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, Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho .Countiea ” ,. VOL. X^Xy. NO. 13-5 CENTS. MibaroiAMi.Bomuoi'i ' . * TWIN FALLS','IQAtio; SATURDAY, JANUARY 8,'1942. wi» T.iwiphi, ^ OFFICIAL CIT^^^ ClisulfM PM ___ .••• ............ , , S t n l t e ’of Ih® United Pm* ; . . , . . ■■ ' "'— ...'■ - ' ‘‘ --V I ■ I■ ■* . r. ~ ' I I." ; i . 7. r -- -^ -t~* i ? .. ..................... .. —??•■ ' If Isi^t the Same Wprkaflay W orid f' . kxn^YSHEV. Russia, Jon. 3 (ll.PJ "—More than 100,000 aerman troops have Ijecn trapped In tho Mqjhalsk' area of the vcst-Mo^ow front and ■must <a»030. between Burrender and death,' dispatches Itoni'tho (tout «ald today.. ■ "fn, ■Seven entire divisions o! 15,000 men. 'oach were caught in the pijcket as Red army troops, investing, the cily of Mozhaisk, swept forthei.west- TOrd ilpng Wipolcon’s road of doom. In pursuit of the German armies. > . A war communique had reported the rccapture of tha important .eltx ol Maloyoroslavcte, TO miles south- southwest of Mo&ow, Md had ^s- sated that thf .Russian forces, ad- -viuicipg, relentlessly, had smashed every attempt of the Germans to farm B ilew defense line; . Wfaloyarosiavets was only ona of numerous towns and villages which the Russians had taken*ln that area, wliere they were not only advancing frontally but. were striking up to- jvord the Mozlialsk area in oi)o arm of a double flanking drive, H was asierted:. . ........... ■■ , IMS SUPPED , W p words — very sUpafry — .ad- equately described'conditlon of sec- ontoKjariU main, roads (iv<erVqi6 . entW Magic Valley today, offlolala of the state’ highway departmertt and the ,1?wln Palls highway distrlcr announced; ^ . Snow which' toll In Twin Falls lajt night iand ttii; .morning—laanilj ^ coat of .some'two Inches .her^w4s genbrar ..throughout the alel, 'an in some sections it: was drifting. Eaatera sfa(jm,jwh!!;h-liavo faged for the post m o ^ays, wero felt here for.,the first time this-morning as the Uhlon. Pijclflc train which pulls In ^^ohl the east did not'arrivB until shortly before noon.- .' •, ^ . . As a result ppstmen found, little to do during the niornhig hours anft .Were unable to moke the regulor .Saturday mornhfg delivery round, r Sorting of the incomlng.niall started ' shortly, before noon and . officials, said th a t it would be delivered this ' .of t™b<in. OlUclals-Of the Mato-highway de- partment at Shoshone said that' ail equipment there was .either out on the roads or' *as ready to go out. All main roads were open, officials said, excepting the Galena .summit load above Ketchum and Sun Valley ' which Is closed,. The Arco road is open-although It Is Icy. Officials of the-Twin Falls hlgli- .way district pointed out no Inform- ation had been received here that -any of-the-roads-ln the district was- closed. jAll were slippery, however. Program Set foi' Ski Cabin Sunday Ray-Rbbblna, ' Jaycee chairman for winter sports, this afternoon said ' that everything 1s >11 set" for ded- ication of (he ski shelter at Magic mountain up ^Rock crc»ic Sunday starting at 1 p, m. Dedication arrangements, which will Include skliog'And toboggan ex- hibitions. Ore under the direction of the Jaycces with membets of the Maglc^ Mountain ski club particl- ' paflHET The general ptthljc Is Invit- ed to attend. ' Robliins this afternoon Aid road to the ski shelter was in excellent condition," ! ' - "y f','! •'i/ Ui.,,, I ' H ' r f Scenes of. beauty like this—in spots you ordinarily gass In Twin Falls without a second glance—Ksulted today aftenlast night’s'heavy snowfall. This view was taken from city park, looking toward the public library bulldfnt In tI)o, background. ^ ' (Times Thoto and Engraving) BLOOD PROJECT AT 300 FIGURE Begistration in the defense, blood dohor prdject reached , 300 persons at 1:20 p, tp. today—with one'week to go. ; . . 1, . " Junior Chamber of .Commerce de- fense committeemen. In charge of. the Joint pfoject with' the hospital medical staff, said the. total' will climb' later today and next week witli the expected signup of 20-30 members as well as members of other civic groups. . Volunteer donors are "typoci" os to blood and arc 'given a free Wai- serman test. They are then on call for a poiulble later iieed for.actual blood donation. ' ’ Price Legidatiop Gets. Top Place in Congress . ( ' ?y JOHN B. BEAL WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (U,PJ—Price control legislation took top Ijllling today on the list of issues facing the new aesaion i) of tongres's, which convenes at noon Monday. . Tlie price fixing bill ivas given first rating when the senato Qanking atid currency committee, after the year-iong first session of the TTUi'eongress had come to nn end late yesterday, .voted unanimously to report a stronger control measure than that approved by the house Nov. 28. Senate leaders planned to begin'consideration of the bill next Tuesday or Wednesday, .The start of debate, ‘howevi prcBumAbly hinges o n _ ^ decision as to the dav^resi- denij Roosevelt will appear to deliver his annual message to -congl'css-on-tlio-Blnto-pfTthe uolon. Tlio leijate'i price fixing 6111 would authorlr« piloo administrator Leon 'Henderson to < |ot ceilings on commodity prices. It would dlreSt iilm to consider provalilng market' pricM dlirlnit tho period from Oct.' t'to (9, <1041, In llxlng those cell- lugs, biil to selcot another two-ycck period if in the first half of October the price of some commodity was abnormal. ; , . ' speciol floor is iirovldcd in tho le of agrieulturol commodities. No, form, price ceiling way bo act be- low no M r cent of parity, or below tliB marltel price of Oct. I.VIIWI. whlchevBr is lilgher, Tlie sonato committeo oliminalcd .a house pro- vision caiw!ng...«_Uihd bas# for rarn\ producla-the Rvttnge prico for tile years from IPIO to 102D, The senate bill provides lor -uso of' government licenses ns a incnng of enforcing pricn control whenever' tle- slrotli by the administrator. A siinl'^ Itvr provision was .eliminated by tlio house during' floor • coiwlderntlon. Sellers applying for ilcemes would- (Conllnufd in l'a<t *, Ctiamii 4) llEPW Magic Valley residents who Jiave sought to assist In tho defense sal- vage .. program by saving vlaste- paper, cardboard and old metal wUl be given th a t opportunity starting next week, it was announced here this afternoon by Gordon Doy, ex- ecutive of tlic Snake, river area. Boy Scouts of JVnicrIca; Boy Scouts in the eight, sciuUi central counties were mobilizing to- day to conduct wastepaper and oili- er salvage pickup throughout tho area, Mr, Day said, Regular sched- ule of collection will be maintained and |the salvage will be sent into d;- fcns« chanrtels. . Tho salvage plan luis been held up for lack of collcctlon and nn 'outlet, the area chief 4issertcd, The outlet problem was solved today by comple- tion of arrangements by which tho Idaho 'Junk house, Twin Palls, agreed to accept tlm waste material, Tlie cpncern win pick up the ma- terial In all major sectors of Magic ValleJ after tlie'Scouts have col- lected It. ' As outlined by Mr. Day, llie poy ScouV setup envisions a compleu coverage program—house to hpuse .canvass followed by regumr return trips to homes .whose residents in- dicate defense cooperation In'the ^talvago plan. Twin Falls newspapers will print a pledge card to assist householders and the Scouts. Completion' of arrangements i for the Twin Falls .district will come at a meeting of all ecoutmnaters at the area olllce a t 8:46 p. m, Tuesday. Thd details for other communities will be nmppsti by Scouting heads In .Uipso cltlcB.Biid.towna,..j.i____... II1EIIMAN,CAI.I,HI» NEW OnL^ANS, Jan 3 (U .H) — Sornlo Slennan, Mlnnesota'ii famed gridiron mentor ' and one of tiie coaches of^tho East team for'the East'j,West game, today had been nolKled lo , report to thn quaiilico marine biu raoks by Jan, 16, lilerman Is n major hi the U, 0. innrino re- aorvM, '. . '1 ■' ■ / ' SIKGAPORE, Jan. 3 (U,R)— Dispatches from the front .I ot night indicated a 'strong Jap- anese attack again.s't British positions in thfe direction of the Bernam river despite the sinking ,of an enemy .trails^: port and four troop-filled in- vasion bju-ges ' on the‘^~west Malaya coast.. Official references opeu^- atlons on the Lower Kerak rivei- froiit seemed to confirm that the scene of battle still was moving southward, al- though, the enemy suffered an estimated 500 dead in at- tempts to land reinforce- ments: Home Itepuisci' Some of tho_ landing attempts were turned back'but others auc- c’eeded. It wos believed, and Jopa. ncse trooijs in smoll boats and flsli- Ing craft—probably coming from Pinang Island—went ashore in Uie lower Perak sector, _ . . • Tlie next strong.stan’d against the enemy was believe,d likely to be along the Bernam rlver,'about 350 miles north of Singapore. On the east coast, the Japanese still were held in the Kuantan sector, 'about tUe same distance 'from i^lngapore, , In blasting one enemy landing at ttopt on the west coast, British nr iHNry set fire to a small tram- portxln addition to sinking. four barges. ConyoyJJeattn eff . Tlie Japanese convoy withdrew in defeat, the c.qnuminlquo said. It w>'s attempting to land inen.qn the coast of "lower Pdfffiprovince, wheri), a successful landing'Of icliiforc'cmenl.i had licon effected previously, . On the Perak river front, Dritlsh Imperlnls fmiglil off three heavy Jnpnne.se Attacks ninrklnff~tl>0 start of n now olfeiulve, the conitpunV quo eakl, ' Jnpaticso casualtleii weM C6llmn,t- ed'nt between 300 niul 400 men In a «lngle email acctor. u : S. ' 'L o .s ANGELES, 3 (U .R)—Chungking radlo,.heard here'-U? NBC, reported today Aiperlcikn^eluhteer flyers have shot down 60 Japanese: planes in fouc air b a ttl^ over Bangojin, capital of Burma: The'Chungkiiig aceoiiht said the Amerlcans lost two pilots and either, three or four planes. Dates of all battles were not glven, Thr third was sold to hove (ake.p' place on Chrlstmassday, American volunteers are serving In China (o guard the Burma road ngalnsfJapanese'alroltaeks, , CHUNGKING, Jan. 3.. (U.PJ—Chinese troops, counterattacking In the sutarbs of Changshvombattied capital of Hunan province, south of Iffliicbw, have infllc®K15,000' cajjualties. on the^^anese, a Chinese communique said today.' ^ * The communique said the Chinese lauilehed their counterattack at dawn yesterday. Most oMlie Japanese caaualtles were credited to Chinese artlUery. A poup of Japanese which reached the cast gate .of-CfiaSigsha in disguise Thursday night were machine gunned and. "annihilated,” ' \ *&OME, Jan. 3 (OKIclal Italian bioade&st recorded by V,P. ait l,ondon) —Premier Benito Mussolbil today demanded that Italians cooiwrate more closely with their "comradei of the axis" because the iiituro of Italy Is at stake. The premier spoUe-lo-'ttie-Mtt<!tial-conimH|iee ol tlie Fascist' party, according to the official nsnrigency. . Closer cooperation, he said. Win ..enable the axli'.to aoUeve a final 'victory. ' . - ^ .‘.‘This Is a war In which two worlds,are facl^f, each'other,” Mus- solini said, “The future life of the Italian people Is .at stake," / By MACK JOHNSON/ . ' WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (U.PJ—A Japanese force of at least' 6() bombers struck for five hour? .at Corregidor islpnd, U. S. stronghold commanding the entrance to-Manila‘‘bay, but inflicted “no material damage” ® the island's fortifications, the war department reported today. '' - The .department’s communique,^ covering reports received up to 9:30 a. m. EST, indicated that the invading forces— already in poSsession of Manila and.the naval base at Cavite —now are unleashing'"tlje full power, of their att^k on Corr regidor.'' Corregidor is the /anchor point of the consolidated Americait'and Filipino forces under Gen. Douglas MacAW thu^ ^vhich have 'withdrawn into, a comparatively small area northwest of- Manila, The attack by Japanese planes occurred yesterday and cost the defenders 13 killed and 3^ wounded, | 'At least three Japanese planes were shot down*' added to four de- stroyed In a previous attack op Cor- regidbr. The communiqiiV said that with the consolidation of our forces in new positions, "organized resistance to Japanese attack^ wlllibc intensi- fied." It reported if "marked lessen- ing of enemy ground attacks." , There was no mention of exactly, where' tlie consolidated forces are now- located, but Tokyo broadcast that most of them are on the 30- mlle-Ipng Bataan- peninsula, on tho northwest shore of Manila bay. Corregidor Is Just off the soutliem tip of the peninsula. ' Ma^Arthur Making Stand -T he communique,yCouplcd witlt the Tokyo broadcast. Indicated that Gen. Douglas MacAf thur, command- ant of the defending forces. Is mak- ing hla stand in the Bataan area— a'mountalnoua region not well suit- ed tat land titiaoks by modem mech- anized arftles. The cemmunlque noted tliat de. spite the lessening of ground attacks, "enemy airplanes were active In tho region occupied by our ground fofccs. ^ ,' This would Indicate the Japanese leallM .that lf MacArthur's forces are to be;bIosied btl Bataan, much of the Job must bo done from-the alr.- Yestorday’s laid on Coijrelgdor was'.the, second largc«scale bombing of the Island ■ Bastion reported, by the war department this' week. Ear- lier, a formation of enemy bombcra killed '27 soldiers opd wounded 00 oUiera lif an extensive raid which cost the enemy at.least four bonlb- ers, shot down by anti-aircraft fire. Stage Last Dllcll Stand MacArthur's tomparalively small band, of llerblo defendors wore-ex- lieotod to wage a last-ditch stand on Datann,. rather than I'ctlro to.in land mouiitnlns for guerilla war. faf'e, Last night tho war depart- ment 'roix>rtc<l that Hie Japnaiese were pressing forward with "Increas- ing Intensity'', despite the fact that MaoArtlilir's' strategy had put his men' In n position to make the Jap-> nnesO'pay dearly lii men and eqiilp- nicnt for Qv^ry mils tl<ey advanced. Renewed snowfall impedtd iollci- ta.tlon today:in the Twin ^ U a Red Cross chapter’s war relief drive, and total funds debited reached 753,45,of the'M,600'quota, ' Dr, Charles ' R, Bcott; general chalrtnan, issued'a brief statement today ond added suggestion that donors bring or send'their contribu- tions to the Red dross office. “Our soldiers are holding posts from the Arctic' to the equator," the chal.rman salo; ''Our sailprs-ore de- fending our shores and sea lanes. Our marines are holding off the enemy. -»■. "If you want them to know that you are .wlUi tliem, glvtj to tlie Red Cross, If our country Is worth fight- ing for^ it is worth giving for. "TJic Amerlcon Red Cross is our personal agency ";that movldcs us ■with tlio opportunity of T31unteer(ng our dollars In this great patriotic service." ^ ^ rr - ' WASHINGTOH. Jan. 3 (U,R)-^The anti-axis powers ____ __ established a unified supreme commajid for all allied forces^ in the aoMthwesf .Pacific—including United States,^ritish, Dutch find British dortlnion forces—under British,Genwai ', Sir iVcWbaW P. Wavell. ^ \ Deputy supreme commander under Wawii will be M aj. I Gen. George H .-firctt, chief o'F the air corps of .the U. S ; ' army, Who is now-in the Far East;. Admirpl Thomas C.. Hart,-commiindcr of the IT. S. 'Asiatic fleeti will direct sea forces under Wavell’s orders. , • . British Gen.'Sir ^enry Pownall will be Wavell’s chief of ! staff. ' '. ' .1 ‘. ' . • •'' . rEstablishmentt of i:hfe unlfieff command—to embrace v.all , r] land, seaahd air forces—was.annpuneed bythe White House^V bn behalf -of President' 'Roosevelt' and. British Prinie M in-'' : iater'. Churchill. . ' ' The announcement said Wavell "will assume his, command ' in the near future." - . ' ; ■. The stateipent said Wavell -wa^ chosen as supreme com- ' mander for the soutjiwest Pacific' "at ’ the suggestt'oh o f ' the Pres.ident.” '. , - The British- general, 58 years 'oldKwas the'first militi commander to win victories over_dihpinyiH-whpn-lmit- Tie pushed Italian forces virtually out of Libya. ' Chinese Generalissirnd Chiang Kai-Shek “has accepted ' su p rp e command over air land and .air forces of the ' ulii nations which are now or may in the future'be operatL in the Chinese theafer, including initially sijch 'portipnM Indo-China and, Thailand ais may bkome‘available to tn of the united nations.": m m m ............ jrat cMro,; % i. ::b ^ ’pwra^ maJflif'^rieraWas.,a'lnonB the’t ,000 prlspncra tak’en^by British'hnperials whMi they captureil' Bardla,-,middle east! g e n e ra l headQUartcrs’.said -today, . " ' The gerieral, named'aehmWt, 'vias chief adniinlstnitlve'.'staff officei' .of the Oormort ormored group In Africa (Pansier Gryppe A /rika), the com- ihiinlque said. .. . It 'disclosed that in taking Bardla, between Tobruk'and the'topt,-, Libya, frontier, British casualties were only 00 killed aiid SOO-.woundeji, More than 1,000. British", prisoners were'released. Bardla wos taken .by South Af- rican troops supported by.British armored cplunuii and artlUeiy after 0 terrific blasting'by the alt force, which began on Dec. 31. '. The communiciue said, that to the Agedabla..arca,.llO .miles_.south-of Benghaisl, British mobile columns ol all arms contliWed to harass the. eticmy.' . ,• ^ - The ma.Ui cfeentrations of axis forces In North Africa .Were hi the Agedabla area. DEGEMe.BO iS .SIEAim Total sale, .of defense bonds In Twin Falls during tlie month of December amounted to $31,075 In maturity \alue, postofflce olflclaia announced thia afternoon,. Actual cash placed by local resi- dents for the bonds came to J23,30fl,76. Among the bonds sold were seven of tho J1,000 variety and 330 of the 125 opes. Total defense stomps sold during December ambunted to (6,835, tho records show, ' ' United States and. Bri.tish repre- . sentat|ves:!vlll-5erve on Chlang K al-, Shek'S' Joint headquarters p’— ■— staff. . Tho’.anhouncement sald’tha iL fled command'jvas agreed uponl OTCsult of piojxiaala .put:;fqf“ :^S|iT?pr^Q____ _____ atlons: to ipresident.' Rboswelt i to the-ptime miniater,”...'.':! I t .was'Stattd authoritative .tlie southW(»t'' Paottlo , Which; Wavell win -nave cpmmandJndudeai the P hil ___ ., .Tha.'Amfrican and PUlpljio. forces '' ' now engaged In! B.;.last-ditch:'jtwid ' . against the Japanese aretcoipmand- ed by (Jen, Douglas MacAilhtir; who' receiftly. was elevated to tlie Tank o f . full'-general. I t w as . p r e s u a c i l ' ^ because MacAr.thur ‘ls so busily' en- gaged in his task of holding oif the 'enemy there, h'e could not at- this' time bo considered for a place In the supreme commantl..; ; ...................... Both WeU Acquainted ' Brett and Hart—the two' Amerl- ' cans on the high command-both a re ' well-acquahited' with the P a r .'' Eastern situation. Both are now on tho scene, Brett has been to tlie Orient Jor several weeks,'consulting wltii Brit- ish, Chinese . and Dutch miUtary leaders. Hart has been command'er of the U, S, Asiatic fleet since July, 1930. • • . Under thccun'ent anily air. or-' ganijatjon, Brett's Job.aT chief of air «orp3 technically has ' bfCn ..to .... dkect procurement of planes..and. . equipment and the training of a i r . personnel, ,Tlie .combat .forces .are' mider separote command,, . BreH has kept In fhst-hond touch, with wor and'supply develo[lmenta abroad.: , . .. ^Develop Great Air Force ' I t was hidlcatcd his chief Job in the 'southwest Pacific.would be.tho',...: development-there of a great air. fprc.e.jijveroSme the aerial suprem- acy that has been held thus far by the Japanese, Brett, who will be 5.6 next nrtnth.- Is a native of Cleveland, ffeTras graduated from Virginia Military ' institute In'lDOO, and the.Iollowhis. - 'year was commissioned, as a second lieutenant In the'Philippine scouts. He won a regular army commission in ion, , . Blunt Churchill Talks Turkey To U. S. 'Chiefs; Urges Shakeup ' . By JOIIK W. KELLY ' (Bpcclal Evenlng^lmes Waslilncton'Correspondent) ^ 'WAOTINQTON, Jan, 3 (SpcclaD—'Wha); hasn't been-told about Uie vlplt of-Wlnston-tJhurchptiirthliV British prime minister gave the President and tho cabhiet Vthe worka," To a jfroup in the cablnoli roopi, of Uie White House‘Uils English son of an American mother, told things wM£itJire5«iUTent In the. na- tional caplttil and which he, hhi)sclf,. sensed after 411.hours—probably relay^p to him by the BrltUh em- bassy. If the adflce of Churchill Is taken there will be a aliakc-up of far rcacUIng effoct. . Mr. Churchill referred to the''61tUatlon ,ln the'United States as "i\ mess," There Is no head of tall to Uio war elfort; np one has ox 1s willing to assert authority. You. can't, said tlip premier; run a war wVU . commissions; you must have' one man and place the responsibility on him; If lie falls, kick .him out,, . ' ' Tell the people the truth, the whole trulhi deolaved Ohurchlll, Don't try to fool them with half truths, No matter how bad the pews Is, tell them, for-Uiey will find it out eventually; Tliere will bo defeata, lind these gliould bo'told the aamo as the victories. Knowing It 1^ a long, hard' war, the people'willitettU)', down to the'maximum of production, —Kxpreaeliir-tl ’ ...... the secretary i for facts,. the lack 0 . Diplomatically,' OhuMilll did not. Indicate wto.Uf 11! down. If Int. had .iiny suaplcions, but ho J e lt: W af^W' definlU) oi\o-man control If.the United Statcs^U]to business mtist bo given uiv opportunity to cooMiitt^ ------ ^ atlona; thb Is everyono'a war. r : . TtlHlnln’/i.rtrlmn mlill«t»i- "Ini' ‘ ' ' .......... . nrltaln’S' prime mlnlater wisdom lie . hna learned England, illta the United' ' '' ' '*r 1 .'* 'I.'':
Transcript
Page 1: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

, TemperaturesHIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low

th is moralnj,-six.

A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho .Countiea ” ,.

VOL. X^Xy. NO. 13 -5 CENTS. MibaroiAMi.Bomuoi'i • ' . * TWIN FALLS','IQAtio; SATURDAY, JANUARY 8,'1942. wi» T.iwiphi, ^ OFFICIAL CIT ^• • C l i s u l f M P M ___ .••• ............ , , S t n l t e ’of Ih® United Pm* ; . . , . . • ■■ '"'—...'■ - ' ‘‘ - - V I ■ I■ — ■ ‘ ■* ” . r .~' I I." ; i .7. r -- -^ -t~* i ? ■ .. ..................... .. —??•■'

I f Isi^ t the Sam e W prkaflay W orid

f '

. kxn^YSHEV. Russia, Jon. 3 (ll.PJ "—More than 100,000 aerm an troops have Ijecn trapped In tho Mqjhalsk' area of the vcst-Mo^ow front and

■ must <a»030. between Burrender and death,' dispatches Iton i'tho (tout «ald today.. ■ "fn,■ Seven entire divisions o! 15,000 men. 'oach were caught in the pijcket as Red army troops, investing, the cily of Mozhaisk, swept forthei.west-

■ TOrd ilpng Wipolcon’s road of doom. In pursuit of the German armies. >

. A w ar communique had reported the rccapture of tha important .eltx

■ ol Maloyoroslavcte, TO miles south- southwest of Mo&ow, Md had ^s- sa ted th a t thf .Russian forces, ad- -viuicipg, relentlessly, had smashed every attempt of the Germans to farm B ilew defense line;. Wfaloyarosiavets was only ona of numerous towns and villages which the Russians had taken*ln that area, wliere they were not only advancing frontally but. were striking up to- jvord the Mozlialsk area in oi)o arm of a double flanking drive, H was asierted:. . ........... ■■ ,

IMS SUPPED, W p words — very sUpafry — .ad­

equately described'conditlon of sec- ontoK jariU main, roads (iv<erVqi6

. en tW Magic Valley today, offlolala of the state’ highway departmertt and th e ,1?wln Palls highway distrlcr announced; ^ .

Snow which' toll In Twin Falls la jt night iand ttii; .morning—laanilj ^ coat of .some'two Inches .her^w 4s

■ genbrar ..throughout the alel, 'an

in some sections it: was drifting.Eaatera sfa(jm,jwh!!;h-liavo faged

for the post m o ^ays, wero felt here for.,the first time this-morning as the Uhlon. Pijclflc train which pulls In ^^ohl the east did not'arrivB until shortly before noon.- .' •, ^ . .

As a result ppstmen found, little to do during the niornhig hours anft .Were unable to moke the regulor .Saturday mornhfg delivery round,

r Sorting of the incomlng.niall started ' shortly, before noon and . officials,

said th a t i t would be delivered this ' .of t™b<in.

OlUclals-Of the Mato-highway de­partment a t Shoshone said that' ail equipment there was .either out on the roads or' *as ready to go out. All main roads were open, officials said, excepting the Galena .summit load above Ketchum and Sun Valley

' which Is closed,. The Arco road is open-although It Is Icy.

Officials of the-Twin Falls hlgli- .way district pointed out no Inform­ation had been received here that

- a n y of-the-roads-ln the district was- closed. jAll were slippery, however.

Program Set foi' Ski Cabin Sunday

Ray-Rbbblna, ' Jaycee chairman for winter sports, this afternoon said

' that everything 1s >11 set" for ded­ication of (he ski shelter a t Magic mountain up ^Rock crc»ic Sunday starting a t 1 p, m.

Dedication arrangements, which will Include skliog'And toboggan ex­hibitions. Ore under the direction of the Jaycces with membets of the Maglc^ Mountain ski club particl-

' paflHET The general ptthljc Is Invit­ed to attend. '

Robliins this afternoon Aid road to the ski shelter was in excellent condition," ■ ! ■ '

- " y f','!

• ' i / Ui.,,, I ' H '

r f

Scenes of. beauty like th is—in spots you ordinarily gass In Twin Falls without a second glance—Ksulted today aftenlast night’s 'heavy snowfall. This view was taken from city park, looking toward the public library bulldfnt In tI)o, background. ^ ‘ ' (Times Thoto and Engraving)

BLOOD PROJECT ’ AT 300 FIGUREBegistration in the defense, blood

dohor prdject reached , 300 persons a t 1:20 p, tp. today—with one'week to go. ; . . 1, . "

Junior Chamber of .Commerce de­fense committeemen. In charge of. the Joint pfoject with' the hospital medical staff, said the. total' will climb' later today and next week witli the expected signup of 20-30 members as well as members of other civic groups.. Volunteer donors are "typoci" os to blood and arc 'given a free W ai- serman test. They are then on call for a poiulble later iieed for.actual blood donation. ' ’

Price Legidatiop Gets. Top Place in Congress

. ( ' ?y JOHN B. BEALWASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (U,PJ—Price control legislation took

top Ijllling today on the list of issues facing the new aesaion i) of tongres's, which convenes at noon Monday. .

Tlie price fixing bill ivas given first rating when the senato Qanking atid currency committee, after the year-iong

■ first session of the TTUi'eongress had come to nn end late yesterday, .voted unanimously to report a stronger control measure than that approved by the house Nov. 28.

Senate leaders planned to begin'consideration of the bill next Tuesday or Wednesday,.The start of debate, ‘howevi prcBumAbly hinges o n _ ^ decision as to the dav^resi- denij Roosevelt will appear to deliver his annual message to

-congl'css-on-tlio-Blnto-pfTthe uolon.

Tlio leijate'i price fixing 6111 would authorlr« piloo administrator Leon 'Henderson to <|ot ceilings on commodity prices. It would dlreSt iilm to consider provalilng market' pricM dlirlnit tho period from Oct.' t'to (9, <1041, In llxlng those cell- lugs, biil to selcot another two-ycck

period if in the first half of October the price of some commodity was abnormal. ; , . '

speciol floor is iirovldcd in tho le of agrieulturol commodities. No,

form, price ceiling way bo act be­low n o M r cent of parity, or below tliB marltel price of Oct. I.VIIWI. whlchevBr is lilgher, Tlie sonato committeo oliminalcd .a house pro- vision caiw!ng...«_Uihd bas# for rarn\ producla-the Rvttnge prico for tile years from IPIO to 102D,

The senate bill provides lor -uso of' government licenses ns a incnng of enforcing pricn control whenever' tle- slrotli by the administrator. A siinl'^ Itvr provision was .eliminated by tlio house during' floor • coiwlderntlon. Sellers applying for ilcemes would-

(Conllnufd in l'a<t *, Ctiamii 4)

llE P WMagic Valley residents who Jiave

sought to assist In tho defense sal­vage .. program by saving vlaste- paper, cardboard and old metal wUl be given th a t opportunity starting next week, it was announced here this afternoon by Gordon Doy, ex­ecutive of tlic Snake, river area. Boy Scouts of JVnicrIca;

Boy Scouts in the eight, sciuUi central counties were mobilizing to­day to conduct wastepaper and oili­er salvage pickup throughout tho area, Mr, Day said, Regular sched­ule of collection will be maintained and |the salvage will be sent into d;- fcns« chanrtels. .

Tho salvage plan luis been held up for lack of collcctlon and nn 'outlet, the area chief 4issertcd, The outlet problem was solved today by comple­tion of arrangements by which tho Idaho 'Junk house, Twin Palls, agreed to accept tlm waste material,

Tlie cpncern win pick up the ma­terial In all major sectors of Magic ValleJ after tlie'Scouts have col­lected It. '

As outlined by Mr. Day, llie poy ScouV setup envisions a compleu coverage program—house to hpuse .canvass followed by regumr return trips to homes .whose residents in­dicate defense cooperation In 'th e

^talvago plan. Twin Falls newspapers will print a pledge card to assist householders and the Scouts.

Completion' of arrangements i for the Twin Falls .district will come at a meeting of all ecoutmnaters a t the area olllce a t 8:46 p. m, Tuesday. Thd details for other communities will be nmppsti by Scouting heads In .Uipso cltlcB.Biid.towna,..j.i____...

II1EIIMAN,CAI.I,HI»NEW OnL^ANS, Jan 3 (U.H) —

Sornlo Slennan, Mlnnesota'ii famed gridiron mentor ' and one of tiie coaches of^tho East team fo r 'th e East'j,West game, today had been nolKled lo , report to thn quaiilico marine biu raoks by Jan, 16, lilerman Is n major hi the U, 0. innrino re- aorvM, ' . .

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SIKGAPORE, Jan. 3 (U,R)— Dispatches from the front .Iot night indicated a 'strong Jap­anese attack again.s't British positions in thfe direction of the Bernam river despite the sinking ,of an enemy .trails^: port and four troop-filled in­vasion bju-ges ' on the‘ ~west Malaya coast..

Official references opeu - atlons on the Lower Kerak rivei- froiit seemed to confirm that the scene of battle still was moving southward, al­though, the enemy suffered an estimated 500 dead in at­tempts to land reinforce­ments:

Home Itepuisci'Some of tho_ landing attempts

were turned back 'bu t others auc- c’eeded. It wos believed, and Jopa. ncse trooijs in smoll boats and flsli- Ing craft—probably coming from Pinang Island—went ashore in Uie lower Perak sector, _ . . •

Tlie next strong.stan’d against the enemy was believe,d likely to be along the Bernam rlver,'about 350 miles north of Singapore. On the east coast, the Japanese still were held in the Kuantan sector, 'about tUe same distance 'from i^lngapore,, In blasting one enemy landing at t to p t on the west coast, British nr iHNry set fire to a small tram - portxln addition to sinking. four barges.

ConyoyJJeattn eff .Tlie Japanese convoy withdrew in

defeat, the c.qnuminlquo said. I t w>'s attempting to land inen.qn the coast of " lo w er Pdfffiprovince, wheri), a successful landing'Of icliiforc'cmenl.i had licon effected previously,. On the Perak river front, Dritlsh Imperlnls fmiglil off three heavy Jnpnne.se Attacks ninrklnff~tl>0 start of n now olfeiulve, the conitpunV quo eakl, '

Jnpaticso casualtleii weM C6llmn,t- ed'nt between 300 niul 400 men In a «lngle email acctor.

u : S.

' 'L o .s ANGELES, 3 (U.R)—Chungking radlo,.heard here'-U? NBC, reported today Aiperlcikn^eluhteer flyers have shot down 60 Japanese: planes in fouc air b a t t l^ over Bangojin, capital of Burma:

The'Chungkiiig aceoiiht said the Amerlcans lost two pilots and either, three or four planes. Dates of all battles were not glven, T h r third was sold to hove (ake.p' place on Chrlstmassday,

American volunteers are serving In China (o guard the Burma road ngalnsfJapanese 'alroltaeks, ,

CHUNGKING, Jan. 3.. (U.PJ—Chinese troops, counterattacking In the sutarbs of Changshvombattied capital of Hunan province, south of Iffliicbw, have infllc®K15,000' cajjualties. on the^^anese , a Chinese communique said today.' ^ *

The communique said the Chinese lauilehed their counterattack at dawn yesterday. Most oMlie Japanese caaualtles were credited to Chinese artlUery. A poup of Japanese which reached the cast gate .of-CfiaSigsha in disguise Thursday night were machine gunned and. "annihilated,” ' \

*&OME, Jan. 3 (OKIclal Italian bioade&st recorded by V,P. ait l,ondon) —Premier Benito Mussolbil today demanded that Italians cooiwrate more closely with their "comradei of the axis" because the iiituro of Italy Is a t stake.

The premier spoUe-lo-'ttie-Mtt<!tial-conimH|iee ol tlie Fascist' party, according to the official n snrigency . • .

Closer cooperation, he said. Win ..enable the axli'.to aoUeve a final 'victory. ' . - ^

.‘.‘This Is a war In which two worlds,are facl^f, each'other,” Mus­solini said, “The future life of the Italian people Is .at stake,"

/

By MACK JOHNSON/ . 'WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (U.PJ—A Japanese force of a t least'

6() bombers struck for five hour? .at Corregidor islpnd, U. S. stronghold commanding the entrance to-Manila‘‘bay, but inflicted “no material damage” ® the island's fortifications, the war department reported today. ' ' -

The .department’s communique,^ covering reports received up to 9:30 a. m. EST, indicated that the invading forces— already in poSsession of Manila and.the naval base at Cavite —now are unleashing'"tlje full power, of their a tt^ k on Corr regidor.''

Corregidor is the /anchor point of the consolidated Americait'and Filipino forces under Gen. Douglas MacAW thu^ ^vhich have 'withdrawn into, a comparatively small area northwest of- Manila,

The attack by Japanese planes occurred yesterday and cost the defenders 13 killed and 3^ wounded, |

'At least three Japanese planes were shot down*' added to four de­stroyed In a previous attack op Cor- regidbr.

The communiqiiV said that with the consolidation of our forces in new positions, "organized resistance to Japanese attack^ wlllibc intensi­fied." I t reported if "marked lessen­ing of enemy ground attacks.", There was no mention of exactly,

where' tlie consolidated forces are now- located, but Tokyo broadcast that most of them are on the 30- mlle-Ipng Bataan- peninsula, on tho northwest shore of Manila bay.Corregidor Is Just off the soutliem tip of the peninsula.

' Ma^Arthur Making Stand -T he communique,yCouplcd witlt

the Tokyo broadcast. Indicated that Gen. Douglas MacAf thur, command­ant of the defending forces. Is mak­ing hla stand in the Bataan area— a'mountalnoua region not well suit­ed tat land titiaoks by modem mech­anized arftles.

The cemmunlque noted tliat de. spite the lessening of ground attacks,"enemy airplanes were active In tho region occupied by our ground fofccs. ^ ■ ,'

This would Indicate the Japanese leallM .th a t lf MacArthur's forces are to be;bIosied btl Bataan, much of the Job must bo done from-the alr.-

Yestorday’s laid on Coijrelgdor was'.the, second largc«scale bombing of the Island ■ Bastion reported, by the war department this' week. Ear­lier, a formation of enemy bombcra killed '27 soldiers opd wounded 00 oUiera lif an extensive raid which cost the enemy at.least four bonlb- ers, shot down by anti-aircraft fire.

Stage Last Dllcll Stand MacArthur's tomparalively small

band, of llerblo defendors wore-ex- lieotod to wage a last-ditch stand on Datann,. rather than I'ctlro to.in land mouiitnlns for guerilla war. faf'e, Last night tho war depart­ment 'roix>rtc<l that Hie Japnaiese were pressing forward with "Increas­ing Intensity'', despite the fact that MaoArtlilir's' strategy had put his men' In n position to make the Jap-> nnesO'pay dearly lii men and eqiilp- nicnt for Qv ry mils tl<ey advanced.

Renewed snowfall impedtd iollci- ta.tlon today:in the Twin ^ U a Red Cross chapter’s war relief drive, and total funds d eb ited reached 753,45,of the'M,600'quota, '

Dr, Charles ' R, Bcott; general chalrtnan, issued'a brief statement today ond added suggestion that donors bring or send'their contribu­tions to the Red dross office.

“Our soldiers are holding posts from the Arctic' to the equator," the chal.rman salo; ''Our sailprs-ore de­fending our shores and sea lanes. Our marines are holding off the enemy. ■ -»■.

"If you want them to know that you are .wlUi tliem, glvtj to tlie Red Cross, If our country Is worth fight­ing for^ it is worth giving for.

"TJic Amerlcon Red Cross is our personal agency ";that movldcs us ■with tlio opportunity of T31unteer(ng our dollars In this great patriotic service." ^ ^ r r - '

WASHINGTOH. Jan. 3 (U,R)-^The anti-axis powers____ __established a unified supreme commajid for all allied forces^ in the aoMthwesf .Pacific—including United S ta tes,^ ritish , Dutch find British dortlnion forces—under British,Genwai ', Sir iVcWbaW P. Wavell. ^\ Deputy supreme commander under Wawii will be M aj. I

Gen. George H .-firctt, chief o'F the air corps of .the U. S ; ' army, Who is now-in the Far East;.

Admirpl Thomas C.. Hart,-commiindcr of the IT. S. 'Asiatic fleeti will direct sea forces under Wavell’s orders. , • .

British Gen.'Sir ^enry Pownall will be Wavell’s chief o f ! staff. ' '. ' ■ .1 ‘. ' . • •'' .rEstablishmentt of i:hfe unlfieff command—to embrace v.all , r]

land, seaahd air forces—was.annpuneed b y th e White House^V bn behalf -of President' 'Roosevelt' and. British Prinie M in - '' : iater'. Churchill. • . ' ' ■

The announcement said Wavell "will assume his, command ' in the near fu ture." - . ■ ' ; ■ .

The stateipent said Wavell -wa chosen as supreme com- ' mander for the soutjiwest Pacific' "at ’ the suggestt'oh o f ' the Pres.ident.” '. , -

The British- general, 58 years 'oldKwas th e 'f irs t militi commander to win victories over_dihpinyiH-whpn-lmit- Tie pushed Italian forces virtually out of Libya. '

Chinese Generalissirnd Chiang Kai-Shek “has accepted ' s u p rp e command over air land and . air forces of the ' ulii nations which a re now or may in the fu ture 'be operatL in the Chinese theafer, including initially sijch 'portipnM Indo-China and, Thailand ais may bkome‘available to tn ‘

of the united nations.":

m m m

............ j r a tc M ro ,; % i. ::b ’ p w ra ^

maJflif'^rieraWas., a'lnonB the’t ,000 prlspncra tak’en^by British'hnperials whMi they captureil' Bardla,-,middle east! g e n e r a l headQUartcrs’.said

-today, . " 'The gerieral, named'aehmWt, 'vias

chief adniinlstnitlve'.'staff officei' .of the Oormort ormored group In Africa (Pansier Gryppe A /rika), the com- ihiinlque said. .. .

I t 'disclosed that in taking Bardla, between Tobruk'and th e 'to p t , - , Libya, frontier, B ritish casualties were only 00 killed aiid SOO-.woundeji, More than 1,000. British", prisoners were'released.

Bardla wos taken .by South Af­rican troops supported by.British armored cplunuii and artlUeiy after 0 terrific blasting'by th e alt force, which began on Dec. 31. '.

The communiciue said, th a t to the Agedabla..arca,.llO .miles_.south-of Benghaisl, British mobile columns ol all arms contliWed to harass the. eticmy.' . ■ ,• ^ -

The ma.Ui c feen tra tions of axis forces In North Africa .Were hi the Agedabla area.

DEGEMe.BOiS.SIE A im

Total sale, .of defense bonds In Twin Falls during tlie month of December amounted to $31,075 In maturity \alue, postofflce olflclaia announced thia afternoon,.

Actual cash placed by local resi­dents for the bonds came to J23,30fl,76. Among the bonds sold were seven of tho J1,000 variety and 330 of the 125 opes.

Total defense stomps sold during December ambunted to (6,835, tho records show, ' '

United States and. Bri.tish repre- . sentat|ves:!vlll-5erve on Chlang K a l-, Shek'S' Joint headquarters p’— ■— staff.. Tho’.anhouncement sald’tha iL fled command'jvas agreed uponl OTCsult of piojxiaala .put:;fqf“

: ^ S | i T ? p r ^ Q _ _ _ _ _____atlons: to ipresident.' Rboswelt i to the-ptime miniater,”...'.':!

I t .was'Stattd authoritative .tlie southW(»t'' Paottlo ,Which; Wavell win -navecpmmandJndudeai the P h i l ___., .Tha.'Amfrican and PUlpljio. forces ' ' ' now engaged In! B.;.last-ditch:'jtwid ' . against the Japanese aretcoipmand- ed by (Jen, Douglas MacAilhtir; who' receiftly. was elevated to tlie Tank o f . full'-general. I t was . p r e s u a c i l '^ because MacAr.thur ‘ls so busily' en­gaged in his task of holding oif th e ■ 'enemy there, h'e could not at- this' tim e bo considered for a place Inthe supreme commantl..; ; ......................

Both WeU Acquainted ' Brett and Hart—the two' Amerl- ' cans on the high command-both a r e ' well-acquahited' with the P a r .'' Eastern situation. Both are now on ’ tho scene,

Brett has been to tlie Orient J o r several weeks,'consulting wltii Brit­ish, Chinese . and Dutch miUtary leaders. Hart has been command'er of the U, S, Asiatic fleet since July, 1930. • • .

Under thccun 'en t anily air. o r - ' ganijatjon, Brett's Job.aT chief o fair «orp3 technically has ' bfCn ..to ....dkect procurement of planes..and. . equipment and the training of a i r . personnel, ,Tlie .combat .forces .are' mider separote command,, .

BreH has kept In fhst-hond touch, with wor and'supply develo[lmenta abroad.: , . ..

^Develop G reat A ir Force ' I t was hidlcatcd his chief Job in the 'southwest Pacific.would be.tho',...: development-there of a great air. fprc.e.jijveroSme the aerial suprem­acy that has been held thus far by the Japanese,

Brett, who will be 5.6 next nrtnth.- Is a native of Cleveland, ffeTras graduated from Virginia Military ' institute In'lDOO, and the.Iollowhis. - 'year was commissioned, as a second lieutenant In the'Philippine scouts.He won a regular arm y commission in io n , , .

Blunt Churchill Talks Turkey To U. S. 'Chiefs; Urges Shakeup

' . By JOIIK W. KELLY' (Bpcclal Evenlng^lmes Waslilncton'Correspondent)

^ 'WAOTINQTON, Jan, 3 (SpcclaD—'Wha); hasn't been-told about Uie vlplt of-Wlnston-tJhurchptiirthliV British prime minister gave the President and tho cabhiet Vthe worka," To a jfroup in the cablnoli roopi, of Uie White House‘Uils English son of an American m other, told things wM£itJire5«iUTent In the. na­tional caplttil and which he, hhi)sclf,. sensed after 411 .hours—probably relay^p to him by the BrltUh em­bassy. If the adflce of Churchill Is taken there will be a aliakc-up of far rcacUIng effoct. ■ .

Mr. Churchill referred to the''61tUatlon ,ln the'United S tates as "i\ mess," There Is no head of tall to Uio war elfort; np one has ox 1s willing to assert authority. You. can't, said tlip premier; run a war wVU . commissions; you must have' one man and place the responsibility on him; If lie falls, kick .him out,, . ' '

Tell the people the truth, the whole trulhi deolaved Ohurchlll, Don't try to fool them with half truths, No matter how bad the pews Is, tell them, for-Uiey will find i t out eventually; Tliere will bo defeata, lind these gliould bo'told the aamo as the victories. Knowing I t 1^ a long, hard' war, the people'willitettU)', down to the'maximum of production,—Kxpreaeliir-tl ’ ......the secretary i for fac ts ,. the lack 0. Diplomatically,' OhuMilll did not. Indicate wto.Uf 11!down. If Int. had .iiny suaplcions, but ho J e l t : W a f W'definlU) oi\o-man control If .the United Statcs^U]tobusiness mtist bo given uiv opportunity to cooMiitt^ ------ ^atlona; th b Is everyono'a war. r : .TtlHlnln’/i.rtrlmn mlill«t»i- "Ini' ‘ ' ' ........... nrltaln’S' prime mlnlater wisdom lie . hna learned

England, illta the United'

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Page 2: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

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IDAHQ^EVENIKG TIMES, TfflN FALLS. IDAHO' - f ' . :■ Satnrday, January 8,1342

ai f p i i u c i i

B 7 JOHN D . GONZALES . WASHINGTON,' Jan. 3 Ql-Rj-Uie ;goT^nmcnt antborl^ onecom- p a n t lv ^ fimiU plant to oontlnue

' p rd a a c ^ - aulomobllu "alter' the present ttscmbljr lines are halted about Jon. 31, It was said today. i .;,Tlie plant would produce cam oO'

' ' ly for'tho-govcrmnent, for the lend- , lease program nnd {or tssciiUnl clv-

lllim users. The averoge man' stlU would bo unable to buy ti new au­to m o b i le . - .\ 'Defenseitffldiils bcllercd that the

, , cstlmatea MO,000-car steclgillB will L’“.be" ratlonm Iri about'-'ii year and

/■J'r. some production will bo needed to 3 ;:',,'01061 demands over a time to /our-

'year .war period. - ■!'■; ,; ,:K 6 sen t stocks of 450JOOO cars p .'jt 'f^ z en in the hand*’ of dealers win

■ ■ ,'';beiaugmcntcd by 200.000 cars to be iv'prpduced tills montli from olready

/K'ftbrlcated narU,.Production of new . was (i'Ozl!n on Deo, lO b u tth e S jiiflustiy already' hod a t213,d0d,000 '•*; I'iniitErlals Bid parts inventory. Only

' $lM,0®,0e0 jvlll.be used In the;Jon- uary new cor aaembly Job an'd the remolndet will he held for tepace-

■ '-njentii. •,“<3Ioolnjf PoMllilUlj” ,

If no’ a?w oar production were available for ratlonlns In 1043, the

. government would be forced to com- ’ m andeer civilian automobiles. Price

Administrator, leo^ Bendersoni cold ' ■ yesterday that such,a step wna''’onif

VI of the gloomy possibilities" of a long . war.

' Under the slngle-pIant producUori being considered by OPM, all ex- Utlng, automobile companies would

i) share In the oiMratlons, and would retain their trade n a m tjjn is com­pany or combination In charge of output would serve oa a "h^tee" lor the entire’ Industry. The , plan may be broadened to Include pro­ducers of vitshtag snacWncs and other consumer ddrable goods'which

; face drastic durtallmenti.■I The '650,000;t«r stockpllo,. If-^al-

-■ lotted u n d e r t^ lf lo terms'ot the :,.,,tlre pfid, tub^, rationing progrom

goes into effect Monday, pen- said, woiild not provide need-

........ equipment for the first/. i ' V M t e n t . l i i l - c t e e a ----------m o d l c o l r & i ':^ i^ , , ^ c e , t m d p i g t M t l v e t n w i p j i

ijjilUlyi outomi&le ratlonlmi.wllj lol- '' ’ of the tlre'Imd tube ration'

' W i Detalls'have.not vet been form, "■'-'‘iK te d . ■

J« V CIO Crillclses OPM ' Meantime, In full-page newspaper advertlseime'ntj here and la. New York, the CIO criticized the office of production management for falling l ^ copDcrt the automobile Industry

w ar' malerlBlfl production many • rV iia jfo u a i«o. ■ ,

letter nos'wJdeessed to "Mr. foK-'iOPM'* and'jigned by .CIO' President

'> f ! ; i i ) ^ p Murray, and President R. J. .li'<^50SionlM and socretary-treasurer i^/;*giOeiJrge P. Addes of the United Auto- > :‘;v'I:i.TOblle, Aircraft and Agriculture

'S jm p lem en t Workers. I t .charged that, I'.'J'ivShifll ol the naUon'j wfcmoMle i ‘ %Iants Wore cIOMd and th a t virtually i “all ol them will bo by the end of 1 ' '.'January. >I , It estimated that 400,000 workers ' ’ will be Idle by the end of thli month, > '.‘and-charged that Vthe nation has

■ -lost i ,000,000 man-days overy week In war production through failure

I "to put the 400,000 automobile work'I ..Wi to work." ■ • '

“Bnln Small nealera’*- ( ' At the some time. President I .

j,Claro Oarglle ol the Natlonrt Auto- i '-mobile 'Dealors-MBoolatloni-Iounflh-

‘<-lng a “nation-wide fight, to prevent’' • ^wholesale bankruptcy among deal- , ' .iers,'-* B^d the OPM’s ordfr banning

“■new car sales would ruin small I T;dealcrs. ' .

. The ossoclatlon’a proposals, to be ■ presented, 'to government otdclali

“ S h o r t ly ,-Included: T hat'now car '■price celling!, II any, ,b>-^liMii, at 'present or recent retail'prlce^ charg- ' Cd by IndlvltluU dealers; liberal

■ iussd catTirlco ceilings,-If anyi uplts ^purchased' or requisitioned by the .•.government to be ps(d for at regular

' -^prices without diKount, and dlitrl*....... ;butlon of allcMS tlirough deaWrs,.

V. Henderson lald that the OPA hoi •hold conferenccj with used cm deal-

V fers and "Is ptepiiea'' to tlx prltcj on ;'nll used cars^I necessary..® Char- i'acterlied present used car prices n.i

. 'ybad." An eatUer .OPA'plan to set ':prlccs on new cars la no longer neOd-; ed; OPA officials eald. os all units are under strict government control,

..... OPM officials disclosed’ that largoTiUpplles of rubber will bo' mado .available to tiro companies for re- ’trcodlng,and rMapplng. Later, how­ever, Jt may bo necessary to ration

:.'used and. reconditioned tires,■I I . ■ I,— .. f '

' ' ' ^ o EplMopal MeetRev. E. Leille Rolls, vicar o'f A»-

"ccnslon Episcopal church, wlU at- •:.tend a meotlng- of the bishop

and council. of Uie Idaho GplicopI churches next Monday In tiolti; He will return to Twin Tails that evc- ■nhig. j.

Returns to Ool|eie .Miss Ann Perrlne.otuaent a flo tta

s ta te , college, Ames, la .. lal^Bha- shojie by train at l a . m, today to re tu rn to 'her ttudlea after th6 Christmas holidays, She met several o th e r Iowa State co-eds atPocstello and. wlU make tti'i' trlt) east' them .

Keep the White Flao of Safety'Flying

Now IS (tan without a , traflto death in our Manic Vniletf.

In Boise., Miss Almcda Avant, Turin Palb .

T lslleijta Boise tW» week.

V U lin ^ lv e s ;Ur.Und'Mrs. W. A, H o w d .h av e

returned *om Deary, Ida., where they spent the holidays a ttlio home o r i t ? a n ( l Mrs. W. E. OotTle,,their son-in-law and daughter..

T o F a l^ le ldHj^Kennoth Johasonjmil d u _ sfiffleverly, .Doris, Jeanette and

Gladys, have returned to Palrtleld after a tivo-day visit with-Mr. and Mrs. A. .P. Bloier,. p a re ritA ^M rs. Johnson. .

Stodcnt Leaves Miss taum Ann Seaton will leave

Sunday* for Provo, n toh , to resume studies Sl tMe Brigham, Young nnl' verslty, after a holiday visit witlr h e r parcntsT ^i'ond Mrs. John R . Seaton.. « ■ '

E x p ec ted HemeMrs. J. W. Newman Is expected to

return todoy fronj San Francisco; following a holldSy visit with friends and- relative. Mi's. Jtlewman le lt C hrls^as'doy for £he''boast.

A t Sun. Valley ^ ’Mr. and Mrs. George Buhler i>nd

Ms, ahd Mrs. S, A'. Cederijulst among thosii who spent Bew Y eart eve and the io U o v ^ day a t sun Valley., ,

*

Week of-Prayer Twin t ’alls Assembly of Ood

church-wUlJoln other Assembllet.dl God cliurches In the United States and Canada next w e ^ - ln a week of prayer services, to be lield nightly w ith speclor prayer meetings during the day In the homes of membersK

I-Q etam s to Texas

Sgt. ?tenneth H, WenJer has gone to Oomp Buills, San Antonio, Tex., where he W attending West Point prep .school, after a 10-aay Christ­m as furlough .with hls> mother, Mrs, Anna 'Wemor, <04 Sevetith avenue east, ^ >

eo m m u n iO n Service .'Departing.from the ■usual custom

of holding communion servlco on Sunday morning, the communion EerrlctrSunday nUJie B aptist lihuroh will be hold Bt'7;30 p. m., Rov. Roy 3. Barnett, naator. announced-todav. i e will give till communion medita­

tion.

Ogden VUttor ^Miss to la Dewoy, Ogden, who has

been the holiday guest of Miss Doris G ene Crowloy and Miss Jenlve Crow­ley, will return to her homo tomor. row. The doiijhter of Mr. and Mrs. 0 . J . DoweyTihe Is a Joriner real' d en t of Twin P«llj.

, M r a .^ - 0 ^ 1 rout«1I?!ne

sorvlceffor

Bethel .Temple SessionEVBngelIat.N, A. Urshan, who has

been tinglnif In one « th t tegest PundamentallJt churches In Now York City, will preach th e sermon at th e Betoel .Temple, church §undiy a t 7:30 p.,m. Mrs.,"Urshan, who U well-knoWn In Indianapolis, Ind., as' a musician, will aiilst w ith the muilo by the ohorui chto anH, oroheitr^

w m visit HereM rs. aeorge J* Weir, qhloogo. Is

expected to arrive this evening from Sacram ento to visit her brothor tn tf slster.>ln-law/Mr, a n d ,Kelker. Mrs. Weir Is en a fte r attending funeral another brother, j, A. Kelker, la B an rrancisco, 'an d viilting h e r m other, Mrs, J. J. Kelker, In B i t t t f mentp,:.Sha. wlll continue her trlii east Monday.

R e t u h u to ChicagoGaylord OJers relumed Friday ta

Chicago, following a holiday vaca­tion In Twin Falls with his parent#, Mr. and Mra. Pred OJers. Youn| O Jers It a felloWGhlp. medical) stu­d e n t as Northwestern university and will graduate In June. The fellow­sh ip requires that ho be an asslslont Instructor to lower classmen in pharmacology and physiology. He also servos the university In research work.

N e w s o f K e c b r dManjago Llcenscf

JA H .Ii^ranols KeMnn, 3J, and Dorothy

E. Melerhoif, IB, both of Biihl* • Robert E. Norils, 33, Kimberly,

and Norma Jeon Anderson, 23, Twin B ^ ls . . ,

, JAN,!G. Richard fiogn,'29, an d Mulorle

E sther Craft, 37, boUi of ^ ^ In Falls, Olover Cadwell, 31, and Harriet

Hanel, 34, both of Twin Falls.Molvln JagclJ, 30, Buhl, and Opal

Low, 10, Castlofoid,

.'Birlha

T o Mr. and Mri. It. E.^Hopkini, Twin Palls, a boy, todoy a t tho Twin Falls county general hospital ma­tern ity home. ..

T o W ash ln gtD n ",Mlss M argaret McAtee Is , re tu rn ­

ing to Seattle, Wash.; .after il hoU- doy visit with her parents, D r. and Mri. P.-^VMcAtee.— ^

'Fran .Portland jfSi. and Mrs. Russell Herron have

returned from Portland, after spcnd< tag Christmas, with SJa. H eno tfs mother, Mrs.. Maud Kirlunnn, and her .sister, Mrs. LoPrlel Hlnrlclo.

su ing Trtp '.Miss Dahrl Belt and Miss Olllo

Pem'Secord went to Hailey Tuesday for a visit with frl,cnd3 ond fo r a week ofT skiing. They , will re tu rn to* Twin Falls tomorrow. ■ -r-

nelnms (o Scbeol r- ■■PVtd I^thnm , K student the

University of Idaho, left this after-, noon^'by 'automobile- for Moscow after s i d i n g Christmas ■vacation wljh hls^parents. Mr. and Mrs. P ftd t . Lathami ' / .A nnual M eetin g .

Annual business meeting of the First'Pefiiteoostal church congrega­tion'will be held Friday at 8 p t m. at the church, Rey. EUIs a ism . pos­ter, announced-today. '■ '

Leave .for Seattler^ .M r-ond Mrs. GamM Btepl:\en», Seattle, W?sh., have returhed to. the coast, after a holiday visit with Mr,’ and Mrs. J. J . OlonUi, parents pi Mrs. Stephens. ^

. ■ . .Back to Ogden

Miss Oora Jensen will leave this week-end tor Ogden, Utaji, to re­sume her. teaching position. . She spent the holidays wiUi her m othsr and sister, Mrs. Jane Jensen and Miss Lorraine Jensen, ,

R elu m in g to S c h o o l . 'Miss Betty Boston 'will re tu rn

Monday to Salt Lako City, to ro- sumo her studies at 6t. Mary-of-the- Wasatch. She -has' been a holiday guest of her. parents, 7)r..ond Mrsi A. A. Boston. r

Conolttdes lloUdajr Bob Uerlghl,^ student at the tTn^

verslty of Idaho who hss.beeii v is it­ing rM fX ath ah i hero for the p a j t

C loft this ■Ruperl for Moscow

wcel. home In Ri hiorrow. studles.-

thls afterhoott tor , his t; He will- leave to-

te sv n e

T o P h ila d e lp h ia ■■ Miss Katherine Booth, nialstant

to the dean 6f women a t the Onivet- slty of Pennsylvania, has returned to Bniladeiphl.a, following ^ holiday visit a t the home of Mr, and M rs, John H. BreckenrldgO, her .broth.er- in-law tind sister. Hcinnothtr, Kirs, Ylhoent Baoth..,.OW.Sennin8ton, Vt., Is remaining for a, longer vUft a t th eBreckenridge homo.

- (Frmn Pm Ond>' ^ettbmrT^yttoalalIcpiyj~ea(I

’okcd exic o u S d -n o fc ^ ro'vol- ^hey

except by tho

ilsyivore speolfloall$^-«xoept« (h e field of commodities

courts,for a second violation o f price rekulatlons;

Uke th e houso bDI, the senate^; meuure.cioes not aumdrhte- ceilings over wages,' bu t the senate commit-, tee wrote In a declaration, o f policy directing stivemment agtncleit deal­ing with labor-^lncljiding tb e labor department and Its bureaus, th e war andnaVy departments, the'O'PM and othe^ ngeftcies^to "worE'toward .the stablllzdtion M prices and th e cost of production." ' > .

Another senate change was msor-' tion of a provision authorizing Pres­ident Roosevelt to transfer any of tho price cop tro l functions to im oth- e r agency: In 'qdoptlng this nmSlld- ment th e ' senate committee; turned down a p lea from Secretary o f Agri- oullure- C laude R, Wlckara th it control Of "agricultural prices- tie vested in h is de£ortment. U nder tli^- amendment, howOver, Mt» Roosevelt couid,order this.. , .

Intornm ^tlng^upon the s-agges- 4ion thOitLSiyickatd be .In ci’-a r^e o t agricultural prices, 'Heiiderson said tha't somo price p*«ars; should be available t o h ln ijiu t "final, respon-. Slbillly will have to, bo cehtrdllzed."

,''We'll se ttle , our .illfferencei.", he said , .,

Jdempapers, magaslhes, books-& i periodicals cd from'isubject to price, control.,'

■Ths senatB^ cDmmittoe broadeTifd the •admlnlstrator'i) power to buy and EEli ■ commodltll!s' to stsbUise iricij, HO would-'bO perm itted to luy anywhere In'tlie world,' Instead

of mereiyin th e United lStates:'bue traniaotlDnB to; strateglo^and criti­cal *or m aterials wero left under' the Mntrol o f w i RFC subsidiary.

, Although price’'control w as the only iegl.'ilatlon dcfiriltely o n tho ngenja for the first, w e ek 'o f tho new lefslon. I t was only' one of a number of m a jo r items faclng.'con^ gresj' as. It, approached- the ■ prob^ lem«'created by the outbreak of warDsc. T. -..pther .legislation will c e n t e r

around!Taxaiion. A -stiggeHng new r?v

epue bill, tppping in a te theii rec' otd'^breaking-iMOOiOOl enacted last jiear, is (fi proepeot. Tho' treaiiuy la expected to in itia te a -program before tho house wayg and means committee looh after J a n . isi

Appropriation*,. President Boose- velt has announced that the new via- budget-which will be ■presented to congress n e x t wiek-wlll call lot about $60,000,000,000 or half tho na­tional income, for mlUtary expendi­tures. ^

Economy.. A Joti)t senate-housO- executlve committee will seek to trim non-defense ipending, which has bten rim n tag around »l,ooo,eoo,- 000 a,ycar, b y a t least ll,soo,0oo,ooo.

Debt limit'. TTie present legal cell­ing on the national debt—$65,000,- 000,000i-wm be reached late In the spring, jnd legislation will be need­ed to raise I t , ;

Labor. Pressure exists In both hou»(j for legislation oxurb strikes and other w ork etoppagea which im ­pede Utti production. Although the' Bonato withheld action a t tho P res- Ident'i request after the house p sss-

Thlrty women yesterday a f te r ­noon enrolled for ttie epeclal hoaio nurflng c6urs«(.under the Red Oroeaand announcement was madj todoy _______, _that cliMes would be held each, comprehensive ,blU outlawing Tuesday and Thursday from 3 to 4 |'n ™ “ , ' 'p. m. starting next weok.

Enrollment took place in the b a se ­ment a t the/library building, th e same place wher(^ clossea .will be hold. Those women 'who did' n o t llnd It possible to enroll yesterday can atlll do la by attending the llr a t clisM next Tuesday, Cost of .th e

fee U merely purchase ot th e ibook, ■

jouncement was alio m ade [alJ4LJi_planned to conduct eve-

, . 'olaises in home nurelng s t a r t ­ing Monday, Jan . 19. Classes would bo hold twice each week in the 11- btiiry bueinent, starting at 7 p. m . and ending shortly before D p. m.'

Health unit nurses will Instruct a t the afternoon c la m while Mlos Bertha'W ilson Will be initruotora t the evening BeSsioni,---------------

Initial registration for speeial n u ­trition olasses was underway th is afternoon a t the Y, W. 0. A. office to. tho Orpheum Hieotor ■ bulldltig. T h ls^losj will be held each M on­day from 3 to.,4 p. m. a t the Y. W . rooms. An evening class will start a t the same looatlon on Monday, .J e n . IJ l being in session from 7 to 0 p. m . «(ich Monday thereafter'Perions./iot regliitgring aftemoon may do so a t the initial class session.-Purpose o( the nutrition olau la to

s tart formation of ir canteen corps organit'&tlon for Twin Falli, o th e i corps would be organlced In th e varUaiyothor communities with-«»t- up for ciasses-TH^hOse conunlml- ties yet to bo announced.

T R A I L E R SWe ip e o la ^ e In bmidlng 4-w beel robber (Ired wagon irallen t h a t may be used for cllber ( a rm Waious o r tra lle n , , , . i lo c k

" traUers . o ther special t r a l l -

. unless voted by a majOTlty of the workers, action will bo sought on that and o th e r pending measures, Inoludlng /a plant selture bill by

Tom-Conni " - -nallyjD., Tex.

PAHEEIISIS OUT!

One local y o u th left for S alt'L ake Olty and', f in a l enllitmcnt .to. „the United S tates army and a Qoodlng man Will leave Sunday, It woe on- nouncja today by Sgt, Prank M or­ris,^ofllcer In ohorgo of the recru lt- liig station a t tho city hall. .-■:

Leaving to d ay was Oordori. ,.'0, Bailey, 21), ro u te two. Twin FaJI*; HO w u honorably.discharged from the-joventh - Infantry on Oct. 6, 1041 and reenllsted for the arm y of the United s ta te s , unaislgned.

Lieaving fiiuiday from .Qooding Is Oeorgo.l!. Bowlos^ St, He waa re ­lieved (rpm active duty on Nov. 1. 1041 from com pany B, Mth arm ored regiment (light) a t Ft, Banning, Ga.) and IS reenlisting for the army of tl)e,United s ta t e s unofslgned,

Theto are m o re then 805,000 clvH service employes In the United Stijtes, , . -'■.

.' Twin'Palls county general hospital ■had :avallable beds on all .^o o rs today.'' - •

•UDIinXTED, '..-Ma!!ter_C5tlyla_Haler,_' E v a a -0 . tV lw ,Tw in. Falls; Baby Sharon Olonh, KimbErly. and Claude Mull,

flooding.

: d i s m i s s e d ■I,Pearl Chadwell, Flier;. Mrs. S id ­ney. Smith, Mrs.. Lavern'e DeVries and son, Mrs. Ijeslle Oerardi Tw in’ PUIaj. Neva lo n g e r, Jlansen.'

8lx d raft registrants had been plac­ed In class '1-A today .and twff were transferred from tha t, ranking, glv* ing,area. No. 1 a net goto of four to the selective service."front'line."" '. . The draXt board, a t ati overtime

lion last night, pushed, ohead .._.i>,the expohded Job that audden-

.ly‘H6«d It with removal of the f'over 28” bracket; o«d with Intensified army needs. . ■'' . ■ < *>

Tho results of the meSllng: five men plaOed'to 1-A, available

for service, o n e . m an reolnsalfled into l-A' from 8-Ai dependency def­erment. Two men removed from' i^A to 1-0, (already in service). ■

Five Put in 1-B, 'limited service; two i n . 1-0; one to -3-B. (defense determent); six in S-A; three to' 4-F (unlit); two oases contwued'ta pres- ent.olnsslfloatlon; flvei reolasslfled ftora 3-A (ocoupatlonal’dsletm enttto 2>B; two.iODiaesifled fr (over Sfll' tb 4-P; two reo from 1-H to a-A; one reo from 1-A to 2-B; one rec from 1-H to FO; oife, reo from H;D (mlflWer) M l-B.

jm 'l -AossifiedasslfledOSSlflO'at^lflei

Double Trouble For Operator o f Ancient Mactiine

MotorlsU driving battered old atitoi are apt: to find trouble oorhes double, o , - J

Bennett Irish, Twto Tails, dls- .coveted th a t today, ,

Ht V08 broughtr Into probiite ooufl ic- tO 'fu s two leparate charges. He ire+pleaded-gilUtyv-io-bothriiCDUl&tlOlir

S4 wlU lentenced nit 10 a. m. ondoj'- by Judge. 0 . A. Balleyj_ The bhirges—d ) W vtag 'a c a r

«lt|ioilli lawful lights and brakes) (3) tenure to halt a t a ftop-slgni . In addition to Whatever sentence

he draws: Monday, Irish was de« jirlved of thp use. of his o o . which Judge Bailey ordered Impiunded fo r 3a or 00 days, t h e man's driver Itcenie wss token away^frotn h tm for the same period. Ha was sharply lectured for driving a machine In which' Visibility wo« taipe^ed to a dangerous-degree-by a cardboard In* one side window, and by other, m a-, terlsl which obatruoted,vision; ■ ' ,'V.-K. Barron, state oiflcor, signed both complatots.

• -■■ ■ - - ---------- ----------- y "

Funeral Service Honors A. Waite

Funeral services for Ahlmaaz Waite, longtime' resident of Twto Palls,'Were held'thls morning a t th e Twin Palla mortuary chapel.• Rev. 0 . L,. Clark; pastor of th e Prejbyte;’lon church, of which hS wos a lifelong member, officiated. Mrs. 0. ‘H. Shearer sang two num ­bers, playing her own aocompOnl- ment.— Tho body was t d k ^ t o Greeley, Colo., for burial, accompanied by a, son, John B, 'Waite, Twto Palis,

DOUBLEBouble-utAor. 'triple, ■. quadruple

and maybb' i]Uihtuple-^to ridhig ,to work to motor car, tho Twin Palla county tire rationing board urged today, ,"Board members pototcd out th a t

thB,"floubiiag-up" advice comes from Washington and will be an Import­ant part of the nationwide wartime effort to conserve rubber., , ,' R'ctldenti who' live on the same

street and'who go to work a t the some Hour were urged to ride In ono Car Instead of each driving h it own machine. . -

MONEY TO LOANON

PAnitf A - C I i r P ttO P E ItT V

PEAVEY-TABER CO.to : S h osh on e S t . E i l t

PHONE 2 0 1

_ 2 n H L J a n . 3 (Speciaii-^Mlcha^l Homllng.-,C5, - Buhl viclnliy former and’ U n ltc d - 'e ta tB s 'government weather observer in this territory for .the past 18'yeaira,'died early this. AiOmlng a t .hlit farm hornet

Tlio body rests a t.th e Albertson funeral '^o m e pending arrange­ments, ■- Mr.vHoinltog ' was born June 11, 187II, .to EstoiUa, Re camf! to the

-Unlteil States InSoos.'and that eamr year-hom'esteaieflln the Buhl area, where US h?s’since-llved.r

He taugh t’ school In Estonia bdi fore moving to ' this country.- Mr. aom libg was s ’member of the Trinity Ijutheran church' a t Clover and oi the Buhl Qrapge,

His fjrot wife', wos Mrs, Marie RepjiO Homling,'. who died Jn imo,

.Thelt;. throe sons; Ted Homling. BUM;. Rolling HOmllng, engaged In oivillan (Jelonse work a t Oi^and,Calif,, indT B ddie' H pm llng .'enL ,IH. oivillan' defence work At Kisl Alaska, irtrvive,. . . . . > ,

In 1037, M r, .HOmllng .-married E llM both'Susslk, who'survives.''Also aurvivlng Is a nepheflJi M.' Kogple-' man, Maywood, Calif,

Mf. Hom iinit had been 111. for-the paj;t two'., years.

sXn DIBia07'Callf.73iS H (U:f''P-' A , four-motored hriny ' bomber oroshcd end burned last night after It^im dtog gear stuck, but it woe-he-' lloved all occupants porachiited'.to safety, ■ ^

Army officials said- Ittformotion, ireprdlhg the number of meh aboard or their Identities wag hot. available Immediately.

Ah'eyewitness to th e crash »ald, t!OW0VBr,.‘th a t ' he saw six mori leap from the ship, which the ooost gut'rd Idehtlfled as a Consolidated 0-34, Widely known to Europe as Britain's WbBMtor, ■

The bomber crashed In. si inhabited South Bon O lw , two miles from Imperial Beteh, nearCoronado. A cordon of soldiers was thrown up arovnfl tho burflcd wreck' ago.

The eyewitness jiald. the plane "bjuntd ■completely and tracer bul,, lets were popping like the Fourth of July."

th e San DlegO' fire department reported th a t It had communicated with the pilot of tho disabled cralt. He said ot>e whcil failed to foil Into position for landing and, that I t lodged when he attempted to re'< tract It for a eroah landuif, '

Midway ^^orkers ^ Arrive in Hawaii

BOISE, Jan . a (U'D)—Several mea- sages from former Midway.,Island const|:uotlon workers, toformlng reU atlves they hoye been brought, from the Paolfio Uland to Honolulu,' were recelved'by Boise 'residents today.'

First word of arrival of construc­tion workers a t Honolulu from Mid­way was received New Year's day by Mrs, Edword 'W. Clark. Her son Oor- 'don H, Eichmann, formerly :sn of> flee technician' a t Mid*ay, telephon­ed from Honolulu that he hod arrived safely. .

John I. Strong, who had been at Midway, sent a cablegram to his wife, Mrs. 'Vera Strong ol Boise, that

■> ■WJiad-ArtJved a t Honolulu. "Happy New Year fa all. Letter follows. Do not know how long will be h8re,'’the message said.

John A. Kelly, Nam'pa,-r6eelv«rf » 'Cablo'from Ws eon, Charles H, Kelly, 'dispatched from Honolulu. Kelly had olio been stationed a t Mid way. . , ' ■ ' ■ • ■'

'^'Qie best way to stop a leak to the rndlSlotJioBS iB to wrfcp a long strip of rubber cut from an old In­ner tube'around the hose and apply a loyer'tif / ’•'’•‘'r a tapo to hold It securely to place, —

C ontinuous Show from liOO P, M, At^nlta 2 0 i to M.

2 9 ^ to t p. M.Then 3 0 e ' ~ Tax,-PAM

‘ COMEDY • 0A1(T0PN NEWS * "IRON CtAW"

STARTS TOMORHOW L O O K III LO O K III

LrN«r* Cbmei a CasMel

tog and gruhttog as th e y wove , steel safe a t Swhn lnvestm ent'o f-

■flee.' . . Yoiing riian b?)iig very galiarit w he kneels'In snow On etdewallc a t postoftlca com er luid

. ties shoe lace, fot Ia<ly. companj;. Ion. . ^Chiude Detweller looljiDg self-consciqus or something os bs. wadte through snow o n Shoshone street nojfth,-canylngf four elef^trio f a i i i , . . Buslnessman^swer^ tng telephone'call atV iuug store(where he'd: been;having coffee), by grabbing_phone and rem aking simply; "Coming".. . Snow K rm - tog Impressive decoration oh -the C^hrlstmas streamers above down-

. town s tre e ts .O ld fellow mutter- ^ g to Wmselt as he's forced to de­

tour Into snow because onto |s parked on sldewaik In front ot IgpiUon.ahop,.'. U tte rs a t Cham­ber .of Oommerce fromi Ben; ilohn, Thomas, Cong. ■ Compton White MdOOT, Chose Clark, All congrot- .

offtrtog dehns?w eather' interiudo! Short-legged Uttie do{( stoking IhtO’ anow u p to 111* eari. - vj". '

One class’ to Bed Cross f i r s t a l f , work w as im d e rm y here to d a y and , five.m ore ■will see l in t Im trujitloiiS . M ng-g lv invnex t-*eek i- ItrW as on- Hgtmced th is oftemoimr.by W » O. w a ls tn , ch a n te r chalnnan o f Red Cross f l n t a id . , , •

t ____3SedSMJmderw*y;«t;the.pi?5ent,_> tim e to onp o f ochool teochera while

three o ther idasses for U a c b e is start; n e x t w<eIc.-^Instructort'lD r th te '- f o u r -

. Although 19(3 auto licence plates- stUI hadn 't arrived today, o jillca- tlons In.CTcew .ol 300 h a d ' been tub- mitted by it eteady stroam of motor­ists ivho.flslted th e ic o u n ^ jissM i Bort’ o f f lc e . '^ : ' ' ■ ",

TOO applications and th e money are being accepted, and plates will be delivered when, they, arrive. At ,that ttoie,t)R)o, aiitolsts • w ill be re­quired to , turn in th e ir ' old plates for definse metolMise., A88tsiSoi:.,CIMtge A.ChU<ls«8s ad'

VUed by the state deportments of law enforcement that th* new plates "might arrive" by Monday. Bis staff, hSwever, Is betting the licenses don't come un til mid-week.

Merchants Talk 8 P.M. Shutdown

^D lw uss lonro f-an 8. p. u K~a ai olosing hour for January; Tebruary and Marctk will h ith lighb the jfirst 1043 m eeting 'of tl|ie Twin Frills m er­chan ts ' bureau, aow rd lna to Voy Hudijon, new ^ h i ^ M i J*ho takes' office a t the session. ' -

T h e 'm ee tin g will be » luncheon a t noon Monday f i t ’t h e ' Bogerson hotel.

The 8 p, m. Saturday closing was observed last year. a n (l present plans call for the same program in M43,' . •

pavid PI*, defense consim ctlon worker who Was dn tudway Isb n d Christmas day .ds now in.'Bonotola.

Mrs. RtBB Plx, Twin-PUIS, h ll mother, does n o t knov.hov h e -got there^^nor- does she care. ,

TIio important thing Is U u t 'b e U to the Hawaiian Islands, ,She received a cablegram th is

m om inr:..which. ' read ' i n Hono­lulu,- Hurrayl Happy ilew Year. W in work here,” -

received from her son, w ith M orrl- •*on-Knudtcn Construction company workers on Midway when th e J a p a ­nese itttrfcks began.' ■ ,

He sent cablegrams following the first and second attacks on th e Is­land, : and Jilsp sent a C hrlstm ai message. '

Driver Fined for

Sunday Rites for Baby at Heybiipn

BURLEY; Jan. 3. (6pecliil)—Fune­ra l services for.Nora Uree-'Wodskow, four^months-old- daughter . of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sidney Wodskow, Heybum, who died.Jan. 3 , will be held Sundity a t S p. m, a t the Hey- bum'I,JD.S, church. .

Bishop' -Elmer 'Helner, Heybum; will officiate, and Payne mortuary will be In charge of interment. '

.Surviving are tho paren ts; two sisters, Beveriy Jean and U llie Ann; her matemiil grandparents and pa­ternal grandmother, all o f h ey b u m ,

TODAt ONLY

iE H h lOPENItJS20i

'Til'■ 2

•rfUntfvr)KieN*-. - ALSO - ■ ^ -

Chapter I Kow S e ria l/ VKINQ OF. TEXAS

BA N O E^.V.B.O. B and 'A .^ee. CInli,

SPORT *_;NEWS

- ENDS TONIQIli; — W illia m M y m a

PO W E L L • L O Y

■” S hF d6w of thoTliln M s n ” '

ORPHEUma t a r t s TOMORROW^

cifasses will be (Jhauncx’-Abbott, Jay Merrill, Marjorie Bytam and: A^mi ■ Oapson, , '. ' ■

■ A closa- principally fpr employes of’ the Detweller firm wm start Monday, a t 7:30 p. m. ; t a place to be

■announced. This claK, w ith, Clyde • ■ViuiQusdelh as instructor, will be; h e l d e ^ Monday, and T b u n d » ^ a t the some hour. 1 - ..' ■' •. •

Class, for policemen, count; depu­ties, state .officers, ombplance driv­ers, firemen and ali» 11 Jw c eea . a s - , signed to th e fire statlim t e oase of ememencjr, win hold first seoiilon nt the: fire.station' a t WO p. rii. 'iTues- ' day. It will m eet again n ex t.T b iir^ day at.tl)o same'hour with lesaona' continuing each TucMlay T hurs­day nightJ('thereo(t«. Ed Benym ap, locol fireman,'' will bo Instructor.

Wolstra' said that posslblUly t x r , 1st? other classes will be organized '. fn thp Immediate futime If. require­ments demand I t ■ ,. ■ i ,

''Organlzntloto of thO '(ilassea wlU 'have started study, or which will s ta r t .next week If one (rtep )D the lo isl defense '■prognim?’ '% a ls tr a ««ld.

Get to Hawaii

to ro id W. 'Wheeler . BtUst pay $6 line, 13 coats an d must get^.hts auto .llghte, and b i a ^ i fixed .as,.result of coAplalnt lll^ ,agalti» t ' hllfl "'tO'> (day In probate court. ,, , • .

Wheeler pleaded guilty to operat- tog a'car without lawful Hlghts las't night, judge O. A. Belloj' ordered fine and costs, and then stipulated th a t the motorist must prove tO itiia court by Jan. .7 th a t his lights And brakes hw e been put la fhrst class

'order. .Stato P atro to ipn V, K. B o rro n

eigned the com plains^,

'V

y e s t e r d a y ’s > price* t o d a y ,

w U h ’ b ii r u ^ n r g u a r a n t e e o f 100% /B a t is f a c t lo n o r

1 0 0 % r e f u n d ' ’ ' „ '

39 Olds tl b . L. Scdan '„„.™ «32S 36 Chev, M aster D, !,, Bedan (305 . 3» Plymouth p . U Pordor ...43Sb 33 Chevrolet Cqupo ......._ ..._ .J l5 033 Ohevrolot Ooupo ,,..,„„.-..|l)5

MANY OTHERS

:'41 Ford Super'O. L Oen^41 Ford Super D. I» Fordor37 Plymouth D. L, Fordor 31 Chev, Master 0, t , Sedan38 Ford 0 . L . Fordor Bedon

. 40 Lincoln Z e p h y r Sedan - 4 0 Lincoln Z ep h yr Coupe40 Mercury Town fleifao, ■

TRUCKS'THUCK84r* 'ord Pickup — 16»046 Ford 'Ton P. U, —88 Ford Pickup ..... ...MM30 Ford T n icic IDOi N ow - hiotor ........

..«DB38-Ford Truck, 158.38 Pord Truck, Dump Body $188

M W iy_ p (lj,e r8, ? )! makeB, a i l m ode ls ,

ro n b . uw6oijt. ihiwctiiiy

f)'

■0;

'T

I

Page 3: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

'^ ( S j i d a y , J tfnuarji S , 1 9 4 2

; K/,

IDAHO EVENING ■TIME.S TWIN FALLS', IDAHO Page Three

' m

Bolstering U. S7Mt)raleAmWcans who can entertain during th^se times of stress,

-■ ar6 serving th i^ country as necessary, and useful Ameri- cans', Mra- Tohi F. Alworth potnfed out.today,'in announcing

' th e program for the January meeting'-of the Twentieth. Century club. lopic of the afternoon is “Entertainment in .This Changing World.” \ : -v ’ , / '• K. K, Dillingharri,'Filer-bHslnes'sman and prominent , mem.-

b e r of the Kiwarii^ club, will - - ^ ^ —b e the gueat'Bpealter and 'en* tertainer a t the T u e s d a y

;lupcheon, session at' 1 p._rn. at I th e Park hotel; y—^-Mrri^llItoKhnni-Blvea' n - f is tin '

gu^eoTperformanca lit rfnglo and_glelght-o{rlmniLtrlcl£ii,.wltoiJieJiaa.

P

i ' .

h

1

■J

piiraucd 03 a hobbytot.pany jeara.• Essential to Laugh '

“Just oi It, l3 .n'e<ict3M y..fpt. the EngUsh people, to laugh "and’forget ftnd be entertained, ,eo It Is with t h ? Americana; and now more than ev e r we will welcome 'our e n to ta ln e ra who, In . their way, help ua to laugh arid, lorset," Mrs. Alworth, chalmian'*\of the program, cpni m entcd. - . ' . '■ In .entertaln tag both soldiers and

clviUoM,. real contributions were m ade by Elsie Janls and other celeb­ritie s of the. thei)tcr and musical- entertainm ent world, even .in.-.,the

■— V a r ot 1917-18. IfffUl be recalled. 'A rthu r'^op iln s, laiJibua d l r ^ o r ,

cam e Into prominence during the J a s t World war, and sponsored the f i r s t American dnuna fptlval, duf- .Ing that period. Marian Tucker also became famous. '

' • su ch now-famous playwrights as , O'Neill, Bariy, Howud and Abbott '\irere-Just,.l)eBtonlng to be establish­ed In-the theater, comcdles prevail.

• ed dtttlhg that perlod,- ' , . Winter Seltlni-

Mra. -J. a ; Cederqulst and M rs. B. A. SutfiUff, In charge ol decorations,

-TrtU-userwlntcmjraiiscinents; — M rs. Wallace-3ond will*'present

th e International relations .talk on. "O u r Unguarded Border." '

, ' PoUowhig-the solute to the flag, •Mrs. Claude Brown will lead the

ii g roup 'ln patriotic songs. - ■ ■

f i e t a M c L e a n a n d

. G ^ e ! S m i t h . W e dRUPERT, Jan. 3. (SpetSal)—M ar­

riag e vows were ixohanged a t D n.m . -Wednesday between Miss Reta McLean and Charles Robert Sm ith.

, T h e ceremony, read by Kav. F a th ­er D . Ij. McElllgdtt, took place In St. .Nicholas ,CathoUo church, The

x o h en i!Tin~BfiainngMn)y^wn~Biinf was ployed, by Mrs. Betty Henseheld EaOsch. The bridal pair waa a ttend ­ed b y Mr. and Mrs. K. Duane Hodge of Twin Falls.

- Heirloom Brooch T h e bride" wore a street length

frock trimmed In, baby blue and gold with matching accestorlM and ft corssge of talisman rosts.. The traditional "something old" was a brooch whlch^liad belonged (o her

•mother,■ M rs. Hodge* matron of honorTTvi a ttire d In a ' black street length dress trtouned In blue with mdtqh-

-Inff- occessorles •todj' a ootsage- -of chrysanthemums. ■

A lte r the rtfemony a 'w edding breakfast was served la the'bonqv.st room, of Fred’s club cafe, -w y te chrysantfiemumsVere used In room and taWe.decoratjons. A decorated wpadlBS-*coJse 'centered the table -TOere covers, were laid for fourteen.

Guests were the bride and brldo- groom.M r. and Mrs.'Charles Robert S m tth ; Mr. and Mrs.- 0. L. Sm ith, B uh l; Mr. and Mrs. K, Duane Hodge, Twin Falls; Mr. and Mrs. 0. R. DetwUer, Blackloot; Olatence M c­Lean a»d -Wendell McLean, Paul;

■vMr. and Mrs. P. N. 'h-appen, Jr., Jerom e; Mrs. J.-S . Brady, Los A n­geles; Ballf., and HCv. Pother D. L. McEUlgott, pasWr ot St. Nicholas OathoUo-thurch, Rupert.

Rupert Teacher ,M rs. Charles - R o b e r t Sm ith,

daughter of Flemming McLean, Paul, la a graduate 'ot tho Albion

• State Normal sphool and hoa taugh t In th e Lincoln grade school of R u ­pert'for-tlie past few years.''

M r. 'Smith, son qf Mr. and Mrs. 0. L . 'Smith, Buhl, Is a graduate of th e University of Idaho, Moscow, and Is eonnected wltli the state bu ­reau of highway englnecra. The young couple will be at homo a t 706 E stree t,R upert; _ _

t t M P H K

, . - TANAKIAA' Bkallng party, last Sunday . a t

Wilson lake waa given by the T an - • akla groHlTof the Camp Flro Olrls.

GijMts ol the group were Morguerlte Domogalla, Paulino Domogalla and Borbara Hlskey. Mr. and Mrs. C arl Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. -Q, E Couber- ly, M r. and Mrs. C..N. Rosa, and L.

’ A. Hart-occompanle’d tlie^rls.' WATANAPO

One of Uio sidelights ol the edu- eatlopal tour of Wntanapo group of tho Cam p Flro Girls was the visit

.. to the local flro station where the girls were allowed to "slldo down tlie poles’ to their hearts’ content. Tlie trucka wfcre explained In detail, and th e suits worn by the men were fully desorlbid and explained. They, went also to the . police station and wcro'flngerptlnted by T, V. McCoy,

•■. city patrolman. At thlj time the, girls witnessed the "arrival” of aev-' eral prjjonera and vicro taken through one of tho cells. Mrs. N. O.-

_ Johnson, guardian of the group, ac-.‘ companlcil them on their tour.

* «

, Betty Lou Spra^e <• ' Weds Leo Knudson

BORLBY, Jan, 3 (6pcclal)-Den- Jamln P . Bproguc, -BUrlcy, !iilii.iin?_ nouoced th'o marriage bl'his diJigh* ter/ M lsa Betty Lou flprijgnj, (9 Leo

' ICnudaon, son of Mr, and Mrs. A. Knudson, Hollister, tlio fftcldliig tak­ing place In Van Nuys, Calif., Ocp. 91,'at' th o homo «f the btUo'i uncle, WlllWm Sprague.,.

Tliey will make their liomo In PhoenlX) Arli., whore Mr. lCuudson Is employeil nt t>ti.Alrcro(tboinpany.

Tlio-couplo milt whilo both woio itudenta at Albion 8tat» Normal

—ieliool, Tlin-brlderpnor la her do- patture for Callfovnln, was lioitoreil ‘ «t aHiowerat« (Iliiiier putty (Iven by Miss Bffio DavlJii Albion..

I'

.1

La'dies of G-. A. R, Install

secretary; -xaiB. viviayijawavn, -Falls', ,'iu'nlor ’vlce-preslflent,

Mrs. B ertha Clyde, Twin Falls. rluB. ^Traveling conditions al-

■ HlgiillBht o f an all,-doy meetlrig ot Dan M ccook cUx:Ie, Ladles of the .Qrnnd4Army-Of-thB:^Republlo,.yM' terday^at’the Amerlcau Legloij MeV mortal hall, w as Installation of of.- flcera a t traditional ceremonies. Otht^ events Included a bualni session a t .10 a.'m .. and 'a pot-lu luncheon-at noon,.,.."' . - -■' .Department officers present a t the affair, o r ig h ig ^ planned as a joint Installation fo r oftlceira o! D t^ . Mo- Cook:'clrclo :a n ^ , of -Sherdan" circle ol Hansen > a n d ' Lincoln circle of Eden, were'M rs. Edith Koenig^ Han- ten,-secretary: ■Mjs.Vlvla, Lawson,Twin -F a"' -------- -and Mrs:hlstorMfi. .Traveling ... . lowed but th ree jepresetltSltVes from Hansen, and. none Were able to at. tend, from Eden; \ ^ ,

Installing SU ff ■ .. '.IlfetalUng o f f i c e r Mrs. Hazel Leighton, T * ln Falls, a.pasti,.presl' dent of Dan McCook cjttle, was as­sisted by Mrs. Hazel Gardner as In­stalling copductor.-'and Mrs.. Ida Ballantyno a n d iMrp. Olora Wlrtli, aoodUig, as color bearers'.

Ofllcer? Installed were Mrs. Pearl Kllcy, president; Mrs. R6)fln Com inons, secretary ;.M rs. Ida Sweet, .senlot—vlcc-presldcnt^-Mrs.—Cora- Murphy, Junior vice-president; Mrs. Bertha Clyde, treasurer; Mrs. Myrtle Johnston, chaplahi.

Mri, Nora Zacliorlus, guard; Mrs, Nora Faloon, assistan t guard; Mj-s. Anna Snovfc\^uslclan; Mrs. OUle 'Jones, patriotic ■ ‘instructor; Mrs. Lawson, registrar; Mrs. Addle Moore, historian; Mrs.. Riley, reporter.

- Mrs. Koenig; InstalledMri. Koenig w as Installed as pres­

ident of Sherm an circle of Hansen; Mrs. Carrie Gayley, treasurer, and Mrs; Bliss Marlli}, senior vlce-presl- dent. Mrs. Falcon conducted the. morning session, and pions were made (for the monthly social meet­ing,, to be held Friday, Jan. 16, a t the home of M rs. Leighton.

Mrs. Ida .M ead presented a pastpresident’s Jetvel to Mrs. Faloon.

C a v a n % h ' . O i r l s ^

Ending VacationConcluding a holiday visit' witH

Uielr parents, M lsa Peggy Covanagh ond Miss B arbara Covanagh are pre­paring to return loJthelr-schools to­morrow. . ,

■Miss Peggy Cavanagh a’ttends Marylhurst college, Portland, Ord., and Miss B arbara Cavonogli Is a student a t p t . .M w i“f-U'»-WasRtch.'

n ie Cavanagh family returned lost'oyenlng from Sun -Volley where they spent the peist week at Challen- ser ln(i, takhig advantoge of the winter sports activities- and other dl- veislons of the resort, Including the Intercollegiate s k i meet there the past few days.

“Keys of. Kingdom” For Review Gfou^

Book Review grou() of the Ameri­can Association o f Dniverslty Wom­en will meet a t the-home of Mrs. ■3. Sr Dlffendarfer,' 1629 Poplar ave- i)Ue, Moiiday a t 8 p. m.- Mrs. E. H. O yer wUl review ‘’Keys ot tlie Kingdom’’ by A. J . Cronin.

All in.terestcd -women ore invited to attend, as membership in the A. A. V. -W. is ndt essential to belong to this group.

Mary Jean . Moncur Weds Ernest Pyle

BURLEY, -Jan. 3 (Speclifl)—An interesting wedding of Christmas a f­ternoon waa UVat o f M lga^ary Jean Moncur, daughter oJ Mr. and Mrs. Harvo Moncur, Heyburn, to Emeat Pyle, aon of.M r,.ond Mra. E. W. Pyle,: Burley, the .ceremony taking jjlaee at ■ tiio Methodist parsonage,' with Rev. Hayrhona S. Rees officiating. .

A .'small group ot relatives ond friends witnessed th e ceremonyj and Miss Bcrtaieigh Pyle, tlie bride- groort’s sister, w as bridesm'old, and Bilbur Dean King, Heyburn, attDnff- cd tho bridegroom.

Hie bride is' a graduate of Hey­burn high school and Albion State Normal school a n d Is 'tcachhig 'a t Tetonlo this, year, and will returti tw her teaching this week.'

Tlie bridegroom re^ientiy-returiied from Ptarl harbor,-- where he wps employed In construction work with his fatlicr, who is' stlU in Hawaii, Ho has accepted,a position, a t Hermls- ton, Ore., and will work there Indef- liiitciy.

Zu Ziips E n fertam A lum ni a t D ance

' Officers of the Zu Zlm club and their iiariners, who welcoin.ed guests a t the anhuar holiday dance .In honor of th ; alumni Inst evening ai the"American Legion Memorial h a l l . include^, left to right. Miss Lorcen Fuller, Harold Merritt,-secretory-treasurer;. Miss Marjorie la sh and DIcfc, Lawrence, p r^ ld e n t; Miss Dorothy Krengcl and Karl Brown,<-Tice-presldent;Zn ZimiSnowmani JIlss Bonnit Brown and David Borry, Mrgeant-at-arms. ' • ’

. . . A t Z k Z i t B s " ' F o r m a l

Club alumni and- officers of Sigma Delta.-Psi and JKed fcnighta clubs were special guests a t.th e 19th annual,holi­day dancing party, arranged last evening by the Zui Zini dub a t the American Legion Memorial hall. Appearance of Wayne and Roberta, -who danced their “Moods in Blue,” was the surprise event of the jntermissibn^ staged with a

background jn the w in te r

80th Birthday of W om^ OBserved

BORLEY.Jm .3 (Spcclal) — Sun- dayoftem oon a grbup o f friends gathdred a t the home of Mrs. Har­riett ■’H attie”'.K. Dunn, to celebrate her 80th birthday anniversary, with her daughter, Mrs, Cora Brady, as hostess to tho fHends.

Ijieut.' A rthur C. Dunn, who was home on furlough from;Port Warren. Wyo.,. took several pictures of his mother' and her guests, and also presented his mother with a beau- tiful flowering pink begonia. ’The party was held, around, tSIFgaily decorated Christmas tree, .jvhich played an important p a rt 'In the

.Cnrlstmosrecent family: reunion on. day o|> the D unn family.

Mrs. Dunn is gradually regalnbg strength from a hip inJUry which she received on July 4 this past ye4fTrdl She hos lived in Burley for 23 years, coming here from-..Ncbraska after the death of her husband. Dr. Ar- thur 0. Dunn.

Aside from her son and daughter, another daughter, Mrs. P. C. Kopp of Hanaep, spent some time recently with her m pthen Mrs. Dunn has six grandchildren .Tand seven great grandchildren.

Quests a t the party were Mr. and Mrs. William ,Roper,.ir„ Mrs. Geor­gia Hoxby, Mrs. Iva Andrews, Mrs. Llnnie Miller, Mrs. W. Geyer. Mrs, Thomas Robinson, and-- Mis. Marla Wailes.

* V *CVCLE OF LIFE ”

THEME FOB M. l.,A.Second ward L, D. S. church wlD

present tlie following 'program for tho* M. f.- A. union meeting Sunday at 7:30 p, m. a t tlie;chnpel, under tho Utle, "Tlie Cycle of'Lite."

Addresses. Herman Christensen, ‘T h f y te Befort"; Mrs! Hertlia Lawrence, tUnfancy”; Miss Luella Tinsley, "Childhood”; Tom Price, ”,lfouth"; Mrs. Reba, Watson, *’Fa- .tiierhood 'and Motherhoo((."

Mel Carter, "Maturity”; ' Mrs. Kathi-yil Kirkman, “Age and Its Mer mories”; President Claude Brown, "Puture u'fe.’'' Miss Lark T^Ier will sing "Lulla­

by” by Brolims.

OLD PASniONEDhevival

••’Charle. E. S'altsr, Director .

’Old. Hymni «nd Goipfll PreacbintL

KVI-OiOO 1>. M7 Sunil&ya

-^MOllocycIci CooUiuiBk'< Interoa-

tJonal Goapel Orondcut

r r -

WRECKER 'SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT

OOMPy;TB BOOT REnVlL’DINO. ' dear SYSTEM

WIIEEJ.-AXEL-Fn/IME ^ BtRAldllTENINA I

AUTO FAINTING

BARNARD AUTO COCudlllao Twin mill roiiiiM

m otif.Crowned in purple h a t. 'b e a rl^

the club name In gold figures,'was a huge snowman, who'poUi'lxd to. U i ^ T u b ^ S d T d M a y J ^ ^ tho-ohuroh^tudy^4rsrBo3^rEvm ET - a n ^ t a a t ^ h t t m e p t n r a n s wend of the hall. "Welcome' Alumni” was printed In white- cotton on purple banner;, and a Canopy of nh l^ streamers extended from the huge suffer bell a t the center of the' hall to tfie walls.

From a table decorated with whl^e streamers and surrounded by pine trees, punch was served by Miss Doris YOung, Miss Dorothy -young. Miss Peggy Pawe and'Miss Yvonne .McBride.’ Logs glowed from a red-brick fire­place, a n d ' the mantel, decorated wiUi phie boughs, completed tlie dec­orations. -- ■

Muslo.'Was furnished by -Will Wright’s 'orcliestrfi, and the itifir- missloj was In charge of Bill Hailey,

ons were under tlie general llrection of-Pat Day.Grand march was a t 8:30 p. m,

and was-led by club officer3''ond their partners: Dick Lawrence, cjub president, and Miss Miifjorle Lash; Kari Brown, vice-president, and Miss Dorothy Krengel; Harold Merritt, secretary-treasurer, and W(lss.Loreen Fuller, and David Barry, sergeant- at-arms; anjl-Mlss Bohnlo'Brown.

,. ,

Dewiocratic Grotlp ' • To Sew and'Knit

Art all-day sewing and knltthig session for the American Red Cross will be attended by Twin Palls Coun­ty Democratlo Women's Study club Monday, beginning a t 10 a rm . at the iiome of Mrs. R,. E. Commons. A pot-liick luncheon will be served at noon..

Those wishing to knit ore asked to bring 'their \>wn materials and those wislilng instruction in the wprk are asked to come prepared to "take lessons” from a qualified knit­ting teacher. Mrs. T. D ta Connor, Fller...wiii preside a t a brief business sessloh,Taitt a 'short program will be given.

And Installation .Planned by WSCSPreced,lng the, annual installation

of officers of tlie Women’s Society ol Christian Service of the-M eth­odist church next T hursday in the church , parlors, luncheon -WU be served at 1 p. m., each circle ot the society to be In charge o f Its own table. Rev. H. O. McCaUlster, pas­tor, will be In charge of installation.

T he event was planned a t ' an ex­ecutive board meeting -yesterday-' in

presiding.Circle chairmen Include Mrs, 0. C.

Dudley, one; Mrs. Leonard Albee, two; Mrs, 0, 0. JelUson. three; Mrs, Mailcay Pishcf, four; ^Irs. J. E. \Vhite. five;-Mrs. R. A. Parrott, six; Mrs. THae 'Kaiser, seven: Mrs. F. R, Darling, eight; M rs.'J. H. Howard, nine, and Mrs. Howard Holl;“10.

■ *) * ■—

Calendar 'Wayside clUb will meet Tuesday

lit 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Carrie Jones, ■ "

. .Pttrent-Teaclier a s s o c 1 a t io n

council wlU meet Monday at. B p. m, a t the home of M rsrEorl John­son, TSS'^econd avenue north, -

Zeta Pl'chapter, Delpiilan so­ciety. will meet Monday' at 2'p, m. at th e Farmers' Auto Insurance company a»dltoriUm.

¥Jo in t Installation will tic held

Wednesday, Jan. ’I, a t 8 p, m, a t the Mountain Bock -Grange, four miles, south ond one mile east of

- eas't Main. Those participating are * asked to bjing sandwiches or cake.

« ¥' ‘ Council of Social Agencies, com­prised of representatives "Trom Kimberly, Hansen. Bock Creek,

' Excelsior and Pleasant 'Valley dis­tricts wUl hold itsregulor quarter-

'ly meeting and annual election of officers Monday at 8 p. m, a t Uie agriculture building in Kligifrly,...

'^W elfare- Ropresentatlve&of-all churches are request^ to meet Monday at 2 p: m. a t Qie Idaho Power com­pany' auditorium to- complete

.plans,for the union. w6lfare work which will begin next we«k. •

I( is important that-complete, representation be in' attendance, according to those In charge.

Guest Day4or ', Mee M. Gibte

■ Mission Cj^cle' Mrs,--Loyai PerfV wlil'^be'gucst. speaker,at rf meollng of the Alice M, aibW 'clrole of Uie Baptist church next Tuesday afterpoon.• Guest day will bo observed, and a 1:30 p;' m. desser t iunclieoh will be served- at the' home of Mrs. Harold Lackey, with Mrs. Edward Skinner as. hostess chairman, assisted-by Mra. Fay Holloway’and Mrs, Gorth Rcld. ,

Mrs.>Perry will present- a review of "Keys of tho Klngdom^^-by. A. J. Cronta. ^

BPfft^'Lo’bby’’'' For 'Democrac.y

'^obbyUig for Democracy” will be' the subject of a panel discussion at tlie dinner meeting of' the Business and Professional Women’s , club Monday at 0:30 p. m. a t tho Pork hotel, ‘ . . .

I t is in line with the, national .themo for- tlie year, '“Strengthen Democracy for Defepse,” and will bo In charge of Miss M, Izetta, McCoy,' chahman of -tlic legislative com-, mittee. •~'

Taking part In tho discussion vylll be Miss Elzlna Ray; Mrs. Betty Hall, -Miss-Berthar- Tlce7'M rs;“ Catheflhp Potter, Mrs.- Emma -Ciouchek and Miss McCoy.

.Music will bo under tlie direction of Mrs. iJfle Rlherd Hinton, music chah-man. Sho ' will :iead the com­munity shigipg, accompanied by Mrs. Margaret Peck. _.

V 41 ¥LUCKY TWELVE CELEBilATEg NEW YEAR

Lucky Ts'eivtf club members and their husbands attended a . New Year's eve.party a t the.home of Mr. and Mrs, J, D. Staats^bcglftnlng with a no-host dinner, followed by pi­nochle. ' - ■

Mr. and'Mrs, Gall Kllllnger were guests, prizes went to Roy fmalley

. Ten. representatives of the'-Epworth.'league,'Methodiat': cliurch, Twin' Falls, attended a banquet arid social;;last-jjve- ; niijB, '.which opened the..annuai. sub-di$J;ricfc-mid,-winter I'eagi^e'iii^itute, Jan.'2 and.8 .~ Other-repreaentiatives at the event,-held at.!;the Methodist churdh at Buhl, iwere from Filer, Buhli.CaBtlefordi Murtaggh.i Hansen, Kimberly-and;-Rupert, .. . — -----

PaWotlc theme pf- the dinner blended .vflth' a . theme of- Epworth league 'colors, red and white, and tlie table,: which formed a large "V", was decoratjed with-red, white an^ blUo streamers, otid llgt>ted2.ci)ndles ot those three colors fo'rmed center­pieces. Individual place-cafds were clover candles made from' tiny candles,'gum drops, and life savers>At-the-headl-of^tfie-hallJWcre -two ceilpphmie-wrappcd electric candles, each ncaifly-slx 'fejt tall. .,

^ At Gurat Table• At th e head of tho-tablo were scat-!

ed David Smith; prcsldimt ol the sUb-dlstrlct cabinet: bali),'Hobson, host president of the Buhl .league;Rev. W. H. Hertiog,. district super- intendent) Rev. O. O. Hannan, Buhl host-pastor; Mrs,.Hatman, and Cecil,Hannan, a'vice-president of the sub­district cabhict. '

6 ible t r u t h- A Gospel Pro^rjim

K T F I-,~3 :45 .P . M. MON., WED., FRI.

Under Direction Royal V, Starr

Statement of CdTldition of

FIDELITY NATIONAL MNK()f t w in f a ;l l s

Twin Falls, Idaho

At Close of Business ieccm ber 31, 1941

RESOURCESLoans and Discounts ....................... .........Federal Reserve Bank Stock.........................Bank Buildhigs, Furniture and Fixtures.. li. S. and Municipal bonds

and warrants ......;....$ 388,689.97Listed B onds..... ............. 21,001.00,Cash and duo from banks, 1,171,704,66

?1,115,252.68 6,450.00

61300.00

. . .

LIABILITIES;Capital Stock ...........,.... ............. ..........Surplus, Profits and lleaefvSB..............Unearned Interest Collected... ;..-...........

tDlvIdeiul Chocks OutntnndinB:...............Donpsits ............. ...................... .............

■ 1,576,395.63_________ '>*• .

’ $2,759,892.21

? 1^0 ,000.00 10'7,535.77'

2,529.49. 3 ,9 9 0 ,0 0

2,495,932195

' . ?2,769.892.21

Member of Fcdornl Deposit Inaurft(ico Coi'pornilon

to Mrs. Jack -Winkler.The club voted a JSvContrlbutlon to

tho American Red Cross, Tlie group wUl meet Jan. 15 at. the homo ol Mrs, Huffman. .J-'

V '* Hi SOUTHEltN DINfJEIt SERVED TO RELATIVES ■

Southern dlslies were sej-ved at a family reunion dinner a t the home of Rev, and Mrs. Mackey J . Brown a t tho Sims apartments yesterdoy. Guests were' Mrs^ Walter Swope, Clyde, Swope and Earl Swope, all ol Gooding; Mrs. d ia rie s Swope, Twin Palls; Rev. and Mrs.. W. T .‘ Ann. strong and son.'Bllly, Osage,' dklo, and Mrs,-Willard E.. Pohner. and daughter, Sherry ■ Anne. Seattle.

”Sea Gardens,” Cook, was a piano solo 'b y Bob Nellsen, Twhi.'-Falls, and was followed-Sy a. controlto, solo, ‘T h e Response,” Mary Helen Brown, sung, by Miss. Barbara Em'- crion, Kimberly, “The-Church Was Still., Pull .df Hymns”, w'ds a' reading by Miss Rose,-Mary-Rees, Murtaugh, arid preceded two numbers by a clar­inet quartet from the Hans'ep group. Meillbors-of the Ijuurtet were Hor­ace’ Coulter,' Miss Marjorie-Rijmbo, Francis Sharp and Miss Leana Sharp, 'who played . "The . Lord' Prayer,” iind 'IPraise Yo tho Lordof'Hbsts."-7p ----------------—-----^jMlss Bernlcs Guiick, Filer, sang as soprano sfllo3 '‘’0 pen the.Gate.iof the Temple,”, Mrs. .Joseph Knopp, and , "Intermezzo.” "Concerto ■ in B Flat Minor” was a piano.solo by Miss Dorothy Brown, Castleford,

Dalo Hobson welcbiiied guests to the institute and t])e response was by Smith'. Tjiks were given by Rev. Hannan, who also led group singinj, and Rev. Hertzog, who sjxike on the plrposes ot the meeting;'The grace wos given by Rev. Stanley D. Tref. rep, Klmbetly, and. jjiano accompa- nhnents were by Miss Maxine Beoth, ’Twin Palls, and Miss Brown. A rec­reation and fellowship houtjfollowedtViq hnnqiTPf ____ _______ _

‘ Saturday Session'T o d ay s sessldn began, a t 8:30 a.

m, w ith ' a . service of worslilp, in charge o f tho Rupert league reprc-* sentatives. Jnstltuters attended four class periods durUig ,the d a y ^ d at 2:30 p. m, was,the cIo.^jlS\session of the con«ent(pn and ffie election' of officers. Rev. Haniian also gave a message a t m at Ume.' ,

Classes were Instructed by Rev. J. H. .Counter,' Hansen, wlip 'taught a class on the Bible; Rev, A. B. Par- rett, (Rupert, who. spoke on 'evangel­ism; Rev. W. H. Hertzog dealt with the International understanding, and R?v. T . M. Mltjmer taught,on how to conduct a service of w o r^ p and discussion.

Af D}imer-;^^rty ;JE R O W ,. Jan. 3 (Bpeci^)r--En- .

gagcmenfc^of Miss-,Goldie '-Heath,. : teacher at' Wasiilngtoh elementary;.' schdol,' to Delmont ,tJ.. Newman,-‘son gf-Mr. find,lOa. ,T,' U. Newman, was'., told-last-weck-atriHChrlstmas'day - dinner party arranged'.for the cou- : plo'at.'the-horae’^t'Mr. Newmtu^’s parents, JeromS. -. . ,■ ' i

.Wedding date for-the’couple wos " not told.'. - - ■ - . '

Ppr tlio paSt-twp years; MlSs Heath : has been teaching a t Wishlngton school, iahd prior.'to .comtag. to . J e r - . ome was a . teacher a t Os'gopd. .She .- Is a gfaduate ol the-*Anun6n high school; Id^o-Falls, and'of the n n l- ' versity of' Idaho, southern branch, - Pocatello: .. ■; '■ , .

M r. Nuiman.was groduat^ from , the Jerome hlgli school, the. L. D. S. business college. Salt Lake City, and attended. Link’s busbiess- college', . Bolsm Ho was formerly.employed in the offices .of ex-county- treasurer, - Earl F, Kennedy,' after-^liwlng r e - . turhed-from, a mission hi Gennany and' Switzerland. He' recently re­turned Ivora Washington,. D. 0;, where ho had accepted a.clvil serv­ice position, He i;j waiting to- be call­ed Into military service now. ‘

. Both. Miss-Heath and Mr.-Newman ' have taken ocUve parts In church ■wprtTTBtdTia'vOeen' leaders In M. . <!. A, work. '

MIm Heath Is tile daughter o ^ & . affd M™' Orover Heath of Idaho ■ ?alls. :

■Present at. t h e ‘dinner .were-Mr. • and Mrs, Henry E. Giles, Thom as,. Ne,wman, Mr. and Mrs. Harold D!l- : \Vorth, Corey, and Mr. and Mrs. T.- . U. .Newman, parenits of WO". New- ': man. - - > ' .

V If .- -The population pt Louisiana'. liiU creased from 2,101,503 In 1930 to 2,- 355,821 In 1040.

'The T im e Den"

But You’ll Never Know K If You Insulate With ATTIC‘WOOL

Buy U. is. Dpfensc Stamps and lBoihdd

.'V

"Tho North- Winds ShaU Blow and ‘ ' We .Will Httve Show” . . . but you'll bs ; .7 ,'

snug and warm if yoii inanlato with ' •

Atjic W90I ‘N o w , You’ll save money.’ .

on fuel bills too.

Page 4: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

IDAHO EVENING TIMES. TWIN* FALLS; IDAHO.; • tv

Tbu: 1 W lTf C i r r l r t .D n lU d J » W / i M c U l l o m roU NBA F w tu r t B e r r l f

'' S ix P m • Wiek » t J 80 B«»d«J W a t, TwJd F»JU. lA bo , b j th*; T IU E 3 .N E W S P U D U S U IN O .C O M P A N Y

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Tbreg m o n th s S b n o n tb i ^

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BY MAIL-rAYABLE IN ADVANCEWllhln WihoMlEUtopouDU, Nmidii ■O ot m on th ■ - . - . '. . .

’ Threo m o n th s * - - -........................... .............. ' ' --------61x in o n th i - ■ . .............-

O m 7 « » r _______________0 u li ld « .8 ts t« o f IdAboi

. Ona jn o n th — ,--------,—Tbr«» m o n th s .............. ..

• 51i nonthi O n i- |re « r ■ ■ i - - , . - ; '—- ....

^$2.S0«M.60

11 66|8?5^$600

All no tlccs ^ u l r e d bjr law or by o rdur o f c o u r t o f eooipeteat Ju r iid Ic t|o a to b* pob ‘■..................... ' ■ th is paper p u n u a n l lo S w tlo i

1099 Seiiion 'Law s of Idaho.Jbhed w « k ly w ill Im pub llahc j In Iho Thoradoy laaua .o f th b paper p u n i ia n l to S w tlon 58-108 L C. A . lo se , aa sdd«d tt)«reta*by C h o p te r 1&4.

■ w

NA TIONAL JIE P R E S E N T A T IV E S . ^ W E ST -JIO L L IpA V CO.. INC. u n ia T ow tr, 220 liu ih S trev t. S a n F rau c lico . Calif.

In 'M a je s ty , i n J u ^ i c e a n d i u P e a c e, _ Winston Churchill has now brought into.the very Mghest circles the discussiori of what are to be the rela- fiong between. the British Enjpire and the United 'States a fte r this war shall have^een won.

The discussion has been going on for many moiiths, and every kind of proposal has, been made from that of a simple military al iance to that of a federal union of the two countries such as to Include a-common cur­rency, a complete free trade area, and a #rtual,com-

’ mon government except in purely domefstic affaira. nnm^Sr^n! ^ n e la e t m a t Japan’s rnad act h as 'Ju t America

: .squarely in the War has pven 'a touch of reality to this discussion— it has removed it from a sphere in which

■ it seemed largely theoretical to one in which it is an , .urgent problem requiring solutionA

" The grim necessities of w ar are going fo bring cer­tain, joint activities, never before undertaken'. The ■ Urijted.States Jias been steadity drawing closer to

. Canada, even before we plunged'into tffe war, and . even .now certain tariff barriers are being broken

down which'i^ears of peaceful rffort could not elimi­nate. — . ' .: That pedtie iiiuaL be urbanized-atteT^iiij' war 'iir

' such a way as to be a workmg system and not.a pious . hope, is something on which every citizen of the free

countries now in the. war will agree. There are many plans for such a system, and which will emerge after

’ the w ar i t is hot possible to judge., Churchill’s phrase was a m^re hint and suggestion l*ath6t than a p when,he said that the British and

. American peop 6 will “for, their own safety and the • gbod of all, walk together in m ajesty,in justice, and in

peace." ,■ . •That does not implyvby'any means, they ihey will

■ walk alone. There are other partners in this war, Russia,rand China, the Netherlands, Norway, and a

, „do?en .others. Certainly it is desirable that all walk • together, fo r it is only if all the.peoples of ihe work a c t u a l by good-will and a love of freedom walk to-

Tgethe/th^t there can.be justice and peace.Every thought given to th is fu tu re ,is a valuable

' tho,iight, fo r yfhile all energy and action m.ust now be .Voted tO'winning the.wai’ so tha t the future may be,

ribroughtirito being, J t is also necessary to have some "idea, (and the more good ideas thp better) of what that ;.:future is to be. • ■ •

P O T ^

W ITli •'

The liSentleinan in " ’ the Third Row

IJLProvini;How

^ToughlsLifeof ,A Soothsayer «

Twelve months Is a long tim e ago. U-you measure.^ it In terms of the amazing world' events th a t .. have piled up on us all since Jan . 1, ISM. -■ ,

Which la. we suppose, hy way ol •allCl S3 WB Jearleaaly'call- to y our attchtlon the Pot .Shota 1041 Prog­nostication Chart, printed with our predictions Just, one year ago y&- terday. •

We'll havii you note, however, that Wij’re' bringing our boners as well as our successtul forecasts out Into the -open. That’s more than other prophets db. .

Monday we’ll give you’ our 1042

j C■ . 'S i tu r d o J . J w n w T SV lMa^^ -

• S E R ftA L -S T O R y t

V , C A R O I ,6Y A D E L A I D E H A Z E L T I N E . .

;i ' t l . ' - ' ';"p- •

T J ID s V Q R V i 'V M t e r m s o f Irew filfo rlio rn ’B ^111 sp e « lM a x Ih n t h i s s e c r e l n r y C o r j I . undf trtt^

: J , C ro c o d ile T e a r sThe Spanish Falangist newspaper. Arriba pi'aises

. .. Japan, states.that it could scarcely any longer tolerate■ American opposition and interference, and hopes that■ heathen nation triumphs over the Christian 'Unitfed

' States. - ■V. Naturally one finds it difficult to reconcile this with „'th;e Christian professions of the Spanish fascists, and ica'uses one to wonder if in their case political belief . has not outweighed tha religious. 'While hoping for the : downfall o f the United States, Ai'riba weep'S a croco- ‘dile tear o r two in hoping fo r the presem tion of

. Manila “.for Christianity’ as “a fragment of the ■)jeart of Spain.” . . • .

, ■ Spain’s colonial administration in the Philippines apparently left something to be desired, since thou­sands of Philippine patriots fought grimly tol)e de-

. liyered therefrom. Under U. S, rule, thousands of Filipinos have been converted to Christianity, and if a Shinto shrine ever replaces the Catholic cathedral

.: in Manila, we hope Arriba has plenty of crocodile ; tears left to shed., '

V o l iu n in o u s U n d e r s ta n d in gEach of 13 Latin American countries is to receive

a collection of 5,192 books selectied by the Library of Congress. T hat many carefully chosen Boeics, the lib- ra iy believes, \i[ill give their readers, some .'under­standing of economics, science, literatu'i^, a rt and life in the United States.

Well,, i t aught to do that, and the venture seems praiseworthy enough. But more understanding of the

' people 6f the United States w ill be spread' through Jjatm Anuerica and the world by our conduct of the wac ,thaili,by any other means available at present. By

■.: :6howiif»g|.th , ability, the stamina, and tho charactcr ■ '(to wiiUhvdvigh, we sliall be pyesentin^ the world with

an object-'Ifess^n, more graphic a t this moment than' I r,-..*' . f ' I ’ ... , (,

If ,j/ou w ant to get a rise out of a real American, piny tho Stor-Spaiigled Banner.

V ■ . •- ', ' ----- — ■ ,:fiomeone you kn^W,doesn’t desorvo, It.; Being sorry foi* ypuj'solf ,i8 wasting sympatliy on

... ................................................... ,

I

which Sou can fill out your own predictions, file ’em awlly for 12 months—and th in dig 'em ouf to find what kind of a soothaayeiT you were. . ,

As lor the 1941 chart of 12 months .ago, have a look: , »■

..^AT-HOME 1, America stay out of actual

Tar? Wo 'repUed: “No, well bo In' o naval war with Japan." We'scored.

2. Will defense spending bring business boom? We said: '.'yes. but to farm communities .the boom will be only moderate." '\lvc scored again,

3. w ill Billy Conn boat Joe Louis? Said wo; “No, And It’ll 'g o six rounds.’’ We-5cor«d-on the no; miss, ed by seven’ rounds oh tho distance. —4—WlU-the-jYankees-come-baek^- Oplned we; "No." ^adly, we admit as of 3«n.. 3,'11)42 we were all wet,

5. Will Idaho have a sales tax? Forecast we: "Yes, wo fear." Wo lose on that one.' r

6. Will Madame Perkins be ^ c - retary of labor? We said: "No.’’'Wo should have been rlght^but weren’t.

1041—ABROAD J . Will Hitler try to Invade,

land? We. forecast; ’’yes." T^ong, glad to say.

.3. Will any major waning power bo knocked out? Said we broshly on Jan: 3,'1041: "No.",On this query we took .our worst beating—tho list of knocked-out powet!„.l3 n yard long,

3. Will Hitler divorce, Stalin? We said;. No." JVe’re a lousy prophet, thank goodnes's.

4. Will the Greeks keep on lick­ing the Italians? Sold wo: "No, be­cause the Ita f^ns will bo reinforced by Ocrmahs much to Mussolini’s domestic disrepute.’’ Hit ■that on the noggin.

5. Will England. giTO. stronger with American, help? We asserted: “Yes.” We scored.

6. Will Europe starve If America Aoosn’t supply food? We saldT” No." We were right, so for.

, There It Is.nDld you do any bet­ter? * ,

, WORDS OF WISDOM -Certain bossy folk In these parts

NnlU be Interfstel In vhat tlje Back Shop Oracle told v i this momlng; The only piys who , can strln* people alone, be opined, are those .who n n poppet shem.

■' I •OXIB BULLETIN UbAItP

Casllda Steelsmlth, ^urIeyTTn<l assorted others—Pot Sliols no' long­er needs lists of new pnpples. W e’re liow distributing our memberslilp cords f o r The Royal Order of Changers of Little'White Squares on dlreclT application o t' the papples Involved.

YOU’LL FIND TIIESE-INEV Epy TOWN

There’» a lady In our town. •Bbe la known lo r miles around; She's hid twenty operotfbnsK Each more serious thon the last.. She’s Ihe eehler of attraction— She derives r r ta t jialUfactlon From Ihe fact that the has suf­

fered „ And she wants t|ie world to know.

She knows evwy nurse ond doctor^ From here to New iioulh Proctor,- She's had everytlilni removed

.T h a t a doctor could let loose.I t ’s tho marvel of the jfes •And a problem for Ihe nages,That slie’s allvo to lell Ihe story— So she tells It o’er anil'o’er.

. -M oy N. B.

S0M EI10DY,^?6 FEAR, WASJ U S '^ - -----------

Dear Mister Thr You guys on the Evetlmes are

certainly helpful. As witness, f ’rin - Btance, your market pnRo Friday. Nice.big head sold “Salt Lake M in­ing Stocks." And that was oil—Just the hcttdllne, quototlons. Next thing I saw was .London bar silver, which doMn’f-tell mo muph about, the few (hares of mlnbig stocks happen to own; ,

A hlg help. Pots. Hiank the boys for me, will yo? ^-liyeiot Blocks

• * .

W isecr^cof The Weelf^

The r,ot Shols Offlt/Hoy slip­ped III lo tell Dontldenllally th a t *11 work u n i Ino play mskas

. J« ck -b g t wimt fun W Hr ,

FAMOlIk LABt S.INE ’ ’___•*. . . Vou cali't buy a new eM

V now, Horace—riow'aboiil my ^ur

TIIK nUNTI-KMAN IN TilD TlllllU ROW

lortr-o tf guru uf Iliirtr-

drew

o U B r^ 'ew V lo V eJ,'J" h .B - IY 1 n A w h eth er o r not hl» p lA 7 bo7 ion A n d r fs ra n n ln jr tb e b o sln c ss

■,«prdlh«' l o ' h l l . f f l t H e r t T P l le j r ' .*> er» lco t o Ih o j^sopje.** p a t 0 ^ 1,

3 w h o bos* lo ved A n dy_^ since f I r l - ' fcood, ia a d if fle a lt spp<« U t r b esrt • In k s w h e n A n d y , c n r r e n t ly iBir. Totred w it h s le s k X lB d a J a liso , tn rn s m n nh irem eBt « T c r to nn«

'■ cntpQ loiu Sir* I le r r lc k * ^ b o ie o n lr 'ld en tm to m n ke « io n e 7 . U er- t le k 'b la m e s em ploye 0111 lU eee fo r. tho to y lo n d e le T n to r •ecW enJ th a t In jo re n n ew sb o y N ic k y . H«r* r ic k n l io ’ta k es , c re d it f o r ca ih ■djDstmflBtn w ad e tQ eastom ers b y C a ro l w ith o u t h is k n o w lcd se , t»~BB e ffo rt to s a r e th e store's n p n fa t lo n . A t th e a o n u a lv sto re

Ea r l y A n d y W e s e s C a r o U I n d l e a i t s a I s ^ t b r m i g h w i t h U n d o . N ex t

• d h y C ttVdl f ln d i i t h e w i l l ' s e n v e lo p I n t h e v a u l t , b n t t h e w i l l I s « o b b . U e r r l e k t h e n f t r e s h e # l o r w r i l l n * a r e t i r e m e n t e h c c l c ' f o r a a e n j p l o y e h e h a s d l s n l s i i e ^ n U h o n s h a s& la ■ b e w a s o n l y fo lf e w ln f if t h e D e a r* b o ^ p o ir e y v n e ^ u m t n a r t o th e i i to M f o r a f l i e s h e h a s f o r f f o l t e o i ■ h e o v e r h e a r s A n d y t e l l l n s l l c r - r l i k h e k n o w v t h e t m t h a b o u t t h e e l e v a t o r a e e l d e n t a n d (h e a d jo s tm lc n t s C a r o l h a s m a d £ . l l e r r l e k t h e i i s i i y s h e k n o w s th e w h c r c a b o u t a o t * th e w i l l , t r i e s to b l a c k m a i l A n d y i n t o l e f t l n v h im n m t h e s t o r e a n d f o n r e t t l n i r H i te r m * . A t id y a s k a lO r t l m e i C a ro l f e a r s h e I n t e n d s t o a f f r e e t o th e p r o j o s l t l t f t t .

SEARCH A T .N M irC

\ . l CHAPTER 3OT ,rjnHE;ioct tha t'M r. Herrick had

told Aridy t t e will wa? still In' <wist(iice gave Carol new hopoT Maybe she could find It. Ci'

Provided Andy didn't le t Mr, Herrick,destroy it flr'stl

She would have until Saturdoy /morning. She wa.a reasonably

■But wliure' woqfiT

closlnsr bell Tang the was crouched b eW d a UtHrused case ob -tho sixth floor. She had taken pains ,(p;:phopse..Me ,V(tierq ..thtte.^^ lio vrfl^ow s' to be:dosed n ^ a o Jights to ' b s 'tum id oft.

td ik c endless minutes ‘ she heard th e last salesperaoft- go dowD & e stato ' and d u e d to k ra lg h ten up. ' ,’ ‘T h e . nlghtr watchman "was her

only w o rry now. He made his rounds io h the Jiour. S h e knew his schedule. I t would b e lalily s lm p ln -to .^ o id him l i she'kept tab on h e r wrist watch.

Her p lan wag well -in mind. When M r. Herrick found "tlio will In the v au lt he^woiil’d have car­ried It t o hla'Hjfflto on the second iloor. T here ho would/h^ve read Hi realized its possliilUtles M d'hld- den.J It. somewhere neutral and safe., ,NQt ln,^ls,,cvw 0®ce.. . l^ s t would p ro b a b ly ^ 'lh e la st place she w ould look. , y ’ .

^ A H O I j had- remeifil b r ln ^ a flashlight and

now. Sho would seari* 'lU l tlio gijnernl.'.dfflco-fUea 'flrat Then the small safes w^ere various^ m o ld s wore k ep t. She w o id p ry into the d e s k of ' Mr.: fjerrick’s as. soclates o n , the ' th^ ry he might have p lan ted themm hg wnillH hft. blnmeless U the

she look? W here, in a store like Dearborn’s, would a man hfde a wilU

In nnr end ’she dtcided shd would have to search the store at night. It was her only_chance.

'And Tier thne was limited. Once Andy save an afflrjnaUvo answer and signed the contract, tho will would be burned. Both

^Mr. Herrick and Andy would sCe to that.

She must find It before It was , destroyed. She must find i t to- niehtiffv ~

No ofic w oinfflhink it odd that L the should come to the store to

make a late purchase nor^woiiid they bother to notice th a t she didn’t go .put with the last shop­pers. She could hide on an upper floor,.make her scarch and then let herseU out a side door.

It was th a t easy, When tho

- T h an k heavens! He hadn't seen her; Stie w as safe i^gifinl ,

S h e walteiil un til he wils gonsV * j4 h e Bext floor before she risked ihovinig, deciding iioti to be caria^ less, another tline.

■The, Alia contained no d e w . W here now?

M r, Herrick’s offlco w as-about the only, clwnce l e f t It was Im­probable th a t he would hiije thn will th e re b u t l i wasn't Impossl- ilo, . . a e ’d leave no placo'-tm- searched. ... *■

+ 4. - .* • • . >]jp W M H IR X V . Hail hour be-

.1 Ipw^,tho watchmaB started his n o x tt iu n d . Cautiously, she m ade her ,wny to th e second floor to M f. H errick’s office, She would s ta r t with h is desk*

Tlie draw ers .wore, flUcd with re­ports, expense, records and th o ’ usual pils?cUniiy o f imy,plBco. man. Extra pencils,’’a" box W -cigars, some paper clips, a noto i;ud.'''Shb fingered them aU, watching fo r ' the fidded w hito p aper that would be the-.will..

T h e n shlT checked his .personal flies. '

H av ing ’Iread storira. whe^e vaiuaiile papers w ere concealed in the* b a c k 'd pictures on the w all, she b e g an to. reipove'^aosoiJpok- ing f o r evidence o f tampertog.

S h e ':will w e re discovered.

Carol w ent about her task me- th'odicaUy.

She Was iii tho'gerieral’ ofilcesi' thun^stog through tho fljes_whcn she lie a rd the watchman’s stops, She b ad been too ehgrossed in her work to remember the thne.

Panicky, she slipped behind the tall m e ta l case and flattened her­self again st It, then heard th e mon enter t h e room, sow th i beam ol his flash as hp surveyed th e emp­ty desks. ShB held h c r 'ire a th . If She w e re caught, she'd be In reaI-^oublor-(;Evcn-tho flnding of the w ill could not explain thisi

I h e footsteps approached h«r hldhig p lace, healtated. She vias too frightened to think. She could only fee l fear inching down her spine, freezing her. J

Then, ttiraculuusly, the feet turned 'backl

hands w h m she‘heard the noise. It w as o n l ^ rustle, a stir of air. But i t was foreign to.the silence of th ^ quiet store..C a ro l sti£tened,.^ot daring,,t(j^

iiiov,e to hang the picture back in its p lace, finally managed to lean over an d push th e button <m h e r flashlight to extinguish its beam.

W aiting she could hear the sec­onds tick ing on h e r wrist watch, •feel t h e rasp of breath as. it to re up an d ^ o w n her throat.. Her lungs W m e d to swell an d burst.

The movement came again, aearer-th ls tim e. It-was no long­er a swish. I t w as tho sound of leather treading o n wood. It w as stealthy feet. .

A hand.s.lid along the Wall, feel­ing' fo r the switch.

Then-hlihding ligh t IJooded th e ' oflU$/

• She w as caught!(To Bo Concluded)-...... ^

A t t]he^0]hll]L]^ches• ■- M ORNING D E V 0 T I0 N A L 3

Tho ratllo le rv lcca th la n e x t week* at 7:80 ft. m. on M onday, W ed n cad n y , and Krlday roornlnga. w ill be s W e n 'b y C. W , Severn, m in is te r o f tho U ennoIiiU chu rch of Tw in V illa . , j .

:u O F T H E A S C E N S IO N (EpU copaf?

Hev. B. L eslie llo lls , v lcn r Second S unday a f te r C hrlslm oe.8 a . IP* Holy c o m m u n io n ' 10 a . m . Church

•chool. 11U6 m . H oly com m u,nlon‘ and acrnion. 6 :5 0 -p. m . Young people '# fiUow- eh lp . Tuciilay, F c a a t o f tho E p iphany .-lO iM a. m . H o ly -co m m u n io n . 8 p . m . V eiliy m eetlnff. T huraday , 2 :80 p. m . A fternooir Guild a t the hom o o f Mr«. T . M". lUnicrl- lo n j 8 p. m. C o n firm a tio n Inalruqticip': 8 p. ro. Even,lnff'ffuUd a t th e hom o of 'JUlu Alice " • ’' ’ v

■fC. * c i i r i i f iT iA N6:46 t . ni. B I ^ 'e c h o o l , F ranH W . Slock,

c e n e ra l lu n e rln te n d e n t. 10U& a . m. Morn*. Inff w orahtp ; m e d ita tio n ) " A t th e M/ui''

. te c V T able" a n d com m union, fo r a ll dU’ clples o f C h rlits '.M la a F r rn W h ltic l >1111 s in g *7Iow liOircly A re T hy D w e llin B lj ' (he cpna to t’s N ew .Y eur. m r^aase .w .ill b e . 911 th e them e "God a n d . O u r Live* fo r 10^2." 8:80 p. m. C h rU tia n ^ :n ilcavor jrroup meet l[^((•. 7 ilQ p. P o p u la r ev an ao lts tlo aerv* ice : c o n g re sa tlo n s l lin g ln tr w ith orchci>tra acco m p in im en t; J a m e a H eynolds, accoM» panied by M n .. O . P . D u vall, w ill alnV, “ The Lord It M y . S h epherd" by Itlahors "W h a t th e E a r th ly M fe o f C hrlu t Mean# to M e" w ill be th o - th e m e fo r th e serm on, M onday 7 iS 0 jj . m . O fflcem ' a n d te n c h m m eeU ne and e tu d y cloaa a t th e p trao iiM e. O rchM tra r e h e iw o l a t 7:30 Tucailay. C M r rc h e a r ta l ’ T h u n d a y a t 7 :80 P. Tho W om en'a M laalonary Society w ill m ee t a t 2 tS() Thuw day a f te rn o a n , ‘

ST . E D W A n D ‘8 C A IU O L IC< F a th p r 'H . E . 'H c l tm a n , p a a to r-

- F a th e r 'lU r r y A ckerm an , annlalant Sunday maARce a t 8 and 10 a ..m . E vunlns

devotionn 8 u t id a y -a t *7 !30 p . m , in honor" o f O u r M other o f I ’c rp c tu a l H elp . W eek­day ntaasce o t 8 a . m . C onfnuiinn i w ill l>e heard S a tu rday e v e n in sa a n d th e e v o of holy day and f l r a t F riilaya o f tho m onth i, 7 :30 a n d 8:S0 p . ni< In fo rm a tio n rru(iic.i fo r non*Catliollca T u tsd n y a n d F r id a y 'a t 7:30 p. m.. Sick c n lls atten iicd d ay o r nltfht.

- . F in S T D A PTISTRoy K. H a rn e tt , p a s to r '

Ot<S a . m.. c h u rc h ic h o o l; M n . Helen R u rk h a rt. tfenernl au n e rin ten d eu f. t l a, m .. w orsh ip] p a a to r a acrm on ■ubjcct. “ How New Ih a N e w Y eor, and WKnt Can Wo Do AVout I tT " 6:16 p. m ., R a p tlit Yoim g People’# u n io n . 6:80 p. m .. Ju n io r hii^RTTJaptist Y oun if Peoplo 'a un ion . 7:30 p , m ., com m union aerv loe: s d npartu re from 'the i ukual cua tom of h o ld in r th e com ’' m unlon aervlce o n iSunday m o rn in g ; p a i- to r’a com m union m etllta tion , "A n d They W en t ou t, , . W edneeday; .7 :80 p, m idw eek lervicfi, '

PJR 8 T P R E fiH Y lE R IA Nfl. L . C la rk , f a i t o r

10 a . m .r S unday achool; U M. I la ll . lU* perin tenden^. 11 a . n t.., m orn ln ir w b rah lp t aerm on, “ The N ew , Y e a r " ; o rg a n num ber* by M r*, J . A. D ru e r t , “ Jo y to th e W orld ,’* H a n d e l: “ Serioao,” I’a rk h u ra t ; “ Dedica* lio n Fm IIvbI," S l u l t i j apeclal ch o ir n u m ­ber, C. .W. A)l>e>ttp»^. d irec to r. 6 :30 p. m.. C h rlitlA i E n d eev o r hour} , counaelora, M r.'a n d M n r G era ld W allace, MUa D orothy C all. _ ;

IM lfA N llE L K V A N G ELIC A L / X U T H E R A N

F o u rn i a ^ n u e a n d ircom l a t r c e t 'e a s t M artin H . Z aue l, m ln la tc r '

i’ 10 a / i n . , Humlay achool u n d e r d lrettU iit o f l^ v a rU W ernei'. 11 n. m ., d iv in e wor«

>Yith le rm oh ' b y the p aa ln r. 2 p. ri.» . t i j^ r a n , hour* w ith Dr. W a lle r M aler

I the ae rm u n . ZtXO p. m . , 'th e an'

V UNITED DRETIIREM m CHRIST T h ird a v e n u e and T h ird 'a trce t eaiv^^’

' •* M e ry l N em nlch, p a a to r- ; i( l a . m . S u n d a y , tcMool. k ' A . R e ln b o lV

lu p e r in te n d c n t . 11 a . m. M ornintf w o n h ip . ^ p . . m . E ven ing aervicei p ra ia a , and p. m . p r a y e r . K p . m . Preachlnar service; •Wedneaday «?vcnlng proyer m eeting a t 7^10

W . M . A. \v ill meet a t th e hom e of 9 . llu tk ln a , SOB B lu e 'L a k e a on

T hursday a f te rn o o n .

: . \ A M E R IC A N LUTHERAN ThiVd l t r e « t and Thlr^l avenue no rth

■ E . W. KfloUn, pasto r 10 m . • Sunday ichool, U c t . I I , 0 .

Thom paon, H uperln tcndent. 11 a . m . D ivine worship ^ v l t h acrm on b y - th a p a s to r for tho f i r a t S u n d a y , o f t ^ new y i;a r. W or-

A dventla t church, thla S u n d a y . A n-

meeUng n e x t 6 ua«

votera ' m M ttn s w ill b« held In the eleclltm « f o fficc ra w ill ttike p ln c \

I r ^ h l a m e e l ln f . 'T l i f r e w ill he no evening serv ice a t the c h i i r c h . 'T h e ImniAiHiel a»* r le ty w ill w m I W e«lnniday < v eh in g . The ijadi^a! Aid will m e e t l l i t i r id a y a fte rnoon a t 2. W «Uher U aguer* w ill i t io ^ T hursday wvaulnu a t 9, T he ch lld tei^ 'a c ln u tu w ill b« reaum id S a tu rd a y a fte rnoon , a t 2.

I .. I), fi. H RCONI) W A Itll J , V. F l^ ilriokaon , HI*h«*p

I i9 0 a , ni.yPfle«lh«K)il m ei'd iig . lOiSO a> nu''PICWA>K«lwHil. UiJIO R. m . F » rI Diiy

m . 71SO |». m . M . r, ‘ it. “ 'ITie C ycle

I la k e p a r t , n>t<i ■yolM.of llfet all

ifrvlcm, Ing. aul

. . iSO |». m . M,. r, A. CtiMjoInt m eet uliJect, “ 'ITie C y ele o f I .Ife ,’* In w h k h

‘Igh t niem hert «(ltl la k e p a r i , ren ren en l’ ....... . ‘ ‘ .......... apr;

eU l niUHlrat Jn y H rra i-h rr ^vjllp reaen i o iyaateeU etlvM a <(«M 7 U liZH.

•nip.jT.................. - ......... . _________________.^<^‘W or«hlp a t Je ro m e thla S u n d a y . An' V i f l 'c o n g re g a t io n a l d n > 4 a n . 1 1 , .a t 2 p.

F IR S T C l I U K C n O P T H E B B E T n R E f i ITilrd a v e n u e and Fourth atreeV no rth

R . L . Ikenberry . m inU ter 10 a . m . 'S u n d ay achool, D r. F . Q .-E dv

wards, - e d u l t auperln tenden t; U in . Oiive H leatanti. ^ / s d e aupcrin tendent. .11 a . m< M ornlntr w o r s h ip ; acrm onette fo r ch ildren , “T h i ' C h ln r a o ' U m brella ' T h a t M a d e ' a Cod;” e e r m o n aub jec t, "God, Cre’a t o r and 8 u ita ln « r o f A ll." ' 8 9 . m . E v e n in g wor- ih ip j h y m n s e rv ic e ; “ Travelogue to ,C h in a ," lubiect, “ S tu d e n t L ife a t T i)n r Chow A m erican S ch o o l," by Susan Ik e n b e rry ; aerm onette , " Im p a t ie n t A ppatlca," by the la ilo r. 7 _ p . m, iffeelJng o f the}..’Y . P , D . e t th e c l r tu h t J u n io r church l a g i i r a t t h s paraonage. 7:16. p . m . A new

adult s tu d y if ro u p Ifd b f the p a s to r , tsple, "The H is to r ic a l Rackgrouifd o f t h e F ar E as t: C hina.** Tuesday. Jan . 6. th e Ju n io r Guild vof th o chu rch w ill meet B t> the home of M n . C h o a . Konk e a i t o t th e c i ty a t I rfclock/-“T h u r8 d a y , J a n . B, th e W om en 's i lla s lo n a ry eo c ie ty w ill meet a t - t b e homo o t-M rs . R a y Mooni 168 I’olk s t r e e t , a t 2 j30 p.' m . . -

SEV EN Tn-D A V ADVENTIST C o rn e r T h ird avenue and T h ird

; s tree t northA . T h e ro n T rea t, p u to r

m . , Sabbitlh school (S a tu rd a y ) . H a . m .. p rc a c h in B J try |i ;e . Young People s met-Ung S a b b a th afternoon .a t 2 j30 o 'ckick. 7MB p. m . We<lncsdoy, p rayer m ee tin g ; ev e ry b o d y ,In v ited to bring the ir Oiblea.

C I I R I S T I A r T BCIKNCB .0:46 a . m : , Sundn^ school. I I a . i...,

ch ilrd i s e r v i c e . “ Kad" U tho su b jec t -of th« le iaon*serm on w hich will be r e a d In Churchca o f Chrlat» Scientist, th ro u g h o u t the > « r J d . T h e Ootden Text Is 1 l*To the only w ise G o d o u r Saviour, be g lo ry and

ijesty, d o m in io n a n d power, bo th now and ever'* ( J u d e l :2 6 U tlekdlng r6 e m lo* cited a t 1 8 0 ' M ain avenue, n o r th , open dslly ej(fcept S u n d a y a n d holidays, f r o m ,l to 4 p , m .

. a s s e m b l y ! ) ' ? c o d660 I ’h lrd avenue w est

D . E . A . H o ffm an ; P asto r i 10 a . m .. t i u n d iy school. 11 a . m>t aivine

worship In c lu c jln g eommunlon a n d m in is - try o f th e W o rd o f (lod. 8:Bl) p . m ., Y . P. 0 . A. m e e t. 7 :3 0 p . m .. speeial evan g e liitla le rv leest a e r m o n thenje , ‘‘The Seven Bplr- ila o f G o d ." r t t ' i l week will be obaervsd through’&ut t h e U n ited 6(at(« a n d C am * da by th e A aaem bllca o f God ks a w eek of p ray e r; a e rv lc c e w ill .b e hsid n ig h tly w ith special p r a y e r aervlcea. during th e d a y . in h o m « ; " H a c k lo th e Bible a n d Ih e (J lj Time Prayer** w ill be th s theme fu r Mon­day and I 'u e s d a y , , .

F I R S T PENTECOSTAL Corner F i f th a v e n u e a n d Third a tre e t e u t

E l t i a ScU m , pMloc- 10 a. m . - S u n d a y school| Icnsun them e,

"Judah 's n e s f o r a t lo n ." Gnrdnn H lils . Uihle CISRS tea c h e r , I I a . m . M urnlng w orah iiit sermon auBJeiM , ' “ Tlie l*s o f* th e Al>oills I’au l." 7 P. n i . Penlec,oetst G leaners•asrv« [e«t a(t«aV«ra Ih ls ae rv k s »IU be S ltlsn H erron a n d R u t h AfeOlnnlt, 8 p . m . 'R e - vjvsl h o iir< « '(ev an g etis tlfl) | oM fash ioned co n g reg a tio n a l aing ln ir and speeial ao n is ,I p. m. W e d n e e d a y . Special S s ln ta ' m eet* ng and p r a y e r ae rv lre . tl p. m. F r id a y . An<

nuftl buKlneea m eeting of the c h u rc h , t -n. S a tu r d a y . ‘U h lld ren 'i H o u r’* In

lUrch J ia a e m e n t . ^

* n K T H K L TKMPLR 4A0 T h i r d avenue west

H. M . D avid, P u to r 10 a . m ., K u n d a y sehoolt II. K , A lld r ll l ,

su p e rin ten d en t. I I 1IO a. m., m orn ing wor« ship I a ae i’v l r a n f p ra ise and m iisle , be^ llnMitiK (h e « t» e f |a f evantelliU n s e rv IM wllh I 'iv a n g e lle t a n d M rs. N. A. U r"h h n of MeW Y ork C 4t«r. t Y euag k 'e e p l t 't

m eeU ns. 7 :8D .p-. m>» ev a n g d is tia se rv lcca w lU ^ p rf ty e ^ fo r th e a lc k and o p p o rtu n ity for b a p t l a m ; g ood m u a ic with tho c h o ru a choir a n d o ro h ea tra , a sa ls te d by th ra n g e lls t and U r a . N . A . U r a h a n ; aecnxotx by E ven> gellst U r s h a h . E v a n g lie s t U rsban h&a beon slnginsr i n orte o f th o la rg est F u n d a m e n ­talist c h v rc h e a in N e w York C ity , a n d Mrs, U r s h a n Is w e ll k n o w n in In d ian ap o lis wllh h e r ' t a l e n t e d v o ice and in s tru m v n t; m e e U n ^ a 'a r e e v e ry n i g h t a t 7 t30, e x c e p t M o n d a y . ' -

C H U R C H OF^ GOD ^ Q uincy a U e c t

C laud P r a t t , pastor . U H o C h ap m an , .aaao<fIate paato r

10 a . m . . S u n d ay sch o o l;.R o y Carnuy, a u - p e r in tc n d a n t. 11 a', m . . m orning w o rsh ip . 6:30 p . m . , Y o u n g 'P a o p le 'a m eeting ; K e n - nclh K n ig h t , p m l d e n t . 7:30 p. m .. ev e ­ning s e rv ic e s . 7 :3 0 p. m . W ednesday, p r a y ­er m e e t in g : B ible cou rac a n d m u a lc 'ta u g h t by R ev . a n d M rs. M ilo Chapm an M ondays* W edne^daya and F rid a y a .

C H U R C H O K T H E N A 2A REN EL . D. S m ith , ilaator *

0 ; « a . m ., S u n d ay e ch o o l; W . F . G r a ­ham. a u p e r in te n d e n t . 11 a . m., m o rn in g w o rsh ip ; J . W. S m ith In charge of a ip g -v ing ; i f iV a n d M rs. L o r e n E. S a n to w i l r sing a d u e t ; se rm on a u b je < ^ “I f th e I ro n ]}o B lu n t . ” 6:80 p. m . , th e young p e o p le will m e e t fo r th e i r a e rv lc e ;.M is s M ab e l E d w a rd a ,--p re * id e n tH u n Io ra -w e c t- th o j a m e hour. 7 ’:8 0 p . m .., the e v e n in g ev an g e lis tic servic4; h a p p y so n g s e rv ic e with the y o u n g people* o rc h e s t r a - a n d .c h o n js ,c h o i r ; . th e r e will b e fipee ls l e ln g in f f ; sermon sy b ic c t, “ila W e j G one, o r L o s t Opportui^illcs."

INeighbory Churchesi. J E R Q U E C n B lS T IA If -

W a l t e r E -H a rn r t in . B. D.; pa sto r 10 a . m . ‘ C h u rch a c h o o l; s ta r tin g n e w

qua rle r 'a a lq d y In " L ifo o f C hrist.'^ 11 a . n. M o rn in g se rm o n , “ T h e Untrodden' b u t )Vell M a r k e d fllg h w a y f o r 19 ie ," by p a a to r .

H I S T O . R Y Of Tw in Falls City &■ County

As O iean^K rom Pllu of Th« Times

T H IS i:U R IO D S W O IlL J ) B y W iU Ia M '- f '^ r in u b n

ONLY er/ A

JS’A V E M £ ^ f< /r -vyi^BRe THB , : UNITED STATES - HBAOCSUARTeRS IIN THE CANAL. ZONE TOUCWEff- PANAMA CITVJ.

»At=lTA1.0P-,THE. ‘■REPUBClir'bp-'*-'

, :PA N A A \A T ' '

rrs NO T'A(^p^<b

F O R . O P P B ' P R I N e ■7 0 J S A T

M a s w e / z . .

• . c o P (im ftlK U H « v ic e ;i« c .

v etese .-r

'fi . ■ ' ' *

B re a t h e s there, t h e a a a n'W ITH 6 OPL -so DEAD, - iVHO NEVER TO HIMSELF=>,0 ^HATH y

%

ANSWER: ‘"This is my own, my n a tiv e l_andl’'—81i'Walter S f o t t .

P B A ip K LEGION IN FIOHI TO d e f e n d NATION

Editor, the Times;To Legionnaires, primal and the

new, of broken honjes.You are not^flghthig in vahi, You

arc sacrifich(g for America, the beautiful, a land, of promise.' You ore, its hulwarkAlta buckler imd shield. You a r r defenders' of an heritage, sacred to these latter da;li. You were the Spartan of the lint World w a r . . Convoy of' the secbnl And needed no' Injunction as was told,-by'.Spartan .mothers ol old, ’’Return with thy shield or upon II.”,

A propheticjnd_om nl6clent tyo beheldr twenty-six hundred yiar'i ago, ”a land of jjromise, choice above all other iiinds, and whatsoever lii- tlon shall possess it, shall serve Him, the true and only God/or they sliall be swept off when the fullness ol Hli wjath shall come,upon tliem. And the fuln6ss.of His Wrath comtUi when they are ripened in Iniquity.",

President Roosevelt and the stilt ljepartment-:wlth its far flung an- tennne for collective information, the American Legion with its'scope and depth of vision, added to pte-, vlous experience, cannot Bo ,wronj.‘

There In no Juttilication jtor the facility with which the Japanciomade their Initial attacl: of PeaO

rbor a n d . islands. .We have hiil objcct. lessons of . treachery and du­plicity for..months, long past. Wo have been ' Invaded. Maladjuilid patriot' and short sighted, fireside politicians have plunged us into de­struction; and chaos. To make/cill- tution for the morale and mt terlal injury tafllcted on the nation vt .suggest Undbergh assemble, all'hls compeera. a t thft front.

Hitler’s war Is a war instigated by words. ’’Our strategy,” he comment­ed to Dr. Hefmaijn Reauschnlng,- f6rmer president of the Danzig inn­ate in 1|)33, “Is to destroy the enemy from within, to conquer him throujh

him self, mental confusion, th e s e are o u r weapons.” In its last analysis, ■ , fe a r . Pear’s counUf-mihe Is Uiought. ’Thoughts are .thinjj,'powerfully ere- i-pc. a tiv e , and confldcnoe Is the b asis 'o f V'/. achievement.' He, with a s trone will, m asters fate instead of being a v ie-.' t im of clrcvunstsnie. As darkness' c a n be overcome'by lo t^ g i n tl)o l ig h t so fear is lianlihcd only t o tho , . , ad v en t of faith, objoIutB' suiT. jweK tiv e ., ’The ,optlmlit wins, The opti­m is t always wim.-

A nd for th ; stand you are h iaklng, Legionnah-e, all the homage A m erica c a r . render Is tompenaatlon, in­adequate, to the taak;' , '--------------- MRS.-WrAi'MASIEHS-:------B iih l, Dec. Sli

, ' CpnilH iC nO N IN NAJIE O F , AKMV VOIUNTEEB

Editor,- Evening ’Timea: i n listing the names o f 'th e 'boys-''

leav ing jo t the U. 8. fqrpes In ' your p a p e r of Dec. 26^oniiflsspolled our i so n Robert’s nwe.'You had i t Me- Chesanut, and It ahould have- heen'- Kobtert M; Chesnutt, His full, n am e Is Robert McKlnncf Chesnutt, -nijt H cGhesnutt, ' ,

■Would like it' corrected' s o liln, f r ien d s aitfl'sohbqlMniites rosy taiow atiibut his enlisting In the. aim y. , We h a v e received a iard laying he p a s s ­ed a ll physical teita and wos , t o be

i t to Wichita ,Polli, Tex., for se rv - l6e iri air corps. -

Thanks. We hayo,heen taking your, p a p e r about 10-yeari and can h a rd ly g e t along without it. Wa will w a n t to send i t to our son as E oon a s wa.- f in d out h^s addrcii.'.’Ihanks a s a in ,

Reantctfully, ,S IR . AND MRS. HOBERT M . " ,

CHESNUTT ■Jerom e, Jan. 2. ,

------------------------1K ansas showed's papulation, de­

crease duriijB '. the IMO c e n s u s , ' d ropping to I,70[l,131 ss com pared to 1,880,990 In 1030, ’

-BRItlSH CROWN COLONY

J S Y ^ S J G O 'JAN.'S,'. 1027

Miss G ertrude Rexroat, daughter ol Mr. a n d Mrs. H. P. IWOeat of this oily, identified with; tho llleratl of tho'University of, U tah, lelt Satur­doy evening for Salt Lake to con­tinue h e r course hi Journalism. Miss Rexroat has had poems published In student publications and in tho Salt Lake n-lbuno. ' '

Mill H arriet Lamb, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. H. E Lamb, returned Sunday evening to th e University of Utah. -V

27YE^ARSAG0JAN. 3, 1915

Sielghlns parties oro much fn vogue d u rin g tho present cold «e&- aen. A very ■ pleasurable one taking place l u t night, when n large num­ber of yoi)ng People enjoyed several hours of sleighing around the itraeta of tlie c ity , ending w ith a lUnch nt HeMut’s . Tlie following young peo­ple nmdo up tho party: Misses Burd Wall, V<Ssta Thonios, Margaret WIl- aon, B eatrice Ostrander, Carmen jOok, F e rn OpsteilD, Mary Mllncr, and Messrs. ‘Flgge, Logan, Sob Lo­gan, SImpsoli, Jolu\ Oreeii, Dave Oirdner an d W liilehend., ■ .

II, r ick c tt, a farm er of tiie jiu r- tiilgh nolghborjiood, transaotcd bus- iiiCM in til* city lo r a day tlio hildcllo of the ^ I c , -

HORIZONTAL~lT3'eplcted-------

British crown ' ' 'c6Ibh)Hn' ' ' '

AslS,------.6 It is adm inis.

tered as part olBritish=— .

11 Mountain nymphs.

13 Companipn,• 14 Those-who '

runP 16 Sprang, n ijcp ress. ifi.Howailan

lood:-19 Darlings.20 About

' (preflx).-21 Pronoun.22 Doctor of ' Theology

(abbr.).23 Division of

senlogic time (comb. form).

25 Symbol for tellurium.

28 Tho gbds (Homan).''

ZBJBorn;30 Writing

implementi • M.An agent.

Answer tohevious Foule

VEBTICAIj1 Nprthca.at/' •w in d prevail, in g over the

' A dria tic Sea.2 Blacic

v u ltu re .3 N a tne again.4 Supplies with'

m e p .B RevokQ a

legacy (law), 6 S u ita n ’s,

dpecree. .I r i v e t'nd lour.

.SliPlaces In lint. S D ecenn ium ,52 Longs. ' ' D lndb len tr53 Disunite,. 10 A ppends. 84Lonn of '■12 S en io r '

tnoney, , , (ab b r.) .

,33 Therefor^, ’34 Article.35 Upon.37 Alternating'

T:iirrent . (abbr.). .

39 Hepuise.43 East Indiei ,

(abbr.). ‘'45 I t exports

large quanllf ties e t — ,

48 Its capital 1}

2 r 4 . r“IT

BT

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20~ ■

13 French ,-(eb b rr )r—------ --15 Spain (a b b r .) . ' WJum'blecl. type._ Silts'native ; capital is —." ."'i 21 Poem .'.25 Oolf m ound . 27Writing flu id .20 Age. , 'SOIloUan rivei^. SJSyniJjol for

rulhenium,33 Fort of ths

head.,38;Co,mmon " laborers,

SIAroblnn .garments.

35nalah’s w i f e - ,. 3D Short-napped

labric., W EleclricsI

term.41SuHlx. * 42aelatinou)

tubstance, 44Iiiitituto '

(abbr.). ' r ,46 Nothing.47 Snare.40 Cluster ot

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7

. T I S l i i l l

Page 5: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

SatUr^ayi Janullry 3,1942_ >■ ' ^

■ ' ' . "■ ■'> .!• ■' , ' ... . ' , :v '

; IDAHa :E.VENING^T1MES;OTN,>ty'

¥

Beat Pick of Footb^l Talent- - , • B y P A lIL S C H E F F e iS , , ' ^

N EW YORK, Jan. 3 (U.PJ—T h a t gridiron cqmbinatipn of ’■rre8is.tible force and' imm'ovable objects, known to followers o f profeasiohal football as the Chicago Bears, wilhbring th«ir own devaatatine brand of pigskin pugnacity to the Polo G rounds tomorrow in a last a ttem pt to gain ranking a s the all-time-super-men'of tie sport.- , . #-

Coach George Halas’.crack club"has smashed nSariy"every '[football record for power and

precision and the Nationa) Professional league has ha,nd- p ic jc^ -a, set, of tho ir, most p<SteH players ^ n d molded th em into a. 2^4ilan, all-star o u tf it -which will try to->-dim th e BeafS’ luster white<^elp- ing ' to fill the coffers pK the N aval Relief societj from proci

Iraiwliriv Cleveiaild Negro, R d t e ^ J o e i b i m

PATERSON, N.'.’j . , Jan.' 3'(U.R)— and Sammy; A iiso tt, w htw elght Lljhtwelghti-Sammy'Sngotti Bob -7------ -------- -

By Dblled Press COLLEGE

M ontana'SS,'Idaho 31.'S an ta Clara 67, Calltornla 55.

-wk!ihlni;tim Stain Rfl, RMlcrnW aahlnston 38.-

B righam Young 65, Nevada 31. -WyomlnsHS, Albrljht 54. ■ Qenver 38, Greeley i1.~

,+_:^olonido S t a t e . . 43, ColorajoMiSirss. . . .

Bo^t! Junior CoUece'41, Northmst N aiarcne OollCEe 33

" Colorado College 40, Arizona Stale• 31 ‘I

M ontana Slate College 65,Ianie«-- town IN. D.) CoUego 35

Loyola o ( ClilcaRO 42, Omoha 20 " S tanrord 59, Vnlrerslty of Atl-

. lona 26. ’.' University of San Francisco 45,

U niversity ot California at Los AO" g e le a ^ .

OKeon Slate 30, Ttxas A, and >M.30.

Now Mexico M ines 38, Arizona . State Xeacheto Caliche at Tempe 3L

Vlllanova 30, Detroit 31.. Great l.aScs Naval Xralnlnj Sta­tion 48, C entral (Ind) Normal 32.

-Waahlneton,ttnd Lee 32, Unlver- Blty of Kentucky C2.'

JVyomlne )2, Albright 54.St. J o h n ’s University 64,Univer­

sity of M ary land-48..University of Washington ' 43,

Michigan State 42.HIGH SCHOOL

- Burley 21, Jerome 18 Shoshbne 22, Rupert . 20 c Jo flln s 22, Emmett J1

,, 37..\y/;!^e^.23.. .

NEW Y ® R K -O If early rejults of' the cu rre n t money tennis lour^ It looks like Walter Pdte,' Davis ■ cup icaptaln,. m a y bo correct.

Pate contends tho amateurs can lick the professionals. ■

His ar^m nent Is t ^ t - t |i e last sim on-pure \o Join the p la H l^ pay boys usoolly wins unlesr.Tie meets som e great player nhq has relhalped in condition. Don Budge repelled t h e Supposedly Ipvlncjble Ellsworth 'Vlnes.'^for example.The opening night , .of Alexis

Thompson’s net exiiftvagansa, saw itank-K ovacs-qult-o low nlng longQnough to dump Budger8-4,a:5,-^'6-4,' Little Robert BIfgs had all the better o f it against Fred Perry until the EngllshnianV dislocated elbon h a lte d the match Tvllh the Kore 0-3, 4-0,5-4. niggs and Ko-

.i i '. .ync9 Jvon -Ui doubles, and repeated the following night against lludge

' and his favorite partner. Gene Mako. ,

i Tennis experts loommenctil to ! wonder J u s t how well tho older

. Perry and Budge would ■ bo going ogalnst th e upstarts, Bobby Riggs and Kovacs, toward tho end of tho. 85-clty to u r . ,

, Budge n o w admits the more re­cent professional converts ate In better shape.'

“Xhoso w ho contend ithat diver- '

OrlpEaUy scheduled lor. Los An­geles but ti-anslerred because o l tho war.. thQ cbfitcst will bo the . first J a n u a ry football goms^ever pljyed to N e w York and may well.marlc.tlie nireweir'appearance of the rem ark­able Chicago Bggrcgntlon.' ■ .

W ith tho demand for military manpower growing each day, Hala? has sqld he excepts to lose Irom 10 t o ' IS o(< his current squad and this, combined with .the lean pick tag s 'fro m the 1041 collegiate draft —fo r tho same, military reasons— win • trim the Chicago juggernaut down to beatable size. ,

H a las scheduled the Bears’ final w orkout for this morning. His 33- man squad, top-heavy favorltes*-at 4-1 odds, followejK up yesterday's drills with a bljKJkbo'ard workout.

. lVorks.''fo Stop Paiies f "-you knQW," he said, ''desplto all

the superlative? heaped on our club by t h e experts; w q ^ e going to-4» p re tty ha(d-pi;essM by those air stars. You can’t forget that the; have the best pass-recelver In tlie' business In ■ Don Hutson and In Sam m y Baugh and Cecn IsbeU. two of th e league's crackerjack tossers. My -whole defense will be t e e d to stop those boys." . '.H a la s said he planned to s ta r t

th e ^ a m e Itoeup' that wenfTigaliist tlie N ew .Yprk aianla. ln tho Ipague's title playoff. At ends will be John Slegal anc| Dick Plasitian; tackles, D anny Portmann ot>d Hay Bray; center, .Olyd'S'.'Tuijier: -bacte,. .Ray. Noltlng, Sld'Luckman, Hugh Oal. lam eau and Norman Statidlee.

Hutson An-lves At Garden City, -Long Island;

son w as the final arrival of the '®1- star squad of SB.coocYicd by Steve Owen o f the fliants.

O w en’s two-d-day' workouts are emphasIWng passing jplays. W ard Cuff, place-kicking spoclallst, who has been ^ e lln e d with a pulled tendon for almost a week, has re ­

jo ined the squad.Advance ticket sales Indicated

crowd o f close to 40,000.

sifled competition helps are righ t,” asserts the red-head who reluitied the D avis cup to Anierlca.''.'ltlfBs

“HHdTtovacs have been-playlng a lot oC^ennU agatnit all types. T h e r e s u l t ^ that their games arq a t raior-edge,

“I t may take Perry and I aev- eral weeks to catch up to them .” Don Budge and I^ed Perry h ad

better-catch-up ' bofore'Bobby R lggi and F ra n k Kovacs got too,<ar ou t In fro n t,-fo r there figures to be « %lt m o re spring In the younger legs of th e latest converts.

I t wouldn’t be nt -all regrettable If W alter Pate wore right.

I t would be nice to have one game th a t belonged'to the am a ­teurs.

A fte r allr tennla obtaUed Ita prominence and groiflb as an am ateu r sport.,Records show th a t 10 bwe h its ,

Lem Prjnklln, th e Cleveland. Nepo who knooked out giant Abo Simon In live rounds, Is ranked along 'with Billy. Conn and Buddy Baer as a "logical contender” for Joo Louis'heavyweight crown In thei quarterly ratings released'today^by ibe Na­tional .Boxing assoclauon.-

Comment accompanying the rat­ings stressed -ih e "presence o t a newcomer among .potentlM heavy- welghtTaiamplflns.--

In addlflon, Abe............... ' ' ' .J. Greene of Pat eiBon, the ■ assp- clatlon’s r p ro 's 1 dent, pointed'but tliat the N. B. A.,’s J u 'd g m e rit, o f fighting men was upheld in 1041, os three N.' B. A. rulers became un­disputed c h a m ­pions In contesti ■With, the New

—commls’eibn claimants."'Tho three were ,Q u s ' Lesnevlch, ta light heavy king; *>Tony Zale, middleweight ehomp.

lltleholder. G reene stressed' \ th a t these ach levcm estiti-^e a compile ment to the association’s rating commlltee, h e a d e d by Fred Spddy b£ Milwaukee. • - . Settliment' of th o three title dis­

putes left only t n e fca,th* and fly- welgbl divisions I n whiea the''N. B. A. and J J e W '^ o rk commls!#(B, are no t In accord*«9 rk champions. The N. B. A. recogrifeecs Jackie Wilson of Pittsburgh as feather king,'while N o t Yoplr'Elves th e nod to Chnlky Wrlglit of hos Axigeles. In the fly - vcelght-seotlpn,. U t t lo Dado of th(i Philippines is tlie -N . B. A., champ,- while New York x cco g n te none.

Hero' are the' N . B. A. quarterly ratings for the period- ending 3Deo. ST, with the cham pion named , first and tlie “Isglcal contenders" follow­ing:.Jieavywelght,-^ Joe Louis, -Billy

Conn, Lem Prarilslln, Buddy Baer.>■ Light heavyweight—Ou3 Lesne- vlch, Billy Soose, K e n OverUn. Book-:

T!r Beok'wlth, M ose arown.Middleweight—T o n y Zale, Cefer-

Ino GM?la, G eorgie AbranjB. •Welterweight — P ’redrfy Cochrane,

Ray Koblnson, F rltz le ZIvIc, -young Kid McCoy. ' . ,

.Montgomery,''CaUfomla. Jackie. Wll- son. "

PcatherivelBht—Pittsburgh Jacklo Wilson,'Chalky Wright,-Bobby Ivw Richard Lem qs, Jackie Callura.■ Bantiunwelght — Lou Sallca (no

contenders lis ted)- Flyweight — Little Cado,' Jackie

Patterson. T ' ’ '

Z iv ij> S ig n e d to .

M eet R o b i n s o n . "NEW YORK-,:. Jan.' 3 (ii.R)^Prte'lo:

ZIvlo of P ittsburgh, former «/eIteri weight' cham pion, i>hd youilg Ray Robinson of New irork, haa'been matchcd tijday f o r 'a return Ur roimd boijt a t Madlsbn Square Oar- don, Jan. 16. , -f ZIvIo replaces young,Kid McCoy of Detroit as SoBtason’s opponent In this boOt. McCoy withdrew'because g gMhcd brow, received In n prev- lou« light; has riot healed;

Robinson won a lO-'round decision over Zllylc'in their-first' engagement on Oct. 31. W ln n e /o f "their next meeting m ay get a title shot at- champlon PreddlO Cochrane.

California U.K

Holds Coast' Hockey Ci’o\m

BPBKELEY, Calif., Jan, 3 (U.PJ- Unlverslty o f Collfomla today held- mythical P ac lfle^o ast collegiate ice hockeV trw h y -'after its win over 'University o f Southern Callfoml? here la st night.

California—with n'rccord of sev­en straight victories this seasoii scored its f irs t win over U. S. C. In U years by -a 0-4 margin.

Ros^M cIntyre and Emil Kwasney scoretffotlV-goals each for California. Jim CvmninBham added the other. SIg Berllo, Henry Black, 'Henry Ca- hon and Dick Tougs rang up the

goalTonight th e Invitational IntercoJ-

lcg)»4j*tournamcnt.wlll close as Cal- Iforiua m e e ts , Colorado college and u s e takes on Santa Rosa Junior college in a doubIe-l)eader.

ToOn Stretcher

To Beat West in Annual Shrine.Game'NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 3 (U.R)—The All-Amei'icaiifootball

circus, which is fclie annual East-West Shrine game,/is being staged in the soifthland today .for the f irk tim e since its inauguration in San Frandsco back in 1925. ' .

Transplanted to the Sugar bowl because of w a r conditions, the galaxy of coUege'senior football stars from, coast to coa<t is .expected to d raw a crowd'of 45,000 for th i s lyth Shrine classic, the p ro fits of which will be evenly divided between Shriiicrs’ crippled children's hospitals in San Francisco and Shreveport, La.

Following the p a tte rn of most for­mer games, the cast has more all- Americans and big nam es and hence Is fa<ored to win. "Shis situation has prevailed almost every year before the kick-off. '

But In 16 previous battles tlie west has won 10, times a n d tlie east five with one tie. Betting odds favor tho cast 8-5.

Players bn trte. c as te rs club In-' elude Bauman, -Northwestern's smashhig tackle; BUI dq'Correvont,Northwestern's great -rumrfng back;Bill Dudley', Virginians afi-Amerlc,im back; Endlcott Pealiody,' Harvanl's crashing guard; Bob Westball, Mich­igan's spinning fullback, and Urban Odson, Minnesota’s . g ia n t tackle. .

The west has Its sh are of stellar players but they c » i^ t ' match tho reputatlohs of tlie 'enstem .gang.Leadhig lights, of th e west taclude Ftankle Albert, S tanford's left-hand­ed passing quarterback; Bob Rein- hard,' CallfoiTiIa's versatile tackle, who Is also an outstanding punter, and two stars of th e ' Texas, Long­horns, Malcolm K utner. an end, and Choi Daniel, a guard.■ The east Is coached by ' Andy Kerr of Colgate and B em ie Blerman ot Minnesota and the west by Babe ^Holllngbery o t ' Washington State and Biff Jones of Nebraska.

Injeotcd 4t the proper times, in the proper games, would have given the Clnclnnafl Reds a th ird straight pennant Instead 'of th ird placd.- Now do you know why Bill Mo- Kcthnlo sat.pri park benciiea Sloho late St nlgljt. - .

The entlie company of woild champion-Redlefs going Into a .slump (>i the tam e time—ond slaying there — fu r th e r lUustrales why managers g:e( to mumbling to tbemielvcs.

Bmley Beats Jerome, 21-18

BUrLeY.-' J a n . 3 (Special)—The Burley Boboats gave promise last' night that they can 't bo cpunted out of the tunning fo r the .south central Idaho Basketball crown when they edged Jerome 21-18 behind a third quarter scoring rally engineered by the Bobcat second team.

Trailing a t the-halftlm o 8-7, Bur­ley forged a h ea d 17->15 a t the third quarter and stretched th e lead an­other point In th e f)nal period. Jer­ome ltd 7-1 a t th e end 'of the first quarter.

■'Averctt, 'Tiger forward. led the scoring with e igh t poUits. Baker paced the B obcats.w ith-six 'potats. Tho Burley / junior varsity squad won the prelim inary' tilt 24 to 19. .. JEROME ^ BURLEYPreemon (4) ........P...... (4) RobertsAverett (8) ------P.............. KUnkMurrell (1)''..........C.......... RoblnaonStanger.(5) ..........G------- (1) EvansLewis .......... ......... O......... Bradshaw

Substitutions: Jerome — Messln- ger, Arnold. Burley — Carter (3), Wood (4), B ak e r (6), Leigh, ' son (SI, G arrett <21.

karl-

Bill I^wis Is One FigKt Promoter Who Doesn’t Hate Mikfe Jacobs

Joe loub, w orld 's heavy\«elght champlci),' Is shotvia here lit the saine poie tim t B uddy Daer, broth­er of fotmer chanlpion Maxle, will see Jan. 0 when he climbs into the rinr-KgabiBl th e 'B ro m Bomber,

A fish belonging t o a family sup­posed to have been extinct for mil­lions of yean woA'caught la 1030.

upert Loses To'Shoshone

SHOSHONE, Jan . 3 (Special)— The S tahone Indians piled up an early Jcad an d held off a late Ru- perH'tally la s t n ig h t to beat the Pi­rates ;2-2(). I t was tho Indians' fifth victory In six startjs. '

The host qu in te t gained im - 3 ilead In the f irs t quarter and stretch- ^ i t to 13-5 a t th e Intermission. Big Ed 'Echcnk, ta ll Riipert center, -Jed the Pirates on a scoring spree In tho last half a n d pulled wlthlr; two pbhits of Shoshone. Schenk'led the scoring with n )ne potats.-Murphy and W inter with so.vcn

and six polrits aplebe ® re high for the Indians. T h e Shushone Junior varBlt;y ddeated th e Rupert riub 33- 14 in thb prelim inary.

Lineups;........SHOSHONE RUPERTMurphy (1) ..........P........ (3) D. GotfBaumnim ............ .P . ............. GamerWinter (6) __ ..0 ...... (0) SchenkCannon (4) ........a .i.... (2), RawsonHandwerk (3) ......0 ......... (3) fierlln

Substitutions: Slioshone — Jones (2), Andrea^n;.Rupert—Bell (1), H. Qoff (ai, Craven.

MONDAY, Jan. 5 Ladles’ MlnoE,Ieague—Alleys 1-2,

Pittsburgh P a in t vs. fiowtadrome; alleys 3-4, iSoden’s vs.'8-H Park-In.

City leiigue—Alleys 1-2, Idaho Packing vs. Twin Falls Floor Mill: alleys 3-4, Elks vs. Harry's Sport Shop; alleys 5-0, CaStle Gate Coal vs. In in . F a lls Lumber; alleys 7-S, Delwtller*s No. 1 vs. Cosgrlffs.

TUESDAY, JAN. 0 'Alleys-1-2, Phillips Jewcjers-vs.

Idaho' Power company: alleys J - 4 , Elks No. 1 vs. Studebaker; alleys 8-6, Nationa! Lauiidry vs. Sherwood IVpewrlters, .

‘ WEDNESDAY, JAN 1 Mtaor • league^AHoys 1-2, Det-

wtller’B No. 2 vs.'Green Cab; a l­leys 3-4, Consumer’s Market vs. Falk-Sears No. I; alleys 5-C, TImes-News vs. Falk Sears No. 2.

Commercial league—Alle'yg 1-2, .Twin Falls B ank and Thist vs. In - 'l^rmduntain Seed; alleys 3-4j Ida­ho Egg vs. Safeway No, 317; a l­leys 5-0, Eddy’s Bakery vs. 20-30. club; alleys 7-8, C. 0. Anderson vs.

^Safeway No. 330. _THURSDAY,'jAN. ?

Maglo City league—Alleys 1-2, Rogerson Coffee shop vs, Sunfre^e; alleys 3-4, B-G Jewelers vs.

^ U o h M otor; alleys firO, SterlUig Jowelers'vs. Orangie Transport; a l­leys 7-8,,F an n ers’ Anto Insurance?».J£taberly_BoQateni._____________

. FRIDAY, JAN. 0 Merchants’ league—Alleys ' 5-C,

Hews-Tlmc» vs. Truck Insurance; alleys 7-8, Troy-Natlon»I vs. Snewball’iL

By JACK GVENTIIEIt 'io C h m O n d , 'Va., Jam 3 m -T o -

day in tho s ta te wiilch for lOO yeara lina been fam ed as the mWhcr of

..Presidents an d Wked hams, I en- tountered a tpccles .of animal. ll(o It least tw ice os.old as tho roc tlio mostodo'h. His names arp 3| Arthur Whlterield, Capt, Blufteatd and Bill Lewis and ho is horalded'as I promoter, o f small town wr

Brother:;- 'Whltefleld Kuebcard Uwla .Is perliaps .the last' nicmlKr o( a n old a n d once honored pro- iMsloif, or .combination of profes-

—lions. He haa-be«n a carnival rous- , ^ b o u t, barkcop, haah-sllngot. and

'Tino-nlglit grapiilor. Today ho Is an Mponent o t self defense and gen­eral m ayhem and perhaps tho only mm' in tlie world who d ta V t hate Mike Jacobsr . V

Dill Lowla, os ho CallV hlnuelf ni)w, is n g e n t who has been tlirough tlio mill from ohiitorto lusombiy lliis; Ho wrestled fo r SO yoors, come buck At Uio ago o f 37 w|tli a bushy blnok- Ixard and th e n gained fame ni innn who exlilblted suoli now fnm- Om characters ns fted Oochrane and Ktii Ovorlln a ( from |JOO to->MO

.•t.liead nplooo. -,I ,In last 10 y te s , ho has stiuod

•llows pf 38,000,000 inoillo.

Ho has encountered enough worries to gray tho hale of Harpo Marx. H is personal torrltory'strotohea through tour s ta te s and 10 cltlcs and ho h a s been double-crossed by fighters, by wrestlers and by Uncle Mike h im ­self. B u t ho/locsn’t hold a gmdge ot any s o r t . ' '

Prom olen lis le Jacobs. "Holl," ho told me while he patted

tlie gold chain across hlTvest "E v- (U'y prom oter In America hates M ike Jacobs becauso Mlko Jacobs Is th e man . every promoter In America would lik e to be. Why that man l i u built u p $125 a night boys like l o d Jenkins into $20,000 cards and h o has staged itibre.jUUe lights In a year , t h a n Tex Rickard did in 20.

Lewta i t may be stated, U n o t attached .to ; Jacobs; - h«- merely -ad ­mires a map who has done Ju s t whjt h o .(Lewis)’would like to do .

o r course, had a less estlietlo upbringing, if tha t Is possible, H « , MWji¥r«sHlng;.ln_lOlo_v<lien-ho

SO, grunted with such gents-fci Blranglcr Lewis, Londos and Nag- urskl fo r 11 years, then diWuted in hl»bcw d.-

"Tlint 'beard really put mo over," ho «ald„‘’untll som<ft)ody pliinod m e In llDl ywood and shaved my phln. ’Tlio board at tha t time was longer than A husband's ollbl but oft I t onnie. A fte r tliat\tlici-« was noth­

ing left for me to do b u t Jam pro­moter. And boy my worries- really started mounting up In tenlflo num. bers then." ,

Boxers Ask Advance ‘‘Firemen refused m e permlflslon

to- fill halls; boxers would osk an advanco of <25 W hen, they were booked for only $30; Jacobs would cancel a show a day before It waa to go on: and tlie fam ous referees I Imported wMid ru n up bills far bigger tlian-tlfti-biilarles I had con­tracted to pay them. A t thnes I felt muybo it would be eas ie r to Vffestls again myself.'’

Lewis is 0 living answer to tlio charges that wro<|tling Is dead am that boxing is Just a rumor out sldd yie precincts 6f Madison aquw Garden. )Ho averages tw o sliowa a night In Uie south'. T liey draw 2,000 fans apiece. But ho ts n 't satlsfM yet, • . , -

"Boine dfty.'l, li6-.t ftid 'as a gr|n spread acrosii his fleshy 7aco, "I may bo promoting In MndlaOn Bquato Oordcn, I'd lovo Uiat. I ’d makemore money, s l i rO u t I'd (Uso be happsto know (hat Mlko Jacobs might then bo, promoting In Keokult, Ill„ .pV Tombstone, Arls., or S ou th Hill, Va. BOy, tvouW I ovor give lilin tlie Hcedlo. rd buy n sot o t f(il«o teeth Just to'bo able to ollok them in satlifilctlon tlion as lio dooi noj ."

’ Wednesday Sale- , JA N U A R Y 7,1942

S P E C IA L OCFERINQ• j 50-Mi xcd W ^iicr Caiws

’ - • 350 Cows ^ ,• 100-150 Head Fnt Cows

• • 250 F a t Sleers i , . ,• G50 H ead Miscellaneous Cattle

•'r . ' . ■ . ' ■You can find tK o class of cattio you need n t this, saleof^jTioi:Q..thanJL500-heud. o£-ca.ttlo,--------------------------

JCwjUt iF'alls L iv e s to c k C o J iiin iiss io n C o .

WI0NI5 240 242

S ick M a n

Babe Ruih, former great Yan­kee outfielder, today w as taken to a New York hospital In a private ambulance. Neighbors of the famed hoiAo run h itte r say that EuUi ls-B-Jlvery.slck-Hian.1------ --

NEW YORK, Jart. 3 (D,R)-Georgo ^erm on, (Babe). Rnth, ono 6f tho. - ■ greatest . (jaseball players of - all- , thnp, was taken to a-hospital-in'a. ■ -Jiriyate ombulanco early, today.. ;

•Mrs. Ruth, ond their daughter, -i accompanied him, but later retuhied lo - toelr apartment.'Tho daiight?r' said he-had Ween taken , to the ho8- pital-for a "routine tiheckup.”: Neighbors isald, howevei. he l^ d ' bSen csrrlcd to.toe ambulance oh a '. stretcher and appeared to be a "very/*' Blck'rtian," : ' '

Ruth^wlU bo 47 on Feb. 6. ' .He still. Is, - the greatest, home-,

run.hitter basebaU has ever known, . hls,;iecord of OO lii a stagle seijson' . i hovlng been, set In iil27.’purlng;hl3 ; ’ :16»yearrcarcec.ln theiri$}or leagues, '-

9 h it o'total of 714 homers..;,,He has play«d in 10 world series,- .

seven of which his, team won'. ■ -■-.The New York Yankees paid $125,- :

.00 and made a large loan to tha ■ Boston Red Sox to get‘him In 1020,and the Yankees’ tome and fortune begantosoar. ’ . :^ His last contract with tho Yan-* kfees pold him t8(|,000 annuoUy.*tha yankees gave him his unconditional release on Feb. 26, 1938. Ho be'como '. vlce-pr'csidcnt and assistant man­ager of the Boston Braves the tiexf- month and;,the following month was' released. His lasraaseball 'Job wos- to coach the Brooklyn Dodgers dur­ing the-1D38 campaign. ,

Goodmg Wins Over Emmett

BMMBTT, 3 (S peciai)-T he barnstorming/Ooodlng h igh school qutatet edged the Em m ett Huskies last night 22-21'when (jrooker dunk­ed in a- field' goal with 16 seconds of . the game remaining. ' .

The SCnntors.lcd at tho holf 11-10 although they trailed m ost of the opening period. Gooding held a five- point lead with only a few mtautes ‘to piny blit a lato Husky rally erased It and wltli only 20 seconds to go scored a goal to lead 21-20. W e vl^-' itors roared'right bac|c up, tho floor and Cvooker comicot^ fo r the de­ciding tally.

Barraetabena, Emmett -forward, Ipd the scorers with lOjf while Crooker scored nhio for t M Senators.

Vandals LoseTo Montana

Mis s o u l a ; Mont., J a n . 3 (u.rp- An In ip ro v ca^n lv e rs lty o f' Mon­tana basketball team ■ l a s t ' night avenged two early season defeats at-tho-Jiands-of-Unlverslty^f-ldalwi- by defedttag tho Vandals 55-34.

Dahmer, with 10, and DeOroot with 0, pacod the Grizzlies as they led Idalia all the way. T ed Thomp­son’s 11 points wtto high for Idaho.

TO YOUr> '

while ou aire having yours reconditioned with

F IR E S T O N E F U L L -T R E A D m G

o r FIRJESTONE RECAPPING

W ith' ^retreading restricted, we offer this con- / venienco to those auto owners who wish to have th e ir present tires reconditioned by the m ost

. modern mcHicda known today — Firestone Full- ' Treading o f Fjlros^'no Recapping. Your present tire can bo reconditioned for a s ' J ^ as ?5.70 (eroO-16). Inquire now fo r full details; '

T 1 r e $ fo n «HOME AUTO and SUPPLY STORKSI 'h o n 8 75 ' , ' 410 M a in A v 4(. S .

------- ^ ________ ______ , T \ .

Eight Results, . By UnltM Pressl i t Hollywood—Manuel OrttsC

Centro, CaUf., 117, deolsloned ^ Ollvera, 'Oakland, Calif., 118, UttlqPaneho, Monlla, 118, drew A

Swood Romero; Sacramento, , ): Bobby Yeager. Ijm Angeles, j ■’ "■ lo, HarrIilgton,...(i

IW . (» ; Jack H---------------173 declsloned j

Cousslns, Los,Angeles, 160,. 1- Jockle McQiyVLos Angeles, 117,1 clsl^ned Feta, Pequit, Manila,:,fi (4); ChueyPlguero, Los Angeles; 1 dccisloiied Norbert Do Oro, Los * geles, 135, (4).

QUALITY

Used CarsAll Reconditioned - T h r o n g h ^ r '

7-Step. System1041 Chevrolet Speclol Sedan 1B40 Chevrolet DeLuxo Sedan 1038 Chevrolet PeLuxo Coupe

1840 Chevrolet DeLuxo 5-Passenger Coupe

1037 Chevrolet Coupe 1036 Chevrolet T. Sedan

n 'i ' - ■Used Trucks

'1041 Chevrolet Ihi Ton 1!cuck 1041 Chevrolet 154 Ton T ruck ' H. D. engine, 2-speed axle '

IMO Chevrolet lU Ton,• a-Speed' Axlo

1D30. Chevrolet IMi Ton with hydraulic - duipp, body, '

1030 Chevrolet. l l i _Ton -1035'Chevrolet I 'i i ‘.Ton ‘

WE’RE EQUIPPED TO'GIVE YOU COJIPLETE pERVlCE —Includhif >11 the follbnlnc.

: operational.

1 , Lubrication2.3.4.

, V,;....

i ' -

lirake Servica Motor .Tunerup Carburetor an d -Fuel Pum p S ervice

5 , Steering an d W heel A llgonienl ,M ol(« Itepalr

7 , Body •«na F en der ,K ep » lr ,

‘8;, OlDtch, TrtmsniUilaii-and Rear ■

9 , Shoek Abi*rt«r Senlo*

cil Oh(ek-up I t , PiliiUiif Mid.’

Page 6: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

’•; -Page Six .. ■' IDAHO' EVENINa TIME S, TWfN P A lis f -I^ ' ,■' i;

• ■ d liC A G O V ia f f ; - a ( U p j ' - A 'c a r a m e r o f •■bullijli” e i f th c s la s m Jnaplred by favor- aij|y*^orutrue(J p r ic e contro l developmental *cn t arnln fu tu re a m o tlc ro td y Jiichcr lo» duy» . • • • • ’ ^ ,

^epli'iabcr d c llv v r tc s of a l l ucalna toiich- 4slc new t m o n a l p c a k S 'S n d o th e r option* rcnchcd 'lhe b ea t )« v eU In m p ro .th a n Iwtf jjiontha. W heat c lo se d Ic* to I',4c o biuhel h ig h e r ; corn w a s ,u p ',ic to % c r o a u up

• H U 't o %rrryc. up -?ic to ^ ‘ic, an ti loy bcona up i*c to o f f lie. ' ,

CHICAGO—G u i n ra n u c j . O pen-'

G R A H ^ IT A U L Gra n u c j ^ . {

H igh l o i r CloiaWhe#i», . ; , ‘

May ' i . 2 9 U 1.28>4 W if■ ju iy i . s o % 1.20%

Sept. , J . a i w 1.3C‘;b 1.81 •«D orni ’

Mny■ Ju jy

Sttpt. .,U&t«i

Mpy .../ .Ci"*4-% Ju ly .. .UGli

’ -S fp t. .. .66% ity e t

i l a y .... . f t - Ju ly

'-Hepi. .. .S2 , ■ ' Boy beans t

•M ajr '. J u ly ;.1.K1v4

.87-% .iV/, .m*

.6U^ 6

.8 0

.8 2

• TG%

•BUS.-

.67%

.81 V«

,N E W Y O IIK . Jan ,.k c t , c lo sed hiKberv A i r J lc d u c tlo n ...t.—A m e r ic a n W oolen A lo ^ a J u n e a u A llied .C h cm ica l AlJfcd S to rc a AUlcd C h a lm e rs A m e r ic a n C anA m . Ckixn. A 1.............................,•A m c ric « n & F ore ign P o w e iA m e r ic a n I c e ...................... - ......A p je r lc u n LotfoniotlvoA m e r ic a n M fia l# ............A m e r ic a n R od. & Bid. San .A n i t i lc u n / lo ll in g "WllU .................—A m c r ic u n 'jjm elt. St K c f in in g ..... .A m c r ic n n T c l. &, Tcl........................A m cricn-n T obacco U 4B -A tj^ co n d u C o p p e r ._ .i............. '£6%A rm o u r p f ............................. .. 64

>Atch.iion, ‘f o j^ k a & S a n to F e ------- .... 80

...... 0u.es- ............ : i 4 %------- - 3»,a

SUVj,-------------

i.8JT<; j.aa i.»3-i'.h2j{, 1 -84 >k i .b S ii

C A ^ I i XiiC-.lN C ilIC A G U -~ W titb .; I'tu. y>.’Uuw tiurd

l l .M . .■ • C o rn } Olti, N o. 4 . y ^ w , ; N». & ycl-

low t)lc ; nuw, x'Jo. J ni.>cd Np. ^..yo llaw i f o . 3, yuiiuw lo 'J i l t ;

N o ., 4 yellow 7Gc to VUvtuj Ko. o y«,.uw• 74c U) 75»/ik1 KfaV 4 w hlto «2c to B2,4Cj

■ Noi 6 wIiUo 77Vjc .Boy beam : Nu.iw m ix e d $1.Q8( No. 2 yel>

low 11 .7 3 ^ : N o. it ycOluw «1.71 to ll.7U ')t: N o. 4 yiiliow tl.6U */j t o Cl.Cy.

• U utai No. 1 - m ix u d C7‘,!ie : No. 1 wliilo . C Q iic ; No. 3 ^ w h ilo HlVici Hu. 4 wliitu

............ “ ■ "^wlii't< 'C 2 iic to 63 |iic ;.'N o . f ^ h i ' t o th in 62l .........1 reU^apccinl e x t r a h eavy No. 1

: No.

r e d apcclal 67c to 67V^c.J ly o j Nff aalcB.P a rle y ] M altin g 7 1 c to O S c N : feed nnd

scA cn ln tn SOc to f lS c N ; No. ^ barley 88es . N o . 1 m ohlng UOes N o . 2 m a lting tiUc.

■ • f l a x ' . ■■ *P O R T L A N D -F la x a c c d |2 .0 8 ^ i . .

I'^LIVESTOCKDENVER LIVESTOCK',

' D ENV^U—C a t t le : 6 0 ; no aaiea. steadyt p rices Quotable: U ccf s te e rs |IU to fU .2d ] b ee f eowa I7.E0 to 19 .2 6 ] canncra and cut­te r s 16.26 to t7 .2 5 ; h e if e r s 110 to 112.60 s

• e a lv e s '||8 to I1 4 .S 0 ; b u lla 17.60 to 10.16.l l o m : 26: no s a l e s : p r ic e s quotab lei Top

’111.761 bulk t l l . 6 0 t o |11.7Q i iow s 110 to IIQ.76.

Sheep i 4 ,000: a ll C o lo rad o lam bs quot­a b le steady (* fa t la m b s , carloads, 112 and d o w n ; n o . t ru c k ln s ; fe e d e r lam bs tl0 .l(0 to |U .(iO : ewca 14 to 10 . -

^ PO R TLA N D L IV E ST O C K ^ O R T L A N D - C a t t l o : F o r week. l . i „ . M lves 126; co m p ared w ^ck ago, 25e hiuh* c r : lom e c laaaes . S O o '^ ig h o r ; fed • 'teen 111.60 to 118.10.

------ H o r n -F op-w eek 2 i0 4 0 j eom par«d-w c«k• g o , 26o to 86o h i g h e r ; week’s bulk good to . choice 170 to 216 lb s . f l 2 ; i c w 112.10.

S h eep i For w eek . 1 .1 0 0 ; f a t lam bs Jwu to SOo h igher; b e s t to a d fed woolcd Iambi JU .S O : f e d ih o rn la m b s 110.26: early shorn

to ItO.EO: odd y c a r l l n : ^ 17 to I7.SD; ' ' ‘“ 'idium ewca 14.76 d o w n : , few .fa t owe#

16.76} g enera l q u a l i t y p < ^ .

CniCAGO L IV E S T O C K \ l i iC H I C A C O —H o g s : 8 0 0 ; open ing ateadr

.X O istrong] easly s a le s irood a n d ehotco llil) ^,<tqf!240 Iba. 111.86 to » U .B O j,to r th e week,

. <A oin If- . t6e to lOo lo w e r w l t l f cloelng top at )M C 0it 240 to aOO Ib. bu tchers tlO.UO

100: ea lv cs n o n e j fo r th e weeV, io\o lO e .lo w e r w ith closing t o p . i t m oit 240 to 8 0 0 lb.. bu tcher^ |10 .tl(l

' • - '^ 'C a t t i e : 100: ca lv e s n o n e ; fo r th e weeV* •'>i:jrqpd and choice fe d s te e r s a n d yearllrtsi

'o { Ig h e r ; w eig h ty k in d s -up m o re .In In'; comi;ioQ 'and m e d iu m g rades atrong h igher: h e i f e n up 26o a n d cowi

-S S ati) 40e; y e a le r s EOe .h ig h er: bulli% trQ ng:-i|trlcU y c h o ic e . .1,084 to 1,161 lb. V earlings topped, f o r w e e lb a t 114.76; choice

■ h e i f e n to p M a t t U ’ a n d heavy sausage bu lls rcffehed 1 10 .10 ; c h o ice w eighty veal* « r s Bold a t 114.60 w ith a few m ak ing |16.

. £ h e e p i 6,000 r - f o r t h e w eek, fa t- la m b a £6o lo 86q low er'; c lo s in g top choice fed Jam bs 112.66 w ith b u lk good a n d choice

. ‘ n a tiv e « n d fed r a n g e lam bs 112.86 to 'f l2 .6 0 ; few d h o le s 'f f i l t ew di 10.76; bulk l e d a n d native e w es I5 .S 0 to |0 .60.

• - O U A H A ^ L IV E S T O C K• O M A H A -H o ea : 1 ,2 0 0 ; fa i r ly active. •VelKhts 27Q lbs. d o w n s te a d y to lOe high*

' « r ; Keavlea a teady to 6 e lo w e r; top Ill.S & i . 8 o o d and choice 180 t o 880 lbs. I l l to

C atile» 100; ca lvea. n o n e ’ f o r the \<eek,. R laughter ateers a n d h e i f e r s m oatly sleady j

so w s a n d bulls 26e td S 6c h ig h e r ; Instance*• p p m ore on coW s; w e e k 's top ateers 118.80 . .on 1,024 ll i .» n u m e ro u s loads Choice 1,000

1.180 lb i^ I 8 .6 0 to <13.B6: bulk h e i f m ffood g ra ( le ^ t t l l . 2 5 t o - 112.26; few good a n d cho«e 112.60 to 112.76 J feeder a teeri fO.60 to 111.86. .

' • 'S h eep v N one; f o r t h e w eek, f a t Iam bi W eak to 26o lo w e r ; y e a r l in g s a tead y ; fat ew es strong to 16c h ie h e r ; . f e e d in g iam bi w e a k . lOo.to 16o lo w e r ; eroilnfl* bu lksi OoOd

Jnd choice fed w ooled la m b a t l 2 to 112.261 u lk good and cho ice n a t iv e lam bs ellKible

t o 812; good an d c h o ic e xed y earlings ID.2S to 10.75. •

OGDEN L IV E S T O C K ' OGDEN—H ogs; F o r w eek, 20o to 80c

. . . l i l g b c r : top 111.40 o n Kood to choice 180 to 280 lb, b u tc h c rs ; l i g h t an d medium

' w e ig h ts outside t h a t r a n g e m uatly IIO.UO , t o 111.16; ex trem e h e a v ie s a n d e x tra amall

w e ig h ts dow n ,to ,|iV .4 0 a n d u n d e r; backing •o w s 18 to JD.26. \ A

C u ttle : For w eek . 1 .C 2 7 ; a ^ o n g to un'- «venly h igher; c a n y t r a u e w i v e an d la te r

^ d e d u ll; m edium t o giJud beef steers 18.60 to I l H c o m m o n A.bO lo |b . : 2 ; ■ tockcrs and f e e d e m 4 7 .T 8 jo .8 lO .H O ; me-

.d lu m to good s l o u g h t e f t ^ l f e r s tX.26 ^to im . lO ; common $8 d o w n ; ' bu lk medium to good .cow s'87 .26 to 9 8 .8 6 ; odd head to 18 .6 0 ; canner to c o m m o n | i to 8 7 ; good to choice *bulls t o 18.80; mu«lium17.76 dow n; b est v c a le r a I l l .C O . to 814; m ed ium kinds 811 d o w n . . _ i .

6 h c« p : For w eek. I l .b 2 0 { lam b sales llm'' Itedv to truck d iv is io n a t a teady p r ic e it ’ irood to choice f a t t r u c k ln s 110 lo 811.26

s in g le deck good 123 l b . ew es | j ; lo rtvt IB head iK ,

. KANBA0 C IT Y L IV E S T O C K :K A N 8 A 8 g iT Y — I lo f f s : 7&; p teady f for

Week, very uneven, 230 lb s . down a t^ jdy to lOo lo w er; h eav ie r w o lc h ts a teady to 10a h ig h e r : ja te top 111.40.

C a ttle : UOO; ca lv es T SO ; fo r tlw week, B ood to choice fed s te e n i 1,200 Iba. up 2&o t o N c low er: o th e rs a te a d y to 26c low er; w eek 's tops p rim e 1,006 lb. long yearling i t l 4 .0 0 ; several lo ad s c h o ic e 1,000 to 1.100 111. 818.60 to 814; eh o lc o .1,842 Iba. |19.GQ( cbolcu huifera 848 .80; v c a le ra |1 4 .

8 h ey » : Nnne; f o x J h e . week, la taba 26c

A tiu n lie i lL ^ n ih gA uburo .—sA uto ■.............-lia iu w in L ucom otiva l in lU tn o rv & O hio .......Ik n d ix A v ln tiim -rrrn:..l ie tU c iic m o te U ...........Uorocii ........... ...................Uu.ovs -»L u rra u irh a .....V........... ..bvcr#.C 'a . i i o r n a l-’u c k in g .....C a n n u m n i'u c il 'ic ' ........J . I . C a a u C o. ...............t o r r o liiT ^ 'ftaco .-C orp .

4 ;nLt.bpcul{ |) 0( O iiiu . . Ch;ca:.o l ire a L ^ W c u ;.r i C n .., i 'a i i . i.

^ i'.urU ]\.« ..w i'. (j.to'ui^^r Cor**.Uj . u i/o mU o.oiuilo l-‘. & 1...........•;........lX).un»uiu tit.»i ........... ...........Ci>pin?Lrv b o lv c n lu ....... ..Cuminu.tNwcauh aoii.hi-ril*.., Cuiieolli.aiCU c ro iy c r . C onaoli'.aU 'd KJlso:> .

j^ o n e o lid a te ii u i l U im iincnU il U an C 'oritincD tal O il C o rn I'roiiUCvfl C u b n n -A m e ric a n ;JuB ar C u r t j* W ritfh t Du i 'o n t .E as tm a n K o d a k ' ......E iec tric P o w e r & L ig h tE rlo It. J t ............ .............................F ll‘'jrcsu> no T ire &. R u b b e r . F re e p o rt S u lp h u r G eneral K lcc trlo (ienptfll F o o d s(icno ral M o to rs ..............G ille tto S a f e ty R o io r G oodr'chG o o u .» . r T i r e A R u b b e r . G r a h a m -P a lg o •Oreat> N o r th e r n ' p f -------G re y h o u n d C p.H ouaton O ill lo w e S o u n d ........liu d ao n B a y M . &' S.KudBon M o to r In d e p e n d e n t R ayonIn a p . C o p p e r .............I n te rn a t io n a l H a rv e s te rI n t e r n a t io n a l N icke l ......

i n t e r n a t i o n a l T c l. & T e l. Jo h n s ' M a n v li le K anaaa C i t y S o u th e rn K o n n eco tt C opperKrcaa<- ............L ig g e tt & M yers U .........L o rilla rd ......M ack T ru c k s M ath icson A lk a li M iam i C o p p e r M issouri. K a n sa s & Tcxas- M o n tg o m e ry "W ard M u r r i .N aah K e l» ln a td f N o rth e rn P ac iflo N a tio n a l S isc u U N a tiona l C osh N a tio n a l D a i r y Proi N a tio n a l D ls t l l l i N o tiona l G ypsum N a tio n a l P o w e r & L ig h t

.N ew Y o rk C e n lr a l N . Y . - N . - i l . A H a r tfo rd N o r th A m e r l c a i j ^ .

4 'a c lf io Gas &. E lec lrio »ackoVd M obrs .

: *oram oun l-rub ....... ....—J . C. Penney Co. P ennsy lvan ia R . R. P eop les GasP h e lp s D o d p .;------- -P h illip s I’e tro leum

,P il)#bur> F lour ........ ..P i tU Screw & D o l t _____P ublic f ic ^ lc o .o f N . J « - . P u llm an P u re OilR adio C orp.-of A n rtr lc a . ilm llo KcKh Ofipheumlleo M otor............—Jtepub tlc Kleel ........ .^ n o l d s Tobacco D Scarii RoebuokShell Union O i l --------- -SimmQnd Co.Socuny. VacuumS o u ihb rn l‘ucific ......--------Suutiitrrn Itallw oy . . . .. .. .p .S p e rry C orporation ..........S.& nilnni UrandsS iflndard Gas A E lectricb w n d a rd Oil Gt C a lifo rn ia .S^an ilard Oil o f In d ia n a ..... ..SCandurd Oil of N ow J e r s e y .S tu d e b a k c r ..... ........... ........—S unah ino Mines ...............Svfrlft & Co. ..................................:Vcxua Corporation V en is Gulf 4 ...

-------- 40^«

..... . <')i

M E M fN E W Y O R K , . J a n . l > ^ ) - R a I l r o a d

s h a r e s led a r b e In th e a toclr< iM rket t o ­d a y w ith volum e in c reas in g o v .w 'th e . p a c e o f t h e prev ious a e i i l o n . . . •*, , ,■ - aliis-ranffed-to%oreAhan-a-polntHn-At«r la n tlf i C oM t I^lne, U n ld n Pacific w as u p m o r s t h a ^ a p o in t a t Its high a n d e m a lle c g a in s \^ e rs m ade by S o u thern P a c if ic . N ew Y o rk C e n f ro l ; B oiithern R ailw ay is iu e s a n d E r i e c e r t l f ic a tr t . E rfe preferrA l *A w a s u p

p o in ts a t 86% .’ B p y in g o f c a rr ie rs b egan yeaterday w h e n

i t w a s announced au tom obile .p ro d u c tio n f o r a i l b u t’ defense pu rposes m ay be e llm i* n a t e d .a f t e r J a n . 81,,'T ra d e rs concluded t h a t t h i s w ou ld increflise ra il tra ffic . C a rlo q d - in g s w e re relcoae^ today for la a t w eek ,

a sm d lle r th a n sc&ional d e c lin e .' ; S to c k bsIm appit>«im at«d 620,100 a h a re s a g a i n s t '] , 100,000 in th e ab o rt aeeslon o w eek a g o . Curb.^ slo ck sales w ere 6 6 ^ 0 jh a r e a c o m p a re d w ith 808,000 liis t Sa tu rday .^*

D o w Jp n c a p re lim in a ry d o lin g a to ck a v - e r a s c s : In d u s tr ia l 118.76, ap to .08 : rn l l 27 .16 , u p . 0 .4 0 ; ,u t i l i ty 14.?0, up 0.88, o n d 66 s to c k s -88.27, u p 0.46. # _

. T . J . G reen R itesBURLEY, Jan. 3 (SpcclaD—Fune­

ra l’services for T . 'J . drccn. 8L re ­tired- tarmer, wlU, be h c lJS nM ay afternoon In the Almo L.DB. church. Bishop A, U. Ward officiating. In - .ferment t i l l be In Almo- cemetory beside the grave of h'ls wife.

T he tody rests a t th« Payne «ior- 'tu'ary.

S « )E G i A N ^ S ' ' ' % G alb ra ith , h o l d EYJ^RYTHING . ' ^ ' ^ y ;

"After th a t Icsture wo: heard about ;b\HIdlnf iij not going to'EelTycur fatherjivhat ypii liald for

clvlllon morale, I ’tn •t d i » i » ■ . . ■

“How do you like this new hslniet.I designed,'GeneraW.’ ,;'

POTATOES^ C H IC A G O PO TA T O E S C H IC A G O » S h ip m c n ts 478 c a n , a rr iv a ls

40 c a r t , t r a c k 204 ca rs , d iverted 40 cars . Supplies z n o d e rA k .' n o r th e m -^ whitfl- s to c k dem and g o o d , m » k e t s t r o n g e r : Idaho R u s­se t d e m a n d m o d era te , r?inrket s ligh tly B l ro n K e r ;^ l I a a T riu m p h s ; a l l sectlonB, de m a n d f a i r , m a rk e t firm .

Id a h o l ^ s a e t B u rb a n k s , washed. 2 cars 82.76, 1 c a r 82.70. 1 cor* |2.07>/j; u n - w aahed, 1 c a r 82.66, 1 c ac I2.C0; 1 eor m edium s i z e $2 .6 0 ; a ta n d a ru g r d e , 1 ca r 82.46 ; u t i l i t y u ra d e . 1 c a r . | 2 . 1 ^

N e b r u k n B lias T riu m p h s , 1 car waahed 12.62^^; l i e d M cC lures, 1 . car w ashed 12.36. M ic h ig a n C hlppew aa , 1 car 81.8&'. M inneso ta a n d N o rth D a k o ta Red r iv e r va lley B l i s s T x ium pha, w ished , 1 c a r 12.20, 2 e a r s 82.16, c a m 8 2 ; 1 c a r a ite I) 81 .70 ; I c a r co m ip crc ia ia , fa ir , CbloVadixi^ ^ 81 .06; 1 c a r 00 p e r cen t U . S . N o .J 81.76;86 p e r c e n t U . 8 . N o, 1. 1 c a r 8 l . 7 \ I c a f

1 .05 : 1 c a r com m erc ia ls , 81.^6; C o M i ^ , c a r 86 p e r c e n t U . S . N o l I 81.66; "Early

O hios, 1 c o r 86 p e r cen t U . S . No. 1 81-70. K atahdlns* g e n e r ^ ly 8ood quality , 2 ca rs <1.86; l iu rn la , g e n e ra lly g o od 'qua lity , 1 ca r ;l.B5,'. *

N e w s to c k oupp liea l ig h t , demand very light, m a r k e t v e ry 'e tc a d y . P e r buihel c ra te F lo r id a H lla s T rlu m p h a , T e a r ahcvwing <le- cay 11 .40 ; loca la $1.00 to 8 2 ; s tree t sales 82.10 to < 2 .1 6 ; few 82.86 : sIio U, 82.10 to 12.16.

C H IC A G O O N IO N S C H IC A G O -6 0 - lb . aack a :C o lorado S p a n ish '81.80. '

M d a h o S p a n is h 81.8().

S tocks highei; a n d m p d e ra te ly active. Honda firm . • •C urb Btocka frac tio n s h ig h e r ;C otton up a i m uch as 0 0 c a bale . \VI}cat and corn u p - f r a c t lo n a .

M ETA LSN E W YORK—T oday’# c u s to m amelteri

p r ic c s fo r deliverctT m e ia ls . ccn ta per lb.: C o p p e r: E lectro ly tic 12; e x p o rt f . a.‘ i.,

N . Y „ 11.26; ca s tin g f . o. b . re f in e ry 12;l a k e delivered 11.26. __

L e a d : Now Jfo rk 0 6 ;70. 'Z in c : 'N ew Y ork «.G4

8 .2 5 .Alum inum ^ v l r g l ^ 16.

in c a n :

Local Markets

B m / in u P rice sS O F T W H E A T

Soft w h e a t

A n tim ony . A m e i.._ .............JM atrnum, dollars pur o u n c e : 94 to 88. CJuickallver, d o lla rs per f la s k o f 70 lbs.

2 1 0 to 216N.T u n g s ten , powdefed, d o lla rs p e r lb. of

0 8 to 09 per cen t: 2 .6 a .to 3N . 'W olfram ite , Chini-si, d o lla r s t> « unit.

1 p e r cen t m etallic co n to n t, d u ty pa id I 24 t o 2CN.

P A f i S i D

^ lo 'S D o lowVf] shM~p a m i y earlin g a weak to 26o low er; closing tia le s lam bs a t w cik 's h ig h leve l: good to c h o ic e yearlings mostly 10.76 to 810.26; to p e w v s 86.86; closing sa lea downward f ro m 1 6 .7 6 ; sh earin g lambs fU .1 6 (o 111.00.

W O O L.D O S T O N —M oat .g r a d e s of fleece wools

r ^ c lv e d same d em an ij t h i s week, b u t the t ^ ta l volume w as n o t J a r a e .

.F in e .combing O h io U efalne brought

SosUy 46e-to 47c, G ra d e d ^ b!oo<Uataiile bibinff Jirlah t fleeces w e r e quoted a t 40a

. to -4 8 e .-C ra a e d M a n d H l l<>od 'combing b l ig h t flee rrt so ld in « t < lo to 02e,

Local Livestock

^OboIe«-llcbt,buUhars,.17&-to 110 lb«„:|ll,Od Orerwelght liUtchera ElO to 260 lbs.lt0.60

: CWrrwelght butchcri, Ji50 to 800 lbs.. 810.25, Underweight butchers.....- , , , , y)n,RQ

N o k J n * Boni, hsavy ................................. ,. |8 .2 6

M xilum s ta iid a rd ji . ('/onim ereial*

lU n u a e a le r q u o teu i ^

O T H E R G R A IN S (D arley a n d u a ts m a rk e t tlu c lu jiie^ 'w iih

.local fe e d e r d em an d . N o unirorm ily in daily p r ic e s quo ted . May va ry -Oa to 2 i i from q u o lo tlo n a lis ted f»elow).Uarley ....... ..............- .............................. ..........81.20

(O n e d e a le r q u o te d ) . Oats

j O n e d i a l e r q u o t td ) . ■

- - V P O T ^ O f l SU. S . R u la c ta . N o.^1U. S . R u is c t s N o . 2 — .........

(U:>i‘ tic u lc r q u o te d ) , U ;-S . j lu 4 u r ts N o . 1 —U. s T lW is e U N o .’ 2 ________

(O no d e a le r q u o ted ).

D EA N S N o rtH ern a N o. 1 ..

G reat N o r th e r n s N o. 2 (S ix d e a le ra q u o te tl) .

G reat N o r th e r n s N o. 8 .(O n e (I? a lc r q u o te d ) .

P in to s .................

..11.30

..-11.60..._.00o

...tl.40*81.E0 ____ b5c-l)0c

..83.10

< |^ u 'd e a l e r s quo ted ).' 1 1 ^m .(O n o d e a le r q u o te d ) .

S\iiall reds. D8s .............Sm all rojs-. Ods .....<....:__

(T w o d e a le r s 'q u o te d ) . '

-.83.10

lO n e d e a le r q u o te d ) . Red ...................................^

.-l6V jc

lO n s d e a le r q u o te d ) .

H v b T o u l t r y<At th s R anch)

uo lored h e n s , ^ e r 4 lbs. . .. .. ..Colored' l ie n s , lA ider 4 Ibe. ........I<eghorn h e n s , p v r r 8% Iba. l e g h o r n 'b e n s , u n d e r bVj lb s. «

Four persons had ........ ............an d fined an^ .a fifth was given a free bed in the county Jail last night a s a result of a "party” which wu staged in tlie south section of the c ity last nlglit, police rccords sliow.

Name of the man glveii the free bed was not'given. He isvsald to have been "slugged" a t the party andf called tor police aid which resulted In tlie arrest of the four o th e r persons. Including a woman.

The TOoman,i; Carolina Wahl. 24, 312 Monroe street, w^j lodged In the county.JalUof Uio nlglit. Tlils morn­in g she entered 0 guilty plea before Municipal Judge J. O. Pumplirey on charges of drunk and disorderly con­d u c t and was' paroled, pending good behavior, to the chief of police.

Fred Stump and Ralph Basham, bo th entered guilty pleas to similar charges and rather than pay (5 flnes.ettch, electcd lo serve, time ,ln th e city Jail. Most of th is time, po­lice records-.ffliow, will be spent shoveling snow from downtown side- wpJ|ia and gutters.

Len Smltli also pleaded guilty nnd w as fined M. He paid hla fine and waa released,

I TUPUSHT TWe KIDS . WERE- GOING TO THE COMMUNITYDANCE/ DID JUNE s X y J — ASlYTHI^e ABOUT/^ THe RIViEpA ■ / Me

1 SOT A CALL FROM THERE’ SAVINS FRECK­LES COULD MTPAV.

C o w e ^ t h in k OF tr, ip TH p c h e c k ' w a s t o r# 2 0 AMO Tw e KID OOULONT PAY IT, tT MISHT B A S I L Y 6 ^ FRECKLES— J u s t BEING _ ______

LOOK,M^R•tH^' l a s ' ^TIMEI WAS HERE MV

ROOM WAS BLACKED OUT MOST i5F THE TIME/ SO I f ETCHED'VOO A,

V-. USEFUL LITTLE PR E6Er>\T f Boit OF ^

ASSORTED LIGHT BULBS,'

HMPH/ rS E E ^ SOME OF THEM ^ ARE REO.'-*vWELL; JAKE/I'LL ObCT PUT A REDOME IN THE

DIMIM6 ROOM - CHAMOEUEF 'AS A DAN6'ERSlQNA).Tt) REMlMbYOUNOTTO

EGAD/ MY WHIMS- S ICAU BROWER STILL tS UPTo HIS

OLD HOBSyOF 'COLLECTIMGHOTEU.

rCH .CO M E ON- I JUST WANT A SNAPSHOT TD SEND TO Ac o u p l e o f k id ' n e p h e w s IM

^ N O r W E S .I CAIN’T BRIN G M VSELP TO D O It - -N O .'T E N YEARS FROM NOW VOU’D HATE ME

LIKE A n e w l y w e d

I COULD IP IT WAS A '

§ l ) N - B U T . , NOT THET.''-

MOT ON W N G j, INNOCENT

.jrl.120- > - .1 2 c

Colored f r y e r s , Zy, . . . _________Colored to a s te r s . 4 Iba. a n d u iu s u . . . B iasa -C olored co ck s l/ea lip rn c o c k s Cai>oiu)f I Ib a . a n d u p .

. .1 4 o

. .1 4 e— .88

\ M IL L P fiE l) D ran, Wo p o u n d s , lir<hti-COO-p<»undi ■Q(oc)( feed. lO ll p o u n d s Block feed. 6Dt>. j^ tm d s .......

rnouucQ

::I13I...81.76- .8 1 .7 0

...840

...BZfl

...80a

...lHo ^ Ida . . .88q

HOG POOL e a r n s :iOFIG,818.99

- N e t receipts totalling tO.81B.OI) will ,1)0 divided Ijy 31 growers,as’re.iult of ycslordnyVIiW pw l's ftia ’ljy' tli# Tw in Falla County Livestock MM- kotlno nssoclntjon, County Agent B ^ rt Dollnybr6k« said today,

-Not to|M reached (11,10 per hun. drcdwclght. Thci:o were 303 head In tho ])ot)I, n||gr«gatlnR 03,070 poinidi. l l i o pool was sold on bid to J .' Hubo Lnrscn, fliilt Lake Cllj'.

Page 7: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

‘r S a t u r d w Jatin^ iry 8 ,1 9 4 2 ' • ; ■;; ■ . ' ! l D A H a E V E N f f l G l T I M E g . t w i n F A I X S ^ J P A H O . ■ ■. ■

I>ubUc»tlon In both yis ‘irore

‘ Bweii on'CiM l-fe-W ort;■ 1 ^ ' pff, won!

3; ^aywi;.«c peif w d per day6 d»ys..».,.:.3e^er word

per day..A fnittlmum o t ten words )j leijulred

-^ln.«iiy.oni:<!l!itBmed ad, Th«« rates Include ibtf combined'cl;culutloai^)){ tb« Hewa and Uie Times. ,T e m t ioe all classified a d i .

CASH

■ COMPLETE COVERAeE AT ONE,COSTIN'TWJN PAW.S • ,

— ADTAKEaPH

l - r -

I

I 33’^or 38 fO B ■ m JEROME

• Leave Ada at K & W- Root Beer;■ BUmd-',, DEADLINES'

. . For tosertlon <n the Hew#' 6 p. m.

’ ?or, IpBtrtlon In tKo Timea '11 Bi m. , ■

This paper subacrlbes'to the code ■ ol ethlcs'ol the AssoclftUrti ot Ncws-• .'psper -Olaasltled; Advertising Man-

oners'and'reserves the jlEhl to edit -ci; reject jiny olassltled* aSvefdslng ,“81(jid-Ad8'! c f ^ ln g a News-Tlmes

,' box nuRiberi'aVo strictly conflden-' itisJ." and no .Intotmatlon can b#

. • given i n .regard to the advertiser. ■Errors wtiuld b : renotted Inimedl-

.' ,'dteiy. No allowances will bo made .'. for, mara . t h i ^ one Incorrect In- 'itertlop.

4G O p D T H IN G S TQ EA T

SV'aU . Sinda of seafood, at Public' ' WarKet, m Blue Lakes north. .

POPCORN-New vop. South Am tr- ' lean.' Qlob6 Seed and Feed Co.

' DBLIOIODS and Romes at Brents. , Rates to tructers. Kimberly. C4R4,

SPECIAL NOTICESDOROTHEA’S Rest Home. . Inva- ' Uds — elderly -iwpp'o. Mgnetate

• . rate*.' Phone Q188-R2. ^

CHIROPKACTOFIS- ; '?o n shouldn't say "I havO t r i ^ ev­

erything" unless X-ray fllognosla and cWropracUo adju toenta were lnclud?a,_.Pr;:^m a fi»^'''"’indep«ndw*' Meat. .

-T R A V E L & RESORTS .S h a r e Expense trips many j))acea,

: Travel Bureau, BIT 4ULAV0. east 1988..' -

LOST ANP FOUND-B litO tt- yest lost'Wtween Flreslono ■ 'arid Doss’ ClB(Uiers.:,'Botum,Doss , 'Oleanera. Rsiward.

-TRUOK tire and rim lost near Alr- ; : .,port.. . Reward. ,W.._T. 'WllUuns, :: ■ Route 3, Twin Falla.

BTRA'yEb, Gray saddle horse, i': branded cross bar A on stifle. J,

W; Robertson, Phtfne ,1102 ^

BTBA'yED-Flve bucks, brahded A BoxTir Triangle Bar. Swallow fork on left ear. Liberal re'wara. Edwin Damman, Mary Alice Park.

BEAUTY SHOPS'0U< ■pirmanentii M.OO up. Mrs.

Heeley-Beamer.-Phone 8!5. Over .'Independent Meat.

»iOd,- $5,00, »B.OO permanents, half • . price. Idaho Barber and Biauty

Bhop., Phone t2 i. ,

'.MAOHINELESS permanent*, {3,50 _ OU. permanents. ■- $2,50. PB.

Al^lstlc Beauty Salon._________

OIL pAuianenta, $ jas up. Oenvitoe . Eugene DUart and Par mschlne-

loss .'waves. Beauty Arts Academj^

jBJgeNE Beauty "studio - hjnna- n » t waves, $3.50 up. 8hl>mpoo (Id flnge'Tsvave lOo and up, 135

1. 'Fourth-Averi&s -north.

HELP ^A N T E D -W O M E N

r-‘

•WOMAN cook, out-ot:town cife. State salary jn d references. Bi)x 39, Tlmes-News;

■^RBLIAfltE housekeeper. In modem : suburban home. Adults. Box 41,

Tlmea-Nowii. ■ i-

UNFURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

FIVE room unfurnished aportnient. Oloso In. Benoit Apnftments. iPhone 2445-J. • ,

FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

, ' . Rooms and bath. 816 Second -J Avenue 'east,'i*hono 3333, '

CLEAN one room furnished opart- : ment. Furnace Heat. eaiMaln west.

VAOANOY at the Justamers irin and O i ^ apartments. Phone 011.

THREE room modem stoker' heat. Bungalow ' Apartmenta. Second •venue east. ,

CUBAN, Corotortablo apartment a t Bostoni 335 Third Avenue nortli, Phono 1B04. ■

TOUR Rooms, bath, stove heat, . elgctrlo range, garage. 1151 Ninth S ' B»St. ' , '

MODERN small apartment. Btokcr , htat, outside entrnnco, prlvato ' b»th. Two ndiil^. Phono 1600.

BOARD AND ROOM 'ROOM Uid board. 713 Second nortli.; Phono K70, Mr»; Hteams.' - ;" r ' ~

ROOM an4 board. Purn«06 hoW. . 1815 Seventh enst. Phone 1333. .

'jJlCELir Pumlshed room and nood mials. 130 Sixth Avenilo N^rUi.

M a s o n ABLE. Stoker heat, 3JJ I Sixth Avenue enst. Mrs. Oiaiio

Hunllton. . . .

LET US HELPSELL YOUi USED

"Due to the diminishing su p p ly o fjew radios there is a big demand for ail USED'types. Many people will not'wait

for new goods ax'd, are '.in tho m arket

for a used radio. Take advantage of this

todgy. Sell yotir Used radio quickly and

lljMvith n classified I'n the Tl;«es and- News; 'Ju st phone 32 or 38,

U'l . ' \ 'ask for Classified.

CLASSIFIED ADS'

jS T H B rp r y weaner'iilgs. 14 norths Vj^iwest .Kimberly Bank.»

16 RANCH ewes, $1.00 head. Qeerge ■ Adkins, Bvhl. Phone s m i . - •

'THREE ' 3 year ojd '.colts; nearly new 2»-wny .Oliver plow. 'Wra'trftde-

J p r . cattlB..M.-R.:EeckIoy, 0283B12.

HERD h ig h grade Holstein cows. H. E. H arry i'6 west, 3W south„JCi*ip ta b . , . • ' ' • '

GOOD, Registered 3 year old Hoi-* stein bu ll. Tencklnek blood. Rupert MbrrlU. 1 east Ji south Kimberly.

UNBROKEN, mare .4 ears, 1200 lbs.; big Spotted -Poland boar.'A...H. U tter, Hdnsen. ,

SOOO^^TJNQ Ewes, lamb-Pcbtt«ry, with F o « s t right and Ittylor G ra rin s . 1120 acres deeded' land, hay meoddW, cuts 600 tons. Will sell a l l or .separately. Call pat G raves, Lcdorejdoho.

HORSES tor, saleT-Seventy e a d good young BelgWn' apd Slft'a horses,'and mares, Several good m atched tejuns. Hughes and'SSIth, back "of stockgrowers’.oftmmlssion Company. .' ' . s

FURNlSHEiD ROOMSDESIRABLE rooin' for ■ gentlemm.

Stoker heot, Close Inr Phono m

ROOM-Stflker heat, hot Water, shower. Close In. Phone 1164.

SPECIAL-$30 month. Telephone, maid service. Park Hotel; Phi .54,

AOIOININO bath. Soft fcater. Stq- ken Bresktost optional. 813 Sho- shone n o r t h . " ..........

COMFORTABLE, pleoaant, conven­ient,' well located, room. Stoker h e a t. ' Phode 333.

UNFURNISHE^ThQUSESTHREE Clean room?, bath, 'wired

tor range. A'dults. 435 Heyburn.

$25—FIVE rooms, ■ modem -excent heot, 805 Third. west-1330J.,

THREE Rooms and bath. Clote In. Phone 338 or 81^ '

STRICTLY. Modem 5 room house, $36,00. Adults refereppes. Phone 1585-J,:. ■ ', •

PITO rooms,-modem, stoker.. 135 Eighth avenue east, inijiilre 53il’,4 ■Second enst.-: ' , ' '•

THREE room house, with bath. Elec­tric .'Water heater,'olt bumer' and garage. In city, inquire 03D9-J1.

FURNlSlfeD HOUSESFIVE room modem partly furnished

' house. 536 Fourth avenue east..

lOuse, modern except iqiilrk 343 2nd 'west...'

TO RENT OR LEASE

WANTJ33, t o n up to' 103 acres. Have cqulffhent,' help and refer­ences. Box 40, Tlmes-Kcws,'

REAL ESTATE LOANSMONEY to lonri 'on* ta'rm,' city ojt;

acreage. Peavey-Tab'er company.

FARM a n d city loons. Northern Lite Insurance Company—Fred Bati!s. Phone 1310.

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR SALE ........

FEDERAL LAND B^NK FARM

480 aero stock ranch, well located on Little Wood River near Sho- ahone.'JM Inches old decreed wa­te r In Uttle- Wood River. Supple­mental rights In Big Cottonwood ■Canal and Big Wood Elver. Pair Improvements. Price $13,000. T?rms.

L. L. WEEKS, Sec'y-Treas. National Farm Loan Associations

QoodUig, Idaho _ Phone 39.

FARMS AND ACREAGES , FOR RENT

160 A. OR 360 A. near Caldwell. Ex­cellent soil, .excellent water right,

. Must be equipped and be able to finance self, Advantogeous terms

, to right party. .Address:-Jay Downing, Coiuithouse, Jocatello,

HOMES FOR SALERB3>II0IJD prlcel Three opartmehtj.

Fine, shape. 131 Ninth Ave. north.

TWO Room plastered'house. Built- ina, garage, comer lot, $1100,. terms. Inquire 1331 FltUi east,

15 ROOM Jioute and bath, garo and 3-rosldence'lota, $3,000. Tenii,.. Wanted; listing oh best now homes In Blues Lukes AddlUotl. Roberta <b Henson.

ATTRACTIVE New 5 Flreplooe, stoker,' eleotrlo hoti water heater. Insulated tor cold weatlier. Close. In.. $000 down, $38 per mopth, Wliy pay rffnt? Phone 542 or 306. '

i^ - FARM IMPLEMENTS AND EQUIPMENT

PRAOTtCALLY new Cose hay chop iwr. Excellent con(lltlon, Howard 'riBfltor Company.

TRADE Vour old crcnm separator on u iww Elcctrlo Kitchen mmlol,

. NO ornnk, no gears, no (illliig. Qamble Stores, Twin Fdli,

HAY, ORAIN„AND FEEDSPERRY Feeds of. aU Wnda for sale

a t Klnney.Warehouse. Twin Falls,

CUSTOM cpm shelling, 6o bwt. All Ian Blamlres, Route 1, 'Wendell,

1800 BUSHELS Barley. SUO cwt, August Brandt, across from Grade Bchopl, MuAaugh.:

..CUSTOM GRINDINQ 1 o r 3 ton 8o cvJt; over 3 ton, 7o MUiLER MILLING. SERVICE

Ph. J2J3„Fllet.Ph. calls oft grifldtoB

F E E lj Purina Chowa fo r mnrr* pjomilk, .pork, ohpw Mix Lay, $3J)r;

■ Calf Startlna, $4.50; Hpg. Chow , B'uiiplcments, $4.20. Vassar Produce -Company, Twin Falls.

MOLASSES MIXING and FEED GRINDING ■'

■ MOHEIiAND .MILtlNO' SERVICE' Ph. 318. FUer. Ph. oaUs o lt grinding,

OROOND ' ■’

PEA CULLS- '•‘■'•For Sheep, Hogs.' Cattle

Limited Quantity . INTERMOnNTAIN SEED 00.

FEED-FOR PROFITS??? ,.THERE Is only one quality In'Bugler

Feeds. No 2nd or 3rd grade, hly one HJOH QUALK^ well bal anced feed made by Banner Mills,

Bugler flay ing Mash .......$2.75 cwt.Bugler Calf. Meal, 25 lbs. 1.25 sweet;. Syrup Dairy R ation l.SO.owt,Banner.Dairy Mineral.___ 4.50 cwt.Banner" Hog Mineral ........ 4.50 cwt,Banner.42% Hog Supplem't 3.90 owl,

(Mix 100 with too your grains) We plnd - We mix

OLOBE SEED 'i: FEED COMPANY

- LIVESTOCR FO n SALEONE Good m H cow. 'A. U Fanchet,

Phone 26J3. Kimberly.,

1300 EW ES wlth''retprvo in Hum,-, boldt forest and Taylor • grazing right. PrIcW tor quick, sale. Jno. Pence. Phono 1820. ^

WANTED To BUY,v>''SPOT C ash paid toi

tu rn ltu re ond stoves.

WANTED: Wood or wire hangers, In . good ' condition, 'Ko' each. Troy o r Noliiwal plant.

N O ltC ETo the Stfoldiolders ef - the. Twin

Falls C«n«l Company> ■■YoU'are hereby notUled th a t the

regular meeting ot th e stookholdera o f the Twin Falla JDanal Company 'Will be held pn-TuAdw the 13th d i^ o f Januaryr'lBO, a t 10 o’clock A. M., a t the.oflloe oJ' ?o^d ComiMmy in "Iwln Fallsi'I((ahorfor:the purpose o f electing five. m im bers of the Board of Dlrecotrs a n d transacting such other business da may come before said'meeting. •

The books will close for' the trans­fe r ot stock ten d a y s before aald meetliig and all pcoxlos must be In th e Iwida of the Secretary not less th an five doya before said meeting, TW IN PALLS CANAL. COMPANY,

By Emma L. TVlck,' Secretiiry Pub. .Thnes; Jan, 3, 10, 1043,

WE PA'S? Spot cash for eoodjato • m odel, lised cah. Chaney Motor

‘ ComSiany, Ph. 1818.

WANTED — Bundles of fiiaga^nei and ra g s —Must hove 100 pounds or ’m ore, to sell. Also h'oni eto. Idaho Ju n k bouse. '

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

ALL Rubber separator, automobile batteries still available.'"'Budget

:tona

PROTECT your family. iSvT^tJiat'l broken gloss repaired today at Mo.On’s.

ADTO G lass Installed at Twin FgJJS' Wrocking, Kimberly Road, Phone 131.

CCC salvage goodir-qullKralnioats, overshoes,,.shh-tsj soc6, ettf'ldatfo Junk House.

AUTO glass, canvo^. canyas repah’. tag, Thom eta Top and Body Worksj-

HOM E FURNISHINGS A N D APPLIANCES

a o 6 o Mattress, Simmons sprlngi^ bedatcd and . day bed. Ph. 3161,W.

GOOD Used coal and wood ronges, all prices, GambleCSWres.

COMPLETE four room furnishings. Practically new. SacrlfWo for rS' ,moval. 144'Tylcr,

EINOLEUM^Remonts prlccd os Jasf «ns 4o p e r square foot. Large'Tlssort- Iment. Bring hi your rbqpi sizes. Moon's.

HEATER el?arance.' 0 ^ complete ' stock of Oakland coal heaters and 'Perfection oil heaters reduced as mud) n s 20?"o In price. Buy your ■heater today 'on iasy terms. 0. 0. Anderson Company.

, Business and Prof esMonal

DIRECTORYB a i / i s and Ma agea

The Sto-Well, B21 MaUf p i!“l66.

Bicycle Sales and ServiceBLASIUS OYCtraY. PH, m

ChiropractorsW. Wyatt, 1513rd Ave. N. Ph.-1311,

Coal and Wood' fb n . ECONOMY AND C0MF0RT|

fill your' bln with A B E R r E B N O O A L

Interm ountain. Seed & Fuel ,0o,l

Curtain ShopsCurtain b Drapery Shop, '335-6th E.

Alao slip coverti corpeta. Ph. 863.

Floor SandingHolder & Sona, 611 Main E„ 1450-W.

Fred Plelfle, 733 Loouat. Ph. 1006-J,

InsuranceP it Firr ana Casualty Inauranoe.

Surety and Fidelity Bonds.. aei , e jv to investment Co. Baugh Bldg.

Job Printing ..

QUALITY JOB PRINTINGLetterheads Mall Pieces . O'ialncta Cords' • Folticri

Stationery ^TIMES ond NEWS

OOMMEItCIAL palN T IN d DEPT,

Key ShopSchndo Key Shop. Ice akntca sharp

encd. hollow gwiiiKl, lao 3nd S t •ouUi. Back or I, D. Btolo.

Moncii to LoanFARM WUl City loina. 4V4%. Prompt

MUon. awtm inv, oo„ Ph. coi,

Money to LoanCl JONES for HOMES ond LOANS.

Rm. S, B ank Sc Trust Bldg, Ph. 2p41

SALARY LOANS S tflc tly contldentlol .»

»5. to $50. to employed people o n ' y o u r own afeatura

Rms. 1&3, Burkholder Bldg,, Ph. 116

AUTO LOANSRefinance yonr present controct—

reduce payments—cosh" advanced,

W ESTERN FINANCE CO.< N ex t to Fidelity Bonk.

$25 to $750 :•■ O N YOUR CAR ', '

1. FOR ADDmONAL CASH 3. TO REDUCE PRESENT

. PAYMENTS.S. TO FINANCE THE SALE

O P YOUR CAR.

Consumers Credit Go;lOwnea by PacUlo Finance)

326 M AIN AVENUE NORTH

Osteopathic PhysicianDt, L. A. Peterson, 130 Mnln N., 403,

Dr E. a. M iller, 413 Main N. Ph, 1011

P, 0. W. ^toae, 114 M. N., Ph, B31-W,

-Plunibing and HeatingAbbot,t Plumbing Co, ' Ph. 05-W

TypewritersBales, re n ta ls and service. . Ph. 00.

UpholsteringReiialrlng, rotlnlshlnj. Cross a Btu

ley'Fum. 130 2nd St. a . Ph. 5»5.

W ater Sgsiemsrioyrt Lilly. Pll. 3030, 314 Bho.II!.

22 GOOD Used electrlo radipa. 14115 and up. Osmble Stbrea. ' . ?''■■

AUTOS F O R S A L E

DRAPT9DI Muat fleU 1043. Stude­baker deluxe coupe. Coab and terms. •Phode-.ISJ.- . ' ; •

OLATB Model Hudson 4-dpor. eedan, ' '8,000 miles, wm tradp -to r resl-

dsncp ptpperly, C eJl 2013.

BXTItA Good 1040 OMamobUe. New -tires'. Reasonable. Owner, Phene 2428.

1040 DELUXE Oldsmoblle; 14. Inch Delta baud taw ;'18-taoh lb«-Waft radial saw: 3 wheel trailer. Phops 146?. ' ' ' . ' v ; " "

L EG A L ADVERTISEM ENTS,

II Ihers ever was- any doubt In the mhida ot iport tiuis or;.-ot Americans'' In geneml oi to th e gppd sports­manship ot Champion Jpa Louis, it la a u r^ dlipelled by ^ o -generous action’0l the champion Mn giving, hla /shore of the purse to. the navy relief fund In Ms UUe' bout 0. In' addition to waivins all pay tor the bout, 'Joe st«nds a risk of loshig hlsrtltle,'though perhaps a remote one, .' ' -. ., , . , '

But there Is always a chance that sooner or liter a cham p may-meet ohe golni’up as he is; goUig. down, and .Joe’s action stam ps, hun as a' truly great:jAmerlcan champion. In a . country 'where good aports are; a nUe rather, than.’ a n excep tfq ic^d bock-jtahlilng (», found onto fir the ranks.of iuisstera, and,-only then through Ita ot exposure, stature isn’t the only.wayTirwhlch -the Japs ore small,. .

And Ujlenlng to th e radio-phone Ills'pledging ca.5h support to the

Red CMu wsrtnM the^heart of oil

Magic Valloj, sheepmim will.' plW' prominent toles at th e annual opn- ventlon ot tho, Idaho Wpol;Growors association as heads o f committees which will hfiH individual sessions ^an . 6 a t Boise.

The cohvenlfon is ischetiuled tor.Tfln. fl, 7 nnri fl.

Comipfete&hrads who will preside a t group discussions o f problems ta- clude Fred Brallstord, general oper­ations, taxes and labor; T. H. Good-

plnE, coat ,o[ production; T, C. Ba­con, Toylor grazing; D .,S ld Smith, forest grazing; John Noli, freight rates, stockyards,. feodyMds, trans­portation; Ocorge/Tfiranpson, wool

larkethig and promotion; -Wilbur rilson, lonib marketing and odver- slng; Merle L. Drake, general res­

olutions; Robert Naylor, predatory anlnlals and diabse,.JTlie Boise parley, which assumes added Importance becauie ot the huge demand tor wool, to supply arm y and navy demands,.will attroctj several dozen Moglo Valley aheep producers. Tlielr wives also wlU a t­ten d since a prograiA h a s b;en ar- raaged tor the ladles.

in addition to the south central Idahoans who are on th e convention program to- report' a s committee iiead^, seWral others also will, play leading roles at the sessions. Harry Benoit, Twin Falls, w ill be toast-

lptfls£3r a t the Wednesday banquet, ^ n d Mrs. James Laldlaw, Muldoon, will speak ot the Wednesday morn­ing gatlierlng as president of the Idaho Women's Wool Growers assO' ciatloa. -

HflfFfl"'BOISE, Jan, 3 (U,R)—Oov, bhaae A>

C lark today pledged-, th e facilities, of private and publl6 agencies to the fe d e ra l, government In re-locating defcnae Industrlej'ln Inland areas'.

Advised that" Uie federal govern­m e n t was consW'erlng relocation of som e detente Industries. Oov. OUrk wired Presldenti Roosevelt a bid, lirgifig Idaho as « possible Bite.

•“I am pleased to a d v lsf you' th a t In Idaho I otter you a coordinated proBfom by public and ’ private agencles.’Vtha governor aald.- “All ol the laollltlea o f atate gov­

ernm en t, aa well aa those ot com- p ierclal .and other- orgSSilzatlona are available to whatever federal ogen- cles-jnay .have the responsibility ot su ch relocations. In m y opinion the v a st resources of Idaho can contrib­u te substmllally to th e war effort an d a t the same time be prepared to old In mslntalnhig post-war econ­om y under a citetully • thought-but pj:pgram In which we a re now offer­ing- our full services."

Two Mothers Ask For Divorce Here

Claiming non-support and assert' in g her husband hos'given Just $13 to maintain his fam ily of lour children In the last year and a quarte r, Mra, Clive B.* Bland has filed divorce suit In district court h e re against Bert M. £ land , now of Holtvllle, Calli, T h e y . wed. Aug, .20, 1030 a t Vole, Ore., and have o son , 8, and daughters, 4, 5 and 0.

R ay p , Agte Is a ttorney tor Mrs; B lond,

I n anoUicr divorce su it filed' Frl^ d a y afternoon,' Mrs. M orgafet Vick.

;*Uk-s aslfs freedom from Charles Vick­ers . railway woiker, on ground of o ru d ty . ’Tliey mlirrlcd O ct. 13. 1034 a t ClntlK, Kon, Shp alleges he is ."Inlatuatcd” t o i ano ther woman. M rs. Vlokers, motlier o f a son, a n d daughter, 3, asks custody of tho

j;OhlWreit-imd'Boikr$100'T)er month support'.money.

O . 'C . Hall Is altorney tor tliq m other. .

Ami;Tioan nlrcmlt m anutacturraa du ring the tin t seven inon tlii ot tills 'y ear delivered to Britlah «lr for*a m ore Ulan KOI,000,000 worth of p innei, engines and o th e r neroniiu tlonl oqulimipnt,

-By A. H A R V E ST E R

who' heard It, and gives assurance that. America'knows she hlis some­thing to lliht lor an d intends! to do Just that, namely, fig h t with oil her resources, WJtli m any' I t ,wlll Be. to avenge Peirl harbor (It. Is pretty hard to keep from feeling, vengeful against such barbaric t,'caCliery), whUe wltli otliers I t will be a long ronge olni to make certain that no opportunity .will be offered to any notlon to perpetrate such,an o.utrage In future, and stHl others will hpld out: the hem that th e teaching ol tho way laid aown by th e Master will bo ample Inmranie U iat no similar' situation win arise.

KIHBERLYBut I started -to write Grange

nows. Kimberly Grange met hi reg­ular session Deo. 22, 'but my. copy come Just.«s I couglit the^nioll for my. lost column, henc(v,tho deloy. A thip oyster stew supper served by tho ladles of Uie. Orange preceded the meWng and .’was a craipllment to tho men who liod,6erved, a turkey dinner a Jiort timo before. (I don't mean tho tame night).

About 10 |vir«niiii wprn priisanl seoted, at. tobte decorated wUh Chrlstfoas greens at^d tapers. Place cards wet*, mapped gifts, wlUi' tho names ol tlie men on them. The comma ofler seated m eans thot the: tables were deco,rated and not the persons. Tills' waa th e la st business meeting of the' year and much rPU' tine matter was dispensed with, The Gronge voted to take anpther $6 membership In the Red Orossri.nstal- latlTO ot Uia new otHcers was an-, nouhced for Jan. 1. a t th e Mountain Rook Grants holl. “■ Attej Uie business m eetlng,U ie liidlej entertained with la pfogromV muslo, gones and a 'sk it. All voted I9 a very .enjoyable evening.'Kimberly Orange flnijhes the ye&r 1041 with an lijcrease In racmberehlp and all dues pold,In full."' A very,enviable record and epe'oks well for the Grange members d'nd shows an e'f- flclent secretary. M aster Frank Beer was .able to bo out. again after a maJoiNiperatlon, Happy New Year, Kimberly.

' -H O tU S T E RAnd over r t Hollister Gronge Uioy

hod a cheery ChrlsUnas party Dec. 23. I t was an open _meeUng, and though not well a la rge crowd was present, a lliorcuglily good time was enjoyed' by all.- All 'w ho attended brought a gilt tor the exchonge, and, Joining In a circle with each person holding 'a {lit, music on the plono was played and tlie gifts wore possed aroun;t>tho circle. As the music abruply stopped. If a ll wanted the gift, that Uiey held, they sat down. If any were Iflio D. W orth Clark they stayed In the circle, passing the gift on atiiln'untll the muslo si ped, when-ejoh k ep t-th e .g ift ( he held.- v. . •• , -

The feature ot Uie evftjlng was the auction, with Pomona M aster Erie Jones aa auctioneer. F ifteen or twen­ty boxes .were sold, each labelled one thing and containing someUilng UO' expected. A (ew)amplEs were as for- Iowa; A man's best' friend—-wiener sandwich; answer to a malden'a prayer—candy klssea; sure cure .tor insomnla-|i Ikrge ^ c l c ; sea mon- ater-can ottsrdlnea;a good^atart In life—thre^ cornered pan ts; a bpy'a downfall-a bar of soap. These boxes aold'for a dollar or more, generally, and the money Is to-be spent for a,| defenae bond. All btwes were opened as received and much amusement 'was had by the audience.

Besides candy, nuts, pof(com and appl?s, tuwlghb by all, M r. ond Mrs. Lyle snltkef and Mr. and Mra. Frank Eostman ibrved cake an d coffee. At tho next meeting Pomona Master Ei-le Jones will Install the officers In the Hollliler Grange hall, And Hoppy New Year, to Hollister.

• WEST POINTOpened In due form with 86 mem

bers present, on Friday, Dec. 20, soys my West Point Orange sorllre, add­ing thot perhaps the reason so tew were outwag becauso i t was th'o day after Chrlslmos. The Ornngo char' ter was draped tor W. S . Burdick I t waa annM ed th a t tlie West Point-Oranis otlloers would be hi' stalled at Wndell JSn. 3 a t ilie Wsndell Grange hall. A potluck dihner will bo sefved.

In an eftortto get full oooperaUon ot the pincers ot Uio .Orange, If was mov?d and leconded-that anyofti- oer who Is abient tour meeUhgs In row automitically Iosi!s the oftlco and a aucoetjor will be elected and Installed, ’Hw motion prfvalltd.

Also by motion, Uie d a te Of Gronge mesUnga wai changed back to tho lJn t-nnd -1WKI''Prrdayii of each month, beginning with th e meeting ot Feb. 6. And on tho unique aide, tills la the llrtl year since 1030 that Itriy SmlUi his not been Installed as master o( West Po)(\t Grange, and Ray took Uit opw rtunlty to tlialik Uia arinje jTor Its loyal oo- operation diirlng alPtlieao years. Mr.-! Smith Is now tronsuror of tlig Btolo aronge.

. The lecturer: being absent,^Mrs.. M, McOIou<l ca% d Oil with o n 'h n - pronfttu . progrtun, cn iaf-m eatis thot. jtbe. persons on' the program are sort, o f .attacked wlUiout wam-'^ nlng.> F i r s t wa? a 4-ott by U w ls. Cottmon a n d '. Bertha Ras'l,"8higlng ‘‘The CJuUtUig Porty." Then Miss Dorlene'.*BltterU gave' an interest­ing account ot jtier work ot the U nl- verslty"oPrdoh6, orMoscow.. Miss Bltte'rll'ia a aenlor in nutrition an d told of tR e many new Uilngs th a t they were igolng to do &t t ^ unU versity a f te r . ' Christmas,' 'to . fu rther the defSnse . program. Wonien' a re to be taU Bht to drive ambulances and to ^ o ' niiuiy other'losks to a id defense; ■ ' ' . -

Reports o f Uio State Q range.w rtf read for t h e Orange by Ray Sm ith and ‘flonald SmlUir Ro'nald. tolling of the trip th a t Uie visiting Grang­ers took to tlje sowmlll.'. Ray , told about, the Orango,<s(tilona at-wluch- many were turned owoy as the tloor stringers vrerO 'dracklng under'.the stroln. (P re tty heavy folks, u s Orongers.) These meetings were held in, th e Lewis and' Clark hotel. Mr., Smith also stated Uiat <it' four JuyenUe inStalloUons h61d'thls:year, Ronald S m ith was installing ottlcer on three occasions, .The lost num ­ber on the -program was a solo by Lewis Coffmph, "My ,WUd Irish Rose,” Undoubtedly Uioy h a d r e ­freshments, .though deponent soltH not: Happy Now Year, West Point.

D E E P 'c re e k Deep C reek Gronge met lost'at th e

Corl- Horder. home, with 0 good a t ­tendance, a n d Uvoly biislnoss. dis­cussion. V isitors were Mv. and Mrs-. Shrodef a r i d ' Mr. ond Mrs. Tom Hejtmone^. Tlie Orango win buy a defense b o n d later,'‘as the secre­tory wos not.present-and the treas­ury report w aa not hand. I t was voted to a cc e p t (ySJnvltatlon of Fah-vlew , G range, to he-guests at, a Joint Installation of Deep (Jreck, Lu­cerne and E^lrvlew Granges. T he Grange c h a r te r was drajicd for F . L. Slonaker. early and long, thne m em bor-ofDeop Creek Orange.

For the.lecturcr'a hour, a gltt.ex-

Aiiisuial^nior Ball -^-Staged at JeromeJEROME, Jon, 3 (Special), Al^'

proxlmatelyi -100 persons attraded' the' anniiarlenlor class’ ball,' ,ar­ranged In, the 'high school gjmsias-; • luhii last.weck.-,-rr-'-,—< --—.r

Guests,,who taoluded member*, of the wnlor claa, tad- niwv. oUnsrs,' danced^amld a'lovely whiter setting,"' the hall belitg decorated In the sea­sonal theme, - . •

Wayne Skeera and. h tf M<s Sfcemers of Twhi Falli playedthe-ovent. ■ •.____-.--Th>ohgh-Tiso''"or make^beueve > Icicles; amlnlatur,e ac'ene ot Sun \ VoUey, showhig . tobogganers, skiers ; and skaters,' ond'a snow hut, >tlie ;: w i n t e r theme was .eltectively, ■ achieved.' ,', : • '’ , ,- Chiss colors ot blue and white, and : the New Year bioUf, gtace^ tho.. unique programs.-The:grand m arch■ began a t O'p. m. led by t o class 0I-, fleers, Jii'ck' Lewis,' president,' and his '. partner. Miss Anna.Lou.Crolg; Meli .Ue SpencM, v te-ptssltot, and Miss MorgareVWarren, council, mfinber:..'/ Helen JeSn . Terry,-' doss iecrdtory,’. and“ Hliyne Polraour;' .Dale ;B urd,''V council member ond Miss Vida tb u . :. Strickland.

Aa an effecUvo cUma'x to tho eve- . " nlng's' entertainment;' queen ’ and'" ,

^ n g o fth e boll were toM, ond B.'B. raerry, closj advisor,- jilaced crowns .,. on the heads' of‘ Mlsj Isabelle NeW- . . man and Ray Stanger. ,■ '

Crown' bearers were' Mlu Marilyn . ,’i Ottlimor and Jay Helton.,' ' ' i ' -j

J e to ' Beveridge, ■ Barfiara-smith, • Jean Lawshe, Margaret _,War- - ren, .Leno're Jenkins, Lytann'Hollo- woy, Jock Lewis, DorothyfCorHon,. ' MelUq Spfncer, Otto Docktor, C. A. Vlnlng a n d -D t^ Ricketts'were, a t- ’„ tondants to ' ,tho honored couple. , j ',

CpmmlUeo, chairmen werb M iss" . Barbara Smith, decoraVtons;, ,Mla3 . Vida Lou Strickland,' Invltatlpns; . V Miss Jeon Lawshe,. programs; - Miss . - Margaret WoUlngton, muslo; D ana,! Messenger, Jr., clcon-up;. Truman ; Wilkes, fhiance an^ (Dtto Docktor,' rcfrcsliments.-

*'atrons’ ahd potronesjes .-.were Supt. ■ and Mrs. H,,Maine Shorn; - .,

^ r . ,a n d Mrs. Walter Oldii Mr.'and '/ rars. Bryon Henry, Mr. and M rs.,' Frank Burkhalter, Mr, and'Mrs. ,1,.T. Burdick, Mr. and Mrs.-Frank ... Burkhalter, Mr. and ■ Mrs. Wllllarii n . PhnenlXj'Dr. nnll Mri B n J tfa U

distributed by_Mr'?. ,L. B. Tllley, IeoJ<» tul-er. Bob Hormon gave a talk on the Christ child.- Vocal duet, “In the G arden.’I.by Mrs. Harder and Mra. Darrovir. was followed by talks by the visitors. All otlloers and members w e re requested to be a t Fqirvlew h a i l for the Installation. Refreshments were served. And a Hoppy New Year, Deep Creek'.

: IN S T ALL A’nONS V Of especial Interest td Grangers

pf tills' c o u n ty ore the Installation I ceremonies; ■ At Filer Orange: hall.' on Friday n ig h t. Buhl and Filer in - stolled w ith ' Roy-' Smlth' of '.Wpst Point O range in the leading role', and- on tho sam e niglit at Falrvlew hall, Erie Jones Installed the pttlcers o f Lucerne, D eep Creek and Falrvlew. Also In the near future are the in -

lUatlo'n ceremonies at ’Modntaln ick,' JotL 7, with Kimberly ns

guests of Ktount'oln Rock and Erie Jones - s histalllng officer, and Hol­lister Jon. 1.4. also with Mr. Jones as InstalllnB officer, ond Cedar Draw and Northwlew at Cedar Drow, and Mr. Jo n d s again lii.the leadhig roll

FAmWEWFalrvlew on Jan. 8, a box

supper and card;porty will be held to raise m oney to buy defense bonds. Other forms ot omuaement wUl he provided for those who do not ploy cards, and f o r th ^ w h o wish to comb otter the^jbMes are sold a cliarge of 25 cenfjs will be made for eoch” couple^^plnylng ,.cards. Col. Roy E H opkins will stU’ the’ boxes and I cake will bo auctloried tor

liu’ mil M'

Am’ at j

■Red Cross fu,nds.\ The pubUo is in» vlted to com e anil' bring a box tor yo old ty m e . box 'Supper, If you havqn't seen Roy Hopkins In ,liigh geaj:,. don’t m iss thla,. ■ '

And how, m y ileepest^apprcclaUon to all who h a v e mode Uiis column possible d u rin g 1041. Many thanks and may t h e Providence' th a t watches over ns oil deal khidly with you all and -with. my . readers. It I have any, d a rin g 1042. Pox vobls- oura.' And th an k a to Tlie Thnes for oUowlrlg m e to oppeor 'in lta col-, umns, for t h e Qronge.

Defensfe-Council a t K e tc h u m Orgilinize^

K M H O M . Jai» 3 ' (8poclal)— iKfiW h^ h o a completed Uie organ- Izotlont of i t s defense council, and tho meethig waa eharaoterlzed by large ottendaaice ond njuch enthus- losm. About 400 registrations vere made ociiprdlng to lote federal hi- atrucUona. The council outlined plans for th e perteotlon ot a . state guard u r i l t 'h e re , the and'police units, orrangem ent for a blackout pracUce,.and fun cooperation with Red cross a n d llrst aid m0Ven;|0nts.

Real E state TransfersIn fo rm atio n fornlihed by ■ I n i n F alls Title and

- 'A b s tra c t Cempa;;

Tuesday, beeember 30 D eed-M abel M: Brown to -W. L.

Duchanan $350, Loroln tract No. 1, bolng’ o rtlon of SBNWNW 8 10 10.

Deeii-B. BJornson tp Ellon O. Mentch, gift. flEBW 30 10 IB.- ■, Deed-V. 'E . Smith to Ethel' M. Smith $1, a c re tract 31, Filar. -

•Deed—G race S. Seaver to tlrst Baptist chvVclr, TF, $10, lou D,“ 10,' 11 blook 35, T w in Polls,

Deed - R o tta - c/araon to D. D. McRae $10, l o t IT block 6 Qolden Rule, Twin F a lls . '. Deed—J. D . Cosey to Mary 0. Bmlth $1, lo t 6 Oaaey subdivision, Twin Falla. , ’

D ccd -K irtlan (| Mig, (», to W. B, Woods »S500, lo ts 43,4J iilook « Blue Lnkoa additloSi Twin 'nils,

D eed-^. e . Hatch’to p. M. Htin $10, lot 0 b lock 111. Twin,Foils., Doed-p. At. Hein to Ai'anm *10, lot fl b ld o k u u ; Twlii Falli., '

and Mrs. Fronk Peter7 son and Mr. ivnd.MrstOhatlca H. Welteroth. '. " ■ v. '.

.Seaman G radiiat^';KIMBERLY, Jan,’ 3 '(fipe'elol) "

Alvin WllUS Klous, 21, 'seaman, see-' ond class, graduated frpm the aVfo- , - 1 tion machinist's school a t Uie Ui 8 . ’ noVol ah' station hi Aloaieda, Collf., Soturday, Dec.J1..He Is Uie son of . Mr. and Mrs. G. I. Klous, Khnberly. '■He expects to be assigned to active ■ duty, with the fleet soon..._. * . ■'

TRUCKSLook a t th e se buys'In lale m odel pickups an d trucks.

1038 'V -> COUPE D eL uie, radio, b ea ter , a p e lllib t ...__ . . $ 4 0 5

1035-^PtX M 'oU T H -Sedan, eo n d ltlo n f d ____S300

Model A Sedan;--------^ . $ 5 0

1036 F O R D V-8 Coupe,- N ew p a in t _____ S31S1035 STUDEBAK ER Sedas, over-

drive, h eater, radio, new t ires -------------- -S e i S

1040 FO R O V - 8 H T. Pickup w ith atako n e k ........... S S 7 5

133S (N T E K M A H O N iil 0 -1 H Ton Plciiap— -------$200

1034 O UEV. l U T.' Troek $ 1 9 5

1039 IN T E R N A llO N A l H Ton Pickup, 7J10s30 U res .... $ 4 9 8

iosi FORD, V .8 i)ii,T o ii, w ith b eet bed....;,5 . $ 3 9 af

1037 O U fiV . l U .T . noondlUone()i ^ d new paint— —$ 4 5 0

1038 .D O D G E l ) i T , foodtutfber -----------~ $ 4 S B

1040 rO R D 'V -B «rack ------ _ „ ~ .$ e i8

1037 CHEV. M T, P .B,

r i b u s E sF a im et* who need boriea

for apring work, see na now a n d aave money, Wn han. 4 0, h ead o l good wotk b ers^ lor sale. , ■ ■! ’ '

V

103* V-B ConVfrlll||a:,S| Roadster, eietUeiiV priced’ to •eD,_''|.

H o y m . .TWIN

................'

Page 8: u: S.newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Idaho..., Temperatures HIjh'y«itert»y, 11; tiw, tero. Low this moralnj,-six. A^egional-Newspaper Serving ‘ Nine Irrigated Idaho

IM HO-'EVENING t i m e s ,;'TWIN F A fiL ^ IDAHO■■.'V

i S a t u n l a y ; j a n u a ^ 8 , I M S

GERM AN ~LP BOA TS SIN K : TH R EE

BJ. BJDNEY, J. W IU.1AM B;WNDON, Jan . 3'(U.I>)^A; Brltoh

•. “destroyer, oner Of JO transferred from thO' toerican ila5 y i.^ d nn, .a\ixl)-

- liux ' vcsMl haw/Been~~»ate^4n ■“ grtaiflve-day battle In w h lc ira e r man aibraarlnes and scaplapsa a t, tacked a 30-shlp cohvdy, th e admire ally said today. At Jeast threB 'G er- man U-boats and tw o-planes were.

• destroyed,- ••A.'.thlrd German p lan o ^ llk e 'th e

re s t a giant Focke-^WuIff flying boat Used for Atlantic commerce raiding —was heavily-damaged..

t . In an earlier commtolque th e dd- rolralty had aimounceii loss of tha

..cruiser Neptune and th e • destroyer • Kandahor in the, Mediterranean.

.Its second conimunlauo described <, tersely one of the most dram atlp sea

battles of the war, during which British warcraft-fought from bee,

. - n to Deo. 22, German subnnatlnes and planes attacking their convoy.

■ ■ . Of the 30 merchontmen^.-ln. the- convoy, oiily two were sunk, a n d tho

Germans paid dearly for th em and the two .warships. ■' ’ , .

; The .destroyer sunk was th a 'o ld ' ■ Stanley, called Bailey w h e n .l t m i

. In tbe United States, navy, a n d the ' amflUary Ship w as'tho- Audacity.' Both'we?e sunk by Eubmarines.

., Nail Prlsoneii'TakenPrisoners were taken fro m tlie

• threl'OfeTnan - U-boats. O ne- was forces' to tha . surface by .deptU charges; a sccond was. ram m ed and

.; sunk by the armed escort 'vessel Stork—Ui6 former German steam ­ship Hanover, which a B ritish naval

' patrol captured In Mardh, 1S40.. Both German planes destroyed wer? shot down Into the 'sea.

. / The admiralty said th a t combined tonnage o f the. two m erchantmen sunk was only 6,103 tons.

“The enemy made claims •which were cxaggoratcd by more th a n - 600

. iier #s))t,'’ It commented. "T h e in- cmy. said that nino m erchant ships,

. totaling 37,000 tons were san k . In ' addition to naval units sunk a n d two

more merchant ships damaged.", .Former D. B. Ship

Stanley ’xas one of tho destroyers tho United' States turned over to the hard-pressed .British navy under a Drltbh-Aflierlcan—aKreemeTir~or Sept. 2, imo. These destroyers. buUt during the last -'World war, w ere of the flush-deck type.

Neptune, 7,175-tons, and K an d a­har, 1,6S0 tons,-struck mines. .Kaii-

. dohar was. destroyed by B rltlsb gijti- flie aftcr .lt had been crippled.

Some of Neptune’s complement of ■ S5(l officers and', m en'vero believed . to have beeni picked up by entm y

. warships.(A German official .nows - agency

, dispatch f rpm Romo, recorded b y .the United J^ess Itt London, quoted "a

Heading foi* Uncle iSaih’s Marines

h -

l ^ e s s . .-\ ■ survivor of ths Neftuno reporting

tnat his-commander,' Capt. B . 0. O'Connor, died after four days -In n llfetjoat.) • •. . . Nails Claim Crew lo s t ....... ■'(Berllh reported, ata) th a t I n ad­

dition to her crew, Neptune h a d 200 New Zealand troops aboard a n d that most of the crow, and tR» troops w erejosf

(According to Berlin the* cruiser among other-British warships was pqrsulng an Italian convoy D ec. 19. when there was an explosion Ifi hev. Neptune listed to port-and s a n k so quickly that'on ly lour ra fts ■were floated and only a .few men 'were saved, i t was added.)', Neptune was the'12th cru iser lost by Ue.British.' Sho ;ya^ launched Jan. 31, 1033. She mounted eight slx-'lnch-guns, eight, four-inch a n ti­aircraft guns and four three-pound era. Sho'carrled two pianos.

.Kandahar was tho 88th destroyer ' lost- Including Canadian and Now

Zealand Destroyers. Sho was launch ­ed March 21,1030. She mounte<i»alx 4.7-lnch guns and six smaller guns.

B iir le y S e r v ic e s P a y L a s t T r i b u t e

BUHLEY, Jan; 3 - (Special) — At .. .Uie Ii.D.S. tabema.cle.friends and

relatives gathered' 'Monday to pay ; final trlbuto to the memory of Mrs. ■Vida Boley Haight, -wlto of Charles C. Haight, who died .last week.

Bishop ,Earle Ollverson w as.In

Mrs. H. O; Hall ployed the piano and violin prelude and postlude. H ie first ward choir under direction of Elliott Budge, sang "I ICnow n i a t

' My Redeemer Lives," and Mrs.■ Wayne Newconib. sang "Trees.”

B^hrlam Nichols gave the' Invo­cation, ahd speakers were H. 0. Hall. Hyrum Pickett, M urtaugh, Adonla H. Nielson and Bishop Ollverson. Leonard Berg sang •"Tlie

■ Lord's Prayer," and tlie choir sang "We Loy Thee _ Gently Down to Rest," wltli Mis . Adonis Nielson ac­companying. B. O. Hatch, president

: of Burley stake, gave tho bcngdlor tlon.

Interment, under direction of the Payne mortuaiy, was In the Burley ceractory. with Joscpli Y. H aight,

‘ -Oakley,'dedicating the grave.Pallbearers were Lorln Lowls. K.

d. Barlow, Ircl Gudmunsen, A. M, eolomon. J. S. Hanzel and H. P,

■ Deardorff. Flowers were In charge of Mrs. . John Brooks, Mrs. Ire l audmuunsen, Mrs. E. Nichols, M rs.

,H . P. Deardorff,' Mrs. Olln Bakor, Mrs. Voyd Sperry, Mrs. Eldon

. Mecham, Mrs, 0, W. Harris, M rs. L. • M. Kelly, Mo, Viva Black, Mrs. Nels■ Bllndeo Mrs. R-ed Judevlne, Mi's.-

A. M. Solomon, Mrs. K. -0. Barlow ■and Mrs., I^rln. Lewis.

• ,1— ^ -------- 1------------------ - -

K iiiib e r ly Y o u th .B B <Giiii

KlMBEllLY, Jan . 8 (SpeclnO— , JjJrdan 'aitemoro, eon of i l r . a n d

TT^Mrir:OIlu1tSll(mi!rtrWas''Sociaeril? - : »Uy-slwt In tin oyo with O.JJB g u n

: -wlUlB playlna near ■his homo lo s t :: v^week. 'y Tlio pallet pn*iod Uiroujli tho cyc-

lid,. entered Uio tyeljall below th o

n il, and later fellj out. Unless In - lon dsvelopi, the sight will pcu- TioMy not.b# ImpBlfcd.

Things, (or bothj^t^efmarln'e l ic n ilts and the “folks back home"' to remember were being jointed oat by Sgt. Stanley, J f ja zd ijk , m arine recroller in Twin Falls, 'wlicn th is picture was snapped at .-the lochl railroad depot l u t nIghL The six youths piclorcd w ere'entraining foi' Salt Lake City and final eiamlh- allpns before entering -the marines. The recruits shown are (hack row from-the left) CUnton-D, Trovlllo, Jr.,.Twin Falls; Robert C. Bostwlck, llajcrman, an d LeonfilS E. Osborn, Jerome. F ro n t row (from the

.lclt),_arcs. Harvey "E. Tate, Buhl; Dllwyn K. 'IVcjtherble; Twin Falls, and Vernls L. Hale, QaWey., • ' "(Tlmts Photo an d Engraving)

. S , W D O i 1n i p j ,S

V WASHINGTON. Jan. 3 (U.R)-The United S tatcs 'today had Oghtened restrlctlotis on w e activities of J r 100,000 axis aliens who, though con­sidered "peaceful and .law-abiding," have ■among -tbent-iiotential-splosr cobmcurs and f i f th columnists.

In addltlof) to, greatly restricting' tho travel of Japanese, Gemlan and Italian nationals domiciled to the United States, Puerto. RlcO and the Virgin Islands, Attorney General FranoU Blddlo h a s fiwjercd all en­emy aliens to surrender fireanns In th'eir possession to local police “au­thorities before I I p. m'. I^onday.

Police stations alrco.dy are ftorc- houses fqr shortwave radios, ,fadlo transmitters and cameras, ranging from the Inexpensive box tyiw to tho expcnslvjj,precision .equipment. Surrender otTntfse-.bedan last week­end on the west co as t and tho dead- ■llno'Ior tlie rest o f tlie nation Is J l p.m. Monday).

A ^ aliens can travel beyond cer­tain limitations on ly when author­ized to do so by th e U. S. attorney; of tho district In wW ch they live. Per­mission for such travel, he sal(^ would bir denied In cases where the U. a ' attorney cpnsldcied It to be "potentially to public Balcty.'!

Permission Is n o t required, how­ever, (or travel w ith in tho llmlts,of tho municipality In whlcliUie axis alien resides,-,or between'm s home Und place of. business, churches, schools; state, local and federtU

mcles. niLi perm its tlie alien to eiifage In normal activities.

Japanese, G erm an and Italian- aliens were barred from travclltig by air at tho outset o f tho war.

Services Honor County^. First' Casualty in N^vycitizens of Twin Palis, gatherlnB~and .tha others- who died at Pearl

LONDON, Jan. 3 (U.IS-NorwcBlans evncunted from Vaagso'e In the-suc- cesslul raid. by. Bi-ltlsli alrt.eea and land forces last w eek said today Hje morale of German soldiers wiu so low they would, throw away Ihelr rifles If tlie British Invaded Norway.- 'niey said that some 30 German sol-

charge, and Mrs. Paul Zlllner anilfllOT.attcmpted to lic e In boats when . . lang th e British attacked 'Vaagsoc. Others

fled to the hllls.German troops,"it was said, got

■mast of their news Irom'Norweg- Ians who listened' to the British radlo-an offense punlsjiable by Im- prlsorancnt.

'pcople nil along th e 'co a st liopb the British will r a id ' everywhere," a refugee sold. ' '

Hosiery Colors ; HitbyOPM'Ban

W ASHINGTON,-Jan. 3 (U.PJ-'nio war readied tlio shadcs-pr-hoslery stage Joday.

Tho olllce ol production mannge- m ent recommended t o hosiery nmn- ufaCtoers tha t U icy quit making hosiery in -more t h a n a halt-dozon jllffercnt elmUes.

At present there a ro moro thon loa sliMes of men's a n d women's ho­siery, There are sho rtage? 'o r threat­ened uliortagcs of c e r ta in ty p e s .,

fleaijngs Slated For Sugar Rates

WABIIINQTON, J a n . - 3 (U.RI-^iib- llo hearings will bo h e ld In sevctnl western cities this -in^ntli oii'lalibr rates mid growcr-proccsiior coiitrnots lpr,tho low sugar b e e t crap,-the oS- rlculturo detiarUncnt aiuiQunced to- toy.__ . _ ^ ___

’The litarlngs l i s t e d by tlie tUgiir division ol A A M ncludcd;

Billings,-Mont,, J a n . 10, Montana and northern W yoming.

I’ocatello, Ida., J a n . 10, lo r UtMi, Idaho, Oi!cgon and W ashington.

Denver, Oolo., Jan.-SSi (or,Nebras­ka, Soiilh Dakota, sou thern Wyo­ming, Oolomdo atui K ntuiis.

In Uic district court robms last n ight, paid tribute‘to the memory of th e .UM enlisted- man from th is county to be kllled^ln th e service of h is country since nostUltles started Dec. 7.,

—-Tha. memorial program was . for ■William Arthur -Marsh. 23, son o f Mr. and Mrs. Henry I. Marsh, Ellza- betli tioulevard. Twin Falls. In .ad­dition to his parents h e leaves Uuee broUiers, Hulbert, Wilbert and Mll- foK^ and four sisters, Mabel,. G la- dhie, Dessle .ond Opal. Serving as an enlisted man with th e U. S . navy Mb lost his life a s . Jopancse bombers swooped over Pearl harbor early on tho morning of Sunday, r?eo.‘-7. .

Four Spci)Vm'hig-

, BlandJi’’ Uio during th e ilrs t W orld war; p .

O. Fortner, whoScrved with the navy during-tlie, first World war; Rev. Hi.J. Hcynolds, Clirlstlan min­ister, agd 0. .A. Edmonson, head of the local recruiting pijlce through which young M arsh entered tne service ol Tila country. Two other local lecrultera. E. R. Bannon and ' Frank 0. Peck, were also present.

On behalf o( tlie American W ar MoUiers orgaiitzaclon, Mi-s. Mattie Vickers, Its president, presented a bouquet of camatlons'to members q{ the. family. .

Mr. Blandtord, after praising tlie navy, said; • ,-

"It was to tills line organlzaUon th a t WHUam. Arthur luarsh be­longed at tl^o time ho so gloriously lost his IKe ttt^Pearl harbor on flee. 7. 1041;

.Proteoilve btcp:«"Wo cannot \indo whot has been

doiie. Tlie Immortar dead we cannot restore to llle. We cannot <lry tho tears o(. tlio parents and friends. Broken homes may be patched here and there^but-never mended. 'These tilings wo cannot do, but we can take steps now to protect our chll- dren and tlielr children yet -to come from a like-fatijInsofar n s .lt Is-pQ*; slble to dp so; -' .

"A few years ago and even, today. a great portion of our pcople, locked behind mountain Jjarrlers, could not understand tn»t tlie coasts o f A'mpr- Jca might be bombarded or Invoded, o r .that tliousands of h i ^ e s might be destroyed and mliUons o f (cople slain by enemy gunfire.,

"It seems rloleulous to some iieople when It Is sald-enemy soldiers may, be landed by plone or parachute on Amerlcaji soil Inland from th e coast. Tliese (cats aro by no means im-

harbor, may .not have" dled-ln valn.'“ Mr. Fortner called upon every cit­

izen. of ,tho Unlted-States to support thXfeountry,

•‘Now wo ato payliiB. ln terms, of humart. Be," F o r tn e r said. "Wlien .Amerlj;an.llve3_jirfi_takea_®a.-must retaliate, jt will n o t be a small job or a short one. Oun^. planes, tanks and s h l^ a l l these must coma frtm the peo^e,"'

Flgfitlng Mad ' In his brief ta lk Edmonson said that the men of th e navy aro "fight­ing mad.'.'. He recounted Instances •iyhlch occurred while he was on duty in tho far cast and praised Uic brav­ery of ijjen like M arsh during the attack at Pearl harbor. Edmonson enlisted Marsh in the services of the navy on OcL 20. 19^0. . v ' Rev. Reynolds said tliat Marsh,

"Hke the; Master, paid the price to save otliers, but himself lie Iwuld iTot save."'

Mu.slci4 tribute was played by members ol the Tw in Falls iilgh school band Under th e direction df Bert Christianson. James Reynolds 'sang "O Love T hat'W ill Not Let Me Go." As services closed those pres­ent sang ."America.”

The/^trlbute. was arranged by a speclKl^commlttee from-the Town­send club organizations o( tills section. .

■Residential 'Solicitation. In' tlie Twin Palls qounty Red Gros^clinp- ter's war relief campaign' Is- being cohducterf under general, direction of Mrs. R. W. Carpenter:. Mrs. ■W. I. TaniSer. captain',- Mrs)- C.--Ivpn Pfice, Mrs. C. O. JelHsoq,' M.rj. O. W. 81ml^^frs. G. W. Blie,- Mrs. N . a Jo!)haon,TiIrs. J, B. Nell- seh, Mrs. Mel Cosgrllf. Mrs. George -C. Dougherty, Mrs. R alph E. Smith, MrsH"-,-I;lllyaii Buhler, Mrs, Jerry ■Wesler. ' -

Mrs. Harry Elcock', captain) Mrs. Ben Keane, Mrs. A. D . .‘Bellamy; Mrs, W. 0. Pierce, Mrs. J . E. Dillon, Mrs. p . M, irfoVey. Mrs. Frank Mc- Atee,y»Mrs.. Wallace. Bond, Mrs. Charles Shirley, Mrs. V ey Gish, Mrs,

^K enneth Dement, Sirs. G . L; Anders" son; Mrs. R. S.' Tofflcmlre. Mrs. Ted Davis, Mrs. William MIHdleton, Mrs,. Fred-Sanger.. -

Mfs. C. B, Lindsey, captain; Mrs. Fred Hutfcbn, Mti. Horace A'. Plcrcci Mj-s. P. H. D e tw ^ r , Mrs; P.-R. Darlhi^, Mrs. Ralph Taylor, Mrs, W. O. Jackey, Mrs. Woods, Mrs, Hari-jf Wohl)alb, Mrs. D illard Requa.

Mrs, C. H.' Krengel,.captaln; Mrs, J., P. Johnston, Mrs; A. C.; Carter, Miss Merle ewlon,. Mrs. AUyn Din­gle. Mrs. 0..C. .Kingsbury; Mrs. Jos­eph Seavcri Jr„'Mrs. F . F . McAtee."

Mrs. Nettle Somerville, captain; "Mls's Bertha Wllscai, M is. John An-

/ -derson,rMrs.--Joe Jefle, Mr^.-Ralph Morehousb.

Mrs. William Baker, captain; Mrs.- Mlchael'Trockmorton,. Mrs. W. A Mlnnlck. Mrs; Leonard Avant, Mrs'. Robert Haller, Mrs. J . - E, White, Mrs. H. E. Ryan, Mrs. Jo e Koehler, Mrs. Ella Long, Mrs, Grrln^^FulIfr, Mrs. C. H. Browne and Mrs./W. H. Hertzog. ./ '. John-Breckenrldge, daptalh;. Mrs.l John Breckenrldge, ■. Mrs.) Nlnn Brown. Mrs, D. T. BoUngbroke,

Mrs. Prank Kleffrier. captain; Mrs. Alfred, Pugliano, Mrs.. Clarke Cameron, Mrs. A. C. M artin, Mrs. A. 8. -Henson^.Wrs. J u lia O'Neal, a^ns. M. P. oJieltree, M rs. Wayne HawleyrMiSyFay Hann. - -

Mrs. W. W7Thomas,, captahi; Mrs. A. L.' Norton, Mrs. E. E. Ostrander, Mrs., Charles Cotoer,-Mrs.. F, 0. Graves, Mrs. (3uy Sliearer; Mrs. Har­old Salisbury, Mrs. S tanley Phillips, Mrs. W. B.. Brooks..

i l C A P li f l P R i s o e s

CAIRO, Jan. 3 (U.PJ'-Brltlsh im­perials fighting to knock-out Bardla and keep axis forces from attempt­ing to create ano ther Tobruk have taken more Uian 1.000 German and Italian prkoners. ti British middle east general headquarters commun­ique saidAoday..-

Bardia, a strong poin t between To­bruk .and the Egypt-Llbyo frontier, was pfissed by w hen the Impcrlafii se t out to destroy Gen; Erwin Ro/J*. mel's German A frican corps. This week south African troops, support­ed by British arm ored columns and artillery, started a drive «n Bardia which resulted In penetration o( the fort's ouUr ppsltlons.

,Operations In th e Bardlo area ore develophig .satisfactorily,' tlie com­munique eald.

_______________ _____ Physician Diespossible. i*t's be prepared to meet I BURLEY, Jan; 3 (Speclal)-Dr. them. Let's loolc forward- to every ' " ■■■ ■ - possibility and tlien do something about I t : /

Bupport Govcrnmoftr ' I t Is up to us who stay a t .home

to ^ a c k up the goveriihient o( tho XJnltcil States In everything It pro­poses hi order that this V ar may be carried pn to a successful conclu­sion, so that William Arthur 'Marsn

Richard Vincent B arta , 64, who (jncc practiced mtdlclne a t Burley, died a t his home at P a rk City, Utah, Jan. 1, according to word received here.

He was a native qf, Austria, com­ing to tho United States -wlien a youth.

Motliballs ore a product ol coal ta r.

Can’t Happe,n Here? Bunk! Health Expert Asks Emergency Alertness

In view of possibility of Invasion o f the west coiist by ejiemy groups, o r eveh .possible sabotage acts in th is region of Idaho, H. 8 . Post, sanltoflai\ for tho district health unit, this afternoon warned that- "rcsldentj of this scctloii should be ready (or. i\ny--eventuality so fa r as public hcalfh Is concerned."

Ho pointed but tiiat this (act was only recently vividly Im­pressed 111 the liilnds of residents of Wendell where, for awhile. It was believed that some foreign substance had' been pliiced In the

_ tw ii 's water sli|)iili;.Uomblng C'on(lii|enoy

■'In tho case ol .bombing, dyila- nilthig or deliberate poisoning, or In cn.io o( breaks In towers and w ater lines where thero Is posil- blllty o( cro?8 connections; use of dotnestic-wai;er shoiild be dis­continued Immediately," rost'm td .

Post said that, h> case of aonio

like emergency the city and state health authorities would Investi­gate hnnicdlately and,^he public would be notidcd when the .situ­ation had been cleafcil up.

“All pijsilble precautions should' be taken by various village and city autliorltles to prevent access to pump houses and water towers. Tre.ssiiasslilg In th e vicinity of these structures should bo strictly forbidden, '

Ask IlcnUli Unit "Any quesllon arising as lo the

Balcty of a water supply should bo referred to thb health deiiartnient

-In -th ls ': district,--whlch^stocntcd' here In Twin Falls: ,.

"Wo have heard a lot about that old saying 'It can 't happen here,’ b u tjjy now residents of this ite- tion should bp able lo see that

, Bucll'n statement Is pure bunk. It can liapiien anyplaco and mljht happen aiiyplnee lieforo this thing t-s over," Pwt said.

m oiB

MtsnalloT/OOk, cap tain ;. Mjs. Loyal-Perry, Mrs. B. F . Ratcllffe. Mrs. Ormus Bates, M rs.,H . L. Hob­son, Mrs. Vernon Edmondson, Mrs. Oren Boone, Mrs. Ray Hayes.• Mrs. W. R. Chase.- captain: Mrs. Arch Coiner, Mrs. G erald 'Tdmer, Mrs. Merle Beckley, M rs. Ed ToV hert, Mrs. Walter Miller. Mrs. Irwin Sweet, Mrs, 0. E. G r le ^ M rs . Albert Cederburg. Mrs. H. ST Ohomplln, Mrs. Andy Halverson, Mrs. R: A. Graham. Mrs. J. J. .Kelllher, Mrs. ■Vim Esllngcr, Mrs. J ; T . i^dcrson, Mrs. R. E. Dhigman:

Business district canvassers, head- cd-ljftlhalrm an Hugh Phillips, hi- d ude these; Donold Gravese, W..0. SmlUi, Bert-Sweet, Jr., Eugene White; Dick -Heppler, Ray ^Robbins, J. e! ■White, Dale .Wakenf,' A. D. Bellamy; Fred Ingraham; -H. H. Hedstrom, Charles Kingsbury. H arry Hcock, BIU Blimp, Ernest JelllsoriV J. E. Hayes, Reed- Lewis, H arr^ Borry, Stuart. H. Toylor, Gerald WoIIace, M . E, Helmbolt, Alton Young and Joy-Merrlll.

During, th e month of.D etraber a ■total of 664 men was. enlisted through th e Salt Lake City recru it­ing district-.for duly with, th e navy and, of. th is total- the third--greatest number of any sub-.stat|on:'ln tlie district cam e ItomTriln Palls; C. A. Edmonson, local recruiter, announc­ed this afternoon..-A bulletin from. Balt Lake, dated

'Pec. 31, .fhows tha t hi addition to tho meii actually enlisted, 303 other applicants were still being Investl- iatcd. . ■“ During the-period 'fovcred^ the report a to t^ - o f 53 mpa enlbtSd through th e .Twin Palls .station. coe^ed pnly by Billings, •M o n t,.< t^ 61, and Bols? with 121. O ther'sub­station to ta ls Include- Idaho Palls, 48; Butte, 34; Ogden, 43, and Provo, 20 , . .! The local station also enlisted four

for the naval, reserve,' which do n o t ccjunt.toward -the December quota. ■

i l E S FORFif

JEROME. Jan. 3 (Special)—Im ­pressive f in a l tribute was paid Wil­liam Jolmstohe, pioneer resident, a t largely attended services conducted at-thly-■Wtleyr (uneral-home F riday afternoon. OfflclatUig was Rev. W. E. Harman., pastor of the ChrlstlM church. Interm ent was , In toe family plot In Jerome cemetery,-un­der the direction of the Wiley fu­neral home,' Mrs. R alph Shawver and Mrs. Geon;o Salladay sang two selections, "Abide- W ith and -"Ivory P al­aces.'* Accompanist wos Mrs. M al- colrii Stuart. . - '

Casketbearers were Martin Lar­sen, Gcorg'e W. Sldw'ell, Clarence Keating, Thomos Gordon, H. Z. Downtogiand WUllanrTfayhurst. -

Mr. Johnstpno was bucned to death at his fann home early Wed­nesday morning. ^

Plans were being formulated hero today (or the animal -meeting o( stockliolders ol thoA vln Falls Canal company which will be he ld in Twin r a i l s on Tuesdoy, Jan. 13.

OKlclals o( tiic company said that a l l five of tlie mertibers of the board o f directors will be up for reelectlon a t tho Jan. 13 session w hich prob­ably will bo held at the Id aho thea- t e r although atrangements have not y e t been completed.

Members >)( the board are' N. V. Sharp, Filer; W. R. H atfiad , Buhl; Jo h n M. Tliomas, Castlelord; Peter L ink, Hansen, jind txm Stalford, Kimberly. ‘ ' '

At the present time no opposition to any of the (Ive men has developed.

f l

E P l D W E iCooperation o( the .Twin -IJalls

Chamber o( Commerce in staging th o fourtli annual Idaho potato and onion week in this area was request­e d today by L E. Sargent, Boise, secretary ol tho state' advertising commUslon.

Tho annuol event, Sargent-told t h e C. of C., will be Jan . 10 to 24. I t will bo a nationwide observance.

Tho chamber's sliare Is to be pro­m otion of tho event in Tw in Falls a n d acting as a dIstrlbutln(L agency f o r the display material lul-nlshed b y , Uie advertising comnitelon. fiam ples of- tho material were re- colved hero today.

Tho pilot tube projects from the leading eilgo'ol an attplano whig, a n d Is used to measure a ir speeds.

ATTENTIONC osh paid tof worthless o r dead cows, horses aiSd prico o f jiclls fo r dead sheep.

'Idaho HItIo (JTTallow' Co. C a l l Collcct N e a re s t P h o h oTw ill Falls 314 « flooding 47

uitptti 5 5 Illdcsi'polta, tallow, fur, j\m k wul bones bought.

Idah^oaristoGet— Blanks Soon

BOISE. Ida:, Jan. B,i mTO-^Feder.ai Income tOJc blanks were ready today to be m ailed out jon, 5 -to ,^(|,000 Idahoans. John R .‘VIles; collector of Internal revenue, said today. ;-,'The; num ber-of returns' b'elng

milled represents a-3Dper cen t,In ­crease -over tliose-.sont out a year ago. .VIley said- residents can X e returns, immediately'crt recelpt’ of the blaaks. but they may'have un­til .March'15 to complete* th e figur­ing.-- ■- ----- -1- . -------------■ "Tax payments are based {>n ;gross Ipconie o f residents, with :m arrle^ couples dllowjiJ .a' $HOO eicemptlon

l.slpgle persons *760.

Q ri’-N ■■r

M rs. Llon'el A. Dean,Twin F a lla c i ty 'chairman for activities. In c o n ­nection with thtf^annual Infantile puralysls c|ui\palgn, this afternoon onnounced completed plans for; o b ­servances which will, be h e ld .J i^ :

T lie drive this.year, she'said,- will be called the"PresIdent’s diamond Jubilee blrftiday -celebration,"':. In honor of.- Resident's Roosftelt'vBOth' H&tildSy,.-Jan,-,30...,

,*^atled"Hore In Twin F a ll| welntend d o ­

ing OUr-share In several tfays. ■We w n i have tho'march of-dfmes cam ^ paigh with ‘wlsh'l^g well’, contain­ers placed in a dozen or, more do-wn- tow n stores along with the malUng o f the . dime hirthday, cards, 'n i l s committee is headed by Mrs. M.' O. Mc^Vey.. Members 'ofjie'r committee are Mrs. Glenn E."Jenkln5,-Mr5. -W. 0 . Pierce, and. Mrsr Vey Clsh.-, ' ■"

B: TofflcnUre Is the b ir th ­day card party chalnnan. This p a r ­ty will be given'at the E lks-hall J a o . 27 In tho evenUig. . Members Hf hd r commlttco include Mrs, J.- H"., Blandford, ,Mrs. A. L. Norton, lllrs. B en Tillery and Mrs. Marshall Chajp- m an.

Activities Group , .■‘T h e women's- activities’ dIvWon

Is headed by'M is. Bay'-Agee a n d jnembei's.of her committee Include Mrs. Hariy Benoit, Mrs. Ray Holmes, and' Jfra. O. T. Koster.. These w o- ^ e n . will , contact .clubs,, churches and fraternal organizations in - r e ­gard ' to benefits antj sllverlolferlhgs to figh t the dreaded hifantllo p a ra l­ysis'^sease. 4, .1 —iSports activities-will/bo handled by,'Dlck-Heijpler. Members, of h is lom m lttee include Bert Sweet,. Jr.. Blir_pinsl6y and Paul Hardesty. T hey will contact skaters, skiers, flyljig clubs-and other like oipa Izations. ’ ■ r

"T he campaign will close, Jan. 30 with the President's ^h'thday, baU ilreld a t Radio Ronde'voo. The donee committee has, Mrs. R. J.. Schwend- Im an as chairman. Members of h e r committee IncliideJHrs. W.O. Watts,- M^s. J. E. Frantz and lilrs. T ed Davis.

•‘Treasurer for all oetlvltles will be.Loyol.J. Perry, Fidelity National bank. - He will accept and pay o u t a ll. lunds in connection with' th e drjve." Mrs. Dean paid, - >

PaulJ^ostmaster Examination Set

Civil service examination for po ­sition of postniaster a tfa u l, I d a , was araiounced here this altemoon^

Applications to -tpke the examin­ation must bo filed, hi' Washington,' D. C., by Jan. D-and the examination will probably be held about 15 days after-tliat date., F u ll informatlOQ can be, had by:

w riting the Paul postolfIce.- Appli­cation blanks are also available a t th a t pohit, a t the Twin'Falls pbst- o((lce o r a t tha o(flces of ths Idaho state employment service.

o rcfc ra a P ta A Ain't M a i a t Noiii>.iy -

This Is Claud Pratt speaking. I ADI ' back to .my. office. - We've got. our .- ■ house fhilshed and we’re '. Inside .- where It's warm' and now^e're.back " at our business with bpth'.feet, pn the groimd.,Thp 80th coiload of Ar-i- ' kansas Motor Oil Is-on- the track t * , and I what I mean Ite th e 'world's , « best jnbtor 611. K you^an tmnk ofa better mptor^.oll thatlll'stand up longer:in automoblles.'tractors and-*- • In diesels In outboard, motors . find;In motorcycles, mowing ma,T chlnei we'd like to know about-.it. , itecauso this, oil has a reicord .that surpasses all'tithei'' records. It- aO- tually cfiwgs to the bedrlngs longer lis It penetrates jlgh’t.in to the pores of the-metal. Multiplied thousands of people ore usIligJhls Oil . here In southern Idaho odd they know-that - - 'these statem entJ.-ire, true. .Jf you-.... ,-start hi with a brand new motor and’ - use. this oil from the: beginning..' .

'w eir guarantee your motor. Ahd .if ■>«-- : you'rb usipg tljls oll ii'ow, don't let , nobody talk, jiou out of- continuing, to use it, -',beca!pe you"%iay want to use your prMent c a r 'f o r a long time.\Anyone .that tr ie s .to arguo ' • th a t this oil Is no.good-doesn't get. very' far In southem Idaho-^too' many people know that he doesn’t . ' know-what h e ’s talkhig akout'He's either, a stranger o r/c razy l; - " ;

I want to get rid of. m y apple trees out i t Buhl—they’re, l a r g e ly . , apple' ttaes and nob-tob b'ranchy.We'll glvS -you thb trees for toklng . ' ' them out. We wartt to 'put , in calves, and cows. If we pull the trees out for you, we’li'chatge yOu thirty'cehts, ‘* apiece. -'There's about twenty ocr'es of trees. We want octlon'right away, , —you can get enaugh .wood to lastn . you (or years'and years. I t ’s about- three and a .half nilles out gt BuhL' We’re selling about everything, we' can, get In—except (li;es—and man, \we’ve got_a-JcrrlWo, stocli:_0fjh cm _____on handr We’ve got a big’ sign lip, advertising Ures—It says; "Big Th-e Sale Dally”-^a farmer Just told, us, that- we ought- to. put a postscrljiti' _ underneath this sign saying,, ‘'Altef ; the War Is Over,"- Well, we have coal and.: I'm Just- starting, to the bank-now—I'll not-be riding a 'bl- cycle'untll the roads clear-up. W® I - milk five cows and 'd rink . lots. '6t^' ’ milk.

Pratt’s the Barry Gas . and Glass, Lumber

Oil and Coal Co. ; ■‘*0n the Roatf 'to the Hospital^ ,

• • II I...— I , . ,

SAVt MONEY!Buy a Good Recoriditibned Rettg^rator—Range or Heater

REFRIGERATORS1 m 9 DeLuxe Cold Wall •

>,^4gidaire Ref. (6 cu.' ft.)

1 4 ^ . ' Gibson Ref rigei?at(i^’

1 7-ft. DeLux'e.Frigidaire ‘ Refrigerator ^

1 6-ft. Gibson R^frigei-ator

2 4-f^ Norge’Refrigerators

1'3-ft. Frigidaire Refrig-.

2 4-ft. Leonard RefrigeratorsI* . - " .

2 6-t;^ G'-E Refrigei^ator^ '

1 4-ft. Frigidaire Refrig’. "

1-8-ft, Kelvinatqr Refrig.

, 1 Two-Dodl 'Servel

•16-ft. G-E Refrigeriator

1 6-ft. -Norge Refrigerator

RANGES1939 Frig. -Range PeLuxd :I946 Fi'ig. “Range Deluxe •L & H Combination !^ng64-Plate Hot Point .Range3-Plate Point Range3-Pl‘ate Westinghouse Range2 3-Plate and Gpoker G-E- -

Ranges' -

i’ireside H«EATERS

Fireside Heater' -Gharter^Oak Heater,

practically newEstate Heatrola Heater,

practically new’,Eureka Heater (excelle'ht

■condilion)Estate Heatrola Oil Biuvner

WASHERSThor Washer r- \

DETWEILER’SBuy U . S, D efense Stam ps nnd iBonds

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