUV : Ulr n.,.1. Iwo >p««,i aik W»ll. 11. N»wo.

1 «rurk..frrf»r 01 at. limn-

'SlTOItlM nr .nul'.i con.ldrr

RADIO A M ) MUSIC

AUTOS RIH SALE

b u g l e r f e e d s

OLODE*tEi!D'^Ko“> '^n CO.

LKV .TBlUbU' W uteunot a » i auhliii^. Phoni il^ C«^lo|

B U S I N E S S A N D P R O F E S S I O N A t

D I R E C T O R YAPPLIASCB REPAtniNO

• C LBAN BRSJ

• MONEY TO LOAN

* UlilBOBRAPHINa

* FLUUBir^O and BEATtNO

9 TYPEWRITERS

^ a r S ia !r > . r > .“

» ir / r s B s o F i r n s n s

H'owii Lipt' innin

fuSt' Co»P”"">'0«M hu<T dutr pirkup Ulrr.

tw» lo-lnrh C*i» lUmnnrmll**.8lr«I itsek Inll.r. ,

rordAa.itxtorwllh t n. mo«rf. A*1 randltlon.

AO J It. w Hm. A-1 wndillon.

lH''H!P?¥n5JM°tn4l lU WBlno. »n- im.

Ford i.wu’ Mn«<» plow.

."w*.G A T E S^rA cH IN E 'sH O P

. WKWCELL IDAHO .

TRUCKS AND THAILEUS

MUST SACRIFICE!

. m t Bulck 8up«r 5-pa«eni,fr coupc. TVtts aw l—5« mttme.

: ST1LI. cUm UlltrlM.JSe mb 4>il rtrtr.

WRSTKim Afro

Judge Denies New Move by ^ItistsSALT I.AKE c n v . XUrch H >UR)

—Tutlre Je«<J«ra ot the poljTiamy- •drocfttlag “tundunenlftiui' i«ct tcdky fl^n m iunu tor »bUl ot parUeuUra to % (Mrral In. dletoieni charging ihftn mlth con- Bplraey to distribute objctne liter- «ture.

“nie fundu»enltll.tU contended Uial the uulieunenu no.'t^ m •■smve constltuUon»l w«tlon In­volving the Ireedwa of ipwh. prcsa and reUslon."

Oiilrlct Judge J. rotter 6ymev Denver, ilttlns to nile on delenae notlona In p\we ot filsQualUlcd Judge TUlmkn D. Johaion. ruled ihat the stand jury^ tnie bill coa> t*lned all th* *at«4i»jy Inlonnei- Uoa" Bynea elm could ate no In* dleatlon ot religloui penreutlon. u charged by the tundunentelUU' eotuuel.

M a r k e t s a n d F i n a n c e

LISTS DIP VIIIH PROFII SELLINGMarkets at a Glance

s .r x

~.7"l‘hViA*'.Vif"t «"n’ il.

Chlc4f.WK».« S I- S otf. on

NE:\V YOUK. March U Iwwers Irtlty cajlird lome of Uielr (imtlta <m lh« w»nt «<Ock miirlttt t)ul«o Rnd. thpre wrre khI-lrrr,5 »IX'U nf rrAUlftllfr. l{»dcr»reir»-ftt«»1 Irtcimna ifl t point or

Ae«ln «nrt rilvldends.|.hi« polulc^l lioix-niliiP.'.'. sprvfd

4>iMnliili.t luclnri for Uic llr,t M s wlicUo *11.1 lor liKlivldURl Invor- ilr. »n pAiilrvilnr AccounU arrc irimnuxl lirro nm1 itierr, lw.'\pr.

■lYAn.-frri ran tn .round 1,000.000

New York Stocks

Nirvv YORK. March U (Sv-The •lock market clofrd Irrtaulnr lodnv. AllU Chnlmer* .............. JS

CAiinill,

Add. Mcli. . n Hrrl» .

I’BClIlC .I. C».V

Crrr^ D ePt-'co . CUcs.iv>f&V» Ohi Cho'.'lT rori>. .. Ci>ni. Copiwr ..Com. Oil Del.......O'rn I'rr>diici.t . C;irilv WTltht .....

Mjpni n ..........Uir»s .........MonliloHirrv Worrt .........

KrUmtitcT............Nmiunal llL'ciiU ......N«ilom>l Djlry ............ ..V«Uon.-vJ CiL<n Regblcr .... N. V. Ceiitml ... .Norih Anierlcan Aviation ...

Anifricsn ........ .Norihprn IMcille ............Packni-U Nfolor ........... ..IVniipy Slnrti ...............rrnn R. 11UilUin , IPxiTT -Oi\ .........Radio Corp. of America ... Radio KelUi Or^ihcum -Re;iuUllc Slcel ............ .Reynolds "njbacco BScurx RoeUuiK ------Sheil OVl ----------Sofoiiy Vacuum —___ _

Southern Pi*clfloStandard 01! California Standard Oil New Jer*ey.._Slewnrt Warner •;________Studelwker Corp. — _____Sunshine Mining_______Swift * Co, .Teua Cotnp»ny ...... ......TlniVen Roller Bearing....Tran-wmrrlea ......... .... ..TJnlon O il Ci.llfomla ___Union - C attlde________Union P»cl^

Xhill«l Corporation .......Untied Oa» Impro\Td__U. S. Rubt>er_________u. s, stwJ ................Warner B r«. Picture* ,.... WaUreen DrugaWtstent Union _______Wfstlnghouse Alrtrake* - Wetiinghouje Bectrio ___

N. T. CURB STOCKSBunker Hill ......... ................Hecirtc Bond & Share _____Heela___________ :_______ ,

S t o c k A v e r a g e s

f S - i S ' “ ■£! ! j 8:!•»«« Ktih ______

» w T o U T Js s f .r a i .™ ,ad irru* ruKn* mHaltrrd nini of u

--------------Iff. E.<I».M

•pul nrm> w» inr »nd rm fll____ ______

■Sill *Mi»nrTlol»!i*”

______eTMM »n>l ipot D.tR

Cyrtlfkalad •) a IIMH.

FREED TOR rVKERAL BOISE. March U OUO—OUrtr n.

IiM. •errtns a two»tCKlB-rear term In the Idaho pesUtenUary toe tor- B«y. v w reprliTed today by Oor. O. A. BottoUtea to atuod funeral «Prtc« for W» faUiw m Lcirlilon. Tli» reprt«T« expUta IWday..

LivestockM a r k e t s

HENVER LIVESTOCK DKNVtli, M.rch.........

CHIOAOO. March 14 WV-<3r»ln futuren prices drifted lower todiy

quiet trade as operatora tended ItinotR all news of bullish char­

acter. BcMtetrd sjilea helped to weaken iha marlcct but the chief jcior eppeorcd to b« lack of Inlet- st on the part of traders.CIo«lng at or near the day'* low

polnu, wlirat flnL<ihe(l H to Ti low­er lt\an the prcvtoui clos«. M&y »I,71>4. July I1.C8U-S: rye ahoicfd

I of to 1 cent, May »138!.- , juwereoff S to*i.M»y81';.

and barley va« H to 1 cent lower, " l y I1J54.

r r L ’ w.?

V '^ ^ ^ A I- .W ,

fWl.t..... : 1 l«'i I.M’i l!u

CABIi RBAIX

ii5 ’ iiVFC* ‘ , S

CII1CAC0, AImtU 1* (<Py—n“he*t lew*. U.rn .ireplt irmd* yo1b>w tOVie.

Ilarltr ntltlsr IMS la non: fwd

n«M‘.«d*iir’lOO*''!br •J.U laM.0« nom: ir<l top tIJ.M to tit.00 lua; tid tlo«r Ill.tS norm iwrn elo<r«T IIUO

l,<0: »oo4 cow* lll.M

wpllsi 1‘ij'rlllH tl «n good lo

KANSAS CITT QRATN KANSAS CITY. Manh U bn—mm

Cent ti on.

l - F s l i HPORTLAND ORAIN

rotlTt.ANn. Or..,

) do>n: Jiml'i4M'?l.>^»n*w!il.’'’' ®- • * ’ * •

C4*h w^rll Ibid) 1 aotl whll« )l.tU kart wHIta iisrluillnv 11 IflUl wkllt

■ '« v ,i: r r , " .E s f .. ' i ‘V,. . . . . .Mnt «-«; 11 »tr *«nt ll-«i la prr «nt

!' 110. 9; fccriJr °plia• : corn t: o«u 4; h«7 >; millr««d ll flu»t<I 11.

'’itoTO'; “‘ill MINHKArOU8,^U«h l( «>-Fl4» Ko.

i 1 t'o i "mijl uB u t t e r a n d E g g s

v^Y j'‘?jrt?r,‘ i}ns CIIICACO PROUUCB ClllCACO, March 1« t»>-nutt*r tlrmi

r . r .

ilO.I?* J vnchanfftd.E«a ll.ilOi itMdr. anch4R«*d.

rV*-l numrn4l, fooJ l» I mh« »4l4lil. I14.06 to •quoUbU le.OO lo M.M. 1

S A>ir.T.l,*S UVEBTOCK

: tntdlum u> «w» »i

CHICAGO rOUt-TBT CinCAfiO, «4rrh U yr>—I'oaltry II

firra. 1 irjckj unch4ns4o.

I to l>if« frid* B a»« la l«H«-

Potato Futures

UAKCnIMO offrml.

K0VEMD8R

''ir^dV'"*

Potatoes-OnionB |CnICAOO POTATOE*

..CIIICACO n*"’’ioiii

IS.-? r.fT i’itt II'kIUI vnw4jkH l4re* 4l<t n.ie: wuM

j- . f s / ’i'.’ i i ' a *

<ima‘ nl4lr'?nwulirf* ll.'l!^ '^bbSri

ou Dll» Triumph* uowu)i«<l 12.10;

« rtrortH. New alock tmrk >4l4i: ftorIM

................. ............ -. . lb. >(.<1w.Uier» 15.00, aOtJTrt 8AK FBANClgcn LIVESTOCK SOtJTIf JJAN rnANCIrtCO. Ml ■

lUn—C*lU«j M. Nomlnil. lUlf-u lurn «<« lb. li.lf.n »1:J0i c»rlol

. IIM A wuh«d tl.U; (tmt laU Xloku

» VA?, s'.lory vr4i1« 19.001 U. S. 1 alio B iS.OQ w

CniCAGQ ONIQKS CIIICACU, M>Rh U <un—Onl«n mi-

LONDOwfKrih l*?Up'-ti'* and'fu-turn bir (llttr )i«ld unchan»d todar it

•'• 'iUllnr» Pft Jln» ounc*. .

Twin Falls Markets

'ti talorf

I Saill Mi, lb . > 8uU r^£ lb .

B»rfns Umb*

O^ER CIUINR lOarlo a&d sate BukM (lomatM vltk ■I fwd«r dmsaad. No aaUcmlQ <a

<T>* tahn «wt*d>UVB POOLTKT

Rou m !

(On< d«*1«r oaslad)

Crada Ke. 1. i ^ l i r MMd’tiUJaa

t e e c n s a r

Page 10: Air Raids Flay 7 Jap lE Pacific Island Bases; …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...roundup of draft dellnqucnU netted - man *ho. the FBI said, had: ResUterrt

Page TenTIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO Tuesday Evenlns, March 14, 19 U

F l l i y LOCATEDBy Cri. DEKNARD FREEMAN

(WfllUn for Ihe AMocbUcl Prfw) SOMEWHERE IN BtllTIBH

OUIANA, Unreh M - Tlie UtUe jlreain dwiiitlltd dov.-n to » width ol nve or jlx tcci nnd riliappcftred Into the llilct vegetnllon. ThU wiu Its nbyjlule source. Tlic pliinc wiu JiLsl nbove me trrc top.', bin ll-s n!- llmcter »Jio»ccl <.000 fctt.

■nius a qiiMl ttinl liiiri none on for more limn 400 ycnrs wua cnriort. Tlie Orinoco rlvor had iilvcii up lU ircrel 10 Miijor Art Wllllnm.' oJ the U. 8. nrrny iiltlortf, a iiiiinc Ihul liii* now become Icuciul lii the Oultinn bra^h. Tliat »ru> I«!«t Oclubcr 31.

The «imy» fi-porl. now ini> *licr t lliorouKli chccktng of t, ro»ult« of tin Wlllliima' exi>rc1ltl<i glvps Ihf Murrc of tlir Oniioco In mauntnln RurRr. bclucNi 600 ni

! Drull *nil Vrni-jui-lii, nl>i)

-hcil liy Hroiind i"'-

r IlniindarrA'liltiiim' rtlsrovrrr, survrycrt by ground

IJi m

Till- rpro;nlr<<1 I

uihly 1ndri'tl

Rold nnd miinils. B\cr finer Hip SiimiLsl; ixl- vpnUirrr Oirtnz llisl oxiilnrcd the Orinoco In 1J31, (•xiK’illlloii utter ex­pedition lias toughl In vnln to llfL the veil ffoin the river'* orlKln.

Hnnlly Mnjor WllllAin*, nccom- pnnli-d bjr Cniitiilii LoiiL-: MIcclo. Mount Vrrnnii. N. Y.: T/Siit. Chen- ter Alviirado, Odc.s.'sii. Tex., nnd S/8[[t. Heno’ T. Ctin\|>bell. Locu.it Gmvp, Oklii.. »i-l out over the dlffl- ruU flylMR coiinlry. wlirre n fori nl liinilhiK uoiild hiivc ‘ * " --'

1 ir, niiylxKly r- Innillnti. Trn

byrxHlx’rt drnlll fllRliUi wiTf Ruulr. -

found Olhrr Art*A|mrt trom tUe thrill ol ilLM-ovrry.

the fllRlit* turned up much oilier Informntlon of Interest. JiinKles nre eveo'»liw. »hrlhrr nl 1.000 or 6.- 000 feel. Tlie hlKhiT Hie elevntkm Ihff Rrccnrr unil closer-cropped the vegelntlon.

Flyln* III thl.s wildernr.s.'i waseiu*ed hy llif iir-v.cnce ot a 1.000- fool finudstoiie nioiintiilii In the middle ol the JiinRlra. With vertlcnl wnll , 11 sti.« vL'lble from nl! ixilnt* of the camjKiM, for nboiii 20 mlle-v and fer\’ed iw « Inmlmnrlc. Tlie Brnilllnn sovprnmenf. In reconnl- tlon of Wllllnm.i' work, hns nnm.-rt the moiinlsln "Pleo MnJor Art Wll- Hums.’'

Hammett Man Is Owyhee Of f ic ia lDOISE, Mnrch U (4-> — Oovcmor

Bollolffen todny nppolmed E>onuld PnneoMt, Ilftmmett. in Owj’hec county conimlMloner.

He rrplscei Ilnlph WlUon. who resigned »hen he moved lo Ensle ' Adn county.

Pancoiut resides In tlic third Owy> hee county eommls-sloner dl.itrlct, but his postoffice (iddresi is Ham­mett, Elmore county.

Wins Wings

I.IKUT. H'ARIlfrN ELI.ISON . . . fa»lleford joulh comml»-

oloned at t.uke fltld, Arli.. <rln> nine hli army «ln(> iiid urond llfuirnancy. iKUff Enr»'>n»'

Aviator Assigned To Hawaiian Post^ASTLEJXDllfJ. Marrli M —Wtir- 1 EllL«on, Krndii lf ol the Cu.illr- il hiKli Mho.ll In imo. recently

rttelvul hli wIuks and cominl*»l«n

:<>n-e'» fllRht irnliiltiK jrhool.

Idaiio’s Creamery Production Drops

BOISE. March M <U.F)-IdAho crenmerr production In January. Mtlmnted at J_S55,000 pounds, wiia Klx per cent leu than Uie production In Janu&ty, 1913. the bureau of nRri- cultural economics reported today.

Chee.'e production In January wns estimated at 1,265,000 pounds os compared to l.tS3,000 pounds lor January a jw «B0. The produc* tlon was B3 per cent above the b ige (19J3-«l January producUo

BUHL

Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Unch. Win- nwnuccs, Ntv, liave been visiting ' ' the J. W. Briggs home.

AvlaUon Cadet Robert Erb hw r«lui7ied to Oreta^vUle. MLu.. after a furlough ullh relative nnd friends here.

Mrs. Vincent P. Bevls U vbltlns her husband. Captain Bevls. who Ss nrlti) Uie coast guard stationed In New Jersey.

Seaman first eluss Vem A.itan ktcCnuIey liai Hrrlvcd (or n 30*day furioush wlUi Ws mother. Mrs. Es­ther McCaulpy. and his aLster. Mr«. t« Rue Phlllliu. He has seen tnuch south Pacific action. At the comple­tion of hU furlough he *IU go to Rliode Island to attend school.

Mr. and Mra. John Lathrom and family hare arrived from Rlehmt ' Calif, to make Uielr home here.

Mn. Tom Holmes Is enJoylnE *■ Tlslt In PDcalello with her daughtfr. Mr*. Tfd Benson.

Ueut, and Mre. James SWeia^tmd (ion. Jimmy, WiUker ntrbase. Vic­toria. Kan, are spending a 15-dny le«« as piesU of Mr. Shields’ par­ents. Mr. and Mr*. J . H. Shields.

Mr. and Mn. Robert Wlilted nnd Mr. and Mr*. Vem Whited and bob. BlUy. are here from Richmond. Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whited wUI remain here. The oUiera wlU re­turn after rlslUng rcUiUves and friends.

Clartmce Max Olnnder h;ui re­turned to Pnrrasut after spending Vm weeks' leave wlUj his parentji.

Mr*. Enil Allen has relumed from Palouse and Bpobine. Wash.. wher« she hat been TlaltlnR rcUUves.

Unit. Dgtl] Fuller.. army nurs« corps, now »lalloned »t the army bate hosptlal at Amarllto, Tex., •pent a fev daj's In Buhl with h v father and mother. Mr. and JSn. Wa ruller. en rout« to her base ler acconpanylnt a ,] ^e n t to Bolae.' J. A. Hurlion hA5 rettimed frotn Urns Beach, OaUT.. and U aUylnc Kith bU duithta-, M r^ M. R. Cotb-

■Mr. and Un. Todd fituivie and fWDlly; J im Nev, have been vtaJf- ■tt ii^U Uwt ud friends in tlw BubJ

. Mn. itobRt nugbes bos rcbimed :frocn 0. <emtl Teelcs..vlslt In tti« n«t sntl. mldtae-eaai, - locludlnB KrinM In Knr JoMjr asd nilQols.

ORAIORYWIiER SPEAKS AI BUHLnum.. Mnrch M—l>eallng wlUi Die Coiislltiitlon In * CliimKlnK

World," Jane ParX-v IlrM plnre win­ner in the unnuiil Buhl Amerlcnn Lesion oniturlciil ronltsl, rtellvered

r orlRhml oralinn In « liirae group LeRlon nnd auxiliary members nl

thrlr Jolnl meptlnir.Til© dWrlrt fonli'sl. under Hiihl

Legion nuspirr*, will be held Ivre lonlRht.

L/'onnrd Mlnii'le iind Eriie.si Prt- -.vin, swoiid and Uilrtl place Win­ers, also Kave tJiclr InlTpreUitlon : the mune subject. Tlie winners

In the nnimnl aiixlllao' e -«v con- Ihe subject of uhlfJi wns "Plo- Pattern for the Nation of To­

morrow," also reivd Uieir e. . ilys. Prlips went to Oeorge UktnrM. Jr., first place; Marjorie Venkr, second, and RuOi Stockhani. thinl.

Ilonorahlr .Menllont The e.winy conle.il «iw ojyn lo

both BithI end Ca.Mlelnrd lilKh sclwxjls: iitul because of the liirve number submlltrd, Uirte honoriiblc mentions were HPleclc<l by the JudRc.i, Fourlli. ririh and sixth [ilBCf.s, res|)ccIHely, »rnt lo Janlcc Webber, Irene Monroe. Ciistleford. and Nonna Weaver.

In an Informallve t.ilk on his line of work In the amiy. Chaplain J. A. Howiird, comniandcr of Uie Butil Legion post nt Uie lline of lib ap­pointment to army cliaplaincy, told of the duties of any army chaplain. He explained that the army chai>- laln makes ncqualniance of every boy as he comes to cnmp welcomes him and volunteers to help him ffhellcver j)0.sslb1c.

•The cliii|ilaln l.s the pa-slor, friend and 'trouble-shooler' a.s the need arises. Wc try to make llie boys un­derstand tJuil Uiey are trally civll-

In iinlfoiTO — lhat they will ■■ return to civilian life nnd

Castleford Sailor Back From Soviet

Gerald R. Cartliell, gunner's .Uilrd class, former Oiuitleford stud­ent. has returned to the New Or. leans. navalarmed guard cen­ter after eight months In the RuKfilon ports ot M o lo to v . Mur- marialc end Arch­angel. t

CorUiell was a member of the

He praises the Russian peopU fi their grim delermlrmtlon and r fort lo bring the »»r whlf the n»i to an unconditional finish.

30-day period Uiey coimled • bomblnKs at Murmansk and that 11 Ru.vilans kept building and rebuild­ing docks and warehouses much fasuir Uian the naHi could deslroj- them.

CorUiell'i sbiler, Mrt. John Durk- harl. lives »t Castleford. and there are three more brothers In the

V-12, A-12 Tests Will Be Marcii 15

Tlie third qiuillfylng tests for hiKli vhool, preparatory collrRe students In U)l5 iiren who are seekljijr Indiir-

V-12 prn«rnnis will be held Mnrcii 15 In Twin Falla hlRh school, which Is believe*! lo be the only school In thli area offering examinations candidates,

Testi will begin at 9 a. m. tn ro.117 of the high school ond will given under the supcrvblon of MIm aiadya Wlilte. high school In­st nictor.

T^ose taking the examination lUst Indicate which branch of Ihe

theylallfy for

iipilng

<ent to cliwlfylnn boards of Ihe.w two proRrams.

AT II. OF DrntqitR FlLEft. March M — Apprentic

Seaniiin Jack Nomiiui Jordan, Fl­ier. 1R among the rccenl arrival* nl the University of fiiibiique, la., un­der the naiy V-12 tralnlni! proRtam. Afler completion ol hU tralnlns there, hr will go on lo further erlu. cation In his Held under the na T'i

GLENNS FERRY

Ihelr moral values should ninin the some so that al all limes Uiey are good members ol society.

Welt Trained you folks at home may be

nMured your boys are receiving ex­tensive and complete training for the pnU« ahead ol them. Their equipment ts of the best and noth­ing is spared lo fit them Uioroughly (or winning Uils war In the shortest lime possible." '

Lieutenant Howard pointed cthe group that Legion posts ......veterans' hospitals perform "a splendid work" for the boj's coming home wounded and convalescent and that posts farther away can help financially these nearer posts to carry --n this work.

March 20, winter term ot district court will begin.wlih Di.Mrlcl Judge T. Bailey Lee. Rupert, presiding.

■i>. Harry Tiiylnr and Mrs. Pete Slonn were score winners wlirn Mrs. Orrn Hale entertalnKl members of

Tuesday Drlrtue club.■, nnd Mrs, Al End,sley are now

located at Pnrmn where he hns pur- cha»e<l A barber .'hop.

Jose Dobaran has sold hLs dairy farm wesl ol town and Is n his family thti week lo a fam Meridian. Tliey had resided here since 191S.

Mr.i. Wlllliun Petersen will enter­tain the W. 8. C. 8. at her home Mnrch 15,

O, T. MosRrove umlerwent a sinus operation In Oolse recently.

Rolwrt Mosgrove, Boise, former Olenns Perr)' resident, has recover­ed from a serious o|Mratlon In Salt Lake Clty-

C. L. Moore ond E. P. Clements have been named on the Elinorc county draft board to represent the Olenns Ferry area. . .

Houston T, Hitt. Jr.. seaman sec­ond class, Indian Cove, has ccmplci- ed training al Parrngut and Is In Chicago. attending Wrlghl college. LleuU Joel Hltl, also Indian Cove, ha* been transferred to Yuma, Arlr.. from Pocos, Tex.

James Wood, seaman second class. Hammett, has been tmasferred from tlie University of Idaho to a recelv- Ing ship. Bremerton, Wash.

Mr Jind Mrs, J, L, Sumner have received word that Ihelr son, Tlicr-

Is In north Africa with the signal corps.

Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Rice have re­ceived word tliat their son, Albert Rice, motor machinist's mate Uilrd class, participated In the Gilbert Is­lands attick.

-- FARMERS—For Plow Sharpenlnr. Fom Work. Trallet* aad IVafoni See

SO PER ’S SERVICE T he live ipot on Tmek Lane'

MI 4(h Ate. W. Twin Falls

WJien in Need of

AUTO PARTSWhen In need ef ante parli — New »r Used —Come In U Twin FalU Adlo Porte er Jerons*

. Aot« Pirli.

[n TWIN FALLSIn Twin Falls we have en ^»nd at the pmenl

. lime *ema wldt 16-ln. Pick-up Wbe«ls for haal- — ing heavy loads.

In JEROMEId Jerome. ir« hare a rery feed atoek of MeQnay Norris parU — pUten riDgi. tnserta, beorlag Ue-rod ends, aad water pomp*. Alw.MeCerd Gaskets.

T W IN F A IX S AUTO PA R T S

Formerly , TWIN FALLS

WHECKING

JE R O M E A U T O PA R T S

JEROME.IDAHO

RUPERT

Mrs, Lliidauer visited In Suit Lake City and Mra. DftlMiln has gone lo BriKluun City. Ulali, where she will visit her husb.ind. a patient In DuBhneJI hospital.

Mrs. Dick nosecrans left by train to Join her husband, aviation cadet Dick nar.ecrans at Fort Sumner. N, M-. and will remain until after his graduation as a pilot. May IJ.

Mra, Millie Walton, who Is <tn- ployed al Ofldm, UtJih. is sj>endlng the week with her sister. Mra, Tom Cook.

Mrs. Rolland Toevs und children, Aberdeen, are vlslllng her parenU, Mr. nnd Mrs, H, V. Creason, and her broUier. Cpl. Ted CreuAon, home on leave from Smymn air field, Tenn.

Mrs. Marie Dotts. Oklahcma. Is vLsltl^g her broUier. C. P. Menden­hall. coming lo attend funeral serv­ices for Mr*. C. F. Menendhall. Slie will remain for sonie time,

frvln Larson has relumed lo liLi home at Saco. Mont.. after attending funeral rites for his sister. Mrs. C.

John Clark, 56, Railroader, Dies

QX.KNNS FERRY. Man:h 14 — John Clark. 56, Glenns Ferry rail­road man, died huddenly of a heart Rtt,nck at MouiiUln Home at II a. m. Sunday. ^

Ifc had lived In Olenns Ferry tor about 30 years and had been n fire­man and on engineer for the Union Pacific railroad until he retired several years ago because of 111 health. For the po-st few monUu. however, he had been working for the governmenl on the MountainHome air base railroad spur...........

Tlie body rests at the Zacher Bey funeral home. Funeral arrange- menli await the arrival of a daugh­ter. Mrs. Louis Clark. Kelso. Calif, and a son, Robert, who Is at Camp Roberts. Calif. Other survivors are his wife. Edna M, Clark, nnd a daughter. Mrs. El.''le Young, Olenns Ferry.

IJCE>SKI) TO WED SALT UAKE CITY. March H (>T)

—A marriage llrense has been Is­sued here to Lynn Morse, 31, and Edith Marlon Dillon, 30, t>oth of Twin Falls.

H A Z E L T O N

Eiirl Johnson of Ihe U. 6. na«7 U enjoying an IB-day leave with hU parenU. Mr. and Mrs. Acc Jobo-

Msater Bergennt Marshall Wood Is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mra. M. L Wood. He to to be moved from Camp Kearns to a eamp in Ne- bra ka.

MUli Romalne Oliver, teatJier In the grade school, undcra'cnt an oppendectomy a l Uie T«'ln Falls hospital last week nnd Is now re­ported to be doing well.

Pvl, Dick Bcrkenmeler, his wife and baby, were Hozeiton vlsllon the past week. He wo« en route f i ^ Camy Wlilte lo a ’ new. slotlon In Texas.

MUs Bemlce Oliver Is spending a few days vacation with her par­ents, Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Oliver. She is employed In the shipyards at Portland as a welder,

Mn. Gordon Murphy and Mrs. Murle Chadwick have left for Port­land, hoping the change may bene­fit Mrs. Murphy's health.

Mrs, Claude Brooks has relumed from Middleton where she had been al the bedside of her mother, who tx critically 111.

Three Hazelton Properties Sold

HAZELTON. Mnrcli M — Several property sales have taken place here recently..............................two farm properties,

Hazelton cafe has been sold by Mr. and Mr*. T. R. Kearby to Wil­lard Warden. II U reported Umt Mr. and Mrs. Kearby will operate the resuurant for Mr. Wardell for a few weeks.

The farm property of Clive Und- ha* been. - • . -

Mrs. Donald Adams. The Lindsays have purchoscd Uie C. I*. Smith residence and will move Into town 'm n . Mr. and Mn, 0. L. Smith are moving to Twin Falls where Mr. Smith Is employed by the Idalio Power company.

Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Reed have purchased the Jack Wickham Idence, The Wickhams are moving to Twin Falls as Mr, Wickham has employment with the Idaho Power company there.

NEW DEPimr SHOSHONE. Marcli 1+-Mrs, C

rie T. Oj’er. RIclifleld. Is the r der>uty In tlie county assessor’s flee.

Camas Chairman Wins Bond Wager

PAIRPIELD. March 1*-Early In Uie fourth bond drive-a bet - was- made between County Chairman George Jones of Owyhee county.and

Ray Jonea ot Camascounty.

If 'Owyhee county bought more bonds per capita than Camas coun­ty, Ray Jones, Camas, was to for­feit to George Jonefl. Owyhe«, a hand-decorated pair of chaps worth

tlie most per capita. George Jones of 0»7hce was a forfeit a regtetered calf. Camas county's per capita waA the highest In the *tate. <

Ray Jones has reeclved word from George Jones that the calf will be

er de­sent u . .................liver)- Is requested.

DR. NEWBERRYWill be back In hla olflce

on and after . , .

MARCH 15

There’s always something

N E Wat yoM

IDAHO DEPARTMENT STORE

A ll Wool

S K IR TSC’olora of red, neiKe, Green, BUie, Or­

chid or gold! Complete section o f size.s

in Ihig important item for uprinff wear.

$59® .. $ 7 9 0

MAIN FI.OOR READY-TO-WEAR

c h o o s e D R . L O C K E S h o e s

. . . t h e i r c o m f o r t ' s c o n s t a n t

Your best lavesuneol in comfort. . .

in quality . . . Dr. Locke Shoe* give you the famed Dr. Locke feamres io style*

designed to keep their shape ind the ir through month* of wear nodm (upport th

walking.

FOR M EN AND WOMEN

M AIN FLOOR SHOE I)E1*T.

The New Mexican Cocktail Pajama!

TEQUILLAJ. See the new Meidcan cocktail pftjama,

r the ‘'Teqiiilla." Colorful ns an Ind ian

If: fio-sta. Ifi cxcitinff rnyon Tex-appeiil

;-i fnbrica in shades of Mexican Jade, Tas-

CO, OrnfiRe and Gourd Gold. Sizes 12

to 18. Pair ..................................................

New!

Turkish

Bath Towels

39cstripe pattern In solid color grounds ol blue, green and peach. Ouaran- tecd fast. Extra targe size. 33*U-tn.'

ECONOXX BASEMENT.

$ 1 4 7 5MAIN FI.OOR D R Y GOODS DEPARTMENT ■

New! Ladies’ Crepe

GOW NS $ 1 9 8Q un lily crcpc in solid colors o f p ink ,

pcach nnd blue. Novelty contrasting

coIorcd trim . SizM 34 lo 40.

I ECO NO M T B A SEM E N T

Boys'

W A IST

Overalls98c

A new shipment of Boys*

8-oz. blue denim Dun«a-

rccR. Sanforized shrunk.

In sizes 10 to 16.

BOVS’ BALCONY

Toddlers’ and Children's Sizes

CORDUROY TROUSERSJu s t received—New cor'udory trousers. Toddlers’ sizes. Small, Medium and ^ A

large. P a ir ............... ....................... ................9 2 * 2 9

Children’s sizes 2 to 6, in shades o f blue, green, red

brown and other pastel ehades. . $ 2 9 8

MAIN nOOR DRT GOODS DEPARTltlENT

Men’s UNIFORM TROUSERS

A new shipment of men's "Porest Oreen’' all- wool uniform whipcord • ponts. double width belt loops. Hip pocket tabs: hea^7 bool-sall drlU pockets; *trotig #eam*. Made by Doy’*. 81««29 waist and up.

MAIN FLOOn MEN’S STORE

$ 9 9 0

IDAHO DEPARTMENT STORE“I f It Isn’t Right, Bring It Back”

M . . .I .


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