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‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control...

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lAfEBULLETIN .WASHWaiOW, Oc*. * O l^ tb o tekW ]lKUm ftfl ttCr U Ptt Mat t»*t WMk at___ tba tapitai:«r » atcllm la afrlevltanj Mmtrnutr vrioM (or Uw tint u«p te U A Reflonal Newspiper Strrlng yoL. 80, no: m Nine Irrigated Idaho Coonties TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1947 Russian Block of «“ies »n ‘»rmk Italy Membership Seen as ‘Blunder’ •hrE'lS ^ (ff)--DIploinaUc experta |r^icted today that Russia's, veto of Italy’s Wd for United WaUoM membership would badly handicap Italian com- l^nist efforts to gain greater power and prestige in that •trateglc Mediterranean country. Am ^CM officials privately expressed surprise at the ac- tion which Russia took last night in a session of the United . NaUons security council. Some called it a “ political blunder” which would work strongly to the advantage of Italy's pres- ent non-communiat government. The Italian application was supported by the United * * * * iStetea, Britain and seven Bulgaria Says Greek Set-up ‘Exaggerated’ LASS sucoBsa, Oct. a w>) — Bulcaria Mcused the Dnlted S u tu tocUy of deUbentclr euciermUng tbe Balku dUturbksees to "<up« gtt pljr ft good ncuM U> tnuisfona ^ Omea Into tn umti cunp oX the United SUtcft." Tba BulftrUn ftttwk v u mftd« btton the 87.n»Uon pollUod com- »ltt«e of United Nations u> semblr leta than 2i hours after two lmport«at derelopeaenU affeetlnc K latlou between th« United States and Balsarla.' *n ie» were the BPonUnff o f fuU diplomatic reoosnltlon to the eotn* munlat-domlnated Bulearlan gov- «mmeal by the United SUtcs and « elmultanMualy luccessful move led Mr the United SUtet and Brit- ain to bar Bulgaria fran member- ahlp la.tlj# United Nation*.. Bulgazlaa RepresentaUTo Dr. N. Merorah, glrini; his country'^ an- «wer -to charges of “ aggreaston" against Greece, assailed the United States for alleged plans to dominate the entire Uedlterranean area and charged that the United NaUons washing used as a cloak for such « ui u acveu other members of the council and blocked only by the “ no" vote of Russia's Deputy For- eign Minister Andrei Gromy- ko. American Ambassador Wanro Austin indicated the United SUtea «uld ^ the Italian case ^ ttose of other Sovlet-Tetoed coun- tries — Plnland, Austria. Ireland. Portugal and Trans-Jordsii-to tte larger forum of the general sembly. One of Series The baUot on Ital^ was one or a series of votes taken in the 11> naUon council, which split cleanlr ^oag toe usual east-west Une. Not applicant countries considered yesterday received the re<iiured veto-free majority. Russ^ also vetoed Plnland, Hun- gary. Romania and Bulgaria. oi>- poeed by America and Britain, failed of approval because they would not get the necessary afflrmaUve major- ity of seven. T ^ y Russia’s string of vetoes stood at the total of 337 Other Afeaclea Tied- The seoirity oouncll was not the o^y U. N. agency Ued In knots by the east-west row, however. The 87- naUon general assembly was so b^ deadlocked over efforts to fill remaining p WLOWLY ZNTBIGUB8* CHABGBD . MOSCOW, Oet. a wV-SecUons of the Moacow------- that the <441 4cuiiuxunB prospecuve vacancies trusteeship coun- ells that It gave up the whole effort, called off temporarily any more meetings tn Its big auditorium at Hushing Meadows and returned to I-ata^cceas for oomalttee worjt. CBABLES P. KOELSCa . . . Ada oonnly district jitdft, who roled yesterday that Idabe^ reoently «wcted UgDW-by-Ui* drink law Is oonstltnUoaaL 0«. fendanu in the test case hsn •premised to appeal his rBllnj. (AT photo) Jury List Is Told for FaU Court Trials The Jury list from which will be drawn Jurors for civil and crlmlnsl WsU during the current fall Unn « district court was announcwl Thursday through the office of O. A. BuUes. clerk of the court. Opening of II criminal triab (or which Jurors will be empaneled is set fof Oct. $ before Judge James W. 'PorteTi PoUo^ are U)i 40 persons drawn for Jury duty: PraiA H. Adams. Carl Boyd. W. D Dale. Esther M. Elcock, W . J. Hollenbeck, J. Uarion Humphrlct H. O. Claude P. MeSSoU M n. A. E Pickett, Mrs. Catherine Potter, Hugh E. Reed. Doyle Sllser Mlnda K Sweet. Dale WskeS. K William Warbetg. Harry WUco*. sll Twin Palls and adjacent rural routes; Ruby Bates, Russ Carlaon. LcRoy Lee. Murtaugh; Chaille Bower. Mrs. Helen J. Diets. LeiHe PBterwin. Hansen; a Canfield, Mr*. Joim S. Peldhusen. Mr*, c . D. ----- --------- TeaUr, a Of-»tolatl:» D Uoe,* Mid , . .i.iiing fet iu> ob- Sentence for Recklessness' Is Postponed ■ V p to PHnaan. route 3. Twin n ils, has been releued on his own feamtajira.to raippm In lo im s.o?ssis»s;r°' •ae d e ^ was gnnted .to enable to recelT* additional •444 t»4«uu> goimcu yeeterday. Nine no. ’-*• had been taken . ~«.44.44 Ml tvcuvw ■ ~ ’ HKmii m ed- M to»tiotnl lor tojurlo ncrtTol in an accident south of Twin PaUs ^pt. 33. The reckless driving » « «««! br «Ute police M of„.“ >8 ftceident which oc- c u i ^ while Palnnan was driving on the left side of the road, accord- ing to the InvesUgatlnTofflw |1> for. Speeding a ^ ^4*? Mrs. Lucine S. Haidtng. route t, Burl^, pleaded -g^ty to ip.0^ on M^^aJSSS e « t in Tajn Palls and was fined » 10. ordered to pay ooats involved. Before Judge Pumphrey p n ^ t n s « mJeJwa Jndge, Robert a p S r y * pleaded g ^ t y to speeding and waa luiia tiD b TSS t Drivers Unhart Bom cars « m damaged, but the drivers escaped Injury, in an inter- section collision a mile south and a mile east of Hansen at l:io p. m. Thursday, • according to Deputy Boyd Thletten. who Inves- Drtvers o f the machines were Warren Oehl, 37. route 1. Hansen, and Olehn P. Allen, 83. I*eft side of the Dehl car and-riaht rear of the Allen vehicle were d sS - aged when they eoUIded u AUea traveling south, turned east, and A «**»• Um officer TM reported. Two miner accidents •were invw. (Owtlw—< «■ H x !«. C»I«»B S) Taylor Continues Efforte for Peace N^erwota get the n eeSi*?^ aaioitty of the B7 asmbly A second deadlock developed in Mwahly voting on trustoeshlp'lSu “ cU vacancies which wtU come ud at the end of this year as terms ex- pire. 77)0 Russian candlate for the ^ teeah lp council. Yugoslavia, was d^eated on Uie first ballot. Russia no decision. U.S.‘Dictated’ to Resume Relations With Bulgarians ^WASHlNaTOH. Oct a (ff) _ Government officials said today a decision to resume full diplomatic reUtlons wlUi'Bulgaria was m »e or leas -dlcuted- by 5SeptiiJ:e of the peace treaty with that communist- i'SfSJiT” The state department ended a six year break yesterday by . extending recognition to the Bulgarlon gov- ernment and naming Donald R. Heath. 83-year-old career diplamat. as the U. 8. minuter. A t the same time, however, this country maintained Its vigorous od- poaltlon to admission o f Bulgaria to the United Nations asse^ly. ^ HeJnity- B m o J. Plwrar, Hoi- Russ^ T. Ofaves Pller anil t t A. Klnyon, CasUeford. gee Ship Quits Aim for BlcckadeRui] JERUSALEM, OCt a (Ui3-0ne ol two refugee ships approaching Pal- estine with 3,889 Jews ntdloed todsr that -we shall reach HaUa tonight," todlcaUng the abandonment of how Of running the British blockade. Soon after the broadcast, Britlib authorities in their " ■ - Appeal on ‘Drink’ Is Scheduled BLACKFOOT,:Octi 2 (U.R) —Donald R. Good, Blackfoot, attorney for the Bingham country club of Shelley, said today he would appeal “Imme- d ia te " to the supreme court an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis- trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding the 1947 liquor by the drink law valid in its entirety. Good bad no other comment on Roelsch’s decision. The club was the first to bring a suit lo tost the consUtutlooaUty of the 1M7 law. It first sought an InJuncUon to pre- vent Bingham county and sUte law enforceoent orilclals from prose- cuting the dub lor operating on a locker basis. Judge Koelsch in Boise denied the injunction but said he would rule on validity of the Uw. Not WiUiln ctly In Its complaint the club pointed out It waa denied a liquor by the drink license because It was located outside of a city. The law allows operaUon o f clubs only within the boundaries of Incorporated clUes and vlllsges. The club said it has been operat- Ing under the 1930 law which al- lows patrorts to ttore and drink their own liquor In the club rooms. *Xcglslatnre Within RltbU" But Koelsch held that the legis- lature was well within lu rights to restrict operation of locker clubs and to forbid licensing of clubs out- side of city limits, aim pending are several other quesUonlng validity of the liquor law. Chief among them is the case brought by Uio Lsst PronUer, a club located In Power county, against Uw enforcement offldata In an effort to prevent Uiem frx»n prosecuting the club. The case U in the Pocatello county district court and a temporary restraining order, unlike the Bingham country club caw, has been Issued by Judge L. E. Olennon. - Econoniie Chief U41 the ships, reported that Uig oonvoy ahouki put Into Haifa some Ume tonight. The ships reported-they were sur- rounded by BriUsh warships. Unleu the report of expecUng t o . reach Halfa.tonlght waa some sort of ruse, It apparenUy meant the Royal navy waa. taking the refugees to thit port The ships were arriving from the Black sea. One of them was named RedempUon, the other Jewish StaU. Previous reports had Indicated they hoped to steal Uirough the blo«k- ade and put the refugees ashoV s ^ r t « along the north coast of While Palestine was ' keyed up over the immigrant sItuaUon, s bomb was thrown into a Oreek ChrisUan grocery in Jerusalem. Of- ficers said it was a warning by the Arab underground, boycotters Jewish goods, against' the sale such material. Taft Winds up Western Tour; Qashes With Party Over UMT n party leaden ^ .. U44V— U44iversa] mUItaiy training. Thi Obioan. who uims aom m ni after a speech here In which he has promised to discuss '‘the Demo- cratic party,” leaves behind newly- voiced opposIUon *- ---------....... WASHDJOTOH, Oct 3 (ff» - President Tnmiaa said todav that Myron 0. T^lor, his renre- sentaUve to tb« Vatican, wlU ^ . tlnae efforta to enUst the suimort ** leader* I n S * effort to bring. about • pcmuinent 'Z^lor.wbantaraadttiaiXurmB U^VMk^ealM.oa Ur. OASPER. wyo, Oct 3 MV-Sen- ator TUt, R , O , winds up hU west- •m political testing tour here to- day in a clash with the Demo- cratlo ftdmlnlstratloo oo several nomloaUon. Elsen- UWWW-# name has-cropped up fre- <HWnUy a* a poasMIe dark horse candidate. PresIdolfTrtahAa also hu lined up in favor cf ths universal train- ing proposal, thus adding It to the Ust of tnaior Usuaa:«f; disagreement mtlttP-^-*—*— -• Tuicca opposiuon lo compulsory muicary training because he said it might become “an obstacle to peace.' Instead, Taft urged tn a sUtement expansion of naUonal guard train- ing in the technical aspecU of war- fare which, he aald, would provide ♦k. or reserves for building a 444uu«<u military machine any tlma it would be needed. His stand against universal miU- ttwjralato* put the Ohio .senator xaeerd against a propcaal UnadjTwoo. tho'eador- looked ttpM; Ihe- 1948 betwCmtHePr««ld«»tand Taft, who h ^ jt h r e eoate's Btpublican policy TijCt alluded' to* his differences with the'admlniitsalion on foreign policy quesUons, doelaring in hli itatement tbat the. flnt principle of the American govenunent (hould be to maintain peace aj long as. world conditions do not threaten, tha freedom of the people of the Unlted States.” ~m my opliUon,- be said, -that has not-be«t~the folding principle of our fqrelgn p o to tn the laM 19 yvca. l do noi -feel confident P»itaMl7. Taft has attacked wbat ‘s . r --------- " •» w W Sweeley Says To ‘ Sit Tight’ -Oa£|fimkLaw oers to store botUes. of Uouor In tlielr Individual lockers for con- aumpUon by themselves or tteir friends have been advised by Coun- ty Attoniey a M. Sweeley t o ^ t Ught" pending dUtrict court rullan on test cases now up for decision Msho**********" aouthwestem ■Whether m not such a pracUce would be legal will depend uMn cetirt tnterpretaUon o f the statute irtilch U so worded that I t ^ h t ^ construed that It would belUegol for any pemn to keep or sto» any a« his home, office or club, for use o f anyone, except himself. UnUl a court nillng is handed down, the prosecutor Indicsted that a n or- sanlaUon permitUng members to keep liquor to Uielr own lockers WOTld be risking vlolaUon of the At present, the only definitely aaneUoned uses of alcoholic llauors are ^ Its sa le^ the drink in com- munlUes which voted under local option to U c ^ such sales o r ^ l ^ v l d ^ who purchase it direct from the liquor dispensary for their individual' consumption. Under a strict InterpretaUon of the existing stale law. anyone keeping llauor at p l« e “ fo r use by anyone oU>er than himself might bo considered O violauon. which would, for ex- ample. creal* the sltuaUon of mak- ing a law-breaker out of Uie penon wl)o serves cocktails to his friends In his home. Star of ’20s Dies In L. A. Mission ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Opens, but Control May B e " SIB BTAFFOEO CBXPFS 4 . . look ever inpreme economic command of nesriy banknpt England when he became minis- ter for eeonomio affairs, wlUi weeplnr powers eoerdlnate DrIUn’s eoonomio policy both at heme and abroad. (NEA pboto) Two Criminal Cases Slated On Tomorrow Two cases sre on the criminal cal- endar for the Friday morning ses- Sion of the fall term of district court. Judge James W. Porter presld- A moUon was filed Wednesdsy by Prosecuting Attorney B. M. Sweeley to terminate the parols and for exe- cution of sentence for Ralph Barks, who now is awaiting preliminary hearing on a forgery charge In pro- n to court The motion sUtes Uiat Barks has violated provisions of the (^P)— President Truman’s drive for American "aelf-ratloidntt” to ' ^ j" Europe went into high gear today amid hlnta thittho «diaSStnk ■ tion may take more drastic action If necessary. Leon Henderson. w a r t i m e^^wgS • ... * * ___ * ^ rationhig, denounced the President’s **buy vrisdy. sensibly, WMte nothing” program as one which “£alU tragic. ' ally short of the demands of a world crisis," He that congress be convened and food rationing resu m e quickly And Secretary of Commerce Harrlman indloited. t6 a t'»- Uoning and price controla arenot.yet out of the picture. He JnorSf «mmittee yesterday that the saving of 100,000,000 bushels of grain asked by Mr. Truman'inay be too little for western Europe’s needs. "I think you wiU find,” Harriman said, “ that somethins > like 70.000,000 bushels more than that Is really requlred.to do an adequate job.” ' , The presidential committee on aid lor Europe, wUch the secretary of commerce heads, dedded'not to recom m end'^ tioning or price control, Harriman said, because action "mnafc v ----------------- -------------------------------|be taken now— today’* and .; ^ AN0ELE3. Oct. 3 (#>)_OUvo Borden, who rode In the movieland firmament as a ♦i.soo-a-week star ^jreara ago, died in poverty yes- At Vo she had loit the fickle fa- w ot the movle-going public and the studio*, her health and wealth gone, but she was not enUrely for- gotten—her moUier was at her deathbed. CeaUj came in the Sunshine mU- lion for women in the heart of Los Angelei’ downtown skldrow. Her mother. Mrs. «ybU Borden. U man- —e r of the mission's commissary. -Jve, who had lived and worked U i w since 19*5, succumbed to heart and lung ailments. Ambassador Smith Returning to U. S. Oct. a iB -n . s. An- o a ^ o r W altw B. BmlUi wUl leave Sattirday for Washington to report «o^ sUU department SmlUi win be ^ le d on the trip -oa»8 br Ambassador Robert Mur- phy and Oen. Luclui D. Clay, O, 8, mlUtary governor In Ocmany. Bmlth Inspected today tbe buUd- ..ag la Leningrad which has been offered the United 8tat«a as a-eon< declared it suit- ijle . *ae bulldtaf years ago housed the Abyssinian-'muilon. Frederick Hainh.wii, tecretatjr of ttte U. ay. will be the consul gea- T«ningn4. . . ,iu Twjnica provisions of the parole from a one to^4 year peni- tentiary term for forgery by In- dulBlng In Intoxicating liquors, abus- ing and disturbing his wUe and family and forging a check to ob- lain money for drinklitg and gam- W ^ .J W s p a ^ wu sranted last ^Besides taking action on this mo- ttoq>v?tfdge Porter will preside at sutloa chargtng him with man- alaughter as result of an automoUle accident last June ao in which Mrs. Aj^rey Standlee, Hansen, received fatal injuries on Kimberly road near Twin Palls. The InformaUon wu amended to delete references to the previous sUte law governing highway speeds but which was superseded by a new-law passed by Uie last session of .the leglslaUire of which copies were not available when the orig- lna3 InformaUon was drafted. l ^ g e t t is represented by Attorney S. rc. Lowe of Burley. Grade Restored For Milk From “Topiper” Dairy On« o f Burley's sources of milk supply, the Topper dairy, has been graded upward to grade A status; aocordlng to 0. E. Cotton. sanlUr- lan ot the south central district healUx unit. Tlie dairy, owned and managed by Jess Yarrtngton. was degraded SepU IS to grade c so far as milk delivered to Buriey fnxn that j ^ t was concerned. A relnapecUon after two weeks hnd expired showed that all Items In vIolaUon and upon which the plant had been degraded were In complluice, and the grade A Ub«l was authorised Monday, ac- Meat, Wheat Continuing to Show Spiral By Tbs AsseeUted Press Prices Of meat and wheat-two sUples of the American diet—con- Unued to riso to or near>^2rf peaks tn leading mvkets today Trumao-a drive for •self-raUonlng- to conserve grain for Europe went Into high gear. Uve hogs at Chicago climbed for the fourth straight day and reached a top of »30J3 a 100 pounds early in the market that was as to M cenU higher. This top was wlth- in 23 cenU of Uie allUme peak reached last Sept 11. The average price of hc«s yestar- to » record high P* high was »28,7a. reached Feb. 25. December wheat futures on the Chicago board of trade for the'ssc-' ond atralght day advanced to a new record peak. The price reached mt a bushel, 254 to 2H c e n U a S ^ Uie previous cloee, and then backed up to $3.oau to H above yeater- day's finish. May wheat hit a new seasonal peak of «.M5i before receding somewhat. Com futures prices sUrted ir- regulsr and then moved as to 3H cents lower. The chief factor In the wheat price advance, traders ssid, again was the government plan to ex- port large QuanUtles of grain. Advancing prices of flour, lard nd JIAmf. <..1.. . 41 — 1 __ iouu volume of milk being pro- cessed by the Topper dairy, however, is not grade A, the official pointed out. MUk being delivered to Burley under-the standard milk ordinance and code is In compliance with stan- dards.showcvcr. and other milk be- ing delivered to ouUylng communi- ties will meet the posteurlzaUon Auvaounf pnces oz flour, lard and some other ingredients baa brought bread price Increaaes to some ciUes and there were indica- tions many other. clUes might fall Into Une. It '* n it Less Fe'eding Of Cattle Said Key for Drive WASHINOTOK, Oct 2 UPl — If consumers stopped buying and farmers'Stopped producing choice, Juicy beef steaks^ and roasts during the next eight months, the food conservaUon battle for aiding the h u n ^ abroad would be haU won. Agriculture department livestock specialists esUmate that unmally 60.000,000 bushels of corn ^ b t h e r grain equivalent are used in the com belt annually to fatten beef catUe beyond the average of good slaughter grade. _ Goa) u Told H ie goal of Uie food conservaUon program is to reduce dometUc con- IM.000,000 Dusheis so that exports may comaas near as possible to meeting easentia: needs of shortage areas in Europe of Agriculture Ander- sxs could help save grain by selling hogs at much lighter weights and by abandoning, for Uie time being, ^ e pruUce of fattening beef catUe Dodgers Win Series’ Third Game, 9 to 8 EBBBT8 TOLD, BROOKLTN, Oct 2 MV-Brooklyn-8 Dodgers opened up an early lead on the New York Yankeea and Just lastod through Uie longeat nlne-lnnlng game In world series history to earn a S-0 edge for their first vic- tory iQ the third game of the 1M7 subway series. In the three-hour and five mlniita struggle that consumed five Yan> 4/v iiun— Luuay ana can not wait on' creation' of the "necessary control me- chanlBras." He added: **niat doesn't mean, o f eoorse, Uiat consIdnmUon should not be given correnUy to what ctattQis might be establiahed, wiUi tbs auUi> ority of congress." i "Adreatm la Denoeraey* Calling it "an adventure in de^ mocnw7,-.aaiTlmaa forecast lue- cess for the giant consmatlon palgn announced last night n wap mv^ac^S ^ »-7ear-oW: by TVuman to head the dU- smtggie uiai consumed five Yan> kee pltehen and three Dodger chuckera, the Brooklyn clnb opej^ ed lu home half of the series sue- cessfully after two Yankee stadium defeats. Blx Ban Spvt '• After Bobo Newsom was rocked frctn the hUl in a six-run second inning Dodger spurt, it was a Ques- Uon of whether the Yanks woold ^ s r be able to catch up with UMm. They never-dM despite a two-run hflmer^_^4oe DlMaggio and ttte first ptoeh hit 'homer to aeries hUtoty, by L«n7 Berr* .Jn Uia sevenUu The Yanks kept'peeUnc away at sUrter Joe Hatten until tEey belted him out in Uie fUth deaplte Brook- lyns' nine runs. First Ftoeh Heao> DlMsgglo's homer toto tba upper stand* In left center was Uie crown- ing blow against Batten. The Yanks got one more off reliefer Ralph ^ c a In the slxUj on doubles by Hnch Hitter Bobby Brown and Tommy Henrich and sent Branca to the showers when Berra's hcmar made It 9-8. Pour hits, including doubla by (CmIUiimI r.,. H, Cl*«i o Preaktent Ttuman and Secretatf o f SUte Marshall wiQ b r M ^ u t f t naUoQwide appeal on the four.maior day. T h U * ^ '^ ^yod msse Skwanf^ th. ues WUl mcei me pasteuruauc standards of tbe sUte of Idaho. Farhi Bureau Ups 1948 flTieat Goal WASHINaTOM. Oct 3 «>-The agriculture department today in- creased the naUonal wheat plant- ing goal for the 1M8 crop. Tbe new goal calls for 15,005,000 acres-anpared with 78.000M0 an- nounced In August u Uie goal. It U about the same amount Uiat was planted for this year's record crop. Yields.equal to those of the last few yaaM would produce on the IMS aewage Uie * ' ur«e aovage uie lounn successive crop of.more than a ballon bushels. This year'k crop was sllghUy more Uian 1,400,000.000 bushels. me-fllantlng season for winter wheat :irtilch nonnally makes up about three-fourths of Uie total crop wUl.end Uils month. The dmartment also announced a naUonal rye goal of 3.<56.000 acres. This U about 605.000 acres more than the'tndlcated aeresgs harvest- ed UiU year. -XnENBfiOUS THIEVES NEWARK; N. J^-Oct. 2. W) M ich ^ Jupln was set npon and U>ra h(a:-«U« waa^ln Uie U u to the top grade. CatUe fau into four major grades utUIty * commercial and Ojata Imprevts Qnallty T^e buUi of the grain used to produce choice, or top grade, catUe goes toward putUng quality on the meat rather than In adding addi- tional pounds. ^ Choice beef has more fat about ^ parttoilarly a mUture of fat wlUj Uio lean, than the oUier «l«UUonal fat conwbutes U> the flavor of the meat It naturaUy aells for higher priCM Uian Uie oUier grades However, much of the extra fat on the choice cuts is in excess of Uie (juanUty which average con- Stricken on Hunt, Burley Hunter to Recover at Camp HAMILTOK, Mont, Oct 3 MV- Robert C. Pollard, Buriey, Ida., hunter who was striken Ui yeater- ^ In rugged mountains west of reported recovering today 'at a forest servic# camp. Nine forest service parachuUsU leawd to Pollard's rescue yeaterday, a HamUton hoapllal was alerted, an ambulance waited on a moun- relaUves o f Pollard hurried from Burley U> Bamiitftr. Early this morning the parachut- ists. mostly Montana university students and forest fire fighters, w k e d their way Uarough heavy Umber to advise the ambulance driver. Uiat Pollard bad been Uken to a forest service camp and will remain Uiere unUl he U well enough ♦" ride a horse out of the wflder- ••• muu jxnuuy; l» ne^ w - - iRre no *1BeaU(M days" or "egglw I«ckfnMp»gri^^ sijp e^ to -eat leas-.but to S ? Im of the scaree Sooiu. m a n ^ tM , «id a,:' "Otmrj World- Of democnwy,- h» s ’! ! w lim. Wallace Approves Europe Aid Plan, With Reservation Pirrapinj). Mass.. Oct a la^ Uietenns. ___8IXTO POUO CASE RUPERT, Oct 2-Tlio Ulnea of •n s-year-old girl was here today as poUo, bringing t o l S “ w ^ ^ b e r Of cases reported for State Department Gets Details Of M^shall ^Shylock’ Charge 'TAocuiiuAun, xjcu 2 OJJO—The sUUi department .has received from our Moscow embassy highlights of MoUier bitterly anU-American Sov- iet magaxlne arUcle which describes Secretary of etato George 0. Mar- >hall aa “a dreadful old man . the fihylock of WaU street- The arUcle, wrlUcn by N. Pegodln. was published in Moscow's •Uter- ary Omtte'* * week ago-Juit seven days after the same magaxlne pub- lished an. arUele by Boris Oorbatov comparing President Truman with ^the^ntUe corporal from M^nlc^- Lieut-aen. Walter BedeU BoiiUt. J. 6. ambassador to Moscow, vigor- ously protMted Uie T^man arUcls M-'3nuittmlj.lllielous.*‘ and demand* ing without suecea that the Rns- alan government offkdalty -DU- avow^ it Prontmably SmlUtt-only adJoQ In the MarshaU matter was to'-send. highUghU o f.lt home to the department without comment Refemng to Uu Marshan plan «iu UI mrope, Pogodto de- cribed Its authSrSr; ^ S S X l ^ d KukaiKu™! Bhjlodc, n . vengefu, unmerclfut. Insatiable In his greed .wbo even threatens to «urpau his classic wlglnai,- * ^ e r e never was a *Marahal plan' but Uiere was a Shylock plaa-usur- lous. greedy, and plUlKS,” Pogodin wrote. -Prom the moment of his (at Harvard oo June 8), <k>Uara and only doUaiB have served aa giganUa b ^ t an UreaisUble magnet,-for. boUt officers of fUte, Inflamed poUUci- ans, parliamentarians. ot af- -n»e laUn» , .T*®" Pmldent moved ^ day of his ll-day'to^ ttonJS He told a B a r v ^ univazaltv >tvi « *>«) to two .t30.gn ^ t Uut tbera muat be no ahJR? iS Slf'ttK' cuucai strocturea they hava.” B«cauie ^ said llnaDcteta-belim' trtvau tovestment and p n fl U ^ Uit, (dilef moUvaUag f o r c « - l a man society and mllitair m ol are trained to. bellm t h a v S a o e ^ maintained only by feres.* Waliaea reoommended Uut- b ^ iBcm - s ^ b« retamed Co ^The.heart of tbdr poUeiM.'' W •aid. Is Uie refumctlSn^Ott-- many of an .ecoBomlo aystaa. o f to cut a pound of fletii tram Victims o f Idke 'Are SM Misdng thm Ticam« «f «n Lake Bowea .S -oru\ eee tar tne*
Transcript
Page 1: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

lA fE B U L L E T IN.W ASH W aiOW , Oc*. * O l ^ t b o tekW

]lKUm ftfl ttCr U Ptt Mat t»*t WMk at___tba ta p ita i:«r » atcllm la afrlevltanj Mmtrnutr vrioM (or Uw tin t u «p te U

A Reflonal Newspiper StrrlngyoL. 80, no: m

Nine Irrigated Idaho Coonties

TW IN FALLS, IDAHO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1947

Russian Block of «“ies »n ‘»rmk Italy Membership Seen as ‘Blunder’

• h r E 'lS ^ (ff)--DIploinaUc experta| r^ icted today that Russia's, veto o f Italy’s Wd for United WaUoM membership would badly handicap Italian com - l^ n is t efforts to gain greater power and prestige in that •trateglc Mediterranean country.

A m ^ C M officials privately expressed surprise at the ac­tion which Russia took last night in a session o f the United

. NaUons security council. Some called it a “ political blunder” which would work strongly to the advantage o f Italy's pres- ent non-communiat government.

The Italian application was supported by the United * * * * iStetea, Britain and seven

Bulgaria Says Greek Set-up ‘Exaggerated’

LASS su coB sa , Oct. a w>) — Bulcaria Mcused the Dnlted S u tu tocUy o f deUbentclr euciermUng tbe B a lk u dUturbksees to "<up«

g tt pljr ft good ncuM U> tnuisfona ^ O m ea Into tn u m ti cunp oX the

United SUtcft."Tba BulftrUn ftttwk v u mftd«

b tton the 87.n»Uon pollUod com- » ltt «e o f United Nations u> semblr leta than 2i hours after two lmport«at derelopeaenU affeetlnc K la tlou between th« United States and Balsarla.'

*n ie» were the BPonUnff o f fuU diplomatic reoosnltlon to the eotn* munlat-domlnated Bulearlan gov- «m m eal by the United SUtcs and « elmultanMualy luccessful move led Mr the United SUtet and Brit­ain to bar Bulgaria fran member- ahlp la.tlj# United Nation*..

Bulgazlaa RepresentaUTo Dr. N. Merorah, glrini; his country'^ an- «wer -to charges of “ aggreaston" against Greece, assailed the United States for alleged plans to dominate the entire Uedlterranean area and charged that the United NaUons w a sh in g used as a cloak for such

— «ui u acveuother members o f the council and blocked only b y the “ no" vote o f Russia's Deputy For­eign Minister Andrei Gromy­ko.

American Ambassador W anro Austin indicated the United SUtea « u l d ^ the Italian case ^ ttose of other Sovlet-Tetoed coun­tries — Plnland, Austria. Ireland. Portugal and Trans-Jordsii-to tte larger forum of the general sembly.

One of Series The baUot on Ital^ was one or

a series of votes taken in the 11> naUon council, which split cleanlr ^oag toe usual east-west Une. Not

applicant countries considered yesterday received the re<iiured veto-free majority.

Russ^ also vetoed Plnland, Hun­gary. Romania and Bulgaria. oi>- poeed by America and Britain, failed of approval because they would not get the necessary afflrmaUve major­ity of seven.

T ^ y Russia’s string of vetoes stood at the total o f 337

Other Afeaclea Tied- The seoirity oouncll was not the

o ^ y U. N. agency Ued In knots by the east-west row, however. The 87- naUon general assembly was so b ^ deadlocked over efforts to fill remaining p

WLOWLY ZNTBIGUB8* CHABGBD . MOSCOW, Oet. a wV-SecUons ofthe M oacow -------that the

<441 4cuiiuxunB prospecuve vacancies trusteeship coun-

ells that It gave up the whole effort, called off temporarily any more meetings tn Its big auditorium at Hushing Meadows and returned to I-a ta^cceas for oomalttee worjt.

CBABLES P. KOELSCa . . . Ada oonnly district jitdft,

who roled yesterday that Idabe^ reoently «w cted UgDW-by-Ui* drink law Is oonstltnUoaaL 0«. fendanu in the test case hsn

•premised to appeal his rBllnj. (AT photo)

Jury List Is Told for FaU

Court TrialsThe Jury list from which will be

drawn Jurors for civil and crlmlnsl WsU during the current fall Unn « district court was announcwl Thursday through the office of O. A. BuUes. clerk of the court.

Opening of II criminal triab (or which Jurors will be empaneled is set fof Oct. $ before Judge James W. 'PorteTi

P o U o ^ are U)i 40 persons drawn for Jury duty:

PraiA H. Adams. Carl Boyd. W. D Dale. Esther M. Elcock, W . J. Hollenbeck, J. Uarion Humphrlct H. O. Claude P. MeSSoU M n. A. E Pickett, Mrs. Catherine Potter, Hugh E. Reed. Doyle Sllser M ln da K Sweet. Dale WskeS. K William Warbetg. Harry WUco*. sll Twin Palls and adjacent rural routes; Ruby Bates, Russ Carlaon. LcRoy Lee. Murtaugh; Chaille Bower. Mrs. Helen J. Diets. LeiHe PBterwin. Hansen; a Canfield, Mr*. Joim S. Peldhusen. Mr*, c . D. — ----- ---------

TeaUr,

a O f-»tolatl:»

D Uoe,* Mid , . .i.iiing fet iu> ob-

Sentence for Recklessness' Is Postponed

■ V p t o PHnaan. route 3. Twin n i ls , has been releued on his own feam ta jira .to ra ip p m In lo i m

s.o?ssis»s;r°'•ae d e ^ was gnnted .to enable

to recelT* additional

•444 t»4«uu> goimcuyeeterday. Nine n o.

’ -*• had been taken

. ~«.44.44 Ml tvcuvw ■~ ’ HKmii med- M to»tio tn l lor tojurlo ncrtTol in an accident south o f Twin PaUs ^ p t . 33. The reckless driving

» « « « « ! br «Ute police M o f„.“ >8 ftceident which oc-

c u i ^ while Palnnan was driving on the left side of the road, accord­ing to the InvesUgatlnTofflw

|1> for. Speeding a ^ ^ 4*? Mrs. LucineS. Haidtng. route t , B url^, pleaded

-g ^ ty to ip .0^ on M ^ ^ a JS S S e « t in T a jn Palls and was fined » 10. ordered to pay ooats involved.

Before Judge Pumphrey p n ^ t n s « “ mJeJwa Jndge, Robert a p S r y

* pleaded g ^ t y to speeding and waa lu iia tiD b T S S t

Drivers UnhartBom cars « m damaged, but the

drivers escaped Injury, in an inter­section collision a mile south and a mile east of Hansen at l :io p. m. Thursday, • according to Deputy

Boyd Thletten. who Inves-

Drtvers o f the machines were Warren Oehl, 37. route 1. Hansen, and Olehn P. Allen, 83.I*eft side o f the Dehl car and-riaht rear of the Allen vehicle were d s S - aged when they eoUIded u AUea traveling south, turned east, and

A «**»• Um officer■ TM reported.Two miner accidents •were invw .

(Owtlw—< «■ H x !«. C»I«»B S)

Taylor Continues Efforte for Peace

N ^ e r w o t a get the n e e S i * ? ^ aaioitty o f the B7 a s m b ly

A second deadlock developed in M wahly voting on trustoeshlp'lSu “ cU vacancies which wtU come ud at the end of this year as terms ex­pire. 77)0 Russian candlate for the ^ te e a h lp council. Yugoslavia, was d^eated on Uie first ballot. Russia

no decision.

U.S.‘Dictated’ to Resume Relations

With Bulgarians^WASHlNaTOH. O ct a (ff) _ Government officials said today a decision to resume full diplomatic reUtlons wlUi'Bulgaria was m »e or leas -dlcuted- by 5SeptiiJ:e of the peace treaty with that communist-

i'SfSJiT”The state department ended a six

year break yesterday by . extending recognition to the Bulgarlon gov­ernment and naming Donald R. Heath. 83-year-old career diplamat. as the U. 8. minuter.

A t the same time, however, this country maintained Its vigorous od- poaltlon to admission o f Bulgaria to the United Nations asse^ly.

^ HeJnity- B m o J. Plwrar, Hoi- R u ss^ T. Ofaves Pller anil

t t A. Klnyon, CasUeford.

gee ShipQuits Aim for BlcckadeRui]

JERUSALEM, OCt a (Ui3-0ne ol two refugee ships approaching Pal­estine with 3,889 Jews ntdloed todsr that -we shall reach HaUa tonight," todlcaUng the abandonment of how Of running the British blockade.

Soon after the broadcast, Britlib authorities in their " ■ -

Appeal on ‘Drink’ Is Scheduled

BLACKFOOT,:Octi 2 (U.R) — Donald R. Good, Blackfoot, attorney for the Bingham country club o f Shelley, said today he would appeal “ Imme­d i a t e " to the supreme court an-oplnlon o f Ada county Dis­trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding the 1947 liquor by the drink law valid in its entirety.

Good bad no other comment on Roelsch’s decision. The club was the first to bring a suit lo tost the consUtutlooaUty of the 1M7 law. It first sought an InJuncUon to pre- vent Bingham county and sUte law enforceoent orilclals from prose­cuting the dub lor operating on a locker basis. Judge Koelsch in Boise denied the injunction but said he would rule on validity of the Uw.

Not WiUiln ctly In Its complaint the club pointed

out It waa denied a liquor by the drink license because It was located outside of a city. The law allows operaUon o f clubs only within the boundaries of Incorporated clUes and vlllsges.

The club said it has been operat- Ing under the 1930 law which al­lows patrorts to ttore and drink their own liquor In the club rooms.

*Xcglslatnre Within RltbU"But Koelsch held that the legis­

lature was well within lu rights to restrict operation o f locker clubs and to forbid licensing of clubs out­side o f city limits,

aim pending are several other quesUonlng validity of the

liquor law. Chief among them is the case brought by Uio Lsst PronUer, a club located In Power county, against Uw enforcement offldata In an effort to prevent Uiem frx»n prosecuting the club. The case U in the Pocatello county district court and a temporary restraining order, unlike the Bingham country club caw, has been Issued by Judge L. E. Olennon. -

Econoniie Chief

U41 the ships, reported that Uig oonvoy ahouki put Into Haifa some Ume tonight.

The ships reported-they were sur­rounded by BriUsh warships. Unleu the report of expecUng to . reach Halfa.tonlght waa some sort of ruse, It apparenUy meant the Royal navy waa. taking the refugees to thit port

The ships were arriving from the Black sea. One of them was named RedempUon, the other Jewish StaU. Previous reports had Indicated they hoped to steal Uirough the blo«k- ade and put the refugees ashoV s ^ r t « along the north coast of

While Palestine was ' keyed up over the immigrant sItuaUon, s bomb was thrown into a Oreek ChrisUan grocery in Jerusalem. Of­ficers said it was a warning by the Arab underground, boycotters Jewish goods, against' the sale such material.

Taft Winds up Western Tour; Qashes With Party Over UMT

n party leaden ^ . . U44V— U44iversa] mUItaiy training.

T h i Obioan. who uims a o m m n i after a speech here In which he has promised to discuss '‘ the Demo­cratic party,” leaves behind newly- voiced opposIUon *- ---------■.......

WASHDJOTOH, O ct 3 (ff» -President Tnmiaa said todav that Myron 0 . T ^ lor , his renre-sentaUve to tb« Vatican, wlU . tlnae efforta to enUst the suimort

** leader* I n S *effort to bring. about • pcmuinent

'Z lor.wbantaraadttiaiXurmB U ^ V M k^ ealM .oa Ur.

OASPER. w y o , O ct 3 MV-Sen- ator TUt, R , O , winds up hU west- •m political testing tour here to- day in a clash with the Demo- cratlo ftdmlnlstratloo oo several

nomloaUon. E lsen - UWWW-# name has-cropped up fre- <HWnUy a* a poasMIe dark horse candidate.

PresIdolfTrtahAa also h u lined up in favor c f ths universal train­ing proposal, thus adding It to the Ust of tnaior Usuaa:«f; disagreement

m tlt tP -^ -* —* — -•

Tuicca opposiuon lo compulsory muicary training because he said it might become “an obstacle to peace.'

Instead, Taft urged tn a sUtement expansion of naUonal guard train­ing in the technical aspecU of war­fare which, he aald, would provide ♦k. or reserves for building a 444uu«<u military machine any tlma it would be needed.

His stand against universal miU- ttw jra la to * put the Ohio .senator

xaeerd against a propcaal UnadjTwoo. tho'eador-

looked ttpM;

Ihe- 1948

betwCmtHePr««ld«»tand Taft, who h ^ j t h r e eoate's Btpublican policy

TijCt alluded' to* his differences with the'admlniitsalion on foreign policy quesUons, doelaring in hli itatement tbat the. fln t principle o f t h e American govenunent (hould be to maintain peace aj

long as. world conditions do not threaten, tha freedom of the people of the Unlted States.”• ~m my opliUon,- be said, -that

has not-be«t~the folding principle of our fqrelgn p o t o tn the laM 19 yvca . l do noi -feel confident

P»itaM l7. Taft has attacked wbat

‘s . r ---------

" •» w W

Sweeley Says To ‘Sit Tight’ -Oa£|fimkLaw

oers to store botUes. of Uouor In tlielr Individual lockers for con- aumpUon by themselves or tteir friends have been advised by Coun­ty Attoniey a M. Sweeley t o ^ t Ught" pending dUtrict court rullan o n test cases now up for decision Msho**********" aouthwestem

■Whether m not such a pracUce would be legal will depend uMn cetirt tnterpretaUon o f the statute irtilch U so worded that I t ^ h t ^ construed that It would belUegol fo r any p em n to keep or s to » any

a « his home, office or club, for use o f anyone, except himself. UnUl a court nillng is handed down, the prosecutor Indicsted that a n or- sanlaUon permitUng members to keep liquor to Uielr own lockers WOTld be risking vlolaUon of the

At present, the only definitely aaneUoned uses of alcoholic llauors are ^ Its s a le ^ the drink in com- munlUes which voted under local option to U c ^ such sales o r ^ l ^ v l d ^ who purchase it direct from the liquor dispensary for their individual' consumption. Under a strict InterpretaUon of the existing stale law. anyone keeping llauor at

p l« e “ for use by anyone oU>er than himself might bo considered O violauon. which would, for ex­ample. creal* the sltuaUon of mak­ing a law-breaker out of Uie penon wl)o serves cocktails to his friends In his home.

Star of ’20s Dies In L. A. Mission

‘Self-Ration’ Drive Opens, but ControlMay B e"

SIB BTAFFOEO CBXPFS 4 . . look ever inpreme economic

command of nesriy banknpt England when he became minis­ter for eeonomio affairs, wlUi weeplnr powers t« eoerdlnate DrIUn’s eoonomio policy both at heme and abroad. (NEA pboto)

Two Criminal Cases Slated On Tomorrow

Two cases sre on the criminal cal­endar for the Friday morning ses- Sion of the fall term of district court.

Judge James W. Porter presld-

A moUon was filed Wednesdsy by Prosecuting Attorney B. M. Sweeley to terminate the parols and for exe­cution of sentence for Ralph Barks, who now is awaiting preliminary hearing on a forgery charge In pro­n to court The motion sUtes Uiat Barks has violated provisions of the

( P)— President Truman’s drive for American "aelf-ratloidntt” to ' j " Europe went into high gear today amid hlnta t h it t h o «d ia S S tn k ■

tion may take more drastic action If necessary. Leon Henderson. w a r t i m e ^ ^ w g S •• . . . * *___* ^ rationhig, denounced the President’s **buy vrisdy.

sensibly, WMte nothing” program as one which “ £alU tragic. ' ally short o f the demands o f a world crisis," He that congress be convened and food rationing r e s u m e quickly

And Secretary o f Commerce Harrlman indloited. t 6 a t '» - Uoning and price controla arenot.yet out o f the picture. He J n o rS f «m m ittee yesterday that the saving o f100,000,000 bushels o f grain asked by Mr. Trum an'inay be too little fo r western Europe’s needs.

"I think you wiU find,” Harriman said, “ that somethins > like 70.000,000 bushels more than that Is really requlred.to do an adequate job .” ■ ' ,

The presidential committee on aid lo r Europe, w U ch the secretary o f commerce heads, dedded'not to re co m m e n d '^ tioning or price control, Harriman said, because action "mnafc v ----------------- -------------------------------|be taken now— today’* and . ;

^ AN0ELE3. Oct. 3 (#>)_OUvo Borden, who rode In the movieland firmament as a ♦i.soo-a-week star ^ jreara ago, died in poverty yes-

A t Vo she had loit the fickle fa- w ot the movle-going public and the studio*, her health and wealth gone, but she was not enUrely for­gotten—her moUier was at her deathbed.

CeaUj came in the Sunshine mU- lion for women in the heart of Los Angelei’ downtown skldrow. Her mother. Mrs. «ybU Borden. U man- —er of the mission's commissary. -J v e , who had lived and worked U iw since 19*5, succumbed to heart and lung ailments.

Ambassador Smith Returning to U. S.

Oct. a i B - n . s. A n - o a ^ o r W altw B. BmlUi wUl leave Sattirday for Washington to report « o ^ sUU department

SmlUi win be ^ l e d on the trip -oa»8 br Ambassador Robert Mur­phy and Oen. Luclui D. Clay, O, 8, mlUtary governor In Ocmany.

Bmlth Inspected today tbe buUd- ..ag la Leningrad which has been offered the United 8tat«a as a-eon<

declared it suit- i j le . *ae bulldtaf years ago housed the Abyssinian-'muilon. Frederick Hainh.wii, tecretatjr of ttte U.

ay. will be the consul gea-T«ningn4. . .

, iu Twjnica provisions of the parole from a one to^4 year peni­tentiary term for forgery by In- dulBlng In Intoxicating liquors, abus­ing and disturbing his wUe and family and forging a check to ob- lain money for drinklitg and gam- W ^ .J W s p a ^ w u sranted last

Besides taking action on this mo- ttoq>v?tfdge Porter will preside at

su tloa chargtng him with man- alaughter as result of an automoUle accident last June ao in which Mrs. Aj^rey Standlee, Hansen, received fatal injuries on Kimberly road near Twin Palls.

The InformaUon w u amended to delete references to the previous sUte law governing highway speeds but which was superseded by a new-law passed by Uie last session of .the leglslaUire of which copies were not available when the orig- lna3 InformaUon was drafted.

l^ g e t t is represented by Attorney S. rc. Lowe of Burley.

Grade Restored For Milk From

“Topiper” DairyOn« o f Burley's sources of milk

supply, the Topper dairy, has been graded upward to grade A status; aocordlng to 0. E. Cotton. sanlUr- lan ot the south central district healUx unit.

Tlie dairy, owned and managed by Jess Yarrtngton. was degraded SepU IS to grade c so far as milk delivered to Buriey fnxn that j ^ t was concerned. A relnapecUon after two weeks hnd expired showed that all Items In vIolaUon and upon which the plant had been degraded were In complluice, and the grade A Ub«l was authorised Monday, ac-

Meat, Wheat Continuing to

Show SpiralBy Tbs AsseeUted Press

Prices Of meat and wheat-two sUples o f the American diet—con- Unued to riso to or n ear>^ 2rf peaks tn leading mvkets today

Trumao-a drive for •self-raUonlng- to conserve grain for Europe went Into high gear.

Uve hogs at Chicago climbed for the fourth straight day and reached a top o f »30J3 a 100 pounds early in the market that was as to M cenU higher. This top was wlth- in 23 cenU of Uie allUme peak reached last Sept 11.

The average price o f hc«s yestar- to » record high

P * high was»28,7a. reached Feb. 25.

December wheat futures on the Chicago board of trade for the'ssc-' ond atralght day advanced to a new record peak. The price reached m t a bushel, 254 to 2H c e n U a S ^ Uie previous cloee, and then backed up to $3.oau to H above yeater- day's finish. May wheat hit a new seasonal peak of « .M 5i before receding somewhat.

Com futures prices sUrted ir- regulsr and then moved a s to 3H cents lower.

The chief factor In the wheat price advance, traders ssid, again was the government plan to ex­port large QuanUtles of grain.

Advancing prices o f flour, lardnd JIAmf. <..1.. . 41 — 1__

iou u volume of milk being pro- cessed by the Topper dairy, however, is not grade A, the official pointed out. MUk being delivered to Burley under-the standard milk ordinance and code is In compliance with stan- dards.showcvcr. and other milk be­ing delivered to ouUylng communi­ties will meet the posteurlzaUon

Auvaounf pnces oz flour, lard and some other ingredients baa brought bread price Increaaes to some ciUes and there were indica­tions many other. clUes might fall Into Une.

■ It '* n it

Less Fe'eding Of Cattle Said Key for Drive

WASHINOTOK, O ct 2 UPl — If consumers stopped buying and farmers'Stopped producing choice, Juicy beef steaks and roasts during the next eight months, the food conservaUon battle for aiding the h u n ^ abroad would be haU won.

Agriculture department livestock specialists esUmate that unmally 60.000,000 bushels of corn ^ b th e r grain equivalent are used in the com belt annually to fatten beef catUe beyond the average of good slaughter grade.

_ Goa) u Told H ie goal of Uie food conservaUon

program is to reduce dometUc con- IM.000,000Dusheis so that exports may comaas

near as possible to meeting easentia: needs of shortage areas in Europe

of Agriculture Ander-sxs could help save grain by selling hogs at much lighter weights and by abandoning, for Uie time being, ^ e pruUce of fattening beef catUe

Dodgers Win Series’ Third

Game, 9 to 8EBBBT8 TOLD, BROOKLTN,

O ct 2 MV-Brooklyn-8 Dodgers opened up an early lead on the New York Yankeea and Just lastod through Uie longeat nlne-lnnlng game In world series history to earn a S-0 edge for their first vic­tory iQ the third game o f the 1M7 subway series.

In the three-hour and five mlniita struggle that consumed five Yan>

4/v iiu n — Luuay anacan not wait on ' creation' o f the "necessary control me- chanlBras." H e added:

**niat doesn't mean, o f eoorse, Uiat consIdnmUon should not be given correnUy to what ctattQis might be establiahed, wiUi tbs auUi> ority of congress." i

"A dreatm la Denoeraey* Calling it "an adventure in de^

mocnw7,-.aaiTlmaa forecast lue- cess for the giant consm atlon palgn announced last night n wap m v ^ a c ^ S ^ »-7ear-oW: by TVuman to head the dU-

smtggie uiai consumed five Yan> kee pltehen and three Dodger chuckera, the Brooklyn clnb opej^ ed lu home half of the series sue- cessfully after two Yankee stadium defeats.

Blx Ban S p v t '• After Bobo Newsom was rocked frctn the hUl in a six-run second inning Dodger spurt, it was a Ques- Uon of whether the Yanks woold ^ s r be able to catch up with UMm. They never-dM despite a two-run hflmer^_^4oe DlMaggio and ttte first ptoeh h it 'homer to aeries hUtoty, by L «n 7 Berr* .Jn Uia sevenUu

The Yanks kept'peeUnc away at sUrter Joe Hatten until tEey belted him out in Uie fUth deaplte Brook- lyns' nine runs.

First Ftoeh Heao>DlMsgglo's homer toto tba upper

stand* In left center was Uie crown­ing blow against Batten. The Yanks got one more off reliefer Ralph ^ c a In the slxUj on doubles by Hnch Hitter Bobby Brown and Tommy Henrich and sent Branca to the showers when Berra's hcmar made It 9-8.

Pour hits, including doubla by (Cm IUiimI r . , . H, C l* « i o

Preaktent Ttuman and Secretatf o f SUte Marshall wiQ b r M ^ u t f t naUoQwide appeal on the four.maiorday. T h U * ^ ' ^

^ y o d msse S k w a n f ^ th.

ues WUl mcei me pasteuruauc standards o f tbe sUte o f Idaho.

Farhi Bureau Ups 1948 flTieat Goal

WASHINaTOM. Oct 3 «> -T h e agriculture department today in­creased the naUonal wheat plant­ing goal for the 1M8 crop.

Tbe new goal calls for 15,005,000 acres-anpared with 78.000M0 an­nounced In August u Uie goal. It U about the same amount Uiat was planted for this year's record crop.

Yields.equal to those of the last few yaaM would produce on the IMS aewage Uie * 'ur«e aovage uie lounn successive crop of.more than a ballon bushels. This year'k crop was sllghUy more Uian 1,400,000.000 bushels.

m e-fllantlng season for winter wheat :irtilch nonnally makes up about three-fourths of Uie total crop wUl.end Uils month.

The dmartment also announced a naUonal rye goal of 3.<56.000 acres. This U about 605.000 acres more than the'tndlcated aeresgs harvest­ed UiU year.

-XnENBfiOUS THIEVES NEWARK; N. J^-Oct. 2. W)

M ic h ^ Jupln was set npon and

U>ra h(a:-«U« waa^ln Uie U u

to the top grade.CatUe fau into four major grades

utUIty * commercial and Ojata Imprevts Qnallty

T^e buUi of the grain used to produce choice, or top grade, catUe goes toward putUng quality on the meat rather than In adding addi­tional pounds. ^

Choice beef has more fat about ^ parttoilarly a mUture of fat wlUj Uio lean, than the oUier

«l«UUonal fat conwbutes U> the flavor of the meat It naturaUy aells for higher priCM Uian Uie oUier grades

However, much of the extra fat on the choice cuts is in excess of Uie (juanUty which average con-

Stricken on Hunt, Burley Hunter to Recover at Camp

HAMILTOK, Mont, O c t 3 M V- Robert C. Pollard, Buriey, Ida., hunter who was striken Ui yeater- ^ In rugged mountains west of

reported recovering today 'a t a forest servic# camp.

Nine forest service parachuUsU leawd to Pollard's rescue yeaterday, a HamUton hoapllal was alerted, an ambulance waited on a moun-

relaUves o f Pollard hurried from Burley U> Bamiitftr.

Early this morning the parachut­ists. mostly Montana university students and forest fire fighters, w k e d their way Uarough heavy Umber to advise the ambulance driver. Uiat Pollard bad been Uken to a forest service camp and will remain Uiere unUl he U well enough ♦" ride a horse out of the wflder-

••• muu jxnuuy;l » n e^ w - -

iRre no *1BeaU(M days" or "egg lw

I « c k fn M p » g r i^ ^

s i j p e ^ to -eat leas-.but to S ?I m of the scaree Sooiu. m a n ^

t M , « i d a , : '

" O t m r j World-Of democnwy,- h »

s ’! ! w •

lim .

Wallace Approves Europe Aid Plan, With Reservation

P ir r a p in j ) . Mass.. O ct a l a ^

Uietenns.

___8IXTO POUO CASERUPERT, Oct 2 -T lio Ulnea o f

•n s-year-old girl was here today as poUo, bringing t o l S “ w ^ ^ b e r Of cases reported for

State Department Gets Details Of M^shall ^Shylock’ Charge

'T AocuiiuA un, xjcu 2 OJJO—The sUUi department .has received from our Moscow embassy highlights of MoUier bitterly anU-American Sov­iet magaxlne arUcle which describes Secretary o f etato George 0 . Mar- >hall aa “ a dreadful old man . the fihylock o f WaU street-

The arUcle, wrlUcn by N. Pegodln. was published in Moscow's •Uter- ary O m tte'* * week ago-Juit seven days after the same magaxlne pub­lished an. arUele by Boris Oorbatov comparing President Truman with ^the^ntUe corporal from M^nlc^-

Lieut-aen. Walter BedeU BoiiUt. J. 6. ambassador to Moscow, vigor­ously protMted Uie T^m an arUcls M-'3nuittmlj.lllielous.*‘ and demand* ing without suecea that the Rns- alan government offkdalty -DU- avow^ i t Prontmably SmlUtt-only adJoQ In the MarshaU matter was to'-send. highUghU o f . l t home to the department without comment

R efem ng to Uu Marshan plan

«iu UI mrope, Pogodto de- cribed Its a u th S rS r; ^ S S X l ^ d

K u k a iK u ™ ! Bhjlodc, n . vengefu, unmerclfut. Insatiable In his greed .w bo even threatens to «urpau his classic wlglnai,-

* ^ e r e never was a *Marahal plan' but Uiere was a Shylock plaa-usur- lous. greedy, and plUlKS,” Pogodin wrote.

-Prom the moment o f his (at Harvard oo June 8), <k>Uara and only doUaiB have served aa giganUa b ^ t an UreaisUble magnet,-for. boUt officers of fUte, Inflamed poUUci- ans, parliamentarians. o t af-

-n »e

laUn» ,

.T*®" Pmldent moved ^ day o f his l l-d a y 'to ^ ttonJS

He told a B a r v ^ univazaltv >tvi « *> « ) to t w o . t 3 0 . g n

^ t Uut tbera muat be no ahJ R ?

iS Slf'ttK'cuucai strocturea they hava.”B«cauie said llnaDcteta-belim'

trtvau tovestment and p n f l U ^ Uit, (dilef moUvaUag fo r c « -la man society and mllitair m o l are trained to. b e llm t h a v S a o e ^ maintained only by feres.* Waliaea reoommended U ut- b ^ iB c m - s ^ b« retamed Co

^The.heart of tbdr poUeiM.'' W •aid. I s Uie r e fu m c t lS n ^ O tt - - many of an . ecoBomlo aystaa. o f

to cut a pound of fletii tram

Victims of Idke'Are SM Misdng

th m Ticam« « f «n Lake Bowea .S

- o r u \

eee t a r tn e*

Page 2: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

SvieXtetwBLVB T IM E SiN B W , TW IN P A U 5 , IDAHO

Stoir^e Units In California

' WASHJHOTON, OeL 1 ( fK l) !* tmiT diacIoMd today ttiit it opeeU to oonUaue to uao lU OtlUotsU ■upply depoU for at lust Ume to ttrenOT^tohandle lood aod other

An annr depurtmoit pubUo rela* Uoat ottlcer told a reporter the Veoeral <taf( hM -decided ag&iiut th« Mtabllahment of i centnl nip- Viy depot for the PacUIo c o t ' becauM of conversloQ and eocta.

r e v Are BrtabUihed Central depot* to huidle purchaM ■ “ t o f enjlneorlnf. ord-

naooBi quartenna<t4r. iJgnal, med* leal and other suppUu lor other taneral area* are optnted »t At* lanta. San Antonio, Columbus. 0-. and Sehencctady, N. Y.

The army orlgtnalljr planned to establUh luch a auppir cenUr for the Paclflo cou t and Bockv moun*. tain areaa at It* Osden, Utah, depot.

Dseannjrapokesinanuld afreight rata etud; dladoaed (hU it would cost taoo.000 to MOO.OOO a monUi extra to buy food, lartely In Cali­fornia, ahlp It to Ogden fo r tempo- rai7 atoraco. and then ship most of It back to California to lupply current army needs.

Seemed ” SUlr V lu W The cpokesm&tt said that this

seemed "slUy and a watle o f money." and a search was mule on the Paclflo coast for an tdvontsgcous locaUon.

A* It stand* now, the orrny will keep Its central stock racords for the Paclflo area at 0(den. whleh also vUl be a general lupply ceni«r for "alow moving-Item*. The other depkot* In the western axes will continue to perform their present function*.

Confusing Curls

World Treaty on Radio Operations WiU Be Signed

ATliANTlO C iry , K. J.. Oct. 1 UFi—One of the moit universal meetings ever held—the IntomsUon- al telecommunication* conlerenee— drew to a close as deletitea from 7B nations prepared to ilgn a new treaty to regulate world n d lo opera­tions.

Oharle* R. Denny, chairman of the federal communluilons com­mission and head o f the United State* federaUoo. said the treaty would be signed )it 3 p. m .. Ihura- day.

Denny, who was elected chair­man of the conferenw, said the success of the meeUng “ Insures the orderly use and Uu maximum growth o f communlcatlcos thn

D ent Ut tbe celden cw ls em>- lose yon. It's a bey. Little Mario De Sario, 2>year*eld Chicagoan, Is Just like aay other Uttle boy. He gets lost Uls Bother asked pollc*. to flod him, and they •earched the store where be was last seen. ‘TJothing there but a eonple of lUUe girls.- waa the f ln t YerdleL Then ooe of the ‘ ’girls’* wm* seen to,be wearing panta—it wms Mario, nnder a fnU head of curls.— (NEA pboU)

Greater Speed For Irrigation Plans Desired

OOULB DAM, Washn Oct. 1 »T h a fiialrman of th« house oom* mlttoo OB Interior department ap> proprUtlon* called today for faster ■■— -----------of irrigation projects for

jFinal Installment Paid by Mexicans

WABHINOTOM, Oct. 1 (/P) — Mexico has pakl the final InsUl- ment of a llJ.m.VOO claim by Unit­ed States companies whose Mexican oil properties were taken over by the Mexican sovemment In 193S.

veterans and heard » report that 300 families have left the Columbia basin project because of appropri­ation cutbacks.

Rep. Ben P. Jensen, la., said “I am sure I ipeak for the majority of the committee when Z ^ y thst not enough emphaols U being placed upon Irrigation development and the veterans' use of the land. We want this work to get underway as fast as possible.”

Touring the Columbia basin pro* Ject with Rep. Ivor D. Penton R , Pa., and Rep. Oeorge E. Schwabe, B.. Okla., chairman Jensen added that -It ii a question o f how much money we have to spend, and wa want to spend It where it will do the most good and get fastest pos­sible development."

R .' A. Parieer. supervising engi­neer of the project, replied when asked by Jensen why development was limited that the original pro­gram had been slowed down by ap< proprlatlons cut.

Joseph Brown, head of the Car­penters' union at Coulee dam. said a cutback affecUng force account personnel had shut off the wages of 1,000 families. One-third o f them. Brown sold, already had left the

Boost in Pnces Canceb Oiit $4 ■

CARE ParcelsAlthough eurtaiifflent o t certain

H package* from tha CoopoaUve for Remittances to Europe ho* been necesslUted by •teadUyrlslu.prlee*. 110 CARE package* may stU be sent and appUcatloa blanks for them are available at the Twin Palls American Red Cross office, accord­ing to BxecuUve Seeretan Eelen Ballcy.

A ccor^ g to word from Paul Comly French, execuUve director o f CARE In New York city. H flour and 14 lard pack^ea have been discontinued because of price in­creases. Orders for «4 packages post­marked later than Sept. 16 wlU be returned.

"It la with great reluctance that I make thU announcement,- Prench said, "when floun and fat* are urgently needed In Ettrope.

Both o f these Item*, however, are Included In CARE'S standard food package. Meats, sugar, milk, egg powder, chocolato and coffee also — Included In this 23-pound pack-

Solons Visit PopeVATICAN C m r, O c t 1 WV-Popa

Plus x n told eight membera of tha Amifftean house o f reprtsentaUve* interstala and foreign trade com­mittee. whom he received In aud­ience yesterday, that the Just gov- enmient recognlted Ita'power wo* nimlted by the baslo human liber­ties o f those who' are governed.**

The pope spoke to the group- headed by I«onard W. Hall, R^ N. Y w -ln Bogllsh.

ARRIVE AT* BELLEVUE BAILEY, Oct. ]—Mr. and Mrs.

Oeorge Pansier, Arkola. ItL, arrived In Bellevue Saturday. They expect to spend the winter at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Beck. Mrs. Pan­sier Is the former Miss Marcella Beek.

VHng Is Plannd On Student Union

MOSCOW, Oct. 1 W )-A 'aew wing on (ha ^ student building ratber .thao a tttioA new structure Is planned for the Uni­versity of Idaho campoB UUs year. Dean B. E. U tU g .-e h a lr ^ o f a student union committee, aau to­day.

The new wing will ooat tffW.ooo he said, in oontrast to tha propcaed new 11.000,000 structure would mortgage Incoma fn m stu­dent* fees for 3S year*.

TenUUve plan* for the wing caQ for a three-stoiy unit to double present union floor space and p io- vide expanded faclUUes for acUvl-

Twins Tvln Mothers;TtJLSA. Okto^ O ct 1 MV-Tirtn

iUtan gave blrtb only a few tId tha n a u hoapttal roein to

tw tn»-« b o j ottd a gM In each cu e .Tha mothan.''ihe fotmer WanaU

and Valeeu Jordan. 94. wera tended by the tame doctor.

Waneta. I* iww. Mrs. D. D. MeboU and her slder la Urx. A. O, Eatr.

Attendants ai. BUerast memorial lylng-ln hospital said the four In­fanta were strong and husky and

toHIy.m c b o U lg a .it iM B a a .to «& «&: ,

............................ eoBcera and Kaxrl '

Meet Ifou

Put Idaho Money to Work in Idaho!Intura wUti

Dan Campbell netumed home Sun­day after spending three days In Salt Lake City on business and pleasure.

nd EmimpjreSAFE SOUND CONSERVATIVI

Aato. Usbiltty, Baralsiv. Rebbarr n 4 Fkstn laswaoea H*m 0<fie»-4slrd BI4f.. BaUs. Idahe

y the top t u - , ,r f^ d a y a n d B W e l a famotu mn*l “ *l«rlnpeaoii.

bWEDNESDAT« P .M ^ KTFI^ TONIGHT ^

The Modernalres ^

PV«iM i#b-(TWEET CANDY COMPANY

t operator fw aa o

IMS. X

A m asriiig

Powdered Bleach

Has20 ADVANTAGES

over oUt-t<u?tioned lipuid bleacTiet

Lou of tree*, especially poplars, In Holland during the war brought a shortage of 90,000 palra of wooden shoes.

/S’ 7^/E ^ £Sr7EAC/ E/l/"

out the world.'Some 600 communkaUons

perta and government olllclal* fnun moet o f the nations ot (ho world aat through thiee separate conferences, which were begun lost May IS.

The conferences were write a 2M-page book of tochnleal regulation* opproved at Madrid In 1933 and revised at Cairo In ins. Earlier meeting* were delayed by the war.

Scouts wm Talk On Fall Activity

Report* on the summer camping program and an outline of foil nc- tlvlUes planned will come before Thursday evening’s meeUng ot the Twin Palls district Boy Scout c

torlum. Pleld ExocuUn ^K hall Terry announced Wednciday.

Chairman Kent Tatlock will pre­side at the session, to sUrt ut 8 p. m.

The faU program Includes a boy- fact survey as a forerunner to uio round-up o f boys who may b e Inttr- ested In entering scoutlni, and (utl details of this will be presented at the meeUng.

More people are smoldns

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v*a«toWt|l3.

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P'Nut Butter.Sunny Jim, Pure, 12 oz. Jar

JELLY.........Nalley’s Tanjj

DRESSING . .Nallcy’s Sandwich

SPREAD . . .Nalley's

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HERE ARE MAGIC VALLEY'S PROGRESSIVE, INDEPENDENTLT OWNED IGA STORES

There’s an I.G.A. Store Near YouBunL DAILEY

Erb Brother! Stop d: ShopMarket JEROME

BURLEY City MarketEconomy Grocery Hl-way MarketShelby Drlve-Xn RICHFIELDPlk -N" Pak Piper's Grocery

CAREY DECLOPaterson's arocei? Shaw-s Market

CA6TLEFORO DIET RICH0. ds U. Pood Serrlee Dietrich Mercantile

GOODINO EDENJ: 0 . Painter St Co. Bob's Drlve-In

FAIRFIELDRay Jones B: Son

FILESFiler Meat Co.

Bin'EBTMeacham Food Store WljlUeys Market

SIlOSaONE W & R. store

TWIN FALLSJames’ Poodllner

' York's Poods miNDELL

Wendell Pood Center

Page 3: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

Hussian Block of Italy Membership Seen as ‘Blunder’

xsations membership would badly handicap I t a l i c com - m n is t efforts to gain greater power and preatlge In that Strategic Mediterranean country.

A m «^can offlclala privately expresaed surprise a t the ac­tion which Russia took last night in a session o f the United NaUona aecurlty council. Some called it a "political blunder” which would work strongly to the advantage o f Italy's pres­ent non-communist government

The Italian application waa supported by the United * ’* • * * States, Britain and seven

Bulgaria Says Greek Set-up ‘Exaggerated’

. LAKE SUCCESS. Oct a (ff) — BulffftiU aoeUHd Uu Vnlt«<l SUtes t0d«]r c f <IelibentUl]r ex«cientlng the Balkan <tUturt»scei to “sup* pljr a Kood excuM to truufonn

^ O neee Into an armed camp ot t2ie U nlt«l SUtes.”

Tbe Bulgarian attack waa mada bcfora the e7*naUon political cooi> suttee of th6 United Nations as- ■embty less than 34 hours after two Important derelopments airecting relation* between the TTolted States and Bulgaria:

These were the Brantlng of full dlplooiatic peoognltloi) to the com­munist-dominated Bulgarian gov­ernment by Uie ttalted SUtes and m slmultaneouilr suecesstul move led by the United SUtes and Brit­ain to bar Bulgaria from member- ship la the TXnlted NaUons,

Bulgmrias Jtepr^U U ve Dr. N. Merorah. slTlng his ccuntry's an­swer to charges ot “aggression" against Greece, assailed the United Btatea lor alleged plans to dominate the entire Mediterranean area and charged that the United NaUons ■was being used as a cloak for such

>XOWLY ZNTBIGUSS* CHABGBD . MOSOOW. Oct. aw > :.6ectlonsof

M y w y c M » w ted. t ^

other members o f the council and blocked only by the "n o '' vote o f Russia’s Deputy F or­eign Minister Andrei Gromy­ko.

American Ambassador Warren AusUn Indicated the United SUtes would take^the lUUan case and th ose of oth^ 8ovlet-»etoed eoun- w ea — Finland, Austria, Ireland, Portugal and Trans-Jordan^to the larger forum of the genera] as­sembly.

One of SeriM T b t ballot on Italy was one of

a series of votes taken In the 11- naUon coundl. which si^ t cleanly along the taual east-west line. Not

applicant countries considered yesterday received the re<julred veto-free majority.

Russia also vetoed Finland. Hun­gary, Romania and Bulgaria, op­posed by America and Britain, failed of at^)roval because they would not get the necessary affliroaUve major- ity or seven.

Today Russia's string o f vetoes stood at the toUl of 72.

Other Areaeles Tied The security council was not the

only u. N. agency Ued In knots by the east-west row,, however. The 67- naUon general assembly was so b a ^ deamocked over efforts to flU remaining prospecUve vacancies in the security and trusteeship coun- clls tM t t gave up the whole effort, called off temporarily any more raoeUngs In lu big auditorium at « u ^ g Meadows and returned to Late Success for oompu tf,

CHABLS8 P. K0BL8CH . . . Ada e e n ty district jndg%

who n ied yesterday that Idab*^ woeaUy aaaeted U«oar-by-the drink law i t oeasiWoUeaal De- fendanU la the t«>t ease have

■premised t« appeal his rvUng. (AF pho(«)

WKI Bocuseo uw b and Anesletiu .of ‘^ la U n t

Sentence for Recklessness Is Postponed

^ la m .P a lrm a n , route 2, Twin bem released on hU own

j e c o g n ^ c o to reappear In 10 days xor pronouncement of iudsment after pleading guilty to T S o t j w j ^ driving before JuiUce

O. Pnmphrey,TSte delay was. m a ted to enable

» t t o a n to recelw addlUona] med­ical treatment for Injuries received

» « l d ^ s o u t h of Twin Palls ^ p t 23. The reckless drivlna cbATge was filed by sUte police «

of the accident whSh oc- cutred while Falrman was drivlnz

;< m t^ W tjId e o fth e ro a d . accort!

1111U17 •uuim OH LTuiweanip coun­cil vacancies which wlU come ud at the end of this year as terms ex­pire. The Russian candlate for the ^ te e a h lp council, Yugoslavia, waa drfeated on the first ballot. RuasU then reportedly threw her support to CoeU Rica In an effort to defeat the PhlUpplnes. which had wesUra ^ c k ^ ^ M d In the end there was

; wuk aiuq cu uie loaa.: mg to the^^vesUgatlng o(l

<1 jtu tlS court, Mrs. LuciUeB. Harding, route a, Burley, pleaded

east In Twin PaUs and was fined •10. ordered to pay costs Involved.

Before Judge Pumphrey preeldlnff as municipal Judge, Robert D. Per^

to •Peedlng and w fined 110 and i3 costs.

Drivers Uahnrt Both ca n vere damaged, but the

drivers esc^Md Injury. In an Inter- secUon collision a mile south and a mile east of Ransen at 1:10 p. m. Ttiursday, ’ according to Deputy Sheriff Boyd IWetUn. who Inves- tlgated.

Drivers o f the rereWarren Dehl, 71. rouU 1, Hansen, and Glenn P. Allen. 63, Twin Palls. Left side of the Deh) ear and rlsht rear of the Allen vehicle were dam­aged when they eoUlded*>«s Allen, trarellng south, turned east, and

^ Dehl was traveling east, the officer , reported.

Two

• '<■ 'UD«p r o d u e ^ ballots bad been taken la tWDtOy* on the aecurity ooundl

^ B r i ( ^ ^ the B t ^necessary two-

t ^ M o rtty of the BT a s m b ly

A second deadlock developed In4«j*mh1» ......

U.S.‘Dictated’ to Resume Relations

With BulgariansWA8HINOTON, Oct. 2 M>) _

Government officials said today a decision to resume full diplomatic reUUons with Bulgaria was more or less -dlcUted" by acceptance of the p e «e treaRr with that communlst-

whloh went Into

Jury List Is Told for Fall

Court TrialsThe Jury list from whkh will be

drawn Jurors for civil and criminal trials during the cuntnt faU term of district court waa announced ^ m d a y through the office of O. A. BuUes, clerk of the court.

Openlnr of U criminal trials for which Jurors wUl be empaneled b

W I?rtCT ^PoUowlng are the 40 persons

drawn for Jury duty:Prank H. Adams, Cart Boyd. W.

D. Dale. Either M. Klcock, w , J. Hollenbeck. J. Marion H m «h rt^ H. 0 . Lind, Claude P. t o A. £ Pickett, Mrs. CatoertS Potter, Hugh & Reed. Doyle SUnr. Belinda A. Sweet, Daie W a k e K WlUam Warberg, Harry WUeox, all Twin Palls and adjacent rural routes; Ruby Bates, Russ Carlson. LeRoy Lee. MurUugh; Charlie Bower, M n. Helen 3. Diets. Peterson, Hansen; & Mrs.

a Peldhusen, Mrs. 6 . a — ^ o ^ C U f t o n Lowe,

E.TBa^r,-

‘■TOUam-II.- ■ Her-

Watt,m, tM. niusiw, u , «i< wray, Bnhl M d T l^ t y : B m o J. f t i S f , H ^

T . GAivas; PUer and ^ A. Klnyon. CasUeford.

Refugee Ship Quits Aim for BIockadeRun

effect Sept 18.The SUte department ended a six

year break yesterday by exUndlna recognition to Uie Bulgarlon g o ^ ernmmt and naming Donald R. Heath. M-year-old career dipkxnat. as the U. S. minister.

At the same time, however, this c o u n ^ maintained lU vigorous op­position to admission of BulsarU to the United Nations assembly.

(Owitte—* — r«— n . UHm* S>

Taylor Continues Efforts for Peace

WASHWOTON, Oct. 3 VP) — JVealdent T n ^ said today that Myron O. Taylor, hU spedal repre- senUUvo to the Vatican, will con­tinue efforta to enlist the suinort of all world religious leaders i T Oeffort to bring.about-pom ansnt

major issues ana in aisagrwment wlUi some of his own ptrty leaden on at least one—universal mlUtarr training.

jE R u a u ja t . o e t a tttw -one of two refugee ships approaching Pal- tttlne with 3AM Jews radioed^today Uiat "we shall reach Haifa tonight," p le a tin g the abandonment of hops Of running the British blockade.

Boon after the. broadcast, British authorities In their tint sUtement on the ships, reported that the convoy shoukl put h>to Haifa some time tonight.

The ^ Ips reported'they were sur­rounded by BriUsh warships. Unless the report of expecting t o ' reach Halfa.tonlght was some sort of ruse. It apparently meant ths Royal navy was taking the refugees to that port.

The ships were arriving from.the Black sea. One o f them was named RedempUon, the other Jewish SUte. Previous reporU had indicated they hoped to steal through the block­ade and put the refugees ashore aomewherw along the north cout of Pales tUie.

WhUe PalesUne was keyed up over the Immigrant sltuaUon, a bomb was thrown Into a Greek ChrlsUan grocery In Jerusalem. Of­ficers ssld It was a warning by the Arab underground, boycotters of Jewish goods, against the sale of such msterlaL

Appeal on ‘Drink’ Is ScheduledBLACKFOOT, .Oct. 2 (OR)

— DoDftld R. Good, Blackfoot, attom ay for the Bingham country club o f Shelley, said today h « would appeal “ imme* dlately*' to the supreme court an opinion o f Ada county Dis­trict Judge C, P . Koelsch holding the 1047 Uquor by the drink law valid In ita entirety.

Good had no other comment on Koelach’s decision. I tu chtb waa the f ln i to bring a suit to teat the eonsUtutlooaUty of the IM7 Uw. It f ln l sought an IntuncUon to pr*> vent Bingham county and s u u Uw enforcement oftlclaU from prose­cuting the chib for operating on a locker basis. Judge Koebch tn Boise denied the tnjunctkm but said he would rule on valldtty of the Uw.

Net Wlthta Ctty la lU complaint the club pointed

out It waa denied a Uquor by the drink Ucense because It was located outsUe ot a city. Tlie Uw allows operation ot clubs only within the b o u n ^ e a ot Incorporated clUes and vlUagea.

TDt club said It h u been operat­ing under the lUS law which al­lows natrons to store and drink their own Uquor In the club roooa.

'XecUatsra WIthhi Elfttts , But Koelsch held thst the legU- Uture was well within lu rlghU to restrict <veraUon of tecker clubs aitd to forbid licensing of cluba out­side o t city llmlta.

Sim pending are several other ^ q u e a U ^ valkUty ot the Uquor Uw. Chief among than Is the case teoitfht by the Last PionUer, a dub locaUd In Power county, fgalnst Uw enforcement otftcUU in an effort to -prerent them from

the dub. The ease is tnS dunUk* the Bingham country c l S

* # • ♦

Sweeley Says To ‘Sit Tight’ O a i f o i a k L a w

Pans (

m to Stan botUea ot Itouor ta t ^ lndltldual lockers f T V I a ^ U o n by themselves or thetr W e n ^ have ^ advised by Ooun-tight- pendLng d i ^ d " ^

V ^ th e r or not such a wacUc* would be legal wUl depend unon

tourpreuuoo o < ^ s U ^ which U so worded t h « i t ^ M t e construed that It w ^

« « o r e any quantity ot Uquor at any place, aa hU hom ^otnce w d S T f ^ ^ or anyone, except himself. UntU a court ruUnc is handed dow£ tte W o ^ t o r indicated that a » or- ganlsauon pemltUng m e i ^ to keep liquor tn their own locken would be rtsklni vloUUcn ^

option to Ucense such sales or br Individuals who p w S a ^ u dlr<^ tram the U q u o r i£ S ^ ^ f w * ^ Individual c o n s u m p U o n /^ « B strict InterpreUtlon ot the «U U law, a ^ e keeping UqSorM any place" tor use by anyone other

than hlmseu might b e ^ d e r S In vloUUon, whlth w o u l T f o r ^ w p le , create the slluaUon ot mak- liut a Uw-breaker out ot the person » h o ta bUIn hU home.

“ ||‘Self-Ration' Drive Opens, but Control May Be ”

w M u ir bankrupt England when be became minis- t«r ter eem enle analrs, with jveeptog powers te eoerdUaU Britan's eeMWBte peUcy both at hane and abroad. tNKA pbete)

Two Criminal Cases Slated On Tomorrow

Two cases are on the criminal cal- endar for the Friday momlnff sea*

1»U term ot district court, wUh Judge James W. Porter presld-

A mouon was fUed Wednesday by frosecutlng Attorney K. M. Svreeley to terminate the parole and for exe- cutlon 01 sentence for Ralph Barks, who now Is awaiting preliminary hearing on f o r g e r y charge In pro- ^ t e court The moUon BUtcs thst Barks has vtolated provisions ot the parole from a one to*14 year peni­tentiary term for forgery by in­dulging In Intoxicating Uquors, abus­ing and disturbing his wife and family and forging a check to ob­tain money tor drinking and gam- bUng. ThU parole was sranted last Jan. 19. '' Besldsi Uktng actkn on this o o -

th«

uuk wuicn was superseaeo Dy a n e * Uw passed by the last session o f the leglsUture o f which copies were not avaUable when the orlg- liua tnfarmatlon waa drafted.

Doggett Is represented by Attorney 8 . T , ZAwe ot Burley.

Grade Restored For Milk From

"Topper” DairyOm o t B u r l 's sources ot

supcdy. the Topper dairy,.has been graded upward to grade A sUtus; aoeartlnf to C. B. Colton, sanltar-

district

*]%• dairy, owned and managed by Jess Tartlngton. waa degraded S ept 13 to grade O so far as milk deUvered to Burley from that plant ------------------- - A relnspecUon after

W A ffllN G T O N , O ct 2 (;p)— Preaidont Truman*? drive fo r American “ self-ratloninB” to ' SoS j " hints that-the a d i ^ S ^ ' -tion may take more drastic action i f necessary. Leon Henderaon, wartime boss o t n r i ^

* * ___• * and wtionlnff, denounced the President'* "bu y w l a ^ eat -sensibly, WMte nothin**' proirram as one which “ falls trairic- ally short of the demands o f a world crisis.” H e that c o i ^ e a be convened and food rationing resumed . '

And Secretary o f Commerce Harriman In d ica te t h i t » - U onii^ and price controls are not yet ou t o f the picture. H e '

the saving of1 0 0 ,^ ,0 0 0 bushels o f grain asked' by Mr. Trum an'm ay' ba too little for western Europe’s needs.

Harriman said, “ th at aomethinif • like 70,000.000 bushels more than that is really required to do an adequate job,” ,

The presidential committee on aid fo r Europer which the secretary o f commerce heads, decided not to Teeom siend-n- Uonlng or price control, Harriman said, becaose action ‘*mtufe ------------ ' ------------------------------1 be taken now—.today” and .

Meat, Wheat Continuing to

Show Spiral^ B y Tha AsMcUted Press P i ^ o f meat and wheat—two

sUples o f the American dlei-eoa- Unued to rise to or near record peaks tn leading markeU today as President Tlnmian's drive for self-raUonlng'* to conserve grain

for Europe went Into high gear.Uve h o a at Chicago cUmbed

for the fourth straight day and reached a top ot tSOM a 100 pn..n4 early in the markst that was 25 b 60 e«nu higher. IhU top waa with­in 33 cenU o f the alltime p—v reached last Sept. 11.

The a v e r ^ price ot bogs yestw^ day soared M cenU to a record high ot IM.7J. ■n»e previous high was <5172, reached Pieb. as.

December wheat futurts on the Chicago board o f trade for the aac- ond straight, day advanced to a new r e ^ peak. The price reached m t a bushel. 2^ to 7\ cenU above the previous dose, and then up to «3.B3U to H above yester­day's finish. May wheat hit a new s e s j ^ peak of ga.sSH before

Com futures prices started lr<- regular and then moved 2H to 3H cenU lower.

The chief factor tn the wheat price advance, traders said, again was the government plan to ex­port large quanUtles of grain.

Advancing pricea of flour, lard and scene other ingredlenu has brought bread pdoe IncreasM to some dUes and there were Indlca- tlons many other, dues might fall Into line.

- * ir * «

Leiis Feeding OfCatfleSaid KeyforDrive

WASmNOTON, O ct a (ff) -

Taft Winds up Western Tour; Qashes With Party Ov€ir UMT

poiiudans as leading ocn- r TafL R., 0_ winds UD hl> wiml. tk v------- - W y o , ----- ---

ator Taft, R., O , winds up hU weat- •m political tesUng tour here to­day In a clash with the Demo­cratic administration co several major Issues and in

Ttai Ohioan, who tAUB vi»uaa..wiio (ums nomewam after a speech here in which ha has promised to discuss "the Demo­cratic party," leavea behind newly- voiced opposition to compulsory mlUQuy training because he said It might become **an obstade to peace.'

Instead, Taft urged In a sUtement expansion o f naUonal guard train­ing In the technical aspects ot.-war­fare which, he said, would nrovlds toe core or reserves for building a modem military machine any timj. It would be needed.

His stand against UDlversal mlU- training put the Ohio senator

mtsflr on record against a proposal ‘Wtdet^haii ab M d / won the'endor-

A H u cou t.D ew cT .

iw .c ijn a jo r lssues«t-dlsagretment betWHB thaPrealdeM and Taft, who hsadg-ihe senaU’a BtpobUcan poUcy

B m ^ w 5 P i e r o r - M f , • • •

07 most pouuciana as leading ecn- ior; the ■ IMS Republican

preaidenUal nomination. B ia en - howeri name has eropped up tre-

P m ld ea f Trtahto also has Uned up In favor of the universal train­in '' proposal, thus adding It to the

.otjnajor lasues « t ----------------- *

aittmncmWith the administration on foreign P p l^ quesUons, declaring In hU tutement that the fln t prlndple o f t h e American government •ahould be to maintain peace u

u world conditions do not threaten the freedon of the people o f the halted s u t « . "■ - in my oplhlon,- he said, “that

has aot-bevt' the guiding prindpU "Mr f q ^ poUcy in the U it

I do not .ted oonfldent

PiwlMsly, Taft h u atUcked what

.to Wi

star of ’20s Dies In L. A. Mission

M O'". 1 w t-oa «iBorden, who rode in the mcvieland flm am ent as a |)MO-a-w«ek star a ^ y w ago. died tn poverty yes-

A t M she had lost the fickle fa -

Death tM at la the Sunshine mU- ^ for women tn the heart o< Loe A n g ^ ‘ downtown skldrow. Her Btothtr, Kra. BybU Barden, u n a ^ ager ot the mission's commissary. qUve. Who had lived and wotfc^ th m d n c e l » « . suecumb«l t o b S r t a ^ _ l ^ ailm cttt

Ambassador Smitii Returning to U. &U 0 60 0W . Oct. r « l > - 0 . 8. Am-

b a ^ o r w a lt « B. i s S S WUl lS ?e to to d a y for Washington to report

<*W tm en t.Smith wm be joined on the trip

bjBtte by Ambamdor Robert Uu?. piV aad Qen. lA dus n . Clay. O. 8, mlUtazy gorenwr la Oanany.

eauth tnspectad today the build- a g tn X«alngr»d has bwn otferad the Qnlted SUtea u a oon- t ^ t ^ j t n e r a l aad dedared U salt- aWa. buUdiag y «ra ago Juqa«t

slnian Pradeilck« the D.

•>. aa ^ b l^ . win be the eoosul gen- • r t t to l in ia g r w l.

« « uuuw^wn aaanaed xnior- matloD r>««>f<»>g Mm vtti) man* aU ^hter u result o t an autoaotfie accident last June 20 In which Mia.Audrey Btandlee, Hansm . recalved fatal tnjuriea cn Klmber^ road

• n » tnfoimaUon waa amended to „ ‘W;ASinNOTON, O ct a (ff) — delete references to the previousaUU Uw governing hlihwavsoeeds »t«PP«l producing chofce.but whldt w u su p e rM ^ C T a ^ Owtog- • - ' the next eight m o n t^ the food

conservaUon battle for the h i n w abroad would be half won.

Acricultura department Uvestodc cpecbOlsU estimate that nvmallr 60WI.OOO bushels of com or other grain equivalent are used in the com belt annually to fatten beef

^ Ooal 18 TeMThe goal ot the food conservation

program Is to reduce domestic con- ^ p U o n ot grain at least 100« 0,000 bushels so that exjiorU may come as near aa possible to meeting needs ot shortage areas in Burope.

Secretary o t Agricultura A n d ^ - jn tdd newsmen yesterday farm­ers could help aave grain by f in » r hogs at much lighter w ^ b ts and by abandoning, for the time the practice o f fattening beef ca ‘ to the

was coDcemeo. a remspecuon alter two weeks had expired showed that all itema In vioutlon and upon which the plant had been degraded were in compliance, and the grade A llbd waa authorised Monday, ac­cording to the sanitarian.

Total ToluBiQ of milk being pro­cessed by the Tjpper dairy, however, U not grade A, the official pointed ou t Milk being deUvered to Burley undeT'the standard milk ordinance and code is In compliance with stan­dards, Jiowever. and other milk l>e- Ing deUvered to outlying communi­ties win meet the pasteinrlsatlon atandards o f the sUte ot Idaho.

Farm Bureau Ups 1948 Wheat Goal

WASHmOTON, O ct a M>-Ttie agricultBi* d e p a ^ e n t today In creased the naUonal wheat plant lag goal tor the IMS crop.

Tba MW goal caUs for 7S,MSM0 acres .^onpated with 78.000.000 an­nounced in August as the goal. It Is about tba same amount that was planted tor this year's record crop.

Yields equal to those ot the last tew yaaa would produce on the IM l a m a te the'tmirth ioeem ive

ot.BMre than a bOUon bushels, yeara crop w u slightly more

than l.«lo,MO,000 bushela.‘n u -p b iiU n g season for winter

wheat tmlch nonnaUy makes up about thiee-fOurths ot Uie total c r w wHLend this month.* •

*nw apartment also announced a w u on a i rye goal or a,4M,000 acres. ‘Xhb It about 503,000 acres more t ^ ^ t h a tndlcaUd acreage harvest- ed thU ytar.

-QKNSSODB TmSVESN. J , O c t 2. tfp) —

kneckwT.dowa I® thxaa bmu who When t e told

. t ^ hia Wife waa in the hospital *»»oded him

^baek—It .- .

0 the top grade.Cattle faU into four major grades

l^ ^ o l c e . good, commercial and

Oraln Imprwea QaaUtyTbe buUc o f the grain used to

prod»^ choice, or top grade, cattle goes toward putUng quality on the meat rather than In adding addi- Uonal pounds. ^

^ * »»«t ^ parUcularly a mixture of fat wlUi the lean, than the other tower gradea. ThU addlUonal fat contributes to the fUvor of the meat It naturaUy seUs for hlsher prices than the other grades.

H o w e r , much o f the extra fat m the choice cuU U in excess of U>e (luanUty which average con-

Dodgers Win Senes’ Third

Game, 9 to 8m a S T S PISLD; BROOELTN,

O c t a M^Brooklyn'a Dodgen opened up an early lead on the New York Yankees and lastedthrough the longest nlne-lnntog game tn worid series history to earn a 9-a edge for Uxelr first v ie tory la the Udrd game o t the 1M7 subway aeries.

in the three-hour and five mlntiU struggU that coniumed five Yan­kee pitchers and three Dodger chuckera, Uie Brooklyn dub open­ed iU home half o f the aeries sue- cesstuUy afUr two Yankee stadium defeata.

SU Bob Spart - After Bobo Newsom w u rocked tran the hUl In a sU-run second Inning Dodger spurt it w u a ques­tion ot whether the Yanks would ever be able to catch up with them, n e y neve^- dtt dasdlte a two-nm homar by Joe DlKagglo and ttu first ptnch lilt heaer tn «e rt«

by Larry'Betra -la tba

Ttoe Yanks kept peddnsr away at starter Joe Rattea untU they bdted him out la the tlfth dtaplta Brook- lyns’ nine runs.

P int naeh Keener DlMaggio'B hctner into the isper

stancU In left cenUr w u tbe crown­ing blow against Batten. t t » Yanks ^ one more off reUefer Ralph Branca In the sixth on doubles by Ptedi Hitter Bobby Brown a ^ Tommy Henrich and sent Braoea to the showers when.Berra's >>""»>■ made it S-S.

Pour hits, indudlng doubles by — y«t« I t C>hma O

StricIcenonHunt, Burley Hunter to Recover at Camp

H A T T O N , MonU O ct a OPh- Robert O. PoUard. Burley, Ida, hunter who w u strlken lU yesUr- day in rugged moonUlns west of the Mpntana.ldaho border, w u reported- recovering todiay at a forest service camp.

Nine forest servloe parachutlsu «ped to PoUard'a rescue yesUrday,

. HanUlton hospital w u alerted, an ambulaiKe waited on a moun­tain trail, and r^Uves o f PoUard hurried from Burley to

Karly tUs morning tbe parachut­ists. mostly^ Monuna university students and forest fire fighters, w o^ed thdr way through heavy timber to advtn' Uie ‘ imbulance M ver that Pollard had been t d ^*'■ a fcra t servln camp aad wUl

jiwn— w u o y HUU ,can not wait on creation o f the "necessary control me* chanlsms," He added:.

- I ta t doesn't mean, o f oomse, that consideration should not ba given currenUy to what coatrola might be estabUshed, with tha aathi orlty of congresa." i

-Adventore la Demoeraey* CaUlng it "an adventure tn de- ‘

mocracy,’*.Harriman forecast sue* cew for"the giant eonsertatlon cam- . ^ Ign announced l u t night bv Charley Ijickman, the S0-year-<Mi aoap manufacturer who .w u pScke4 by ,Mr, TTuman to head tbe clU- wis* committee. '

Prestdeat Ttuman Secretary Of SUU MarshaU win broadcast II n a t t o ^ e appeal on the four.majot networks at 8:80 p. a . , m s t , Stm- day. ThU wffl open what « " 1 M a news coaferenoe l u t nSghtd?! scribed u an "sU-madU* .- t a d u d l^ U lttSrS^radio, moviu'^and’ ta

Uvm slogau ovCT tb«

m •vHDat wTTice camp ana Wm remain there unUl he Is weU enousb to ride a horse out of the wflder-

s i x r a p o u o e a s eRUPERT, Oct 3-The Ulneai c f

an S-year-old girl w u here today u p ^ o , bringlna to alx

State Depai^ent Gets Details Of Marshall ^Shylock’ Qiarge

WASHINOTON, O ct a (lUO-Tho SUU department has recdved from our Moscow embassy hlghllghU ot ^ U ie r bitterly anU-American Sov- letm agatoa —........... • •describesS m ta r y o f B u te Oeorge C. Uar- i j ^ ^ u -a dreadful old man the Shylock o f WaU street"

Ih e artlde, written by N. Pcgodln. w u published tn Moscow's ' U t ^ wy Q w t te - a week ago-Just aeven days after the aame mmyrtna pui>. Ushed an. article by BorU Gorbatov comparing President Truman with Hmtt «»n »r a l from Munlch,-

IJeut-Oea.. Walter Beddl smith, U. a ambassador to Moscow, vigor­ously protsated tba Ttuman artlcU u "wantonly Itbdoos,'* and demand­ing without snecen that tbe Rns- *Un government oiffldaUy "Dis­avow" i t Preaunably Smiths only

cribed iU a u lh S u k 5 2 S ^ M man. a Shakespeareaa Shylock, re- vengeftil. unmyclful. Insa^ble in his g reedT m rh e evnTthrutens to surpass hU datslo or igtaie

"n tera never w u a •>*■>«>»«» nUn’ but there w u a Shylock p U n -n w ^ loua, greedy, and plUlen," Pcgodln wrote.

"P icm the moouat of hU 'ip e e ^ (at Harvard on June « ), d d la n and only doUars have served u gteaatla b ^ t an ineslsUble magnet,>(or both otflcera o f sUte, innamad poUUd- ans, parlUmsntaiiaas, Blsn <€ af-

“ Xhe Sbakeswanan .Sbyleek

•Tvw ifc. rrnnimanty em iins oniy actlea la the Matihall matter w u to aend hlghUgbU ot. It home to

tte nett war la r x a * ja r t«r » eaa.* ■nieta yien jm -maitam iOtU

Wadnesdaya"'tt

w i s i s . ' - js s r ’i s s

'• » !* w u u i » :

rann^ of w«iar T i . „ t a< »ioetK r- iw

^ ^ M t now beoomo'the graa- W M , or wo ahan bury '

Pwple. to U k e^ S S S d lL -^ .meat because that a t o i S

In S*T0 wheat^ w a y -p a r U c S S

Wallace Approves Europe Aid Plan, Witli Reservation

h it t e w iuu no t m u a io , ,iod a S

five New England sUtes, aU e x « « RepubUcan Maine. ^^ tdd a Harvard nniversity aud-

to 6M0 afc306ton lut'B ^ t that there muat be n o attanxptrecdvterSMthe ^ o f Internal wonomlo and P^tical strocturu they «h»n bava.” .^Bey»hasaldllnancia«"beU anthe chief n » U v a t la ^ * fe S S ? man aodety a n n u t a r r n a m tnlned to bdleva that p M U

"should*--—‘ *•-I7W.*

said, "k ^ many 'o t an .

' V

asked to cut a w ueaa m anthe body ot his w lth^Statom hand and a knltlin ^bday* ahyiock win cat 'ou t Jad».

w w m oiamignis <h .k name u pendent aa ttflnk ld iia^ anda dw w the departmeat without commeat dgnty trom hU d * b ^ ^ 2 » * 2 ^

Referring to tba Marshall pU n _l^ L & dy a n t i W /

1 be retnmed to prlrate Ufa.'*

aM~mo S .te jw ift o U rn a ii.a g rw - ;

Victims of L ^ e > i Are Still A&sin^

kenga sod Dwoty Oaoria Seat to

on Lake Bo*en.fl• Tba 1bOUr t ____iMrad tbrtta i i . - .

aM

Page 4: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

TMQBTm

GandHils 78; Observes Day In Usual Way

RSW niCLHT. Oct a (#)-Mob*n. ^ K. Otn^hi lod*y dcroUtf Ms n th bta1h (U A im tT tn u 7 to p n m . twttDC tad U bon lor omuUoq ot tht «ecDmuut « u u t whJch b u b m M tlbtnt throuchout thla m b-coo- «tMB» (lo t* fn w lon (racn BrlUah rult WM ktUlncd with tht htip ol hla ffuldtse*.

A lthw ih ttm U1 trora Infhitnn and couihtnc bwUjr. Outdhi w u out o ( bo«l kt 3:30 u a , whta bt ceo« tfucud Iht unul pnjr«r meeUsk tor Ct«rr u n p lom Utd other houtcboM

Bard at Wwk B7 4:i& ajn . h« w u •quatt«d 00

th« noor hard at work M o rt a U* Inch hKh deak.. Aa the aged Indian leader work*

•d. the aUeoca « u broken otOj by th t toft b u n of charkhu at vhlch two woQtn ipun eotton. OecaiKm- ally oat 01 tht women hummad tht atralaa of tome Indian folk tong.

K e e p th e W h U e F la g o f S a fe ty F lv tn g

H<no five Cayt vAthout a traf/ia death in our Uagio Valley.

vhoa vat H. & suhrawaidj, for- a«r premier ot Bensal. a clott at. aoelau ot tC. A. Jlnnah. rmmor ftaera) ot Pakistan, and tnflU' ' ' iQ tht affalrt ot that countiy, Qmrwamt C«ne«m«d buhrawatdj. who cpent the night la a fUMt.houM on the iroundi. Joined tht roup at 8 ajn. Olftng a pottlblt clut to tht dlrteUon ot hU half hou

The untal ctremonlea o f mats u - teoibUet to mark the birth date

abandontd thlt year. A staff atm btr explained that **nobody eoQld tnthuilaatteally celebrate In this time o f iDdU*! trouble" and that Oandhl wished s o special cere*noor.

Pay $ 2 0 FinesTwo n o fla tt haw been Itrled

. to municipal court against men who

. pleaded gutltr to chargM o f drunk- «nnem pnftrrtd by dty poUct.

Beth M. Low and Mark B. MtUdler, 49> South Park, each wert fined that •mount by Judge J. O. Pomphrey.

The Hospital' Xmeigtnqr beds «oly were araU- •blt Thunday at tht Twin ftUs oounty general heapltal. visiting ■ boon art Zroa a to 4 and 1 to • p.m.

u AMn Park. Uw-,--------- ---------- Mr*. Violet tudUt'.Bovtr, Mrt. Charlea Brannon. Mrs. iDcwlto Oraham and Un. R. L. iDttwSn, an Twin PaUs: Paula ; Btokta and Mra. Charlit Mathews, ,Uartangb: Jaatt PUvel, Richfield; Jln. Predtrlck Whitehead. Basel* ta: Kra. Rtz Stoat. Bden; Vlggo; Ktmberly: “

‘ Bob Oraadall. Prank LotUr. Karl Ibxwtn. Opal Baktr, Mrs. Ohtxlts Baktr. Un. Ijoulst Rackow, Ur Wamn Bohrs. Un. Jamta ynw --1 and Un. Frederick ‘ '

Marion J. Smith Honored at Rites

B U nun '. O ct 3-Puntral serv- tees for Uarlon J. ftnlth wert held Tuesday at the Marlon LDS waid chapel with Bishop M. w . Cranney offleUUni.

Prelude and pottlude wen played by Vemlt Mabty. Muslo Included numbcrt by Jenal* Cranney and Porrest Serert acoonvanled by Nel* Ue Uartln, a aolO by Elvln Nelson, accompanied by Ortl 1\)lman. duet fay Ortl and Joan ’Ibhnan, and a tolo by Blaine Marttndale.

Invocation wat by Ralph. Whittle. Thom u Mabey and Bishop WUford S m n spoke. benedleUon was by Kenneth Warr and the graTealde prayer was given by Robert Smith.

Plowen wert handled by BengU Deadler. Amelia South, PhyllU Bnwn. Ouenna Rasmussen, Doro­thy Whltely, PontalU Horton, Rita Laytoo, Dorcat WUson. Ada Price. Ruth Lyons and Martha Cranney.

Pallbearert wert'JEarl Sears, Ralph Warr. Ray Warr. Thurlow Smith. Harold and Arlyst Mabty.

InUrment was In the Marlon cemetery.

~ T n g^ W B !^ T W lN PAUe, roXHO nmmm, ocroam t imtMinister of Cuba Resigns Post for Part in Rebellion

HATAMA. Cubit, O c t S (« ) — ■ducatloQ Minister Jott ..Manuel iU eJ W vbpte name bat beta mtn* tlcoad in conntctloa with a racent* ty cmashed ezpedlUoo onanlatd In (Mba to UiTade tht Domlnleaa Rt< “ iblto, quit hU job last night under

Tht Cuban tenaU bad voted "non-confidence" In Alemta eo tht--------d that a m i were found at','....... and that h i allegedly had _

payroll penoni unooonected with hit mlnlstiT,

Aleman resigned at once. P : ^ . dent Ramon Orau San Martin la^ mediately appointed Aleman a minuter without portfolio and eler. - TTndersecretary Carloe P. Ara-

to the education mlnlstnr. Ale> man had held the education p « t since May. 1948.

Col. OKar O tu of the Cuban army charged at a new conference Monday that Alsmen was ImpUc

throw the Dominican R ^ b llca n ot President Rafael

Reinhart Billiar,91, Passes Here

Reinhart BUUar, 81. a resident of Twin Palls since 1810. died at hU nooie at ■ '* ' ~ •

Harbor Fight Said Testing Laboi: ActLOS ANOELB3, Oct 3 W>-Mo»t

s cargo lay untouched In frclghUra and on docks of Los An­

ita and Long Beach harbors to* y In the stalemaU between CIO

longsboremea and the Waterfront finployen aaaocUUon which a unloo official called “ the first major test of the Taft-Hartley act”

**We.can no longer depend m law but must rely oa our economic strength.” the union official, Louis Ooldblatt IntemaUona) secretary of the Longthoronen't and Ware- boutemen'a union, told a mast meet­ing of dock workers.

at 8:45 a. m. Thursday.Mr. BUllsr was bom In Buffalo,

N. Y., ^ P t. 30, 1858. He farmed In N e b i^ t for years before his reUre* ment when he came 10 Idaho. He was a member of the Immanuel Lutheran church of Twin Palis.

Mis wUe, Bertha, preceded him In death Jan. 15. 1940. He Is aur- Ttred by two daughters, Ida BUllar M d Clara M. BUUar. both Twin Palls; t son. Julius J. BUllar Buhl^and three grandchildren. Phy. lUs. Ruth and David BlUUr.

The body Is at the White mor- tuary pending funeral arrange- menlt.

Twin Faiis News in BriefVMt ta t y f i g t alt iMr. Ptoyd J. JQdd and _ art spending Iht wtak at tht BroDsoo hoBM la Sprtacdtta,

old Wends. Mrs. Basal BObtct a&d Mr. aad Mra. Ltaard Maw. O fd w , Utah.

L. B. Pentat m L. B. Ptrrlnt. tnglattr to tht Twin Palla Caixal ocmpaBy; la «»- Taletctag at hit bcoM east «c Twta PaUa fOUowtat a btait attktt tatt

Marrtagt Uctnaea w«% Imtdffednetday bar tha com ty not to Robert A. Rysoan and AUet“ • and K< ------ -YTonnt Walker. aU ot T«ta PallbPtewMT Btaidtala VW»Mr. aad Mra. William a TVk», Portland. Ort.. Tisittd brttOy T itt-day with frttad* la TwtD PaUa. ter U tht ton of tht Utt O. & Taytar. f in t Justlct ot tbt ptaet te Twto Palls.

Booster Niglit SetSH06H0N*, O ct 3 — Booster

night will b« obsenred Oct 10 by the Wood River Orange, acooedlng to aa announcement by Master Donald Sandy.

A special program and speaker have been arranged for the meet* tag.

Magic Vallejr Funerals

Itraa. aU Twin Palls: Mra. Xrrea Xttacktnbert aad daughter. Sim* beriy. aad Mra. W. z. M cpvund.

WeatherTwte PaOa aad vidnlty-.ratr to

partly etoodr toalgbt aad FrWay. ehan^ ta b n ld lty aad tva*

Blgh yeetetday IB, low » . Lew thla aeenUag U.

JZRMCB-^Puneral terrlou tor Mrs. Mary Blsabeth Tooley wUl be held at 3 p. m. Saturday at the PTasler mortuary. Prlends may call at the mortuary untU time for serr- Icaa. Intarment will bt In the Je-

I cemetery.

RAINBOLT’S

FLOORSANDING

We wni On Anywhert ta Magic Talley to Do the Job.

AH Wetk OBaranteed

PHONE 354

Two Persons Asking Permits for BuildingTwo new building permlls have

been fUed at the Twin PalU city cltTk-r office. ^

Robert Llngnau. 348 Van Buren. requested a permit to construct a 14 by 30-foot cinder block garage for an estimated t350.. Harold Oosney. 354 Sidney street, plans to make an 8 by 18-loot ad* dlUon to a one-famlly dwelling, pouring a concrete floor and usU\g tome salvaged materials. The addl- Uon. to be u «d aa a wash house, win cost an estimated 1150.

Foot Bone Broken

Injured In football practice was to be taken to St. Valentlne’a hotplUl at Wendell today for more X*rays of hla Injured foot foUowlng dU con^ that one bone In the foot

X*raya were taken at Wendell Wednesday, dUclosIng the fractured bone. He was Injured Monday.

CALIT0RNIAN8 VISIT HAILEY’. O ct 3—Mr. and Mrs.

Charlea Brooks and daughter. Hoi* lywood, and Layton WllUs, Saa Prancleoo, Calif., arrived Sunday to epend two weeks as guerts at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George McCoy.

Knten VatvenltyHarold (Buddy) Lockhart, aoa at

Mr. aad Mra. Lawton Lockhart, tn* tered Utah unlveralty Moaday to continue hU pharmacy ttxtdita. Ha attended Webtr coUegt at r ' last year.

BlrtbiSons were bom Wednatdap to Mr.

and Mrs. Charlea Mattbawt, Mur* Uugh; Mr. aad Mrs. Cbarita Crum* rtae. Hateltoa. and Mr. aad Mra. Rex Stone, Bdea. and daugbtcn to Mr. and Mrs. Predertck Wbltabet«ll. Haielton and Mr. aad Mra. R . U DetweUer, Twin Palls, at tht Twta Palls county general hoipital na* UrrUty home.

DAV te Meet A special meeting ot tht Btrmdley

chapter ot tht Disabled American Veterans wlU b« held at « p. m, Prlday In the Jury room oa tht third floor ot the county court* house. The meeting U tcbtduled tn order that a charter may b t signed ta connectloQ with tht DAV per> manent memorial home. Alfrtd J. Steckleln. adjutant aanooaew'

Transfer OkayedBOISE. O ct a (U»—SUta Rtcla>

maUon d g ln e tr Mark R. KxiJp to* day approved the application ot John P. Edtaborough, Ooodlng oounty farmer, to traaater water applied to 80 acrea to IK acrea. tn* eluding the ao. The water la from the Big Wood river.

The transfer eras proteated by other srater users, Kulp tald.

ASK rO B DKMOnStmATXON

W H Y S U F F E R ?

A S T H M A

BREflTHEflSYAT TOUB OmUQ 8TOBB

0 1U M O V I E S U N D E R T H E S T A R S

n MOTOR-VU 0U OUTDOOR THEATRED l MILK RAST OP TWIH PA ILS-ON lOMBBRLY ROAD

i SKSTHBBIOBION

THURSDAY - F R ffiA Y

PMIS CAKTOON u il SELECTED SHORTS_________ NOTICE!_________

VZBST BBOW NOW 8TABT8 AT 1.M Saoaad Shew 11:01

B tx 0 « c * OptBt at - OtSM Xar|y|

Tha Best Mot1« Bajoymeiit In UitComfort of Uio Pamllr Cm .

PbB Now to Allend thom id n ig h t m a t in e eSATURDAY NIGHT

Mia. L. Mytrt. W teeoa Lakt, la d , to TlsttiDt at tb t home of Mr. n A Mta. Charles MoBwala. 100 Ntath aem M north.

. Vlalton at tlM homt o< Mr. aad ^-Vtnai Bency art Ura. Harold — , St Paul, Hebr.; Mr. and Mrs.----- :*mmens and ton. Oretley,Mebr, aad Mta. A. R: Btudley tad ton. North Blatt*. Ntbr. Mra. witter la tbt daogbter of Mra. Btmey.

t tn a l eara.parkad OQ the aaau a tm t waa reported to Twin Pailt «lty poUct Wtdntaday night WQ. *•— . A iw a nporttd that while hla

. wa* parktd tn Second avenue tenth a rtd and grttn Indian blan­ket was taken: and P. A. T a r j re- porttd a blaaktt atolea from hla ear wbW .lt waa parked on Seoood avt&ut watt

Mrs. Tooley, 53, Dies at WendeD

OM « th» taW andtQ atU foOowtat a Un*

Hebr; 00 O ct 12. 1802, Sbt 'la a Bwabtr -o f tha Methodist and haa lived ta the Jeromt arta for 90 years.

Sunrlvcrt. Include her husband. Qooald Tooley; one son, Capt John Jeflertoa ‘XM ty, Booolulu, Bawall; four tUughtera, Mra. Maalne Dal­ton. Payette;. Mra. Maiy.lUaabeth Otto, Jerose; Mza. Lots Jeaa MUltr. Jerome, and M n. Coral. Vlntnla Sauoden. Caldwell; twO hrotbtra, Boward Mlltoabergv; Tht DaQca. Ore.. tad William MUtonbetter. Sal* am. Ore.. and a lister, Mra. Ooral McMillan, ■nwdford. N ^ .

Puneral terrlcea will bt held at I p. m. Saturday from tht P n terlan church. Burial wlU b t ta Jeromt cemetery, Prlends may call at tha Prailer mortuary.until ttmt for terrlctt Saturday.

r r n mYOU ASKED FOR n . . .A G A I N !

W A lU C E B E E R Y -G E O R G E R A FT i

Seen TodayOotati' Auditor Otarte BoOtaaettag aa boat-tt a ..........ahowtr btld after of number Of bit staft. . . Ben Mot* t«m preparlag'to leavt (or Moeoow ■ attend u. of t------game Satarday wttb high bopet of tatlnc Vaodala whip the tradttloa* ally*toagb' Oougars . . . New tign votag la troot-«f radl»al*tlcn STPt. . . , Andy MMka looking vurra sporty mlmiB hla- glattta. which -be taya hat nstaff sow ooly ' reading ftae prtat iOD.cantraeU .. .Mayor Berb Uuterbaclileaning jauntily aialnst Bkt templv pUlar while conrenlng with two otbtr geato . . . Picture ct Tnr«e« &:

Qrant 0D .9SQ bOl.ta Judgt.J. a : Pumphrey'a ooUectlon of traffic ftaecurrency . , , Police o fflcm dratted ______In old clothet. ea routt to data ta 'aayway.”

Hearing iSetifdr;

C17. noM rttd a ' pnUmtaaiy btax^; tag wbea am lgatd WtdDttdty bt* fert-P n b ttt Jodg* a . T . Bamm a»- aad a iM a rterw u t t i t o r O et.lT .'

BtQ'oT 11,000 waa. t t i by-Jtidf*

te tbt eottody «< tb* thcrlff n t f l - ba n u ra lM d . '

Tht offtaab allettdly oecurrtd, S tp t l -wbeo Batktt pasttd a ebtek for m drawn on tb t Twht-PaBi' Baak-aad *:-------------------------*.ay'a Plaoo b i Murtaagb.

judo (appUad) at FBI actwol . . Just aaen: Bm Prlart, Herb Oral Charlea Oottoa, P»d ZngraBam. B Nltschkar aad Dorla OUvar ... Aj omtMard: Pallov ratienalliti about high acort' ta golf fasie adding, nven.- iVu good «

One Day Photo

Finishing^ Any Size ,

I or Reprint

EPSOM SALTgy ir ABSORBINEi»=H 79 ‘DREFTSUDSH 29<

0N£ P/mf

GILLETTE Milord RazorSHck-jhmrtlut opens at a twiitl

pf»fjve 050

btln Tm m TMbtrtM. U tt»f «•< imWM

SA V E on T h e iet i e

29* AMORAY TALCtJIS’SL.....2t.r36'69* LILAC LOTIONIdeoloftet « Q t hav«. 6-0*............ ‘to

O cfoberVeM33' Mimeil* Toott PaitaI.<]Tg*Tub«»~

2 " r 3 3 'Tfme fa Sere OnFoniila 20 , 49* Sbaapit6>os. Bottlei

2 - 6 9 ' 'Trfpfe-PlffenJ I59' MINOYL Mineral Oil |

B u r2 -S A V E Cl2 « ^ 7 9 ' ^

unncVunTn'urrnc I FEATURES for NATIONALLY HOUSEHOLD NEEDS I advertised brands weeklook it (Ac fV/cM 0/149c RUBBER GLOVES{Si‘a 7 :2 9 < f

_^B^Candy Dish > 19c

ONE-MAY IMMO M U LTIPLE VITAM IN S

f i0 « MURINE «Q |Fm tti« nMi IHniK* . . . . . . . WKO TEX S4 'a , 1 2 1C oato ia lfiff • • • • • • j t '

\

Page 5: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

• T>'-r. .......... :

TPIP-OTTO. TWnj FAIXS. IDAHg ,

PILOTINGJl^lUiS DURING ANDERSON'S GRE^t

A STORE-WIDE SALE OF VALUE PACKED SAVINGS!

Am arm u wriUa* snder «lz feet of water >ad (wlee m f*od bM«Me It M a tt 7 n evcrydsr pncU otl b^eflU. In erwydiiy bm. Now yosr new Bpbobtered fsmJtBTe CAn b« looUnc new y e m from now. Xt'a m poetwsr pranlM BiAde coed. Come In. Let u IcH «nd ahow yes tb* wb«U ■Biaitwy i(«t7 .

t P e . Drrenport SefA> n e tm d -w H b tht

Ifew Dmx Treated C onr

Gorgeooa Nylon S 1 M . 0 0

Bere U ooa o f tniajr h U wb ibow with the anr D r a x Ubrio.•el that hM th* ctnly b«lr and S55 “ “ •Prtof. ^ U la eohlODt, back and b ^ t IHwnport is

- t laehei looser than standard Bln.DK LCZB DATKKO AND CLTO CBAStL JM DKAX FABBIO m 9.n

First! Exclusively Here On Furniture Fabrics

ERSOn

-First at C C. Anderson'sHELPS NEW FURNITURE LIVE A

- j t l i S s ' W m oreSpO ts " ■

DRAX Treated UpholsterynrrRODU CED b y W a s h i n g t o n f u r n i t u r e c o m p a n y . . . M aker. oI C n .I l „ . , le r and S l « p « .a t . r

“X”—ON NEW DAVENPORT SETS ' “X”—ON NEW BED DAVENOS

“X”—ON NEW CHAIRS AND ROCKERS

DRAX Resists INK— GREASE—OIL WATER SPOT—FRUIT AND BEVERAGE STAIN

AN D SCORES OF OTHER FABRIC-DAM AGIN G INJURIES

INVISIBLE, TOO! W IL L NOT

CHANGE OR A L T E R COLORS

NEW ARRIVAL!

Children's Cotton Print DRESSES1.98

Fresh crisp cotton prints In lovely, fast colors Everyone atyled fo r youth. Floral prints and stripes. Exceptional values at this low price. Sires 7 to 12 inc.

New Arrivall

HAPPYHOME

DRESSES3 9 8

Crlip freah eeltoD prints direct froa the milU. Floral detlrns la colon trees, red and b ln wlth Ufbt back* Krennda.. BUe* 14 to M and H t ltm

New Arrivall

SPORT AND AUTO

ROBES2,49

A renalae raris Woolen Mnis robs. BrUUant plaids. Deep tone colors. Ib o fln t shipment tbls season. Oet toss BOW. Sbe 3ls5«.

Genuine

Chenille Bedspreads 8 ”

Twin and full bed sizes. Gorgeous colors from white to deep tones. Plains and multiHiolors. Center designs with lovely border trims. Heavily tUfted chenilles on 1st quality muslin backs. Get yours’ today. Balcony Store.

Men’sGenuine Woolrich

Wool ShirtsIdeU for fasnllBr or ipertnrear. Colon In plaids, red and black and wblU and black. 8!sm to 17.

6 * 0

MEN’SBroadcloth

Pajamas^ 9 8

PollmaB st7 l«, batton frosL Larre as. loetton *f coUara, Sanforised An slsM.

DENIM

blanket Lined

Jumpers^ 9 8

Tb« workmans dream for waxmtb aad •errtce. B f r j blanket Unlnr. wool. M % cotton. AU tiscs.

' BOYS'

Flannel

Pajamas|9 8

Medlua walfbt for extra wamth and oeafort. Slaes to fit aD boyi. Get 7» m now. XU a hard to ret itea.

MEN, LOOKI AT THTS SUPER VALUE

UNION SUITSOnly ^89 j Q a n n g n t

A medium weight union.!n-a fu ll range o f sizes 8 M 6 . Fine cotton jmit^y.ams, elastic r ib / long sleeves ^ l e length. Msde to sell: fo r 42 .49 . Shop early and get yours t o d ^ I

JustArriTed MEN’S MONKEY PACE

WORKGLOVES

4 5 'pr.Rabberized Angora. Nap fa d n e .

INFANTS* SPECIAL

JufltArrived

Ves Pant VestsCotton rib, cach

69<Yes Pant Panties69C

Cotton rib to natch tho Tests Limited Qnantities

New ArrivalMEN’S FANCY

DRESSSHIRTS

2.49Every shirt sanforized shrank' f o r . permanent fit . Gorgeotis paUems and colors. Sizes 14J4 to 17.

Men’s Akom PeR '

SHIRTSZ.75aatanO. Btavy. '

M icb f t e m m t t :

Page 6: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

IDAHO- TAihuffiAT/e ioBBB iijun.-

- - "10 gw«4 BtnM Wm*. TwU

It-: ' M

An MtkM nqnind fcr U* •? tar erd«T »( eevrt ot ««CBp^t tarWleUen psUUh.d «M?r. will t>* »i.bll.b.d, inn t » < w tMM of tbii ptMT p«mi>M t» 8«rtl<ni t«-ie( I. aiwt. M th»wt« by q«»uf m. im Uw»« ( idib«.

HATtONAl. -RtPtMlKTATtVia

NEWSPAPER W EEKO dc0 a year W8 In the newspaper buBlneu

iBTlte tbe attention ot our readers to the fonctlon o t the press In community and na­tional life. The feeling that prompts this Invitation Is a mixture of gratitude and pride, .with ttie former predominating.

We bare the blessed good fortune to operate under a government which permits us to report news without Interference or censor­ship, except in cases where national security is inTOlved. But it does not seem Immodest to aay that tbe American press as a whole Jias appreciated its freedom and cherished its good fortune in such a w a; that that freedom exists undlmlnlsbed after 160 years.

T b s slogan of this year's National News­paper week. (Oct. 1-8) Is "Your Newspaper— S c ^ n g Freedom by Serving Y ou." It Is not necessary to catalog tbe many examples ot public service which are evident In every adltloD o f an American newspaper. That M fvice can be summed up In the words In- lonnatloa and opinion, two Indispensable •tomenta o f a true democracy.

T be unhampered gathering o f Information expression of opinion by private citizens

jBay not be the most Import factors In a gorem m ent by free people, but such a gov­ernm ent could not endure without them. In order to know the issues facing their gov­ernment—local, state or nattonal->and in o rder to choose wisely the officers o f govern­m ent, people must have access to'lnform atlon th at they can trust.

Lacking that Information- It Is almost im­possible for them to guard their civil rights totelUgently or, once those righte are taken from them, to restore them without violence And bloodshed. This is tbe history o f too n a n y countries in the world today.

Suppression of Information and free opin­ion bas reached its height, ot course, in the Soviet union. There the press Is simply part Of th e government propaganda organisation. Orltlelsm Is permitted only of tbose persons w ho deviate from,party line or government

. policy. Truth is not only unimportant; it la an ’ active enemy which must be silenced and banished.

Elsewhere this control o f free ei^resslon takes the somewhat milder form of suspen- •Ion o f publication by government order, or withholding of newsprint which eventually drives the offending publisher out o f busl- s w . But wherever the circulation o f true Information Is discouraged, there one finds

• individual freedom weakened and the cause o f peace endangered.

In this country our government, far from Interfering, Is endeavoring through treaties to guarantee a greater measure o f press free­dom abroad. Let us hope that m any other fovem m ents may follow the American ex­ample, for in it lies the bast hope o f better understanding among nations.

The American people's heritage o f a free press, which they have guarded and pro­tected, has done much to make this nation strong and keep it free. The press’ own heri­tage, bequeathed by generations o f Intelli­gent, honest and responsible newspapermen, has also been guarded and protected.

That heritage, In short. Is the obligation of newspapers to give its readers the truth. So long as that obligation is met there is no danger that either the press or the people will lose th ek freedom.

HOW RUMORS W ORKLike so many sheep, hundreds o f people in

Twin Falls and vicinity rushed to ^ e stores last week-end to buy nylons, sugar, canned goods, ammunition, hardware, tires and everything else that frenzied rumors brought to their minds.

It all started with unfounded reports that the government had Irosen such items, and the result recalled those days during the war when the announcement o f each new ‘'freeae" brought out long lines o f eager buyers.

Before this week-end “ tizzy" had subsided In Twin Falls, several merchants had already started taking down names for the waiting lists.

Was there any basis for these rumors?. A nd how were they started? These questions went all the way to official Washington be­fore they could be definitely squelched.

Needless result: More shortages in some lines because of this abnormal buying and the likelihood ot stm higher prices as a con­sequence.

Selfishness and mild sieges o f mass hysteria lead us to do strange things a t times, even thouBb we are Supposed to be sm arter than sheep. : I

FIRST THINGS FIRST Am vtoan scientists are studying the et-

fMta ot atomic bomb ladiatlons on heredity. ThlC »h oln i ceitaln amotmt o t optlmlam.

mora com fortable U the Atateaman would sa t togather on

. * pU nlO odttaw Uia atomic bomb ao that the ■ « n a 'i0l»h t M aaaliiail otth at la

e .M B M ^tir, .a new O ration,

. •■-.P«>6(a Who ajiens’aii their tlm « -w on ju a a jn u t i^ ttm i iO ieU need onel - . '

TUCKER'S NATIONALW HIRLIGIG■AVBOUABS—OTTtnlnd Ubor bM talcn boU> a

U uoc tod ft Ucklnc wiuun Uie iMt fiw wMks. But both o n ln li mvr m ntuiU y o p cn u to the adnatace « l Um a m st* . batd-worklng «aplDy« sad tb t m «m-

b m ot hi! family.“ -isiooU UbodtM tost a

of pm un wbea thi----------twoiaM lA ir t tiny bad

eoQdimnid u aa adrecata o f the ‘rm -R u U ty ■lav* Uw wen by a •weQtt nujMlty !a a cpwlal «l«tlon 'ta the elsnui PnuuylrtaU district

*------------------ " ^jwdown ea the.......J mwlts e( that

.......... [ atatutv, it v as a d ed -•Sra blow to the euh-aad^w nr

lU bor Indtts «b « , without evta the blU. hATt lubbtttad it

M cruel Mid m«tlon»ry.U tt«n pourlDf Into tho Whlt« Bousa uid otncei

o f cOTireMmeD ,o o n ^ tho tnprMdoo th«t th« is .- 000.000 liiflustrlAl wotlCBn are comlns to reskrd the Uw M K M ferurd nUier th u « m w jun of ecoaomio SIkTery.

: A m O A T rr—Numerout union offtdili. In iettert to tbe Preildent, Senator Taft, O., and RepresenUtlve Bartler. K. have aaealled APZ<’aod CIO nff|f.|ni| for their AtUtude toward the itatute. They are w pe- dally Ineeneed over John L. LewU'a refuaal to alin the NLRB affldarlt to the effect that he U not a

As a luppond «hew pubUe and poUtlea] b ooetivm taf atatute,:

Prerident William Oreen and the other 14 T-p’e on thJi quetUon at the recent. OJenland meettaf of the ortatiUatlon’a execuUre eonunlttee and, as usual. L«wU woni

By not agreelns to aisn the I-am.not-a-conununUt oath, and torelna the AFL ruler* to adopt hti vJew- polBt, Lewis has deprived ererr email local union of the rlihts and prlvlleses which they would other- wtM eniar under both the Wajner and lUft-Hartley acts. By Ziewla flat, k > to ipeak. they are outlaws Intofar as eovemment aid and protecUoa are eon- eeraed.

AUJBaiANOB-To say that loeal unioa leaders art sora Is to put Jt mildly. They have wriltan Wash- tnfton labor haadquartsrs, damandlnf that the A7L abandon the lUff-necked attitude forced upon It by the coal miners’ boas.

In short, John L.'s deflsnce h u done more to edu­cate the averase workingman on the merits end demarlts of tbe Taft-Eartlty law than any other happening.

OmparaUvely few American workers are registered eommunUts. or believe in that systsm of economics, pollUca and government. They think it no stain or fUgma to say or swear so. In fact, according to the commonlcatlons reaching Washington, Uiey are only too wUUag to voice allegiance to the flag as against the hammer Sad tleklk.• • •

MANAQBHCNT-'nie nation's greateit corporaUons. including U. B. Steel, Goodyear Tire and Rubber and Ohryaler, to mention only a few, have takes over the task ot telling their working people that the Taft- Eartley law allows and forbids. Under the sxipeneded W ^ e r jebor relatione, act, managtment was not

mts.

uwsmucn as /le u ana uiw speecnes, and publicity have been devoted to only a b on the Tatt-HarUey legUlaUon, the men m by It «ire learning about its key purpcee am

'teportant labor laws enscted In the nation's history.Inasmuch as AFL u d CIO speeches, statemenU

................................ k bruUi attAckmost affected

------------------------------------------- purpose and provision*for the first time.

And, although even Its house and senate authors admit that their handiwork may need amendment in labor's favor, especlaliy In the presidential year of IMS, the 10.000.000 men and women employed behind the aatlon's machines appreciate, as their letters Indl* cate, that the law tends to free them Instead o f to enslave them.

MARTDf—The Republicans are following Speaker Joseph W. Martin'* current trips acrou the nation with special interest. Although the modest, likable, Massachu4tU man malnUlns Utat hU tour Is only a pre-IMS. exploratory expedlUon, he figures as a pos­sible, presidential nominee in almost every practical pollUclan's ImaginaUon. Here U their pro-Martla analysis.

Oovemor Dewey. N. Y., and Senator Taft, O., the two leading candidates at the moment, may kin each other off In the first two or three roll calls. They doubt If Harold E. Stassen or Sen. Arthur Tandenbcrg can make It in the stretch race that will foUew the Deway-Taft elimination.

They may \be wrong—•‘pro" poUticlans are often short-stghted and narrow-minded—but they are stilt cold toward the candidacies of Generals Elsenhower and MacArthur.

Under such circumstances, the plain. down>to-earth ’’Joe'* Martin might be the man of the political hour. Many clubhouse DemocraU, who would vote for no other Republican, would plump for him.

And If, in 1046. the people are reienUul against 16 years of Democratic rule, with a White House “crisis" hltUng them In the face or midriff every few weeks, they might welcome such a sane, quiet. unexclUble individual as *-8peaker Joe."

V IE W S OF O T H E R SNO SOLOMON >4BSDE0

demands covering operating rules, they ask for no wage Increase, only better working- conditions. The railroads retort that 38 ot the changes would compel rail lines to pay more for less work man the present workers can perform. The other nine changes woxild, the lines claim, change operating practice at Inereaeed cost.

The public, which pays the transportation and freight bill. Is interested prlmsrily in fairness. I t will concede that rail labor should have (air pay stand* ards And woriilng conditions that are not oppressive. So tar the travelers and shippers will itrtng along with the operating unions. There they will itop. Ho unnec­essary work, no openiUng change that can not be jus* tided in requisite efficiency, no "made work" to create unneeded raU Jobs can be endorsed by anyone who U aware that all ot this h u to be put Into the charges for transport service, The public pays the bill

Row tar the operating unions are right and the raU- roads wrong, the layman Is not prepared to say. In the long run, It is the Job ot the IntersUte Commerce Commission to ascertain the facts. Since management- employe relations are Involved, It can be the job o f the national Labor RelaUon* board, too. The ImportAnt thing Is to keep politics out of It and make a decision ea the cold hard facts.

Let's sum up the facts on which alone the decision ahotfld be made regardless ot who likes It and who does sot: Fair pay scales—no utmecetsary Jobs—no unecon-

8LOT MACimrS LAWWa are of the opinion that the atUck o . the con*

B arton ._____ __ . ___________ _____________ _____of unsolicited advice from this newipsper to slot machine operators is that they let well enough alooe or they may find themselves completely out o f business. We are ot the opinion that the public generally la convinced that the -bandlU" should pay their way. aod pay It well, cr be put completely out of business. They have operated too long In Idaho by-passing the law and falling to assume thitr Just portion bf the cost of government.—Payette &iteiprlse.

H u war deputmeat paid H1S.M5 last year for suaesUons tHat are expected to save tbe govemmeDt |10J060;000. How for some suggestions that will save tbs tupayacs eoaie douib.

Po t

S h o t s

mMBODI WRR KO WM>» r«t« and Defi Alttar «er« tMatta.

^ three miles north et Reeky Bar last week*esd. aeoerdlag t« a latsd r e ^ arrivtat by eattltt Shan from a M 8boU Held AtM t mm that's not ta thiuiual, nor la U mrthy d Bota that they were

noos the many huaters «b » r*- t t ^ iB>pty*haBde4 frett thatBut tbs rot Bhots ineld’ A ita t

adds mat PeU and Dan came Terra, verra close to being literally empty- handed. Yep, BO rifles. Seems they drove away. leaving their ilO u leaning agaiiwt s tree.

After retumlng to the m t twice and chsslas ^ w a a

Daa met a kind gent who knm about melr rifles.

At least they brought their rifles back wlUi ’em.

COWB W1 Dear Potsey:

A local gent who carries mag out South Park way decided to becone ft catUe buyer and attended the local stock sale.

After bidding on ft 0(stceh, he bid S30 for o n e ._____Ing ftcqualnted with buying cattle, he thought "cwt" meant “cows without Ueth* unUl he went to pay up and found himself owing |«oa.

Some biigata.Sub S t ^

JCBT ANOTOE& C LAM Dear Potso;

Blaine Couaty Sheriff Im Outa, Recorder B. P. Thamm ftad Otis DUbennett. Bellevue, were so fooled by a -notice of JocaUon" apparently made out for a mine that they near­ly recorded the infant son o f Jerrold and Pam Morse, former Hailey resi­dents.

The birth announcement was sent to Dlsbeahett who thought it was a regular fUlng on a new mine, what with sudi'teroi as Upa ravtne. Chin cliff and Nose knoll and the usual detailed description o f the elalm.

He rushed it to Thsmin'a office which was closed for the day,-eo Disbennett turned the paper over to Sheriff Outts wlUi careful instruc­tions to have it recorded early the n u t day. Itiamm was entering, the paper in his receiving book when he happened to notice the claim was in HawaU where the M one couple resides.

After careful reading and explan­ation, it was decided coogrfttulaUons were more In order,

b, j * r(HaUey)

HtW TORS—Za aU tbs uproar talnst ths TifWHartlsiy law, ree-

JoeiM son* BltlerUn features of thTwasnar Bet, the tO U of the Ameriean mMmaa has a«Tcr,be<a

.bsatd.itia>. u

nrs SUSPICIOUSDear Pots;

: saw that itory la the T -N about hunters klUlng 80 elk AND two horses. So I've set myself a policy.

Anyone giving me any meat, whe­ther they claim It to be ,«lk. deer •or just plain steer, must fomUh aa affidavit to the effect the meat did not come from a horse, either riding or working variety.

Jim Sprifgs

' Pot Shots reminds Jbn of the saying about not'looking a m horse In the mouth, meat prices b^ Ing what they are.

IMFERVIOUS NAVT Por once, a couple of teen-age

girls were ipecchlus the other day.While OM 1/c O. W. Whitaker

o f the Twin Palls navyvrecrultlng staff was putting up a aew "navy appear sign in front ot the post- ofllce. two girls approaohed from the other direction, and from behind the sign he heard one say. "I dont like anyone who Is in or ever was in the navy."

The helty rechilter at thU point shoved his head out from behind the sign and remarked, "Yeh. and the navy doesn't care, either]”

As the girls hastened down the sUcet, the one who had done the talking said, -'Gee. I d idnt see him."

lU M rch Dep't. Eav«*dr6pplii( Braaeb

PAM0U8 LAST LINE . . . And eaa I eteJuuige twe dee*

ea pair ef nylensTGENTLEMAN IN THE

POURXn BOW

BOB HOPETlte world's largeit drug itors has

Just opened here in Los Angeles in a new specially buUt three million dollar building.

I rushed down as soon as the store opened, but I was too Iste. All

the phone booths iwere rented.

store Is so large It's got a uted car lot adjoining the 'soda fountain.

And for I people with sto­machaches who [get lost in lu Ivaitntss they've got St. Bemardi roaming aroundB*k a.»*

earrylng kegs o f bAnd it would really be difficult -nplng there if they didn't have leopters to Uke you from coun­

ter to eounter. It you want to speak to the floorwalker, you have to flag him down.

The store li ao larfs i fs really tough on Uii elerks . . . When they have a two*week vacaUoa It takes then 10 days to get to the door.

It's not unusual to see scmeone carrying a knapsack la the store. . . Svery week the local Boy Scout troops go on oremlght hUces from the prescripUoQ department to the augaxine rack.

Everything la the store la klat alee.

The aodu they serve are eo big . . Instead of a straw they give

you a bathing suit.This aftemooa the soda Jerk

asked me U I wanted one ecoop or two and before X could answer the derrick started unloading.

HdW t h i n g s a p p e a r f r o m PEGLER’S ANGLE.r'SSsa.’f f is M S r :bau'ttlayei' has beea waftsd dnt of

he :was a nagger and aa 'I 66 not oadSHak* to

thsAoSrtcsa

_ _ _ t a o a p ilo a a H y bright Only the

^ exceptions are ex­ceptionally bright and mey soos quit working to become *Oabor lead­ers” or unloa bosses, public relatloos tnea. kmployete or poUUdans.'

I f the Americaa wiirkmaa coiUd be heerd. aiaay of him jnuld be selfish and laxy and would praise any law. such as tbe Wagner act, which promisod him more mosey that his work was worth, free va­cations aad protectloa against dis­charge for stalling, for destroying -iteria l, whiitle-Jumplng and aglt*

ng on company time.:xhers o f him certainly would ob-

Jeet to carrying the dead*welgbt load of these bums and would want to be paid according to individual ability, economy. producUveness ---------*)lllty in the place.

X may be denounced wlUi fearleu contempt for saying that employ-

ths'T aft-B ftrtisy la* sw h ebutd make his fetes hsih l la the

“• “ oa the dumb side.and that better than the

Um politlelaas.Roosevelt knew It better aad ex­

ploited this dumbness better than aay other American In our time. I guess he was tbe all-Ume .ch— ploa to date at this bnslaeel . . kidding the dumb average dlUaea. HS.aad Henry WWlsce »«n t so far t o call him the common man, knowing that he would be too stupid to resent this supercUiousneas and would think they were paying him

So, la the present wraagte about tho Taft-HarUey law, the profes­sional unlooeers, tbe exeeptler-*'- bright J t ^ of Uu breed. 1 . . . telling him that the lav U a dirty o u t l ie amouatlBf, in the rough, to a aew aad mysterious kind of slavery.

That Is ft laugh. They aren't go­ing to tight anybody. They all drew draft,exemptions In the war. They are the actual sUveholders them­selves and the common man has been their slave for a dosea years. Bowever, the professionals have

. . aay that h* Is

** yS SwSoiiit ^ * t g V i ^ s » h i’ wffl W

^ door at hto m et,

nattsty U a w n d ir M fO M to tha' woHt-ot thS' pnrsM oaals a ^ ths polAetatu, sueh M Itoossvait, X i f t O u ^ u d Ssnatsc Wacasr. They tab the Asmteaa wwkBan

uiAVhSfMdsaiy; trlfelous aad greedy *vtiy

^ % u y tell him he Is ttts m a^ In­telligent commoa man oa the face o f God's green footstool, or some­thing like thst, and h « comes op yelllag "Yowl"

The AmerleSa worteuu agrees absolutely, although erety nae of them knows doseas of boviaa, slug­gish. ao-aooount loafers who are close to the limit ot their Intellec­tual powers When they are aaked to

- - oa a red Ugbt aad aa_____ . . aa eleetrle bell' sad tobush a button when the light aad the bell go off together, indicating that the faachlne whkto they are- tending haa octnpleted a certain operaUon.

All the propaganda tamed out by the professlooals against tha Taft- HarUey act follows thU line. I t flat­ters the American workman lo(>- alded. but how does anybody know that he has the Intelllgeace to dis­agree with UUa goose-grease anc suspect that It Is discoursed for Uie ulterior moUve of peeserrlng tho old

X b m often vrttUn t M lU t" cacnaoBS ***«< gleftoilB(

o f ft Tapory idSal deptet-

ta-01a&« eoaw, there ara SODS flae fet.

k m ftoMBC him. but, as William Qtasa so ensn says of tbe .many

" ' Ul. .psrtk»Iarl7. prosUtaUoa>«b a t o n tip aatoog '• » ” ? ...............

•b X sn 'b o t tolag to aay. beeaoss ' nobody knows, what tbe Amerlca&

uj, Taft-; a It the’ profesaloaak

_______ ______ _______ I o v a Ifitls^tsetk itBreheaM , frota the heart and wlthoat a ecr^>t.

Ee ialsht ba stupid e— ----------- -that I tU an act to easlsTe labor, with ft Capital L, as he haa so often' read tta hla uaion papera. Toti; couldn't tauch blame him for saylag (he Wagner act waa labor's magm carta. Be heard that a mllllcn times., too. .

Aad. U he stm thlaks B oosev^ waa hla friend you have to allow ter the fact that he aerer before had the experience ot cltmblajthe President's Up and L-------- _

faker eay, in » confidential, ..il way. "My friends, you aad I k n o w .. . "

Whether we liked old moose-Ja% or not, we have to admit now that' he wea the greateet taU-board tpUi- er o t the age. What that auy oould. have <ione with ft pair m spott4d steeds and a buggy, a keneeae flare and a satchel <

tat, for I at one c faction I

I the Ills of maa or b « ^ ilah the botUe and satl^ iiaranteed or 'you r nwiXy

seeeto ssekt m /m HFOR YOU CAN HAVE JUST THE TYPE,

KIND AND SIZE

Heating PlantYou Want or Need

FROM OUR LARGE SELECTION OF

Electric ■— Coal — OilRoom Heaters-

C ^ r c u l a t o r s - Stclkefs ; i

N o matter the sirs o f the room or place you wish to heat , . . Wa have in slock just the heater for you. Nationally famous brands that you know wilt do the Job . . . correctly and economically.

Here's Some We Have in Stock for You NowC m C U I J l T I N G T Y P E E L E C T R I C

ROOM HEATERSJUST TUB THING TO TAKE OFF THE tA E tT MORNING CBHX THIS FAI.I.CLEAN, SAFE, ODORLESS HEAT: IDEAL POR BATB BOOMS . . . AED ROOMS . . .STUDY NOOKS, OFFICES, BTC.Initant eomfsrilar warmth In any room with ens ef these proteeUng electric heaters,Na axpeied elsmenU fo eaUb fire. Jest plsg la anywhere. Warms Urge space evenly.Regular

other Electric NOW Heaters to $30.00 ONLY $ 1 8 ^ 5

■ S P E r iA l

"STOKOL"STOKERS Carried In Our Stock For Immediate Installation

MORE HEAT LESS FUEL

A STOKOL STOKER jI»M y isn i o f troubte frM . . . even htat automatically and are built so rtig> ged and to aaeh perfeetlon, you will instantly see why ao many btudnMses and homes j^efar them to all other fltoker». Quiet, sfflelent, dependable. Lst oa ahow yon Stokol before you buy any stoker.

BIN OR HOPPER STYLES A SIZE FOR EVERY HOME OR BUSINESS

WILLIAMS ^

OIL-O^MATICo n . BURNERS

Models for every type beating syMam and en alu home . . . new er old. Offering lewer ei ea complete aatomatle oU beat.

COAL BURNINO

CIRCUiATORSTboee aafe. reliable borne healers that offer ■o macb beat a a d V rr ice for ao UtUe ooet. These oeal bSaters are well finished with dor- able heavy east »e«y , saamel flabbed clreelaU log JackeL Win heat yncr besM at a real w v b^s. A few ealy o a eals this fpedsl pricey sow

P LUM BIN G A P P L IA N C E SOF q u a l i t y

V RBBDTT^S^2U B 0

»50*o®' “ L r » 6 0 - o oI Regular price on these Is

$69.95 and 984.95

1 ^

Page 7: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

T H D M A T v O C T p B E B t^ 1 M 7

Oiinese Girls Change View OverFasMonBr D D IB CBlOHTOir

S H ^ aH A i. O ct 3 rn -e m c* «b* ^ of tb« w . Lotos B ow xa tad r n m n t ' Ptoay im n oomi t o Um mU«UOT that tb v . too, h&ra n t irtat It took to nuke tenm Smyot- Km of Laat Tunitr u d Jtns B u . •ell. but ttur hare a problem la ™Wng ttae DMwt of tt.

ICOdtrn UUS y i^ liyto tbo other bi« dUes -ot

ooDMenbljr ehaaced tbelr Ideu of ttu tuhtouhlo Ac* tn« M a m u lt of the tdraxt ol p o ^ m r Amerlcta fOnu.

'm o newttt CblgeM dm*w n - qulre that their wearcn poutu aO etfentlal fouodatlon lu m n u , trt^Uiey are Ja txtteonlj' shdrt

A rtirUed Sbanthal steaofrai>hir a e a ^ dropped her notebook receaU ar whta her b o « . epecUIldns la clw -A . rnrenuBent-apprond taj.

neeeaMry for the reeoostnicYork for 1 0 ^ braulorea. ■

Bopetunr, ihe aiked U (hU « h eorrtct. and. cot back on u i erra ^ wtjen the bosa repUed: n ru , theM Klentlfle American eooklni •toreg caUer brazlen are Juit l i needed for the winter.’*

From the prom

'TIMESJJEWS, TWiyFAIJLS.-IDAHO

Btadli^ Irons Out' Gnpra on 61 Bill. . m i l l to third In c aatet.of four article* oo O e & m Btadler'i adtntalstntloo o< <ttM T C tnai'

b ou mtght haTs made mon If the f i l l had cabled for what ihe on W nally thouiht he wanted, tor the l a l ^ American eclentlflc trtumphi

»1<1 are much la demand.Howerer IhU li one type ot

■Aaertau rapport that Its cot deem­ed etsentla] by the Kovenunent and

*ppr0»ed Import Hat*., .^^“ ..’ rtnter It doem t metier. By the time U leU cold enough for a nrealw, M lu China haa l«tt atoe,

a tony, padded robe that augtt^her ngige u glamanus

Br DOUGLAS LAB8BNWABHIHQTOW. Oct: 3 <NXA>—

Ttie coat o f apeodlac a dollar for i^terasa'-beneflU haa*steadBrTlm txDdar-the two>rear rtlga o f Ocn: O nar N. B nd ler ti^head of Teter« a w •

During the flrrt part of Bra^ex^ -------------- - oortn «.be -

wamer weather, howner. ahe ^ " " f jn u M . J t ,m cr«I Wlcct u

to make the wearer look u If ahe ^ Juit takffl a swim with her cJouiet on and was walklni iralnit a atron* wind. wauui

iUGAt, ADVERTISEMENTSWOnCE TO CUDITaBi

COURT or T m WAHO^ o r TWIN fALIA WATIOr

* ™ 7 eo° '

KHT UTL, dKtMvd. ta lh« ./

S ^ n S 1 i ? l t . 'S S V “ u "S S i

„ a .dmutd. “yablbhi Bfpt. <. II. 11. II. Ort. t_ „ „

- ................ •Ucm

tween three and four cenu to pay doUar'a worth o f baaflta. Mow It

la coetlnc between fire and oae-half aad alx oenta, aooordlnc to VA'a owQiUtUUca. <

But the nere'eoat of .administra­tion Is ODljr one point In ai^ analy* ala of the job Bradley has done, ih e moat knportaat thing ,was to get the Job done. Brea oongreta would agree that a better job.ora<kntaiU> trmtlOQ la worth more money.

Faying the beneflu of the OX bin o f ilghU — education, loans, aind training—and handling the o f Teterans hare been m o ^ just an admlalstraUre task for Bradley, l l u top policy, and .benefits to be glten, are rery specific In the law.

Notwlthstasdlng the ooit of ad> mlnUtratlng the O l bill, there Is general agreement that It has been dooa rpTT well, with minor quallfU cattons. There U not that agreement on Bradley's handling of ei«imi

Lack of-enough roccn In the na> tloQ's schools and colleges has put the biggest Itanlutlon on furnishing a z education beflefiCs. That Is not Bradley* fau lt ' ,

*nio opening o f the cuneot school year, with an estimated a.IU.OOO veterans enrolling hnder the OI plan, finds the system working anoothly according to reporU frtxn •choola all orer the country.

Frocedurea have beea gradually tlmplUled. At first there were de­lays In making paymenU to veter- aris who wanted to study abroad. This delay prohibited many from going to foreign aehools because of having to finance thenuelres the flrat few months.

That has been Ironed out There are atUl grlpee, but the mere pres­ence of BO many teta In the schooU today under the O I blU ls proof that the plan is working satUfactorlly.

Educators are loud In their praises of the administration of the Job. It waa Bradley’s decision to pay schools at the start o f the semester for the tuition o f Teteraa students. This saved many InsUtuUons fran hav­ing to borrow that money from banka to keep gdag.

Per^pa the biggest remaining complaint o f the aomlnlstraUon of the OI bill Is the celling on pay. menta which Bradley asked congreM

^ ^ ea disabled veteran Angelo 8. R oae e( San Fraaelaoe m pre- aent^ an awtemaUo-drlve ear by Oea. Omar Bradley aa part ef the VA

^ n e f lt s prognim. It looked like everything waa going aawethly. Bat. assert Bradley's handUog ef dlsabQlly.'benefiU la a aere qw t In

to put over on-the-job training Trams, oongreas then passed a that no married vet In this pro­

gram could get more than $300 a month while In training and no sin­gle vH more than 1170.

It has been pretty well demon­strated that this low celling has kept many veterans out of that program. Bradley’s answer Is that the amount of the celling U the decision o f con* greas. But he has not told oc that he thinks It la too low.

When the loan guarantee pro­gram got under way many private lender* shunned deals Involving OIs because of the red Upe In­volved. Bradley was just trying to protect the veterans. But sliice then the paper work Involved haa been slowly whltUed down until that at­titude no longer;exlsts.

The red Upe, delays and frus­trations connected with gettt^ a claim processed through Is a big source o f IrrltaUon to veterans. An American Legion expert esti­mates It takes more than six months for the average claim to get through the mill. Some take years. In the

meantime, while waiting for VA to determine whether an Injury or ail> ment was caused by aervlee. many

WELDING

I .1S!S,»*.rK5«”5,;!a:

WHITMORE I OXYGEN CO.

^ One of th* basle canaaa fer tb M erttlca-dalB. to Bradliy’a

MBnectkn with the >my. T b tyM .k rt In'

vay- I L Hg FWl-

M rewuKU nt. the men. tin t tron Washington to Korth OaroUna. u d then to 8 t LoQla. Aad they aay ^ t because Braffley'U la the utay he h u failed to aeedle'tbe war department tnto'-brlngtng W i f the m ed l^ reeorda'which are atm ovtr« seas, as quickly as they might haw*.

la ch claim f « a settle* eon* nected dlsablUty must ba n fe m d

the maa-a MTrtee ncoid.General Bradley's efforta to ap**d

up aerrlM record checks hav* pro­duced some Improvement Aooord> lag to the latest VA flgurtc lhat* a backlog of M.MO Of— .........

fitted him well, for the adaUalstra» tion o f a civilian agency. They aay he b u been Im^Uent hasn't lis­tened to advice,, and has been too aenslUve and resentful of crttlcUm.

f t e p A / R E - aPATCHED

A radiator repaired her* la c repaired properly,, th o r ^ a honestly. Mo "patching," makeshifts, no skimping, oaly real repairing — the kind that gives the mailmum eftldencv aad sendee. Prompt servleo- reasonable charges.

Complete Stock o f NEW RADIATORS

Ifc* I_______________ _* ? » . >»y U M tt t t» i m n i l _

th* V . & hat to oO w .<toa « c u » « tr a a « « i n -

kt'lar______-dbtbiiI«n; rmchnt. olthln - poklUtU« e(<Mr meaclM aXUr tb* tblf Mtica. lo tb« u l

CMad S«ptoailMr S. 1I4T.

TuUkbi SrpL II. la .'ll u d Oct t. lS4t

BUOLEK MINERAL SALT Is fed like.any ordinary « 0 t la Salt Boxes er Licks or mixed with your grain ra­tions during the danger per­iod of Bloating. And costs only 1 or a oebU per head,

-^ j^ m on th .O VARAintX

Bugler Mineral Balt win treat any bunch of sto<± to y ow satisfaction er your money refunded.

GLOBE SElED & FEED CO.^ ^ OaMwen, Idaho

‘ •r* B U G L E R

MINERAL S.Tteat itock now to help control blotting from Oreea Alfalfa, Clover. Urkspw. Sneeseweed, etc

Long-Free-Swinifiiig;

COATS $29 J5

C o m ta , c ib u ^ m s . p U d s o f pore, ^rool b i s r e tt coats

W k fU n s s^reep from nedcBnca to bem s. U a a ; w ith

hoDd> that b n back Into fiactfal «cml. coQns.. Slngla o r AmU* Imutcd. Sim U to 43

BLOl]SESU m ^ w v e e tto n a a d d M k rty o iH lo th a ' » w a t taOBt*d M d dw B f aayh*. abort e r ' ,

S S 5 T S ^ « « . _ : . l _ 2 . 9 8

SKffiTS

.$4.98

. . » ’ t J A C K ’ N JILL for baby's health and csmfoitl

RAYON PANTIES

3 9 cteoeth i « j « a katt w t& aB> anuBd etettke M e t «t|itwtUt c om et m a c l « a . Ito ien v

GDOs'SVESISTiate** <«kr ent^ a s M katt

asc

■TUBDT HIQR OHAIB , , . waxed hard. wMd with adjostable trar and rv n c foetreit, noa-Up base._________Wa* Blreh BIgh Ch«lr - T .O S

IBADONa BEAT la natm l o r f t o maple fln laW olds for ea«7 s to r tn g ^ oC

DB0P*8IDSS GBIB has sdjsstsble29.95INKIBSPBINa CHIB UATTBE8B

has wetproef eower -- 1 0 . 9 5

FOLDING CAMUAGB (er Baby's

ta ’^ W s lb e n r t t e _________ 2 5 . 9 5

i wo^ j 6 9 . 5 0

■ ' .B PC CBKDBfB DDOCTR

■ TUble with add-redftaat top. leaf design. Four chain wlth-

$69.50

c g n

Coronado CAPRICE

*25”

RAYON SUPS

98cFtoe quality raytm knit allpa Mr the young aiat. BuUtMip shouK

W av T^aRM,

. roA . h « « r ■«>«.here • on* yov cm eoity carry fren room to room. ImuHM Ivory and blue e ^ w l f t w rryl^ h««n .. A M kSrSf!?* . ^ **” ?>: y»«n "»fv .i« . M k, .r to l

CoronadoR A N G E R

$29.50Top vel« h o«-ertro-let fcf *0

end ImproHd drofil eiwrM (Idt).Iryofto^andetortfyofrecepHoe. lyORY PINUH «iify M 3 0

n T T N iaA IM IM IPvt K t« the teat whet* y « « expect to oae I t . , , rtght ln.ye«r own bema. WeYe e v e e f Cereaada gvaSty, that's why wa make this offer. Ceata ta today. . . it's easy to arrange for a Free Trial ta year ewa beme. Ask abort Weaten's Thrifty Paym eatnaa. ^

Camp Cots$ 3 . 9 5

• Heavy Dack Carer• Hetal Kaeafereed• Made at Bardweed

221 Mata Are. East m a u n r A v s ^ K

Rnyw H Sati#

S U P S

a n m a t tn n l la e » . iBtnMcred atrlM.

* OTP. Ot M -

K q m i W C M tea

TABLECLOTHS

G i o n o i *

NYLONS1 J 5

AnoUwr SU pM tt^ CH the matt ki tt*best ta YmbM wfawi terW M O U s . abMT. « in r . to g tn y w MM* tetta rt(« t e a tK

5 5 . 5 ^ “

1 . 2 9

tortrooa n y ea and stroB« ««ecih *d cotton eombtne tor « cloth o t rare ^ u t y at thia low price. Printed novelty design. siaa.

Matehlag Ctoth aad Napkla B ets___________ - 3 . M

^ V E R W A R E

22-75s«t

B e n ta tftvecwara yoaH b* paoadto own or gtvel Bcqialatta OaUMt pattern-Bud* vtehMtraly tor m by a fasMoa aaksr. Oonptet* ■ e^ ee iw 1 . « pUew to a IwNtr

a « r S M i k p { r « M b

fltlSCDXAS

S2.98• w U P te t ta d v S l i tan •U",

3i)8

i i i U

Page 8: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

TIMES-NET , TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

jles T a t )e n M

Soloiis’ Tour

Urt o{ tho sUta depmrtnent Indl* eat« a dtuatloa In which It U Just m

, veU to tak« a de«p breath before indlffCAnt.

In the old dayt fueh a demonstra* tiOQ or in vUl by one nation toward dlgnltwlM o f another eould very vastly tera M l to a break In dlplo* matlo relatlooa. “niat was betort u m a ealllag and 'nenre wart" be- eaxna a recognised part of dlp]omaUe proetdure.

The rudaneu of the Russian ae- tloc In denylDg entry to an Amer* icaa party which said it wished to Tlslt our Moacow embsssy on oin> elal buslneu U undeniable. But whether It rtpresenU any more than'another blast In the propa* (aoda coanict between the two ooimtilef. is to be doubted.

Beasen for TripT lu nembers of the senate ap­

propriations committee are tolng to Ziuiape for the purpose of surreylos lU economic altuatlon with resard to what this country must spend to help. Studying the operation of em> bassles, which they said they wish­ed to do In Moscow, hM never been » routine part of the cammlttee'a operaUons, although conceivably within Ita purview. Inquiry Into su te department praeUce also Indi­cates strangfy that the attachment of assistant Sccretaiy John Peurl- foy to the party is far m on aa a

. Mrt of guide for the lenatora’ than . In pusult of official department

business.The strong Inference, then. Is that

the otnelal party, while undoubtedly i headed for the American embassy,

actually wanted to go to Ruaala <to Inspect Ruasla. Just as the Russians furmlsed. T o Amarloans that m n u Ilka a normal. proMdnre and .noth­ing to whloh a naUbnvWlth a dear oonadence couJd object. .But coo- aclenee or -so eonsdenee> the Bus> tlana nevar have Uked to be sur- reyed by forelgnera. It's an attitude that goes back far before the BoN ahevlsts, although the latter do seem to make a^partleular fetlah of It. It's an attitude common to more than one m a of the world. Is now oonaldered rather aborlglns]. but U stlU s tn os In many so-caUed dv< lUsed areas.

Highly OoefRsedIMpIasnats In this country are

highly confused over what Russia expecU to gain by her ever-lhcreas- ing displays of ID-tempor, Some think that she is Just venttng her rage over.her frustratlaa-In world affairs while at the asms tlma try­ing to spread hystarla over foreign relations at horns to keep the noeea o f the Russian people to the grind-, stone of industrial and military preparedoessb A better view seems to be that a lot of the talk and chest thumping U to distract atten­tion from conslderaUon In the tTnlt- ed Nations of actual Russian actlv- lUes in Oreece, Korea and other trouble spots. Ttiat she Is Insulting In the process Is a mstter for regret and perhsps even for eoocem, but sot a cause fcr complete lou of poise.

Twin Falls Radio SchedulesICLIX '

TBUBSOAT SM JSSMB Blila'aJUS 5 S i '" c £ 'r

Sill IUrT7 ArnoM la»ort> stM ‘ Mr. rralSnt

m oo I

iiM akk'« ciMk i:M Jtoi •») tUrf rO« *Z*kf MiBsm US flilm Dirut no M««tiio« *nr«Lkrut a*b rtO *Oi««ktut ta K«ltn < ||K Ntva lU *T*4 UalM*:«0 Matic kr M<InlmlU JnmplB- JtcU ■M Tra« StofT lU M«w.lis K u x HubiW •WdUr Klirnu HI U«rk«l>itO KUX XInb iM •P4al WhltMua Iio «Udk. DutMii .>11 KUX Xl«b iftO 'U dM Dt B«*M IM Tmjl Dmtwn tM Jbrmb Shins tM *U>n« R>B(tr>00 S«wtoolk n*nitn itO *Th* 8h*rltr IM *QIII«1U ruhu •40 <L«t OMm rii It i«4 Annlrcmrr r<rt7

KVMV(14W ULOCTCUU)

1i«4 •C4brUI 7l«tur t!i# ?M«‘twJ-lffitb‘?«rtr

•liMn'i D«Ir« ie ;» ruhlon*1i> H«Mf " " N m Bm U, lUrktti

•WarM___‘ World BotIm

m u *Woild 8«rlM li«0 *WoiM <l«TtM n il for a Dkrti«4 riltht !iM li«0 xN m 1:11 iCMlw JIa;:sI *8uBfmin « *C*»uln UUatfbt I *Tm MU

KTFI( in * K1LOOTOU8)

■MBOTHURSOAT

SiOO lAUrlcb FMallr

iieo xSsp»M- a«b• .11 Mi.^dfuni UtUoB il« fm i Morla oelttfcn*rSIOAT

• l*0 :

lOllO

S DrMktMt XdlUn ■ I0« arr*4 W*Hic BiSO DtuiMM lUa's Zi. SKI Bln« Onaby lieo aOM« Upea Out Tlmt Itse aJMk B«t«b Om«

le>ee at U« l>ay

II lU aBob Blplir liiM liMt Um tUod m is xNoon K m . Mukftt I too aR*<IU> Sniak ttOO aG«n«ral MlIU Uni tiU lUeord lUrkw 4i00 aN m Bsanan 4>U KTTl Xspbe«iM l i l t N*m »t World liU >11. V. KalWoben • lOO Dlur Darrea <ilS xSli.rltlMK Xdllka TiOO al’mW An rnaar

SUI Catnu Pnlil* tiOO xSuppvr Clab • llO iCan You Top m i

10)00 aDa.liI StrMt " '1 alUallh Ian Orck.

HOT TO QET IU4BAX/riMORS, Oct. ] (ffV-Ray-

mood WlUard, U, can get out of bed now and stop worrying about the tia« bo found In a “haunted" house. The police decided there has been a ‘ 'leaaonable" time since Sept. 3 for the rightful owner to put In a claim for the 9134, ‘Ihey're going to give Raymond the money In a lit- Ue ceremony at headquarters Sat­urday.

Commercial Dairy Course at U. of I.

A short course in pracUcal com­mercial dairying will be offered by the University of Idaho beginning Nov. 4 and lasting until April 4, ac­cording to an announcement by O. Xk Fourt. head of ths department of dairy husbandry at the university.

The course, offered annually prlw to IMS when It was discontinued because o f wartime circumstances,-will be open to all Idaho students InUreeted. although Fourt explain­ed that living conditions In Moscow are definitely crowded and that housing acccenmodatlons for only eight or 10 single students ' available.

Included in the short.course will be studies in buttermaklng, cheese- making. farm dairying, "'H'f pro­duction. dai^ bacteriology, Ice cream making, dairy mechanlcsi market mlt^ daiir calculations, dairy rovlew, market poultry and eggs, scoring milk, butter, and cheese: factory t«sU and lee cream.

Further information regarding the course may be had by wrlUng th* department o f dairy husbandry. tTQiveralty of Idaho, Moscow,

Visitors Reported For Glenns Ferry

OLSNNB PERRY. Oct. 9-Several visitors have been in Olenns Ferry

scently.Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gray, Tulsa,

Okla., stopped here m route to Spo­kane. ' Wash. Mrs. Gray U ' the former Dormdeen Garrett, Glenns Peny.

Ethel Miner and O. L. Stevens. Guimlson, Colo., are vlslllng Mr. and Mrs. Keimeth Lucy.

Mrs. D. M. FraHer. Merced. Calif., is visiting her mother, Mrs. Joe Wells.

Mrs. R . D. Bacon, Mrs. Jamta Patton. Mra. Feme Wylie and Mrs. J. Zk Sumner were Old Timer club No. as delegates at a recent auxiliary -leetlng In Sal L U e City, Utah.

Mr. and Mrs. BssU Rlnehsrt have returned from Salt Lake City where they visited their son, Laveme Rine­hart. and family.

Mrs. J. C. Pancher is visiting her son. John, and family in Loe Angeles, CalU.

Elgbty>flva per cent of all pas­senger travel mileage in the United States Is by-motor vehicle.

Magic Valley Bean Yield Is Below Nonna

port Issued tv U. S. deparbasnt of commerce and agriculture and the University of Ida! said Wednesday.

The past week was good for har­vesting, the report said, m th mwt o f the third crop of hay In the stack and with apple, red clover seed and sugar beet harveeU off a good start.

Slight amounts of froet and rain damage vers reported la the area during the week.

Harvest for potatoes w u expected to start la about a week as ths cn ^ has been frxuted and is maturing rapidly. ^

Rain and cooler weather was pre­dicted for the SCI area during the latter part of this week la the ra- port.

Labor outlook In the potato and sugar beet harvetts did not look premising, the report concluded.

Ward ReorganizedSPRINGDALE. OcU t — The

Springdale ward of the LDS church has been reorganized with Edgar Christensen ss bishop.

Paul Stewart and Everett Tost are counselors and Pred Johnson retUned as ward clerk.

t o r t to p l » » ' «

' m O M t " PtVWS fO U safe antl-flr«es« protection at mbiimum eo«f. It's made from the mosteflScient o f all known safe anti-&«e«e materials: three quarts of "Zeroae’ '* wfll do ths work o f four quarts o f most other types o f antl-freeM. “ Zerone” needs onJy an occa­sional cheek-up. U improve, cooling—wtards rust and corrodon —koeps a clean cooling system clean. Get "Zerone” —ths dollar braod in most demand.

' Z n f X ’ 9 ! ¥ t s y o u winter-long protection. It's non.«Tapo- rating—one filling lasts all winter in a properly operating cooling system. Like •'Zerone," contains a special chemical In-hibitor with a high "alkaline reserve" that gives long-time protec­tion against corroeion. "Zer«x" vron’ t atUck rubber, aeep from tight cooling sysUms, or d o* radistora. There’s no better anti-fteese.

Z ^ O N E or ZEREX iodayIIITU THtHO* f o i I iir ii uviHo...rHioi;o« cHiMnrsr

H ^ey Womto’s Two Sonm Are

Legion FeahiresHAILET, G ot » -T w o MOgs wrtU

ten by M n. Charlea W er^, Bailey, were the feature attraction at a dance and Dutch lunch given m em bos o f American Legion i . . . No. a< for the auxUlary and tKO- member veterans.

The eoaga, *In' Sunny Sun VU' ley” and *^ou Are M 6n Than X Dream Of,” were w ng t o Urt. Ray Walker accompanied at the ptano ^ M n. Jack Davies. Ih e eaogs have been published by a - -------llshlng eompany and vID go on tale this f a a n was the l in t time they had been heard here.

Muslo for the dance wai lu r - aished by Mrt. Mabel Walker and Bin Mallory.

Child Cuts LipRICHFIELD, O ct 3-M ary ChaU

field, 18.months old daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. O. P. ChatfleVl, sus­tained a bsd cut CO her Up when she f«U on a pop bottla.

The Child was taken to Bbothoos where three stltehss were required to close the wound.

10 TULIPDerwlM la nlan.

6 IRISWWgrwoed bvTboM Ith

10 CROCUSirioM tpHi>g cetM. •

only 50f^ IsTand the rod drde from ony

Riher product. ' Here's a colorful volue— 26 blooffllnO'Slze bulbt for {urt 50c. To get yours— purehoio ony Riher Flouring MlIU Coin- pony product (Zoom— InrtoBt hot cereol, Fliher's BbMt AAtx, Ruler's Cake Flour. Rther's W heat Germ, or any other R»her quality food). Send 50c In coin end the red. circle from the package toi Flowers, Box 84, Seattle.

XWO NEW FALL STYLES

Here Is what you have been waiting f o r . . . Rhythm Step'a InterprelaUon of the new fall styles in footwear to complement and add new beauty to the longer hemlines. Juft slip these on with your new fall drcsse^ suits, coats. , . beautiful. youH agree.

RIGHT

THE SOCIETYA catchy tllng heel pump In black calf or wine calf, two popular faU colors featuring

' open toe and a picture-pretty plaUorm.

?11.95LEPT

COUNTRY MISSA town brown calf pump with solid h ee l. and toe that goes everTwhera In style, smartneat. and comfort combined in a «

------ U calstyle.,:- :— •

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E H E N ISN o n a o r w w t o r A irAenoNT

THE r r a n o r idaho IM akd fi*o’ S l ? a » " i? A ? S » "* S e iH C O ,..

pontl<s. F|«tstUr.JKKOin p. WILMK JOHH B.

lit. I»(T, s wTti of ■ttMhanl vm I____eot e( a . aben aUtM m rt ta tti. ■ken'MUUrf Mtlaa. KtUtklu tbt sn^ €ttr W BsnH ter t£«

tS.lt l je uaJ IdUrwt. at wTTMwa WH*Rior. i k«T« w *.KM Mt w hSBd and tb« Mai ef •on lUi Kt dur Octsbcr, JtlT.

Kk.1 Oft. t f , II, im .

PREFERRED-------------- IlFORKOOMMJIUtP

^TRIN!

LB 6A I . ADVEKTISBHSNTS‘ N orm TO cu u iiu ii

kaen, A. M.

bm , wiola e>9 aasUa arur Ito

L T O A L ^ A D V E R T ^ E & IE N T S .

4t<!i..«W— »f al £V,*ta f fx M fn t t T

M u a , 3 ^ ; ft. V o “S ‘ i .T !r H M i

ATTENTION ELKS NEXT DANCE

Satiirday, October 4th10:80 P . M.

MUSIC BY ARLON BASTIAN ORCHESTRA

N l W B E R R r S

D O Z I N

H O L L A N D G R O W N

T U L I P S

H O L L A N D I M P O a i

C R O C U S2 FOR

□ ctrr or HAAtuai nmrt (crta>»M rmI)□ rANTAST Tvtin {rriii*<.ri>ki . . . a u T u u n Noixi n a in .□ ratDI OP KAAIUM TULIPS (C«riM□ AOVAHa TUtlPt (RmI w /etv* Cm »m > □ . PRIHCtM n iz . TUUPS (DMP Plah) . . .□ iNoueoM * m io w tuup* rr«ti^ ) . ,□ XWANINIURO TUltPl (Whit.) . . . . n •AkTIOON TUUM . . . . a PKtmus TULtW puk) . . . : a WM. CePtLAND TULIPS

YIUOW CIOCU* .BIUI CDOCUI . . 'WMtn CROCUS . .STflptB caocvs . I

• 'Ttw fhtf of o1]. spring, blooming. flow m In yellow.'blue, whHe, rtrlped.

SHOES A tfF A B SL

HOLLAND GROW N

Hyacinths 2 For 2 5 ^

□ lA »

D QUilH OP PfHK'S TUUPS (Om * Pl«k>□ QUSIN OP •LUt'S TUUPS {It. •!>•) • a KINO OP tlUI*S TUUPS (Ok. ■tie)O I INNOCINCS TUUPS (WIilM) . .□ YIUOW HAMMS TUUPS

H olland Im port J u m b o S i z e B u l b s ,

King Alfred D A FFO D ILS

• Add beauty wMigoTden yettew glofrt doffodHi — that wHI thrill on floWer >oven . . ■ . : . lACH I S

H O L L A N D G R O W N

Chrope H Y A C D ^(MUSCARI)

2 FOR 5^• Heoventy Uve Imported Hyocthlhs. The highest qOolIfy ond wltl gWe yo« a beoutifwl border plant, z ' — '

FREE!With Each Bulb

PurchaseA handy guide to success- fa l planting: and bulb core. Get your copy tomorrow.

I For larger lovelier flowers next spring plant Holland ,• Bulbs this falL ^

These are the bnlbs adver­t i s e in Better Homes

r f i

Page 9: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

jHUEsniSrobro^i^jM t

Face; Change Found Aid to Ex-Prisoners

B rO L A lU C O ZOTIOAQO, Oct. a « l » - o iT e aa

v t t i coDTlet a new. face tod ttit m r ba look* at the world may chasst M much ai the war in which tho world looks at him. Um IntopaUonal ocOlege oC com cauwas told today.

Dr. John T . Kck. Ohleato lur- tw o and tcacher at th« 'DnlmaJty ot miBoii medical achool, told tha ■wtMU o f the resnlU otitalneil ta 976 easea InrolTlnc . o f theSUterllle, HI, penitentiary. In these eaaea pUiUo lurstiy waa uMd. to alter a phytlcal defcrmlty or aooe qolrk of appeuanee which mad* the ooQTlct contcloue that he did not look like other men. Pick' eald.

_ Bze«n>nt Beralta T h e paycholoBleal re«ullt.r ha

aald, “ha»e been the the meet oat- itandlfls feature and gain.”

‘Zhe m eatts which he dbcusMtd in particular were thoee who bad been out of prlMD.for three yean or more. Of these, he aald. only three had returned to Jail. The usual rate Is about one In fire or better.

Pick began hU work o f glTtng eonrlcts new ears, noses and other ladal features 10 years ago at the request t>f prison officials.

Most ccmmoa defecU which he waa called upon to oom ct, he said, were those of the nose, ears and «Vln

Prison Officials Qted Casa Prison officials called hU atten­

tion to the fact that many o f the prison were looked down upon by others because o f thetr ph]«lcal defecta.

Some of those who felt they sconed by their fellows blamed their taming to a criminal-career on the fact that they looked not the same as other people; that their noses were out of line, their ears not the same, or their sUn Kaned or misshapen.

Bcraa Work ia i m In 1837. with the wllUng oooper-

aUon of JaUers and Jailed alike, he began his work.

Pick admitted that inme of the criminals who came to him may have sought surgery because they desired a new appearance for a further criminal career. But he aald that this percentage was reiy small.

He told of ene unnamed Chloigo* •n who serred a term at Staterllle and underwent an operaUoa which changed his nose. In contrast to the man's past behartor, he has alnce become a successful real es- Ute operator and haa not been m trouble with the law.

(^ca^6Boy,l% Admits He Slew

P re ^ e rt H^eORZOAOO, Oct. a MP)-=A l»-year.

oU foeatlonal high achool boy. de- jcrlbed by h ls'ptrents'aa a •yttj good bby.” w u held la }aU today after. poUo* aald. ha signed a staU- &e&( fatiU stabbingof « mlnltter’awlfa la an attempted robbery Sept. 34.

PoUce.‘ Capt P a trt t OoUtns said the phmp. tousled haired youth, jamea >»slashed and nbbed a young mother tn tha same wath dUtrlct ia wtiieh the ctabMag oectnred.

He bad been aeiaed for quMtlon* I s f.la the atUek Tuesday night <n Ura. Mary Clausen. 2S, mother of two smaU children. After she Iden­tified Hartmann- but al^W two of her broUwra grabbed and beat him

U a . Oraeelyn Busb. tt. wUe o f a mhilster, in a busy south side park­ing lot.

•Trea, t BUed her." OoUlns qiioted Barteuum as saying, *3ut I dldnt mean to kill her. I dkln't know the knife was open. 6he came toward me and acreamed.’ X hU her. Then she fell. I ran away."

Officers Selected For MIA at Paul

PAtlls Oct..3^New offloera hareten announced for the MIA grouDS

of the Paul ward of the IJ)8 ehureb

Lee Merrill Is president of the young men's group with Darrel Harper and Oleaver Maxwell as ----------— lAwrence Miner

B ack P a y fo r Empire Lines

Is'viPqSsibilityU5WISTC<H. 'O et 1

alr Unas atands to »l<n r«troaeth«pay through new. rary ratM CQ transpoctattOQ o f mall by feeder.alr'Uaes, T . S . Roblnsoc. empire's general oiaaager, aald bare.

Tha new ratea, eetabUshad r ' d m aem aatlea board, win Empire retzeaeUve pay for the period aloee Sept. as. 1»M. according to word receh ed today by Robinson from the CAB at Washington.

The air Jfatei manager said Bmpbe has beea.'repelvlng pay at the rate - f 9A ceata. pox' airplane mile for■■wTpftfttwy wi«ll

Under the new decUtoo, the pay win be M'oeats per alrplaaa tniu for tha first six months o ( operation, sa cents for ths next three mooths, aad on a sliding seale downward by 5 cento for enry. quarter back to U cents, or until the pennaaeot rate is set by the board.

Traffic Fines

^TiaaS-'RtrWS, TW IN F A IL S , IDABO

Plane Controls of - Predators ShoWn

— *-------T eloMd today withd o M ^ a t lo o s on use ot

eftectne m oODtrelling ooyott* «>»«n t ^ OM traps.-spestea declared at yestsrdays-aeeaion.

Payment' parking fls

of 14 more «1 (_ flttii h U ' been made in

Twin Falls dty. traffic court by

The fines were paid by CUff f in - erlck. Don Smock, Agnes Smith, Kreft Garden Supply, Oul AlLee,

Alda Vtrcng, Mrs. K. R. Hawkins. W flS g u m m ^ Kenneth Kali and

HABVB0T LOS CKOP^ p R m O D A L B ; cict. a - A large delegation frcn Springdale assisted

aad beeU

yestadays<Use of tn i« bka proved tnef>

fe(^Ta ain» they tSS rT xiS S l uinals and domestlo stock, c . a

asslatut chiefdlrtsion ________ ____lee, jald wohres. tonaerty % big pn>bto to western stockmen, have practJcally disappeared SAd coqrotce now are the main problem. Ba aaU sman-plUMa are elfecUte tor aboot* Ing tnlmala from tba air aad tor U a c ^ pups to their burrows

snowy wtater montta.

Idaho Spuds Will Be Parley FeatureBOISS. O ct a UR>—idaha has

-eea asked to furnish baking potatoee for the big outdoor ateak feed to be held durtag the aaaual meeting of the Natioaat Rsclama- UoD- aisocUtion O ct 3»^1Phoealx, Arts, it was revealed Wed-

n X. Welsh, secretary^maa-

soclaUon, said arraagemenU have been made to aecure about i jo o pounds of the famed spuds for the IVJOO to l»,tKK> expected tor the meeting.

Mamie* B. Oreen*. Boise Ktontty and onmsel for the Oem ZrrlgaUoD dUtrtet Will be one Of th « speakers at a special session on water^uaers problems.

Ofaoers and dlrectora o f Idaho's am canal oompanlea have been

P lot Swapso e t > «U I -.lta »

deal tb wbkh M c h S bsoh MMl «ttMT

Nationalization Row to Be Aired

be aired at th* aaanat eauenattMwnfertae* eg*Bta« bn Br^hlcm to.

Principal zeaotatiau beta* ttta * **^--------------------^ ^ ^by tttanr

^ ^ ^ e ^ » « u ^ to :**>tN* ^ pazbammt ac^ceptlng coal otta*

tadlcattDc nhxtane* to » « « « . * <k^MttanaXtaatlon ot cenata

P « ^ fw th* BMeUnt wbkfa win ^ Sabuday wtth aa addresa te fnrmer Prte* Utabter 'W tasta Churchia. levH r o f th* p a i ^ T ^

H am pshiK sc._ ^ C O O Q T , O c t a «

Kiarsisissr-kMn«aaliHn.i

Sale BPfUNOIUI^. Oet; n d o r aItofg

•.SHO^

Cig3rett« 5

K T F I8 :0 0 P ,M .

' I t ' . U W n a

T h a t . C o u n t i ? * /

I r t * 11. UlU < tU. n l m

W.un.ri»otf„,ap^to.W ■daetUB, research, aadte,.t 11

wlwk w « reallj tsIm Is tta.llf* ceantey liv lag offera n e t , , . th*cbanoe to be ckM to eur families and naiglibora. . . diOdrea aharlw ta tba eh om . . . woridag with bur «WB hands at aworthwhllB Job. '

A ad egaatry p lea sa res are*tap)e: gned talk at day^ m d. aad

•( SM aaMWk .,

^ r e a l t y . , of. ^life b ttiit spirit o f , t d A 3 . ' '

the youngTwoiaen with church farm at Hunt asked to attend the meetlag.Sarah Qruwelt -and Mrs. Audrey Harper as ooudsellom. A rr llla n ca U seereUry for the men. and M n.Betty Miller Is seeretaiy for the

Awards were pnaented by Mn. Lee MerriU to Bee Hite Olrts Lucy Oreen, Lois and U la Harper and

PABENT8 o r SON OLSNNB PERRT, O ct a ~ Mr

aad Mrs. Arthur Postlethwalte are parenU of a son bom at the St. Al- phonsus hospital, Boise.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

W TUB MATTER OF TIIB APPUCA-

I>«r*ln. aad jMltleaa th* aber* «nUU<4 Court for an Ordw ta thaai* hU a •Bd alksM tlM fixta le b* M foUswit*1?“* «< t-.M-ffi,Bi»r« tiUB Oa* (1) Jut part.

■I^l U »»a born'm tla Htk 4arSS5

.that U 4«lrM t» d «a -, jSTkVLl' iss, fSl,tm t i . UnlUd SlaUi, a< a elClMn tb«r«>t,

^ WIIKnEFOIlE. P«<UIM>«T prara that a ?Yv V* HoawabW

» O V «h»n*lnr Ui* namaat Sadajukl Sanba, (a nUSS SEMOA l>at,d tbta nih Ja, a r X l A w . im .

8ADAYUKI BEIIDA.PfUtlofltr

Those partldpatlng in the pro­gram Included Mrs. Grace Jonei, the high school Qlee club directed by Boyd.Earl, Maxine Hoggaa, Burler, and Mr. aad Mrs. Danel Harper.

Primary school gr^ustes from the class o f Mrs. Helen EUlot are Marde Hammond, Ohriitlne Z>orser and Darllne Olsen.

Refreshments were served br M n U P. MUlor. M n. Mdvin ^ w e U sad Mrs. Darrel Harper.

Ricks CoUegre Goes On Harvest Recess

REXBURO, O ct 2 (/P) Ricks ^llege will dismiss tomorrow for a

harvest Tacatlon. Pres. Joha L. Clarke, announced today.

-Students are being wged to seek employment during the vacation to be the greatest amount of aMlstance pw lb le to fanners o f the upifcr Snake river valley," Clarke Mid Olura win b. raumm oet. so.

D A N C EEvery SATURDAY Night

SAWTOOTH RANGERSwith Betty Lou Haney

£ « b* SUBS cb «haan

O. r . DOVALL.for r«tIUon«. Publbhi Oct. I, t, « . IHT.

b a c k a c h lLEG PAINS MW BEjpANGER SIGN

JUST ARRIVED! Direct From Holland

BULBSThey’re Here—Come and Get ’em

R febt now Ib the correct time to plant these ImportKl Hon.nd bulbs . . . be.

>■* NoTCmberf I”plete planting Infonnation. Come s«e the Korgeou*- colors (actnal color photos) make yonr Relectlon,

GenuineIMPORTEDHOLLAND• NARassys• BAFFODILS• HYACINTH• T U L IP . , , EOT,

Olobe Feed & Seed Co.M M t b A V C S o. (T n ick L an .) Twin FiUb

PLENTY SMOOTHYes, Our New Worsted Suits Do A Man Proud!Pit subject for adm iration .'.. our new smooth flnlsK worsteds. Specially tailored by Glen Park/ Ck>£h- craft and Hart Schaffner A M arx.for year 'round wear. Their U ck o f bulk and heaviness means you can wear them In the Fall, when the aun's atUl.warm. While their all wool fibres guarantee plenty o f

parmth when that winter chill-aeU inf • -

Priced from $39,50 to $79,50

K H R T 1.Y pXAFTID HARDWOODRECDMJMBIMT~y cctMory lo yi oJtm oCitnn

r $1750HeUi 7 I t O e e U

& d t o 8 . im p l l d t ^ n a v tu e . tool Ide.lly .ulNrf ,0 limited IMng quarters. "Rug-cultert'* call It a ‘•golnfl*’ Mbinet. Popular with the young as well m the cider home.m*ken, toa The exclusfve "Jojlow** styling. W r t conitructlon be-lle in low price. Chotee o f lutrous walnut or mahogany flnlihe*.

fur nitur eMl MlAIN AVKOTE KAST F B O N B U S S I

J

NECKWEARhuWUton Supcrba

and McCurmchMo matter vhat jmtr tu tes or « « t m mlcht be. jou-U n a l» tie ot ywir eboJe* «m oo« cwr JMest H»n n^les utd colon.

Priced ?1.00 to $3.50

STOCKINGSb a l i O t n c o B a i

a n d W i l t o n

A nkkt u d tta n te leneth. Btht aod be*V7 v d cb U in a w pattCRtt aad eoto i.

TOPCOATS. STRIKE A' CASUAL NOTE!

Easy doM Itl That’a 'th e new lIn e .foryo itt.F M top. coat Easy lit, easy tailoring, all add op tO'tha-caiuit,. look that'a smart th is Fall. ■ Y ou ll see tbls now a o t i , In Ronlra-Madi's gabardines and coverts .in .cKevfc' ots or the nenrCTr bolder tw eeds,' -

Priced 45c to ?2,oo Priced from $35.00 to ^ 7 .W .

T k t P l o c e T o G o F o r The Brandt You Know

Powleg»Mae:fefBum e a t B a rt S chatf n er .

Page 10: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

»XOT*i8sr Tn*EI^^Tl^^IWlNFAMS«, IDAHO-- -THDra*t[:oGroBEBX-iMr

25QGotham Vets

■| - BjrJOKHAlLV. KOXSVILLK. N. Oct. 9 m - r| DbuUlns>up vlUi tbe ln*Uwi, living :1 JatunU dreenivlU irkU cheaprtT- Uecet'’ tntf other houilns iborU««

t; woe* h>T« ended for about SfiO Yet- eruu In ft'plesswit ftretch ef 1 ^ 9

<; liU nd eotmtiTiIile.It v u *1novlnv In” (U7 >t !■•

' lutd Trtta, m poUto fwm Uvee . aontbs m o u>d now the n«Uen'<: falfgeft pMt*mr renUl project. It

<lntle hotuet where 8W)‘ f«AiUUM mntuaUr wIO Uve t n -----; honM m t ln f for MO • month.

•Ted ArtctD, 2#-y««-ol(l teteran ; o f three r a m aim r eerrlee u d one > of the ftrrt ttntnu to anl»e, In- f apected h)a houf'e and announced: ! ' '*TWi U foe

a u wife added: "It'a the flret . plaee 'we're erer had to call our

ojm.7.The Arkena. who have two chil­

dren, moved from a snail, crowded •parbnent in New York City.

A neighbor, RajTOond Kohler, aa. who *pent three yean In Af- nea and India with the air trani- port command, was asked what he thought of hti new <juarters and

D6uble*CheckM nmKAPOLia Ulnn„ Oct. a

0M9—Or. rrandi E. Townsend, erlctnatcr of the Townsend old aate pensloniolan. outlined a new. proBtmm to Wd bewildered Uji* payers who trj to follow the wnUncs of confress.

R e MReeted avptlr.of repre- senUtlvea Instead of< one from eacli.congreulonal district. That way, be said, one oould stay at borne and explain to conitltb- enU what the other was doing In Washington.

Rupert Residientg Use Canniiig Kitchen to Ciit Cost of liviiig

ts foe S

laws ever since I got out ■*rmy two years ago. What do you think?-

Island Trees originally was plan* aed as a 9,000<house project by Lev- lit and Sons, Long Island builders, but WlUlam J. Leriti, president of the firm, announced It had been ex­panded to e.000 because of the

' whelming demand.H ie entire Job, to be finished in

about a year, will Involve an Invest­ment or »i8.000,000. All of the homes are for veterans. Levitt tald "the demand Is for rental homes now and that is what we are trying to u t* tafy.".

Three hundred of the hous« were ready for ooeupucy today.

UeanwhOe. workmen -were busy eo other parU of the project. Leviu •aid 100 addltlciul iw a o would-be flnlsbed each week frera now on.

The ceUir>Ieas- heraea' have a larva Itvtng room, two bedraons and » ootnpletely eqtdpped kitchen' eon*

} tainlng electric refrigerator, electrie •tove and automatic' washing ma­chine. SMli houM atands on a 00 by 100 foot plot

Enlistments Open For Air Troopers

Direct enlistments are now t>e- ing aoceptod for the ttnd alrlwme division sUUoned at rt. Bragg. 8. C., according to First LleuU Qeorge It Claxton, officer In charge of the Twin ralU army recruiting station.

Men enlisting ’ will be sent to TU Ord, Calif., where they will receive approximately 13 weeks’ basic train­ing before being sent to the para­chute Infantry school at Pt. Ben- nlng, Oa. Thli applies to men with TM prior aerviee, while veterans will Iw .sent direct to the parachute Khool. They then go to Ft. Bragg to Join the division.

The official pointed out that upon comptetloa of the airborne train­ing, men would be promoted to privates first class and also would be paid an extra ISO per month for being a member of this im lt Total pay for a private first class would be «130 per month.

SN.AKE RIVER REPORT

(rram npArU br ba>t«n er mUmtlloD.■talotkal lurrrr. itm] twrtrallni

parlln.lSullen DUch.orConU Ym tus jKkuB U k *_______ Ol.tlO* m,(M*

By. IDA B. OASLSOirRT7PZRT, O ct 3 Rupert, real-

dents >uve found that th« commti* nlty canning kltcbcn U one means of combatting the high coat of liv* Ing with an aatlinatcd IflOW cans of trults. vegetables and meat ex­pected to b« proeewed this y n x , according to tiiamas T. Maberiy, •upervlsor of the project.

Started Aug. 10, IW , m a o»> operative enterprise sponsored by the sUU board of vocational .edu­cation and the Rupert school dU- trlct as a war training provram In

• • project -the

MM1.140. •,B1« l.ltO

•Hi.tte* lot.tio*______________1,IM I.JM'alcott________II.OM* M.ltO*!• N. B. c*Ml _

Amttlcka r>IIi

HInldok*____________HiBldekt B. S. canal __

MlUtr II____

4U*.»0#

’ISoth.r soanltllM In Meeii4.r«rt.

<l»tlaUsB »Ml v*«kl Moran OJl**.LTMM CRAHDALL. MUM bSlMt

becotne a community the withdrawal o f all Mrs. r n d Mott, bead Instructor from the time the project opened until her sudden death a few weeks ago, baa been given mueb of the credit for developln« the progrmm.

When the canning center first »ened. It waa financed mainly by

..le federal gorenuneot and- was operated In' the old Rupert laundry building. After only four months of

peraUon In IMS, some UMO r food h«d been processed. .The cannery was moved to Its

resent location on property owned y the Independent school dUtrlet

In 1M4. The building was Improved and new equipment was installed by the shop class in vocational a ^ - culture.

Output of the cannery has climb­ed suadlly lince It lUrted opera­tion. During 1M4, M.OOO cans of produce were processed. In IMA, the total climbed to 100.000 cans, while 120.000 cans were proceased in IMS. More than 100.000 cans have been processed to date this year, with the output expected to be a record IM,* 000 cans.

Since withdrawal of all outalde aid. funds for operation of the cen-

re derived entirely from aale of which are purchased at about

three and one-half cenU each and

•old to enanitry patroos . cents. Income froen these aalea.lt used to pay ^for fuel, eleetrteity, water, supervlsloa. etc. The cttnery Is a noQ-profit educational project

It w u pointed out that the cost of cans had Increased thU year but patrons were not required to ab­sorb the increase.

More Army Vets Awarded Medals

Ntmcs o f those reeelvinr World ..ar n victory and American defense medals through the Twin rallj.o l- flee of the U. & army nenilting station were announced Thursday by Plrsf Ueut. Oeorge P. Claxton. officer In charge.

-Those receiving the Amerleaa de­fense and victory medals wertf Lloyd W. Simonton and Russell J. Books, both of Ooodlng; while the victory medals went to Bari B. Newman. rouU 3, Buhl; Donald V. Mutsch and DennU P. Nutsch. route 3; Jer­ome; Carill J. Ballard, Twta TalU; Vernon U Richardson. Ooodtng; and Kenneth I* Abercrcmbie, Hailey.

Airliner Lands to Assist Motherhood

AMARILLO, Tex., Oct. 3 (/P) — A

here because one o f Its passengers, Mrs. Ralph Youngblood, 30, De­corah. la, .gave slsna of Imminent motherhood.

A physician and an ambulance jtood ^ as the plane landed. A police and highway patrol escor >aced the ambulance to Northwest Texu hospital.

Mrs. Youngblood waj stUl await* ing the stork.

WarDead Return To Be Explained

A meettac to txplala tbe gorem* f&ent'a procnun f «r retorD and final Inirlal o f tboee wbo died tn World war n wfll be held at ■ p. m. Oet a In the Amerleaa Legton hall ‘~ Twln Pans, PU»t U eu t Oforge Olaxton, officer, la charge of the Twin Pallf arny recn ilti^ sta" announced TMiraday.

The procram will be deecrlbed by Lieut Uoton L. Tttroer, jr^ a rep- recentative of tbe American grsvei rtgistraUoB division center at Dtab general distribution depot. Ogden. Otab. A war department sound film UUe "OccUlon” wlU be ahown. IM i film outlines ttepa to be taken by next-of kin in selecUng a final rest* Ing. place for their war dead.

Local veterans' onaolutlons. cfvle groups and others interested tn the program are cooperating, and- tbe meeting U open to the public.

Daily Bus ScheduleChanging to Serve the Following Connections

Leaving Twin'Palls 7:0e hM . MeeU east bonnd Stresmllner Trata at 8HQ8HONE. . . Connects with Sstnion River Stager at ABCO, through Sslmen. tdah»~for MsnUna PelnUi Retoming to TWIN PALL8 this bus meeU Train No. 18 at snOSHONE, Arriving back In TWIN PALL0 4:18 TM.

Leaving TWIN PALLS Si30 A 3 t MeeU train No. IT at SHOSHONE 1U40 AJtf.

Leaving TWIN FALLS «|W P.M. MteU Wettbound Stresmllner Train at SHOSHONE at 8tl5 PJO.

Onr Buses leaving KETCnUM 8:00 A.M. and 7:W P.M . make direct connections with Overlaad''areyhettod and Faelfie Trailway Bates at TWIN FALLS, arriving ll:tO A31. and »:S0 TM.

(Far further Information ean Unlan Bus Depot)

Sun Valley StagesTwin FalU Depot

FURS value and quality alone real test

We, at The Fur Shop, do our doggonedest t<S

sell fine furs as low as anybody in the coun­try . . . and to prove it, our fur business is 12%. better than last year, which was the biggest in our history. We make large ad­vance purchases for cash—and then, add on one of the lowest profits known in the fur industry. . . that is the reason we say, with complete confidence — SHOP and COM­PARE — dollar for dollar — quality for quality—and if there are any little e-x-t-r-a inducements—deduct them IMMEDIATELY -^then see if our furs—our values—aren’t

' s ff l most attractive.

Stop in—See What We Mean Quality fo r Less at the

Budget or Layaway

FUR SHOPSm ««r SpecUl Sbow- Itig of Furs at tbe Style Shew ipensered by tbe Twill Falh A roM ttw at Radio Rendered Oet

I PHONE 413

A n m D Ron o r vwks

¥ a - h o - n o la>QUBu.punr Nost p io f o

m W IFPW JtNIFn.T, STUFFY D I fm t t OPHeadCoUs

lUtla yicks Va.tr

and reduce stufflnett. And If uied m time, Vleks Va-tro-nol helps present many colds from developing, i i j itt Follow directions In thepaS ag?

wiUi tMtoIM.LEGAL ADVERT1SBMENT8 LEGAL A0TER119EHBNTB

w 'S S - .S i a i S ^ -* i !5 W -S R 5M (IS D. a. c n i-s ib ). laar

l 2 ^ «—.h t i f • mmniM la mcUm ». T. • a . K. )< B.. M m MvMSm, matlac a rvMmlr ha*lag saitaMta•imtiM *f ine»niM«tii» lti* tmt MtMMlae .mama i« U* teUfma* •( Um town SaliMa wnm (Mo. a n . a

___ _la tmr walk at ««aristo>l ■

•MaiM H m i aM osnfWaaat «wh«. Aar

trxrjnssr.K-scriA'-Uw r«sm l fW »r CMMiutaa. «l Wa<Wt>e«n. D. .C. M •( tk« C« '

The Hoose Pictured Abore 1b Now FinbhedFIVE ROOMS: living room, kitchen, bath, two bed­

rooms, two Joined closets.COME IN AND LOOK IT OVER

FAU. CREEK LUMBER GO.E ut aid . OQ Elnbcrlr. R oul . Twin ralU

Wheatamln Tablets, aoo’s $2^5

UPJOHN

Unlcaps, lOO’s .... ......$2.26ONE-A-DAT

MULTIPLE VITAMIN, 60’s....$I.9<ABBOTTS

VITA KAPS, lOO’s ...................$2.96BEXEL

Vitamin B Capsules, lOO's.....$1.98squiDB-s ■

VIGRAN CAPSULES, 100’s....$2.89MEAD'S OLEUM

PERCOMORPHUM.....................67c

CLOSE-OUTI Movie Wave

Home Permanent

With LanolinRegtilar Price 92.00

Special Cloae-Out Price

cigarettesPopular Brands

> 1 . 7 5

SPECIAL!s i -00

MAHDEEN C A / »SHAMPOO ........ D U ^

Both for 89cPlus Tax

SPECIAL!Packer’s TarShampoo ...»....... D U ' 'Packer’s Olive Oil 60c

Both £or 59c

D a i l y D rug N e e d s !SI.50 AMPHO-JEL .............. ...$1J9$1.50 GELVSn. TABLETS.. . .$ 1.1360C SAL HEPATICA ........... ......49c4 oz. PEPTO BISMOL ......47c30c Vick’s Kose Drops.... ......24c73’s BAND A ID ..................... ......49c60C ALKA SELTZER ......49c75c VICK'S VAPO RUB____......59c

U. S. Rotary Com Popper.........89cKoroseal Table Cloths........$2.19

L.C. D u lc » - « s 5 4 Incb Sit.

Unbreakable ABCO CoffeeM aher....................................$4.95

Steam-o-MatIc Iron s..........$16.95Knapp-Monarch Automatic

Iron .........................................$7.95Lady Beth SUent BnUer.......... 69cElectric Hate Dryer..............$12.95

Hot or Cold Air

Mitten Pot Holders................... 98c*Var7 lAathews’^ o m p k t e lr Protects the

SPECIAL!60c Size Jerls

Cream Oil 50c Size Jerls

H air Tonie

Both for 51cPlu» TW

Toni DeLnxe Home

Permanent $ 2 . 0 0

ALARMCLOCKS

$1.98Plus Tax

Portrait Home Permanent

$1^9

.45 Smoker, Pride o f the Weat ™ . f t . MGenuine Cowhide Football ----------------J M .MBoy’a American Tool Chest ---------------- 9 X 9 BGenuine Tinker-Toys . ___ .....3 9 ^ to $ X 3»Dart Games, with 3 Darts -------- ----------- .M *F rfra TIaHit, X In • Ttn»

Erector Brick. S e t ________________------------------- 9 3 .9 9 1

The New ConstnKtlon BricWReallsUe Models

SAV-MOR DRUGOPPOSITE ORPBSUM THEATRE

ho(D» tn Tidn Fans.

Hew ViYttet DfviieimjAUROSANASHOP

lmpbs$i* M good gtooef Ingiatlilitrlmljrtslloted t«o>|rtecer ofwasliible

O^erlr adorned

Exciuslvt Sfyltit for MODE O'DAY

W c ’ r c b u s y as bees in ou r H o lly ­w o o d d e s ig n ifig s t u d io s , s t y l in g n e w d a y t i m e dresses to g r a c e y o u r F a ll w a r d ­ro b e . . . W e ’re w o r k in g in c o t ­tons, rayons and taffetas . . . in a ll the Fall colors - b lack , navy, rich w ines and greens a n d b r ig h t Cali* fo rn ia hues. T h e y ’re arriv in g t o d a y a t y o u r n e ig h b o r-o w n e d , n e i g h b o r - o p e r ­ated ROSANA F r o c k S h o p a n d I ’v e tried to make each o fie a fashion -m asterpiece. F or te c n -a g c r i. . . f o r a l l w e ll -d r e s s e d w o m e a . S izes 12 t o 4 2 .

ROSANASHOP

m MAIN ATE. IVEST

Page 11: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

THtmsDAY, ocTOiaiii *. isif

Riipert PlmsFor ’ Festival On Oct 30-31

T fo r t tn : O et a — T m prolaeU d ltcuu«l At thfl Ch«mber at O on- merqe meeting were thp•1 p n t n n nKl'tbohajTest fetUral vb lcb h u i>een poelponed uatU

Oena KnUoo, cbunber M crtUir. leportM latenM InUrctt la tba •wlmmlng pool project. Memben <H

of A. r.B tym er, M n. Bob Brodde. M n. Dan SUrto. Bob Reed, mad CUrk Cameron were prewot. beddes

mtatlTec from ru lou i other

Bon Bawkei pointed out that the poue troundi would be an Ideal place for the pool.

procram tor lummer. Tlie Red Oroca U oppoMd to further um o< the Paul pool becaute It doet not meet aanltary regulations. KlUlon ■treosed the need of united effort*. Re dted the «eoofnplUhmenu of the aheriff’i poue, u an exarapla of

' vhat can be done.The harrut f«tlval, orijinally

ilated for Sept. 38-37 has been post* poned xintU OcL 50-31. TenUUve plans were dUcussed.for the two days, some of whteh are:

1. A parade carrjlfll out the har- rest theme as well as the 40th an- nlreraarr o f water on the Minidoka project.

3. A Boy Scout Jamborco Friday night Oct. 31. ,■

3. Booths sellhij farm produce.4. T7A group partlclpaUns.e. Merchants, will be asked to \tse

part of windows for display of farm produce.

0. rootban game.7. areased pig scrambla, hog call­

ing contest, husband ealUng.a. Dance at night.A full two-day program U being

planned and hopes , are being ex­pressed that U can be made an nual event.

The cORUnltt«e working cn this program Is Klllion, chairman, with Clark Cameron. co<haliman: Ward Woolford. Oerald Btanley. Rill Henicheld. Dean WhlUey. Bay Bob­bins. Harold Baskins, Warren Dalgh and -nrni Maberly.

Capacity Audience I^esent as li^chwd BonelU Opens Series

■yVSSNARichard BooelU. American' bari-

teae. appeared M ora 'a easatity M . dlenee la th* high s c h ^ auditori­um Wednesday erenlng. opcnlngthe im .T w ln Tails Town Ball aeries. AeewBpanJed by Alaander 6ehreln- er, ocganlst and pianist. BonalU pre­sented a varied and dramatic reper­toire which appealed to his Twla raQs aodlence.

CmlUlng many of tho classScal Oerman lelder and Trench baritone standbys, BoneUl chose mainly seml>classleal numbers which he sang with ease and' ' '

Pilots of ‘Flivver’ Plane Near Tokyo

TOKYO, O ct 3 ftUO-'niB far east- am airforce today arranged for George Trxunan and- a i f f Evans, who are firing a Piper Cub around (he world, to land in Japan at Itaml army alrbase near 0 » k a . They will then fly to Haneda airfield In Tokyo and to CUtose army air base Bokkaldo.

The fliers were expected to ar­rive here somettma over the week­end.

Among the few classical numbera he selected were two opermtle arias. “Largo al factotnm,- the waU-kaown "Figaro aoog" from "The Barber of sevUIe' and the passlonaU "Erl tu~ from Verdi's opera, “ The Uask- pd Ban.'* The audience especUlIy enjoyed BonelU's handling of the Bostlnl number in which the cocky Figaro enumerates his many talenU and aceempUshments.

The sUtely Handel selecUon "Where'er You Walk." from "Sem- ele,“ opened the program. la con­trast were BonelU's second group of songs which were, picked from the more moderp compositions of De­bussy. Orlffes and the American Ernest Charles.

In an after concert Interview, BonelU gave soma InUrestlng tlde- UahU on the extraordinary song “Dance Macabre" by Charles Ca­mille Saint Saens, This number Is best known In lU orchestral form, but when BontlU was studying In Paris he discovered that Saint Saens had originally composed the dance as a vocal poem with sym­phonic accompaniment. Considered especially difficult because of tho Intrtcate French phrasing. It Imme­diately became a challenge for the young student, and he frequenUy ly ludas this favorite In his concert programs.

Following IntennlssloQ BonelU presented his last two’ groups of songs whIA Included many Irish, Scottish and Negro dialect folk songs. The syncopated Kegro ser­mon. "Jonah and the Whale" br Robert KaoOlmsey was mijoyably interpreted with a rhythmic swing and much humor by tho artist.

The lyrical song •■OlfU" by Alec

Templeton-WM of particular Inter­est beca^a* the words wer« wHttea by Hoaa Modlnl SODelll. wUa of

A n dto f e a t u ^

In co lia^ ation on this number.T%e oM favorite "Ceae to the

F a ir by Easthope Martta was an­other popular aong. As a n ' encore BoneUl sang another Martin tom- position, “Crown of the y W ." which he explained ^ r t s s e d hU feeUng about the faU season as he had seen U in Magle VaUey.

CUmaxtog hU fifth and last group w u the JertMBa Kem classic. “Old Man Blver” from the musical come­dy "Show Boat." Generous In hU encores, BanelU. offered the witty “It Ain't NecessarUy. So" as sung by Sportin’ U fa in George O m h* win's folk opera "Porgy and Bess."

As BonelU stated, the program closed as It.had begun, with Han­del—for the final number was a frank satire In the Bandel manner enUUed "Old Mother Hubbard" by Victor H. Hutchinson. The take-off

o n o s am ui -am war OUl petM.'. A l the concluding pubUc m m m of a BlneMlBy ecumenical Methodist

-*5« f t * -mont TltUe. Chicago, proposed the crusade—"not against Bussla. but against hunger, poverty, racial dis­crimination. and laequaUty of op- i^ortunlty."

Credit must be slven to BonelU's excellent accompanist, Alexander Schreiner. Head organist of the LDS tabernacle In Salt Lake City, Schreiner frankly admitted that he did iltUe accompanying, but his lympathetlo following and sensiUve touch proved him to be one of the finest accompanists to appear on the Twin FaUa sUge. ^hrelner

ilMBS-NETO, Tw rorAiia. TOAHO

Methodism Called T o ‘Holy Crusade’

an artist in his own right and »m soon begin a series of organ oon-

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

In Iht at Uif CaUU of SILAS D.

a. « . ef <tld 4 v. «1 «h« Court ftosoi ot mU Ca«rt. at Um CMnty Ceart Hmm In Twin r«jb. Cevslr of Twin huk»»o •»palnu4 u tS* Urn* u>S plu. for

ane* to th»to of IrtUn laUntnUrr »S«fi «no whtr* tnr Inur«au4 ma* a»>»«ar and conUal tht Mno.

. IIAMILTOK. tJi-Offkl» C fk .

MIW woou> f

Let Our

CLEANYOUR

FURNACE

We arent looking for a quick for­tune at GEM TRAILER COMPANY . . . look ia us for savings on truck bodies and trailer equipment. Youll find our products constructed to sustain the rough treatment for which they have become noted.

OU HUTAir. Conditioners

Conversion Bumerg

s m ruRNAasForced Air Units

Domestic ond Induttrloi G ravity Furnaces

DETWEILER’SPHONE 809

OFFOfilTE rOBTOFFICB

. \53hAT LATIN ?H1!ASE tS ON €V0 W U.XC01N ?

F a S ' a n d

P « K ,k . « ' ■ ' f f

Climber Finds 4 ^dets Lost In Nov., 1942

c*d*u who dlaappeMtd m « nuUne

tuuo a u» WtH aim.. tl>, unv npontd today.

w r«dnt».«< thtfr ptane w u■potted atx daya ago by vniUam J o r ^ tmivealty o f CaUtwcia ata- d ^ t . wbUa h« was OKwitalaxUmb-

AbMid the pUm « U n It took o n ••uv. u . IMS. booBd tron B aeraata- »o to o o r t ^ CaU wtrt U eut W . B. oanbar. » . FaytU*. O ; the pilot: Avtatioa CadeU Kugtn* Kuan.

^ 8 t CUinrma. O.: John U.

L. U . UQstonaa. S3, Bratacrd. Mtaa.Wto> they lanad to arrtvt tn

Ocralog. tho army recorded: "Mica- to«; oterdua on navigational train- tat fU ^u- A aaar«h tor the plan* »a a called ott after a few daya.

Ttoc* aaow already had bcfun tan ta the gUder regloa. the

party could not recover the bodlea. *nw am y plans to send a party up oo the glacier next spring when thawi wiu make the task ot i« - oovertng then easier.

CPA1XAM8 8BTBOISE, Oct. a — 7118 su t«

board of aoeountancy wlU convea* bar* Oct. II tD approve appUcaUooa by a^lranu to take a certified ptf>- Uc aocountaau examtnaUon t T t e given Nov. IS -lt Thear« p rep a ^ ^ the Amerlcaa b - ■Utul* of Accouata.

_ r o m t A K D i 0 ( « , OcL 1 « n ~

Ida, ba ____________ _wheat graaa ta the aaitbrw t 'b ttaft eipwteaaat la atq^taM taan t*<-

Boralat. ngfcaal «b«cM r « t tte burwau o t taad

> m M tte ate eeedtee m M

20.000 Acres to BeReseededlqr uSSiSSliC-. AiratShoshonellajgB S a a ,,

N w r M

FALSE T O m' i w u t t i K m R ^ : .

eaasIhK aad east n a » ao% t a » - pand to the usaal M « r » .

‘R w taa4 m a t be dtavett « t brush bafor* the aaadtes.

^ r w n » .

A T LOWEST PRICES

Assorted h

Lunch Meats lb45« 59<

Veal—nellclons

Shoulder Roasts lb.For Breading

Loin Chops »>.

POT ROAST*. 3 9 «Shonlder Cuts 7 ^

6 0 « 39«

Sirloin

STEAK DeUdeas,Kb.

GROUND BEEF lb.

SALAD DRESSING MIRACLE WHIP A Real Bay—Qts.

Van Camps

PORK & BEANSEvaporated Milk

No.SOS 13«

i^vaporated niilk m

SEGO LgeCan 4 f o r 4 9 < f

VELGRANULATED CLEANER, Lge Box

29<CRANBERRY SAUCEOCEAN SPRAY - NO. 303 CANS

Tomato Juice ^F & P in Heavy N o. SVi C ia s ^ ^

PEACHES 2 4 vPeets OrahaIated^^-I.a(n B o x '" ' aie

SOAP 41«

Tomatoes 2i-bs.15<= Lettuce Elfl e1.tad 10< Celery 15<?

Bananas Goldnp* 16< Grapefruit 2fer|5<

FLOUR Bannock CMeS 50 Pound Bag

Strained

BABY FOODS 3for22«GERBERS— CLAPPS

Canned

LUNCHEON MEAT 3 6 «I Oscar Maycra t * — — ^IS ox. can

Tomato Soup , . ^jCAMPBElX’S j f o r X y * ' ’

Com Flakes

KELLOGG'SOATSMothers— Cop 8 Sanceir

COFFEESchiUings-M. 3. B.-Folgers-Xt».

« a m « B «

SPRINO GARDEN

PEAS Fancy No. 2 Can 18< “ ■ $4^24

ECONOMY CASH STit663 M AIN A V E . E A S T ■ "Never tCnowbigly Undersold

Page 12: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

iG B T E Kp i ; ....................

Few o£ ‘Slate’ Ships :Ro'rf^ Seas

wiisEmcnoN, ocL a («>-oni7 A hutdful « ( tUts-ntines,'M rep>

: nM nt«d by Amerieta tattlublp*. «a a b« <oimd oo Uie open m u to* dt7.

At ono Urn* or anoUur betveen 1941 u d IMS. a m th u » aoon of

• - — 1 on Uio

TIMES-NETO^^T^raiPALLS, JDAHO wt»ai>«, .praoMBti-w»'

m r ««Klntt Oennuir and ‘ O f thHO, but four, Uio Utest u>d XQO«t modem type, remain In »cUra •BTlcs wltb Uie poitwu navy*

Mo." Sewwl < They wa the Mlswurl—o o whote t)Kk J*jma fonniJly nurtndercd ■nd which lately brought President atum sa home tnan lUo de Janeiro: Ihe Mew Jersey, the low*, and the

.IWlKCOstn..* Two o t h m the Indiana and the illanaetauslU are lUU in (ervlce, but are held In reeerre.

Tbe remaining batUuhlpe which m r e In ccmmlulon at the outbreak o f the last war or wen

mluloned. slated for serAp, or have funk*

B cw 8Ut« Names tinder statue, all naval vcsmIs of

tettleshlp designation must bear staU names. Records show thst at ooe time or another, all sutes have been lo hooored.

war was the Idaho, 33,000 tons, carry In* 13 14-lnch guns, which was oocnmlssloned during the first World war. H ie shop now Is at Norfolk, Va.. offered for sale as scrap.

The old Utah, converted Into a target ship, was sunk In the Jap attack on Pearl Harbor. Slie was n lsed but was stricken from navy )UU in 1M4.

Girl, 11, Hurt in Fall From Swing

PAtlU O ct »-M artlna Felton. 11- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. DMinas Felton, was rushed to the Oottaee hospital at Burley after ^ e fell from a fwlng'durlng school recess.

She was unconscious for nearly ■n hour after tumbling fron the «wln« In which she and JoAnn Ortmm were ‘‘pumping.' She landed on her face.

Martina, a sixth grade student, Kutataed a ooncusslon and was ex­pected to remain at the .hospital

, lor several days.

MAK DEAD IN WBECKED CAS : BOOORRO, N. M.. Oct. 3 WV-A man- tentatively Identified by Sher­if f Balnard Cray as Tom NlUah, •bout 38. o f San Diego, Calif., iits found ahot to death In a wrecked automobile today along U. & 60 about six miles west of socorm

StuffedBAffTDKlS. Nebr, Oct. 3 ( « -

A half-grown coyoto wWch de- Tourml aU chickens In O. A. Nel- soo’s chicken yard here discovered the wl»looi of Aesop's fables- but too late.

■ the predator feuted on six —then found the hole through which It had entered too small for escape. A policeman's gun ended the career of the trapped predator the next morning.

Residents Report Guests at Filer

PILER, Oct. 3—Several visitors have been reported here and resl- denu of Filer are visiting In other sections of the country.

Mrs. WendeU Decker and daugh­ter. Boise, are guesU of her broth-

r, Charles Dwight.Mis. J. Howard Anderson and sons.

Boise, Have returned home after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. 0 . DavU.

Mrs. Howard Musgrave, Modesto, Calif, Is vlslUng PUer and Twin Falls friends.

Mr. and Mn. M. J. Xohr, Wallace, are here on a business trip.

S 3/0 WendeU Ortasey, staUoned at San Diego, Calif, Is spending a leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Creasey.

Mrs. M. J. Rogers has returned to Passdens, Calif., after visiting her daughter, Mrs, E. D. Vincent.

Mrs. Homer SchneU vlslUd her daughUr, BeUy Ann. and Jean Mogensen at Northwest Nuarene college at Nampa.

Roger Vincent and Nancy Jo Duerlg, University of Idaho itudenti, spent last week-end at their homes In Flier.

Mrs. Jeannette EtlU U vitlUng her father In Buckley, Wash.

KILLS BABir, SELF , MONTE, Calif,.' Oct. 2 UPl

Charles Edward Thompson. 37. shot and killed himself and his six-

Ih-old daughter, Barbara, depu­ty Sheriff J. P. “Toohey reported, as he sat In his automobile with his estranged wife, Oladys, In front of her home here last night. Mrs. Thompson was not Injured.

Lower Prices Reported for Sale of Stock

A medium nm of 1,310 head of cattle was' sold Wednesday at the weekly sale of the Twin FUls live­stock' Commission .company with all

a week ago.Feeder cattle also took a drop of

from 80 cenU to t l In the Wednes­day sole.

In the sale, where no choice steers or grain fed heifers were offered, good steers brought OS to 334.80, choice feeder steers »33 to «33.10. good feeder steers $20 to 131.78 and common steers dropped from prices of 117 to 119.78 lost week to $18.

Choice cows brought from (18,60 to 117. good cows 114 to «1B.38. com- moo feeder cows 113 to |14M and eannera tad cutters W to 113.60.

Oood grass heifers were sold from 130,60 to »33, medium, heifers. tlB to »30. feeder heifers $17 io «30J0,

West Is Iihpresriv^ ’ Say Hafley VlsKiws

B A o r r . Oct. A iaA Hbrathff and family. Mr.' and Mrs. ‘nom as Fagan and son. b e n from Bogota. Colombia, in South .A m * lea. are lmpr«so«X with t h e - ^ n t j of the weet, this b^lng thdr.Tbit trip to th ls.part 'o f the V . ^ '

■niey will leaTe for South Amer­ica about O ct 10. ‘They netDtlr were guesU of Mrs. B. J. Vtcan. Mrs. Minnie Florer and Mrs. Bangh Silvers at a. dinner party. Other guesU Included the Rev. Father L. M. Dougherty. Mrs, Mary Johnson M d Sue Ttacy.____________

MAWNE PBOMOTBDKIMBKRIiY. O cL 3—Pfo. Fioyd

O. Tate has been promoted to-oorp- oral In the marine corps at Camp Pendleton. Calif., acoordlng to .word received here by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tate.

bulU 113 to 917.70 and real tram tlS to 131.

Slock calves brought from «ao to $80 a head.

Coming* Mother!

Back on the air tonight!

Tune in

' T he Aldrich Fam ily”STARRING EZRA STONE

K T F I - 6 P . M.

ScQut^terato Join in Meeting

Twin Falla Soontmaxter and Cub- masters will meet lIL-«OQ^mctlon with thta evenlng^s lesslan o f dls tilet Scoot leaders at the Idaho

to foimulate plansfor the annnal BOT. Seeots romid- tip thU fall.

DIstilet officials will draft final am nsem ents for serri&ff as hostii

Tw m Falls county at the annnal fan eouncU meeting scheduled for Tuesday evening at the Presbyterian

*nie will also draft anof activities.

FVBCHA8S8 LOT HAILEY. O ct 3 -L . E. Outo has

ptffchased the property between the Hailey Shoe shop and the alley co Croy street He plans to enlarge his present place o f business Uter.

LEGAL ADVEBTISBHENTBAw(wuit ynwM W

m TKC o tn a ic r c o o ir v r j o aS S ‘3 ! S S ? ! 5 S f e S ? 3 g ’ FSJ------------------ w t n m .

J S S * J 5 * S S S ' : ______________ssiS“Js.‘:rrBisnJJ2j srts'&ssrsri.--*' sisrjM s*rs.'.Wtn uk. M n « t

"5SSs.sSui.ss' 'bJ'iSSfrM:

Hear

at the piaoo, playing fo r your listen­ing and dancing pleastire at

ORVILLE'S Steak HouseMondays through Saturdays,9 p. m. through midnight.

Starting September 29 our kitchen will- b « closed each Monday but the bar and dance floor is yours.

Listen to “ Bererly” and E njoy Yourself

LEGM, ADym iB B HENTS

pitEs m d iiL E ?For .Quick RtlUl.

lua tnlUUi « ua laS abttak •____ _ __ i i K E :

cUm R r <nl« at »U t a M a r»Ik •tUr.Ute. Drm >n4 WU-

Oania sa^'AnMtiUk ahUlt, wefcuac. tunrty -lialf • tnn have been nporied to eapte* aad.kffl

jitE$aT wCONCRETEPHONE 415

M U -M -ate • .» A .COLONIAL CONCRETSMb BlreslSeu Twta FaBr

B. W. KIta. Mb'.

C l a u d e B r o w nMusic and Furniture Co.

143 M AIN AVENUE BAST TW IN FA L L S il l '

Bud A Mark

Authori2id M i l l aad I llV lf il

ProaBBS

Depot

C o m p a r e

Q U A L IT Y !C o m p a r e

P R IC E rDeonlsoa's Catsup and CblU Saucc are praded *'Fancy” —the highest sradiB o f qoalicy (here ca o be United Sates Govemmeat Standards Yet D « o 5soq'»"Fanc7 -quslicy is priced plain. So compare tne product—com­pare the pricb You c u 't t ” ' qoaUty...why pay a hJgl

B U Y D E N N IS O N 'S /

Dennison's.M NCV CATSUP ami CHIU SAUCi

* M A f 5 O 0 Y • M I R t Y - O O . R O M N I ^ S • F R O V K »

t t l -

Gof MW F o f ^ PoHn anrtdpot»~ewfvm»;«VI^ ki an •fidlttt v o rM jr •< oel.of-H th -w efH

deitgni, ««e h on* a metodjf of lov*)/ )in «t »•

complement FoN's •mortest fashlont.

$6.95 „ $8.95

Brown Buede Sabot Strap , . .Wedge Beel

•White X3k Nttrse Oxford , . . Map eols and B M L -t7 .f S

don 6'Footwear fo r ike Entire Family^*

Page 13: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, ISABO

MBA. aiCHABD 81LVA <8Uft enirkvlsi)« « « V

Silvia Marriage Rites Held at

Baptist ChurchOABTLnORD. O ct S-BeToni m

•lUr deeonted wlUi Tern, l u ^ b u - ktU of utd tapen,Muclne Clftyton, cUu«ht«r of Mr. ftwl M n. Oliver aft^ton, u>d RJcii- ftrd DoniM BUva. aon o f Mrs. T n n - ce« SUt*; MUes. Call/., vere unlW

' to mmrrlftge. TUe R«y. G«t*W E. OlUupla perfonned the <]oubte-Hn< cereotonr which wa« heJd at the Tlrst BApUat chtarch. BaturdJiy &f- temoon, S«pt. ao.

O lnn la marrlKo by her f»Uier, the bride wore & while » t ln gown •tried with k net joke, fitted bodice, pointed wxUt-lenffth *leerea end %

. flowing •klrt entnln. Her full length Tell w u caught In her hair with a beaded tiara. Tlie bride carried a white bDile and a lavender orchid wHh satin etreamars. As a token of ■entlment the wore a strand of pearU belonging to Dorothy GoUer, one of her brldesnaldi.

Oandlellghter waa Oarl Jeaa 01ay> (on, lister o f the bride. She wore an »(]ua taffeU gown. ProcedLn« the cereraooy, Mrs. Janies Miracle, Mrs. Alex Melton and Mrs. J. Roy Raiey

• aang “Oh Promise Me" and "Be-

Mother Attends Elko Marriage

O f Burley GirlB t m m , O ct 3 -M r. and Mrs.

J. P. Bovard wera present at the wedding of tbalr daughter, Alya Jojrca Howard to OUlMrt Tan Bvehr In zuco. NeT^.last Saturday. He u (be soa of Mr. and Mtt. J. J. Van Xrerjr, Hupert. Ih e marriage w u perfomed by an Slfco Jwtlce of'the peace. i

The bride's mother was attendant and wore a print Jersey dress for her daughter^ wedding. The bride wore TOM crepe with black accessories.

Mn^Van Every attended school la Burley and has been with Western Union for the past year. She plans to oonUnue her work for awhile. Her husb*nd. a graduate o f Rupert high school In 1838. attended Idaho SUte college, Pocatello, for two years. He se m d for three years In the army with paratroopp* Infantry. He has been associated with the Boise. Payette Lumber ootnpany for a num­ber of years and at present U with the Gooding firm.

* If m

Shower Given for Miss Van AusdeinInga Van Ausdetn was the Inspir­

ation for a pre-nuptlal shower given recently by Mrs. Paul R. Carlson. Miss Van Ausdein opened her gifts before the guests who Included Mrs. Jrtm Van Ausdein, Mrs. Charles Hranac, Mrs, Pnink Popple, Mrs. Norman Herrett Mrs. Reed Conlam, Mrs. r . o . Carlson, Mrs. Jerry Wyant Mrs. Paye Bailey. Mrs. Gor­don Rann, Margie Albee. Evelyn Van Ausdein. Mrs. Dean HUlmsn and Mrs. J. D. Hillman.

Miss Van Ausdein wlU become the bride of Charles Hranao early in November.

Paul Hostesses ' Entertain Clubs

PAUU Oct Clark enter­tained the OoBtract Bridge club at her tuna last week. Tw o tables of brtdff* were played. M n . Mary Bhort

received high p c l» and tow veat ito Mrs. Marraret Oaloot*. H a tr e d imenu were atm d at ttw close ot i the eventog.

Also week the Paul Bridi* I club w u antertalned by Mra. Bertha (Clark. R e fr o " - ......

a . Lois T trm and Mxa. Uargazet Caloota. B l^ aeora wm held b v Ura. John Uartta and low itr MIS. OUdya Qreenwall. C M prtsa went to U n . Calcota. Mra. James » e w a tteetved a preaeat ttom the

----------ehJb IB lemcBbraaee ot bar Wrth-the hosteaa to monbera and two day.

Mdthers HonoredHAILCr, Oct. > -T ta» Obnk-

chfTiny Camp Rr% gtrte aBtartatiMd thetr BMtbeta at tba iotfx achoo)

Whatever Your Figure, Is Fashionably Yours in

New Officers installed for

Filer Rainisow

• aouff "tm iTomise MC" ana ••Be­cause." They were accocnpaolod. by

. Mrs. prank Wells, who WSo plaVflD the wedding marches.

Didorea Clayton, slater o f the bride w u maid of honor and was gowned

^ In blue crepe. She carried a oolonlsl ^ bouquet of carnations and stcpha-

aotls wKh pink streamers. Brides­maids were Dorothy GoUer, Salt l ^ e City; Norma Mcstbeck, Nampo, and Jeanne NoU, Bethlehem, Fa. Their gowns w w o f 'ro s e U ffeU and Uiey each carried heart shaped bou<iueU el camaUons, asters and <la!sles.

The youngest atster o f the bride. Anna Jane Clayton, w u flower girl, a e w u dressed In a floor-length. white crtjw dress and carried pink anapdragons. Bobby Jean arlgss, cousin of the bride, w u ring bearer and carried the ring on a ^hlte •otln pillow.

B « t man w u John aayton. xm- ele of the bride. Ushers were Jasper Griggs and Preeman Griggs, also uncles of (he bride.

P«)r her daughter's wedding. Mrs.afternoon

<iress with brown accesoorlea and a corsage of red rose buds.

A rweptlon for the 100 guejta w u held In the church basement. The

S m W onory women were In charge.The Uce eovered reception Uble

w centered with a three-tier wed- d liy topped with a tiny bride

bridegroom and flanked with P«sldln« » t the re- ecptlcm Uble were Mrs. B. D. Logan,

J. Roy Haley. Mrs. Dave Gray- Mrs. Claude Brewer, Mrs. Wells, Mrs, John Moyer and

Carl Doramus. Mrs. Preeman P i P Clayton wereIn Charge of the gUt roesn. Mrs. Lee C l ^ n supervUed the guest book.

Dewratlons were arranged by

la jp^ and Mrs, Bert Conrad.P w her golng-away ensemble the

OIW with blMk MeoaMrl<M.

la T ^ P»1U where SUva Is esn- P W rt by the IVanways Bus c S -

FILER, Oct. 3—The glrU of the Rainbow organization held Instal­lation o f new officers Monday even­ing at the Mssonlo hall. Margie Raybom, outgoing worthy advisor, and Donna Lee Davis, Installing marshall, conducted the ceremony.

The gIrU who took office were Bet^ Lou Walters, worthy advisor: Patty Hawkins, associate worthy advisor: Geraldine Brown, sUter of charity; Joyce Swartley, sister of hope; Majorie Drape, recorder; Jeanetto Childers, treasurer; Don­na Lee Davis, chaplain; Marsaret Ann Beem, organUt; Helen Ruth Hill, faith; Ermlna Klstler, Jean KlsUer, Maxine Cantrell, Jessie Grace DeKlou and Donna Lee Leeper, color sUUons: Miss SwarU ley, reporter, and Mrs. Stanley Walters, mother advisor.

Miss Davis and Miss Beem played a piano duet for the program which followed the itutallatlon. Prances Thleme accompanied at the plane fbr a horn solo by MLis Hawkins. Mi|S Brown and Miss Swartlev

.hiotorous ,«iu !ln i».MiS. Marjorli accompaniedsang a

by Miss Beem. - Refreshments were served by Miss

Hill, Mias Davis and Miss Haw.

¥ ¥ ¥ Friends Gather

For Bride-to-BeTILER, Oct, a—Mary Alice Peck,

who Is soon to become the bride of Clinton Quigley, Buhl, was hon­ored Tuesday evening with a lin­gerie shower given by Prances An­derson.

Refreshments were served to the wests upon their arrival. Minis, ture bridal bouquets made of pep. permlnta marked the places. An unusual centerpiece w u formed by a rose.resUng In a pitcher of green water. The water w u filled with ordinary mothbalU which sank and rose la continuous motion.

Plnochlo and bridge were played. PTIaes went to Mrs. George Potter, Mrs. Jannle Peck, aad Dorothy H u- tmgs and Celestlne Salmon, both ^ i n Palls. Other guests for the e ^ l n g were Marjorie Worthington, Velma Hmderson. Mary Lou Brew-

i> ¥ «

Guests Surprise Girl With Party

William^ dUw, sr.. enterealned a group of young people at a surprise party t e «lttughter, Ellen, attheir hMie TUeaday evening.

Refreshments were served and Btfta opened during the evening, puests were Dennis Draper. Jav

M«cham^ Tom Ded- Ted Davis, Wilma Kirkland

^ p e r . Veldon Wilde, Beryl Albre- th s ^ ^ Coates, Arien DUworlh, Halne PhllUps. Val Parke. Phil A dcock , Lola Stocking, Boyd m ^ g . Mariene Stocking. Michael Maycock, Mary Carbon, Quentin I^rson and Twllla Mccham.

¥ »

CalendarA social meeUng o f the Walther

I«a w e wUl be held at 8:30 p. m. Monday. The group will meet at the church for a hayrack ride.

♦ ¥ ¥^ e Royal Neighbors of America

I 2 ? r ^.V* ^ meeUngWffl be fc^lowed by a party to which the pubUo is Invited.

¥ ¥ ¥PILER, O ct 9-Ohapter AH, PBO

jUlcrhood, wm hold iS flr s t m ™ taS of the sesMn at the home of Mr^ G. o . Davis Monday. A no- hosteas luncheon will be served at 1 p. m. Members are uked to bring their own Uble •enrice.

¥ ¥ ¥

Surprise PartyPAULs O ct 3-M rs. Martha RUay

w surprised Friday when a group of .her friends called hrlngtng a

Dinner Held for Albion GatherinqALmON. O ct 3 -M f. and

entertained relatives frirads at dinner Sunday after-

Adams. Boise.Mrs. Carlton and Mra, Adanu am

*ad J. H. H a ^ m h w brothers.

Pianist PerformsPaul, will be

the regular piano series

program h u been chanaed from Wednesday to Thur»day at#;45 p. m.. ??” : » P l « o teacher h o^*fU. is a studeat of Mrs. Teala B ^ n l . She will p*y "Noctuma.**

>3 No. 1 by Chopin; "Oourante**

M R a JOSEPH POTUCl^ (Jordan^pha^—aU ff engraving)

M ary L Wicher Is Married at

Fall CeremonyOLENNS PERRV, O ct » - A t a

ceremony performed in Our Lady of Limerick Catholic church, Thursday morning. Sept. 33, by the Rev. Father M. J. Keys, Maty Louise Wicher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wicher, Glenns Ferry, be­came the bride of Joseph Potucek. son of Mr. and Mrs. James Potucek Buhl. '

Given In marriage by her father, the bride wore aa Ivory saUn gown with a sweetheart neckUne and a veil edged with lace. Her bouguet was fit whiU rosebuds with pink rosebuds on aatln streamers. Mrs, Darlene Samuels Grenier, Maryl- hurst college classmate of the bride, w u matron o f honor. She wore a gown of pale blue faille and car- rlrt a bouquet of white rosebuds with a headdress to match.

The mother of the bride wore a black faille silk gown trimmed In Bold with black aoceasories, and w e bridegroom's mother wore a Venetian vine gown with black accessories.

The best oian w u Charies Potucek. brother of the bridegroom, and ushers were Daniel Wicher, brother of the bride, and Tony Potucek. brother of the bridegroom. Mary Jean Stewart, Idaho Palls, abo a classmate of the bride, w u

Mrs. Potucek Is a graduate of Olenns Perry high school and Morj'lhurst coUege, Portland, Ore. She taught school one year In Jer­ome high school. Potucek Is a gradu- aU of the Buhl high school. He served three years In the armed forces.

After the ceremony, breakfut w u served at the Wicher home to the bridal party and a few close friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Potucek are spend­ing a honeymoon at Salt U k e City and will live on a farm near Buhl.

For the trip ahe wore a VenUan wine suit with matching hat and gl^es, a black purse and black suede shoes.

A pre-nupUal p « ty Jn honor of the bride w u given by Mr. and Mrs. LouU Mooney. Showers were given by Mrs. Roy Spargur and Mrs. North Montgomery,

¥ ¥ ¥

Autum n Bride IsShowered Friday

C A R ^ , O ct a—A mlseellaneous shower w u given Friday evening by Mrs. Worth Eldredge In honor of Mr^ c. E : Cantrell, the former Balne Bennett at the home o f the brides parents. Mr. aad Mrs. X^ur. ence Bennett

Games provided entertal.i^i.cin, and prlaea were won by Mrs. Jeaa M e^am, Mrs. LouU Eldredge, Mrs.

O. Briggs. Mrs. Blaine PhUllps, Mrs. Leonard Howard, Mrs. Howard Gets and Mrs. Ira Eldredge.

attending were Mrs. Alice w im i Mecham, Mrs.WUllam Laldlaw, Mra. Laurence

Tln Salrd, Mrs. Max Barton, Mrs.Justesen, Mrs. James Tum-

Imll ttod M iyr M d Judy TeUer.

Friends Help to Honor Birthdays

HAILEY, O ct ^-Birthday parUes were given lu t week in honor of

tony™ , n u rt a c ' u i S o a £sis. mV.S”'"' ■“alversipr with games and Ice cream and served by hU mother, Mrs. Ethel Buhler. Guests were Laren Davies, Carol Smith, Joanne Allred, B ^ e Barcus. Kay Buhler, John ^ v les , DarreU and Ronald Brown. John Astorqula aad William Buhler

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Page 14: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

£6(1 0 8 TW ELVE TIMBS-NEWB TSTO MMiSrlDaHp THDIUSDAT.iOCmra A-.lHt..

^Historical Odds Against Dodgers Winning World Series Now 17 to 1Tbtt

B* JOS BXlcnLSB pUibetf only by - Dtre B tn oo ft a t tba fln«2 imsM o( Um UM :- TAMSXB STADIUM. New Tork, Uu IBU PhUtdelphlA Phils and Joe: O c t 3 M>>-Aft«r •etttng »ome ob- Bolej of the 1939 Athletic*. , ^ hUtcrtctl odiU BnlMk* th*

• ictu* record In l^eKlay-i o p « « ^ The Tankeee’ bem ce « f ’U U U T w -M -lanlM the world‘ji«rle i

s'"£rsxs’' “"ss ;equelled ap e lr of noteworthy mmrta. ■*"®* which * dub won the ^ twocne b r bufv beltlns u d the other they ■heUKked the New Teift Ol* nmes, on l/ one club, the im .T u i*

‘ hr Idle watching. The Ytokeee tied ante. U-B with » 17>hlt stUek ia keei, kat the teile;the world eeriei record fcr triple* In ............................. —one game when Oeorge SUmweUi.Johnny LlndeU and Bill Johnion •lammed three-bafjeim. The Dodj- en In IBIS and the ClnclnnaU Redi In lOlD previously hit three trlplei In a game. Pee Wee Reese of the Dodgera went through the entire game without a fielding chance at ihorUtop, a leat previously accom-

tack. (ha c a s e ewe< m a x fer

acalDtt ttu Olants. waBflran---------------------------- The B r o o ^ boya might sot

With-Balph Bnuea ana Tk ecotaln many bit* In their batf, bat , the Sodgera' tw« meet, they’ta mra to . go home ^ loUable to aBrrira the fUth . oC money tn th dc pockets. Itils QD-almtt the Tankeea* at. doubtedly wm be the moet IniltMtalk' BOW ts t t a foar* poit>seasoo. series for the r ' '

ip.Thatwovldat b e n . two game* the players*.pool the XankMs wh« haw amomU to W3MW J6; i r more than

. . . I. th«' t90<J«l.38 received from in foor gamaa last year.

Tha sttCBdane* i f l i W fw the first twa gamca alao haa l«p- ped the tatal 9t tha flist f « v games last year. The Cards and Bed Sex drew exaeUy JU.17I ta- the (tn t fosr gamea la St. LobIs aad Beston la the 'M aerica.

BURT 8H0TT0K . . TbU sign that the popular

Dodger manager la making may mean *Ul’a weU" to htn bnt to the FlatbtiBh falthfol It itgnUlea the aero In the Brooks' world ae.

' lies neorO.

Morris Ups High Average Lead by 624league Wednesday night when he toppled the staples for 934. Inelud- ing gamea of 203, 301 and 331.

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Brewers Win to Even Series, 2-2

I UILWAUKEB, Oct a {/P)-UU- waukee*> Brewera cashed In on

\Betau Becker's big bat and some (wobby Syracuse fielding Ust night to whip the Chiefs, Q to 4, and square •t a games each the little world ■erles between the American asso- elatlon and International league.

Becker, the Brewers’ Berlln-born first baaeman. bolted Millard (Dixie) Howell. Syracuse righthander, for a alngle, double and triple, driving In two runa and acorlng twice hlmaelf. The Syracuse defense helped the American association club by com* mlttlng five errors.

BRUINS READY FOR BULLDOG BATTLEBabe Brown to Bring Powerful Eleven Here

W i t h

U 0U4 Sport SeriMtm teics m femt down that g M ea t at Umon/Uait: -

It'S great to be • qnrta wittar. oorotog a world scHei. o ld T O W ought to know, beeaase.be waa there, CiharUe. Prw eata. and yes, trw drinks that make yoa wish yott never had bMcme prohtbtttao Xrish. aad the right of your proltasloa to assodata wlth tha.game'i a lthty.

That's tb* rideabew-bwt Jt'a Bwre tntareathig than tha petfM M se* tai the main teat. *

By OEGBOE F. BEDMOND Tlraei>New« Sports Editor -

Coach Hank Powers, the old " T server, stepped out of the tradlUonal mood of his profession alter putting his Bnilna through their final hard practice session of the week Wednesday afternoon and gave that Imple* ment of di^alr, the crying towel, the lustiest kick you ever saw. That la to say, his face was wide, Instead of long and he had fanned the gloom out of the dressing room to bo dissipated In the atmosphere outside.

Yes. sir. he was really exuding___ ____ _______ 1 he said nary

- word along that line—that his Bruins would take the Nampa Bull* dogs of the ex-Vandal coach. Babe Brown, apart under the lights at Lincoln field Prlday night

*^eOI Olve 'em » ' BatUe” "W ell give 'em a battle, you can

bet your life on that” was all that he said, but there waa the emphasis

T confidence In the words.And that really was a lot to say

In face of the fact that the Bull­dogs were pre-season favorites for the Big Six crown and were coming here with most of the team that gave the Bruins a kicking Ust season. Too, U was a lot to say I.n face o f the fact that In Bill Moore, Nampa haa one of the top halfbacks In the conference and the Bulldogs will outweigh the Bruins some 13 twunds to the man.

Moat of the Bulldoga’ weight ad­vantage will be In the backfleld where the Bruins average 167 and Nampa 160. In the line It will be------- la's 108 against the Bruins'____ -■ Bobby Khig starts at rightguard and 160 If Jim Danner geU the.caU there.

Cooper t« Start Gene Cooper, the 100«pound end

who caught all four passes that the aouthpaw quarterback. Bobby Long, heaved his way tn the Cald­well game, probably will be ready to start at the right wing al­though he has been out of achool several days because o f Illness. Only one other player was ailing. Hank Oandlaga. right haU. and h ell be out for another week. However, Don McBride, who shares the fullback

Itlonwlth5S‘°Cross, has shaken oft the ankle Injury suffered early In the season and will be available.

Bob Martyn, IM pounds, who hasn't figured In Powers' plana at the start o f the season but made the team and played a strong game at Caldwell, will be at left end. Duane Bell. 173, will get the lett tackle atartlng assigned, while Bob Drips, 160, wlU show at lett guard. BUI RIach, Isa. will draw the center spot with cither King, ISO, or Dan­ner. 176, at right guard. Tom Buck- Un. lS3,’wIll be at right tackle with Cooper on his flank.

Long. 160, at quarter. Jerry Kleln- kopf. Its, left half, Don Adding­ton, 163, right half, and Cross. 17S, will form the starting backfleld, Mc­Bride will be the No. 1 replacement either at one of the halves or at fu ll

ployed by the latter to make the most o f his heavy backfleld.

The game will get under way at 8 p. m.

Area Athletes on Vandal Freshmen

MOSCOW. O et 3—Among the ( athleUes who have turned out for freshman football at the Univer­sity of Idaho are three from the Maglo VaUey—King Block. Twin Palls, halfback: Earl Arnold, Jer­ome, and Dale Thacker, Rupert ends.

Coach Steve Belko. Twin Palls, announced that the first freshman game would be with the TTnlverslty of Washington frosh O ct 11 at 8po> kane.

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Heyburn Grips South Six-Man Title by Win

PAUL, O ct 3—Coach Ted Hanks' Heybum Panthers all but clinched their second straight South Side SU-Man conference title when they defeated Coach Harold Brown's Paul panthers. 30-18, In a hard-fought gridiron battle here Wednesday af­ternoon.

Paul grabbed a 6-0 lead at the start of the game when, after b lxk - Ing a Heybum punt after the klck- otf, a pass, Strubar to Bell, produced a touchdown. Heybum came right back, however, and scored when at the end of a maifh Nelson passed IS yards to Urlguen standing on the goal line.

Jensen, the Beybum center, in­tercepted a Paul pass at the start of the second period snd ran 40 yards for a touchdown. A pass, Jones to Urlguen, good for SO yards, gave Beybum another touchdown as the half ended with Hanks' lads lead­ing, 18-0.

Heybum went farther In front early In the third period when Url­guen again scored on a pass from Handy. Nelson then place-kicked for two extra points.

Barclay, Paul halfback, blocked a

touchdown on the first play, there­after. Then In the fourth period Paul added Its third touchdown long march that saw Strubar i Ing.

The lineups and summary:K.ybum Pd«. Pmal

m t (piaoniTnt). r>ul Mnrlncl Te«chdoiirn»—D*II, Dar< tUy. Rtnibaif.

............. Durth. llardtfl-

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Conlins at PurdueRUPE31T, Aug. 3—Harvie and

Henry Conlin, the twins who made gridiron, basketball and track history at Rupert high school, have entered Purdue uni- veralty, according to a letter re­ceived by Rupert Coach Oeorge Hays from O. J. Mackey. athletlo director at the famed Indiana tmlverslty.

The twins have tumed out for freshman football

Shoot Will Be Held For Ducks Unlimitedhave so advlsea BUI Nitscke, Twin Palls county chairman of ths o cation.

The Snake River Gun cub tn cooperation with Ducks Unlimited will provide the groundi, targets and prizes for this shoot to be held on tlM local grounds Sunday, starting at 0:30 a. m. Trap shooters from Pocatello. Idaho Palls, Sun Valley, Bolss. Rupert Burley and other Idaho cities wlU participate. This promises to be one of the largest trap shooU con­ducted by the local club this yeu-.

The purpose of the shoot Is to start the canq>algn for Twin Palls county to raise fundi to be donated to Ducks Unlimited. This 10-year-

ganisatlon hu been fighting __ . . . handedly the matter of pro­tection and rearing of more ducks tn the three western provinces of Canada. AU money raised through the medium of this shoot will be tumed over to President Clark.

drives over ths sute starting Sun­day.

"We are going to help 'raise enough fimds nationally to improve the duck rearing area tn Canada tn order that we might eventually return to the former bag and pos­session limit of ducks, Wegener wrote NItschke. The bag and pos­session limit this year Is four ducks.

Hie first section of the duck sea- m opens at noon Oct 7. A aecond

section will be from Dee. 3 to Dec. IS.

In outlining the program for the ahoot L. V. Rothrock. member of the board of directors of the gun club and county treasurer of Ducks Unlimited, slated: "We have made the program open to anyone in Idaho, and we are especially In­viting beginners.' Special traps have been provided (or this of shooter and the older members of the club will provide ample Instruc­tion to assure tha novice as good a chance o f winning one of the many prlas as the ezperlenocd shooter.' A special class «1U be op«n to

Juniors and high school students are expected to furnish keen com- petlUon. Special prlies wlU'be given the winner. It is expected that the local ahoolers will have their hands full la defending the laurels o f the club.

Perrins’ Cubs Defeat Burley

BURLEY. Oct. 3-Coach Kermit Perrins' Twin Palls Cubs eontli on the undefeated list and rftt..._ up thetr third 1M7 victory when they defeated the Burley Bobcat freshman-sophomore team S-O, here last night

After threatening two other times, the Cubs put over the lone touch­down inu he last SO seconds when Lcopould passed 40 yards to quar­terback Howard, who ran 10 more yards across the Junior Bobcat goiu line. Dewald's kick for the c ‘ point was wide.

The Cubs got to the Burley one- yard line in the first period when Prunty, right end, ran 4B.yards af­ter taking a pass fitun Howard. However, a five-yard penalty threw them back and they lost the ball. In the second period they got to the Burley four-yard line after a series

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Deer Checking Stations Open Thiu’sday Noon

Hunters holding pemilU for the deer hunt in the Cassia division of the Minidoka forest were warned today by ConservaUonist Grover Davis to take precautions to avoid shooting elk and to guard against fires. The hunt opens Prlday.

Davis said there is a small band o f about SO elk In the area and

urged hunters to be certain they vero shooting at a deer befon they pulled the trigger.

Because of “ tinder" conditions In the forest area, fire danger is ex­tremely high, Dovis warned. He said all huntm would be required to carry a shovel, axe and bucket safeguard against fire.

. Hunters are required by law to check into and oul of the hunting area, he said. Cheeking stations will open at noon Thursday! Pennit hold­ers were advised to have their tags before entering the hunt area.

Checking stations will be estab­lished as follows: On Rock creek at the forest boundary line, CrockeU spring on Indian spring road, forest bounary line on the Bogerson road, Ixnindary line tn Big Cedar canyon, boundary line on-* Trapper creek. North water on the Bostetter-Oak- ley rood and forest boundary line north of Rancho Orande at the Plney station.

Small areas around ranger sta­tions will be closed as a precaution to protect personnel living in the stations, Davis aald.

All avaUsble conservation officers, forest rangers and fire guards will patrol the area during tho hunt which lasU from Prlday to next Tuesday, inclusive.

World Series Facts, Figures

as L ef^ Grove and-Oeorga Zamshaw hearing their flrtiMlla through tha osona in « slntls some, and Dlaiy Dean fUpplng that td g h bard ona*

thiDetroit*.

Br n « AMKbiw r n

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fnr /li lUvarSil Sku. Pa«« (

U»kar41. C nn (S>. Dihnaan (1). Dar-■•7 <7> *1)4 MirsrSil R«ra*M« anS B«m.Bmtlnlac athWalai Tklr4 «•>•. ThmrsSar. 0<U h at Braak.

Iro.raartk saaif. rri4*r. Ort. niUi vaaa (U nacaaMrr)

4. *1 DtMkl7«.BJilk (*»• (If n«c< t, at Yatk.

6o«t>lh laaa (irOct. I. at N*ir T«rk.

rinantU) rU*r«al AtttnSaam «>JU. lla«il»Ui Itll.TSlJS

Balw4ar,') 8*>4w, Oct. xarrl UnUr,

■t tharat t4T.IIMS ai SIU.I41.I1----------. . . . aharai I1T.»«1.1I

Each clak’i ikarai tl1.l4I.ll. AtimdaBM <ar tfca " '1I1.1M.Il«*«t»ti far tka fin

( 'atUalanir** ahara fa* Ika flnt tw*n « « > iH .m .ii.riarara' akan fai Ika flrat !«•m ijii.s<.

lack laant'a akara far Ika flnt !*• saaaai t>4.TllJt.

Sack clak-a akar* far tka fir*! I«a ftatai tll.Ill.r*

COAST Pl.AT0Pr8

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Sport F ront

Brother Stars Foes in Vandal Tilt Saturday

MOSCOW. O ct 3 C/P> — T ^ mother of the tw o left. halfbacks who will clash here Saturday in the coast conferance'"natural" of the week has decided that n don't really .need to b« big to prelty good football player*."

Mrs. Ralph Williams said In Spo­kane, Wash., she would be here Sat­urday- "if I can get theee butter­flies out of my stomach" to watch trlpIe-threat Billy Williams of the Vandals and triple-threat Jerry Williams of Wsshlngton stata.

e thinks 'hera might be a les- . . . . for high scbool coaches" In the story of her soni who are tied for coast conterence scoring hon­ors with 13 poInU each—that UtUe men can play football.

The Vandals finally hare an over-confldence problem.

Coach Dixie Howell, concluding another secret- pracUca for the homecoming game, said the Van- daU were lo good physical con- diUon but that he was worried about their mental attitude.

The Vandals won their flrat two games. Including an amaslng up­set over Stanlord. while Washing­ton State lost Its openers to power­ful Penn State and Southern Calif­ornia.

Howell said he had told his play- en they would be meeting a heavier, faster team sessoned by two bard games.

LONG COUGAR PSACTICBPULLMAN, Waah. Oct 3 tfP>—Ths

Washington 8Ut« Cougars worked into the night on secret pracUce preparing for Saturday's game with Idaho.

Aad. yas. M« tbaSTS;atw ad Jeha HeOiaw, tka kua- ban brala. tbdr BNitba wMs •paa Uka UtUa bays.And Nick Altrock. the bassboU

X)»edlan. being told % haU a doaan tlfflca that he'd have to bu n r if b*

Officials to MeetItia organlsera o f tha new

Magio Valley footbaU-basketboU offkrlala will bold tbafirst of regular 8 p. m. Mooday meetlngi C ot 6 at tb« high school for tbs purpose ot im­proving the officiating ta tha area. Sipeclally asked, to. attend are the younger officials and-aU who desire to becctna officials.

expected to get to the baQ park before the start of the game.

And the galaxy •( apart wrfteea rammed Into narrow Impcavtsad

AND THATB THAT POR HOW, except: The Yank organisatioD really muffed one when they tamed the ex-Cowboy thlnt-sacker. Bert Bonoml. loose . . . AU he did for tha Cardinals' Presno club was to smack the apple for .SIS, drive tn U4 runs, second high tn the league, and break the California State loop recocd for triples with 3L

^CHffiOPRACnCIBSALTB B E E T Id

Sor. M.H. MACDONALD* \Chirepraeile Pbyildaa

BLSCTBO-THSRAPT

o f passes and end runs.Burley smashed to the Cubs’ SO-

yard line in the fourth period when Dewald Intercepted a pass to halt the threat

TTie Cubs’ lineup follows: Pord, left end: Walls. left tackle; MsrUn- dale, left guard; Toupln, center; Polash, right guard: Perkins, right tackle: Howard, quarterback; De- wald, left halfback; Chevelier, right halfback; Craig, fullback, and sub- sUtutes: BotUMns, Warberg. Mills. Serpa, Green. Parsons, Patterson, Leopold and Hill.

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M i a i i

SurrMlI

Otif best adverdseri for Stifrftvrillsuiti arc die men in town v ^ V e worn oo« aad passed die good word along. No better tribute could be paid to tills masterpiece of fAtic bjr Pacific Mills and tailoring b j Brodiers. All-wool Surritwill widi lo rich, :woven-in sbeea ha* die Indelible stamp of amsrt, correct attire...wfaaier«r die oceasJoit, and jon'U compare W a b l ^ . . . in any com.

paay. So go where yoB will bot go Soiritwinand jou go dressed widi confidence.

*45

S U B K E nriL L S L A C a m d ls iu im JUHmetht p m id t imrktt. t « m t o l m . . . hm tonidm g tx tm . for j o m 4 ^ 1 mU. $ 1 4 ^ $

A L E X A N D E R S

Page 15: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

. . t ' i M t

Page 16: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

T DE& ireill^TW m FALLS, IDAHO THtmmAYj

M arkets and Fin an ceStocks ; Livestock

Markets at a GUmt 'K iw To a c. OM. t » ) — atitH M hiit a«wU4 tBmIMB

Q»tM» I ft^ h r ; »nm tUb* u 4

IteuTTnd* nklMr

l t .n i aMt» «W M » »m i- 4*u» m m im m tU M lM ;«ab« 1........ —

i'S-ASKSJ!

DwZSlw UM.UW!

OlCMM*: tantat onCACo. o««. I tfy~ Wh^«»4 Mm !^a». __ o « « XM U «

>t ttou »t«ra nfUkiH »«d M d' ttete »M W ^ W - ------- UTU U«K

b ««t* «> M »*ektk* d «^ ,

tm t a rm ^ 4M4M M-a *kM KlM ;|«lalra rM«M Mn M l w *» A M l ICMU Mktk «U: tateJ «M: «•:

I TnMttn *HUM «

• 4htMm4). MImIm hmmi «.Cw». Bk«Ur O U .__________________!a ,4 s rc ; r s a a ■ss“S ra 'c r'fiK T fiS t,•14 Oil K. rMl/te Waurm OU.___ __5 s j‘3rrv:s5.as5i;..'s'; i«tml KUctrto »d4 SteUk tvw^ u 4 U«kb

BsaAtMMA ______NSW TOBX STOCZa

MSW TOBX. 0<l. 1 AUM 8tn UH Mid Cm M Ante Owl 4IS M*at « u 4Am AbllMl • Kuk XtirS K . .........

‘!rS 2 ‘^!JSf’- S = ."= .t= sMMS* M k

e22u t tr !; cancA co. om. :

Kk«c«*: t « * < W . t » « M W » «Ute u»<4. M* ttte tar: rinU *ar mka tO *:n«4M ^ U M M : i«« %» «i

»«. « «M«l LU: N*. 4 (m*|N«. V u t : •>»»>• >i««> u»>

IJ»H; tte. X

Am 8 AMOk a N « Blfcnlt

«3 Hm CMk IHU K.l U)tJ TIH N«l Otot U Nat r A t. U N T OMt 17« Nw *■ A»

S ou th Am erica’s

“Contrasts” T old

A tK iw an is iG lnbSztrenu p bm tr u d i m t VMltb

« n U u moA ttm ioc coetrwta BoUcMble to South utaaieki i tm m

o f bdU told Iba TWta M is Ktwanls ctob l l t u p ^ vta n t » Appestnd befon tfa> IumImob b m I- lac to ipeklc tipoo hli nh<m>Uum Cmitm « necat thrct-^Bcntbi'-trlp Utfoocfa Tariout soutbcm eottntzica.

XUustnllBC hli tAlk wtch pletoit*ol polnU Tinted. Uu ipeakcr do* •erlbed tha mott oatstudti^ ex- perteocca. erne of which v u cos- teDdtns with th« t m t vuUtloDS

> tn monetAxy tsehmnccs. Ho dcaoib* cd this M pArtieulATl; tXTtng ' tnveler.

A. J . Mecki. mAnAicr o l tho IdAh< ■uts emplojrment Mrrlce. umoi

; cd loe«lobw m nM ot*% A tlO B A l^ .I Dior tha Dhnically hAadlcttDaed"

WMk O ct S through 11.OtMBts at tha aeulon la tht Park

. botal wtre ZL E. Olbaon. Robert De< Buhr. and Richanl and Dod Du* TAIL

D o d g e r s W in

S e r ie s ’ T h ir d

G a m e , 9 to 8IFt m Pm * D*«)

Bntce Edwards and Ed Btanky. teat the tAUatln Bobo Nnmom to an early ahowtr with two men out In the aacood.atST-Zto?* k ,* J ~ *

k«t£r

a:K ,» OS

iv-Esr-sfMOT ITMSMlkk)* tXJM*: o _____•rtwtim lUMTJMS ««M » n »»-»»«-* - Mdten u --------

“cs=s\ n'M f«,?;ak iw t : stf» mktt. u a : ».rt

>»». >«ai»«, j m ) £A«: «klte clakr«kMr> Or lMtT U»2 )•

Im4 eta a«. M >m*: b^ i«» mad w

§=0*3* ________c«ni m * So VmCiuk UK So racin*Cam* Wriakl (U SMttT

»W*»W(<*1 ilankfc*«■■■ ■■ Wri *■>»«,— ; uU Ik. Mm Um temka tU *.

•klakb •••: Mtal A.IN:-->A eUta **-Tt kteW; m« « a»4.««

' - M <k*k« M M IV k*ttk.

t e ; sy« lOTiW ae kk W : N«. S kar4 |*M kM« (L R S to Na. S

sar 4 to «* khkw; N*.

DrvoUrs (NL)

E^VK t«tk Cn^Tn UH, s : r ‘!S3 Vr FMiite lUH

laMi^aa.cuu» Miute m4 M»t M

jm4 M kaltw* MM«r: •<d m tnm U«* a*. «a>< Im <

»^c.UH to lu tti: 'Mlw k>rtr O.M to UMtt. •.n 17 It

SJisrL

1 1 . w « i u>s s s a s ?

“tt

ils

>ntw t o t * etnaVSW TORX. Ort. t v n -

te£?»nx .iuSSiS, ,!5CIU«a 8«rr M TraM h a 4SS.'.V liSik-'U'Sl '!5Mt Ctl7 0<* f / l ( Utak r A 1.. tlK

I Stock AveragesO w »M kr Tk* AMMlatot r n a .

M«t tk u(» — AJ a t ueh A.nmlWw ----- •!.( U.« 4U at.rn*l9at 4Mr— tI.S t«.I 4U MJw<ak « «• ___n .1 t u t u u .Mm Ui __ tui m 41.T 14.1Twr »«• . _ SAT t u 44.4 UJl»iT Riak _ _ a t j tM <T.t «ajXMT l« w » t u n .l *9.t UJ

Butter andBAX nUNCtBCO PBODOCa

^^BW PSAtKIS^ Ott. t (OT>-a«kOMMTt^'4S.44?Ul«M* 410*. X r i i Lara* andt A a*4lu

CRtCACO POULTVT CmCAOO. Ort. t m -lU 8DA>-U»* Vevltrr na«tlM : N««btt U tnrkai rOB Hheleeale aatkMi Dacktlan U : kMT7 ^ k a S>^t aaaa M u tig aU tkkkfua

k*UM« n js sm4 M WItOT » *«» D14 :

lT.«*4t: kttotlMl to» . «kttk» n«ky aMu< UM

2tsr*i^.K5irs,

S,7SnK SE A roxA. on . i « » - n a » No. :

l-W.lk«| f ., lUaeW IB I—rikd eat lat Dr»w» la>—t><mkM f«r Chairflrr_____

R R EN. Y. <AL) __003 221 100—« 13 0B rooU m <KL) Otl 300 OOx—0 13 1

___ _____________ Bn«rl rvrillo. Raa* balM Ini Zdwar<li.. . j ____ „i-iU •>— WA. j ^ SUakr *. r»rilla I. Umltll. DWi^otatoes-OnionsU 1 MS ______________________ ^ > Edward.. Sunkr. rurUlo. LolUr.Ilrarkk. •

__ bABO rALU

• aM wtMti •» «««4 u d «tote<■ i*S ? k t .a ja jxa o ; «,» au« m, IJRI na.1 ■»t i l l aiwtk alM m U.M I >A«»t MNn m U v t«.«aA«*:

----- totot kNf lva*4tM

• atMdi: «a >tor laate ti

' hrc* kO> UA. mmBw tm r. O.^ M lR, ^ A «tok;^ t o M tmM. « « r trm morl

kM. M tir

A -toWA ,

, ,, gPCACO fOTATOP CSnCACO, 0 « . 1 «ur)—Antnla 14«: '« - v .

. -• - f «»««•■ »i Ckai>dl.r - .r off nranca ts off Pa«« li oK C4M« 1- Slrfli* oiitai kr iUttnt i : kr Draata 1;

------- ---- S iBnlan: Pan « niai 1 Ila 1 Innlnn; lUtUn • naa t hlu In laaUca : Draaca I raa> 4 kIM la 1 lanlnn: .T « r.ni J kU la Ifk InalBia. Kit

IMl ■ tl. S. t .IM 4

' Wear Milk, Eat Wool, He Avers

!. Ott. a (A-(FS)fXV—H»tjw M at«n aad M tati

aa ak* atack artl«« aad > aa M k M ).M kktW: to.

' PKODUC*CmCAGO. Ott. I M>-BalW» « •*l»ta ts acm* AA TAI5‘c V a r '" '"“ ‘

_ . Jd to 4 kalM «a)«to aadH««a aakUa iM; » . . a w aa ■«•« to .bOr* t>

B. S. A •mM . <«r NMtkli la«a»»*a M K »w valk* bkUm .

— C. i . J a»to A Wtoka m«a«ka O. A. I ^

o, a. »

ancA ooTo5:®s' Ortwa*. 5Mt>k O.= n« tM.a a»

‘ (Mdw »!«■ U.Mi k n j * ! »nd M a

WOOLNVW YORK. OcL < M>-E«UaiaM *»)• « f waat lapa faiara «wr« M.»N »Ma*) Waal tatntto 1U.009.Weal fataraa chmd .» aT a nat to L«

aaat* klakar: Ort. lltABi t>«. IllAB: ■ank ItUBi Mar m.«0< Jatr !««.«& CmincaM vaal ipol llLtN.

JtMTToAD: U.Oct. mAD: Dm. 1«A«B: - - •■*-«: 0<t. II4.4B. *an mJH.(M id i H4<««taal)

PU nnS E S SOOQBT J. M. Buotphrla And Lee BUaen*

burs hAT« instituted proceedings tn Justice court here a«al&tt Ur. and Mrs. Art n m h l for rwtoratloD ot pnmlaea. which they have all^adly faUcd to TAcata. Attoraer* for tho plaintiff! a n Cta^cnan and 9utnn o f Twin Pan*.

» a M « f CXTT

-S^u^‘.£S':12i£2n.3sral. Cad aMra tXW4T.«a:------

' a«kM* atoan "• - * Hckk I 4 * « w : - •

SritoTa> to W«* LH.XM.

M <WMa ILM: «aaw« N.eajIM: ^ A m : wdla* aad kb4— r* kaa. ..hto aaUkIt

5 = 3 ^ 5 ^ ^ ™ Former Residents

Visit Camas Aj%aP&lRPtEXD. Oct. » -H n n e r nm-

W«nts Ot CuttAs cmznty returned tw » R cn U r to Ttin meads and

U r. aad U n . John VcdcrmaSer. BOW mMcckta « t CalUortxla. are CQcaSa At the B eaiy Baoaeher imnch tau « ( PAtrtMd while vlsltlnc ttknds aad ntAttrts tn tha county.

WUQa TABdlTcr. Caaes pnM a n d t e l w b « A boy: U n . Vaadl?er. (ht f tm c r Jean Smith, and their t io chUtbm. Rapett. vtslied mends aad K la ttm bare. to a Rupert n o o l leAclacr.

U r. and Mrs. R . C. Wear and wOSnn. Saa BtirtArdlao. CaUr.. Tb-

i*r . aad Strx. Uax Ba&aoo. U n . Kaar to Baaaoa^ ateter.

Woman Vasnuit HeldA. wvBaa hooked u Hetoa C h « -

» r waa betnc heid ta the Twin FU^ cflnnty JaQ Thuzaday pesdlnc M peam itt htfot* Justice B atd Unzktec At POer cn a n f n a t y<haxc«>

SZw was aeeetheoded Wedneaday r A sbeettr* d q » t y wMle AQeetdly

«Bc*K«« &i ^wnhAndltnt on the «&cc«> « t POer.

that they hAve been eatlnc wool and wearlnc milk when they heard Earl Olson, company sales mAnager of the Idaho Power company office at Boise, speak durtn* their Thuraday hmcheon meeUn At the Park hotel

The speaker, who Is an authority a chemurcy. told of the thoutands

. ot ways la which previously wasted , statenab are belns used through I chemurgy. and he also told of how

It enables profiuble growins of new , producU that previously had UtUe 1 value.

Ouesta at tho staff meeting were C ountj Cotrnnlaaloner DeWltt R. Youn« and R. W. Edgars. Twin PaUa high achool agricultural instructor.

Potato Shipments Declme From ’46

IDAHO PALLS. Oct. 3 (OB—Idaho p ou to ahipmenU have been lighter, but onion movemenU heavier this aeason to data than for a period a year ago. Lyle N. Oardner. local pepresenUtlon for the market news aerrlce of the producUon and marketing administration, said to* day.

PoU to shlpmenta thtnigh Mcn- day totaled 5 .m cars, cotopared with 6.800 cara a year ago. Onion

431 CO1.MT ta IMS.

1 ccmpATed with

Held in JaURamoa Molina Parra waa being

held ta the Twin PUls county Jail ThuzadAy awaiting action by labor otnclAla to effect hla transfer after be waa amated by therlfra deputies Wedi>«adAy night At PUer following A fight At the Mexican Ubor CAmp.

Officers Rportcd thAt Parra puUed A knUe during the dJtturbeAce.

DischargesQuy Jesse Bair.

lUCTIDNS.

TALLULAH ILLCBICAOO. Oct. a WV-Artrt*s

TU labh lUafchiMlI was r«parted ' — " “- H AU w r after an attack o f

_____ A n a d • tH B penij ctctlnct t Tttfm te U vt* .- the eenwCy tn wWtto she faAs beea anicartng :

Watch this column dally lev news o f Ua«to Valley^ fann auetlcDi and for the date their UsUnga win Appear In the Ttmei<Ne«t. Check their adi for locatlcn and an neccsaary Information.

OCTOBER 9fWU) W . B. PiHefaao

. Oct. « .?

» .T W ' f f v . “ ?SSS“ u .™ o , SW IM

IN VESTM ENT CO.■keahoa* SL-'K. rbeaa

Page 17: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

40 ACRESr tMd Us4 •» «

fH E * BABCOCK AGENCY o » - . « . . .^

isibllu b( I4 » M (« i ttO k^llkmil -iJw t<(ht*i U« MT«* nltlraM ■*<

__« o s b* firiMd] TvWr cndivrUkti tat n i ot ealU«. I ran Blln nwdtra beat «llk dntrte dbW •ruh«r ind aUcMf bet **Ur bMUri fsniwti (IrtplMi t««M en IIt* en«t wlUi pIfBtr ol iprinc water. Prki T«r» «t II**" -•

n UUnN. m kc__ . » purthu^ ___ ____ ..(UlbM prk*. AUo UmI pUe* ter tP klnit 9t frail. btrrlM ru^ u It b RtMlkiillr fr*« frmn tprlar <m4 <>IIJ Thkh mnild duiutt fralt. TkW

t It idMllr louud ' - - ' "I town »tK] «U1>Om «< tki b«t M •crm tdStmt t» TwIm TmIU. BmtOM «U rtxna a«d«ra kamt, wO, prMsra fntrai. tan. ■UW*. all rood t«ra Usd. Ttil* pIm« kM . n9.»M «np tbli m r.

Prk* t».OOOM. PboD* 111 «r aU M til Sw. St w.

w w n : OR PHOHBSCH M ITTA W H IPK E Y

GOODING, IDAHO rnOHC >10

SaU t» b« on« of tli« bMt.W t. I# Co«eih« couBty. y»u ------aa<3«r nlUrtUen. U n line inlCilJMi u l Im M an a hani t«r«

fM«4 m d. AbMt I BllM froa Ge«].S 'u . ’S i ' s ; . - " * -

M .* niOM P « Acr« '

F. C. GRAVES & SONKADIO SLDa PUOHE 111

WATER » IS THE LIFE BLOODta asr brInM MMtrr. Tkb U par Uralariy In* m tb« Salaaa tract

*b«r« w» MS *«I1 r«a 161 ahara, aai tiww ta a food tBlUralW Tortjr. 0EB JIU MARTIN OR ME

C. A. ROBINSON■uk * BUc. rboB* IM

I ACRES0«lr IH »U» Ml of niw. H*. H

metn of Tmr aood land. •€»■« pa*. taM. A nrjr (wd Horn.. I room*. ■eo4 ban •Bd oalbalUliin. HIm or- >• placf to mak* a

BILL COUBERLY ai^HWpTi^r* /u*S?rVK?

tndi]« City Llmiu with 7 non aedm beuit. ToMaulon H da/a,. m.OOO.M T»mi

IK ACRE Wlih MO foot Rail Aoad Tmhatk Thit It A n«al Burla LOTSDIu. Lak« Addition. CV»a In. oo

olltd itwrt with a«wtf.

I DUPLEXES McKUni. with farna««, atokar and alw Ule hot waUr baaur for tMb apart. ntnL rail battmtnl lia.0w.09, Umt. Inna. tlU.09 i>«r monlh.

1 TRIPLEX Modtrp. Ea<h apartnrat ]iaa farnact. ilokcr and alMtrk hoi waUr h*alR with foil bummu aitd (antn. In. « n . lUJ.M p.r month. Prka HO.OOO,

E. A . MOON PHONE 5 OR 21

POTATO FILERS

ORDER NOW to m iuR * DELivear roa pall

UABVER

P A tn . EQUIPMENT AND WELDING SHOP

Paal, UaM PltMw OISMI. Dark;

>t BaiaJtoe. datp mO. f

Sod-sa

ELMER PETERS

80 ACRES

H AOR£«1IT llalu with mctan T.rooa

^ a . vototloa, M dara. 111.000. T«mu> ,3 NEW

X odn » reaa boiBO. a«>«r bMB m> uvplad. wtll locatad ea ollad atTMt. «U,M9 aaab. Sm tbla. Taraa.

E . A . MOON R EAL ESTATE

Pke»* I «r It far appelata.

IMMEDIATE ACTIONNKMtarr for thMa two eo»7 1 btdroo_ hona, Mch la a (hal<« locatkii. IT.M« •ach. Bolh tarrr hish loan >ala«. Our own lean appralan «an mauh yoor lijiniiiJlaU mpoTu* la ilrlni you dtfl*

• '-F U L L Y EQUIPPED '11 enlt RiMiI with U.000 worth <

' ampU >pa«« (or huUdln Tionry-m.klnr «nlU. Wl

lock.Mnarkrt comblnttloni nwr Twia Palli. franehltKt doushnut buti ■ IdMltr altuatad on haarllr Ua

Cob*—Sa^Appraelata IDUAL PURPOSE

PropMty. Mow a apacloM I b lraoiB hom. on lot wllh 111 foot dfpth and 1» tool fro&tati. On (In. itrwt. Buil- niaa bolldlnc (an bt plMtd on to fool dapth without InUrfarlns with bom* and Iandt«aprd yard. Xluhm hai .iKtrk dlihwathar and rifrlrtrator, bu«t»nt hat naw oil farnact a»d fnill room, thins room hu flrrplxt, (trac.

only. Shown by

MAGIC V A LLE Y INVESTMENT CORP.

Ill Ktia ATt. K. Phon. I4«lSpaclilltlns In lha b«t In hom... faRnt.

bwlntaan, and loant.

D AVID BRADLEY TRACTOR DRA'WN

78 b u s h e l 'MANURE SPREADERWITH NEW TIRia * TUBES

»398.00

A t

SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.

PUREBRED POLAND CHINA

BOARS & GILTSProdutlnc IU«Utrr«l Proran SiMk

SInita ar unralalad irovpa.BUD McNEALY

Buhl. Idaho Phona Pllar UUil

in3............. — . Caffto— ,. ...J Uotnr Lode*.

«tM«, lUIMt .ir' i^ toTand

-------- r^ntln* abolcun: blryct* andradio. All In (Int rondllton. W. IL Oil*m»B. Apitimtnl HH. “ ' 'parUBTBt Biora.

CUSTOM K ILU N G KQUtPPeo n atncats

AT rOUR PABM

CALL 0498J1 M. B. EACKER

GOOD THINGS TO E ATTREE ripntd pr«on. t

•__g n WTOBH Affim aGOLDEN Banun >wa.t <arn.

You pick. Caraii^otllRl. JONATHAN applit. Ralph'oi

north of hotplUl. Phona 0 TOi'PE:

O P

C. B. Adams FARM S & RESIDENCES

t city. Ilaa t bodroosi ardwood fkwn. fomaaa

____________OalT lU.m

)n*« mWm«« propwtr ta Bla« Lakai •Mltiea. 1 nom, and balb. funaca / M (takar. Good tarara. Loraly yard.

A K r H r - ' " " " * " " * " ’ -C. E. ADAMS

XSilUla At*, bat Pbc<M Ml

FARM IMPLEMENTS

A4 CASE ( iwttb. 4 at

KObEi-------

H. C. poUto difttT wl_ I. tood aondllton. Illi.OC

O N E

M O D E L G

6 FO OT

R U B B A R

C A S E

COM BINIi;

COMPLETTBLY OVERHAULED

All New Farts

W TANOEM WHEELS* BAOCINO PLATTORH « rSACnCALLY NEW UOTOB

S E E A T

GATES BROS.WENDELL, IDAHO

Bring conlalnin. 4 aotith, U I'atk,JONATHAN applM for tala,

wtat. South Path. PbontE. D. Ctmsbtll,___________

API-I.KSI Jonathani; winltr

TRUCKEna ATTENTIONIAPPLES

IM and Gotdtfl DtlI«Iout, Jonathona. Now raadr. t«e c>«r buihti and up.

ROSS MCALLISTER

STOP OLD MAN WINTER

BniNO IN T/fAT 9ASH AND HAVE THAT GLASS REPLACED BEFORE THE GLASS SHOtfTAOE GETS ANY W0I13E.

MOON'S PAINT & FURNITURE

GOOD USED TIRES

All Sizes

Low 88 $2.00

FIRESTONE STORES 410 MAIN AVE. SOUTH

WINTER APPLESRntular, Dtllelout and Jonathan! Ito tht nrw iiira (tn<r Doublt RWi All Giadta A I'ricwa

A r«w Melntoth Roniii and Starmtnt LatarKENYON GREENt mlitt aoathwtti Twin Falla

WOULD Smlih. n 40*t».KOOT

WANTED TO BUYwtd Cardti (lit. Dtnnlt

MeCORMICK.Dt lnr bom drawn tiari llfur, Ilkt nrw. IU. e aotitk. 1 wmInorth. H taat Klmbarlr.__________TW0.UN1T~OtLaval masnatla S ^ <

a lkloc BKhlB i aUlnlMa ataal

L 'iK '.V u .T . '/r .a K s r . 's :'=■ “ •■‘ I'- " ”

FARMS FOR RENTU lfT i Para 100 or 140 aam i'r

niad. Hay. fraln. row cropt. paatara Taylor »r«aU«. I4T. Rkhflald.

X e A L ESTATE FOR SALEalJdUt iot. W t>Us ' s n c . ' - b i

TCk>y Drira. Caa Bill CoabtTlr,

**• A«ni witk 4BMn«t fapramU practlaally aay pri

PAT DALY**ta?ub n

FARM MASTER M ILKER

WITH 7 STEEL PAILS

« H. P. MOTOR

LESS PIPE & PTZTIMaS 931X.83

SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.

MODEL B ALLIS CHALMERS

TRACTORw m i I-WAT PLOW

SPUD AND BEAN CULTIV/TOBBEAN c tn r o . MT.

KOWES AND KANURE MABCBALL m GOOD BIUPB AND BSAOr TO 00

RONALD STEW ART

MACHINES AVAILABLE FOR

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY — N e w -

M«C<

potato dlctati.XTtnmaa astomatla land Itralin. Vall(7 Hound 4<row tractor <omi«a.

Ian to tit all maktt of traelon. Vallty Hoood 1 and l<fow hont co (•tera.OImi naoor* loadits to (It all maktt

M<C«mlek.D*«tIna M or lO-lneh (..d •rladtra.McCarmtck-Daarlar crMm aaparaton MeCannkk>D*«rlnr nllklni machlnt* McCoRnkk.Dtarinc t.row bMt and

b«n planur.McCermlck-Datrlns t^.ft. haaty duly Undtn diac harrow.

■ ■ “ lO-tooth attal ptiktrraw.XeComkk-DaarlDc aprlni tootb bar-SoptrW bydniBlla ram Handa to fit ~ aakra of tracton.

, -------------- - --row boat pnHtr tofn medal H or H traeton. H«Cora>kk>Da«rlnc l.row btti pulltr to III aodal A tnclor.BoUry aerapara la l(u. d fU ( IL, and

M«C«nilek>Oa*rlas No. iOO'iracior^u7«?I^St^'ln IfU and I ft. alt. llydradlo doaar f»r aodal U tractor.

— USED —X K«Cor»kfc4)**rln« SI.4I eoablna- thrathlns macblna.I UcCorakk-Daarlac No. 4t harvaiM

X ^Cormkb.I>aarlsi awtrp rakt for «»dd A Uaelor.

McVEYS, INC.. « w AYfc w „ t rhoH m

loo-ifro I’ULLErrsproduction. wrl ktr. Elba. Idaho.

Hum batrackt.L. Sklnnrr.______irlns bran) tUrlln*

drtalla A. M.

DEER HIDESFOR HIGHEST CASH PRICES

. BRING THEM TOHARRY KOPPEL CO.

ftnein*. h « patlur.. tcrwn, buriltr proof, Many othtf tbinii.

BUCIINO APRONS COVERALLS•SOCKS

PLIGHT PILOT BOOTS GAS CANS A NOZZLES HEAVY RUBIir.n GLOVES aUlTCASCH . CAR GRILLS FOOT LOCKERS - TRUNKS TENTS . TAni’S. ALL SIZES TAN TnOUSr.RS . MARINE LAMPS

FLBECE LINED FLIGHT JACKETS NAVY JACKETS . FIELD JACKETS All kindi of Anil* « PUt Iroa A Plat* SInl.

HARRY KOPPEL CO.! i: ind Amu* South

J. A. CIIRISTOPKRIISON. MGR.

-W oolrlch Brand SHIRTS

JACKETSCOATS

AllSupplies for

HUNTERS NEEDS

TWIN FALLS HARDW ARE

PACKS PARKAS SWEATERS CANTEENS

RAIN COATS SADDLE BAGS SUNTAN PANTS

TENTH — TARPB CKIDDLE IRONS 0 D. BLANKETS DENIM JUMPERS AIR MATTRFJSES

OPKICER'S COOK K1T3 O, D. PANTS A SHIRTS

GABARDINE COVERALLS AMMUNITION. HUNTING CAPS

TWIN FALLS ARMY STORE

W Main Ara. S. Phoaa II

DBaa..Urpa. Itatt, r«B«*a. baatrelat. aaall nach tlor*. i Coltaan ell b ara. laBlfrnt, saw and aaad artkiM

RED’S,TRADING POST111 Sbotkona SMitb Pkona ll»T

RADIO AND MUSICPLAYEiT plana, axetlltal coadlllon. cabi.

Oaaranttad. Studio nNrw brnchaa. r«« c«„ .. ................. ....or cath. Bl*b,;j PUao Slot., 1410 Plltr A<tnu* Ea>L Phona TIM.

— PIANO BARGAINS - A Few MoreGOOD — USED GUARANTEEDPIANOS

Come In and Sec the New

BALDWIN SPINETS

CLAUDE BROWN MUSIC & FURNITURE

FURNITURE. APPLIANCESWINDOW ahada, U”.

USED waililn* Bachlnt: »ood conditionCIRCULA'TINO toal baaur, food condlUes.

” • -------- North.---------~ lf hta.rr. |.rnon. uivijii.

GOOD cIrcuUlInc coal btala. . . a. 1-___ .>11.. « .^n^l^rogltat ubitt: b

Children’* toy*.

DAVENPORT and chair: Di dinlni nx>a trl. both flk* II20W.u T crr -

OINING !• arlkl’aa.

W itT

r<i>. radio. 1 book Num.roui othar

>nut Eatb Pbonatntmal traah bvimrr wllh hot----- colli. Hot waUr unk. CIrculau

Inf coal hcalar, til. Phona 1111. wm Addlion.Free Wntlnihouit alaculc porubl* taw.

Ins machlna wilb trwinf cablnit. all at- Uchmcnlt i good condllloa. J. M. WrIfhk

•. Good oon- na All htalar, . Pbona 7» ,

X.ET at rtnaka r°■ 'S i:-;

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

DIRECTORYniCYCLE SALES & SERVICE • MONEY TO LOAN

BUtlut Cyclcry. Pk. 111. 4

• CLEANERS & DYERS

BOYAL CLEANERS. PboM 171.

FLOOR SANDINO. naldar. Prt* attlaattfc Ph. flitiC

rannlthla*.>t IIIIW er l»4W.

Crtaa A Brvlay. IM :

gLi4SS—B*atBB Olaa* A Bad, m iBd E. ^

INSULATIONCECIL E. OISH « SOW Fra* E*timataB P. a Bsi 141 PboM 1014

H AY, GRAIN AND FEED

W. IL lUabo. riMn* 2

• LINOLEUMS ipECUUra^

Q^LKUM a:U~XfpUl Tl>* UU.‘ 'filD"hSS ^ w “*

• UlMEOORAPaiNO

• PAINTING & PAPERINGPalaUnc a Pbont 0111.PtIntlBsi Spray or brt

Bart Vatttr. Phon. 1... PAIN’nNC. paptrhansinf a

rt Hofiaa. Phona XZMM.PLUMBING £ HBATINQ

Hwaa PlaablBs and Qla Co Pbcai• REFRIGERATOR SERVICE

SASH & UOORS■ s sIHINUM atom wiBiiewB *b7 ____- Enslnatrlag A Salaa. 110 Main -------- --- MTT.

' SEWING MACHINES

7 i a . " r r s i ; : " ; s B r s s 7 -' SIGNS <6 SHOWCARDS

TrMUU AdrcrtlilBs. Ntos Slssa. traak

• TAXIDERMISTfcdlLralUk. Pboi;; 4I0J4. bata.• TYPSWRITBRS

VENETIAN BUtrPS

TrNETrAN*'uUHD“ si

• WATER SOFTSNSRS

cludlns altcirk ranrt. rtfrlstrator.‘ ira tulirt. II.Ins room___ _

plalfnrm rocktn, aahocanybad da<rR^oVs-

Itak. Phant lOITR. _____------------good fumllara. TVIn bwl.room tulu. BaautyRMl mattrtaaa, larga

tilt wool nisa. dlnttl* ttt, oranluffad lat and mmir othtr thlnsi.- ‘Vou^w*""’'*'***-

. Hollywood bad. ona dinatu tat. nrw. At my homt. Inqulra Soathatau... Fornltura CoBpanr. Buhl. R. D. Powall.

PLATFORM ROCKERSASSORTED COVERS A COLORS

114.11

SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.

9 Ft. 4 12 Ft.CARPET

$7.65 SQUARE YARD

MARGARET HOF FURNITURE

tall and 11x11 X7U4 woo] thn I pitca chroma . dinttia a.t. IM.M.( placa (tu Itc drop la^ tabla aad « ehalrt. Ml.ll, h watnat er aal>osany

wool n a UI40 >. tl.ll

iwe atanalon laava*

WESTERN AUTO FURNITURE DEPT.

N EW SHIPMENT■ OP

BEDROOM SETSALSO

ROLL OF » rOOTCARPET

CLAUDE BROWN MUSIC & FURNITURE

HARRY MUSGRAVES MERCHANDISE MART

• 1,000 STOVES FURNACES

GRATES

*"aVsSi.rt“J : i ; s K . ; ’^Priced Cheap

®''ad^«u^r“u'*k*t.*Mi*“ ’ *******

MAGIC VALLEY WRECKING AND SURPLUS STORE

Hlfkway W Waat e< Ho*pllalPHONE 0394R1

SPECIAL SERVICES5 ^ P 6 o j. aJaaala,. Tb» liaii

SHUMWArBADp'lta .'* Retwir. Bafrlgar

SEPTIC tank and eaaaiMel eUaalati.......

Uaala Vallty Rtfrlgaratlaa B DONALD LOUDEB ITO ni»e Uka Bird. Pboae

AUTOS FOR SALEX»‘ ;.NA8H *00, fully aqnlppwl. Pbone

land. ____liiT'vTl— d“ ,«.IUnt coadltioB. Ml Mala ArtBPt Narth.1114 MASTER Cbrrrolrt la good c<

Srreiaoa Motor Sake

ONE 1111 DODGE TRUCK IH-TON—IIU.OO

CECIL E. GISHPbone 1014 for appolntneal

Sox X4I. Twin Fallt

1147 KAISER, rary low nlltase »4I CIVIUAN Jaap lli l FORD Fordor IHI FORD I'ton pkkup 1*40 LINCOLN Zaphyr 1140 H-ton PORD pkkup 10» PACKARD 4Hl0«r tedaa

’TWILL P A Y TO SEE M cRAE

661 Addison W est W E BUY USED CARS

W E HAVE MORE CARS

ON HAND Than Ever Before

COME IN AND PICK ONE OUTO. i t : A. O. PINANCINa

WE SELL FOR LESS THAN

A N Y OTHER LOCALITYII4T CADILLAC M oot. Flaatwood 1I4T PLYfiOUTD Indoor aadaa. aopar II4T STUDEBAKBB Chi

PLVM0U1 and radio.

1*47 STUDEBAXEB Coainandtr «o o r tKlan. htatar.i»«1141 CHEVBOLET Moor tadaa Pleat.1»4« MERcilRT «Hloor aadaa, baatar1141 BUICK tupar 4Mleor oadan. healer1141 CHKVRoLet 4Hloor aadaa Styl.1»<1 DODGE cu^ua dHloor aedas.

btaltr. radio aad vrardrir*.1141 CIIEVROLrr |.door aadaa Styl- mailer, haatar.

ILER' M ui

•‘ 17 FORD taier

iiu nd^LIBERAL TERUB.

SPARKS USED CARS

m awD AVE.a-

*1 iinkm. SaM1140 CHRYSLER ^ a«d*«

Written Guarantee JESSE M. CHASE. IN a

EiUbtlihMl U17 303 Shoihoo# W. Pbooo SU

PINB AUTOMOBILES

i 'a ci1141 B 1141 STI

EVROLrr n*«tiiM **das E V R O ^ Flattaarttf aaduv •RCURY I paaaanm oeop*

- R Y T x i ir ^ .a S 'i^ f -

MOST OP THESE OARS HAVE RADIOS, HEATERS,

DEPROSTBRS. SPOTLIOHTS AND PO a LIGHTS

\\\\ t - l«ekHAVE SOME OLDER

MODEL OARS

R O E ^ R 'S ■. SALES & SERVICE

m Mala Eaal PW * »W ^QUABANTEED a tgUABB OZAL

BEN BROWNINaAUTOMO

4 B 3 M a I n ^Phone 1980

lin^CHEVROUBT STTZW ASm *.

»4I PLYMOUTH COKVZBTIBLB. k FASSEMOER. BAUO AND BSA7W

1140 cratVROLTI *0001 1111 CBEVaOUET S.OOOB 111! WILLTi ^ A aUtbU « ^ P A r » KOTICI i»a* lS i^alSS* lifta I ^ nUi

M AKE YOUR OWN

T-E-R-M-S

TRUCKS AND TRAILERStraiU .«

TTSn- ........ITfiStX_____171 BIiu L*k« South.

^ R SALEi ^T*ll«r tnilar k ^ U 'foot. I tall alaa b.aoulppad. IMO. LarrT'i Body ai

MALL Sbulta trailer boaaa. claaa. atw iw M O W ? ^ ’^ U » Etabarl, Boad.

FOR real trailer bVltHor* walcoma.

FORD iv ft s n m r ^ a "5m V KTNS'rthTSaL

1141 F1141 MERCORY . ___

bcatar aad ^ ^ a a se r ooupe,

iHlaer. beaUr 1141 F0Rp'"MBrariJb1e. haaler aad 1»4I FORD l-patjtnser eoupe.1»4I OLOMoblLS aedaaet.Itll FORD >-<ioor aadaa, taper dalaxa.

tIH roRD aadtB, taper dela<«,114* DtSOTO iHleor Mdaa, baat«r and radio.1141 CHEVROLET Indoor aadaa, heat- I«4I arZVROLrr l-deor tadan l»41 CHEVBOLET Indoor aedan ISII FORD 4.door iwlaB 1*17 PONTIAC coupe l » l CHEVROLET coop.

COMMERCIAL UNITS1141 CHEVBOLET J.loa tnak 1141 CHEVROLET pkkup. baalar aa

1141 CHEVROLn tfBck Moa lOU DODOE pickup 1»4I POKD lft.tan in A l»40 FORD Moa track, ataka --•-CIIEVROLrr nirtaa tnck. 1

J o p “ t4aa tr«ek Twwata aaaplw tnflar. •«*. -

NORTH SIDE AUTO COMPANY

Jerome, Idaho*7OAB0'S : R C » r P8gD HA»

IfjrcHEVROLto trok. j<»( oVa^SJZ

1»U CHEVROLET truck, gesd yabber, ha«%

VT'iI47 l^TON atakTCdTttSClST:tten at Idaho t t t Preducen, in 4th aTennt toutb. acruat froat Coray'a.

. - j - i i r S S I S

1947 and 1946 FORD TRUCKS

t (paad aala, LU tlrw, toa* wbaalkM*,10,000 a l l« each. B a ^ L iT T S I tNew Tracka Coat.

IV A N WINN

tl4 >o.

Page 18: ‘Self-Ration’ Drive Italy Membership Opens, but Control …newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...an-oplnlon of Ada county Dis trict Judge C. F. Koelsch holding

T I M E S - N E ^ T W n i r r o T H l ^ A T , ' OCrOBBR<*, . I M T

Uhripe Fruit ;BeKeved One ' CaiiseofPplioSYRACUHS; N. T , O ct a VP)->A

B ynem t pedUtrtckn, Dr. Ralph R. 8eob«7. wbo nteljr beUerM cfknlcl* jieitmnninj CKORS lOfUlUle panUysU. b w pnt till tinver on untipe fnilt. •moBC ottier thloci, u a MUica of tlwtfrMd(llM ««0.

Z » . 8oob«j''» belieft are pubUahed ia a M rtu of arUelet In the ar* o U r a o f pedlatrlca, a montUy pub- Iteatlon. Be makes a (kwble-bairel- M l«lalm:

1. Xt oerer ba i been proved that ttu -Tlrua- o f poUomyellUi can taOM that dUeaM In human beings.

a. Jt hat been proved that poUo M a be eaund by cyanide polson- Sn .

HU Ide* o f how Infantile paralysis ia caused departs radleally from iMognised p<^o research. He says that cranlda not only can produce pazmlysla In human twlngs and aiU- n a b but that It results tn a chem­ical imbalance !n the body that n a y have lasting results. The func- t ta u o f the thyroid gland and the Urer are disturbed. Dr. Scobey says.

He adds that poUo is only one of R group of diseases caused by cya­nide poisoning. In this group he lists goiter and panlytlo sheUftsh disease. He says It Is possible that xtoeumatto fever also results from cranlde poisoning.. "1 do not think." Dr. Scobey says.

*that a mlero-orgnnlsm exists that eaa be assocUted with pollomyellUs

lest a by*product of the cyanide poisoning. This Is probably a leu« oomalne o r enzyme, which when Injected into experimental animals •an p ^ u c e or accelerate the pro* diutlon o f cyanide In the body and thua produce a disease similar to that resulting In bumans from flyanlde.”

Holfcrff cod Called Wrong Place for Rearmg of ChUd

TORONTO. Oct a wv-*n>« »«•periorlty of Llnwood. OnU. orer Hollywood as a place to bring up chUdren * u asserted today by Mark T. McKee. 80*year-old Unlt«d States airline execuU' ■"hU custody of hU 7-year-old eon. Terry, against a suit brought by his divorced wife, Mrs. Evelyn Me- Kee of Los Angelw.

Asked by his counsel. Oeorge Loohead, about his atUtude toward the boy, now living at McKee's Lln-

ood farm. McKee said: rr want him to grow tq) Into the

kind of a lad Uiat's atrmlghtfor- ward, honest, who knows what work Is. At the farm Terzy Is learn* Ing to work. I don’t want him to grow up to be a playboy, under the Hollywood Influence."

During his testimony McKee sold the final break between him and Mrs. McKee occurred afUr be re­turned hooie In August, IMI, "and found In my closet a perfumed bath­robe belonging to a Peruvian gentle­man who had been occupying' my bedroom and my bed with my wUe and my baby."

Later, Mrs. McKee, whom McKee divorced In 1B13, was named corre­spondent In a divorce suit brought against Max De La Quenle, Peru- Tlan consul at Los Angeles.

Yandal Group Selects Locd MmDirector

MOSCOW, O ct 3 (/P>—V btt «lee> tlon of omcers for Vandal Boortm,

a be-Inc, the sutewlde orgai---------------hind the revitalising of attUetles at the University of Idaho, has put J. B. Hotfner. Kellogg, general man* ager of the Bunker HIU, In as presi­dent.,

As a result of this elactloo the Zdaho-WSO football game vUl not be the only contest In Moscow Sat­urday. The nine newly elected di­rectors of the organisation will meet to decide a tie for the lice* presidency.

Tied for this office were W. B. Hawkins, Coeur d'Alene attorney, and fbnner president o f the unlver* alty alumni association, and 81b Kleffner, Boise sporting goods deal* er and regular Vandal halfback In 1023-34. Guy Wicks, field agent for the linlverslty, was named §ten - tary*treasurer.

The directors, picked by the 47 In* corporators of Vandal Boosters, will hold their first meeting here on Homecoming day.

In addlUon to Haffner, Hawkins, and Kloffoer, the first bov<l of <U* rectors Include Mitchell Bunt, jr., Tvln Falls businessman.’

Hemlinos len^rthcn with the shadows into allur­ing soft gowna. See our charm ing selection o f a f­ter-five silhouettes— ex­quisitely new — attrac­tively priced.

PARTY FLATS. . . distinctly new!. . . refreshingly differentPlatform wedge type soles, soft as a cushion, light as a feather. Get ready for that gay party season ahead.

Gold or Silyer Kid...... ;?7.95White Satin.................$6.95

T77j’//27?'’

jfeho Department Store■ ' “ I f r t I s n ' t R ig h t , B r in g I t B a c k " i

WlflTTHm DI6HT

Our first concern la-the health o f your children’s fe e t Our shoes'are sturtiily constructed . . . our salesmen experienced in the correct shoe needs o f your children. Shop with confidence . . , select you r children’s shoes here.

GIRLS’ SLIP-ONSIdeal fo r school wear. Wine colored elk black trim solo and heel. Strap across fringe tongue. Leather soles and rubber heels. Sizes 4 to 8 (Dfr K A Widths A . B , C, ^ . 4 _________________________O O .O U

Newl Loop-tie

SPORT SHOESFor all girls young and old. S oft brown elk in plain creased vomp. Flexible leather soles lo r added com fort These aro in A A , A and B widths.Sizes 4V4 to 8 _______________________ $5.50

New Shipment!

BROWN OXFORDSwear. NeoUt« soles that are mi with no seams in heeL Size BH to 13. Widths A. B, O _

n eOc upper. Scuff Up for longer e durable. Leather quarter lining

___________ $4.98.$5.45

“Trim Tread”Brown Wedge OXFORDS

Tan elk semi moccasin toe open lacc. Flexible sewed on soles, platform sole and wedge leather covered. Sizes 41^ to 8. - - - - Medium and narrow w id ths__ $6.50

BOYS’ HUNTING BOOTSBrown elk high cuts, lace with hooka, welt construc­tion. Thick cord soles and heels. These make excellent hunting boots fo r women in the narrow C Q JfC widths. Sixes 1 to 6. C, D and E widths_____

Juvenile Shoe D ept Downstairs

IDAHODEPARTMENT

STORE“ I f I t h i ^ t R ig h t , B r i n g I t B a d e ’

SCHOOL DAYS SPECIALOF YOUNG MBITS

Regular $8.95 and $9.95 Values

combinations . . . constructed with' springy sole cushions that m<ik« walking untiring . . . best ooaUlr leather aoles. . ^

Just Received!ANEWSBnPMENTOF

YOUNG MEN’S

SLA C K S$11.90 S14.90 $16-90

• PLAIDS• SOLID COLORS

N o w . . . a b ig selection to choose from . Vliw gin w ools! Gabardines I Bedfords 1 Al! sturdy fabrics . . . in asorted browns, tang and grays. Sizes 28 to 42 waist •

A NEW SHIPMENT

byVANHEUSENJust Unpacked

N o better vali 3 . . . because these aromade by Van Heusen, one o f Americas best known manufacturers. .Sanforized shrunk and made with their famous webbing one C A piece collar. Sizes 14 to I 6 I/2..................

MUNSINGWEARAmerica’s Best Known

Name in Quality SHIRTS and SHORTSThey’re 'tops in quality and tops fo r com fort. , . because they’re fu ll cut to f i t perfectly. It pays to buy quality 1

Skit Shorts_______ 85cShirts to Match..................75c

Rayon Knit Shirts....

Idaho Department Store- I f I t Itn^ t R i g h t , B r in g I t B a ckT


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