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Idaho Democrats U.S. Acts Czechs’ President Fail to Determine...

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LATE BULLETIN washdcgtoK. r«^ n ctB-ik* >«ii. ^IniflCCHW m*mU »i||il wtm koMr^u.Tte FINAL CITY EDITION Idaho Democrats Fail to Determine Action for Taylor BriOHXCOKurr BOISE, Feb. 27 OUD—The oprcnr licgered on today amons Idaho Democrats for failure of their state central committee ycstcrdar to take official action on the bcdt of Sen. Glen U. ^ Taylor to Henry A. Wallace's third party. ^ The uproar took voke at the Idaho Jeffer ncr last ni^ht when the faction desiring to make a stand oa Taylor's dcdsion introduced a resohition acccpUng 'Hiylor's “\oluntary withdrawal from the Democratic party mthout malice. . . ” But it was gesture with no official standing and resulted from failure of the same reso- Truman Quiet On Dixie Plan To Bar Name KEY WEST, Feb. 37 fcF) — Prtaldent Trem ia *»a »Uefit trx*»j on ft wuUuin DcnocTaUe aon to btr hb "«">.• trcn etatc tmBata b the tndJUootUr «oUd fOuUt.' nb »sal«*al pres McnUry. Ebca A jm . told rtpoctns Uscre n s "no commenl" IWm the tttBpagmiy ^Thlte House vheo be n s Mkid mbout the anU'Tmnis drlTc Uunchcd b; Gor. W. U. Ttefc at Vlrglat*. Tuck uked the >lninls ktbU tise lor ■ law vtlch «w ld keep s u n e s <)t pmldgnU*! o!f the b«Uot next Noremfaer. TtiJa would make tt peesible to cmS tb« kUte'c li ekctcnl vtAes (or vboea- Democratlc leaden deddcd lution to be introduced a t the central mTnTwiniMi meeting. Ttee m ft r o r ot « jrs ftXid ft Cte nftr of eon tor tbe rcscCutka •ad TtesSsftjSer John C Porter. Rexteic eevspftper poS>- Ibber. a id n beUen the h»Tx or ' N* Offldd CnUtr»U«i e eesa*l oonfitte »<Uoaiatd Ei aattaa Ute ta the ftllaxioaa Badt as taktsc omdal irr.TirtfT»;vri ol Ttqlork bolt. TM « = i:ie e aeScctrd Utho FaSs as the sce ee Cs deksate nsrtsU tn f»i—» ts* tGlaUtt dale m. Kec^ nUh r«lkT “nw Rfuaal to CQomeai keeping vlth the pollcj ih« Prrsl- dent has toUond since be stiei:- ted to coDcim the dra tl^ia pn>> posab wtich stlned soothem scm* ben ot his paitr to blttCT prvUsU. The PmldcBt withheld at hit last am conTertat* b Wa&hinstaa «be& the thrtftta oC le- Tolt wen broutbt cp rtpcrteia. He new here W tdctsdaj trtm Ouantanaffio naTy bas* tn C&bft after rblUnc Puerto Kca the Vlrstn UlaaiLs. Rff»>rs*Affa rfiBde^iat Taykr Icc hb bOit » « w «h ft diae ft dncra bet liry were aot ttvcn ft c£aaec <£ t=intatSiaa ftt the coeo- BlSe* aeecisc. ^aa HTnteta. Ada coatj aUte ecm ntecsaa a=d T^lar pftiUsao. • ■the Cehi a kwp the rtsoluuaai c! t^ae CGsUSUe. &ner the tbe £-.e asd date lor the em estlae. Hr^teULi acrrcd ad> >*r=*=x aad n carrtal 3J to is. L Oil_a I Taylor “Bolt” May Be Felt E. U SUHUCBFnXD . . . Twin Fan* raU tst wb« talM d M peUUoBS »r caadUae? ftt Tli>ndaT. He laid U be ran fcr lUa yrar. be wsoU •eik the MmlaalisD a* V. fi. MBftt«r. (Stan pbetft-«BnaTlB(J Summerfield May Run for U. S. Senate BOISE. Feb. 27 — Robert U Negroes. One hlfhtr placed White ■ource who aiked th a t his >•-»--<* be ' htU in caoHdeim said the Pttsl- dm t ~wUi continue (o cauider each appotatment IndtrkluaUy.* * * * « . Anti-Poll Tax Act Moves up To Full Panel WAfanKGTOH. Prt. n m — AnU-poU tax. IfststaUoa w w mp- prorrd todar by a tenale roles cb^ cnmmlUee which tem hed a MMthem senator's demand for bem:^ )nc5. The mrasurt would h t voten hal- lot in tederal electlcBs whettaer or not they hare paid stale poQ It b one or the Uws Prtaldent Tt»- man has asked as port of hia ‘tltll riRht*“ program. Many soulhetn party k*den a;v Rbclllne agalBSt the program whicit abo Ineludta aaU-lynehtac. ftnti- job dbertmtnatlm and aaU -Jte tow proposals. H A m ^ by Bmm Hie anll'P^ tax hia abrady has been approred hy the house. H ie senate acbcammlltec'a v tle n aenda It aiong to the full committee, ad- Tandnc It m e step toward the sea* ■ ale floor. In the last ____- --, ______ _ house has pasaed antl.poQ tax but senate acUoi alwajrs has b e a blocked by a ntUhem flmcstcr. Be& thb year bo» cooata ladleate the OOP-dominated MsaU may be wHUns to rate » ttmh cn tfetitt. TUs would shot «rr eirorts to talk the bill to Ste« Chairman Jeoner. R , l2^ xsM the measure win be reported Js»- medlately to the toO arname* headed by Senator Broolca R , HL He and Brooka pndlctcd the tB!I ewnmlttee win ftppore tl. Prom Senator Oeone. n , o * , came ft predlctleo «>ft the ro tn« between Denocrftts wffl l(«d a party shakrup ftfler the ;n sU ea. UalelecUan. Wlthoot pftsstng en Prtsltkni T%i». man's chances la Korembcr. Georce said he beUerea w ethcra tin - 'ii <n»« ot Ur. Tftmaal cMl rlthts pc»> gram are gotnc to hai* a grest deal to say abwt the ftttwe ^ their party. C. W. w a. jt, fSn'tmr. OOP ssftte friiiaiH-UL.isj bxm Uxri^ . tOB Oj . 809 be w^MBiflJe for the * A BceM E. Stesn ma: a itateaesl to the TSoes^ScB. said that eakas the sta:e OOP caavtn- tiCQ etaVwirt faawg ter Pnsidesl he w a f»irra»n t« Taylor. T»j- k r ftT-’iu . ■ftl his atiasbOIty tor t-V Tice gntidtaual »«rr;fra*.Vn co HessT XCanice-<s ti* d psny ticket MoxSay. *lt the Decexstia kicfc Taylor (Et fif the DeaoenOic partr.” Difl said.'’aad tt the Rfpobacam ta the ccnTTBtlaa tn &orth da &ot c£x!s3» SU sca. I wiaald like to ask Seca^ar T^iylrU I caa be his bxse ta anct^CT Idsho.” DQ wai ft Bcabrr d the stale hgisiasr* ta a a . rm 109 to m s he Wfta cha!r&aa «f the Lin- ccia tssm:y Tosss* Sep^acaa <Jah. Experts Forecast Hog Price Gains To Be Continaed c m u c x k . F«». n cub—u w sSacfc experts at the Oxteago aUck- yardsswd today t2«j tapetsed bog pricts ta coKtSrae cpcanl dm lag the *prt=* msa rrr-rr aoBtfa*. Ttser aft»d there wee too tew hag* ca tbe Sfttm-k tor pork prtcea t» siay al the ; zt» s I low At pnDCSt. they aaiJ. rrtaa prices B asasfeecz «se s^a dropping *s the msH cf » Op a the aaitrt ifwfce o: b co eaiotf this swalh. Tbe «Sswa*a»d m an tirad prob- ftbtr saop aoact ftzd the apwftxd **s« w a bdto ta Bae wCh the ew t t w a «toei^»pd ptke*. - Sftaswftac. heem r, the itixs d^ftrtsaeat ftt WtohS=r« »rpe««l t^ aTmge wbotek prices s::**t^r last wwk. ------- ^ dedhje ' Summrtllrld. Twin Palb Jc«!tr. Thursday drew 44 peUUons ot can- didacy but said be had not deflnilely decided to run. "It I do seek otOce. It will be (he mate." Summertleld said. Defeated ia m e Summertleld. who was defeated two years ago In tbe general eUc. ti(B When he sought the lieutenant gOTtmotahlp. said be would run *tmles Gumeone who can tnily be c»ned ft RoosCTelt Democrat ruas." 1 beliere the Democratic psrty. It It Is going to hate ft chance la the g rn m l election, must get aray trom tacUonaltsm." Summertleld said, rtferrtng to the rlti between Q»art*a C. Gossett and Sen. Oltn H. TVlw- Gossett haa been prom- IneaUy meaUdaed as a candid*te tor aenator. FWtewsTItK Tlw people ot Idaho gave Praak. UD D. Rocaerelt a oaM tty ta erenr aakL-nwee .. ft^cand}dlte teideals.'* . vho has been acUre .Porelga Wais aHslrs ------------------ » itftte. jftU he bad been apprrached to run tor unsle several men "who repusealeoua- Jona, basiaess orgaala- Homestead Farm Open Near Hmit BOIS& rtb. a <»)-ae=acfttte wm be xtcelnd trntQ U ta± • to the b m tn ot nctaatka ftr a l£ ao* hrmwfMil M il to tfai r areaotthekllBidaftasnjM. The bonaa nlltt* uK tew o( « drawn ter iMt t e a at Jtt 'M UMr RitaqBlteL frtference win be gtva «oB{M wteMia(Wwliw»n. The «heaea> ftvmtt dr^tyed tto»-4tacia ot a e*=t R w « ^ •K n ad w ^ that the amage price had topped ca t£»m tesie csai- Bft tri.-r:i1led ta the KOSCa TOU. BISKS SXOCU P«i. s; a ^ u jy n smr two poac* s a tfcr a ta amhem It w « tepottrd brSgiss total UtaBUea ta two days to 14. Complaint iii Liquor Gise Sent to Boise Complaint against the Klorrr Klah owner os ft liqwir charge tm to be aent to Boise Prtday tor lix- nstsie ot the sUte Uquor ageols who conducted the Ptb. 5 raid. Pros- ecntlng Attorney E rm tt M. SiteJcj said. As soon as the cocnplaint b le- tamed. Sweeley aald It wtU be tiled Wth JnsUce ot the Peace Jatnn O. Pumpihrey. Since a rlolaUon ct the secUon under which the complaint b made consUtctcs % mtodwneanar. Sarelrr added, the case win hare to be In- suto'xd In JmUee court. IrriKj S t^ ^ . owner ot the dub. b tr« Beten wTxling the cenplalnt tc Boise. Swwley tntormed Attoroej- Oenerftl Robert Sajylle that the ar- rest haa complications which but m ail la a “test case- belcct the U.S. Acts To Avert 2 Strikes CHICAGO, Feb. 27 (UiO — Government ascnts sought today to head off two major strikes which would cut the nation’s meat supply and cripple the railroads. If the pcaco-making efforts fail, union members may waUc off their jobs in the two big- gest strikes of 1948. AttempU to atrrt a railroad strike are tn the tlnal stages. A three- man tact-flndlftf board appointed by Prrsldent Truman b larestlg- atlng the Usuea la the dbpute be- tween three tinlons and the na» Uon's 133 cUsa I raUrosds Eey Worken laralred Ttie unions represent 10 per cent or aU rallroftd empJoyts, or ftbout 12S.OOO exiglnecrs. tlreaen. engine- men aad 5witchmen-kej employes who could Ue up rail (rattle across Uie country U they watted oH the job. President Truman tods; apprered the extension ot the healings to Uarch T7 attcr both groups asked for more time. In eftcct; the acUon will delay stxike action at U vt until April J7. Parkm Threalraed Tlie other i>lg strike Uireat In- rolves the CIO United Packinghouse Workers, which reprtscnts about lOOMO employes ot meat p«^>^tr»y plants, -The .faUon has nied strike noUces against S3 Urge companies Including the 'big four*—Armour, Swift. Cudahy and WUson. Direct negotiations on the uolon'i demand tor a 3-cm t hourly In- crease became siaJemated e a ^ thb mooth. and union members voted In tftvor ot ft .'■trike. No dale tor a strike has been set. but imdcr the Taft-IUrtley law the tmloR ts tree to strike at any Ome. as It has fUed the required 60>day notice. Honxrx, tbe U. S. condliaUoa service has Intcrvtned In the dbpute. * * * * Test Case Is F ile d in Union Political Bans Presiding Sweeley pointed out that Dbtrict Jodce James W. Porter has rulrd tn elfect that the m ? liqoor bv doeanot apply to dry commualUfj. District Judge Charlea P. iCf»,<..-K Babe, has xvled that the Uw doa! n* apply to dry commiaUUes. sweeley said Smyllo requested him la piocced even It the case must be carried "to the court ot last serf Washington Area Floods Receding POLLMAK. W ash, Peb. 77 Cli?- Damp Week-End T2is TOk-cad wCJ be talhtr fia igitfc TWJit. ftcwrd. to the latHt tomftst w aJiw »«iTed bert Piiday lift the AaeehiedPRas. B=S '«n*s- Ifeoday. there wlH b* BO pcwf.ifnTna entag the --------- .«* the pertad. the at the highest tlood watea lo » jwi. TtTO ta up lo low teet deep tr«a the Paiocse nver began to subside hi peSman and Colfax, Wash. A Camas pajOrle raQtaad freight loco- «n«tv* was denUed near ttwti.n Wash, w tw boalden locaeeed br the ratsstona tell on the tzm*. The Korthera Pftdtk raUroed Slid •smice w«a expected to be nonasl yy “> Kan ^iQkaao ta PaSman. Farm Machinery Sale Being Held w rt CB aale Rlday at the ftanasl ^ madxtoerr ftwtico being beM la yfttds near the Win* tarns Ttsctor trmpmnj tn the aa bkrt of ThirdirSleTOth. M 18 m. m. Prtday the ttreet tog the aactloe yard w u ctae,. wc. ~ tf the te n am ber or tam WASmKGTON. ?«». 37 WV-Ihe CIO United Auto Workos tDed a sail in-federal court todsy attack- ing the lUtV-Hartley'B act^ baa cat tmloQ spending. The cult contcads the ban b ua- consUtutlaial and that the eewt bsue an Injunction^ ptm ot the Justice dppaitment tnsn R«ee- cutlng the UAW tor any vWsUon ot the ban. It b the second CIO court chal- lenge to the proTblon which pro- hibits tmlon c3cpRuilturr« tn coo- necUoo with federal electlcau. Preaecstloa Invited The parent CIO Invlled criminal picaecutloa and then a.sked that the provbion be declared cncon- stltutionaL CIO Pres. Philip Mtirra; was In- dicted Ptb. II. TWay^ move on behalf the UAW. Pres. Walter Reuther and Secy.-Treas. EaU Uaicy b a civil suit. It ft£ks tor ft “declaratoy judg- ment" that the provision vlohtea the cODsUtuUonal gtiarantees of free rpetch. preis. ftscmbly and petition. Notice Sm td It also serres notice that the UAW hitenda to take part tn the IMS political campaign ta many, wajs-, through newspaper publfcaUcm. db- trtbutlcn ot voting records ot can- gressmen. pnbllc meetings, radio broadcasts, paid advrrtbementa In dally neirepapm. handbllb and pamphlets. The complaint aaj-s that Attorney General d a rk has ~thtralen(d to prtttecute” Reuther and olher UAW oiriecTs. It ftsks tor ft temporary laj'mctlon to prevent aaj sach FcosecuUcra. Reuther said In a slalement the suit will provide an opportunity tor the supreme c w t to decide the b- tue "before it adioums and la time tar (he ISIS election campalta." Legion Holds District Meet Here Tonight Members ot 'the tUlh dbtrict of the American Legion com-ergtd on Twta Palb today for Ihe annual db- trtct winter convention wlilch was scheduled to start at « pjn. today. In conjunction with the meeting ot Legioanalres, members of the American Legion auxiliary also are holding ft convenUon. Business ees-' slons for both groups are being held Legion hall. Dbtrict Commander Henry Uohnhont. Ilaselton. and District Auxiliary Prrsldent Ocr* aldlse MfDnnald, Eden, are pre- siding ftt sessions ot the two, groups. Featured speaker at a 7 pjn. ban- ijuct Wiu be Idaho Department Commander Charles Howe. Donnel- ly. Ml*. James a Bangs, depart- m eat aujdllary president. Pocaullo. also wm be tatroduced. The depart- ment enmtnandcr will speak on na- tional security. &)tertalnme&t at the tianquet will tnclodt ft ladlta* trio ot-Uis. Uax Bnwn, U n. Austta Wallace and duet Czechs’ President Swears in Cabinet Governed by Reds PRAGUE, Feb. 27 (UJi)—Prc.s. Edu&rd Bcnca administered the oath of allegiance to Com- munist Premier Klemcnt Gottwald's hand-picked cabinet of 15 ministers today, giring a Bcmblnncc of legality to the lightning communist coup. Bene.-? said in a short address during the brief 10-minute ccremony that he acccotcd Gottwald’fl cabinet to avoid ---------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ “general chaos" in his coun- tn'. l^lcr an official spokesman charged foreign corrtspondenU here with misusing facUlUea and tUlng untrue or dbtorted newa stories abroad during the crisis. The spokesman said that ~pro- per measures, according to the cir- cumslances’ wUl be taken against correspondents who do that here- afler. The sole Jud^ tortlon la dbpatches the foreign and Infarmatloa mln- btnes. he said. He loW coerespond- rnts (0 check any unottldal re- > »ee p n m I House Committee Cool on Senate’s Grain Ration Bill -WASHINOTON. Feb. J7 (T>-A mute-passed l>m to ration grain to the liquor IrKlustry got a loke -arm welcome ta the bouse to ^ . The senate me*sure would rvrtve grain coouols which expired Jsa. 31 and keep them In effect to-the end of October. Just tour vecks ago the house banking committee killed a differ- ent senate bin which would have eonttaued rationing csly thnogh thU month. Rep.-esenUUve W alcott R , Mich, fhalrtnan ot the Itouse groop, has made it plata tie Is even lew^ter- made It plain be is even Im Inter* senate passed yesterday by voice vote. Wolcou*B corament has been: Ko plans for hearings. ReprtsenUUve Hay*. D . AA, a member «< the ecmmltttt ' aad an advocate ot giala Tatlontng, predicted the cocnalttee wtn rerttae Its stand and a;>{atnc » bill. AKASIA T isrr SET ' WASHIKGTON. SW». 71 QUO-The aircraft carrter Valley Ftege and t«o cseon&g destiujaa win Tlslt Saodl Arablft next month on a cota- V utloa "good w cr and tratolng} by Sir. and Urs. £ar)e Bo)cs. Posts from T rla Palb. Buhl, Filer. Rapcrt. Burley. Wen. Paul. Hunt, H aallon. Albion and Oakley a n represented tn the fifth dbtrtct Taft,' Bridges Urge Military Aid for Oiiua WASHINGTON. Feb. 37 tujj—Two leading Republican umalon today called ta r an arm.-i.for-Chlna “rider- on the new $273,000,000 Grccce- Turkey mUltary aid hlU. Sens. Robert A. Taft of Ohio and Styles Bridges of New Hampshire in separate Interview* said ccncrtss should send more American pljmcs and ammurtltion to the antl-com- munlst forcea of Chlang Kai-shek. And they suggested the admlnbira- tloj's request for a second Iwlall- ment on the near east “ijuaTanllne »" program be used thb end____ Rap Rejected PRAGUE Wb. 37 OU^-Csecho- slovakla's l e f t i s t government, freshly sworn In by a reluctant Prts. Eduard Benca. tonight bluntly rejected an Anglo-Amer- Ican-Prvnch statement oitldzlng U as a dUgubed dictatorship. The western powers have no right to Interfere with or even to crlUcUe the Internal attain of Czrchoslovakla, the govern- ment ot Communist Prrmler metnent Oottwald said tn a formal sUtemenl, ports with Ute InformaUon mtabtry aad write their dbpatches on the basb of the answer. The government ceremony took place In Itradcany cftitle. Denes re- ceived Oottwald. aoempanled b> 13 new mlnbten and three old ones who changed posts, at 10:5P a, ‘5-Year Plan’ For Housing Is Presented Red Menace Termed ‘Greater Than Hitler’ WASHIKGTON, Feb, 27 (U.PJ — Secy, of Commeree W, Averell Harriman has warned congrcss that Russian aggres- sion is “n greater menace than Hitler," it was revealed toity. The disclosure was made by the house appropriations com- mittee as it voted $503,420,263 to run the state, commcrce and justice departments and the federal courts during the fiscal year starting July 1. This is a net cut of $84,417468 from President Truman’s budget requests. The committee also demanded that tho justice department step up its antl-monopoIy work, particularly in the fiields of fo ^ , clothing and housing. It gave the department addi- tional money for the work. Rarrlman. ' MawhiTl Vrgt* Help ■^Secy. ot SUte George C. Marshall asked congress yesterday for dlUocal »7S«iciCI£)0 lo meet w....- eal" Greek piemUa on.rlaushis and Soviet pressure on Turkey. Only a few hours earlier he urged the sen- ate foreign relaUons conunlUee to refrain frtxa ar>y large-scale D. S. miUtftry commitment to stop ecm- munlsm ta. China. But Tfttt, chairman of the senate GOP policy committee, and Drtdgra. who b^chftlrman of the appropria- tions cocunlttee. tndlealed they re- garded the secreUrys stand as in- coDsbtent, Ceptrart Pwbe Pr»mi*ed In ftddlUon Bridges prombed a fun-scftle eommlltee InvesUgaUon of two ma}or contracts awaidrd to American engtaeertng Orms for re- toastructkn work InOreece. The contracts, he said, were negotUted ’or two m xips ot engineering firms by Pftul V. McNutt, fonner federal •ecurtty ftdmlnbtrator and now a Wftshlngtoa fttlamey. T an maintained that *nhe sllna- UoD ta China and Greece b Uigely Identical," Although ha voted tor he orlgioal Oreece-Turkey •with relttttance." be has eafled tor ▼tgoraus American mUltary aid to anU-commanbt forces la China. WASmNGTOS, Ttb. 37 VPi-A housing program that would cost tho government about t\j300fil»M0 the first five yean was laid before congrcsslortal'committee today. Senator McCarthy. R , W b, pre- sented the draft of ft proposed bUl to the hotise-scnate bousing com- mittee. He b vice chairman. The measure b Intended to en- courage the construeUon ot 1.SOO.OOO new homes a year for the next decade. A big share would be homes for rent to low Incoms tamUles. Profit CturaalMd To atlTDCt Inveslors lo construc- tion of tlUa tj-pe of dweUlng. the bill guarantees a profit of from about 3>i to 5 per cent a year. If the Investor built homes .. apartments to tm l for less than W In clUes ot 500.000 or larger popu- btlon. and less than HO In smaller cities, there would be these ad- dlUonal Inducements: 1. TTie Income from such project* would be exempt from Income tax. 3. A total of iO per cent depre- ciation tor tax purposo—against other Income—would be' permitted. Local Aid 3. Local communities would be called upon lo give aid In the form of land, labor, materlab, t«x ccn- cessions and cash. -It that program has not pro- duced several hundrtd U)ousand low rental houses a year from now. Ill buy you each a sleak.” McCarthy told reporters. McCarthy added, however, that » win not Introduce the blU In the senate unUI the Joint committee has " a chance lo studi- It and sug- changes. Stalin Invites Finns to Sign Soviet Treaty HELSINKI. Feb. 37 WVPrlme Uinbter StoUn has Informed Fin- land she should sign a pact wlUi Uie Soviet union slmUar to these Unk- 1»B Russia and Its other neighbors, sources close to the govenuscnt said tonight A diplomatic note from Etalln to President Juho E. Paaslklvl said tuch ft pact b desirable. Tens Lgan ai ot ft government ^ b husg over Finland. Bants «a PUmt TTie news burst upon ths Plan* even as the communbts in Cxecho- Slovakia were consoUdatlnt their grip on that country. It b wen known that Flnnbh leaden tor some time ham been studying closely the agreements the' Soviet union has made one after another with the Balkan counWcs, ft network ot pacts linking those countries closely to Russia. An auUMriUUre aounn said Karl August Fagerholn. speaker ot par- liament, would go to Stockholm, per- haps to Inform the Swedish govern-, ment ot the Russian proposal. .............. .......................ta. Moscow, said at commltlee lievloga that iVWWtfftm If in western eurtpe, w® wifl faea a sltuaUon that we cannot deal with, and the balanca of power, which now is predcsslnately In our taver, will be against us.“ Sevtnl Testify one of several too Amer- ican officials. Secy, ot ' SUle George C. Marshall, who olUcbed SoTlei policy durtv the hearings. Their testbacoy was re- leased only today. xtBwh.ii caid the United b •^aslcally friendly- to the Rosslan people. But he said Soviet art “very slow to agree, rather dU- flcult la negoUaUon. and I wouM say generally tosplclous of our moUves.” Brtakdeww Gltra m Its budget the committee cansarked «U7.317.- 4S3 for tbe sUte depsrtment; SIM.- s»,7oo tor Justice. llTUBijico for eosmtCRs, and |U ,7S $ ^ tor tha federal eouits. It tha house upholds the o xn^ tea cuts It would bring orer-aU rt- ducUons CO the tlzst three money bUb to hit the Door lo *aa.7«J70. The RepubUesn goal is to trtm tha budget t3j 00« 0» a 4 Tornadoes Rip Wide Texas Area DALLAS. Tex. Feb. 71 MV-Fwtr tcmadoea lashed Texas last night and earty today and a Denton coun- ty woman, pinned ta her %wbter- aiw ktd home, was burned alive. Other tornadoes struck Ballinger and Woodscn. ta west T^zas. ar;d Itasca. 4S miles aoQthwcst of Dallas. Twenty-fTre homes were pracUcalty destitved a t Woodson, UO mUes northeftst or Bantagtrr— ------- Bsined to death in Dentco coun- ty was U ta. Sam Patterson. .A haacar « u blown down at Brace field. BaUlnger. and damage was fstlmated at $100,000. Stx planes also vera dastactd. A'tomado damaged two buildings lat Revised Support Program Moves Checked to GOP wAsnmoTON. Feb. n ttv-The XkraocraUc admlnbtraUon to d a y : checked to ttie RepuWlcan congrcss the problem ot what to do about supporting farm prices after Dec. Jl. ttaless congress acb ta the mean- Ume. price supporU for many farm commodities wUl be ended on that date. This prospect might become an Important isaw ta farm sutes ta the coming prwldcnUal campaign. Secretary ot Agriculture Anderwn outltoe* the admlaistrsUoo^ peal- tion ta lettcn to Senator Capper a « r ReprtsraUUra Hope. Kansas Repdbtl^ns w te head the senate and house agriculture oocnmlttces. Anderson wrola that he had asked congress aora than a year ago to p as new price support legblatioa, but that It had faUed to do sa He said he doM not want to'take the rtsponsibUlty for saying what those policies should be after the present law explra. That Uw msltts most farm prod- ucts eligible tor pries tnpporta at not less than 80 per « n t ot parity vBtiX the end Ot thb year. ~W"WA»-<»ncs» WASHDJOTOR. Ptb. 77 {«-The ar asseu admlnbtratian told Rep- resentftttve Daaaon. &. tTtah, today It cannot operate a itgVinal office ta Salt Lake Oty on tu sharply cut funds. Diplomatic quarten said the Rus- sian letter was a “^Soviet program declaraUaa” Reports persbted that !Ugh*level discussions were under wsy ta the PlnrUsh government con- cerning a "new dereloptnent In Rus- slan-Flnnbh relaUons," Tho cabinet met with the presi- dent. Its disctissltns were kept strictly secret. The president had met tor hours yesUrday wllh hb foreign relatloru commlUee and membCTS of h b government As In inany ot Finland's political crises, the news of thb development reached the outside world before It reached the Plnns. Tlie naUcn learned of It only ta thb allemoon’s newpapera. Russian Plea for ‘Satellites’ to Be Rejected by U. S. WASHINGTON. Feb. 17 (^>-1he state department Indicated today the United SUtes will reject Rus- sia's proposal that Poland, Yugo- slavla and Czechoslovakia be con- sulted before the western powera decide anything aix>ut Oetmany^ tuture. At ft conferwjce ta London, the United States, Britain and France art now. trj-lng to work ciit plans for the economic tmliy of western Germany. They met without Russia because Uiey - cculdnt reach any agreement with Russia for unifica- tion ot all Germany. The Soviet cmhat\y sent to the sUte department today a nole say- ing it thinks the three Russian satellite countrle*—Poland, Yugcn slavla and bcopermiltcd to attend the London session. The Russian nole was last night U)o Moac6w radio. Russia's action toUowtd a formal request frtm the three snallcK countries to attend th- Loodon meeUng. It was turned down. Ibday, Mlchsel McDennott, sUte department press officer, said that the American poUcy had not been changed ta the sUghtest-wblch meant that the Russian proposal will be rejected along with that tnm RuisU'B satellites. Dropped WASHWOTON.-.Feh. J7 UPh- Sen. Olen H. Tayte. D, Ida. who *'«» annotmced he wlQ lun for vie* president on Henry A. WaUace^ third party ticket, has been dn^iped from ths Demo- cratle senatorial eampalm cam- ■slttee. The action was annomcad laU yesterday. Senator Local, D . HL. « u ra- appotatad .................. Drive of Red G-oss Slated To ‘Set Pace’ Fund drive worken for tha Amcricaa Red Cross were urged Thursday evening by Kent TaUock. drive chairman, to make every et> fort to put the Twta laUs diapter ■over the top- ahead ot the rest of the stale ta the IMS drive. Tatlock explained that the IMS goal of mooo b double the ttgura set for 1M7. Last year IISAIO was raised ta Twta FaUs and surtomxl- ing communlUrs, and the local chap> icr was third to the state to reach Its BoaL It was pointed OQt hy Tatlock -that a :$ per cent tacteasa ta contribuUcns wUl be necesary thb year It the Red Cross ta thb area b to tuncUoo ta an adequata maimer. SoppUa Issmd Kits ot supplies were b&ucd lo workers and the area that will solldte was mspped. TaUock announced that a desk a t the Idaho Power company will be the receiving staUon tor all contnbutloos trom March 1, the opening day ot Uie' drive, thro»«h March IS. Any dooaUons made after that Ume can be sent ta him or to Red Cross hesd<iuarien at the public library. CbatrmeQ Naaed Chairmen ot the worken ter tha fund drive are Mrs. Carl Em rm n, Kimberly: Mrs. Donald Dletx, Han- Noel Bailey. Hollbter; F. M. Rock Grange; Stanley W altm , P ^ mona Orange: Albert Oedettarb KnuU community: Hans a AndoaoB. Murtaugh: Mrs. B. Q. Bayca, Tvcn> Ueth Century dob: Mazy <Ciuti>«i HI % Otan U * * * * £obins Proclaims Red Cross Month The govtmor orged vi<«hn^ t» lend their support to the de-- elartng that a ■ ‘vohmtaty ontpoBXt« ot money fm n an walki o( BUT has made posslbla *a loot aad w ted taeord-of serrtc* to:»afctoQ^ . - divldttals and v d l''' ks' to oar armed (craa.* OoTemor Bobint i ho p e ♦*»«* I V-- • ' rAlFAKtns o m .................
Transcript

L A T E B U L L E T INw a s h d c g t o K. r « ^ n c t B - i k * > « ii.

^ In iflC C H W m * m U » i | | i l w tmk o M r ^ u . T t e

F IN A LC IT Y

E D I T I O N

Id a h o D e m o c r a t s

F a i l to D e t e r m in e

A c t io n f o r T a y lo rB riO H X C O K urr

BOISE, Feb. 27 OUD—The oprcnr licgered on today am ons Idaho Democrats for failure o f th e ir sta te central committee ycstcrdar to take official action on th e bcdt of Sen. Glen U.

^ Taylor to Henry A. Wallace's th ird party .^ The uproar took voke a t th e Idaho Jeffer

ncr last ni^ht when the faction desiring to make a stand oa Taylor's dcdsion introduced a resohition acccpUng 'Hiylor's “\oluntary withdrawal from the Democratic party m thou t malice. . . ”

But it was gesture w ith no official standing and resulted from failure of the same reso-

T ru m a n Q u ie t O n D ix ie P la n T o B a r N am e

KEY WEST, Feb. 37 fcF) — Prtaldent T re m ia *»a »Uefit trx*»j on ft w uU uin DcnocTaUe a o n to b t r h b "«">.• t r c n e tatc tmBata b the tndJU ootU r «oUd fOuUt.'

n b »sal«*al p r e s M cnU ry . Ebca A jm . told r tp o c tn s Uscre n s "no commenl" IWm the tttBpagmiy ^Thlte House vh eo be n s M kid mbout the a n U 'T m n is d r l T c Uunchcd b ; G or. W. U . T tefc a t Vlrglat*.

Tuck u k e d the > ln in ls k tb U t is e lo r ■ law v t lc h « w ld keep su n e s <)t pmldgnU*! o!f the b«Uot next Noremfaer. TtiJa would make tt peesible to cmS tb« kUte'c l i e k c tc n l vtAes (o r vboea-

Democratlc lead en deddcd

lution to be introduced a t the central mTnTwiniMi meeting.

T t e e m ft r o r o t « jr s ftXid ft C te n f t r o f e o n tor tb e rcscCutka • a d T tesSsftjSer John C Porter. R e x te ic eevspftper poS>-Ibber. a i d n beUen the h»Tx o r '

N* O ff ld d C n U tr » U « ie e e sa * l o o n f i t t e »<Uoaiatd

E i a a t ta a U te ta the ftllaxioaa B a d t as tak tsc o m d a l

irr.TirtfT»;vri o l T tqlork bolt. TM « = i : i e e aeScctrd U th o FaS s as th e s c e e e Cs deksate n s r t s U t n

f»i—» ts* tG la U tt da le

m .Kec^ nUh r«lkT

“n w Rfuaal to CQomeai keeping v lth the pollcj ih« P r r s l- dent has toU ond since be s t i e i : - ted to coD cim th e d r a t l ^ i a pn>> posab w tich s tln ed soo them sc m * ben o t his p a itr to blttCT prvUsU.

The Pm ldcB t w ithheld a t h it last a m conTertat* b Wa&hinstaa «be& th e th rtf tta oC le - Tolt w en broutb t c p rtpcrte ia.

He new here W td c ts d a j t r tm Ouantanaffio naTy bas* tn C&bft after rblU nc Puerto K c a th e Vlrstn UlaaiLs.

Rff»>rs*Affa r f iB d e ^ ia t T a y k r Icc h b bOit » « w « h ft d i a e ft dncra b e t l i r y were a o t ttv c n ft c£aaec <£ t=intatSiaa ftt th e coeo- BlSe* aeecisc.

^ a a H T n te ta . Ada c o a t j aU te e c m n t e c s a a a=d T ^ l a r pftiUsao. • ■ th e C e h i a kw p the rtso lu u a ai

c ! t^ae CGsUSUe. & ner the

tb e £-.e a sd date lo r the e m e s t l a e . Hr^teULi acrrcd ad> > * r = * = x a ad n carrtal 3J to is .

L O il_ a I

T a y lo r “B o lt” M a y B e F e l t

E . U SUHUCBFnXD . . . Twin Fan* r a U t s t wb«

ta lM d M peUUoBS »r caadUae? ftt T li>ndaT. He laid U bera n f c r lU a yrar. be wsoU• e ik th e M m laalisD a* V. fi. MBftt«r. (S ta n pbetft-«BnaTlB(J

S u m m e rf ie ld M a y R u n fo r

U . S . S en a teBOISE. Feb. 27 — Robert U

r

Negroes.One h lfh tr placed White

■ource who aiked th a t h is >•-»--<* be ' h tU in caoHdeim said the P t ts l-

d m t ~wUi continue (o c a u id e r each appotatm ent IndtrkluaUy.*

* * * « .

A n ti-P o ll T a x A c t M o v es u p T o F u l l P a n e l

WAfanKGTOH. Prt. n m — AnU-poU tax. IfststaUoa w w mp- p rorrd todar by a tenale ro les c b ^ cnmmlUee which te m h ed aMMthem senator's dem and for bem:^ )nc5.

The m rasurt would h t v o te n hal- lot in tederal electlcBs whettaer o r no t they hare paid s ta le poQ I t b one or the Uws Prta lden t T t» - man has asked as po rt o f hia ‘t l t l l riRht*“ program.

Many soulhetn party k * d e n a ;v Rbclllne agalBSt the program whicit abo Ineludta aaU -lynehtac. ftnti- job dbertmtnatlm and a a U - J t e t o w proposals.H A m ^ by Bm m

H ie a n l l 'P ^ tax h ia ab rady has been approred hy th e house. H ie senate acbcammlltec'a v t l e n aenda It aiong to th e full committee, ad- Tandnc I t m e step tow ard the sea* ■ ale floor.

In the l a s t ____- --, ______ _house has pasaed antl.poQ tax but senate acU oi alwajrs h as b e a blocked by a n tU h em flm c s tc r. Be& th b year bo» cooata lad lea te the OOP-dominated M saU m ay be wHUns to ra te » ttm h c n t f e t i t t . TU s would sho t « rr eirorts to talk the bill to

Ste«Chairman Jeoner. R , l 2 xsM

the measure win be reported Js»- medlately to the toO a r n a m e * headed by Senator Broolca R , HL He and Brooka pnd lc tcd th e tB!I ewnmlttee win f tp p o re tl.

Prom Senator O eone. n , o * , came ft predlctleo «>ft th e ro tn« between Denocrftts wffl l(«d a party shakrup ftfler th e ;n s U e a . UalelecUan.

Wlthoot pftsstng en P r ts l tk n i T%i». man's chances la Korembcr. Georce said he beUerea w e th c ra tin - 'ii <n»« ot U r. T f tm a a l cM l r l th ts pc»> gram are gotnc to h a i* a g rest deal to say a b w t the f tttw e

^ their party.

C. W . w a . j t , fS n 't m r . O O P ssftte fr iiia iH-UL.isj bxm U x r i^

. tOB Oj . 8 0 9 be w^MBiflJe fo r th e

* A B c e M E. S t e s n ma:a i t a t e a e s l to th e TSoes^ScB. said th a t e a k a s the s ta :e OOP caavtn - tiCQ etaV w irt f a a w g te r P n s id e s l h e w a f » i r r a » n t « Taylor. T » j - k r ftT-’i u . ■ftl h is a tiasbO Ity to r t-V Tice g n tid t a u a l »«rr;fra*.Vn co H essT XCanice-<s t i * d p sn y ticket MoxSay.

* l t th e D ecex stia kicfc T aylor (E t f if th e DeaoenOic partr.” Difl sa id .'’a a d t t th e Rfpobacam ta the ccnTTBtlaa tn &orth d a &otc£x!s3» S U s c a . I wiaald like to ask Seca^ar T ^ iy l r U I caa be his b x s e ta an c t^C T Idsho.”

D Q w ai ft B c a b r r d th e s ta le h g is ia s r * ta a a . r m 1 0 9 to m s h e Wfta cha!r& aa «f the L in- c cia tssm :y Tosss* S e p ^ a c a a <Jah.

Experts Forecast Hog Price Gains To Be Continaed

c m u c x k . F«». n cub— u wsSacfc experts a t th e Oxteago aU ck- y a rd s sw d today t2 « j tapetsed bog p ric ts ta coKtSrae cp can l d m lag th e *prt=* msa r r r - r r aoBtfa*.

T tse r aft»d there w ee too tew hag* c a tb e S fttm -k to r porkprtcea t» s ia y a l the ;zt» s I low

A t pnDCSt. they aaiJ. r r ta a prices B asasfeecz «se s ^ a dropping *s th e m s H c f » O p a the a a i t r t

ifwfce o : b c o e a io tf this sw a lh . T be «Sswa*a»d m a n t i r a d prob- ftbtr saop aoact ftzd th e apwftxd * * s « w a b d to ta Bae wCh th e

ew t t w a «toei^»pd ptke*.- S ftasw ftac . h e e m r , the i t i x s d ^ ftr ts a e a t f tt W to h S = r« » rp e« « l t ^ a T m g e w b o te k p r i c e s

s::**t^r la s t wwk.------- ^ dedhje '

Sum m rtllrld . Twin P a lb J c « !tr. Thursday drew 44 peUUons o t can­didacy but sa id b e had no t deflnilely decided to run.

" I t I do seek otOce. It will be (he m ate." Sum mertleld said.

Defeated ia m e Sum m ertleld. who was defeated

two years ago In tbe general eUc. ti(B When h e sought the lieutenant gOTtmotahlp. sa id be would run * tm les Gumeone who can tnily be c»ned ft RoosCTelt Democrat ruas."

1 beliere th e Democratic psrty. I t I t Is going to h a te ft chance la the g r n m l election, m ust get aray trom tacUonaltsm." Summertleld said, r tfe rrtn g to the r l t i between Q»art*a C. G ossett and Sen. Oltn H. T V lw - G ossett haa been prom- IneaUy meaUdaed as a candid*te tor aenator.

FW tewsTItKT l w people o t Idaho gave Praak.

UD D . Rocaerelt a o a M tty ta erenr aakL -nw ee

.. ft cand}dlte te id ea ls . '*

. v h o has been acUre

.Porelga W ais aHslrs------------------» itftte. jftU he bad

been app rrached to run tor unsle • several m en "who repusealeoua-

Jona, basiaess orgaala-

Homestead Farm Open Near Hmit

BOIS& rtb. a <»)-ae=acfttte wm be x tce lnd trntQ U t a ± • t o the b m t n o t n c t a a t k a f t r a l £ a o * hrmwfM il M il t o tfa i r a re a o tth e k llB id a f ta s n jM .

T he b o n a a n l l t t * u K t e w o( « drawn te r iM t t e a a t J t t 'M UMr R ita q B lte L

frtfe rence win be g t v a « o B { M w teM ia(W w liw » n .

T h e « h e a e a > f tv m t t d r^ ty ed t to » - 4 ta c i a o t a e*= t R w « ^ • K n a d w ^ th a t th e a m a g e price had t o p p e d c a t £ » m tesie c sa i-

Bft tri.-r:i1led ta the

K O S C a T O U . BISKSSX O CU P « i . s ; a ^ u j y n s m r

tw o poac* s a tfcr a ta a m h e m I t w « tepo ttrd

b r S g is s to ta l UtaBUea ta tw o d a y s t o 14.

C o m p la in t iii L iq u o r G ise

S e n t to B oiseC om plaint against the Klorrr

Klah ow ner o s ft liqwir charge tm to be aen t to Boise Prtday to r lix- n s ts ie o t th e sU te Uquor ageols who conducted th e P tb . 5 raid. Pros- ecntlng A ttorney E r m t t M. SiteJcj said.

As soon a s th e cocnplaint b le- tam ed. Sweeley aald I t wtU be tiled W th JnsU ce o t th e Peace J a tn n O. Pumpihrey.

Since a rlolaUon c t the secUon under w hich th e complaint b made consUtctcs % mtodwneanar. Sarelrr added, th e case w in ha re to be In- su to 'xd In JmUee court. IrriKj S t ^ ^ . owner o t th e dub . b t r«

B e te n wTxling the cenpla lnt tc Boise. Sw w ley tntormed Attoroej- Oenerftl Robert Sajylle th a t the ar­rest h a a complications which but m a i l l a a “te st case- belcct the

U.S. Acts To Avert 2 Strikes

CHICAGO, Feb. 27 (UiO — Government ascnts sought today to head off two major strikes which would cut the nation’s m eat supply and cripple th e railroads.

I f the pcaco-making efforts fail, union members may waUc off th e ir jobs in the two big­gest strikes of 1948.

A ttem pU to a t r r t a railroad strike are tn th e tln a l stages. A three- m an tac t-flnd lftf board appointed by P rrsld en t Trum an b larestlg- a tlng the Usuea la the dbpute be­tween th ree tinlons and the na» Uon's 133 cU sa I raUrosds

E ey W orken laralred T tie un ions represent 10 per cent

or aU rallroftd empJoyts, o r ftbout 12S.OOO exiglnecrs. tlreaen. engine- men aad 5w itchm en-ke j employes who could Ue up rail (rattle across Uie country U they watted oH the job.

President T rum an tods; apprered the extension o t the healings to U arch T7 a t tc r both groups asked for more tim e. In eftcct; the acUon will delay stxike action a t U v t until April J7.

P a r k m Threalraed Tlie o th e r i>lg strike Uireat In-

rolves the C IO United Packinghouse Workers, w hich reprtscnts about lOOMO employes o t meat p« > tr»y p lants, - T h e .faUon has nied strike noUces ag a in s t S3 Urge companies Including th e 'b ig four*—Armour, Swift. Cudahy and WUson.

D irect negotiations on the uolon'i demand to r a 3 - c m t hourly In­crease becam e siaJemated e a ^ th b m ooth. and union members voted In tftvor o t ft .'■trike.

No dale to r a strike has been set. but im dcr th e Taft-IUrtley law the tmloR ts tree to strike a t any Ome. as I t h a s fUed the required 60>day notice. H o n xrx , tbe U. S. condliaUoa service has Intcrvtned In th e dbpute .

* * * *

T e s t C a se Is F i l e d i n U n io n P o l i t i c a l B an s

Presiding

Sweeley pointed ou t th a t Dbtrict Jodce Jam es W . Porter has rulrd tn e lfec t th a t th e m ? liqoor b v d o e an o t apply to dry commualUfj. District Judge Charlea P . iCf»,<..-K Babe, h a s xvled th a t the Uw doa! n * apply to dry commiaUUes. sweeley sa id Smyllo requested him la piocced even I t th e case must be carried " to the court o t last s e r f

Washington Area Floods Receding

POLLMAK. W ash , Peb. 77 Cli?-

Damp Week-EndT2i s T O k -c ad wCJ be t a lh t r

fia ig i t f c TWJit. ftcw rd . t o th e la tH t to m fts t

w a J i w » « iT e d b e rt P iiday l i f t th e A ae eh ied P R as .

B=S '«n*s- Ifeoday . there wlH b* BO pcw f.ifnT na e n ta g the--------- .«* th e pertad. th e

at the

h ighest tlood w a te a lo » jw i .

T tT O ta up lo lo w tee t deep tr« athe Paiocse n v e r began to subside h i peS m an and Colfax, W ash. A Camas pajOrle raQ taad freight loco- «n«tv* w as denU ed near ttwti.n W ash, w t w bo a ld en locaeeed br the ra ts s to n a te ll on th e tzm*.

The K orthera P f td tk raUroed Slid•sm ice w«a expected to be nonasly y “ > Kan^iQkaao ta PaSm an.

Farm Machinery Sale Being Held

w r t CB aale R ld a y a t th e ftanasl ^ madxtoerr ftwtico

being beM la yfttds near th e Win* tarns T ts c to r trm pm nj tn the a ab k r t of T h i r d i r S l e T O t h .

M 18 m. m . P rtday the ttre e t tog th e aac tlo e ya rd w u c ta e ,. wc.

~ t f th e t e n a m b e r o r ta m

W ASmKGTON. ?«». 37 W V-Ihe CIO U nited A uto W orkos tDed a sail in -fede ra l court todsy attack­ing th e lUtV-Hartley'B ac t^ baa cat tmloQ spending.

The cult con tcads the ban b ua - consU tutlaial and th a t theeew t bsue a n In ju n c tio n ^ p tm o t the Justice dpp a itm en t tnsn R«ee- cutlng th e UAW to r any vWsUon o t the ban.

It b the s econd CIO court chal­lenge to th e proTblon which pro­hibits tm lon c3cpRuilturr« tn coo- necUoo w ith federal electlcau.

P reaecstloa Invited The pa re n t CIO Invlled criminal

p icaecutloa a n d then a.sked that the provbion be declared cncon- stltutionaL

CIO Pres. P h ilip M tirra; was In­dicted P tb . I I .

TW ay^ m ove on behalf the UAW. Pres. W alter Reuther and Secy.-Treas. E a U U aicy b a civil suit.

It ft£ks to r ft “declara toy judg­ment" th a t th e provision vlohtea the cODsUtuUonal gtiarantees of free rpetch. p reis. f tscm bly and petition.

N otice S m td I t also se rres notice th a t the UAW

hitenda to ta k e p a r t tn the IMS political cam paign ta many, w ajs-, through newspaper publfcaUcm. db- trtbutlcn o t vo ting records ot can- gressmen. pnbllc meetings, radio broadcasts, pa id advrrtbementa In dally n e ire p ap m . handbllb and pamphlets.

The com plain t aaj-s th a t Attorney General d a r k h a s ~thtralen(d to prtttecute” R e u th e r and olher UAW oiriecTs. I t ftsks to r ft temporary laj'm ctlon to prevent a a j sach FcosecuUcra.

Reuther sa id In a slalement the suit will provide a n opportunity tor the supreme c w t to decide the b - tue "before i t a d io u m s and la time tar (he ISIS e lection campalta."

L e g io n H o ld s D is t r ic t M eet H e r e T o n ig h t

Members o t 'the tUlh dbtric t of th e American Legion com-ergtd on Twta P a lb today for Ihe annual d b - tr tc t w inter convention wlilch was scheduled to sta rt a t « p jn . today.

In conjunction with the meeting o t Legioanalres, members of the American Legion auxiliary also are holding ft convenUon. Business ees-' slons fo r both groups are being held

Legion hall. D btrict Commander H enry U ohnhont. Ilaselton. and D istrict Auxiliary Prrsldent Ocr* a ld lse MfDnnald, Eden, are pre­siding ftt sessions o t the two, groups.

Featured speaker a t a 7 pjn . ban- ijuct Wiu be Idaho Department Com m ander Charles Howe. Donnel­ly. Ml*. Jam es a Bangs, depart- m e a t aujdllary president. Pocaullo. also w m be tatroduced. The depart­m en t enmtnandcr will speak on na­tional security.

&)tertalnm e& t a t the tianquet will tn c lod t ft ladlta* trio o t-U is . U ax B n w n , U n . Austta Wallace and

duet

C zech s’ P resid ent Sw ears in Cab inet

Governed by R ed sPRAGUE, Feb. 27 (UJi)—Prc.s. Edu&rd Bcnca administered the oath of allegiance to Com­

munist Premier Klemcnt Gottwald's hand-picked cabinet of 15 ministers today, giring a Bcmblnncc o f legality to the lightning communist coup.

Bene.-? said in a short address during the brief 10-minute ccremony that he acccotcd Gottwald’fl cabinet to a v o id ---------------------------------------------- ------------------------------—“general chaos" in his coun-t n ' .

l^ lc r an official spokesman charged foreign corrtspondenU here with misusing facUlUea and tUlng untrue or dbtorted newa stories abroad during the crisis.

The spokesman said th a t ~pro- per measures, according to the cir- cumslances’ wUl be taken againstcorrespondents who do th a t here- afler. The sole J u d ^ tortlon la dbpatches the foreign and Infarmatloa mln- b tn e s. he said. He loW coerespond- rn ts (0 check any unottldal re-

> » e e p n m I

House Committee Cool on Senate’s Grain Ration Bill

-WASHINOTON. Feb. J7 (T >-A m u te -passed l>m to ration grain to the liquor IrKlustry got a loke -a rm welcome t a the bouse t o ^ .

The senate m e*sure would rvrtve grain coouols w hich expired Jsa . 31 and keep th e m In effect to-the end of October.

Just to u r v e ck s ago the house banking com m ittee killed a differ­ent senate b in w hich would have eonttaued ratio n in g csly thnogh thU m onth.

Rep.-esenUUve W alco tt R , Mich, fhalrtnan o t th e Itouse groop, has made i t p la ta tie Is even le w ^ te r- made It p lain b e is even I m Inter* senate passed yesterday by voice vote. Wolcou*B coram ent has been: Ko plans for hearings.

ReprtsenUUve Hay*. D . A A , a member «< th e ecmmltttt

' aad an advocate o t g ia la Tatlontng, predicted the cocna lttee wtn rerttae Its stand and a;>{atnc » bill.

AKASIA T i s r r SET 'WASHIKGTON. SW». 71 QUO-The

aircraft c arrter Valley Ftege and t« o cseon& g de s t iu ja a win Tlslt Saodl Arablft n e x t m onth on a cota- V u t lo a "good w c r and tratolng}

by S ir. a n d U rs. £ar)e Bo)cs.Posts from T r la Palb . Buhl, Filer.

R apcrt. Burley. W en. Paul. Hunt, H a a llo n . Albion and Oakley a n represented tn the fifth d b tr tc t

T a ft, ' B rid g e s U r g e M ilita ry A id f o r O i iu a

WASHINGTON. Feb. 37 tujj—Two leading Republican um alon today called ta r a n arm.-i.for-Chlna “rider- on th e new $273,000,000 Grccce- T urkey mUltary aid hlU.

Sens. Robert A. T aft of Ohio and Styles Bridges of New Hampshire in separate Interview* said ccncrtss should send more American pljmcs and ammurtltion to the antl-com- m unlst forcea of Chlang Kai-shek. And they suggested the adm lnbira- t lo j 's request for a second Iw lall- m en t on th e near east “ijuaTanllne

»" program be used th b end____

Rap RejectedPRAGUE Wb. 37 OU^-Csecho-

slovakla's l e f t i s t government, freshly sworn In by a reluctant P rts. Eduard Benca. tonight bluntly rejected an Anglo-Amer- Ican-Prvnch statement o itld z ln g U as a dUgubed dictatorship.

T he western powers have no right to Interfere with or even to crlUcUe the Internal a t ta in of Czrchoslovakla, the govern­m ent o t Communist Prrm ler m etnen t Oottwald said tn a formal sUtemenl,

ports with Ute InformaUon m tabtry aad write the ir dbpatches on the basb of the answer.

T he government ceremony took place In Itradcany cftitle. Denes re­ceived Oottwald. aoem panled b> 13 new m ln b ten and three old ones who changed posts, a t 10:5P a,

‘5 -Y ea r P la n ’ F o r H o u s in g

I s P re s e n te d

Red Menace Termed ‘Greater Than Hitler’

WASHIKGTON, Feb, 27 (U.PJ — Secy, of Commeree W, Averell Harriman has warned congrcss that Russian aggres­sion is “n greater menace than Hitler," it was revealed to ity .

The disclosure was made by the house appropriations com­mittee as it voted $503,420,263 to run the state, commcrce and justice departments and the federal courts during the fiscal year starting July 1. This is a net cut of $84,417468 from President Truman’s budget requests.

The committee also demanded that tho justice department step up its antl-monopoIy work, particularly in the fiields of

f o ^ , clothing and housing. I t gave the department addi­tional money fo r the work.

Rarrlm an. '

MawhiTl Vrgt* Help ■^Secy. o t S U te George C. Marshall asked congress yesterday for dlUocal »7S«iciCI£)0 lo meet w....- eal" G reek p iem U a on.rlaushis and Soviet p ressure on Turkey. Only a few hours earlier he urged the sen­a te foreign relaUons conunlUee to refra in frtxa ar>y large-scale D. S. miUtftry commitm ent to stop ecm- munlsm ta. China.

B u t T fttt, chairm an of the senate G O P policy committee, and Drtdgra. who b^chftlrm an of the appropria­tions cocunlttee. tndlealed they re­garded th e secreU rys stand as in- coDsbtent,

C e p tra r t Pwbe Pr»mi*edI n ftddlUon Bridges prombed a

fun-scftle eommlltee InvesUgaUon of two ma}or contracts awaidrd to American engtaeertng Orms for re- to a s tru c tk n work InO reece. The contracts, h e said, were negotUted ’or two m x ip s o t engineering firms by Pftul V. McNutt, fonner federal •ecurtty ftdm lnbtrator and now a W ftshlngtoa fttlamey.

T a n m aintained th a t *nhe sllna- UoD ta C h ina and Greece b Uigely Identical," Although ha voted to r h e orlgioal Oreece-Turkey

•w ith relttttance ." be has eafled tor ▼tgoraus American mUltary aid to anU -com m anbt forces la China.

WASmNGTOS, T tb . 37 V P i-A housing program th a t would cost tho government about t\j300fil»M 0 the first five ye an was laid before

congrcsslortal'committee today. Senator McCarthy. R , W b , pre­

sented the d raft of ft proposed bUl to the hotise-scnate bousing com­mittee. He b vice chairman.

T he measure b Intended to en­courage the construeUon o t 1.SOO.OOO new homes a year for the next decade. A big share would be homes for ren t to low Incoms tamUles.

Profit CturaalM d To atlTDCt Inveslors lo construc­

tion of tlUa tj-pe of dweUlng. the bill guarantees a profit of from about 3>i to 5 per cent a year.

I f the Investor built homes .. apartm ents to tm l for less th a n W In clUes o t 500.000 or larger popu- b tlo n . and less than HO In smaller cities, there would be these ad- dlUonal Inducements:

1. TTie Income from such project* would be exempt from Income tax.

3. A total of iO per cent depre­ciation to r tax purposo—against other Income—would be' permitted.

Local Aid 3. Local communities would be

called upon lo give aid In the form of land, labor, materlab, t«x ccn- cessions and cash.

- I t th a t program has not pro­duced several hundrtd U)ousand low ren ta l houses a year from now. I ll buy you each a sleak.” McCarthy told reporters.

McCarthy added, however, tha t » win no t Introduce the blU In the

senate unUI the Joint committee has " a chance lo studi- It and sug-

changes.

S ta l in In v ite s F in n s to S ign

S o v ie t T re a tyHELSINKI. Feb. 37 W VPrlme

U inb te r StoUn has Informed Fin­land she should sign a pact wlUi Uie Soviet union slmUar to these Unk- 1»B Russia and Its other neighbors, sources close to the govenuscnt said tonight

A diplomatic note from Etalln to President Juho E. Paaslklvl said tuch ft pact b desirable.

Tens Lgan aiot ft government ^ b husg over Finland.

B a n ts «a PUmtTTie news burst upon ths Plan*

even a s the communbts in Cxecho- Slovakia were consoUdatlnt their grip on th a t country.

I t b wen known th a t Flnnbh leaden to r some time ham been studying closely th e agreements the' Soviet union has made one after another w ith th e Balkan counWcs, ft network o t pacts linking those countries closely to Russia.

An auUMriUUre aounn said K arl August Fagerho ln . speaker o t par­liament, would go to Stockholm, per­haps to Inform th e Swedish govern-, ment o t the Russian proposal.

.............. .......................t a .Moscow, said a t commltlee lievloga th a t iVWWtfftm Ifin western eu rtpe , w® wifl faea a sltuaUon th a t we cannot deal w ith, and the balanca of power, which now is predcsslnately In our taver, will be against us.“

S e v tn l Testify one of several too Amer­

ican officials. Secy, o t ' SU le George C. Marshall, who o lU cbed SoTlei policy d u r tv th e hearings. T heir testbacoy was re ­leased only today.

xtBwh.ii caid the United b •^aslcally friendly- to the Rosslan people. But h e said Soviet a r t “very slow to agree, ra the r dU- flcult la negoUaUon. and I wouM say generally tosplclous of our moUves.”

Brtakdew w G ltra m Its budget

the committee cansarked «U7.317.- 4S3 for tbe sU te depsrtment; SIM.- s»,7oo to r Justice. llTU Bijico fo r eosmtCRs, a n d |U ,7S $ ^ to r th a federal eouits.

I t th a house upholds th e o x n ^ tea cuts I t would bring orer-aU r t - ducUons CO the tlzst three money bUb to h it th e Door lo *aa .7«J70 . The RepubUesn goal is to trtm tha budget t 3j 00« 0» a

4 Tornadoes Rip Wide Texas Area

DALLAS. T e x . Feb. 71 MV-Fwtr tcm adoea lashed Texas last n ight an d earty today and a Denton coun­ty woman, pinned ta her %wbter- a iw k td home, was burned alive.

O the r tornadoes struck Ballinger and W oodscn. ta west T^zas. ar;d I tasca . 4S m iles aoQthwcst of Dallas. Twenty-fTre homes were pracUcalty destitved a t Woodson, UO mUes northeftst o r B a n ta g trr— -------

B sined to death in Dentco coun­ty w as U ta . Sam Patterson..A h a a c a r « u blown down a t

Brace field. BaUlnger. and damage was fs tlma ted a t $100,000. Stx planes also v e ra dastac td .

A 'tom ado damaged two buildingsl a t

Revised Support Program Moves Checked to GOP

w A sn m o T O N . Feb. n ttv -T h e XkraocraUc admlnbtraUon t o d a y : checked to ttie RepuWlcan congrcss the problem o t w hat to do about supporting farm prices a fte r Dec. J l.

ttaless congress a cb ta the m ean- Ume. price supporU for many farm commodities wUl be ended on tha t date.

This prospect might become an Im portant isaw ta farm s u te s ta the coming prwldcnUal campaign.

Secretary o t Agriculture Anderwn outltoe* th e admlaistrsUoo^ peal- tion ta le ttc n to Senator Capper a « r R eprtsraU U ra Hope. Kansas R epdbtl^ns w te head the senate and house agriculture oocnmlttces.

Anderson wrola th a t he had asked congress a o ra than a year ago to p a s new price support legblatioa, but th a t I t had faUed to do s a He said he doM n o t w ant to 'ta k e the rtsponsibUlty for saying w hat those policies should be after the present law exp lra .

T hat Uw m sltts most farm prod­ucts eligible to r pries tnpporta a t not less than 80 per « n t o t parity vBtiX the end Ot th b year.

~ W " W A » -< » n c s » WASHDJOTOR. P tb . 77 { « - T h e a r asseu adm lnbtratian told Rep-

resentftttve Daaaon. & . tTtah, today I t cannot operate a itgVinal office ta Salt Lake O ty on tu sharply cu t funds.

Diplomatic q ua rten said the Rus­sian le tte r w as a “ Soviet program declaraU aa” Reports persbted that !Ugh*level discussions were under wsy ta the PlnrUsh government con­cerning a "new dereloptnent In Rus- slan-F lnnbh relaUons,"

Tho cabinet m et with the presi­dent. I ts disctissltns were kept strictly secret. T h e president had met to r hours yesUrday wllh h b foreign relatloru commlUee and membCTS of h b government

As In in any o t Finland's political crises, the news of th b development reached the outside world before It reached th e Plnns. Tlie naUcn learned of It only ta th b allemoon’s newpapera.

Russian Plea for ‘Satellites’ to Be Rejected by U. S.

WASHINGTON. Feb. 17 (^>-1he state departm ent Indicated today the United S U tes will reject Rus­sia's proposal th a t Poland, Yugo- slavla and Czechoslovakia be con­sulted before the western powera decide anything aix>ut Oetmany^ tuture.

At ft conferwjce ta London, the United States, Britain and France a rt now. trj-lng to work ciit plans for the economic tmliy of western Germany. They m et without Russia because Uiey - ccu ld n t reach any agreement w ith Russia for unifica­tion o t a ll Germany.

The Soviet cm hat\y sent to the sU te departm ent today a nole say­ing i t th inks the three Russian satellite countrle*—Poland, Yugcn slavla andbcopermiltcd to attend the London session.

The Russian nole waslast n igh t U)o Moac6w radio.

Russia's action toUowtd a formal request f r tm the three snallcK countries to a ttend th - Loodon meeUng. I t was turned down.

Ibday , M lchsel McDennott, sU te departm ent p ress officer, said th a t the American poUcy had not been changed ta th e sUghtest-wblch m eant th a t th e Russian proposal will be rejected along with that tn m RuisU'B satellites.

DroppedWASHWOTON.-.Feh. J7 UPh-

Sen. O len H . T a y te . D , Ida . who *'«» annotmced he wlQ lun for vie* president on Henry A. WaUace^ th ird party ticket, has been dn^iped from ths Demo- cratle senatorial eam palm cam- ■slttee.

T he action was annomcad laU yesterday.

Senator Local, D . HL. « u ra- appotatad ..................

D riv e o f R e d G -oss S la te d

T o ‘S e t P a c e ’Fund drive w orken for tha

Amcricaa Red Cross were urged Thursday evening by K ent TaUock. drive chairman, to make every et> fo rt to put the Twta laU s d iap ter ■over the to p - ahead o t the rest of the sta le ta the IMS drive.

Tatlock explained tha t the IMS goal of mooo b double the ttgura se t for 1M7. Last year IISAIO was raised ta Twta FaUs and surtom xl- ing communlUrs, and the local chap> icr was third to the sta te to reach Its BoaL I t was pointed OQt hy Tatlock -that a :$ per cent tacteasa ta contribuUcns wUl be necesary t h b year I t the Red Cross ta th b area b to tuncUoo ta an adequata maimer.

SoppUa Issmd K its o t supplies were b&ucd lo

workers and the area th a t will solldte was mspped.

TaUock announced th a t a desk a t the Idaho Power company will be the receiving staUon to r all contnbutloos trom M arch 1, the opening day o t Uie' drive, thro»«h March IS. Any dooaUons made a fte r tha t Ume can be sen t ta him or to Red Cross hesd<iuarien a t the public library.

CbatrmeQ N aaed Chairmen o t the w orken te r tha

fund drive a re Mrs. Carl E m rm n , Kimberly: Mrs. Donald Dletx, H an-

Noel Bailey. Hollbter; F . M.

Rock Grange; Stanley W altm , P ^ mona Orange: Albert O edettarb KnuU community: H ans a AndoaoB. M urtaugh: Mrs. B. Q . Bayca, Tvcn> Ueth Century dob: Mazy

<Ciuti>«i HI % O t a n U * * * *

£obins Proclaims Red Cross Month

The govtm or orged v i< « h n ^ t» lend the ir support to th e de-- elartng th a t a ■‘vohmtaty ontpoBXt« ot money f m n an w alki o ( BUT has made posslbla *a lo o t a a d w ted taeord-of serrtc* to:»afctoQ ^ . - divldttals and v d l ' ' 'ks' to oar arm ed (craa .*

OoTemor Bobint i hope ♦*»«* I

V-- •'

r A l F A K t n s o m .................

PAGE TWO

- J h A v e o f B e d - C ro s s S la te d

T o ‘S e t P a c e ’<r»-» o m >

B b tv tr . C n lT cnn r V oeM e: Ur*, c iu ra m OvTti. U a ftBd 8 ch ti; u n . J o t a r . A a a o d t K evtem en d o b ; i s n . L . a . R u l a s .K lt« : K oR aaa H ocom o . lio n s d u b ; Mrs. ja k * Pop*. Wonwa c f the Uoom; M ix V dm » D M dvtU . A m e rte u L cflao u s m u r : U n . Lm B olth . O ood*1U d o b : u n . F to s B o m n l a n d U n .1 W E r t . Pioneer •q u v c : U ra . D«l« DoekJUddrr kud U n . K enneth Rurfiiut. W tibl&ftoo fourt*: U n . Rulh J o h a w i. South P u t . and K r A mad U n . W. W. PdvcIL

TtiCM f h a tm m wm b« M isted In lo lk m n c b ; m n sh e n oT th»tr

. vmnoQt w m m m lU a and •1.^

High School Class To Present Play

Suiprtse and tuspenw « iu fa* f t* , tw ed In T h e IDth School M n - t«T ." a ccmedjr ihrllJer w il te d by the iB&lor clai* of T v ta raH i hl$b •cbeel as lU a n au ij p l» j. -ni# pro- ducUtn U scheduled for U iic h IB and 19.

The audience tIH pa itldpa ’x tn cBucb of th e action to this ununial plar. T he e a s t has be«n chawa by S hlrtty Popfc d n a a u e Twtnjcta-. and w in tneh«l« H elta M ttv ea , Lon* O n b e r t . B lim R eran . Merry a ^ o r . U a ry Jean D eatle. Joyce 8 » w t l^ . V em cn B anion. Dcnald ^ n o U . W arren PeripenJlne. Joe a » w ^ ^ U oyd Webb and Robert

E x -^ e n Resident Dies in California

haa been rw etred h e n c( the death o f U n . Oeor^U PUltao.

M e n r wM eat. a t Beaumont.

U n . FttStoa, v l th h e r husband. R a n t r a n th e Ptolton (to re in ESen t e m any y e a n . Besldca her hus­band. abe Is tu rv ltcd by one aoa, D atld Vulton. Chilly, and o i« ^ r h t e r , M r*. Ptancea Lon*. Har-

- K e e p tJi6 W h i t e F la g o f S a te ty r i y i n g

K oto 34 d a v t tD ith o u t a t r a f f i c d e a th in o u r l i a o l c r t tH ty .

4IWU.T be body a r r tn in T « ln PkHs

Saturday m fy n ln t and v f ll be to T * tn P U ls mertuaiT. PUneral a rw it tm e a ta a re IneocapJete.

Infant Rites HeldLD6 c ra rts ld e sc rr ie a for DUne

M r . c ltb t-d ay -o ld daochter of U r. and U n . R a b ca A. Jeff. » h o died T ta rsd a x a t th e Twin PWls exwnty boepitaL were held a t 3 p .m . Prldsy a t the S unset Uem crtal park with Blder P . X>. lA w rtnce offteiaHat.

Bealde* h e r parents, she ts *ur. TlTtd by a b ro ther. O s t r Lyle: her n » t e n ^ tran d p a ren u . U r. and

J - A. -Chrlstopherson. T r to PkSs. and h e r paternal crandoar- enls. M r. a n d U n . AmeOd Jeff. •Americaa Pork. tn a h .

Th e Hospitalf tn e n e n c y beds only w ew araU-

•b le PMday a t th e Twin rkll* oxm- - ty hosp ital. VUlUae hou n are tnea

J to 4 and 7 to « p jn .A D u r m o

Bert H eary a n d Guy TXjtor. T»tn Palls : Victor M asien . U urtai«b- Gharlea MondeUo. S h f^w ne: U n . Hay E. Sharp . PUrr; Mrs. John Alexander. CasU efort: M rv Oeotte Leasnoe. H aeerm aa. and U n . Leon H adfldd. WeodelL

DISMISSED U n . Ruben J e u , T » tn PW h; L.

L. Malone and M n . Ray E, Shaip. P i le : U rs . M ildred Oljen. JXur- tM gh: VloU a n d Ja n e t R e rre ^ Cm - Ueford. and Mra. Robert B u rts aad ■oo. Jm x a e .

EarlT.Clontz,52, Claimed by Death

JEROME. Peb. n - E a r l T, d o n u . M. a Jeroma fanner, died W ednes­day a t the r e te n a s hosptta) a t Boise after an u tended Illness.

M r. O ocU was bora April 8. i t u , ta Sprla jneld . Mo. H i came to Ida- ho la Ul*. a a t l a * hU bom t near Hansen and T « tn PalU until moving to th e Jerome Tlclnlty five years a to

I He was a r tU n n of World w ar I and a member of the Bethel T em ­ple ehurth in T u la p»u ,. ^ , c hurch deacon for the la st » yrars.

BurrlTon are his wife. U n . R « e O ontz. Je m ae : two sons. Paul c io n u . Klmberty, and Earl Nathan Cloat*. Jerome; two stepsons. Al- MQ H in and Uerle Hill. Je iw ne; a stepdaughter. I c r t i u HUl. Jercme- a foster son. Raymond Turner, p je n : two btQtheis, Stenson CIcnU. Iroatoa . Otah. aad Psrrell Clontz, Keanewlck. Wash.: fir* a isten. M n .

T ouaf. Boise; M n . Maude n artltrn ta . Grass Valley. Calif.- M n p t ie l Mecool. Vlelory. MoaU; M n . Perrnal BUlla«Ua. Twin Palb , aad U ra. OlheUs Paasler. OoJdta a t y . M a , and two pandchlld rra.

^ c n J serrJcw wia b« held a(

A ^ n t M a k in g L o c a l S u rv e y O n P a r k D eal

A on« -staa la rre y of Twin PalU d r lc le ad e n to aound out public opinion on th e eooTersloa of the P w ra fu t n a ra l training centcr Into • iU te park, was conducted Prldsy by Jam es Lahtloeo, Idaho its te purchaslae agent. w

HaU the tra in ing tile, where rnsny Idaho servicemen went through “boot- train ing , has been Uken drer by P a rragu t coUeje. Lahtlnea ex- plslned. T h e remainder, according to th e plan. U to b« developed into a self-supporting sum m er and win­ter reso rt

M arch 15 l>cadUii*The s u t e leglsUlure has until

U w h la to decide on submitting a I I bid for the camp, conjiiiueted during the w ar a t a coil of »ei-trsl tnllllon do llan .

His tour o f aouthem Idaho. Lah- Unen continued. U to gather opln- l « u on the propoeal before It Is « te d i:pon by th e legislature. Bo far. be said, civic leaden are “nearly 100 per cent tn faro r of the act,"

Snpport More Although th e people In the south

p a rt of the s u t e are n o t affected laim edlauiy by th e m m t. he « ld .

they jire th« value o f lh e develcip. meni In bringing a greater num- her of tourists to Idaho and ere supporting It."

m camp h as several permanent ^ ts lla iJo n s . Ineludlng a swimming pool, rifle range and Jiving (juarten th a t may be converted Into civilian

TIMES-TOj^JWIN-FALLS,-IDAHO

T w in F a lls N e w s in B r ie fBM h«

A aon w u bora Prtday to Mr. and I Mr*. Jo h n Alexander. Castleford. and a daughter was bom to Sir. and Mrs. Ooorge Lemmon. Hagerman

I a t the Tw in n j l s county hoepltal. '

Bsltm ts Borne M arjorie Leonard has left for

Sacrameato. C alif, a fU r spcadiag the w inter month* In T «in Palls a t the homo of he r parents, Mr. and Mr*, p . B. Leonard.

Leave fo r Meeting Mr. ^ Mrs. Paul Poullgnot, Har-

ry K dson and Dale E unkd will leave S a turday for Portland, Ore., to a ttend th e annual meeting oI the Paelflc Supply company.

Pair JaUedWhen tw o m en were unable to

post 130 fines on Intoxication < ^ e s PVlday they were s ^ t t”

cl!r J .n t a J u d „ o .Pumphrey. T hey are Walter P L < ^ tk a and W illard W. Martin.

W eek.Ea4 In Bdae Mr*. L. a . HiU. 339 TWrd avenue

*pendlnf the week-end in

Alaio Vialten Jir* . A rtie- Bronson and U n .

Owen Jones, Almo, were guests for s e « ra l days this week a t t t e home of Mr. and M n. Charlea E Johnston.

M arriage U e a

G o o d in g S e ts H e a r in g O v e r S c h o o l U n ity

ra iD A T , FEBRUAKT 2 7 , i s a

Last Rites Held For Blaine Hyde

Puneral services for Pfe. Blaine Nelson Hyde were held a t 1:30 p.m. W d V In the LDS Ubem acle with B lili(^ Sherm an Swensen oHlclal- mg.

x u o c n j •semcw wiil t>« held a( ^ p . a Monday a t th e Bethel T ^ e r tu r th in Twin ra il* w th ^ s t o r B. M. David officiating.

Tax Funds Asked In Divorce ActionPae OdTfleUa Bartold wants one-

haU of the WOO Income tax refund HJT. husband expect fo r1M«. accwdlng to the divorce coen- p la ln t which she filed P«day against G abriel Bartold.

In addlUoa, she asks custody of » n , L«WTene«;

the ir household effects which are stored ta BurU nk. Calif., and »100 tn tR th ly fu ro o rt She U willing to walro pn^yaty. including an au to- mcdjlle. which the couple own la

PTA Broadcast•nie J i ^ . S e n l o r PTA will nre-

jCTt the PTA broadcast a t 10 «Tro. ^ t i ^ a y over KTTI. 171# program has been arranged by the drajnaUcs departm ent of the high school u n . der the d lw U o n or Betty Robinson, and will feature a reading by Lois Ann Erickson. ^

. . aiarrlage llcens* w u issued T huraday by the Twin Palls county recorder to William Cooke and Alice H em aade*. both Twin Pall*.

B os Chartered.T h e bus chartered by the local

M ethodist Youth Fellowship Co Uke local ddegates to the sub-dbtrlct rally In Rupert flundsy, win leave from the d iu rch s t aoon.

Ccuaseler Here Elwla A. Kelly, Pocatello, Idaho

aU le employment counselor, cur­ren tly Is visiting the I8 £ 3 oiricei In Tw in Palls and other Magic Val­ley cities.

Bid Opening Bet Bids fo r repair work on the roof

of the county hotn# were to be open­ed Friday aftenioon. according to K enyon Oreen. chalnnan of the Tn'ln Palls board of county commls* slonen .

^O O O D D iO , Peb. « _ A pubUe heartog <n Ooodlag county's reorgaa laU oa plan will be held In

^ to the s u te board for

.45* ^ 7 • “ to the county.The plan calls for two das* - A '

d lslrtels and one class “B" d u tr tc t to the cooaly. T h* two class "A” dU tncta will be located a t Ooodla* t t d WeadelL Currtntly.

t o c lu d e ^ e n a a n . BlUs.

Seen Today

A Q uartet of W «. Xenr-rUi ^ n d le tc n ; M n . Elmo Hansen. IL C. Tolman and O rm us M. Bates sang two selections. An organ and piano duet was played by Mrs. Jny Memll and Mrs. Melvin Culler. Speaker* were John W eia and MlUhell Hunt. Jr. The Invocation was given b> E. M. Guest and th e bcnedlcUon was given by Bishop N. W. Arrington.

PTpwer a ttendan ts were Beverly pederlekson . M ary A nlngton, Bet. ty Arniga, M aurlne Sm ith. Altha Wliltehead, Naomi K lrkman. Elsie Egbert and Marcella Uelder.

Pallbearen were E ira Davidson Roy Arrington. Leo P. Singleton! w llburt J, Roy. Leonard Llnsnaw and Ilay Well*.

MlllUry rlt^s w rrr conducted by th e Twin PnlLi Amerlcfln Legion po-U In Sunset MemorlRl park. Dedl- « t lo n of the grave was made by A. W. Hyde.

JEROME - puneral se rr ta a fo r a r l T . C loatj will be held a t 1-30

^ m r h ta TWta PWls w ith Pastm- B. M. O arld officiating. Burial will U taade ta the Twin Palls ccmeterr. n t o d s n a y call a t the Twin Palls a w t n a r r frcca 1 p. m. Sunday until the ttaae of the funerat

W e a th e rTwin r a lb a n d TM a!ty-.rBrtly

fcmlgW a n d Salanlay.High y n te n la r 51. I«w r .

U w th is m a ra ta c SC. a l « ajB . r

for L in ^ Jean DavU.and Raymond J fT D arts. Infant twins of Mr. and Mr*. Glen A. Davis, wUl be held a t 3 p m . Saturday a t the Sunset Me- m o n a rp a tk with the Rev. Albert B. P a r r tu . pastor of the Methodist chureh. officiating.

BUHL — P u n e n l »ervl«a for S tu b b c t will be

held a t 3 p. m. Saturday In the ^ Methodist church w th the R ^ . O lta P a r rt tt officlaUng. Burial

be made ta the Buhl cemetery.

O O O D IN ^ P U n e n l ser^ice.i for yjy lan LouL-e Dmphcnour will be he.d a t 3 p. m. Sunday a t the ^ o m p so n fu n cn l chapel. Burial W1U be made ta D m wood cemeten-.

OOODINO—P u n e n l ien lces for H ^ G . Jenkins will be held a t • :30 p. m . Saturday a t the Thomo- ^ funeral chapel with the Rev. ^ t o n Moore, pastor of the Chrti- Uan church, olflciatlnt. Burial wlU be ta Elmwood cemetery.

Alxwt two and oe»e-haU Deople ta th e U nited S tates a n crtpplea.

Last Rites Held For Mrs. Kenagy

RUPERT. Feb. O T-Funernl w rv . ^ were held fo r M n. Harriet a K enagy a t 3 p m . Tuesday a t the M ethodist church with the Rev. Jam es R . cron-e conducting the #er\-lcM.

Music for th e services Included wclude and pocUud^ by M n . How­ard Brun.1 a t th e organ and t w vocal duet.'i by M rs. Lloyd Gilmore »nd Mr*, -nieo Schoranan.

^ I b e a r e n w ere H. V. Creason. Willard Shllllngton. Joe Dolan. J. W. Murph>-, J . O. Remsburtr and

f tor th e PEO chapter.m te rm en t was m ade In the Rup.

ert cetnttery.

T r a f f i c F in e sH gW tn l f ic U * vlola ton In Ttrtn

ro lls Thursdaj- pa id Ml in lines.C. H. W illiams paid tl3 on a

speedtag charge a fte r he pleaded Wilt}-. He appeared belore Judge Jame.2 O. Pum phrey. M, u Dowett paid *3 for overtime parking in the ' po.itoffift rone.

The other Mx who paid t l each for o\'erUme park ing are Ivan Gar- nand. I ^ Lincoln. W. R. Cameron.A U Wu-iclitas, D. M. .Mecham and M. Klppennnn.

L E X T H E A T R g

50 Scouters Hold First Aid Meeting

A dem onstnU on in f ln t aid was presented by m em ben of Boy scout troop Cl n t the monthly meeting of W n P a lls db trlc t ScouUeaden ta i h e 'S t . Edward's church hall Thursday n ight.

The 50 Scouters attending -the meeting, a fte r a brief gcnenl ses­sion. split up Into three groups. Dls- tric t e o m ^ ss lo n en m et with Jewll ^ n . d istric t vice president; Scoutm astcn and troop committee- men conferred w ith DlsUlet Com­missioner Lloyd Roberson; and Scout Executive Herbert West con- ,ducted a meeting of Cub leaden.

During th e meeting, a progress' report on th e development of Llght- lool B ar cam p site on the Boise m ver was read by George 8. Scholer. district cam ping chairman.

Job Office Here Has 12 Openings

Opening for 12 Irrlga ton and lortn luinds were li3".ed Friday by A. J . Meeks, manager o f the T*-ln Palls ofllce o f Uie Idaho state em- ploj-ment service.

The job.v pay i n a per month In­cluding hoiLiIng faclllUes for small wnllle*. Meeks said.In addlUon. there are openings

or t«-o farm hands with trailers

Money Stolen in Robbery of Shop

B u i jljo . o l U1 .n lli iu . , t m Main avenue south, owned by Mn. May Janks. U being Invesile- ated by Tw in Palls police. TTio burglary was discovered about 11:13 p. m. T hunday .

Altliough money was reported missing by M n . Janks. Uie amount

not disclosed by police. Entrance - the store w u made by "Jimmy, ing a rea r door.

Enrolls a t University G len H. B uu. son of Mr. and M n.

H. V. B uu . Twta Palls. U enroUed a t Butler unlvenlty, Indianapolis Ind., according to word received here. He Is *tudylng to become a pharm acist.

BUt« MeellogT he Interchurch Laymen’s league

Is scheduled to hold Its annual dta- Her m eell/is a t Q:30 pm . Monday ta the Twin Palls Church of the B rethren. T he meeting wa* post­poned from Feb. 16.

Recclvea Honor Jnck W. Sean , tan of Mr. and

Mrs. Emerson Scan. 317 ElghUi avenue es-« jjecenU y was elected presldenf“of the. Cotnmarclal club a t Modesto Junior college ta Cali­fornia, according to word received here. He Is a fre«hman.

Fenders Damaged Fender damage resulted fro n a

collision Friday n ight between cars driven by M arjorie Driscoll, Jerome, a n d ' Carroll Korschaver, Seattle. Wn.-*.. Tu-ln Fall*•police reported Friday. The nccldent occurred in the 300 block of Addlwa avenue west.

Church Sets Dimmer A special poUuck dinner honoring

..ew members of the American Lutheran church will be held a t 8 ])m. Sunday In Uie church, the Re%-.A, Stanley Christensen, pastor, an­nounced Friday. New members are MarUia K n a p p , Mrs. Margaret H urlbert, Mrs. Edward Stover and Donald Harder.

win ulciuoe naser TutUe and Clover O te k .

MOTben of the reotjanlxaUon board a re J . E. parm er. Goodla*- 5 “ ^ W enddl; DoaiT «ertcksen . T lvim Creek: John Newbrotigh. J r , West Buyser. Bliss; and John W. Jones. Hagerman.

Magazine Agents Pay Fines of $25

KIMBERLY. Peb. IT -T w o men np rese au n g theaudvc* as Twta P ill* high school students working on a magaxtae-selllng c o o ta i »pon- •ored by the Tw ta Palis high K hool wei» ftaed *25 each T hunday by Justice of the Peace Dennis Smith.

The men. D onald Spellmeyer. Van Nuys. C alif, and Allred Adams. Los Angeles. Calif., en*.ered pleas of guilty to charges of ta ten t to m is­represent aad dctraua the publla

Ta-o other arrests were made - 'h u r s d a y . JusUce Sm ith re­ported. Moaroe C . Craaney. leoa f tp la r . Twin Palls, paid a ftoe of »30i0. Including costs, for reckless driving ta Kimberly.

William 0 . Stfw art. Twta Palls, entered a plea of guilty to the charge of speeding 30 miles an hour in a 30-mUe an hour tone betwem Kimberly and Hansen. Stewart was ordered to report a t 10 a. m. Satur­day for sentence.

Mass Celebrated For John Giraud

RUPERT. Peb. 37—Retjulem for Joseph John Giraud was cele- brated a t 10 a jn . Monday a t the St. Nicholas Catholic d iu rch with the R ct. Fa the r O. L. M tHUgolt ofll- da ting .

Pallbearen were Eugene Berard. Marius GUaud. Irene E ynud , Au­gustine G authier. Augustus Talon and Pete Peyron.

A ro iary was red ted a t 7 pas. Sunday a t the Goodman mortuary chapeL Burial was made ta the Rupert cemetery.

M t t - a i a u h iraiftke* b is rounds oo Addlsoo av«. o u e a t an early h o u r .. . T hree glrJi » e « t a t eolorfuJ ear muff* as brisk.

wind blows thrmigb Twin f a l l s . . . New neoa sign going tato place a t h a rd w in store on Mata a w u e n o r th . . . Convertible car w ith transparen t oil d o th covering ^ v a s to p . . . Local Legion mem- beta ge tttag ready for dU trtct con-

. Marian TVasley G ray- beaJ back from honeymooo ta Mexico, . . smaU boy hanging head f i r s t over end of couch ta dentist's o « j c e . . . Woman wrlttag letter w hile she drtaks coffee and ha* a doughnut ta local e a te ry .. . Idaho licenses: 3-T-HOO and 3T-1TOO M n . W. M Houifiu c a S t a T i w lar*e bundles into T-N office

seen: Mrs. ArUe Bronson. Max U oyd. M n . L, H. Haslam. Mrs J ^ Pope. Al Nelson. T ed Jen- n inga and Jerry Wlckland. . . Aad o re rb ea rd : CcorenaUon on street

aa ld?“ -Y es.- “Well, w hat did l ' s a y ? ' " I d e n t know.-

VTSITS MOTHEK3T - Mr. and Mr*.

C harles lU w ley in d son. Ronald.T o tin g Mr*. Hawleya mother.

Mrx. Charles Hawley, ta Eitacada, Ore.

RE A P TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

M ra E Bjomson Dies a t Kimberly

B J o r o .^ ro u u o«m . died a t U:JO

to Idaho ta UOB. She moved to B m - beriy from M oon. I d a , In 19J0.

She 13 JUTTlved by her huJband. a daughter. Mr*. OUv* Meateh. u Center, Wash.; a brother. Erio B u n tad t, Burlay. a a d > aistcr. M n. SofU Burgmaa, Tw ta PUla.

T ^e body t* a t the Reynold* fuaera l hom* pending arrange­ment*.

. DischargesItotoert C, Abahlit, John D. Saylor.

3 Good TheatreShows Klmbcrl;

F R I D A T - “ D E S E R T F U R Y ”Lltbeth Scolt - Jo h n Hodlak - B urt L aa ca s t^

------ S A T U R D A Y --------

S U N D A Y - “ T H E EXILE**Douglas PHrbank*. Jr. - M arla Monte* - Paul# Croset

E t* . DoMS Open 7:15 Mattaee*. Sat. « Son. D oon Open M J

0 . \ K ^ - P u n ^ forO sbura R ^V hlteley will be

hfW a t 3 pm . ^ tu rd a y in the LDS tw e m ad e with BL-Jjop Wllford

^ n Offlcuting. MUitary rites will " f w ^ u c te d by the Amrrlean Le-

Iclon ta th e Oakley cemetery,

FRIDAY . SATURDAYFEBRUARY J7-M '

snow STARTS AT 7;J0

---------W H E N A M E R IC A

/W A S V H N IU R IN 8 FO RTH ,T O N E W F S O N n E R S I . y

I

CtAUDITTt^ HINRY~

COLBERT-FONDA^ M o y O I i v * r ‘ £ddI# Coffin* J®hn CoTOC&w • Don** Bowtloft

S o l p h t A rth u r SW ildi B o U r tlo w tr y S o o t r lm h o f

e*— krJO H H roO .JO*OHTu»yj<««HconnwMmi

- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1948 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

G ro w e r S ees ‘D a r k ’ F u t u r e F o r L iv e s to c k

--------- B K U r-tA K B c n V r P e b .T he miUook tar the Amertcwj Uto- »tock productr In IMS U Bknm r.

T h li « s the m e su se braush t TestCTdar to th e u m u i l c onnnU oa of i b t DU h C»tile uK j B o n e Grow- r n ’ ■MoeUUo a br Ita president, L. C. M ontcom err ol Beber C itr.

M oatcvnery u ld rcceol slum ps la the price of meat, vbUe «t«el prices were cllmbln*. irtU brtn« p« » te r disparlLr btw t«n Uve*tock »nd In- d u jtr it l prices.

Be u i d beef g le e s In U tah ha re dropped from 37 ccnt* p e r pound lire v e lsh t to S cenU p e r pound, aieel prices have Bone u p u per ton—a ad steel Is th e kcrstone for t t t t tn c prie« rate s fo r the Industrial tcooocn; of th e nat4ca.

M o n lp n e ry c o m p l a i n e d tha t (Sttlem en a re under ftre t h b jrear from eooxresslonal committees In- vestlia tins prices. forestr7 and pub­lic domain matters. He «bo was tuLspokpu In his objecUon to criU- elsm of U restoci men by sportsmen and consen'allonbLi.

P. E. MoUln of D cnter. aecrt-Ury or the American NsUonsl Livestock sisocSaUon. spoke In opposlUon to prlcc control and ratlon tns o f m e a t.. He said such measures vould return I bUck m arkets. '

W a lla c e W e lc o m es T a v lo r

Sen. Glen H. Tajler, D , H a , (lefl) who bolted the DemaeraUe p a rtr , li welcomed lolo Wallaee'i third p a rir b j Ilca rr WsUsce him self

- t r i t h t i a t W ashlBittP. D ..CiJNEA-t»«etihoio)

Move to EdenMURTAUOII, Feb, 27 - htt. and

Mrs- Burton lllil have moved to Eden where they will fann.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Noyes and children have moved to N jtu . O re,

where they have purchased a farm .Mr, a n d Mrs. Vlrsll Johnson have

purchased Uie F. M. Egbert ran ch .

Tile flr.it kerosene was distilled from coal shale and hence was called conl oil.

N ew M ex ican W o rk e r P a c t Is A n n o u n c e d

WASHINGTON. fVb. 27 OP) — The XJ. 8 . had published today Its ne* aereement »uh Mexico seiUnc up rules for hiring Meslcan a trl cultural workers In this counlry.

The atreem cnt was slpjed Ir Uexioo City last week.

I t will “provide for the temporary employment of Mexican agricultural workers in the Umted Stales,"

Dnder the agreement, the l___department said. Uiousands of Mexi­can workers brought into the U. B. last year can keep their )oba.

The new accord repUres th e ___th a t went into effect March 10,1047.

U. S. emBlpjrtra who ^Sant to Mexican workers must:

1. Bave a U. 8. emplo>-roent serv­ice statem ent that workers are no t available In this countrr.3. Have a permit from the Im-

mlgration ai;d nsturalliaUon service allowing Uiem to import a specific number of workers.

3. Quadmtee to pay for Uie work­ers' traivioorUllon to Uie Job and back to Mexico.

Ttie agretmenl says llml Mexican workers cannot be wed to replace domcsllc employee It adds th a t the Mexican a-orkers cannot be used to pusli do»-n WBKcs or depress other working conditions. -

Red^Cross Q uota. Is $3,000 in Buhl

B01IL. Feb. 27 -E ed Cross l__palgn quota for Buhl and vlclnlly t h b year h w been set a t M.OOO. w hich Is an>roxLmalely twice the a m oun t sou jh t last year. 0 . n ; Dibble, chairman, has announced.

A total of 113 persom have been nam ed to make personal soUclla- lions in Buhl. Caslleford and sur­rounding srtas. T lielr asslgnmenu an d cam paign literature are to b« m ailed to ihem th is week>«nd and Dibble urges each person to begin Mbcatlon-i .Ntonday. tJie opening day of the week-long'drive,

FARM SOLDUNITY. Feb. 27—Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil WUliams have sold ihelr farm and moved to Burley.

HEXBDBN.. I garei W arner was ti pllal In Burley 1 ment.

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TIMES-NEWS TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

T U C K E R ’S N A T IO N A L

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«i.:>~TJIOUJDAT CO. INC Cn K«rtM Su«n. £aa CUIZ.

i r N T O D N A T I O N S M U S T A C T N O WT ^ e U & iied y i t l o n a s e c n i l ty c o u n c il h u re>

e d T t d t2ie b a ld f a c i a f ro m t h i U . N /a o w n P a ^ es t^ ae T h a t ta , th e c o u n c il h a si r c e r r e d t h e n f o n c a l l ; . A c tu a lly , t b e f a c ta b a v e b e « i p la in a s d a y f ro m tb # t im e w h e n t h e U . K . n n t b e g a n c o n s ld e r ln s t h e p a r t i - tlOQ g! P a le s t in e .

b i s n o v t im e t o a c t . T h e U . N. m t u t h a r e a n l a tc m a U o o a l a r m y o f e n fo rc e m e n t, a n d U s u s i h a r e o n e f a s L I n l e a t h a n th r e e g a a l t a th e B r i t i s h w U l t u r n o r e r I ts P a le s ­t r a e m a n d a te to t h e U . K . A n d w h e n M a y 15 a m r e s . a fo rc e m u s t b e th e r e to ta k e o r e r .

B c ;o re t h a t t h e r e m o s t b e a d e c is io n o n v t i a t c o c B t i le s a r e t o p r o r id e tro o p s ; w h o w ill c o s c a n d th e m : h o w t h e y a r e to be o u tf i t t e d . c ;7 iplies a s d p a id , a n d b y w h o m . T h e n th e y & s s t b e a s s e m b le d a n d t r a in e d a n d tr a n a > p o i te d .

iC h y th e U . N . h a s n o t d ls c u u e d th e n e e d o f e a f o rc e m e n t b e f o r e n o w Is a m y s tO T . D is - c s s s l a a s h o u ld h a r e b e g u n th e d a y I f ^ th e A ra b r o r r n m e o t s g a v e o ffic ia l, e x p lic i t n o t> i r t t h a t th e y w o u ld n o t recogn lxe p a rU tlo n . a a d w o o ld oppo&e I t b y fo rc e o f a rm s .

T lje re a r e c o a s ld e i» t lo n s o f p o lic y a a d p o :m e s b e n e a th t h e s u r fa c e o f t h e m a lo r p s jr e is* a m t n d e to w a r d e n f o r c e m e n t T h is C o r e n u a e n t , l o r e x a m p le , h a s t o t h in k a b o u t

: » c h t h ln c s a s t h e oU t h a t t h e A ra b s seU s x . a a d th e p o s s ib le r e s u l t o f S o v ie t p a r t l c l - p a x io a I n e n f o r c e m e n t . I t m u s t w e ig h th a d e a a a S f o r U f t ln s t h e e m b a r s o on a r m s f o r i h e J e w s a g a in s t t h e o p p o s i t io n to s u c h s h ip - n e a t s b y B r i ta in , v h l c h Is s tU l th e m a n d a - tc c y p o w tr .

B s t th e s e c o n s ld e r& tlo n s . a n d th o se o f o th e r c o s a t i t e a . s e o n t z l r l a l c o rn p a re d to w h a t w ill h a p p e n t o P a l e s t in e a n d th e U . N . i f p a r t i t i o n I t a o t e n fo r c e d . A n d s in c e t h e m a jo i t t j r o f

U . K . m e m b e r n a t i o n s a r e n o t b o th e re d b y th e p r o b le m s t h a t c o n f r o n t th e b ig p o w e n . v h y h a v e n 't s o m e o f t h e m co m e fo rw a rd w i th » c a 3 f o r a e tlo n T

& Is q u i te e r l d e n t w h a t w ill h a p p e n I f n o t h - S a c t s dcm e. I h e J e w s v i l l h a r e a b a d t im e o f I t . e r r a I f t h e y a r e su p p lie d w i th a r m s a f r e r Use B r i t i s h l e a r e . T h e y w ill b e g r e a t ly c c s a u a b e i e d b y a n I n t e r n a t io n a l a rm y o f In- tm d a g A ra b s .

U . N . p r e s t ig e w m r e c e l r e a h e a r y b low . I h e P a le sU n e q u e s t io n f in a l ly f o u n d W ash * f c g to a a a d M oscow l a a g r e e m e n t T h a t w a s c a c o s r a g la g . B u t i f t h e U . N . Is to bow b e ­f o r e i h e C i s t c h a l le n g e o f I ts f i n t - m a j o r d e - c^s ia o . I t m a y c o l la p s e l i k e th e L ea g u e o f K a* S33TIS—o n ly m u c h f a s t e r .

I t s e e m s c e r t a i n t h a t t h e b lu s te r in g A ra b S r o a t w m ld d is so lv e b e fo r e a n y c o n c e r te d 44o t o f p e w e r . B y a K > d e m m il i ta ry s ta n d a r d s , t h e A ra b s ' e q u l j a a e n t Is p i lm l t l r e . T h e i r t h r e a u a a d s a b e r - r a t t l i n g a r e d ir e c te d t o ­w a r d t h e n a t io n s t h a t a r e th e i r b e s t c u s to m -

. R is u n l l t e iy t h a t , l a a sh o w d o w n , th e y w c c ld w a n t t o c u t th e m s e lv e s o f f f ro m th e i r e a i o r s o s r e e o f r e r e n u e .

B s t a n y e n f o r c e m e n t a c t io n m u s t co m e *5 t h e U . N . I f i n d l r l d o a l g o v e rn m e n tsinierTeae, the jjresent suspicions and

am hi:jir.s would Incrtafe. They might sow the se«ds or World w ar m . So there Is only

.eoe choice. The U. N. must a c t and act ^ c J U y .

B k try a . ■ n w a a .‘Zb* Ssc* & Kisv

K. Allta «C CSMbk, ta» * ia »•be cbAlmaa cf aT-so««ttf.bcdse raim fORffrrt , X^s* t o I•utbonty ta k a u v s s b j ■A H m &AS t C t t t i n i r ( i i x M «. _

; ce lb* nalTttaJ csiltKy C tts s c Ihm. ah te itb ts «ai *»~|poncd tor th* u sed ««n i » <gB>l sUttM auBj ae e :^

Reptiticaa tratira «e bcch •o f e » «»piSQi«nsMd by thlj c e t-e » ^Ickitcc th u tSSSsO s a ; - - i n i Ua OOP la iS * 5 * “ P a t a c l a a j mrp-, T 5«y «,b* chv<«! vtu. ^T x c bbcM *ae*u*5ait af is.CA tlecil d e ftiae t i t i t i e rx tU

aOLaTtO!OST-Ar«e b u b m kxsm4 z t e t sUat»Uecl»t weuagtt b a i«=x «»e c ta p u l . Bt

VI* teosb. hswrns. Ssitt te•uch vcapcc* u th* tc c ra «=>S «C5*r n s ^ . tettsen bAt* ea £ » n c a K v n r r tsA lAoa roct* oi tt* «e£»c!;is»i«is’s i ti« xjjrr propoMl. ra bl» cp&JcE. Asiasst oT suncreo«^ ,=«» AfTiiUitraJr Si <0»r irtyx

Oe3*r*l E lK ± o « « t 6»* A i n - , a te d« h r a h e hl»!i2 jh :« i t* , - t p o r »s c>Jrt »urt* t t h A o n for (SAC^SMSS e£ SM X S T b w 4 «n h a

■btlkf thAt UM t a s u s r a e• r e »11U t i » bKfcbee* a t k a j w .

^ U » B a iB b in t a i a caea a.-a baSjtd A U eu K cf hAT. e f C T O jacea a e c b c i <tfbourn t s s i MBA> r i a l i;;: c a th u«U 1 QCtttlCB « 2 ttK S A<*«s»^r xae S t -p u b lk a a s ta tb* n s ? u c = L

p . \E U .u a : n a K T - T b * s a » i * r h «*ort»<l to a i r t i A» oU u tu m r ts* =: h a riJan »p r ^ t r r m » TOt» c a ja« (ScswcTCxa: l a s>Bi n a Ad»ne* ttias « 3 iujCMwd » SaT% S w a f tU » « rd « * « t ^ b o u » A d c y t» lg a « e B g » ; g A j a K a e y .* ^ a f t i « ^of p r a n e ts * w m l } « a ac«v

ThlA AspK t cf AZca ; k> » « a l»• n r t l * C O ? Jk e « y 6 , « c sa * tf « f sa iem ft.crAtle €oe±3cC Tb» b o a * cO k vSilcb b ibM<!a. t i tb* t a S c t e n a a <rt ehi=.5*r.A fi t t thA Appccpctu* e s c c s a w S a s s ts w w a Ably o a AEcr mM scA. a c s s a s t n s v T v aTO »*«xe#peibrocsix{S*riiB«Bi=3B5at«. 'S ^ a jp tn p

itTA t t tb* j r t t a c e a . 5 C » a « e » 3i*5»:»a«cAlratfAT a ad R t e a a d v a a i -tB tn l. A £ m bAs bCccM a2 i s u » « s»5eprocM ot te Ik aB=a«a o! rskstJiTT. B » bM b m b rr t A&3» a 2 r^g a tc a ttiM b« «IT* hl» <mx pceaJiM a a £ j«i-ica U» voHUra to 0003* t» A «bg«43«&. r r a a C s t e Ja a CAisiaa. » b « a b* « a t tSA S:a2a a c a » * te c «2• s tb b o n m m a s t i x ic s : *Us vIlL

r a n ) A T. FEBBDA BT r . M «

HOW TH IN G S A P P E A R TEOM

P E G L E R ’S A N G L E

6 0 G tZ N SAT8 S cat P o t» :

b«AdUn« sa ;a : T tir - lor Bo!U HU P tn y . CaaIj L ot WlU) W AlUwBld.-

T«t Sen. T ^ J o f dtm U U ly aaji tn V »r« coatAlocd ta th« aeeount t h « In d l to t iMTt tb* Dcmocrac pArt; - I t Jtfl hliol

Who nu k ta th e heAdUnet. any' *W . T V io r or the T -N edUon? TAJ-Ior. o l eowM. So UU Uie T-N bdjv to <put bu ttin f In.

D« W itt (BlAine oounlj)

WEONO CALCNDAIt t)M r Pot ShoU:

T?« tomm en opinion U u t Oeorie WtiiU.’ CtOD r u bom on Peb. » u e n toM ui: he vAi bom on reb . U. OrtAt B n u in And tu eolonlM did &ot Adept Uie OrecoflAa CAlendar on ta Sept. 3. t ; u . A t th a t time thw * WM An error of 11 daya.

My calendAr dated I T l i *ho»i S o f t e r ba i on]; IB daj-i. e«pu

P o i Oreec^^a calredAT wa*

f w r r r C o s r iM A ie J j r tJ* lUp«&acAa p m aate gAl ^wrT^1Ar^^l 3 sU » 5 i» a a r « t A a t i * tbAt A Sk'A A K m S C O * S t » ^ctfteet the poBtlCAJ i a t e « s c f a«c . S s b tn X T V t o r OhJa, m ja tb * ooiy Q O ^ cA.«tfV>»t stS j.tAzy t n r n fn c , Bw oo i t s s i s c Sayu^C ia a « t&» nica eecnatiaw ts Btsv CUms* i Srs*a eC O^a. v h o lA Abo Tkft'A e aa sA te i 3»= a ic t7 ^ :n ~ eoD T t& tte ZACA. 8R«SI tcCc^x A te . »> grorti m r r A m oet b a c w a»gcM r«=A aa t e a jQ a a . h t o M oWooiy b* *«BttSAi te ttj* T « saafflJAsy a tJ>* Rn»6QcAa.<a3ei£ai*« j s a t f - p i s a t nthis KTAT* COnaBO. fi vsitS KCCK be v v osl « Atep W iai tb* SA ttr a s : a r c » i i A S:«:«-.tei « 3 » p o r t toe BA nld K. BSAam SarCiaaBSae <XUaprtiBAry. tfce M Sew ea » A «e«* eSrocAie <C CUT.

The r a a k A sa ta » oC ta * a a e s S e : ^ lu i*thA t t l » ttem ber &ce& gSnaia « a c n c a d« t h lA b» . tiro s SR15*. c6 s= ei A2d • a a a a o «sipa««a to m in ta ry T5«y =i.'« Ar*sa to 5* pUa<do o ^ ^ e jlp c e >a lb* pRM rtK -j*

dra>c» » r r t n t r s s : a aa crenifaUnc c r t r tb e e iA S a e s » ^hr:r Uu>hero—TtAstoa JX Beca»»*C2-.i: OrTTcrwO rAlIlAi w hich the OcBOcma r tv d i j j r .jSAftvi a c t th e e o u a s r .

t : th r t» »sy e«i;«i«. * ; JT ® 5?- > c ty ipea-bfttrtWT. they bAv* see b R a n 5«su>-ctAtle CAactsAl he*ar.2»:»cx. & *a.-o. a a ;= Jc « .v > a thAt sfi*« Cf th* « tc » 5»c ras* i£ to T a T r tth e p « i a s d tTTWssfier t i u S i ^ t ^ a s a a is the aun w mas; elKS » i.~

planted tn meat of Europe In 18B3 Asd a t tha t um e there -raa an er­ror «! 10 d a j i : the e rro r now !a o w II d»T». (Feb. 11. 1732. wa* m d a j) .

C L . B. ^ (n ic h lia d . Wa»h.)

T^ie O mce Oldster u y i m en re- •e a t ronien when they hA»-* the (ace to chanse th r lr mtnd b u t n o t when th t ; h*(Y A mind to c hanse ih ttr tact.

MAN SnORTAGB D eu l>ot(T;

l e t Be thank W onderin ' Hubby a ad Niwcocntr (T) from Ooodlnj te r Asnrvrlnc my plea.

W* U rt about » mile* Jixaa Mooatatn Home up In th a moun- taOit. We hare lo u of doffa. pine t n « and mow. bu t no dog calchen , poUccaea or judffM.

Df«d yonnt. ta ll And hAnd- s ta taea up here w ho a r t more

a te m te d In younf. cute slrU than & cold mlnlngll

Tm iic r tn la ff MAld (Pine)

ANT Bt.CE.K lTD U TTEN B T Dear Pot Shott:

r w heart th a t you m ay be Able ta help me In ftndlnc a blue>ered. AhltA bnc-halred k ltlen . I am 13 y » . oJd. TtxJay my dog tiiA t Pve had atnt* a baby. died. So m y jjom m e o b ed m t a k itten b u t I don't know where to rind one. O yea: I t h u to be a tommy.

CU yloa B eaar (Rt. 1. BuhU

FAMOUS LAST U N E . . . W ham t (« t n y wife for

btrW rthday .GENTLEMAN IN TUE

F O im T H BOW

B O B H O P E

V I E W S O F O T H E R Sc A U x x s c c t x c r o * *c Ci WJSAS t i» »m-4,Ts SiSTT »«

Ssatis 6> t i * <vcs2ssct; ' . i i t l y

H E L P F O R C R I P P L E D C H IL D R E NThere are so many “drives" of one kind or

• h other th a t it 's only natural for the public to qatsUaa w hether a ll of these eA tnpaipr.^ S x reads are really necessary.

The Idaho Society fo r Crippled Children, t a c s r way of thinking, is one organization

, tSatSsdsSig a worthwhCe Job, When i t starts S3 e ic h a annual drive fo r funds next Sun-

pJiiposB win be to help the 3.144 crtppled children In th e state.

Tb pnjTide money fo r better, care, more » ^ a e s s aad greater <ro>0 Ttunitles for these cSjS^ed c ia d rea cf oars, th e socle^ Is mail- iag TS.OM leueis and sheets of Easter seals to th e peccile of Idaho, asking tha t they buy aa d rse these seals a t Eastertide.• The sa a e y raised by th is method is used fo r h a ^ ta lla U o a , special InstrucUon and = * iisa l aa d surgical care of Idaho's crippled y=c=«s:eTS. aad the sale o! Easter seals Is ^ caly source cf funds for this commend- *hle purpose.

The Idaho sodety Is a non-profit organ- ^ of citizens throughout the

aad Its wtJTk Is administered oa an area feasss hy local trustees. In whom the public s a y 5 1 aee e r e i y o s n ^ e n c e .

H adgcarters of the organbaUon are main- <ilrecUon of Bar-

E P etosoa. executive secretary, and C T r t T ^ l a r c f T w i n R m s is t h e trustee in

e t Twta Fans county.■ - I h e a a a e ty is a,s>7nK no set^jxmonnt as a

^ * = ™ O O B ir to T h e w rifare of Idaho's crto- M t i t i a r t a . T hat is le ft up to

can toward the ^ aecessa iy acUvlty.

a o pressure to th is f n*,% te a t t t t a i j » n Jnorem eat In erery respect,

w e s e v t e b e l ie v e t n s o c h

Tt e d e S a n s a e c a e d s l a k e e p in g i r o m u p r o o t in g T e n a b le t o p

t t a a b e c a n c o n c c n t r a t e o n th e d u b

:e a wU: be b w a lS s *js» <as.-c> v-: r t e r s t - ta * o ta c e x cctae a d e s s w t a a a i xaerjil^ ra te -.t . SaiATt y r a :^ son i wSi> t ia y *?»• s rsT rrw tjrsU ^ jr

to ICe & tb» “s » » 5J» iS - x-c- a>»BATT. a s A CARer e r » c5«»2i S i c a a ccfTillAa em p lcysec l. p r t a ie J a r r Uw r s ihb e e a w cow they c a a f s rc y if isv * Vbra- e r a

T h e h lsb c r pay. * a i « i a r iratC JU Js-mU ltary aertic* ar* t ; ka ireac « :c ^ oc bcOrt!:^ hlsbXy! ;» :» ! . a c^ ia^ ao l . savSane r a . t s ta p re p A T a tlix ira rS M d sra w a r^ . T 5 a awA=a ih a i tti* ATBicd f« t* a casscA dspecd b c c r a s a c » t r a a e r a s a H it. bu t seed taaeC stna ? s te » a c i «=ia = s i t e r them v u h c tr::a3; ets^C^ecv S o = » the A Tsed a e r r l r t i h a te w r t c a ^ i 5 t ? s j- a s i i > a e « f its , t a cccapcuac ts r s e e & a t f ,ta S a ted Wa«e asiI t j »a. |All th * be tter tec t i e ie e i= ;a . : ^

T h e AT3 ed x n icea K * s » ^laect? > » y tfa tm fo r B ilaats ta peacecare- W5ioa jvtc i-v * A t» ja a a la t u s l lo n a herea rtef you t e w a a j Sx « c o p e n , . ♦ e r b e « « a la s a s e a ;* - . Ct t i a hae^ T jis « i3 kasw J thA t h la pay a a d reCreeaair * r r 5 » s r r th a a ♦thoeee r^noB id riZ aaa . T d s S a te «» :=a:Ji srasaa t o b e p s ^ c < th * ;e a c e C a e S s « e » A » - c C a » W '.S B e 1 forte*. T here are. c4 e e n e i. * u s ? r» -*a2«» rr.tJ .. JA ad s o t t e th 2 « f ik » » s « f f c e a c C S » « i r e A ?SK *=ti ♦A re b e tas re> c te tf A ssasaJ**.—T a e C re s ra a a a . J

---------------------------------- ^T S S SSAIAX t s X CV S

itSEiocs « r <a«eaa»5y a» c A e c t «:R asa laa occupied taiaJa a a i t2» » c ri4 j ia js i- s ie i t U ta k e s foe e ra a a < thaS cc* « C : -3s U ia S ^SiNT' tw i ty outers.

B a t m hea a a A s e r c a s . ^ a s w a jicaoa002 eg cp tcan is c f : « .3«tJTO cTtea ^ ^ th a t ts a o c et ^ rrg Zt bardry r t e r b a jg ee a .

Tet It lust hss baw«c*4.0» S ta rr SSei- «=»i5s I ate ot Bsttaz^. 5Dt\ baa r«a.'tsu»£ C, S. tiaeralup I to llte th* U» o; a Oeraaa «ia Oernaattiaa At WleahAdec. I

Th* taoUTe aeeias to be th* l.<tr « * eC '< :» wvU," with Kbeii ac«s9 to ttJA A=«n=»a c.*y3»eaii5itacoesSatecl. Set wtASetee i£* waaca ^ * a a laArkAhi*.—iCaapA P%t* Fnsx

I*aithed Lot Angelea recently wtlcotaed a a Ind laa nOn m aker . . CileT Tcxha] of th a W asco tribe, w^io wa» nowa he re lo taidtle“ the d r o s h u The chleTa m aiden name

w as p r o b a b l y f K a l n t n t h e [pace."

T he chief wax prelty confident atx)ui m aking It ra in . . . He wore galoshes.I He did A ten- j i A t l o n a l r a i n Idanee for over ithree hours and .all he wound up V lth was water oa the knee.

T^te r>t« thing we know A rthur iiicTAy wia be gtvlng a ctmrae In TAa.tt»kmc.

T^se chlcf even ^ent up imokeslcaalt to a ^ for r a i n ___but somew » Cwy f t a plane used I t to spell

•trKige perfonaance. In Hew of profeaslanal and ethical pte-

'M, lo th e ir recent eonr»i» of the report o f ^ death In Ind ia of Prof. N i c h o l a i Roerich. U la Ju it u well they did.It U time to un - maak anyway.

Roerich waA a palnler of dehat> able distinction.He aUo was A tourist of AJlatlc p tru . If not. Ah explorer. T here U w - t w - i 9^ no doubt th a t he either dabbled or seriously enftged In the furtive and mysterloui pol­itics of the f a r east, th a t he w u ptnon* grstA In M okow under the communisu And th a t some of his American devotee* went nuU for. a while and re ta rded him u Ood almighty.

Among them waa Louis L. Korch, mysierioua fellow himself, with

only a very aketchy and uneonvlnc* Int biography In the pencnne! rec­ords In W aahlngton where he » u placed In Im portant Jobs with l«o jeoartm enu, agriculture ind com.' Tierce, by H enry Wallace.

Horch waa a trader In foreign rxch&nge. Some of his old co- rtllglonlsU In Uie Rocrlch cull the Jou-hou»A on Riverside drl*e

V York, have aald tha t he infatuated w ith Rocrlch—TIxy

d a pleasanter term, denoting dolatry or adoration—tha t he usm

and author-

I t U undeniable and undrnled tlmt Henry Wnllncc. a cabinet mem­ber with acceu to deeply confldcn' Ual knoKledga of m atters affecting foreign commerce and exchsnge. alto associated with this crazy con* grcM o l tools aad eharpea.

Wallace also admired Roerleh. W hether h li odm lratlon was sane or Iznbecllic, like the queer neuroses of m tny others In th e circle, ve do QQl accurately know.

We can say w ith kuuranee that Wallace w u . At best, silly In some of hU relations w ith Roerlcli. as when he Importuned this Russian to go traipsing over the Gobi and other fa r pa rts ostensibly In srareh of grass seed a t the expense of tht American taxpayen .

Roerich waa a c itlren of Ruuls, and thus a Soviet subject, and Mas- MW would not have let him go gall- rsntlng unless the kremlin v u con- ridrnt th a t he was a loyal bolshcTlk.

He and actne of hU dlsclplts 'led on A Queer, ptg-lstlnftujue discussion About a project to mskc Roerleh " le A d e r " or •'miister,'" whether d lcU tor. king or ulis i wi do not know, o f Manchuria. They referred to MAnehurla oa "Kanias" la th il r correspondence.

,b t wrote tbem .auencc, lo MDii cate*. OAy In­

dicate virtuous disdain, but tn thl« caae It doeA n o t Wallace li deeply topUcaUd by documealAiy endeoce already to h and , “n ie fUes of the d ip a r t s c a ta o f agrleulture Aod wmmeree h av e been combed of em- ba n « aJa g And tUiltlfylng recordi, but U WAS d o n s loo late.

T he proof of Wallace^ relatloni with R oerich and Boreh got out be­fore W allace w as put on guard. Therefore denUla in th li case are u n te d . Indeed requested, so tha t tha t ru th m ay be presented to the cltliens concemlxig a faker mas- queradlng aa a prophet with Inti­mations of holiness as a candidate for th e office of President

Tha New Y ork Tlmea flaunU a slogan "All th e news that's fit to print” bu t. In Its casual farewell to Roerich, w as guUcy of omitting prlnlAble And Important Infotma- lion.

The Tim es sa id nothing about Wallace’s Implication In Uie Rocrlch nuthoiue o r b is deeper guilt in fi­nancing th is faker from Moscow with American public funds and handing him American government credentials fo r his wanderings.

The Tim es takes it upon Itw lf to decide th a t th e public shall be kept In the dark about this weird and. It may be. om inous relationship t>e> tween a m en now running for Presi­dent. end Roerich.

fn th e f irs t test a t the polls. Wal­lace won a victory In a congreasional db trlc t of New York which U more R ujilan th a n American, on a pro- RusAlan and generally nntl-Amerl- can platform . T lie pro-Russlan and entl.A m erlcan character of thla and othsr d istric ts of New York will be denied now.

But w ithin two years coats will be off and the issue of nationalism and pstrloUsm Against ccnmunlsm and trea.wn will be openly contended In print and on th e radio in the United SUtes. ' I

In Another initance. the Ttmee^

A Sunday poUtkAl blogniH eaiy WaUaca by Cabell Pi.....* b o was recotameaded ta an tntro- ditctory box AS AO AothorUy, .who bAd "c^KrTed U r. WallAce:! CAteer At cloM raag i for the last U yeart.''

Any xeporter who h sd ‘'obterred* WallacA for 13 yean m ust hare tcArned of h li strAnge relAtlons with Roerlcb Aod of the idlotlo letters

a po-UUCAl Isnia by H arry Hopkins. £d n y irn And the late ChArle> M i l l ­ion tn the IMO r«mp«lgn

The Authenticity was le ft open to doubt by MlcbelKm, but this meant th a t til l possibility o f .th e lr being TAlId m ust enter th e r*ckoalng. If WAllAce did Write thoM letter*, no American Toter-]tmaUc« being dU> qualified—would Tote for him for Any office beciuse obvloualy th t au< tb o r of th a t writing w u UuanA

The Herald T «buae had »n op­portunity lo buy tbcH letters u CAmpAlgn material ta IMO when W allKe w u running for rice presi­den t under Roosevelt. T he Herald Tribune turned th a n down. Ho«' ever, the Herald Tribune made tn. dependent inqulrlee Into Roerich'i character, political acUvlty and wandering! Almost 30 yeara ago.

TtiU WAS even before Wallace be­came secretary of agriculture under Roo#e«lt tn IP13. However. WaUace. already, a t the time of thU Herald Tribune survey, was frequenting Roerich's templea and seances.

James Ninlfle made the study, _ thorough Job down to then, but necessarily Inconclusive because the more absurd and dangerous develop­ments had not occurred or come to light.

W ith all this InformaUon on hand and with more knowledge avallabls

the Herald Tribune neverthe- determined Uiat th e people

have no right to know anyUilng •bout Wallace which their “poUey- mAkers" decide to withhold.

The Influcncea which are so scandalously apparent a t the Herald

Book. *lC a«loa to U o k o v - v r e t* - T40AWW. j « a . 30. IMT. Oifiser la the eTentof fo r tb a oewspapermea A ^ . . ^ . . w t» e * -* t- th e tmbAAjy. m wlTM a re a ttncU ve And ftne typea. <Damo decent of the old ro o it« . eh») Mr*. j o e - B a r i i taT pm sed us -very much. She li «ulet

reserved b u t b u veiT deftalte opinions Aad U res up to thw^ which . b an-A w fuI-lot tbeee daya. She la much n w re rad ical th a n her bus-

I am Informed. I t w u good fun to g e t them golag on RiusIa.I t was qu ite Apparent tha t the Joe BAraes Are a stu ra l rAdlCAls."

Joe BAmcB Is t£ e present forelm editor o f th e H ersld Tribun*.

M n . Joe B arnes, wbocn Davies found -m u ch more radical than her bu iband ,' w hich, to use Davlee' p h ru e . Is An-awfuMot, formerly w u th e wife o f PTederlck Vander­bilt Pleld.

Field is now a b associate of Corlis Lsmont in th e pubilcaUon of »ome IS C om m unist party-line union papers in New York. She h u had a lot of mileAge herself tn the re- voluUonAry poUtlcAl areas and Dav­ies' estim ate o f h e r poUtlci Is con- servsUve.

The H erald Tribune formerly w u Republican ne«'spaper. You guess -

which p a rty 's Une it favor* now.

BACK HOME ALBION. Feb. 27 -V . E. Newman

has returned home after spending lereral days in Idaho rails.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSlo n c e roB ri;nucA T ioK o r tb k

TIME APPOINTED ro tt FHOV. iNR wiuu rrrc.S TOK PHOIlATTi COURT Or TWIN rAU.S COUNTT. STATK OK 10*110.

IN T Jli UATTKIl o r THE ESTATE Or LEVH3 E. QIUJS, DECCAnr.D.

) «a order of i»U Court ib»4# i( >Vlinitr7. l*te. noUc*.It TuaJir. ll» Blh i4r.t T « o'

_____JrfI Ux CItr e{ Twin

. . . ..1# r»Ili. hu ^• Um# piM for pret-

•foe JTarles, In his taeffably silly

».W ^ r .A . t tha Courlhouat I 'tlk. County < ' ~roolt.Ud u lh« ............ ...— .....If Ut WlU or «>ld l*w^ E. nibba, i f

r«u<4. and for hutln< teplktUan of CKtriM D. mix] C. a Wlllun {or lb> btiiaur* l» Ihrm of U ttm T«U.

D4tal frb ru irr :o.t Ih* ua«.

■■wary 8AU10V.Uirtli i . 1X1.

I t would be a n a dftUon if-Keni> Wallace woitld deny any of this or deny h is association with Roerich. Horch and other* in the cult. He would contribute to the pubUo understanding of hU chsr- Acter and h is honesty If he would take lome notice of the slieaf ot Idiotic letters addressed to Roerich and others in a hand indlsUngulsh- able from his on-n in Ute ej'e of

expcrta, if only to deny that

e c t m c o K t J<*a."AH this win h a re An eXfcct on the

CaWomla w ta tber irport-v Prom raw oa they 'wUl-TJrobably read *THr and warmer, followed by Chief Itah a J ."

Xaw 1 know w hat they do on a r*tay a lght m Rio . . . go dancing.

t a cm t kaow w hy the Cham ber ed Caesaerce w ent to all th e trouble ttf cAlIlag Chief T uxhal w hen aU tbey hAd to do w u get O ary Cooper

m c h up and Up over a cloud.

aUCTiONS.Watch this column dally for sews of UAglo> VaUey** farm auction* and for the date their listings wl'l appear ta the Tlmes-Newt. Check their ads for locctlon aod all neceisaiT inform aU oa

MARCH 1Ed. A. ^ ^ ^ rr

Advertisement. Feb. 2a OKar R laas. Anclleneer

MARCH 1n . J . D ItUr

/A dreH lsem ent, Feb. 27-M Hellent^eck A HeUenbeck, Aocts.

MAR*CH 5Another Cemmtmlty U achlaery Aaetion

Buhl. Idaho Hopklm A H arm on, AactA

MARCH 5Lea OUon

Advertisement, M arch J-4 Holden A Ilelden, Aactioneen

S f C U R I I Y

' A l t , t a x p e e r s r a t i TP tr gtBtraanna a ^Ca» baa bms c3!:c <st «r?

w iie tbcr A s a a 'k t e : a t bta ^ ^» » » - e r ^ * x h t CAKfirala. A astS a 3aKbR-'3t£DSa& Ats..

a so tth -«W bAby itt a CA=-casCBi by * (fljc w5iD* «K ydanced la a algbi claftL T5» fcaSjr x*» ta f is M i ' T ^ m o t e sAlii tb a : a£» cw M « rg iU -y . ^

^ d o c aBjwwS « s :n s » :» cska- ss» 3 « :« s : 'S J * Saab « A sDOd WAS* dec a a s »a* 5»55t,-

a » 5 = ^ * s a t tV

OTAfA^teJat to l w .g y e C C ia K . ss* <JtC AiSWiJa lO Ta m tnpoaili2» tisaa Ow

-Caaipal*a elgsLSA A» ■«BBx v t e d e n t a s * iSYca j.

S a v in g s a t w o r k h e r e a re l o a n e d t o

h o m e o w n e rs a n d a re b a c k e d b y o n e o f t h e

s o u n d e s t t y p e s o f s e c u r i t y ic n o w n :. . f irs t

m o r tg a g e s o n s e le c te d : ■ T e s id e n t ia l p r o p e r t y .

F ir s t F e d e r a l Sa v i n g s & L o a n A s s o c i a t i o n

I OFTWINFALLSJ 513 Sknsbmie St. N orth Twin M is , Idaho Phone SSS

Yes! MR. FARMER!Were ready

T O S E R V E Y O U A S U S U A L

W I T H O U R R E L I A B L E

FARM DELIVERYFOR ALL YOUR NEEDS IN GOOD QUALITY

G A S - O I L - G R E A S El b thoae who have no t used our special farm «cr%1ce. we u k a chance

to prove to you why so many fanner* end conslructlon crews i using It.

To our old customer* of seasons pa.’it, we're ready usual with our wme dependable route service

. . . J u s t phone Ml.

Lion Brand OILSARKANSAS MOTOR OILS

GA$Our gti:ioUne Is high quality and ideal for any and a ll uses. Yea we have spcclal trac tor f u tiv \ alsa \ S

JUSTPHONE

551NOW!

Get lined o u t on our regular route service a t the s ta r t of th e scaion.

00 well know n by many of you are thcje line qunlity oils tha t all w* need aay Is , . . THE Q U A Liry W T H E 8AME and the PRICES A R E RIGHT. You saw It dem onstrated for years a t the Filer fair. I f a proven bet-

G R E A S E SFor every machine or every Job. We have 'em all. Bulk or regular. L ight or dark pressure , . . Cup . . . Bearing . . . Axle , . . T rans­mission . . . Track roller,, etc.

OCT OUR PRICES NOW. — ‘

L E T U S T A K E A L L Y O U R O I L W O R R I E S

, . W'^. - Stecalize in Farm Delivery Servirp.YOU WILL FIND OUn PRODUCTS UNEXCELLED

DEE PACE SALESON THE ROAD TO THE HOSPITAL IN TWIN FALLS

FRIDAT, FEBRUARY 2T. 1948 TIMES-NEWS TWIN PALLS, IDAHO

L e sso n S e e n I n G )m m u n is t

G zech “C o u p ”B r JJO. ROBEBTS. JB

A T Ferdcn A ftiln A iu ljtt ‘Hie tn v tU throusb w h i c h

CceehotlorUcU U golns n u j o o t prove esUxel; tn n l n U I t senres to conrlace the r tcu Jn lng free coun-

. tries iQ Europe th a t you c * n t do hu iln eu w ith comni\inlitii.

F lnluul nuT be « gooe eooee. B ut P n n c e end ItAlr can itlU win th e Tight ap i n i t tolAUtkrUnlim U th ^ p MclalijU le&n> th e lesson of Prague;

Trench ItAUan communists are no t strong enough to iCitge coups without soclalUt. support. Neither were the Czech communists. B ut th e r ha re been getting socialist sup­port In a ll three countries In a reaction from the extreme rlghtlsm Inflicted on them during the war.

Blgbtista ro r te Help French liberals gcneroJJy wem

to have d iscom vd (or themselves th a t totalltarlanlsnj ts totaU tartao- Ism. no m atter whether you call I t communist or faocUt. But the re ­birth of the ejtrem e righ t under new auspices In Prance since the w tr has given the communists a large body of liberal support.

In X tj^ , by combining with the communists, the extreme socialist le ft has been able to exercise a force which now sertotaly endani life of the govemmenL

J l t te n Sams aa Burope today b auffertng from a

eas« of Jitters quite comporable to those of 10 years ago. T here Is a note of despair, almost of resigna­tion. as the people ask "can history repeat Itself so soon?”

The three-power sta tem ent de- plortng the Ciech developments, ad­dressed to thin a ir, Is remindful of the atmosphere then . The sUuatloo In Czecboelorakla Is not much dif­feren t from th a t In Vienna on March 11,1M ^ of which ChanceUor Schuschnigg said;

‘■We have yielded to brute force •laee we a re oo t prepared In Uits terrible situation to shed blood.“

I c e S c u lp tu re : M a n V e rsu s N a t u r e '

I l'a th a t Uai« of year wbea campBS gronp* a t Dartzsootb eollere, OansTcr.'N. IL. coopeta for top basor* In lee K tsltsring a t the ir an* noal winter eamlvaL One of the coU landlnj e n tr ia thU year U the m aasin aUtoe caUed "W inter’s Entrance.*’ left. abev«. designed by Alfred G ra n s , of Lewes. D el I t's also th a t time of year wben metber na tore tries her band a t th e art. A good example Is Ibe f m e n (ouataln. right. In Delroll’a ETcnreen cemetery, wbleb locka like • g iant Christ* mas tree.

H o u se D e s ir e s f o r ‘T r a in lo a d ’ O f F ig u i’e s S u d d e n ly D ro p p e d

By FETCB EOSON WASinNO’TON, (N E A )-T hU b

the story of the world’s largest order lor congressional red U pe. and w hat happened afteru'ords. I t Is Intended for filing with Speaker Joe M arlin’s

> l l e c t l o

U. P. Orders 100 Passenger Cars

LAfl VEOAS, Wev., Feb. 27 (UJO— O . F. Ashby, president of th e Union Pacific railroad, today announced here the railroad h u placed orders fo r 80 new cliair cars and 50 new

k a ll room sleeping cars oC lightweight " construction.

Total oost, he said, would be about • IJ ,000.000.

’The Pullman Standard .Car Manu­facturing company of Chicago has been awarded the chair e a r con­trac t and the sleeping c a n will be bu ilt by Budd company of Phila­delphia.

Aahby said delivery Is scheduled for late IMS.

beUttllhg congress tor s< of the d u things they d o n and ribbing t h e m K '^ » * i for I t In a n l c c P •-

BEMODELS WENDELL, Feb. r f - T h e Wen­

dell Cash grocer)- has completed a remodeling Job. T he store is oper-

.a t«d by Maurice Johnson and Stan­ley namsey.

E s t a l t e T V a n s f e r e

Dill 7>ion*- CMUrioH.

A. C.

|-» I 11. Nnm.nR hnrr. ll.MO. Lot SI Illk I

D«*li Miud. I. Collli.1 IJM, Lot 4 D:k t Trrrif* . . . . . . .

U*RUm Dlihov Slinn In ChrktI.nJ ' l i !T^ ***' **

I W :‘ W. H. Wrltht to Ja, H, n ,,n i,r . tIO. I^'s I t and 3* Itik 11 niu« AdrtlUon WmI.

I W l Fred W. IU»J. AUmln. of All,«l Utllrif. d«.. to Jokn K. lUhn. II,OSS. IM li S JoiiM Addllloti.

Dm I i Coato.XiUins tG .»rs«,.M

IW l: Oitrlra ... n. Jor«. II. Lot t SuMliUknn.

D»«di OorJon tt. C*n>tnt*r. -• -

r m . Ji” • C«rp«it»r to Gordnn

of Amm<IM Gmn‘*

Addition,I. ]{. lUmi;?.

FBtL 31 Ewtll to K>i

Id 11 Ulk I

li Ct». i. I. •Siatritt VallfTTitu.Th« Orrfon UorUx* Co, Lid.

J4 16 u ”*'

CormtUm datdl 0-- ' '• ------ --win C. Roo«r. II. pTt.n-1 Sahdl.Ulon. Lot l:

FED. 24^ Dm<1 i rraok Jtm o Cntla . ^t e a . - " • “ ‘

Dart I Uu A. CraUian to 3. A. CUir. Croti.™ aqWi'ruiii

Oaadi r*ul Rehnili lo Paul S^kiull W U St E H N t WHHE s 1 t i “ S m e:

I t 14 IS; traturrr ct wairr rlibt Wjllard Z. TaaUr la Cllttort 8.

^ '*• •» « KImWrlr.J '- ^

dwJtoH. ■ ‘ » O'■a,i?**^‘ to Clao P. PaUTMtt.

>l Lei 1 Illk I Ttin»ar-« AdllUen. •

o.S ’""wuil*a D. Craota to L an Dow

ll? ^ m t,soil>.r Oe, taI M i rin t Nat. Ilk. at

Co, lo H n l N»lL Bk. ar

• 5 | j ? S 'S K ,E A ”'f T l , ' ; '

aekaarar'to Hmtr KnUp. U«: NWNW I4.1«.»| SWKW I t ” M . Job. B. 8ehM(«T to .am. aaia* pnpartr.

/«!>» t Seb*af«. b Eat ctI ITm m n __ ' __-. . .SchMJar. D .^ to .nrM flluS!

way.L ast December,!

when aid to Bu-| rope was the blgl Uiue, the house! passed a resolu-'Uon calling on th e petcr secretanr of com­merce lo furnish certain data t - tJ. S . exports. O rlslnally, a s dreamed up by Rep. K arl E. M undt. R.. 8. D.. the resolution called for a lis t of all exports to Soviet Russia since Jan. 1 ,1947. w ith names of producers and exports and value of shipments.

T his was a large order In Itself. But when the M undt resoluUon got before the house Interstate and foreign commerce committee, members decided I t wasn’t enough. So they broadened It to cover U. S. trade n lih the whole world.

So It was rew ritten to order Sec­retary or Commerto Harrlm an to fu m b h the committee w ith complete tnfonnatlon on a ll slxlpmcnt of heavy machinery, farm ImplemenU, railroad equipment, m otor’ tehlclcs. coal, petrvleum, baUdlng materials, metals, meats, grains, "and oUier m aterials «hlch m ight endanger the naUonal defense." TTiat m ight be ■100 or more critical Items.

Complete details of names ol firms and individuals In the U. S. making such sales were demanded. And. os If th a t a-asn't enough, they asked for all Information ai-allable

"uninied orders." I t was un­questionably the moat staggering de­mand ever p u t on any government agcncy by congrcss. B u t It was |ias.’«d In about two minutes.

W hen It came to filling tlie order, the departm ent of commerce boys were rocked on th e ir hersls. A check ahowed that. In th e first 10 months of 1M7. there had been some three million shlppera’ export declara­tions filed on th e m aterials for which congreaa wanted Its facts. The only trouble was th a t they were mixed in Indlacrlmlnatclj- with three mlUlon e th er export declara- Uons on vhlcli congre didn’t w ant any facts.

The first Job would have been to sort out the th ree mlUloa piece* of paper they w anted to tabulate from the three mlUlon they didn’t want to tabulate. They esUmated the cost a t $200,000.

Of course, all th e aix mUllon ex­port declarations m ight have been sent up to the committee to look over In Its spare time. B ut th a t would have re<julred a truck train reaching from the commerce build­ing all the way up Cotutltutlon nue to capltol hill.

The data on names of original producers or m anufacturers was In most eases no t arallable. O rdinarily, the shippers filing the export de­clarations are merely agents, or freight forwarders or foreign gor- em m ent trading monopolies like the Russian outfit, Amtor*. To run down the m anufacturer!. I t would be nec­essary to canvas* th e sh lppen who filed th e .three mUllon export de- claraUoni, Just to find the names of

estimated 30,000 to <0,000 original producen.

There Is a legal question of whether the govcnunent has the right to pry Into private business In this way. Republicans used to bawl o u t the new dealers for all Uie forms they required business to fin dUt. Now times seem to be changing.

There Is th e sligh t m atter of. cost. To have done the whole Job, the way congrtsss called for, would have cost an estimated 600.000 and would take from three to six months If proper summ aries were made a fter the d a u were In.

In the end, the committee IntersUtc and foreign commerce got a big bale of m aterial about three feel high, which Is now stack­ed up In Uie committee roomi walling for somebody to come along and evaluate It.

U. S . foreign trade su ih t lc s . . . compiled by th e census bureau. The figures are p u t on Ubulatlon shceU about the size of a nenlor admin­istrator’s f lat-top desk. ’Trade sta­tistics for 1047 nil more than 1,700 of these sheets. To give congress the dato It wanted on these exports. It was neces,«iry to go through such sheets and underline Uie figures Id which congrcss said It teres ted.

for appropriating tSOO.OOO and autliorlzlng th e peeping lom suney orlRlnally called for. I t has appir- enUy been decided to le t the matter drop and so save red laces.

Service Resumed At Burley Airport

BURLSY. Feb. J7—Regular pass­enger and m all service by the H n - plre Air lines was resumed a t the Burley a irp o rt Tuesday, W ayne K ennedy, m anager of the airport, has announced.

Service »-as dLicontlnued la st week because of the rough con­dition of th e field. Last week an airliner sank through the black-top dressing on one of the parking areas and was s tu c k for scvenJ hours.

nOLLISTER VISITORS HOLLISTER. Feb. 37-M rs. Cal-

vln H arris and Mrs. I ln Hardy, Me- a m . Nevn arrived by bus recently lo visit the ir sister, Jlrs. Esther Wlbon. who Is IIL

3 t o 4 D A Y

SERVICEon

Faclory Aulhorized

PENREPAIRS

BEING I T TO Coronet Jeweler* The Jewel Box

M att * Vic's Jewelry Roberta Jewelry SterUn* Jewelry

Twin Falls Jewelry Perrlne Pharmacy

Sav«Mor D rag . Troltoger’*

W alpw en'i W iley D rug

IDAHO PEN SERVICE

IN BOISE FAIRFIELD. Peb. 37-M r. and

Mrs. M annlo Shaw were In Boise re ­cently to visit Mrs. Shaw’a mother, and to take the ir daughter home with them.

M o n e y t o L o a n• Fnm i Loans• City Resident Loans• City Buslneu Dldg. Loans• No Appraisal Fee• No Commls-ilons• Low In terest Rates

J . E . W H I T EAGENCY

139 Main East Fbene S«7

B a s e b a ll T o s s e d 'T h r o u g h S ide O f H is N ew H o m e A n g e rs V e tBy HA&MAN W. NtCaOLS

WABHINaTON, Feb. 37 (UJ5 Most of the fellows who fought and W£9 th e war for you have a roQf over tnblr. beads a t last.

B u t the roof h u liblea la I t I t leaks. Not only tha t** the plMtfr Is dribbling down on Johnny’a crib In chunks H ie floors let In a! couple of Inches' of daylight a t the baseboards. T h e window sills are warped. The base* m ent admits a gu&h of w a t e r when I t rains.

One O I wToto in to say he pu t up 110,000 for a new house.. A month later his 8-year-oId male heir w u out In the yard mak­ing like Bob Feller. The kid wound up and let one go down the middle. A second later, his mom was startled to aee a basebaU crash through the side of the house and roll under the davenport In the living room. The thack was th a t poorly bulltl

Late In 1044, the Veterans of For­eign W an conducted a sur^'ey among B.ooo of l u posta. I t reported th a t seven per cen t of the soldiers and

aallora of dlaastcr No. n wer« Urlag In attlca, which U nreU If yoQ Uka atUcs.

Fifty per cen t had neither a pri- vat« bath no r a refrigerator. Thlrty- llTo per cen t had mother-ln-Uw miseries — living th e folka.

■nie VPW fe ta fan mall the sackful today. All o f I t tndJeates th a t the a ltuatlou Is getting worse Instead of be tter. Movies bar* been made to point up the crisis. Mac* ailne article* h a re been published, o r a have w ritten lo the ir congrcaa* men. Coogresa ha* fiddled » llh bills. N othing happens.

The VPW a le tu r s say some pretty nasty things, mostly about eon- tractors who charge a fright for poor material, loosely glued together. A l» some uncomplimentary r e n a r k s about landlord*.

Bdward J . P lyna, a guy

City w u oaa m x c A oaerred la m < u m a and o tb e om fo ruh la b I i m B* w u rea-

•ooably happy in an attic. But ha'a belDC e rk te d . T be war booilt nn lt h a ahared w ith other OI** ia three*«tor7 apartm ent boUdln«.

I t h a s b e es returned lo the woisa w ho ow ned i t . b a aald. l U i lady w ants to kldc erezybody out. She. aara Sd, w anta tb e ground floor for herself, th a second for her * a i and tb e th ird fo r a - o l t t t w itb u tb ffl»

h u to Bra >1 » M ill____U*> t a r M hO R t and » i t m K d to o o t . '•

SAWYER’S BABBBCDS Open 7 D tjs a W«ek •KB UADC ATS. WWr KOW PEATDBira A

MBOHAHTB LAtOB FOR ONLY 46e

C O R R E C T F 1 T T 1 N 6 IS n i P O R T A M T !

M any people a re not get* tiny th e full use of their truss, because it was not p roperly fllted, and Is un* cxjmfortabla to wear. Here. A kroa-tralned technicians a a m e yon of eorrect fit­tin g a n d comfort.

PRIVATE FTITING RCMJMLADI ATTEOTANT for w eaaa

(!SAV-MOR DRUGOFFOStTB O R p a n m T C E A T n I

SIMPLE NIOMT.TIME P U N RELIEVES THOUSANDS

• OfTmiiro eoujb due to cold*, uaok- ing? G«t tliii pre*criptjoa-tjT>e fonnoli of provHi eouRh-rtlief In tr^im ts Ioo| utol by docton. Quicic, Igpg-Iullnglief9iiapottaat«ra}'i:! • l»«itkr»*IIIUU

2 . *««th*i raw, lrrlt«l*4 ntBltraBM3 . H*lrtlM»t«phUs«

tTIU ONLTM^

*& -__

O n t h e S u n n y S i d e . . . by W o o db ur

"Sboulda been here this m orning, m a’am . We had banaoasl'*-

Life ba* It* nnhappy moments—a n d tb e th o o fb t ef moving Is not always pleasant. Bat moving, cra ting or a ten g e Is aor bsslness. So let us U ke over yoar ’’headacbe"! W e are certain yooll behappy w ith onr d

Ford Transfer £. Storage Co.• M O V IN G a a r t „ c r fo r d . M 0.W 4T• T R A N S F E R P.O.BOX 675 PHONE Z Z 7• S T O R A G E 217 W dll S \.. Tw in F^llt. \d»ho

RADIATORS E R V I C E

C!eaa*out, Boll-out, Flush and Rod-out. Repair and Beoore. New. Radlatort. Expert work, satlafac* tlaa cuaranteedi

The Radiator Shop

n ou n ce m e n t. ^B o b R ee se M o t o r C o m p a n y

t a k e s p le a s u r e In a n n o u n c in g

tke a ppo intm en t o ^M R . E A R L E V I E R C K

A S S E R V I C E M A N A G E R

S ir. V Ic rc k Is a f a c t o r y t rd n D c T a n t f ~ th o r o u s h ly c a p a b le B c rv lce . te c h n ic ia n . . . s c h o o le d to «avo y o u tn o n o y b y c o r ­r e c t ly d la jrn o s in g m e c h a n ic a l d e fe c ta . C o n s u l t h im a b o u t y o u r B c rric e p ro b le m s .

Bob Rees^ Motor Company■ DODGE _ . 1S3 Third Avenue North .■ PLYMOUT

I $1.25 CREOMULSION . $1.08 $1.50 AMPHOJEL . . . $1.29 60c ALKA SELTZER . . . 49c 60c Murine Eye Wash . . 49c 75c BAYER ASPIRIN . . 59c

jj^$2.25 RDX Tablets . . .$1.98 i j 75c ANACIN TABLETS . 59c

»$1.00 ADLER-l-KA______79c

WHITE OWL CIGARS

VA N D TCBCIGARS

$152 SIZE ..........8 9 *6 0 « SIZE.........5 3 *

K E G U LA B t u g ElM O BPECIAL

NIGHT CREAM .....BEQDLAB 12.00 CBEBAMT

SKIN CREAM .........

..JNow $1.50

...Now $1.00B S a in .A B HJO BABOASA OOtJLD 8FZCIAL

NIGHT CREAM .......... Now $t.SOBEG DLAIt Ilf l'ro L IE Tn t U A R Q U n T S

NAD, POUSH (close-ont) ...30c

SPECIAL ^ PRICE SALE REAU CAKE MAKE-UP

w ith BsH l.la Bpeiii* Ccnupmrlijicnt

w a s $1.50.......................Now 75c

New Larre SUe I -T Iracixed

. YE A ST T ablets, 150’s ....$1.58Abbott-*

\ VITA-KAPS, lOO’s ..........$2.9<Liny**

M U LTI^BRIN , lOO’s ....$4.86W beatm bt B Camples

TABLETS, 75’s ................$1.89'Upjohn UNICAPS, lOO’s $2.96 Wheatamln T ab lets, ......$2J5Sqnlbb’s ADEX ,250’s ....$249

Filin Develoiriiig127-120-116 Fllni Printed fa

S ^ z F lS I Z E 45cPerRoUrExtra Repriit(k.5e A Complete Stock e f t n A m r n .

S A V - M O R D R UOPPOSTTE ORPOTDM

T r a i l l U n io n ’s P e a c e B id N o “F o rg iv e n e s s ”

PAGE sqc

CLrVELAND. Fctk 77 (Xy-JL T. W U tcc r^ PM t * tth P ra ld cn tT ram in , M s a n ^ - c s e a r o( th* m a n l l m d «M k». w u t m u rlac* oi pncUoU poUUc* u d not of loTt KwJ l onflm teaa.

WhlCtuT. le a d rr of th« Brother- hood of R a ilroad TTalctnen. « i ao •ro o x d In ‘M « h r a Ur. TrucaAa dtnouDced h im «sd vn c k ed th« r»U f t i l to th a t b e a C td th« PtkI- dcct 4 '‘poUUeal acadna.*

Rc ih rea te n rd to tpead mtlhocis to beat h t n In •♦! Bat h« quIcUt

’ r e tn a t« l frecn th * t raeiUoa is '4T. C eU Dccbiaa

n ts *up(>on o f U r. *num an-«r. to b« ttchn leal. hU wpport of Ike Octnoerstlc p a r t j—li a dfcUlca fasMd on hia s lar-np of the ca'Jccu] political &ltuaUoa.

Here arc twn incldecU th a ; U-Jo* H*ht oo th e thlnkln* ol Whlus^y and b b bro therbeod:

1. When th is r r l l t r rtx& arM duiinc a s iBlCTTte* "jou .rectr.Ux came out fo r “IVMmM lor re-«>c* Uon." \T hltney aharp lj dtnled IC

He ih m u l d : **I OTLt out acalzut a third p a rtr . I 'm not a -co la ' to commit pollttcal iuicldr. I »aJd I b t l l n td the liberals c t th ii counlrr o iu h i co t to ccsiunit pollUeal tuU ride. I M id t h r r ought to ccstrr the ir tffo rta w lih la the Dexuocratle. party and sup p o rt the DeraocraUc. candidate."

D U Uactloa D rava Thus W tiltn rr < lm a dbtiiKllon

betaretn luppo rtlng Uie p a r t j and supportlnK U r . Trum an prruxiall;• eren ih o u jh U r . T nanan icfroj « tu t to be th e DctnocraUe candl- dale).

2. o rriria ls o f 'the brotherhood directed th e rvporter A a lieniion to an cdllorlal t ^ t appeared la st Juljr 38 In W hltaey"! nevjpaper. T r a in - taea N ew ." T h e r »»id It U th e be« aU teo en t o f th e brotherhood's .L ttt t o n n t M r. T n m u c chac h as bees issued.

Th* s ta tig n m t la ja the brt>Uirr- hood* fa ith in M r. T nim aa - sh au e tw l' l a IM « and;

~Ko m a tte r v t ia t Te m ; aow. v e c anno t c ra te or retract the h u r t and hamUlBtlon of M ar.W« r e re a lav -ab ld lnc o rsa n la - Uon. as w« ar« no » . but v rre treated a s crlm lnala and trafton."

D r i v e r G e f e $ 1 2 5

F o r D a m a g e S u i tA jndcB cn t o f tU S was a m d e d

a A. J e a n la o . 201 Elm e a te t. Tbursdsy by « JmUee co tat jn tr fo r allevt^ dam ac«« to his auteacK bH# la • traffic acdden l la st Oct. a .

Jennlnss v a a su inc va id s . T v la r a i l s , (or C U J 9 for OamacflB to tb« Ttblcit allecKUr r t .c d re d In th e a c d d e c t a t F te r th street and Second a rrau e vest. Ed­va rds v a s d rlT lns an auto « h k h Rpoctcdlj s tr tic k ih a Jennlncs ma­chine.

T he case w as b e ard b? Jtolic* of th e F e u e JaXMs O . Pnm phttr. Ai- U n m v e re E arl E. Walker ter Josalnc* a n d R a jb o m and R a j-

. bora for Edw ards.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS» T * T t 0.

tXASTD.NecW ta W vbr s in * kr t&« «i

-•4 C m to r «r ib« E>tau «r A•n »OM%t a»Ttas tlmlmt »olMt Vii i r m il. t» «xkMt Um vltk m m . «u

ite n m iwWiMltBa l&b M nU £ x n ts r a t tW %tTin

Allan«7 ia t On Ca*e<rMiUty N4lfaul B*bk KaUl CH7 •{ T*la Cottntr •<at«u at U»l». tHk M a«tm tk« tnauctlM • ( U» kota

b t i t a t t AA«tt r . a*a»v. i y»k. T ,^ tt. m t . im .

'.'TOTtCS TO M P n g x Tk. tte l. r«ehM t»c A tm \ *0!. r»ehM t»c Ar«M « _ _

"* o m « ^ bm> :k . ? a t»tf. m ». h r ,

r On*t\- ; t HisS. IB<et «r riMte Wsrk^ Bsm a •

te «in b* ^ ___

J-* w ’TZSSS» SUU PurkMlnsM Uw ,^k> U rt i« t «

TIMES-NEWS TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PRTOAT. FEBRUARY 27, 194*

H e a l t h C h i e f

r» rt7-Ttar-«ld O r. L e w r e - A. S«l»e«l«. «f F a r i W am c. to d , a ssb tsn t tarftO B fc m r a j e f Uu V. 8. pobUc b e a llh aerrlc*. was B ased b r r r a l d e a t T ram aa le Mceted Dr. T hom as r a i r a a as pobUc health s w i eo tt f tn c n l « b « i Ih t latler^i t e m a t •» ]« • czplrva In April. Dr. 5eb««le U alM dlrrctor a f th e N aU assl eaa- e rr laiU tatc.

F arm D e v ic e s A n d T i-a c to rs R u n n in g W ild

By A RTllVB EDSON WASHINOTOK. Feb. 37 (T) -

■n» tiaetora and farm c q u l^n e a t of this nsilon ar» n in n ln s wild.

Concitsu learned today th a t wheat eocnblnes h a te thow n up In Florida.

Com picker* h a v f c irp t la comleas Alabama hlUs.

Treny tractor? h a re been spoUed 1 U»e northwest, w herf an jth ln s

less ihsj] a flr»-p]ow >ob is Jooteil ' pon as a nm L

Pr«t>l«D r » r dHo* ctfce?Tlist's w hst a hou.'c public works

lubcommlttee w ants to know. I t U peertns Into the so-called gray m ar­ket In farm e^ulpcaeuL O r. to ouoie Chairman Macy. R . N. Y.;

■We want to know wliy a Urmer has to pay « . 0 0 0 fo r a trac to r which h»i a ILit p rlre of a rru n d tlXOO.

J . C. Dtion of M rw phls tried to h r l^

He .-aid he d id a 53.000,000 bo.M' eM last y r ir . helping tractora Itnd

their way home.P ick m in .\lab am a

T ike com pickers. H e so t ___pickers from th e hlUs of Alsbwna.

■Do they r a l» any com down tliere? ' asked the c tx n a it te t 'j »eL John T . M. ReddSn.

“Not much." ia ld Dtxon."Well, do they h a te any t

sm plckeia?- ■No." ;ald DUon.Same with eocnblnes. He foxind

two braad new ones th e other dsy.

T w in F a l k R a d io S c h e d u le sK U X

(U«* KILOCTCLES)

«HI •U str D*tti Tr«* 0«ka «T Pa^acahti t t Slncla' BaaT.»« •TU sw nrf TO* •Otaaplm R»(| Call l;««*CUWu. ru k u• iM •»(«»« pif«» .« U Toar TSl 1S:M Kfvv

1».«} MuW TUt Clkka II >M Tr«Mr M tnli

iaTVtOAT « « » a ro u i«tiU h f . . a>4 Uarktta t M Onrk BlUa Tilt CkKk Wa«««l!U PetVa PartT I -M EfU« CoaUr «:M *AkkotVC<au!la

1^ •H.OcpaUUa O prn

«:C» Jaa«aa Skiaa l i l t la Taor Naia*

Tj» Mr. MaloaaTrtilf iiM 'Takoa CkalWas*

«:«0 H uM t JIowiewB 10i«« Hrw% l«!»4 *SlfT*e« Orrh.11 ;>* ‘rn d tr Htnia 1 1 « •C«»r t OKk.

K V M V( I t u K1L0CXCLE6)

TilO •UrarattWa PkaM (iM 8M«a*4« Ta roaI>1( 'H n rr J.'Tarler

Klmktrlr ~

«r<« Valter r*na Jegrul7i«0 Waura Itear7H» •p^irtk.l ^ r d n t i im rraak llnglnrwar;;y s s s t 'v i iM 'i rf i l l i>p*.B<i>oci aiodr »!>« •AiTtourt Paradf tiU *A4>nturt Parana #.■*4 *A<lT»T.Uif* Pirad* Oil« Ildi b»ti:iu Dm liM •Leacb»i< at Sanilt liM J«nai« Fattr liU j0oa< Panr

ItiM 'TogUi ;rn;lMal<a ■* -••> EchM e/ Car »0'»

I *HcC>l>I«r Slfton

W P«ac« OKb««tra >» •Tlx Loni Wolf M Mule (i

. . . >Ko» Merali. Orck. =?? “ “ *• :ta ‘U. s. Ktrr:M TXlifkt MKlllaUoai .M Tmi ct r*lM

K T F I - A M - F M( m i KILO.M .7 BBQ)

sKBOnUDAT

Blaa Bama liU w uw r Wo>4«>U»4 Tieo iPwpla A n raau; tM Cbapal la tk« Bkr1 1« CutalB Call

lita iCas y<Hi T « Tkli lrt» zEiarr T.llw

BATVROAT iWorl4 N n t |taaa<sp

I iii la k h a r t u«k«n liU lUfla ValWr Asri. ti l l Onakfaal UlUan I >10 OotlsM* Uaa'i U. lt«0 iCkarlla U u J<W mallla* U U^BBtlJ

iDiM r r *

J2iU Koon Kava i iM aOrcbaatra ef HatloM

4ilt alUIUloa la Oia Kavi 4iM aNOC armj>imj S:U xCanalB Xlaa (:04 IlliM Danvn • li t SIcnttM n tiUim «iM Wlnwr WasdnUB4 TiM UlJt Tarsaa 7iM aJnlr Caaoi'a S i» xKar Krtn SiH anraad 01* 0«rT »lOd >Llf« iJ niirr ttia iTnjlh. Conisquracaa

10 ICO iK«»> EunmarT 10;tl xN rn

W a t e r M e t e r e a t

B u h l t o G o I n t o

E f f e c t o n M o n d a yBUHL, r tb . 71 - W a te r melOT

In Buhl « m te r tad fo r th e f i n t time U ccday ta d bins, based on the retdlD(s. will b« «cnt otit th e flxtt of A pril

A ltnouih all of the m elcia baT« be ta installed ta d the m e ter *T»- t«m. which replaete the f la t ta le lyttem . U ready fcr operattoa. the cliy c«tmcU h u not yet docldedupoa the raU to be ‘ ---------nimers.

la a lengthy tessloa Tuesday. UM oouaell dlscasied rates bu t post­poned tcUoQ until W ednesday In order to confer again w ith W. N. Orooms, eoaiulU af toglneer. Ko decision was reached a t (hat m eet- In f bu t offlelaU expect to have a rsta schedule established by a ez t week.

l l t s tr e a t nujorlty o f sha rk s est other fUhej. but some feed chiefly

a minute organUms la the s«a.

Radio ServiceCUABANTCZD LOW COST

P ro ap i PIck-Bp - rbone t t H

Anderson-Fairbank

7H Mala Aresua West

NAMED M U O A T E S BOISE, reb . n (ffV-8ea. B e s ir

O. D wwihak. a. Ida, and a*p. Ab# Ootf, I t . Id a , today were named Idaho delet*tca to th e a a a u tl m eetlnc of the Amcncaa Academy o( PoUtleal and Sodal

looklns mighty lonciome In Perrj', Fla. He helped to arrange a deal send them to C anuis.

■How did they get to H orlds?" ■It's beyond me." said Dixon.

Use of Cigarettes Up 100 P e r Cent

WASHINGTON. Feb. 27 tUJO- C lcm tU smoking am ong Americans Increased about 100 per cent dur­ing World war I I , the treasury esti­mated today.

The Increase was about tlie some In World war I. th e treasury ssid I a study of tobacco taxes,The report said Americana In

l»tS imoked m 036.100.000 clga- t«uc» -ebou t 3J34 for eacli man. woman and child. In IB15 belora

•3 war I brought th e eljarelte Its own. the average per caplU

connitnption was only about 160. The treasury .-Jild th e Increase In

ilgsrtlte consimipUon between tJie wo wars wa* attrlbuU blo In p»rl o the growth of smoking amons comen.

Cow KilledOOODINO. Feb. 27—Mrs. Ardtlla

Wclch. driving south of Wendell early Wednc.vlay. h it and killed a cow. the Ooodlng county ahertff’s office retw rkd Tliursdoy. Ap;>roxl- mately t 20 damage was caused to Mrs. Welch's car, offtclals said.

n;kw 10 a . ; r r

MINIDOKAErmaat W. I

> m,1 M a. Ike

• laflaa kmI *»»la: .bMt

Transfer Okayed For KLIX Stock

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (-IV-The communications commission today w id Pcntreis H. K uhn , presldtnt of the Soiiihero Idaho Droadcaatlng Television company, of Tw in PalU. Ida., could transfer S3.000 shares of stock to J . Robb Brady T ruit cwtipeny. Idaho FaUs. Ida., for *23,.■w.

The block of, slock represents _ 50 per cent Interest In th e company, which operates sUUon KLIX Twin Falls.

Jndls. Ceylon and th e Nether­lands Ea-M Indies produce about » percent o f th e w orld's export tea.

W A L L T I L E

LINOLEUM ASPHALT TILE

"Specializing In Floor Coverings’'

G . & G . F L O O R Sa s AddlKD Wf*l PbDOe t004M

A rr a n g a wlib ua Jor Ibis .100% liquid lilllDg aarrlca ,Bow. Il-a lb* croswar lo bo» to gal lha work don« faitar. CeodyaoT Solullon 100 In- ctaotaa any trad e r lira al. flelancy — lacraaaaa grip. Uaeana alip. Call ua lodcry-

*peedRanch-Way Chick Starter from the &IC *pOlAt f

T h a t’* r ig h t , f o r • good s ta r t In life ,' h i r e RA N C H W A Y C H IC K ST A R T E R ready the m inute y o u r b a b y chick* a rr iv e . W ith R A N C H WAY'S w w , t t u a m U tu i C H IC K STA RTER ' PROGRAM , y o u can b e lu re th a t you r chick* a re je t t in g tU the ne ce isa ry n u tr itio n a l e lem enu they need fo r ra p id g ro w th , *ound, healthy bodies.

fallaw Iki (ampUre kaiNfc-Wey p»»ltry jire frea

•• : E - W H. . .- T».ii

COMMUNITYSALE

^RICHFIELD, roAHO

Monday, Mar., 1Sale Starts 1:00 p. M.

THE FOLLOWING tFEMS WILL BE SOLD;MMiejr.HirTh tm lor

and mower, (new Feb,1 M 8 )

Farmall rtcolar tractor.on robber

John Deere combine McCormick 7 ft. binder 2-wiy tractor single

bottom plow

McCormick 12-hole grain drill

Superior {rain drill Horse mover Spring tooth harrow 8 ft. a in ^ dijic Bean phnter Bein coIliTator Doe potato hiUer%. ^ ---- r r -z. _ s/oc potato nu

N ^ - T - B i w e t ------ P o U to d i s f w

McCormick spod eoltiT*. tor

26 in. Bear Cat chop-

Tator 1928 CbeTTolet car 1W« Ford car Many other items too

nomcroQs to nentioa.

L & B S A L E S & S E R V IC ER I C H F IE L D . ID A H O

J O E D U F F E K . A w tio o e e r

P U B U C S A L EAs I am quitting farminff, I will sell the following described property located 3' South of East Five Points on the Airport road on

MONDAY, MARCH 1stSTARTING 12:30 P. M.

MACHINERY1937 C h e v r o le t t r u c k , 1 ‘ i to n , e x t r a good

)

H International tractor, extra condi­tion

H a n c^ plow. 18 inch .Spad cnltimtor ^ r for bean oilUvalor Hanff-on harrows for tractor Tandem disc. 7-foot International International field ctiUiTator. 7 foet S-se«tion MoUne harrov, extra 2 section

barNew Ideal raanore spreader _Internationa] lO-foot rakt Spring tooth harrow TicklerJohn Deere 6-foot combine OIiTcr 6-foot mower, on rubber Olirer 26-Inch ipnd diner 2 MoUne bean and beet coltiTaters Self bean cotter, extra blades Moline bean and beet planter, extra shoes Hoover one-row spad planter Cast side delimv rake

• S f o n n a a - t o m i n t a r -----------Set of Self corrogatora 2 two-section Case harrows, new .7-foot tandem tractor dbc. Oliver Moline bean planter Machinerj’ trailer

Land lereler Walking plow Several old wasons John Deere field culliTator

LIVESTOCKJersej- cow. 5 jrears old. milkin;; 3 Vi pal. Jersey cow, 6 years old. freshen soon Jer^y cow, jp;^. freshens soon Team horses, smooth month

HOUSEHOLD GOODSWestinRhoase combination coal ran«eFlorence 2-bumer parlor heaterBuffetTwin beds3 Rood mattressesI^bleatKi diain

MISCELLANEOUSIntenutiona) miUns machine DeLav^ cream separatorHeaT>- tvpit.l$5xIS6 inches _____Spool heavy barb wire' Cyclone weeder Derrick 8TaK>lc hay fork Garden drill Grindstone E^tform scales Locnst fcnce pests Poplar logs Set harness and coIlar?i Shorebs forks and smalMools

TE R M S : C A S H

B. J. DITTER, Owner- HoUenbeck ft HoDenbeck. wlQctiQRten-

C h i ld c r a f t * S h o e s4 4 9

OTIIEitS 3.98 — 5.50

Enater shoca for fflrla an3 boya I Bright patents in styles for sprinff. Good lookinK brown oxfords — sturdy — lonff wearing. Brown and white saddles with red rubber soles. Priccd righ t for your fam ­ily budget.

•Rej. U. a. Pat. Off. .

S m a r t — D re ssy

BROWN OXFORDS S« -12 3.98 12'/i - 3 4.49plain toe broirti oxXord. Sturdy n««U(e so lef — iiisde for v ta r .

8>/>-12 3.98 121/2-3 4.49

Scufl-TIp

BROWN OXFORDS

121/2 - 3 4.98■ boja ' iculr-up b r o w n

CTjords. Smut cut — m ide to fit.

AT 1110t

,'I ( >11 V < ' ' \ 1 1 1 11 \ t 1 1 N W H \ 1 W 1 M \ 1 m l

J I L M J

PRIDAT, rEBRUART 27. 1948 TIMES-NEWS TWIN FALLS. IDAHO Face sevbh

M e y e rs ’ A id e T e lls P l a n to B e a t P r o b e r s

WASHDJOTOK. reh. 37 O AB - Blerlol H. U n a m . “tfu u aa jr p r til- dent ci k w tr c aa tn cU n c n r a *et up by U t] . .o ta . B r id c u e . M rjrm . UtUned loda r Um Bcnenl u rfttl him to cover u p H t j e a ' proflU by elttn inc ho tost tb e moor}- a t -n e e tn c k i and b o o k su k tr s . '

■Hie te n en a coached him '•« ? . m l'* times o a th a ito ry ha v u to t«n a n a ta I n rc s t l t a to ^ L am am told • federal ccpurt ^ 117.

“Meytra tokj m a th a t I w u to n y tha t the l a n e aalaiy I had n > ctlTtd I had w u te d a t racetracks u d bootinakcra."* L aznam f

THcd e a I»dBc«»enU • The teneral la triad on charjea of indudns L am arre to Us t<T»en- ate J n m t lc a to n abou t th« leneral’a f laacdal deallRsa-

U m a n a ha« te iU ned th a t aj- though he vaa Usted as rettUig as much a i ISIJKO ansuaU y from the ATlatloa ESectrlc corporaUon of Vaadalla. th e m ost he r e c e l i^ w alljhtly o te r MXXX) a year. The m t he w ld h e “kicked back" to Meyer>.

Meyen, now reU red. the air forees' No. 3 prociirem tn t officer durlnc the war.

Talks Two Day*Lam airt, a allm t>lond young man

of U , t ^ a n ta lk ing In court yuier* day about h is dealing wlUi th e gen­eral. He was stUl talking today.

In h h testim ony th u s far. he has attempted to &lio>:

1. T h it H e y e n made about a tlU.OOO profit during th e war through kickbacks from the aalir lts

F o o d P ic tu r e — T h e n a n d N ow

if Lamarre and o the rs In AvlBectric corporatlod. V andalla, 0 ,

1 T hat Meyers se t up th e cor» poratlon and go t I t contracts through his a ir lo r te conUcts.

S. T hat when th e corporation « dhsolTcd. L am arre wa.« supposed le t mOOO. In stead U went Into a company Meyers se t up to buy goremment bonds on margin.

Guatemala Seeks U.N. Intervention

- GUATEMALA City. Feb. 27 O iK - Quatemala p rotested today to the United Nations, th e Pan-Ameriean union and to ever? American coun­try IndlTldually against Brltain 'i sending a fleet to British honduras. A foreign offleo spokesman charged

W B rlta ln 'i action was designed to Intimidate'* O uatem al*.Brltlih chargcs th a t Ouatrmala

was InciUns Irresponsible elem rnu In Bnush Itondu ras against Britain were protested by th e foreign mln- litfy as offenslre to th is countr>*.

A separate p ro tes t w as being pre­pared for delivery to tha BrltUh IrgaUon.

HLM UNION RAPPED WASHINGTON. Feb. 27 (UJD-A

self-confessed form er communist said today he w ithdrew his union from Hollywood's striking Conler- enea of Studio U nlona becausa too many people In th a t organisation ‘'supported tha CocnmunUt p u ty Urn.-'-

Graph sheiri the mareroent ef wholesale fa«d pHeei In, the ptriod from 1918 Is ibe pm enL Tbe tap afte r World irar I was |5 J 0 on Js ly 31. 1916. From thrro It fell to SZ.6S on May 26. m i . a drop of SOr.. From the h lih in 1029 to the low Id 19S> tbe detllne amoanted to The eo rrtn l decline, which begana fte r J tn . 13 when tbo Index let its record high a t tlJ tt , has amoonted so f a r to 7rc. The Index rtpresenta the sam toUl of the prlre per pound of tbe foUowlng 31 food eoramodltlea: floon; whral, com, rye. oats, barlej, beef. ham. lard, ba iler, cheese, logar, coffce. codon seed oil. tea, cocoa, brant, peanuts, eggs, po ta­toes. peas, rice, molasses, ralilni, eurranta, pranea, steers, hogs. mlOc and lambs. INEA iciepbotol

C o a l P e o p l e T h i n k o f S e t t i j i g

M i n e s A b l a z e , B o y l e L e a r n s

DOTLI

MOVING ALBION. Feb. 2 7 -M r. and Mrs.

Mel Taylor and fam ily, are morlng to a ranch near He>bum . F o r the

“ irM years they h sra beta g the J . B. C hatbura

By UAL DO>XrWILKES-BAHRE. Pa.. Feb. 37 (/T)

—The roal people are thinking of selling their mines on fire.

In the past they spent million* of dollars fighting accidental flrci. Now they think there may be big profits In seUlng the mines afire

^ purpose.I t sounds rsny,

but It's a real Iblllly. The

big Q u e s t io n Is whether the fires 1 an be controlled D get w hst they rani — Rss from rhleh they can

. . l a k e »}T»thellc fuels.

Wild fire# have ;en a costly problem hers In the

Wyoming valley, heart of the na­tion's concentrsled hard coal fields, since 1873.

More than a decade ago It was e.^llmated th a t In th is valley area alone lUJWOWO had been spent fighting underground fires.

EUll burning Is the famous lied Ash fire, a sublermncsn <00-scro blstc bordtrlng "Giant's Despair.' sleep curved rood where 40 years ago 30JOO people used to w w d to watch Ralph ae Palma and Barney Oldfteld In annual hill climb

In IBM a miner's lamp se to overhead timbers In the Red A:ih mine. Since thrn some four million tons of hlnhgrsde coal have up In sulphurous smoke

;ontrollsble bl.ize.^ a t represents almost much anthrsclle as has been

duced In the Unitedyears. And the smoke aUll UD from Uie Iona-deserted

becomc the cheapest way to produce synthesis gas—from which can be made gasoline, diesel oil, aJrohol, waxes, medicines and oUier pro­ducts.

"Mining Is th e big expense a t present." ho said. "If the coal can be gikulfled wlUiout mining It, we can obtain tlie synthesis gas a t low cosU-

T h tre Is sUll anolher advanuge to burning the coal in the mines, but Johnson didn't mention it.

Nobody has to haul out the allies.

Buhl Chamber to Hear Sen. Deal

BUHL. Feb. 37—State Sen. Edson Deal. Canyon county. MU be guest speaker a t the annual Chsmber of Commerce dinner a t 7 p.m. Monday. Ous Averttt, chairman of the pro­gram committee, h is announced.

T hree directors will be elected a t the dinner. Nominees Include F rank Flint. Robert Aiken, Elon Pearson, Bum ard Albertson. Robert Coad and R. M. Mclntlr*. One director will bs elected for three years while iho other two will bo elected for two-year terms.

Thomas Sm ith. Olen Buekendorf. Olen W yatt and Edward Manning are the holdover directors.

U. S. Death Rate Records Decline

WASHINOTON, Feb. 37 tUJO-The nation 's death rate per 1.000 popula­tion dropped from 10.8 in ll>«3 to an even 10 In IMfl. th# office ' vIU l statistics reported today.

All but six aUles shared In the general decline. These were Florida. Idaho. Mlsflulppl, New Mexico, South D.ikoia and Ihe D istrict of Columbia.

U tah had ihe lowest I9tO death ra le with 7J. Moni;ina, New Hamp­sh ire and Vermont were highest w ith 11.7.

New E nslind and the middle At* tan tlc states were highest among geoeraphlcsl ffctlons wlUt lOJ, StatisUcliins oilrlbuted th t figure to the relatively older age of Uio I»pillatlon In tliose areas.

goneFined SlOO

BURLEY. Feb. 37 - Elmer L. Read. Oakley, w m fined IIOQ and «n tenced to 30 days in Jail In pol­ice court -niursdoy on a charRe of drunken driving. Police JuclRe Henrj- W. Tucker L-npawl tlic rtii- - - and sen t Read's driving

to Boise.

Wallace Tries for Minnesota’s Vote

MINNEAPOLIS, Ptb. 37 — Henry A. Wallace makea his f lr jt d irec t appeal today to the farm e n and laborer* of Ml;viesota for sup­port o f his third p'arty candidacy for President.

W allace arrived b>' plane last n lsh t.

He will sptnil three days In M in­nesota making speeches and con­ferring with farm and labor groups.

W allace still has a chance to win the endorsement of the coaUUon of Democnits and the once-powerful Farmer-Labor party In MlnnesoU.

I f Wallace succeeded In winning the support of the party, President T rum an would be forced to n

Independent In Ulnnesota.

READ T1MES-NEW3 WANT ADS.

Lewis Demand of Pensions to Gain Owner Rejections

WASinNOTON. Feb. 37 O iPJ-Soft coal operators said today they will reject John L. Lewis' dem and for Immedlste ptrulona for h la m ln e n —even U It means a ( tr ik e this spring.

Industry leaden made IheIr po­sition clear as they gathered here to frame a counter ptogram of ae> tlon. Lewis Is demanding Immediate $100 a month pensions for miners aged 00 yean after 20 y e a n aervlcc.

Facing the producers U LewU' th rea t that be might file a notice next Tuesday tha t would lake 400,- 000 miners out on ano ther na tion ­wide atrlke In April to enforce the pension demand.

O ne Informant said tbe tnduitry has decided tha t it cannot g ra n t the Lewis demand until the c o it has been a«ertalned. He aald aurreys made by operators show widely varying coiU for different aecUoos of the country.

One unolflclal estimate Is th a t

the pension plan alone would In­crease producUon coita «0 cenu a ton. This would amount to S340 - OOOJOO a year on 1M7 production.

4eraf* Your Seedb td . /n c r o o t i C ro p Y ie ld s w i t h a

S E A M A N T IL U R . . .

AgrlnillvtBl s e n t iKel Ihilnpe<1onl tingit faclof In Incraoilne <t>t nitregtii ivpplf lor htollhy plani 'lh> tvppir el ok rs tfi* <o». Thti It trv« b«<ovi< All htlpi le pramoU tk* growth and el fltnbic becttila In IK*iMdbtd , 0 lodor lo Iht set.urol nllr»g«a cytli. i

t r Itlilng tK« hood ol Ik* StAMAN n u r i , )>» klfk Y,!oilr, le ltr mhot a Isrg* enevni ol sir Into tS* lotl u It Ii pvirtrlstd. At |K« otroltd toll MMIflbock onle Iht grovntf, a lall M*i)b«d ntellt end lh» air raaglnt InlUoldif n litd »Ill> IS* tall, T>It It eni el IK* r*a>oni orhy SEAMAN TIllAOC retlilt compaUlon' — •Ttfi olltr >l«ndlng iKtevgh Ihe «Itil«r nonlhi. TKI> Incrtattd ivpply ol nllr»g*n In IK* ludbtd pronelo ilurdltr, h*ellhl*r pleni g'owlK, end Incrtattd Crop ylildt.

Thli It *nlf *n* ol aatir rtoioni «rhr BStAAAAN tllie i xokti billtr i**dbtdl. Ul 1.1 lill y«u nort obovt IKIi •rilcltt.l, lo'io.ilsi rolgr tllltr. Dnp In and Ilfs folk II rrtr.

ELMER HILER Phone eilO

30] W. Addison H lfhw ay 3>

Permits to Build Sought by Three

'I%r«e appUcatkoa for building permits, with conjtrucUon co«U csUmated a t tio.ioo, wer« fUed F ri­day with c ity a * rk Coastanca J. Lelser.

Howard Allan plana a SO by 33- feet frame house on loU > and B of the Klmes addition. He estimates coat a t I7M0.

W. R. Miller, 311 Jackson su e tt. plans rtmodeUng work to Include the addlUon of two bed* rooms and a bathroom a t an eatl- mated coat a t ttX«0.

C. W. Pullman. H3 U ncoln street, plans remodeling work a t an astl-

a a tM co rt of »00 w M e JT W . Adamson. 137 Fourth avenue north, plans to remodel a garage a t an eftlm ated coat ol WOO.

2 Christian Poles Killed in PalestineJTRUSALZM. Feb. 37 MV-Two

Christian Poles were fotmd alaln tn Jerusalem today and police said they b e l lm d the men were -exe­cuted" by Jews convinced they had aided Arabs.

One wsa a former Polish csosular employe and the other a freelance Journalist.

The deaths raised the death total In communal fighting since the par- UUon of PalesUne was voted by the U nited NaUons last Nov. 38 to l.iS l.

T ha holy city was quiet dorlng the morning after a n ight during which sun llre was heard almost constantly for seven hour*.

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Alfred C rana le ft Wedneidtf for their fo rm er booe. Q npo’.-tnalk-k a ttend th e a u m a l h m eecB li» .«»ebratloQ.

READ lT U E S-R rW 8 WANT ADS.

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H tw fH iaCa th e n o s t aineere aiW ee w« can f iv e yotL W hile w tU inf fa r (h a t n e w Dodge e r H yinntfK d on 't le t 'Toitr p reaest c a *nm down** w b e a U'a so easy to g tt

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. L e t s s d w c k y e n r n e ta r m l - to n e i t c p U nectasary—e x a a la a yo tir e lec trica l a n d cmU b( iy»- terns, c h eck h rak e i and tirc i. We h a re th e m anpow er fer q v k k , ceUahle e c rrica new. O ih e ia l

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Women'B Printed

COTTONPAJAMAS

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59c

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SPRITE SMOKE

INDIAN SUMMER

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89<Sijei 8^4.10>/2

Women's

STYLESHOES

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50c

Boy’s

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» Wool and Rayon • Sizes 4 to 14

S2.98

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$ 1 . 0 0

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TIMIS-NEWS TWIN FALLS.IDAHO

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REA D T O tS S -X W rs W iN T ADS.

KCT. ILUX T MritCT^-------«!>• «ID nxMiart TttiTal

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raiDAT. RBBUAKT

Fairfield Residents Take Several Trips

n a a im ft m . j » _ i imm ak a l m U a i p e t t to s t e a u S ^ iM t a V«n*y. wer» K m t Wotar- wttw D o n l l T S u s t a ; X«B>7 T lo r-b « 4&d j o t a 4 - —

3Cr. s a d U n .l^ JV ctfzM sd ty fo r Iad t« n i azid I!-

Eoce&B Jo D S h a i le n ter U a U la a to T tit t h e r jlster, iCn. L u t j A ib o a

W alia- P c u K Q ukd Lob BtU- «t& h a f« k t t oo a Mp* to Zlcn

p « t . ttM O n o l CM jcn «tad Uexioo.

VISITS rAXCNTS C A S nZP O R D . Pfeh. a 7 - ia r f l jn

Heller. B o te , ip e a l tH« n t t - n > i ««1» toer pM tnta. M r. a sd U n. Albert BeOff.

C a n c e r P i c t u r e s

^ S h o w n i n C a r e y^ tn a ad e ^ w ith « »aee r v t R ibown ^ * r t h t a sQ iO H o f th* ABwleaa C u ttcr a o d e tr t a ^ u ,l&e rttuLu- L D S B d S t e d e t r u i l

a t the C a ity w n e taa th .v t r e c t r a s hy Or. a W. Itat.

BUlt7. v t » tlx> u n t n d T~-rM m cooetnUBt c u c c r . aod by U n . O to rn McOoalKle. dM zlet t e n . mander o f th e C ancer e d e ty ta Idaho; i t n . L au r» J a t e e . o m ty cQCDsia&dar: a n d M n . B arald H»r~ rti. C u ty T tp rac n ta t tT ^ U a p » . .

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n ■•as e » re ii c f ,’WSi3t\ a a .-au p asc. j tU s M u r r ' : r u c t a » to : i» .'=ai:u la V a r M e a m a :

'A rtSTtctaiie J

State Safet>- Rules On Building Printed

BOISR P«». Ti ^«V-A pasph>t rxplalalRt m tn ta a n safegr pcac'.krs to r ih c buUilia* and «ori»xUoe

--------------- ^ in d a i . 'i e s .u ia be sent «wi soca byitT K sc k «a£ also !»4 * coad I UidiaL-til accidea: board, sihfli ? » s jr4 . She h a t beea a t s n - - 'boul 4.000 of the pubacatiOM

! ^ JTTTirr a iiic d i a e r o i 4-H I trsu lita s is adopted bya » a i i s r a c th e p a s t clab Sept. 15 » Q be s a i l »

r o c ih e s:sj* i r a a e r a the 1 co=!.-acio«. ca ipeo ien aed tetiMis*I V S |<TarU 'aea.

! :<3«3N'GZUtLC ttSITOCS, SFT CjaaaA lZ L J t b . *»d

K 2 a a re aad d cath lc r.S ar ^ arn. t i s n r i r s h a o r r ^ a a - ,CKS. Kr. «a >tv a. P, P-^ort,Sbst- -wcsBi^y.

$ £ 1 3 rOEESCa.-A'S WANT AOS.

Stuart Brothersr . u x r r s G a ad r A r t *

n .\.\G IN C CON-m\CTOKS s n r ib A n . E. n o w C3-J

W e a t r t a n r« h e n ta M asle Valley

O l t o flo th e ;cn>s*«d ti»csaisaj<*»

i

Grange MeetsPACL, 3

:= » tr r s a th e d a a ’u 't j ^ n a T T O ^ i buiuMw jia tL H W ec-m -s>»«i3a. P n t a t * a i l bu t the da te r tiS rtia e sC i »

■ th e i:a e b a « d rl« s e r^ e i H a»:ei<a v sr? v ~ . Q rt

Second AnnualFARMERS BALL

SpoasorH hv ^ HOLLISTER GRANCJE

T W I H F A U S L O .O JP . H A U .

WB>NESDAY, AtAR. 3M avn's oitrnESTnA

O L D T O IE x a s i c E V E R Y O N E INVITEH

n i i J i c k -

WARBER6BK01PHONE- 2 4 6

The cm cer r to e m t a l« v * n U Ihe b u rjlar. b u t yoo seed h a w

tear o t tb e b u rsU r |« ttla< your Tahiables « t x n y tn ilQTt them here. P re tec ted atctac*

eertalntT.

PHONE 2IS

DOING BUSINESS? Y E S !

THE MODERN »

WAY

‘ ' C a s h

a n d

C a r r y

The Efficient System OF FOOD

DISTRIBUTION

THE EVER INCREASING ACTIVITY IN

..-O U R STORE PROVES THAT

OUR EFFORT t o SAVE YOU MONEY IS

APPRECIATED

Drive-W ayM M Xn» 5 2n4 STREET NOKTB MA>ac

.■

;y

FRID A T. FEBECABT 27, 1 9 « TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Kimberly Dinner Honors Golden Wedding CouplfK M B E E L T , ! , g n _ M , r

ICrs. R o s r r ‘n u x A u calcrUl&ed ftt - - * Itm O T m n t r 8und»7 honorlnt

U n . T & om u' p a n n u . Mr. u id M n. H an r ty Wood. VhOM golden w T - d lng u in lre n a z ? v u on lliundkjr.

C en te rln f th e dlnloj Ublo « s > th rw -U ercd u-eddlnj caie la whil*. ile e o n tM w ith TtUov rosea vid to p p n l v l th m islnU iure bndal cm - Ikle. O n «llher elde o( the u k e v tre UuT«*branch«(l citiiaI c u d c U b n ■rlth ycUo» ta p m .

F o r th e oceuSon M n . Wood « e w e n dress and a c em g e of Jon- (lulU. Wood v o n a yellow bou* loan iere .

T h e honored couple v u m anled a t th e h c s e of L e bride'i parvnti, Mr. and M n . Simo.n Snow, a t OUl* Qcr. N cbr.. a t a ccrtmony pcrfonscd by W ood’a fathw . the IK t. Ilarrey W ood, p a jto r of the MeUiodUt c hurch .

U r . a n d Mts. Wood have tm chlJ* d reo . M rs. T hanu^ and Joe Wood. W enatcherr, W ash. Joe wai unable to b« preaent fo r the occaalao.

O the r r«UUves In attendanca were U r . and Mrs. Ilirrey Wood and IjT in . O oodln t: Mr. and Mr*. Wll* Itam Bcaale;, Betty and Patty, and D ella Bates. Twin PalU; Mr. and M r^ WUIard Wood, IJaielton, and S and ra Thomaa, Kimberly. •

« « * Member Joins Mountain ViewM rs. S . J . NcUaon v u accepted

a new mem ber of the Mountain View club a l a meeting Wednes­day a t the hooie of U n . C. W. D urUns. Mra. John McDoweU wa; co-hoit«aa.

T h ree Tlsllor*. Mra. Ralph As' ■cndrup, Mrs. William O roum an and P a t ty Qro&sman, were present fo r the mectlnB. Mn, Patty McCoy received the club prize.

T h e n e x t meeting will be a l the borne o f M n . Emmett £ . Bauer, Huh), a n d wJU feature a U m ily poUuck dinner.

. ♦ ♦ ♦Birthday DinnerHEYBDRN, Peb, 77- M rs . Den

£illa waa honored bjr the Neighborly Nine club a t a special birthday din* n e r F riday aXtemoon. The event wma held a t the home of M n. H. O, Pullm an. Piaoclile w u plaj'ed dur- Inc th e evening vrtth M n. O. C. 1/oU

Corey Delegates to Girls' State

H A S T C A E U O N LOIS D m c S L B. . . who havt b m eboam by tb« A w r ic u tc t to a aw nU ry , Davtd

D art* peat. Carey, to a ttend CW a’ S ta le In J « m a t Pw alH la. T ba atrb .JwniMi a t C a m h lfh a c h ^ wO be apum red U i««*h &

rmlaed by the aaiUlaty a t * pablte eard party. (StaJt e a r» T ln n )

Readers' Guild Elects Officers

Bridge DinnerHEYBURN. Feb. 3 7 -U w score

m o n b e n of the BD club enUrtalned th e h igh score membcra a t a dinner recrn tly a t the home of Mrs. Henry Schodde. A fter dinner bridge w « played and prlie.t were won by Mrs. L » H andy. Mrs. O. C, Loll, Mra, LllUan D olbeer and Mrs. Otto Peter'

KIMBERLY. Feb. H -N e * of­ficers were elected a t the Reader's guild which met a t lh« hscae of Mrs. O lio Fowler, recently.

Mra. M. W. Craig U the new. p rea litn i: Mis. 8. E. Andenoo, r ice prtslden i: Mrs. Don Gibbs, aec- rctarj-. and Mn. Leo Urban, trea. surer,

Mrs. Lulu Sevems gave a book review of •'.My American A dventure ' by Em a Banehek. Mrs. Oeor^e Burrow, Chehalls. Wash., waa a CUMU

The proeram and bulne&a uaalon were preceded by a deajert luncheon (n the raJenUne moUf,

M n . Sevems will en tertain the group a t her home In M arch w ith Mrs. Mabel Jefferis as hoMess. Mr*. Andrews will arrange llie pnjgram .

« « »Talk Describes Utah Pioneering At DUP MeetingJEROME. Feb. 7J—'F ln t In U U h"

waa the lessen given by Mrs. Calvin Nell a t a meetlnc of Camp P ra n - Ida-Rome. Daughten of U tah Ploneen, held l u t week a t th e hocna of Mr*. H. C. Duffln.

During Uie hiatoeaj n teetlaj. w lih Mrs. H. E. McNeil In charge. II w as decided to pureha.'e senjng tray j fo r u^o by Ihe organUatloo. T en tray i have been purchased and addlConal ones will be secured as soon as ihey a re available.

Grand Guardian Makes Officer's Visit in GoodingQOODINO. f tb . 57*“- Ooodlni

bethel Ko. 13 received the official T ljiuUon of M n. Irene SUrUn*. Pocatello, grand tua rd lan of Idaho. In te in a U » a l Order of Job's daugh­ters. a t the Masonic temple Wed­nesday evening. Mra. SUrlln* waa accompanied by Mrs. Rachel 81uy- te r . Twin FaUs. jraiaJ marshal and Mra. Harriet Miller. K a r

A n announcement tha t u -o books a year would be given to the library by Uie county DUP was given by

,Mr». John Woolley Mrs. Woolley also reported that the county eor»- venllon would be beld a t Builey scmetlnie In April. The counties to be represented are Ooodlng. Jerom e. Tw in FW1.1. Csisla and Mtnldoka. Mrs. H. E ^fc^•ell read an outline of lessons ancf p.-ojects for th e com- In* year.

I t was announced by Mrs. RoUo Olbbons th a t the Saga Sego lunch­eon will be held Wednesday. M srch ai. a t the Onnge hall, w ith Mr*. John Woolley as Uuitmliireas. T he commllteo chalmien appointed were M n . H. E Mc.Sell and Mrs. Oscar Jensen, menu; Mrs, Russell WooUey and M n . Bea Tho.nason. reUc table and decorauons: Mrs. Ben W right in d Mr*. B n est Clark^oa serving, and Mrs. John Woolley, tlekeli.

T h e program, under ihe direction of Mrs. H. C. Dutfln, Included a Ublo game with three cents charged for every Incorrect answer. T h e money forfeited was put in th e general fund of the ornn lza tlon .

RefreshmenU were served by Mrs. H. C. Duffln. a,«*liled by Mrs. R. B.

and Mrs. Vem Bucilea.* * •Eden's Rebekahs Enjoy Luncheon

EDEN, Feb. .57- T h e R eb tkah lodge met Tuesday evening a t th e hoene of M n . Vernon Lance w tth M n. Mable Bean u assb tan t host-

11-17

SEW TH IS AND SAVE H ere's a ballet-number to sta rt

your sewlng-m achlng hummlngl A eay m ad w hirl of a pettlcont drtas— "m^n—p retty ! Pattern hasb ^ -c a tc h ln s -b o w s . new neckline!

TTUi p a tte rn elve* perlect fit, U easy to use . Complete. Ulustnted Sew C h a r t ahows you every step.

r ^ t t e m M2J J r . Miss a lua 11, IJ, IS. n . S ite 13. 4S yd*. SB-ln.; petti­coat. IT* yda. as-ln .: i yds. 4-ln. lace.

S end tw enty .five cents In coins for th is p a tte rn to Times-News p a t. tern departm enU Twin Pall*, Ida. P rin t p la in ly nam e, address, wne, s l » a n d s ty le number.

Now is th e lime to »ew for spring! Rftecn cen ts more bring* you the brand-new M arian Martin pattern book, c ra m -tu ll of exciting *prtna fashions fo r even-one! P Iu » -a free p a tte rs p rin ted inaJde the book- two beiu to Rive you the new look. Better have ih b l

Pattern* a re mailed dlrccUy from San P ra n c to c a .

Precedins a dessert luncheon, a business meeting was held a n d ctfl- c e« for the ensuing year were elected. Mrs. Bean is president: Mra. Larry MarUn. vice president, and Mrs. QeorKB-Lauimtr. aecre tary. treasurer. I t was voted to gh-e nv« doUars to th e Red Cross drive.

Two tables of bricge and two Of pinochle were a t play with prttes awarded a t bridge lo Mrs. H erbert Cooper and Mrv Larry M ar.ln, a t pinochle to Mrs, Bertha Spestf and Mrs. LatUm er and traveling to M n . Earl Wright.

* ♦ ♦Anniversary'PILEIV reb . r r - M r . and Mra.

K. V. OUck were honored on their JOlh wedding annlvtraary a t a Sun­day dinner glren by Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Howell. Twin rails. Also p-e- sent fo r th e occasion was John OUck. aon o f the honorees.

« « «

Boys PartiedSPRINGDALE, Feb. « - M r v

Stephen E liu and a e o M archant entertained the primary T r a i l Builder boys and Lark group a t the EUl* hcBM Tuesday erenlct.

grand third messenger, and M n. B eth HudUelsoa Ooodlng, grand f in h messenger.

A dinner honoring the grand of- f lcen and mem ben of the bethel w»3 given by memben of Cosmopo- I lu n chapter No. SS. OES. S en lng on the cornmme»> were Mrs. W alter C. Raby. worthy matron of Cos­m opolitan chapter and Mrs. Don L. Carrtfo. co<h*lnnrn : Mr?. Willard Ainsworth. Mrs. P. O. Massej-, Mrs. Don rredrlcksen. Mrs. Dean Good­ing. Mr*. O. D. Heller, Mrs, William Sfhrelber. M n. Montgomery Miller, Mrs. R. A. Stephen* and Mra. Rich­a rd Stephetu.

Initiatory degrees were conferred upon Donna Cecil. Sally Kramer and Lola Potter. Colleen Thocnpaoa received the ma)orliy degree.

Providing special music were M n. K ermeth Rice, who sang "My Taak;” LUa SeVere. aolobt. and Carol Har­ness and Roberta Day. vocal duet. Xtra. C. A. Reynolds was accompan­ist. Anna Lee Burrean. bethel mus-

i. pronded music lo r the bethel.

Y-Teen to Hold Dance SaturdayPlara were completed for a dance I be held Saturday night In the

rooms when th e scvrnth and eighth grade Y-1>et« met for a buslneaa ae&aioa Wednesday after-

T he pregram for the afternoon Included a piano *olo, -Always," by Shirley je a n Peters, and a trio num­ber. "111 Dance a t Your Wedding," by O xinle Pfost, Palsy Skeen and Shirley P e te n accompanied Salley M artin.

Beverly Ollason. advisor to the croup, was given a gift by Beverly Nel^cn. prtsldeni. making the pre­sentation.

u x a m m L

Two Books Are Jerome's WSCS Lesson ProjectsJS tO M E , A b . 37—'‘I h e G reat.

Prayers of the B ib le ' the study book for memben of clrele one of th e w a c s of the MethodUt churth . waa reviewed by Mr*. Hinkle Oox a l a meeting of circle one, Ihu rsday a t the home of Mra. A. U D ew hlnt.

led by Mrs. Cox.and M n . Fred Carlton conducted the. business meeting.

During the program Mr*. H. 8. Hurd reviewed the eeeopd p a rt of the book 'C ommitted Unto Va.” Re- freshm enli were served by M n. Cox. Mrs. Dew hlnt and Mra. C. E WrlghL The n est mecUng will be held March 19.

T he first two chap ten of “Com­m itted Unto Us." were reviewed by Mra. Albert E Martin a t a meeUng of circle two held a t .the-hom e of Mra. Loula Nelson.

Devotional* were led by Mrs. A. D. l* r*on and Mr*. H. J . Ooemmer, eoexJacted the bu*lneas meeting. The new yeartiookf were distributed and plan* were dUcusaed foe a rummage aala to be held Saturday, a t Pierce'* real e au ta office. Following the buataew meeting refreahmenta were aerved by M n. Nelson, assisted by Mra. Leighton Imes.

T h e G reat Prayer* of the Bible.’ a s a lio reviewed a t a meeting of

circle three a t the home of Mra. W alter Kyle. Mr*. John McConnell waa in charge. Mrs. Dean C lark led devoUonala and Mr*. Guy Kennedy conducted the buslneu meeting. -

Refreshmenta were aenred by the h o s t ^ assisted by Mrs. A. Heaaler and Jira. George Easton. ■n>e neat meeting «U1 be held a t the home

r Mrs. Frank B etr on M arch 30. Circle four met Thursday after­

noon a t the home of M n. H . O. Woody. DeYotlonal* were led by Mrs. Woody, who also gave th e les­son In d ia ."

During the meeting Mra. Nellie Roberta was appolnUd aecreU ry- treasurer lo replace M n. O. Roy Ha\-erland. who has moved to Wen< del!.. Refreshments were served by M n. E nklne Brown, Mrs, Fred Kennedy and M n . Woody. The n e st meeting will be held Thursday, M arch 18. a l the home of M n. Harlow Free-

To Wed in June

President Gives Report on Grand Rebekah LodgeJEROME. Feb. 27-Deputy P rw l-

dent Mildred Goodrich made h e r of­ficial visit a t a meeting of Syrlnga Rebekah lodge .Monday.

Mlsa Goodrich gave a report on the grand lodge meeilng last year In Canada and presented a white saUn a lU r cloth toa h e lodge.

During the bujlnew meeilng, with M n . Haael Summers pre.tldlng, U was decided tha t a sunshine box ;i-ould be sent to the aon of Mra. laiirsner Mollr.

announced th a t the Re­bekah ThUable.club will m eet a t 3 p jn . M arch 5 a t the lOOP hall and th a t the usual quilting bee will be held each Tuesday afternoon.

•n»e district convention j* to be in Ooodlng. a t 1:30 p in , Monday,

Gooding Teacher To Marry HorejsOOODINO. Feb. r - M r . and Mrs.

J . W. Poulton, Ooodlng, have an- nounced th e engagement of the ir daughter, Laura, lo Francis E CBudi HoreJ*. sen of Mr. and Mra. F rank Horens. Twin Pall*. The be­trothed coupJt plans a June wed­ding.

Miss Poulton Is a teacher a t the Ooodlng Junior high K hooi.. She graduated from Twin FalU high achool in IM4 and from Southern Idaho College of Education, Albion, m IMS.

Horejs ts a member of the Twin Falls lire deparimenu He served w ith the arm y in the Pacific from 19U to IMS.

Reviev/ to Show The 'New Look'JEROME, F^b. 37 -T h e "new

lo o t- for eprtng fashions will be featured a t the Jerome Civic dab fashion show lo be held a l 8 p m . Tuesday a t ihe high school auditor­ium. The coeualitee. under the chairm anship of Mr^ Jam es Felton, include* Mrs. LeRay FtaS er, Mrs. Jam es Felton and Mr*. Ray Mann, ways and means, and Mrs. Tadd Nelson. M n . Vem Tomlinson. Mrs. WiUUm Sm ith. Mrs. Guy Simona. Mrru U u re n Nehrer. Mrs. E C. Kims. Mra. Guy Pnm tj-. M n . Harold Peterson. Mrs. & nesi Craig and Mt«, William MacICnlsht

M em ben of the Civic club . . . ...- quested to assist tn Ihe sale of Ucketa.

« » »Fetes DaughterP A IRT IH JX Feb. 37 — Mrs. Don

Bauseher entertained Saturday In h o iw of h e r daughter. Caroline's, b irthday annlvetsair. Eighteen boys and girls were p rtjen t.

Thoee receiving p r im in t h e __testa were O an y Reagan. G arry J e w e tt Rodney Spackman atKl Jane McDooald. Refres.'unenta consbted

cake and Ice cream. Balloons and candy sucken were given u faA-ors.

• • ¥Poetry ThemeFeb. n - -P o e t a Com er-

waa the Iheme of the program a t a m eeting of PEO chapter E held last week a t th e heme of Mr*. O L. T ho rtw a. Mr*. Winiam A. P eU n. who w»* Ja charge of ih e program, read a aelecUoa of poema. Refrcih- m ents were serred a t the close of the meeting.

Blaine Ball Is Set for AprilCAREY. Feb, J7—The Blalr\{jtAke

gold and green ball will W held April 9 a t the Carey ward recreation hal!. two weck.1 a lter the ward gold and green ball, according to Mra. D. E Adamson, president of the B laine sU ke YWMIA. Mrs. Adam­son. Don D llvorth, itake superin­tendent of the YMMIA, and Mr. and Mrs. Owen Barton are genen l chair­men of the ball.

Committee chairman are Mrs. MUford Sparka, decorations; Mra. Roy Payne, refreshment*: Mrs. Cloj-d Mecham, advertising and Uel!et.5: Mra. Burton Thome. Sho­shone. dance programs, and Mr. and Mrs. DwlRhi Thompson, Jerome, floor show.

« « «Story of Gandhi Told at MeetingCASTLEFORD, Feb. 37-T he life

M ohandu Oandh! and a brief review of the sltuaUon In India were gU-en by M n . F rank Walla a t the recent meeting of, the Castleford Rouivl T able a t the home of Mr. and Mra. Mel Cook.

Also on the program wa* H. C. Darrow who d!scu.ued an article from the Christian CctjIo t entitled "Inside Russia-Ocoipled' Germany." P rank Wella, who presided a t the business meeting, gave a short talk on “Learning While Asleep" U ken froen Time magaxtne.

Dinner was serred lo the gather­ing a t a Uble decorated with aweet- peaa and lighted U pen .

« « « CalendarJn iO M E , Feb. 37-M em ben of

the Jay-C-Eite* are urged to a t ­tend a meeting a t 7:30 p. m. Monday a t the lO O F hall to discuss a future meeting place.

From the cool slopes o f the towering Himalayasc o m cs D ir jc e l in g —rares t o f »U t c a s - t o g iv e I w o n d e r ­

f u l D ew ( t n g t o d e lic io u s

T r e e T e t . T r y t h i s n e w

f l t v o r s e tis t t io fL

m m

Team HonorecJ; Guest Club Is Held in CareyCAREY. Feb. 37-Two parties be­

gan Uie social week a t Carey. Hon­o ring the high Khool girl's baakeU ball team. Mr*. Lavar Justeeen and Mrs. P. B. Hunt m lertatned a t a party a t the Juslesen home. Coach Melvin Sanders and M n. Sandera were special guests. Various card games were played, and a luncheon waa te n e d a t the end o( the « e - nlng. O ther guests were Mary Blackwell, Joyce Juslesen, Cleone Baird, EveliTj Kirkland, NetUe SmlUi and Beryl Albrethsen,

T he Quest club w u feted Tuesday evening a t the home of Mrs. Dana Mes.ienger. Two table* of pinochle were In play. High acore prite went to M n. I ra Bdredge, and both door p rlte and low went to Mra. Noel P ra tt. O ther guesu were Mra. Jam ea Turnbull. Mra. Levar Juate- aen. M n . Ale* Albrethsen. M n. Irvin Spencer and Mrs. Alfred Albrethsen.

41 Presbyterians Attend GatheringJEROME. Feb. 37 - Fttrty-OTe

m em ben attended a meeting of th e general circle of the PresbyUr- la n Women's association Thursday evening a t the church.

Membera of circle four *en-ed as hosteaaea with memben of circle th ree tn charge of the program. Mra. E thel Burkhaller, president of the assodaU on. conducted the buslneas m eeting, and Mr*. Anna Parkinson led Itoe d n oUonals,

T h e Rej,-. H an ey Harper gave an Interesting review of the book, “A B ro ther la a Stranger." Al the close of the evening refroshmenla were aenred, M n . Ous Mann waa a gueal of th e meeUng.

* * «Club DinesJn iO M E , Feb. 37-M r. and Mrs.

Dale Burkhaller were h a il u> mem­b e n of ihe lr dinner club Monday evening. H onon a l Bridge were awarded lo M n . W arren Kay*. Mrs, Ja ck Meuaer, Paul Malone and Le- Roy EUla.

G uests of the dub were Mr. and M n . T tanm y Ryan. Caldwell, and Mr. and Mrs. W arren Kays. . . .

ISC PledgeJB IO M E , Feb. 37 — C o l l e e n

Fleenor. daughter of Mr. and Mra. Charles Pleenor, Jerome, waa re­cently pledged to Sigma Sigma B eU . social sorority a t Idaho Slate college. Pocatello,

* « «Relief MeetsMURTAUOH. Feb. 37-T he 'l d S

Relief aoclely met a t the church Tuesday afternoon with Mn. D. O. Mo>-ea In charge. Mra. Roger Tbl-1 m an presented the social aerrleel lesson. I

Leaders’ Meeting Heads Jerome Scout Activities

JEROME, Feb. 37-O lrl Boout leader* from Jenjme were tn Bolt* "niur*- day to attend the district meeting of th e o rganlation.

P lans for the delegaUon were m ade a t meeting of tha leaden Monday evening a t tha home of Mra. Jo h n Hoaman. At tha t time It wia decided th a t regular meetings of th e ^ lea d en ’ club will be held oa the fourth Tuesday of each month.

Monday ZUzabeth Ha>den. execuUve director of the Pacific northwest ' area o f the OW Scout councU wUl

be In Jerome to meet with leader, aasU tant leaden and troop com­mitteemen. All are urged to attend the raMUng which wUl b* held a t 8 p. m. a t the home of Mra. Hoaman.

While Bee*-Anlmali, ih e lr Namea

K abiu" w u the answer to roll call a t a meeUng of the White Rase G irl Seoul troop held IMday after­noon. Material for acartt w u dls. tributad by tha leader. M n . Ander- aon.

The business meeilng was con­ducted by K athryn Jo Anderson, at which time the group w u divided into two pairoli.

BloeblnlBluebird ScouU aewed oa their

acarfa Tuesday afternoon a t the home of their leader, M n, Harold Otto. Yellow m alerlil w u chosen for the background w ith a bluebird aa the emblem.

The buslnesi meeting w u con­ducted by Judy Karren. Following the meeting a marahmallow roast waa enjoyed. The next jaeethig will be held a t the Mooae hall Tuesday.

Bttttercop The Buttercup troop met Mon­

day a t the home of M n . Hoaman. Tweaty-one aiuwered roll call and paid the ir weekly dues. Each girl haaded in a map ahowlng tha di*' lance from her home lo achool.

A report on JuUelU Low, founder o f the Olrl Scouts, waa given by Cheryl Sturgea. Shirley Sturgea gave a talk and demonstraUon on the oorrect way to display th e American flag, and the Ten >cout lawa were completed by leveral girls. The lead en gaw (ha group InfonnaUon - 1 unlforma and aeceasorles.

PtjUowlng the reporU and bual' CM meeilng the group practiced

th e flag ceremony with Lola F^x an d Nancy Cappa choeen u flag b e a ren and Carol# Hoaman and B ette Christenson as color guards.

■nie next meeting will be held a t the Amerlcaa Legion hall a t i p, m. Monday.

OES Group Is Plonning Party On Birth DateTwin Falls chapter Of Uie OES

mode plana (or lia annual b irthday pa rty when tiie group met In regu­la r kculon Tuesday evening a l Ihs Masonic temple.

T he birthday party will be given a t the next regular meeUng on M arch 8 and will be In honor of all E astern S tar w anen who hava been m em ben for 3S ye an or more.

By reaoluUon it w u requeated th a t OES memben make the ir do­nation* to the cancer fund through th e chapter.

A t the close of the meeUng r t - freahmenta were aerved by H elen Bobler. chalrm tn. and her cotnoiU- tee, ElwOod Bobler. Mrs. Oladya Hall. Mrs. Gertrude Ring. Mrs. C. M. PUlier. Mrs, Evelyn Paynw r and R uth .MeCluiky.

« * * Surprise Party Honors SistersK3MBE31LY. Feb. S7-Mra. Paul

Sterner, Twin Falls, and M n . Carl Thompson. Jerome, sisters, were surprised laat Saturday evening a t th e coimly home of Mr. and M n . Roy Engelbrecht, Kimberly. Tha occasion waa the celebnUon of the ir b irthday annlrenarles on Saturday and Sunday.

Guest) were Mr. and Mr*.' Ei Bame.i and Bonnie. M n. U iRae Laypoth and her children. Barbara an d Richard, all Twin Falls: Mr, and Mrs. Cliff Bob'ard. and Z^ula and Lee Engelbrecht. Kimberly, and the famUlea of the two hoiioreea.

T he women received many glfta. Ice cream and cake were aerved la te in the evening.

Ploy PinochleJEROME, Feb, 37-M r. and Mrs,

D, L. C rolhen were hosts to m em ­b e n of their two pinochle clubs re ­cently a t a parly a t the Orange h^ll. H onon were won by Mra. Delbert H all. William Hayes, M n. Burley Craig and Leon Aockton. Don T ay ­lor won the traveling prise. R e- frrshm eiits were served a t the cloee of th e evening.

O uesU Included Mr. and Mr*. Leon Siocktfln. Mr. and Mra. Del­be rt Hall, Mr. and M n . Burley Craig. Mr. and M n, Don Taylor, M r. and M n . William Hays, Mr. and M n . Ed MoeUer, Mr. and Mra. S herm an Church. Mr. and M n . F ra n k Scheme!, Mr. and M n . E m le 'IVjTtel, Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy Cham ben and Mr. and Mra. Earl Clark, Tw in Palls.

MSS MeetsM 6 and S club met Wednesoay

a t th e home of Mr*. Harley Roun- tree. The pm lden l, Mra. Clifford D avli. conducted the buiinesa**ea- alon, and Mrs, Paul Detweller gave U»e good Uioughl for the day.

■Hie program offered a talk by Florence Schulta. county home demonatraUon agent,- oa garden planUng.

Co-hostesses for the day were Mrs. W. F. Parish, Mn, Clements E ldred and Mra. Davis, Mr*. D ora A nderson was a guest.

Civic ClubJEROME, Peb, 37-T he Barry­

more Civic club eliterla'ined a l a card party Saturday evening a t the home o f Mr*. Guy Hunler. Pinochle w as played with honon going to Mr. and Mra. Kenneth U vena and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Lee. Jifrs. Leo Coat.'swu awarded the tra\-ellng prUe. The committee In charge of arrangem enU Included Mrs. H arry Miller, Mrs. Dsrrell Rlgney, M n , Carlj'le Howells, M n. William Diehl, M n . Judson Gullck and M n . Dick B urks.

¥ « «Girl in Oregon Joins HonoraryHANSEN, Feb. 37-A lm a Dopson,

daughter of Mr, and M n , Charles Dopaon, has been elected recenUy to the Mu Ph] Epailon national muiio aorority In recognlUon of her scholarship and mualcal ability.

Miss Dopaon,. a former itudent of Mrs. Nellie Osirom. Twin Fails. U also a member of'the Alpha DelU PI aorority a l th e Uolvenlty of Oregon, Eugene.

ART HOGGAN

ALTKBATIONB

BEUODEUNQ

DECOaATlONS

"An Work auarante'ed"IM FERU L WALLPAr£B5

P H O N E 2283-M

Meritor Membisrisi,., Meet at February Tea in Costume -M entor club m r t W ednetdsy. a t

the homa of M n. B. a H uffm ia for an o ld fashioned tea wUb tb« mem­b e n dreaaed to ooctnmei o f t t u past century.

Roll CaU m answered by t t d i woman with a descripUoa a t t u r wedding goira.

I t w u decided th a t th e in n o U m e s^ dinner will be ^l ld M arch U a t th e Idaho Power auditorium. I t i* group voted to u k e charge o f th* I ^ ^ C r o s i d rite in Ihe O urrty dU>

M rs. Max Crolhen, dlatrJct a rt ' chainnaa, exhibited a group of pic­tu res by Idaho artists. Mra, T . 8 . Nicholson, Tiler, aUte a rt chalr> m an . Iva June Huffman, Mia. Gala K llllnger u d Betty Bailey w ert guesla.

T h e club prlte w u raceired by Mrs. OroUiers. Mrs. Huffman aerre4 tea aa Mra. Ed Tolbert, prealdent, poured.

* • •Tale of Pioneer Heard by CircleM rs. Fays Walcott «nlertalned

the Sunshine circle club W ednei- day. RoU call w u answered w ith 'som ething about Waahlngton," and Mra, Fern Bohonan gave a report on h e r cousin of the Palley family who pioneered a t Sweet.

Mrs, Wlltlami provided the club priao which w u received by M n . Elva OUon. Tea towsU were glT«a

th e club to the three m em ben v l n g birthday* in Pebruaiy.

Secret aisUra’ glfU were distributed by th e secretary.

Tw o guessing game* were th e en­tertainm ent for the aflem oon w ith both prites going to Mrs. Beasla Sims.. Mr*. W alcott aerved refreah- m enls a t th e cloaa of th e meeting.

* * * .Bridge-LunchJEROME, Feb. 3 7 - A itm ebeco

honoring M n . Calvin Crandall. P a r­ma, waa given Friday afternoon a t the home of M ri William J , Spaeth. Bridge w u th e diversion of th e a f ­lem oon u'lih honon being v o n t r M n . Roger Guernsey, Boise. M n . John T . SteUe, Jr., and M n . C ran­dall. Gueste Included the honorte. Mra. Roger Guernsey, Mr*. George Collier. Clearfield. D U h: Mrs, WU- liam B. Burka, Mra. Jack Meuser, M n. John T . stelle, jr.. and Mr*. R alph Peters.

' V « •Dinner GuestsPA U inE L D , re b . 37 -M r, and

M n. Herb Lore, Shoahona, were Sunday dinner gueata of Mr, and Mra. Bob Proalenaon. Love waa a t one tim e principal of the Fairfield high achooL

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M '

PAGE TEN TIMES;NEWS TWIN FALLS, IDAHO FEIDAT, PEBEDAHY W, 1 9 «

Ai Smith, Gooding Light Heavy, Draws Main Event Spot on Jerome BillJSROMB. a r-A l sm srn . the Ooodlnc llsh t h t»n r« tt« h t «ho U

g»rded M cb im piouhlp oftte rU l fo r tti« IMS K orthw nt Oolden OIotm la u m ta e n t . will be /e i tu r td In the n u ln « r« it ot the am eU tir rlns pro* g n m th a t the Jerome A.O. will eU ge «t the high lehool fym B*iurd«y Blsht.

em llh . who gave Lyle Tttylor. th e two-Uaie Golden glove champion. hU hardest tetUe la Utls year's northiTMl loumament e t Twin Fatli, will draw hU opponent Irom three b«ttler»-C IU f Pryor, the hertl>punchlng

O n the

S p o r t F r o n tW ith

Y e Old* Sport Scricctier p ic h 'em o;i and puti 'em down-rluhl lierei A clipping Iflt oa VOSS' desk by Mr. Hovitrd Re«l reminda th»t the

ancient word puddler hoe slipped up on hl« yearly announcement of the rodeo champion) . . . Here t^ey arc; Drone riding—Curl Olwn. the first Canadian to ever win the event; bareback riding—U rry Finley. »lio haj ridden a t the Filer lair; bulI-ridlng—Wag Bleislnft, anoUjer performer who ha* appeared here; s teer w rcatllng—Todd Whallcy; calf roplng-Troy F o rt; steer roping—Ike Rude, and ateer roping—Jim Orester . . . Bill L lnderman U sccond In brcne riding, hU brother. Dud, second tn bare* back . . . In fact, all the champions are newcomers to the purple.

Mr. Uurlon Perrlnr, Ihe hatch, ery magnate, says tha t Ihe pudgy one got the figure ‘ O" opalde (Sewn when he guoird the Illlnl alomnni 8< laying tha t Ibe ilcrgeen dli* played In a window here welgheil 000 poundi. . . And now he's ge t­ting the apology demandrd.Tlie coachcs and referees t t the

c la u B dlnlrlct touninment looks for a real battle In Uie A touma* m ent a t Twin PalU and they're no t so sure, as VOSS was a couple of weeks ago, tha t Coach George Ha)-a' Rupert Pirates will eroerge Uie champion for li\* third straight year.

£ m le Craner. Uie popular referee who Is officiating.In the class D district tournam ent, has been named

W e s t m i n s t e r t o

M e e t P a n t h e r s

I n T w o B a t t l e sALBION. Feb. 27-C oach Oene

•Cooper's SouUiem Idaho School of rdueatlon Panthers will wind up the ir basketball season to* n igh t and Saturday n igh t when they meet the W estminster col­lege team from Salt Lake City here.

Boasting Just about th e sm all­est—ta helght-baskelboU team In the count)-, the Panthers can wind up an exceptionally suc­cessful season by m ining a pa ir of victories over the team w ith whom they split two contests enr- Uer tn the year.

M a g i c V a l l e y

B o w l e r s R o l l

I n 2 T o i u ' D e y s. BOISE, Feb. 27 m — About 3M bowlers ore expected here today for th e opening rounds of th e s ta te ehamplonshlp. Another SO are ex­pected for the stale £lks bowling championship.

■n»o sta te tournament will un til Simday evenlns when trophies and p rlie money. toUllng nearly «3.000, wlU be distributed.

• Bowler* from T»'la Falla, Buhl, Rupert, Ooodlng, I d a h o Falls, Blackfoot, Pocatello, Caldwell, N am ­pa, s m s ie tt And Ikilse h n n been entered. -

In a separate tournament sta rting tonight, bowlers representing e ight H ka lodges threujhout th e s ta te will begin rolling for the stAte Elks championship. Lodges represented ar« Tw in Palls, Burley. IdaJio Palls Pocatello, Dolse. Nnmpa, Moscow and Coetir d'Alene.

C B E O t r r ROLLS Xt6 Seven bowlers broke Into the

"500" column In the Magic City W otnen'a Bowling league T hursday n igh t w ith Mrs. Kay Hoover's 653 ahowlog the way. The others were Mr*. Herschel Cobb, 517; M. Morrey, 603; Mrs. M artha Watson, 530; Mrs. R eba Henry, 511; c . Begley, 525, w ith a game, and Mrs. R u th Rogers, S17.

T lie scores:(1)1 U7. m . J«;

^ 0 1 : Knnxti 117. 111. Xrc(>r1*9. JIO, 1JS-4T11 EUtp HI. i n . lU — U l | OMor 117, »J. lie—411; Orandt U l.“ i- '"“ **■ "«•,,Ccr» CoU <1)1 IltiKlktp HI. ISl. ISt —!S; f ! i3 “ - S i '.'ir'Ili ' f c ' . ’f:

t«*Udroau (1)1 HI. ]

B uhl light heavy who wa* golns s trong tn the 1M7 Ooldes Olores imtU he ran Into Jim Sargent, the 1040 UUeholder, and lost on a close decision; Loren Dartlema, Shoshone, who won several championships in the navy, and Bob Brown, CastJe> ford 's former high school champion.

F rank Davli, Jerome A. C. d i­rector. said tha t two BorkduU brothers. Merlin and Melvin. w elU r- welghta wbo made a good showing In the Golden Gloves would be on th e cartTW 'wni DScJc Reynolds, the Buhl wildcat.

-W e are programming 10 fights

for Baturrlay night with Ooldeo Oloreia In choice spou," Davli stated.

John Jennings wUl be (h< referee.

POCATELLO, Feb. 37 M >-Flght- crs from Idaho S u te college turned In three victories against no de- feaU to set the pace In the open- Isg round of the Intermountala la* tercolleglate boxing tournam ent last night.

Ten schools are represented In the meet, which' continuea tomorrow night and Saturday.

In sccond place in team sta n d ln p

was Montana S tate college, with three wins and tw^ defeats. South­e rn Idaho College of Education had two victories and two lo ts a . Snow college of E phnlm , Otah, one and one; Utah unlvenlty students en­tered as individuals, one win and three losses, and Mesa college of Orand Junc tion ,. Colo, no wins against two laese*.

One taoekout spleed the 10-fIght card. Heavyweight Jay Lam bert of DUh put away Charles Masten of Montana s u te in the f ln t round of their scheduled three-rounder.

RtsulU:

1 IS pounds-Eugene Machida, U a* bo sU te, outpointed Charles Cornell. Utah.

125 pounds-D can Clark. Snow college, outpointed Jack OUea, southern Idaho.

130 pounds - Ken Cox, Idaho sta te , outpointed Harry Anson, Mesa: Ted Hunter. Montana sUte, outpointed L ttter Tovrry. Snow.

135 pounds—Frank Qlllette. south* e ra Idaho, outpointed Robert How- ard. Utah.

145 pounds-C harlfs Lear, Mon­tana staU , outpointed Bill Hay­cock. southern Idaho; Gordon

158 po im d»-1M Maheraa. Idaho sU te. awarded declsloa over Charles Burke. Montana tU te , w b » fight was stopped tn second round be­cause Burka suffered a cut; John Wright, southern Idaho. oDlpolnted Bud Pflleger. Mesa.'

Heavyw eight-Jay Lambert, Utah, knocked out Charle* Mas ten, Mon­tana sU te, flrsU

WALCOTT AGBEES TO F1G*1T CAMDEN. K. J , Feb. 31 Iff) -

Jenejr Joe Waloott last nlgbi apeed to m eet e h aa p iea Joe Lonla to a 15-round heavywcicht bout a t Tan- kee stadium June 3L

Louis, p rior to leaving for an « . hibltlon tour In England, th rta len- ed to right “anybody else- If Wal­co tt d ld n t agree to teran la two weeks.

The two week ultimatum waa nearly over.

Walcott agreed to Louis* terms. His manager* aald ''thU is on* fight w* cou ldn t let g a -

PILOTS NIP WOLVES TO REMAIN UNBEATENTrojans Push Heybum From District Tourney

Jack Ellis, the elentaied leading m an of the Gay While Way, took a n lih t eff and went to Klmbtrly (o root for bis alma na ter. Glenns Ferry. . . And eame back to report tha t Pan] Shmiq saved the Castltferd game by Mcnllng out and pluifing a halo through whleh the Wolves were slipping for points.

Howard Gerrlsh says tlierell be Btcelhead news for the flsht before long.

AND THATS THAT FOR NOW except: T herc ll be on attendaneo record broken In the class B dlstricl tournam ent agalti 'this year. . . Anc th a t’s why the smile of Supt. q . B W right, tlte tournam ent manager,

- bit wider these days.

S i x S c h o o l s P l a y

I n G r a d e S c h o o l

C a g e T o u r n e yHEYBURN, Feb. 37 — An

elghth-sevcnlh grade basketball tournam ent opened here yester­day with six schools participa t­ing. Results In the opening round of the double elimination affair

EICilTilBurley 22. Paul 9.Rupert 37, Dtcio 17.Oakley 23. Heybum 14.

KEVZNTIIOakley 28. Burley 17.Rupert 31. Heybum 23.Decio 10. Paul 12.

C l a y t o n L e a d s

F i l e r F r o m B i g 7

L e a g u e C e l l a r

FILER, Feb. 27—Coach Maurice Clayton d idn 't win a Big Seven

this season but hehad the distinction of Ic&dlnit the Filer Wildcats out of U;e crnference cellar where Uiey had repcicd dur­ing the two previous se.-isons—be­fore Clayton came alonn.

n i e Wlldcata accompllihed this fea t when they defeated the Good­ing Senators. 33-21, after leading 17*S a t the half.

F iler won the Junior varsity pre­liminary. 38-37.

riL i:n nnnniNa...... I* fl pt,r,oo.llrBWllllimt ( 1 I MUiim r J4iprr ( 4 S f

5 1 4.KI«lns»f r t 1 1 lUM.lInw'ih

B n l i l S h o o t e r s

M a g i c V a l l e y ’ s

L e a g u e C h a m p sTlie Buhl Rifle club won the

champlonsliip of the Magic Valley Qallery leogue by defeating the Tv.-ln Falls club In a shoot-off ofter tl)o two teams from each club i f t - Uhed in a four-way title du ring the regular season,

I n the shoot-off, the e ight top scores compiled by each club were employed to determine the cham ­pionship and Buhl won by a single point, 2,203 to 2.201. ,

Clarence Mortensen and Lewis H ull of Uie TK-ln FalU club had 201 and 167. respectively, out of a pos­sible 300 to a t t tlie pace for the shooters but E. Rolland. E. K rai and D. W. W^lkfr shot 380s. three points better Uian tlie third high m an for Twin P bIIs.

Doth club are eligible to shoot in sta te and national gallery matches

T he results:CltAtlPIONRIrir MATCH '

Duhl-t- Kol.1,,1, K, Kr.l, !»«. n, W, W»lVtr. :m : j. n : : j . tie

rnt. :h3; M, K. Slrllh, tt l ; U (JiillliT. C. Illnj.i.bur*f. — • — -

B r u i n s C l o s e

S e a s o n b y W i n

O v e r W i l d c a t sFEX R, Feb. 27 - Coach J . B,

"&{onk" HalUday's Bruins, a fte r a 7-7 n m qujxrter, defeated' Coacli Maurice Clayton's Filer Wildcats, 47-38, to close their regular aeason wltli a victory.

Coach Morris Roth’s Cubs won from the Filer Javees, 43-37.

TWIN rALLM 41. riLEB Twin l-'«II> Iw l( tu n u i StSVI)»"n f S 0 l|WllII»ini f 0

P i c k O u t a G o o d O n e

KMnkirpf I. C«op«r J.TWIN TALL* cirns a . riLzm

JAVEU IT I- fs >C pi Fll.r U tl I

A guest a t Bill McGowan'* West Palm Deaeh umpire school before repoHlnxJQ-tbe.Yankeea.ln EL Feterahsrc..JoeJ)lM ag|lo-geU -thrce— year-old U rry Valeaeourt off on the right fool a t bat.

______________14 » SS »;” KorU 1. "reTly 'i, -^o.

»T: . Jen. : 11. Shitfrr.r

i U II

r liJ'i"‘ri.^AJ. I.EA(:IIe‘ MATClIKfl ■

Twin K«ll. No. 1-11. StimftiT. : « l : C. «nrt.n.,n. 1«7; U Hull. :U | II. Rlp!»r,

Twin K.IU N«. :-C .nllh. :TI: II. Sh.ft#r.

|n«hr>!• i i ' i ill Toi.i. > br «U4rlrril

I. Ill, ltt--<«»; JWTtT 111, >11. llW O li EriekM# 14(,

(1)1 iiiDdic*# 101. 101, lo i- jo s :

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Camr't ( » | lltndkap ST, IT, tT—III ,» « • ly . lU -JM : C«rt.r no

ii», ]U—SU: Pqrtr 103. ici, : u —sit tolmln 411. 4J», 41S-111*. •

—* 131 1^1.1 I4T, 411.l i m V ffl'

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RtftTMt r«»«n *s4 OlbbsM.

3 Q u i n t s I n v i t e d

T o N . y . T o u r n e y. NEW TORK. Feb. 37 tfV -The first three of eight spots in the IlUt annual-national invitation basket­ball tournam ent a t Madison Square garden were filled today by St Louis, Texas and Western Kentucky Slate.

A&a Bushnell. director of the tour­ney to be-played on the nighls of M arch II. 13. 15 and 17, said aU th ree had acceptcd, although Texas m ust go through Uie formality of getting permlislon for a majority of th e member* of the southwest conference.

S««: J. McCmciit. :«S: E, Oo..lln'No. l - n . Knljhl. J

No. ! - L Uurtn. SS«

B u r l e y , R u p e r t ,

J e r o m e W i n n e r s

I n J a y v e e E v e n t

tlurlrr .V»- S ____ _

toUli. 4M. lU. 4 l t - l l ( t lU a a - . B w ( tn lUaJleis 101.

WANTEDDEAD OR ALIVE

- Males ■ Cows V H lg b c t Frle<* Paid

•F o r Prompt Pick-ra

CALL COLLECT flM W J.

PERCY GREENE TBODT FARM

REFUSES TALE OFFER NORMAN, Okla., Feb. 27 W -

Football Coach Charles (IJud) Wil­kinson has rejected an offer to coach a t Yal# and said he would s u y herv as bead coach a t the Uni­versity of Oklahoma.

lOS-JOSi llolcnn M. ill . U»-M7i T(». •on »l, li:. »>—2tS: Von»7 IH. U». Ill - « ! s : u u iii ii« . 4*«. »«-iu .* .

Ukoiv< IS) I lunaw p U7. isr. tn —t i i . u IS.— . . . . . I l l—i « i ri.iu»o

U>n» TRxlunlt<—Sill Kllincrr D'Atrr US. 3>t. IM iir , touk.

T a g M a t B o u t

S e t f o r F i l e rF e b ." 3 7 '- ‘’’ v e ra l blg-

Ume performers were promised Pro­m oter . K en Mayne, for future WTcsUlng ahows here If Saturday night'* m a t program shows th a t such action would prove profitable.

Som ething new In the grappling sport will be featured tomorrow night—A iistrallan Ug wresUlng. Mayne has pitted himself and Dave Reynolds. Columbus. O.. against Jack O-ReUly, claimant of the Aus­tralian championship, and Floyd Han.ien. S a lt Lake City. This will be a tw o-out-of-thrre fall affair w ith

lim e lim it of 00 minutes.In this type of atesUIng, a mat* :an tn distress can be relieved by

tagging hU mate who sU nds ou t­side th e ring, H ie tagged wrestler then takes over.

Two o the r matches are scheduled, both of th e one-fall variety w ith a Ume lim it of 20 minutes. In one, Mayne will c^ipose Hansen and in the o the r R ^ o ld s wlU wrestle OTlelUy.

GAWLAN BOXES WILLIASJ8 NEW YORK, Feb. 27' (,?>-Ed

O avilan’a ring rhumba meets the big teat tonight In Ike WUllam*. the lightweight champion. T lie lr 10-round Madison Square garden bout will be non-UUe as Ike wUl be giving away about six pounds to the

to 1 H avana underdog.

RUPERT, Feb. 27 - Burley. Je r- ne and Rupert were the winners

of opening round games In the first annual junior high school tourna­m ent a t the Rupert Civic auditor­ium hero last nlghL

W ltli McMurray scoring 14 points, Burley won from Buhl, 3S-33, after U klng a 13*10 first half lead. Bag- ley had 10 points for Buhl.

Jerome won from Filer, *3-33, a fte r holding a four point lead a t the end of the half. Shriver, who made five free throws! paced Jer*

with 11 points, while Raybora had 14 for File*.

Urlguen's 13 point* and Hoys' 10 laced Rupert to a 44-31 win over

Oakley. Helner had 11 points 'fo r' Oakley.

Rupert will oppose Jerome la- the :hamplonshlp bracket and Buhl will tongle wIUj Filer In the consolaUon round Friday night.

nURLET » . BUnL u

Jerome Enters Finals Of Major Cage Event

OAKLEY, Feb. 27 — The surprising Jerome Jaycees -defeated the Oakley Whltely Spuds and entered Uic finals of the first annual tourna­ment of Uie South Idaho Major Basketball league here last night. ’Hie score waa 35-10.

■Die favored Spuds, sadly off In their shooting, were able to register only one field goal In the first half as Jerome took a 14-4 lead.

' MIetincr. center, late of Utah S tate, dropped In five field gpals and six free throws to pace the Jay\'ees, while O m ni MarUn, Utah unlversl* ly's sta r end. ran up Uiree field ROiiLi and a free throw to lead the Spuds.

Tlie Tftln Falls Selfs remained In the tournam ent by erasing the Slio- Rhone Re<lskln3. 45-34, after taking a 1M 3 first half lend. Hex Wells' anti T lcti, each wltli 10 jMlnts, led Uie Sclfs. while Haddock wlUi nine paced Shoshone., Gaining a -23.13 first ha lf lead.

Rupert's Jean Seeds won from the Burley Jaycees. 55-38. T. Hess had 12 points for Oakley, while Turner rang up 14 for Burley. Tlie defeat eliminated Burley.

Friday the Jean Steds will op­pose the Spud.1 a t 8 p. m. and Uie winner will bailie the Self* a t 6 p. m. Tlie winner of Uie latter Kamo will oppoee Jerome Saturday night.

JEROUB JAYCCEH Jl. OAKI.Er wiiirr.LET tiruus i»

. . .mt f t n pf,0*lilfr te fl Ttiompacn t I 0 CjlUuuUl t 0 :

1 1 lillrll 0 0

n tni Th(inip«on.RUPERT JEAN HEEIIH Jl. DUIILEY

JAYCEES li Ilut>rfl tt <1 pMlutlrr It ft ;i

I I l|nirr»1l f* 1 SiTuTn.r t 0 S t>||kini X -

B D i s t r i c t B o x e s

CLENNfl FERRY i«. CABTtCroRD I Utlltrord It II {il;(;ieiin>VlMlnt f 1 J Jl K,rr/ I t ft

0 r. Iloiiln,! I } 0

Mrn*llla (WlchtliUlaekwtll'

t. Crt«a

KIMBERLY, Feb. 37 — Coach Earl ’n ito n 's Olenns Feny Pilot* Ust n ight won their way into the finals o f U»e class B dlsUlet tournament arid gained the assurance of a pUce la th e secUonal event which will I select the team* to pl*y for th e s ta te championship.

Meanwhile. th« PlloU await Uie plaj-lng of a game between Cotch p n le Clute'8 CasUeford Wolves and Coach Keith Judd’* WendeU Tro­jans Friday night which will select th e i; opponent* in the champloasblp

- “ “ - game Saturday night.'Hie Pilots gained a place In Uie

flnaU by dcfeaUng Uie Wolves In a close-guarding and deliberately played contest last nlghU The seam was 30.30. Neither team wasted m any shots.

Close In F ln t Quarter After Uie score had changed hands

Uiree times. Uie Pilot* emerged with a 0-3 lead from Uie opening quar­te r and Uiereofter never were head­ed. They paced Uie Wolves, 18-p. o t Uie end o f th# half and were In front. 38-30, when Uie UUrd period "'OS reached. _

•PauI'S linun.'U ie PlloU’ star cen­te r, shifted to a pa.'jlng game and bowed to fonvard Wooten In #cor*Injr. Wooten rang up four field g o ^ and a free throw for nine points, Shnrni had seven points, whUe E Hoagland, th e other forward, had six. Blackhom and McCoy, gua«^ paced Uie Wolves wlUi nine each.

P an th e n EUmlnaled Throwing Its scoring attack Into

high gear, the Trojans surprised wlUi a 54-35 victory over Coach Ted H anks’ Heybum PanUiers. Ttie de­fea t eliminated the PanUiers.

T he game was close for Uie f l r s lA tw o quarters. Wendell took a 13-11^ lead in the first frame and was in front. 23-17, a t the half. However,In the third quarter Uie Trojans scored 10 polnu to four for Heybum - I d Uiat m eant the ball gunc.

17 PolaU for Kearler Carroll Kearley, hlgh-*corlng

Wendell forward who had been held In check during Uie first two games of Uie tournament, came up with seven field goals and three free throws for 17 points, while ccnter McBride, still starring, made six field goal* and four free th row for 10 points.

F rank Urlguen again led Heybum w ith 11 points but for the most part he was clonely guarded.

lienfrewM<Clurt

WENDEU, II, IIETDUBN JIrll It ft ptlllrrbani fir f 7 S SjUrliun t 4

t 4 0 < Jrn in f I” - • 1 I « « r . « I

I ] V *rn<r r it Uurth t 3

'< 4I «

___Ihrowi mUM4i Krtlrr I. n«rrCh.plln I. MrClurt I. Urlmrn I. J r

■ W«rncf I. Lk Moon T. Durth }.

It ktll: Ilui'ffl 13. Ilurl»T I! iroiri mUa«0: Iturrrt I, tJurl. • I AH.X >nd Thons..c)n.

llurlfTMcMufrr f

It p(

Tt>u3< U I 10| K>t«b 11 1Sm k kt bkUi Darkr It. OuU le.

JEROME II. riLKR »«•J.rom* f t ft »l|Kil«r ft H pt

SlUjjlmrr • ■ • •

RUrERT 41. OAKLEY IIt fc n pr.uaicr u • n r S : IlConpInn I Ir e' ' • i * 'h X J t 4 I » « 0 «iu Criif>ifi«i-!.

Cni««U vrf llrmu.

« lliddMk « 4 l:I)tnl»li ( I : Ao<lr»4Mn r-.S

lUrrrkxhu*- - - I T..U1. I

I Iht hilfi' T-ln r«lk 111 T-Ia r.11. I. 8ho-

lu r.rm i Al:«i .ndT

A.NTELOPE nOUNDUP BOISE, Feb. 27 l/T>—An anUlopc

roundup by the state fish and game department will s ta r t Monday in Cuiter county near Challla.'Antelope trapped will be transplanted to anoUier range. P. J.'M cD erm ott, game - district canscr>-atlon super­visor, will be In charge.

PERFECT GAMEPOCATELLO,, Feb. 27 (/7V-Eddle

Allen turnrd In a perfect bowling^ of 300 during leogue compctl-

Uon. Allen Is believed to be the first Pocatello bowler to make the score In league play.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

O A S K E T B A L t

I D, KI.UUEtlLr IIISTniCT

a .n , . F .r tr ,« . C..ll.f.td }| W«n4ill Si. ll«;kgm IS

WILDER IIIATRICT WlljrT Jl. MKdtcIin IT Fnilllifid l(. CiKtdt II Calnrll II. U iul.In l l » i X

UOLINTAIN noilE CIRLS K>n. :i . Illlu ]}Curtilt II. KiRf mil II IIMu It. M*nlnf ID llanrdiU It. Ncr_ IIlU ttnam I*. CtiB4tlrw II Ueonuin lU n. II. C hU, I

coi.i.E(;eN«rtli«nt N>t»ni> Tl, 8mIII> ti CUr nll«i* 7J, ItrMhIrn o lh t t ! PtlndUn Tl, lltm id II

L L SUt* «BEES SIGN ‘nVO MOSZ

SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 27 The Salt Lake City Bees Have algned two more rookies for the coming season. Claude fiigbcrg. business manager of the Pioneer league club, said Willard Abbott, Richmond. Calif., and Theodore Ritchie, San Pmncijco, were cliosen a t thc.fian. Francisco Se.ils ba.-<eball school now under way. Abbott is a catcher with California semi-pro and .service ex. perience and Rllchle is a left-hand­ed pitcher.

H o g a n 9 U n d e r

I n G o l f E v e n tST. PKTERSBURO, Fla., Feb. 27

M’)—Birdies were para lor Ben H o­gan in the St. Petersburg open golf tournam ent yesterday as he bounced around the course In C3, nine under par.

I t gave him a four stroke lead Uie field and set a new record I k hole round for this tournament. I t also tied Uie all-tlme mark for Uie 0.43C-yard lAkewood country club course.

When the 1«7 entronla finished firing Uie opening* round about du.tk, JO oUier players had Joined Hogan in sub par scores.

The closest to the leader, how* ever, was Cary Mtddlecoff of Mem* phis. He was ou t In 34 and home In 33 for 87.

Behind Hogan ati{} MIddlecoffere five players bunched a t 08.ate flnlshera. Lawson LltUe of

Cleveland. Johnny Palmer of Badln, N. 0 ., and Jim Mllward ot Northera- alre, Wls., Joined early finishers Bobby Locke. Johannesburg, South Africa, and Eric Monti, Sanui Mon­ica, C alif. In a Uilrd place bracket.

Seven of Uie golfers shot CD and another quintet luid 70.

TOO COLO FOB LEWIS LONDON, Feb. 37, <ff)-H eavy-

welght Champion Joe Louis and hi* wife have moved out of Ihelr J300

week apartm ent on fashionable Park lane. I t was too cold. Pro­moter Jack Solomons said.

DONLEY TOPS COUGAR UUNT BOISE. Feb. 37 (/^-Robert W.

Donley of Garden City tops Idahe cougar hunters so far this year. Don­ley has basged IS of the crlttcrs,Uie' sta te fish and game department- sa id today, adding Uiat 61 In all have been killed. WUllam Steuer of # McCaU is second wlUi 13 of Uie falg cats.

Mihvnokce’s Firstl America’s FfnestI

RIopc Valley’s Favorite Bottled Beer!

Percy Beard, former werld cham­pion high hurler. Is coaching the University of Florida track

TRACTOR TIRE VULCANIZING

ONE DAY SERVICE

If* TRAILWAYS %C«mfort,Speed

PERRINE HOTEL

Drained and R e p U ^

S taa rt Morrison_«<_W E8T^TBDCK LANE ;________PHONE i m

Linileniooil Fariri Store318 SHOSHONE W.

COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE ON ALL MARES OF CABS

Oat-O n-Labrieatloa . Bteam a e a a ln t-W u h lB i

Ignlllan Servic*M otor BcbnUdiog

Bear m e e l Alignment and Balancing

Body and Feader Work Bpray PateUog

Aec«iWrecker Serrle*

Q em lna NASH Paris C8E 0 CA&8

HEYfyour car needswashing toe

Brinff your car in today fo r a real wash job. We are completely equipped (o give it a thorough doaning from top to bot­tom—inside and out.

INCLUDING

SteamCleaning

to remove jfreaso and oil and

Vacuuminglo r tht lnt«rior ’

W I L L S

M o t o r C o .Authorized Nash Sales and Serric*

236 Shoshone St, West PhoM W

FBIDAY. 7EBBUART 27, 1948 TIMES-NEW5, TWIN FALLS, mAHO /

PAGB TWELVln U D A T .r e B R D A B Y * r ,:

nX D A T ,. FEBRT7ABY 27^.1948 TIMES-NEWS TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PA G E*TH lilTE£H •

FARMS FOR SALE

SPEOAIr TO MARCH le t.

AUTOS FOR 8 A L R ............

.»< mu ttU . C41I Tl«« «fUT I.

1947 BUICK ROADMASTER SEDAN

atMllikU ndl*. bMUr. 4«{ra*Ur. Ky> >•" •••« €w*»n. rin>Un« lsip«(lal ■ hitf »»11 Um. Law bUm«<.

JESSE M. CHASE INC.« t Shiabin* W. pkoo. U*

^ G B rOUBTEEN TIMES-NEWS, TW IN TALLS, IDAHO FBIDAT. RBSQAST S7. 1»48

C h i n a G e n e r a l

L o s e s L i f e o n

R e t r e a t O r d e rNANKHfO. Feb. 71 OU!)-N»Uon.

O eaentl Wen U . vho coo- BUBdMl ft d JrU kn ftltempUac to detrnd • Ihe t r y Manchupiwi city o( Mukden from communist ksuultt, b»s b«ra executed to t v lth d n v tn j h b troopa tro ts * suburbvt airfield, c o n m m cn l reports Irom Mukden dlsclosfd todAj--

Wen's e x e c u te v u ordered by MuichtuiAD O ocm nuid«'-lo>Chlt{ Wrl LUiuwff u k m u ll of th« csplure by d ln e a e ccnimunht lorcrj o f Hunho «lrf1»ld. one ot Mukden's m ain co n lw u v lth thg outilde world.

A ltifk ing red forces mtmn«hi:i cut oft kU m ajor defense bssUotis delendtftK the city 's Und spprocches In ona of th e worst b lo n to the ' ChUng Kil-!vhek rrgtaie of thfl M&nchurUn c lril n r . dlipatches u ld .

TlieJe r rp o ru said Uie comtnu- ntsts haTc captured PenluJ, broken IntoH-ilnmln and Kal>Tj#n.brrached the outer defcnie of Ylnjktnr and smashed Into Hunho airfield.

A g r i c u l t u r a l C a r M a k e s H i t W i t h S c h o o l S t i i d e n t s

R i d i n g C l u b H a s

F e t e a t G o o d i n gOOOOnJO. rvb . I7 -T 1 « annual

dance cponsorrd by- the Goodins Rldlns club attrac ted an alUtlme record crovd Tuesday evening. lUp- resentatirra (rt>m m a n ; Magte Val­ley riding d u b s as well u local res]- (Imts turned ou t for the event, Mn. Rom McCloud, club sfcretarr, sn!fl W dar-

PrlMJ •w arded were a western ud d le to K . a 'O lc k e tt. Goodins; a NaTaJo double saddle blanket to P. W. WUson, Haller, and « brldJe to Stanley E. Palmer, Ooodlng.

The commlttM In charge of ar* nngcm ents fo r the dance Included

b. Mrs. Effle Brooks,R o a M cao u d and Clinton Aber. oomble.

O u { - o f - to m efulu rrpresenfed w»rt Wendell. Jerome. Shoshone. Hailey, Twtn Palls. Buhl and lUseX'

Stodenla from ibe Twin Palls high school a rrieu ltn rat clasi a rt ih o m groBpcd around lectnrrra. County Ageitt W arrrn D alfh, left, and Gene W hitman, tln lrers lty «f Idaho farm exteniJon serrlrr, T hnndsy Id a special U nion Pacific agrlenltnral ear. A grlcnltaral clane* frsni Hansen,

A l l e g e d R e d s

D i s m i s s e d b y

A r m y C e n t e rWASHINOTON, Feb. 27 QU5-The

army announced today It has dls> mlaoed •'a crcra l" employ*! a t the St. Louis. Mo., odoilnUtnUon eeoter for alleged «ubTers)Te actlTlUes.

While th e arm y gave .to eaact details. Inform ed q uarten said 13 8L Louis cmalfffW have been fired and th a t 26 o the r suipected cases the rt tuive been turned orer to the PBI for fu rth e r study.

One perron close to the sltuaUon u ld th e S t. Louli center h id be­come a “beehive" of «ubvcr*l»e ac- Urlty th rough conununlst Infiltra­tion. He u l d the subrerslres'w ere engaged In destroying reeonls of communlsta and fellow traTclen who eer>-ed in W orld war II.

“T his s ituation constituted o r . . the gravest dangers of our national security existing today," this sourcc wtd.

TJie St. L ouis admlnlstraUon ■ ter handles confidential army

R k e E v e n tW nS E H . Petk. n aod

M ra. P. E. Roccra. who have been mairled 36 j* * n . wtn cele­b ra te the ir 14th weodloc annl-T etaar? Sunday. .... ....... ..... .......

They wei« married P th . s». 1893. and get to celebrste the tr aLanlTtraaiy ereiy ioor je a n .

O N R C T C K fT E IP PAIRPU XD . Peb. n - U r. and

M ra. pred Ball. Cascade, cq th e tr r c tu in trip fram A rlnna and CaU- fo m ls . visited Mr. aad M n . Robert Pn » ten so n here.

REA D TOCES-NEW8 WAKT AOS.

o rds financial B a tte rs Records o f a ll World war n reterans axe th e r t .

F m e d $ 2 0H A HK T. M . X T -P tn k O a M

a t Ib e b i c a K t t e « ( ifae 8 n T tD er highway w lih Wgfewmy n tn K et- d n m . w ss Osed m « a d c a t s by

Jo e g t G o x sa A. MeL*o4

U tm niiiMti jjucaataatorencw

™ ~V!SJS.S

K imberly and PUtr b motion pletnres TherK PalU and Blackfoct ■ earlier. (S taff p h o lo t

1 alsA attended leelBrM and aaw farm , Th« apcclal e a r left Friday for th e Idaho u The c a r visited other Magic Valley towns

rkvlBf)

R o b i n s ’ L i n g u i s t i c

S k i l l N e t s R e s u l t sMOSCOW. T t i . 27 MVOov. O. A.

Robins’ UngulsUc talents, as re. ported by th e Associated P rtjs. paid off today.

fttu n Boise came a dispatch Mon­day; tha t » le tte r written in Oer- m an and mailed from Kamten. Austria, to: ‘'O urroroebter I S tad t Idaho" Itad made lu way lha govemor'k deak. I t sought .v learn the w hereabouts ot Joseph ZfztT . about 70. living on "Route 3."

■nxlay T h e Idahonlaa a t M»cow located E ssc r. living on Route S. Moscow. R u ra l maU carrlen said ho llvtd on a small timber tract on the slopes of Moecow raounUln. had no telephone and came to town "about cae« a month."

U . S . L a n d U s e

P r o t e s t M e e t i n g

S l a t e d i n B u r l e yBURLETf. Peb. 57—Annual protest

meeting of Tw in Palls dh trlc t of Ihe bureau of land miuiasement will be held a t Burley a t 10 a. m., March 4. James P . KelUi, district g ru le r, said Prlday.

Tlie mectlnt; called to hear pro­tests and to budsct mnge Improve- m rnt monies which have been re­lumed recently to the various ties. CoTulderaMon also will be given to ranse mannRfmrnl, m nge Im- pfovemenl projects and game i ajemcnt.

O ther buslne.v which will be sldered by the ndvlsorj- board In­cludes consideration of applications for transfers of permits nrul appll- cntlons for construction of Improve­ments on th e federal range within tlie boundaries of tlie district.

Advlsoo* board members who are expected to a ttend Include: Don J. CavanftKh. chairman. Twin Palls; A. D. Pierce, vice cluilrman. M alta: Rus%ell C. Larsen. Kimberly: Wes­ley B. W ard. Elba; Vera Enmes. American Palls ; Max D. Cohn. Poca­tello; Jesse H. Dredge and Milton T. Jones. M alad; Reed E. liirkln. Snow\-llle, U tah, and George E. DooUi. wildlife represenUtlve. Jer­ome. .

O ther officials who are expected to a ttend Include KeUo P. Ne«-man. regional jrnuJer. Portland, Ore.; Jack O. Taylor, soil conservation service. M alad. and D istrict O nidcrs John A. K eith . Shoshone, and Joe T. Palllnl. Idaho Palls.

U n m a r r i e d M a l e s C r y f o r A i d

A s G a l s T a k e C o n t r o l o f G t y

Y o u t h f u l M o t o r i s t

F i n e d A f t e r C r a s hnA ILEy, rv b . n — Samuel L.

Brackenbur>-. 15-year-old Oannel youth, appeared before Probale Judge Georse A. McLeod Wednesda) afternoon to answ er a charge oi operating a m otor vehicle durlnc the n ight w hen h is license rwtricU his driving to daj'Ught hours.

The car w as Inroh-ed In an ac­c ident on h ighw ay No. D3 Saturday.

Pleading p ill ty to tlie charge, Brackmbury was fined $35 and co.«.v Twenty dollars o f th e fine was sus­pended due to ' the defendnr.fs youth. Judgo McLeod atvj recom­mended to th e departm ent of law ............................. Dmckenbury's

AURORA, in .. Peb 37 (UFD-A spe­cial police force of ^0 women went on duly today In a clty-wlde'man- hunt.

Any bachelors found on Uie streets ere subject to ariejt I t was A urora 's leap year day. tlie

first In e ight years. And It every m an for lilm«lf.

Tlie girls took over Uie city ad- mlnLitratlon — Including the police force—today becitute leap year iloy falls on Sunday this year. Tlie girls were a fraid Uiere wouldn't be enough biichelora out on Sunday to make the ir day a succens. So they got the city council to move the big day up to Feb. 27.

Aurom 's girls started observing le.ip year day In 1033. So many of them grabbed huibands or levied Jlne.i on b.ichelor-mlnded boy friends th a t year they decided to conUnuo Uie special ladles day every four

Education Program Subject for Parley

BOISE, Peb. 37 (-I>-A prepfL-«d fducstlojv program Jo submit before the 1M9 Jeslslaturc will be dlicu.wd a t a meeting of education reprc- setiUUves here M arch *.

Alton B. Jones, s ta te superintend. w>t of public inM niellon. said mem-

— ''T C H V the s ta te board of education, and reprticn tatlvc .1 of rchool tru.v t« s . teachers, pa rm l-teacher groups and state- agcncles will atlentl.

O n T r ip s

Leaders Invited to Hear C. of C. Chief

BOISE,' Peb. 37 W>—Business and agricultural leaders of Idalio have been Invited to hear Earl O. Slireve president o f Uie U. S. Chamber of Commerce, address a gatlierlng here March 3.

Tlie tpeetlng Is spomored by the slate and Boise chambers of com­merce.

W lllam E. llanunond. Snn Praii- c l-m mannRer o f Uie western dlvl- «lon of Uio U. S. chamber, will company Shrcve. E arl Murpl^'. r r ta r r of Uie Idaho StAte Qiamber of Commerce. ^Alll Shrcve Li' Uie first iwe-sldcnt of Uie national cham­ber to vUlt Idaho.

S t o r a g e o f S p u d s

R e c o r d s D e c l i n eBOISE, Feb. 37 OT>-MerchanUblo

slocks of potntofs held by Idaho growers on Feb. 1 were le a than half Uie stock of a year oso.

Tlie bureau of agricullurat nomlcfl said today 8J50,000 baihcls of potatoes were on hand In the state, while lost year 18,450,000 bu."ihcls mere held.

The agency estlmiited total sales from Uie 1047 crop ttlll amount to about 34,023.000 bushels, compared w llh 30,50(3,000 bushels told from Uio 1940 crop.

•T hero w eren't enough m around to make It worUiwhlle." spokeswoman for Uie girls said.

T he bachelors who are caught by the lady police force on leap year day are hauled off to court In squad cars and patro l wagotut. They are locked In a bull pen unUI their cases

up. The only way they can get o u t_ o f ja l l i5_to,p>iy. flnea.for. being bachelors to a magistrate who.

f course, la a Jady.T here Isn 't much a poor male can 5 once h e 1* arrtsted^ because for

th e day th e whole city adznlnlstrs- tlon b in th e hands of women.

T hey drive Uie police ears and Uiey patro l the streets In the clly". f lre enRlnes. To make m a tten worse for the eligible young men. Chicago police sent a brand new patro l w ason the 30 miles to Aurora, for the girls to use In their man h u n t

p retty 18-ycar-old brunette. S tella Serophln. ruled Uie city as mayor, a fte r being elected by Uic town'A voters. She was aided by the two ninnersup . M argaret Denson. 18. and one-day clly clerk, and Dclols Middleton. 18, who la treasurer.

F l a m e s D e s t r o y

B i l l u i g s ’ A i r p o r t

H a n g a r B u i l d u i gBILU NO S. Feb. 37 tUJ!>-A gen­

eral alarm fire today d e s tro fd a large, city-owned hanger a t Billings a irpo rt and two adjacent hangar u n its which luused the LjTich and a n i ls flying service.

All a ircraft were removed from th e hangars before the lire had spread . auUiorlUrs said.

A1 Olllls said hLi loss would am ount to $75,000-»60.000 of It In o lrplane parts. His loss was partly covered by Insurance, h e saJd.

M ayor IL E. Blddlngcr said the c ity hanger, bulll several years ago a t a coal of over KO.OOO, was fully Irwured.

Ow ner of the D 'neh Flying sea.1 n o t available to estimate hb

lOiS.The fire broke ou t th is morning,

apparently as the result of an ex­plosion In Uie clly-oTOed hansar. according to wltnes.ie.v T lie blnrr f lashed Uirough the structures and w ithin 40 minutes. Uie roof and nil bu t one wall of Uie tfirce units had collapeed. firemen said.

BURLEY. Peb. 37 -M r. and M n. R. O. H atch have returned from Plo.lda, where they vlslied Uielr daughter and fam ily. Dr. and Mra. H. C. Sa^T^e.

H. E. King. K ing 's Variety stores, will leave next week for New York City on a buj-lng tr ip for th e stores. Mr*. King a ad two chUdren are «slUng to Portland , O re , with her parenta.

County A ltom ey A rthur C, Dunn. Arco. visited th is week wlUi his »ls- t g . Mra. T t n r Brady.

Boise’s VA Hospital To Get Improvement

BOISE. P^b. 37 MV-The veteran.t adnilnl-itmtlon ho.iplui here soon •'•III get ft new dhilns room and kllfhcn.

March~3tl fo r the new bulldltiK mnjor Altemlloii.n to the preseni la'p ltal and m inor repairs to Uic

prrjcn t Inflrm.iry.Tlie project U expected to exceed

$800,000.

W KEK-ENnS AT HOME FAIRrJELD. Feb. 37-Jacqufllne

Morris i«pent Uie week-end a t her homo In Melb.-i.

WOOD RIVER' ------ MOTEL------

Sixteen De Lose t'n lts KETCIIU.M. IN SUN VALLEY

Ilngh Falkner •P.O.Box 92 Phone 658-Rl

State Oil Contracts Won by Two Firms

BOISE, Feb. 37 W)—Contracts for >rovldInR slatc-ownM vehicles wlUi nolor oil and grca-^e for the next clx moiitlM were awarded f»-o ma-

ir oil cowccriu", yesterday.Standard Oil coiiipany «a."; award­

ed the contmcL for noiilhwestern and northern Idalio counties and Shell Oil ccnipany received the con­trac t for southccntral and ea.’itcm Idaho, Harold Boyd,, state piirchaa- Ing agent, said.

ATTEND MECTING MURTAUOH, Feb. 27-Mr.i. Rny

A.vendrup and Mr*. Justin Klcln- kopf attended a 4-H club meetlnE In Burley.

Election HeldHAILEY. Feb. 37 -A t Ui& annual

meeting of the water tisen of the Hiawatha Canal company Tuesday evening In the Hailey courthou.w. K enneth B ultram was elected di­rector to fill the vacancj- caused by the term ination of the (erm of Aaron OlcmentA.

Plans fo r Uie Improvement of the canal for th e 194B season were ap ­proved and D an MUer was elected w aterm aster for the year.

DIAMONDSWATCHES

JEWELRYand the

BEST IN REPAIR SERVICES E E ____

The Jewel BoxROOERSON HOTEL

LOBBY22 Ycare Friendly Scrvlcc

SATURDAY/ 3 P.M.

S U R P R I S E

S P E C I A L

ID AHO DEPT. STORE

ILLFAIRFIELD. Feb. 37 — Clinrlei

Reagan, faUier of William Reagsn. is 111 In Uie Ooodlng hospltiiL

HEARD ROOFING and

INSULATION CO.139 Third Ave. Soatb

ALL TYPES of ROOFING

ROCK WOOL INSULATION FUONC 1411

HO.ME FRO.M TIlIP E.\IEltSOM. Feb. 37-M r. and Mrs.

Manue! .M ala-anrt Chlldfrirrrliirhfd' la.il week from bji extendttl trip through K ansas and Colorado.

LOCAL

MOVINGStorage

RAINBOLT'SPHONE 351

E lectrica lmm

Prompt Service on* Electric Motors* Refrigtrators

p • ElecMc Raajca* AppUaacea* Stokers and i* O a B o m e r s * ' '

DETWEILER'Sr a i o C T w

G R IF F INT H E S H M e n t A r

s a y s

because It has a h a r d -w a x finish

«U CK *IIO W N >'

NYLON

R u f f l e d C u r t a i n s

Fits You . . .FITS

YOURBUDGET

^az jc r-U ilo rcd clolhcs arc Individually fn.sh- lone.d to your measurements — to f i t you You are assured prcclaion.tnllored comfort. Choice fabrics and intcffrity of workmanship mean economy due to lonff wear. I t’s sm art to buy cuatom-tallorcd clothes fo r sm nrter np. pcarance, g reater wear.

A . C . F R A Z I E R & S O N

— ' C u s t o m T a i l o r s ,,j

122Ji MAIN AVE. SOUTH PHONE 3G9Over Newbcrrys

H O T P O I N TTABLE TOP

W a t e r H e a t e r

CONVENIENT - PRACTICAL

A limited num ber a t

$124.75-GUARANTEED FOR 10 YEARS

Tipunons Appliance Center, Inc.K K i f TO c r r r h a l l . t w i n f a l l s - — inioN E c s i

Drapery Dfp'L

These lovely curlnins nrc mndo from Hathaway Nylon MarquUettc. j new rubric woven entirely o f d uT on t nylon yam .

■Delightfully sheer in appearance and testiirc -------------------*A7nn2inKly" s im p lc~ t o~lg n n d c T rjn :

Sizes (each panel) DO X 90. Pair .....

Sizes (each panel) C2 X 90. P air .......

n n s fn n s c rp rc s ra •SUibiiizcd to prevent Bhrinkage •Has ppccial dycstuffs to rcduce sun fading

' h -

u

.S21-50

S 1 2 . 5 0

S A T U R D A Y

S u r p r i s e S p e c i a l

B E H E R E 3 P. M. / B E H E R E

*

Id a h o D e p a r tm e n t S t o r e“If It Isn’t Right, Bring It BaOT


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