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T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW...

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HEAR DR. TWir vVOU 1. NO. ’307. liO M O R ' : iisiiiiisT ONJO ITMS —^Attacks Secretary of Navy’s ■> ' “ Biggest Navy”-Program in Speech Before Congress Pro- testing High Expenditures . DECLARES TA)^AYERS iWUST BE CONSIDERED ThinTra Food for Starving Oiiil- dren Far More to the Ques- tion Than the Largest Navy ' fo r Totnre Heeds '' By L. C. MAKTIN ' WASHINGTON, Jon. 14.—Attocklng Secretary -Danlob’ “ Biggoat Navy,'’ Sooator Borsh vramod today that "this sboinolou orgy of cxponditares may force tho people to cry oat with the voice of revolution sgaiiiBt the nAdncss that‘is griodifig tbem to powder.” % charged that while In theory tho |j gove^QtDont has groat plans for aalver* • nai'poaco and brotherhood, ‘'nevertlio- leu in practice it still apparently lo - following tbe rales of kings and auto- 1) erata—to frighten the people and rob t them throDgh taxation. . ( Political Infloensa-:-------- “ The 'political inSuenzs^’.nov-epi*. ^ ‘’drmic in Bnnla tnay infeet Ameriea If ° moro atteatlou Ib tiot paid to thoso who mtiet pay tho taxes,” Borah said. "I j. ■orvo notice now that those who under- tak«* to pot throngh thin naval progratn ^ ,wUl have to fight ovory step of the ^ way,” said Borah. cannot under- ^ stand the demud for warahipB at this time. They are Instnnnuita of war. Are wp challenging dr throwing donbt upon the frieadahlp «f France oc. Sag- lan'df Japan, is powerfni, but bur reln- tlona are frio n ^e r than for a deoade. ,/'A fte r, the war ia over, with onr en- emioB defeated and all tho great naval powers friendlier than ever before, we proppee to. spend *600,000,000 In the throo years'ou a poworfal fight- ing, m&chlse. ^ ‘<Ig this not a direet ehallooge to ^ tho good faith of our^alUes, or doea U V not throw, doubt on"'the'alncerfty of ® our own profeaalonst ' 01 Qcsstlona Jostiee ' ” Above dll, i€ It not a signal act of it iujiutico to the people of thi# country A who have paid taxes aad bought Lib- erty bondn and saved, stiuted ood do- at nieil tberasclvei in the wmr erislaf*' tb "Is the American taxpayaf to have m no more plaee In this program than a tb eoddled peent ■' Ie; "A ro wa ^In g oa with thU shame- ei; loss orgy of expenditnre until th« peo- of pie are forced to ory oaf with the be voice of revolution against the madness that is grinding^ them to powdert Ddffereat Plaa for Aisatlea ' ‘ The next war w ill no( be between ^ governments or nations ba‘t between the govemmentB aad the people. *^0 Bus- of slan'and French'revolntioos are the .^ legitimate oatgrowth of Injusace^and * * T>wression.’ There has not beea a crime • committed in Bussia in the .fl vonths'that did not have Its parent C in t]ie oppression ef. the bloody ^m a n - iJ offs. We caMot shoot up or-kill that kind of moveaqnt Toa^havo to fe«d Bussia fin aomething b ^ te s ballots. - That ia what tho-Bcmanoffs fed the . Bussians. Ameriea should adopt a dif- ferent plaic “ I know w« arp very strong, well- ' i powcj, llberly-loving people,, but wo ' are not immune. ■ Tho s^meless waste of the pi'Oplc’a cnrnin}:*, iho uacon- pcinnablo extortion fnun their savint;*. > untleminp tho noWost InntUu- ' tiota. Even tho strufturc reared by our /others will not ■taiiil tho strain no' inJofinitely.' ' i H w t Meet Hom* Needs “ The people have p&tiently bome • the hardens of the war, but the exr. pen.litares from now bn must be bca^ on reason ahd distributed with..Econ- omy.” ' a;r Borah-quoted reporta of children of »■ nUrrlag ia New York. H a if the stor>- .'was set told, he said, adding he h*^ .reports from another eity showiag 100,- tot -OOO childrm -to be under-clothed asd wi enJeffed. Af . 'iT h n c are the aeedf of BoUheviam, ” ies aaid Borah. "How -quickly this po- it litital in/ 1nen*a will spresd'when onte pn hatched ia hires of misery and star-, ,tiq vation, ae one fan telL Now it Is time to take notice, to consider the peo- ple who hare to pay. the taxea." ^ , sU Borah, aiKasaiag^/rviAUs propo'sals ao for a'league of natipat, stroaglj con- me demaed T a ft’s plan for «% league of oatioas. to enforce paaea. .j- ^ T a ftId e a of fore« would faa^ qm , teaiag^’eeaaetiptiw ea - the 'Ajaericaa 'd«^ pM ]^ la paaet 't^e*, Benb'daalti*d. wi] I. FORTIER ON 1 N FA Sponsors Nt Operation f h Governor Davis Respon signed to Co-ordinate >s ■ Than Forty-Eight Sep: In Place Management Ui J. Fixed and Definite OABZHST MEMBSB D BOISE, Ida., Jan. 14.->The *Jnrintit in the state govenunant wa«.i»anclied [. directly sponsored by Ooremor Davis, i the constitution by cosferrlttg upoa th< >- . m>on8lbmty of xon^nnlng the principal y • nin ^ comniisaloaers,-' at the bead of as ^ - are made up o f a coasoUdation Of ntu oniti^ and aboUaUng otiierB, principal: ^ Director of farm tnazketa ,stat« bor warden, pubUc ntilitiea 'bas ,2 Inxpectot: of mines, state examiner, indi >, inarian, highway commiasion, sUte boa chemist, hljliw ay engineer and nomeroo force and effect and after Biarcb le . . . ' ; ' a (Special (0 T H018E. Jan. 14.—Striking ri ° bnslncBH |)n)bl(‘in aj< cliief e.xeoiiti W. DaviK, tly» new governor of J ■g .sl(*<*v(*.s jind waded in today to i ). bunincKK adm inifltration and to i b tion 4»n Ins foronist of legislation > tlll^ I(*gislatnre. Ill one of tho most aUikinjjly ooni-^^ 1 ^ prohoiisivp and moiit pfogrcsaive bills F g ever introduced by a goveruor of a L ^ woNtcrn stflito ancj {larallclcd by only | J 0H<' o t h e r case in tho hiatoiy of state loglslation, .Oovornor Itovls today In- ' tr^ucoil a bill intp tho logislaturo which tal<CB ovor forty-oight aeparato ' * departments 'of tho state govemmont '* and placi'B thorn under n in e ' heads, * thereby saving t'he state tbouBands of dollars ond much nooJleia.,. ^ B ?e 'o f ® time aud energy. ^ OreatM Advlsozy Boards I, Bot tho samo legislative act will M . crcato. fivo advisor}' boards for tho ^ samo number of depdrtments which w ill ^ constitute exi>crt opinion and w ill ^ through itn merpbers reflect tbo opin- . ions of nnd represent the public ia a way which ho* not before been accom- j plished. I "W ’ith rharneforitttic bunincHs sense, { Governor Davln- hns apiironchcd this pr business problem, just aa he wolild ro- bil orgsnizo a, bank or other business in- loi stitutioM, should he be responsible fo r of { ita success as such,” said SpeaEor M. fo: r A. Kiger of the houso today.^ thi No piece of loglalatiou presented to co: - aa Idaho Jogislaturo in the history of thi tho state has before Tauscd the com- »» ) mont beard today. In this comment — I there waa nb adverse criticism. A ll legislators voem to agree that Its prln- _ . clple moro than stood tho test. Many __ * of tbem knew that political scientists I held ao disagreement al^out the effi- I cacy of such a plan. . '^BIU FaToraldr Bagardad b. Wore the bill to be voted on todaj- , in. both houses It would pass by accla- , mation. But that thero will be some . opposition to its enactment into a low I (Ooatinoed oa Pac* Toor) SPiTMtS AHEpiRli First Delegates Brought Band! and Are Ready for a dance ' or a Scrap i rtv II. C. HAMILTUN NEW VOUK. .Init. 14.—Tho noviet!« nrr cathprinj:- ^ ' The first <)cJcKal(*« an* hpre with n, b»nd. Thpy have hired a dsBce hall or i a rioK. , Either n danrc or a scrap was to be-unilpr full ntcftni with the thottle tied op«‘n. The new iniernational Irafrue. elder a^nong tho tiig minors, aftil’ d survivor of maay a rough ushered in the most strenuous work in the his- tory of baseball by it* meetiiig hero, today. Followinf* rlosely in its wake will come the meeting of the National Ajuf^riation of Profewional Baseball league*, which w ill take np tbe stPlngs it laid down in Chicago and win make preparations to hla*t a hole in the aa- tiquateit jistional airreezneat under which basebali has ^ n operating. The ini&Ar league^ said Tinker, will sUnd faytniy their guns, even going •o fa r as to abrogate tA national agr«e- ment unless their wiahss are agreed to. However, thfejH^n^e^ har* mad« tkraata b«fo» *ad*i£n'ha'tiooal agree-. QMat m te DO. Unlaaa they.foUow their . 'd^r^aatioa with brave hearts, th ^ w ill be beatea. I IRfUGATlON A l LLS TWTO PAU.8, IDAHO, Jew Plan of L for the State onsible for,M easure De- ite A ctivities of No Less e p a ra te D epartm ents and Under Nine HeSds W ith K ^ s p io n s ib ility TO HEAD BUBEATJB Blnlstration'B plan for. a aveepiag cbaage” chad m itha state aenate today... . It is T is / ^ Tltallxea aitlcle 4, sectlon.6 of a tha chief execQtlva the power s i^ clpal departmants through a cabinet ot as many tiurei^ These departments ’ ntuneroys present aeparata government tpti among which ai^: . hortlcultarsl>lnspector, fish and game i .'bank c o m m ln l^ r, Insurance manager, industrial acddaiA board, sUte veter-. i board of beaJ^Xsaaltary Injector, laroos Jx>ard& I t is proposed to go into brch 31, lOie. I to Tho News) g right at (lu? ,l»»art of hin big roiitive of the state of Idaho, D. of Idalio, literally rolled up his ( to make good his promise for a to put indelibly the stamp bf ac on contaiue<l in his message to' fPROy iOEBBOGE ; ^ovEHiEenT; 5 -OWSLEyFER filf; ' * a il Mrs, White of Twin Falls Spon- " ° sor for Measure Carrying Ap- p: II propriation for Needed Passr age of Snake River ---------- _ fl (Special to The News) O BOISE, Jan. K*.—Asking .for-aa ap- s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod ia the 1 - lower house thIs.mo'riiliig by Urs. Whlto r of Twia. Falls county. The-biU prorldea !. for the construetlon ot a brid)^ over tho Snake-river at Owsley's f^rry, thna di 0 connecting the Eagerman vaUey wltb tl f the south aide of the river aad doing O . away with the feny earvlee at that t( t — -------- - ------------- - ■ . - - • nt } (Continued on page four}' - fl 1 WORLD NEV s ________________ l' • . B ' NEW YORK, Jan. 14.— The i r five or six billion dollara and pr rate than any previous loans, il here by Garter Olass, new seori GENEVA, Jan. 14.— Ignaee . - patriot, was not badly injured w according to word reaching her ^ graphed friends that his wound I his work i WASHIHaTOK, Jan. 14.— S Ij from Europe was demanded in' ' Senator France, Maryland. Tb I pcace,ncgotiations be spcedod^ti j . to withdraw the army of occupa I delay. li ' -------- -, • TOKIO, Jan. 13.— (Delayed) ^ 1 - r'eachcd an tinderstanding rega ] i Siberian railway, it was learned foreign office w ill soon publish The allies have given their cons ican understanding. LONDON, Jan. 14.— No mal > . majority in.the national assetnt of elections, the soldiers’ and vi tinue to power, Hugo Haase, indi in an interview with the Expr The soviets, he said, control tho close nndentanding with the w< political tittity in opposition to t) I.ONI>ON, Jan. 14.— The Es the armies wiU *.*9iarch s tr^ H i ierms afe not f i ^ carried out,' w ill be but a h ^ measure. . The belief tha t Oermany is neither w: ^ th its agreements as set forth M d poiats to the failare to deU^ . .X ''' \T THE LAVER DAll 10, XnESDAT, JAiraAB'T H, 1919. No Real Fighting in Berlin Since Sunday Afternoon ^ Spartaean B^volution Gradu- ally Dying Out— Ebert Gov- ernment in Ascendenoy S BBBNE, Jan.. H.t-Thcro bus ’been jJ no real fi(^tiuK Borllu since Sun- liay aftornopn, Orrm.'in illspatchcs ro- l l ported foday. The govcrutncnt was said to have orderetl arrest of Knrl Liebknecht, Bosa Lnxemburg, Karl Badek and Po- _ Ijce president Eichorn.. A number of Crech nnd Russian agitators havo been captured.^ ' ^ Tbo Ibove dispatch directly refutcn a'report cirrulatod yesterUay ntid ered- in d -to the Tagblische Bundschau that Uebknecht and several of hia followers bad been arrested. Previouaiy Ueb- knecht was reported killed in'Street fighting. It is ovidont that hg not only in alive, but still directing wbat rcntninn of the Spartaean revolt. IS fliN ^ MENFpRFOOD I Germany Will be Given Supplies j Providing She Turns Over Ships and Prisoners By FEED S. FERGUSON ! ’ PABIB, Jan. 14.—Con^lfcte ttgreo- ment haa been reached by thu inter- f> allied food council regarding roliof for ^ liberated territories and other affected aeetiohs, it was learned toJay. ' The plan inclndes permission for Ocr- maay to obtain food, providing sho I turns most of hor merchant- ships over r to the allies for vario^ls uaea, inclad- c ing repatriation of Amorican troops. ” This la in no wiae a co^eeMion to Oer- - many, but is dcsigad to follow the lines eonaidered by th r alHen to represent ^ . their beat interests In inaintainlng sta- ble couilitionH in central Kiiropo. Tho ' plan ban been submitted to the nsso- , cinted peace conferees for_ratificatlon. : The present program provides thnt! tho first fu ll session of the peace con- ferent-e shall be held at the Qua! Ornay, 2:.10 Batnrday afternoon. The , next meeting of the nupreine war coun- , cil is scheduled for ‘10:30 tomorrow ,n , morning. ,ij \ FESTIVITIES COT 8H&BT (iLYMPIA, Wash., *Van. . 14.—All tl I da^cos planned during t^is session of ai I the legislatnre have bc^n callod off by- to : Governor I^ te r and theatres ordered ai to only pe'rmlt occupation of alter- th I nate seats, to prevent spread of in- to fluenea among tbe legislators. so m ^ ^ 1 WS EVENTS ^ th ------------- tb e next L ib e ^ loan w01b9 for ^ probably for a higherinterest ^ , it was indicated in a speeoh icretary of the treasnry. ;e Jan Paderewski, the Polish r I when ho waa shot in Warsaw I lere today. Paderewski tele- . inds would not interfere with - —Betum of American troops p| in'^a resolution introduced by Tbo resolution urged that tho ' [frtip so that it win be i^B ihle ■paJtiejj from^QemSny wlthont i < nn d)— Japan.and America have ti< garding control of the trans- nt ed authoritatively today. The ish particulars ^of agreement. 'j' >nsont to the. Japanese-Amer- th ------------- ap aatter ^t^ioh party obtains a '■ '* mbiy of (^rmany, as a xeralt 1 workmen’s ooundl wiQ^con- ndependent socialist, deolared na :press, nbliahed here today. Jie factories, becanse of their ' workers, who have organised ^ y the bonrgeoiie par^. ^n ------------- thi E^ess t«^y deelared that iei ght to B e r^ if the arxalstioe It," anything else, it declared, ^ Che newspaper aanounoed the ’ willing nor able tp go throv^ th in tfasi text ef th# annistloe sliver promised tqipliet. ei< RING THEATRE LY N JEMERSMySTBE - ORF IIGE IN IIG Senators Borah and Ke Progfesaive Wing of Warning Against Con icies Not Specially L ht, the Ranh and File '.1. , ------------- TERRIFIC JOLT FOR i IF PRESENT COI ten ------------ WAf^niXdTOX.-laii. 14.- ew cnmiHff that trill nirct ul,. ficn unlrsa thn/ fmu‘ and nnlvo i set trornhifi sounded.lo. dfmocraih lot f/ff;/. ht/ S^iaioriiKcJ>}/on and h They c(iui>inucd (ifjaiunt “ ot, po.'iiuit of thr iitnintu' of Itohh Thei/ iirt/rd hnnrttt, fcarle/is, si f/orcniint'iit and poUHral Icadc pt'ohlema affccthu/ the t/nvit ma ’ CONSOE IlEyT ^PEACE SESS ION e- I Questions Involving the Fate o f ! 'd Millions of Intelligent People \ , Are Being Studied Carefully i 1 ° by the Allied Nations ; J FRANCE AND ITALY SHOW - IMPERSONAL ATTITUDES ' « ... ____ I National Territorial Claims Are | 10 Being Waived to Take Up < More Important World Qnes- ‘ It! tions for Oonsideration i 1- '■ ' By LOWELL MELLETT ' ° PARIS, Jan. 14.—The peace con* J fcrecn are making rapid progress in disposition of vital questions. Yot to- 1 ■lay rcvonleJ now problems that show why tho sittings must continue for many months^ .The principal questions 11 that aeem in n fair way of prompt and ' f amicable settlement'are Italy’s claims | y* to Dalmatia and domination of Syria d and Franco’s desire for acqulsltfdn of - tbo ^taar valley. ,Eithar of these wat- >' tem might well ha.ve been the tfole is- s sue of a peace conference lasting for t _ months, or in^time of peace, cause for x war. But both Italy and France are a fhowing an inclination to waive their 1 claims in this regard. r QueatlQes trascdvad * . On tbe other, hand, such questions aa that presented by Poland, involving ” tbe fate of iui ambitions and intelli- ~ gent people, numbering millions, are i: hocciisitatinfta^ policy of deliberate aad b (Continned from page £!▼•) PEEEllTES; M liyB iLMTEO ; Plan Proposed to Reduce Pro- ° -portionate Re>reMntation , at the (feh%ence r wiiLiAM pnn.rp smap i ! PABIS, Jaa- 14.—A movement was o under way today to rednci> the proper- tionato representation of small nations i nt the peaco eonferenee, in order to f: make tho coagreas leas unwieldy. Under t original acheme proposed by France, f delegates wero to be apportioned ae- cording to the imporUnce'pf the role their nationa played In tbe war. This ’ appareatly ha» beea changed so the P >-arioua powers w ill be repreaented ac- cording to the importaaee ^ their peaee * interests.. * This wonld aot offset tho fire great ^ nationa—the United 6tates,’0reat Brit- " ain, France, Italy aad Japaa—eaeh of whieh would ret^n five delegates^ The ^ other nations woold vary between oae - aad threo repraaeaUtiTSa with a t«»d* ^ cncy toward reducing- tba aombar for * the smallest alllaa. The British doaist- ^ ions may each 'bare th d r «wm vafe* ia the eoaferaacM, on tha gtvad. tkit *' each is a aeparata aattea aad scat its ” own fore* to Fnsa*. IDAHO -WXAZSn < Tuesday aad Wadaaaday, taeraMi** . cloadisaaa. E TONIGHT ^ I lEWS PBXOB FIVE CENTS E llSEM ICS MiLSHEH Kenyon Voice Thought of nf Upper House in Sharp ontinuance of Partjfs Pol- Designed for Benoit of K STANDPATTERS ONDITIONS CONTINUE i.^T/iat ti iin r alu/nment of th« irccp airai/ vxhtw fj political par- vo reudjiiMtnicuf prohlemn the hiic.atul vppnhlicnv chicftaivs if/- d Itorah, iir<3ffrc«invc ieadcrs. ystrirl, t(wtirn" as a means of dh- ihhvvtMm .'m tUr u»iicd Sf^ee. , Mraitjhtfortrard tadics ht/ the ad^t'H to copr irifh reconstruction mass of the Ainericatipeople.. TeirlMo Jolt Oomhig After soandlng the warning to ■'"•tand patten” in botH parUea that "a terrific Jolt la eomlsg to them tnta the Americas people” unleaa. preaent condltlocia are resi- •dled. Borah and Kusrtm oatUnad ways of oaetlng the Bctfsherlfla meoaca to this coastry. U “ Those in power, whether in pollti- |U cal parties or in tho government, who I I blind themselves to, the menace of Boi- sbovism in tho country ore cotirtlng, , disaster,” said Kenyon. "T he workers JI of this country recognise the menace. I 0 ‘loa't want Bolshevism. They foar it, but tbey realiie it Is spread- ly Ing here ani that something most .be done to stop.it. They look to their leaders to stop It. Blatt Bacog&Uo Woilcera’ B l^ . ‘ ‘A p p ^s are belng'hiado to“ repiib-' ;S lirnn and democratic party leadars t« puv thoir respective parties on record for a broad, wine, .governmental wel- fnrc policy tliat w ill recojpjlae the Fp rights of the workera as they, have nev- cr been recognized. Ono of, tho most c-oiiservntive tnon in the republical^ ' party >liBCusso<l the question with mo recently, because o f requests from his oonstituonts that be got congreas busy on welfare legislation. He is a party leader, a presidential poaslbUlty. He rwiliw* the menace. But all tha p i^ y ' ^ leaders do not! ‘ What tho people want la aotioa, not talk; ’ results not promises. The wlM -' political party is -the on© which will go on rccord for and then obtain' lawa like the following: of BoggH^ Plaa t- "Ono— Creating at once a commis- s- slon on pablic W bi^ Co co-operate with >r the states in pushing necessary public jr work during hard times aad. to aot re a buffer in absorption of aurplua labor Ir in the recon.itructioa period. TUa w ill'' remove, the pi'employmont menace, which is growing V bound* LS . "Tw o—Creating a national employ- g ment bureau to keep with th^ s ta t^ I- -"Three—Providing help la establiah-' ■e ing homes for workera. Fiaance . tUs . d by n plan aiq^loc to the farm loaa — ■bankii. "Four—Vocational- training for all. 1 "Five—Extending soldiers and Bail- ors insoranco to-uen in Industry. "S ix —^Establishment of courts of 1 mediation and conciliation ‘ voluaUry.' "Seven—Old ago, sickness and dis- ability insurance.' Borah Opposed to Force j Borah, a bitter foe to the doctrine of wipint; out Bol»he» lsm by repression " or force, saiil: ‘ One heors upon every hand these IsTs the doctrine of force. Wo are to forri' jHwro. niid wr are to have force to-maintnin j>eacc, wo aretft have force ti» fi^ii our lsl>or disturbances. Instead LS of talking force anJ* repression, let tia r- ptjhrh CO oiM-mtioi) and tolerance. 18 BoHHTii-viHm i-. (he fru it of forte. We M mu>t kirk fho p!«ychology of war from jr tactip^Nf wo doa’t want a terrific jolt e, frnm fhp people. B. . -Outllnee Basic PrlndpJaa 'There are a few general principles la »rhich if wc adhere to thera w ill aim- . ,« plify the situation: ' ' "One—We must,gel back abaolotaly ,0 to tho constitutlbnal government, to the priociples upon which oor fathara it bunt aad eschew all arbitrary raaaa- t- *'res. if 'Two—We must establiah complete e freedom of spe«ch aad of the pnsa. 0 .S'o man in theM timea ahoald be ea- |. hsrrassed in the free aad opdi dlaon- f »bn «f graat pubUe i^ueatiena vgn' ^ which d«p«ads oor whole fstora. - 'Thrae—The prladpls af tha'lnr of « r»-operation ia the iadnstri*! world - , shoi^d be substitut«d.^er tha ^ Isar af . tooth aad claw. I«ber a*a*t sadar^t^ tUad that it baa aa iataraat la great indutziaa of the e«aat>y mM« ^ from the' mare ^estibB af ; (0»ai«i»d « >
Transcript
Page 1: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

HEAR DR.

T W irvVOU 1. NO. ’307.

liO M O R ': iisiiiiisT

ONJOITMS— Attacks Secretary of Navy’s ■>' “ Biggest Navy”-Program in

Speech Before Congress Pro­testing High Expenditures

. DECLARES TA)^AYERSiWUST BE CONSIDERED

ThinTra Food fo r S tarv ing O iiil- dren F a r M ore to the Ques­tion Than the La rgest Navy

' f o r To tn re Heeds

'' B y L . C. M A K T IN ' W ASHINGTON, Jon. 14.—A ttocklng Secretary -Danlob’ “ Biggoat N a v y , '’ Sooator Borsh vramod today tha t " th is sboinolou orgy o f cxponditares may force tho people to cry oat w ith the voice o f revolution sgaiiiBt the nAdncss th a t‘is g riod ifig tbem to powder.”

% charged tha t while In theory tho |j gove^QtDont has groat plans fo r aalver* • nai'poaco and brotherhood, ‘ 'nevertlio- le u in practice i t s t i l l apparently lo

- fo llow ing tbe rales o f kings and auto- 1) erata—to frigh ten the people and rob t them throDgh taxation. . (

‘ P o litica l Infloensa-:--------“ The 'p o lit ic a l inSuenzs^’.nov-ep i*. ^

‘’d rm ic in B n n la tnay in fee t Ameriea I f ° moro a ttea tlou Ib tio t paid to thoso who mtiet pay tho taxes,” Borah said. " I j. ■orvo notice now tha t those who under- tak«* to pot throngh th in naval progratn ^ ,wUl have to f ig h t ovory step o f the ^ w ay,” said Borah. cannot under- ^ stand the de m u d fo r warahipB a t th is time. They are Instnnnuita o f war. Are wp challenging dr throw ing donbt upon the frieadahlp « f France oc. Sag- lan'df Japan, is powerfni, bu t bur reln- tlona are f r io n ^ e r than fo r a deoade.,/ 'A f t e r , the w ar ia over, w ith onr en-

emioB defeated and a ll tho great naval powers frie n d lie r than ever before, we proppee to. spend *600,000,000 In the

• throo years 'ou a poworfal figh t- ing, m&chlse. ^

‘ <Ig th is not a direet ehallooge to ^ tho good fa ith o f our^alUes, or doea U

V not th row , doubt on"'the 'a lnce rfty o f ® our own profeaalonst '

01Qcsstlona Jostiee '

” Above d ll, i€ I t not a signal act o f i t iu jiu tic o to the people o f th i# country A who have paid taxes aad bought L ib ­e rty bondn and saved, stiuted ood do- at nieil tberasclvei in the wmr eris la f* ' tb

" I s the American taxpayaf to have m no more plaee In th is program than a tb eoddled peent ■' Ie;

" A r o wa ^ In g oa w ith thU shame- ei; loss orgy o f expenditnre u n til th« peo- of pie are forced to ory o a f w ith the be voice o f revolution against the madness tha t is grinding^ them to powdert

Ddffereat P laa fo r Aisatlea ' ‘ The next war w il l no( be between ^

governments or nations ba‘t between the govemmentB aad the people. * ^ 0 Bus- of s la n 'a n d French 'revo ln tioos are the

.^ legitim ate oatgrowth o f Injusace^and ** T>wression.’ There has not beea a crime •

committed in Bussia in the .f lv o n th s 'th a t d id not have Its parent C in t]ie oppression ef. the bloody m a n - iJ o ffs. We ca M o t shoot up o r -k il l that k ind o f m oveaqnt Toa^havo to fe«d Bussia f in aomething b ^ t e s ballots.

- That ia w hat tho-Bcm anoffs fed the . Bussians. Ameriea should adopt a d if ­

ferent pla ic “ I know w« arp very strong, well- ' i

powcj, llberly -lov ing people,, bu t wo ' are not immune. ■ Tho s^meless waste o f the pi'Oplc’a cnrnin}:*, iho uacon- pcinnablo extortion fnun the ir savint;*. >

untlem inp tho noWost InntUu- ' tiota. Even tho s tru ftu rc reared by our /others w ill not ■ ta iiil tho strain no'

■ inJo fin ite ly .' • ' i ■H w t Meet Hom * Needs b»

“ The people have p&tiently bome • the hardens o f the war, but the exr. pen.litares from now bn must be b c a ^ on reason ahd distributed with..Econ­omy.” ■ ' a;r

Borah-quoted reporta o f children of »■ n U rrla g ia New York. H a if the stor>- .'w as set to ld, he said, adding he h*^

.reports from another e ity showiag 100,- tot -OOO c h ild rm -to be under-clothed asd w i enJeffed. Af . ' iT h n c are the aeedf o f BoUheviam, ” ies aaid Borah. "H o w -quickly this po- i t l i t i ta l in /1nen*a w ill spresd'when onte pn hatched ia h ires o f misery and star-, ,tiq vation, ae one fa n telL Now i t Is time to take notice, to consider the peo­ple who hare to pay. the taxea ." ^ , sU

Borah, aiKasaiag^/rviAUs propo'sals ao fo r a 'league o f na tipa t, s troag lj con- me demaed T a f t ’s plan fo r «% league of oatioas. to enforce paaea. . j - ^

T a f t I d e a o f fore« would faa^ qm , teaiag^’ eeaaetip tiw ea - the 'A jaericaa 'd«

p M ]^ la paaet ' t ^ e * , B e n b 'd a a lti*d . wi]

I. FORTIER ON 1

N FASponsors N t O peration f

h Governor Davis Respon signed to Co-ordinate

>s ■ Than Forty-E ight Sep: In Place Management Ui J. Fixed and Definite

OABZHST M E M B SB

D BOISE, Ida., Jan. 14.->The *Jnrintit in the state govenunant wa«.i»anclied

[ . d irectly sponsored by Ooremor Davis, i the constitution by cosferrlttg upoa th<

>- . m>on8lbmty o f xon^nn lng the principal y • n in ^ comniisaloaers,-' a t the bead o f as ^ - are made up o f a coasoUdation Of ntu

oniti^ and aboUaUng otiierB, p r in c ip a l: D irector o f fa rm tnazketa ,stat« bor

warden, pubUc n tilitie a 'bas,2 Inxpectot: o f mines, state examiner, in d i >, inarian, highway commiasion, sUte boa

chemist, h ljliw a y engineer and nomeroo force and e ffec t and a fte r Biarcb

le . . . ' ; 'a ■ • (Special (0 T

H 0 1 8 E . J a n . 14.— S t r i k in g r i ° bns lncB H | )n )b l( ‘ in aj< c l i i e f e .xeo iiti

W . D a v iK , tly» n e w g o v e rn o r o f J ■g .sl(*<*v(*.s j in d w a d e d in to d a y to i ). bun incK K a d m in i f l t r a t io n a n d to i b t io n 4»n In s f o r o n is t o f le g is la t io n >

t l l l^ I( *g is la tn re .I l l one o f tho most aU ik in jjly oon i-^^

1 proho iis ivp and moiit pfog rcsa ive b i l ls F g ever in tro du ced by a go ve ru o r of a L ^ woNtcrn stflito ancj {larallclcd by only | J 0H<' o the r case in tho h ia to iy o f state ■

lo g ls la tio n , .O ovornor Itov ls today In- ' t r^ u c o il a b i l l in tp tho log is la tu ro

“ which tal<CB ovor fo r ty -o ig h t aeparato '* departments 'o f tho state govemmont '* and placi'B thorn under n in e ' heads,* thereby saving t'he state tbouBands o f

dollars ond much nooJleia.,. ^ B ?e 'o f® time aud energy.^ OreatM Advlsozy BoardsI, B o t tho samo legislative act w il l M . crcato. fivo advisor}' boards fo r tho ^ samo number o f depdrtments which w ill ^ constitute exi>crt opinion and w ill through itn merpbers reflect tbo opin-

. ions o f nnd represent the public ia a ” way which ho* not before been accom-

j plished.I "W ’ ith rharneforitttic bunincHs sense,{ Governor Davln- hns apiironchcd this p r

business problem, jus t aa he wolild ro- bil orgsnizo a, bank or other business in- loi stitutioM, should he be responsible fo r o f

{ ita success as such,” said SpeaEor M. fo: r A. K ige r o f the houso today.^ thi

No piece o f loglalatiou presented to co: - aa Idaho Jogislaturo in the history o f thi

tho state has before Tauscd the com- »» ) mont beard today. In th is comment — I there waa nb adverse criticism . A ll

legislators voem to agree tha t Its prln- _ . clple moro than stood tho test. M any __* o f tbem knew tha t po litica l scientists I held ao disagreement al^out the e ffi- I cacy o f such a plan. .

'^B IU FaTora ldr Bagardad b .Wore the b ill to be voted on todaj-

, in. both houses I t would pass by accla- , mation. B u t tha t thero w ill be some . opposition to its enactment in to a low

I (Ooatinoed oa P ac* Toor)

SPiTMtSAHEpiRli

F i r s t D e le g a te s B r o u g h t B a n d !

a n d A re R e a d y f o r a d a n c e ' o r a S c ra p i

rtv I I . C. H AM ILTU N NEW VOUK. .Init. 14.—Tho

noviet!« n rr cathprinj:- 'The firs t <)cJcKal(*« an* hpre w ith n,

b»nd. Thpy have hired a dsBce hall or i a rioK. , E ither n danrc or a scrap was to be-unilpr fu ll ntcftni w ith the thottle tied op«‘n.

The new iniernational Irafrue. elder a^nong tho tiig minors, aftil’ d survivor o f maay a rough ushered inthe most strenuous work in the his­to ry o f baseball by it * m eetiiig hero, today. Followinf* rlosely in its wake w ill come the meeting o f the National Ajuf^riation o f Profew ional Baseball league*, which w ill take np tbe stPlngs i t la id down in Chicago and w in make preparations to h la*t a hole in the aa- tiquateit jis tio n a l airreezneat under which basebali has ^ n operating.

The ini&Ar league^ said T inker, w il l sUnd fa y tn iy th e ir guns, even going •o fa r as to abrogate t A national agr«e- ment unless the ir wiahss are agreed to.

However, thfejH^n^e^ h a r* mad« tkraata b « fo » *ad*i£n 'ha 'tiooa l agree-. QMat m te DO. Unlaaa they.foUow th e ir . 'd ^ r ^ a a t io a w ith brave hearts, t h ^ w ill be beatea.

I IR fU G ATlO N A

lLLSTWTO P A U .8 , IDAHO,

Jew P lan o f L fo r the Stateo n s i b l e f o r , M e a s u r e D e -

i t e A c t i v i t i e s o f N o L e s s

e p a r a t e D e p a r t m e n t s a n d

U n d e r N i n e H e S d s W i t h K ^ s p i o n s i b i l i t y

TO H E A D BUBEATJB

Blnlstration'B plan for. a aveepiag cbaage” chad m itha state aenate today... . I t is T i s / ^ Tltallxea a itlc le 4, sectlon.6 o f a tha chief execQtlva the power s i^ clpa l departmants through a cabinet o t ’ as many t iu r e i ^ These departments ’ ntuneroys present aeparata government tp t i among which a i^ : .

hortlcultarsl> lnspector, fish and game i .'bank c o m m ln l^ r , Insurance manager, industria l acddaiA board, sU te veter-. i board o f b e a J^X sa a lta ry In je c to r ,

laroos Jx>ard& I t is proposed to go in to b rch 31, lO ie. I

to Tho News)g r ig h t a t (lu? ,l»»art o f hin big roiitive o f the state o f Idaho, D. o f Ida lio , lite ra lly rolled up his ( to make good his promise fo r a to p u t inde lib ly the stamp b f ac on contaiue<l in his message to'

fPROyiOEBBOGE; ovEHiEenT;

5 -OWSLEyFERfilf;' * a

il M r s , W h i te o f T w in F a lls S p o n - "

° s o r f o r M e a s u re C a r r y in g A p - p:

II p r o p r ia t io n f o r N e e d e d P a s s r ■ a g e o f S n a k e R iv e r

---------- _ fl(Special to The News) O

BOISE, Jan. K*.—Asking .fo r-aa ap- s proprintion p f *50,000, tho f irs t bridge I- biU o f the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod ia the 1- lower house thIs.mo'riiliig by U rs. W hlto r o f Twia. Falls county. The-biU prorldea !. fo r the construetlon o t a b rid )^ over

tho Snake-river a t Owsley's f^ rry , thna di0 connecting the Eagerman vaUey w ltb t l f the south aide o f the rive r aad doing O . away w ith the fe n y earvlee a t tha t t(t — -------- - ------------- - ■ . - - • nt} (Continued on page four}' - f l

1

W O R L D N E Vs ________________

l' • .

B ' N EW YORK, Jan. 14.— The i r f ive o r s ix b illion dollara and p r

ra te than any previous loans, il here by G arter Olass, new seori

GENEVA, Jan. 14.— Ignaee . - p a trio t, was no t bad ly in ju red w

according to w ord reaching her graphed friends th a t his wound I his w o rk

i W ASHIHaTO K, Jan. 14.— S Ij fro m Europe was demanded in ' ' Senator France, M aryland. Tb I pcace,ncgotiations be spcedod^ti j . to w ith d ra w the arm y o f occupa I delay.

li ' • ■-------- -—, • TOKIO, Jan. 13.— (Delayed) 1- r'eachcd an tinderstanding rega

] i S iberian ra ilw ay, i t was learned fo re ign o ffice w ill soon publish The allies have given the ir cons ican understanding.

LONDON, Jan. 14.— No mal >. m a jo r ity in .the na tiona l assetnt

o f elections, the soldiers’ and vi tinue to power, Hugo Haase, indi in an in te rv ie w w ith the E xp r The soviets, he said, contro l tho close nnden tand ing w ith the w< p o lit ic a l t it t ity in opposition to t)

I.ONI>ON, Jan. 14.— The Es the arm ies wiU *.*9iarch s t r ^ H i ie rm s a fe n o t f i ^ carried out,' w i l l be bu t a h ^ measure. . The be lie f th a t Oermany is neither w:

’ ^ t h its agreements as set fo r th M d po ia ts to the fa ila re to deU^

. .X ' ' '

\T THE LAVER

D A ll10, X nESD AT, J A ira A B 'T H , 1919.

No Real F ig h tin g in B e rlin Since Sunday A fte rnoon

^ Spartaean B^volution Gradu­a lly Dying Out— Ebert Gov-

ernm ent in Ascendenoy

S BBBNE, Ja n .. H .t-Thcro bus ’ been jJ no real f i(^ t iu K Borllu since Sun-

liay aftornopn, Orrm.'in illspatchcs ro­l l ported foday.

The govcrutncnt was said to have orderetl arrest o f K n rl Liebknecht, Bosa Lnxemburg, Karl Badek and Po-

_ Ijce president Eichorn.. A number of Crech nnd Russian agitators havo been captured.^ ' •

Tbo Ibove dispatch directly refutcn a 'report c irru la tod yesterUay ntid ered- in d -to the Tagblische Bundschau that Uebknecht and several o f hia followers bad been arrested. Previouaiy Ueb- knecht was reported killed in 'S tree t figh ting . I t is ovidont tha t hg not only in alive, but s t i l l d irecting wbat rcntninn o f the Spartaean revolt.

IS fliN MENFpRFOODIGermany Will be Given Supplies j

Providing She Turns Over Ships and Prisoners

By FEED S. FERGUSON !’ PABIB , Jan. 14.—Con^lfcte ttgreo-

ment haa been reached by thu in ter- f> a llied food council regarding ro lio f fo r ^ liberated territories and other affected aeetiohs, i t was learned toJay. '

The p lan inclndes permission fo r Ocr- maay to obtain food, providing sho I turns most o f hor merchant- ships over

r to the allies fo r vario^ls uaea, inclad- c ing repatriation o f Amorican troops. ” This la in no wiae a co^eeMion to Oer- - many, but is dcsigad to fo llow the lines eonaidered by t h r alHen to represent ^

. the ir beat interests In inain ta in lng sta­ble couilitionH in central Kiiropo. Tho

' plan ban been submitted to the nsso- , cinted peace conferees fo r_ra tifica tlon .

: The present program provides th n t! tho f irs t fu l l session o f the peace con- ferent-e shall be held a t the Qua!Ornay, 2:.10 Batnrday afternoon. The

, next meeting o f the nupreine war coun- , c il is scheduled fo r ‘10:30 tomorrow ,n , morning. • ,ij

\ F E S T IV IT IE S COT 8H&BT(iL Y M P IA , Wash., *V an. . 14.—A ll t l

I da^cos planned during t^ is session o f ai I the legislatnre have bc^n callod o f f by- to : Governor I ^ t e r and theatres ordered ai

to o n ly pe'rmlt occupation o f a lte r- th

Inate seats, to prevent spread o f in- to fluenea among tbe legislators. so

m

1W S EVEN TS

^ th------------- • tbe next L i b e ^ loan w01b9 fo r ^probab ly fo r a higher in te re s t ^ , i t was ind icated in a speeoh ic re ta ry o f the treasnry.

;e Jan Paderewski, the Polish r I when ho waa shot in W arsaw I lere today. Paderewski te le- . inds would not in te rfe re w ith -

—Be tum o f Am erican troops p| in'^a resolu tion in troduced by Tbo resolu tion urged th a t tho ' [frtip so th a t i t w in be i^ B ih le■paJtiejj from ^Q em Sny w lth on t i <

nnd ) — Japan.and Am erica have ti< garding contro l o f the trans- nt ed a u th o rita tive ly today. The ish pa rticu la rs ^of agreement. 'j' >nsont to the. Japanese-Amer-

th------------- apaatter ^ t^ ioh p a rty obtains a '■'* m biy o f (^ rm a n y , as a xera lt 1 workm en’s ooundl wiQ^con- ndependent socialist, deolared na :press, nbliahed here today.Jie facto ries, becanse o f th e ir ' w orkers, w ho have organised ^ y the bonrgeo iie p a r ^ . n------------- thiE ^ e s s t « ^ y deelared th a t iei gh t to B e r ^ i f the arxalstioe It," anyth ing else, i t declared, ^ Che newspaper aanounoed the ’ w ill in g n o r able tp go th r o v ^ t h in tfasi te x t e f th# ann istloe sliver prom ised tq ip l ie t . ei<

RING THEATRE

LY NJEMERSMySTBE- ORFIIGEINIIG

Senators Borah and Ke Progfesaive W ing o f W arn ing A ga in s t Con icies N o t Specia lly L

ht, th e Ranh and F ile'.1 . , -------------

T E R R IF IC JO LT FOR i I F P RESENT COI

ten ■ ------------• W A f^ n iX d T O X . - la i i . 1 4 .-

ew cnm iH ff th a t t r i l l nirctul,. ficn u n lrs a th n / fm u‘ and nnlvo i set t ro rn h if i sounded .lo . d fm o c ra ih lot f/ff;/. h t/ S ^ ia io r iiK c J > } /o n a n d h

They c(iui>inucd (ifja iun t “ ot, po.'iiu it o f t h r iitn in tu ' o f I to h h T h e i/ i i r t / r d h n n rttt, fca rle /is , si f /o r c n i in t ' i i t a n d p o U H ra l Icadc pt'ohlem a a ffc c th u / the t /n v it ma

’ CONSOEIlEyT PEACE SESSION

e- ■ I

Questions Involving the Fate o f ! 'd Millions of Intelligent People \ , Are Being Studied Carefully i 1° by the Allied Nations ;

J FRANCE AND ITALY SHOW- IMPERSONAL ATTITUDES '« . . . — ____ I

N ationa l T e rr ito r ia l Claims Are |10 Being W aived to Take Up <

More Im po rtan t W orld Qnes- ‘It! tions fo r Oonsideration i1- '■ '

B y LO W E LL M E LLE T T '° PARIS, Jan. 14.—The peace con* J

fcrecn are making rapid progress in disposition o f v ita l questions. Yot to- 1 ■lay rcvonleJ now problems tha t show why tho sittings must continue fo r many months^ .The principal questions

11 tha t aeem in n fa ir way o f prompt and ' f amicable settlem ent'are I ta ly ’s claims | y* to Dalmatia and domination o f Syriad and Franco’s desire fo r acqulsltfdn of ■ - tbo ^taar valley. ,E ithar o f these w at- >' tem m ight well ha.ve been the tfole is- s

sue o f a peace conference lasting fo r t _ months, or in^tim e o f peace, cause fo r x

war. But both I ta ly and France are a fhowing an inclination to waive the ir 1 claims in th is regard. r

QueatlQes trascdvad *. On tbe other, hand, such questions aa that presented by Poland, invo lv ing ” tbe fate o f iu i ambitions and in te lli- ~ gent people, numbering millions, are i: hocciisitatinfta^ policy o f deliberate aad b

(Continned from page £!▼•)

PEEEllTES;MliyBiLMTEO;

Plan Proposed to Reduce Pro- ° -portionate Re>reMntation ,

at the (feh%ence r ’ w i iL iA M p n n .rp s m a p i! PABIS, Jaa- 14.— A movement was o under way today to rednci> the proper- tionato representation o f small nations i n t the peaco eonferenee, in order to f: make tho coagreas leas unwieldy. Under t orig inal acheme proposed b y France, f delegates wero to be apportioned ae- cording to the im porU nce 'p f the role the ir nationa played In tbe war. This ’ appareatly ha» beea changed so the P >-arioua powers w il l be repreaented ac­cording to the importaaee ^ th e ir peaee * in te rests.. *

This wonld aot o ffse t tho f i r e great ^ nationa—the United 6tates,’0 rea t B rit- " ain, France, I ta ly aad Japaa—eaeh of whieh would re t^ n f iv e delegates^ The ^ other nations woold va ry between oae - aad threo repraaeaUtiTSa w ith a t«»d* ^ cncy toward reducing- tba aombar fo r * the smallest alllaa. The B ritish doaist- ^ ions may each 'bare th d r «wm vafe* ia the eoaferaacM, on tha g tv a d . t k i t *' each is a aeparata aattea aad scat its ” own fo re* to F n s a * .

ID A H O - W X A Z S n <Tuesday aad Wadaaaday, tae raM i** .

cloadisaaa.

E TONIGHT ^ I

lEW SPBXOB F IV E CENTS

EllSEMICSMiLSHEH

Kenyon Voice Thought o f nf Upper House in Sharp ontinuance o f P a r t jfs Pol- Designed fo r B e n o it o f

K STANDPATTERS O NDITIO NS C O N TIN U E

i . ^ T / ia t t i i i n r a lu /n m e n t o f th« irccp a ira i/ v x h tw f j p o li t ic a l p a r - vo re u d jiiM tn icu f prohlem n the h iic .a tu l vppnhlicnv c h ic fta iv s if/- d Ito ra h , iir<3ffrc«invc ieadcrs. y s t r i r l , t (w t ir n " as a means o f d h - ihhvvtMm .'m tU r u » i ic d S f^ e e ., M ra it jh t fo r tra rd ta d ic s ht/ the ad^t'H to co p r i r i f h re c o n s tru c tio n mass o f the A in e r ic a tip e o p le ..

T e ir lM o Jo lt Oomhig A fte r soandlng the warning to

■ '"• ta n d p a tte n ” in botH parUea th a t " a te r r if ic Jolt la eomlsg to them tnta the Americas people” unleaa. preaent condltlocia are resi- •dled. Borah and K usrtm oatUnad ways o f oae tlng the Bctfsherlfla meoaca to th is coastry.

U “ Those in power, whether in po llti- |U cal parties or in tho government, who I I b lind themselves to, the menace o f Boi-

sbovism in tho country ore c o tir tln g , , disaster,” said Kenyon. "T h e workers

J I of this country recognise the menace.I0 ‘lo a 't want Bolshevism. They

foar i t , but tbey re a liie i t Is spread- ly Ing here a n i tha t something most .be

done to s to p .it . They look to the ir leaders to stop It.

B la tt Bacog&Uo Woilcera’ B l ^. ‘ ‘ A p p ^ s are belng'hiado to“ repiib-'

;S lirnn and democratic party leadars t« puv thoir respective parties on record for a broad, wine, .governmental wel- fnrc policy tlia t w ill recojpjlae the

Fp rights o f the workera as they, have nev- cr been recognized. Ono of, tho most c-oiiservntive tnon in the republical^ ' party >liBCusso<l the question w ith mo recently, because o f requests from his oonstituonts th a t be got congreas busy on welfare legislation. He is a party leader, a presidential poaslbUlty. He rw iliw * the menace. B ut a ll tha p i ^ y '

^ leaders do not!‘ What tho people want la aotioa, not

ta lk ; ’ results not promises. The w lM -' political party is -the on© which w il l go on rccord fo r and then obtain' lawa like the fo llow ing:

of B o g g H ^ Plaat- "O no— Creating a t once a commis- s- slon on pablic W b i^ Co co-operate w ith >r the states in pushing necessary public j r work during hard times aad. to aot ■ re a bu ffe r in absorption o f aurplua labor Ir in the recon.itructioa period. TUa w i l l ' '

remove, the pi'employmont menace, which is growing V bound*

LS . "T w o —Creating a national employ- g ment bureau to keep w ith th ^ s ta t ^I- - "T h re e — Providing help la establiah-'■e ing homes fo r workera. Fiaance . tU s . d by n plan aiq^loc to the farm loaa— ■bankii.

"F o u r— Vocational- tra in ing fo r all.

1 "F iv e — Extending soldiers and Bail­ors insoranco to -u e n in Industry.

" S ix —^Establishment o f courts o f

1 mediation and conciliation ‘ vo luaU ry .' "Seven—Old ago, sickness and dis­

a b ility insurance.'

Borah Opposed to Force j Borah, a b itte r foe to the doctrine of w ipint; out Bol»he» lsm by repression

" or force, saiil:‘ One heors upon every hand these

■ IsTs the doctrine o f force. Wo are to fo rr i' jHwro. niid wr are to have force to-maintnin j>eacc, wo a re tft have force ti» fi^ ii our lsl>or disturbances. Instead

LS of ta lk ing force anJ* repression, le t tia r- p tjh rh CO oiM-mtioi) and tolerance.18 BoHHTii-viHm i-. (he f r u i t o f fo rte . We M mu>t k irk fho p!«ychology o f war from jr tactip^Nf wo doa’t want a te rr if ic jo lt e, frnm fhp people.B. . -Outllnee Basic PrlndpJaa|« 'There are a few general principles la »rhich i f wc adhere to thera w ill aim- . ,« p lify the s ituation: ' '

"O ne—We m ust,gel back abaolotaly ,0 to tho constitutlbnal government, to

the priociples upon which oor fathara it bunt aad eschew a ll a rb itra ry raaaa- t- *'res.if 'Two— We must establiah complete e freedom o f spe«ch aad o f the pnsa.0 .S'o man in theM timea ahoald be ea- |. hsrrassed in the free aad opdi d laon- f »bn « f graat pubUe i^ueatiena v g n '^ which d«p«ads oor whole fstora.- 'Thrae—The p rla d p ls a f t h a ' ln r o f« r»-operation ia the ia dns tri* ! world - , shoi^d be substitut«d.^er tha ^ Isar a f .

tooth aad claw. I« b e r a*a*t sa d a r^t^ tU a d tha t i t baa aa iataraat la great indutziaa o f the e«aat>y m M «

^ from the' mare ^e s tib B a f ;

(0 » a i« i» d « >

Page 2: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

fPORTSME '

r|W IM i' Cabinet Trouble Is Expected to t Result In Resignation of the

Ministry and Election of a \ President for Hungary .

> ALLIED FOODCOMMISSION ^ . ASKED TO INVESTIGATE^ Present Prem ier Is the .jO n ly

H a n W ho Has the Oonlidenoe . o f A ll Factions and Therefore , Log ica l Choice fo r Position

Bv KDW AHl) JUNO ji BUDAPt:ST, ■‘.Tflii. n (Dolayed).— A

cabinet criftiK which ia h o iir lj uxpoctod to result in rcsi^.'nntjon'of tho m iui«try, . may roeult Ui Prumjor l^a ro ly i's ,oloc- tion prcflidcnt o f tho Hungarian fo- public. ■

.Tho Bocialifltii claim tho riKi>t to rop*I ’ rc'ftcntiition in tho war' and home port- ' fo lio . Tho Rovcrnment. han rofusod to [ counidor tho ir claimii and hoB

its reaQlnoaa to abiUeato. l ^ i h o eab< Jnot utepn out, a contlHion irU l bo er«at< ed whieb w ill oocoMitato election o f a prcnidont so -that au thority may be

‘ indrc contrallxed. Count, K a ro ly i ap- - pears to bo .the only logical choice fo r i that, o ffico, as ho in th e 'o n ly 'p u b lic * man who'baA thc confldeneb o f a ll fac- -

■ tions.Aaka Znrestlgatia ii

. Tho nati&nal cou&cll was sQliedaled to meet today. This nleeting was ex- £ poct«d to brin's: matters to a head.

K a ro ly i fau askod the a llied ' food comuij^eW to make a thorough examln-

' a tipa o f internal bondltions hore, elaim- in f ' tba t tho a rm b ticcc jH ^ been brok­en throuRfa tbo invttsioa of''.^bong:arian te r r i to r y " by tbo CMcho' Slavs and ' Rnmaniana. Tbo Czccho-Slovaks have s

. tnkon 'Komorn ond^ have proclaimed t P rosburg as tho ir capital. Thoro are 1! rumors tha t th ey .cvon contemplated J occupation o f BudapcHt. n:

LfOmbcrg is s till tho object o f fig h t- o inp: between ibo Ukriaaians and Tolos. k

A . London dispatch today reported b the Hungarian cabinet had resigned p and tha t the now m in istry would bo McialisU r. Tbis is r6cardod aii signlf* q ican t in Wow o f Premier K a io ljr i ’i ^ statement in an exdoaiye In te rr ie w ^ w ith tho United Press, tha t tho pcace settlement must be a t least ‘ .‘ pa rtia lly p soc ia lis tic ."'

ConcU iatio ii Is linthe A ttitu d e "

v_, o f Delegates ”,---------- • pi

Possible Stmnblingr B locks A re « Being Disposed o f b y the p<

A lliod Eeprosentatlves• ------------ io

B y r o K . K E E N tbPARIS, Jan. 14.—The allies are de- U

volopiug a s p ir it o f conciliation o f aer* ia eral matters th a t ha%*e loomed as posai- at blff^ stum bling blocks, i t was learned G<

* from ac&orltatiTO sottreea to d « }r . '.T U i i t w a s . aald to . be p a r t ie o U rlj troo o f a(

-Freaeh and I t a l i i ^ te tr lto r ia l e lalntti, so P re ia iM O toeacdan, - fo r instasetf; b<

wsa r ^ r t a ^ u .preaeatixig • raaaoa- w< able j itt ita d a t « w ^ * te rz ito x i^ aab i* tiona. E o .ia 90 t wtgiing Taaea*M elaim to the Saar valley and ia In riitta ig on ly on Bomq method o f goaraateaing ■ the safety o f French Zrontier^ H i t h e r la he pnahlag tha ezp«ejt«d dWTiaad fo r entrol o f a ll Syria. .Tnatead, Freaeh e la ixu in th ia qoartar are extremely „ mUd.

I t a l j 'a elaima ragarding D alm atia are » recelVlae l i t t le aympathy aad i t ia be- ^ lie re d ahe ia com ^g aroond to the j^ ia t o f v iw o f the other eonferees, •w l» are making deai* th a t aha w il l not ^ recoive certain tc rrito riea fo r Which aome elononta in I ta ly are elamoiing. | Some other aolction o f I ta ly 'a prob-.

j« m a rogardiag aeearity o f tho A d r ia t ic ’ - is eortain to be achieved;

' pciRussian O ff ic ia l • I'-.

. I, In q u ity P red ictedi'h * ■ ' J l5

-S nch A ction DiscriBsed' b y the jio * A llies to X/eam tho A ctna l J jj

S tate o f A ffa irs----------- ‘ ’"‘ iPABIS , Jan. K .—Immediate o ff ic ia l ■**'

In q u iry by the allies in to th e actaal “ jf* state o f a f fa ln in Bussla. was predict- ed in certain o ffic ia l circles to ^ y . I t P®? was hinted th a t sneh action waa dia- ® cttssed a t yesterday’s meetiag o f the assoeiated r#prtsentativcs. ‘ “ •*

B r itis h influence was understood to be baek o f the idea fo r a searching in- ‘ rea tiga tion o f the Bnssian problam. ' * Soch. as- ioTestigation would be con- dncted b y an allied commissioa asd wonJd be poshed aa-rap id ly os poesi-j“ * Me. Th la comtoiaalon would report ® back d jreetly to the peace confertnee. j ***<

.Tbe plan materlalixed to a po in t; where poscible members o f the Amer^^.^ can <ont{agM t were being discussed, i - * ^ ■WUliain Howard T a ft nod Eliha TtootjWa- w r r * aaong the names mentioned. I t in o o was impoMibla to. learn w hat men were baiag e M t ld a ^ fo r B ritish matahar-1 The a l ^ oa th t a d e m l* ! * . tion

. P A O B . I W 0 . . L , -

b O t h ' M h o i n e s

J D E S P I T E W E ^ L L T q

A C a rry in g o tt ia - t h a i r H | \ A uaU l aak*d to d toeoB tiaM . I M . v tn c a ^ A s to r u d JC n. W T ID

V a n d ^ b O t 8 r« tw o o ( A a M lo i i .w o a lth lM t «ad b « t4 m o w n .e o d i l .

^ ieadaim, hava | M t r t u m a d f r M P ranM . B o th **tM d«d M i

>• a “ Y** h u t a t th a Croat. B o W ' ' i t- braved daagvra. aad t tv v t r M fe w i0 fo r r«UaL B o th w a r* J iw ta ta d l » by tbe P m e h a m h o iit iM . T k M

are hare aeea c a tt la g tb e lr I v J <: g llm pae o f tb e **beaatlfa l U d r A ‘

th e .B ta tM oC U bertgr. In I M ^^ .Y ork harfeer. m tb e lO o « i a fr tv e 4 ' < e ' ’ ■). ------ ------------ --------------------------------------------- ------

c \E ng land Wishes Russia Treated

as a Free Power ed ^ ------- •

Says the O onxitiy H n s t N o t bo j1 , Dragged Before the Otin, n

ference fo r Judgment ^t- ----------- dn By • J . W. T . MASON. 1d • N E W T O B K , Jon. 1.—Great B rita in >B 1 c suggestion to American and tho alliea ^ d tha t the woirtom ilpmocrneies cstnb- ® e lish relations w ith tho.' BolsheTiki a t d Moscow and w itb tbv independent Bus- ^

sian govemmonta o t Archangel, Ekat- orouindar aiid Omsk, has remained nn-

>■ known to President W il^ q fo r a week d becauso o f confualon a t the stato de- C d partment.® prem ier L loyd Gcprgo dd no t eom- •’ municate hia position d irectly to Praal-* d«nt *Wilaen, wiio .waa iu I ta ly , a t/th e

time, bu t sent i t to .'ffiaahington, where** i t waa not forwarded to the A m eriras ^ T peace delegatea in Praia. ( ^

Action la S ign lfleaB t ' q,Tho acUonrof“ Groat B r ita in in deal- 4

in g w ith tho m atter through tho - or- R dinary diplom atls ohannela' inataad o f making tbe |»ropoaiUoa d irec tly to tho t l

{ peace delegates is o ig n ifica n t.. I t Im- b< plios th a t'th e B ritish-govem m eat wah-

) cs to trea t tho Bossion people w ith the lo consideration shown a free sovereign i t P9wer. f t

To drag Bnasia before the peace eon- sa fcrence for- jadgm eiit w o ^ d eraata the m impression ainong tho Btiaalana. tha t tl: they were to be subjected to , tho dlo- t i

- tates o f the woatam demoeraoiea. n d f at• is in the aamo method th a t Ameriea ei- and tbe alliea in tend to nae againatI Germany., I f employed agali^at Bnasia l i i I i t m igh t on ite Boaala and Oermaay so E againat the western powera, aa the re- m

su it o f common grievances. Thla,wonld nt ; bo a calam ity aod a-daagpr to the ia- world. pt

‘ BATB S T A T E lO a iT PATJtT. L PARIS, Jan. 14.—S ccte ijiry I*n s in g

' o ff ic ia lly denied a statement published I in the Teppe tha t A jnerlca is ready to ' send as. expldiUonary force In to Po- ^ ' land. He said the statcrornt.waa "a b -

solutoly fa ls e ."

' DECLARES LEAGUE OF ' , , NATIONS UNNECESSARY foi

______ la lThinka H s to a l P arpoM i Among JiUaa p^

Oonitltntaa p o f n d ^ G oaran tr ■ M< I Againat F u ta re W a r • prij --------- - ^. W A B IIIN G TO N , Jan. 14.— "T h e re U Ch 'no present need o f a league to en fo^e ’th< -peace," Senator S terling, Sooth Dako- Tb { ta, Bcpubliean, declared In the aenate w il yesterday. “ Yo

The peacf''eanf«renee should devote in its entire energies to determ idlsg tbe 1

jloss through pillage, burn ing o f vU- gat lages and othea violattoaa o f interna* wa tional law, be aaid; OOO

"T h e rclatioaa/and mntual purpoaea Sts o f the allied aatioas are sneh aa them- ' selves costituta a perfect "guaraotee y y against war aa between thamselves—. they are a reaaonable goarantae o f the peace o f tbe w o r ld ," S terling said.

S te rling doabted whether the daei* T w siona o f a leagoe o f satioaa ean ba made e f f a ^ r a againat nationa aot w il l ­ing to abide by,them .

" I n tha laat ana lys is ," ha eontiaoM , 7 " w a ahall bara to d e p e ^ on'tha friand* Tw. ship and good fa ith o f th^ natioaa o f and the world, ta lh a r than fo re* 0 0 gvar* acc aatoe o f paaca." day

S tarling denied he waa against a I- league o f nationa. . - Wy

> . ---------- ----- P itiW AJUUNUTOA B A S IF IS S ■' in 1

^‘ C liT M P IA , Wash., Jan. 1 4 ^ T h a T WaahingtoB legislatnro yesterday a fte r- F ra noon ra tified the Sheppard p roh ib ition and Amendment. The aenata aetad, f ira t. v il l i Tbe houae qo lcU y foQ evad.. - ThS ae- spin tioa waa onanlaiow la both braaahea. in'Jo

pINiSjjlifI ' •I B a s e b a l l R e v o l u t i o n I s P r e d i o t -

' e d b y P r e s i d e n t o f C o lu m -

I b u s M in o r L e a g u e C lu b

I N K W Y O B K i ' j k n . 14.— A baM baU I ■ ‘ rc v 'o lu tio n ' ' was- fo ro ea a t la te yester*I d a y by. Joo T ^ k e r , p ro d d o n l o f * tbo I Colum hua c lu b o f th o A m e r ie a n ' Aaao- I e ia tio a .L , , T in k e r to ld th e U n ite d P re ia , th a t I th e m in o r longues w i l l dem and oqoa l I rip h tK w ith th e bn jo ra in a l l baaoball I m n lt i ’ rti, p a r t ic u la r ly ro p ro a e n ta tio n on

th i- n a tio n a l com m ission, o r w i l l nbro- Rnto the n a tio n a l ogroem ont.

L M o s t B o v lso Oommiaalon,I “ T lic N n tio n a l cum m isalon p o s it iv e ly I m ust bo r e v is e d / ’ aa id T in k e r. " T b o j m in o r -leaguos c lth o r w i l l ooeopt U o I propoBud bno m an com m ission, o r w i l l L iiiH i»t th a t tb o pre sen t body^bo rep laced I b y a com m ission co n s is tin g o f ono re*I p ro sen tn tivo o f th o m in o r loaguea, one I r i'p rc flo n ta tlv o o f th o m a jo r Iganea, and I ono m an cbnndetod w i t h n e ith e r . A l l I ' m om bors w o n ld havo to be m en w i th I no o th o t b o M b a ll connoetions.. T h e na- [ ' ' t io n a l oasoeiation o f p ro fe o lo B a l baae- I b a ll leagues w i l l f ta a d p a t o a t h l i . "J A th re o m aa eommisaTon tn ch .a a sug- I gcstod b y T in k e r w o ^ d m ean th a t th o I com m ission aa n o w c o n s t i tu te d -A n g o s t

H e rrm a n n ^Jo h n H e ld le r , u d B a n Joh s- ' son— w o n ld bo w ip e d o n t._ ' ' ' W a a ta D r a f t B a le A b o U ib e d -

T in k e r a lso dieelared th a t th e xaiaor leagues w i l l a t le k b y th e ir deola ion to do a w a y ab eo la te ly w i th th e d r a f t ra le .

T h o m in o ra ’ d e m u d s w i l l bo p u t in to ' oonereto f o r a a t th e aaeettng o f th e aa«ocia|ioB ’a d ire e to n he re . T h a v w i l l th e n p ro b a b ly be p r e s e n t^ t o tb o ma­jo rs — ^possibly in ' ^ e fo rm b f an u l t i ­m atu m — o l th e jo in t , m e e tin g fo tho N a t io n a l an d A m e ric a n laagnea here on T hu rsd ay , ^ e e o m m itto e to o a r r y th e dem ands to tb e m a jo rs w U l eona iat o f T in k e r , A l T o a m e y , p re a id e n t o f th o

>B T h ree I loague, an d E d H a n lo n , p re s l es d e n t o f th o S t. Joseph c lu b o f th e W eat* b . c m longue.o t -------------T-*-;----------- ^ •

W ould Have Senate t Favor W ithd ra w a l5k \ “ “ T "e- O a l i f o r o i a S e n a t o r A s k a P a a s - .

a g e o f B e s o l a t i o n t o W i t h - ;

l i- d r a w T r o o p s i n B n s s ia <o , , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . 1

^ W A S a fN O T O N , J a n .r 11.— Sena to r . H ira m Johnaon, O a U fo l^ ia , t < ^ y Is * , trod ue ed a re so lu tio n p u t t in g th e eeii* a te on reco rd oa fa v o r in g speedy w itb »

1* d ra w a l o f th o A m e rie a n troo pa f r o m . r* KtiasTa. • . ‘ ‘t f " I t ia th e e«nae o f ih e aenate ,’ * aa ld , le th o rea o lu tio n , ^‘ th a t A m i^riean troo ps 1- be w ith d ra w n aa sooa aa p r a e t le iU e . " i* Johnson annonnced ho w in c a ll i t u p { le la te r th is w ee k and dem and a c t io n 'o a * n i t . H e re fu sed to a llo w I t to go to th e *

fo re ig o re la t io a s com m ittee , because he f 1- sa id a n o the r reso ln tion , In tro d n e e d a ] a m on th ago, * 'h a a been- b o tt le d ' o p b y I t th e .c o m m itte o ." ' T b e p ra v io n a reeoln- : y t io n s im p ly asked in fo rm a tio n o f th e I f s ta te d e p v tm o n t co n ce rn in g £ e g o v - - a o m m e n t’ s po licy .'I t " T h e t r u t h is th a t tb e 'D ^ te d S tatea a lia s no p o lic y in B n as ia ,* ’ sa id John* y son. " W e a rc n e ith e r In ta rv a n ia g in »■ s u f f ic ie n t fo rc e ' to be o f eonaeqoenee) d n o r a rc wa. s ta y in g ou t. W e 're s i m ^ e in v i t in g d isa s te r b y In te r fe r in g ^ i n a -

p c c a lia r dom estle s i to a t io n . "

U B O R W I l I T d I S C U S S

; F A M O U S M O O N E Y C A S E

I D elega ted Q o L l O onvantleQ to D lacnaa P l u s fo r S e c s tls g 'K o d Q a y 'a

Baleeae f ra m P ila a n

^ C H IC A G O , J a n . 1 4 ^ H o r e t h u a . t h o u s u d de lcga ica had a n iv e d to d a y f o r th o op en ing o f th s eo n va n tio n o f la b o r m on fio re to m o rro w 'tOy/diaenaa

I p lana to aecnre th e release o f Thom aa • M eonay fro m B u ' Q u e n tin , O a lifo m la ,

p rison .J o h n F i tz p a tr ic k , p re s id e n t o f th e

I C M ca 'i^ ’ Fed o ra tio n o f L a b o r , ^ r i l l open r th e m e e tin g as te m p o rA ij ■ T be m a in speech a t th e f i r s t saealon I W iU be made b y W . B . C o c k r u , N o v

Y o rk a t to rn e y w ho de fended M oo ua y ., i n b ^ t r ia l .

Lo ad ers expected tw o thon san d de le , ga te s f ro m a l l s ta te a The de legates, i t * w as sa id , w i l l repreaent m ore t h u 9,- iX 000,000 la b o r o n io n m en in th a IT n ite d

: S ta u s .

T W O A I R P U n 'e A C C I D E N T S

P R O V E F A T A L T O F L Y E R S

T w o K m e d In F iv e T h o s s iK d F e e t V aU a n d A n o th e r In jo z e d F a ta S y

J e s t T a n IC lits te a X « ta r

F O B T W O R T H , Tex..—Ja n . 14. — T w o f l y e n w ero k il le d , oae fa ta l ly b n r t nnd a fo u r th - s l ig h t ly in ju re d ia tw o a cc id en U a t C a rru th c rs ’ f ic M ! here to ­d a y .

IJ c u te n a n t Joh n E . G a rb u t, S h e riila a , W yom ing;, and M echan ic B . L . Q u inn, P itu b o rp , P e nn sy lvan ia , fe l l 5,000 fe e t in a ta i l ip in , an<l w ere k il le d .

T w o m in u tes la te r , C kde t In s tru c to r F r u c i s X . B o s tic k , A m it ty , L o u is ia na , u d ' M echan ic . ^ I p h S le llw a ln , O a k ­v il le ', n iiB O ii, alsA crashed- i n a t a l l - s p in : ' S e D w a ia was p ro b a b ly fk ta n y - : in jn re d ; * U fk t ly ‘ h a r ^

________ ' t w in f a l l s

ALLIES MUST EXTEND OR WITHDRAW ARMISTICE

n U ust be Disposed o f^Before J u o o ry L 17, When the A llie d and Gef- i J num Ooimnliwlons Meet^ ^ ■ . ■------ r

- - By LO W ELL M E LLE TT 11“ PAW S, Jan. .14.—Quostions counccL-

od w ith tliu 'estcnaion o f tho arnrlnti'O wens oxpeaod today to bo spoodlly sot- tledj perm itting a de fin ite program fo r tho peace congress to bo arranged.

oil Tho afmisUco, which was connidcrud er* a t^ o s to rd a y ’s meeting o f Ajnericau, ^ 0 BlRtlsb, Ita lia n and Froneh^delottntcs, so- must bo disponed of' boforo January 17;

when tho German and-a lliod arinistico m t commissions w ill meet a t Treves. Par* jaI tio l l i f t in g o f the blockade o f the ceti- sU tro l powera la' understood to bo the on chief jtToblem connected w ith prolong- ro- ittion o f tbo arrals^ce.

Tho mooting yesterday was attendi'd by President Wilson, Secretary Lan- iiog , l^roraier Olemencean, ^oroign Min- istor Piehon, PremiiJr L loyd George; Foreign Soorotary B a lfour, Prem ior Or-

4*° lando; Foreign M in ister *8onnino nnd tbe lr socretaios. '

;cd ,

OFFICIAL SLIGHTS TO IS SERVICfe MEN CRITICISEDith ---------- - v'

t f ove' Is on Foot In Boise to ^ n g le- About a Change to Oosfozm to

• G brem or’s Beoomnendattoaig- ---------ho BOISE, Jaa. 18.— Governor Davis, in

his-message, recommended th a t retnrn*. *■ lag soldiers bo given e m p lo ^ e a t, not

only; th e ir old placra baek b u t th a t t h ^ bo'considered whenever jobs wore open. So fa r, however, sneh lit t le eonsldera-

(o tion has beon given' re turn ing aoldiera le. in o ffic ia l circles, as to cause coaaider- ^ able comment here. - , lie Several legislative posiuon u d do* m -partmental as woll have been ifiUad w ith JJ. miarried women iwhoeo husboinda otfe

making good salaries, one n f thom hold- 1,0 Ing a responalble ^ s i t io n in a Boise jn bank. . .tjg Quite a few eopablo jT)ung eoldiera pf have been tu m id down. There Is, a liP move on foo t to bring about a chnngo. ^ I t is pointed out tha t the example set

to private employers ii| not wholesome.

D BUO BIEaZATIO V O F ' 'aHBBCAH TEpOPB XB BAFZD

I A U E B IO A N HSADTTABTEBS IN GERM ANT, Jan. la ^ D e la y e d ) —

|. About 00 per. eent o f tbe G e rm u j^o p a have been dem bo iH f^ sinee the a m is - tieo waa signed, i t Wes' revealed ia sta; tis tica ’“ cemplIod in fo r ty towns occu­pied b y Americans.

About* 18 per cent o f the men who went to 'w a r from U e B h in e lu d were

* .killed u d about u equal number re*‘’ ttiraed.heme before the.arm lstiee was

^ siga'ed Doeanse~of-p<)nnuant' disable- “ meat. '

^ gB B B IA A U D V O M U U fS C n o JO IN . n STOOHHOLM, Jan. li< —The Swed*

ish govenunent has been no tified by i Q the S e rb lu m inister Serbians, -^ Oroatians u d • Slsvoaians In Ansteia- ^ H u n g a rj would oidte w ith Serbia and i ^ tha^ a single government .wotild be i ^ formed b y Serbia and Moatenegio. |I* ■ L.. ■ ■ -

' 1

Jh

r

H

F m B J ji^w

I w

\ Jb

LS DAILY NEWSB iB T OAMEL OTAIITS

CE £lEE-FlOHTaTG.: ■

w ^He waff bom ouvvctlvo service.

th U w oo lly , wobbly-lhgg'od ca-mel fo a l, h is m other being In -tbo H rlt- la li transport during tbo righ t for

• “ freedom' a t the tim e -o f hia b irth , im*. H av ing been b o m under tbo B rit*, not Ish flag, therefore on English nub-;

jec t, he qu ite n n tu m lly eould v K ' ten. th is Tom m y officer to help him Irt,

a pteady pono fo r the camera.iera . ' - ’_____________________________ ___!er-- Ita lia n M in is te r

■S Advocates R eturno f, Aegean Islands

W a s H o w le d D o w n by ^ s t i l e A u d ie n c e ^ ^ e A t t e m p t ^

‘gn. t o D e l iv e r S p e e c hset - ■______

ROME, Jan. H . —Ita ly should relin- qniah e ll claims to Dalmatia, tfie Tyro l

’ and tho Aegeati Is lu d a , according to ® Signor Bissolatl,* who rerfgned recently

as m in ister o f m ilita ry aid u d war IN pensions. ’ •)— B iu o la ti mado the statement in a jpa spcecb, jl'ubllshed In M U u n'ewspapera lia- today. Ho was prev.entod from deliv- ta ; ering. tho apeJch a t a mass meeting by en- a hostile audience, whleh howled him

down.'ho “ Roturulng the A e g e u Zalaads to ore Greoco would gain a fa ith fn l ifzlend re-* fo r I t a ly , " Blesolati declared, aecord* ras Jog to tbe p rin ted te x t o f the speech.

"A nnexa tion o f tbe T yro l wonld p r» vent uniflca^tion o f the Oeraun raee, which - is one o f President 'W ilsea'i

™ principles. . " ''>d* "D ^ m a tia should bo given, to Jngth by Slava in exchange fo r Fitime, which ELS, was not included In .th e London pae t." la- Tho newspapers, commenting oa the nd speech, criticised Bissolatl fo r h is fs il* be ure to denounce the im periallstle pro­

gram o f other natieas.

T h e f^Vor ju d g m e n iso m a n y \ have usee

3 q s T i& rn s te a ( " co'f'Fee y e a r s m s u re ly w€

iv ith y o u w ' y o u

r p ^ y o u sh ^ m

a cha

-'I _______ ;_________ •

pHmE"IIM IIT

Prominent. Hollander Declares Wilhelm Is on Verge of Be-,

coming Hopeless Maniac

■ AS[6TEIiDA.M,-.Tiin. J4. — W ilic in ii Hohcnrollorn is' on tho verge o f be-I ' coming.’tt.holplcas lunatic, according to-t inform ation brought hero today by a5 prominent Hollander, who ju s t lo ftS Count Bentinck ’s castle, whoro. ho wasI a guest; Ho declared tho former dm-I peror talka eontiuually, his conversn-I tion bt^ing ram bling and erratic.- He-i runnot.'s loop n t aight and g u a rd iu sI * o f tho Bontinck castio froqueuUyI him w alking in tho park before dawn.I Itecontly he annonnced his intentionI o f roturning to Berlin and i t was w ith! . d if f ic u lty ho was pigrsuaded not to_doI so. He also is dotormined a t times toI . surrender .to the B ritish^ ___

i Bolshevik Guards .J Approach Warsaw,ce. W ARSAW , J u . 1 4 .^^ J s h e v ik i ad- nei vuce guards approached to w ith in 17(> n t- mUes o f Warsaw Sanday, i t waa re-

ported here today. They have capturedth. o r u y u d Zukario. The m a ltf foree ‘‘ fc*' reached tho geaaral lia e o i W da aad “ Jl B a ru o v ie h tL

,rt Another BolsheviW army was report­ed a d v u c in g npon B re it-L lto v ik frem Piask. i C ,

FLO UB TAKES A SBOPF O E TLJan), Jan. l * , - ^ r the f i r s t

tim e ’sjnco w ar was declared the prioo j _ o f flo n r. dropped here 'today.. w iB a ty

ecntfl per barre l was k n o e k e d -^ the selling figure., Tbe baa w l a r t th e

d ie m u u fae ttire o f p« t< ^. 'floor Waa re^ ^ inoved today.

ilin- Real Bargains^ (0 Trackage lo ts across from 0. S. L .My depot, tlSOO each.

_ 7 'Well improved e ighty on Salmon, «i55.120 oa Salmon, a l l neceasary

i a buildings; largo cistems, I70.S0. lers 80 acres near K im berly, A'*l soil, liv - 90000 Impf'bvementa in buildings, '1)9 tS&O per acre.

360 near Hollis ter, ono o f the 'bes t' ~ farms on Salmoa; (7000 Improve* menta In build ings; b u ild in g fo r

,two famiUe*. snd Xf yon have' hotise fo r ssle e u .>rd* b u d le same r ig h t now. - u Business bu ild ing fo r sale ca -

M ain avenne, l : For V . S. govemment Irrigated ^ lu d a a t O r lu d , OaL, see Nygord ■* * a t Lue ’s o ffice or Myhre a t H o te l-

Perriae.go- I f interested in N orth Side Uads leh call or phone residence 84S, of- t . " flee 742.

t Nygord’s Realty Co.

rabte^ i t o f Iwho I d

UMid of ■for

n u^ Ieigh^ vhen find

ihould n a ke

TUESDAT, JA17UA&7 14, 1910.

Page 3: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

T D B S D tf , ^ A O T A E T l i , 1919.

r ' . J

JI

A llG o iI T ■

A SALE, AS/

fi.O.P.RETK re CONTROL OF COONPFICES

Members'of First Republic^- Administration iti ten Years ;

Are Installed in Offices at < Court House |

— - ■ ] . The < ir*t B«publlean adm inistration t

o f a ll county offices in T w in S*alli roQoty since 3 ^ 8 w u installed - io t

. offiee this, morning^ E. J . Finchi Itfim* t o>-r:at, re tir in g rocorJur, ailm inlBteiing. i to tho memWro o f t ic new board o f | CDtinty eomminniencra tbe oath o f of* i fic ft which wan nnbMrraontiy sdminln* f ie m l to tho other o fflc ia ts l»y T . E. Moore o f F ile r, who <n* clected c h ilr - ■] mnij o f tho board. ,

T h * V vw O fflcU lB tThe new county officers are the fo l* j

low ing : JComndaaionefa— T. E. Moore, F ile r, x

chairman; WitUam U . Parish, T w in f IW ta ; W. F. Breckon, K im berly. g

Clerk o f the d is tr ic t coort and ex- o ffic io A ud ito r and Recorder—0. 0. Siggina. V

Treasurer — Mrs. Etnma . Longley . Warren. '

AMOstor—George'tt^ 'W ileox.Probate Judge—O. P. D ura lL ProM cntlng A tto ra e r — Frank L.

Stepkan. ®Superintendent o f Publie Instruetlon *■

^ M if ls B rittom art Wolfe. 'Coroner—P. J . Grotaman. *The only exception to 4he occupa­

tion o f county offices ^ y BepnMicans ^ i* in the caso o f JamM A.'Bybee, Dem­ocrat, who waa re-elected coanty snr- h voyor. n

A. Spragu^', Rcpabliean, who waa C olccted to the offiee o f sh e riff a t the r last election, haa been in o ffiee fo r somo weeks, having been appointed by tho re tir in g bofirtT o f county commis- xtonora to f i l l the vacancy occasioned 8 I'v tho resignatTon o f his r{>rcdect!Bsor, p Frank M. Kendall, cffec llve on Norem- o her 10. a

B c ttr la s O cn a ln lo & e n m ^In attendance a t the swearing in of

the new connty officers th i* morning was O. £ . Carlson, re tir in g chairman o f the boarS o f county eommissieners, ^ who had been confined up to this time ^ fo r HTeral daya a t his home w ith ser- ti

, ious iltnesa resulting from ga ll stones. R W. F. Brewer o f Hansen, re tir in g com- li m iiuioaer from the th ird d is tric t, w u 8 unable to b« present, word b«iag r»- tl reived th is morning tb a t he ia s itt in g __ op fo r the f ira t time a fta r MTvral days ' iUnets from in fluen ts . "

John F . Haaaen, - appolfltad by ^ ^ ron lc r C. C. to be ono o f kia ydeputies, acted aa e le rk fo r the board. *'

R v e c f the o ffie ia la awora ia tWa *' morning bad beea re-elected. Ckair-

' man T. E. Moore is catering open hia th ird sueeessiT® term as a coonty eom- miisioner. The o tk m re-elected are f AKseMor W Ucoi, Prol»*t* Jodg* X>bvbD, ij P roeecoting A ttorney S le p W aad te - t] perin t«B d«t_W olfe . «

O U a t* * W ltb o v t m e t e ' | « The c h a ^ la the adaiia istratiaa w i& t t

,E A 1f ■ • .

1 sumM EI

'SI

•ing==AndW I I . I . P A Y '

t h i S g f

, T H A T IS iALfe. ■ 7.

.. Organizes S tricken Town fo r Combatting^

In flu enza Epidem icCapta in Jolm B. W U to o f

S FaU i S p e n ^ Btrannons .Week in W e n d ^

Captain John E. W hltc roturijed S.utt*. day evening from Wendoll, where b«

tn spent tho pr^rooding sovon days und ^ nighta w ithou t the ossistnnco o f anoth­

er physician in ' ottcndnnco opon in flu - Ht onza patients and in form ing an o r­

ganization fo r the caro o f sufferers o f I tha t d is tric t. 'H o lo f t today fo r Hagcrman, where he ha.i been callcd

>“ to pe rfo m r n sim ilar service. *^ Xn Wendell, Captain W U to stated,I® th*r® were. 150 case# o f infiucuEa, and

the on ly physician o f the d is tr ic t was ; Ig him self a s ^ fe re r from' tho epidemic. ' >* Under Captain W hite 's d iw t lo n the f '* h igh achool %as con%'crte^ in to .an om*"* ergency- hospital w ith a k i t c h ^ and ^ wards fo r men, women an<l chQdnm.

T h irty -n ine patients suffering from the | Aaease ^n a rferioos form fwcre ro- ceived a t th is hospital. .O nly one death resulted during th o ’ week at tbe ina ti- tc tion . Oa tho day o f his a n ir a l in W endell'Captoin W hite aays, there were .

^ f iv e funerals and the community wma J' on the verge o f panic. °

t- , ■ ri3. OSBAPBB BSBAS »OWT ^

SAN PBANCHBOO, J«». I t ^ o n r * ' priem fe n S< ^ t a • U m l I m ^

SEITATB VOTES iL jO m S H B IlT 'm B IA N A P O L ia , jr«a. I t — T te In - “

d iana aenate today paaaed the b in r» t- „ ,Q Lfying th e . federal coasUtoUonal pto- {,

h ib ition amendment by a vote o f 41 to 8. •>

! ; DITBODOOES 0U > M II.T T A B Y L A W ; V1- LON'DON*. .Inn. 'H .— Leon^ T ro M k y | r- hns in tro d u rc il in to th e R o il a rm y th e : r

o ld m il i ta r j- la w * w h io lt the fo rm e r ,n la C xar abolished, at c o r . l in g to j i i11« |m tch ifi le rece ived f ro m P e tro g ra d . j j,ir ■ » — ty W O U U ) P E N S IO N W TO O W ‘ ' ' ' >• W A S n fs O T O N . J a il. H . — S e na to r, d 8m o o t, U tsih, to iln y jn tro J iire d a .^ ln ll i

g ra n t in g M r n /K d i t l i ilo o ^cve lt. w id o w i o f th e la to |iresi> lpnt, a pcn jfinn o f #.’>.000 ■ n y e a r and fre e ii*e o f th e m n ib . ;

g . O A U rO B K lA ’ S a W K A B S IV E 8 'a LOS AN.OELES, {,'aiif., Jan. 14.—

Bijnnd fo r- tE> 6 an FranriAcn presidio e for.dem obilization,' the I^-tth fie ld ar- f. t ille ry is doc to pass throufih Los An- I . geles at 11:30. o'clock Thursday mom- i. ing) according to railrcmd o ffic ia ls . Th»M tfrizzilies, i t wa>f understood, p f V thrdogh Chicago today.

’ be effected w ithout fr ic tio n o r Ineoa- renience, the appointment by the re-

^ t ir in g o ffic ia ls o f the ir neee«*on-al«ct ^ te be deputies fo r some weeks-prior to ^ today be ing a potent fac to r to th b eadl r* ■ ■ •i t . D O i r r T O W FOBOBT IT >* Bear in mind th a t Chamb«rlals*a * Tablets not on ly joove the bowela b n t S Unptove the appetite aad strM ffthM i

tha d igw tioa . Tbey c«ntaia ao p ^ ^ or other aic«stiT« fe m e a t h'at o tN s fth *

|c a th * atottaeh aad eaable I t to per* tt fe r n Its faacfioaa aatorslly.— A £ r.

, . TW IN FALLS !

o H M n a H M i a i H H B i

R u \rS? ' '( ;n ’S UN] sHOES

d Going I■ Y O U T O V ] IR E ,A T SE.L:

/ O N E - P R I C E C l

A M E R IC A P IC K !

r” in te rn a tio n a l aa tho rlti«s on. across tho oc^an Is aeroplane. 1

(Iss pU nt. I( haa a w ing t ip o f 1 ' In a rocont test carried f i f t y paas<)<lr I t la axpocted (o f ly tho AUantlc.id . as

Li REPORTS ON HOMESOPENED TO VISITORS

en. ' . ' ■B. X.. SiacTlear A ik a fo r Oooporatlfln

‘O’ *Wtth I« c a l Oojomittea iB B * . th . Having oeagestlOD ft t B o t« lft i-in

Accomodations fo r approximately 800 . „ jo in t conference v is ito r* Ja the homes

o f T w in Falls have been aecured m » i ' result o£ th e . canvaa made b y £ . I*. :

Mac V icar, to whom' th ia tash was dale- gated by tho local committee. J£r. i MaeVicar suggests th a t T w in Falla 1 people,who havo friends among the i conference visitors' or those coming here this woek fo r other porposes, shall

" * entertain them la tho ir homes as a meana o f relieving congestion in the hotels consequent upon the in flu x o f

^ cnnfen*neo visitors.

971 WOULD M E h lO B IA U Z B OONOBE83cyj S i^R AM E.N TO . .Ian. 1-4.—A jo in t lO jr e i^ r ^ o n mcmorjaluiiDg conRresrt to i er.Qcqiiire Lower California by purchaso •h i from Mexieo was introduced in the leg-

j inlotnre hy Benntor Evans o f IRvenide.

io “r - M f l n t Utias r«a m w l radQ. — FARMINO U AC H IN ER I b w ln . - U

S Ikber." Yoo m w l WORK far SUCC“ -from Um ETOoad b»” —know o r r r r t l

*'* — »#n. bow t® opwmt# Umbi. to -hom tl td . rov la boalnau ta ro0 «wa Urrftor

S B9 rour ralod U &l Mllla« Powrr Far — . BUSINtSS. I t »ot b . • -Sld«Un, ^ U ^ t te DrrEKMrKATXOl

B- — tm t ta • —msU Ho. of A VXat TUAC^ — whU* tte b dmleeUs—« 1.» — w a l l ta * tJ *h to to r t r roar Smtt*' * “ AVERT TSACTOttS sM o tte r P o m» — iM r eweteaieia. «<»• r<« a nm .

MB taf« sMd ( te sMUtaara ot aa it ts H i5 5 w ta t t * * To« » W (r «< Iw rtta rr- WW

p i^ B S 5 5 5 S B S |B 3^ J

B | | V a I w M

s n M n i M i i n

D A ILY N E ^ ,

^G EOVERGfDERWE

H A T

Fasf==At'IS IT O U R SX i n g E V E ^

i& a u k t:/C U O T H tE R S

K E D T O J % Y A T LA JS ^T IC

on A ir a ffa irs aro p rod lc tlng tba t Amerl Here Is tho biggest aoro-boat yot b u lli

>f 126 feet and ia 70 feet fro m propcllors aasongora a il along ih v A tla n tic coast. I t Ic. _

s| TOM OEIROW ’S „ | T H E JO INT G

- Jo in t BTflsOng M eeting8:00. “ The United States Weather

H) Bnreau; its Value to tho P arm er," by M C linton E. Korquest,. Metetprologi^, U. » 8 . Weather Bnreau, in c f i j i ^ o f work L In Idaho.»• fi:00. “ Tho W orld Food Situation r. and-its Belatlon to tho Southern Idaho la F a rm e r," by R. F . B leknoll, state food te adm inistrator fo r Idaho.^ ' Idaho Seed <htnrezBa Parish EaUic M orning Session—>f (1:00. “ Si^ds and Seed D is tribu­

tio n .” Paper from R. A. .Oakley, chair­man committee on seed stocks, U. & department o f agricu ltpre.-

^ 10:00. ' ‘ Markets fo r Idaho Seed*,'’I t discussion led by H. K . W iley; s e ^ o (jrower, Springfie ld, Tilaho.10 •10:45. "B .'a n Growing in Id a h o ,"

II. W . Ilu lhe rt, assistant professor o f r. farm crops, I'n lv o m ity o f Idaho. ’

rad«ntaad tefora ovaJas a POWSS SU t te t •’ I te r * U oo «w*II«a«« wltbonl ***

LJCCESS. Toa a u . t Kao^- Ite b ^ ia tm —TTthtar ateat t te machlnt* re« m t« ZZm ttey iteoM te »oId. » l» t It wiU eort “-n a y : aad ate«* all «1m . mnvt laaka ”F a ra la * XacUaarr w i ll 't e r w OKLT —•Ua*.** n m m l te TOUB ONXT JOB. _rXON t» B a te road. cmfrkWot aasta l t« SRACTOBS cad Bar r«ar I lr ta t u p w iK i ~-a faoUdiac U teoM tte maeUanT. a —UTlU n -■» «m nsrabh tte macklaM— — ]x r F ta ta c MachtMf^. lartrart ^ la = iInValaM »«Ulac »Ua. adMrtblar Utcra* —» < is iil ---------- wtea siniisTT. W. S '

cm AT OKCS 0 » CALL, «OC[R. — <

S AJO A T S I EAR 'rs__________ L-___ ;___ ^ ............t- '.- .p ,

iB igR ediS T O R E W H N T IS O N

A S A L E A Si

W I T H T H IS P L A N E .

m ertca w i l l ba ih e l l r s i n u tlo n lo ny > u lli. th e N C I fro m t l io C lu m i C ur* lo rs lo t a i l . I t hoB (lir<>«' rn R ln e j. n ito

I t can r is e 20U0 ffO t in lu n iiui>iitc-H

" ' • ) ■

> P R O G R A M A T CONFERENCE

11:30. • •B e u i Diaeaaes," B. H. [lor Smith, fie ld entomologist, U a lre ra ity

o f Id ^ o .U . A fternoon S e ^o n — irk Jo in t session w ith Idaho Irrlga tlaa

congress.Ion S t tU r * m B m wdio

LaTorlag TheatreM orning Session—

0:30. ' ‘ Sugar Beet SUage £xperi- msnts,” by E. F . Rinehart, state an i­mal husbandman.

10:30. “ Use o f Beet Sugjar By-prod- u c ta ," M ark Austin.

^ 10:45. Address: “ Sheep aad Wool a Prospects, fo r 1B19," by Hugh Sproat,

president Idaho Wool Growers' Aaso- eiation.

,0^ 11:30. Address: "Shorthorns in Am­e r ic a , '' by W. A . Coihel, fie ld represea- ta tive American Shorthorn Association,

o f 12:00. Adjourn fo r shorthorn sale.X d ^o Irr iga tion Ooogieat

~ Masonic TempleM orning Sc.nsion-^

9:30. O pen ing exercises— music.9:45. “ The U ltim ato Price o f Eec-

lam ation,” liy D. W. Cole, senior engi­neer, U. S. B. 8 .

10:jJ0r “ Sftrrice Vcrs\i» Acreage u a Basis fo r Annual Maintenance C harge," by W. M. Wayman and C. E. Atwood, Preeldent V a lis r Farm Sales Co., and Chief Engineer Vaiier, MonL, Land and W ater Co.

12 :00. Koon recesis.• l^ re x lo g Theatre

A f temooa —1:30. Addrese—Gov. D. W. Bavia. S:X2. “ Jackson Lake S torage," hyj

F . A . Banks, Ea^iaeer, U. a B . &2:30. B r ie f Talks on the Carey A s t

Law. aad lU AppUcatioa: F ro a th * Standpoint o f the Federal GoToruM at, b r b e o r j. A rd d lx ia , O t n r A c t T.ITW to r, 0 . L . O.; Frrun the Staadpeiat o f the State, by E d v ia Boov, Fenaer As­sistant A tto rney Oeaeral fo r Id«he;

the staadpoist e f the W atar He- i n AssociaUon, by D. H . Blooeea, Coa-

, so lting Engineer. Balt Laks l^ta lk y.iS . D ise w io a .S:50. T«n adauU reesas (nnsle}.

. 4 :00. <‘ D ra iM io tka I r r l f i t ^

(Coatiioed*

. . 1 ' ' ' r4 m m -ia o lM a --

n "

/ ' '

luctionsi l L E

L T H A T IS 3ALE.

liNTMON;mTOPICS

Feminine Visitors at Joint Con­ference Entertained at Re­

ception on First Day •.^fr8, M. J. Sweeley, president o f th<»

state federation o f women's clubs, and Mrs. I I . W. Clouchek, county cha{Vm«^ of tho council o f defense women's'com*. mittee, woro the spoakera a t a recep­tion f^ven Monday afternoon la the parlors o f the i l r s t Presbyterlaa chaieb fo r women visitors a t the jo in t coafet' eace. Mre. Sweeley talked oa “ The Leesona o f the Great W ar fo r Idaho

= W om en," po in ting oot the need fo r In* — I telUgeat handling o f home problsms,

espMlally’ thoee perta in ing to the mor­als b f yooBg mea and wemeo.

ChOd welfare w ork was th t theme 'o f tho paper, read by Mrs. Oloochel^ la

— which Bhe portt»yed the te rrib le to ll taken among children annoally by i f - norance o f the prlnclplea o f hygiene aad ch ild rearing. She dlacnssed the plaa o f the government fo r meetiag aad am eliorating th is coadition throogh' community organlzatioai.

Mrs. E . I i. Van R iper o f Bohl, who was to h»ve spoken oa “ The Oppor­tun ities aad B^spoBstbUltlea o f Wom­en in the A fter-the-W ar Becoastrao-

eri- t lo n , " was a pa tient la a Baht^ h e ^ * ta l- ta l su ffe ring from aerrooa proetratlsa

and no speaker was given her place. ' t i - i l r s . C. H . Brown, home demoastn.-

tion agent fo r T w in FaUs eom ty, wss ''ool authorized to appoint the foUowiag

committee on ’ i«soIntions: Mrs. S . E . MO- Bolton, Tw in Falls, chalrmaa; M i*.

S tuart Sevems, Hansen; Mrs. B . H. Smith, T w it Falls.

A de ligh tfu l musical program arraag- Ion. od by 1 ^ . D. E. Began, chalnnan o f

music o r th o Idaho federation o f woa>- e n 'i clubs, wa* given. Tbo program in-

—~ eluded p iu o selection by M iis Zelma Larmore. vocal solos b y Mra. F .:8 . BeU, aad numbers by a ladies' choros com­posed o f Mrs. 0 . P. Duvall, Mrs. H . 8 . Cowling, Mnu P. S. Bell, Mrs. Zenas Smith, M n t^F . F. Bra ijten, and Mis* Helene Allmendinger.

Oot some IN FO B M A TIO N aboot i t — ^ what i t WiU eost, irttere i t may be

lies bought to best adTaatage— thraogh nL, reading the ^

I Sobsolbe aow fo r the NSW 8 .

A L F A L F A H A Y. . Account o f mUd season, record “ • breakiag wheat pastores; so Got-

erameat demand, v a s t be shipped ■ h promptly, m - O oaa ln to— c t W o tM ^ taigeet distrlhctoxa:

^|eARUSl.E COMNISSKH CO. ea- I Kutat iai}, Ml. II

O D B ia le m tS , f n tom, l t b a d | | : Uaavaaeee. ■ . ^

- h - a r f

Page 4: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

y THEjTWiii FAaSi NEWS

| f t i ' ^3?abU>hing C onpacj, Io£orporat«d &1 | B ' T rriB Falls, Idftho, und isaned 9 n ry » t ^ ■ r ^ rn o o n .e x c e p t Sonday. _

H F ’ b o y A - BEAD —-------- — Pro*ia«tni■ f i f J O n ^ ' C. H A R V E Y ------ Nowa Edlto«I f f i Tolephone 82

m T o d a y ’ s N e w s T o d a y

I i i . S D B S O E l P T I O i r ; ^ T B SI ® ■ OftrrleiU j •'♦5.00________ bn® Year -------------$«.0(H r tSUO________ 6 m o n th * '------- ;----- I8.0CI t t ' : ^ 2 5 . ,••»> moath* — — tlJS i 1 1 ^ • m o n th ---------------* M

j ; -A d v B rt^ i^ jB a tB a npon n p p llc a f l^

^ - K o r u p o a d b i l i ^ iM B ffom ed ^ o r th<I eare o f nnaoUeitad m a n u o r i ^ p h o t»1 K taphs o t At'hwc x o s tT lb u te d m a tte ri A r t ^ e a s a W l t « d f o r p n b lle a tto n « U! • b« oaed o r n o t A t th a d b e r e t ip o f thei e d ito r a h d no m anoaerip ta w in b« re-] t m ^ aeeom panled b y tb e see-f eaaa iy p c a ta f^ ____________

] Entered as'aocond-class m&tror. A p r il l | 5 \ 9 , 1B18, a t the poBtofflce a fT w in I I idah ti, under thn Act a t March 3, JS79.

jvI i j T H IN K IT OVESj: j W ith the form ation o f a W ork iiioa 'i I:' * and Soldiera' Council a t Portland, Orc> I son, an'd w ith the eyea o f evory progrea- I . aive leader o f pablic thought in the I | j . «ODntry fastened to ibe problem o f Boi* I j j nbeyiun a t home and a b ro a d ,'it would v \ neem that the timo is almost bere .fo r ( l! a coucentration o f attention on the jft j. pa rt o f tho people themselves npon the ti; qnestion o f govermnentai. changes fo r | r tbe 'bene fit o f tbe people aa a whole.!. Up.to now the'averap) m«n has view^ ; ed conditions in ' Russia and in Oer;

k . m iuiy as interesting in. the abstract ba t I I ; o f l i t t le real.moment in America. Both ! * countries wero too fa r away,'.'and be- I ' aidea, the common sense o f the Amori* lo can people Va» always to be 4opended

npon fo r the proper action' iq tb'e;''evont o f sn y extraordinary* dcxrtrine o f gor*

i - .-ernment f in d in g temporary lodging in f America. ^Tbin a ttitude o f m ind^B^y i ' have been warranted in tbe.; i t is not warranted today in the face j o f b e facta. , .. V - / >.

Canada is n ^ facing the mtfnace o f im ported ideas in the way o f a 're -

'i ' vis ion o f national th o u g h t-Id e a s which’ i have, tb e ir inception in tbe doctrine j ^aad‘ t«achlng8 o f^T ro trsky and Lenina

' i & fa r o f f Bossia. Portland ^ ber I W orkmen'a and Sold iers ' conneil,

N o rth Dakota ber Townleyism, every ^American c ity Is shot w ith socialism in one fb rm or another and in every rase tbe moving sp ir it o f the entire program is, to be found, in tbe fin a l sn- aJyiSa, In tbe world-w ide unrest o f t b i

, great army o f workers, in *ib is coon* ^ SLadjaJjrood.

B o l^ e r is m toucbcd tbe match to the tra in in B n W ii and the a f^ rm a th bas

. already boUed over in to , Oerman;.|j. I n Canada the movement has reached r . threatening proportions, j . Here are the v i e ^ « f tha mayor ['• o f Portland a« expredted to the mem- b bers o f tho O n g o / I/egialature a day : ' or tw o ago; . •: , “ W ith soldiera b#m jt discharged } . in th is v ic in ity a t the o f 600 J . a day and w ith no employment fo r ^ them, I . W . W. oTganiMra are find - /

Ing ft fe r t ile fie ld in which to ' apread tb e ir propaganda. In the J

|[ ^ so-ealled 'w orkm en ’s and noldiers’ | eooneil' organlted ■ here F riday i you have as fine a Bolsheviki body '

. as any la Bossia. I t ia dominated | b y the' 1. "W. W . who have p ipnty o f money from 9n unknown aowrce' , and discharged soldiers who are ■witbont fnnds nre being fed and abelterod by tho orgaulzatlon.

; Those todieals captured th«J con- 1 vention o f the sUte federation o f -

labor here th is week, notw ithstnnd- in g 60 per cent o f 'u e memben-hip

jo f organited labor is loyal. Wc mnst meet and put down this Bol­shevik movcTnent immediately o r 'It

• w i l l put us dowiu”

Oet'aoma H 7 F 0 B M A T I0 N abont i t —. ir ts k i t w in eost, wbara U may ba

i . . boogbt to beat advaatag*—through /;n a d iB C tba ada.

I m . — - A^« ars «hs«p—a£faetlVa.; <

I r I m '(ouDxnr I I w v i A o u t

[ HOME

.. s v m r I h o m e

p P o d a y 3 ] v [ e » . r k G ! - 5 r«wi L_____________i a t ' • ___' I ’O B T IA N D LIVBSTOOE____ _ 1‘OUTL^VND; Jm i. 1 4 .-^ n tt le ra-aent cciiitH 108r tono o f m arket-steady; Utor prime steers $13@ tl4; good to ehpictv

Btccrs. 4>9..'30@|ilO.GO: c o i^ o n to fa ir steers ♦8@*9; cbolco cowa and hoifers

a y $10.50@$'14; inoduim to good cows and -— . h.-lfor« ♦[email protected]; fa ir to^^modiom

cowfl iMid heifera *7@$8; caanwa W@ , liiills «fl.CO@«8.50; calvoa W@

$i:i.80; Htockera nnd foedors |7@<9. 1” ^ . ITog receipta J49; toBO o f markot SIm priftio i ^ o d <10.76@|17; mod-, 00 ium «10@«10.:s0 ; 'rough and heavy

•- $1-J.75@«lB.7.-!rpigs [email protected];.«)nlk ^ $16@ «7. • - *- _• Sheep rcpcipts 1421; tone o f markoi tbo higher; east o^ moiintaai lamba t l8 @

lOtoi f#l3.75; valley lau^ba •H.50@|12.C0; tte r. yvarliuRB *11@*11.30; wothera t lC ® wH l eio.50; ewes I0@$8.50.tbo : ____ _

DE N V E tt, Jan. 14.—Cattlo receipta S.'iOf); ■ mnrkot 25 lower; stoors |10@

___ ei5.50; coys and hcifors |8.00@$11.00;p r ll ntockcrs and feodora . |7JS0@|13.86; aii«j ctlvos879. ' H fg reepipts 5600; market 10 lowor; ^ fop «lfl.OO;, bu lk ♦10J50@$10.7C.

Sheep.Vccoipta 1400; market aotady; lambs «1G^O@«10; owes |8.S0@|9.75.

____ _ KANSAS O iTY , Jaa. !♦.—OatUe ro-colpta 15,000; market strong; steers @♦£0.

pn'a Hog receipt8vl2,000; market 10c bigb* Ore. c r; bu lk *17.15©$17.50. 'Tcs- Sheep, receipta 8000; markot steady.

Iambs ♦14@«0,66.' •

W HBRB POPPgOBS SLOOM _ ^ Northern Prance whero crimson pop-

•^or pjc8 bloomtbe And su ffering marks tbo pathway .of

tbo Hun, J - r t i. The evening shadows lengthen

gloom8- Begias to sottio w itb tbo fad ing aun. ew '

Another day baa closed; tho n igh t birda • ■ croon;

Tho atars aooni f in d ' th e ir plaeea e rn v ' f lth bead, '>be* -And o ’er tho h illtop lobma tba tidng ; ori. “ ooaj p j To rast its s ilvery mnntln«on the dead.

Tbo afiell-torn plains n re l d o t t ^ hero :0T* and t h e » / ^ , ' .

in W ith slabs w h i^ i ntainl like dontlnels apace; j j * ; V

T Atop eaeh m arty r's gr4v» a wooden * proix do guerre • -.// . ‘

*ce Boetowed by death to mark hia resting ■» place. •

* * * Save fo r.th e boom'of j^ n s —tbeir than*' der deep—

ich No sound'disturbs the stillness o f tbe ine o i | ^ t ; . "jg y Tho sh iftin g rlopds acroas the heavens

sweepTransparent in the ir hues o f pearly

e»f white. ; ,aryjiQ And soon the dawn; the stiri begiajTto

‘ peepA b ^ ^ h e cnntetn hilla. Tho gnns atUI

an- WjUAs 'neath the sod unehanted heroes Ib l ^Weepyg, Jn P landcn where the rrlnjson poppies

bloom. * , /—Sgt. Ju lian T. Baber, V. S. A . Ro-

the V ta ry Clnb o f Lynchborg, Va.has --------------- • —.

LK A D E B 5 MUBT B B V IS ^ X A 0T I08 ,C4l OB PAOB M BNAO B OF B O Ir

S H Z V I8M

ror ' . . “' (Continned from page ona) i

' 'Pour—A syttem o f taxation must bo j devised e<)ultable and fa ir between a ll I parties, but always ' based npon the < principle o f a b il ity to pay. <

“ PTv.c— Tbe people and tho govern- ] ment must get closer together. t

I “ Six—Tbo perfectly unconscious c I waste o f money must cease. I do not t

believe thn disposition to waste public < money over had such a hold upon pub­lic scrvlco as now, and th is is prac­tica lly regardless o f party lines. Ex* i, tpavagance In public fnnds, thereby t burdeafng tbe people w ith o]>|)rrssive k taxes and s te riliz ing in itia tivQ in a ll h lines o f induntrj- is ono o f thn- -things, . u|>on ■which Bol5hevi«m flou rishe*."

BEAD T H E C lA S a iP IE D . ADS.

Olaaaifled A d i are ehaai>--T«ffeetlva.J

A ak T oo r Otoear ‘Par - |

STERLINGBUTTER

__ n o d * by^ r r rn a T B lT J lfO '^ T w ts > ra ll^ Id a te

• •Oor l l u t t i i QnaHty-.«ad--Sa>.Ttoa”

a . |» I ' i_ III ■ ■ ■»

e» c*«,(*>*»( I AW,

gfiifiiBSRDiDyTOFIICEIIFTER

I IR mmS I Heads or Farm Bureau and Seec >■ 'Growers Association Voice

Recognition of Responsibili- ty in Reconstruction

b u l l ^ _______

ENTOMOLOGIST FLAYS >3@ STATE PEIVURIOUSNESS

E. H. Sm ith Havo le g f t .la tu re A ppropria te E n o t^ l

io@ to Safeguard Ag rion ltu ro l Xq:i.oo; • terests A ga inst Bug Menao'c 1.26;

Itealizatiou o f thn rexpousibility «l the agriuuftural industry in tho rccon

' . fliruction problems iu thu waku o f the war WU8 the keynote in tho addresset

0.75. g f scheduled speakers at (he opening scniiionit o f tho State Farm Bureau tind

* ^*(i Id a h o Seed G ro w e rs ' assocts^ " a® tioM s i t t in g i t i jo in t hchhIo ii here JJon-

day afternoon, a t ’ th is same rcuponsl- ' ‘K“ * b il ity in respect tn other iudustrJos hai

been made p lain in the sesalona o f the other organizations. partlL-ipating in tb( joint-eonference here th is week o f the Idaho agrieuUtJral, livestock, engiaaei'

— ing and irr ig a tio n sociotles.pop- ■, ^ . P anaan Bwnaln L o j ^ .

In ’ tho coufso o f his address o f wel-• , o f eiyn.?,: W l P . A lw orth o f T w in Palls, f t brought tb ia .m a tte r fp ^ 'ib ly to -the at- thg tention o f hia bearers ^ d a r in g th a t tb j

Ida lM fan^ara w il l be u e ffic ie n t and n. M -. lo y r i- t ii iCactBg the problems o f re*

y •o o n s tn ^ tiA n as they were in facing irda tbo .eriaU o f waK Tho w orld had aot

;■ always been aware o f who fed i t , be rai^' aaid, b u t tbe w ar bas brought about ao

~ ' appcflciatioa .o f the farmer. Eo ex- dsg; jiresaed tho opinion tha t tbo farm bU*

/fMu played an im portant pa rt in in- wd. crbaaiag tbe effic iency o f fa im era and

th a t ‘th is organisation waa d e a tia ^ to lere be o f i^ l l l fu rth e r benefit to them.

,Warns aa to " L l t t la S a lBoia"‘>0 * Snyder o f Springfie ld, president

o f need growers association, ro- den 5pon^ng to tho uddrosa o f welcome,

Moutin^d a note o f warning coacemlag ;ing what he termed the .“ l it t le kaisers.”

"W e havo licked tbo b ig kaiser; we know wo would do i t , bnt aow we must

mn-' tu rn out a tten tion to the U ttle kaiaera in otir midatv” he declared. ,

the -Labot^ problems and the necessity fo r ' ~ providing employment under conditions ena tha t w ill moet w ith tho changed ideas

and broa<lor viewpoints o f re tnm lag ir ly noldiers ahd.sailors, are two topics do-

manding the serious consideratioa. o f the American farmer, M r. -Snyder aa-

" to aerted.D e fia ita Kaowledge .Ne«lad

itUl ''-One o f the most serious problems now beforo t u , " be declared, '* ia tba t

oes o f not guessing but knowing tbe eoata o f prbducUoa as tbo basjs lo r securing

lies n more equal division o f tbe profits from the sole o f farm, pruducta.”

Ro- Uo afguod fo r an extension o f the high standard set fo r Idaho seed crops and doclared f<^r (jua lity a t tho expense,.

:0 8 i f n**d bo, o f quantity.Bhow U p OoBta o f Paata

Diseusalon by U. H . Smith, fie ld en- tomologfst fo r t'he University o f Id ttto who has l>eon stationed here fo r Mveml months i« s t in clovor aphis control in- vestigatioiis, brought out some sta rtling

bo figures in respect to tbo damage dono a ll by these pests, and W. E. Crough, bloJ- the ogist fo r tho United States deportment

o f agriculture, w ith headquarters-at rn- Boise, gave'figures showing a,saving to

the farmorn o f Idaho o f more, tlian-$1,- >us 000,000 AS a result o f the campaign fo r >ot the poisoning o f squirrels, gophers and lie otber rodent pests.»b- rU y a N iggard ly PoUcy •te- Inve igh ing against a n iggard ly pol- •X* icy on the part o f the state government by toward Investigations calculated to ve stamp out Insect posts, M r. Smith in

hifi addrcM mndo th is statetnent: gt, ^ - x i io depreaalng th in g abont the

whola a ltxutloa ia i f tlia atota haa gbnnr socb niggard ly aap-

^ po rt to the protoction o f her agzl- cn lta ra l in tenata againat .Jnfoct peata and p lan t , disease, eran whea

^ m v U ly nadeiatanrtab'le facta abow th a t ten^ and even hundreda o f

[ ! thousands o f doDara worth o f cropa are m w or'lesa completely m iaed ■

.foch r w . A a iUuitzlOQs example o f th ia false ecoaomy waa tha f la a l appropriation o f S4.000 in tha early' p a rt o f 1917 fo llow ing tha >500,000 loaa to the 'c lo re r seed crop o f 1516, fo r carry ing oa expShmeatal w o ik In tha control o f c l oyer aphis dor-

' .in g the bieaniam J917-18: Three thonas nd. e ight haadred - doUan o f th ia a p ^ p iu t lo a wonld have gone to pay the aalary o f the Invettiga-

^ to . la a v lo g 'o n ly t 200 to meet tha

w n tM rm iw s E ,\ I AW,I i w8r,-ruG er

TW IN FALLSL S : DAILY N E W S

ill-

N ib le y-C h a n n e lX .IW B E B .O O UPAXT

s s |i' ia . • .

expenaea o f the axparlmenta..! con- - f lden tly beUere th a t I f ample ap-

j proprlatloB had beea auuia- f o r th is work, a h a if m illion dollara wonld

lO e have been aaved to the faxmexs o f aonthem Idaho against tlie 'd o itn ic -

. tlveneaa o f the c lo re r aphla doxlng to n . tl> . p « i! l r . « r . " the * Discusses Other P e ^

ss«g Mr. Smith discusscd nmo'ng tho in ling sect posts gain ing a foothold iik Idaho and the a lfa lfa w e v i l which in -Utah, afi- ctfc. cording to- Oebrgo I . Bccvos, govern ton* mont speciallsf, causes tho loss o f abonl H5l. 50 por cent o f tho to ta l annual yiel^ has o f alfalAa hay; tho clovor aphis, whieh the I>e said, coat ^ e farmers o f Idaho nol tbe loes thaa (600,000 in loss o f tbe alslkc the seed crop alone; grasshoppers; elovei MT« aeed ehal^S, and the pea w««vil, which

he said, has completely ruined the pea grovring indostry in southern Idaho,

re i- W onld In ro ke Itag lila ta raills . His advice in ^ s p e c t to the a lfa lfa at* jveovll menace, is tha t tho - legislature tb ^ before adjournment should pass such and lawa and quarantine measorea.as w ill re* perm it the offectivo oradiontion o f the iug weevil where i t is eaUblisbed and pre- net vent its fu rth e r spread. “ This w b rk ," he he said, “ should be placed Itf tbe an hands o f tho moat competent man or

ex- men tha t money wW seeure, aijd, since bn- m illions upon m illions o f - dollars ore in- a t stako, no s tin ting o f funds ahould

»ud bo tolerated.'?.- D iaci^Ma .d o re r Aphla

. In rospect to, the eontrol o f .the olov* er aphis M r. Bm itli snid, “ Our studies

ont during the jmst summer and present w inter have lod ua to believe tha t in ordinary clim atic conditions, Die rlov-

^ cr aphis can bo effective ly controlled by practical and inexpensive methods.

'■'0 summarixo our knowledge concern- ing thd clover aphis wo can say:

len y j_ The clovcr'aphis habitually ^B»- ed tho 'w in te r as live insects in the

*®‘‘ crowns o f clover plants, }n the clovor fie lds aml^ wherever els© ro l^ .-.^ lo v^

®“ plants «jccur. During severe w£ntert " f f lik e tha t o f 1015-10 tbe greater per-

centago o f the aphi« wiU be klUed, but in m ild w inters like ‘ ha t o f 1917-lfl

" ■ practicaljy no aphids are k illed by the cold; In fa « r they may continue to in:' urease by reproducing young through-

“ ■ uu t the w inter.. “ 2. B y grazing clover fie lds close- ly iu tho la to fa ll so os to removo a ll vegetation, the clovor aphis, •'thus ua- protected, .w ill be dcatfpyed by the 6old o f the ordinary Idalio winter.

In case o f spring infestation of ’P* alaike clover tbe fie lds ahould be graz- *®». 'ed verj- c loso.till lato spring,-'say up to

the f ir s t week in Juno.”“ The.clovcr seed chaJcid,” M r. Smith

snld, “ can bo controlled in very Jargtt ^ measure by cu tting tbe hoy crop o f ™ clover and a lfa lfa about, the- timo the

f im t heads are beginning to ripen whon “ ff the grul^s arc immature and i f i l l bo

kUled by th e d ry ing o f the .seeds.”- Bad M edidna fo r Weevils

. la ^a p cc t to the poa 'Weevil M r. ^ Smith saidi. “ To say the least, pea J _ growing wiU be a m ighty hazardous OP propoaition next f>-ear.' •‘ ^However, i f

aVeiy .package o f seed sold fo r garden planting and ovorj- ounce bf'.seed sold fo r fie ld p laa ting tbia spring were fo- migatod w ith carbon bisulphide, a well

. known* and simple treatment, therV would be no danger o f the i^eoyils lt»

Ju fenting next yearfs crop.” .. ^Argaea fo r C nltlvatloa

h i the discussion foUowiag M r. Sm ifh 's paper, O. P. Hondersbot o f Boine, who claims to be tbo pioneer a l­fa lfa grower o f tho etato. having rais­ed thn t crop since 1877, called attaa^ tion to tbo adN'antages of~tboroogb aad frequent cu ltiva tion as a means not on-

LetUsSliipYourtlay :W a caa rasdor j n i n p a c k r M r*

Tie* In n y m tffc a t i

T h e N o r th w e s te rn B ro k e ra g e Co. , ’

Idaho P o « « B afld la ff ]Fb o M s n

• ' -f I

1 S tU K « ^ T T b L T l” H b u .7 H e # W T OF T)KtfB ffrSCM S6'(OOIHTM HOi;(€;V

IPROyiBRDEEflBRlRlOISLJRtRRl

Mrs, White of Twin Falls sfpon sor for Measure Carrying Ap

• propriation for Neqded Pass _ age of Snake River

(Continued from page one)

point. Tho' bridge- would shortvn- th tr ip Iro ^ i tho ontiro Twin -’alla an Buul country in to Bola^ and pruvid on uubrokoa sUto hijthwai' from th

^ Idaho capital in to aouthan Idaho.. . 'HoUso b il l numbpr 11 intro lucqd’ V ^ Nollson o f ’Bonnoville thia m o m i^ , ) J .. dosignod to protect growing crop# upo J, j Ihnad nnder Irr lg a tio il ayatoma upo

which the water assessments havo ni) been i>oid. Tho b il l provides fo r th redomption.of audh land w ith ia a porio

laho J '® "* payment o f a 10 pe' cont penalty and 1 por cent Intereat p«

month. During tho t ^ e the land 1 bout water eotopany, a ll erop

j shall fa l l under tbe core o f the originshieh. '; ' Designed oa an omorgeney measnre, :

b il l was introduced by Ura. W hite o Tw ia Palla th ia nibraiag, 'permittiaj couaty govarameata to iacreaae tha pa;

„ j l o f steaograpbera a t w il l where soel aetion ia aocoaaary in order to obtaii help.' .. - AboUab.Capital Pnalshaant • -

itnre W itb the idea o f aboliabiag e ^p iti soeh poniahment ia Idaho, a -b ill waa th i w i l l m orning introdoced by Mra. Drake o

’ the Payette. The meaaoro aobititatea U f pre- impriaonm^nt fo r hanging aad raaka

rk ,” second degree morder p o ^ lsb ^ le by i tbe te rm .o f imprisonment o f froaOO year

a or to J ife .'dnce Representative Foloy is tbe author o:

ore a moasnro providing fo r tha faraiahin] ould by tho atato o f free vaccines and aemm

to a ll couatioa, towns and villages, thi expense o f adm inistration to be borm

ilov* by tbo coonty and paid fo r a t the ra t d ic f o l ' 12.50 per person, together w i t l 2i sent ccnts per m ilb in mileage. Another bU t in aimed a t the present f lo aitoatioa wai •lov- introdoced, g iv ing connty comniiaalon dlod ors the power to employ a v ia ltin{ lods. nurso a t aueh times as tbia Biay becomt ern- noeeasary. ' _ j ' ■

introduced a bin today providing foi lass- In 'tho senate. Senator Booth o f Lowii the the division o f aU ooontiea in to thre<

Dvor d is tricts aad the eleetioa o f a ooos^ o v ^ MwwaisaibBar from e ^ o f the thrat iteia d is tric ts by the people reaidenf'of-ibal

• Oambllng SecJand Ntdcaaea - OambUng is declared,a.nnlsance and

. . tbe county attorney is given new and jirh- powora by aeaate blU No.. 16,

introduced th is 'm ora ing.Momberahip in ib e th ird house U . ex-

pccted to be co ^d e ra b ly aogmbnted w ith in tho next day or two In connoe-

feold governor’s bIU_^to i-ro-\id o fo r tho estnblishmeni o f a gov-

I ernmont (iabinet o f 'n ^ e heada w ith faz- i ^ ” ®*" various activities o f state government. ,

A m a jority o f thoae apoken to re- aitb measure as fondAm-satallyiTffO *J“ t g ivo i t aa the ir opinion tbat

I t w il l not4 >aM w ithoat a atrong f ig h t the *

“ b " ^ ^ i t h H o . s l 3 d n d

^ • i * H o ' 5 t ® - s - s o 5 • ! *

P** Mrs.' Charles McElwain ontertaine-1 0“ » a few neighbors in honor o f Mrs. Bliea-

beth Brown on Friday afternoon, don . • .'Old / T - ■ .

J / Misses Zella and Frances ISUis w ill fgl] Entertain the ir Sunday school claMieii

and a few outside gucHts on Friday ev. j J enlng.

M Im Ellen Oocbel gavo a^ca on.Suu- dny evening in her rooms. Tho -guests

o f wore Misses t i u i e Smith, Ida Brown, ol- nUdegarde O tt, Adclaidi' Xichols, Grace lis- Brj-ant, Bo»o Murray, Anltn Kincaid an* and Byrd Wall.nd ---------------an- Advertise i t In the Classified columut __ o f Tho. News. Somebody w ill want it .

Iy o f dtKconrag'ing insect pents but of making poMible the harvesting of fonr cu tting" o f hnV itmtcnd o ^ th rw .

D r .n , r . .\il>ee of Bock (^reek. dis­cerned in this suggestion a possible in- tcrf<rrcnriv\vith proper irrigation of)ihe hay crop, whicti wns met by Mr- lion- <lor«hot w ith the statement that al- tbnucli' ■nltTvation xhould be given be­tween caltlngn. the proper ciirlnR o f the crop should not occupy more than three or fou r days, i f the' bunches were

^ ^nade nu ffic ien tly Kmall.

f f IW LCTA • '—

> J iS « A V W lP F W & -.( f )«*^

: ' w e HAVE THE BEST

[ BEAN STOfiAGEgy - ^ A N R ^ ^ ;

eiEANING FACILITIESjp l IN TOWN ass- — ---------

MUNSON & HARDER

and OO TO

HIGHWAY SERVICE STATIOH. JO B

\ V n A iu tT .T in n r tM A S DB a it BatTlea ta M l* *

«• » fB S B A IB . W A X B B A H D B A T tM K I . W A Z B k

upon) nbt • '- the SP0K80B8 N B W P liA N OF OPEBA- oriod T IO N POE TH B STATB3 per ■ ■t per (Costinoed from page oae)-Id la --------- ——--------— ---- —sropa secius certain to obsorvors horo. This g ir i^ w ill como, however, from tho office­

holder who sees bis eynosuro slipping ire, a away, sey tbo poUtieal wlieacres. Those ^ o f mon,'who.; ni9w-hold office aud would tt in g be displaced under tbu governor’s busi- ) pay ness e ffic ioncy plan 'are fo r the aoat sneb part rather strung j>olitieaUy in thoi^ ita in homes. - .

Ono logiHlator from northofn Idaho . , put i t tbis w ay today: “ The fellow

Jnim home who M d » a. -job is goIoK to lu k ■ his logUlfltor to protect- his placo- a t th<f public trough. Ninety

* ^ per cent o f tnemboro, y'ea n ine^-fivop w cent, would -not ^run . th d r ona

1 * * ^ biteiuess tho way tbe slate's ' business ^ • is run and the public ngraca with-»ffem. reara ^he way I sum i t up is that there wiU

bo on the 'opposition side thu profes- slonal, mercenary politic ian and oppos- od to him w ill bo the public and its 'good. I l l view o f the supreme impor-

, the ta^ce o f tho ipoduro and tho peraonal •nrno pressure o f tbo ^elf-seoking office hold- rate c r on tbo legislators, I strongly ad- 1 SS viso tha tithoso interested in tbe bosi- ■ b i l l nesH good o f tbo state urge th^ lr rop- waa rcseutatives to stand fast on the bUI.

m « t t iu .BUI F c m iic t * The aupervodnnco o f forty-eight de­

partments by nine.^ ^ The aavlag o f tbouAands o f dollars

fficpeas*..Making thA governor directly onswer-

able to tbe people fo r the business of- flc iency o f bis adminlatratlon.. 1 Prnvlaion o f a cabinet to advise

* w ith -tho governor on a ll Important mat­ters, c o m p e l o f beads o f dopartofrnts.,

Placing o f state,finances on a sound and business basis.and D irect representation o f tho people

1. 10, through advisbrj- boards composed of nine tqcmbers to serve w ithout pay fo r

I. ex* fivo departmenta,ated yo reeelvo export advise and real *®®* pnblic opinion through tho personaell I " * o f the advbory boards, a ll the mombers

o f w h i^ s e rv e fo r patrio tic reasons.. No addition o f functions but a fa r

‘ ^ more rapid attention to'pubUc matters.re* elim ination o f red tape and eoa-

j j j y gcstioR o f publie a ffa irs.that ■ ^ •-v f .. Panalty e f Failure.“ F a lla r* to pro fit from our own mis--

take i. i fa ilu re to apprcciatc that we have made mistakes, fa lln re to heed the wamlnga o f people more experi- «oced than we. alwoya carries w ltb It

♦ a heavy penalty tlio t mnst be pald.-;- Bxcbaage.

ne-1 - ■iea- olaarifled Ada ara aVaaf iaWi<tiT;a.

' f U S E D G A R Sr u A T

^ largain Priceslu. 6 Passeoger 7o rd in good

‘ flhape.,7 Paasenger Hndioi^'OTer-

in r hatiled and' re fin iihed .6 Pasienger HaTnes, jnst

re fin ished and over*hean- hanled.

MAGELBROS.Phone t w in TaSf

— Aw CUFPORt* Ha iMjTjN TKE I ■e<e$ AKT> T

^ " B u t j t c a n STAKO IT W N C R e / ^ \ f : r “

H e

' , ! fO B a i> A T ,- f fA K U A » T 14,' 1919.,

Page 5: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

' ' " • “ ’" V - s & y 'TUBBDAT> J A O T A E T 14, 1019.

joiNimii: r FMOir..Twin-:Fa|ls IsvMecca ifor Farm­

e r, Stqdkmemand All Inter- , ested in Development of jh e

• state Industries ^

. HOME? ABE'oPiNED AS HOTEL&, BECOME TAXED

. . - ■ . J l ______ ■.

Openingl^esBiona Indica te Im - . ' portasoe o f DiBouasioiis and

A ction to bo Taken .a t B ig Gonference o f State Bodice

A ntreani of /armorti, {itockmon and , men Intorcstod in . tbo liovelopmont o t

tho stato otburw iw tha t bcgna<on Sua- day and Monday in cobUnuin^ to pour in to T fr in Eollo ftom vurioua point* in,

- Idaho and adjobfinff states as tho jo in t .conforonco o f Idaho. a K ric u Itu ^ , live- Htock, onginoorinft «ocioticH Ih getting uader Jttll Tray. Tho hololn arp crowd­ed w ith convention viaitorn and the best homos of the c ity h(ivo boon open­ed fo r th o ir reception. ' •

T i i t t D a y Fz«c*B(Uncs Sessions ihn’ Idabo. Society o f En­

gineers and o f tho Stato Seed Growers’ association s ittin g w itb the State Farm

- Bureau, openod, a&d a reception, fo r tho v is ito rs to tho women's section under the auBpiceti f i t the farm bureau wom­en '■ department and fodoratod clnbs was held on Moi\day.

Tho enginS&B. ^o u rned tho ir annu­al mooting most

. . V .irf • th e .jn o ^W '- 'p fitfh o aocisty w ill te* m a ^ h e re 'u a r in g ^ d 'w e e k in attend* Asia a t the a e i^ n s o f tho irriga tion

' .^ngre ts and o f'o th e r o rga^ta tiom - ^ fo r O u u l S M U u

Tbe stato fa rm burean'and ^ o sood ^[T&we^ met separatoly. th is m o f i f l^ .

' ' tE « .fo rm e r'll tho lA v e r jn g th'e&tro a ^• ' the )a jt« r in tho P a r itk ftoU, whoro yoa-

ter'day’w io in t sess ion .'^ ^ held. B o tliL o r^n isa tiohs havo adjourned this a t jS ttirnoon fo r the u n u a l mooting o f tbi? *

.Tw in Foils (Jandl company, while their ■'irtejpbor«..MO spending tbo afternoon either in attendance at the m oo ting o f . uthor orgoAtzadons^ a t ^be ’Hereford i nalo, or on oxcurflionii to'Shoshono Falls .

•and Blue L*kc».Tho ow n ing sessions 'o f tbe Idaho .

Irr iga tion congress, tho Horoford sale ■ .and tho-m eeting in tbo women’s SM* - tioa are the b ig > vds o f tb is after- ,

■ noon's proceedings w ith the joint-con- j ferenco.

■ Im portant Xoxklcs Schadnled A fto r an inform al banquet ^ ‘ 'r o : , i

ception in tbo J lotel Porrine t ^ ^ f l r t a ’*' H ing, a jo in t a w io n w ill b o -h e ia 'tt.th o i

' Lavoring theatre, tho s u b jo ^ 't^ ^ 'b o ‘ discussed being among tho moaV im ^ r t - ant tha t w ill be presented a t tbe con­ference. Dho speakera are B arry Dib* f ble, Unitod States roclamation sorvlce project manager a t Rupert, apeaking on ^

• th r “ W ork o f tho United States Becla- m atloii Service,” and Dr. Samuel For­tie r, o f tho department o f agricnltoro, oa “ Preparation o f L a w n 'fo r Irrigfi^ tion .’ ' \

Ooremor D avl* Speaks d' Tbo seed growera and Irriga tion con­

gress tomorrow aftomoon w il l meet ia jo in t, aenaiob to Ite itr tho address o f ^ Oovernor D. W. Davis. Wednesday w ill In> livestock d*y fo r tho farm bureau, and w ith i t the livestock societlee, af* h tor the ir forenoon soBslona w ill adjonra ci fo r the Shorthorn sale. • A

In the women’s . scction to i^ r ro w there w ill be. sesaions in tbo moniing at the Presbyterian church and' in tho af- U’rnoon at the America theatro-

The T x iu Falla County M utual Firo-■ Insurance company w ill hold Its annu- » r n ifo ting tomorrow aftornonn In the fbrni bureau offices.

Cable fo r Hansen tj - Span Is Received

—------- niI A i^ v a l o f Shipment froilQ W is-

conain Pnta N e w ly A ll t h e ^' H a tc i la l b^' Oroond ^

A — V “A ear containing more than one-half ’

o f tho cablo tha t w i l l be rec[ali«d in hte eoastrQction o f tbe ntapeailon spaa aerosa Snake r lre r canyon Bortb o f Haaaea a n ire d oa H o n d ^ from Eeno- ^ aha, W lacouiB , aeeordiag' e i B . 1C. Mar- j ^ , superrlsing engiaeer^'for tbe Haa*•en bridge eommlialoa. P ra ^ tie a llr all o f tbe re ft o f tbe m ateria l fo r tbe rpan is on the ground asd exearatioa work is almost completed.

" ftt in:

y i ^ i i o u n o e m e n t JV — ■ . . . I es

---------- ■ hR. The Prenhrtarian Missionary society

w ill m rrt a t th r home o f Mr*. .Tame* McMillan on Second nvrnne north Thiir«iiT a fte m o ^ .

Twin Falla Temple No. 21, w il l hold it * re p ila r meeting Thar»day, Jaanary IA. a t 2:30 o ’clock, la Mooae halL

To “ flnanee*’ a * 'T o L e t ” adrer- tising campaign yoa ae«i on ly set aaUe )

perfaape a fe w day*—a ja rt^ of pocket m o a ^. _ . * !

iy i E v e ry C a k e I .

•’ Tw in F a lls SHtrine ’ A m ong Those Cited

s r * C o r p o r a l D a r r e l D w ig h t , h e - b e r o f - F o u r t h B r ig a d e , to i

G iv e n O ro iz d e O n e rre

Corporal Darrel Dw ight, bob o f M r. : r j an.l Mrs. W. U. D w ight o f Tw in Falla, ' ' ta a member o f tbo S iz tb marine' corps

rogimont whioh, jr i th other regiment# o f the Fourth brigade, has received tho Ct\>ix de guofxe U id o flle la l d t * t i« . ] for^bciftiery in action; . ' .

l ig ite .O !^-^ ta tiou rolatee the bravery o f , ^ t b a ^ u in ^ d o r f i i « aad the efficieney

. b f t! lQ i^n^& rs is aetioB in tho b a ttle ! ; . o f B on reaW aad Bellean wood, Jutae

Jid 2.18. - ' . o f . - 1 - _____ __________ ■■ '

JOOLGROIR!; i i SOPPflRTlilS:

— ' I. S o u th e rn Id a h o A s s o c ia t io n E n - ,

d o rs e s E x e c u t iv e P la n f o r J

s ta m p in g O u t S h e e p S c a b |(

'T h e Sonthern Idaho Wool Qrowers p associfttioa a t its anntial oieetlBg held 1 Monday eveaing in the e o oa^ f t i r a bo* ^ rean offlcea here, went on reeoM in tlM adoption o f a resolntion in support o f ^ .Govemor Davis ’ p o lity fo r - b ring lag «

^ aboDt the-eradleatioa ef, aheep aeab in P0. Idaho, asd appointed a eommitt<ft eom-

posed o f B . U e N a a a j* , B ay x ! ^ Browa, J . A . Orom o f T w io . lU l^ and ^ D . F . Detweller and . H . SebUdmaa o f ^

, n ic r , to prepare a protest agalast the fireseot system o f asaesaiag tba value ^ o f a ll eonuaon sheep a t $S per hatdL-.- ~

O fficers wore eleeted aa/oUofrs: ptei- ideDt,.,j:os«i>h _H. Soayer, Q M tlafurd:

^ l»<»«ere ta r7 -aad treassrwr, I I . B . P' IjTg lh ildm aa , TOer.

The foUowiag were ^ t « a to serve w ith the preaident asd seeretary o« tho

^ Jloaid-J»f d iree to ft: John S k lle ra , o f £ ^ Bolsei- W. M . Shotwen, Boise; H . O. ® “ Brown, Tw in l U l i .

A a active p a rt in the dlseosiloiis was , token by O. P . Henderahot o f Bolw ,B. •M te ta ry .o f tbe state f a i r aweeiatltm f '

and o f ths L ew irtos NcFrthweetirn L ive " Stock Show; 2 . McNamara, B * / B rjw n , _ D. P. Detweiler and .0. B . Braivioa.*^ • f

jP e 3 rs o 5 a .a :la« ---------- -------------- ;____ It- ______X- M r*. D. T. Wilson hpent Mon<lay her«»- from Bopert, i>® W. A- GoggaaU le f t Mondav evening “ f f f Sfca C ia a d ^o .f. Mrs. E. Brimhal] le ft Monday-even- J, ing fo r a b r ie f v is it in 6 a lt I« ke .

Mra. E. D. Weaver han returned from Woiser whore ahe was the gnest o f bet sister. S]

Q Mrs, F. E . Nefzgor lo f t Monday fo r ^ f Nampa where ahe w ill v ia it w ith rela- v .

tivea and frieada. ^1, Mrs. M. 0._HoIcoml), who has boon K ’• here as the gucat o f her aon, Lee Hoi- ca B comb, le f t Monday fo r her home in Loa •

Angeles. br

t --------- ----- ---------------- t^i

S ---------- pr:M ary Haaol StttrglU Hi

M ary H#rol S turg ill, in fan t daugh- ■»> ter ot Mr. nri.l Mrs. S turg jll, liv in g on en

[ the Bnnke rive r near Cedar Draw, who enwaa born A p ril 2S, 15>17, died on Jnnu- an nrv 4 a fte r suffering fo r aomo timofxoin; pnciimonin. ih inera l sorviies 'were conducted nt tho homo by T. A Cr

*. W e s t^ rb y , and Intonnont was in the do" «>8/Ccemetory. She leave* to mourn aci

the ir Jos*, bor p a u tm tj^ ^ o , hrothora foi u d fo n r sistan.

Knske l7 F im e n l Postponed \ Tho funaral' o f M ax W . Ennkoly bas j■ been postponed from Wednesday to nu,

Thnraday a t 3 o'clock, on aecoant o f oili■ the arriva l of. relatives. - j ,>c I . i niic

.R obert McLeaa A t hia homo one and one-half ^ le a ia t

northeaat o f Han«en at 5 o ’clock th i* hot morning, Rob<>rt Mclycan, well known farmer, d i^ l from pueumonLa follow int; ^ influenza. Ho Is survived by his w id­ow nnd fivp children. The remains aro nt tho OrosamAn k D oW itt undertaking estabUabmenL . Pnneral .nrraogetnent* hR>«' not l>e«*n made.

Otto Bailey ' ~A v ic tim o f ■pneumonia followinc' in-

floen ia , Otto Bailey, well known, farm- cr, died Monday morning n t hu< homo thriv) miles nnrtbeaat ot Hnnsen. Fn*neral »ervife» w ill bo hplil at 2 ci'clock ___Wednesday afiemoon from tho Orosa- g nan 4 J^eW itt chopel. p .*

BEAD THE- CLASSIFIED ADS. ^ ' ‘,1

Sabscribe now fo r tbe I?K W a

jSiiysEPimlEBEWlTyRN

- OFIIIiPLipTD. B. Moorman Files Answer in

fe Suit for Damages for Slander i Brought by Times Publisher

—Presents Counter Claim, DoiiyinK t h j t he «nid, cxcopt by, way o f returning tho compllmont, to D. M.

' Denton, owner o f th f Tw in FaiU Times and manager o f a real e ^ t o firm ,“ You oro n , --------- lia r ; You nre tho

, '■ .■ th ie f nuc] vo u k in thia town ■ and ovofybody kn<iwi*.it,” D. B. Moor-

- wan', 'through hia attorney, Jamoi E .' Wise, Monday filod hi* onnwer in tbo Btilt 'fo r $20,000 brought ngaiuet him in

. d ia trie t court here.Moorhnni'aM'lcft thn t Dentun toko noth­

ing on m-rount o f th i’ auit. nnd filo ft o conntcr claim fo r rent in tbo ’ a im ro f $30 alleged to lie ihie him fo r rent on the build in i;'occupied by Ihi' Deuton

• real entato firm .Gives, D«talls o f Differences

M Jn his answer Moorman notH out in j T detail tho cit'cumtUiuce* 'under which , U the alleged interrhaiige o f hpt. word*

wa* paMcd' Inat^Xyvcmbfli; between himself and nonton.. “ He aayH' thnt

n - anitjp time [-r ijit^ to thot.-dnte Ponton j undnrtook to nell to (Vod K eller nnd 8. N. Pittello^ hja osaoi’ latoM in thu real e.<tato bualnoH.4, ii. <-i>rtnln tnu-t o f land known an thp C. O. Workman place, i

ira provided dear tit le "idiouid 1h> abown. i tld Donton wux tn roceivc $Tift conimlsalon. i >Q. Moormain auhaequentty wur advised, ho j be aay* by. nn attorney fo r tho atato o f o f Idaho, that rlenr t it le could not Ih> giv- j Bg ou u n til the estato u f Workman were j in probated. • in . Denton innisted, Moorman *ays, thal c jbI I f warranty .deed could .no t be given, i 1 Moorman should give a quit claim deed, g o f The deal bung thero, Moorman says, g ha u n til he waa quoAtionod about i t by | ue Keller and Putelio. Uo told thom tbe ),

aituation ho aay^. Later, bo avera, he t drove h i* car to tbo o ffico o f Denton j]

j . who eanio out.on tho aldowatk«ad took q him to tbnk fo r what ho ha<l to ld the ^

g prospective buyers. ‘ „"M oorm an, what you to ld Putelio ^

yg anti KeU»>r about a q u it claim doed is a ' fiQ Ho; D. B., you are a ‘ l ia r , ’ ’ ia tho laa- p£ guago which, according to tho anpwer,Q Donton uaed a t tha t time. Moorman °

acta out in hin answer tba t ho retorted “ ^ in kind, followed Denton in to Dentoa’a Ij, office where ho charged Denton w ith ^ ^ Jtoeplng W O .out'o f bla rent and keep- ^

ing back hia September rent.

'REHiiSSiSIl FRENDlPEEfli

Kimberly Branch Opens Hospi- " tal in School Building to i,<

Care for Flu PatientsMrs. O. H . Brows, eooaty home dem-

oastratioa agen^ and K t a anaa M . Spesee, eoonty elsb leader, were” ia ^ E in b e r ly F r i d ^ and Satorday helping to esUbllsb a kitehea in the eawrgeney

'* bospita], whish has been opened ia the ™ . K im berly grade school boUdisg b y tbe 3; n K iaibcrJy Bed Oross b rB seh"fo r tbs “ I- eare o f ia f ln e n n patients. "« - The coaunittoe a p p o in t^ b y " th e

branch to take charge _6|i ih e hospital is composed p fM *s* iW llH am TSn Hon- ton, Mrs, B fcggU eaton u d . Mra. Ar- thn r W ils o n .^ , ' - V

M lss'E locta Nesbit, o f Tw in Falls,I form erly a saperintcndoat o f tho Boyd H

hospital, and Misa NoUle Gallaty, a B< practical nurse, are aaaljtlng Mra. Van D Houton in the management o f tho In- G’ a titution. Mias S tuart, domeatie sei-

a ence teachcr, is in charge o f the kltch*0 en, w ith two othor teachers, Misa Wood i „ . and Mias A rv illa , assisting hor. M iM p, B Ilorsch is secretary and bookkoopor. ,,r g Tlie .hospital is maiatalood w ith Jled jp . Cmss funds. Patients who are.ablo to ^ B do iK>-aro oipected to pay fo r tho irJ accommodations and others are carod1 fo r free o f charge,

Q U ILT B A U ; POB B E N B TIT(Special to Tho Nows)

« K IU D E R LY — Tho R«d Cross q u ilt ir l* made by the young women o f the Moth- bo f o ilist church and quilted by tho “ sen- rei

I i f o 's ta r” mothers o f men in the army __. jn iiil ii» *y , i.s to be sold in accordance 'iv ith n plan whirh haa been worki-d < rt

I fo r tho benefit o f the local Bed Cross'• ho sp ita l. I . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - i

. s i f l e d

TOO L A T B TO CliABgTTY

FOR S A L E -7I tram mares, 1 spa)i mules, fresh J e i^ y cow,- wagon,- har­ness, iraplemcnta. Inquire Washisgton

, L ive ry Bam. E. H . Hawley, ..j

FOUND—Black m uff. Phone 543-W.

STRAYED — From . JCimberly, one gray horse mule, one bay mare mule.' Reward. N o tify A . B. UUrieh, K im .; berly, Idaho.' '

BEAD T B E CLASSIFIED ADS.^

TWIN FALLS :

I tockholrers IVRTEIIGIINST I

r RECK IET;in Canal Users Turn Down Propo-i er sition of Hearing Discussion | ir of Irrigation Law and Nom-1

, inate Directors ' Iay «tockhoMcrB o f tho Tw in FalU Cn-| VI. nal company, a t. an anaoal mooting cs w ith tho omallcflt attondanco o f roceut m, yearli, thia morning voted down a prop- bo onition to rccas to a la to r dato to per* , ru m it wateruBors to attend tho sessions I >r. o f the Idaho irriga tion congress, a t S. which }iro()om'd i-huii)'i>i< in the irriga- ho tion Idws are boing dlscuaaod. A mo- in t io n . to bo consldorod th is oftoraoon

proviilea fo r appointment o f a commit h- tee to inveatigato th is m atter and i f a deemed e*])cdiont to Call.a special meet- of ing to mnko rocommondations .to the >n legialaturo.in Taylor Ont e f Bace

Candidates fo r dirootors bavo boea placed in noniisation, includlag n il uf

7 tlio diroctora now serving oxcept W. O.• Tayior, who decllaod the nomination,

and throe others as fallows: O. M, Et- ter. Tw in Falls; D. F . DetweUer, F ile r ;- . and John Frahm, Hansen. Tbe balloi[. boxen were declared opes a t 11 ©•'clock.' Center F lg l i oa Detwallsr '

d Sentimeat expressed among the ad- B, m ia is tn itlon forces is th»t the f ig h t 1. w il l bo concontrated against Detweller,I. who Is said to have collected a large0 number o f proxes.' f Getieral Manager J. C. Whoolou coui- '* plotod ju s t beforo tbe nooa reoess the c proaeatation o f U s report eeTCtiag

amonnt* o f water delivered and tho .coxt J o f de llre ry , together w ith his state-

ment as to im provem nt w ork done L and tho progress made ia overooming >> seepage. “ I t w in be a s ia tte r o f grat- y ifica tlon to investors In th is seetlon to ® know tho t a fte r 'li.y o a ra operation o f ;

the canal system, the amount o f seep , B now is losa thaa oae per ccat o f tho ^ area, o f tbo pro ject,” he assorted. Ho

was applauded as bo took Us position on tho p la tfq rm -and oa fln ish lsg h i i

“ report. • -“ Zudc Presiding O ffice r ’ , / ^

Former Senator O. O. Zoek e f K i» - Q boriy Is presiding as chairman o f the1 m a tin g , aad E. N . D ay o f T w ia T a ils g is acting ds secretaiy. The attendaaoeI, whoa tho meetiag opened w«s loss than i. 50, but increasod to about 2S0 a t nooa. ^

'.Csndidtaea fo r dlreetors were nomi> ,* natod b y the' faUowlag: O. M . E ttc tr .i

by D. F. Detw jjder; Iva n -G , Llscola by W. P. A lw o rth ; W. O. Tay lo r by V. g E. Chtimberlaio; J . H . Barker by George McPherson, D. F . DetweUer by Lewis ji H i l l ; Gl&ud BtoWq .by JoUss Beblake; t] John Frahm by Harman Thieme; F . A . K e n n # ^ by J. A . Yoltoa.

’ M r. 7\aylor. decllaed ^ e aominatioa out o f regard, ho stated, fo r sentiment

y among tho stockholders tha t the secre- ^ ta ry should not be a member o f the board o f directors.

Objects to F o s t i^ Aerea ^Objection to the motion tha t tho num- g,

. bar of- acres owned by oaeh candidate should be placed opposite his name on w

a blackboard d l^ la y o d a t the fro n t m o f the hall was made by D. T. Connor fe

; o f F ile r and F . E . Chamberlain. Tbo ai , motio awaa snpported b y H . S. Hobson, y , B uh l; J :_ A . Crom, Tw ia Falls, aad al , Qoorge' McPherson, Buhl. I t wa* car- ul

ried.Upon completion o f the pcnaaneat ni

orgauita tion the chair was antborised hi to appolat a committeo on the order ui o f business. .Eo aaiaed F . E. Chamber- ‘eii Iain, Lowls H il l aad B. F. MoPhersoa. I'|

Tellers wero elected as fo llows; J.H. Barnes, Hansen;-Oeorge McPherson, B uh l; Elmer Asian,. I l l s r ; ' George Drake, FUor; Mattbow Scully, Buhl; Gordon Bennett, Bnhl, to

Stops Beading, o f Hhmtes Oil motion o f George McPherson, who

iun ’m ipted tho reading o f tbe minutes, . explaining tha t ho understood tha t tho previous meeting had beon declarod i l- * legal, fu rthe r reading was dispensed

. . L“The order o f buslneas adopted prp-

vlilos fo r th is afternoon session the consideration only o f unfinished buai- I’*' nc*ii nnd now business.

- 1' "

Get some IN FO B M A TIO N about i t — i irha t I t w i l l cost, where i t may bol bought best advaatage—Chroogb I reading the ads. j

T h e Q r jLa s t Showing Tod

“ T H E M.The Feature W ith a Tht

CCCHAS. R ,

A 7 part romance o f the s ta rring Chas. Ray as I

5 DAILY NEWS ___^.#

T h e c o r s e t i s , 1

T ' , . \ n d n s t l u * f o i i i u l a t f i o i i c o f r o i ' t o r n o t , s o i i i n y - y t

I, * * . \ i H * c ( y o n r ( M i t i r i * w u d1 r o U * t o b o .

10- ;

O n J J h i y ( l u * < - o r s < j t f i r s t .T1-;

l U * 5u s s u r e < l o f t h < ‘ p r o j ) ! . f i t t h i t ; f t f y t i r s u i t s a i

I n g K o w n s — u n d t h i * c o r s e t vAo“ t i l o t e n n i n o t h n t .op- ' .

O n r (.•oi'setiLn-ps l i k e ; j a . t l i o s o ( * o r « e t s b o c a n i□ 0- . ■ t i u ' y a r c s o s a t i s f a c t o r y 1

y o n . t < » t h e m a n d t o n s .i f .......... .

‘f f S r n e r ^ l ^ J h

>cao f T h e y a r o ; ; u u r u i i t e e < i l l o . jO ' f i i r t , t h e i r w e a r .in,St-j r ; . . - T U i ' y a r e c o s y l o f i t , a n lo l l i H K l e r a t e p r i c e m a k e t l i e isk. . '

\ V » * k n o w \re c u n s a f e l y r u i t ‘ g u a r a n t e e d t o n s , t < M > .

P c rH o n a l- f i t i i

III-h« _ VA •y'Ae G rt

^ I d / ^ D b r ^■eV . . . .kt-to I -------------------------------------------------------------o f»P PO IJSH A TT AXES OONBIDBBED

A T PEACE M ISSION jn — —i i .(Continued from page one)

• ' careful cotulderatlon. The Polish que»- tfoa has remained nnaolved fo r maay

•* centurioa, fo r tho reason that i t waa ^ never conaidered from tho viewpoint

o f tbe Polos’ own rights and wlabea. “ I t waa clear today, fo llow ing Seere- ^ ta ry 'L a n s in g ’s deaifll o f reports that

America advocntod nxshing troops to thu aid o f ono o f thu two prlnqlpal fac-

^ tions in Polaad, tha t tbo Polos must do- cide tho ir owa dostiay. Tbe Ualtod S utos is aot prepared .to discount’ tho

[® apleadld battle carried oa by Goaorol ^ Pilsudaki fo r thu peoplo’a rights

throughout tho world war.^ ■ s«lf JXrt«mlii»Ooii

And i t la nnwUUng to allow itse lf » tu bo frigbteaod by the label “ social-

^ U t” w ith hU oppoaente—tho aatioaal committee—is attem pting to fasten oa Pilnudaki'a party. On ^ e eoatraiy» Americaa delegator ar«^ t i ^ a g the view tlm t i f the (Poles w a a t 'a socialistic government, St la th e ir r ig h t ■

4 Students o f Europeaa a ffa irs are n watching tho uaceaalng e fforts o f the i t imtioual eommittoe to coatrol Polish af- ir fa irs. i ’o M lb lllty o f tbo comtfdtteo’s 10 aucvcxx <vas ^treagtbeaod whenr*Ignace 3, I ’nderowaki went to Polaad—presnm- d ably undor alliod protectloo—w l^ the r- ulle^ed liiten tlo ii o f overthrowing PU-

nudnki uud sotting up a aew govora- ment. Tho famous pianist, becanse e t

d hia tremendous peraoaal popularity and r unqiieatinncd lovu ^of country^ undoubt- : • ‘eilly in the b iggo|it' national flgnre o f I. r^ ilu iiil. Fear waa erpressed, however, r. lh a t he wa* unw illing to be used as

the romniittCo^'s/catspaw. *0 Bolshevist .'Menace Unfeated

The TmlioTinl i committeo Is reported * to represent ari.'toeratic Interesta who have beon out o f touch w ith -th e peo-

^ p lf aince the beginning o f the war.The .\nicrican^ delegation has made •

*’ i t p lain tha l i t cannot be swept o f f its ° feet liy an alarm o f a “ bolshovist"J moiinc*' to Poland. I t intends to get '

to the bottom o f tho case, though i t *' in w illing to aMint the ] ’roaont gbvera- ment w ith nrmn nml ammunition. I f nprcsnary. Ther«‘ is 'no reason to fear • fo r P ilsuii.ik i’s loya lty to the allies, .in ^ view cif tho fact that ho waa roloSLSOd

l in Sovembor from a German prlaon. ^• i ------------ - • ''»l ClasalflM Ads are eheap—effective. ‘, j * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -j Snbtcribe aow fo r the NEWS.

p h e u i r t l'odau The G reat Melodra.

dASQ U E. OF"housand T h r il ls

COMING W EDNESD AY

in “ SUDD£h e b i g w o o d s — A S a t u r d a ; s F i g h t i n g J i m .

s , the founda tion

H I iH : / C T X ’ ^■'.von 'ra rd . '

■o|K‘r ' ^ '

Corsets

o.iVtMNi— t h e i r f i r , i h e i r c o n i-

a n d t h e i r i i in h < iu u H ty uuU '.lie in p o p u la r .

y re c (n n m e n d th e m , f o r t h e y ’(M). '

it t in y a a rrc n g e d

n STOREltd.EBBEQIEB I^ ro g n tm tv

. i , . . ■ '

j o c o l g r e ’ i r i + i o j

e»- .H aa^he Znfloecisa—A. B. Ostrander,' ay }b a a d ^ o f tbe Osbrander Tam i^nre raa in a p a i^ , is confined to -his home w ith in t % se rle b attack o f ia fh ie a ^ ea. ' ere- M ib . Bnzkholder B le k ^ M rs . 'W . H. la t Burkholder, w ife o f W ; H. Barkholdtf. to o f tbo Burkholder Paraitare com pny, u - Is su ffering from an attack o f In fln - Jo- eaza.*od ■ --------------bo BeiBmw t W ork a t M ilW ^ le a te a a a t -al Lawronco Uodgin loaves th is ,ev fn lng 'to its asaunio bbi fo rm er'pos ition as auna f*

or o f the potato flo u r mlU a t Idaho - Falla. .

AUemla. I / ib o i K w t - a . a MHOniw,. d is tr ic t iaspector fo r the U n ited 8 tsU s

employmeat service, le f t M onday,ev- euiing' fo r Boise where W w ill'-W tl»4 -i a meeting o f the sU te federation o f la*

;ie ;

Attends Seattle M eeting—Mias Byrd ” W all le f t fo r Seattle to attend a ^ f cia l f ie ld reeoBstroction eonfetenee' oii

the 10th and 10th. D o riag her absence „ M m J. Barnhart w i l l have 'charge e f

her work in high school. .

’ Betants to S alt Iiak»—Mrs. Cbas. Huesor le ft yesterday fo r S a lt I« k « .

■1 She w il l probablj- not re tara tp Tw in.. Falls. She.waa called there by the i l l*

aeaa o t her s ifter. M iss Bvo B le h tA ^ who visite<l- horo daring the holldAy^.

^ B o tonu w ltH P H «oii«—B bM iJf A . N . Sprague retamed Moaday from Bt. Helens, 'Oregon^ b r i i ^ a g w itb him

, James Stevens o f Bubl, who is alleged to have forged his fa th e r's name to

^ checks ia the approzim fte inm o f $300. Stovoa* did not rM ort to e rtra d ltio a proceedings.

ts • "*• Betom from Camp Lew is—Nine Tw in

Fn ll* men, form erly members o f the [ t .174th bakery- company, quartermaster J. corps, a t Camp Lewis, wbo have beea [f discharged from the service, returned J Monday to Tw in F a lla .. They were n Sergeant Byron .Decker, Sergeant Jos- ^ ej>h Newton, Corporal Curtifl Dedter,

Iloy M cBtids, G rant K tu ik le , E a rl Jo r­don, Harold Jones, B raz il Drake aad

g, Holan Prentice.

I Classified Ads aro eheap—e£feetiT«.

rheatreramatic Speetacltf, •

F L IF E ”Produced in I ta ly

V . ;»fLNJIM”Jay .Evening P o s t s t o r x

' I I ' I

I -

Page 6: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

P NEERSiillEWSONGOSTIfELECTIICIlifIwoject Manager Barry Dibble 3 , 1 1 Gives Experience with Mini- "/ 1 1 dol(a Government Owned■ 1 Plant—Cost IsiSmall <'_:».• >•■ilRECT ATTENTION TO' "I l AFTER WAR PROBLEMS

iP e t ir io g : President W. 0. Ootton 1% ' Urges Support o f Lane Beo- i>c

tarnation BiU— Shows -Dan-1 1 1 ' ?er i i i UnempioymentI k ' tu

lu v A n im promptu discuuioD o f tbs de- m U o p m o n t o f Idaho watorpowor b j P io- l u K t Uonagor Barr7 I)ibbIo o f tbo U. , l i L BcclAtnation sorvico, in which he ' ' ■ (tandod^a* orroncoua tho commba opin* ■ l& " th a r th o VOat o f oporatioa o f a p l*n t I ' m practica lly tho wholo coat o f pro- l [ u c L o g hydro-eloctric powor, wa« an In- ■ la rostiD g dovolopmont o f tho onniial l - k ’6o tin ;;‘ horu Moliday o f tho Idaho So- ■ ‘ lo ty o f £ng;ine«r«.I T Tho uoffisoora o f whom thoro wero ■ /& o u t GO-in attondanco, wcro'welcom- V*'

fo r tbo Om&ter T m n Fa lla elnb, by V Im n n a ^ S e n a to r M . J . 8 wo«ley, and re* = lu ^ n a o TV as mado by W. H . Gibson, l^ o a id o n t o f tho M ountain Homo Co- l^ o r o t iv o ' I r r ig a t io n company. R l

F o r -SecUmatlon BiU K |:B « tir iD S i^rooidont W. O. Cotton of l^ d o h o Falls, in bis annual oddrosa, coll- I m a ttoBtion to the* chiovomonta o f tho lihembors'^ o f tho society in the m ilita ry j , ly o rv ic o , and urgod support o f tbo I<ano I HM lainatiou-bill beforo coo(;ori»a through I ^ W c h proviaion w ill bo made fo r the"I jm p loyn ion t and absorption in to clvU .<3, ■ 'l i fo o f ro tu rn ing aoldiurs and ' sa ilun I » d which w ill add to tho productivu I lo r r ito ry o f .thu nutiou uu arua five I Umcp o« grea( oa .tha t o f tho statu of I idoho. ~ —I i H . T. I 'lu inb , chief ongiuuer fo r. tho I j w t Laku branch b f tho Qonoiai Elcc- I ;» lc company, gave a acholorly prosen- q,

t* tlo n o f the aubjuct, ‘ .'Tho' Boduction Oro# by E lectrica l Procxas w i^ Bpe- ,

U Bofcronco to Poaaiblo Apphcationa Idaho.'*“

L . o m e e n 7.I A t tho buaiasw mooting jiia t boforo I ^oo rnm oD t otficors o f tho aociety fo r I he 'onaning yoar were ooictod as to l-

PL lowaK Proaldent, (h> O. Scharf, Bblae;B W t vico-jroaident, £ . B . OorUngton,

irome; secoad vice-pfcaidont, C. N . 0. t t le , Moscow; 'Secretary u d (roaaur- , M . I>. Badgley, Boise. 10

A ]ogialati%-o committee to roeom- mond to tbo present legialature tbe idoptioB b f a b il l de fin ing the atAtos e f 11 u «n^)iset-and othor-moaaurea was-ap- IS pointed cobxiatlng o f W. UT QibaeB, 13 UooBtaia HomS| J . C. P o r^ r f ie ld , T w in 16

l ^ l s ; I>. Q. M artin ,-Idaho Falls.J 'A ppoiotm aat was made o f tb * fo l- 16 lowing; members o f a committee oa res­olutions to make its report a t the. eoa- ch u to n 'o fto d v 's s e e a ip a s o f Tne Idaho 18 in ig a tfe n coagreas: W . 0 . Ootto>, Ida* •

^ho Fhlla ; J - Clyde Baldw in, Boise; B.E . S h s p ^ rd , Jerome; A . H . B nek lis , 13 B a rle y ; F . A . W llU e , Boise.

Sbtnra aoor om e f Oset , 20 ; P ro jec t H aaacer 2Mbbls’s atatement in *M p6et to Ch* cost o f prddocia^ *n d 22

< :d i« tribn tin ff e teetrie ity from w»t«r- Dpower waa s B o e s t^ dariag a d ls e ^9 stoa in w hicb & B. Shepherd o f JetoBft Uhad rentoraid th« prediction th a t, the ?4e'relopm *nt o f Baaka r ire r would re- f 's n lt in the bu ild tag hers o f a great -J f dnstria l empire.j i M r. D ibb le argued tha t the aaecess ^ j';o f sncB. developmeat would depend vp-

the ba ild ieg o f a syatem o f reser- A vo irs to squalixe the flo w o f tbe stream I and wvul.d en ta il other exteaaiTo pre- j l in la a ry w ^rk .I '<Tbe'«2u iaa l coat o f operation o f the I M in idoks power p laa t o f 10,000 horse- I power ia about >15,000 fo r labor and ^su p p lie s ," he said, launching upon a ^diacusaion o f the coat o f e lectric pow­der. “ Thia item as a m atter o f fa c t ia

very small pa rt o f the whole coat j!l>eprM istion w ill double tbo amount 4 o f the operating costs and interest oa i th e invcfltm cnt, evon a t the very low |rat(>a- tho govorumcnt pa#i«. fo r money, 40.

w il l equal the charKo fo r depreciation- “ T h i" makes up tho cost c f powor

^ the p la n t which is a yory d iffe re n t m atte r from tho cost o f power deliv- ared. Transmlaaion, cost o f transfom * in g and d is tribu tion a ll are ezpenairs, •a d the cost in;reoMS aa the points o f 4--

‘de live ry become more w idely separated.* “ I f Idaho derelops its» power re- taom uai i t mnst, i f sowesafnl, be w ith 74be ead in v iew o f combining a ll pow- I i t plana to feed in to a common network [ f o r d ia tribn tioa to eijualize Tanatdona.[ < * It Is a mSst&ke too frequently ered- [ i t s d tha t w »t«r power ean be derelop- ^~- t ed cheaply- I t is freqoaatly poadble i t a derelop powerV«heaper w ith coal’ [ t t a a w ith power beeaose c f the hsaTy {STW taest ceqalred b i th * U tte r na- t e t a k l i f . ' * 6T

A M m X«ok a l A f t B o tM T aU ng up ths discussion a t th is

•a tn t i M r. Plaaa M ** rt*d th a t “ Itsoxa*:, t te a * d o t fB t pay to tefc* what is ( I t - ea to y o « ." /qm

“ I t is a -faet th a t aaamoss water- m m m U g w t i t . * * h * M id , <«bot i t is •fae I k s t tha r* b aew so eh«api w y o f saTiag I t •a d atteaipta te m n

<0 » B t te * d o a |P«(« se re s } |

N E X T ISSUE W A R S £ v i W IL L HONOR BE^

P ic tu re o f P a tron S a in t oi e rnm en fs Baby Securii

. ■ on M arke t—In te re s tin i ' oaopher-Inventor Is B r

A ction o f the Treasury, W ASHINGTON, D, 0.— Tho U n ll.d In' etntoH treasury, roa litln g tha t Ihe name lo'• o f Hunjamin -F ra n k lin ia . ajmonymous th I w ith th r i f t , h iu paid signal honor to* thu philosopbor-invontor in the selee* l i i

tioa u f hiii Hkcncaa tg adorn thn IfllO 00 >suc o f W nr Savings atampa. The U n it, th cf] Staten government boa aummdned uh the nation to jo in in paying tr ibu te to 88 F rank lin 'a memory on January 17. More than 150,000 W or Savings, socle- fai tioa and other orgsnizationa w il l hold F r publie mootings. Special exorcises w il l pri ho hold in the achoola throughout tho rio conntry. Tho public libraries w il l make tei tlio dny a apecial.ono. Tho purpoao o f to thin F rank lin birthday celebration is tio to stimulato increased interoat in coa- fo i finu ing tho habit o f th r i f t acquired cri during tbe war. — . wa

.IV nnk jln wfta a . liv ing ''apostle of ^h riftirnnS b’unlnoaa foresight. "F o r ex- nmpio, a l it t le h it o f matbomatlcs hoonco performed todny note tho c ity o f ‘Philadelphia about $133,000. Tl»o mon- wooy ifl in n fund known an the "F ra n k - (jdl in . 'fu n t l" , the nucleus of. which was doil*Tovldod by -tbo great pionoor o f t h r i f t tnc

Frank lin mndo a bcqiiost o f f iv o thoO- ipnnnh<J poundn, known ns tho “ Dr. Frank- w«-lin IV n d jfor^LoanB to Young S lan jed ostA,pHKcerB.*’ Thc-’ libqueat was mado pci

Charter No.

B X P o itT OF O O NDITION OF TH B FIB£ -FALI.S , I K TH B STATE OF ID i

BUSQIB8S ON DBOE

BesotucVi . a I>oans and discounts, ineludihg rodlacc

d Notes and bllla To<lim!ountod (other t acroptanpos sold) (neo Itum r>7a) ..

‘i . Ovordr&ftn UMceuml, $10.08 ......... .r,. U. a bonds (other than L ib e rty Bond

eluding U. B. ocrtificntcs o f indebted a IT. 8 . bondn dopouitcd ^ noeuro oirculi

vnluo) ............. ;.................... ...................d U . 8 . bonds and certificates o f in i

pledged ns collateral fo r State or otita or billa payable ............................

• g Premium on U . S. bonds ......................0. I* lb « rty Loaa Bonds:,

a L ib e rty Loan Bonds, .5%, 4,"nnd' 4% popledged ...... .................... .................. ;..l.

0 Paymenta actually made on L ibe rty . cont bonds o f tho Fourth L ib e rty L<

7. Bonds, aecniltles, etc. (other than U. S.) b Bonds (other than U . S. bonds) p

secure postal'savings doponitn .....e Socurlties otber th iln U. S. bonds (not

. stocks) ownod nnplo^ged __________Tota l bonds, sMuritles, etc., other

0. Stock o f Fodeml Beaerve Bank (50 p< ' subscription) ___ _ _________

10. a Valoe .o f banking houao, owned andbe r e d _______________......... ......... .....

b E q u ity In banlcing houae ......... Z.....11. Furn itu re and flx tu rea ........... .......... .....IS. Beal estate owneTI other than banking 1 13. L a w fu l rescrre w itb Fm era l Beserre :

. 16. Cash Ib vau lt and net unounts due f ra l banka ______ ___________________

' 16. N et amranta due from banks, bankers, co m m ie s other than incinded In Itc

I 18. Checks on other banka In the a^me c ity reporting bank {other -than Item 17'

Totaal o f Ite n a 14, 13, 16, 17 and 1 , 19. Checks on banks locsted outside o f clt

* 'o f reporting bsnk and other csah it< 20; Bedemptlon fnnd w ith TJ. 8 . Treasure

fro m U .'S . T reasu re r____i______ ____; S3. W ar B a r in j^ Certiflcatea and T h r if t t

tn a lly owned ________ ______________

. Total .............. .......... ......................‘ la a b lU tl

24. Capital atock paid la ___:!_____________£5, S trrp ln s -fn n d ____1.;...... ................ .— i..2«. a U ndivided p ro flU ;_______________ _

b Loss current expenses. Interest, aad t50. (Tircolatiag notes ou ts tand ing________ 1SS. N e t amounts due to National b a n k s ___93. N et amounts doe to banks, bankers,

companies (other than included Iner 82 ) -------------.._.........v _ ___________

Total b f Items 82 and i i ' _________Demand depodts (other than bank dep<

Ject to BAaerre (deposits payable days):

34. Ind iv idua l deposits subject to check .....35. C ertifiea tM o f deposit due in lesa thai

(o tber than fo r money borrowed) ......16. C ertified C heeks________ ______________Tu. Cashier's check* ou ts ta n d in g .... ............40. Dividends u n p a id .... ..... .................... .......

Total o f demand deposits (other t deposits) subject to Uescrvo, Ite i3G, 37„ 38, 3&, 40 and 41 _____

Tim e deposits sobject to Beserye (payi 30 da’ys^o r subject to 30 days or me and postal u r in g i ) : . *

42. Certificates o f deposit (6 ther thaa f<b o rro w e d )........................ .............. ........

44. Postal saving* deposits _______________4.*i. Other t itm deposits ________________

Tota l o f time deposits aubjsct to Items 42, 43,, 44 and 4 5 ________

51. D ills payable, w ith Fe.dersl Bescrve B uT o t a l _________ :___________________

57. a L ia b ilit ie s fo r rediscounts, includ ing t

Federal Beserre B a :^ (aee Item Id )

. Total contingent liab liitiea (57 a,

STATE OP ID AH O , County of T w in FaUs, I , J . M . M axwell. Csahler e f the above-)

the above atatement ia tn ie to the beat o f :

Subscribed and sworn to before me thia(8 «*J)

COBSSCT— Attest:C.

tv IN G S S T A M P S : ’ BENJAMIN F R A N K L INt o f T h r i f t to A do rn Gov- i ir itie s , Soofi to be Placed ’ in g S to ry o f G reat P h il- B ro u g h t to 'L ig h t by the ^

■V

i In 1700, and in. making i t , F rank lin i e lookoU SOO yenm ahead, eatimatlng what s tho to U l would be in 1800 and 1900.0 By b is proceaa o f calculation, F ra n k ' £

l in eatimated tho fOnd would be 131,- -9 000 pounds, or *065,000 a t the e n d \ f J « tho f ir s t .one hundred years, b u t . it .fe ll S1 abort o f this figure, reaching but *89,-J 883.50. b

Several reasons aro advanced fo r \he n• fa llu ro o f the fund to reitch the amotmtI F rank lin had expected in 1890, bu t the C 1 p rincipa l one ia th a t the "yoU ng mar-> ried a r t if ic e rs " fa ile d to borrow as of-I ten OS ho had expected, due probably ^ f to thb reatrlctlona. La te r the restrie-.I tions.woro made leaa drastic in an ef- ^- fo r t to got the. money cd t to borrow- C I cra, w ith the roaalt..^bat leas «tteatlon

was paid to character and reapoaaibility O'> and frequently the loan nnd Intereat ^ , wpro both lost. si ) Tem a Are Oharscterlstlc' Tho terms la id down by F rank lin ^■ woro choractorlatlc. They woro dlcta t- ^• (jd by. sbunil .bualnesa judgm ent HeI deereod tha t tho Jonna should not bo . . tnore-tb im s ix ty pounds storting, n9r• Irsi< thnn .fifteen pounda. BorrowQ,rs■ wore rcqiiired to pay each year inter- [ ost a t fivo por cont together w ith ten I per cont o f the p rincipa l u n til the loan* st

- « No. ‘7db8 ' ■ ' . C

iQETBST N A T IO N A It B A l ^ A T ' T W IN ni ' ID A H O , A T T H B OLOBB OF b<BOBMBBB 31, 1918. ' ta

' • foMUCOll' • ■ ,. , ,diacounts .......$ 890,907.48 " ^jer than bank .. ‘ ■ ,oa) ................ 1,220.00 $ 879,087.48 k,- - • ; r ................. 1W 8 mJonQs, bu t in- q,btodnesa): ^irculatiuu (pnr fu....... - ................ ' 50,000.00 ja' indebtodness>r other dopes- j-]........ ................. 50,000.00 H i

100,000.00 fo Mt

4 per cent, un- ’ •...;..;...:.....,...;;:„.>-211,364.38 • Wo rty 4U per . - - i -y Loan ownod. 211,804.85 «1. S .) t u«) pledged to . t o.................. . 2,000.00 ^ -ne(not iaclndlng; oi----------------- -- 142,125.83 . .hor than U. S. 144,126.330 per cont o f , .___________ ___ 3,750.00nnd unlncum-

53,726.00....------------------- • - C3,72flL00____ ..... ; 4 0 W 6 4in g bouM ........ 0,595.95rve B a^k ..... 117,674.99e from nation- <

.....- ...... ... s i» .M 3 .e okers, and trust a Items 13, l i ,____ ;--------------- • 154,572.84c ity or town aa .a 17) ...... —. 12,445.55nd 18 ............ 456,971.99. 'f c ity or townh ite ro a --------- . 12,648.33laurey and due «--------------------- ‘ 2^ 00.00i f t Stomps ae------------------------ _ ; 12L99

................ ........ .* ' *2,029,379.06ilU tis*.................. ....... « 100,000.00. .„u ---------------- , 25,000,00__________16,315.19

tad taxes paid 16,315.19___ ---------------- 50,000j>0a ------------------- 9,8«O.10ers, sad trus t [ In Items 31------- --------------- 66,768.57_________ -------- 78,628.75deposita) gab­ble w lth la 30

t ............. :-------- l f i* 0 f iS L 1 6than 30 daya

1 --------------- 9,432.31---------------------- . 30.82........................ - 17,569,28 - ---------------- 8,000,00ler than bank

Itema Z5,_____________ : 1,375,893.55[payable a fte r r more notice,

LU fo r money - .-------- :------------- 5S,030.M--------------------- . 1,098^53---------------------- 276,422.13t to B e * ^ * ,------ • _ 1 •335351.57I Bank , , . 56,000.00--------------------- 2,029,379.06ng those w ith

Id ) --------------- 1,220.00

' a, b, aad e) » 1,220.00

l*aUs, sa:ove-named bank, do aolemaly. awear that . o f my kno w le d ^ 'a n d belief.

J . M. M A X W E LL , Caahier. thia 13th day o f JanxKry, 1919.

E. B. FOX, Notary PnbUc-

C. N._ B E ATTY,L . E. BA LLA D A Y ,H . W. CLOUCHEK,

Directors. a

' TW IN FALLST O U o B iu n r 's p b o o b a u a t t h b I j o u j T c o m m E N o z

(C on t^n e d 'fro m psge three)'

• Lands,** b y 7 . Ct.Wheelon,. .General f Managed T w in Falls Canal Co.' ' SodetiM i

^ o r r lc a Theatre > Xlorntffg Sewlon—

Sfoet-w ith S tifte Farm Bureau a t La- vering Theatre.

' .A s ie ilc A Theatre I A fternoon fleseion-r- t Adjourned fo r Shorthorn Sale.

Aisartea Theatre ^ - ' Evening Seaaion^ .• . 8:00. • " i io g Prospecta-for 1010, ” by

J. H. M anderfiold, Oeneral .ManagerI Salt Lake IToion BtoSk T a rd i, I

8 :3 0 .' “ Co-operative M a rk e tin g ," J by H . M . Currey,' IN jrm etly' ^ t h ' Bo*.

I t t» u o f Markets. '0 :00 . ‘ 'W in te r 'F e e d in g Hog8,*» by ‘

I C. W. Hickman, U n ivers ity o f Idaho. , Women’* Seetioa .

F irs t PresbytezlaB Ohorch Parlor I ’ M orning Bessloa— * ' . \

10:00. "C h ild W elfare W o rk ," by .' Mrs. W . F . P iko, T w in Falls, County J

Chairman Child Welfare.10:30. “ Inereaslng ' Health ,St*nd-

nrda o f Young C h ildren,'’ b y 2£n. S . ‘ R. Bennett, U n ivers ity o f Idaho Bxton* slon D iria ion . j-

America Theatre A fternoon Seaslon— J

.2:00. “ Copveniencoa in the P a ro Homo, ’ ’ by Mra. J. M . Pierce, Berger.

2:30. ‘ ‘ M a k in g ’ the K itc h in E f f i - “ , c lout,” by Budolph W«av<5T. U lu s ^ t - I cd w ith lantern alldea; ^

TO T H B D 7SPBPTIC . °Would you not llko to foel tb a t your

ntoinodi troubles ore ovor, tbfkt you £ati oat any k in d -o f food tha t you oravef Consider thon tho fa c t tha t '(3 h ^b e r- lo in 's Tablets bavo cured others—why ^ not you t There aro maay who have been (restored to health by tak ing these tablets and can now «at any k ind o f food th a t they crave.—A d r. ®

---------—-------------------------nwas Ettid o ff. I t was w ith tho expee- ,c tatlo;^ th a t tho entire fund would bokept bitHy.thot F rank lin made hia estl- hmates o f what the to ta l would bo in a one hundred and two years.

F rank lin did not intend tho ontirofund to bo continued fo r loans n fto r “V1890. b u t- th a t in tha t year lOO,OO0 hpOtiiida he tunie<l ovor to tbo c ity o f «riiilnd i-lph io to ‘ |b riug the water* o f ii(lie WinnaUii-kou creek to tho c ity and 1fo r publl'c improvemen^ta, nurh;^s eqi;!^ }i M ucti, fo rtifica tionn , e t c . ? ^ " ' ],

In lfii)7, tho liftard e f c ity trOiits, dwliii-lt waa cuHtodian o f the F m nklln Sfund, turned o re r the money, about ti«133,0(Ki, to the F rankllug lo a titu t* , fo r liuao by tliu L itte r inn titu tion in its fund cito orrct memorial bu ild ing on tha b-now Philadelphia parkway .in memorr Tof F ranklin . g

If You Si

. .

T win F• .

T o d a yJ

B u y th e fo r a d a y jo in th e s

A N ew spj

T win F' T W

■ I ■■ ■ — — g e g B g ■ ■—

S DAILY NEWS

AUCTICW A L T E R 6

^F IU B B ,

PURE fiRiED STOCKBefore dating yonr sales, w rite , :

h o n ^ e f f ld e n i serrice,Satisfied patrons te s tify tb 'the-c!

. E . :0 . W A LTEE

kj- I

•' CONFERENCE NOTES |Jaraet^ W . Jonoa o f Salt Lake ,,sag tr

p la n t investigator fo r the department ^ o i agrieulture, is one o f tho moet in*'* tereated -attendants l i t the sessions o f

tho fa rm bureau and seed growers* a*- • aociatlon. M r. Jonea is sehedpled on

- Thursday afternoon a t the fa rm bnreaa ^ nMbting, to s ta rt a discnaslon on "ETog- “ ar fieets, tbo Crop and Prices fo r 191©.'’

i ‘ • The T h u rs ^ y ev.pnlng jo in t meeting ^ scheduled' to be held in the h igh sehool

nuditorium, w ill le.-.held Inatoad in the le v e r in g th o o t^ Mrs. M. J . Sweeley, president o f the state .federation o f women’s elabs and Dr. E. A . Bryan, state eqmmlakloner o f education, w ill

I*. speak on subjects in relatiba to . Ugher ' oducatioa *ln Idaho, aad H. 'V. PlattT

'* vice prenidont and general manager .^ f tho 6 . 8 . L . Ballway company, w il l ta lk ' on trnnsportation problems up-to-date.

John 0, Wooloy, head of tho agrl- I cu ltu ra l ongineering dopartmont* o f the

U n ivers ity o f Idaho, nt 2 o ’clock th lij afternoon w ill address a meeting ar- ranged by tho farm bureau women’s

^ deportment a t thQ, Ameriea thoatro on, hot and cold wot'er systems and acw- ttgo disposal fo r farm homes. Budotph Weaver, head o f the department o f

— archllocture n t the W whlngton state 0' .college, la te r in ihe a ^ m o o n a t-th e "5 ftsme m io ting w il l give an illnatrated i ' lecture on how to p lan-n comfortable

aad aeoaemleal house.

fO O, L. W aller, vice-president o f the Washlngtoa state collegb, who was lo have addressed the Idaho Irr ig a tio n

>f eoBgress th b afternoon on the “ Wash- ington W ater Code” , telegraphed on Monday tb a t he would bo una^e to be

(V- herc .at th a t.tin ie , and wfll. apeak * t . .* la to r seaaibn.- Ly ifrl Crnadiin', chief l iy -

s, drographer fo r the T w in ,F a lls North a Sldo Lead A W ater company, who waa i t to hnvo spoken' a t the jo in t meeting >r laat a igh t on the springs In Snake r ire r d canyon, b n t wbo was compelled to re- 10 t o n ye tterday.to Jerome; w ill take U r.7 W a lle r’s plaee oa the, ir r ig a to t ’a pr^^

g iv n th is afternoon. . "

u W a n t a News Subscribe fo r th

Fa l l s D a il ^. ■ ■/

s N ew s

i [^ a ily N ews on t l y Oi- tw o , then , i f yoi ; s te a d ily g ro w in g i

New s readersb ■

)aper—N ot e ------------

/

^ALLS D ailyW IN F A L L S , ID A H

io n e e ir :s S S H E A R E RJB, ID A H O ■

CK AND FARM SALE ,te, phoae or sm t i& ' We sestire 7 <m o f

le-character o f on f w O ^ ■>* •B ..L . SHSASl^ ' / ' . \

I K A H S B N M O TH BE V IB IT 8 _ _ OBZLDBSN A T U N1VBB8ITY

' K A N B E K —M r i E. B. 8 s lith , 'o f H u - ;- sea, who has. been spending. t ^ '> M t fe w weeks in Moscow, Idaho, aad Bpo-

■Bt k ia e and E lk , Washlngtoa, a rrived in* home Sunday. Sm ith le f t Haa-0^ sen on December 16 and sxwnt a few

dajni w ith her children, H oy t aad M ar- on jo rie , who are attending tho atate Uni-

vers ity a t Moscow,.and wss jo inAd by >9* thorn in a v is it to Mrs. 8 m ith ’* b io th - - " or, E a rl G r if f ith , a t Spokane. Hegrt u d

M arjorio roturaed from Spokane'to Mos- epw on January 5th where they w il l

>ol rem ain-fO itil the end o f tho school year he In Jnne. H o y t lias boen appointed to >7, the reserve o ffice rs tra in in g corps since o ' b is discbarge from th e fi. A . T. a in, • • » -

\ A Great V ictory. .v litSfflftinafltcrx-Is^nUncd b y i l t t le r io --.

^ t« r i5,g,i5 t - n time, n iid 'eve ry new vlc- ‘to ry tflros u» fresh strength fo r grcnt- e r victories In the fu tu re ."—Exchiingc.

e. __ ' _ ■ .

r l . Reduces O clf S tick Supply. . «ha .T l.;- Invunllun o f a go lf c1ul> w ith In* j j . turchnnBCHbi.? • liL-ndfl pcm iUs nil- the*

strdlVen It") be i.iade w ith ono s tick w ltb- out tlic n»H.vsalty' fo r carry ing BCVcmT,

on ■*’ " ' ' ■■ ■ — ,Pointed Statem ent

pj, “ Now, I f you- hnv** tlm t in your .m lud ," Knltl It profvsHur who bad Just oxpluJncd u t l ii 'o ry ' to his studuiitH, "you li;ivi* I t n il in u pcta ljc ll I"

ed : --------------------— ■ '>Io Judg ing by Appearance.

D on't Judge by nppcnrance. The mna who lookR like fl bnak president may

ie bo o fiim io r who hnt rots o f businesa ^0 w ith bnnkH.—KxchnnRp.bn • -------------- —ih- i t O OBBAT AOT OF H BBO I8 U on -BEQUIBBDbo I f some great aet o f heroism wtis neev,

easaryvto p ro tec t-a eh ild^from eroap, ly- pe' mother would healtato to protect ih heir o ffapring, bn t whon i t is on ly nec- ;as esaary to keep a t hand a bottle o f ng Chamberlain’s Cough Bemedy and g ire er i t as aoon oa tho f ira t indleatloa o f re- croup appears, there are maay'whe aeg- fr. lec t i t C ham b^Ia in ’s Cough Bemedy ro- is w ith lft the rcBch o f a ll aad is prompt ' '' and effeetoal,—Adv. - -

■ - i..'- • .

^ spaper ,

he

.Y N e w s

T o d a y

th e stree t ou lik e ,I t ,: a rm y o f

\

an O rgant , - -

■V. ^

Y N e w s 'HO

xriajoAT. jjuro»«r;i*. UM.

Page 7: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

BUSINGS DIRECTORY

o A y p ^ i n s s9»<! iJisortJoii, per lino .........•..._...... -lOuOne wcok, per line — -------------- 2ScOne' month por line ............... ......

P il'ONE -JZ

^ ''m A N S F E E c B o ^ a i £ S 5 a i S r c o 7 v h o n r ? S !

“ ' t o n d o w d i i B s *■WZRDOW OLAflS—Alao cftbinot w o ^

M(m & 8hop,'FbOno 21.

A U t O B E F ^ ^ I TAUTO EEPAIBS— Autos, ropalnid &t

W ornor’fl Novelty 8hdp.-'

A U O T IO N E B B S ^A U ^ r i o i ^ E - ^ £ * 8 . Branaon; aou- tioBocr. Stock or ranch solei a spa- c ia ltjr. 25 years oxpcriouco -aolling a t lancoln, NobraaJta. Now a t o ffico 137 N. Sbosbono. ,Phonoi'7J9 or 881. Tw io Falls. Idalio.

p iA N tf' P IAN O r t r a X ^ ^L o ja o

Muaic Co. : ^

a o K r^ A O T o iiO. J . 8TBVBNS—Qenero] contractor.

Proporty fo r salo. Phone 781B.

PROFESSIOHAL

t m n S in ^ASBEB B. WILBpB—Uw ror. T ' B o m ^ a : i i E c £ £ ^ ^ y i B o i i ^ a ^

55£SVi^SKFr5rTTr»ajr',a v / i i A B ^ K ~ ^ ^ * a e n U ' JU fou 6 7 Idaho P«w«r Bld<. i

rS e z rO H L o s g u a ^ U a ^ t by Mzb. T . ' W . Meech, ^ 5 S ix th N . Pkaa« 487. '

a W B H IS Y & SWBELBY" — ' ■ a t Lew. Practico is a ll Ooorts, Tw ia ' FaHa. Zdaho.^

E. j i w b i i i - i i w j t i . ' i i j O T . ' 5 i n J ' ' over Idaho Dopartment Store, Tw io ‘

Falls, Idoho.

J. H . V(JSB—Lawyer. F o lly orgaalted * Odleetion Departmoat Offieea, f Boobs 6 and 7 Over Tw in Baak ' 4b ^ a t Co., T w in Falla, Idaho. ^

1 aW o o t x ^ ^ " " -

W O LFEM D Eir « OSOOOD—Boom 8, Power Bldg. Telephone 201 aad fTff. ^

m o n n n i B " -

J. 0. P O E T B E ra iJ > -0 i» i l , H jd r» u - ! lie aad M in ing Engineer. Tw io Pali*, r Idahe. Pbone ■

" S t t O P E A O T iS i r ~ ~ h--------- ------------------------------------------- ;----- bD&; W TZ iT ‘8 OBIBOPBAOTIO BAN- b

IT A B IU M —AU forma o f 13eetrieity» - M ineral Y apo r’ and Electrie L ig h t Baths. 304 F if th Aye. E. T ^ 29«. rt

OF A i n r o ^ gSTOOEHOLDHfiS OP T B B IDAHO - STATE BANK,- TWIN P A IM , IDASO gNotice ia hereby g iren tha | the aar °

nnal meeting o f the atockholdew-of the Idaho State Bank w il l be held in the 'bank ing rooms o f aaid baak a t ^ Tw ia Falla, Idaho, oa Tuesday, Jaau- f, •XT 21, 1010, between the honra o f 10 a. Bl. and 3 p. m-, fo r the purpoae e f elaetlng a beard o f d irector* fo r tbe _ enauing year and fo r tho cOBaidar** tion o f aueh other boslneaa aa may T properiy come before the neetlng. m

TJ. A L IO , Qaahier. a<. . . ------------- ------------- ---------------D

NOTICB OF A lW U A I. HUUTIHU OF - ■ " m iA BEHOLPSBS OF THB TW IN ,

FALLS BUIU3XNO * LOAK A8SO- !*( h a t io n , t w b t f a l l b ^ id a h oNotice is h«hsby given tha t tbe an-

nnal mooting o f tbe ahareholdera o f tho Tw in FaUs B u ild ing ± Loan Aaaocia- t tioa w il l be held in the banking rooma o f tbe Idaho State Bonk a t Tw in Falla, fe Maho, on F riday evening, Janoary 17, pi 1010, botweoQ the hours p t 7 p. m. and th 9 p . m., fo r tho purjwse o f electing H

- throe directors fo r the ensuing year at aod fo r tho eo&ridoratlon'of caeh other — buainesa na mny properly eome before tho meeting.

CHAB. U. A LIO , SeereUry.__ _______ feB ooai s o o a t be

Taka yoor eggi to tha M atual Oroam* L. ery Oa aad get ca<h. me

D o m e s O F T H E V A N I

I . > / d a tH C .- rO JM A fto ir/ - tT '. NOT' O N U V Ift « W .

SMART *T»U- BW1t k'MDiaAS'ViVSO rHB. IPITZ

-n> m u s t i - MO ■ ■ t^lfSO.

KHt\Vi^ WHC l-ry*4e o s r t S R ^ T ^

1 n.

w i l i

■ J i

TUBSDAT, jiuitrimr «, m». ^

1 C L A S S I F I E D4 ADVEItTISEMENTS_ ' OLABB lPniD E A T E ^'loJ One inaertlon, per w o iil __ _ .„.... 8a2Sc One w<iok ( lU l l r and W eekly):___ lOo iT ic Ono month (D ally and Weekly) _2Bo

Mlnlmam diiLrgft fo r 'oach insextloa >— o f any claaslflod ad, 16 centa. Ada. <

must nm fot^ a atated period o f tlma. '

; g : . ■ ' Fop Sale

— - FOR 8A LE —Two room houso, Phone ,»rk. 084J. ]

— FO B SALE— Nearly new incubator. * Phono 084J. . ' ^

» t TOB S A L B -B a le d atraw^ 80e per ba l* ■ a t Masson A Hardera. '

FOR SALE—PiiML young team. Ad* —— JrMs “ A. B . , " care'News. ^

pe- ~ A U T O FOR SALB-Choap, almost ■ a t new. Farmer's Blacksmith Shop. ’

FOB SALE—Onlona a t the Anchor Hay, Grain & Feed Oo. Telephone 23. |

FOU HALE OR TRADE—Four-room • houHO ncor 'h igh school. E. A . Moon

ran (owner). *

_ SEED B A B L E T ;? 0 E ■SALE—1000 - buahelfl n t $3.00 per e w f i f sold a t once,

or. Tel esa-'W, ' ^»-* 1

__ POR SA LB —Bound-ieed baby eab, '^ gondola, style, practically-new: Phono

2M -J.- ' * ‘

FOB BALB—P rta k ll^ tn x la g w , V jua t ovarhaoled aad rabettt. ^ m a . ~

^ 'A rthur L . S w Ib l ^

FO E SALE—F irs t c lan f l r t f , ' aecond ^ ^ and th lM cu tting hay, dellTend, #14. - , T ^p b0 ft» ,6« l-W .- V.' "

FO B S A L B - U w n a e iM k h^Umm - U nd aear n g a r faatavjr a t |S t. par -

^ aert. A ith w L . - # ^ ^

5®- T T P H W B rrE B S — Bebullt _r* any mako, fo r aale or re a t See H ootot ^ at BualneM College.

'7- ~ f 6 b b a l e OUEAT—H ljh p a d . p i- ® ^ ono, also 1915 Ford. Both ia aplejidld (J condition. .726.a Maia. ' £-

FOB SALB—Sevea patMngar P a lfo ~ ^ car; w i l l trade fo r small ear. Ewralre iv [J a t Tw in F a ll i Aoto Oo. - • '■ c«

‘ ~ F 0 B S A li» -P ia e Eaatlawn reaidonee ” JJ lo t ihoop. P. B. Thompson, 403 Sixth f t

avenue' eaat. Phone 614.W. ' Q-,

FOB SALE—Fonr horses and hanwaa ~ or w il l trade .fo r Ford touring ear o r to

“ * tn iek. 240 Sixth ave. W. ' p.

^ FOB SALE—Honaehold'‘ faniltQ r« o f g best qu id ity. Inquire a t Model Bho« pi _ ator* aftemooaa a fte r '8:80. B . H . Snehr, ab

POE SALE—4iroom modem, h o i ^ 1500 down, balance easy tam a. In - al quire at 331 Blue L^kes blvd. F . B . at’ Bam hilL “

- FOE 6A LE CHEAP—Oood work ” horse, buggy and' harness. W. T . * t

— bart, a t end o f aide walk, east oa E lm - aU r- berly road,-phone 77BJ. B.

t FOB SALE—N o . P « ltb .n k . S-to, ~ S. registering beam wagon scale, including r» .. tim ber frame, aevAr weighed over, bar. Dl p. gain. Adams Produce c o m p ly . J.

? “ ■ j o i " a S 5 ^ ^ i M o 7 T i ^ ; s i ; n ; 5 5 f ;garage; h a lf bloek from Shoshone on » Sevontb' east. Inoulre J . A . Steele, a t

^ Perrine hotel.

^ .^^R S A LE —L o t 32 block 71, choie- a t ^ eat hotel aita .Ia tbe c ity |. one block — ^ front bualnoss center. Only bonafidn ® bids connldercd. AddrosvP. 0 . bor ,S28, po:

c ity. ' onB - - y ml^ FOR SALE— Lot 2, Snyder Traet, __r Tw in Folia, fiv o acrcs; good improve-

meotsj $4,500, cash »3,300.', Alao 160 ~ acre* d ry 'la n d near HoUUler. J . Q.

. H arris , Buhl, Idaho, Boute 5.

J k > B B A L E ^ ^ s im ^ l iv k U p t o 4 ^ —^ is oor buaineaa. ^'Prom pt re ts n u and- hlRb^nt prices” is onr bobby. Le t na _ convince you. Tho Northweatem Brok- ^ erage Co., Idaho Power Building. Phone

- .____________________■ ?'»» FOB chlckeo feed, dairy -feed, horse — 1 feed, hog feed, baled hay, etc., tele-» phone 2.1. Delivered anywhere w ith in — 1 the c ity lim its freo o f charge. Anchor 1 I Hay, Grain 4 Feed Co.. 2 4 9 ^9 Sixth — r ave. W. . 1t ------------------------------------------------------------- ' A t, FOE SALE— 10 acres, :» miles south- ___

oast Jeromo; 30 acrcs a lfa lfa , balance 1 stubblo. No bulldinga, 6 f t . woven wire Fa!

. fenee. Price 914S.00 per acre i f sold usu beforo Fob. Ist.'^ For particulars ace S.

■ L . nugfaell, 1 mile northweat Eacr>'- > more. . o f

r L O P N S

A v v c u i. , c ^ - r ' ] w . \ 1 -r>i*HK o»s /-THeB wr • \ \'a«M e wXvm S N O J ) \ OVT 01^ lW . T ^

------ 1 \ Vot/ vow A /ia . ^-rRo»./8t£ «« c ta iv c f t . / -r>«

IA T H .^ T Y “ ~ Y ^ “ ■ I T > t- T W i p w - t u v IS. ^

T>*«a. I —k IS so hmjCM\ y^ooM JH -THU / A H B n wM ylB • fctf / ^

— J . S O B B A ia , > .

.. POE SALE—Eang(| Eternal, nearly new. Bound Oak heatu, household fu r ­niture. Call 409 Fourth, avo.*W.'

FOR SAIjE—Choico Burred • Eock — * Cockerels, »1.60 ond *2.00 Misa F io r-j

onco O iffo rd , F iler, I<Who, ona-half mile ' 8fl north o f F ile r on etato hlfjh^Vny. j

a jfl f o e SAL13—2-iO acros ono west too and ono and ono-holf south oX. Jerome; i Ule h igh ly improved. For descriptloil ad-J

drc'fls S. S. Shaw o r.G . M . Boblnaon,' owners, Jerome, Idaho.

~ FOE solo or trade—E quity in SO acres on tho Sovior'E ivcr ia Utah, about

■ne one mile from Lyndyl on tho main Hue • • E. Utah, to California. W ill trade

“ fo r anything on any b f tho Tw in Falls ■ trilcts. E. B. W illiam s Box 82, Tw in

^ PoUs, Ida., or ph'ono 390. .- r i , “

FOR RENT—Housokeoping roomi, furnished.- 0.17 Third Wost. "

, FOn RENT—Furnlslied nice modeni room. furnao«- hont .Phono 125M.

~ ' iiO USE FOB BEN T—Suitablo f o r ^ gjl couple; low ront. 252 Seoond'avenuo __I north.

o™ FOR EEN T—Room' furnished fo r lig h t housokeoping, 042 Second ave. E.

__ Inqu ire 052 Socond avo; E.

^ POB B B N l^ M o d e rn bungalow on ' Addlaon ave. Two blocks from Wash- t ignton school. Inquire pbohe 400.

‘I’ ' To a * < T ^ L e t^ ' a d rS ^ jt i l in g e a o p«a^ yoa &«ed only M t acida <

_ - f o r p e ^ p a a few day*—a Ja rt o f j-Qur pocket nuawy.

“ ■ FOB BENT— Largo bnalBeBa room on ^ M a in avenne to leaao; w e ll loeatod. ’ id OaU a t .once o r w rita Parka * Houck, ‘ ;4. 228 Shoabone St. So., -Twin Falla. '

“ ™ ~ ! “ ^ W A N lT O > ^ e a n > B ^ . News Of- c

- W ^ T ^ lw a B h la g to do a t home" ^ J Phoaa 778-W. *

W ANTED—Young Jersey fresh pbon. _ E. 0 . care Newa... * "

Id W AN TED — Draasmaking, sewing.' 252 SecoDd ave. N . li

POSITION W A N T E IW B y thorough- q re ly competent chauffour.'*^ Cres B o tty , n,

' care News.

:o ALW A'ES in the market fo r baled al ;h fa lfa . Get onr prices. Anchor Hay, '

G r a i n A I ^ C o .

■a W ANTED—Would give good homo ^ to one o r more cbU^ren, country home. ^ P ..0 . Box 800. . J

2 W ANTED—l,fiOO aham fo r aommer a i« pasture. P lenty o f feed, water and n t , shade. Ed Terpstra, Bogeraon. J

^ w a n t e d " TO " b e n t —T wo onfar^ “ i. nlahed rooms fo r l ig h t . housekMping,E. stbam or furnace heat, conveniences.

“ V C " care ^ w s .

k W ANTED—H o n a e k e ^ th a t w ff l o;> appreciato good home; muat be respos* oi I- aible p « r ^ ; good wagea Addresa Q. ■>

B.,*'care -of Newa. >d

I W A N TED feiA ll kinds olorar a e « l- U t red, alaike, w h ite ,. sweet. The A lbe rt w'• DlcklnsoA Co., Chicago. Local buyers, u

J. A. Stoelo, Perrine Hotel or B. «- c p Bpafford. Phono lOQ. pi

; ^ l o b t :LOST—On" Main" "a tree t* 'satorday

_ afternoon, agate lavalliere. Ptader eaU- a t Paeifle Hotel aad receive reward.

> LOST—Account book containing pa' ® pers ond $300 note and occounts. L ib ­

eral reward. B e tum to ifa je s tic H ia r-: macy or phona 138. Ed A. M innerly.

______________________- _______ , , b- STRAYED S T B A Y E I^ 2 dark boy mares, 8 years

' old, 1 dark boy gelding. Pbone 540 hi . B 3; or w rite Box 3.’>, Boute 2. al

J STBAYED— About mlddlo o f Docem- I ber, from two m ilosu io ftheast'o f M il-

nor, brown horse,, sta r in tforehefcuJ, blazed noHf, shod forward, weight 1450.F. W. Deming, 018 Seventh ave.' E „ “

. Tw in Falls.I ------ ----------—■............. .............. .. ..................

; _________ __F A B M LOANS. A. L . Swim.

-------------------------------------------------------------ahF A B M LO ANS on favorable terma.

,' A rtbo r L . Swim.

MONEY TO LO A N ca good Tw ia : FaUa c ity property a t a lower rate than <’* , usuaL A rtb o r Lc flw ia i. ^

_--------------------------------------------------- 111Advertise i t lo tbe Classified column*

o f The News. Bomobody w ill waoc I i .

< H ow I ‘ ^ "T H S . fUHJMS - J l * z ; ; ; ^ f I

Vey ^o*>mT X /^- \ ow -r o rv«> >SMft Fwa-mMO \ B iT H « F-r>*G.'t Ho*r ^ —-r m tn o ; ca.h i } j

• J D / [ 7 :1T ( I

x- X : T*WIN FALLS ]P(Jd HD

rly FOUND— 14-incb Jobn Deere plow lir- shnro. Apply Di>lto-Llght o ffice. Twin

• Falls.

' M iB ce lla io ou s •" j i '^ r Q J » , LOOK, L ISTEN —B ig donee

I l i t l-'iler Roof Gordon Friday -night,. 'January 10.—Adv.

)St ---------- ------------------ ------ -------- / - . .... —n n i in s o w s a i .k , t w i n f a l l s , ' '

a'I .Ijuiim rv 10. State Swine B rctiliu ;*' as- • “ ■Jjotlatlo...— Adv. T I

WHO marks' cattlo 2 splits in ono ,— car, ono in other, U reversed on rlbsT ,

Box S3, Murtaugb.

HO W IL L , tho party^ stealing^ the seota , do out o f my car please roturn same to ' Ils Nows o ffic e ! L . B. 8.in ,, —__ _

L E T US ship your w heat CaU us up ] nnd get our proposition beforo you soil.' The Northwestern Brokorago Co., . phone 331. ' ■

' ' .MONEY: ^ A N T ip —Wo havn loaor— fo r private monev as follows: 12500 ul

U) acroB. *1230 ou L‘0 nc rc . 5 vcors ai^ '5 {>or ci-nt, f irs t mortgage; also MOO oa Q 2' corner lots and bu lld lu g .o t 10 per i

real, valuation 40 to 50 per cent. Cali 1 or w rii« Ripley' * Timm, tho Beal*#' J

_ totors, F iler, Idaho. " 1

n r ro S T ^ B S ATTE N TIO N !, I havo fo r salo, in tho best town In

_ Idnho, several business properties. >n Thoao properties oro a ll undor long h- time lease a t o figure tho t w ill rotum <

10 per cent not on the invoatment.' In w addition, they possess splendid specu- £ *• Intivo possibllitlea. Call upon, or write, C

Chaa. H . McQuown, Euhl, Idaho.w _____________________:_________________ t

SEBP OOBH - (.Have several bushels o f selected SU-

J, ver K in g seed corn tho t t t aocUinated C If to th is conntry. I t ' Is not Pettigreed V ' but is a good yielder and never baa faU-

^ ed to mature fo r me. I t ttade better than 1' 50 bushels per acr^ lost year tinder nn- I ’ favorakle copdltion. A aample b f tbe T corn can be seen iX The "Newa offiee. W ill book orders fo r AprU deUvery a t

~ 7 1*2 coot* per pound, by parcel poet ’ add postaga. Ed Vsace.—advt.

■ i r o n t o i | ^ c(. To a ll ownom and drivers o f motor A, vebitlcs; ic'. You are‘hereby no tified tha t all°1918 oi

IlcoDses have expired and the 1910 11- t{— censes aro'now duo and payable a t the• o ffice o f the county neaessor. Pl.case'* nail and ^ k e application fo r same. s

GEO. W . W ILCOX,Connty Aaseasor. e<

. ■ M B E riijo o r s io b ra o jiD E B i ®The adjourned mooting o f Stockbold-

~ era o f tho Tw in FollavAthlOtle osaocia- " , tion w il l tako place i ^ tho E lk HaU, ^

January 22, 8:80 p. o l, fo r the pur- . pose o f electing a boord o f directora r and tho transaction o f such other boal* ' 1 ness on may come boforo the tooetlng.- -r

Jan. 2 2 ,1919 \ M. J. M ACATILEY, “ ------Adv. Socrotar/. “

> t h e BEST COUOH M ED IO IN B.When a druggist flode that, hla cns-

. tomers a ll speak well o f a certain prep- v 1 oration, he forms a good opinion o f i t• and when in need o f aueh a medicine. is almost certain to use i t h im self aad .

In bis fam ily . This is why so many . druggists' uso ond recommend Chamber- .’ lo in 's Coogh Bemedy. J . B . Jones, a• woll known d ru ^ ia t o f Cubrun, Ey.,• says, “ I >hove ■ used Chomborlain's . Couf'h Remedy in my fomUy fo r the

post sev^n yeora, ond hove found i t to• bo tho boat cough mediclno I hoyo aver ol

known.” — Adv. I*;’ . • ■■ '

‘ OptJmlatIo Idea.Nothing la ao uncvrtnln us ibu miods

; c f the mbble. . ■ .•

; « For Meditation. •A ll fTcat reforms a ro . bosed od

broad, gcnerotis priodples.

, .Question o f Price. .••You «ay UicreV u ' ; r i w «u lic r x\,

head?" " I Rhould «oy bo. T lm t bnt ahp> got cn must hnve co«t*?»0.''

—----- hoRemovable Rubber Heel. in

A riililHT lie*-! liuM Ijfon lavontod thn^ pn can l)t> sil].|)t.d tiv iT tlic b li;lt licul of jg a woinu ''.H hIhh'.

------------------------------ ■ . toVlL-lrt-u nn

y ir,t.‘*v :iro it;!tlvc« fi« r--ir!.v r’ ll tj, InniN iii.il thrive vorj- c i-n cn lly rvp i^- wbori*. ll»- m -n tiT numh«r Ju tin* shod**. i>ui sonie In tlie huu.

Snares In Credit P la n .' ^H'm jila ti t</ J’:Tt oa.sli. TJlO

\vi-,.i in .ii;:i.i- l l i r y u n -;:itt lU K * MiiD.-i'ili.u f. r i.oilil:.^ ' K''"-f'r:>lly pny ilo ii'ilc .—I'J illiK ji l; Jiia ltr« )rd . •'

Snbacribe aow fo r the NEWS. i \______________________ ___ ______________ '

< 0 Z N O ~ a Z T ~ w i^

■ y W

S T H E F(6l L

j™ SECTION ONE jThi’ follou’hij; caxuiiUios aro roport-

i^ 'C d by tln ' i'otiimujidliiK noimral of- tlii' AiiiL>ru-au i-xjioditiouary fort'oii: K illm l 111 action- 5(1,' <lioil frcn» wounds 71,

— <!iiMl o f aculdcnt nnd o,ther caiiAos I'J, lao ilioil in uo.co{da.»o avt-.idcnl il, died ^rom 3bT .Hhooso 17, woimdod novcroly 143,

wiiiindcil (Ic'Kroo undetormined 10, woiuidud sliKhtly iniRslng in action, 29, to ta l 339.

ID AH O CASUALTIES '— KlUed In ’ Actloo—p r t . Glena W.

Eones, Menan.'OU i>iod o f Accident and Other Causea <0., —Ideut. Donald B . Broxbn, Boise; Sgt.

James 0. A lco tt, Kamlah.Wounded S eve re ly -P v t. Farley, Par-

ULWEBTBBN L IS T

oa BLiUed la A ction . 't)sr *>({«•- Marry A. (5roiu>, tipokano, Wnidi. all I'v t. A ll){'rt I.. IJonhani, Ta ft, Col. • as‘ i ’vt. .lolm (i. Oariclio, tieuttlu, Wash.

I'v t. .Morton K. FoHtor, Dunlnp.'Cal.— I ’vt. Robert l i Henry, Lafayette, Oro.

Died from A£cldont and Other Causesea. I 'vL Goorgn M. a ilvo r. Salt liako, Utah ng Died o f Dlsoasen i Corp. Ivo r Hurke, Corfu. Wash.In Wounded BevwelylU- 6gt. Kvurott E. Ford, Oakland, Cftl. to, Corp. Je ffery Oross, San Francisco,

Cal. . . ._ Corp. Edward Harris, Ashley, Mont.

Cprp. Clyde R. Hogarty, Knowlton, U- Mont.od Corp. Rodney I). Murdui'k, t'rcsno, Cal. »d Wagoner P ietro Spinntfrdi, Merced, Cal. - U- Mlaalpg in Actionin }>vt. A lfred T . Eobsoo, Obispo, Cal. , n- Pvt. Bobert Thompson, Obispo, Cal. lie Pvt. Lawrence Zeelcr,'Acondino, Cal. j a. 0 0 0 I

S SECTION TWO JThe follow ing raauattlcs are report­

ed by tho commanding gonoral o f the i r American expeditionary forces: KiUed 1

in ouUoo 02, died o f diat^abo 82, wound- 18 od severely 240, missing in action 20, I 1- total 413. 1le ID A H O O AS U A LT IIU>e K ille d , in Action—P vt. Olocence M-

Barber, Bexhorg. IS llla d in Action. Previously Beport-

r. e<i U isd u g In ActiOD—P r t J9hn T. ^ ' ' Olagg, Dnbola.J, Wounded S eve re ly -P v t. Poriey O. I

r, B N O n rH B lis A IR V IE W S ON Ir- COST OP S LB O TB IC R Y•s '■ —i. ' •(Contlnoed fro m Page 6)

i t in many instances would provo more j costly than the waste. Development o f

.* small power sites is uneconomical aad « tbe converting o f smaU power sites in to big ones ia very expensive. I t has beon proven in cosos where large ateam , plants cun bo used'as in Salt Lake, - Portland, Chicago and other citlee, tha t

^ oIoctHcity can bo produced c h e i^ r from steam than from water power. I t la legitim ate tha t water power ahoold ‘ bo developed, bu t a t proaont electrical engineers don ^ know . .how to db t t ' ceonomically." , ' . ' I

Q Shcnra Dangerous''Alternative 0 In Bup]>ort o f bln .claim io r aup]>ort r of till! Luiic- roclamatloa b ill, Retiring

I ’rcHidont Cotton declared: ' j“ Those who wotild acrnple abotit'

g higher covt tEan may prevail whan normal- condltiOBS az^ here m twt , f a t t the . t fx more abriooe altezn^: \ tive o f qpelling .the dlatarbanp» ,

Q ' tha t is lnav itkb l» U ^tha i^ 'li^S rtd*^ spread oneoplOTmest*’

AchloTsmeots And D oty oilo pointed to tho eantonffietaa, na- ^

I'loaal army camps, avia tion fie lds, fae- . torlcs, shipyards, and ships in our own country as 'w e ll aa docks, ports ware­houses, rallroada and railway term isals > in Franco aa moooments atosting to the- -

^ part plaS'od by tlje American,engineer iti tho causo o f democracy, and argued

further that " I t ifi.now up to a ll o f ns to 'llvo up fo our res]>ona!blllty; wo most not lenve tho world helpless to 'res is t tho commercial domination o f tho Ger­mans w ith tho support o f Russian ma­te r ia l."

• To ‘ .‘ f in a n c e " a “ To L e t” adver- tlalng campaign yon need oaly aet adds

, —fo r perhapa a few days—a ja r t c f ; yoor pocket monsy.

.Claaaided Ada are ehaa|k—effeetlva.

Subscribe now fo r the NEWS. ..

r"'• M o th e r s o m e t l in e

( t r i r i TH& •v j t h \

. OF H O N O R jiB iioldor, Bom ; P v t S t Elsib PolUi Ooodlog.

' W ESTEBN L IS T }I, KlUed ia AcUon ‘ ■}; I ’ vt. Christian Brudwlck, Soattl« r l Wash. . ; . ,/

’ I ’vt. Itoy Knapp^ Siiluoy, Mont. \Pvt. W alter F. .McDonald^ ' Windsor

™ C IO .' I ’ vt. Chnrli's L . Monotroy, Siin Francis

cro, Cal. iPvt. IIuRh ft. W illiam s,' Rochestor

Wosh.Died o f Dlseaae *■

W. Pvt. I-:dgnr l i Pcartf, Spokane, Wash.Wounded Severely

sea P vt. Cbailos IL Barton, Monroe, Waab g t P vt. Lukas D lm lck, Bed Lodge, Mont

P v t Angoto Fanellj, San Joae, CoL < or- Pvt. M ark Jerko, Onklond, Cal.

Pvt. O r i/ f ith Joaca, Oregon C ity; Die Pvt. Fred U K Intt, Denver, Colo.-

\ Pvt. I'o tor Lnrttoii, Havre, M o n t 1,*. I ’vl. KiirJ Cartor, San Fmnclseo, CaL’

i ’vt. O.Hi-ar <-V Howltt, Jloaldsburp, Oal Pvt. Calvin II". Haro, Deuel, N. .\T.Pvt. H arry A. Hedbbrg, l la r tv illo , Wyo

ro. P v t JOHO Uvyva, Tucson, Aria, jg j ip v t . Floy.l n . Mi-IOIroy, Los AnKolea

P v t Odui J. .Johnson, Enumclaw, Waah Pvt. Poter O'. A. Nelson, San Francis

co, Col.P vt. E a rl E. Rood, Spokauo, Wash.P v t Kenneth A. M itchell, Kelso, Weah

=®' P v t Lylo Myers, Columbia Falls, Mont Pvt. Oscar F. i ’attorson, Randolphj

Mont. ■P v t H arry P .'s ta rk , C arnithers,’Cal.

In Action“I* P v t Nathan Pasllma, Los Angeles, Cal

KlUed ini Action, P rev loos lr Beportwl M lM l^ In A ction

('or|i. Paul I«. Btowart, F o rt X^lllns, Colo.

'• P vt. Pierre Borbe.'San Mateo, Cal.P v t/ Olnoppi Holla, -Oakland, Cal.P v t W alter C. Orane, Alleghney, Ore. P v t Claytpn T . Dotoher, Los Angeles,

t- Cal.,e P v t-H e rb a rt P. Frey, Denver,-Colo.,a P v t Sllen Gorcia, Gobomader, N . M . . d. P v t George Qoat, Beattie, W aih.0, P v t F ra n k lA tobert, Long Beach, Oal.

P vt. David M. Stonbridge,- Eeckyford, Oolo.

4, P v t H arry F j Vino, Dayton, Wyo.Dlod, Previonaly Beported in

t- Actlpnf . P v t. Fernando Presquoz, Ohamlsal, N.

M.P vt. Louis Montoyo, Dol Norte,'Colo.

B E A L bS TA TB TBAMSFBBS 7 I K T W IN P A £ U OOUNTT

Monday, Jannary IS- P. S. West and w ifo , Tw in FaUa, to ™ Forrest M. W ick, Tw in Palls, B% lo t

3, block J, Ashton addition, T w in Falls," « o o ::® Wm. C. Sawyers and w ife , Tw ia " Falls, to A. B. Jared, Tw in .Falls, lo t

11, bloek 2 ,- ^ u th Park a ild ltion, Tw in [J Polls, » i,lo o ; . ■jr D. K. Frost and w ife . T w in ^ l a , to I t n . C. H aie l, Tw in Falla, l o t - I , ee*- la tion 19, twp. 10, range 17, .1. i l F ile r Townalte Company to K atie K ;I t NaAeulaa, F U e r , . le t8 13, 14 and 18,

block 0, F ila r , . . i |S ^ ’IWW, to A. M. Pnlle^,

B u b l , - ^ N % B « J c t io n :i, twp. 10,“ range 14, ♦24,000.

W. L .-B row n and w ife , WeadeU, to L illia n B. Anderson, N % 8 E H , aeetion 37, twpi.-10, range 15, *3,800..

Get aome IN P O B M A TIO N aboat 1»^ w hat i t w m eo*t» wher* i t n a ^ ba bonght to beat advantage—throo|& reading t ha ada. - ' :

- Advertise i t in the Claaalfied eolomaii o f The Newa. Somebody wiU want i t i

I- ■ - - ' ■ _-g--------- • ~ '.'8

y An Opportunityir ; " ~

^ .fo r ambitioufl yoong farm er to ' t own U s own raaeh. 80 aerea one t pUe from good m arket on M ilner ..

segregation; one-half in a lfa lfa . ’'* $1,000 cash payment, bolooee I n .

• twenty yearly paymonta.■.e . .Beil •

! SIVIITH &mLL1ST Shoshone S t Booth I

. 1 .. v - ■ ■. y y . v ~:— "*

BBS haa aa. Idea beraell I

J

IE '

J--------------------------

.. JxAaa-nvilB

Page 8: T THE LAVER E TONIGHT ^ I T W irN FAlLLS D A llLY NlEW Snewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/TWIN...s proprintion pf *50,000, tho first bridge I- biU of the BOBSIon waa iatrodueod

piESEfiyES f pOITOSEmE =|v SflVETfilOIS?■ j i • f i l l

■eneral Strike Called Off Sat- ■ iirday arid Shops Opon— Po- K litical Disturbances Make : K ' Public Nervous

mLSHEVIKliADERS ARE K p laced under ARREST tH.

• an(Hklleged Soviet Secre tary Sajrs ooii f t O ouected VTith a P a rty of H F orty-S ossian W orkers and iliR< la N o t a M axim alis t 'K ______ ' repR | ' ' By JAM ES I. M IL L E B f j j■ 'B 0 E K O S A IB E S , Jan. 14.— ProBident <-la: B p igoycn *a netlun in r& lliu i; tho m ilita ry iou W o«8 o f 1807 to the colors and asking ing Bbngresg to .docfarb 'a atato o f aiego hcc n a s rct^oriU'il in iioinu quartom today 1 H p a uiovo to forvntall a ponsiblo aati* dnj I p d ie a l n vo lu tlon . a tI t The A rjo n tln o oxecutivo oloctod .by »»cr B b c wotkeia has incarroil tho conBtaiit* nio m jr Sncrcaainff enm ity o f the conBcrva* 1 n v o element th ro u ^ o u t tbo couatry. twt K h i f l oppotition haa been fanned by I r f . yoa p io y e n V aetioa in practica lly tak ing o f U ^ 'c r.the g o v e i^ o n t mochinory ia some tic ;

f ,the provincoa. Argontine lawa per- non lita tbo president, wben d iaa tlsfied ly i i t h a f/a irn in tho provinces, to inter* era one and diaplare the governor' w ith aon la own nppointoe. Tho rocont elections tho I aome o f tho provinces went against tlic IB radicals. Irigoyon intorvoned in or^oba, Tneuman, Corrientesi >Iendo- g ^ .Salta and Entrerios, whore his po- thai tleal- opponeata were tho stroagttst \^y h ia served to eryatalHM anU-radleal ,]eQ tntim ent against him.

Ttoopfl UudeQoate ' gov Wbeti Irlgoyen 'a lateat move became "

Bownj I t was fe lt tha t hia purpose was a‘a, eeper than a eountor-m«ve against ra tinuatlon e f the s trike d l^u rb a a . l*b (

i^ o d a y th is fooliag had d ^s loped h ito a be lie f th a t the adm lnistratioo fa ir Btually foresee# tho posalbllity o f a i» »volationai7 raoTement. 'V

I Oeneral D e ll^ ia n e , who Bssuraod m il. “ A i taxy «09iro l o t the c ity when; the (ton. rum

«1 s trike was a t ita height, adm itted j t i r f e the TTnited ^ o a s that there wore not pongK troops In Buenos Airea to cops 8i I th the strikers. Tt is reasonable to j fac t

^ ■ ■ ■

A com p le t * E le c - - , ■ trac L ig h t . and

> p o w e r p la n t - f o r ^ F a rm s an d S u b u r-

• ban Homes— S e lf C ra n k in g — A i r ' Cooled, B a l l bea r-

. in g s— N o B e lts — T h ic k P la te L o n g - L iv e d B a tte ry .

R U N S O N K E R O S E N E

DE.MO]

A*-- ___ _

asatmio thnt tho same would apply to hit u rcvblation. . - Hu

TransporUtloa T ie U p I t wna loarnod-from an o ffic ia l source

toilay thn t tht* federation o f ra ilw ay ’ “ ! workers ia a voted to call a a trike im- modiotel>’, t.vliig up tho ontiro ra ilw ay iiyHtem o f - ^ io country. Thia would {ilarc t)w govornment as such a disad* vnntngi* thn t i f tho anti-radicals real- ly I'ontoniplatn ft revolution, i t wonld “ “ fiirnlKh them an uniianally opportupo * ' moment to atrike. .This wonld be re- P®‘ flocto.l particu larly in tho d if f ic u lty w ith which tho govemmont troopa could ho movod. J f

Kfean^hilo labor troubles were ro- ])ortod to be..sproading throughout the j»r«vUu-oi*. Tho Htecl- ra il w o ik c n in tho northern part o f tho country woro JU wiid to have walked 'out. In Buenos T AircM the rontra l police sta tion was / ‘* under attack practica lly a ll yeaterday and last n ight. R a ilw ty workers be* aoigcil the station during tho day.

Leader In ju red Thoy were routed liy mnchinc guns

i l l the evening. Then the port strik* ora took up the fig h t, but also were repulsed.' - • - g ji,

Pedro W ald, president o f tho / 'A r - gentino B o v ie tH e p u b lip ,'’ waa o ffi- c ia lly reported today to havo boen sor- iou fly in jured in the atrugglo proceed. ing hU capture. Ilia sweetheart haa been airested. as a suspect.

ProBiilent Irigoyon wna .reported to- .] dny to have asked congress to declare a Ktato o f aeigo and c if l l.o u t the ro- Q„g| serves o f tho class o f 18f»7 ju H t de- , moblUzod.

Thoro waa Kpaflniodi(‘ f ig h tin g be- twoea demonstrafoni and poHoe Iato f j j j , yesterday and during tbo toarly hours ,o f tho night. The numbur o f caaual- tics could not be learned. W hllo oco. nomic cautros fo r diaturbanco apparent- ly coaHcd w ith calling o f f o f -tin' gen- cral Htriko' Saturday, tho po litica l rea* 5,, aona obviously continued. -Moat of tho ^hops nnd stores Imve reopened, but —j., the pulilic is fra n k ly nervous.

* Denlea P lo t Otiarges u pSergy Suslow, alleged .secretary o f

tha t “ Argoiitino S o v ie t," interviewed by tho United Press in his ja i l cell, denied tha t he was involved in a Boi- ahevik plot, to ovorthrow Argentine ■ government.

" I was, born and educated in Bur^ s ia ,” Suatow said. ‘ ' I came to Buonoa ^ A ires In 1003. I am seeretaiy* o f a labor society composed o f fo r ty Bna* aiaa w ok«ra. - I am not • M axim alist.I have so knowlodge o f Bussian a f- ‘ cle, faira. I know Wald. Hia correct name ' is V a l^ c o s k y ." son-

Wald is alleged to president o f the chic ‘ Argentine Soviet R epub lic ." I t ia sold

rumored th'at ho dlod in j ^ l from in - jiin'ea received while raalsting arrest. Ti

A g lta to n Leave t ia liSnslow waa unable to reconcile thtf — fc

fact, tha t his society was supposed to you

1 ELECT!E

ID elco-L ight has ca rried the coi I t has proved th a t eleotrio lig h t D e loo-L ight is accom plishing t l I t is a good in v e i^ e n t becans D e lco-L ight is a Complete Elec I t fi^n ish e s pow er to operate t

"sepa ra to r o r tum ble the ohm I t supplies b righ t, clean, safe el o f o ld 'f&shioned ^ m p s and lax D e lco-L ight runs on Kerosene,

lig h t and power.

L ' . ” ' T,

^ ------------------1 ---------------

►NSTRAT]• SE,c6ND STREE

O V E R S IX !

) hn\^' o ifly fo r ty meinben*,' while 140 I liuHHianH had already been takon in to 1 custody. He admitted h a ring formed I

, the acquaintanco o f two po litica l agi. I , talora alnco Iho 'arjn lstlco. One, he \ said, had gono'to Chile, the othor to the - ! United States.I ' Suslow spoke very lit t lo Spanish. He ; wttM reticent In the prcscnce 'o f a- po-

Hec, offlcSal (hut'-»i><fko freely when alono w ith the corrospondent. Asked • about the report*^ death o f W ald, tho police said ho had been removed to another ja il. * ^

I r r ig a to rs F avorNew W ater Bureau

IHsoussionB'at Opening SessioQ .. /*S h q w Sentim ent in Snpport th

o f Proposed L a w ' “----- at

Thu Idaho Irriga tion congreaA, con- ot venlng hero th is morning fo r throe daya tj, Mcsslons in conjunction w ith th e 'jo in t- wi In s tltu t cot Idaho agricu ltu ra l, live- gf atoek, eugtncerlng nnd livcatock soei- etiea, undqubtoilly -w ill go on record before _ ndjournment In fn^•or o f pro- qJ puNe<l leglalntion nt the present aes- slon o f tho^tR to IcRi«ljvt«rc' fo r a crea- pi tion of^a, bureau of- water rights fo r f^ the adm lnlstrationc.nf tlic waters o f ««. tho state. . _ ' of

THe diacu'aslona a t th is m orning’s jq BOasioHK. while confined to the~Unic nsaigiie<I, were gormaln to tho m a tttr ^ o f the proposed change. Follow ing the address o f fres ldon t B. E. Shepherd Jq o f .ferotne on tho "P resen t Irr ip ^ tlo n j, j S ituation in I< laho," in -which the change was warm ly advocated, J, B. <«' Truo, .^Vyoming atato engineer, 'spoke ond a paper by Percy A. Cuppor, Ore- goii Htato engineer, waa read, each doal- ing w ith t h r a ilm inU tratlon o t water i l l hlH rospcctive' stote under a plan jjj n iin lla r' lo th ^ t proposed by tho con- gross fo r Idaho.

HEREFORDS BRING BIG » PRICESriN NEBRASKA

F if t y Cattle Sold a t Aootlon b r Uooxel ' Brothara To ta l $1?2,2C0

Proceeds from the aale o f 50 regi*- I qj terod 'Horefordfl by Moasel Brothers a t ye; Cambridge, NoV&aka, on Jaanaiy 7, amounted to •102,250, aceor^iaff to a tiu telegram received b y Jndge D . T . W elty ' be *of Castleford from H enry Uonael, hia toi son-in-law. Thirteen spas o f Beao M i*- pb ch ie f averaged 95242 eaeli-. Oae b till ve sold fo r 922,000.. Int

^ weTo “ fiB*nee*» • « d n r - th.

tia lng eampai«B > 00 need e ^ r w t u id e dl< — fo r perhap* ft fe w d a y » ^ ja r t o f wo yonr poeket bm sct. lafa

m lr v lD E , L C O =

BLAZE,D Tconveniences and labor-sav ing e ffj

[ght and pow er on the fa rm m u ltip l g these, resn lts today on m ore tha tanse i t aotnaDy pays fo r itse lf. Q ectrio L ig h t and Power P la n t;— te the fann ing ih ill, grind<stone o r jh n n i— to.pum p fresh runn ing wati e eleotrio lig h t— znakes i t easy to < lan te rns, thns reducing th e f ire h

le. The same coal o il o r Kerosene

Thonsands o f tes tim o n ia l le t t in ac tua l experience o f I

The Domestic Engineerina CompaM akers o f DBLCO-fj<

IONS D A ISET W E S f-N E ,X T 1

HTY T H O U S A N

i II01III ENGINEER- : DISGOSSESeiC

PUNpTyilEif. C.'Allen, in Charge Of State

Highway Construction, De­clares After War Develop - ment in Idaho Unusual

' ' / 4 d a h o Boad W o rk and Plaaa fo r the F u tu ro " was tho aubjeot fo r tho Monday' evening meeting o f the .jo la t eooforonee ’ o f the agt-ienltoral, live atock, engineering asd ir r ig a tio n eoci- oties ,of Idaho, hold a t the La re riog theatre, w ith H . C. AUes, state high* way engineer, aa the p rla d p a l speakef o f tho evening. ,

He waa preened in an address o f •welcomo* by W . y . A lw o rth , preddont o f the state fa rm borean, who In a few w ell choaoiu remarka aUted the purpoao and object o t tbe jo in t con* ference now being held in -T w in Palla. " T o b riag a l l o f tbe d iffe re n t intereate o f the state which w o rk tow ard the fa to ro derelopment o f tho state in to closer cooperation w ith one ano the r," waa tho keynote o f hia remarks. 8 poak>Ing o f the p o rt w U ah tho agrle tiltu ta l Interests o f th is section o f tho conntry h iv e to do w ith tbe fn to re dorfllop*, mont o f tho ^ t e , ho said in pa rt that " I t i s up to the farm er to b ria g opcry. th ing whioh ho produces np to a p a y i^ _ basis. The roconstruction porlovi ia novr " on and a ll th ings mnst be mado to pay ^ the ir own way. W heat laat yoar, ow- ing to tho high •priccs, waa p o t upon a paying baaia, and only_inaOfar aa a ll things wUoh tho fa rm er raiaea, ean bo mado to pay h im a leg itim ate p ro fit, ean agrienltore bo e x p e c ^ 'lo forgo ^ ahead and flgore in the derlopm ent o f ” 1 the stato o f Idaho. ,

« W ar and Soad BolUdng - ' " T ho-^ortage o f labor o w li^ . to tho

cansed brought abotit b y the w ar had a great influence opon tho n a d b tiild - th ing o f the state, d n r ia f the past tw o s t yenra, bot rogardlosa o f the manner'In ic which state highways ' were baaqMred U tlirough px is tisg eonditiona, roada bare tl' beeu b u ilt, and never before, ia the hlB< gi to ry o f the stato hare soeh exteasire 0( pinna been''laid fo r a fte r tbe w ar de* or vrlop inenta,'’. said M r. A llen, in his m< Introductory remarks. > Coast atatea hs •were oven mor.' hnmpered than were of the int<>rmotintain xtates, fo r tho oon- at dltionit in the sldpyords where high p i woges were paid fo r 'th e most eommon t r labor, made i t impossible fo r contractors ro

ON THE= L IG H TPHE W A Ytffio iency o f the c ity to the fa rm d ii ip lies m an-power and saves both ti ;han s ix ty thousand fa rm s.

I— . ■ "*or washing machine— jb IDc the a te r to ^ pa rts of. the honse and 1 ;o do oho're w o rk a fte r d a rk w ithot 3 hazard.. .ae fo rm e rly used in lam ps and lani

stters prove these th ings f D o lco -Iiigh t Users .ipany, Dayton. Ohio, U. S. A.L IO & T Products

D IS TR IB U TO iM i

: < ' 508 F in

- ID A H O p iS T f Universai

I . y H . S. H ar^ D . C. Wa,

IL Y A T L(DOOR T O NE.W P<

'J D S A T I S F I E D

^ 6 w IS T( To Suy Good Irrigated I

m (Jarey land at'VS l.Q O -^r a v o ; Iio fourteon oqual nnminl li^ta llm enta

■ Proved up and improved landa $76 t I Ooo^ water r ig h t; good ir r ig a t l

“ ccntB. por acre, per annum .' Orow bl;- a lfa lfa , potatoes^ Good general d lr (

3 o f atock do wolL A l tU o ^ 3600 to 4( <>se. A going conceiii— 80,000 acre olovatnrs oa tbe project.

' . Increase in Co'St'On A p r il 1,1019, tho price o t w i

labda on tho Valior pro ject w il l be In not mako your plans to v is it the Va

10. L e f s f a l i

|. M r. W. 2S. Wayman w ill bo In Tg Idaho Irr ig a tio n Congroaa, Jantutry j Ix. riuo HutoL 'See him and ta lk the x

you aU about tho, opportonitios in t l Send fo r oor lilustra tod booklet

‘ V a iie r F a rrV aiier,

•• W. M. Wayman, President.■* Please send me free mcjratnre a

;® ' Name .... 1;.......----- -----------------------------

a I--.0 ........— .... —

^ , BUte -------------1--------------,t

Ji ' ■'■■■ g — -------- -I engaged in road boUdlng to get men , , who would etey on the jo b . ' W hea tho ' armiatlco was algned the geretam aat I, In Washington began to omphaaiae the

necessity td r road constmctloa. Idaho,. whoso progress w a i alow, doring the ^ war, was ablo to fa l l Into line and has . now some, o f tho greatest plans fo r th is

phase o f eoastra ition th a t are to be fonnd In tho northwest.

^ B ig B oort la a c b ta Speaking o f financ ia l assistance in :- the m atter o f road bnild lng, M r. A llo a , » Stated th a t " Id a h o ’s share o f the las t ; i fodorat a id bndget was aboot 1900,000. , 1 Under the present proposed approprl^; e tlon fo r road bn ild lng now before eon-

gress, Idaho w il l reeeire abont $1,129,• ft 000 during the next f i r e I n >>* order tha t a fa ir d ls trlbn tion o f th ia , B monoy may be made over tbe atate, i t | a has been deelded tha t the population ] B o t the atate sbaU decide the a a t ^ . A. , - atato road ta x operating tmder th is ( i plan would cause ealfih ta x p a y ^ 'to con- j 1 tribu te as .hia share o f the.opkeep o f < I roads-ono. do llar, per year, w i t h 't h « * | c

I f M m%

. d is tric ts , h tim e and labor.

. r

he oows, operate the cream aid bam .;hout. the bother and danger

lanterns now fam ishes both

----;-------------- -p----

'ORS:M odern App liance Compi ' i r s t Avenue South, S e a ttl

T R IC T D E A LE R S : sal E le c tr ic Co., R igby, Id Yardman, Boise, Idaho Vatson Company,. T w in Ft

.b C A L OFPOSTOFFICE,

D U S E .R .S

■ T O B l^ T , JjUnTABT l f c 'I91B.,

T H E T IM e Ti Land at Vaiier, Noniaflab; 16.60 per a en f i r s t payaient, balanee snts. Interest a t s ix per cent per annnm. rs to $126 per aere; easy terms, v ja tlo n eonstroction. Maintenance f i f t y r b ig oiop# o f w b » t , oata, bw ley, f la x , d iro ra ifled fa rm ing coontiy. A l l kinds 0 4000 fe e t No aage brsah, good dra in- • icres nnder water, t o banks, sixteen

i f o f W ater R igh tst water righ ts fo r the Oaiey aad deeded « increased to *60 por acre share. W hy V a iie r eoontry npw f

a lk I t Overa T w in Falla .doring the seariona o f the r y 18-17. ^ addreaa w il l be the Per- le m atte r oVeir—he w il l be glad to te ll n the V a iie r eoontry. k lo t and other literature.

•m Sales .Co.sr, Mont.

0. A . Sand;'0eeretary.■e aboot the V a lle r lands.

sa dollars coming from Idaho ’s sliaro g ir - ho vn b y tho govehxment, aa I t .baa been, a t ascertained tha t the popolatlon f i t the he state la A b o u t four persona to ,tba sqtiare 10, m ile ."he M r. A llon atated th a t a t tbe p r fs e ^ ^ as timo fodoral aid fnsds had been lis in tho conatroctlon c f tbo Ijost K tct be highway, roonlng from Maekay to Ohal-

lia ,.o n tho Sawtooth P a rk 'h ig h w a y , and on the Orangerllle. Park highway.

Interesting slides wore oaod to illos- trate^the speaker’s leotnre on tho roads

^ of«th'o state, showing the wonderfnl ^ road development in those seotlona now

on the state highway. '

a* OOUBT M A B T IA I. MEETSV . LOS ANGELES, Calif., Jan. U .— ^ Tho highest ranking court m artia l ever is convened in Southern California met -

a t Fort M cA rthur todoy to tr j- Colonel >a H arry W. Newton on clmrges In. con- A. neetion w itb tho oxpendituTc o f $500,- ia 000 a t F o rt M cArthur, whore i t f ' ’ n*"8- acting conatructlon-quartermaster. The >f court waa composod -entire ly b f col- >*tonel».

Get the / Delco-Light /

Booklet Right Now (

ipany itle . Wash.

Id a lio

FaUs, Idaho

FFICE j


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