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U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... ·...

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HieB isiKqp and TheGoat! ^ U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED * * * .Nazi Troops Push Southeast of Moscow Russians Claim Invading Armies Exhausted;'Gains Around Capital Are Slow Bj JOE ALEX MOUUS VbIM Pkm F«i*lcn Gdlt«r German armies were - re- ported pushing, almost 80 miles southeast of Moscow toda^* as home guards and the Red arm)’ fought against diminished encmj' pressure on direct approaches to the Soviet capital. Counter-attacks by the ^ Russians in the Orel s ' 210 miles southwest of Mos- cow» were said by radio Mos- cow to have exhausted the Nazi drive, although it was acknowledged g r o u n d had been yielded on other fronts in a great semicircle around the capitaL A Vichy miio broadcist reported tha Ger- .juniuBsre u Stjnilea to Hoaeow« t7nlt«d SUtv* tamlTCneDt Is tbe InternatiCM] hosUUtka coBtloaBi. The V. & deatecyg Kwany w.Vtt'- — pedoedrvraBBSUifi^'V • KmI U< IxMt, but M i wtDk. «bW CD AUaatie pftizQl. Hie dutnijtr sattered oo i*aoaltk« nod it praccedloc to port. In.the Panne. »n juacrteu omt; Fall of Odessa Denied by Reds (Bt United rm e) A Moscow broadcast heard today by the Vailed Stockholm acknowledged that furious street fightinc V45 progress in the big Black sea port of Od«!$sa. the Gemans claimed to have captured. Th^ Russian report denied that. Odessa had fallen. A Moscow broadcast heard by Columbia BroAdca^'Unir system in New York, covering devetojaaenis ojoly ujs uMi\ noon on Thursday, said the m iP s rFW SEH l lO N M P O in , BtlLLmN Oct. 17 (UKt— cW ahlm- ecdmd lato pert f«r .iMtraeUaos icfud* Ttw Busstea ndk» ivpotts cnpiu- sixed tm t Une dtspeUha sarins the Germans had cutfend eoonnous . casiulUc^ buv BcrUn l&dlc&Ud U» ■main ^JecUve ««s endrcktncnt ra- ther than coDttnued dUect auanlt OD the delenders. The drtre Unrard Rfuh^k was )>art of the Oennan effort to sweep WpURd Moacov fran both north and touth and cut ott vlihdraeni e&st- w^)dj*here dlpiocnatlc mlsstans and aotneRuSiian (orenunent Wtlees al> read)' hare moved to a elty believed to be on the t*st bank c4 the Volpi. London understood that earif re< port« that this cltr vas Katan were Incorrect. A hu«e home cuard torre and for- midable barricades th r o w n ui around Mcwov «rre uM to be akl Inc the Red artx^r tn hotdlns ott Utt enemy prtsaure a*aliut the city, cut* 04n«a TakcA On the Black ae*. the Orm ins aatd they had taken the Uice pon ^ 1 ^ 4. oa»i.« k> eOf CONFESSES PORTLAND. Me. OcL 17 <U»-A 16<xear-^ ^Mth admitted today he ahot and ktltod a man to oUatn hU auto. rapudtaUnc hU contentkxx he o( hta eouktn, tvMna B ktt Cunnlrw- Itam. 1«. and Ida A. me*, )». aob- wrackcd. Herttert IL Otm. jr., told County Attoroer Albcti Knodaeo: "I thot the man to taka his mr and keep ■etn*.'' The ficUm waa Oraln«er Browntnc. )«. oC Mount OUee. N. O.. who had b««n tirtog at an Atex. andrla. Va.. traUer cimjv Hla body vai ducovered jmterdar hidden In buahM near Conenrtnrx Md. The boy and lirta. held pending arrtni at aMrltt Waller B. Benn. tncton ot Hartford oounty, Md. with murder warranla, were (o be irtum'* •d later today to Bel Atr. Ud. for ^^rraltnBent. iBf Ibelr veyafcs. The navy*! eUtemenl did set ri> TWi wbat ablpc bad been ordered IbU wbat perte ter Instraetieu. b«t warned that “anj impUcati«B that they wUI net conttane i* p)y tbeir B»nal trade ii entirely err«n- “Fer loae Uae. tbe merement ef American merebaat tlilps baa be«a centroOed and directed as Russians wer« nghtinir back furiousty oa ail the ca^utaL ^ Red annr umt»'«BUght behind the nan fines were ^riUnc: blows to the GermaB r«ar. The Oermarj wedpd thetr Into tb* CEussian defvaes. c«« btoadcasc »M . te l tTe«pmt(r were repBbtd b^r 'Xatnceok^* Red army coitater-atucfcs «p «• T l«rs' day SMO and sanmd AckJMwfcdted tc Moscow n d in evnrSec later - * Badto vtchT thm bnadaA a re- port that tbe Oemaas wee* enthla about 3T mUfft of tb* ,c»|«tal. A dispatch M tb» cr«B)pkj»r Pratxia. broadcast MaeceNr. ^ dbtilct laid (eday erdete bare been is»w>d la aD Aaeetlcan mwj eh*at abtpe In AilaUe «ate*««w pot Inte -friendly pwis' tmmedl. ately. The dUlrict's pabtle reUtlMU •rtlce eaid tbe orders went e«t by aUon in the Pacific waa rapidly ap* proachlns a climax. 8bl» Torot Back It was reported one tT. fi. flag the manttme oom- nled the Oenaans. bad ca^tsae^d Odessa, as clateed bi a <vnoa«- nbiue ot the Kail hl«ii ccoBinaAd. -Odeesa U stlQ Bwn»Cr Mee»d- Inc heneU." the dbpatch (RfeiBSwd U » ^ to Pratda said "Ocr ate destraj^lBC Btekns* a»d Ka- Darslan hordes.'* OfTnatte Sttfl The Moscow radio wciamvi tbe Oerman otlepalve was Mia t«<aiaBic Into Red army drfecm briM al a slower pMe ana at ccs# ct bi«e «m»- ualUra. but radio Vkrhj' 4*kd tbe an& form were ooJr abovft 9ft W te from the So«M capttaL nthtlDC araaad tbe capkul <m- llnued Inteoae with Rwstoa Sc«es.. Includtng hooke pmrd «sr.iOv tcnten- trattns on the taaj»«d]ate ajv- proachcA behind tecmttaMe mUslon frelchter Perida, had al- ready turned back t» Shanghai. In addlUcn. to the marltUne com- mbAlon. other American TesoeU In ihe Pacltto are operated by Ameri- can Prttttdenl lines. Mataort Navlga* iion company, and the major oU American ercaldeni, lines operatea IS eesaeU from Ban rrancUco and Um Anceles to tha PhlUpplnes. Burma, Dutch Bast Indies. Bhani- hai. Hontkoni and other (ix eastem immediate emersency conferexKe of all hit operatlnc heada. Itte ordera were expected to affect a major portion ot the American merchant fleet now encaged In carrying oil and war suppUea to the Russian port of Vladimistok. and in taking war supplies to Malayaaia for tratufer to the Chineaa army. Sen. Pepper Asks "Two Sinkings" for Assouit WAOBINQTON. Get. I t ________ _ CUude Pepper. D . H a , aaeert«t today Uia attack on Uw O. B. d*. stroorer Ksam y should be a*enged by tha nanr with a poUcy o( *tir# ilnkingt for each assault." Pepper dsacribed tbs tacMent, aa one m oi« to a 'Xhaln ol ptntlcal as- “tedoubk our to dear Uw ‘■lili Um Job or o v Dkvj to p u back tMM aaauHa with two slSi- ^declared. an.0^r.Nya^lUN.0.nM • aurtl tM M M - « • to * • ---- tn view of Um a«alB "If Ihe Kearny was up to what we know the Greer was up lo, then tbe wtwle matter wlU be different from the casa the InterrcnUcnleu wUI MbUdly try to naka ogt.- Nye Wamn C. Uanwon. rottteh^w IX. Wash, a member ________ affalti commltlM. said few more or these incuenu and U m United States nary U golag to eleaa out tha aao. BtylM B r k ^ M. H.. «tw has supmrtad Um MUor^ iM iu n a r our . ^elearlMttMMM __ one nan act that ftttttver onn- German Blilz Batters Near Moscow No Casualty List As Ship Limps for Port Near Iceland It. ¥ * It « « « « House Approves Arming of Ships JU A M f Bltte'e two fe a r sH effense cenflawer'U smash enwatit Mward Mescm with plaaes. tonka. Infantry and paiatrMpe batterlnc taeser m e Mseeew's elide ef defenses. Uicse were the new develop* tsi Nerih «( the S e ^t caplti^ NaxU elalned a break-tbmih at d Raher: la the sentb, panien reportedly work-v accenUnc to bn In London and New YortL XXm<l press cwnmunkatfaa wtab klaataMc has been totertupM tor M h m v WWW OPENS S E S » assemble In Twte PaBbi to«H9 and tomorrow to eoosMir tlhe mMkeiui and compensatlDBa ti tbe enr«t>a«' Hospital .Md in Spotlight As CanWss Checks Vote With the formal canvnss of bnllot book.s showing a differ- riw «f just one vole from the totals announced in the Eve- ninir Times, TR-in FjtUa county commissionera today marked -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention to melhoila by which the hospital crisis may be met without bonds. The canvass showed these official results: No— 1,988 votcH. Yes— 1,932 vote.s. UnoKlclal results printed In U\e Evening Times coincided exactly with the votes In favor and sliowed one too many "no" t>al\ots. iQjml- naUon of Uisl one vote Itft the bK‘ gresate turnout in the bond oirc- non 9M0. Precincts Bams *n>e canvass upheld Uie iinotdrUl count ot 11 precincts which nave a Mmpla mujorlty or more {or the txxids; M prrclnols which votM a Minide majority or more ei(aln^l Uie proposal. On the a By Valted Press I jOXDON—Moscww becomM I.il- . .rvv <i;,\awalUng Naal ajuault; IcwkkU and many govemmenl oHi- < m :v Tnmt- easit. probably to Kazan: TndinaUon Qennan drlw haj» bfci» ha^M alLhmvh may be progrrksliig UAF attacks Du^brrK. Rur.r atva. Dunk1rt*nd Calais: ri- Hf» cabinet wtU brtu* ^l^ow• in Japan; Bangkok ' wami> « nuaiand ol Occasion t» ttw ttfXh Writers' confeteacet. s the Idaho WHMn‘ kasrai. wfuit chapters st Betas ton. Burley and local chapter as pubUc ts tavtted to aUewi Nr p aJ«« ft nominal rectstr%tta« tee. fM k hotel Is hradttmitots. Bsud Masto'Mo' •as el ttk s - transacted thlaa ecuUve board ass of Mrs. Ftoeeoc* _____ o< the Twin Patta rbsglssy « M <«•- fersnce chali relter, BuW, aided. aftomooo prrm paMekTea^lw l:M p. sa-. ar* Dam Qnv, Uwta. um. who wUl ivaak en ’'’Vnttav H r • LtvbiT: Kra. .taala Ikmat. A|. Won. «bo wUI mnrn ^Tmgigiiii tn nose.-* aa« IM T. AwmTSw valley. dUeetor « l p M M «r tm Mm Idaho reaert. wtw w B dtocaaa VahM or ruMMtr^' , apeakeca at toa ‘"iiiiiu._. , sassto frooa l» a. n . m mm be Mrs. o u t* M ir T«to Vteler Oeerton. Trth M k OtabUeev T ato W q H«an. aua Taai«rKkMa . r2!ss-"- ■la IM av i» bo Ml THUNDER OF WAR HOME-Bmwi bomb KapJes. kUl- RC la. evwndlng S7, sUrUng fires. tOK\’0 - a n p m r Hlrohlto rom- SKtaunru. War Minister HMekI 'n>Jn W Trern nrw cabinet; seeks nsv)' M l tor T\Uo who Is regarded «*ANGIlM-l%le*atB fpffsrd Ta}a as HMy I* ge alew In In- e«He«c ta war whleh be Is m l* %a beWma may lasl M yearas «MI i«ga«^d M eIsM to Oeratany kal Nasi m ew i ter aale rap> rnuncT VICHY-tMOMB Leon Olgot was nevtor genera) of ihs tMIVST UUKVILL^ lU. — Jht WPA ««wwlMI the palaung ot murals •a U » Mtovtna toalor hUh school itgltxm teOWiBU tn Abraham M i kacMM oMlnns pio- •H M AxKst atilMar UMe's *^ow. liaeeia *>«li hands like --- of Ameri- 1 the wan the letter from County Attnrnry Kvemi M. Sweeley, calling lor « ilinrough study ot hon]kltal Impmvr- ment within the UmltaUons ImiKvi* ed by the bond reJecUon, earrley called for aoUon to prevent escecd- lug Uie maximum load of Uin hos- pital, to be determined Uirough the ,doctor* oC the county, and utrnJ that Uie Judgment ot the rnUre cmmty be sought In drartliig dteps to ameliorate Uie hospital cn.ilR. Tax AvallaMs It was pointed out today In nffl- dal circles Uiat one faclor^wtilch ts empowered to levy an annual lax ot one and one.halt mtUs (»r l\e«- pltal Improvement, enlarging. and rqiilpmenL Ttui would raise about gw.ooo «nnually, TIM hospital advisory board wlU convene Oct. ai, Cl«alrmaii o. It. said today, and eomi* By JAMES SUETLEY WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (O.PJ—In an atraospher«"echoln« with deniinciations of Japan ahd German>‘, the house today passed and sent to the senatp a resolution authoriunc the arming of American merchant ships^ The navy is ready to start arming the ships as Sooa as the senate passes the legialation and it is signed Pr^si. dent Roosevelt, The senate foreign relations committee •will start work on the mea- sure next-Monday. The roll call vote on passage of the resolution was announced u 3A9 to 138. A motion to recommit the measure had been defeated by iS7 to 138. - The reso\uUcm would repeal sec- tion 6 of the neuu^lty act, which now forblda annamenis od mer- chtjll-vesselai^and would ampower [President BooMv^t to order thft arming of such ship* during the un- limited national emergency he pro- claimed oci May 3T. < No Major AmendmenU Passage of the leBlslsUon was dratted after eight Amerlcui*own- ed vessels had been sent to the bot- tom by axis sea and air raiders, most of them tn recent months, major amfeadmcnta wera ottered In the house. Mr. Roosevelt and other adnilnls- tratlon leaders also want section 3 of Ute neutrality act repealed to permit the sending of armed Ameri- can merchant shlpe Into combat sonrs. from which they now at* barred. It Traa generally conceded that the pending tpeasure wo.i a forerunner to introduction of legU' latlon to repeal section 2. OpponenU of the measure, frho did not include the full house anti- intervenUonlst forces, made a llnal rftort to return to the foreign af- talrs committee for furUier consid- eration. When this w u dcleated, the roll call vole dq Iknal passage becanie routine. Newspapers Anneonea AlUck Newspapers announcing the at Lnrk on tiie Keaniy were In evldnu-e all over the house.floor as mcmbera debated and voted on Uie resotiillon. There were admontUoiu trom Lw- laUcmlsts spokesmen that Just 31 ilays after the ohlp arming Issue was before congress In 1917 Uie Unit- ed SUtes was at *ar wlUt Oimisny. Rep. Dewoy Sliort, R„ M» . cham- ed In a iast-mlnute sddresR, Uist Uie ship arming resotuUon wns dc> signed "simply to create lha inci- dent which will plunge us all the way into the wnr.^ Annouivcemrnt of the Kearny in- lC*ati.ii*4 r u t S, C«1<I<.I| T> \S ASHIN GTON, Od. 17 om ~ TV MT7 aaMOKcrf tod^ tlM t (1m U. S. & K w v w tkb naimiKt M pttral M r abM l 3S« Miles ab«U wtstofk«lui«. NocssmIUw «m Mkmt«4 i» |w«lfaaiaaiy n e sltt^ b iprac««liat lowBrt m «M«r liftv »«««N Kcancr,« 1,€M4mi4*> sti«3r*r« fei Ij U M A .O M iu iL L .D a * t~ ---- tt» tea «t tta aa«^ • drraUon of prooaduta wtU be tiiaug- iiratad then. Chairman Hsmpleman disavowed this afternoon, however, one prlntad suggesUon attributed to him—propcaal Utat the nurses' home > remodeled Into an addlUon for le by paUenta. Omt.Me4e4 *The nuraea* home,” he said, "la itrlcUy out-moded for use as .a hos- pilal. I auppose the suggestion may ' be broufhl up at ihe board meet- ing but as far aa I'm opncemed U U nM aullabU al all The rooms are too amall, tha,4«cn.«n too narrow it 0T«r If It wan to be u«ed a« an addtUen t» tto* boapttal.'* ria »ddad lhat auraea-muit have a ptaN lci-al»r. PRAGUC Oct 11 «U b-^ at- fidal amwenemeBt today aaM. that n BMra Caaehs tev* ba«« aruglitna- LONDON, Oct. IT UB-Attlbort* tattve intbrcoanu said todai naaa* bers of the British embassy staft and mlillaiy mission at Moscow had k n for a new capital to the east. SOME. OclTn UJJ9 — A Ugh eommand e m M u H M saU today U»t BrlUsk t^am in a raU m Napke, m miks ds frem Kaase. aO M IS f ewssa. weiinded » and startod fk«a te vartwia « tte etty wMi W- ccDdlary bansba. The eeaUBon^M « u BrtUsh planea ab* hwbed Ikngbait. Italian base aa tb* Libya c—al. and caased damage to -dwsfltoea.- lUUan planea beasbed VaBetta, Malta. U BERUN. Oct. 11 OU»-AuUMrta(d Informants asserted today the Oer- msn .... Moscow’s deep outer defenses In a great crescent-shaped line of massed tanks and motorised 'rapid'* tToemi whUe air foKe wiuadi^sna boi&bed the lilty day and night. It was said the advance to Moscow was continuing step by step In face ot continued, desperate Russian re- sUtance. POWER CHIEF 10 ADDRESS C. OF C. Revised Uneup of <dlrector.ihl|> nominees waa listed for the 'I'win Palls Chamber of Commrrce today, and 0, J. Btrlke. Boise, ^rcsldont o( (he Idaho P6wer company, w u sii nounced as the speaker at the nr ganlsaUon's annual meeting rrlday, Nov, 1. liany Bcock, O. of 0. hesd. ad- vised today'a luncheon meeting at me Rotenon hotel Uiat Mr, mrlke has aeoepted invlUUon to address Uie meeting at which new ottlcers and direeton will be tnitallMl. Neoslneea Hie mised lUt of director nom- Ineea to nil the six posU on Uie board w as presented to today's lunehm toy John Bodati, chairman S I R E S HIN1ED HYDE PARK. N. Y- Oct. U ail>-. resident Roosevelt hinted today at direct Intervention by the ofltce ol production managencnt tn exWn- Mve defense sUlkes with the stale- ment something may be expected wn from that delmse agexKy. The Preakdent oltertd no tadkn- tlon of Uie natura ot OPM actton that might be in prospect. Ba dtd say he Itas been giving sane thoMcht U> whst waa described aa an bi- creaslng number of aUlkt* la de- fense Industrtes. He added UnmediaUly tM ttnnftht Uwre wouM be somethloc (rota OPM pretty soon on this sutt)ecL;b< strtkea. HU words left tha H^y-tatkd of lha I I. The nomlneaa are Grant Thomss, Voy Hudson, r . O. Bhensberger. Claude Randall. John Klnnsy, Harry Vo- gel, Oana Oatrandar, Bert A. Sweet, atuart n. Tftflor, Mrs. Oora. s. bm- vens. Jack Klmas and K. e. Harper, Mr. Ttioous aod Mr, Hudson r«- piM a J. Bolhn* and Arthtir Bookwtta. who wan uaabia to ae- d t o t informal ImUUation ol tha lU m « diraetm will ooma M day noon. Oet. ll, wivtn tha boartf wiU mcsMUaa and alaet Ohunbar W tX nS im 90 aiiyUUng up to this The Prealdent did not spedly what strlkaa he had tn iaMaA,VW » pk 5mA Sr. •■apataw. '-n* ti. s. «. Xaancr i M Ifei* mtf9~ la IS » awe «eei»Wid W k Xtua ship htt a ttaariMA iHniliiiiiMin of M M tans. Tha sbtp k M l t«e« k»c airi has a SMw* tan . aha Ii arnxd ««ih tha atandai« bauacrackweiusk. otter datalh ai* aeaBaMa t» at Uita time." Thks vwa the fink Aiaitfcan ship to be hn while on AUanttc pa* tn( dnty la thb war. On Stpt < Ike u. S. a. Qrwr. aa« Lkar waa tOed vpan kr a subaaartna twk«. AU «t the tor* pnkM nkMd. TTie Qm r ootatcr-. altaefead wtth dtpth bombs, bat aj»> Tfaa aavT'k a rat dU net state the port tovwd which tha Ktaray te praeed^ nor dtd ti la- dkat* whether she w^atndl asdat^ anc«. Ttaa Keainy was hit not 'far tnid the area ta whkh tba Greer eptaoda occvmd. OarwkelDaly Dank, aktnxr «T the Kearny, la ,a naUxe e< WasktogMn. D. C. At UBe or tbe attack the Rcaiay was on patrol duty. cazTTtt«e out tta aaaignaMnt ta the north Atkntic patrol whkh to w dtr PitMdcnt Rooamtt^ ocdm to shoot axis suk- m on stght In wntefv Tbe mw lann tn kaftand at« tera. Tt» nary M not MentUy Ute at- tacker. but oftksats btttmd It «a- douMedty wasa C the s u e geoKa) an«. kat wkwd. it was net tadtraied whether she wonM se«k tke ahatkr «( ka(k«r ta mkad. «r Ornnk^ w «o«M craa the amth AtknUc to a baaa tn thta country cr Cinada. Th» Itnt nave) r<«Mt dU Mk stoto wikkt a( tha -**rrrr I* tte Kearny, n was pokkted oat that tha tceptdokw ow iea « n ^ thta BSOro- has iA Bttk tka* at the dsatinat iCMitoes«<nr«Ma Roosevelt Says Keam^ - Inside Defensive Zonei HYOK PARK. N. T.. Oct. IT President RMeevelt saM today tka u. B. a. Kaarair akartr «mMa; Uta Amerloah defaoatva a a * The PraMtat aaM Ite kMV k opetaUn^m^Me n gatew^ aatti in tM ABUgltU. “iboot w
Transcript
Page 1: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

Hie BisiKqp and TheGoat! ^

U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ • * ■ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★

.Nazi Troops Push Southeast of MoscowRussians Claim Invading Armies Exhausted;'Gains Around Capital Are Slow

B j JOE ALEX M OUUS

V bIM Pkm F«i*lcn Gdlt«r

German armies were - re­ported pushing, almost 80 miles southeast of Moscow toda^* as home guards and the Red arm)’ fought against diminished encmj' pressure on direct a p p ro a c h e s to the Soviet capital.

Counter-attacks by the ^ Russians in the Orel s ' 210 miles southwest of Mos-

cow» were said by radio Mos­cow to have exhausted the Nazi drive, although it was acknowledged g r o u n d had been yielded on other fronts in a great semicircle around the capitaL A Vichy m iio broadcist reported tha Ger-

. j u n i u B s r e u S t jn i le a

to Hoaeow« t7nlt«d SU tv* tamlTCneDt Is tbe

InternatiCM] hosUUtka coBtloaBi. The V . & deatecyg Kwany w .V tt'-

— pedoedrvraBBSUifi^'V • K m I U< IxMt, but M i wtDk. « b W CD AUaatie pftizQl. H ie d u tn i j t r sattered oo i*aoaltk« nod it praccedloc to port. In.the Panne. »n juacrteu omt;

Fall of Odessa Denied by Reds

(Bt United rm e )

A Moscow broadcast heard today by the Vailed Stockholm acknowledged that furious street fightinc V45 progress in the big Black sea port of Od«!$sa. theGemans claimed to have captured. Th^ Russian report denied that. Odessa had fallen.

A Moscow broadcast heard by Columbia BroAdca 'Unir system in New York, covering devetojaaenis ojoly ujs uMi\

noon on Thursday, said the

m iP sr F W S E H ll O N M P O i n

, B tlLLmNOct. 17 (UKt—

c W ahlm- ecdm dlato pert f«r .iMtraeUaos icfud*

Ttw Busstea ndk» ivpotts cnp iu- sixed t m t Une dtspeUha sarins the Germans had cutfend eoonnous

. casiulUc^ buv BcrUn l&dlc&Ud U » ■ main ^JecUve ««s endrcktncnt ra­

ther than coDttnued dUect auanlt OD the delenders.

The drtre Unrard R fu h ^k was )>art of the Oennan effort to sweep WpURd Moacov fran both north and touth and cut ott v lihdraeni e&st- w^)dj*here dlpiocnatlc mlsstans and aotneRuSiian (orenunent Wtlees al> read)' hare moved to a elty believed to be on the t*st bank c4 the Volpi. London understood that earif re< port« that this cltr vas Katan were Incorrect.

A hu«e home cuard torre and for­midable barricades t h r o w n ui around Mcwov «rre u M to be akl Inc the Red artx^r tn hotdlns ott Utt enemy prtsaure a*aliut the city,

c u t * 0 4n«a TakcA On the Black ae*. the O rm in s

aatd they had taken the Uice pon^ 1 ^ 4. oa»i.« k>

eOf CONFESSESPORTLAND. Me. OcL 17 <U»-A

16<xear-^ ^Mth admitted today he ahot and ktltod a man to oUatn hU auto. rapudtaUnc hU contentkxx he

o( hta eouktn, tvMna Bktt Cunnlrw- Itam. 1«. and Ida A. me*, )». aob- wrackcd. Herttert IL Otm. jr., told County Attoroer Albcti Knodaeo: "I thot the man to taka his m r and keep ■etn*.''

The ficUm waa Oraln«er Browntnc. )«. oC Mount OUee. N. O.. who had b««n tirtog at an Atex. andrla. Va.. traUer cimjv Hla body vai ducovered jmterdar hidden In buahM near Conenrtnrx Md.

The boy and lirta. held pending arrtni at aMrltt Waller B. Benn. tncton ot Hartford oounty, Md. with murder warranla, were (o be irtum'* •d later today to Bel Atr. Ud. for

^ ^ rra ltnB en t.

iBf Ibelr veyafcs.The navy*! eUtemenl did set ri>

TWi wbat ablpc bad been ordered IbU wbat perte ter Instraetieu. b«t warned that “an j impUcati«B that they wUI net conttane i* p)y tbeir B»nal trade ii entirely err«n-

“Fer loae Uae. tbe merement ef American merebaat tlilps baa be«a centroOed and directed as

Russians wer« nghtin ir back furiousty oa ail the ca^utaL ^ Red a n n r umt»'«BUght behind the n a n fines were ^ r iU n c :

blows to the GermaB r«ar.The Oermarj wedpd thetr

Into tb* CEussian defvaes. c«« btoadcasc »M . t e l tTe«pmt(r were repBbtd b r 'Xatnceok^* Red army coitater-atucfcs « p « • T l« r s ' day SMO and sanmd

AckJMwfcdted

tc Moscow n d in evnrSeclater - *

Badto vtchT thm bnadaA a re­port that tbe Oemaas wee* enthla about 3T mUfft of tb* ,c»|«tal.

A dispatch M tb» cr«B)pkj»r Pratxia. broadcast MaeceNr. ^

dbtilct laid (eday erdete bare been is»w>d la aD Aaeetlcan mwj eh*at abtpe In AilaUe «ate*««w pot Inte -friendly pwis' tmmedl. ately.

The dUlrict's pabtle reUtlMU •rtlce eaid tbe orders went e«t by

aUon in the Pacific waa rapidly ap* proachlns a climax.

8bl» To rot Back It was reported one tT. fi. flag

the manttme oom-

nled the Oenaans. bad ca tsae^d Odessa, as clateed bi a <vnoa«- nbiue ot the Kail hl«ii ccoBinaAd.

-Odeesa U stlQ Bwn»Cr Mee»d- Inc heneU." the dbpatch (RfeiBSwd U » ^ to Pratda said "Ocr ate destraj lBC Btekns* a»d Ka- Darslan hordes.'*

OfTnatte Sttfl The Moscow radio wciamvi tbe

Oerman otlepalve was Mia t«<aiaBic Into Red army drfecm briM a l a slower pMe ana at ccs# c t b i« e «m»- ualUra. but radio Vkrhj' 4*kd tbe an& fo rm were ooJr abovft 9ft W te from the So«M capttaL

nthtlDC araaad tbe capkul <m- llnued Inteoae with Rwstoa Sc«es.. Includtng hooke pmrd «sr.iOv tcnten- trattns on the taaj»«d]ate ajv- proachcA behind tecmttaMe

mUslon frelchter Perida, had al­ready turned back t» Shanghai.

In addlUcn. to the marltUne com- mbAlon. other American TesoeU In ihe Pacltto are operated by Ameri­can Prttttdenl lines. Mataort Navlga* iion company, and the major oU

American ercaldeni, lines operatea IS eesaeU from Ban rrancUco and Um Anceles to tha PhlUpplnes. Burma, Dutch Bast Indies. Bhani- hai. Hontkoni and other (ix eastem

immediate emersency conferexKe of all hit operatlnc heada.

Itte ordera were expected to affect a major portion ot the American merchant fleet now encaged In carrying oil and war suppUea to the Russian port of Vladimistok. and in taking war supplies to Malayaaia for tratufer to the Chineaa army.

Sen. Pepper Asks "Two Sinkings" for Assouit

WAOBINQTON. Get. I t ________ _CUude Pepper. D . H a , aaeert«t today Uia attack on Uw O . B. d * . stroorer K sam y should be a*enged by tha nanr w ith a poUcy o( *tir# iln k ing t for each assault."

Pepper dsacribed tbs tacMent, aa one m oi« to a 'X haln o l p tn tlc a l as-

“tedoubk our to dear Uw

‘■ lili Um Job or o v Dkvj to p uback tMM aaauHa with two slSi-

^declared.

a n . 0 ^ r . N y a ^ l U N . 0 . n M• aurtl t M M M - « • to * • ----

tn view of Um a«alB

"If Ihe Kearny was up to what we know the Greer was up lo, then tbe wtwle matter wlU be different from the casa the InterrcnUcnleu wUI

MbUdly try to naka ogt.- Nye

Wamn C. Uanwon.r o t t t e h ^ w

IX.Wash, a member ________affalti commltlM. said few more or these incuenu and Um United States nary U golag to eleaa out tha

aao. BtylM B r k ^ M. H.. «tw has supmrtad Um

MUor^ i M i u n a r our. ^ e le a r lM t tM M M __one n a n act that ftttttver onn-

German Blilz Batters Near Moscow No Casualty List As Ship Limps for Port Near IcelandIt. ¥ * It « « « «

House Approves Arming of Ships

JU A M f Bltte'e two f e a r sH effense cenflawer'U smash enwatit Mward Mescm with plaaes. tonka. Infantry and paiatrMpe batterlnc taeser m e Mseeew's e lide ef defenses. Uicse were the new develop*

tsi Nerih « ( the S e ^ t caplti^ NaxU elalned a break-tbm ih at d Raher: la the sentb, pan ien reportedly

work-v accenUnc to bnIn London and New YortL XXm<l press cwnmunkatfaa wtab klaataMc has been to tertupM tor M h m v

W W W OPENS S E S »

assemble In Twte PaBbi to«H9 and tomorrow to eoosMir tlhe m M keiu i and compensatlDBa t i tbe enr«t>a«'

Hospital .Md in Spotlight As CanWss Checks VoteWith the formal canvnss of bnllot book.s showing a differ-

r iw «f just one vole from the totals announced in the Eve- ninir Times, TR-in FjtUa county commissionera today marked -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention to melhoila by which the hospital crisis

may be met without bonds.The canvass showed these

official results:No— 1,988 votcH.Yes— 1,932 vote.s.

UnoKlclal results printed In U\e

Evening Times coincided exactly

with the votes In favor and sliowed

one too many "no" t>al\ots. iQjml-

naUon of Uisl one vote Itft the bK‘

gresate turnout in the bond oirc-

non 9M0.

Precincts Bams

*n>e canvass upheld Uie iinotdrUl count ot 11 precincts which nave a Mmpla mujorlty or more {or the txxids; M prrclnols which votM a Minide majority or more ei(aln^l Uie proposal.

On the a

By Valted Press

IjOXDON—Moscww becomM I.il- . .rvv < i;,\ awalUng Naal ajuault; IcwkkU and many govemmenl oHi- <m :v Tnmt- easit. probably to Kazan:

TndinaUon Qennan drlw haj» bfci» ha^M alLhmvh may be progrrksliig

• UAF attacks Du^brrK.Rur.r atva. Dunk1rt*nd Calais: ri-

Hf» cabinet wtU brtu* l^ow• in Japan; Bangkok '

wami> « nuaiand o l

Occasion t» ttw ttfXh Writers' confeteacet. s the Idaho WHMn‘ kasrai. wfuit chapters st Betas ton. Burley and local chapter as pubUc ts tavtted to aUewi Nr p a J « « ft nominal rectstr%tta« tee. fM k hotel Is hradttmitots.

B sud M as to 'M o '•as el t tk s -

transacted thlaa ecuUve board assof Mrs. Ftoeeoc* _____o< the Twin Patta rbsglssy « M <«•- fersnce chali relter, BuW, aided.

aftomooo prrm p a M e k T e a ^ lw l:M p. sa-. ar* D a m Q n v , U w ta . um. who wUl ivaak en ’'’V n ttav H r • LtvbiT: Kra. .ta a la Ikm at. A|. Won. «bo wUI m n r n ^ T m g ig iiii tn nose.-* aa« I M T. A w m T S w valley. dUeetor « l p M M «r tm Mm Idaho reaert. wtw w B dtocaaa VahM or ruM M tr^', apeakeca a t toa ‘"iiiiiu ._ . , sassto frooa l» a. n . m m m be Mrs. o u t* M ir T «to Vteler Oeerton. T rth M k

OtabUeev T ato W q H « an. au a T a a i« r K k M a .

r2!ss-"-■la IM a v i»

b o M l

THUNDEROFWAR

HOM E-Bm w i bomb KapJes. kUl- RC la. evwndlng S7, sUrUng fires.

tOK\’0 - a n p m r Hlrohlto rom- SKtaunru. War Minister HMekI 'n>Jn W Trern nrw cabinet; seeks nsv)'

M l tor T\Uo who Is regarded

«*A N G IlM - l% le*a tB fpffsrd Ta}a as HMy I* ge alew In In- e«He«c ta war whleh be Is m l* %a beWma may lasl M yearas «MI i «ga«^d M eIsM to Oeratany ka l Nasi m ew i ter aale rap>

r n u n c T

VICHY-tMOMB Leon Olgot was nevtor genera) of ihs

tM IV S TU U K V IL L ^ lU. — J h t WPA

««wwlMI the palaung ot murals •a U » Mtovtna toalor hUh school itg ltxm teOWiBU tn Abraham

M i kacMM oMlnns pio- • H M AxKst atilMar UMe's *^ow.

liaeeia *>«li hands like--- ‘ of Ameri-

1 the

wan the letter from County Attnrnry K vem i M. Sweeley, calling lor « ilinrough study ot hon]kltal Impmvr- ment within the UmltaUons ImiKvi* ed by the bond reJecUon, earrley called for aoUon to prevent escecd- lug Uie maximum load of Uin hos­pital, to be determined Uirough the

, doctor* oC the county, and utrnJ that Uie Judgment ot the rnUre cmmty be sought In drartliig dteps to ameliorate Uie hospital cn.ilR.

Tax A valla Ms

It was pointed out today In nffl- da l circles Uiat one faclor^wtilch

ts empowered to levy an annual lax ot one and one.halt mtUs (»r l\e«- pltal Improvement, enlarging. and rqiilpmenL T tu i would raise about gw.ooo «nnually,

TIM hospital advisory board wlU convene Oct. ai, Cl«alrmaii o. It.

said today, and eomi*

By JAMES SUETLEY

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (O.PJ—In an atraospher«"echoln« with deniinciations of Japan ahd German>‘, the house today passed and sent to the senatp a resolution authoriunc the arming of American merchant ships^

The navy is ready to start arming the ships as Sooa as the senate passes the legialation and it is signed Pr^si. dent Roosevelt, The senate foreign relations committee •will start work on the mea­sure next-Monday.

The roll call vote on passage of the resolution was announced u 3A9 to 138. A motion to recommit the measure had been defeated by iS7 to 138. -

The reso\uUcm would repeal sec­tion 6 of the neuu^ lty act, which now forblda annamenis od mer- chtjll-vesselai^and would ampower [President BooMv^t to order thft arming of such ship* during the un­limited national emergency he pro­claimed oci May 3T. <

No Major AmendmenU

Passage of the leBlslsUon was dratted after eight Amerlcui*own- ed vessels had been sent to the bot­tom by axis sea and air raiders, most of them tn recent months, major amfeadmcnta wera ottered In the house.

Mr. Roosevelt and other adnilnls- tratlon leaders also want section 3 of Ute neutrality act repealed to permit the sending of armed Ameri­can merchant shlpe Into combat sonrs. from which they now at* barred. I t Traa generally conceded that the pending tpeasure wo.i a forerunner to introduction of legU' latlon to repeal section 2.

OpponenU of the measure, frho did not include the full house anti- intervenUonlst forces, made a llnal rftort to return to the foreign af- talrs committee for furUier consid­eration. When this w u dcleated, the roll call vole dq Iknal passage becanie routine.

Newspapers Anneonea AlUck Newspapers announcing the at

Lnrk on tiie Keaniy were In evldnu-e all over the house.floor as mcmbera debated and voted on Uie resotiillon.

There were admontUoiu trom Lw- laUcmlsts spokesmen that Just 31 ilays after the ohlp arming Issue was before congress In 1917 Uie Unit­ed SUtes was at * a r wlUt Oimisny.

Rep. Dewoy Sliort, R „ M» . cham- ed In a iast-mlnute sddresR, Uist Uie ship arming resotuUon wns dc> signed "simply to create lha inci­dent which will plunge us all the way into the wnr.^

Annouivcemrnt of the Kearny in- lC*ati.ii*4 r u t S, C«1<I<.I| T>

\S ASHIN GTON, O d . 17 o m ~ T V M T 7 a a M O K c r f

t o d ^ t lM t (1m

U. S. & K w v w t k b n a im iK t M p t t r a l M r

a b M l 3S « M iles a b « U

w t s t o f k « l u i « . N o c s s m IU w

« m Mkmt«4 i» |w«lfaaiaaiy

n e s l t t ^

b ip ra c « « lia t lo w B r t

m «M «r liftv »«««N Kcancr,« 1,€M4mi4*>

sti«3r*r« fei I j

U M A . O M i u i L L . D a * t ~ ----t t » t e a « t t t a a a « ^ •

drraUon of prooaduta wtU be tiiaug- iiratad then. Chairman Hsmpleman disavowed this afternoon, however, one prlntad suggesUon attributed to him —propcaal Utat the nurses' home

> remodeled Into an addlUon for le by paUenta.

Omt.Me4e4

*The nuraea* home,” he said, "la itrlcUy out-moded for use as .a hos- pilal. I auppose the suggestion may ' be broufhl up at ihe board meet­ing but as far aa I'm opncemed U U nM aullabU a l a l l The rooms are too amall, th a ,4 «cn .«n too narrow

it 0T«r If It w an to be u«ed a« an addtUen t » tto* boapttal.'*

ria »ddad lha t auraea-muit have

a ptaN lci-al»r.

PRAGUC O c t 11 « U b - ^ at- fida l amwenemeBt today aaM. that n BMra Caaehs tev* ba««

a r u g l i t n a -

LONDON, Oct. IT UB-Attlbort* tattve intbrcoanu said todai naaa* bers of the British embassy staft and mlillaiy mission at Moscow had k n for a new capital to the east.

SOME. O c lT n UJJ9 — A Ugh eommand e m M u H M saU today U »t BrlUsk t^ a m in a raU m Napke, m m iks ds frem Kaase. a O M IS f ewssa . weiinded » and startod fk«a te vartwia « t te etty wMi W-ccDdlary bansba.

The eeaUBon^M « u BrtUsh planea ab * hw bed Ikngbait. Italian base aa tb* Libya c—al. and caased damage to -dwsfltoea.-

lUUan planea beasbed VaBetta, Malta. U

BERUN. Oct. 11 OU»-AuUMrta(d Informants asserted today the Oer-msn . . . .Moscow’s deep outer defenses In a great crescent-shaped line of massed tanks and motorised 'rapid'* tToemi whUe air foKe wiuadi^sna boi&bed the lilty day and night.

I t was said the advance to Moscow was continuing step by step In face ot continued, desperate Russian re- sUtance.

POWER CHIEF 10 ADDRESS C. OF C.

Revised Uneup of < dlrector.ihl|> nominees waa listed for the 'I'win Palls Chamber of Commrrce today, and 0 , J . Btrlke. Boise, ^rcsldont o( (he Idaho P6wer company, w u sii nounced as the speaker at the nr ganlsaUon's annual meeting rrlday, Nov, 1.

l ia n y Bcock, O. of 0. hesd. ad­vised today'a luncheon meeting at m e Rotenon hotel Uiat Mr, mrlke has aeoepted invlUUon to address Uie meeting at which new ottlcers and direeton will be tnitallMl.

NeoslneeaH ie m ised lUt of director nom-

Ineea to n il the six posU on Uie board w as presented to today's lu n e h m toy John Bodati, chairman

S I R E S HIN1EDHYDE PARK. N. Y- Oct. U ail>-. resident Roosevelt hinted today at

direct Intervention by the ofltce ol production managencnt tn exWn- Mve defense sUlkes with the stale- ment something may be expected wn from that delmse agexKy.The Preakdent oltertd no tadkn-

tlon of Uie natura ot OPM act ton that might be in prospect. Ba dtd say he Itas been giving sane thoMcht U> whst waa described aa an bi- creaslng number of aUlkt* la de­fense Industrtes.

He added UnmediaUly tM ttnnftht Uwre wouM be somethloc (rota OPM pretty soon on this sutt)ecL;b< strtkea.

HU words left tha H ^y - ta tk d

of lha I I. Thenomlneaa are Grant Thomss, Voy Hudson, r . O. Bhensberger. Claude Randall. John Klnnsy, Harry Vo­gel, Oana Oatrandar, Bert A. Sweet, atuart n . Tftflor, Mrs. Oora. s. bm- vens. Jack Klmas and K. e. Harper, Mr. Ttioous aod Mr, Hudson r«- p i M a J . Bolhn* a n d Arthtir Bookwtta. who w an uaabia to ae-

d t o t informal ImUUation o l tha lU m « diraetm will ooma M d a y noon. Oet. l l , wivtn tha boartf wiU mcsMUaa andalaet O hunbar W tX n S im 9 0

aiiyUUng up to this The Prealdent did not spedly

what strlkaa he had tn

iaMaA,VW » p k 5mA S r .

•■ apataw .'-n* ti. s. «. Xaancr i

M Ifei* m tf9~

la I S » awe «eei»W id W k Xtua ship h t t a ttaariMA iHn iliiiiiM in of M M tans. Tha sbtp k M l t«e« k » c a ir i has a SM w * t a n . aha I i arnxd «« ih tha atandai« bauacrackweiusk.

o tter datalh a i* aeaBaMa t» at Uita time."

Thks vwa the fink Aiaitfcan ship to be h n while on AUanttc pa* t n ( dnty la thb war.

O n S tp t < Ike u . S. a . Qrw r. aa« Lkar waa tOed vpan kr

a subaaartna twk«. AU « t the tor* p n kM nkM d . TTie Q m r ootatcr-. altaefead wtth dtpth bombs, bat aj»>

Tfaa aavT'k a r a t d U netstate the port tovwd which tha K taray te p r a e e d ^ nor dtd t i la- dkat* whether she w^atn dl asdat^ anc«. Ttaa Keainy was h it not 'far tn id the area ta whkh tba Greer eptaoda occvmd.

O a rw k e lD a ly

Dank, aktnxr «T the Kearny, la ,a naUxe e< WasktogMn. D. C.

At UBe or tbe attack the Rcaiay was on patrol duty. cazTTtt«e out tta aaaignaMnt ta the north Atkntic patrol whkh to w d tr PitMdcnt R ooam tt^ ocdm to shoot axis suk-

m on stght Inwntefv Tbe mw la n n tn kaftand at«

tera.T t» nary M not MentUy Ute at-

tacker. but oftksats b tttm d It «a- douMedty wasa C

the s u e geoKa) a n « . kat wkwd.i t was net tadtraied whether she

wonM se«k tke ahatkr «( ka(k«r ta m k a d . « r O r n n k ^ w «o«M craa the am th AtknUc to a baaa tn thta country cr Cinada.

Th» I tn t nave) r<«Mt d U M k stoto w ikkt a( tha -**rrrr I* t te Kearny, n was pokkted oat th a t tha tceptdokw ow iea « n ^ thta BSOro-

has i A B ttk tka* at the dsatina t

iCMitoes«<nr«MaRoosevelt Says Keam - Inside Defensive ZoneiHYOK PARK. N. T.. Oct. IT

President RMeevelt saM today tka

u . B. a . Kaarair akartr «mMa;

Uta Amerloah defaoatva a a *

The PraM ta t aaM I t e kMV ko p e ta U n ^m ^M e n g a t e w ^

a a t t i

in tMABUgltU. “iboot w

Page 2: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

r«ceTwo IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Octobw 17,1941

125,000 BREWERY, WELDER WORKERS THREATEN TO QtnT AFL

H l E i S

0 F 8 I G M T E RU A T n S . w »«h, OcU IT <U»-

■m* A m vttM FrdenUon tii U bor^ c m utnukl conveaUon wm kd- jourtMd tod«y le*rtn« » tih the txt- cuUv* wuncU th# fx M tm of oopln* v lU i ft t t tm u n M MhUm by IU ,000 v«b l«n u d brcvcry worker*.

Both thm t«n*d to desert the ptr> M«t onw toUDB becioist ol jMrti- dJctJonU (JLtputw. The mxM m wnnl an Mitonomou3 cmft union; tlicbrew w «*>nl totheir mnks beer Initk drivers whom the teaimters unioii also eUlms.

Chuter Svsptnded The contenlloQ tucpended Uio

chwter ot the b n v tr j «-orkera \mion Kith tu i i . W m em bm unUl U yleUa to the teunatm >U lOM drivers. But the brevers were »da- mant d«(dte » U. S. suiveme court decision Ust veek la^lrmlng the teftimter's ^irtadlcOon.

"Our membere wtjp thet if tlie AiTi doesn't »-*nt u», Uie C IO do«." detecate Joseph Kauaer i«id. He «ald U the brewers didn't p> Into the Congress of IndustrUl OnranitA- Uons they proUbtjr «-oukt torm nn IndepeodiQi union.

N a rr*(H t u ««d AM The conveouw accepted without

protect an eneullTt council recom*. mendaUon that aid ta Ra<«]a be ap- pnved on a bitsU that such action did not ladlcale trlendshlp with the sorVet tool mn«)y v w pncttoai and cxpedUnk 'Hte reeolutloa «ipre«ied hope the Ameriean aid irouM laduoe RuasU to ceaae p r^ tcanda acU- viUca in the United SUtes.

convention al«o approved a TWOtuUoc eetkbtt a paidotx tor rn d K. Beal, paitlctpant in a Oastonla. N. a . tMtUe etrike tn iia» durlnf «bkh ft poUoe «htftt dM . BeftI U an ioictat* U the North CftroUoft a u u penlteniiMjN____

W A 0 S IN A R T IB o m . O c t » V7PK

Admtnlitrtte W. Miner today n a eM WPA veritei* boUt «ltht m w ftlivwt boUdlBC^ toiu ftiipont and fw r tendingfleJda U>4 nltee tt tunways tmdir the a a lU a l defenae «6a- ■tnwtlaB vncTM tn Idaho.

— TB-«Mraae. IBDet fapor. agency coMtnieted twtr arourlM.

-------- ' * teeoe and made

t o to t ig r a ip w * eenrtnietlan and t e p r m M m U f a i ^ w

gSw d^oSp ! M d * w ^ S c t £ n ^ ^eoNktMttcn Mihool l»Udlnt ftnd te M V »t tht Ontvmlty ot Xtf ' wutBem branch to Poattlto.

HUtor MU 1M cmutruc-iim protnMa te ^ e d constntc- tk n otTi mUw «f dnOntce ditches,

«U<aM.ana

U ft}e r% rU M of the airport pro> g n m «*r* carrtAd en a i Boba. Po* OftUUa, Idaho f«Ue and Burley.

ReiattTe VUIIi «>Ml&s Mno' J"f>c Hfllneoka, On*

Urlo. Chill-, Is licrc \islVlng her cou­sin. Mm, K. Du»ne HorfBfl. and fam- ll>-. and otlipf rclallvcs.

Overling ParkeraBecorda at the police itallon today

ahowed that A. J- Voung and E. G. Blair wcM fined I t each on charge* of overllme parking In the 10-mln- uU wno itx front of the postorrice,

Named u AsmtOregon Mortgage comixuiy, Spo<

ktuie, ha* dfilRiiated Edward Low, Tuln PnlL<:, M 1I.S ii«ent In Idalio, according to certificate ahd i\rtlclc.i of incorporntlon filed wltWUic coun­ty recorder.

On VacationMrs, O. Trt* Is Icixvlng Sunday to

-Ult her soii-lii'law nnd daughter, Mr. nnd Mra. Arthur PaUer. Walla Walla. Wwh., and her parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. Jolin Wi^jner, Top;icnl£j), Wnih.

Scouts to meet A\1 mtmtien of the Boy Bcout

drum and bURle corps today were nskcd by offlcluli to appear tn unl- tom\. and -’KtlU instruments. r I the band.shell In U)0 city park Satur­day at 10:30 a. m.

News of Record M u T t a m U t t « m

■News' in Brief

t>lendi Vl»ltMr. and Mrs. Walter Shrader,

Bellingham. Wa.ih.. en route hojne froni A vacation trip, wore overnlRlu guestd this week at the home of Mr. and Mra. 0 . W. Wltham. They were friends of Uie WlthaiBa dtiring their residence In Iowa.

FIrtUhea Courae Leo W. Parkinson, private first

class, has been graduated from the teletype course of the Chanute field (Illtnoli) branch, U. 8. army air corpi technical aohooU. Parklnion, son ot Dr, and Mrs. O. T. Parklnnon, Twin rails, enlisted In the tilr corpn March 11 of this year. He is now as­signed to the Portland alrbue, O re i^ .

Jud»e VUlla Judge H. M, Holler made a trip

from HollLster to Twin Palls yes- terdsy. visiting briefly with frlenda,

KdUor to VUU Mrs. Betty Matthews, society edi­

tor of the Idaho Daily etatesman expccls u> attend tl)e bftnqucb see< Kion of Uie Idaho Writers' confer­ence Saturday evening a t tho Park iioul, Rccwdlng to word received by Twin Falls (rlendi.

Returoa Tnm Eaai ML'J Ar:ics Stronk hoa relumed

frtim ft vWt to Washington, D. 0. Hor mother, Mra. M . A. Stronk. who accompanied her to the national cai)liiil. .stopped o/f at Earllng, In., on me return trip and w ill vl&lt tiiere for a time.

Oatnace* Slight DamnRcs Were alight early yes.

terdny afternoon when cars oper­ated by Millard L. Fletcher and Rex D. Mathews crashed at Second nvonue and Third street north, po­lice records show. Both drivers are Twin Palls residents.

h Sugene Ly exten-

■*' OCT. 11M u ttn B e t i . a t, Deer

MoaL. and Aimt Manty, n .UkD. Moot.

.lamea Vw\ VHck,» , etaj\\*.v, and Bthw P r l * ^ Z ^ t r , n . Olenns 9trrr.

TQ Mr. ftnd M n. Allred iieatoit. Twin PftUa, ft ion, last nlglit at the Twin M k eounty hoeplt^ mttem- tty hootft,

Mr. and Mtv J . K. ste«ikTl. Jerone, ft eon. U»t night at the Tvln PftlU county general hospital

JXROME. Oet. 17 (tfpeclal) — A dUtrlcv meeting ot tho county ex­tension agents of the al* south cen­tral Idaho countlee was held all

Thur^ay morning and alter- ooon at tiw Jerotne county court­house and ftt the North side Inn for ih « purpDM ot d u tu u ln i the ex­tension service’s place In the food for defense program.

Preeent included bcsldeaW. WhitmftB, Jerome_____ _sionftgent; W. W, Palmer of Burley; 0. W . Oalgh of Rupetf. J , Pal- t u r ot QoodiQi and Bert BoUng- brokeofTw lnlM U .'

SpMkars Dean E. J . Iddlngs, director of ex­

tension nwk. University-of Idaho, itoeoow;_J. W. Barber, stato eounty agent laSger, Moscow; Miss Marion Hepworth, ataU home dnnonstra* Uon leader, were ipeakers during tho morning's seasioti.

In the afternoon. Joint session meeting! were held with the Nation­al n r m iM n aasoolatlon secretary- trMaurtre from the district offloas in south centra] Idaho.

In Charge J . W. Barber woa in charge of the

Joint meellng. witli Eki Bell, farm credlV administration. Spokane, con­ducting tho discussion which was given over to relationship between the ftxtentlon aervlte and Uie Nu' tionai Farm Loans asaoolatlon.

Polowlng this meeting, a brief sea- alon of the county eatenMon agenU was'held with Mr. Barber at which time (he details of tlie extension ser- vtca program w«r« dUc^iued.

pian wiui me auiy or eacn rounty agent being to inform the people ot the details and the reaanni (or the program,

[NEDANDJMED

Ray Mitchell, Oklahoma an d Texas transient harvest worker, to­day was in county Jail in ilcu of payinent of a fine ot 110 0 and costs of 13 assessed by probate Judge C. A. Bnllcy as th6 man was brought be­fore him this morning on a charge of driving while Intoxlcatcd.

The complaint, signed by A. B.

ernted by Mitchell was involved here yesterday, MltcheH is alleged to have sped itwoy from Uie aoddent scene and was arrested by Perkins a short time la t« ’.

Mitchell's car collided with __other maohlne being operated by George Slgrlat, Twin Falla, on Sec­ond avenue south last evening. Dftmas«s wera small.

The man was first arrested on hit and run charges but these were dropped In municipal court and the drunken driving charge was placed In probate court.

IEI W U E S

Tlie general public wlU serve aa ''Judges'' during a model airplane eonicfit' which wUl be held 8i 'at 2 p. m. at MoMaatere flata .----if the Twin Falls municipal airport, t. WAS announced U\la afternoon by Dale Clark, one of the organ|*era oj tlie MAglc valley CJ- “ - gojilzatlon of model .......

Clark Mild thut many jasoUne and rubber modeb will be entered in the nicet which Is open to the putiUa. The field Is reached by going to Five Poltit,s east then taking the road south over Rook creek, keeping on tills road until the munielpai airport Ls pns:>ed and the model Held rcBclied.

As motorists anlve for the meet, eacji will be given • ballot and they will mark down their “results" after

Vay the takeoff was made, the com- pleieness ol conetnicUon or on »ev' eral other things.

'riio&e planning on entering planes \n the contest and dulrlng addi­tional Information should ............Olark at 6SD Main avenue west or o,t.telcplionc 838.

! i W E S ASKTwo wlvea tiled divorce aulta In

district court today, one claiming non>support and the other alleging deterUon.

Mrs, Wanda Thomaa asked free­dom from Leonard Thomaa on thi

OEAIH COMES 10 R K EE E

EdlUi Morello filed aviit against Joseph MoraUo, whom ahe married Mtty 13, 1040, at Norton. Kan. She said he deseftert her lew thun two months inter—July lO, 1940.

O. 0 Hall Is counsel for both di­vorce petitioners.

Condition of Wendell Boy Stays ‘Critical’

W INDEU.. 0 « l. 17 (SptcliUI - Condition of Floyd Merritt, D, aon ot Mr. and Mra, Fnink K. Merritt, was termed "ormoai" today by au­thorities at Bt, Valentine's liospital The boy was accidentally thot In Die stomach lA t. Sunday during a visit at Tuttle, The .22 caliber gun was held In the Hands of a young friend.

CASTLEFQRD, Oct. 17 (Special) -Mrs. Mary Qee. 60, CasUeford res­ident for l i years, and member oJ a prominent pioneer family ot Oakley, died at 11 p. m. yesterday at the Twin Falls county general hospital, following a (hrefi weeks' illness.

Her second husband, whom she married at' Ontario, Ore.. In June, 1934, died In 1933. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Mildred Hildreth and Mrs. Laura Blackham. Castle- ford; two sons, Parley McBride, Tuln Falls, and Paul MoBrlde. whose present address U unknown; at grandchildren and four great* grandchildren. Her first husband, J , J. McBride, Twin Falls, also vlvcs.

other survivors are two sisters, Mrs; Florenoe Moeller, O-’-'e", - •' Mrs. Ully McMurray, Oakley; tour brothers. Joseph Wi«o.. . renco Wilson. Qoiiley: ' Oallfomln; Parley Wilson, Logan, Utah, and several haif-broineis «.,u half-sisters. .

Mrs. Qe« was born at HarrlsvlUe, Utah. Not. 30, 1874. She came tf Idaho with her parents 5S year: agorMtUing &trOiiicy; ......... -.......

Funeral services Will be held Mon day, Oot, ao, » t 3 p. m. at the Albert* son funeral home chapel In Buhl.

Bishop W lUlan Hutchison, ot the L. D, S. ehurch, will efflelate, and Interment will be to Buhl cemetwy.

An all-time American record was se tln 1640 when'prlvato pilots ot lfl,BOO planes flew 330,00 miles.

KifttberlyF.F.A.Winds up Labor

On Bean ProjectTha Kimberly chapter of ^ A Is

Just closing ft cooperalhre bean proj­ect of approximately three acres un­der tlie supervialMi of John H. Darby, FFA inetniotor, it was an­nounced In Twin Falls today by FFA offiolals.

district. The maohlne labor was done by D. J. MagnuaoQ while the hand ifltwr w u done co ^ra llv e ly by the iliembers 6t tho Klalberly club and llie (tdvlaer. Scene elaaa tfane wAs de­voted to Uie project, giving the club mmbers first hand oxperienoe along with their n ^ a r class work. Ttie project and work was under the su­pervision ot Darby and the FFA ex- cciiUve committee.

Officials estlmat«d that the beans will average about 80 busliels to the acre. The net proceeds ol the proj­ect will go Into the Kimberly FFA treaiurj-.

At lUc same Umc I t w u annoimc- ed that the Kimberly and Mur- taugh FFA chapters have Just com- pltud thalr annual program of work. Presidanta Joe Hillegos, Klm- herlv, and 5!lmer Rees, M uru ,____named members to the follow-ing administrative committees and each club member will aid In shar in i U\c program for the year i serving on a commlttec:

Supervised fanning activities, co- operauve actWttUa, community serv­ice, leadership and publicity, earn­ings. saving and Investment, con­duct ot meetings and prograisis, scholarship and education, recreft* Uon, entertalnfient and contests.

l i N I I R E DBecause horses wandered onto

U. 8. 03 late last night, an Idaho FaUa woman suffend bniisas and the IM l ftUU) drlvta b> her son waa wrecked to extent ot |100, Shehff Warrea W . Lowery said today.

Tho woman, who suffered the minor Jniurles w u Mra. Bay FuUen- wldner, passenger in the machine--- stod'by John FuUenwldner, 19,

of Idaho Falls. The car la owned by hia brettm.

Mrs. FuUenwldner was brought toTwin Falls hotel but did not re-

(lulre hospital treatment.Sheriff Lowery said that young

FuUenwldner put on the brakes when the horses loomed In front o( liim. He lost control of the machine. The mishap occurred at 11 p. n . Thursday two mile^ south of Berger.

Shortly after the crash, ahorltt’s records showed this morning, the “meanest th ie f came along and stole the spare tire off the wrecked car. The tire waa a Goodyear 6 by 18. ,

Seen TodayJackrahblt making high speed

BJ he acoota along truck lane near. Five Polnt« eas t. . . Crowd look­ing at skin of brown bear shot by local hunter , . . Another of those f.our-mo(cred bombers roaring over city . . , Man, holding gun in one hand and shells In the other, standing on downtown street talk-, ing to friend . . . county com- misaloneni winding up bond vote canvaas In record time, opining that oanvftaa like , this Is a cinoh compftred - with one of the prl- Inanr gtooUoos . . . And very amoJl boy energetically licking at candy sucker, then stuffing the sticky thing Int^ his Txwket.

Potato Marketing • Sessions Planned

POCATKXO, Oet. IT U fO -^e fltat tmtoQ of the Idaho , potato markettni agreement admlnSstra- tiv* oonunlttM alnoe the program went' into effect Monday has been scheduled (or here tomonow night, Uoyd Bell, marketing manager, an­nounced.

Bell said Idaho fannera ««d ahlp- pera were cooperating •‘wholeheart­edly’' with the program.

Routine business and matten re­garding administration of the pro­gram will be stildled at the session.

READ THE T U O a WAKT AOS,

CCC ™ C K , CAB C R A SIi;2 IN IU e

PAUL. Oct. 17 {8peclal)-.OolMon J a Paul COO truck and a coupe Saturday night a t the first railroad ocosUng this aide et Heybum placed two of the throe occupants of the passenger oar, Mlsa rthe l WaUace, Burley, and Blase Vogel, MurUugh, in the cottage' hoapltal in Burley. Andrew Kergenreder, Murtaugh. the third person in the ooup^, and G il­bert Pouason, driver of the CCC truck,' escaped without injury.

Reports from the hospital gave Miss Wallaea'a oondlUon aa favor­able but the senouness of Vogel’s injuries were not yet detemlned, it waa sUUd by Deputy Bharlff Clyde Craig who waa called to the acene of the wrwit W midnight Saturday.

The wreck occurred when the CCC truck started to make a left hand turn and the coupe foUowhig startedto pass as the truck turned left, Officer Oraig stated. The coupe, col­liding with the left front fender of the truck, aUdded and rOUed about 48 yards, coming to a stop right side up.

About, IK COO enroU«ea were In the truck and one w u riding In the front seat with the driver.

VANENGEIENISI TO END CANVASSVan Emgelen's department store

today became the first local instl- .tutlon to complete a catwass among employes for donations to the Twin Falls Community Chest fund, Carl N. Anderson, drive chalrmaa, an* nounced this aftemooii.

Although the drive does not atari until next Tuesday morning, several flrma already have a canvass un­derway, Anderson aald.. ' ,

Under the plan some W store owners and managers have agreed to conduct solicitations in their own businesses, thus aiding the drive by taking some ot the work o ff.the shoulders of volunteers. The atores and firms participating ip this man­ner have been designated ’'lieu­tenant honor stores."

While not disclosing the amount contributed In-Van Bngelen’s, An­derson said it "came to a larger amount than the contribution made ^ the employes of that store last year."

OEER H W T E R8 PAY M

WlUam Lantlng and Ruth Ar- tr. Twin Fails, have each paid tS

fin* and-13 cuts In probate court on charge of failure to attach a deer tag to the..deer.tbey.-bagged in the Minidoka special hunt. Judge C. A. Bailey set the. fines at t u each but remitted « » of this amount.

SPEAKER URGES CHEST SIIPPOR

Participation In and support of the coming Twin FalU Ooenmunlty Chest drive was urge^^ere yester­day by Jay Spracher as he spoke before members of the Klwanls club meeting at noon at the Park hotel,

Spracher told of the work being done by the various organltaUona connected with the' Community Cheat .and said M a t acUve aollci- UUons get undevvay next Tuesday following ft "peptibreakfast at 7:30 a. m.

Other speaker during tho noon program was Fred Meech, who dis­cussed v^lous English sports and explained the setup of each.

Accepted aa » new member ol the club during tha session was William King, manager of the local Wal­green dma store. Ira Lambing, Long Beach, Calif., was a visiting Kl- w a n ia n . <•

IpNOWI Ends Tomorrow

^VICTOR lES, RECORDS

Brixt| You th« Great mplioslea Perfonnod hy Uia World’s Grefticat Artlata

Ixti. lk<( l>fftii>e of tiiixrh |«lenu in<l ilia unrlnllnd YJrtnr r». cording (echiii>{ue, So cbuoM die l>e*l ->St no cxira cod.

C rto t M utka l M a s te ip lid i

by Fgmoui CondiKtort

lur* (Woiofl) x llh RDCiirmphonyOrchMin. 2 ildM . . , . * 1.00

l..p«M«Hh*wil.l-Sy>n[ihonxlnnMinor Hill> Ihg I'hlU.ltl.

rhis OrcIiMlce. I3il<lM,ln «ll>utn

|^K*v«HviMl.r-Pel«r*nd ihf. , Wolf «ilh iha nn.ms

Jtym]>V>nB7 Oftil>r«tr», 6 In

sibuin......................... .^0 .1 0

M«M ttlMW*—HjmnKimy Nh. I (P ..II.S) ^lih N«-

' limit] Uj'nipliony Onhoitf#. 10sIJm , In album.............. «I,M

Sr'I'iK *'«1Hssri Wounds (Two Eli|l«e

Po«m«) iC f i f ) tha Undon ' Pitllhirmgnla OttliMirs. 3 »<•!«•

|),09palrf*" levHiliv—nuulin snij l,ud. pilla^Uv<nniei(;iMM)-l)ubU.

uihks rnm>h^Kormh,w)*\th the

lndl.n.jK>lliS,^mi.hfln|-0 r"1.« lf t .te ld M ....................................... I 1.M

In * * WrtHf-Synphony Nfl, 4 | (Jul'iK i) {Uomfi) « lih li lt Vlinns Phllhsrmonie Oi»h«tt«. 7 U alVu*. . . . . . . . M AI

snciAi G ift orriRi

The mskett of Victor Hacordi t(« calsbiailoi tlis |ruiM( ysw in Ibalr history wllh ihl* MnMlIonsl

on thsM lw« gm t Victor Had S(«l Rsoordt-No. lB220and No. 18B30.

•120 FR IEETWafarlNFriMafOMl

SHOP FOR ,FURNITUREAT RARBT MVSQBAVB’S

B S rO K S YO U BVV

I Every thrifty person Ibsowa that stores that sell for CASH sell for LESS. Oet quality fur­niture for LE88 for 8P0T CA8H at

HARRY MUSGRAVE’S Mdat. Mart

Magic City Market

Saturday Specials!

POT ROASTChoice Steer m A m Be.t, ID. ............. l y C

PICNIC HAMSTenderized, Half or )VhoIe

..LARD

I Pounds . 61cSALT PORK

Dry Sail m || —

Belly, 111............ ..

EGGSWe Pay the Highest Prices

In Trade

rftEE DBLIVBRV'ALL 0R0B R8 C. O, D.

riiON B 911-W

h k t s M ^ t o l k b o M

On our lot now you w«I find "buys” fiubsUntlally under the market. We in­vite you to come in and look them over.

Save $50 On ThU One so V Ford peluxe Forder Sedan- new flniah, very good rubber, ex­cellent appearance and la R de O from top to bottom ....-....

Marked Down <6037 Nash lAfayette Deluxe Tour­ing Sedan—New finish, good rub­ber, only one owner. Is economi­cal to operate .........-..... — >376

Goins at $40 Off36 Bulck 8-40 Bpecla) Coupe-> Clean Interior, excellent appear­ance, new finish, good rubber

.........................-...............«46

MANY OTHERS

40 Mercury Town Sedan, n Unoeln Zephyr D X , Sedaa. t1 PlymeoUi Deituu Forder.U Ctaev. Uartor Dlx Fonler. 17 J o r t rotdot. .Sfl Studebaker Comm. Sedan.

.3} FontlM DelBxe-Fordor.— U Ford Coupe.

TRUCKS TRUCKS40 Ford %-Ton Stake P.U -i69338 Ford Pickup, ',4-Ton--- »395as Ohev. Pickup, 4-Ton 9Q Chev. Truck, IH-Ton ..J350 SS Ford Wckup, M-Xon

Many others. Yesterday’s prices today.

Soden Electric Co.Ntxt to drihtum Phont 170

W(i«n you <Mnk > cup o( Hlllt Bcoi.y o u w in l « , l e ■ d c l l c l o u , i l i v o r

( h a t n o o t h e r c o f fe e h a i . T h a t f l a v o r , w h ic h n e v e r v a r ie s , l a d e v e lo p e d b y CcmirolleJ ttoinliMg, a p r o c e s s o r i g i n a t e d a n d use « l e x c lu s i v e ly b y H i l l s B r o s . T h i s p r o c e s s , u o l l k e o r d i n a r y i p e t b o d i , m a s ts t h e b le n d e v e n ly , c o Q t ln u o u a ly , M littU 0l * timt. E v e r y co tT e e b e a n is ro s s c e d p e r f e a l y . N o n e o v e r d o o e ? N o a e u n d e r d o n e !

I t m a y a u r p r l a a y o u <o k n o w t h a t H i l l s U r o l . C o f f e e i s o n e c o f f e e y o u «:an u a « i n a n y k i n d o f c o A e . m * i u < ' ' 7 h « C b v u c * a * in i ia g u a r a n t e e d t o p r o d u c e b e a t te a u h a Jo D R I P , G L A S S M A K E R , P 8 R C 0 L A T 0 R , o r P O T , i f t h e d l r e c t i o n a o n ih e a id e o f t h e H i l l a B r o s . C o f fe e c a o a re f o l l o w e d .

M M M i M i m m m . o #

e>

Page 3: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

Fridijr. October 17,1041 IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO

st r ik e a c t io n lo o m s in w est co a st w a g e . batTi ^♦yNION fROlESIS

U. s. BEAR MSBy Unlt*d P rm

Strike action afrcctlng 1150,000,- 000 worOi of plane orders ttireat-

' ened today at the huge Consolidated Aircraft plant u son Diego, Calif., unless the federal govemroent of­fers to bear the cost of wage- in* creases agreed upon by the com­pany an(T an'AF^ union.

Apparent company - union pcace at the aircraft plant, employing 37,- 000 men. was shattered by angry pro- te&ta from AFL machinlsta against a company statement that nego- Uated wage increases would not b« forthcoming unless the lederal gov­ernment bore the cost.

Charging -'bftd fftlUx" because It k was the company that had proposed

, themadlilnlsts' local petitioned its In­ternational executive board for au- thortiaUon to tlrlke. W . C. Chud- lelgh, president of the local, said walkout could be e»P«ted upon r celpt of the authorixatlon "iinlcsa there Is some improvement In the situation." '

DeUys “Wildcat" Strike Because of what he urmed • strong

KcntUnenf’ for a wildcat walkout,■ Chudleigh appealed to Uie workers

over the planfa public address sys­tem last night to stay on tho job for “at least 34 hours."

TTie proposed w ag e Increases — granting a 15 cents hourly minimum lor aUMed workers and a 13 cent* hourly increase In lower paid brnck- et«—ended an earlier strike threat

' a t the plant. The company spob man said ttie govemr(icnt was pected to pay lor the Incieases, tlmat«d at »83,000«00, under a clause In alrpt&ne contracts providing compensation to manufacturers for Increased production costs. The war department was believed u> be studying the case to determine whether the wage boosts should be paid by the government.

In the 11-day strike of 1,400 unit­ed autombbUe workers av Uie M id­land Steel Products company, c'-;- talls of a wage gain compromise tenUtlvely acceptcd by the union and company for ending tho walkout were expected to be worked, out in conferences today.

Conciliator James P. Dewey, who previously dlscloaed that eight to 13 cenU hourly wage Increases had been agreed upon, announced the tentative settlement last nlghl.

To Mlehigsn Nest - Prom the Cleveland dispute

•Dewey-wllI go to Ecorse, Mich.; to attempt settlement of a strike of 400 C IO steel workers delaying produc­tion on high teniille steel and other defense oMers at the Great Lakes Steel corporation.

The American train dispatchers passed a resolution at Chicago yes­terday demanding a 30 par cent wage increase for 3,500 memben. The new demand came as a presidential fact- finding commission finished hearing evidence from the railroads in the wage controversy Involving demands by 1,300,000 employes for 30 to 41 per cent wage Increases.

The board will henr a separate fwage case involving railway express company employes and rebuttal ar­guments from the carriers and Uie railroad brotherhoods In the prin­cipal ca.ie before going to Wash­ington the latter pttrt of next week to study the evidence.

NeighboringChurches

KIHBBRLY CHRIRTIAN • Rby L. Tltui. mlnliur

10 a. IB.. Uibk ■chaol: JUdford Walker,- -...« Lord's 8upprr) br Mr*. Howard lir ih« minuter. Senior ChritUan

for alud)' m.. illbl* •tudr

■ffviea: et>>«rvaBca ut • tpwlal m«Ma(* In tc Larmtn and ih* •«rmj t;SO P. tn.. Juniur ai UndMvor KKlelln- wl ind dIaniMlon. (:S0.;lart for adulw. 7[a0 p. Tfi., •non piaj, ■The. Urokrn frombe'’: Mr. Tltua will briDC the mca>as« (olluwlns ihli pl«/. Hallr day and homwotnint Mcvlrn will

n/f al noon wlih a number nrtpccial r>a- around lh» dlnntt

JEROHB HBTIIODIKT Alb«rt K. Martin, minlttcr

a, m., church .eboul; II. J. (k^mn.er.

anlhrm br lh« choir; >clii by Klila Imni; arrmon. ''Ilow to 0«al Wlih th« Imixml- l>lf.“ 7 u. m., JlethtKliit Youth K«llow»hlp; ]«a<I«r, Mr*. I'yl«. group aponaor.

Ptl,ER METHODIST lUlttr I- Whllr. mliil.lcr m. Chorth «hoal-. BraM \iwni

claai«i. II a. m, Mornlnr wonhlii; yrmon by th» cajlor; iprclal muale ‘Aiulr un<l»r lh« dirw:llon of Mn.II a, m. Jftolor l»suc d«votlonal ... let, 7:S0 p. m. Kpworih I«asuc davotlonal

1^er»ole. i*leaa« be lura to bring Ulbla for rrf«r»ncra.

HANSBN CAI.VARV flAPTlUT 'A; Bennett, xutU r

10 a. jn. Sunday .rbooi. Monro Whit- tU\«ton. U a. m. Mornlns'‘or»hlp. 7 p. m. U. Y. I\ i;, icrvlcCT. itob I-elly*rrw, pr»ld«nl; •ubjKt, -Crownln* Chrlai In (^on'imlc Life," K ii. m. Kvrnlna wor»hip. The Woraan’i Ml»lnn Union will Birrt al ihf Urn Rayborn hom» nrar Kim-

Tbr»da/ tflrrnoen. "held I e rhurrh Thuriday

JKROIIR CHRISTIAN Waller y. Harman. H. I)., p.ttur

10 a. m. Church achool :• l»»»on. •"TKe Wutk of the IMy Spltlt." It a. m. Sermon I Kiplc. "Th. Kirallty of Chrlilian Revela- tinn. muilc.

KIMBKRLV NAZARENE Karl Willlamn. paitjjr

m a. m. Sunday irhool. Sam Ka auperlntcndem. 11 a. m. Mornlns wonhlp. 7 p. m. Voting p<«ple'a mreUn*. mil liar- manlni. pmldent. 8 p. m. Evangellitla •ervlce. 8 p. m. Wednnday. prayer Ing. , .

.K»t5N CHURCH OP «iOD Roy Carney, patlor

10 a. m. .Sunday .chool. 11 a. m, i Ing worihlp.J p. m. Ypung people’t i

BUlESSFIiS

Owners or managers of 65 local I n s t i t u t i o n s today announced through C*rl N. Anderson, Twin Palls community Cheat drive chair­man. that they would solicit dona­tions from among their employes In order to "ease • the load" of Chest workers In soliciting among tho workers.

Anderson estimated'that approxi­mately 1,000 employes will* be con­tacted In this manner. As ■ result of Hie decision of the firm man­agers to aid in this manner, eacli will be termed an “honor firm," An­derson said. Tlie drive lor funds starU next Tuesday morning.

Following is a list of the firms cooperating In tills manner:

Idaho De^iortnient store, C. C. Anderson,'J. d. Penney, Van Engel- en's, FaJk's-Sears,. Roebuck, Union Motor, Olen jenklns. Twin Palls Bank and Trust, Times and News, Fidelity National bank, Idaho Power company, Detweller’s, Jerome Co­operative cre^ery . Amalgamated sugar factory.'

Rogerson hotel. Telephone c pany, Woolwortli's. Newberrj''*, Twin Palls Lumber, Union Pacific, Magic Valley Processing, Simpson a n d company, Scowcroft’s, Coca Cola company, Safeway store. , Parisian iatindry, Troy National laundry, Park hotel, Sa’lft and company, Walgreen drugs. Independent! Meak company, Idalio Packing company.

McVey's. KTFl, Orange T ra n ^ r t . Oarrett Prelghtllnes, Consolidated Frelghtllnes. Barnard Auto, Brown­ing Auto, Magel Auto, Idaho Egg Producers, Twin Palls Peed and Ice, Krengel's, Royal Bakery, M. H. King company, Zlon Wholesale, Hoosler Furniture. Western Union, Klmbte Super service and Zlpway, Hoops Construction company, Vogel’s mar­ket, Coogrlff. Roxy theater, Orphe- um'theater. Moon’s. Schwartx Auto. Hudson-Clark Shoe company and Claud Pratt Sales.

Motion Pictures Shown at Rotary

RUPERT, Oct. 17 (Speclal)-6ev- eral nsels of natural color motion pictures of western sUtes and pio­neer traiU, accompanied with a talk by William Thompson, Burley, pro- I vlded entertainment for Rupert Ro- : tarlons who met in a noon luncheon sesslwi at the Caledonian hotel Wednesday. ‘

Grwip -slnglng;-«Hh"Mrs: ‘Edna Sinclair at the piano, completed Uie program, which wos under the di­rection of A. C. DeMarj', chairman of the program committee?'

The president. Dr, A. E. Johnson, Drcelded. One new member. Dean Olson; was added to tho club. Quests pro.sent wern„W..g -JUohardson. Po­catello, district manager of Safeway stores, Ralph T. Nyblad,. superin­tendent of Rupert schools, c . D. Wiley and P. N. Victor, owner and operator of tlie Rupert Electrical Supply company.'

Stude7it Cast Scores in Tale of Great Obsession

■ All bones from wlilclj glycerine, lubricants ond pho.4phoroiis can be obtained, nnist .be saved by Ger­man hoiuewlves.

Marian Martin Pattern

Patera •8M may b* ord«r«l only In ohlldren'a lUaa 4, fl. I. 10 atid la, BlM « nqulTM 3H yard! u-lnoh fabric and % yard oonlraal.

To get tnu pattern aend VirTBKN ORNTti U> Idaho Kvenlni Tlmei

' »rtm«nu An ftddlUooiiI brlnn yon eariMms

....... - II hu « vitMrobaplan for mryon*. pliu ft PRJUC Itove and b«lt pattern.

pattern depwUnant VniN OBNTC brlnn i ^ t t e m 9eok. II |

‘Defense’ Subject Of M.LA. Comedy

JEROME. Oct. 17 (apeclal)-Tlic Mutual Improvement association o: the Jerome Latter Day. Saints church will present before members and tho public a timely production. "Defense," at the next meeting Oct. 33, It was amiounced today by stake and ward drama director, Mrs. Lucie Jorgensen.

The play will be presented without charge, and ever>'one is Invited.

’The one-act presentation has a barTack3jn_A_jjnlted..atat.es..ftrc camp,'for Ita setting, and the time the present.

Cast of characters includes Inland Talklngton who plays Ned, a refbrn- ed missionary who Is a draftee In the camp; Jim , e. school mate ol Ned's, Ralph Smith; Doug, who Is Rollo Olbbons, and In love with the same girl as his captain; Harry, ployed by Kenneth Chldester. a young man without inhlbmona, anti friend of Jim's.

To roach dUtant starting polnta ror horse tralM, forest rangers now load their moupts Into trailers.

CARO OF n iA rocsTo Uicse who expressed their sym­

pathy 111 so many beauUful and practical way.i during our recent berenveniMU we extend our heart­felt tliftiik.v

Sgl, likwrpiice Hollon Mr, R. A. Goans

By FBANK ELLSWORTH"But when thou cloest alms, let

not thy left liniul know what thy right hand doeth."

Around this Bible verse centered the guiding thQUKht for the all­school play for Twin Pallo high school, Lloyd C. Douglas’ "Magnifi­cent Obsession.’ presented in tlic first of two pertormnncea last plght in Uio high school audltQilunu-under the direction of Ml*s Florence M. Rees.

Second dramatization will be given this evening, bci^lnnlng at 6:15 o'clock.

’The play dcmoii.-stratcd how an obsession can chaugCthc life of a "scoundrel 'onu wustrel” in to , a worthwhile characlor. wishing to re­place with his own Ufc fot one wlilch had been forfeited for his sake.

Cartnty ImpretislveTom Cartncy, portraying the par#'

of Bob Merrick, who, spoiled through wealth, thoughl onb’ ot pleMure untli he consecrated his life to flU

Ing role of Uic cv.enlni!.As the IrH-oloub and IllrlaUous

daughter of Dr. Hudson, Ruth Adele Smltlv presented a rcallstlc charac­terization.

Dr. Hudsw}, wliasc dcnlh brought about the'rcforniiiit; of Bob Mer­rick's personality, wilh well-played by Lloyd Thomp5«:i. Margaret Det- weller displayed nbllliy in the role as tho doctor’s wife, •>

StelUr >Vork -Also turning In a stellar perform­

ance was Virginia Woltcr as Nancy Ashford. Outstanding In a minor role as Dr. Hudson's cook was Ruth- ann Hayes.

Dick. Salladaib took the port of Mrs. Hudson's cousin, who mis­managed her ba^ne.u affolra and brought her Into financial dlffl- cultlw.

Introducing the p r o lo g u e waa Robin Blaser as Randolph, a sculp­tor, whq answered qucstlonfl of Sophistication, a questioner, and Youth, seeking knowledge, parts taken by Grace V/egener and Mary AUoe Buciianan. posing as p&rt of tlie audience.

. Characterization of Dr. ’Pyle, a corpulent friend of Hie Hudson fam*

jP Y R O IL“The Lubricating

Gas”N ow A vailab le a t N o

E x tra C os t!Schwartz Auto Co.

lly, wa. iidroltli' taken by Bill Rob­erson. liiid Bob Burnett gave an aimisliig imerpretatlon of Dr. Jen­nings.

8mai;cr iiarts in ilie prologue were taken by Miir^le Robertson as MlsS Danvers, u sccreury; Dorothy Oook- rell. Mildred Url«K-'. a nurse; Jennlo Slgglns..,MiM Plckou, another nurse; Virginia McBride. Siuan Carson, a student nur.-ie; Steve Cox and Junior Mo.spley, Dr. Carter and Dr. McDer­mott, and Bill Henderson, senncr.

The>e Did WellDr. ttiitl Mrs. Jack Dawson were

Interpreted witli naturalness by Lloyd lliviiiiaiiian and Vera Good­man. Oilier minor role.t were taken by Donnlil QulRgle a.s Perry, a gar­dener, and Marian Tolbert and Billy Apnga. vl.slior.s at the Hudson home.

Si>eclal nuwlc before and after the ,p!ay and belwcen .scenes was played by the high school orchestra, under direction of Richard R . am lth . Tlieme music for closing of three scenes was played by,Julia McBrHJe .on the violin. "Lead Kindly LlghtT’

Orchestrra number.s I n c lu d e d •'Marla Elena." "Cwtle of Dreams,'’ "Yours l.s My Heart Alone," and "When the Swallows Come Back to. Capistrano,"

N E B M 8ITES HR. B H D

RUPERT, Oct. 17 (Biieclall—The

body of Roliiiid W, Beciitold, 30,

Twin Kalk, railroad brakem»n who was killed In the local yards late Wcdnes<lQy night when he fell under the wheels ol a Ittlgln train, wHl be sent Saturday alternoon lo Syra­cuse. Neb. ,

Bechtold, aldlnti in switching op- eratlon.s, evidently fell between two oars. The \raln iiawea nver hU head and one nrm. He died huUntlj'. The body Is at the Goodman mor­tuary.* '

In addition lo his wiie, Mrs. Ruby N. BechioUi: Eltihth avenue east. Twin Fails, he l.< sirvived by his parent.s. Rev. and Mrs. Walter' Becli- told, Syracu.se; four brothers and sisters.’ Mrs. Nell PitieiiHer, Wllford and Robert Beclnold, all of Syra- cu.se, and Mrs. O. A. OHia. Missouri.

O.K.CinCAOO. Oct. n W.f9—Presi­

dent Andrew J a c k ;^ was a poor speller. His ver»I6n-’oJ- "all cor­rect" was "oil korreck." In ap­proving official doeuraenta. he shortened U to O.K. hence Uiat famlllur c>:presslon In our lan­guage.

Authority—latlt section of a new dictionary off the University ol Chicago press.

Neglected Wife .: Granted Divorce

.p lu irxa of extreme cruelty s M neglect Including asKrtion ttttt her husband bought her Juit one

in 3fi years p t married U ffr-b^ a divorce decree here twlM far

Mrs. Florence Root agklnil Ha&y'P.I Rwt. Elmore and Twin Palls county ranchcr.

Judge J. W. Porter approved a property setUement.

The Roots married Jan. 1, lOl'Oi at Caldwell,

WOMAN DIES IN BLAZE

POCATELLO, Ida.. Oct. 11 «J«— Plre-fl?partment InvesUgators said today they believed hot ashes caus­ed the blaze.wlilclj'resulted ln.de- structlon of the home of Mrs. Emma Seabrook. 89. PocuicUo, n^e woman died when the fire destroyed her 'house,.

Court Reverses Assault Charges

BOISE, Oct, .17 (U.RI—Tlie WollO svpremo court lote yesterday re* versed (he Bingham county district court conviction of Charles Nadi- man, charged with assault with a deadly weapon. •

The 'weapon wii.s a typewriter whlcli Nadlman threw at J . O, Brad* ford during an argument In Black* foot. Judgment of ihe district court was reversed because one of the Jur* ors was not a rqxldent of the coun* ty and because of prejudicial error In rulings by the court.

A new ladlo receiver for llgiit plants that wcl«l\*i only. pounils Jins been’ placed bh the market.

SPECIAL Shoe Repdir H A LF SO LES .

Z9«Leather or Composition

LadleiT Qeel LIfU Pat On In Three Hlnutea.

Shoes Dyed Black andNew Laeea Sapplied....... i | ® C

FALKS. SellinjT Agents

SEARS

our cullrctlun of

Used Can would

look good. They

will look food

from any angle

-Including the price angle.

They're dependable bargalna be-

oauM well tell you the Inith about them,

>034 Kord neiuxB Hedan, A-1 |t25

JM I Plymoulh Hpeetal UJ*.t-'oupe, A - r .........................I..WW

1M« Plymoulh Tudar ..........|4tS

1D38 Ford I t i Ton Platform |550

1055 Kord D ll. Tudor ..........

line Ford DU. Tnder...... y yn

1038 fcrd 54 Ton Plekup „..„»30a

1P37 TerrapUn* Tudor..........|U0

1934 Dodge DiK. fu d o r ..... . . im

m i riyrooulh Dig. 4 Dr. -..,4 1 IS

»95l Kert Medan ...... .......L |7S

1M9 neNolo Medan ....

t»U Naih Hedan ......... ^i m chk>vrokt H i -nw « siMhRack ........... ......... - -

.IW

■ MANY, OTHEBS

Buy a ilh

e o n fU tn e t a l

MAGELAUTO CO.

81nct i m

TWIN PALLS

DRESS SALE!SATURDAY ONLY We Offer 346 Dresses From Our Regular Stock

Reg. Values to $2.9S

SATURDAYOHLY

A Iji i i i i t ifn l MclpiiHon <>(

iinil two |)it‘c(3 (Iri'HHc.'t w ilh

p lca lcd Hill! f in ro mUiI.h,

IN’liitH, H|iim I’ftyonn, f*ilk

liiliilH , A ll now fu ll Htyli's.

U fKiiIni' 12 to f)2, J im iiT

HiZfH 1> to 17.

LIM lf TWO To A Customer

DOORS OPEN 9 A, M,|

Charge It A t

C. C. Anderson Coi

i Mats, fish and vtgiMts

Gain g^dness in a flssh- We flavor soups and salads ~7And give Item zest and dash-

f ~ n__Here are 4 exciting fhvors lo make foods more de-

liciouil R«»! ftivon o{ Celery. Gallic, Onion. NEW

Ssvoc Silt Seasooiog, to delicious— dijtrtn l. lo

glau shaket* with poitiure-proof caps. Try ihem.Schilling

4,1warn( S ' V

g iS Q M

Dress IPantrsAgain wc offir extra pant3 from our famous ^Clipper Craft 6uLU at j k 9 9 an amodng low price; ■

Reg. $7.50 “

ULIPSBeauUful satin and ray­on crepe slips at a bar- ^ - g«ln prtce. SUps that •hmild sell for much £ M nme. All sixes. • _

Rayon UndieSRayon panties a l a Ire- ^ ^ mendous saving. A spe; ■ A clal purchase made U possible to offer this ™ amazing value to you, I9c Val«»e

Crepe and Satin SLIPSR E G U L A R $1.69 ^

A ipecUl group ot our f t ■ 2 %

reguUr stock In iorely ^

slips at a reduced price. •

Marshall Field IOO«i Wool

BeaulKul All-Wool

BLANKETSl( thla'blatviet was per­fect It would sell for ^«I0,9ft. A super, saving,Blue. Peach, B e ige ,Dusty, Rose.

Children'sDRESSESA on* day special In

lovely prints for girls of A

all ages. S lu iS to l f l . ' M

TOWELS18x39 Terry Towels In ^ __green, pink, aiure, blue. v ^ red and Jade. A one » day 8p«Ut,

W A S H C L O T H S .

iteffualr 16c .............................. ^ V

HANDBAGSlitw fall bags redilccd . $1-00

to give exceptional vol-, ^

uea for 1 day only. M ^

alack, brown, blue, Un.

Dress ShirtsOur famout Horrtwlck ReR. $1.85

ahirts In wlilte, tan, a

grey, green and fiiiielM V H ^ /

A Saturday special. 4 f t

Men's PAJAMASMen's liatd«lck and R e ^ * 2 .0 0

B.V.D, pajamsa, 60 pnir ^ 3 7

only. In site A D C U.

ROYAL BLUE HOSIERY’4G G u uac , fu ll uU s ilk c h l t to n — e s Thr«iiil ^o x tru fu ll coui’neH fo r bn tter we»V, E x t r n . . j

oiHHliclty in woU, nuiw t^fine aeaVna. L a t e * *

fa ll nhutlon. A n AndcrAqii.yalue In a l l n i lk e 7 T h rtad

ho tlo ry . RVj lo lol.-i. Conatructlon ^

Page 4: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

page Four IDAHO EVENING TIMES, ,TWIN’ FALLS, PAHO. Friday. Oetobur 17,. 1941

TELEPHONE 38

‘ r»U w in a«rvl«* UAltcd Pnu AMMteltoa. T*li UMA rMtan Swrte*

r BsUr«d u 8m»b4 CUu Matter Is th« Tv Ib -- . .Act of CcBtr«< M»rtb I. I

. ro.u(ric«i. April It. li l t . Uad«i

SUBSCRIPTIUN BATU CAWtCSB—rAVABLk IN AUVANCB

Thrro cnonth _

4 by J»w B I b» Cptilrr ol tourt of eomp.U»l )urb<JieU»B la k« po^ b. publlthtd b th» Thui»dM Utu« o' ihli t-Pff purtuAai to Sk im b >32. u BdJtd thtnls b/ Cb*pUr Ut. I»U ScmI»b U tn «f Htbo.

PotShots

The Gentleman fn

. the Third Row

The Return to BiirharismIn the months just before Eui-ope was plunged into

World war II, every responsible statesman in the---.world said.that.if the.>\’ar_were allowed .to happen'

the whole continent might return to barbarism. Even some of the less responsible statesmen, including Hit-

■ ler. recognized that.The war Hitler felt he must have anyway has been

‘sweeping across Europe for more than two years now, and it seems measurably close to achieving the pre­dicted result.

These things come one by one. Lest wc be beguiled by their piecemeal advent into forgetting them, let us review a few things which this war has brought.

Fii*st, the entire fabric of honorable relations by treaty has been sadly damaged, and must at some time ^ be laWiously rewoven.' The black and calculated

treachery with which Hitler has i-epudialed treaties • and the given word, time after time, and according to

an avowed policy to keep no treaty any longer than___ it is. to .ills advantage to do-80, has sadly shaken

throughout the -world, and temporarily destroyed in Europe, men’s faith in pledges. That is .a long step toward :barbarism.

Second, the killing in th.eir beds of innocent women and children has been accepted as a normal means of carrying on war._ This has happened in wai*s be-

' "^ore, but never has been generally accepted, Todayis so accepted as the fruit of the development of

the bomber and the readiness to use it indiscriminate^ ly against civilian populatiohs. That is a step toward barbarism.

Third, restrictions on sea watfaie-aimed at pi-o- tection of noh-combatants and of ordinary neutral trade, have been thrown overboard. The Kaiser start­ed it; in the first week of this war Hitler took over ;where he left off, with the sinking of the Athenia;

amow “spurlos versenkt” is the rule he attempts to im- / pose on th^ whole world. And that is barbarism.. . Fourth, the slaughter of helpless hostages in re­

venge for acts of resistance in which they had no part •was a practice w-hich aroused indignation when the American Indians infrequently practiced it. Now it has become a regular tactic and technique for the holding down of conquei*ed populations. When the Duke of Alva slaughtered his tnousands of innocents in the Netherlands, the people of 400 years ago de­nounced him as a beast and a barbarian. Today nasty little pi^eyed gauleiters are doing the same thing

^ all over Europe. We have i*eturned to what?¥ ♦ • '

; Populations are being uprooted and transferi'ed bodily to unwished-for regions; millions a re doing forced labor for the German fuehrer; whole countries

; have been Ipoted of their food and then informed tliat they must “cooperate” or starve. Education has been

‘ Stifled and free<lom handcuffed across the length and ; breadth of the whole continent.

If all this doesn’t come ])retty close to the predicted - barbarism it will do ubtil real barbarism comes along.

Sad, Sad Tale About the

Bishop’s GoatPnt Shots M in :

Bishop Adamson up here .it Carey «c iii out hunting *nd shot himselt n .fine mountain go«t. lu was the first one the 6 l^ o p had ever UUcd and when he returt\e<I home he al- masi wore the hulr and hide oli iiic uiimtil carr}'lng It around to sliow to all his friend^

Finally. ,when everyone In thb illey had seen it^and a good many

D\h»rs Irom Picabo. 'TUtura, Pricsl. Onnnelt. Hailey and Kctclium had come to admlrv It and to pat tlie Dl.Oiop on the back for the mighty liuntcr he had turned out to be. and hiid wlieedled the promiw of a choice cut or so of the deceased goat froni Its atmtUng possessor — and sorie on their way. the BUhop ear­ned his rm t Into the Carey Co-op store refrlgeralor and laid U to rest In coolness and peace (or about three days.

To the abMiuU coDilemaUon o( the Bbhop, and all b it relatives, and everybody elae wtlhin hear­ing dUUnee. when he went again to admire Uie goat and to cat hlmaeir a (ew iteaka-lhe goat was genet: Net oven a atrar lock

fo f bair remained. The BUbolt Wat *U lLO : Somebodj tod got b it goat!The Bishop ca^ed' down the Ire

of heaven upon this, hla home town. This vicinity came closer to a visit from the national guards, the Uniud SlAie.1 navy.,the marine* and J . Bd- car Hoover' hlmt,eU on U « t day than J-0UT8 truly hopes it will ever come again, and not until several ot the stored good customet^. one a m r the other, entered the place and asked for some more of that good hamburger, "the beat l ever et;’* did a light o f understanding dawa in the Bishop's eyes.

As aoon as tli^t "light" dawned

• saiwc-5i«wy

MUI DER IN PARADISEby MARGUERITE (^HAGAN - .

In Uie Bishop's eyes, the new butcher . the iutcrs. The new butcher

boy. not yet knowing the differencebetween wild goot, tame goat, beef, pork, mutton or veal, had ground tlie Bishop's beautiful, lovely, mag* nlflcent mountain goat up Into cheap coRvmon'hamburscT and soVd it.

The Impossible HappensMost of the glibbest commentators on South Amer

ica have emphasized this: The United States can never have much trade with Argentina; what they produce, we produce, and do not need to import.

Like BO many other glib things, tnat’s too easy. The fact is that today the United States has become Argen­tina’s beat cuHtonicr, taking more than 35 per cent of her exports as against a 1040 share of 17 per cent.

Of course that is abnormal and due to the war, uincc m(ist of Europe cannot buy from Argentina as it would wish. There is no nssurance, however, that further changes may not he in pi'ogress. “After the War” may not be much like “liofore the War,” and thei*e is at least a chance that much of this mutually beneficial gain in trade with Argentina may be retained and «ven increased if liurope returns to the South Ameri­can market. Here, as everywhere, much depends on whether Hitler Buccoeds in reducing Europe to a fllnffle econojnic unit under his. domination or whether trade regains a reasonable amount of f

G r i in R e ii i i i id c r

ith« very eve ot the National Safety congrcsii’ .^iDglh Chicago, when 10,000 safety leadcre meet, I learned that Aurast set a new alUime high for

t deaths. The toll was 8,910, an increase of 21 pw omt over the 3,280 total of August 1940. /

' " out of proportion to the increase in tralHc ' and suggests a growing tension and

Istis. Oi all times, now is the time to__________ ndiurimaiy niheof the road;j(Qur time and keep your temper 1"

N «..the bnlcher boy was not nr«a. He was the BUhop'l aep'bow.

—May N. V.

rLAlNT FROM A DRAFTEBI

Potshots;Here'S part of what I've learned

about the army since I've been In It:

It's an outfit where you do your damndest to get the better of the othkr fellow and pray to high heaven that someone el.vc Lmi'I Uklng you from the rear. The army Is short of men. «uns. anmxunitlon. housing and nearly everything else, but I haven't yet heard of a stiortage of labor or picks and sho\ els.

-Urafloo X

Pot's nntr; NfA wtahlng nny eugle* eyed army oMlcorh to give o Irlb hiore l>uk and .shovel jobs than neceiAary. wn say only that the above cajiie Ironi a young gent at C a m p ------. Cullf.

KVR.SKRY RIMi:, RCVIKCD

i.Oid Mothtr Huhbani Went lo the cupboard To aoothr her dogi hHnger and

thlnt.VVhcn she opened the donr Hhe got very aerr—The ta i man had been (hero firtll

—I>luy and Daffy

IN DKKENKK o r REHTINOl

Dear Pol eimU:1 saw A Irtend of mine taking

things en.vy l>> IninliiH hiu'k In hU de.'ik chair nnit dMnR nmhhig.

•'And whm nre you doing?" "ltA.itlng," ses he.“A fine time of day to be real*

InB,- act J.Bes he. psiiird;"What's wruuu wUli reeling? W«

need more rr.siem In ilie Unltwl Btatea. More lesiers would mean more rekllug pIncM, more May chairs, more m)(1 rushtnnt. And tnore rcktliW placcA. cUalriv aO(t cushions wotild mean more building and more fnriory work, All that would mean more Jobfi. And more )ob* t" whai WF need In this coun> try. Now «h*ts wrong wllh raat* IngT-

1 lea nothing.>-Mff

MTATIDNARY rO tRH

Vcar Tblnl Row;That new gotornmenl U i af

flra per ceni on Iravellng w«n‘k afroel a k l of people 1 know In T « l« Fatla. They aren't going any Vlac* anyhow.

-Eagle U f

H I IM IM m i x NOW MAY AMir«l Dear Colleague:

Add to Ute Pot filioU dlcUoiiaryi Wowa* — Creature who UUnu

It's rcnnomy to buy aomelhlng aha doeuil need because it** auoh a bargain.

■~Pror«Mar tW

rAMOUS LAST UNE

TKR iTOBVi MaMIe 0*C««oor. Ta«atl»ala« 0( Paroaiee Lako Wlak ferr (choal (ta*k*e«aacfettr, Harr, kaa a lat •< threrlea aVeot tk*

S.VtV.-yS.'-itSJ'ttr'SSaiw«r«r*4. aoBkia tfcat tko la> ^Bral'a liaalleallaa of aaarslcr aiaab Vareltl •lyU laa tfce aeeoaa

aaaall* tiUaala ««M Jeaaia M«r> F l a , fre iir ar»«o e( ■iiatcbMacra Mlaa HllUe, C*r«. aaa «ko d r l ka broa«kl la FaraAlM tkla rear,aiarsl* DIxoa. txaaia rir«a< oU

wha jeoole. cUaHr >aa*k»«r«r Cfcrta Oer«aa. aa« oiktr « li rtaiaeate aaa aewtaaiera ta rarallea are hoClo4 k f «ke are*

a* are (ke state retleo.

JEANIK H O K R U

CHAPTER X

next day found Maudi* loo

exhamted from the previous

night's excUemiBt to atlr out of

bed. It was a good day to stay

there inywgy, *ray and blowy

with little whltecaps making our

peaceful lake cold and anfry-

looking.

In the. afternoon I decided to

go out. A farm girl, who came

In a coupla ot timet a week to

clcan, wouW take care of Maudle

and I felt that some of that fresh

breeze woiSld get my own mind

off the aecond crime.

I really had no Intention of

going to the Morris home, but

once headed In that direction I

began to think ot Jeanie, her

work! ebmpletely tom to pieces.

Since Maudie and I had been

rather prominent in both aflalrs,

It seemed only right that I should

a(op in to ae« her. ^

The , beuaekaeper opened the

door, I thought that young Tod

Falmar'i description, old seurpuss,

filled her, Biit she was civil and

ihow'ed me in^> « Victorian style

parlor, hideous w ith marble-

topped tables and uncomfortable

chain—* cheerful place for a girl

to entertain her best beau, 1 de­

cided.Jeanie came in. looking like

mid-Victorian wraith herseU. in

plain black crep^ and her wWte

lace framed In brown hair. 1 must

have been the first one at the

•Tiouie *Ker the police .and - the

lector, and she seemed childishly

>^atftlullot-my- ptesence., W & aaid

' the usual trite, polite thiriga and

then I offered her a cigaret. She

ahook her head and started to ex­plain that ahe couldn't «moke

there, but I handed her. one and

held the match.

"Things have changed now,” I

pointed out, “and you'd belter try

to relax a little.” S})e shivered

and her Upi trembled with the

rcalixation that no one would

again tell her she must not do this

that. 'T h e e ’U '6e hard dayi

ahead,” I Reminded her, “and you

mustn't break dawn. Zven an

older persM would find It dlffli

cult to bear up under two aucb—"

It was bard to bring out the

word murder, but the supplied iL

'Yc5/' she said, "two murders.

I—I suppose they'll ask mo ques­

tions again, too, won',t they? You

know they aren't satisfied with

my answers lor the other time.”

I knew she was referring to the

alibi Tod Palmer had given her,

bul 1 was a i r ^ to say too much.

PoUce are always Uke t l» t ,"

I told her without too much con­

viction.

She turned to me and there vere tcara in her eyes. ' *'Tod wanted to help me and he did. i ’ll n?ver forget that. But— but well, I wasn’t w ith him.”

“I wouldn't adm it that to -many people," I ' said, trying' to choke down my lefellng^l Irigh t

‘■I won't. But i f I don't talk,I think I'll Just cr'ack up insldt.” She put he:; h inds, to her face and then teemed to regain her compQstur*. “lU k ty o u . I have to have someone to trusL"

•Well. I’v« heard • let of con­fidences tn my life,'* I admitted, "I ’m a tc^otJLteakher, If that giyes you any more faith in me.”

She smiled ■' Uttle. "You’re not like a school teacher. You're lirctly 'knd young enough to un­derstand—”

I knew then that even if the (old me she bad shot Herbert Cord I ’d tUy be on her side. She must have felt that, for ahe smiled again and tald. “Oh, I didn't shoot him. Fv6 never shot a gun in my We. I waa angry at him, hurt and sick at having been made lo look such a fool. I guess I ’ve grown up these last few days be­cause now I realize that his com­ing hack here w ith his fiancee shouldn’t have made such a dif­ference to me. Seeing her, I won­der why he «vw paid any atten­tion to me, and after seeing .them together I wonder how I could evercare’ for“htm;“ thfc admiUed candidly.

• • 0UT>UT if you had lived hue

^ tummef after summer with

never a diance to get about with the summer visitora;* never have a boy come b a ^ a second tirAe because he was afraid ot your aunt, you would know how much U meant to be w ith a man like Herbert Cord. He was only amused a t AvxA UiUie, and he made me laugh and he took me dancing. He—ha never made love to me but once or twice, but by taking me around-ioh, picnics and sailing—he made the summers

THOMAS BL JOHNSON - -A Berrfee Mttttary Witter

WAfiRmOTON. Oct. l7-T^ough great offeoaim ooetipy the center of the vast Russian auge, the drama may be decided behind the northern wing. In that vUde^'ess the Ptnntsh anay U winning unnoticed Tlctorlea that confront Oreat Brl»

and the Omv«d Statet too, with

'And th6n this summer it wa; all changed. My pride was hurt, and Aunt MilUe made it worse by pointing out what a fool I'd made o l myself.” She twisted her hands and looked io miserable that I patted her cheek.

"It w only because she was to Heartsick'for you herself." 1 said.

"She was always good to me. My parents died when I was litUe and Aunt MiUie did everything for me. B ut this tumroer we seemed at swords’ points to often

^nd now— ”

She looked out the window at the tossing green branches of the trWS ahd the granwajer^und con­tinued, "A iTu that scene at the inn I started home. I was tick with embarrassment 1 hated to go home feeling that way because 1 knew Aunt M illie would notice

1 walkedalowly and before I had gone very far Herbert caught up with me.

"He'd cut across the tennis court and began explaining that Margie Blxon was Just over­excited and hadn’t ■ meant what she'd said. One thing led to an­other and when he tried to kiss 'rea'I became furious. I told him 1 was glad the had said what ahe did because finally 1 understood what kind of a m an he was. trying to make two women miserable and then %nJoylng their unhappi­ness. I taid I never wanted to see him again, and he just continued to laugh and ropcat that I was being silly and why 'wouldn't I k lu him good n igh t

‘‘I h it h im then.” she taid in a low voice. "A n d then I started running. He didn’t follow me, though, and finally I sat down on the grass and a t^ a d there until I had <]uieted down and stopped crying. • Then I w ^ t home. Thai’s a ll there wat to it, but after what happened to him who 'would be-, iieve me?”

Who would believe her, I won­dered. Just because I was a tenti« mental fool and would take my oath that she was telling the truth I didn’t think those hard-eyed police would feel the same.

(To Be CeaUB«ed)

EDSOK IN WASHINGTON<UHw'« ••••> WkBa 94mm n - UTfl tbelT ftnxUT lOtfOK thA l Uk •' k V 4nny Inadeaui^

I^T ITikA G

"little Plnland** looms unexpect­edly big today In the paramount question: Hov this war U to be won?

toger to prevent Russia from wtn- ntno <L lUnlanrl U h>lpt,sg the MatlS to victory—and really helping'.

Something wUl have to be dona about Finland by Britain and. quite possibly, however rehiclaoUy, by the

That will cause a sensation, for not long ago Finland was the herolo defender of democracy. Tlien the Finns signed the hard treaty RuttU presented, oiily lo face new de­mands. PtnUsid. rejected them, be­gan preparing for a r ^ w e d war, hewed from graiUte a stronger Man- nerhelm line, doubled her rugged army’s oumbera, Itsequipment, partly with American aid. and entered relations with the Nails.

*Xtrlng Space" Again■ A Plnnlah-Oerman army, has Just climaxed a daring, deaperate cam*

• * cite wilderness la ouUtrlpped their

Naai partners. These h a ^ . fiery woodsmen reached the Russian rear, cutting to pieces special troops of.thi Cheka, the dread Bolshevik secret &er.'lce that has ita own prWat* ar­my, They fought to Uie death In the crimson snow abOut “ ----- - ‘

lets. And If aav the u m y n l ia - r Qulahes the L e o t o ^ -.Uatcow- Doaeti In d u s trU H S u aai^ railroad a t i. U beeomat dapendent upcn the Ural and BtlMrian W us tc ia l reclaQt>Tttey mMjhl turn out eqalpoent enough for a defensive stand along a stroog Una like the Volga, but hardly- for ah offensive.

Washington heara not all Finland applauds flghUng for lebensiauia side by tide with the Mails when

and Amarleaaa dont like itniry la reporta

with Baron Maanerbeun i Ing to the anay that the capture of Petroaavodsk la big ^ toward eventual security, but with many

, people anxious to cod Ibsir ordeal by war and hunger before' they lose British and Americas friendshlpw

What form BrlUsh-Amertcao ac­tion would take Is sunnite but there U unconfirmed talk that despite the difficulties, the British may land an eipedlUon at Murmansk to reopen the railroad and perhaps help raise the siege ol U n ln gn d . One r«Port is

which the Ptmu captured and re- chrlstened Petroskol.

Now Petroikol was no part of the terrlUvy Russia took from Finland two yeara ago. but of an "Alsace- Lotralne” claimed by both, long held by Russia and now Ubeled by Fin­land's president. Rytl, with the Nail name" Uvtng tpace."

Britain warned the FUms to lay off this particular lebensraum If only because through Petrotavodsk ran the shortest and best route whereby Britain could send Russia the supplies Russia so urgently needs. This Ufellno la Uie railroad leading south from Murmansk. Rus­sia's only year-round Arctic port and beet funne) for Brtllsh cargoee,- ee- peclally now when freetlng makes Ice In rival Archangels harbor.

Which to bad, for Russto't other entry-porta in East Siberia Mid the Persian gulf are long hauls b f water and raUroad, often single-tracked.

armies and commimfaiues _______this fact: Russia's back Is pretty close to the walL Those who said the Russians shouM always "retreat and

RUPERT

DECLO

m im DoroUiy Lewu Is spending tie week at springdtle, visiting her

cousin. Mlsa M erlin ' Bronson.

-Mr. and ^ rs . A taa Tanner have returned to their home In Colorado after spending several days vlsUlpg at iiie home of his brother, Ray Tanner, and fa ^ ly . •

Mr. and Mrt. Charles Hawker ipent Tuesday at Blackfoot.

Lynn Noyea ahd Harry DaYrlng- ton. tirtio have spent the past several months In Ihe army iralnlnH camp In California and who have been discharged from further duty, were speakers Sunday evening at lacra-

lent meeting In the 1>. D . S. church. M lu Benon Penrtd-returned Sun­

day from a vksU>it Boise.Scott Anderson, who has spent

liie past several montlu In Chicago, arrived Tuesday for a visit with tils parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Ander-

Johii L. Hunnnkcr, Slarrnlt. vl!at«^d with his sLitcr. Mrs. Hyriim 8. Lewis, Wednc.-,day, Mr. Huiifaker was on

,hU wny lo BaU Ijike CKy nnd Brig­ham, Utah, wlttre he will vlsU rela- Uve.1 .

Mrs. Alina Lewis eniertuliird her Bee Hive glrli Tuesday nl u hike and Ihen they went lo the niiUloor fireplace at the church house and enjoyed a wlrner loast. ^

Mm. Wlndeld Hurst and Mrs. Oeorge U. Ward, slake board mem­bers ot the Relief sociely attended ward Relief aoclely conference at View Sunday evening.

Mr. and Mni. Ftank Ballard spent Saturday In Pocatello and DiaclC- foot.

MIm HbkcI Hawker has kuko lo BlacklooV. «l\ece alte han KccciAed a (KMlilon teaching In the grade tchool.

Vo.m:o Park* arrived In Peclo Tuesday for a visit with Ills wlfa and family, after spending several months In Chicago.

H I S T O R Y Of Twin Falls City & County

MURTAUGH

IS YEARS AGO

OCT. n , fProm "Drop Kicks,'' Times sports

column)We believe ihai Tommy l^cas will

either find a berth on the all-state team this year or come mlghtly dote to It. Tommy Htlll has much to learn but he Is a mlghiy hard man to get arouiul, aa any Qurley, Flrth or Sho- ahona player will tell you.

Howard HcrK Ui a vastly Improved player.over lusl year and can be counted on for n substantial gain through the line moil any limb. He U almosi all-auie caliber.

Owens and Perrine proved In Ihe Burley Rame ilial a good, fft.it end runner Li about Die most valuable

an on a (noiball team.

27 YEARS AGO

OCT. n , 19U Mrs, M. J, aweeley. Mrs. A. D,

Norton, Mrs H. W. Clouchek and Mrs. n . W, Hpangler are Ihla week attending Ute biennial meeting o( the Slale Kederallon of Women's ctuba. which meeu in liOwlston Tuesday, Wednesday and Tliuraday. On account ot the great dIsUnre tlia number going from thU cliv waa hniltert but ’l » n Falls Is cer­tain lo have as good representation as any olher souUiern Idaho cltlca.

THE aurn.niAN i» SHE TMlto R ip

M ri. Lee Qnnderson In vislllng relatives In Nnm|ia this wrrk.

Miss Calhrrlne Krhlllfr vtNlted In Bhoahone with trlrnda ihe first part of the week.

Btanley llionias li vhiiing hla grandparsnls, Mr. and Mm, O. T, Lee. Burlty, and iincin and »unt, Mr, and Urt. Bill Uarlon, Paul, Ih lt week.

John Thoinu, chairman of th i board of directors of the 'lY In Falls Oanal company and Mrs. I'homaa hava gone in i’luwnU. Arli.. where Mr.Thoman Is allrmllnit Ihn meeting of the National lirclamatlon aaao- oUUtm. Mrs. GhaTkit Pocatello, la slaying at ihn 'nioman homa In Uie abaonoe of hrr )inrenta.

Mr. and Mrs. Oenrgn Dllck and ten of Klko, Nev., Ajwnt 'I'ueaday wlUi relallves here

M n , A. M. riankln. Mountain Orovt, Mo.; 8. W. McMurtrey and Hayaa MoMurUay, Bprlngfleld. M o, amved Tuesday tor a visit will) Mrs. Nall MsMurtrey and Mr, «nd Mn. SdCotirad. M rt.RanklnU '

Mrs. Frank Barton Is crIUcally Ul at her home. Her daughter. Mrs. Joe Graves, who recently went to Utah, has been called home l>ecause of her mother’s Illness.

Mrs. Rose King. Seattle. Is here for an indefinite visit at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Henry Rees.

Mrs. J . R. Boyle Is vl&lUng rela­tives in DCS Moines, la .

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bauire and daughter. Betty Jane, have gone to Ml.uoula, Mont.. to visit Mr. Bat- Nlre's brother. Harry Basslre. an^ family.

Harry Clos and Mr, Lang, Clyde, 8 D„ are vUlUng at ihe Howard Klein- kopf home.

Larry Klelnkopf, small son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Klehikopf, was brought home from the hosplul Wednci^ay.

Mrs. Nora DarUngton and wn. atiinlcy, Bolhcl, Wa.^h., have been vhlllim a l the Uri«gs. Menser and Thornton houir.i the posl week. They flew enM by plane and vlalUd relatives In Indiuha. Ohio. Illinois and Iowa. Tliey purcluscd a car there and wrrc rn routft home by way o( Dtnver, Sail Lake City and lUaiio, .

Mr. and Mr.i. tinm Tliornlon's daughter, Wllmu, and son. Bobby, had tlieir lom lb removed Monday.

Mn. Carl Oooch Ls holding open- house. al her home Oct. 30 from S l>. m. Uirough the afternoon and evening, tor two recent brides, Mrt. Dick Cranntr. who was Mlsa Mar­lene Collins, Twin F»lb. and Mrt. Wayne Mort, who waa Mlsa Betty Rose Cranner.

W. C. Hall, Ihe merchant of Mur- taugh, trani>acted btulness In the county seal for a day tha middle of the week.

Bteveni and Mrs. Ralph QualU left thla week lor Marble, Ark., to vMi raUtlves and friends. Mr. and Mre. Howard Stevens and family, Wash­ington, D. 0„ will visit h it parents In Arkaiiias,

MUM Uelva niarkham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morley Blackham, has aooepted a teaohing poalUon in North Pork, Nev., and jeft Sunday

t aasume her duties.Mr, and Mrs. Frank Barker and

family Iwva gone to MarbU. Atk..

^ias^yidna Baergen, M tu MlidrM Larson and MUa Margaret Mua.-u>y, (teUdenU at Northwest Natarrne college. Nampa, spent the week-nul at the home ol Mlaa Baergen's pur< •nU, fUv. and Mrs. O. M. Beargen.

Peach Pits for FuelA man in Ban Laendro Oallf., has

oparated a thriving builnaaa tor the piut 11 years buying twaoh pita from oaiiiierlcs. Hs aella Uiem to tlie publla for 10 cents for a targa gunny sMkfui. TIM peach p(U ignU* aully,

__ „ _ , _ _ _«dauah* bum for a long time, and i^ucaUr And Um McMurtrey men brottMt •*» 'Hit; <ir* uW-to baOt Mn. McMurtrey. Mra. cSmd b foo4 St hard co^ for lusL bad not seen her ilsier for eight

hsr uncia fnr tha pall SI Aocenllng to tha Utsal llgurea, Amarloan farmtra own u td opar«aM im S M trucks.

EDEN

. Till Union service and gas station, fiirmerly manage<l by Ooidon Tho­mas, h u been purchased by Mr. and Mt», Oil* Blepliena. Mr. and Mr*, Thomaa will leave aoon torSa- attie.

Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Wauchope. Kalloii. Nev., were vlMtora here Bat- iirday, n ify are former realdsnUnr Olrn.

Mr. and Mm, Keith Jolinson. Po- rnli-llii. vW lw l Halurday wlUi hit iwrrni.', Mr, and Mrs. Ferry Johan-

■rtiryhy liPiu JiiivtvufiHn. wlw wlU apattd

short time Uierr,Mr. and Mrs. K R. Harding tpani

the Krrk-rnil near Blackfoot, ve­iling wlih ihrir nona, Ray and U * wli> ilarding, and-families. Thay wrio ar< omiwnled home by Mr. and Mrs. Iloy lUrilUig aud tmall ~ who will visit here during tha harvfni VHcallon.

Mr. and Mrs. iU y Hanry andchU- dreii IrCt IMtUy (or Salt Lake where Mrs. Henry tmderweni a ma­jor ot<eratUm Haturday. Mr, Hanry returnM lo his home here Monday evening. He reported Mra. Henry re­covering nallnraclorlly.

'Die Mxilhern Idaho pceabytwy met ItirMlay In the praataytarUn oliiirch. Members nf the L»dtM' AM served dinner to ift In Uta ehureb basement.

Mr. and M n . Harold Usher M t Wtdiieaday la vtalt ralaUvaa InRaoo. Nev.. and in Oallfomla durtni tb* harvest vacation a l the high setMOL

A two weaka' h a m a l aUrtad hert Monday In IwUl t|M high Mhoo) and g rtd t acMoL

that the Unithas been asked lU ^>lnlah of th «A plan. Everyone bellevn a ahowdowt^

Legion, Auxiliary Hold Open House

RUPERT. O c l U {Spooiali — Membert of the Oeorge E . Marshall poet. No. 10, American Legion, and women’s auxiliary enlertainSd Wed­nesday evening at the local legoln home with the annual '‘open-house“ meeting.

Mrs. E. J . Moldenhauer, past pres­ident of the local unit, prttlded andannounced the program which open­ed with the ^ tUute.foQowed.wiUi

M n. Alfred W . Qirgory waa hoe- teu Wednesday to members ot the Bid or Bye club and four guests. Mrs. Ward Judevlne. Mrs. Oerald SUAley, Mrs. MUton Hyde and Mra. Wilbur Bell Honors In bridge went

Mrs. -Gerakl SUutley and Mrs. Ward .ludevlne.

Mrs. R . B. Moy entertained mem­bers W the Merrr-Oo-Ilound club and one guesl, Mrs. Harry Ballard, with a social afternoon at the Moy home Wednesday.

Mrs. Gordon Ooff was hostess Wednesday to members of the Ebel Brkige club. Two new members, Mrs. Oerald Delltager and Mrs, M anfitd Arthur Burson, were added to the club. High score prize for the at- lernoon'a games was awarded to Mrs. Charles F. Mendenlull.

______ _ with Mrs. Waltet Baslagtr.Heybum. a t the lUano. Prayer waa offered by M n . Chwter Ittermao, chM > l^ of the Rupert auxUlaiy.

Give PreaaMe Memljen of the local unit, led by'

Mra. Moldenhauer and accttnpAnled at the piano by Mra. Basinger, sang the auxiliary song and gave tha pre­amble of Ihe coDsUtuUon.

Addretsea of wakcme were given by J . J . Van Every, adjutant of the George E Marshal) poat. and by M rs .^ Edna Bllger. president of the R u pe rts auxiliary.

Mrs. IntroducedRalph T. NybUd. superinteodent of Rupert schooia; J . B. Fridley, su- perlnVendent of Paul schools; James Tomlin, superinteodent of AcequU schools; Walter Basinger, superln- Undent of Heybum tchooU; Mrs. Clara J . Haosen. superlnt«Dd6nt of public Instruction tor MinVlok* county; Mrs. Ruth Bo)'d, fifth dis­trict auxlUsry president, and O. W. Paul, flfUi district legion command­er.

PregTan A musical reading was given Iff

Mrs. Waller Basinger who played her. own accompaniment: a reading waa given by Wanda Mers; two vocal Kdot. Mrs. Edith Corless. Twin ^ rails, with piano accQmpasimact by Mrs. Basinger; a humorous akit. Mrs. Angelo French, Mrs. Peter Boyd. Mra. John West, Mrs. Robert Lc« CuUey. Mrs. Charles B. Masoner, Mrs. O. W. Paul and Mrs. William L. Reed, members ol the WorlhwWle club; reading, Mra. J . B. Frtdley. Paul; address, Clyde R . Tsenburg, iOir'ner and operator of the Itenliurg, Drug company, who w u the guea^ speaker.

A past president's pin was pre-> sented to Mrs. Moldenhauer by Mrs. Peter Boyd, wlio paid tribute to Mrs. Moldenhauer for her faithful and efficient work with the auxiliary as preeldent. Tl\e evening concluded wlUi a social hour over refresh- ments, which, with the floral decora- Uons of the room, were In keeping with the Hallowe'en season.

LEND-LEASE EXPERTHORIZONTAL1 Dogma, a Weep.SDIlch (pi.),

la Adjustment.15 Paid pubUclly 17 Alone.IB Ceremony. lOConcemiPf.SO Vim.23 Row ot houses 34 Through, as Pln'-UU duck. ITAaaert..« Trust 38 OrrUtholocy

<abbr.). al Female aalnt

(abbr.). as Weight of

British India, 33 All.33 Banish from

country.

Answer te Prevleua Pustle 31 Saucy

21 Grade.

3 24 Horseback game.

3S Riddles.

2 g Lend-ieaM’' adralnlilralor

pictured.

SO Wrath.

32 Earth.

93 Exclumallona

34 Each (abbr.). 39 Sag.s o n is (poel,). 42 Ireland.44 Back of neck. 4e Thrifty.48 Group.

91 Slain.53 Consumed.H Indian.M Com paiS

point (abbr.).37 Symbol for

tellurium.39 Donated.

37 Exclamation. 61 Continent38 Harness. fabbr.). ■30 Dagger. e i'C kar,40 Sloth. 87 P in t name41 Stalk, of :a verllcal. 11 Metric ♦aimpreaaet. BftOreaM. meatur*. 49 Narrov^ inlet. 99 Cooking 13 Beverages. 4TTermtnal. apparatus.4« Tribunals. VKKTiCAl

cs .SO£ueni»

48 Sun god. I Snares.

(simp.).93 Annoy.03 Nights before B8 Make a

m liUko.00 Entomology

(abbr). ft2Transpoie

(sbbr.).03 Forever.

H Small todcnU, 64 '^hua.10 Prove. es Jumbled typs.MAtoatmsnts. MTo»»fard.

Page 5: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

F|-ld*y. October 17.1941 IDAHO EVENING TIMES. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO

Pre-Armistice Dancing Party Planned by ClubOfficials of Mars Dancing Club Gooding Seeks Data

. About Girls’ .LeagueDancing to music by Glen Bates and his orchestra, with

circle two*stepa called by Hector Bates to enliven the eve­ning, members of the Mara Dancing club entertained the first of a scries of dances last evening-at the American Legion Memorial hall.

Informal in theme, the dance was attended by approxi­mately 50 couples. Eastern Stars and their escorts and Masons and their wives, from Twin Falls, Filer, Bphl and Hollister, have membership in the^organization.

A pre-Armistice dancc ia the next event on the club cal^ endar, being scheduled for Nov. 6 at the name place. Board of dim tors and officer.s will meet soon to Tilun the event, details to be announced later.

Greeting the guests were officers of the chib and their wives, including Ray Sluyter, president, and Mrs. Sluyterr Earl Walker, vice-president, and Mrs. Walker, and Lyle Frazier, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Frazier.

Board of governors includes Hugh Phillips, Lurry Sweet- man, E. E. Jellison, Curtis Eaton, James D. Beamer, Ray J. Holmes, E. Clifford Evans, A. E. Bobier, Mrs. Hay Wash-

^ burn and Mrs. A. F. Oslund.

Prettiest

Mba MU7 Merelw. Plcabo. whp «ms a ^ l « d M MU> Sun VMey of Idahtt a t the m ort 't rodeo Ust tanunrr. racclrrd Jhe UUe of pret- U « l pi six w tslfm fUtes• I MadbMi 8«tiarc Oanlen redeo. New V«rk a iy .

(Times EnxnvInO

Sum-R-Set Club Gives Luncheon

ConcludlQg » series of card parties, memben of the Sum-R-8et brldw club attended a luncheon this week at Blgley** cale. followed by bridge a l the home o( Mrs. Carl Anrterson.

Hosteues were Mrs. O. H. Brueg- gemann. Mrs. Jennie Rinehart, Mrs. W. J . Hollenbeck and Mrs. Anderson.

Quests, vere Mrs. Henrj’ Malm- ken. Mrs. W. O .’ Tliompson. Mrs. E. O . Spellbcrs and Mrs. Clara Parks.

Mra. Thompson von honors at bridge.

41 « «nAR^-SST FESTIVAL ‘DINNER SET BV W. 8. C. S.

Final plans for the annual Har%-c.it llon>e Frsllval dinner to be Mrved this evening at tlte Methodlht church, were arranged by Circle No. 9. W. S. C. S. of the McUiodlst church yestcrda>- at the homo of M n . Carl Maxwell. Kimberly road.

M r^ Jim Howard pre.Uded at the buNlneM &eulon.(ollowlng a 1 o'clock no-ha^le^.•^ Itinrheon. Plans were nLv) made lo s r r « a banquet riiirlng th e C ..........week.

Mr:i. Roy Haverland led the devo> tIminU. ronducUng a quU on the nible.' Roll rail was answered wlUt lavnrUe poems or arUcles. Mrs. Callle May I^wls and Mrt. Olen Showaller w>re guesta.' Mrs, OeOrge IJng *111 be hnHlcM at the next mretlng. .

¥ ♦ ¥Al tlie start ot 19*3, Aitrlnn, dr-

Mgnrr tor Monnn Slicartr. Joiu» Crawfonl and olher film himl narlen. will <k|>rn a .-.hop of lil.i oni in never>y Hllla. Ailrliiii Is fiimou: for liLi ault.i. and Intricate cut'of t gannenl In hks hallmark.

Health-Defense Discussed for Bickel P.-T. A.

Speaking bn "HeaUh for Defense,'*. w. Morgan, new sujxrlntendent

of T»-ln Palis schools, Bddrc.wed Uie Bickel Parent-Tcacher as-soclatlon Wednesday evening at the school auditorium.

An "open house" half-hour pre­ceded the program, and Mrs. Carl Hafer presided at the business meet­ing. Mrs. Laurel Smltlt gave a re­port on the retent district P.-T. A.. meeUng tn Burley. Mrs. Ethel Oray Introduced teachers and their r mothers.'

Progiam chairman. Mrs. Smith, presented Mr. Morgan: Mrs. Cather­ine Merrill and Mrs. Zara Tonks pla>ed “Hungarian Rhapsody" as piano duct; Mrs. Cleonc Smith sang ■•Song of My Soul." Refrcahpicnts were served.

Teachers and room moVhcis Intro­duced by Mrs. Oray were;

Miss Esther Smith. Mrs. Charles Young: Miss Mabel Porterfield, Mrs. Ralph Johnson; MLu Evelyn 8tcld-

Mrs. U. 0.41alght; Miss Marlon Feuerstcln, Mrs. Olen Showalicr; Miss Lots Shue, Mrs. Everett Smith; Miss Elnora Christopher. Mrs. Eu­gene Davis; Mls.s Almcda Avant. Mrs. Edith Rcsa; Ml&s Emma Wag ner, Mrs. Jay Merrill: Miss Alberta Co-der, Mrs. H. Thlcme; Mbs Le­ona Thorsted, Mrs. Floyd Lincoln.

Miss Vivian Klink, Mrs. Claude E. Mtlllgap: Miss Helen. Butler, Mrs. J . Roemer; Miss Annie Hills, Mrs. Jess Carlton; Miss Velma Morse. Mrs. Peter Garlson; Mlf»'Virginia Keating. Mrs. William Griggs; ML« Margaret Schroeder. Mrs. Betty Sturgeon; William P. Rleman. Mrs. Grass.

* ¥ ¥

Couple to Wed At Reno Rites

Mrs. Ruth SulUvatt and Jatnes Wallace • left this morning for Reno, Nev., where they will be i rled OcU 18.

Thte Is the 42nd wedding anni­versary date of Mr. and Mrs. O. Caldwell, father and mother of the bride.

While In California they will visit at the home of Mr. Wallncc’fi sister. On returning they will be at home at ooodlng.

¥■ ¥ ¥

f a m ii .y d in n e rII.ONORS niRTlIDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Ployd Olsen and son, Kenneth, entertained Mr. and Mr.i, M. P. Sears and daughter. Wilma Jean: Mr. and Mr*. W, R. Pltz- water and John Olsen at dinner Tluir.^dny iilght.

Tlie. occasion was Mrs. BeaTfi' bIrUiday anniversary, and a drco- rated birthday caka centered the dinner (able.

CalendarCamp Mary l^ls. Daughters of

the Utah Pioneers, will mrnt at the home of Mrs, Elda Wixxin, lOI) Polk otreet, Monday. Oct. 30 at 3 p. m, Membem are asked »o bring guests who are ellgllilo fnr mem- bernhlp.

¥ V WOrchnlara club will meet at the

home of Mrs, M, T. Anliiuf Mon­day afternoon..Plans will bo coni- pleted lor the Achievement clay Oct. aa at Uie Twin PalU county falrgrouncla, Filer.

Miss Margaret Dctweiler, prc.sidcnt of Twin Falls high .school Girt.-i' longue, presided at a specirtl mcoting Wednes­day noon which brought together for the first, time this year, tlie cxfciitive council and staiulinK chairmen of the group, nt an impromptu sack hnichcon.

Mins Detweilcr extended a word of wclcomc lo all the council, coniniittoe heads, itnd ,iii)on.sors, and outlined the duties of'cttch of the group members, i’lan.s for the iii-

Otricers of the Mars Danclnr dob and (beir wives, i^walUof the arrival of guesU at last night’s iniUal Informal dance, discusaed plans for future events of the (roup. Seated, left to right, a*e Mr*. Ray Slayter, Mrs. Lyle Frailer and Sira. Earl Walker. StandlDTi left to righl. Lyle Frasier, secrctary-lreasoKr: Ray Sluyter, pm ideat, and Earl Walker, vice-president. , (Times Photo and Enpmvlng)

B e ta G a m 'm a a n d Y . W .

P la e e in g 'O jp e n H o u s eExecutive board of. the Twin Falls Y.W.C.A. and Beta

Gamma club, youiifjer business women of the Y.W.C.A., an­nounced today that “open house" will be observed in the recently enhirged niul rcdecorated "Y ” room.s over the Or*>)i' eum theater, next Monday afternoon and evening, Oct. 20.

Open hoti.se and tea huuns from 2:30 to 5:.'J0 o’clock will be in charge of women of the Y.W.C.A., with Mrs. R. L. Reed, board pre.sidenl, as, chairman. Beta Gamma mem­bers will be in charge from 6:30 to 9:30 o’clock.

bperial InritationsChurch groups and oUicr orgnnl-

zuUons of Twin Falls have been given special Invitations, and all In­terested persons are invited to call during the designated hours,

In charge of the program will be Mrs. Frank E- Wells, new Y. W. C.A. secretaiy. and Mrs. Helen Herj- derson. Immsdlate past secretary.Rcpresentnilvcs of the Beta Gamma club, Negro Women’s service club.Trl-y girls, - y girls and the eighth and nmth grade Girl Reserves, all Y. W. C. A.-sponsored. will speak.

Mrs, R. E. Commons. Mrs. J . s.Dlffcndarfer and Mrs. Skinner will be in charge of refreshments* dur­ing the afternoon hours. A table will be decorated to receive silver offcrliiK-s. which will be used to alil in furiiL'.rtlng the rooms.

BcUi Oamnia committees for the evening hours Include Miss Yne.s Ala.>itrii. g iw ral chairman; Mis-s Velma Mor^c. program: Miss- Doris Melcr, rofre.Hhmenls; Miss Ambplle Brown, liivltntions. and Miss Mar­lon I'Vucrsteln. decorations. Mrs.Miiiy Kmmen Is club pre.sldent.

HiickKround nui.sic will be playc«i throuKhoiit the evening.

To send Ilelegatei Pliiiw fur the event were complet­

ed tlii» week at an executive board iinTtlng. Pluns were m ado,to send <irlrKiilc.s lo tile Y. W. C. A. Nelgh- hnrhrxxl conference Oct. 24 and 25

. Robe.Mrs Wlllliun Baker, a delegalr, lii tiiko charge of iho Sutur<iny oi iiitig se.Mion at Doi.sc. Mrs- Fnuik

W. Hliifk; a member of'the summer

stallation ceremony of offic­ers and chairmen, to be heldTuesdpy. Oct. ai, were announced and Uie president read communica­tions from the dean of girls at the Ooodlng high school, • Inviting the Twin FoUs girls to visit that school and pre.sent a program to explain tlie objectives and acUvlUes of Uie league. Tlie glrl.s voted to accept the Invitation, with Uio execuUve council in complete charge of ar> rangcments,

story nook Parade TIfc an. ual all-glrb mixer, to be

a Story Book Parade since H will be Nov. 7, during book week, will be at the high school gym at 7:30 o'clock and all girls of Uie school are in­vited to attend.

Short talks were given by the president of each jm lt of the leapie. Miss Norma Dickey, senior, dis­cussed program building; from the Junior unit. Ml.s.s Marian Orlggs spoke of Uie importance otgroup’s activities; sophomore^........

. Hayes explained the tnean- ing of the G irl’s league, and Miss Julie McBride. G. A. A., stressed the Importance of sports for Uie group. .

M1.V? Midge Robertson, pa it pres­ident of the Junior girls, spoke on the cooperation between Utc atrta and thelj- league sponsors: Miss Bernice Babcock, financial advUu, gave a report on candy selling work, which was a ver>' favorable report. commepUng on how well the girU

responding In this, the only manner of sccurlng funds for the league.. Last year's activities were Uoned, In ronnectlon with the tftO studio couch which

Your Budget doain’t n««d » cryital ball to “im ” the •conomy in ----

Kvery houMwlfi

th a l.tb * food dolUr nwdi

•tntch lnv to balaaw* th«

budgvl novradaya. -

Duk whila other foodt hava

•Ktvane^l In prtc*. KDDY’B

BRKAD r«mitna the M ne.

lan-t K loilcal, then, that

uatng MORS n d d /a Will

help aolva/ your problam r

»ddjr‘* Pan Dandy u dt«o-i

loua, nouriablnc^Md anrlcti-.

•d with TlUmltui B-1 and Q.

Try

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DcIUIom

D«vehiwh

Baptists Honor Donors to Fund

Recognition of flrst_ local tributes to the World' Emei'ger.iy luud. being stxc2,:>cd tills year-by tho BaptUt church, was a feature of the program for the Baptist Women's Missionary society yesterday « ;tcr- noon.

Donars. thu.i honored wer* Mrs.'. S. Munro, Mrs. Liicy Carder,

Mre. Pelwldt and Mrs. W lillam - TBtln.'A ''tree poster.” to record the conUlbutlons, was displayed.

Mrs- Herman Dod.son presided nt the buslnes ssesslon. following a dc.s- aert luncheon. Ouesta were seated ot a long table decorated with yellow taper.s. black-eyed susatiR, marigolds and brlghtlj- colored gourds. Session

as held In the Baptist bungalow,T^plc for discussion was "Love,

the Common Denominator." Mrs. Roy E. Barnett was the leader. Mrs. J. B. Wakem dlscus.«d work among the Indians; Mrs. L. B. T jlrr. work among the Orientals, and Mrs. A. J. Russpil. Negt;o schools. Mrs. Munro was In charge of the-davntloM on '•The Ma.ster Has Como «nii;Cftlleth tor Tlice."

Mrs. A. D, Bobier toUl of tlie crtit .stale convention nt Mn.scow Plnii.s were outlined for nn a^socia- tloiinl meeting in Buhl No, r>.

Hosle.sBes were Mrs. Ed Hklnner, Mrs. Ted Scott, Mrs. Harold Lackey, Mrs. Prank E. Wells and Mrs. Dil­lard Requa.

last year from Girls’ league funds. obUvlncd only through candy sales In the school halls and at the foot­ball and ba.skc(bnll games by vol­unteer workers. Mrs. Rose Murray NorUr has cxpresj.cd the conven­ience of that, lounge for all Uie glrl.vof (he school. ,,

Miss Helen Mmier, senior spon- )r, emphasized the Idea that the

girls at the meeting are the leaders of Uie league and that as leaders, they must accept the responsibility that goes with that job.

Mrs. North announced that -the next meeting, which will be the first regular meet, to l)e held Mon­day, Nov. 3. wU)i all regular ses­sions to be called the first Monday.

: each month.Leaders of league

Officers of the Girls’ league and standing chairmen,.who have been recently selected. Include for the senior unlf. Miss Norma Dlckcy. president: Miss Mary Coughlin, •tce-presldent; MKs Eva j^unham,

vontprenco planning boaixl; ,Mr It. Young and Mrs. WrlLs, lur (illier Twill F^lls women who will nitend the meeting.

Many Parents at Opening Session Of Lincolii PTA

A rccord attendance marked the

first o|>cn house meeting ot the

last night for. the Lincoln

Parent-Tcacher aisoclatlon at the

Lincoln auditorium, between.2S0 and 300 parents attenrtuig.

Supt. A. W. Morgan'gave the ad­dress of the evening on ‘The Child In His Community.’

Miss , Lois .Shoiwcll. with Miss Rogstad at the plitno, led the com­munity singing, Mr. and.Mrs. Mel­vin Carter played three Hawaiian guitar numbers. Miss Orpha Stokes and Mtss Eva Stokes played two flute ducts, acocmpanlc^ by Bert Christianson.

Teachers were Introduced by MUs Beulah Way. principal; roofn moth­ers by Mrs. Alla Christianson, and executive board members by Mrs. ■RarpU ElUott.

A short businc.w session was con­ducted. and a social liour followed the serving pi refreshments.

secretary: Miss Ruby Kawal, treas­urer; Ml^s Donna Crossley. pro* gram chairman; Mtss Dorothy Ann Neely, service; Miss M a ry Alice Buchanan, soolol: Miss ,'Vlrglnia Wolter, publicity, and Miss McBride, music.

Junior girls' president is Misf Marian Orlggs. with Miss Leattlce Bell. Miss Ann ElUworth and Mis* Joan LeClalr as vice-president, aec- retary, and treasurer, respectively. Cholrmen arc; Miss Celestlne Sal* mon. program: Miss Aleene Rich­ardson, service; Miss Dorothy Cock, rell, social; Ml&s Ruthann Hayes, publicity, and Miss Ollle Pern Se- cord. music.. President, vice-president, secrc' tary and treasurer of ttie sophomore unit are. respectively. .Ulss. Sblr* liy Hughes, Miss Dorothy Retting* hou.se, MUs Marilyn Heinrich and.

Miss Carmen Vasquez, Miss Myra Hansen and Corlnne McBeth (tre chairmen, respectively, of program.service.. social publicity and music committees.' Miss McBride Is president of the O. A. A. with M1S.S B'etty Edmond­son as vice-president, Miss Midge Robertson as sports manager and Miss Dorothy Ann Neely aa-secre- tary-trcasurer.

Miss Georgia Dean Is sponsor of sophomore unit. Miss Helen Mlnler of senior, and Miss Josephine Throckmorton, of Juniors.

•'look pmijr,** Howtrtr, v h w you tr» ihtm It’i quit* dltr«rM( Hory~jlrM m 4 4tknJ4 iU , «ht» mould lo p.if«tio..*nii (omblMOoo of M M *m h r m » dtiltnin* Rulus and masUal K M t ll i M h lm t « .m w "hlth" ia thMt uplUt b«tuiy.

11m ttjl* h •"AUo-lm.** Maldm Fom't iman dwl|B tor 'In- htcwMA'' i f M t . *nHM U a i m u fli w • fra c d o n « ^ lnch hy m a u of s Jhu ifU , bKMaMnlog and tbouldtr suapi.

And — a very roprcaontnllvo lino of Maiden Form Briuuloren from98c to $1.50

— CONSULT —Mm . Carrie lUpplcye, ConnUere

Van Entfelens~ • f a 'a i r t r ...........

Ligbl*ai-a<whlip«r, ibty jn m alowii

«kl(c*i« to do anyibbg «»c«i>i jun trf l^ m It'i quit*

SPECIALSSATURDAY- SUNDAY - MONDAY

1 ^ ■■ ■■ M S ) C W 6 l l

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&ak«rs Shredded, 8 oz. Package .

COCOANUT12c

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"Shnjilv us A. B. C. —

\bu cant make a bad cup of

M J B "— tllUn Dretv h Nils Astber, w bih making.Pa rum oH u t's " V m N IG M T O F JA N U A R Y K .T H ”

N IK i f.o/t oi In i’ll on./ Imui in ihit pUtnrt u t t tmaking, triH$ lhc<r‘■ LlIN i Vtopt, h it Hhky mfHtrhl. N lli~ hu l ihty Ukt moil llilmgi 111 ht ilmplt,

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I l i lN i lu ll uu .M. /, (I. n hlhA^ >0N IH f ll ilroHg, v m k , or i i - i f l u f i " , M . I .H . i% |ao<f amf w *l )om

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ilora'a why l l novir fftiUI Mnl>* your coffoa with the iiuno <'iir<i ai you have In tlie naxl. 'II»-m< two • ic lu ilv o M. J . II. frAturui a

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«f flaM •*<li«ri.MMiM M|W..rw parMlalaf w Mffaa |m I-

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BLEACHWaNCM,

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Page 6: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

PaeeSlx IDAHO EVENING TJMES, TWIN FALtS, IDAHO Friday, October IT, 1941

^ P

WhiH Happens to Ball Players When Season Is FinishedCOAST GUNS TO RETAIN GRIDIRON PRESTIGESanta Claf a and Michigan State Tangle in Feature

By JIM SULLIVAN

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 17 (U.R)—The Hlit?htly tarnished prcsiiBe of Pacific coast football, ns comiiared with the mid- western brand, may get what amounts to a shot in the arm tomorrow when Santa Clara- plays Michigan State here.

Santa Clarfl is kinp of the fur western independents and the only unbeaten major team west of the Rockies. Michigan State is the No.-2 independentteam of the middle country, yfelding only to mighty Notre Dame.

: ' Santa CI*ra should win and there- — :--)iy-(lo something toward. restoring

the luatre of western football, which defeats of Washington by Minne­sota and of U. S. C. by Ohio State

. had, dimmed.I While Sontn . Clara takps on the

:■ illchlganers Jed by Charley Bnch* man, two of the Pacific Coasl con-

i ference’s present "big four" will be ieeklnK to Improve their first dl-

r Ylslc^ staodlngs.

I ; HMUea.Play UCLA

1 ■ i Wiuhlnston. which got back on i the track laat week after two Mt- I- (acki. play? U. C. L. A. In Seattle,

Oregon, the surprise team «o far in ; " ■ 4h&JM ljwpalgn. plays California

In portliand. Waahtagton and .|oa are favored.- ^ *

Ill a third conference Bsnic w. o. w. and Washington State, both consld- i n d out of titular chance, play bi Los Angeles. The ; outcome la- a tgas'Up.: 111680.four games top the Batur- ^ y football offerings. Oregon StAtc,

- JroDt*runDer - In tha-. .coafeienco Ohase. Is Idle, and Stanford, the old

, Champion, plays ^ virtual set-up In tmirerslty of San FranelBOO. Stcftd- Uy improving Idaho shows Utah 6U t^ tome of m n e ls Schmidt's

. faole-danle at I<ogan and Montuia takes ofi Qeniae* i t UUsoula.

••ClHi V OMBpeUUen

— In -Uie "OlM» B” ranks of the west, lota of action la promised In the

9u'Joee State and Hudln-Slmmona tm g b t and the Nevada-Presno BUte

• at Reno Saturday.t'Other samee for the week-end In

' ^ude:rF rida j: IiosroU-Texas Mines, hot Angeles: Qreeley • Montana State, Orwler.

Tennessee to Face Tough Alabama Clul>‘ ATLANTA, O a; Oct. 17 QJJO —

Vhen the men who do the hlrlft* at T enn^ee looked around lasi *u1n» for a successor to MaJ. Bob Qeyland they handed the top coftch- ^ u ilp un en t to Line Cosch John

J As an after thought they asked qim If there w u anything they oould do to ease the tough Job •head. ''■ "CMt ’em to relax the rules," said ^ rahJU . “And tt\.\an sullrtdge, UoUnakl, ahlres and Foxx for an­other year, and we'll have another unbeaten team."

Vela Oet BumpMl

I The; couldn’t change the rules and miracles seldom happen, Teanesaee was bumped off by I I t to 0—The first time since tbat the Vola had lost a regular uaa to game.’ Barnhill and the Vola come up to

their second. big game tomorrow, the annual Tennessee - Alabama classlo, and the exiwrts are saying that abqut all the Tenneaseeanft will have to throw against, the Crimson

Blue Devils Of Duke to Meet ColgateRAIlEfaH, N. C.. Oct. IT fU.fi)-

For 30 years Wailnce Wade has taught hls-lootball teams to watch, wait and capitalize on an opponent's error. That liaa been a good system, for Wade has won far more than his share of football games. This year—from a fan's viewpolnt—his system has readied perfection.

Duke has been cashing in on .. opposition mUtakea so frequently and energetically this season, fana ore suspecting Wade of evolving soma mysletious new technique Which e n a b le s the Blue Devils to strike for touchdowns, in light­ning-like thrusts that bewilder the op<^Uon and leave dared and de- morallsed foes easy prey for other quick touchdowns.

Duke plays Colgates at Durham tomorrow and fans once more will have the opportunity of deciding for themaelves whether to csill the Blue X)eviB “blue lightning" or lucky devils."

In Duke's first three games either tiUe n igh t apply, for most of the scores came on quick Duke-made openings and with devasaUtlng i '

The Wade system Involves aQ Lhoae things which make for good football; Hard blocking and UckUng, heads-up playing, fast backs, ft hard* charging line, team spirit, and above all. ball hawking.

IrTTlie gam eno~ 3are=aga li» l Wake Forest. Tennessee and Mary' land that technique has worked t< perfection, for the scores came early.

Carey Gridders Whip Bellevue

O A RW , Oct. 17 (BpeclaD—The hard-hltUng Carey six-man gridiron club used a variation of power plays, reverses and passes to soundly trounce the Invading Bellevue team hero yesterday afternoon by a score of 40-0. .

The local boys, ltd by Henry Ar- rlen, Jack York and Calvin gparks had the situation well In hand all the way through and piled up a 38-0 lead in the first half.

The Bellevue Bulldog defense tightened in the second half, hold* Ing the Carey team to two toucli- downs. However, the invaders failed to get Into the scoring column.

Three Brooklyn Dodgers aod—«bhh!.-a New York Olaat show off a few ot U ptaeaaanU bagged in a day's hunting on preserve near New Palti. N. Y. Left to right: Cookie Lavacctto, Bill Lebrman, Doipb Camllli and Lew Biggs. Lobrman U (he Olant piteber In strange eempanr.

Bruins Tackle Pocatello Saturday in Grid Feature

Reports Varied On First Day of : Duck HuntingDuck report: - .“Rotten" to ‘'excellent."That’s the result of the first day’s shooting through

south central Idaho as the migratory waterfowl hunt got under way—a hufit that won’t end until Dec. 14.

While a large majority of the

tor would seitd thousands of the birds winging their way southward —and make the south central Idaho sportsmen happy.

Tide will be a prayer and Johnny Butler.

Clfers JIUery BamhlU's other principal offen-

sive threat. Bobby Clfers. lias shown little except a bad case ot sophomore Jitters to date.

Duller, ho*eveif is a nenlor and he probably was more respoiulble than anyone else for Tennessee victories over Alabama In 1030 and 1040.

Unless Butler tiiMetji (tie dope. Alabama will have too intlfhoiower In the line and backCleld fo rSh* Vols and may yet pace the Bo«ith- east despite Its M (o 0 drfeut by Mississippi State.

n m n u u n n n H H H i i B ■

UHlsllIllIKIIIlEllIllIlBB

. ileppUif SUnferd In a itelu|r. Oregon Slat* demenitrated Uial tlw eld T nedel Isn't buUt lor

By HARJIY QRAYHON NKA Servlee Hperta EdIier

NSW YORK — 'nwlr mUerable aeon finished. Uie New York

ware told by Chlllle Wlllle to, write Uieir welghU on slips

■ and hand them to Uie boss. I he hell Is he going to doT” {arry the Horse

I us by U)e pound?"

W th Joe LouU out of acUon, — t J , Johnston U dlrocUng U>e

*1 Of his big and JllUe heovy- --- • ua ln a t other Black Menacee

MO&rSliSua”'^*’

f mutflla In Olevelaild Oat. 30. They M r t o n a l« h will do *30,000,

VHtor, Um old B<9 Bandit'a

: s s t e s1/

and then Hlmen ebUlned and kept an appointment with lha Turkey fellow.Prankllii aitd ulntoi\—tl\cy

like a department ston*—have come quite a dlaUnco niiicn m n k i ln won a six-round declnloit from the Rich­mond Kill giant In Olilrago ir March. lOSO.

Kranklln, a real good lilttor, t>ell' «1 out Tony Muslo In Cleveland tlie other night in leas Ume than It takes to say "I'd like a Loubi match," He'd like to go over Umbi' entire The Bum-fit-tho-MonUi club list, and If he dlsposea of UUnon, Louie will hear a demand for a chance from a member ot his own race.

Jack Hurley, who managed Silly Petrolic, )iui Pl-anklln. Hurley; who U better than a green hand, beUevee hU atrwig and fierce yotmg savage would flatten Louis.

Lem Pranklln easily could bo the best possible opponent lor Joe Louis at that

Certainly. Uwt* l i no one — a ^ n d unless you count DUly Conn. wh»4s In moth balLi until next June.

And what er^r beoame of Lou NoraT

Oleee U Mt hea*7Wel|hla are MpeotM !• eesipMe to a erblte heiM twnMMak In Datn<t.

rrank B a tten , lha premeier, a m tak a t an oXaaUsf Uu4 aU w n eih* Meter Oll7»

Indians Again Favored to RetaiirTitle----Coach Hank Powers and his

undefeated Twin Falls Bruins today were all set and in tip- toj) condition tor their impor­tant joust with the Pocatello Indians—at the Gate City on Saturday afternoon at 2 :30.. W ith Lyle Pearaon likely to

be available for a limited amount of service, and with Don Kottraba. back in the line-up, the veteran .Bruin mentor will bo able to field the strongest cUib Uiut is available this yi;ar at t-ho Twin Falla school.

Pearson had been 111 and niiaaed the laat two Uruln ganiu, but he is’ reported to bo back In condition for the all-important lilt and if he la able to play, tlie Twin PuIIh rhances are expect^ to bo coiiaiderubly bet* ter. Only a aophomore, he was Uie early-scason aiwrk for the Brulnk.

Fine ReserveHowever, wllh a fine rcseivo In

Red Higgiiia and otlier Kood bock- field material In Mel Hulbert. Qlenn Oibb and Olcun Tciry, the IV ln Falla club la cx|ie<:tNl to give the highly-favored Inilluna a strong run for Uielr money,.

Coach Powers won't bo ulilu to field a club wiili hucIi Individual b ril lln n l hUim nV K r l ly , llii- bnck; and TiioiniiAon. llu- m-w I’o- catelio NfKH) hupiiimitiii! dciwiitldn. but the lUiiln bnekh iirobuljly will <1o better worloiw u unit.

When It roini-s to nniipurlnK Hn’ two lines, the 'i-wln t-iilU Imyn will bo outwelBhrrt for iJio Mint ilnio U1L1 aenson. Coii.-li .iiminy O'llrlrn ot the (IcfenclUiK cliMiniilonn IxmnlA A lino timt nvrrnHi'.t lirlwnrn 100 and 200 poinids v>'lil<li, ii(lili-<l to liln sjwedy biirka. hIvi'.t liini « WflMjul- ancod club.

Well Cnnrhrd I.IncHowever, whru |i roniM lo ronch-

Ing llnrwnpM, Coach I’nwfrs will (ukn A buck nnit trmu no one In the stale (If Idaho iiml If tlin Twin Palis club hllOlll<l Ilii]i|>r1l )<l l(v,i>, tiin chancra are Umt iJio blame wmi't be UUl on llio Unt.

Moth trnma rtitrr the frav with undefeated nlaiD rrcoicls and they ore tied at the t.i|, of ilie lilg aix conference Bt(in<liMH». • Winner of this Ult Ifl nearly AA.iiired of going Uirough to a rlinni|iUiiuthli>.

In «hn liiHl iwi. ynuvi. 1‘iKutello and Twin Falla tiuve ei.cfi wim) a tIUe, with the Indluns Iwlng drtcnd- ing chainjiions. Au<i it apix-ura (hat U>o two teamn me koIiik I» contin­ue miinoixOluuiiin of IJin biKtieat of Idaho conferetH-ea.

BurleyBowling

^ m sti it\ n inx lt

________ 170 167 118 482flrinl Vrtir ........................Ditr 8»mp«.n ............ Its US

...1!5

Don Meade Leads In Riding'Winners

NEW YOBK, Oct. 17 (OF) — Don ■Meade,..vstgta?LJa^key,whQ won thc. natlonal ridUig championship in 1939, may repeat his title-triumph this year.

A sut-vey disclosed today Meade holds a wide lead in the naUonol Standings with a total of 177 win­ners for the season which opened Jan. 1, Jotin Adams, another for* mer champ, is to second place, with 166 winners while rookie Conn MC' Creary Is third w\lh 181

Dob 8t«ri .................

X5S H'JI 7U1 llt lfh l M>K>r

E. Mrrham . INt ISO IMII. ................ l it ISl , 107Chirira n u ih i .......Its naV. ............ '.,IM IS* usoiin n .k r r .......................leo j»o no

Bowling Schedule

PRIDAY. OCT. 17

MerehanU’ Itague >- Truck tn-

aOLOISK MOUNTAIN

ELK HUNTQuidea. lioriea and pack horsea. Upper South Boise, IH Worth of Twin Bridges.,Jiarry Bdholm. fhone Ooodtny W « . •

M » llrmM .... liUv* Aninn* .. a Htuihn ...

N*tl<n>l lUul77t 71i 2i 1S

Cubs Win Over Buhl Fresh dub, 6 to 0After a isipse of* several years,

Buhl and Twin Falls school athfeUc departmenta resumed relations yes- tejday Uv a .“sneak'’ preview game between the Twin Falls Cubs and the Buhl freshmen squad.

The Cubs won the battle, played on the Buhl field, by a 6-0 score'in a game that was evenly matched all the way through.

FoUowlhg the contest, coaches of the two schools announced that the teams had signed for two more such contests in the 1943 grid season.

lone scoTlpg drive yesterday came early In the third quarter. The Cubs gained 30 yards on an exthange of punts and then a pair of end plays netted 40 yards. The scoring came when Dale Upcoln went around right end for the touch­down.

The Buhl boys played on terms with the Cubs for. the rest of the game.

Both Coach Rex Hunsaker ol the Buhl team and Coach- John Platt of the Cubs used mostly freahmen throughout the contest.

Cowboy Pilot In ’FriscoManager Andy Harrington of the

Twjn Palls Cowboys has arrived in -fian-Tnmcisror'wnercTie'^nrspMia the winter vorklns—and, Incident* ally, looking for baseball talent for the-lM3 season of the Wranglers in the Pioneer leuue.i.,.-

in a 'letter received here today. Andy pointed out that there Is plenty of material down there—but all the boys h^ve good Jobs in de­fense Industries and it will probably be plenty tough to attract many of them awajr.

He enclosed a clipping from n San Francisco paper, with box scores of the industrial league games. Many former Pioneer league play­ers were noted.

Among them were Prank Palconi, Bam Penech. A1 Marchi and Steve Bogdanoft. all tormcT Cowboys, and

huntsmen returned with - stragglers In their bags, some of the more expert shot-gun blistcra came back Into town with big loads of the birds. However, In aU the city there wasn't one report of a party coming back with the limit.

Get Nlee Bag A group'of six hunUrs reported In

with 40—all shot around potholes in the Eden-Hazelton district. This sector is noted for home • grown ducks, but members of the party also claimed p ia t there were many 'lourlsts” In the vicinity.

Early-momlng hunters, who stay­ed out for only three or four hours, came back with one and two ducks each, reporting that the night was very small and everything they saw was strictly of the local variety.

Hunters who tried their luck on jllowing canals found very Uttle to

shoot at—but lots of tempting pheas* ants along the sidelines.

Home-Grown Variety

Along the Snakb river the report was thot there were plenty of the home-grown ducks — and most of those reporting In showed fowl in fat condition. Hunters In the Hager-

valley, at Charley Wing’s re­sort, reported that there were plentj of teal around, too.

However, pothole shooUng was re­ported the best of the day. A party at one swamp got a shot at some geese, but failed to bag any of tbe biggest o f the migratory fowl.

While yesterday's hunUng sUrted with cloudy weather, by mld-ddy the skies had all cleared off and the sun waa out hot- pheasant. rather t ing weather.

_JLm aer,.frgnui9 .H -Qn Uilngaare expected to Improve. Later In the day yesterday flights were reported coming in from the north, apparent­ly frightened by the hunting that got under way at their feedmg grounds m the Camas and Silver creek areas.

One good stormy day In that sec-

98 ARBESTB MADE BOISE. Oct. 17 fU-R>—The state

Ilsh and game department reported today conservation'officers.made 69 arrests during September for viola­tion of sUte game laws. Twenty-two

K. rtholWfll . KImI* Kr»r .. Uunmi)' .......

LrE

IM In the 1042 modrli, hn* a» evrn higher pawer<to-wel|ht rallo than befer*. -Adr.

DR. eEiK SGHOLEB

letridt,I with'

lUilhifelers'OLAtWEE

IjOtJl’I.ICATEU

Terms

L h i t o h i n t ars | o n s but BECK t i g n r s mTime and ckM ittd ennr “Maiii ItreeT. . . bai tiM leeker lifiMi llf»ef «Mllty -liMfaaiMKMay UiealMUat. m •mlleat bewl I

AMERICAN PILSENER■ H IIH O l lK i r t • 0 « l l l l . ..............................

DHtrilmttll by; MOWMS^lgntlBDTING C0,^^7 Fltth Aye. 8», Phoiie 200

T ryahard-" cooked Idaho Egg with your next glass ofBohemian Cluh. You’ll find them both “good eggs”

IBobemiaiiGlut

"No nse (e blow on

Ih li bouM. Il'a In-

■Dialed wllh AKIe-

W oor

Have You Ever Thought Whnl

ATTIC-WOOLINSULATIONCAN DO FOR YOUR HOME?

i r your hoipe Isn't Insulated it is time you

were aUrting lo think about it. Don’t ui> In­

to another winter without Altic>Wuol in .

sulalion in your house. Tlia countless beiio> '

flla to . l^ had mnke Isuultatlpn a good

fnvestinont. Fuel nvlngs nione would mor*

than repax. you for the small o o 6 l% i| ^

volved and In addition you have a more

oomtortable and a cleaner home the year

around.

DETW EILER'S“EvtrulhiHe lo M ih t U v in t M on P letuanf

&

Page 7: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

Friday, October H, 1941 E V E N IN G T IM E S , T W IN FA L L S ,

I Athertdn Code EqMciiizes ^Pacific Gridiron Power

Small Schbols (iet Breaks In Material

B j HABBY GRAYSON NEA ServiMi SjMrU EdIUr

Oregoi> SLbM stopping tbe SUn- lord «treak and Oregon belting BouUiem CaUIamla lor thD • llrrt Ume since 1915 is somettOng in .the way of evidence that PacUlc coast lootbaU power ia ^ u a l lu d as it hasn’t been since World w w I.. Northern schools have an idea that the Atherton code hM <oted as a leveler and* consequently help­ed that McUon.

You niay recall that the P»cKio Coast cdnference engage*! Edward N. Atherton, a former 0*man, to first investigate and then police Its ineniberB.

b Conunlssloner • Atherton last. faU ' denied eligibility to a group of ath­

letes at colleges for which they were headed-

He obviously has curbed tuahiag and inducements, and in the past it was quito plaUi that more than one CaUfomia InsUtutlon offered just a lltUe more than their neigh­bors in Oregon and Washington.- Washington -and—Oregon - SUte

• have been strong contenders since the round robin type of play yitnl Into effect on <he Pacific *los« live years ago.

Get More Flayera

With the exception of Washing­ton, the Pacific northwest schools do not have as many idayers as the southern schools, but those they do have arc Just as good- ' W ith an even break In material, Jimmy n ie la n will do all right at

’ Washington, and so will Babe Hol- hngbery at Washington State, Lon Stiner, at Oregon 8tat« and Tex Oliver, the old army man, at Ore­gon.

Jn connection with Oregon State shutting out Stanford, 10-0. it is significant that the Cardinals’ cel- ebrated T formation failed in its

O first acid t£st on a wet field.Weather was Ideal for the Red

Indians all last season and until they bumped into the Beavers at Corvallis In ia good, old-faahlohed Oregon mist. There is no getting

. away from the fact that the execu­tion of the T designed by Clark Ehaughnassy, with Uio roan-ln-mo- Uon running all over the place, is

> based on speed, timing and a dry

Oregon s tS le 'lo s r tf^ '^ rT O M i. but -81 returned—l i seniors and 10 Juniors. A dozen sophomores were picked as fine performers at the outset, yet not one of them started

_______against Stanford, eojou. Can JSftdfly.seTThat the Aggies .were not ex­pected to be soft for anyone.

Oregon State has a sturdy line built on the sides of Quentin Oreen-

. ough, an alert center. Bob Deth- mati-'and Den Durdaa'•ffiash.'akirt and pass. Joe Daly is all fullback. Coach Stiner even has a place- kicking specialist In the sophomore quarterback, Warren Simas.

Soadipaw Paaa«r-Pnnter

Curtis Mecham, six-foot south- ^ paw passing and kicking star, tum-

ed in one of the outstanding per­formances of this or any other cam­paign as Oregon stampeded South-

^ > em Callfomia. 30-fl. in the Loa An­geles collseuhj. Mecham fired- three touchdown passes and kept struggling Tojuns In difficulty with a Jemnrkable display of power anc

' control punting.Oregon closed ltd 1040 season with

such a scoring rush that the Web- foota had to bo considered a possi­ble dark-horse entry in the cuiret\t race, on the golden slope. 11118 de­spite the fact that Coach OHver lost 10 lettermen, Including what termed his starting backfleld.

The trick was that Oliver had

One-Time Galloping Ghost Takes Bride

l * r O u r

Doclart o f Motanrrafacr Your Car Aaatnit fA U P O X *

ilTKU. POX-A mal«dr »Uok oHqeb motor eon d u ila i fan coU Biapa,

W li* n th* f ln t eeld •pa ll m o p i a t O iwn Utou- . wmda o i c a n wlU b * dam agad b y itU l oil* and o rao M i, i r o n n r«diatom and dead bat-

l«r iM . L«t our doc ton o i m e lo n protoot r a u n w llh our ip o d a l onU-loidn, VHomln 8 8 .11 i« aiado u p o i Umm S o r m lg n S m Io M i

• O m n M K b M d l C ta K * u

la Tm i m l

G ot TOUT oar

McVEY'SK im CORNER FROM PARK HOTEL

iNDi c f N i i b N r i v u i vr i i ii

Oregon this season fields a vet­eran t«am with the exception of the fullUck. where OUver now starts with a young man named Dunlap. The key back spot, which is left half, is amply fUled by Tom Rob- lln, a hard-driving runner, who Is backed up by Prank Boyd, a fine passer and punter. Duke Iverson and Roy Ell alternate at quarter.

Oregon has a line to match.The Eugene outfit will stir up

trouble for Its coast rivals and Tex­as, which It lacUes In Austin Dec. 8. The Lemon-Yellow Uckles Santa Clara, too. in Portland, Nov. u

Oreg(m certainly can't be charged with picking Ito spoto.

Add a tablespoon of parrafln to water when waslilng Itooleum. ThU removes lUlns and heJpa preservethn IlnnlHMm ‘

Itiil sow . M t o in M o n .

Page 8: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

Page Eight IDAHO EVENING TIMES, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO ' F«d«y , October 17,1941

M A R K E T S A N D F IN A N C E------ — By United Press —----

GRAIN. SOYBEANS . . . I K E B E W V

CHICAGO, Oct. IT (UD-rCrilti b**n fulurw m»d. ■ »ironB r*c--

-l<yl»r.‘n iruilin* n«rroOitr ejwuUdlh.r<ibatAtlC>n> lit tlfflc w«r« Ut UhlBd

lr.-lli.tf. ,lint crlMi la wheat ««n niad« In th*

finitl hour <>h.n M»y u)ranc«d to tl.l}, up «;.e » huih«l from rMW^iir'i eloi*- ITofil'l*kln« er»»«d pirt of f»ln and tt lh« cl«« »hr*t wu fre to &Sc • buih'l hljhfr "Ith at to.ll.tl.

Corn rtnlihA] 6»io to «%c & lu*h»I hith­er; .,aU wtro up s»i.r to 4',ic; rr« »»• US X<>< io le. kDil ‘ur bcao* wer« (c to

r;RAlN TAULE

tllfh Clow

«;A8II CRAIN . . ailCAUO—Whrati No. * ll.Oai-i t« 11.05; No. 4 r«J

N«. * «■ 4 fejV.e j9% So. & 85Vi.....................- . . . . No. J whil. -10\c; No: .i6»«: Btir. 67'>.c: No. S tie lo eJ'U: Nu. 4 €1^0 tu No. i (He to

Soy b ti» : 1 r«tb» ti.to to ti.6m: No. ] |l.tats, to »1.S4H-

0»Ui No. \ n.iw4 We; i<o. i 44e: Ho. . t whlta 42%e to 44^4*; No. I 17c U.

4te: No. 4 16ei No. 1 whit* heavy 4(c! No. 1 tni»«l h»avr 4 l^c; No. 1 r«d ipc- clil hrtvjr .41c to 48c: No. I «<1 ip«lil

Uarlcri Malirn* *4c lo llcN: f«d and •emninn 9Se lo S2eNj No. t barltr <(<; No. S maltlnx Ble.

- •

II UVBSTOCK • --------------------

DENVER LIVESTOCK DUNVEK—Catuc tkiw to wtik |

W son*; W t cowt *T.» to t1.1t:ranstn and cutura tft to t f .l ii htllin M to Hi calvca it lo tU; bulk 17 (o W.tO.

. . .Uagil 300; tie la 40o.lowar( top ttOl bulk t«.«t to 110 i auwi «t.» to t8.Bi.

BhNpi 4.ieOi lal lamb*, ear-iMd*. f 11.71: /at lanb*. ^cklnt, tlO.SO to tU.lQl tNdtr Umta IIIVMI twt* U to

NEW YORK. Oct. 11 (U.FD — The martet closed higher.Air Reduclioti .......................... 3B\American Woolen ..................0'.4Alaska Juneau ......................... 3Allied Chcmlcol .............. ......... 152 UAllied Slorfs ......---- ^---- H iAllis Clinlmers .........................27 *Amerlciuj C a n .........................Am. Com. A1............................. ,7’ iAmerlcon A: Foreign Power ..NoaalesAmcrlcftt\ 1 « ........................... -Amerlcwi LocomoilVB — _ _ _ _ l lAmerican Metab ...................... lO’iAmcrlcivn Rad. A: 8td. 6an....... 5SAmerican Holllng M i lk ........... 12American Smelt, tc Rellnlng .... 37\American Tr!. f i Tel...............15PiAmerican Tobacco B .......... . 60'.jAnacotidB Ccpj-wr ....................aS'iArmour pf ................................ OS'/.tchUon. Topeka & Santa Fe .. 374Atlantic Refining ..... .. ........... 33’-;Auburn Auto ........................Nosalc.tBaldwin Locomotive ................ 13'jBBlLlmore t i Ohio .................. 3SDcndl* AvlaUon ........ ...............36Bethlehem S le c l....................... 60:;Borden ...............,....... —............ 20V»Bulova ........................................ 30Burroughs ...... B'.iByers .........................................California Packing..............No salesCanodlan Pacific ................. . 4'iJ. T. Cwe Co............................... 70' Cerro de Pasco Corp..................; 31 .Che-snpeake At Ohio...................35‘iChicago Great Western........... 2'iC.. M-.' St, P. 4; Pacific........No salesClilcago i : Northwestern... J^owlcsChrysler Corp............................. 644Coca Cola ...... ............. ..............M'.iColorado P. At ]..................NosalcsColumbia Gas .. . 2V«CommercSal Solvents ...............Commonwealth & Southern.... 6/18ConsoUdated Copper ............... OSConsolidated Edison --------151iConsoUdated O i l ...... ............... 8Continental Can .-........ .............37Continental O il .......................24Com Producta .. 49UCuban-Amerlcan Bugor........... 8SCurtUs W r ig h t__________•_...... 8>iDuPont .................. ....................141SEastman Kodak ........................134Electric Power.* Light...Erie R. R ...Plreslone Tire & RubberFretport Su lphur...........General Electric Oencral Poods

4.100___________ Jt*lr Mtira; (at Mnbt. car-loadi, U> UucklM t\O.H to

tllJS ta.ttl.1t : awM tl.Tt

OGDBN UVE8T0CK - -OOOBN-Miwirti9: tOe to lOe lowtr on

and indw outald* that raoca vvoatir i> to IS.tt.

‘ Cattlft Its; alow; moatlr a fMd«r nn: • -14. Jb. U*t ilMn

tl0.tt| odd lou c

! X

CHICAGO LIVEliTOCX OHICACO—Hont 1,000 I (loo. fentrallr

Uc ta 4>« lowwi pracUeal top llO.tt) balk t0« to’m Ib^ 110 to IIO.U.

. Ctltid ).tMs mWm too: <ta«n BoilU M«dliuB mnmr ahort ftdi tlO K tlU0{ toad cImTm 1.200 lb. »*liku ll l.1t noii b«lf«n I I to tio.lt.

BhMp I 1.000 ; (at Umba lUadr to itroni nu>t >«>l rtwiln. natlrca t ll. I i to Ill.tO,

> doublf 100 lb. led

KANSAS CJTY UVEBTOCK KANSAS CITY-Hon I l.tOO: (alrir ac-

tin. unmn. Mo lo tOc lower, than Thura- daj'a »w »w i mtp«t on t*-lev ItO Iba. 11.10 to t9.00,'

CatUt: TOO] calvti 200: kllllnf claiM* of eattlt ilow, lUadr to wtak In a clean­up trad«i v»«l»r* fooalljr aiMdx; common lo tntdlum h«lf«n $1 to |l.

aiM«Vl 1,1001 cluMa uv*nlnt (all] ilMdr: Kood.eholc* to lb. Colorado laml>L

. tll.tO top; bulk »U>d chuica natWw tll.it.

OMAllA UVESTOCK OHAKA-ll»it>> I,>00: lie U. Ite lo».

• n top |S.tOi bulk Kood and cKotct IX to 110 Ibi. tt.tO to tt.1t.

CattUi TOO: <alv*a IOO:«U*d|r lo »eak Kood lo ehoIr« alauihUr iU«ra 1,1(9 Itw dotrn til 10 tU.«0 ; me.)ium lo I 0o<l h.l' (era tl.1t lo 110.10.

8h««»l t,400 i ai*ad/| bulk |o.h] am rhalna fed «ool*d lamlM. 101 lo 10) IIk. III.to to tll.et; bulk a>*.irl«l lool anc cholM |alivt lamb* tU.«0.

PORTLANH I.IVKflTOlK • rORTLANI»-llui.> MO; no tal..; rail]

Mdi around BO. |.> SOc ai tlQ.I:

Ca"lil.t*rr?'r.T*-*'To'; Hu!,|7l fommci •U»r» »l.1»; I tlO.M: chi.l<.

‘ .•I:.,?’?'..

•am; oUula,l tIO M t i l l on« iMt.l •« lal IdalHj ni>a .>rr«rt.l.

Non»; »«r -wk, moaM, Uo »a lower; »..,led l»wU t il to tll.eo.

I.IIM ANMKI.KH I.IVRKTOI X I.()H ANUKI.KH-lloKai 11; llllU don

Catllai IlOi alaadri l»o M •ta.ra I10.lt to t ll. lt i

.........Bh««pi Nona I inncl to i

• '» 111.11 I, ---

Ini onir a llmlt.l d« ■laikai tuUr.

Uradad (Ina Tirrllo o i» d rranth

'y »ool ot axraa* n| len.tht l.rouilil ■rourt.i UiU. Kina»1.M t.. tl.01 .rourj U

ronibliii 'Nrillver aold hi lliiilurn. .1 tie In 11.02. 'Hi.ra m>nd 'for grada.! H hh.Kl •lk.rr »«ol at »«a 4o li*«.

NEW YORK STOCKS

- 13\ ... 84’ j ._ 21S

... . 4fl_____ 27->i

... 434 ....No tales

- 2%

Pacific Ga« & ElecUlc....Packard Motora ..... ......Poramonnt'Pub. _______J. c. Penney Co-.............Peiin.iylvonla R . R ...... _..peoples Oat Phelps DodgePliilllps Petroleum..... ..PDlsbury Plour..».............Pitts Screw ic Bolt.........Public Service of N. J-....Pullman .....Pure o n .....Radio Corp. ol America Radio Keith Orptieum ...R«o Motor .Republic Steel ............ .Reynolds Tobacco BSears Roebuck.............She'll Union OH ............SImmonx Oasocony vacuum .......Southern Pacific...........Southern. Railwai».........Sperry Corporation.......Standard Brands ...........Standard Oas i t Electric ...,Noaale.sStandard Oil of CoUfornla .... 224Standard Oil of In d ia n a ........31^Standard O il of New Jersey .... 40‘i Studebftker ............. _________ _ 5"'

. 22 'Sim Swift & Oo. ,

General MotorsGUIetU Safety Razor ........Goodrich ..........Goodyear Tire Se Rubber ..Graham*Palge ......... ...........Great Northern pf ......... .Greyhound Cp.....................Houston OU ------------Howo Sound .Hudson say M . Si S.Hudson Motor

ll Rayon

14.No sales..164...._ 38.. 28S-- 38U..... 39\

Texas Corporation............Texas O u l f .................... r.._.Texas Sc pacific C. & O. . Timken Roller Bearing ...Transttmerlca .................Union Carbide ........Union Pacific ....................United Aircraft CP ..... .Ui^lUid AirUnea .........United Corporation..........United Prult .

..... . 12!4-------------- 3H

... ....- 30 i

................ 194. _ 34

la l Harvester .International Nlcke] .. IntemttionaLTel. Se Tel.Jcrfins ManvUIe ' ................... ........Kansaa City Southern ____4’iKennecott C oppe r_______Kresgc ........... . 25HLiggett St Myers B _______ _ 87Lorillard ...... . - - 18HMack Trucica ................. ...........29HMaUileson A llulJ ___________ 85»iMiami Copper . 64 Missouri. Kansaa St Texas.___Montgomery Ward . 91H

' Salt Lake Mining Stocks

___ Tunnal ... ........Illnvham MaUla ......Cardiff'••hUf C»«..............JIayton UlWar ........Colorado Con.' ..........Comhlnad MtlaU ......Cro/f ..»U.t Hlandard .........K. .......... ....

f-Jl'reka r!uiiioB""'r::r.iKuceka l.lly Oon. ......fA.r.ka Mlnaa .......1...Horn Hllvar .... .......>Kennabao ..................K relono ...................Uhl Tlntle .............Mammoth ...........-...Moaraw .. ... . .....Min, Clly Oipoar .....Nalldrlrer ................

National BUcult .National Cash RegUter...National Dalt? Producta... National DltUllers National Gypsum .

____64...... 4... . 84

...... 154___ 234___ SH

National Power St U gh t...... . 3>iNew York Central.................. .. I IN, Y,-N. H, Sc Hartford_______ !North Acncrlcan ................... 12'North American Aviation____ 13'Ohio Oil

33 H

United Otis Imp. ...............United States Rubber ....United States St«elWarner Brothers -----We.slern Union ......Wcstlnghoute Air Brake ..Wftstlnghouse Electric ......■■ W. W oolworth.............Wortlilngton Pump ....... .

N. Y. CURB STOCKSAm. Locomotive i t T ra in ____American Super Power______Associated Gas A ....... ............Braxlllan Tr................. ..............Bunker HUl-Sulllvan ...............Cities Service ..........................Crocker Wheeler .Electric Bond & Share .Ford Motor, Limited ....Gulf OU Pennsylvania , Hecla ....... -.....................

Ne?n Montana Mining ... „-.No satesNiagara Hudson Power i _____ "Pennrood............................._....United Gas Corporation..........B/16

Local Markets

Buying Priceg

s o K ;

OTnsR 4;rains(Barlaj and oau market (lueluatM arlUi

local (awUr demand. No unllorailU In dally prleaa quoUd. Uar earir I0« t< "

r«TATOBR /. fl, nuat«(> Nor I .........../. K. KoeeeU No. J ..........((Ina d«aler ciuiiledj.

I. H. Hu...t. No, 1 ..........

MKTAI.nNKW V«HK -Today', n

>rir.. for dall.ar.d n.euU, (V.viHri KU«lu.l»tl« U i .

y:in<il New Yolk l. tt l Hi. l.ouU

iThra* ileelTe <i

Kmall ra>l>. H’u Hm'all ra<le. l>n>

(Too dealtii .1,1

r ilorad hane, c l^lora.1 hane, i Uahorn hatie.

t:oTut«d ((>•<«.4 .1ora.t ruaei.r Blaf. ..........

r fla.k of 14 lb.,1

Local Livestock |

OWba llfki iwtaiMra. lU lo tIO Ih.. H,1t 110 to itO IU,.it,tl 110 to IM iba..|t.00

II ta rt i HK«. *m i «m »H «, *m I1

l/)NnnN IIAR HII.VKR U>N(>«N-Hi»t U r allv.r »aa qooud

>4 pane* an uunoa laxlay and fuluraa I t/ lt panra. h..lh unrhai.aa.!. ’ a Ha... f Kndand malnulnad lu «oM buylni rko at III ahllllnai par (Ina o«nM.

PerishableShippingOoorteiT W «4 O. r u n w , Union

floinmodlUM for ool. 10 ;Caldwell (UiUiol^Ai)iiiea 24, 1

luoA as, onions 4. celery a, m l

dUUlotr-PoUtou M,

lUftnct-rolalOM U].

Ufhom aoek

{Iran. 100 (hillran. too (wMliKrli fa«l. I(Hock ta«l. I

RALLY INCREASES PRICE OF SIOCKS

a aarir July, treat •till WMM PUKltd br for*

--•a. but fh« t*ndancr «r 'uatloo I

natloiI Tofo’aa premier.

c» market aUrtad firm ----V mTnulaa aflar tha opcninr nm* nant that tha U .'8, Ontroytr

eloaa.afUrnu

tha I.Ulal ir^lnc broutht out ...rderm i t 1,000 to >.000 ----A acurad atlcKt saint. Tha auhaaquant

ll laadlns luuat to naw ' leludin* Balhleham.

Edleon. Pcoi uclbla Sl««l 1M<

rlina ient eevaral

point and othar'motor* firmed. >la< loaeaa with «aln> r»ni 'I In Southern Hallway prafei I atrenalhentd with a vain .0 poinu In .Dow. UUlllI.* <

■ rrgUUrad lalna ranaini

S i l l U .S .O E S W E R

4Ff»i« Pan On«)imrth Atlantic, aecottllng lo both Uiill«d S l a ^ and British author* lUc». American and British mer^ chaiitmen as well aa those of other friendly nations, are being convoy^ ed by American' patrols as far aj Icrlund, Prom that island, ships ei

itc to Britain would liave to be jvoycd by the royai navy, which

1.S enabled by the shortened line to concentrate more warships lor this duty.

Although the Kcaniy was'tiie first United States .warahlp to be dam- iited by hostOo action in the At- imtic Rlnce the war surtcc^ Amcr- ran-oftTied merchant ships have not been so fortunate. Three 'U. 8.- iwiied freighters carrylnff supplies o Iceland have been sunk In the li. tm between Greenland and Ice- iiiid. The three ohlps were .sailing uiHler tiie Panamanian flag. They were Uic S. S. flessa. on Aug. 17; the S. B. Montana, on Sept. 11. and the Pink Star, on Sept. 16. The Pink st.ir sinking occurred after Mr Roa-sevelt Umed his "shoot-on-

." orders.

poinl. Olla hald ■ttadi’ to firm. I had eman s*ln> and aia uncbaiKad lo nora Out. - - itr In Warner Urothva rictumi

prcferrrd. Amarlcan Alrllnn and Eaatcrn ■ ■ If* salnad a point or mora.

................. on V. K, Htaal, (ian-Yoak CanU>l, Tara-

ad Edleon. Cunt». Corporation. Southarr rd Oil (N. 4.) Calhle-

,<-llvity> t... I Hlatttlc.

I‘»clfle and Standard

ycjlarda

aaja* approxlmatad tIO.OOO >RtO.OOO Ycatantav. Oaib ......

n la.OOO aharai. oneh«n»ad from

Jonaa prrllmlnary cloainc avaraifn: rial llO.lf, up O.tt: rail 27,»l. Itnilr 17.80'. up «.I0} and «s itocki

POTATOES

CHICAGO POTATOESCHICAUO—Waathar cloudr. t*r

!. Shipmanla <70. arrlvali 7t, t iverlwl JJ. Suppllaa modarata, xhi. market beat qualltr waihrd Triumchi rm. other varlatlaa aU aactloni itaady.Idaho Ruaaet Uurbank*. waehed, 1 c

1.V14. 1 ear tl.&O: U. ». No. 2 practlci > free from cuta, 1 ear |1.7t: r . S. No. 1 baker liie I2.2t and U.

I Trlumpht. 1 car

•ar *l.67H. I. waehad. $1.20: 1 ear

unwaihnJ t l.lt : RO

.,15, Wlwoaaln Bit-Telumpht. I ec ally fair quality, wa>hed. tl.K i ni, 1 car tl.2t: Kurala. comm car ll.It. 1 ear 11.05. -1 far It.

Potato Futures

Wegener and coDpany. Elks btiild' inr, telephone SIO).

a tradadl.(110 c

CBICAKO ONIONS CIlICAOO-60-lb. aacke:MllnoU yallowa Itc lo OOc. Minnraou yellowt tl.It- Wiieoniln r«Uowi tl.lO. Colorado iwett Spanlih 70c lo

DENVER BEANS i

:rm ans driveEASTOFMOSCOW

<rr«a Paaa One)of Odessa, which was reported In rUme. and greatly damaged by dy- njii])itlnjr In line with Russia’s seoTched earth policy. The Mc«ow radio said street fighting was still In progress in Odessa, and the city hud not fallen, despite sacrifice of huRC German and Rumanian forces.

Tliese developments had a dlreci bearing on the Japanese cabinet crLsls. Emperor Hlrohito selected Elkl Tojo, former, war minister and regarded aa comparatively con- servaUve, to form the new govern ment.

"Conserralive NatiooallsC’

Tlie (jxact complexion, of ToJo'; propo.sed government waa not known but he Ll regarded as a “conserva­tive nationalist." Hlrohlto’s choice was believed to Indicate Japan Is once more poetponing. If pot&lWe the fateful showdown day when she must cast her lot either, with the trlparllte partners or Britain and tlie'United States.

The German high command cast little light on the Rus.slan situa­tion, saylhg only that operations are proceeding according to plan wlUi the luftwaffe ‘making heavy attacks on . Leningrad, Moscow and ships evacuating Soviet troops from Odes­sa. Six of these Ahlps totalling 30,000 toat were sunk! It was clolmcd, and eight, of thenx damaged'.

London admittecl the Germans ap­pear to be going forward slowly on Mo.icow tu the blg_Nail .offensive entered In 'i&Te'th day.

Grange GleaningsBy A. HARVESTER

O N SO REEIlli AID 1941CHES1

Claude H, Dctweller. Twin Pails Co'mmunUy C\«:sV oUlcltil, Wday urged members of the loral Uons' club to give one day’s pay to the an­nual cheat campaign which gets underway next Tiie.vlny,

Detwriler «i)okc to inembrrs of the club flt. regular weekly Krn.slnti Iirld at (he Park hotel at noon today. He ankeil eooperallon of chib mem­bers. In the drive and iitKed tiiat •■full hupiMirf’ .1)0 Klvrn tlie partici­pating orKanlr.atloii.'Gene Dillon, fnremnn of the bo<ly

department iit the Union Motor company, wfts li/nxiuceil rr n Hew member of the club. Or. Gordon R. Tobln was a gue.it at the luncheon.

«'r.‘. v , r ■___________!!:

a a i S y a . , . u ....-.....!! :

: . ; : : . , : : = : = r = = = !K

a IS,? " " . : : :::r=:{};

Christ Ue-Crucif icdBy World, Speaker Asserts at Revival

Svaniellil R rnut S. Coryell de­livered m sermon at the Nntarene revival here iait night on -'Orucl- fylng Christ Afrrsli,” lie said In part, -rhe world, war-mad. and In- difidiiAls am today crucifying Oiirlit afrMh ity rejecting Him and Ilia cotnpletA salvatloii. Our great- Mt need U to return to God in re- I)«nUnce atut tattU. 'llien and m\y then will we have God's iielp."

Rev. Coryell will preacii today « t 7;4B u.,m . *nd fluniiay at U • . m, and 7:90 p. m. aa well as nwUjr, except Saturday, all » ix i v t t t . Rev. L, D. 8mlti), pMtor, liivltaa ' publlo lo attend tit* mMUofa.

H.R.NEUM A1.78, WHEN BY DEATHPunerol services were bring com­

pleted today for Ileiman it, Neu­mann, 7B. retired 'i“wln ntlls form­er and early day «cttler on the Twin ^ lU tract, who died 'niura- day at Ills homo at 230 m th avenue « u t In Twin I'ltlU,

The body renin nt the While mort­uary. He was l)orn Aug, 2.1, I80S, at Horicon, Wls., aiiil rninn lirrn from Stanton, Neb., In Murrli, ifiKi,

He is s»irvlvert;>y his widow. Mary Neumann,of 'I’mIu l^lls, n daugh­ter, Mrs, Augiint Axon. MnnlHtmrg, Neb., and three aoiix, Rwiilil Neu­mann, Stanton, Neb; Pniii Neu mann. Rio Ttnio. Nrv„ tuul Oflcar Neumann. Kelingg. 'Hirrn sisters, e lfh t frandchildren and three great grandchildren survive.

Prison Operates Inside of Budget

I I I E R S ’ LEAGD f ENS SESSIONS

fPr«« Pate Oai) tills evcnlni} at the home of Mr. and Mrs> John E. Hayes, 691 Shoshone street north for delegates, guest speakers and special guests. Qoodtng members of tlie Twin Falls chopter are In charge. Tlie Burley chapter will direct registration, which will begin this evening at the Teception, anti continue tlirouBhoul tomorrow morning and early afternoon at the Park holel,

Saturday's se.s.sloiw begin with poeta' breakffiflt at 7:30. a. m . at tlie Park hotel, followed by- a poetry panel dlscuwlon,

Presenting toasts will be Mrs; Helen Regnn Sklllern. Boise; Mrs. Mary TIiomM Cook, CasUeford; Mrs. Della Leltner. Boise; Mrs, E^a Chamberlain, Bnlii; Mrs. Mina Buhn. BoLie, end Mrs, Grace Seavcr, Twin P>lls.

I’antV 1>lxc)utlon Taking pari In the |>ane) discus­

sion will 1x1 Mrs. Sudle Stuart Ha­ger, KlmlH-rly; M iss JOACphlne Tlirockmortoii. Twin Fulls; Mrs, Evelyn Leveke. Duht, and Mrs, SklU lem, Bobie.

Tlter.s' roimd-up will follow the profie pitnel Saturday, beglnnliiK at 3 p. m.. and Vardl.i Fisher. Hager- man: Mrs. Anna H. Jlayes, IV ln Falls; Mr. and Mrs. Regan, Ifft, Grew ond others will take part.

The eonlerencn will close Satur­day v(llh a bRT\ti vot at 4-.30 p. m. at the Park hotel, and responses will be given by Mm, Yelter, Mrs. Casilda ateelsmlth. Hurley; Mrs, Mlldreil Ferris, Cloodlng; Mrs. Turner; Mrs. Maye Anita Johnson, Albion; Mrs. Edith MaeDoiinId nraliam. Twin Falls; Nicholas Ifft and U. S. Toffle- mlre. Twin Falls.

Prlres for IJie winning short story, article ond jx>etry In a recently- compleletl sUtewlde contest, will bo presented during the bantiuet.

<;t>a>rm«n LIsIm I Mrs. lotlia Webb Tester. Good­

ing. Is rei'eption chairman; Mrs, Steelsinlth. In clinrge or registration; Mrs. Graham will preside at -iiin poeU* i)reakfast; Miss Dorothy Cali. Twin Fulls, at Uie jw try paiiel.

T)ie article division will bo In diargD of Mrs. Olive May Cook; Mrs. Dorothy Robinson, Boise, will direct Uie prose panel; Mrs. Hayes will priuildn as toastmaster at the tMUiQuet; Mrs. Dorlne Ooertjteii, Twin PhIK Is chairman of printing and publicity, and Mrs, Nellie I,an- don. Twin Falls, U cltalrmtn o( tlie elecUon board.

B 0I8K . Oct. 17 niP)-WardflU O. Van Olaric reiwrted tixUy (lie Idaho penltenliarjk was operntiug wiUiln fu budget with a balaiico of lioo^toi remalaTnt to be si>eni during tlia n«Rl U monUis of iiie biennium.

Clark reported daily cost of maln- Unano* pm- prisoner was 83 4>enU {or th* p m e n t piUon )x>}wiktlon o( W . Hla monUily reiwrl allowed I I O S ^ hat been spent for prlfon opm U PM *0 far this biennium.

m o M J u ly T lM O . U ie u i i i t i d a u i M --- -- tluirtaly i m mllH

‘HOLUSTCBSome of this news will be a )lttle

old. but we had tO' get Uiat hos­pital Job out of the papers so could have room for other matters;

And did you ever stop to think how up to the. minute the n«v«- papers arer WhUe a matter Is of curreot Interest. Ihe papers give you all they can on the sub jec t;^ soon as something else takes Its place tn the public eye, the papera are oU out for that topic. They really ren­der 8 service that no other medium can, In keeping the people informed, and some folks don't even take a paper.

Hollister Grange met on Oct. « with a fair attendance and' all of­ficers present a f roll call. The aj>- pUcatlona of Mr. and Mrs. Oral Tal­bot were accepted by ballot, a a members of the Orange. The ap­plications of Miss Smithson and Miss Scheffgen were received and will be balloted oh a t the next meet­ing.

The building committee was in ­structed to buy shingles to roof .the Grange home. A communication in regard to the hospital bonds was tabled until the next meeting. At this point a short recess was de­clared and Mr. Blaiulford and Dr. Puendellng were pertnltted to dis­cuss this matter with the Grange folks and give their views or ' subject.

At the next regular met KnuU Qrajvge la lo meet with lister Grange and will present the program. ThU will be Oct. 23. and Hollister Orange ladles are asked to bring cake or sandwiches. At the first meeting In November, it was decrced by the Grange, the Idaho products dinner will be held. (My scribe said supper, but I guess we can be society, folks U. we want to.)

The newly elected chaplain, Mrs. Morse, was installed by Mrs, A. f l Kunkel, acting installing officer. The program presented by the three Graces was as follows; First sUps of paper were passed out and on six of these, a lero tagged the re­ceivers to sing a song, "Boostera," to the time of “Tramp, T r a m p Trallip," which they did. Next i contest, in which the pictures of all manner of celebrities were pin­ned on the curtain, and Grangers were asked to write the names be­longing to <tech picture. Betty Pas- toor being the winner. Another con­test that provided much entcctaln- meht and required some rapid thinking, was to see how m a n y words could be made f r o m the words. “Subordinate Orange.” We are not certain of the winner of thljuone.

Retrcshments were served by Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Kunkel and Mr. and Mrs. John Pastoor.'

TWIN FALLSTwin Palls Grimge also met

Oct. 8 ot the O d / Fellows hall, with an unusual amount of business to be Uken care of, as this was the last meeting prior to th e State Orange at Lcw ton, Two maladies, colds and “threshltls" kept some'of the members away, but a very good attendance Is reported. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Talmadge, ot Rlverhead, Long Island. N. were visitors, Mr. Talmadge telling of his home Grange and its activities..He also stated they found Idaho potatoes

:ry strong competHors tor the At-,ntlc seaboard tubers.Lecturer Harriet Capps, present­

ed a varied program, the first num­ber being a song by the Grange, A talk by Dr. W. F. Posser explolned the hospital conditions and the bond Is- ue. many questions, by the Gran­gers bringing out much Information In regard to the matter. The c^ to r said that more beds In the hospital would mean more safety.

October being the "safety” month In Orange programs, the theme cen­tered around this subject. A. U Ronell discussed accldenta tn the home ond on tlie farm, and distri­buted circulars tiiat showed th e enormous loo. of life and Injuries from accidents on these supposedly safe place.i. (Actuiilly therp

night. Oct. 10. with eight officers and a total of 43 members In at- ttadasce. New pedestals were In- sUUed for the Juvenile Orange. It was announced t h at Gooding Orange Supply had donated tIO to each BUboTdlnate Orange In the dis­trict. ’ Gooding, Tuttle, Hagerman and Bliss Granges being benefited, the money to help these Granges send delegates to the State Orange meeting jat Lewiston. Tlie Grange voted to send the Juvenile Orange matron to State Orange with her Mpenaes paid. Anne Mink Is the Juvenile matron, and If more of the Oranges did likewise there would not be so much trouble getting matrons for the Juveniles.

The program was aa follows: Song y sexUt, “The Bull Dog"; acting

game with Bro. Daubner the win­ner; talk cn the new tax law, “How and When the Tax Law Nicks Your Purse," by Frances Brummltt; de­bate. "W hich Is cheaper, a wife or a car?" the car belnit the winner. The Orange went on record against the sale of butter substitutes In place of butter.

The next meeting Is to be a cos­tume Hallowe'en party. The pro­gram was directed by Frances Brummltt, with the very able as- ilsUnca ot Alma Crabtrtc.

ARP E K i l l IS LED HERE

All southern Idaho artists urged to send pictures for exhibit at the art show here Nov. 17-23. In observance ot National Art week. Miss Agnes Schubert announced to­day. ■*

la line with the naUon, Idaho Is sponsoring three art shows this year. National Art week. Inaugurated by President Roosevelt, was first ob­served last year.

The local art show replaces the one held last year at Boise, Other exhibits ^vUl bii set up ot Cocur d ’Alene and Pocoiello,

Pictures must be received by Nov. 13, -and ,a Jury will decide wlilch items shall be included In the ex­hibit. according to'Miss Schubert. The Junior Chamber o( Commerce Is Twin Falla sponsor of tiie show.

All work must be original, not a copy, and pictures are to be deliv­ered to the Twin Falls recreation center until an exhibit room can be provided. Miss Schubert pointed out. ' Artlsla of the dUtxJct, which tends from Boise and Hailey points south and east almost as far as Pocatello, win send their pic­tures to Twla Falla thla year.

DySE APPROVES

P l E J CHIEF ID ADDRESSC.0FC.1

(Pr*» Pat* ObO rfleers tor 1941-41, The official In­stallation of officers an<f the board will be staged at the annual dinner l^ov. 7.

Bajlota will go out Monday and must be returned with pcetmark not later than Oct. 27, the lunch-

>n today was told.

Ticket Conimitlee Mrs. Stevens, who heads the ar­

rangements committee for the an-' nuol gatherinR, reported that details u-e completed and the dinner will .itart ot 7 p. m. Ticket sales commit­tee. ans^ounced today, consists o{ Ralph W. Carpenter, Frank U Cook and Robert H. Warner.

Twin F ^ win extend iU Invita­tion for uie south central Idaho mu- R\c icstlval, the chamber decided today, acock and Warner will rep- re.sent the C. of^C. at the annual "teachers' Institute" of tlie south central I. E, A. next week-end, will Invite Uic association to convene here again in 1043, and will offer the bid /or the spring music event.

Tells of Chest Drive j .Carl N, Anderson, director ot

Community Chest campaign, an­nounced that 87 firms had -agreed by noon to solicit their own cn\- ploycs, and had been, given ranking OS campaign "ilcutenants.” Moro than 700 letters were mailed out t« business houses and some Individ* uals yesterday. Mr. Anderson said In excess of 100 additional letter* went to clubs and organizations.• The C. of C. voted $25 as a dona­tion to the Cheat.

J . H, Blandtord.-chairwan ot th« hospital committee, received high praise from President Elcock for the efforts he and his associate gave to the bond campalm, Elcock con­gratulated Blondford and hla com­mitteemen.

DHAnEESGDlO INDOCIIONPOIN

Five young men from Twin Falia county area No. 1 were at army in­duction headquarters In Salt Lake City today after e^itralnlng here la s t ^ night. ”

One transfer from here, sent from southwestern Idalio . but ."credited" to the local quota, was already listed today os rejected. His rejection adds to the area No. 1 deficit for the Oct.10 call since the toUl group did not reach the specified amount.

Tlie five who went to Salt Laka Oily last n ight were LStjyd Charlet Chick. Harley Lee Eldreth. H. H. Esterly, Joseph O. Olklu and Robert A. Wood. Donald V. Hutchins, trans­fer from Beloit, Kan., also boarded the train.

Ares No. 1 men who left /or in­duction from other o r ^ included O. E. Roberts, Welser; Richard Wal­lace. Prosser, Wash., and Lafe Wil-

Dn. Belle Fourche, S. D.The local board was at work today

lining up 1-A men for the next Oc­tober call, six men on Oct. 21.

more Occidents In these two’ places, on the basis of persons Involved, tlian In any other walk of life. doiibtlrsN due to lack of safety de-' vIcr.H aM organlnitlon.) Mr. Ron- rll Is chiilrmaii of (arm and home ncrldrntA committee of the Twin FatU chapter of the American Red Cross, and Introduced W. O. Wal- Btrii, first aid clialrmon of tlie local rhaptrr. G, Viiu Ausdeln. Miss Alma Carson and MIsn M, Laycock. Tills .e II III t h e n demonstrated or* KIclal respiration In its. APpUcatlou 11 (-use of drowning or asphyxiation >y Kfls. Miss Ciirson and Mlsa Loy- •ork then di-monstrnled the appllco- ;ion of bandnRes In various type* of Injury In Occidents. (I Would call

•y practical pl-ogram and ire of tiie Granges might

betxedi. (roiiv ni,icl\ a prosranv)Mr. and Mm. J, F. Cordes and Mr,

itiKl Mm, C, E. McClain served re- fre.thMR-nln ond a social hour follow- rd the mi-ellMB,

(l(K)niNOCironge m e t Friday

Now Buyinff

POTATOES-O N IO N SSKB UR IIEFOIlB

flGI.MNG

j E. S. Harper Co. j1 r u M u n Tuto r m * |

iiiiiiiiiiEaiiii

. (Praia Pat* Ona)cldent, coupled with a mounting in­dication of further serious strain In the U. S.-Japanese relations weigh­ed heavily In the house's final action

1 the resolution.Rep. Charles I, Foddls. D.. Penn.,

called on the administration to ad­vise Japan that "If Uiey move In ony direction we will destroy their navy."

Rep. B. E. Cox, D.; Ga., observed that once American slUpe have been armed Uie deadline lor criticism ol administration foreign policy would ‘ ave been passed,

AnU-lnterventlonlsts colled the ship ormihg measure “a little unim­portant. Impotent mea-iure" and ex­pressed fear that a far more serious step may be at hand.

Husband Receives Mrs. Small EstateEstate of the late Mrs. Nellie 0.

Small, Filer, is left lo her husband, Jesse F. Smoll. according to the wl" filed for probate here today.

Mrs. Small, who died Oct. 0 ot Flier, left a will dated-Aug. 31. 1037. A step-dnughter, living ot Buhl, and a Btep'son. Los Angeles, ore named as beneflclorles after the lifetime of tlio Blirvlvlng husband.

Tiie esUte. valued ot #3,800, In­cludes a Filer residence and the "Pastime" cigar store In Flier, Rny- bom'and Raybomare attorney^ for Mr. Small, the probate jitlltlontr.

9100,000 TO LOAN• On Residence or Busineu •• property. Farms or Acreages •J Peavey-Taber ;• COMPANY •• v a B ha Bt. Bast Phone 301 •

HEREFORD BULLSALE

Monday, October 27100 HEAD OP REGISTERED

HEI^EFORD BULLS

TIi Ih iii tho fifth itnnuBl bull anio at tho Twin Fnlla LIvcHtock ComrolBBlon Co. Watch your ncwnpaiwr for hiilividual entry lUtn. aa tho hoitt atook In tho intcrmountnin wo8( is definitely ontored for this sale.

Twin Falls Llveitoek Commifaion CompanjrP H 0 N B 2 « - ^ «

READ THE TIMES WANT ADS.

Prepaie. . . F O R Y O U R F U T U R E

T R A N S P O R T A T I O N

N E E D S W ITH O N E O F O U R

USEDCARS1037 Ford Sedan, new blye finlnli, iieuler, goodtires .......................... g 4 0 0

1030 m d Bcdiin, orlglnol black finish, heater..............$ 3 4 0

1030 Chevrolet Coach, good Vlrt'ii, Bf>od mechanical con­dition,/hciitor, cleun In-

...,..............»sso1034 Cliflvrnlet Sedan, extra clean Inside. Hood tires, lieAter, (I good solid c a r .........$ 2 9 0

1033 Chevrolet Sedan, good

.......................%t4Q1020 Oiiryalor 73 Sedan, good tires, extra good mechanically, extra clean Snslde---- f 7 8

USIDTIiOCIISlesa Olievrolelt m ton. g«od Ures. goal meehonlcolly, abuy at ......................... tB B O

1M7 Chevrolet. 1^ Ion, itock

........ ...................- s 4 a s

1034 Clievrolet, m ton, good tlrea, reconditioned. Com­plete ..................... -..... ^ 9 9 »

1»38 O . M. o„ % ton, «XUk Rood, heavy oomnierclal Urei, reconditioned throughout, new finish .... .................. I H f l

(1E|C.JEDIIIS

Page 9: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

P r i a w . O c t o W 1 7 , I M l ' I D A H O E V E N I N G T IM E S . T W IN F ^ L S ; ID A H O

1 Tiu, TimesPHONE 38 C L A SSIF IE D A D V E R T I S I N G

W A N T A D R A T E S

Publication In both tb*

NCW8 AND T lU l t

Bs m O on Cott.Per-ff»rd

1 lUy-8 d iy i „^.4c p«r word per day

6 days.... ..3c per word* ^ per dayA minimum ot Ua w e ^ t l rtqolxtd in an ; one classified B<L I t iu * r*U» in c lu d e c o m b ln w ! d rc ir i l^ n i ft tt>e KewB and Ihe

Tenna (or all clMslfUd «<ll , t •

CASH

COMPLETE COVEBAOB AT ONE COST

IN TWIN P A U J ___PHONE 35 or 38 FOR ADTAKB

IN JEROWB U tvc Adi i t K i» W Root Beer

Btima

DEADL1NS8For Insertion In th« H*wi

e.p m.

For taierWon to the Times U a. m.

ThU paper lUbKirlbef to the code ( ctWoi of the AMOCiaUon of New»- paper OlaMlfleO AdvertUing Mim- agera and reBervea tha right to edit or reject a ijj t\a»Hicd advtrXlsing "Blind Ads" dUTTlng a Wewi-Tlme*

. box number are alrlcUy eonfidanUal and DO Information can be given tn regard to tbe advertiser.

Snort ^o uW be reported Immedl* ataly. No allowfnc* will b« mad* for more ttum od« tncorreot luertloa.

GOOD THINGS TO EAT

DELICIOUS, Jonathans, S5o up. I south, H west ^ u t h Park—016SJ3.

DELICIOUS, Romes, Jonathaiu, 16o. O. V. Jones, mUes south depot.

ARE ALL T H E , EXTRA ROOMS IN TWIN FALLS

R E N T E D ?We don’t believe they are, and yet we fee l that

there are many people who have juat comc to our

city who would like to find a real nice place to Ijve. If

you have an attractive room that you could easily

fix up for living quarters, give us a ring at 38 or

32 and put in one of those igexpenaive WANT ADS

,and you’ll find yourself with a nice monthly incomc.

D O I T T O D A Y !

TIMES & NEWS. Classified Ads

LOST Al«D FOUND

LOST, Grey mare 1400 pounds, Bay horse 1300 pounds wire cut, right front leg. H«ward. 923 Main lait.

WORKINO girl desires room and board. Reasonable. Box 39. News- Times. ,

BEAUTY SHOPS

• ZiAROE Delicious, McIntosh and Jonithan 'apples. Also Nampa frapcs. North Main Fndt Market.-

MACHINELESS permanents. 13 up. Oil permanents, »3M up. ArtlsUo, Beauty Salon.

DSLICIOUS A| ebard, 1 Park.

PERMANENT waving and styUng. Esp^eoced operators. Mrs. Dlok* ard. Phone X«71.

JONATHANS on iree-wlndfalls. I south. K wost,' South Park— OIW-JJ. - •

■ JONATHAN SOU W n|eoQtalnera. 1 east. H souUi K im ­berly.

APPLES—Jonathans, Romes. De- Uolous. IK tnlles east on Kimber­ly Ro«d, voabwa.

OQi paimaaenta, |ii>o up.Eugene Duart and Par maoblne* less waves. Beauty Arts Academy;

DOUBLE — R«d Dellolous. Jona­thans. New Red Romes.-atfl. IM. up. Kenyon Oreen._______________'

BWEiyr apple cider for sale. Idaho Vinegar and Cider Company. US Wall Street.

SE U 0I0U 8 , bushel or truck lead applu on trees, soo. you plek, bring eontatncrs. No worms. K

. north hoepitol. Geo. E, Pomeroy.

W O U ^ like praoUcal nursing. Can glva good references. Phone MS-J,

WINTER Baoaaa applW Merle Beckley. 4 west South Park. (For­merly BehaeXer'i Orchard) PhoneoaeaRia.

APPLEC—100,000 bushels, all vari­eties, all grades, many prices.

• ----- Trailer Park,Lons'! et £ ■ Blue Lakes >

TREJB rtpentd vrmm'. 'UeXntosh, Delicious, OreentDi, Orlmei Oold> en, Winter Banana, Rome Beauty apples; Flemish Beauty. Keefer pears, a east of east Main, U south. Formerly Wonacott orch­ards. now operated by J . a.'feW- husen.

PRUNES7S0 a bushel.

Good tree ripened, last of crop. Picked frMlj today. Bring your own containers.

MARKET HAHKET rive poInU Boat. End o( Moln E.

EABL RAINES

SPECIAL NOTlpES

DOROTKEA’8 Rest Home. Invalids —dderly iwople. Moderate rates. Phone OlU'Ra.

Have you a boy In the servlcef SPECIAL ARMY-NAVY RATES

for either Uio Times or News 3 monUu ------ 11.00

TRAVEL & RESORTS

SH A R I Mpenae trips many pi T ran l Bureau, 017 rourth avMui

WANT ride to Los Angelei loon. Bhatv expenses. Piione 427'Jt, VI*

B. R . Arment,, Rout* i,i, H a u e ^

C H lR O P R A C T O R fl

.. numb?—You need a^ust* m nta . Dr. Alma Hardin, OYtr Iq« dependent Meat.

8 C H O O L 8 A N D T R A IN IN G

YO p p a y for businM trainlni w i m ^ irou get It or no t T im » to*, Jobi, promotion, better aalar*

LOST AND FOUNDU W T lW

Rfwani.M « « f ilttU

' •to iraS iiK *

prtee. Idaho Barber aad Beauty Shop. Pbool «3«.

PERSONALS

HAVE YOU A B lO K jn itB K ti AT

ffhy t u r t M d ^ ^ ^ t r o i E a o ; MSWSTlEn'lX appNolat* HI Drop

into the office TODAY aad ptaee your order—either paper for only l»o per week (p a y a ^ in advance).

8 IT U A T 1 0 N B WANTED

EXPERISNCBD Carpenter. Re­modeling, day or contract. Free estlmatee. Phope

HELP W A N T E D — W O H B N

OIRL wanted for housework—m e child. Apply Jerome LtQlior Store.

CHRISTIAN lady, companion, I.. . . home, wages. 130 4th Qtnet west.

laCPXRISNCED cook. Good wages. Apply in perlson; Myers Cafe, Eden.

WANTED: Experienced ' UUoress. Come to Babbel's C losing Clinic. Phone 643.

WOMAN over 30 for housework. Referenncn required. Box 4S, Tlmea-Newa.

BOARD AND ROOM

FARM IMPLEMENTS ‘ AND EQUIPMENT

BlRDSELL Clover :

POTATO Picking basket*. Oet.yoare now whue w# bav* a tupply. Krengel's Hardware.

PRACTICALLY new O U «r "TO" tractor with spud, beet, bean ou]tl> vator, 3<«ay plow, » fbot dlso. Team well-matchod horses, t and 8. with harness. Phoae 1461-W.

ONE Extra good 38* lAcOonnlek- Deerlng hone spud digger, t49. A 34* Hoover digger, same priee. Two cheap Pugh diggers. Karry Mu«> grave.

HAY, GRAIN AND FEED

SPERRY Pceds of all Unda for sale at Kinney Warehouse. Twin Falls.

MOLASSES MUONO and O R lN D m O

MORELAND MILLINQ SERVlOE Ph. 318. Filer. Ph. caUa off gfliKUag

, FALL RYE $2.00-CWT.Recleaned No. 1

INTERMOUNTAIN SEED A FUEL : COMPANY

CUSTOM ORINDINO 1 or 3 toa fic cwt; over 3 tec, 7o MILLER MILLINQ SERVIO:^

Pti. 73J9, FUer. Ph. a l u cU ftizuUog.

HIOH QUALITY

B U G L E R F E E D S17% Uying Mash _...Ua48 owt.

Developing Mash ewt Dairy Ration, ivtet s

mu _________Bugler Calf Msat .

L ay l^ , hog and i

WE ORIND-W S M IXGLOBE SEED & FBEU) CO.

LIVESTOCK F09 SALE

OtTERNSEY cow and heifer. 1 east, I ’m north Washington school.

UNFURNISHED HOUSES

149 TENTH avenue north. Six rooms. Modem, two baths, stoker, garage. Phone 800 or ISM.

GOOD Guernsey milk cow. Smersoix. e miles east Washington eobooL

lEW three rooms. Modem except heat Hardwood floors. Inqu ln apartment .23, Justamere Inn . .

30 GOOD ewes. 1 buck. Sldoey By- ram, Hacelton. Phone S8-J4.

WANTED TO RENT OR ' LEASE

800 EWES yeuUngi to tix years. B.ced to lamb Jan. 1. Denison, 1 mUe south Dietrich. .

IMPROVED and productive 60 or ISO acres, north or south aide. Have lu ll line good equipment, finances. Box 87, Tlmes-News.

EARLY lambing breedlnt ewes. Grover Newman, Northslde Inn at Jerome.

REAL ESTATE LOANS

MONEY to loan on -farm, city or aoreage, Peavey-'nkber oompaoy.

FARM and city loans. Northern Life Insurance Company—Fred Bates. Phone 1379.

HOMES FOR SALE

BMAl l house, new. r

FIVE Room home, Just com^«led. FJI.A, loon. P. R. Thompson, 351 Buchanan. .

BY OWNEIi ~ Remodeled apart­ments. Bargain. Good Income, m Ninth MorUi.

ATTRACTIVE new five room dwel­ling, New district. «450 down. 131.48 per month. Move In today Phone M3 or 39«.

6ACRIFICBI Five room home, mod­em except heat. Newly decorotwl, hardwood floors, garage, Nice lawn, shrutM. Cioee In. Slxtli eiut. Phone 1946.

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR SALE

FOR BALE or rent: rifteen acras, p(vt.i«iilon January 1st—039S-R3.

Peb. 15th lambing.

EIGHT year old Jersey cow, te Yearling hclfcr calf. Milo Cook, 1?; north Washington' schooT

S IX outstanding yearling Hereford bulls. Prices to suit you.Clark, 3 miles south of ' west, u south.

FOURTEEN Registered Hereford cows, Domino breed. Very reason­able. HalMrt E. Batch, Gaimett, Piione 038-J4,

POULTRY FOR SALE

75 WHITE Leghorn pyllets. Phone at night. 1166-J; day. 1345.

FOUR MonUis old White Leghorn pullcls. Hayes Hl-Oradii Uatohery.

EXTRA good purebred setter dog. 1 we.st. 4fj north Curry. W, C, Van Zaiiie,

THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William Fergoson. CHOIR CONCERT SET FOR TEACHER MEET

. __o v s r e R S

A R B

For the district No. i teaohers* in- aUtute, to be held in Twin Palls O o t 34.38, the Twm ,M U hlgti •Qhool ft oappeUa «hotr, uaAw the <UiMtloQ ot U lw UarJorH Albert- eon. will present lU flrei eoneert ot the year, a panorama of Amertean muslQ fsaturlQt the *19aUail fee Amerieans," by Bohtnion aad 1a- touch*.

'Die concert will be preiented PrU day erenlng, O e t 34, u ont of ti>e openlng-day teaturea ot tbe South Central Idaho Idueatleo aaaoelaUoo eooftrence.

Carlton MeMuUln wUl take the baritone solo aztd the entire choir ot M wUl furAUh cheral baekround. 'n w pubUo to invltad and no ad­mission wtu be charted.

Clarenoe Dudley and M a r l i n Sweeley will take the lead for each Of two other pwfonaanoee eehfd- uled, one of which «1U be the pre- aeeUUen at a high aehool aoembly t v the entire student on the

preoadlng the eveningIT iu r * ^perfdrmance.

The t in t phase wlU be divided, musically, Into four secUons, the ttrst featurlni muslo of the early Amttioaa oolanUa. th* teoood

eW BSTAAeATf A ,R8N '. M B A n BUT sw e r r^H m A O s

r A^R«. <n_AUoiNB XAOiAMMNVO, CAXJH

R e g is t e r e d Black male Cocker Spaniel, six months. Reasonable. Phone M6-W.

WANTED TO BUY

WANTED: 100 tons first or second cutting hay. Phone I960.

3 DOZEN New Hampshire Bed pul­lets. Albert Ccderburg. Phone 0387-R3.

t e n ton mlnlmuth platform scales. Also bucket type grain elevator. Phone IMO. ‘

'WANTED: Wood or wire banters, la good condition, tie aaob. Troy or National plant.

ALFALFA and clover seeds—Clean­ing, stor>Be and seamless bags. Globe Se«l and Peed Company.

BIDES, pelts, Junk metals, iron, bat­teries and clean rais. Idaho Junk House.

WE PAY 4c LB. For

GOOD, CLEAN

W I P I N G R A G S

(No Buttons or Overalls)

TIMES AND NEWS

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

FOR s a l e : 600 good field bags. Call 0388.J4. H. W. Reldeman.

6800 USED Field bags. 5c oach. George SUvens, Wendell. Ph. 330».

Business and Professional

DIRECTORY

ftU^CELLANEOUS FOR SALE

FIELD bags, bushtl baskets, corral poles. Joe Berks, 1% east on EUe- abeth.

ATTTO glass, canvas, oaavaa ropalr* Ing. ThomeU Top aad Body Worka.

W INDOW Glass Installed Insash, no charge for settlnt 1____brought Into atort. Don’t watt ie» the last rush, be prepared for winter. Moon's,

O ra w wlU alM -Itie HairTTHat' Once t h r o u g h n ia l HaU“; QwM Hrttrwht. "Loeh - - -- Jane Shearer, — so Woodnui semWe wtU a l.. .Only With T to e _

Romance ot th tturywm be express..........."Juanita." June MeHeetyi ____Bolt.” OUve Wells I "U a t Rosa ot Summer,” Eva Dunham, "nie an- semble will sing **Lang, Loot A ta ” and a whlstUag arrantement ot "LUten to the Mocking Bird," Hr Preston Henman, will cooohi^e Uii» division,

Dixie Sm « sAmong the songs of the south VlU

be “Won't You SU O w n ." and “Oit,

oeh U ao o a* : Mary "My oayiHave aMii~ Vtw,” and Um w so «tnt -Dctalr W W .ilne Kyee.**

M ot th f eartp IM h aen---- 1bo exprenM (n vooal aoiee.

June MoHeety: -B«i

Pep I-.- _•n tt pep band, under dlrecUeo ol

Bert A. Chrlrtlanson, will preeen< a group of musical numbers eX' B T M ^ tbe dere lc^en t of Ja v I r a n n r te n r ln t durtng the ma­chine age. and the final portion of the concert will be the "Ballad for Amerieans."

"Indian Prayer," an Indian chant. by Clarenoe Dudley, will open the first seetlon of the program, and' wlU ba followed by an enisnbla ar-

. - gJrla* glee chib, and a-—- . - Marlin Sweeley, "OkJ Black 5 o » ? ^ Foster: Norma Andrews, ‘’Qooie Where My Lora Lies Dreamtni," also by Stephen P ^ter; Dorta i i» a Sherwood, 'Tm Sad and I'm Lone- - ly.” a bluea song, and MUdred M i* n ln « . “Deep River,- spmtual.

Songs of home, “In the r*Ing” and "Sweet and Uow." girls' sKrtat, and ''Urn'* O ld SweH Song." by VerU Pataeldt n m fea­ture. with sonn ot the wMt, tha «i-

ot Uie t in e when tha east expanded Into the 'vest Bob Bw- nett'a aolot U tU e Old Sod aad B<A> Ooddatd^ n « M O a M n Bachaler" will al preeenUtiou et Munah* and of *c Toor Pretty UtUa Po ' ogi ot the wealt sobgi ot the weal BIU ItaynoUto «m be

Uie ballad, to ellmai tha and Mrs. NelUe Ostrem «i: paw , m e b i^ ^ ^ « ^M | > 'i

and Kenneth H u s ta d ___ _______Stansbury will be reapodilbla .tor UghUnt. M -

Reclamationists W arnetl:^ Against New Settiements-tiM inttitM 7

HOME FURNISHINGS AND APPLIANCES

LARGE OIow Maid range. Lahue. 1 east. 3 south, H east, east and Main.

GOOD l^arge clrculatlnf coal heat«r. W ill heat five rooms. «39JD, Gamble Stores.

A LOVELY L. H. Electric range, buffet type with cooker pot Like new, 160, Harry Musgruvc.

PHOENIX. Arlin Oqt_ 17JUJOrA

wamlnf against any attam;^ ait a socialised settlement of new western Irritation pto}eete-suoh -u- tha Grand coulee and Rosa In Wash*

n. the All-American or Central -_ln- CaUtomla.-wu voteed to­

day by Clifford Kaynor, the EUensbuit, Waeh„ ord.

Kaynor, who handled settlement of the 13-OOO-aere Klttl(as projebt in Washlnrton'a Yakima vall^, told the National ReclamaUon aasoela* Uon that the tutura of weabem r«* olamaUen Uea-In elimination of waste and In a unltod effort by every true friend In se^g thM land set­tlement work Is put on a p a r ^ ef< lloleney with tha enilneeiing.'f -

Soelallaed tettlement with from tha dust bowl, (allures V

BEAUTIFUL wool 0x13 rugs, at *39.00. 'See Uiese at Harry Mus- graven.

pad. Mahogany dtsk, Just like n»w, Larg* round mirror. 6aerlllc« for cash. Phone 804 after fl pm.

UP TO $40 for your old range in trade on a new Coronado. Phone S&e-J for estimate. Gamble Stores, Twin rails.

I9A8 F OR a 8x13 tell base rug, threa squara yards for 81.00. Heavy weight 4S^o square yard. Guar' anteedt Moon's,

quira 144 T^ler.

VOUKG employed couple wants ex-

Good wages, board and room If desired or can go home nights. Must have, references. Write box 10, Tlmes-News.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

plant Terms, CaU Murtaugh I

18 ROOM Hotti, beer parlor, good twstneu cheap. Ttnns. Muitaugh.

SERVICE BUtien and tourist park for rent, reasonable. 'Phone 81.

SERVICE Station for lease. Small capital will handle. 4Ut Avenue south.

FOR RENT: Samoe station with

UNFURNISHBDAPARTMENTS

VACANOYI rumlsbed, unfurnished. Reed ^ i r n e n t a . m Sboihona north, R ione 1317.

OUOICE Three rooms, prlvata buita, heated^lrt«7 M nT en lenoe .jr^d

FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

IIODSRM fwjr i m . pontt, oleeli r u ^ e d . Stoker. |arac«. R mm

■ niRO room m o ^ tMkar I Bungalm AparSMBNk Sm avenue

w r m m n j mj S S T R l ' ^ ■ * » ; « ' 0 » | .

BOAROAmi:iW O w T

WELL Improved' 160 acres. Trade on 40 acres, owner. Twin Falls tract. Box 41, News-Tlmes.

ll ie SU-Well, 837 Main W. Ph. 188.

GOOD suburban acre, well liiiproved, Excellent location. Box « , News- TlniM,

ONE of the best twenty acre tracU, cloie In. W ill take cUy property on deal, Roberta and Henson. Phone 5*3.

N C im iS IDB 80. rough but rlcl» soil, ss acres (armabls. well im ­proved* well, olectrloity, $5,360 cnnh. K. L. Jenkins.

annunl payments. 4% ____ __ „„In ftlfiiifa. 4-room house, cistern, elccirlclty. 3 north. S'.i weal, Joroine. No sand, no noxious weeds. o«n .Dietendort. owner.

FEDERAL LAND BANK FARM

« ncrfs, 7 ml. NW of Wendell, Full water right under North Bide ca­nal. Pnir ttapmwnente. a real bartialii at 1 3 ,^ . Raatonable down

1-. L. WEEKS. Sec-y-Troas. Naiionni Farm Loan AasoolaUi

Gooding. Idaho. Phone 30

~FAn!Mfl /W D ACREAGES FOR RENT

OOOD N to m aoros. R rvs o%n

NO A0RB8, BdM dlstrtOt, 3 seU Im-

KOB b a m o r T B A D i

FOUR Rous*

Batha and Ma88age$ '

Bicycle Sales and Service

a JONES for LbANS on HOMES. Rm, 8, Bank i t Trust Bld|, Ph. 3041.

DLASIUa OYOLERY.

Oloyiteln>Bleyole Bhop-Ph. 6M-R.

Chiropodiet

Chiropractors

Dr. Wyalt. 181 3rd Ave. N. Ph. »77.

Coal and WoodDEPEND YOUR ROME

DEMAND HI-HEAT COAI. MAGIC CITY FUEL CO.

PHONE IBO

Curtain Shops

Cur(sln A) Drapery Shop, MS-O'h B Alw tUp covert, oarpets. Ph. W

Floor SandinoHiider St Sons. lU Main E . I4ft0-W

Fred Ptellle, 753 Locust PU. 1»0«-J.

Insuranee

For Pire and Casualty Iniuranoe. Surety and FldeUty Bonds, see bwun taveauneat Co. la « ;ih nidg

Job PHniing

QUALITY JOB PRINTINGUlteriieads , Mail Pieces

Biuioqu Cards Folderi

T m S i r f f i ^ w aOOMMXROIAL PRINTWO D»T .

K t u H h o p

Sohada K«P « w p - S N and B»-South, .Sack Q( .X, O . Store.

lAHClHO

Money Jo Loan

S^ECTrRIOAL AppUanoes inoludlnf .ooftee makere, toasters, mix- master# will soon be hard to get Make your holiday . reservations now. Kranttl'a Satdwaie.

LARGE Round Oak heater. In good oondlUon. 4M Blue Lakes NorU).

AUTO LOANSRefinanoe your present conirac^-

reduce payments—cash advanced.

WESTERIJ FINANCE CO. Next to Fidelity Sank

SALARY LOANS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL 88 to 8S00 to employed pcoiile on

your own signature.Rms. 1 St 3. Burkholder nidg. Pl>. 778

$25 to $1,000 ON YOUR CAR

itracts refinanced—private s tlnaneed-cash advancici

Consumers Credit Co.(DJv. ot Pacl/lo Finance Oorj),)

330 MAIN AVB. NORTII

OeteopatMe Physician

Dr, L. A. Peterson, IM Main N.. 481.

Dr. B. j , UUler, il3 Main N, Ph. 1077.

D t.f t W, Rose, 114 M. N. Ph. D37-W.

PlwnMng and Ueating

Abbot! Ptumblni Co.

Cuitom Tanning

» . K nttotk. Ph. O N U i Airport nd.

Typtteritmbalee, i«nt«ls senlloa. Phone l a

VphoktwinoI O n u A B n i.

i i H i f «»■». w . w*.

, Wtltr Syttmtn S V S ^

STOKER CLEiUUNCE SALE.

.......1139................ - ......1140

Freeman T-3 S ton r ................ tl69l‘‘rcemon Dlx Stoker ......._... »I80Kreeman Blnfeed Stoker ........ |330Krceinan Stoker Wa(er licQler,

for Hotels. Rnstaurants. Druu- ty Parlors. Aportments, etc. , |150

ABBOTT PLUMBING CO, Under Fidelity Dank

WEEK KNl) •SPECIALS

In the Appliance Depnrlnient Piione IM

1 New Master Stoker, completewltli controls.................. 1188 60

1 L. & H. comb, range......... 140.501 Monarch comb, range.....M4 B01 Splroflame oil heater, large sise

(iUe new) ....................... 140 60B U «d leltlgeraVora.....»95 and upBuy your coal or oil heater at

lowBSt prlcea in Twin Falls.

C, C. ANDERSON CO.

tp X «M by seeking and oUalniirrtntton t a n n e n W h •u f lW iD l'~

D iey were obtained without delasr'

^ asU y f<

and for the cause of reclamation.

e KlIeT llsher said that10 yean a t« theortoU might hava held that such thioriee of a country editor were cockeyed, but that on the K ittitas project it had been proven that settlement of a project should bo organlHd lo much the

way as a manulKlurtr de. a market for a new product

M i i no room for a blatant and no plaee for expert- with a lot of haU-baked

fu l weatam Irrigation pnleoU h ^ been attUed. by praettoal,. hard- working! farmers who understood ir-

U nothing complex in tlie setUement of a good project," *•* added. " I t seems ridiculously sin

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

worked out a elaoslflod a d v ^I oampaifn which «a« mm 1b ~

Ion dlstrlets.

Sessions WUl Tell Plans on defense Fdod~Series of edueaticoal moottngi vUt .

be held, at datee to be amtounnd. later. (0 expUtn the ‘‘food lo r da* fense- pUns in Twin PattrxooolT. aoeordint to Walter Reeeo. Outla« . ford, ehalrman of the oommlttaa ta

Mr. Reese said that BpeeUlc foala for the countr have new been a it "P and wUl be explained to in n w a t seaalone planned for vyirloug trow . '

Federal Market Baeat'

■nia . laoraased pcoduetton «Rh . gram ae requestad by tha lovam- ment wiU be bulwarked by fedaral funds td assuia good prteee on aona

and by the I '

return on ather eiopa. L and Stalgali amendment f

RADIO AND MUSIC

ANOTHER IDBCMONSIN THK DISTRICT COURT OF

THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL D ISTRICT OP THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR TWIN P A U ^ COUNTY.

OrlatKl Wesley Allred, Plsnlllff. vs.

Donnie Juno Allred. Defendant.THE STATE OP IDAHO again

sends greetings to Bonnie June All- red. the above named defendant

You are hereby notified that a complaint has been (lied against you in the Dlstrlot Court of Uie Eleventh Judicial DUtrlet of the State of Idaho. In and for Twin Falla County, by the above named plalnUff. and you are hereby directed to appear and plead to the said complaint

In twenty d u s of the senlca of this summons; and you are further noUfled that unless you so apoeM and plead to said complaint within the tlma herain specified, the plain­tiff WiU take Judgment agaUut you as prayed. In said ecmplaint

The eald aoUon U brouihl for the nurpoea ot aacurlM a deerae ot dt- Toroe-tv (he plalnUff from the it- feodant on the ground* of desertloA.

for white beans, and wU fair retume on butterfat s

County milk produetie be acwevtd by better 1 breeding practices rather tnan w oraasa In herds-^haa been eet a t five per oent. Egg increase to to be ' nine per cent; beef and calt alauib* ter, 18 to . 30 per oent gain; ))ci| slaughter, two p«r oent

Mora Spuds

Tills year's smaller poUto acreage WlU be expanded by 10 per genti the large bean acreage will ba ra*tained; feed crops and feed V f ^ Will be Increased. Wheat axpanitcn, however, will ^ discouraged and the AAA is retelntog mtrlcttona on

NffW Supply ttsed pianos, priced to

New 0 tube Console redlo^ Budget terms to lult. Flro> Home and Auto Supply

TRUCKS AND TRAILERS

TRAILER ROUSB. bulU-ins. Oood oondlUon. Vlrill Jewett 4\t south- aaai HOlUatar. .

34 FOOT mawnlte traitor bouM, ptaoUoaUy new. tnqutre 830 Fifth

sugar bHU to W X. tha total acreage of beeU will depend on tha contract That U dependent on 0 . S. needs and the offshore quotas and ' tariffs.

Hisli MountainsMount McKinley U the hlgbssk

mounuln In the workl above 4ti own ; base. This Alaskan peak stands In a valley of low . plains, whUa WmA KvereeU the world's highest i

V ,.......(SEAL)

■dward iOaoria

S E -/AUrSR o'.

m .

MUOQRAVS. ^. Clerk,

BoberU, Depun.

rwiSsIiIufr.

- ^ A V E GAS—7CM bMM

IHI lU Mn attMaMwUiHk. T r i«jf.lisw iir.ss!un ii, Huruiub.

' • I V," 1 '1

Odd Bread_wi.vr',2.as

- UM ru ii ir

r A B H iB S ' ;t u r n

Page 10: U. s. DESTROYER TORPEDOED - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho-Evening... · 2014-12-12 · -finis" to the ^50,000 ho.spital bond issue election and tumrd attention

, Page Ten IDAHO ^VENING TIMES, TW^N FALLS, IDAHO Frid>r, Oeto)»r 17 .194X

Japanese Army Leader Named to Form New CabinetGENERALS OFFER S P R T ; P f E R S

RE W i SBr ROBERT DELLAIRE

TOKYO. OcU 17 (U.RJ—Ocn. Hldcld Tojo. one of the prmy’s "blB three,” undertook to form a new Jftpnnese cftblnet at the Impcrlnl commRnd qf Emperor HIrohlto todny nnd was given ImmKllfite support of Ocn. Qcn Sugivama. clilel ol Uic scncnd staff, nnd Gen. Olozo Yamnda, In- Fpoctor gencml of mllltnry educa­tion.

Sufilyama and Ynnmlfl. with ToJo, form Uie army’a big tlirce. Tojo. 67, U regarded as n conscrvaUve na­tionalist in poJlllc.i. Ho accepted the fmt>cror's commKslon to form n gov- crnment to /iucccpd tlint bf Premier Runimaro l^onoyc. li\ which he war mlnLslcr nnd which resigned ycpterdny because of differences In ftftttonal poHcy.

Announcement that SUglyama and Yamiida had given their support nnd encoiirnuoment to Tojo mcnnt that the anny wiis solidly behind him In hU efforLs to form a cahlnet

- but aa yet the approval of the navy, ftUo ewicntlal, had not been an­nounced.

Follow Some LineNovy spokesmen, However, tor sev­

eral days Jiavo taken Ujo same <i(Kh- ly nationalistic line followixl by tlie top councils of the army. Navy sfwkesmen also hnvo followed Uio

. lino of newspaper* which renewed attacks on the United Stales. Lat­est editions of the Japan Times and AdverUser said China was flghUng Japan "wlUi American weapons. American bullets. American teclinl- cal BssUtance. military advlcp and monetary a&sLstanco.''

The Tokyo newspaper NIclil Nlchl gave prominence to a statement by Admiral Sanklchl Tnkahashl. for­mer commander of the combined fleet, Inferring the Japanese navy was ft match for that of the United States and urging confidence by the Japanese people.

Tojo was 6clcct«d at a meeting of elder statesmen. Including six for­mer premiers, aitd was at onc« sum* moncd to' the emperor’s palace to receive the Imperial mandate.

Ke«n MlUUry MltUlTojo Is called KamUorl (raisor)

because of his keen-edged mUltary mlwrf He n>n« tO ICfttlexthlpWhen Konoye, atter guiding three cabinetfl, resigned yesterday under a

_ bcnDb&rdizieiit o l . natlDD&llst crlU- clim. led by the army, because of hi»JaIlure-to-c«ect4jottcj^r«laUons with the United SUtes without sac- rltlcln* Japan'ft amblUons to form a "grtrater east Asia co-prosperlly

' « p b ^ " extending to the far south seas.

The immediate future* of Japon- cse>AmerlcoQ relatloo5 • w u not clew.

Japan had made no secret of Its distaste for the shipment of Ameri* pko war materlala through the sea Dt Jap«n to Kuasla.

Only Wednesday the government bad sent a Uner, tlie TatuU Maru, to Honolulu and the United States to embark Japanese c lUwu who wauled to return home in view of itralned relations. The ship is duo at Honolulu Oct. 33 and Son Fran- tlsco Oct. 30. At-lenst two more lln- era are to b« sent.

Newipapen CautiousNewspapers were cautious in their

comment on the cabinet change but It was emphasized in all Japunene quarters that Prince Konoyo had fallen because of his failure to ne- fotlate an agreement wlUi Uie Unit- ed States on Japan ’s terms. It was emphaslced also that, before the falli there was a split among cabinet mlnUtera on the policies to be ptir- lued. «

Newspapers generally siUd that no matter who succeedetl Konoye. tiie country would expcct ihn ijfcw pre­mier lo pursue tlie Chlne.ie war to victory and to eatabllAh Japan’s "greater east Asia co-prnrt]wrlly ipliere."

The United States army air corps chalked up more than WO.OOO flying houra to lU credit during 1040, In 1031. only 77.000 flying hours trediled to Uie army.

Last “Pcacticc” Before Natioiial Conipetition '

Kimberly, Buhl FFA Teams Head for National Meeting

Joe Hlllegas, Lyle Magnuson and Anton Britt, members of the K im ­berly FFA meats Judging team, ac­companied by John H. Darby. FFA Instructor, left this afternoon for Kansas City lo enter the national Judging contests In cohncctton with the American Royal livestock show In that city.

The Kimberly team won the Idaho lamplonship earlier this season

when the FFA Ktatcwlde meeting was held In Twin Palls.

Buhl Team Ooea Also leaving today for the same

community were members of the Buhl FFA milk tcsUng and grading taara. They will compete in the na­tional contcsU in this division. Members of tlie team are Marvin

!U.-jEroeat _antbcr_ana-rostar neen. Leslie Jackson, Instructor,

is accompanying them.The Kimberly t«am. under the

direction of Earl Hansen, won the Idaho stata FFA meata judging con­test this summer and the right to compotc in Uie naUonal contest. Bob March, of Uie Independent Meat company, 'twin Falls, h a s worked wlUi the boys each week In meat grading identification.

The Kimberly s ^ here to Pocatello by nlng they will Join teams from Idaho o _ the trip east by train. The Ulnerary calls for all day stops at Denver and Omaha. In Denver the group will be shown through Uie large pack­ing houses and will bo guests at a lunclieon there. In Omaha they will visit the railroad shops and wilt also make a trip to the famous Boys' Town; They will return lo Kim ­berly on Sunday. Oct. 28. Tlie trip

made, possible througli the fi­

nancial oiulstance of the Kimberly school . dUtrlct. the Twin Falls Chamber of Commerce, the K im ­berly Lions club and the Kimberly FFA chnpter.

The Buhl boys also went to Po­catello by car and Joined the other Judging teams at the train there. After the convention the Buhl boys wlU be given tours of Omolm, Den­ver and Salt Lake City.

While Mr. Jackson Is on the trip his classcs will be taught by a stu­dent tcacher Irom the University ol Idaho.

Castleford Has Harvest Vacation

--CASTLEFORD. Oct. 17 (Spcclal) —School ha« been dismissed for two wceka ol potato har>'cst. s jid will convene Monday. Oct. 27.

The following tcnchei^ have left for their, homes In other communi­ties: Mrs. Frances Elliott, Idaho City; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Osterhout and baby, Declo; Mr. and Mrs. Fran* els Egbert. Murtaugh; Miss Bertha Nutting. Rupert; Mlw Arlene Nich­olson, Filer: Miss Beth Wlmmer, Shoshone; M^bs Bcrnlce McClcllan, Jerome: Mrs. Don Reese, Kimberly, and Miss Alice Ar<|uette. En)(le.

Superintendent (>nd Mrs. Fry and

Dr. f ’. F. McAlee and Dr. Frank M cAlft

/lJUlOWHrfl the rflitioi’ni of their officea to JI5 T iird Avenue Eatt.

VanQmp’sThe best for the least

P O R K . ind BEANS

What a home industry

means to Magic Valley!

Th o u s a n d s o f D0LT,ARS cach year sve

HponL hy our orifunization right in Magic

Valley in t l io evoi'yday pi-ocesa of doing hus- ine«H. The money you wpend in your purchaso

of Fallrt Hrand mealH returns in part to you througli

incroaHod huKinenH for 8Corea of Magic Valley bus- infHHPH. ConHidcr — repairs to trucks; oxpendlturo

for, gaHoline; buildings; upkeep and maintenance of our properties: nnd expondituroH for other sup- ;

plieH. These, anide from our puyrolls, In the first nix months of 1941 amounted to

» 1 4 , 8 6 2 . 8 6AH Soent With tocal MerchantB

Those figures exclude payrolls, taxes and iw-Iginal inveatmonta in equipment.

Falls Brand Meats, PrOccsscd und DiHlrlbutcd by

INDEPENPENT MEAT CO.A Name Yoifvt Known for Y^art

The last ‘ kuU" practice was

belnc held by member* of the

••Rimberfy FFA • meaU indjing

team when this picture was taken

lu t n ifh t The team left this

alternoon for Kansaa City to com­pete In the national eontesti. They are Idaho state champions. In the picture llefl to rifhl) are John Darby, f I'A Instraclor; Joe imiegai, Anton Britt and Lyle MarnaMn. team members, and Dob March. Instmclor with the Independent Meat company. AU but March will make the trip to Kansas City.

(Times Photo and Engraving)

FS H FA IIIES IO AID IN DEFENSE

Two hundred farm famlllrt co-

op«-ratlnK with farm security In

I Falls county are ''geared lo

do thclr part In the department of nRrli;uliure> food for defens<- pro- prnin by increasing production of dairy, pork and poultry producla,'" t>en Wiseman, county PSA super* ^Uor, ^»ld here' today.'

"Masl FSA famlllca in this dls- trScv liRve already placed their farms on a balanced crop and .livestock prosram and this diversification will cniible them quickly to adapt tliem- selvr.i to the food goals being set up by the county," Wiseman sold.

Supplemental Loans

'Supplemental loans wlll be made available for sound "expansion of llvc.stoclc enterprises or for repairs anti Improvemenlk necessary to brine livestock numbera up to tlie amount of - feed available on ' farm."

Flnnnclnpr for additional c munliy and cooperative sen'lce.i lo provide Joint ownership and use of farm machinery, purebred sirw and other operating gooda Is available n n d ^ o u ld help meet prospective shortages next year in farm machin­ery and dairy breeding stock, the aupcrvLsor explained. Cooperative a-s.soclntlons may be establL'Oied to provide for processlng'plants, group purrho«lng. n^edlcal programs and' land lea.slng activities.

"Farm homemakers cooperating •Ith FSA have already launched in*

tensive live-at-bome programs that Ineluilc ample gardens, good storage and canning antf also produ^llon of &I1 dairy, meat and poultry products nec<led for home use," Wiseman said, .

'W ith DefenseBoard

Fiuin .security Is cooperating close­ly with the county agricultural de­fense board In the ciimpalKn U achieve the “food for Ireedom" goal;

set out by the kecretary of agricul­

ture.

B. PurceU, state director for the

farm security administration, Boise,

visited here recently and held

meeting at the labor camp, south of

the city, to assist in making plans for formulating a purchasing and leasing association covering eight counties In south central Idaho whereby large land unlU may be purchased and subdivided into eco­nomic units and leased or sold to farm families eligible for FSA kssist- ance.

BABY'S COIDSdaughter, Lee Gunderson and Elmer Oskey arc staying here during vaca­tion as Is the Earl Hudson family.

the steertng post, is entirely mechan­ical, requiring no boesler or other anxilUry mechanism for iU opera­tion. —Adv.

. There U • ditUncllvt 4«li<loui> n«u to FRIL-LETSt There n thil nourithing rlehntsi ol

fiOliOfn FRESH- E6G NOODbESI

Ttieri li the energy building of A-l Dunim Semollnil Thtrs it Ihe^ew ce«t <«r (««d bud-.g«tf piui »Kd#»lr»bl|Ity'el 6'/i

. a in u tr prtpsratlon.

GENUINE PYREX CASSEROLE_

jpUu or ■ d i ^ \. . . Bead U» 10 J

Rdlere misery fast -eiferBaUjr.Ruboa

ICKSV a p o R ub

niEXRNDER.’SMEN'S

SUITS-and-

Topcoats

—and they tiwl you no n

S U I T S ' ^ Alexander's hclp.s you Rpnico for

winlor with cconomy . . . tliia ia n great 8c-

)('cli(»n of units ftt $25. It iiicliidoH worsteds,

tu'ocils’ nnd covci'Ih in biiik Io « ih I double

MircuHted HtylesI Color HelectioiiH ifro com-

l)lct(!, jm tte rn BclecUons

nrti completo am i Vl'c i C 0 0 '

riiiik't- i>f «izc8 w ill f i t any J j ^

man! *

T O P C O A T S — f^om fort’tt tliR tilin g In

lopconfa but at Aloximdnr’H you RCt Hitmrt-

iic.sH, too! Sec our hURc now Hclcctlon of over-

couIk nnd got ready for n long comfor.tablo

wiiit(?rl Flyfrontfl! nutton-thrunl Fleeces,

twppdH, worHleds , . . w« hnvo them nit from

?Hi.7n to 5!ir>. Your favorili' ntylo and color

in hen;!

W ORK C L O T H E S FO R M EN

Who Work OutHide

You men wlio want quality with econojny will find Just that at Alexander’s. Whe­ther It be overalls, work shoos, blocers or any tiUiar Item the Qusllly Is Uiere, built rl«<i( ill. 'llta l <)uallty will auure you long wear and the utniost In economy. V i s i t Aleiander'i work fiiothes deiwrlnieiit.

DUNLAP & METRO

HATSTlie hats you'll be proud tO wear all winter long,

$ 5Others from I2.9B

^ 3 S J i « n n i E a i s a s * '

I

LADIES' HATS14 Reduced to..... ........................2 5®16 Reduced t o ............................5 0 CRepriced to sell Saturday. These are sport fells and some matnmly styles that we know will give some thrifty shoppers a real treat. Hurry, get one Saturday.

RED FOR SAFETY!HUNTERS'^popular corduroy with reversible Kv. Tliey're warm and comfort­able. Compare Penney'i low price. Ask to see the exceptional value Saturday I 4 9 c

/ WARM NAP-OUTCOTTON GLOVESDouble thick for wannth and wear with knit cutfs. Popular while

with eloaUo cuff. TTieee are popular tor

‘'a


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