12
LATE BULLETIN NEW YORK.'D«. 1>-The Tvlt r»dl» o ld io • bt«*dcast morded br CBS tbat Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn csm> g*oc «rro execultd lodiy. FINAL CITY EDITION Little Relief Seen for Veterans in ^ Truman’s Proposed Housing Controls WASHINGTON, Dce. 13 Somo sovemmtnt ufllclnU Mid lodny they railed to »fe much. If any. relief for veterans m the Presldcnl'a new housing con- trol program, Theee onic wllh houslns and conjtrucllon during the war, did not wiah Ihdr names used. They eald tho Prealdenfs pro- Bram would tend to encouroBo bulldlns of homes at prices which were «IIU »bove the tcalo that most sliellcr-seelclng vcteraoi could aiford. Tha forthcoming rtsulaUon will eatabllih priorities on bulIdUiB maltrlals for slnfjle or mulUple dwelllnB unlt« coalln? $10,000 or less. 8lncc a eontractor would make a greater profit building a *10,000 house than a cheaper one. these officials contended, he wos most likely to use materials prlcrllles to build at the maxi- Mr. Truman'B program also called for-price on dffclllnsa. Despite thb. offlduls said, nt' will eoat from 33 per ccnt to 40 per cent mort 1939, Two faclon than In n prict A recent war department «ur\ey. continued, showed that Jhe vast majorli veterans who need housing cnnnot homes sclllnB at more thnn W,000, . . •••- •“— •- enter Into this—higher matetlsls and ittachcd to BEentlcB Which dealt labor costs. For Instance, lumber Is 73 per ccnt n' ......... . rosily now thin It waa In IMfl: brick and tile. cent; plumblnj and hcatlnB. W-8 per ccnt and pal 31,1 per cent. As for wbbcs In the construction dujtty, common labor avertBed 68 cents an hour In 1D30. l^iday the average Is 81 eer>ts. Por skilled labor It was » ! .« and today It Is $l-<57. It. J. Thomas, vlce-preslrient of the Consrea ol In- da«rla! Organliatlona, told the hou.ie banking coni- mlluw that veterans were finding It almost Impossible 10Itnd a homo priced at a "reasonable viiJuc." He de- clared that lalliire to stablllzo home prlcca v^-outd make a "complelc joke of the Q. I. bill of rights." The war dtpartmcnt questioned outgoing Krvlce- mcn at ccparallon centers In the nurvcy which ehoii-ed that most veterans cannot afford to d; iv mora ilmn 80.000 for homti. House Split Three Ways Over Full Employment Legislation New Fight Against Car Ceiling Seen As Ford Rejects Demands Of UAW for 30 Per Cent Raise Forestry Men Will Help in Spoirts Area Sadder, Wiser Jap Sub Boss Tells How He Sank Cruiser WASHINGTON, Dcc. 13 SI.B—The liousc v opened debate on its loiig-dolnyed n ment legislation. The Bplit was npparenl ns a eomplett'ly i ment bill camc out of the house execiitiv Truman May Ask Unified Armed Force Road Chief Tells Method Of Proposed Buhl Route G. I. Blisters Brass Hats at House Probe T. Matt Ilally. highways, explain •'jirospectlve rcqui buUdlng or *tate t ing held In Uie c Cnvanagh late yr.s been rcheduled to terday In the Par Falls and Buhl. WASHINGTON, Dcc. 13 ^ DETROIT. Dec. 13 (U.R)— New pres.siirc ngainat price ceil- ings on 1946 car.s arose today from the automobile indu.itry ^vhich niiist deal with the dcmand.s of the CIO United Auto- mobile \Vorkor.s for a 30 per cent wage incrca.se. The I'ord Motor company told the union that under cur- rent OPA ceilings the company stood to lo.se 535.000,000 ne.xt an increase in pay for its workers. , riic Ford at-gument was in lino with the stand taken pro- viously by niiother of the auto indiiatry’.-s "big three,” General flfofor.s—which insi.sted the nutoinobilc workers’ wage pro- po.snl.s could not be met with- incrensing tho pricc of ritten sub.stitute for thi R. L. 1 j Hnl crllcld, nngh. ■ ! local po. 1 t of VFVi. anr Lelclillter. Ilally explained that niic pose of niy meeting with cltlc era waa to familiarize local pn ers of arei; road? with Itn pros- .pectlve requtrcincaw and to una. i lyic varlou.i merits <?f appljlng fed. era! funds on present roiitea utlllj. ing present hlghnay wldth.i.", Hally luila the {late Is willing ta cooperate In the U, S. 30 propo-ial If the U. S. publk roaei.-i admlnlstrn tion u-lU.wiitve lU,100-foot rcoulre ment on right-of-way and If It wll make the Job a federal aid project Ho believed the udmlnLstratloi would agree to the waiver. Main comlderallon.1 "to be dts- ^uMcd In tho preparation of a rci' be tendered the Rovem. federal aid In such proj. cts, nhotild be the volume of traf- Ic. plus the voltune of produce car- led by truckj In the area (Inrilcat. IK Ui^e neceislty of such thorough- 01 by ; tlie a erved Tliomason, D., Tcs. the two-day testln Jor-general.^ and r rd hi . :tlng Chairman .. Interrupting ly of four . .. vlnUiHe of ■ . lilcles and the comparison of wl) It was like before any study of ro the prc t pict and wliiit pected In the fu Hally ttrc5,scd Itmt "it Is not t Intention of locally Interfiled Inc vlduals or groups to offer nnylht even approaching a mandatory- i qulremen t. "Rather, the lntere.?ted groiija a working primarily to succc.vful ^ f f e r the state a.«lstnnce In m» B jib recommendatlgna to tlie go Tent mendatlon will Include tlon that no buildings o be erected with tlie pr. government." I "A great deal n pushed If we <C«nilni>«l M med from hl.-i belief "the democmtln waj army unless nil olhe: He felt certain, hi' sn tnry enlistments mid Hattie Certain 'litrlted floor battle appeared n. Tlie "fuU employmer ' spon-iors arUd they would try to k the compromise measure and su stltute the tenate "Jobj-for-aU'’ bllL They object to the house com- rnlttee's vep.^lon because li rejecta ;hc full rmployment goal anrt al«> ilde.steps jetting up machinery to Ticet such a goal. Tlie senate version adhered closer ;o. the recommendations of the E^esMent. It act forth a policy inder which tJic govemmeat could lisure full employment by encour* iBlng private indiislxy. it also pledged public works programs In ■vent private Industry could not al>- orb all willing workcra. but ihc ilcd^c wculd be binding only to the "Allaln Illffh tever- Tlie bill which Chairman Carter Monoico, D., Ala., of Uie cxccuilve tpendllurc.1 committee, placed bc- re the house membership declares governmental policy "to attain Id maintain a high level of em- oynicnl production and purclias- tng power." •• provides that the Prc.ildent .'.ubmlt to congre.w within 60 . after the beginning of each regulnr .^c.'jlon im "economic re- woiild iictompa; rtdlit-of-wuy regulat Human Head Goes In Trial Evidence ;rvcd 1 azl c evidence mtrntlon c ar crimes trial of 21 nr lenders today. The grlRly e.xhlblL.'i wtri' added I le Oermuns" own rccords of mui cr nnd brutality placcti before lli '■-.power Internatloiml ly allied pr«<t ice-powerful li cliu ploym remedies for ftlmul FLASHES of LIFE a. grew Impatient nee which had e him to ft ho.s- dead battery. Brown helped t bulance to a ntnrt “Tragedy” to Bare Secrets, Hearing Told WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (,T}—Sec- any i icmployment. and Cooker Blows Valvcj Rancher Is Burned PAUL, Dec. 13—Jack Bohon Is •covering from severe bums jui. lined recenll/whcn a steam cooker .8 wa.1 operating at the Henry Pnyno ranch blew out a valve. I" and head were badly humi wa.? given emergency trea at the Rupr — hLi : Ijere. Othman, Ears Aching From Solon Talk, Finds Self Deep in the Heart of Texas DOGGY TULSA, Okla.. Dcc. 13-C nance Commls-'loner Jo h n I hU ChrWma.1 ;.liopplI)g i thoroughly licked. Nearly all liLs friends hni, ! Just ;b63 along vil ■rtlllcnt Missing Buckeroo May Be in Hiding WRISER, Det- Sheriff Al Wain believed Lci ling since No he bolated .■ r here, Is "1 Reynold.^ creek Owyliee county I Sheriff Arlhur . 20from his cabin ind hollow section Idlng" out in the y KnKDKRICK C. OTIIMAN WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U .R j had to lake to my bed today wltli dLiciuo known as cougresjlonsl « Hour after hour and day i day I've been 11s- tenlns to those 2 babies ■ said I-d have packs and s> .. vlUi something soothing. He said he'd be In to see my eari tomorrow and for me to keep 'en Iwlde the house. But above ail hi *4ld, keep 'em out of the house oi representatives. I said could I write thtj Item foi Iho papers? He said that wouldn't ^lurt me. but he doubled If It would ia you readers any good. If you’n mart, you’ll take the doctor's frei P“Ke; If youti still with me you'ro golnr to learti about government and my bride. Never havind been an Invijlld before. I never knew the trouble she has wltli Iter government. Take corkscrews. She had to jet into one of my. medicine Jugs with an tee pick and a hairpin becawe there n't a corkscrew for sale In Wash- igton. The corkscrew dealers elajni IC federal metal progr»m caused llie .ihoriage. ,e mall m an brought our Incomc itatemenc and os of now she Is trying to figure that one out marie more money In ie<5 tl thought I would In 1M4 then B penalty in 1S«. Or so the ____ print Indicates to her. She says she believes that Fred Vinson an' '' treasury deportment are runr bean guewlng contast. Don't get the Idea that slie'i ter. She gets her money's ...... from Ui« government. 6he spilled iodine on the rug. While It »'»s wet. she had the buxeai me economics of the agrlcul. ture deportment on the phone, tell. Ing her how to rerno™ It. The Is -good on roast turkey recipes, too. slie said, and how to make chestnut stuffing without :heitnuis and cranberry sauce wlth- wt cranberries. Tho bureau um ipplej. The alley bitck of our house is piled with nibbLrh. She has not yet able to fliiih out U»e right . by telephone. It looks now, tlie sayi, as though I'll have to take u^p the subject with Sen. Theodare ttee Id charge of alleys, r I must, I must, but he'll p »bly make a i>jieech. What U my cars I hate to think. 38.'' SWISS PRESIDENT BEIIN. Dcc. 13 (U.PJ— Dr. Karl Kobelt was elected ferdcnU prc; :rUnd for 1340 today. «ar minister. Mayor, Otliers to Attend Municipal League Sessions Hog Sale Slump Told Marketers More llian an M per cent drop n hog .■ iairs during the piist year. IS aniila^t the previous ycnr fni- •he T«ln Falls County Lli MarhcUng n«oclrtlon, Thunidny morning In hall at the group's iiniiunl m Lewb P. Joue.% Twin Falb, tor for the association, told 14 membeni that from Dcc. 1; I94< through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the same period the year before the $05JMJ2. The pre.i, lan conlerrcd UiLs week Dwight D. Ekcnhower, iiy chlcf of staff and an unification, Elsenhower say what lie nnd Uie President dUcussed. But he did say ho had assured the President that the army vis "his" and ready to do his bidding as commsniler-lii.chlef. Sourccs clore to tha Ttcslden 4ial-Ihc-ng-v ftould t reply Tnm neraJ Motom, the •Ike in CM plants VO waM 23 days ago. on the wage hike with no m the price of automobiles, ito Industry was -Mon to President ent of a fact- iludy tlie woge (he , Itlng QM'j finding dl-spulo ^rporntlQii and Its biggut umoii'. Tlie board selected by the President yesterday presumably may want to look nt General Motors' books. The union coiitends that the records would show the corporation could pay the wage Increa.-e wiihout boo.itlng the price of cars. Oencral Motors and union ofll- clala planned to meet again today In their so-far fnjltless negotiations to settle tho strike of 175,000 trork- crs. The fact-finding board will not stnrt it-i work tmtll next Wednesday when the three members will meet to oreanlze. UAW offlclaLs eald they would co- operate with Uie board. In their first discussion of wages with the union sinca the end of the war. the Ford officials yesterday fumed down the rcqucit for a per cent increase but left tha w»y c ear for furUier negollatlofts. An- ouier conference between Ford and officials WM scheduled for Friday. Ford opened Ihe wag# negolla- tlons by explalnlns that it faced the prospect of losing « I o nhecp tales IlRur 21fl.Bf His re crea.se In Other fig showed t hogs wei e the yea I SOS,574.22. e 11 V I 534. J, Uie head of s il 0,027, T , .078 head of hat In 1D45 For those ;p sold were lively. Lewis jershlp Uiat luas eporled he a.-.^oclotu_ .. „ .. ng lo.ss for Uie year of S449.41. Quoting report.^ from 12 market- tig pooU In the .state, reprcsentlnd Idaho's livestock Wells, Boise, ex- ■peclallst. e-ftflh 0 i that of ti that I BoLs<! Maklnit the trip with the miiy 111 be Cotiinil.'.sloners Truman rccnhnlRh nnd Kenneth D. Sho Id Attomcj Jo'cph H. Ulanclfoi The lenRUi' did not meet eliirli le war year.s nnd this Is the fl; Mlon called In an attempt to r admlnl.stratl(i dl.'cusseri. will be in dent of £ “Blue Baby” in Critical Shape BALTIMORE, Dec. 13 lUJ?i — Doctors at the John-s HopkUis hojpltsl were watching the con- dition of two-year-old Judy Hsckmwi .closely today, fearful that the Buckley. Wash., "blue baby would fall to make the loni hard pull back to health. Judy made excellent progress on Saturday after underRolng tho famow "Blalock" operntlon. but on Sunday her condition was "not too good,'- Yesterday she WM reported In a ••crltlcnl eon- dlllon." But doctors have not given up hope. Tlia operation Involved splic- ing an artery to the heart to step up the flow of blood to tho lungs. "Blue babies- arc those whose hearts won't supply enough blood the lungs and consequently are —■■•- unless saved by allon. Patton May Walk Again, Medic Says HElDEUiKHO, ( The coni::niin V. S. annv li'v)i Oporgc S. P.ii:r:;,j ment for paralv.f..- was "a good c!n American comiiiftr.i hli fret BKnlii. Tlie frncturi rf told the membe .t hogs ma 44. 74 per from,Jnn. 1-No lentagc had rlf Ho spoke at a R continue Uielr (/■aion t Durliit: the lunclicon, were pre.'.eiit. If a quori d for slaughter c.u were tows. But 30. 1345, the per- IcalldrrinS'ftrwed it ;pealeilly and publicly when, as a :nator, ho headed th6 war Invc-^tl- Official Time of Flight Uncertain NEW YORK. Dec. 13 (/T7—Official clnp-.ed time of the record flight by the Superfortress 'Dreamboat' • York. luport . Unic( ind said Jaycees’ Message Sent to Ex-Mayor rie trip took fl' tc.-> and el£ht and one-fifth nd$. Pilot w.ii Col. Clircn -vine, St. Paul. Neb. Tlic blR Siipcrfon maintain! vernsc speed of 450 miles per rcalest ground speed was 451 miles 1 hour. The flight's average speed ;at by IS miles an hour the uver- by the II propell Tellliii e-K Koehl Man Sought; His Mother Is Dying illce received a telegram Thurs- from Chiitl.inooga, Tenn,, ask- that they locate A. T. Allen. Is ^upiwicd to be In TRln Falls, crenscs toUUng 3a.03 per cwt slncs 2. The firm’s average wage Ij sev- cn cent higher than Uiot of the next lilghest among itg major com- TJiis Is no lime to talk about ral wago Increases becaute tha company can't tell now „.cUy Its Toltuno of production and sU win be next year, vny discussion of wages must d in with consideration of how nun; [lie productivity of the cm- ployu-whkli u at Uie lowest mark the thin rwlii I'-alUi Junior Chamber of Commerce Tliurrday wiit ii tcle- ihe former mayor now In ' crlUcal condition at the hospital In Boise, e.^sagc was ordered «t the Jaycec niembtrr,hlp meeting Tues- day night. It will be read to Koehler by hk wife, who ha.s been nt Uolse .ince Monday nlKht when a doctor icjvlicd her that her hwbiuid was egram from the ... 'The T»ln Falls :r of Commerce i icerest hope., fo death. Tho full tl effort t Rancher Breaks Leg James Parr, Tuln FnlU county mcher, sulfered a fractured leg lie cranking a truck, brought to Twin Falls liwpltal for treaiment Prkluy I Jobless List Less Than Anticipated 30 tc Opcrt ofllcUls .1 Fewer layolf/. In ncKpcctedly h!cl rate of buytuK ai Ulal have promf <ono.T>lsts to oil ;mployment outloc By ne,« hLireh Women Active in Victory Campaign TO date, women solicitor* in the city have sold I129.1C8.7S In the Vlc- torj’ loan drive, Mrs. Charles Caeey. chairman, announced Thursday The IE I)ond mIc will continue through Dec. 31 but the purchase of other series ended Dec. 8. In nddltloo to the total, Uie Otrl Reservea exchanged USD in stamps for bonds and sold }S3 In stamra, all In one day recently. R. L. 6um- merlleld. county chairman, said no total figures would be rt- d ujiiU after Jan. I. IV o Return Althoug rc has been nc iw.sprint shortagL Sly has forced the rcUef which tcmpoi Tlme-s-News to discontinue Its ctlltorlal pnae. curtnll on oUlflr departmcht.5 and plncc restric- tions on advertising, a change Is Being mude which we believe will meet with our readers' approval. The "Heport on the War." which ha.s been running In In- itallmcnts on the comic page, and tho two-eolumn panel, "Life's Uko That," will bo dtsconUnued during the emergeney to make room for the Tlmes-Newj' two most popular columnists, Ray Tucker aiid Westbrook Pegler. UnUl Uie editorial page can be resimied In Its entirety, Tuck- er and Pcgler wlP appear atart- ' ig tomorrow on tho comic page, 'hlch location best meets opera- lonni problem.i under the clr- Death Decree Ordered for DachanNazis DaOIIAU, D«, 13 m-A. tl. J. military court today scntenccd 3S officials and Buarda nt the notorious Dachnu concentration camp to death by hanging for the murder, torture and starvation of thousands "t the camp’s Inmates. Another defendant was sentenced to life Imprisonment and three Uicrs were sentenced to 10 years ach. The 40 defendants were convicted estcrdny by the mllltarj- inbunal. -hlch debited only 80 minutes be- iwe brlnsiiig in lls verdict. Among rs nnd three prisoners who had llnborated wlUi Uic S. S. the trlnl said that : killed at Dachau, ere brutaUy beaten. 1 wero immersed In eperlments and tluit .OO’ w h S *” “• ™ - ■The camp was the most notorious M d most feared of Use concentm- tlon camps sot up by the nails for pomical prisoners. nen *Jio orated th# horror ecelved their sentence* calm- the most part, only a few - any change of expreswon. 5.000 Jet ly for ktS;^ fichimng, 74. who' killed many prisoners In eioeri- mmta through which he sought a Martin Weiss, commaadanl of Ui# camp, were among'Ui# S< witcncftl Should Have Been Ready—Marshall WASHINQTOK. Dec. II OuT- en. Oeorse C. Martban contlQiiet! his testimoajf before Ui# Ptarl Uar- ■-or tnvesUgaUng todar 1 th the decluatloQ that iba Ba- wallan v m ; command ihould Iut*a been rea<ly for the Jepeneee ott- alaught. Rcfentng lo * war Jt over his alKtiaturt cn H «. B. : IHl. U)« toimer chkt ei- ~ am (UU'tn: bu lUns that whoi3wi e>v»X«0^ - : mand to a hlflh 'onton 9 * etoetii' U to b « exMuted.-

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Page 1: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

LA T E BULLETINNEW YORK.'D«. 1>-The Tvlt r»dl»

old io • bt«*dcast morded br CBS tbat Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn csm> g*oc «rro execultd lodiy.

F I N A LC I T Y

E D I T I O N

Little Relief Seen for Veterans in Truman’s Proposed Housing ControlsWASHINGTON, Dce. 13 Somo sovemmtnt

ufllclnU Mid lodny they railed to »fe much. If any. relief for veterans m the Presldcnl'a new housing con­trol program,

Theee onicwllh houslns and conjtrucllon during the war, did not wiah Ihdr names used. They eald tho Prealdenfs pro- Bram would tend to encouroBo bulldlns of homes at prices which were «IIU »bove the tcalo that most sliellcr-seelclng vcteraoi could aiford.

Tha forthcoming rtsulaUon will eatabllih priorities on bulIdUiB maltrlals for slnfjle or mulUple dwelllnB unlt« coalln? $10,000 or less. 8lncc a eontractor would make a greater profit building a *10,000 house than a cheaper one. these officials contended, he wos most likely to use materials prlcrllles to build at the maxi-

Mr. Truman'B program also called for-price on dffclllnsa. Despite thb. offlduls said, nt' will eoat from 33 per ccnt to 40 per cent mort 1939,

Two faclon

than In

n prictA recent war department «ur\ey.

continued, showed that Jhe vast majorli veterans who need housing cnnnot homes sclllnB at more thnn W,000,

. . •••- •“— •- enter Into this—higher matetlsls andittachcd to BEentlcB Which dealt labor costs. For Instance, lumber Is 73 per ccnt n'......... . rosily now thin It waa In IMfl: brick and tile.

cent; plumblnj and hcatlnB. W-8 per ccnt and pal 31,1 per cent. As for wbbcs In the construction dujtty, common labor avertBed 68 cents an hour In 1D30. l^iday the average Is 81 eer>ts. Por skilled labor It was » ! .« and today It Is $l-<57.

It. J. Thomas, vlce-preslrient of the Consrea ol In- da«rla! Organliatlona, told the hou.ie banking coni- mlluw that veterans were finding It almost Impossible 10 Itnd a homo priced at a "reasonable viiJuc." He de­clared that lalliire to stablllzo home prlcca v-outd make a "complelc joke of the Q. I. bill of rights."

The war dtpartmcnt questioned outgoing Krvlce- mcn at ccparallon centers In the nurvcy which ehoii-ed that most veterans cannot afford to d;iv mora ilmn 80.000 for homti.

House Split Three Ways Over Full Employment Legislation

New Fight Against Car Ceiling Seen As Ford Rejects Demands Of UAW for 30 Per Cent RaiseForestry Men Will Help in Spoirts Area

Sadder, Wiser Jap Sub Boss

Tells How He Sank Cruiser

W ASHINGTON, Dcc. 13 SI.B— The liousc v opened debate on its loiig-dolnyed n m ent legislation.

The Bplit was npparenl ns a eomplett'ly i m ent bill camc out of the house execiitiv

Truman May

Ask Unified Armed Force

Road Chief Tells Method Of Proposed Buhl Route

G. I. Blisters Brass Hats at House Probe

T. Matt Ilally. highways, explain •'jirospectlve rcqui buUdlng or *tate t ing held In Uie c Cnvanagh late yr.s been rcheduled to

terday In the Par

Falls and Buhl.

WASHINGTON, Dcc. 13

DETROIT. Dec. 13 (U.R)— New pres.siirc ngainat price ceil­ings on 1946 car.s arose today fro m the automobile indu.itry ^vhich niiist deal with the dcmand.s of the CIO United Auto­mobile \Vorkor.s for a 30 per cent wage incrca.se.

The I'ord Motor company told the union tha t under cur- rent OPA ceilings the company stood to lo.se 535.000,000 ne.xt

an increase in pay fo r its workers., riic Ford at-gument was in lino w ith the stand taken pro-

viously by niiother of the auto ind iiatry ’.-s "big three,” General flfofor.s—which insi.sted the nutoinobilc workers’ wage pro-

po.snl.s could not be met with- incrensing tho pricc of

ritten sub.stitute for thi

R. L. 1j Hnl

crllcld,nngh. ■

! local po.1t of VFVi. anr Lelclillter.

Ilally explained that niic pose of niy meeting with cltlc era waa to familiarize local pn ers of arei; road? with Itn pros-

.pectlve requtrcincaw and to una.

ilyic varlou.i merits <?f appljlng fed. era! funds on present roiitea utlllj. ing present hlghnay wldth.i.",

Hally luila the {late Is willing ta cooperate In the U, S. 30 propo-ial If the U. S. publk roaei.-i admlnlstrn tion u-lU.wiitve lU,100-foot rcoulre ment on right-of-way and If It wll make the Job a federal aid project

Ho believed the udmlnLstratloi would agree to the waiver.

Main comlderallon.1 "to be dts- ^uMcd In tho preparation of a rci'

be tendered the Rovem. federal aid In such proj.

cts, nhotild be the volume of traf- Ic. plus the voltune of produce car- led by truckj In the area (Inrilcat. IK Ui e neceislty of such thorough-

01

by; tlie a erved

Tliomason, D., Tcs. the two-day testln Jor-general. and r

rd hi . :tlng Chairman .. Interrupting ly of four

. .. vlnUiHe of ■. lilcles and the comparison of wl) It was like before any study of ro

the prct pict and wliiit

pected In the fu Hally ttrc5,scd Itmt "it Is not t

Intention of locally Interfiled Inc vlduals or groups to offer nnylht even approaching a mandatory- i qulremen t.

"Rather, the lntere.?ted groiija a working primarily to succc.vful

^ f fe r the state a.«lstnnce In m» B jib recommendatlgna to tlie go

Tentmendatlon will Include tlon that no buildings o be erected with tlie pr.

government." I "A great deal n pushed If we

<C«nilni>«l M

med from hl.-i belief "the democmtln waj army unless nil olhe: He felt certain, hi' sn tnry enlistments mid

Hattie Certain'litrlted floor battle appeared n. Tlie "fuU employmer '

spon-iors arUd they would try to k the compromise measure and su stltute the tenate "Jobj-for-aU'’ bllL

They object to the house com- rnlttee's vep. lon because li rejecta ;hc full rmployment goal anrt al«> ilde.steps jetting up machinery to Ticet such a goal.Tlie senate version adhered closer

;o. the recommendations of the E esMent. It act forth a policy inder which tJic govemmeat could lisure full employment by encour* iBlng private indiislxy. it also pledged public works programs In ■vent private Industry could not al>- orb all willing workcra. but ihc ilcd c wculd be binding only to the

"Allaln Illffh tever-Tlie bill which Chairman Carter

Monoico, D., Ala., of Uie cxccuilve tpendllurc.1 committee, placed bc- ■re the house membership declares governmental policy "to attain

Id maintain a high level of em- oynicnl production and purclias-

tng power."•• provides that the Prc.ildent

.'.ubmlt to congre.w within 60 . after the beginning of each

regulnr . c.'jlon im "economic re- woiild iictompa;

rtdlit-of-wuy regulat

Human Head Goes

In Trial Evidence

;rvcd 1 azl c

evidence mtrntlon c

ar crimes trial of 21 nr lenders today.The grlRly e.xhlblL.'i wtri' added I le Oermuns" own rccords of mui cr nnd brutality placcti before lli '■-.power Internatloiml

ly allied pr«<t ice-powerful li

cliu

ploym

remedies for

ftlmul

FLASHES of LIFE

a. grew Impatient nee which had e him to ft ho.s-

dead battery.Brown helped t

bulance to a ntnrt

“Tragedy” to Bare Secrets, Hearing Told

WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (,T}—Sec-

any i icmployment.and

Cooker Blows Valvcj Rancher Is Burned

PAUL, Dec. 13—Jack Bohon Is •covering from severe bums jui. lined recenll/whcn a steam cooker .8 wa.1 operating at the Henry

Pnyno ranch blew out a valve. I" and head were badly humi wa.? given emergency trea at the Rupr —

hLi : ■ Ijere.

Othman, Ears Aching From Solon Talk, Finds Self Deep in the Heart of Texas

DOGGY TULSA, Okla.. Dcc. 13-C

nance Commls-'loner John I hU ChrWma.1 ;.liopplI)g i thoroughly licked.

Nearly all liLs friends hni,! Just

;b63 along vil ■rtlllcnt

Missing Buckeroo May Be in HidingWRISER, Det-

Sheriff Al Wain believed Lci ling since No he bolated .■ r here, Is "1

Reynold. creek Owyliee county I

Sheriff Arlhur

. 20 from his cabin ind hollow section Idlng" out in the

y KnKDKRICK C. OTIIMANWASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U.Rj

had to lake to my bed today wltli dLiciuo known as cougresjlonsl «

Hour after hour and day i day I've been 11s- tenlns to those 2 babies ■

said I-d have packs and s>

.. vlUi something soothing. He said he'd be In to see my eari tomorrow and for me to keep 'en Iwlde the house. But above ail hi *4ld, keep 'em out of the house oi representatives.

I said could I write thtj Item foi Iho papers? He said that wouldn't lurt me. but he doubled If It would

ia you readers any good. If you’n mart, you’ll take the doctor's frei

P“Ke; If youti still with me you'ro golnr to learti about government and my bride.

Never havind been an Invijlld before. I never knew the trouble she has wltli Iter government. Take corkscrews. She had to jet into one of my. medicine Jugs with an tee pick and a hairpin becawe there n't a corkscrew for sale In Wash- igton. The corkscrew dealers elajni IC federal metal progr»m caused

llie .ihoriage.,e mall man brought our Incomc itatemenc and os of now she Is

trying to figure that one out marie more money In ie<5 tl thought I would In 1M4 thenB penalty in 1S«. Or so the ____print Indicates to her. She says she believes that Fred Vinson an' ' ' treasury deportment are runr bean guewlng contast.

Don't get the Idea that slie'iter. She gets her money's ......from Ui« government. 6he spilled

iodine on the rug. While It »'»s wet. she had the buxeai me economics of the agrlcul.

ture deportment on the phone, tell. Ing her how to rerno™ It. The

Is -good on roast turkey recipes, too. slie said, and how to make chestnut stuffing without :heitnuis and cranberry sauce wlth- wt cranberries. Tho bureau um ipplej.The alley bitck of our house is

piled with nibbLrh. She has not yet able to fliiih out U»e right

. by telephone. It looks now, tlie sayi, as though I'll have to take up the subject with Sen. Theodare

ttee Id charge of alleys, r I must, I must, but he'll p

»bly make a i>jieech. What U my cars I hate to think.

38.''

SWISS PRESIDENT BEIIN. Dcc. 13 (U.PJ—Dr. Karl

Kobelt was elected ferdcnU prc;:rUnd for 1340 today. «ar minister.

Mayor, Otliers to Attend Municipal League Sessions

Hog Sale Slump Told Marketers

More llian an M per cent drop n hog .■iairs during the piist year. IS aniila^t the previous ycnr fni- •he T«ln Falls County Lli MarhcUng n«oclrtlon,Thunidny morning In hall at the group's iiniiunl m

Lewb P. Joue.% Twin Falb, tor for the association, told 14 membeni that from Dcc. 1; I94< through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the same period the year before the

$05JMJ2. The pre.i,

lan conlerrcd UiLs week Dwight D. Ekcnhower, iiy chlcf of staff and an unification, Elsenhower say what lie nnd Uie

President dUcussed. But he did say ho had assured the President that the army vis "his" and ready to do his bidding as commsniler-lii.chlef.

Sourccs clore to tha Ttcslden ■ 4ial-Ihc-ng-v ftould

t reply

Tnm

neraJ Motom, the •Ike in CM plants

VO waM 23 days ago. on the wage hike with no m the price of automobiles,

ito Industry was -Mon to President

ent of a fact- iludy tlie woge

(he , Itlng QM'j

finding dl-spulo^rporntlQii and Its biggut umoii'. Tlie board selected by the President yesterday presumably may want to look nt General Motors' books. The union coiitends that the records would show the corporation could pay the wage Increa.-e wiihout boo.itlng the price of cars.

Oencral Motors and union ofll- clala planned to meet again today In their so-far fnjltless negotiations to settle tho strike of 175,000 trork- crs. The fact-finding board will not stnrt it-i work tmtll next Wednesday when the three members will meet to oreanlze.

UAW offlclaLs eald they would co­operate with Uie board.

In their first discussion of wages with the union sinca the end of the war. the Ford officials yesterday fumed down the rcqucit for a per cent increase but left tha w»y c ear for furUier negollatlofts. An- ouier conference between Ford and

officials WM scheduled forFriday.

Ford opened Ihe wag# negolla- tlons by explalnlns that it faced the prospect of losing « I o

nhecp tales IlRur

21fl.Bf His re

crea.se In Other fig showed t hogs wei

e the yeaI SOS,574.22.

e 11 V

I 534.J, Uie head of s

il 0,027, T,

.078 head of hat In 1D45

For those ;p sold were lively. Lewis jershlp Uiat

luas eporledhe a.-. oclotu_ ..„ .. ng lo.ss for Uie year of S449.41.Quoting report. from 12 market-

tig pooU In the .state, reprcsentlnd Idaho's livestock Wells, Boise, ex-

■peclallst.

e-ftflh 0

i that of ti

that I BoLs<!

Maklnit the trip with the miiy 111 be Cotiinil.'.sloners Truman rccnhnlRh nnd Kenneth D. Sho Id Attomcj Jo'cph H. Ulanclfoi The lenRUi' did not meet eliirli le war year.s nnd this Is the fl; Mlon called In an attempt to r

admlnl.stratl(i dl.'cusseri. will be in

dent of £

“Blue Baby” in Critical Shape

BALTIMORE, Dec. 13 lUJ?i — Doctors at the John-s HopkUis hojpltsl were watching the con­dition of two-year-old Judy Hsckmwi .closely today, fearful that the Buckley. Wash., "blue baby would fall to make the loni hard pull back to health.

Judy made excellent progress on Saturday after underRolng tho famow "Blalock" operntlon. but on Sunday her condition was "not too good,'- Yesterday she WM reported In a ••crltlcnl eon- dlllon." But doctors have not given up hope.

Tlia operation Involved splic­ing an artery to the heart to step up the flow of blood to tho lungs. "Blue babies- arc those whose hearts won't supply enough blood

the lungs and consequently are — ■■ •- unless saved by

allon.

Patton May Walk Again, Medic SaysHElDEUiKHO, (

The coni::niin V. S. annv li'v)i Oporgc S. P.ii:r:;,j ment for paralv.f..- was "a good c!n American comiiiftr.i hli fret BKnlii.

Tlie frncturi rf

told the membe .t hogs ma 44. 74 per

from,Jnn. 1-No lentagc had rlf Ho spoke at a R

continue Uielr (/■aion t Durliit: the lunclicon,

were pre.'.eiit. If a quori

d for slaughter c.u were tows. But 30. 1345, the per-

IcalldrrinS'ftrwed it ;pealeilly and publicly when, as a :nator, ho headed th6 war Invc- tl-

Official Time of Flight Uncertain

NEW YORK. Dec. 13 (/T7—Official clnp-.ed time of the record flight by the Superfortress 'Dreamboat'

• York.luport

. Unic(ind said

Jaycees’ Message Sent to Ex-Mayor

rie trip took fl' tc.-> and el£ht and one-fifth nd$. Pilot w.ii Col. Clircn -vine, St. Paul. Neb.Tlic blR Siipcrfon maintain! vernsc speed of 450 miles per rcalest ground speed was 451 miles 1 hour. The flight's average speed ;at by IS miles an hour the uver-

■ by theII propell

Tellliii e-K Koehl

Man Sought; His Mother Is Dying

illce received a telegram Thurs- from Chiitl.inooga, Tenn,, ask- that they locate A. T. Allen. Is ^upiwicd to be In TRln Falls,

crenscs toUUng 3a.03 per cwt slncs

2. The firm’s average wage Ij sev- cn cent higher than Uiot of the next lilghest among itg major com-

TJiis Is no lime to talk about ral wago Increases becaute tha

company can't tell now „.cUy Its Toltuno of production and sU win be next year, vny discussion of wages must d in with consideration of how

nun; [lie productivity of the cm- ployu-whkli u at Uie lowest mark

the thin rwlii I'-alUi Junior Chamber of

Commerce Tliurrday wiit ii tcle- ihe former mayor now In ' crlUcal condition at the hospital In Boise, e. sagc was ordered «t the

Jaycec niembtrr,hlp meeting Tues­day night. It will be read to Koehler by hk wife, who ha.s been nt Uolse .ince Monday nlKht when a doctor icjvlicd her that her hwbiuid was

egram from the ...'The T»ln Falls

:r of Commerce i icerest hope., fo

death. Tho full tl

effort t

Rancher Breaks LegJames Parr, Tuln FnlU county mcher, sulfered a fractured leg

lie cranking a truck, brought to Twin Falls

liwpltal for treaiment

Prkluy I

Jobless List Less Than Anticipated

30 tc OpcrtofllcUls .1

Fewer layolf/. In ncKpcctedly h!cl

rate of buytuK ai Ulal have promf <ono.T>lsts to oil ;mployment outloc

By ne,« hLireh

Women Active in Victory CampaignTO date, women solicitor* in the

city have sold I129.1C8.7S In the Vlc- torj’ loan drive, Mrs. Charles Caeey. chairman, announced Thursday The IE I)ond m Ic will continue through Dec. 31 but the purchase of other series ended Dec. 8.

In nddltloo to the total, Uie Otrl Reservea exchanged USD in stamps for bonds and sold }S3 In stamra, all In one day recently. R. L. 6um- merlleld. county chairman, said

no total figures would be rt- d ujiiU after Jan. I.

IV o ReturnAlthoug rc has been nc

iw.sprint shortagL Sly has forced the

rcUefwhich tcmpoiTlme-s-News to discontinue Its ctlltorlal pnae. curtnll on oUlflr departmcht.5 and plncc restric­tions on advertising, a change Is Being mude which we believe will meet with our readers' approval.

The "Heport on the War." which ha.s been running In In- itallmcnts on the comic page, and tho two-eolumn panel, "Life's Uko That," will bo dtsconUnued during the emergeney to make room for the Tlmes-Newj' two most popular columnists, Ray Tucker aiid Westbrook Pegler.

UnUl Uie editorial page can be resimied In Its entirety, Tuck­er and Pcgler wlP appear atart- ' ig tomorrow on tho comic page, 'hlch location best meets opera- lonni problem.i under the clr-

Death Decree Ordered for

DachanNazisDaOIIAU, D «, 13 m-A. tl. J.

military court today scntenccd 3S officials and Buarda nt the notorious Dachnu concentration camp to death by hanging for the murder, torture and starvation of thousands "t the camp’s Inmates.

Another defendant was sentenced to life Imprisonment and three Uicrs were sentenced to 10 years ach.The 40 defendants were convicted

estcrdny by the mllltarj- inbunal. -hlch debited only 80 minutes be-

iwe brlnsiiig in lls verdict. Among

rs nnd three prisoners who had llnborated wlUi Uic S. S.

the trlnl said that : killed at Dachau, ere brutaUy beaten.1 wero immersed In eperlments and tluit

.OO’ w hS *” “ • ™ -■The camp was the most notorious

Md most feared of Use concentm- tlon camps sot up by the nails for pomical prisoners.

nen *Jio orated th# horror ecelved their sentence* calm- the most part, only a few - any change of expreswon.

5.000 Jet

ly for

ktS;^ fichimng, 74. who'killed many prisoners In eioeri- mmta through which he sought a

Martin Weiss, commaadanl of Ui# camp, were among'Ui# S< witcncftl

Should Have Been Ready—Marshall

WASHINQTOK. Dec. II O uT - en. Oeorse C. Martban contlQiiet!

his testimoajf before Ui# Ptarl Uar- ■-or tnvesUgaUng todar1 th the decluatloQ that iba Ba-

wallan vm ; command ihould Iut*a been rea<ly for the Jepeneee ott- alaught. •

Rcfentng lo * war Jt over his alKtiaturt cn H«. B. :

IHl. U)« toimer chkt ei-

~ am (UU'tn: bu lUns that whoi3wi e>v»X«0^ -:

mand to a hlflh 'onton 9 * etoetii' U to b« exMuted.-

Page 2: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO T H T JE S D A Y , D E C 18, I M t;

Roads Chief Tells Method On Road Plan

Kovemmfnt departments In mind" he aald. "A ball of keeping Uie stale #ncl govctwntnt on spfaklng tfrma will do much to (imootti " dlMlcuHlcJ."

•The Alste nt prcacnt h»j «0,000 unexpended fimrti for liljliMI atnicUon," llnll)- snid. "snd amount ?.lll be spent In thf Wen- dell-Bll^i sccllon, where 11 onlr tskcs 10 per cPiit of frdcrnl fimcla to match tho stnlc fimdj.’

Ilalance for mulching timds,Jnn- 1. 1IH5, 'ms » deficit ot »307,-

DelayedAn Kccldciit near Lavn Uol

SprlnB.s delayed the nrrhal horo yesterday of T. Mott Hally, slnle director of highways.

Hiilly> auto nas .Hriiclc Ijy i run-away trailer lo.iclul iMlli hoKS.

-I saw tho truck comtrs down tha road,'' he said. 'TIhii tlio tnick pa%ied me, bul the trnlltr which was filled with lio s Had become delachcd and wiui coming «trnlghl towanl me, It.i conncct- iHK longno on the imvemfnl and sweeping from slilc to .'.Ide.

"JUit ua the trailer passed me, It crashed Into my rtnr lender anrt up^tl, throwing hogs all over tho rond." Hiilly tnld.

COO- : o be nvallable.ate on Jan. 1. 1010, wlU

amount to (3C3,0[X).Tho postwar program per year for

a thrce-year prosram (wltti the | rlod of the emergency expected be dated from June 30. 1040) ? include {4J)4S,2Q5 &s federal funds and »25U,730 as tho reffular match- 1ns itote fundi- The ratio to the total cost will be, for federal aid C3.C0 per cent, with the stale funis accounting for 3741 per c estimated co.?t!,

6ome Indication ot Iho upkeep of state roads was given by Hally told tho group that 5M,0M tor crushed roclt wia needed per year for maintenance of roads within Idaho. Hfl also Included in tfiiance need; 3,000,000 gallons of oil per year for rotid control,

•The striping of tho yellow ter line* on roads was definitely out during the war for the simple reason that the coloring como from Java." Ball? aald. •'Wc will go work of solid striping in ISIS, and this one project will cover about 400 mllfs of Idalio roads at a c. of $75,000 /or striping unlSa a palntn.

"'Another Important proje. throughout the stntc will be the erection of proper roadway sljns, one of the first steps to be taJten in tho elimination of a large percent- ace of fatal traffic accidents."

A resolution to ask tliat the feder* aJ highway commlsalon waive 100-foot, right-of-way regulalloa for th» proposed Improvement of hlgh- W17 30, between Twin I^Ils and Dtihl, wa4 adopted by reprcsenta-

■ ThBB i*r-08 dTle orjanletlMu to T i* » ^ a lb ond iuh! who met In Joint Bcaflon at the Park hotel yes­terday noon.

The Hospital

Keep the W hite Flag o f Sa fety Fli/ing

Now 22 days w ithout a t ra ff ic d e a th (n our liSaglc m ie v .

Seen TodayDudley Swim’s plcturo on front

pogp of "Tliu National legion- niitic" . , . Jim Ballard, ex-army striding along Second street we»l

' facetloiisly saluting ac^ualnt- , . Ground deep into asphalt

pavement on Shoshono street as aftermath of hoi summer days; Safety pins, uck.i, nails, bottle cape, ft penny, aomc bobby plns- . Waaaleh motor touts bus, empty ex cept tor driver, on Second streeL . One llltlo boy on Tlilrd weat hav­ing tough tlmo pulling another lie boy on aled, wlUiout a sign of

•- . . Christmas stiopiwra uwk- 1 llttlo more worrletl than tliry ;wo wecka ago iciily nine buy­

ing days left). . . Salvation Army kettles and bells at strategic polnta

the coins Jingling not loo often yet. . . And many small new homes south and eoutheo-st of town.

Rupert Man Dies

Following IllnessIIUPERT, Dec. 13—William Da- Id.son, 53. died Tuesday afternoon t his home here. He had b(1 health for mors than a ye. aa bom April 19, 1803, at Twin

Oroves,Survivors include his wife, Mrs.

Agnts Davidson; daughter. Bernice Davidson; iwo ulsters, Mrs. Arreiti Parkln.wu. Ilexburg; Mrs. Hugh Dlgler. El Segundo, Calif.; i brothers. Harley Davidson, Ruperl, and Ouy Davidson, Heibiirg.

The body la at the Goodman tuary pending funeral arrange- menta.

Twin Falls News in Brief

m it Mdtber Mr, and Mrs. David FI*. Honolulu.

. re visiting a( the home ef hU mother, Mta. Rose Fix.

Back FTora Salt Lake■ and Mrs. Poul n. Taber re-

turned to Twin Falls Wednesday after a visit Of aevcral days in Salt Lake City.

Mrs. Dick Freeman loft for Poca­tello and Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Moor-

, Murtaugh, left tor Boise Thursday. All traveled by Z lerly Airlines.

OlrlhaA daughter waa l>oni Wednesday > Mr, and Mrs- Jack Butler, aud a in Thursday to Mr. and Mr*. Lyslc f. DavLt, all of Kimberly, ai

Twill Falls county general ho.splIal maternity home.

MarrUfe I.lceiises A marriage license wus Issued

Tliur.sdfty ty Enilllo Flgluola, T»-ln ralLi- and Prances D, Fawcett. New York City. A license was Issued ye-sterday to George A. Oraham and Bemico L. Oartlner, Spokane. Ws-sh,

Daujhter Here” h Klalne UiivU. iliiugluc

,nd Mrs. W. C- Davla, ar from Jtiiilor college. Ban

Francisco, to i-p^nd Christmu here, Li mnJorlnK in radio acting, IK and directing.

Plsrhurgrd. Winfield fci. Sccord, former

......F.illa clerk, wiui discharged ..ceiitly from FI. Douglas. Utah. Ho 8cr.ed 15 month.i oversew. His wife,

e former Mabic Snow, now resldea Sacramento, Calif.

Last Rites Held

For Mrs. WhiteFuneral services tor Mrs- OUle

White were held at 3 p. ra. Wednes­day In the Twin Falls mortuary cliapel. The Rev. A. W. Barbeiat of­ficiated, aaststed by the Rev. Davit! Johnson. Music was furnished by Mrs. Stanley Dexter and Mrs. F. E. Creisey. accompanied by Mrs. David Johnson.

Pallbearers were Noel Dailey, Carl

CochT?n; Ateb Cochreh Leslia ahan. Interment wa: Twin Falla cemetery under the di­rection of the Twin Falls mortuary.

ADMrLinda, Ostler. Kimberly: Charles

Bnrroe, Filer; Mrs. James Wa.«om, Twin fVilis.

DI6.MIS6KDO. J . McVey. Leonard UtiJtljon.

Mrs. Calvin C. Jolmson and daugh­ter. Twin Fnlls: Patty Ann Stin­nett, a n d Mrs. Merlin J. Kefgzer, Buhl; Mrs. Joe Severance, Edrn.

The WeatherContinued cold and partly eloudy

sky tonljhl and Friday. Leweat to- nl»ht 10-15. Saturday partly eloody and continued cold. Yeaierdiy hijh 25, loTF 17: today loi "

Waives HearingWilliam nils, arresUd >-estf:<Iay

at BuIO on a warrant charging him with "inducing a girl to enter tht stale for immoral purpwes," waiv­ed prellminarj' hearing late yester­day when he appeared betoro Pro­bate Judge C. A. Bailey and bound over to the district t under »SOO bond- Ho was remanded to the custody of the sheriff in lieu of bond payment.

Tlie defendant, a former re-sltlcnt of Mlisouri, was arrested by Depu­ty Sheriff Ed Hall and was booked at the county Jail at 4;30 p- m, terday.

Small Fire Firemen at 4:30 a.m. Thursday

extinguished a minor blaze at tho re.sidence of W, p. Hlno, 557 Uadlion street. An ovCrhciiled chlmncy cawed a wooden support for a . tovc pipe to catch (ifire. Only slight damage resulted.

Army EnilatmentsLoren Lei^oy Hougburg, route two,

Wendell, and Ora Morton. Jr.. Wen­dell, were accept«<l for a three-year enlistment In tiio regular army. T/Sffl. Jack W. Buck, local army recruiter, announced. Bolh men iell Wednesday evening for Balt Lake City to report for duty.

Mooaa Meetlni ' Moose lodge and Women of the Moose will meet Friday at 8 p. m In ihelr hall. The men will enter­tain the women.

CaUrd to Colorador. and Mrs. Itoy aaiber have

_ ,j lo Ormul Jiiiictlon, Colo, called by the lilnr&s and death of his mother, Mrs. Nettie aarber, who vlslled her eon hero several times.

Club lo Meet Tlie Smiling Throuch club will

meet ai 3 p. m. Friday nt the hoBie of Mrs. R. T. Bell, 124 Buchanan street. It will be a Chrlstmaa party nd gift ejchanRe.

iell Karlgufh raprrn T/Sgi. Jack W- Buck, chief army

recruiter for the Twin I'alls station, received his 80-day furlougii certifi­cate Tluirsday moniing. Ho will leave Dec. 20, when Ills furlough be-

•. eflcctivr- lo vLslt with hLi parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ike Buck. Portland, Ore.

Losei RlnisColeen Wornvsb-'iVer. cmployo of a

downtown department store, report- ' ■ police late yesterday that she

11 engagement ring with seven diamonds and a plain gold wedding

. n a local hotel. Tho rings were contained In “a amali brown change

Dltorta Suit Filed Eleanor Klli-y sued Thomaa D

KIley for divorce In district couri Thursday and charged desertion The couple married in SturgL^, S. D. May 7, 1037. She asked custody of Uielr children, a boy. 10. and a girl,

Qhe ret]uested also the funit* md no monthly nllmony. Her

attorney Is O. C. ISall.

tetsma Uame Boon Sgt. Clarence F. Wurstcr. husband

of Mrs, Oerry Wurster. 100 Buchan- now stationed In Japan, has processed for hts return to

3L.nes, He entered the seri'ica December, 1B42, ai>d htts been ov

since November. 1044. with airdrome squadron in the second combat cargo group of the fifth AAK troop carrier command-

rn lo Berkeley. and Mrs. Scott Hbworlh, for- re.'lilents. have returned to

Berkeley, Calif., after a week's vLslt with friends. Tiiey have pur­

chased a home In Berkeley and will .. . there permanently, Mrs. Frank Elhworth. their son’s wife, and Henry Scotl E-'lUwortli, tlielr grand-.

ire living with them while navy 1 veteran Frank Ellsworth U receiving | navy ha'pltal treatment.

Four F inedFour niotorLsU paid fine* lat ,

terday for improper lights follow­ing Uic city’s efforta Tuesday night to curb operation of car* locally w#h faulty equipment. Those pay­ing fines of 13 each for the offense Included Mrs. Norris Stettler. Don­ald Poxlon. Fred Jesser and Bar­bara Commons. A. J. Henry paid fine of $0 for failure to stop follow­ing an accident and Tom Hamilton paid a fine of tl6 for disturbing the peace.

Former Resident Passes on Coast

L. A. Knyder, 85, former Twin Falls resident, died Monday at the home of a daughter. Martha Snyder, Hollywood, Calif, according to word received here by relatives late yes­terday.

He came lo TR ln Falls In 1005 and tamied near here until 1017. He wa connected with t-le Twin Falls Cem- ■•-ery ai-oclatlon until recently wher le left Twin Fall.i In 1041 to make hU. home with his daughter.

He WI15 prceeiled In death by wife In 1937. Survivors include four ,'onj, Rhoda Snyder, L/ce Snyder and Dency Snydor, all of Seattle, Wa.' h.; William R. Snyder, Jerome; two daughters, .MLu Snyder. Hollywood, Calir.: .Mr.i. Rllla S. Proctor. aLio of Hollywood and iwo gTandsona,

DischarffesCharles D, Abbott, Henry J. noda-

baugh, Herbert L. Larsen, Shirley 8, Eaton. Joseph L. Eaton. Leland E. ’Thomlbon. Donald R. Travis, Donald W. Newcomb, Richard Duvall and OeorBO R- Wllllama.

READ TIME3-NIW8 WANT AD6

c / / £ e '/ ir u /a < f

JayceesMove Into Hospital Efforts Here

Added impetus from a new direc­tion stepped fnto the Twin Falls hos­pital picture today.

The Ttrln Falls Junior Chamber of Cotnmerce, after a fiery discus­sion which flatly showed belief that tho cunent campaign for a new hos­pital is stymied, decided to awing into action. The chamber adopted, loudly and without a diisentlng vote, a resolution by Dr. Frank J. Mc- Atee that the Junior Chamber form a Jaycee hospital board with the understanding that ll go in to e ImmedUtely,

Several plana were proposed by three principal speakers, and by era! imprcmplu siK-akers nt meeting list evenliiK.

R. R, Devon sug^f’ted that the city float a bond Is-’ue to raL'io enough money to match that "some religious orK;vnlz.ilton." In , remarks Oevan exhorted the Jay- cee.1 to "prevail upon our city dida. clean-up the h&'plUil adminlstra- llon and forget the petty prejudices of which we are all guilty. Includ­ing myself. Then we should get doctors to come to one ot our meet- Inga and to tell U' what they need and what wc should do."

Buriesta niatrlct KcnneUi D. Shook, the (>econd

principal apeiker, proposed that the chamber ask the stato legislature to form a hosplUl dL'itrlcl in Twin Falls county, similar (o a school and highway district. With thLs. Shook recommended that the neecls In tho Duhl area be recognized and a small­er emergency hospital be built in that city.

aien Chugg, whose spcech read in his absence by Charles (Chio) Crabtree, Jaycee president, proposed that a hospital association be formed, compoied of the leading cltlMOj In tho community, to raise the necejjary fund-i for a new ho.'!- pltal through sub-wlptiotvi and donation.'. Those ^utk5crlblnK would be atockholders, he proposed.

Before introducing the prlnclp.il speakers. Chic Hiatt, program chair­man. read the hospital report which waa Luued by Dr. fl. W . Black, recognized auUiorlty in tho north­west on hospital needs and their admlnl. t^atlon. From this report, RIatt pointed out that tho Twin

GATOR ROACH HIVES

&AV-MOR DRUGOpposHe Orpheum Theatre

Falls a a Is In B ne«d of. additional fio-bed hoe-

pital u the sick in this eommunitr ■r» to have proper «*re."

PrapcM* Fluui Driro Breck Fa<ln. one of the im­

promptu speakOT, mpporttd th# soclatlon Idea and proposed tsuch an association bealn 4a ti___ftinds Immediately so that these fund* can be matched vlth money from Uio federal government to th* exlent of 40

Fagin reminded the group th»t % bUi passed by tbe senate Wednesday will make this proposal poulble.

In hla remarks Fagln stated that le rates at the present Twin Falla

county hojplUl arc "too high" In comparison with other cities and thai there Is "loo much blckertn«-" The best operated hoipltals In the country are -by rellgloiw organlra- ilons wiUi training schools attach­ed," Pagln said.

Regarding donations and JCTlptions for a hospital Fagln de­clared: ’Too many people want to know whai they will get out of it.

itist remember that a hospital humanitarian institution tmd

anyone In need of hospitalliation should be taken care '

Larron Colston, In an Impromptu address, told the Junior Chamber memljcrs of the two idle buildings

Ooodlng, "fully equipped for hospital.' Colston aald this property, formerly Qoodlng college, was under

trol of the atate land mls. loIl and suggested that the chamber Investigate tlie possibility of obUiinIng use of these building*

hcispital to serve tho north aide. That, he said, would load licrc.

At the beginning of the meeting Crabtree read a resolution, adopted

the natlouol orginiiatlon. which ts that congress amend the Q I t to allow convalescing veterans accept part time Jobs while hos-

pitnllied. and that the veterans be

MEASUREYOUR NEXT

TRIP IN

MINUTES

BY AIRPHONE 1786ZIMMERLY

AIRLINESLobby Rogerson Hotel

Ration Calendar

alloived to accept pay for these Jobs. Endorsing thl« resoluUon tha mtm- berg initructed Ihs Jaycee govem- ment affair* eommittee to write the Idaho congressional repreaentatlon. Immediately, regarding this matter.

Tlje members of the chamber were also reminded that Joe-K Koehler, one ef iu members, Is seriously U1 in the veterans’ hospital, Bolso Cnibtree Instructed 3. J. Mullea to wire Mrs. Koehler a message of "tood cheer" from the chamber to be read to Koehler. The former mayor is now imable to use his eye* to read the m e .^e himself.

Quests of the chamber were; Le­roy Motherahead, George Bever, U

W. Ancleraoa. Ohe*t«r ttrocDerer. Brveo Vanderhof, Don Jrvaoi, Jack TliOmM. BUI Oesooy. Val Toolsco,uui ueniuy. «ai awww,

T Readeraon and Den HUty.

AMERICA’S WASH WQM)

OUR BIGGEST TRAVEL JOB is ahead

. . . G E T T I N G THE F IG H T IN G iAEN HOM E

Du r in g December oboirt 530,000 veJercns, homoward bound from ovetMoi, will arriv®

on the P ad fic Coast; another 490,000 will orriva on tfie Atlontic Coast—o fo fa l o f mora fhan a m il­lion <erv/c9 nreft ro tu m in g in ona m oothl All o f them are e a g e r to g e t home— all o f in are eager

to do what w e can to help.The ra ilroadt have one thought In mind— to

give returning veterans the very best lervice they eon with tho c an and engines that ore available.

This Is the situation:Three-fourthf o f all the sleeping cor space In

the country I f assigned lo movementi o f our fight­ing men. C oad ie i,too ,h ave been token from reg­

ular train service— more and nwre o f them— Induding 3 6 S additional withdrawn from western

trains early this montfkAs you know, no new pawenger can

could be built during the war. Even

the 1200 government troop sleep­ers, ordered last spring, have not been delivered because o f lobor difficulties.

Only a small portion o f our passenger equipment is avail­

ab le now fo r necessary dvillon travel, to say nothing o f the added demands o f -the Holiday

SeasoaInconveniences, discomforts and d e la ys are una­

voidable under these drcumstances. N o one regrets

this more than the railroads. The problem Is par­ticularly acute on the Padfic Coast where nine- tenths o f the returning veterans must make long {oumeys to reach their homes.

This then I* the situation for the next two or throe months. W e know you understand and will

b e potlent, just as you were during tho war yeo a For nothing Is so important to Am erlco as her fighting ions.

The rehjming of these men— a million a month — Is the final phase o f the railroads' w a r job. It Is

the most difficult. But when It Is be­hind us, nomial service w ill be quickly

restored, and plans that already are f a r advanced for many Improvements

and Innovations In railway trove! will becom e realities.

But f ir t f w * muif finith

our w a r lo b i

U NI ON P A C i r i Ct O A O OF T Ht k H

r a i l r o a dT H l Q lu U e * u )M i

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T H H E S D A Y , D E C . 18,1948 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Site of UNO Capital Stii’s

Controversy; Br LOUS F. KRKWLg bniiFd Prat BUff Cerrapond<■ There la more than mcela the

!n Uio dlspulc ovrr whether Lh# per- ronnent ecut of the United Nations OTKanltatlon ehall be In the Unlttd states or Europe.• Superficially, the question of -

Clio appears minor in wnlriit to Bmvcr Issuei ronfrontlng tlie DNO.

the dlHlcuUy In nercelng on It nothtos.

THe United Nntlon.1 la a *-orld«ld8 t r i l l io n and in theory could func Uon as suceesjrully In 6an Pran- ciMO. Tlmbuetoo or nt the north pole.

Actually. U bii. bccome & blj three l£.sue, wlUi Brllaln and Russia cn cppo.?ltc sides or tfio fence and the United Stoles delcsatlon trying to be coyly neutral.

Orent Drltnln opposea making the United 8tatr.i the home of Uie UNO. Ku.'LsIa favors It. Most of the smaller nations are divided In accordance with their affiliation with members of the big three. Poland tupports a European silo as against the Rw- Blan stand, anil Australia fnvori UnltocI States agaliut the mother coiiiUry’B wl.ihes.

Olid bituatlon It aeema odd that Brllaln. rie-

I'plte her desire to eonllnue the Anslo-Araerlcan war alliance, (iliould be siding against the UnUctJ Slate.? irhlJe fiusiJa Ukes the op- l>o5lng view. It may be ihat the nu.i- •■'inn.i find some grim humor In the 'iltuatlon.

Britain cvliiently fearj her Inter- national pre.itlge will suffer If the cfnt<T of political gravity 1. shifted from Europe. Tliat w tor Ro much In west In the east, among tlie countries lylnp on the Imperial life-line the Orient. Urltlsh fears arc gov­erned more by that eonsiaeratlon thnn by any rcluctance to see the United etalc.i take the spotlight.

would prefer a "world cap- oiil.-ildi' F.uropc. mainly bccaujc

^ hiT .suspicion of a possible wcst- «-rti European bloc ngalMt the So­viet union and lls established sphere of In/lurnce in Europe, as long as It piia.'io.s by projy to " mote United Stales.

“Who Is He?” Answer

N. V. StIAnP . Filer rancher and prominent

recumatlonlsl. anbjett of yester­day-. “Who la lie?- article by Charic* C. Merrill. Kharp is ad- drcued by liU friends variouOy as “No " or Noah. Tlisso who knew hijn In %VashInrton call him Dill. Ills wire Ukfi NoeL Dnt hU pjr- ent* named him Nov*. (Ktaff rn- sraTlne)

Alleged Forger Held for Court

Robert Meyers, arrtued here lute yesterdny on a warrnnt cliatKlng him with the forgery of a *200 cliecl was bound over to the district com Wednesday afternoon by Prob.il Judge C. A. Dailey, who set the dt fcndanffl ball at S500. Meyers wi remanded to tlic custody ol II Bhcrlff 111 llcu of bond payment.

The defendant chnrscd , pe- clflcally In the warrnnt, which ua. siKnect by Claude Wllcy. city police, with giving an nllcgedly worthier check to Wesley Noren. operator of the Lincoln Cuih grocery on DC' Tlie check wa-s made payable to Snyder and was slgnc l by H.

New Officers Are Elected By Stoclonen

A new constitution and by-laws were adopted by the Western Stoekgrowera a-wjclatlon at nun* meeUng held nt the Pleasant Valley school hou.?e on Dee Members of Uie aisoclallon from Kimberly and Hansen.

Russell C. (Bud) Lar.scn. presi­dent of the group, officiated at the bujlneii session.

Eifctlon of officers was held. Larsen waa reelected president; O- P. Laricn. flr.it vlcc-prc-sldcnt; Fred Hoops, r.ccond vlcc-prealdent; Mrs, Canie Crockett, secretary, and /

Larsen, trcQsurer.Altemates Named

'»o allcrnatc.i were electod the advisory board and Include " ~ itler and Qeorgc D. Crockett.

rs attendlnB were electcd membership.

Sheriff W, W. Lowery told the group "We might expect nn up- iwlng In entile rustling as crime In nil parts of tlie country L" on an in- crcnse." Sheriff Lowtry told the group that he expects to eonllnue the patrol and he n.iked the cooper­ation of the a-stociutlon In rcporl- ig any su.'splcloiis movements of ■uck-s and rUier.s.Oamcs Keith, Btirlcy. district

grjizler, nikod the luvixliitloir.s co- O|)cratloa In pracllclng Kood mnn- nKemelil by proti.'ctlng liie area burned over tliLi pxsi Mimnier. Keith stated that If the nren-s were not protected they wo\ild no bill‘d i'’ 5aKe and undt-j.lrable uocd: grnsics.

rols«n Weed HMrrtbecl Williams Mnthcw,'-,, al:«. with the

grarJiif: tcrvlce In Burk-y, ilcscrlbed a new poUonou.': plant known a.? halozctz-n. He rrporlctl that It U Invading thL? nroa and Li caiiilng big lo.-<,e5 to the .sheepmen. It L'. polsonniis to both lihccp and c:ittlc but cattle do not eat It readily. He

icluded that a fear.lble way t( control It is thrnui;h pro|)cr mcvn

Others In attrnclani-p .-vt thi nretlnB were O S. Duller, C.irrh Crockett, Anna Liir.-.cn, L. P. Lar­sen. A. K. Kunkel. PeUT Newman, Ralph Butler, PVecl Hoop.'i. Victor Nelson, Farris Larsen, tllrchle V Broin, Clara Dro.-,c Strieker, Ken­neth Uirsen. Ted Crockctt, No.ih Brackett, U,in Week.':, .'.rcrctar\- o

Mlnidok* national forest. Burley and Oita Smith, loreat service. KUaberly.

Grange Has Idaho

Produce BanquetTliB annual Idaho produce .sup.

per was held by the T^in Pails atange Wednesday nlEht in lOOP hall with more than 40 nv bers present.

The Buhl community hospital discussed by Robert Thoinas and Millard B. Leigh. Lccturer Harr>- Nebon Is oul of the state, it was voted to Invite the Pomona, Moun- t.iln Rock. Kmill and Ilollbter Oranges to Join Uie Tv,ln Falli sroup in hsstalllng offlcer.-i here r 8 p. m. Jan. ».

Visitors were Prank Atkins, flol; ert Tliomoi, Falrileld: Millard I Leigh ond OreenhalBli Wnleot

who la attending the na»al «lr tech- □leal tralnlns school at Corpus ChrtstI, has been advanced to the rank of A m t 3/e. He Is atudylng radar and will spend the holidays at home on leave.

n i r -

BEEN SICK FOR SO LONGWhy don't yoa cita NATUHE • cbanee lo lUrl frotn the came of yonr trouble, and SEE HOW SOON NATUBE

CAN POT YOU ON VOUR FEET AGAIN

THE NATURE'S W AY SYSTEM ■2H MalD Are. Nortb—Oppotlte the Poit Office-Twin FalU

Telephone UCO for Appointment—lloura; 9 a. to. to C p. m.Larron Colston—M K. HarUR-Mary A Zupo

NATUROPATIIIO PHYSICIANS'

MAKE IT AN

ALASKA CHRISTM ASnere'i the Ctrlrtma* jlf l cTerybodr wlU enioy.

ALASKA LIFE MAGAZINE, published monthJy: packed cover to cover with stories, aiucles and pictures of Alaska ETA M It l3 today. One year jubscrlptlon. 13 thrllUng Usues.. tPA .OU IMO ANNUAL PICTOniAU Alaska Ufe'a bla 103 ptig# book of up-to-the-minute Pictures of Industrie*, cities.

ALASKA REFERENCE MAP. showing highwayj, i roads, air routes, cities, toTns, smaller settlements.Oompletely Indexed____________________________

ReruUr Price ...... .................._____ .. __

BarBaltf ChrUtmaa GiftPrice for all three .............. ...............Wriu n*mf« »nd addrMsn rirj plilnlj of i till* »ttr«cilYo llir»o Clitutniw mn n money ort r for I2.6t> Joi* rieh nain Fl

1.001.00

-S 4 .S 0

J 2 .8 9

Christmas Suggestions at

Our Farm & Home StoreUSE VOUR CREDIT AT

Conde'

SINGLE M ILK ER UNIT WITH SUPPLIER

SKISA rm y surplu.s Hiclfory Ski.s with mctiil edRc.s, ridfjcd to suit the best of Hkiers—

1 1 9 5

SINGLE MILKINC

UNIT

CONDE

75“L513,25 per Month

(Cash Price 5225.00)

Portable

CONCRETE MIXERSYou move it just like n wlicel barrow, mntie with heavy itnRle iron frnmc— 64 .50

Mefal

TOOL KITS

Only MUking Machine Using “FUtered Air”• Modern in Deaif^n

• Saves Time . . . Saves Labor

• Easy (o OperateBefore you buy luiy milker, be sure to come to C. C. Atiderson’n and etc the famous Concle Mllklnn Machine . . . commonly ac­cepted os the workr. finest . . . Concle b the product ot the most painstaking design md workmanship, i t la easy to ojierate requires a minimum of care . . . and Is tnjlj' a wonderful time and labor saver eingle milking unit U complete with Jtt-' pound steel pall, denning bnishes, cleaning rod and rubber parti, ready to connect lo itall cocks. TTie one-haif horse power sup­plier Kill operate three single unit milkers »t a time. If desired.

Vz H. P. SUPPLIEROperates 3 milk- ing u n it s with this machine.

For Christmas give him •a hnntiy tool kit with inside tray. Mnkcs n won­derfu l fishing tacklc kit also—

2 ^ 8

136““

t e a m h a r n e s s

Stanley

BREASTDRILLS

1 3 5 0

Corn}. Compacf, Efficlenf Powtr UnitMUler Tool

HAND DRILLS

175

to

2 2 5

Wilton Precision

BENCH VISE3 - Inch Size - - $14.004 -Inch Size - - $21.00

Yankcy Bretchen black leather har­ness — really a heavy duty harness with 2 inch traces. You will have to see this harness to believe its value—

WESTERN SADDLESHerford Brand $165.00 toH and Tooled,14 inch tree — $189.95

Farm and Home Store

Page 4: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO T H U B S D A T , DEO. 18, IS U

Marines Ired At Positions

In Tsingtaonr HAL B011.E

TSINQTAO, Clilna, Dcc. Confuclm once sild ' One worth a Uioujand wordj."

Beveral thousand marlnu, tccept- Ing hU *tat«menl vcrb«llm, have had a good Iniig "lonS:" nl tlih ancient cage’s home provlnf« «nd now tliey'f* -ilnioi.l unaiimloai Hint they don't want to waste «o:ii about Belting out of here.

It la the only subject I ever knew more Uian two irurlnfa !■

TslDKlno h our o( llir clilet p. t; of flhantung pcnlii.Miln in norUica.M China and 1« iraport.-vnl ns n tcrmlnu.1, Ic*tllc moimfncturliig ter mid coal thlpplnj point.

You don’t hear much talk here about "oil for the lamp.' ot:t^ :ill I

t SfwnKlini.SliMitunit pciiIii.Mil.

roughtly like a liniim witfj Ice clrlpiilnK from The nu'e Jui.'! out Ini aeu, wlilfh-licrc, n:

Ir 11' 81Ins.

It Is Jus! anollirr rx.iiti; rnphy texlbooh Kritm Innocent Khool clillrtrrn. If I ev Bet out to climb MoDii; IlTere. t will take almg i\ candle In c«'■ tunui out to le a immfl.

ConfiicUu lived in ijhimtiini; iiri) Ince more lupinly llii>n do Aiiicilc: marines, and sllll rcjldlng here a the 77th Kf:>eratlon rf lih (I'.v-cm an(.'

Tlie olil |ihi)o-.u|ilifr ii.lnht ll-.c know tli:vl liL\ Micred mouiittilii. T Shan, 1-s .sdll D.n.'iO (cel t;ill tincl i rlvaii hnvc oppcurcd iipoii Iho hnd-

Tjlngtao has tea balhlng fAcllltle.i and la one of a dozen oriental cltle. willing to be known a.' "Ihe Rlvleriiof t e far e.

The city has « population ol well OVCT 600,000, and a visitor geta the tmpre-'slon well over hall o[ tho eltiiena are engaged in p«ldUii, souvenir brtc-a-brae and Rirment. of "genuine tllk raj-on"—k1 that meani-at pricp. ihnt Shanghai merchanU looi: like pSill- snthTopIiLs.

I talked here to tuo navy plurnia- c^et matej who abo tervcd tha marines on Okinawa. They rhaslMd repeatedly how much the marines dtallke their pre.-.enl Uon in China.

"I know the marliic.i uouW belly­ache J4 hourj a day, even It they were on n 40-hour week," said Frank McCormick ol Rutherford, N. J. "but. theyro the best flghtlnu In the world.

•'Only, the main thing U they all want to know Just »li hell we are doing over here. The only American property we ha\« to protect Is our own eqiilpnienu'

Zdibo Ermlcf T

roblhhw) d.llr .T.H SotidAr II I B«eond Slwet W«jt. Twin F*!l*, tb> ‘rittiM-N»»i l;ol>U»blri OmWM.

BWDSCntPTION nBT CARBIER-Pi

8T MAI1^PATAI1I.E 1

BBBdo Onlj. »n7»b«r«l

P o t

S h o t s

EGO CHAMP t/eare It to Bill Dye, rancher,

dpe-rateher, hen (anfler and Khalnot.

IIP *aw that T-N Itepi ahoul (ha MiMoula foar-ounce ejr with three yoUu. Ho »qolrTned aneatlly. Then he aaw that a Twin r»lli hen. oivned by Mr. and Mr». J. W. Atkln'ion, had eqnalled the SI!i- aoula four ounrcn and three yoUci

This ma.lr Hill feel a little bet. ler In hla civic pride department. Out It wasn't enoti|h.

We don't know whether he went out to the Dye hen hani« and de­livered a Icrturo to hit ehlckenj. Hut—

He brought un an fgi as bir 11 looked like an oblong balloao.

Weight on druf gtere >cal», four ounres and 1! gralDi.

Numhrr of yoI1c«. Ihree. .■Mpn uremeiit!!, «‘ i Inrhe* by

GOT AN ELT?Our olrt friend, DorU Stradley,

ays ICs n crULs and ahe'a got Inri .■oiiic elf.? for Union tchool.She inc.ias /.peclllcilly th.n i

cilk. out. Ill Union want . •bro;viile" or cU Kiilt.v eight of 'i

school program. They ca r mntrrlnl now but figure 1

of you parents have such elf ai ■ ■ ■ , from the tline.s when y< youngsters were In .school sklu.

Wo don't personally know what clf Biilt lootn like. But when Do

ly,") they’re needed, they’re needed. How about ran-'iacklng the attli

and coming up with an elf or two?(Phone Mrs. Stradley at 455 and

she’ll pick ’em up.)

IlKQllKST AND OFFEnr;ir Pot Shot. :You have helped so many other

people out, I wondered II you could •ny rescue loo. ec .■-ninU daiiglilers have

ujked Sanlr^ to bring them a puppy —they aren't p:\rtlculor nil to what

would however prefer a male) and I can pay a rea.-wnable price.

Pot.-:, do you happen to .thing tliat would fill the

bill???—A Norlhslder

Canal Meet To Ballot on Weed Killing

Volins on an amendment whlrh would Include erndlcntlon lous weedj aa maintenance and op­eration expen;e will bo carried out at the annual meeting of Twin Falls Canal company atcxikholders Jan. 8,

IncltL Inn uf the weed amendment I’olR wa. announced In the com- lany'a official cnll to slockliolders uued by A. Wynne Smith, asaljtaii secretary.

?teet at 10 a. m.nnual M.-w lon win convene

at 10 a. ni. at the company^ office, As in piL-’, yeani the stockholdera will then move to a larger location, probably a theater.

Election ol dlrectom ajid submis­sion of reports are also scheduled. All members of the present board

understood to seek reelecllon I no announced oppa'Ulon thui

TliD iiniondtuent to the arilcle.s of Incorporation w’ould empower tho company ’'to Include a a part of

’■ ■ lalntenancr and ( )roJpc[ or canal r ic;iL ami cradlcatliin r<l.? Krowlnt; I c boiindarlej

project or ej.stcm and adjaccnt thereto." It would aL^o empower the board of director.'; to utllUo avail- able funds and to levy and collect

cliarKc.? and expervic.? again!Sivcii piece of land nccordlng tienellta which shall accrue

Cooperate With Kt.nl*The weed work would be carried II In cooperation with the

, rojram ’'of the con.itltuted aulhor- Itles of the state."

In thla county three special weed dlstrlcta are already In operation as "constituted authorltlc-\" while the county aa a whole la a weed district In Itself.

announced . .pany's booka will be closed for ft- of stock 10 days before the Ing. All proxlej must be filed with Uie tccretar>- no Ie.v. than five rtayj before Jan. 0.

Six Men DischargedMade Valley men were tllz-

.•d recently from Ft. DnuKba, Utah. They Included Pfc. Roy Qlklii T»'ln FnlLi; Sgt. Arthur W. piitahl!

'■ Pic. lilKin Lundy, Hon.-en; •Ith ERtiert, Twin FiilLs; T/S

Vern R. White. Twin KiUb, and Sgl. Lyle E. Allen. T^'ln Falls.

THE B IB LEThe B«T. 11. O. MeCallljlef

with grace In your hearts to the Lord. And whatioever ye do 1 or deed, do all In the name Lord Jesus, giving thanks ( and Ihe Father by Hlm.-

by hli mother. Mrs. I who reside* there. All Calllomla they will r

C. Scantlln, r meeting In to Seadrlft,

Record Induction Slated for VFW

The Urgeat nisnber of recruits in the history of the Idaho VFW wUlbn tsirm rr<«pnK*r«K 1 nl IhA

erana have applied for memberahlp Into the orjanlxatlon since the Uat meeting of the post. Peten atated that ihls number ii believed to set a new record lo membetihlp rtcorda In tho state.

Macn into mcmoennii^ o*. wic regular buslne.v meeting of the lo­cal poBt at 6 p. m. here today, ac­cording to A. M. Petera. Bdjuwnt- quartenna ler.

More than 100 World war I I «t-S CONFIDENTIAL SJ TO THE MEiy aS? OaU Mnrcla it D07 and Ihe Iff

wUi help you aelect your 2e bW wife'* Christmas gift — We

have everj’lhlngl

I /I / rac i 1 L/og-ue 1

Now Many WearFALSE TEETHWith LllUo Worry

^lUt. uDe. or tn««»» wltliOTi Im?

M ' wSi!hg'‘ VAmeT?r l»!d ” • tciriraitr kad non Kmrortiblr. T^lt [ilM- ust poitclar hu no cuinar. goon put?

G o o d cc^ e-m e a < n < i , a . ^

SchillingVACUUM PACKED ,C O F F E E H

StnvlCE rERSOSS’EL

Pot Shots:have two little shepherd fe-

pupplea thiit we'd like tc away. They are two monlhs olrt and

like nice pcta or Rood slock dogs. Anyone intere.'trd can call 0iP3-R2.

-neader

iF. CA^IERA FOltND Dear Pot Shota;

. to thank juu. Potsle, for your klndne.is. And also Lavem Montgomery of Rupert who I4 i. kind to sell hla camera and which ho is aendlng to my brother. Koy Bmlth, who Is with the army of occupation on Leyte.

Tlmiik you, C. W. 7'uner of Fair­field, and Mj-6. Evan Tlionias. Jr,

Durley for your kind offerd.—Mrj. Glen Leonard

SL'CCKfiR Dcnr Pol KIioIa :

I found 11 radio for llie boy In the navul hck'i)linl. I ’m sorry to have ■ hcred you but they are to hard

get and the time #0 ahort I didn’t p.is.1 up any poMlbls chance.

Tlinnk you so much.-Mr*. A. M.

FA.Mous Last une". . . No. It isn't age getllnr her

—(ihe’a got the akllng creaki! . .THE GENTLEMAN IN

THE THIRD ROW

DinECTOR HEELECTED RUPERT, Dec. 13 - Roy Mar-

que.v5 was unanimously reelecied di­rector of the Minidoka Irrigation dl. trlct at electlona held Tuc-vlay In Rupert, Aceqiiln. P.iiil and Hey-

” o i ^ a l q i ' c c n ' i

C H 9 C 9 1 A T E S5 ^ .

TOPS IN TASTE THRILLSA rare taife troot Ihat’i top* with everyone! A Deluxe ^rtment of dipped nuh, frultj, toffee*, and other oppe- HrJng emten, inwoth, rich mllltKhoeolat# coatlngi.

$ 1 5 0POUND BO X

G jja ltjrce ii Storei.

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T H U B SDAY, DEC. 18> 1946 TIME^NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

1 World’s Record Trout Came

Fi’om South Idaho Hatchery• Z Bjr IAN 8ANDEB80N

^ The largest trout ever caught on hook and line — a 31- ; pounder in Idaho's Inkc Pcnd Oreille — wna believed to have

come from hatcheries in southern Idaho and renewed the • prediction thnt Magic Vnlley anglers m ay possibly duplicate

the feat in Inkes o r ----- --------- --------------------. -- -- crvoirs in the southern Idaho area.

Burton Perrine. former slate IL. culturlat, said action 1a being Ulcen

- to have eggs, »pawneO In Brltlali Columbia nnd cultivated in Twin

■ Falla or American PalU Imtcherlej, Dlanled In local »’atcrs.

« Perrine said the record trout, auehl by E. W. Drelsbach of Band- point alter n 25 mlnuto battle, wa;

hatchcd cltlicr In Tnln Falls oj American Falls,

However, Perrine siUd, Canadian sportsmen have curtnlled Iho ship­ment of CRKs to Iho local hatcherlej but ncgotintlona arc still unfleniay for n rr.sumpUon of traile «-ould slve Southern Idaho lor n new national "llalicrman’a par- ndLse."

The record trout, a Kambop . Kootenay trout, »aa caujhl with 200 feet of IB-paund line and spoon. 'Ilic lucky ongkr reported the llsli, n rour-ycar-old, leaped out of water c1k1)1 ttmcn and toolc an additional 200 feet of line before being sub­dued.

Ted Trucblood, IdaJio sport-i au- (liorlty and represeiitalHc ot Field and Stream niDRnzlne. ."sald the Pend Orclllo cfttcli WM unique In that It marked the first Unie a record catch woa made In which the ase of the fLih wA.? dcflnllfly knoan. It also.

Local Stockman Taken by Death

Robert L. need. 57, Twin Fallj stoclunan. died at 5:30 pjn. Wedni day at the Twin Falla county ge rral ho.-plt.i: folloj'lng an lllucss of several month.1. He was boni Feb U, I8S8, In sprlnsdalo. Art. anC c.amo to T»-ln Falb from Ely. Nev. In ion.

He was a member of the Metho- ^.d lst church and «nf, formerly P'clatrd with the Hcusonic and

loriBCs.Besides Ills wltc, Mr:.. Wanda

TU-cil. survivors Include three davightcra, Dorla Reed, T -ln Falls' Mr.-!. John R. Watts, Denver. Colo.; Mri. J. W. Payne, Loa Angeles; one son, Pfc. Robert W. Repd, Oowcn Held: mother, Mrs. Dora Reed, Springdale. Ark.; brother. Joe a, n 'Cd. aL'O of Sprtngdale; tlu-ec sis­ters. Mrs. Catherine St. Clair and Mrs. Lcll.T MftelJ, both of EHIco. Nev., and Mr.'.. Marsaret Tntc, Wnlla, Walla, Wuih.

TliD body Is at the Reynold.' fu- nerAl hcsne pending word from rel­atives.

Funeral Held for Resident of Paul

PAUL, Dec. 13—Last rllci for Ross Br -son, 31, were conducted Sunday at tlie LD6 church by Uie Rev. Dalla. McNeU. Music was lurnlnhed by Mr, and Mrj. Ray Hanford and Mr. and Mrs. Bud San- ford-

Bryson, who was bom April 16.■ 19H. was Uie eldrst son of Mr. and

-.Mrs. Q. W. Brj-son. Survivors In­clude In nddltinn lo hU parents, maternal grandmother. Mrs. Edith Ford; five brothers. Pvt. Giarles Br>-son. Okinawa; B l/c Robert W. Bryson. San Francisco. Calif • MoMM 3/c Donald Br>-son, home on furlough; three sisters, Mrs. 3luth Oreimle, San Francisco,Calif.; Mrs. Anne McKeen and Mrs. Doro­thy Van Zandt. both of Kellogg,

Burial was under the direction of the Pnyjie mortuary.

ho said, was the result of one of tha most successful fish cultural proj­ects ever undertaken.

The project he referred lo wa.'i di­rectly related to a program inaugu­rated by Pcrrlna In which the Drlt- isli Columbla-.ipawned fish a->.r« hatched In southern Idaho and planted in northern Idaho,

Flr. t attempts to hatch the L... tenay cgffs In 1010 were made In Siuidpolnt hatcheries, but dlfflcul' ■' wero encountered by the c

r tcmperuturcs. Tlie next y( Perrine had 25,000 eggs shipped .. the American Palls state hatchery 'here resulLs were 100 per cent. / ;w wccka after the eggs were hutch' J, Uie flngerlings were growing at

the amazing rate of an Inc month. But at that time there D possibilities of plnnUng the I any south Idaho lakes.The big problem then was ho.. „

the rnlnbowo back to nortliem Idaho, previously considered a hope-

Pcxrlne solved the situation wltji barometers and -illde rules by trans-

•ting tho fish via Moiitani and avoiding sudden elevation changes that oUierwUn would have provrd 'atal to the fLsli.

In the 650-inlle trip not vas lost.It r

47-Pound Trout Dreams Come True!

pellcd previous declarations by Itsh and Bamc offlclaU that such D planting was "Impo- slble."

Southern Idaho’.i bid to fL'-.liUlg fame at present lies In 3J00 larRC brood stock now wiggling in Twin Falls and American Falls hatcher­ies, Eggs from these fish durlnp the next year will be planted In Salmon re- ervolr. Altur<« ivnd Red Pbh lakes and American Falls and Island Park re.'.errolrs.

Previously stocked fish In these •atcrs con.il.sted of land locked sock- ye salmon, better known a.i red L'h and bUicback.s,But these young ealnion ate mere­

ly ball for the new race of Kootenay trout. The cannibalistic fish Uirlve

tho blueback.-i and 50-pound trout .'t as fnnU-istlc a.i It sounds. Ac­

cording to Perrine, the Jl-pound record trout l.s Jiui a bfRlnnlng ol

Union Favors CVA As Job Help HereOne Twin Falla labor group went n record here Wedne.sday night In

favor of the proposed Columbia valley authority.

Members of Uie plumbers steamfltterr. local No. 701 at their reuiilar monthly mcellng adopted » resolution favoring the CVA, Douglas Borlase. president of the nion. announced.Pat Ryle, recording secreuiry ot

the organiiotlon. .^ald the rc. oluilon pointed out that a CVA program would bring new industry to the Pacific northwest that would pro­vide additional work for ihe labor­ing man.

The union hM -lome 30-odd n bers.

Funeral Held for Jerome Resident

JEROME. Dec. 13 — Last rite.Herb Gill, pioneer resident, conducted at the Wiley funeral home with the Rev, John Morris Frees, pastor ot tho Christian church ofnclatlng. Interment was In Je-

icti '.iiifi, wiiii iK-companlment by I>;illbc;ircrs sere

u|in r.iuikner. Wuync Wclgle, Or- le uwi^nt Osborne. Ve;-n Miller and Stanley Sinter, Hon-

baucli, Hniry MllU r, Wllllnni DcPc' B. I!, DtivLi, 0, Ollvnr .-\nd Guy M. Humphrey, Moral clleringa were In charge of the Appleton ladles’ club.

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTS

NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

TIIAT I. HAROLD TELFORD GAIL. will, at the next regular meet­ing of the Idaho State Board of Par- dons, to be held at tlic State house, Boise. Idaho, on the first Wednesday of January. I0«, make appllcstlon for k pardon and/or Commutation of Sentence from that certain Judgement of conviction of Obtain­ing Money Under Falsa Pretenses, made and entered In the court of tho Eleventh Judicial District of

- Jlie Stata of Idaho In and for the ■iounty of Twin Falls on or about

The «-p«und trout, at left, caught In a lUh trap In Kootenay lake, nrlllsh Columbia, heralds a new era In trout flshlnf for the Idaho rtjltin following reporis tliat the fish was spawned In Canada but hatched lo southern Idaho. The troot Is believed the norld’i Urgest aUhough another record was tel Oct. 15 when a Sandpolnt fisherman laiideil a 31- pound trout on hook anil line.

Tho pholoiTiph at the top *hon-s U i:. rittseh of fiandpollit. Burton Terflne of Twin Fulls, former Male fl.sh cullurist. anti Irvin Weatherby of American Falls an they planted the first Iruckloail of Kootenay rainbow hatchfd In Twin Fall* and Amerl- ean Jalli and transported 050 mllei lo the norlhem lakes.

Tlic

Barber Shop Here Gets New Owner

Charley Ru,«ell. \eteran barber formerly n.v;oclalrd with the Hunt shop here. Thursday assumed own­ership of tho Perrine hotel barber shop at Main and Sho.ihonB west.

The Pcrrliio ihop was formerly operated by Cljde Rlehurda, and nichards and Carl Mullins will re­main with Ru-wU In the buslnc.vi.

With the exception of two year* which ho i.pcnt In war work, Rusjcll has been pursuing the barbcrlnij trade la IVln Palls elncc 1537. He took up the profession In 5023,

Police in Nevada Arrest Brothers

The local nhfrlll's olllce was no- tlliKl late Itun nl[:hl that Bruce Mnrllii and .Man Martin, brothers, residents of Twin Falls, Biilil and Wendfll, were apprehended Wrt- nr.vlay In Ploche, Nev., on charges

of dlspoAlnc of auto icctMOilej al­legedly atolen In Twin Falls in re­cent weeks.

Officers left for Pioche early Thursday to return the brothers to Twin Falls on felony wirranls charging them with grand larceny

Relief At Last ForYourCoughCroonwUdon rellmsjwmDtiy

cause It coe« rigbt to aeac of ttse trouble to help loosen ana expel ccrm UdcQ ptiie«m. and aid ofttura to eootbo find heal nv, tender. Is* flamed bronchial ttueom Dtcm- branca. Tell yotu' drussUt to aeU 70a n twtUo of Creomulslan «lth tbo cB'> dcntAsdinz you most like ttu vtr it

allays the ron u o

C R E O M U L S IO NforCoaKhs.Oi«tCoMi.eronchiHs

Rishest Prices for!Potatoes

We Are Now Baying at 3 HAZELTON

HANSEN KIMBERLV

MURTAUGH |

W. W. and W. T. t Newcomb |

*7dabo'i Pkineer fBoyers A SblppeT*" $

ItrrRON HAQBIS. OBTcr tMnrusth. PboBS U IWILBim L0DCK8 ♦

Kimberly. Fhone SUi *Main Office Barley. Pho. IH f

BEAD TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

atCLEARANCE!

Every fur coat we

have left !

LIONS CLUBPresents

“The Whole Town’s Talking”

.T O N IG H T -8 ;0 0 p . m .

H IG H SCHOOL A U D IT O R IU M^CKETS: Ob lale st Ornj. 3. HUI. Safenr(M^n north), Klnfi, Ne* Central Maricet or from any clBb raember. ^

PrixlBcea by iRi and Co. Kew Terk

*l™liitW«il! Wlittr 1 ,4 < 9

<i'vc1l>e*aiJw«».o3(wenwtikIf«*te«iDr.ir»ofllMd|pre«y.

SopHillMUd' 98*Soliilt,lki«trii.B p rau .^ li .d f plaid,; to ^ illc r h c S

9 S « | . 4 9

A FEW OF THE VALUES:4 Gorgeous M arm ink .............. $149.00

3 Lynx Dyed Opossum ........... 109.001 Black P ony ................................. gg qq

2 Brown Coney ........................... 79.00

5 Opossum ..................................... 59 00

1 Red Fox Scarf ........................ 25.00

The Luxury of Fur..at tremen­dous savings.

When we cnii’t offer you a complcto

stock of style!! and furs . . .

Wlien size ranges are b roken , . .

U’5 TIME TO C LEA R !

For those who can find J u s t the right

cont, just the r ight size, i t ’s an oppor­

tunity of a lifetime!

The only way to K N O W ho w wonder­

ful the values are, is to co m e and SEE

rm s COATS f o r y o u r s e l f i

And the best way to make sure wheth­

er there's eomethinff here for you, la

lo leave everything and here aj

fast aa you canl

List«d are lome of the o fferings. W t

can't promise you they'll s t i l l be here

w h«i you come— earliest ahoppen

get first choicel

NO MAIL, TELEPHONE ORDEBSI P.S. A woDderfuI C ^ tm a s idea» tool

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TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO T H U R S D A Y , D E C , IS , 1045

M ilk OutputLevel Rises For Octobcr

BOISE. D « . 13 njJ5-For the lint time In ihrca yean, Idnlio mlli production In October hfld i" •• the eamr. level w September bureau of agricultural economli ported today.

Thfl October production wn. million pounds, name lU foi month prcvlQii-v n ie previous years, October production fell oil five million poundJ below Ihril of CoptCTiibcr.

Crenmcry butter production wu 2j00,000 poiind3, the lowest for Oc­tober .Mncp 1033. Chewe production declined 107,000 pounds to l,7«,000 pounds but still wm the aeconc! larKcst Octobcr production on kc-

Total butter production for tht first 10 month.1 of 1945 wim 27.. 631,000 pounds or 10 per cent ita than tiie 31.007,000 pound-i prcxluc. cd in the came period a year nso

Bridge Tourney Winners Listed

Winners In ttio la.n came of the Filu fall bridge «erl« Held Wednes­day night In the Venetian room of the lodso ^ere Al Wc.itergren and Mt3. Ralph Curpenter. The final toumnmcnt will he held at 8 p. ni. next Wfdnr.-;dny In tlic lodgc-

Eecond place went to Mrs, Hugh rhllllp.1 .inrt C. n. KrenKcI; third, Mrii. William BroolLi and Mrs. Don AndrcATJ who tied, and O. E. Ch»n-

Ho.-!tcssc4 were Mr, and Mrs. If. 0. Umerbach. Mr, ntid Mr.i. Lem Cha­pin and Mr. and Mn. Drynn Ells­worth,

Bgninst the enemy in the Plilllp- plnM, the third flcct'a commtmora- •‘-n bar and a presldenllal unit cl-

\ (troduate of Jerome high school, iRnelU hns been In Bcrvlce 23 inltu. He served In the south clflc sectors Including Leyte,

Mindoro, Llngayan gulf.

GRANGE PLANS PROGRAM rAUlVTEW, E>cc. 13-Tlio Juve

nlle Orongo of Fnlr\lew will prejen a ChrL^tmris progrixn Friday night Dee. Jl.

May 2S while under an altaclt from Ihe air and wa.- liiciipacHatcd four

Id one-half moiitlis. After being patient In the D4th field hojpltnl Saipan, he wub placed aboard the

U6S Siimarltan and wts taken to the SlatM, lamllns Jmi. 21, He wan Jio.-ij'UnlUttl nt Sun Unnelro, Cnilf.. and dl'.cliarged from the navy In Beptcmbcr.

"I felt safer during the run to Tokyo than anytime In my career In the nav7," remnrkcd the ex-

•yman. He .'.t-ited thftt he served aboard the US3 Lowr>'. The jhlp was with no other combat ihlixi. Including destroyers, battle wagons. bRtlleJhlps ond corrlers. Ha was Hi days on Oklnnwn, He was an

nlrcrnft gunner on r 40 m.m.

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTS

Federal Worlcs Agcncy. Public Buildings Administration, Office ol the Division Engineer, 839 U. S, Ap­praisers' Building ,Ean I'ranctsco 11, Callfomln. Nov. 30, 19«. Se lrd bids. In triplicate, v,iU be recclvcd at this office until 2 p. m.. Dcc. 31, 1015 and then publicly opened, lor fumlihlriB the materials, and pi forming the work for new water pi. Ing at the U. S. P O, Twin F.ill.v Idaho. In .ilrlct accordance wl tho epeclflcatlon.s dated PB-Dli . October 15. 1045, and drawings (If any) mentioned therein; And the gentral condlUons dated Sept. 15. 1042 and addendum thereto dated May 15. 1044. Specifications and other data may be had at the office of tho cuotodlan of the building or the office of tho division engineer. J. E. Stanton. Division Engineer. Pub: Dec. 13, » , 14, 1045.

NOTICE For the puri»se of forming a fra

temal corporation without pecu­niary profit as an objcct in cordancc with Sections 20-1101 20-1102. Idaho code AnnotAted,Ueo L'i hereby given that an tJon for directors of the FRONTim lUDINO CLUB INCORPORATED, win bo held Monday, Dccembe ■ 11)45. at Eight o'clock In the nlng of said day In the District Court Room in the Court Ho\ the City and County of Twin Falls, State of Idaho.

WARREN W. LOWERY, Presiding offlc(

Publish: Nov, 20, Dec. 8, 13, 1045

NOTICE TO cnrniTonsIn the Probate Coiu-t of Uie Coui

ty of T\k-ln Fulls, State of Idaho.Estate of Stunrt Morrl.-!on, de­

ceased,KoUco la hereby given by the

underalgned executor of the estate of 6tuart Morrison, deceased, to the creditors of and oil person* having claims ngaln. t the said de­ceased, lo exhibit them with thi necessary vouchers, within four months after the first pubUtstlon of this notice, to the c&ld executor. Btuart T. Morrison, at 200 Fourth Avenue West, In Twin »ViUs, County of Twin Falls, Slate of Idaho, this brine Uic place fixed lor the tram- action of the buslne.'j ol ^ lcl estate.

Dated December 4, 1945.STUART TAYLOR MORRISON.

Exccutor of the mate of Stuart Morrison, dectaitd.

Pub. Dec. 6. 13, 20. 37, J04J

Sailor Felt Safe

On Run to Tokyo;

Returns to HomeJEROME. Dec. 13—Former a 1,'c

John MoBnelll, a Jerome high school luatc, who participated In the jrlc run to T\>kyo In February upport of task force 58, Is here inn relatives niid friends alter

being honorably cllocharKed from the navy, lie will lenve TufAdoy of thb week for Denver, and plai

Labor Chiefs Rapped Because Mexicans Didn’t Do Beet Job

By UAL KKOLLWFA from Its top officials down lo the local men, was denounced

by Harry A. Eleock. district manager, Amolgamated Sugar company, last night as having failed to see that Imported Mexican labor fulfilled its half of the 1045 farm work contract, while county beet farmers upheld ihelr part In voln.

He spoke at the annual meeting of the Twin Falls County Deet Growers lioclatlon In district courtroom, which group resolved to Join with the igar company and form n spoivsorlng association for beet labor Elcock wa.1 presumably,crltlcirlng

U6DA offlclj • - • •ir c of the labor program.

WFA, part of the USDA, longer In

The sugi

1 Okin Inju 1 last Prfsent w Darrel H. I T»ln Falls

Kpud )llen yell* He ako crltlcl;u:d t oup for having shlli my tho full 1

President’s Plan

Puzzles Buildersl.oca1 biiUdlnK oontractors. tjuer-

Ifd lute jf.'>ti'r<lny by the Tlnic-".- Ncwi In cuniKctlnn with President Truman's Ihiendcd program to hold doa-u the lid on real citate values and to relieve the liou- lng sliort- ntrcs, were all nf the .name opinion that "thr vi?5C.ition that the 1 Went will • • uctlon In Uic : ter 1.5 i)u:.dhig. I t !-•! too early It what such a White House move

One contractor, who nsktd that his name be withheld, said that "I sec the matter, the man who either renting now or is bulldinK already affected t)y Inflation and don’t sec what good a presidential edict will do in liL r.-\se "

The ilnii the Job alone. Anotlio the (lltllculty In . ccuriPK hands for the beels wo.-, tlial "the potato growers yelled louder" than the

Form Own AssocUtionSome 70 member* pre.sent voted

lo Join with the sugar firm and lorm a bcel labor s[>oiisorlnK ii/jocl- atlon for 104(1. Workers brought In by this group would work only In beets. O. J. Bellttcxxl, county fnrir labor supervljor, explulned that im- der this year's contrapt. the Mexi­cans were brought in lu. free "agri­cultural labor." Rlncr there w.v, orl-

Man Injured As

Truck OverturnsClyde McCormick. Twin Falls,

wa.s treated In the office of a Kim- Ixrly phy.-ilclnn l;itc ye.iterday aftei his pick-up trudk ovrrtiirn«l al While's corner, rlvo mlle.s east ol Twin Falb at 0:30 p. m.. Deputy Sheriff Jim Denham reixjj ted.

trol, t,e truck, which ■

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

Brenchial Coughs Get Blessed Relief

A Rm I Up«clorant Hut iMMnt-Vp Thieli, CK«k!nsPM«fm

M«kt« Breathing Eaii«r

.0 Paso couimns ipMm.

ai(lTtc»—<rr Duckle i

Gifts of GemeyA fragrant sequence of Cemey, famous Richard Huilni

scent with the sparkle of gemj, i» sure to dclighi

every faitldiooi woman.

Jerl94f^Jl

Trolinger’s PharmacyTTn Pre«rIpllon Pharaacy

for t:

ictory cooperated wltt n dealing with laboi •Saying he was "dls-

he inefficiency of this :i workcrri, Elcock a

with Mexican labor, the growi and processors should dispatch their

recruiters to that port of Mexl- ear the American border where

labor was good, he said, Tho beet Industry wants a voice in neg "' tlon of the 1043 contract with t

Didn't Fulfill <r camp and n to get the I their poi'

here, the WFA lut they had lo ntrnct. If that hi as well throw

Elcock, however, indicated tha immigration authorities had blocked the efforu of the sugar factory send its own recruiters Into Mexl

Winta Price B-joit Since lujar beeu bring the least

profitmorke-- ---- --I be equitable wllh oUier farm )mraodlty prices, Nogle said.Ho declared eltihl types of plai ■» were being tested and that so ay be In production by spring.•id Ford would put a planter a

topper on the market. He called production,

ircleii•<1 to hU .

Mild" nt

•llllly, Tlic cccretary also ask ed that sugar growing In Cuba Puerto ItUo and ihe Philippines b reduced and thai the dome-stic quoti •:e JncTea.'fd.

Telli of .llachinery In his talk, Elcock discussed net

3cet mochlnery. mentlontnK: J imall McCormk-k-Deerlng s ln g l ' row topper-lo.idcr of simple con ilructlon; and a Klcsl topper which openr.ed on four row.i (tliLs mnchli fas featured In a motion piclui ho-AU durln,; the mce;tlng>.Orville Millar. Shelley, presldei

if the state sroup, told the meeting provL'li

»-ork o;

departed from Falls Countv F his: a-'-'ocInt

crop they hud th

1 Labor Sponwir

. cllwood .'.aid lilnK thi.s explaii.-vt ■larold E. Nagle. St. Idaho Beet Growers

caused the Mcxlcan-s to v.-ork In It beet fields or be unemployed at deported. Most of thr men work(

When a beetgrower at the inee Inc jUjfge-Med that thi: ai/-.ocliitlc adopt by-l;iw» which would ns.su sulflclent beet labor. Nagle sa vehemently that by-laws would 1 usrlcs.1 unless they had teeth.

"You've got to be hardbolled wl Iht Mexlciin.sl" he said.

Would Oust AsenclcjWhen Niigle .

Mtly li nilng.that the fcveral federal agencle. which were dealing wllh farm liiboi be removed from thLi Held and lha the growers and processors tak( over the task. No prl-ioncrs of wu; win be available next year.

To avoid this year's "headache'

t the I ig ofo

hill 1 ; 1037 11040,

, prc.-.ldci er rcipectlvcl ir ofIlcc. - Tc oadlng Eiatloi

.ward Teaga ■iecte<l>: Ced

Cn.stlcforcl—Chr;

igh—Hi’ PlcKi -Wlllli SampL-,c

Coiner; 6:o n Falls-Di : Curry-H led); Filer vey—Leonnr 1C Kollnifyei selholt (rteler

Filer Masons ElectFILER, Dec. 13 — Morris Carlson

.t\j. electpti wur.ihlpful ma.5ter ol hr nier Miiviiilc lodgr at the reg-

Sailor Finds Bit OfHomeinJapan

In Form of SpudsClose to home was the wsy 8 1/c

LaVerB Boyd felt when he found Bomo Idaho epuds from J- H. Henry's in Kimberly while buying supplies

in Japan. Not only polaloes ■ from the home £Ute but he alio dWovered eggs from tho Idaho Ebj Producers In

^ ^ ^ ^ T » ln Falls, on further Investlga*

a letter wTlt- to his par­

ents, Mr. and Mr*. J. A- Boyd, route two, Twin

Foils, Beaman Boyd slated that the govemment pays filly cents for Idaho eggs and they . highest priced eggs the government buys.

He told his parents tJiat now thir the a en are get-

and vege-

Scout Course Set For Instructors

Plans for a Boy Scout Instructors course lo bo held here Jan. 13 anc 13 were dlscusr.ed by Ihe Tftln Pali; district committee Wednesday night O. J. Bolhne, district chalnnan staled late ye.?Urdoy.

The course will be devoted to de­velopment of the senior Scout pro­gram. including explorers, ali Scouts and cubbing. Don Seaman, .levere head cut and body bruUes former Ueut«nant commander, will have charge of the older boy pro­gram, Bolhne said.

The Twin Falls dl.itrlct will be host at the instniclor's eoursc which will be attended by Scout leaders from Jerome. Gooding ond Llnocln counties. Plans for the-comlng yeai were also dlscuiird for the loca dLitrlct at the meeting Wedne.sdi'/ night.

A meeting of the Twin PaU.'i dis- trlct will bo held Dec. 28 at whlcl time officers will l>e elected.

Scribe Says Eire Facing New Outlook

By DEWITT MACKE.VZIE DUBLIN. Dec. 13 C/n-Thla is a

tou^h article to control because y whole Impulse is to start right t with the Blorlfication of two

beef steaks which your columnist team has Just eaten at our first meal in the capital of Eire.

They were steaks cuch u dreamed of but haven! ever up to now since Unde 6am . hit stride in food rationing. After all. who Btarta serious columns with diasertatloiis about beef tleaks, no matter how untuual? Well, the answer apparently la that I do— being rather given to following ' pulse.

The reason In this iiulance for the rather whimsical approach is that these beef steaks—being par- l1c l l ly Impressive after close ra­tioning; In America and closer li Britain—are symbolic of a great chanBc for the better which south­ern Ireland has undergone In re-

The Eire which I hove known for a generation has been tratuformed from a land in which there w; much poverty and distress to oi in which, so I am informed in o flclal quarters, there b no re destitution.

To get tha full significance

In years past—poverty so harsh in some country districts that man) families rarely knew anytlilng bel­ter than potatoes and salt for food, and were grateful for even these small ble.ulngs.

Now, I don't want to . lmpre.«lon that southern Irelond has suddenly become a Innd flow­ing with milk and honey, for It still has a long way to go lo reach that state. However, iw position has improved to much during the past doien years, and especially since the beginning of the war. that

Dublin today is the raecca of a of tourists from Britain, In-

eluding many Americans living in England who are la search of relief from drab and really meagre ra­tions.

Not a few ore drawn by the fact hat there's plenty of good liquor 0 be had here, whereas spirits of my tort ore almost as rwe In Lon- lon as molten gold and worth about os much as that precious meUl- Of courae there is rationing

Ireland, but those juicy steaks with which we started our column are In renllt}' ond there are plenty of other good things to go with them.

Castleford Woman Injured in CrashBUHL, Dec. 13 - A Castleford

womon suffered an arm fracture, a

................. driving left thehighway and plunged Into a ditch. 100 feet above the low-line canal. H. S, Cunningham, Buhl chief of police, reported.

The Injured «c«tian wo.s Mrs. Fe­lix Selsyo, Castleford, who told Chief Cunningham the accident oc­curred when she became blinded oy

ipproachlng csr's headllghtJ The woman wa.s token lo the hos- plUl by Chief Cunningham,

-sm ith -r o o f in g COM PANY

“Almjs the tle t for Less’ '

riaeg Advance Orden Now

285 W. ADDISON, Pho. H 7

The perfect gift for the mechanic­ally minded man, A good selection of quality sets in ottractlve cases.

IIAU Steel KITCHEN STOOLS

Get one of these for y o u rs e lf , A miBhtly scarce

l^OST DRILLS

Hunting KnifeWITH SlIEA'ni

Excellent quality knives with handsome leather sheaths. A fine gift for tlie hunlerl

$ 4 . 5 0

TOOL BOXESOr fishing tsckle boxes, AU

ElectHc DrUlsThor — M-Jnch

Made By Tex-Tan

• Sadtllea

• Billfolds

• Leather Bells

McVEY'SH A H D W A R E DEPARTMENT

161 3rd Avc. W est Pho"* 1'''^

CAN’T KEEP GRANDMA INMMm-------------oungitaiw

Now her Backacha la b«tt«-

OkkI?n«lWn«ri»r»KiiUirt^

Ioo<i. Thrr txlp iiiMt put

"\ his w ar- ho rn M o to r O il

FIGHTSOXIDATION

New ingredient in Golden Shell

is good news for cars of all ages

¥K8N somethin'O Eums up the oilinc sptem in your

enpne, ho i eull

That’s fxaaly wliat happens when oxidation occurs in

motor oil. 0-xidttion i! the parent of sludge .. . that sticky, ([ummy substance which ccts into oil lines and oil filters, and

cuts dow’n the flow of good lubricants to a point where tlie encine suffer? from oil

To tninimire oxidation in motor oil w « the objective

search. Succtii rcivanied the

scientists, and now you can buyGoldenShellMoiorOil containing » war-Sorn o.ii-

dation inhibitor that's added durinn manufacture. Be­

cause of this inhibitor, new Golden Shell stays full- bodied and free-flowinK

from one oil drain to the next. . . offers better protec­tion to cars of all ages.

This new motor oil is

waiting for you »t the near­

by Shell station. Shell Oil Company, Inccrporalcd.

Like oxidixed palm— oxidhed oil is «o good

You’ve ie<a papar «hn'i yeilooej olih i(e...lriitla ...lifeUii.TTiit’i tb» rtiult e( oxidttiqti, (!>• itiiK de. •tnictiv* cbenical rnctiea wbioh mill iroo, fidis clotb, crscl. rubbtr. And oxiditioa ]i th« partat el .lud<. ia Botof oil. Ttat'i "hy you o««d 1 Golden Shell notor ei' ita exiitiif lnHblltr.

COLDS;FIGHT MISERY “wbeie you feel throat, chest ond tockwlthUme-tested

SHEUCREDITCARDSAREBACKHotw»d «♦ oti Sh>U Ildlloni In UnlUd

antf C«f>oda. Apply lo* yevri at oiry Slitll olllc* M xrrlc* ilellon.

RAISINSSeecllc.ss CfAM 1 Pounds _________

PUMPKIN...15c

S Y R U P

SPAMFor a quick meal alter Chrlst- mns shopping—

Per tin 37c

SparklingWater

l-'or your iiollday mUes, Canada Dry ^

i V/E HAVE A D A IL Y JO B T O D O /

An Important Message About

F L O U E Subsidy payment on grain may very soon be removed and as with butler It may »tr11 reflect In higher prices

lU foods made with grain, play aafe!

CRACKERSr r _____ 3 3 c

COOKIES

CORNa Dell, Crear

VEGETABLES« Libby's MUed. ‘T f t r

Style. No, 3 Can ..... * No. 2 Glass Jar .............A W

JUICEerce'.T Tomato. « Faultlc;), 3 Can ..........-...... I W C r

STARCH8c

Slock Up for Christnins Now ! !

,,4*c55c4 5 c

35c.3 5 c

—mrs—GOOD MINCE MEAT

POItK ROASTPork is scarce, but we have a fair supply of shoulder cuts.

Per Pound ......... . 3 3 ®

SAUERKRAUTLons Shred. « Bult. Pound _____ * V W

VEAI. STEAKS

LINK SAUSAGEBy popular demand we again feature this item.

Per Pound ................4 ^ ®

STEAKSQlrloln, A-Orade, 9 9 m Lb..............................3 5 c

OYSTERS

-Fresh Lettuce and Celery-

SQUASHTliick. Yellow Meat,Any Sire Piece, lb........

SALADVegetables. Maggio's, « ^ _ cello Pack. Plcg........... IO C

SPINACH18c

PEARSAnjou De Bose, the •'Millionaire'* pear" and we mean they're nice, nat, S 2 .S 5 * “>*•p r r im H

M A R K E T

Page 7: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

T H U R S D A Y , D EC. 13.1945

BUHl/. Dec, 12—Mr, »ncl Mrfl, Cur- lls Pryor hnve announcfd the msj- riage of their dftUghlfr. Miry lou. to JomM rorreet, *on of Mr*. Barah Forrest, Salem. Ore. Tho manUge waa performed at S p. m, Tucjday. Dcc, 4, at tlic oHlce of County Judge C. A. Bailey, Mrs, May For­rest and Mrs, Albert Forrest nesicd the cenunony.

"njo former MIm Pr>or graduatfd from the Duhl lilgh school In ISU, She had been employed at Uie navy ordnance depot at Offden. The coupic will moJco their homo In Duhl, whero rorrtat li employed.

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHOP A G E B E V ta i'

Varied Social

Tho «C53lon echeduled for Decem­ber will not bo held. It was decided by tho Jimlor-scnlor PTA at an executive board meeting held in the office of Mra. Roao M. North st the high Rchool. It waj reported Ihnt a totnl of 700 member* now belong to Junior-ocnior high «chool PTA. Mrs. Roy M. Dimken Is membenhip chnlrman for senior high and Mrs. Roljcn McCracken (or Junior hljti. Approximately 175 students are Ing .served hot lunches dally cording to Mrs. A1 Hankins, cl mnn. Mra. Roy King h radio chair­man. It was announced that ths ra­dio brondcflsta for February. March and April wUl be In charge Junior-senior PTA.

* * *A Chrlatmiu: gilt exchange i

held Tuesday afternoon at the lio of Mrs. Maude Dertsch by mcmb of tho Good Will clul). Tlie bic voted S5 to the Chlldren'a lioi DnUe, .and also voted to liolil ChrLitmna party at 8 p.m. Dcc In the Odd Fellows hall.

Committees for the atfnir will be refreshment, Mrs. Marie Cowell, Mr.-;. Einmn Rodmnn and 1 rence Havjklns; program, Mr,v John Rocmcr, Mrs. John Rogers. The tree u-lll be donated by Mra. Lee SmUJi.

Tlie white elcphont, donated by Mrs. Luellft Nielson, was Mrs. EMna Smith. The program Wednesday afternoon wm undec the direction of Mrs. Jlcgcrs and Rocmrr. ncfrcshmcnls were { foUawlng the meeting.

OAKLEY. Dec. 13-Kathryn Bur­ton, daughter of Mrs, Charle. B Burton. Ogden, and PrancLv Sim­mons weer niorrled In the Salt Lake City LD3 temple on Nov, 1. Elder Robert I. Burton performed the cercmony.

The bridegroom Is the son oi and Mrs. J. J. Simmons, Oakley is a veteran of tho European theater. The couple will live In Ogden,

A progriim consisting of the lilj. tory and singing of familiar ChrW- mas carols will be conductcd by J(K.<.-phlnc Boyle at a meeting i ' Kiippa netu to be held at 6 pi. Bundny In the Mcthodljl churdi.

Special Chrbtmas music will bs presented by a trio comiwr.c Ollie I-\Tn Secord. Mr;,. Paul and Mr.5. Floyd Pendleton, ac

c direction oftloii will be under Juanita Weinman.

TJie group is planning to go carol­ing in place of tho regular meeting Sunday. Dec. 23. Plans will b« dlj- cu-«ed Sunday night for the dUmer to be held Dec. 30 in the church for the winter Institute of the south- cutcm dl-itrlct at which Kappa Beta will be hwts.

The sen-lng committee Is headed by Mrs. J . p. Weinman, assisted by Mrs, C. L. Morris, Mildred Elrod, .Mrs. C. W. Clapper. Mrs. George Ilrndley. Mra. Olynn Smith, Mabel Ca.-ie and NelUe Case.

. * *llio Mary Davis Art t __

Mrs. Walter Fr.imeter recently To »ork on hand decorated Christmas card.'!. They also did photo tinting

^ Lunch was -^rved b} the hoslcu.

Tlie Opportunity cluss of the Christian church will hold a Chrlst- n v party nt 8 p, m. Friday. Dec. H, In the church basement. Children nre Invited to accompany the pat; cnL-;. Each member and child Is re<]uc.-itcd to bring a small lo or 15

* * *Johnny Tucker, son of Mr ajia

Mre- Wayne Tucker, celebrated hl» third birth anniversary at a party given by hLs mother recently

Tlie tabic was clecoratcd wu Santa Claus theme, -Each guest prr-'ented Santa Claus fators ar

Ouesu at the party »era Mid Drown, Lcnore Wiseman, Ttrtr France Larry Nye. Dlllle Ung and Mary Jean Annb, The mothers of the guc.'it.? wMe also presenu

Using "McT'a Diamond Horjc.

W member!of the MeT club wlU hold their an­nual formal dance at the Radio Rondevoo at S p.m. today. Emie Reed and hu orchestm wiu fumbh the music.

Parents of the Junior and linlor ^members will be patrons and pa

tronease-v They Include Mr. »ad

DO YOUR LEGS ACHEArt rea aerreiur Patn in ib Q a ld e r i r B«ck P»hj*T Then try

Vheatamine x t r a c t

SAV-MOR DRUGOppoatta Orpbtsa neati*

Mra, Bert Weston. Mr. and Mra. Edgar Jl. Olmstcad, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Van Valkenburg, Mr. and Mra, Paul Hawkln-i, Mr. and Mra. W. I, McFarland. Mr. anri Mrs. Al­bert Lulloff, Mr. and Mr.s. W. A. LooklnBblll, Mr. and Mrs. Horlo D. Kline, Mr. and Mrs. Ray liartruft, Mr. and Mrs. Alton Young, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Parker. Mr. and Mrs. O.

Smith, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Schwcndlman,

d Mrs. A. L- Richardson. Mrs. Jim Busby, Mr. and

Mrs. Lee Johnnon. Mrs. Norma Mor- Isoii, Mrs. Winona Merritt, Mr. anil >Jrs. A. J. Mcek.i, Mr, and .Mrs. Vir­gil McBride, Mr, and Mr^ A. T. Hull, Mr. and Mra. Harry Holt, Mr. and Mra. Ray C, Hiiyt;,, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. FVancls, Mr. and Mrj. Harry Denton. Dr. anil Mr.s. G. W, Burgess and Mrs. Ruby Alauzet.

Sponsors of the club, Betty Pum- phrey and Mrs, M. C. Glls.'on, will be present.

Prcsldeat Margie Holt; Secretary Bctly Alnuzct; treasurer “

{ and sorgennt-nt-arms McBride will lead ihe grand

march.* * *

Initiation ceremony highllshtcd 10 meeting Wednesday of the Ze*

nobln club Daughters of the Nile. The group gathered for luncheon al Wray'.? cafo and held Uiclr meet- ■ ig nt the Rogerson hotel.

Those initiated were Mr.i. Stella Phlnney, Mrs, rmnccs Humphrlea, Twin Falls; Mrs. DorLi Eakln, Mra, Jennie H. Heues, Mr: . Evelyn Case, Mrs. Ada Fuller, Mrs. Ethelyle Riper and Mra. O. C. Childs.

Members spent the afitmoon sewing for the Shrine hosplUl Jn Salt Lake City.

RICHFIELD, Dec. 13 - Mr. and Mrs. Ellas Fl.-»vel. nichfleld. an­nounce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Wlbna Mae. to Robert E. Ker- foote, San Diego. Calif, The couple was married Dcc. 5 at the home of the bride’s twin brother Pfc William Flavel, Mrs. Flavel was bridesmaid and Grant Flavel, brntJi- er of the bride, was best man. Sen­ator F, L. Manwlll officiated at l single ring rllM. The bride wort

drea.5 with black nccc. .ior dOfsage of whlCe c-liry.ianil

mum.v RefreshnionLs fecvturlng five tiered wedding cnkc were j.ci ed, Mrs. Vcfrn TTioma.?, aunt the bride, presided over the silver coffee service. Mrs. Kcrfoote ,':cn'ed three year.i in the WAVF-S and her luiibnnd wn.s recently dL';chorged from the senbces.

3 heldmliccllaneoiLS sliowerWednesday evening at the ____ ..

■ W. Robertson, 260 Dghih . north. In honor of Helen

Thomas, who will become the bride of Milo W. Pear,^on, .wn of Mr. and Mrs. Jame.'t Bmhy. The bride-elect l< tJic daughter of Mr, and Mrs

W, Thomas.Mm. Joe Bill Roberi-wn, rtaugh- r-ln-Iiiw of Mr.?. Robertson, uoj 1-hostes.s for the affalj. Holiday

tJiemc was used in decorations.Midge Robertcon presented piano

sola? during the evenlnR's e talnment. Quests al the party Mra. Thomas, Mrs. Jack niomaa, Lucille Thomaa, Mr*. Busby, Mr». Alton Davidson, Mrs. Barton Son- ners, Marjorie L«ish. Betty Johnron, Mrs. Bill Peters, Mrs. David Hilly and Alta Frailer.

♦ -til *The LD5 stake primary enter­

tained at a Christmas party for »11 wards In the stake. The affair was held In the sccond ward recreation hnll,

Christmas carols and original rounds for the group, compoted and directed by Verla Mcea furnished the flrit part of the evening’s en- terlalnment. Mrs. Zara Tonks ac­companied.

■nie remainder of the evening’s fr.?tlvliic.? was under the direction ot Edltli Young, Lucille Chatter- ton ond Louise Adamson. At the close of the evening Santa Claus

pulling a sleigh filled with served by

Velma Cox. Belh Thvie.ion, Ljle At­kinson and aiady.i Williams. Hand­made Invltatloii'i in chfirge of Nor-

Cox, Wilma Robinson, Doro­thy Tidwell and Gertie Talbot were

lo e:ich ward. The dccoratlon committer Incluried Claire Ander-

■>3ra John.soii and Ruby Mat-

- Grace Laubcnhelm enter­tained the Sunshine circle club at

Chrbtmas luncheon Wednesday.Following the meal a program was

presented. Mrs, Elva Olsen preient- ed a solo accompanied by Mrs. Terry Sulllvaji. Mrs. Cora McRlll present­ed a reading which was Interspersed with Christmas caroLi. A gift ex­change was held. Tlie women voted • send J12 to the Childrens' Home

Boise. Letters from the Corono hospital m California were received by members. The group will play aanta Claus to those In the hos- plul.

The group will gather again Jan.at the home of Mrs, Nellln Hatch.

CalendarThe Bvenlns Guild of the At

rion Episcopal church win meet „ pai. today al tho home or Mrs, J, W. Marahall. J133 Locust .nreet

» ¥ ¥The Firemen's amtliary win meet

at a p. m. Friday at iJie home of Mrs, E. H. Freelove, 019 A-.h street The annual ChrI.uma.i gift exchange will be held,

* * *Tlie YWCA rooms will i><. closed

from Thursday until M.mday for regular business brcnu.-.c of i death of R. L, Reed. hiL'-baiid the executive secrrtiiry, Meetliiga scheduled In the evening at the "Y " rroms will Uke pliico a? pinnned. Ptr further Information call Mrs

", Chase. OlOl-j-i.

Bertie SacketC on j;,n. o. club Toted to clrculatc i> Million against a night club c.iu-ibllshment

e Mary AUcc park. Ida Moore charge of the petiiioii, u will

be presented to the county commls- slonen, Mra, Bert Ke.iitlcr und Mary Arrington, old members who have retiUTied lo the nrighbortiood ' Invited lo Join the cluij.

Odtlta Stringer and Gert: ampson were in charge of

Chrlslmas program.Readings were Klven by Ocrlrude

Sampson, Ida Mourr, Dcrtic Siickelt, LaVonne Butcher. Iluth White and Ada ’Tumbaugh; two dui-ts, Mary

on and Evelyn Juiikert. A gift

Alpha Eta. new clmricr rliapter ... Epii/on Sfgma Alpha, national cul­tural and social Mirorlty, will be opened In Tft’ln Falls nt 8 pm day at a banquet.

Mrs. Harriett Do:in, national field secretao'. will prr.?enl the charier

formal pledge ccremoiiy. The ■ will be held in the Rorfcrson

hotel.Late In January, .Mr,?. Doun will

return for the cla?inK of the charter when five more pledges will add

names to the i-hnpler ninn- hponsor will i,c .-iclected ■ip at tliai lime.

isword P u z z le ilp n a ^ B iu rB in

□ a n a H U H ^ n S n s

n r a n n r n n n n S n S S

Acnoas ». Lauea«r I. nimot* ertam ]<. Drr». Stn4ll run 17, Scarcer«. Monker >», Cruited <

II. Khorl Itinr Wa«t» al 13- HInilt ininc

AratrlMB

talnlnc t

ber:hlp. ,

'cdne.-.dnyUb I,,"

Tlioma.1 BucklinParbh ....................

Mr.?. Melvin Dunn, pre'ldenl of­ficiated at the mecDiiB. The gVoup

give $10 lo the Chllrtren’j home.

During the grecllngs lo the Josllii. stalloiin Nallian Tolbei

Farmers Honored by

Gooding’s RotariansGOODING, Dcc. 13 — Gooding otnry club observed Its annual

fnrnicrs' night with 71 Rotarians and fnmier guests at the lOOF hail. Pre.'ldrnt Branch Bird welcocned Riie:it.? and Otto Schlld responded '->T the farmers.

Ru-vcll Robinson prcsenKd a slright-of.lmnd performance. J

Wesley MUltr, William Pyle, Ted Edholm and Harrj’ Cannon were In charge ol the proram.

CHRISTMAS N IGHT

- DANCE -Lcffion Hnll— Twin Falls

DECEMBER 25Mtnlc liy Hap Hanarda

gifts. Refreshments t

The First DLitrlcl Nurses' a.'.?ocl- tlon met Wedne.^day evening for le animal Chrlstma.? p.irty at the

home ot Mrs. Vlra Murray.A gift exchange was held. Helen lee sang two numbers and led the roup In singing Christmas carols- Irs. P. L. We.?t accompanied. Lieut. Helen Mnag, army nurse )rps and her sister. Llllle Mnag, lio was recently discharged from

the navy nurse corp.?, told of ihetr exj)erlcnces overseas.

During the bu-'lncss meeting announcement wn.i made thai DoV- othy CoUard was clccted vlce-presl- denl of the Idaho State Nurse.?' as­sociation, MIM Collnrd Is pre.'ldent of the district n.?,?oclntlon nnd Is also tuperlntendent of the local health unit nursing staff.

Refrtf.hments were served. Hos­tesses for the meeting were Mra Murray. Mrs. Betty Sllgcr, Mrs. Doris Oaraett. Mildred Rlttler, Ruth MOgera and Mrs, Arlene Allen.

The Falls Avenue club met at the home of Martha Bulcher Wed­nesday for the annual Chrlitmas party. Viola Howes read an article Tltten hy Bud Klmes.Mary Baciett resigned as presi­

dent and Gertrude Sampson was elected lo reploce her.

It was announced that the annual club dinner will be held at tho home

program in clu.rge of i. E Joslln. Ohrlstma.^ carols

were sung accompanied by M Parish. Mr.?. Arcli Coiner read maniiicrlpl WTltlen by Mrs, John E. Hayes.

Tlie buslnci? meeting w;i;. lowed by a gift exchange. Members voted to hold the annual ChrL? party for tho children ai the Curry «choolhou.?e on Saturday evening, ”5ec. 22. nefrcshnicnt.'', were served.

Mr. and Mrs. C- C. Haynle enter­tained at a dinner Weclnc.?day eve­ning for the per.?onnel of the South­ern Idaho Production Credit as.?o- clatlon. The dinner cclebr.-itcd ihe organltatlon exceeding iwo million dollars In dally loan balance.?,

Gue.?!.? Included personnel from bou. tJie T«-ln Falls and Burley offices. A Chrlstma? moUf wa? ii?ed

table and room decoration.?, preseiii.

LICE.NSEI) TO %VEDSHOSHONE, Dec. 13—A marrlng(

llcea?« was U?iied here by the dis­trict court clerk to Robert Arthur Kerfoot, Lemon Crove, Calif., Wilma Mae Flavel. Richfield.

MNEmakesthe perfect

gift• Someone who “has cvery-

thing"?.. . Someone “hard

to please” ? A bottle of fine California wine may be the

onjvvcr. Table wines, like

Claret or Satiterne—they’re gifts of dining pleasure.

Sherry or Port or Muscatel — they’re grand for folks who love to entertain. M ake

your selection of California

gift wines rigltt away. VVine

Advisory Board, 85 Second Street, San Francisco 5.

Vlilery Bondi i

Timid Hero Takes High Honors for Lions Club Play

ny MARTHA SIieVAMARAAnd the whole town talked when

Boyd Lytle disclosed his love af fair with a famous movla star. Subt­ly Bhy. the nondescript Uttle mai became Important when his pas life waa reveoled in 'The Whole Town's Talking," presented Wed­nesday night by the Twin Falls Llon.1 club.

The Ilnal presentation of the play will be at 8:J5 pjn. today Ir ' high school auditorium.

• Steal.1 BhoiT F-iilly stealing the fhow li

portriiyul of the timid hero, Chester Dlnne, Mr. Lytic displayed a lor comedy un- urpassed all iilng, Reading hU lines with ar-suronce of a veteran actor, Ljtle presented a finished portrayal for the Wednesday night audience.

Sparring wllh Lytle lor top honors ac Russell Jen.'ien v.ho blustered

his way thiough the role of Henry eimmon-1, smoll town promoter and doling father, who steered Uie course of his dnuuhter's love life, KcnncUi Wkharl slid tmoolhlv Into his role as city allcktr with villain- ouii Inlciit, Deane Shljilcy t.-iu su­perb lu-. the Jealou.i niioplectlc mo­on picture producer,

rUy Kupportlng Rolei Gihcrs In the civ t »cre Mrs, Kent

Tatlock. Mrs. Gene Dillon, Mrs. Ar- CiOi', Mrii, Lfiwrciice Wlthart, Boyd Lytle, Mr,i. Donald Mur­

phy, Mr. . Monroe Hlkkelioij and John Fankhauser,

Between ticUs one and two Ihe high school orchejtra, under the direction of Ingard Nelhon. pre­sented musical selcclloni.

Between act.? two and three Ella

Mao WeHcl offuw! the foQowbit " pl&Qo numbera ‘Tnluda In 0 e iu n - Minor." Rachmtnlnon: u t ttw’ "Arkansas Travtler and *0)8 Har­monica Player."

Tho production st*ff locluihd Mrs. Otorgo W*rb«rf. director; Harold SaUabury, gener^ etulmao;' H. Salisbury, L. Z, Bartlett, Monro* Mlkkelson, buslnsMi TVavlsMcOon* ough. J, Hill and A. F. Nelion, u). vcrtlalng and llcketn; Ernest Jclll- son, VIggo NlclMn and Hoss Bevan, aUge and properties; Olemi Chugg, Max L. Brown and O. J, Botbne, publlcliy.

Grootes Named to State Vet Board

BOISE. Dee, 13 </P) - aovenioc Wlllinms today appointed Dr, Melert Grootes of Tiiln Falls os a member of the state veterinary examlnlna board.

Dr. Grooies replaces Dr, Robert Smith of Jerome, rtslgned-

Othrr membcfj of the board aic Dr. Ray Hurd of Nampa and Dr. John A, Zlcbarih. ir- of Pocatello.

MADE IN ID.\HO FALLS

• Strong • iDinlallreand economical • 1 or ■ rallUsn

Ajcnls

V IC K E R S & MADnONUJ MAIN E.

or PHONE MiM or lOSU

Tfeey'JltKriveonitrsaid Doctor

Evcninfj S teak Dinners Fried aecordlng to your dlree- Uoni. We're open every day aoii night except Mendaya.

MODEL CAFEU« Shoahone St. Weat

’""'E Mi A Y F A H IR

A Bowlful o f Health

for your children’s lunch!

Heinz^ Condensed Cream o f Tom ato

Soup^ I t A s A S a n c e B a s e

for aeadoaf.6pa^betti.«^ is M & o d .T b ib k ,tC & a n d z e s Q i

Tb«^ no better sauce!

W S T A R R I Y E D l

A grroup o f bright, youthful Printed jersey dresses that are tnily. . .

Any mother would b« proud of two yotmg bu»]dn Ufc»•turdy and full of pep. And aow. you know, Borden'i U ovc, wonderful for helping babiei jrow good itriing teeth and becauie it providej thtaa times at mucJt V ittm inDu befon pint provides 400 unlta... ■ fUll dfly*. wpplyr

P.8. fo molhani Borden'i ErMpormlad Milk li •capt^ by Ih, Amer/cjn Mtdicml AtndiUlan.Coundl cm Foodi tni Nultilictx.

And Golly! W hi Borden's does for coffee!

8.30to

12.95

• Ju s t In time for your

holiday wearing this grand

Bhipment of prints on light

and dark groundn in a good

run o f ai«8 . Come in and

make your aelectlon.

HoRMtiy, until you by It, you jtat cKit im ailm wh«t marv^ thing! Borden's doM rorcoOe«l It M ngi otrt all the full rich co

flavor.. . *0 Bv«y aip li delidota. And Bordw’* 1* gfttd foe aio f and hakins, toa Ju t yon tty itl

•make this grand dessertWITH LEFTOVER COFFEC

AND BORDEN'S!'

^ ..... - ............

c o m t NUT PUODINO

I orp■v«p*nH4Mn

Hcapt.

“ S . . . 16 .9 5 to 19.75

f f iM A Y F A I R a

P Df aUk. «lrtl<«iiURt Hlitot* lat» M

C«k. .tlnkf coa.tu.tlr, «Y« ' M.PBorp«tCif

Now.. . 400 units of Vitamin D par pint

Page 8: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

( IP A G E EIGHT TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO TH U R S D A Y . D E C . 1 8 ,1 0 4 6

Area Sportsmen’s Meet Starts at 4

Representatives from I I soiilhorn Idaho coutitic.i meet t day at Park liotel for the nnniml cotiforcncc of Foiifth District

Associated Sportanien.Flih bird »nd biff Btune commUtfej BO Into a huddle at < thts «flcr-

noon to thrash out rrcommcndntlons nhlcli t.111 be pmcnttd to tlic enUrc btoup followlnc n dlwitr nt 7 p. iii. IXie to the heavy ngcnda of reports expcctfd, no spcnkpra mc slntcd lor tlic coiivciUloii. Wftltrr Prietw, chnlrmnn. said. "Il's strictly biislnc.vi ond there'll be lot* of It," wili lili cxplanntJon.

Committee chnlrmcn Irom .wuthcm Idnho Fish and Oanie wclntlon wlio will reixjrt fonlKht Jnclude Lud Drcjlcr, ruiilnfi; Davldzon. big gamr, uJid Mcl : ton. upland blrds-

ProposaU made toiilglu passed on to the state incellnss of the Idaho Wild Life Fedtrotiim and Idnho tlsh and Bimie comiiils.Mon at DoLsc ktartlliK Jall. 12.

Mnjor lr.!,UM from tlic Mntlc Val­ley dlJtrlcta Includc eitaWUlmiciil-i of pliefiMnt tcluge;;. oruftiilit-J fl'h plftiillnff and pojilblc clitiiigcJ In Silver and FUh crcck oiwn (I'aions.

Dr. OcorBc P- Scliolcr, iireildnil or Uie Sautlirrn Idaho FiMi and Game Broiiji, alrt MhrIc Vnllcy’f fa­mous phcnsnnl crop U run on a "hit ■and mls.i" ichcdule with tunrlca provided to gunrd from predntnrj- ’ "turc ivs.iurance

Priebo warned that me lot.i faces n contlnuiil decline In (K bird Bnme unic.v inoie dclliill. ffr:\nvi arc f5t;ibll.'hrfl.

A report will nb" "‘“‘I nlnht by A. F. BrlKK'-. new vbor of Mlnlddka ' --- '

c blrdn no Iii-

d lumllng.''

Buhl Wins 42 to 24

CiilCAGO, Dec. 13 (/1',-Albcrl B. Happy) Chandler, cummlsiioncr ot jiu'.cball. emerged from prcjldlng iver his first Joint .•e.vilon with the miijor leitBucr.i ye-'.ierdny, hn|iplly ictorlous and ••'Ith nu sniping

uU drubbed over Mountain oiirt last nlglit jrlcd for Miiglc

icybuni twal Orrkley 35 to 30 laKcriniii; ple:ineil winlie Oooriinc tiliitc ;,chouI. FolIowliiK are- box score.f;

PORTSChandler Scores Moral W in In First Major Conference

agfllns him.etidlni; >Chandler

which will iillowunlimited night ba;.cbaJl ncM sca-

IthoUBii nio.'il. of the chibs will cuntlnuc to limit ihelr arc llnht con-

lo H- Th< reception;, will be wo St. LouL-i clubs—the Card- nnd Browiu.—and the WnjJi-

Ingtoii Senator.i.In connecllon wilh niKlil Bunic.,, It

nn:. declLlcd K> ab.uulon IwIIIkIU doiiblcheailer;i. mile.-.' ;.\h li are made

iile.' Night al;o will befrowned upon a;i Siinihij nnd hull*

•ClinlKlIcr gained two victories In uddllloii lo casting the "sky-ls-thc- llinlt" night game gained veto power

Chandler......... .. .. legisla­tion he consldcr.i detrimental to biiseljaU but can be uverruled by a threc-fourtlis vote. The minor leagucra at their touvciulon in Colunibuj. O., a week nso had vot<Kl to eliminate .such n veto power.

Chandler abo moved bacic Into the 150,000 promotional prosrani for ba.'.el)3ll. At the Columba'' conven­tion. the promotional committee which Includes the pre.'sldciits of the two major leagues, onnounccd thnt the »50,000 (el a-sldo be linndled by iin office scpiirate from that of the coimnlvsloncr. Ye.iterday the <iiviii:m declde<l lo Ihrow the oominuu'f ;i nclloii out lit the »liidow, arm pre- hcnt a new report to Cliniiciii'r iiv meellnB!. to be Held In New York In February.

ullook : dccrhunting in the Mlnkloka rrnlon.

Buhl Veteran

Cops High Kegler Score

BUHL, Dec- ll-Hlghejt serlf.'i the year were rolled on local alle>-3 lis t week by-A dlicliarBcd service­man who put togeUier games of 107. 304 and 203 for n C04 count. te.sulU In the men’s bowling leafoie ed today.

Tlie high score was turnrd In by Rollle Homllng. former coast guard; mnn. but the fcrles did not count 1 mutch results a.-, he wu merely «5tabll3hlr6E an average. Henry Wlnegar was credited wltl some with a 313.

In a match Sunday. Dulil Motor rolled up n m'ly of 3033 poliiu o\ Gene’s Confectionery of Burley, return match Is slated ncJt neck the Rupert nlieys.

Buhl Implement now leads t IdcjU play with 17 wins and Efv defeaU followed by Lesion wlih and 8 Mid Moose Lodge with 15 a:8.

rollowlng are score.'-.:DUnl. MOTOR

I ssx. ■:=;;! ”■

Gates Tops Minor Bowling Contest

Wnliic-Mhiy nlKht with a hlnh,it -.iOl, with Wahlci tiikllig

■duiil hununi with a tlirrc game

Phillies Seeking

Way Out of CellarCIIICAOO. Dec. 13 — 'Ihe

PhlladclplHa Piillllej> do not Intend to be the National lenguo doomiat any longer.

StrhlnR to rebuild their laJt place club, Ihe Phillies were the energetic buyers of talent a major Icixgue i.c.v>lgnn. which closH ye;itcrday. ncq\ilrlng three pbiyer.s. Previously they had drafted tin "Mad RuE.ilan," Lu'.l Novlkoff. an outfleldlns eiutoff of Ihe Chlcsja Cub.?.

IJRKn.STIlK HOI.I)CniCAOO, Dcc. 12 (,!■/—Tlie Chi­

cago Cut)s today .-lold Shon-itop Cliaille Brenster to the Siiii Dk-Ro club ot the Paclllc Conat league. Drew.uer. who wa.-i Cub property played for lA' Angeles and Na.ili- vlDr. Tcnn., In ID«,

Magic Valley Boxing Bouts Scheduled

GOODINO, Dee. IJ—nie South Centrel Idaho Dbtrlct Boxing i mts.-.lon. meeting here lonight. i final arrungcmenla for the winter boxing schedule which i lU include Ooodlng. Wendell, nichfleliJ. Jer­ome and Shoshone, Lelgli In'fecrsoll Quoding, announced. Earl Williams principal of Jerome high tchool was In charge of tlie nicetlnR. .

Tlie dktrkt touniament will held at Qoodlng March M-15-1C ln;;er.: ll said.

’Pie schediiirs follnw:

i Beau Jack Meets I Joyce Tomorrow I In Garden Battle

NEW yoriK. Deo, IS _ The , "ntmJon dollar kid” and the 'Tiall-

mlUlon dollar Ud” Unglo tomorrow night at Madison Square Garden In

.................bo one of boxing’*most sparkling bouLs of the year.

That Is one way ot saying Deau Jack of Augusta, Ga.. and Wllllc Joyce of O Ind., will me' the big Hghlh

D«»a Jack

the 10

Beau’, fori

ound

plon, drew .......Uian *1,000,000 In groa gates during 1943 before he entered Ihe while Joyce, the year's most boxer, has pulled more than *500,000 In H bouts so far this year.

A crowd of around 16,000 and *100,000 "house ’ Ls confidently e pected by Promoter Jacolu In vlt

ot tbe recognized crowd plmlnf record* of the former Oeorgla »boe- ahlne lK>y and the Indiana louthpaw whom Trainer Lou Onus has de­veloped Into a lightweight contender.

Out of competition for the last ]0 months. Beau nevertheless Is rated a 6 to la favorite by the Broadway betting fraternity.

Simplots’ Team Gets Coast Star

SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 11 (-T)- WlLh a week to go before the na­tional premier of the Amerlan Am­ateur basketball league. Coach Bill Whentley of the Blmplot-Desercta today announced the acquisition of lanky Uoy Turner, former Idaho

Turner, who was rated sII*Paelflc

Electric MotorsElcclricnl Equipmcnl

W . H. Roller Co.

CoMt OMiference when he pUyed with Iho Dniverulty of Idaho Van- dais, was mustered out ot the arm; last week, n ic ehi-foot five tnd one-hftlf Incher also played with the University of Idaho, wulhem tjraneh.

In Uio JnlUal contest ot the league, the eimplot-Deserets, rep­resenting Utah and Idaho, wlU take on the San Diego Dons at Salt Uke City Dcc. 18.

----W ATER----HE A T E R SHeat-O-Matic

ELECTniC WATER HEATERS : Unit - « Gal. CapacRj

$ 1 1 9 .9 5ROB'T e . l e e s a l e s CO.

Plumbinfc Dept.5H Main So. Phone 1I8W

lil

RKAD TIMES-NEWS WANT-ADS.

I M W PRACTICAL f l l „ S E F U L

! H abdware | | | F T SI Presents For the Whole FamilyrSPOmS^^n

Van Engelens:

TURKEY SHOOTThursday, Dec. 13th

L A B O R TEMPLE

7:00 P. M.WIN A TURKEY

F O R CHRISTMAS

L A D IE S INVITEDSponsorctl hv

TWIN FA LLS PISTOL & RIFLK CLUBShells nvailiihlc nt range

Just Received!S H E L L W O l ^ ^ l N E H O RSEH ID E

HHU> BOttSHlDS WCSKtBOES

WORK SHOESIn the Popular 1000 Mile

6 Inch Plain Toe Style

Broirn Only $5-50

TENNIS SHOESKOR M E N A N D BOYS

W c jn s t rocoiwd iliis tiinoly shipment

of Teiini.s and ISa.'-ketbiill Shoes in lacv-

lo-toc sty le .

Boys’ Sizes $9.292'/: to 6 *

$2-49Men’s Sizes6 to 12

I n the Shof Department

Van Engelens

ISleds..............................Rubber Tired Coaster .

(W»»on« «Hh Sleerln

Volley Balls...................Fine Croquet Sets..........

... 4.85 to 8.95

............. 15.95Gear)

.8.95 to 10.95................9.95

Wilson Skis.....................11.95 to 2L50ILabrl nindinn to Kell with Sklst

Importcti

FIELD

GLASSES

34.50 to 43.20

Hunting Knives..............................8.75(Kxtra Fine Hand-Madr)

Ski Mittens .....................................1.95Punching Bag P la tfo rm s .............8.75Soft Balls.............................1.00 to 2.50Hard Balls............................. 50c to 1.00

YES SIR! HERE T H E Y AREI

Genuine Dux-Bak Hunting Coats

Feather Foam Coats-28.50

Ball Gloves...........................2.98 to 8.95Table Tennis Sets............................7.50

lEzeellent Quality)

Tool or Tackle Boxes..........3.45 to 5.75All Metal Kiddie C a r s ...................6.95Archery Sets..................... 1.00 to 18.50

SLEEPING BAGSFine Quality A ll Wool

GOOD TOOLS

Make Fine Gifts!

Nail HiimmerB

$ 1 .0 0 to $ 2 .5 0

Hand Saws

$ 2 .5 0 to $ 4 .2 5

Spirit LcvcLs (wood)

$ 1 .2 5 to $ 2 .7 5

A lum inum Levels

$ 4 .4 5 to $ 5 .8 5

Fine Hnntl Axo.s

$ 2 .5 0

PHora

S S t

D raw Knives

$ 1 .6 5 to $ 5 .9 5

B low Torches

$ 5 .8 5 to $ 6 .7 5

Shaving Brushes

$ 1 .2 3 to $ 2 .5 0

H a ir Clippers

$ 2 .8 5

Safe ly Razors

5 1 .2 5

Blade Razors

$ 5 .0 0 to $ 6 .5 0

Razor Strops

$ 2 .8 5 to $ 5 .0 0

Good Barber Scissors

$ 3 .4 5

PRESENTS WORTH WHILE!Tap and Die Sets............19.85 to 35.00

Fine Wilton Vises............12.50 to 42.50(PrettiloB m*de)

Power Sickle Grinders....... 5.45 to 9.95

Elec. Soldering Irons ..........2.98 to 5.50

Aeroil Weed Burners................... 21.50

Genuine Vulcan Anvils . 21.85 to 28.85

Men’s Wrist W atches .................45.65Shockproof; Waterproof (with tax)

'4

'4

III I

Slop in and .shop around — B u y usable, worthwhile Rifts for ihe en tire fainilyl

I Diamond Hardware|

FEATU RIN G

The fineit auorlmuit

BILLFOLDS

TOD wm find anr pUe«

$ 1 .0 0 to $ 7 .5 0(plot tax)

Page 9: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

THURSDAY. DEC. 18,1945

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PA G E N IN B -

NOTICE NOTIOS IS HKRSBT OIVEN

THAT I. DON BELLER8 wlU, ftt thi next rtjuUr meetlni of th» Id*ho SUt« Boirt of parfloru. to b« held

Firm T»nk HMter (OKI

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTS

at Ute SUtcbouee. DoUe. Idaho, the t in t Weduesd^; of Jiauary. 1948, m»lM kppllctUon for a Fvdon 4nd/or CccomuUUsn of GenUnee from Uiat ccrtaUi Judgment of con- TlcUoQ of Murder, second degree, made and entered In the Couri ot Che n th Judicial District o( the Bute Of Idaho In and for thi County or Twin Falls on or about 13-13-40.

Dated at Boise. Idaho. Date: 11- 34-tS.

' >pUcant: IX?N 8g.L.ERg. lahed Nov. 23, Dec, 0.13.20, IMS.

NOTICETO THE STOCKHOLDERa 07 THE TWIN FALLS OANAL COMPANY;

NOTICE IS HERE3Y CIVEN lint the regularjinnuai mcciiiig of

..IB itockholrtors of the Twin Fills Canal Company will be held «i the office of tho company In 'I^ ’ln rails. Twin Fulls County, 6tat« ol Idaho, n Tuesday, January 8. 1D46, at 10

-'clock a. m.. far the 'pun>cx-c of electing five (5) merabcn ol the Board of Directors and ir.ia'..K:ing any and all business that m:>y prop­erly come before the mcptm?; to consider the affali ' '

(New) 12,00

Table Ump ......

Conatmcl-a-Toy f

Smoke Stand .....

Eitra-nlee Smoke SUnd ....410.60

>Vhi(« DtntlU Bet ..

Two-bumtr Ilolplate (new) .

New Coal Cifcolator______

Coal Clreulalor...... .....

1 Chalf __ JI59.00

Bedroom Suite .....—

^ Baby Dutiy ..

Baby Bed and Pad .............

MeUl DIah Cupboard ...........

Kitchen Cabinet ................ J

Wardrobe Tmnk ................

Small Trunk ....

High Chain, Nnraery Chair*, Baby

Fnimei. Plano Stool. Card Tablri

Clothes Hampen, W «! Rup, Occa

Kitchen Table, Davenperi, FUr Coat.

HAYES’ FURN. EXCH.

460 Main Are. Sogth Pho:

take iI part;

ruijcci

I to the

LEGAL ADVERTISEM ENTS

suant to Title 41. Chaptei 18. Ida­ho Code Annotated, money for necessary charbea and expenses ajalnst any alven piece of land accordlns to the benefits which shall accruo to u id land, to' b« determined by tho Board of D l ' rectors: that tho work lo be car' rled on. as Indicated herein, shall be In cooperation with the weed p rogram of tlie constituted authorities of the Stale, pursuant lo the effective laws of the State of Idaho."And the ballot to be submitted as

to the proposed amendment shall contain the following;

Shall the Articles of Incorporation if the Tn-ln Falla Canal Company 1C amended as proper- •'

The boots will cloaa for tho ti :r of Btock ten days (10) before

said meeting, and all proxies must ■ filed with the Secretary not '

111 live <5) days before JinuATT 8, 104S.

Dated this 12th day of December, 10«.

TWIN FALLS CANAL COMPANY By A. WYNNE SMITH

AsiLitant Secretaiy 'ublbh Dec. 13. 20, 27, lS15-Jan 3,

Articles ot Incorporation .........Twin Falla Canal Company, ahlch shall bo by atoclt vote and cubmlued In tho followlns form, to-wli:

Shall the Artlclci of Incorpor,’ if tho Twin Falla Canal Com;

iinbcixbe n cle tlIIIA," which ••linli ro.Kl lu-. folio-,vs:

-ARTICLE IIIA”"fn addition lo the purpKc,

specified In Article HI above, the corporation shall hove power to Include as a part of the service of maintenance and operation of Uic project or canal ty.'ilem. the Ue.it- mcnt nnd eradication of iiojloiu weeda srowins on the Innd? •j.ithin the boundaries of jaUi proJcct nr system and adja to provide fund-< to meet iicccaary charges and expen:c.i f( tre.itmenc and crndlcatinn ( lous wesd-s the BoarJ of Director; may utilize moneys avnllab der the provisions of Sectlc lOOl Idftiio Code Annotatec may also levy and collect,

V^XVXV«3V»XVV^3^XVICVI.\^\^

T H E TIMES-NEWS

FARM SALECALENDAR

★DECEM liK R M

F. A. Bikes Advertisement Dec. 12-13

Col. E O. Walter, Auctioneer

D E C E ^ R 14W. p. Oeertian

Adverllsement Dec. 12-13 W. J. Hollenbeck Auctlonce

DECEM B ER 20p. E. Hartlry

Advcrt!,«cmcnt Dcc. J8-1!) W. J, Hollenbeck, Auctioneer

NOTICE TO CHEDIT0R8 IN THE PROBATE COURT OF

THE COUNTY OF T V1N FALLS, STATE OF IDAHO,

ESTATE OF MARQARCT CLERF.Doer.

Notlcc h hcrolA’ given by th un(lcr;il;Tiicil Lxrciilor.i nf the E- Of MAROARZT CLERK, decc:

having cla treased. to ext necessary voucher. , within four months after tho fir. t publication of thi:: nollce, to tlir .-.jld Exccutori

of n . P. pirr>-, Fidelity Ik liiilldinc. T«'ln Falls.

Idnho. this bclnr the pince fixed for the transaction of the bustacss of said est:ite.

Dated r>c;fmbpr. ir-45.HENRY CLERF,NICHOLAS CLEKF.

.SOTICK TO C:itLIHTOitS IN THE 1‘ItOHATL: COURT

TJIE COUNTY OF TWIN FAr.t.q, STATE o r IDAHO

EaTATK OF LEE MOFmT,Dcce.ued.

lotlce b hrrcby given by the i •rlgncd AclnilnU.tr

Irst -publlc.itlo:

OffI« of Earl E. Walker, I. Store IMilldliis, Twin Falls, Couii : Tv.-ln F.ilL'. State of Idahii, tli Mng the plncc fixed for the ir.in

DatcU DccemlJcr 12, 1S15. JiERNICE .MOFFirr Ad.Tiliilstratrlx of tho Zjta or Ler Moffllt. Diccwed.

Give a Brand New 1946

PHMCO

Yes, It’s true! This year you can say

"Merry Christmaj” with a Ph ilco ! Any

moJeiolihticDtnioaal new \9‘i6 Philco Radios, Ratlio-Phonographs, Refrigera­tors and Frcerers just announced from the great Philco laboratories. I t ’s the

thrilliog Christmas gift in ytars! e ia . . . see our display . , . get the

WILSON-BATESAPPLIANCE

E ASY TERMS

BEAD TLMES-NEWS WANT ADS

Page 10: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

-TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO T H U R SD A Y , DEC. 1 8 ,1 9 4 5

Report On ihs. Wa/LBv General George C. Marshiill

This ii the «ra of C Imtall- tncnU of mmlcrUI lelKlrd from OtnfrjJ .■'lunhiH'i report on l>ie •Binntor of World W»r II.

XXIII THE KNOCKOUT

THo tnlTRnco of lha Flflctnth arjny, under coimnsnd of Lt.-Ocn. L. T. Ocrow. Into th= Una of Uie 13Uj army group on 30 Mnrcli save more frceilcni of nctlon lo tlio First and Nlnlli nnnlM, cnnljllng them to Incrctiic Uie trtljlil of the of­fensive Into Oem.aiii’. Ninth nrmy tanks Iminfdlatfly broke out of the orca north of the Ruhr and swept easlward In a powerful thriLit lo- WATd Munslcr. On 1 April the vcloplns column) of these armies made conlnct wut of Padcrborn, cuttlnji off the Ruhr nnd a large area to lha joulli. In the larsrat pocket of envelopment li tory of B'nrfare.

ElerarnU of IB Ocrmaa divisions from the First Parachute, FlIUi Paii' Mr. and Fitteenth i\rmlcj circled In Uils iklllful maneuver. Leaving atroiig forctj lo eonlaln nnd tmIuco thL? Blivni enclrclrmrnt, the Flr.^l nnd Ninth nrmlM continued CiLstwnrd toward llie Hr Wrscr. Hpfarhc:iillnft the Allied of­fensive, they hendcd for Lelprlff nndn pre-arranged Junclloii ........Soviet forces. Tliere wiw momenluni, no rcjjilte fo rmy fo.-ers. niid by the e.(IrcC vxek of April both nmiles had cr<%5Scd the We.' r In llic arcn north Of Ka.'!'<c:,

On 6 April, acnerni Elsenhower KTote me:

"As >ou can see from the reporta, our pUtw have been dcreloping nl most in exact nccordnnce with orlK- Jnnl coticejitloiis. You mu-M ex ])cct, now, ft period In which the lines on your map *111 not advnncc ftif rnplrtly ns they did during the past several weeks becna« we mu.st pause to digest the big mouthful that we hove awallowcd Tltihr area , . . The enemy making efforts to break oi area but our persistent jwltcy of knocking out his communlcntlons the ea.stv.-ard, and his Inck of m blllty wlUiln the pocket, both mn Jt very difficult for him to louneh a really conccrted nttack. confident that he fan do nothing

The Ninth army advance frctn the Weser to the Elbe was featured by armored galn.i of 20 to 30 miles day Bgalnst little or no resistance. By mld-Aprll our troojn were along the Elbe near Wlttenberco and MaR- delburg nnd had established hrldge- heads ncro.w tho river. In rear of the armored column, the cities of Hanover nnd Drxinswlck felt to Ninth army Infantry, Bypa.«jlng Leipzig and strong resistance In tho Harz Forest, tho First nrmy drove east- tvnrd lo Uie Mulde Valley *ouUi Dcs.snii.

Rnhr Pocket Ylrlli 300,000While these eitenjlve operations

continued, the battle progressed acalKst the trnppc<I Germnns In Uie Ruhr. With the Flfleenth army holding the »-est face of the pocket along the IQilne, and armor and tantry of the Ninth and Firstmlo3 driving In from the north, e.....and south, the formidable enemy forces were cru-ihed In Jum ja days. More than 300.000 prisoners «ere taken In this unique victory, won lor behind our forward positions and squarely astride our line* of communication.

Soon Leipzig and the Hnn moun­tains were In American hands, and tJie Ninth and FIret armies clo.srd on the lino of tho Elbe-Mulde. the lorword limit, which had been ar­ranged with the Soviets, To estab- ILsh contact with our Allies from the eastern front. First army patrols

pushed cujit of the Mulilc to Tor pau. where tho Iong-a«»ltcd June ture with the Red nrmy occurred o 25 April.

In the north, tlie Drlthh Second nrmy. advancing on the O.snabruck- Bremen axis had cros.-ved the Weser on ft broad front near Mlnden early in April and was at tho outskirts of Drcmen by the middle of the month. From their We.ser cro.'.slngs the British struck northward toward Hamburg, reaching tlie Dbc couth- enat ot tlie city, TJie Canadtarw forced iho IJ.v.el river and prc.wd on IhfouBli the Dutch towns, liber­ating the remaining teetlona enstem nnrt norUiem Huliand,

Far lo the south, tlie Third nrmy, after capturing Muhlhaascn, Ootha, and Erfurt, crossed the Baale river and turned southea-st toward the mountains of Czechoslovnklft and Uie Diuiubo vallry, Tliij advance wa-i designed to e.stabU'h firm coii- tjict KiUi the Soviet forecs in Aus­tria and to prevent any effective rcorganlEatlon of tho enemy r nojits In mountainous regioiu lo ....

Hi the right, tho Seventh nrmy encountered bitter resLitance In Numbenr, but quickly capture«l the city anil tlicn swung south Into Die Bavarian plain. On the firat of May the Third amiy wa.i advancing into Czechoslovakia on a hundred- mile front southeast of A.wh; along’

■ Danube other elements hod driv- 20 mllr.i Into AiLitrln. Tlie Sev- li army had taken Munich, bir

plnce of the Nail party, and .weeplnp aouUiward toward the Inn •Ivcr. Along the upper Rhine, the rirst French army captured Karls­ruhe and Stuttgart In turn and pro­ceeded with the reduction of enemy forces ciiUKht In the DIack Fore.sl.

St ot May the French had.............. Jin SwKs border wr.it ofLake Coastiincp ami were driving Into western Austria alongside Uie Seventh anny.

Surrender hern Qcrmiiiiy, the UrItLsh irm>;, reinforced by the

X V IIl American Corps uniirr MaJ.-, I. Matthew D. Rldgway, broke from tJie Hbe river late In April reachcd the Daltic on 2 May.

ThU action e.-.tabllnhed contact with Soviet force.'! al WLsniar ;in<l cut oil the Dani-Vli PcnUi.sub. Further re- tstance on this front was hopeless. >n 5 May. the Qermiin commander

Mirrendered all forces In northwe.M aennany. Ifolinnd and Denjnark.

AIoiik the D.niube, Uie Tliird nrmy continued tlie advance into Austria nnd entered Llni on 5 May. Next day PiLspii fell to our furees in Czechoslovakia. General Patch’s Seventh army swept acray the Inn

a wide front nnd drove « miles capture Saliburg and Hltier'r,

ntrongiiold at Berchte.’ Ridtn. OUi- r Sevcnlh army trooiu ilio had akcn Iim.nbruclc drove through the

Brenner pa.s.s to e4tabllJh contact with the Fifth army at Vipltcno. Since lU laJiding on tho Riviera, Uie Seventh arrny had advanced an avcraRc of more than 3 mlie.s a day ORiilnst what had been the mast formidable army In the world. At noon on B May, army group comprising all German forces In Au.itila, surrendered uncondlllonally

our sixth army group, Just n inths nftcr the landing In Nor- in<ly.

The powerful Wehmiacht had dls- IntcRrnted under the combined Al- lied blows, and the swift advances Into the mountaUis of Austria and Bohemia had prevented the e.stab- ll.shmcnt of an Inner fcrtrew. Hur- rouncled on all fronts by chnas nnd overwhelming defeat, the cmL'sarie, of the Oemi.in Knvernmcnt sii dercd to the Allies at nelma May 10«, • nil land, sea, and air forces of tho Reich.

S IDE GLANCES By GALBRAITH

JOSEPH VlfSARIONOVICH DJU6ASHVIU tSTHS REAL NAA\E CF WHAT WELL- KNOWN WCCLO PI&URE ?

.P- ^ ^ “ ^ “1 kmesome In Japan, w ItolSirsl ” Chrl3tnifts-ho-H send him right back

SCORCHY

T U R C J U O lS erS SUPPCSEO TO Be A HX)Cr STONE...BUT ONLY WHEN

RECEIVED ASA eiPr.

Answer; Joicph Statin,

By EDM ON D GOOD

IP YDU L/ PIPS 1 COjfT, ltL)toiW,\

DO IT V HEBE )

T /' rfA HAEPyy

'AWOy, WHERE U 1 CAME BACk FOE J i HOPS SHE U (\ UOPP S u f I ABE 7H' re-MlNfiS? SAIT ANP PEPPM f unQZiP.^i

W BVE.W U A«JSTeEScua-jME

1 PEAVJHSj/ZesOlSESA L T ?? )

1. (S»M 6usy

ALLEY O OP By V. T. HAMLIN

Page 11: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

THUKSDAY, DEO. 18,1016 TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO

Phone38

WANT AD RATES<D«af4 oa C«t.ptr.«rd)

DOnOnn^A Pnulir Ilal Home, Ellut><t}> • Ttnur. T>la mil. I.Uha. rheni

THAVliL AND KESOETT^

> <3LA #rFJED a d v e r t i s i n gPAQB ELEVE27

W ANTED— RENT. LEASE

Phone38

1. rrtrcll lofln. Room

W ANTED!

A 2-bedroora

Unfurnished House

MONEY TO LOAN

SCH001.S AND TE<AINING

HKvNt UtAUTY 3!10I''^^« t

I.OST AND FOUND

IDAHO FINANCE CO. LOANS

CIUO aiATI, Ugt. Ground (^r Qank Tnul

Pbm. IK

Krifl A rin ff/e^a

G IFT GUIDE & CHUCKLE CONTEST

LOANS & FINANCINGON AnTOUOD(l.ESi rURNITUlLl

W. C, ROBINSONlAcnm Irom Ba4I. D14.)

tJO ’’

H(1;K iriM r

iiXl'rniESc

—WAKTED—TREE TRIMMING

TOPPINO AND TAKE-DOWNS

^A fw Sj’V'd* n***”

STAPLES <S; CRI6T

NEED MONEY?

RELIANCE CREDIT CORP.

SccuriUca Credit Corp.

B U SIN ESS OPPORTUNITIES

HELP WANTED— FEM Atlj:

HEl.l* WANJ'ED— .MALE

If you

BODY Md PENDER MAN

T»111 piy to st»McRAE

HI AddUon weat phone IBOOJ

TOUFUST CAMP

APARTMENTS

SANGER & BACON

- FREE -THEATRE TICKETSG ET IN THE FUTJ NOW

Every day 'illl Clirbtm«2 rrec tlckcta lo the Or- phcum (ind 3 ticteu to tlie Idaho win bo uwnrdtd tij prlrcs In tlie CTiucklo coii- ttst All you need rio to enter L-. U: clip a compitu Hno from the elniiUled jcc- llon or Die pnpcr and «j

make up (i funny sequciKt. Pa^te up the lines In Iho moat humorciii combina­tion possible niid mnll 11 lo the Cont«i Editor. TUncs- Newfl. Winners wUI be an- uounccfl In . this column dally. Cnll lor your UckcU nt llie TlmM-NcwB olllcc.

Today’s Winners

ROY \V. FYKE. KlmbtHy TTio wlnt

Street” o Lioii at AH ticket.

Her

■ee 'The House oi the /ollou-ing n

1C Orpheuni T1

TREC ilOLDEIis, ||

MARV MOtlGENSTEHN Box 72, lUccrTDna

will receive Iwo tree Uclcels 8ce -Where Do We Oo From Here." or the following a tion nt the Idiho Thcdter,

Here I i (he Chuckle

iiov.s cu.s iioL.sTEn;

FOSS .MANUrACTURINO CO.

MRS, W. I, MCFARLAND OR

C. A. ROBINSON

LNCOlli: pnOPEIiTY—J

— W ANTED -

Experienced

MECHANICS

SCHWARTZ AUTO CO.

H ELP WANTED— MALE AND FEMALE

WANTTOI

SEED SORTERSTo Work

' Night EhUt

M ARK MEANS CO.

N E W HOME FOR SALE

llTlne lihr.rT

avcrhtAd iArccd*Kir

J Wrootia.

JE S S 0 . EASTMANBUItL 11 or tOtni

F ARM S FOR SALE

(T.00»—II.UO

Vntna wlf« IN fl

f t s f f f u ; ‘

F A R M HEADQUARTERS111 shoMM w«i 11,1

E X C E L L E N T FARM BUYno ACMJ, .11 two ! » » »

phon«. Blli Bill wqUfc n»«I Tt»d. I riIIm frera tcwa. III.MOM. 11,200 .III UMI., I'hoi.i l|] ,r e«ll . t lit Ud aimt w«v

;n.viTunE sTont:

•c I!oqi;ct sets—

lF.i:TACE"!nALES» ro«d to ih. ho»piUl.

G R O W E R S ’ MARKET

C H R IST M A S GIFTS

fo r the HomeAT PRICES YOU

CAN AFFORD TO PAY S.lre rocVfr,. pull.„p ch.irr.

FOR T ^ ' b ADtT;"''” ' "

«nd firelliA,"'*'”"*"

M O O N ’S[■AtNT A STOWt

VATEtl SOFTZNEnS.

Kpl.i.dW Chrliu innoTTS

FARM S F O R SALE

UEISS IN V EST M EN T CO.

FARM IM PLE M E N T S

SKID E N G IN E SIlca LESS THAN LIST IN

QUAKTITIEH

ED SH O R T

NICE 5 A C R E TRACT

1 A C R E TRACT

C. E . A D A M S

SADDLE CRAPT DtLLTOLDS

I'AMOUS HE311-XJRD SADDLES Made by Tex-Tan

TEXAS RANGER DEt.TH

M cV E V S

L A R G E SELECT ION.Itufftd Do*i. p-'ll*

BRUNSWICK CiaAR STORE

Diam ond Hardwnro Co.

ID E A L G IFTS 1

EEWINO CADINCTS HEWING STOOI..';SEWING lioxn;;

T O Y S ! TOYS!

or WltERE TlIEnE-.S nOOM

T IM M O N S Home &. A u to Supply

JUST R E C E IV E D !

rOOT .'5TEEL CLOniEfiLINE

SEARS-ROEBUCK & CO.

GIFT ST A T IO N ERY

) »W17 with ChrUUnu “wetrUfc- Diet your ord.r NOW for »«T»T»jbo.M of ih»t fino qomUw .uiionorr

Timos-News Jo b Dept.

HOST TEnSONAL O im . . .

F A R M S FOR SALE

' Kral7 Boi M l

Splendid 140 Acres■•nd wlUiln • ft- nlRtito of T«)a

Il>r Uk«d. POMMllOD IV

» ACIlt rARM lo U m aiiMet. KM- «r« bom.. O w »oll • (ottS pn- 4w«T. E*»l7 poMWloa. Ptle«l ri»a

WZ ALSO HAVE • (tw tool w I4<m*

SW IM i n v e s t m e n t CO

F A R M b F O R SALE

r> Anlhonr 8>ott-

A LARGE OPPORTUNITY

For a Small Price

C O U B ERLY & PARISHC9 MAIM AVE. E. PII0H6 II»J

BUY A RANCH

V being token for:

POTATO HARVESTEna POTATO Pn..ERS

POTATO SORTERS MANURE LOADERS

STEEL FABRICATION

K RE N G E L ’S , Inc.Phone 485

SpecialPre-Christmas

Sale!* S nOTARy roll-.vrr Ki.^rn

'GATES B RO T H ERS M ACHINE SH O P

BUSINESS A N D PROFESSIONAi;

D I R E C T O R Y

• DICYCLS SALES & SERVICEniMlia CrclirT. P^ II

• CLVANEnS& DYERS

• COilMEIlCIAl. PlihS’TING

• GLASS-RADIATORS

MniEOGllAPUING

» MONEY TO LOAN

• PLUMBING & HEATING:t BbathoM au E.

• REAL ESTATE

•HESTAVrtANTS

VENETIAN nUNDS

> WATEIt SOFTENERS

. WENDLINC. D.l-.Il.r Bpm. phoM «

WANTED TO B U Y

LEE H A N K S

HAY, GRA IN A N D FEED

CU6T0U h>r chopplni, I'o;

pik" wT-fni i'koductio'n

F. IIANCHK.I.

THESE RANCHES ARE INQ PRICED ON A BASIS OF AROUND $45 TO 800 PER COW UNIT WHICH REPRESENTS SOUND, NORMAL AND NOT INFLATED VALUE,

UC Land & Cattle Co'II.KIW * 'Vl^NDF.nLICK.

CONTACT. NEV.

F E R T IL IZ E R

LIVESTOCK— PO U LT RY

GtlERNf EY iprlnor.

^U.'iO Cu'tnitr cow.

- 0 PWMlt. eitUl.___________WAWTEOi lOa ^^C«llfora1»^jtolit«l»

b..r, U R

cEta rc !!* ” 'Whit. Emb.n

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

ANTLUi Tril

•DIIMTUHIU P

Mist. FOR S A L E

SPECIAL SERVICES

"15,X I I 1

CrsaPOOL tnd septic Unk olunln*. ?. ” *7 ••llitlH tuilDOnn, Twia

6ullt nr

'E KERVICE 111 miknot c«r .1.4 tr.ctoi.. r„t „t,n I ■ lop It—

DICK'S CARACB

STOC* WATEniHO TANKS

GATES BRO-m ERS MACHINE-SHOP

— CEMENT M LXERS — WISCONSIN MOTORS

WILLIAMS TRACTOR CO.

K ARE MW rREPAUED TO INSTALL

AUTO GLASS

AUTOS FOR SALE

Special This Week!

FLASHl.ICIITB A POCKPTT K:

T%vin Fnlls

ARMY STORE

FURNirU ItE. A P P L IA N C E S

n,„. M,0(

•PLES-liorn*!! BmuU, D*1Ic

JNIT APARTMENT and good

5-ROO.M HOUSE >nl .-Imp'' and paying bO( inr. PrlrfCl to fell!

C. GRAVES A: SON

FARM l.MPLEM ENTS

IMrnoVED to ACRES—Uu>n diemU. Ur, fiM. buiim

w. o. s^nxHlUnk « Tr<ut Bu(I4Uf

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

riI08P»ATr. UI|10ADCABTtR«

n*NO-ON TllACTOK PLOWSOM»T uoa to Inior. oaflf <l«llt»n

PAUL EQU IPM EN TAND UXLIIINO SHOP

BEEF HIND Q U A R T E RS

KILL A llEKFI

lEEF"INDEPENDENT MAREET

yrur.

WANTED TO BUY

W ANTED TO BU Y

Men’s —■ W om en’s Good wool c lo th inp

COATS - ^ ; aNT8 - BLACKS

c

R S w r» ‘;.‘2

DEN VER TRADING PO ST

RICIIAKOSON CLEANERS Tw™ rALU aunt.

wXujijT

in^VaQ~'n

uirM. Ctii Iim. :ss ;th

RADIO AND M USIC

Personnlly Sclectcd

PIANO BARGAINS

m a s oa cash

ritEE DELIVEHT

•. Dro»» ku loM r.t«ri>*4 fi

lOlTLL FIND THAT CaUnUAS PIANO AT

CLAUDE BROWN

MUSIC COMPANY

A ^EW OHA nUu lUM i

K 's r - iT r - . i s iS

_ S ^ S 5 5 2 ritroj >11 atod

rOR SALE-HIJ Uod.1 Arendition. C*ll IlMR. »ok ralr

'“oVA “ i*"'w Ol*A cU-

I'JJJ JLVMUUTIUwn wjpc

ItJl UDOOU Ch.Trekl, bodr dUbn. «ood ruV r. IKJ.OO

In TOd

CASH la ■ fIiil.l-(M rour < NoniiiJi Auto C«Dp*»7, ;<

'i< [>ODtiL n.. Pligt 1 or.7£;u>:Dfllbt.

Pt ktTrl. imtll t <«!■. S" Pho”'.''*"?.' '•* Hitol Aota

‘"I' Cfi.T«relii cirk

.»'.M,rl” comI°tl«ii.”'woulj'' Jlirhl cir In trM» PW. 1i

•np. VioxlT

«OOJ

CHEVnOLET 4^r,

WE A R E WRECKING THESE CARS!

* *1^ irtnialulo?^^'I5J? ?

1st StiTlon W?«'tf Hosplua

SEE D8 AT Otm NEW LOCATION 661 Addison West

for a car

TWILL PAY TO SEE McRAE

HIGHEST

CASH PRICESpaJd for Iflto model

TBUCIAAKD mme

(It pays to shop around)

11 PLVMODTH SEDAN u rLYMouni aiDAMim rORD SEDAN

IP SEDAN

t sfilDE'sAKU CoiuiANOEB

1 >«IUW.SEDAN

Cl ptie»i vldla 0. ALL GOOD nUTSIBALLENGER

VELTBX SERVICEShotbOM bit «•< Hk PkOM *1

SFEtlAL SERVICES"C4)l >rur I ». » . Ik*

TRUCKS AND TRAILERS

Page 12: Jotrf Knmtr and ID olh«n of Iht Bebtn New Fight Against ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times... · through Nov. 30, ID45. only $1! 350.48 In saliic were sold. F the

PAGE TWELVETIMES-NEWS, t w i n pa ll s , IDAHO THURSDAY, DEC. IS. 1045

Movie Magnate Tops List of

Incomes for One-Year PeriodWASJIINGTON, Dcc. 13 (/T)

The treiuury iMUfd a report on bis Incomes tonight and numo of l^uts D. Mayer Ifd all the resU The moTlo mngnalc got $508,070 from LoeWfl Inc., for pcrtonal srn-lcM In

Mnyer'a top-ranklnj was dis­closed In ft suppltmrnl to in e.irllcr jiartlnl Itstlntt or Indlvlclunli" In­come from coniorallons. The report tu a whole covcrs rctiima for Ihc calcndnr year of 18« fiscalyeara rndlne In 1!H3 and 10«.

Hanking immedlalclj' after Mayer, ulio wm In front Ijy nearly 1150.- 000. were Charta E. Wilson, of Oen- crol Motors, onil Thomna J. WoUon.

• of Internationa! Dtislne.M Machine.'!.

Fred MiRMurroy. In fllHi place, and Deanna Durbin, In lenlli plntc were tho only actors to make Iho flrnt ten n.i Individual- Dul the In­come of comedians Bud Abbott nnd Lou Costello, wlilch ».\s reported a-i a sliiRle salary - lOfJM - ranked fourUi.

Following ta the It't of the 30 In- dlvldnab who, nccorrtliiB to the treasury Alntemenl.', rccetved the Kreate.'.l Income Irora corporalloai for personal srrvlce.'i In one ycnr;

LouLi D. Miiyer, 50M.070; Charles E- Wilson. i<5D,011; Thomas J. Wnt- hon, $425,51S: Fred MacMiirray, S419.1C0; W.iUer W.inser. Univer­sal Plctiirn producer, MOT,0:8; John B. Ilnwley, Jr. preiident

of Norlliem Ordattnco MOO.OOO: Nicholas M. Schenck, pres­ident of Loew'a 1391,600: Ormond E. Hunt. General Motors, W53JH; Al­bert Bradley, Oeneral Motors, M50.- 433: Dcnnna Durbin, from Universal plctiirc-1, M2fl,4tll: Barbara Stan­wyck, from Parnmounl Btid Warner Bros., »323J33; E. 51. Bolist, of Hotf- man La Roche..Ind.. M03,nS; John Thomna Bmlth, General Molor.\ J300.3 10; Donaldson Drown. Gen­eral Motors, *300,ICO: Charles F. Kettering, General Molor.i, »300,117; Elmer J. Mannli, Loews, 1300,725; Sail Knlz, Loew'o *298.125; Harry L, (DlnR) Crosljy, I294.444; William Pov-ell. $202,500, anti David Dem- steli), LocWs $285,000.

Income taxe-i took n big bite out of thcj!e pnyraciit , however, Tlie rate. generally ranged from M per cent or more on Income of $200,000 to about DO per ceijt on liiconx proachlng $I,D00,C00.

Cattle Sale Prices Good

WKIi prlccs holdUiR strong 1.000 head of cattle were c.-ld here nt the weekly auction of the T*ln Falb l.lvcslock CommWlon company. Tom Collen. co-owner slated late

yesterday.Quincy NorrtJ. Twin Palls, sold

the top load of fat steers for *15.75 per lumdrcdwelRht and also a tnickjond of niUrd slrers for A carload of mixed steers owned by John FeldlULsen brought *14.80.

•nie . alc «Urted at 10:30 o, m. and will be liekl at that time next ttfplt. Calleii .Mated. No sale will be the folltiwlnK week beeaiise Chrbtma. . 'Hie r.tockmnn said expects the market to hold steady

next week u,a that MKr the first of t 6 yew sales should inercwe.

Two-year-old steers sold for *1330 to *14.00: yearlings, *1250 to *I3J0: good cowB. SUJO to *12 60: fair CO- 8.110 to t l l JO; fecdera $7fi{i >0 '.80; good helfcra »13 to *13.60; fair *13 to *13: feeders *10j0 to IllJO; bulls *8.10 to *11.60, vealers

to *13.70,

Six to Get ExamsSHOSHONE. Dec. 13 — Six 18-

year-olds from Uncoln county will go to Boise Dec. 17 for pre-induction physical exams. They arc Olenn E. Ross, Carl Jerome Piper, Richfield; Cal D. Bateman. Mac L. Openshaw, Raymond L, Martlndale, Jerome K. Klmey, Shoshone.

Openshaw, Kinsey and Piper arc tllll students and may be given deferment to complete the school

Lumber Industry

Is Topic of Talk

At Boys MeetingO. ■), DoUinc was sueat epeaker

at the Twin Falls high school Boys’ club meeting held Tuesday after­noon In the high school auditorium.

Bothne spoke on the topic ’Xum'

upon the legends of Paul Bunyan, mythical lumberman of tho north woods. He also explolned about the industry In Idaho and the north­west.

Dill Mstson, Boys' club president, opened the program by reminding the boys about the Boys’ club dance which will be held Prldny Decem­ber M In the high school gym. He urged the boys to support tho dance.

The prognun wu In charge of the Junior unit. Byron Snyder, pres­ident of the Junior unit, Introduced the program. Two piano solos were presented .by Willetts Warberg. Hu­bert Hendrix, high school sopho­more. sang and played several num­bers on tlif guiur.

John D. FUtt, high school prin­cipal. explained a proposed voca­tional and educational survey which nlU be taken sometime during the second semester of school.

'The program ended with Snyder naming the committees for the dince.

$1,000 Suit FiledEarl W. Hutchinson filed suit here

yesterday against Walter Ta?ca for court Judgment of *1,000 whIcJi he claims Is due him for five horsts which were "taken from his ranch near Rogerson on Nov. 27, 1045, nnd

converted to tho u » of the defea* dant” Ray D. Agee. Twin Falls, U attorney for tho plaintiff.

READ TIMES-NEWa WANT AD3

- C u ll-

POTATOES—WANTED—

We Pny O A n Per Hundred______ O U ' 'Any amount, dellrered to plant

ROGERS BROS. . SEED CO., Burley | Potato Flour Mill

Latest Styles In Men’s

Lovely new styles created by ••Bclty Barnes'.. Bmooth rny- ons In white nnd colors of aqua green and dusty pink. Clever new neckline, short sleeves. Ideal lo wrnr now or any sca-'on. .. A real unrdrobo Btrctchtr,

They’re Here — They’re Popular

FASCINATORSOur holiday dudes some lovely new styles, weaves and flnl.shes In either I00~= wool or wool and rayon. Surprise her Chrlstma. ) log by slipping this little hit of feminine extra under the tree for her.

1.501.98

SPORTCOATS

Made In CalKornIa of 100''. pure wool, lallorcd by 1!. L. Block . , , a nnme that nlways means top' In spurt clothing. Shown In a beautiful, Im­pressive, yet lint block plaid. Has 4 pockels, each with .'.mart blending Icallicrtabs that but­ton over the pockets, aift.n that really warm a man’s heart are those ihat he can wear He’ll love the gift and the giver lor their thouKhlful- ncM If you rJioo.'c one of the.-c lovely new Eport Coats.

I.arge - MctJium • Small

1690

Don’t W orry, . . She’ll Like

DICKEYSHiey’ra tricky llttls things as cute u can be . . . She will be delighted to hove more than one of Uifse . . . Smartiy tai­lored or fussy frills and Shown In white and coIo: organdy and

Colored

SQUARE SCARFS

MAIN FLOOR READY-TO-WEAR DETAnTMENT -

how , . , 'Yes, It has mar , many tlmen each set

:.on , . , Rood for winter we:. . . Ideally used In the nnd Kunuiier evenlnHs . .U:.ed head coverings or i ^a. h or shoulder wrap. Our i n.'.iortment Include,? many p.it- ' i

11 gay bright colors. Ray- I

1.00 to 3.98

H EPv Give Her. ..

Ladies’

MulesBernlAr Vilaei lo }5.9S

3.95Here Is & Rift bargain for Chrlitmaj . . . Lorge assortment of ladles' mules In all the gay col­orful glsmoi of Uie sea- ion . . . Borne styles and »lsc8 are broken so we are offering these at an unusual price for gift buylhg. Psstel colors of gold, red and blue and •11 real beauties. Farbics of felLs. (heepskln, plush »nd aheirllng.

BUes From i lot

Not All aiKs In Emy Slyle

For Every M an On Your List

NECKTIESYou can rwt a.^ u ed ho will be more lighted ulth yt If you choose c these ntw lovelies that have Ju. t arrived. Largei or small floral patterns, designs or the popular plain colors, tis offered by Botany, and Beau Bnimmel,

Don’t worry, he can always use more ties , , . and

Other Ties by Arrow and Wembley

1.50 — 2.00-2.50

Opera Style' ■ ■ '

SlippersHere is another group ot gift slip­pers nt a real saving. Viiha's lo J3^a , . Included tJi this gay us- sortmciit ot satin slippers with flfza solid Iratlier sole.v Me<llum ana low heels . . . Pretty Mitln with satin bow trims. Colors of red.v wines, blues nnd ulhcrs- All specially priced now,

Valtie.«» fo

Don’t overlook our regular stock of high quality •’Oomphles" and ’’Daniel Oreen* slippers . . . We've R .'tyle, sire and kind to lull everyone. . .

. His Gifts

N ettletonShoe

BagsAnd They Cost Only: 50/ ;

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Give That Man a

Sheep Lined CoatWanath and r.ervlce In these coats . . . For frosty nlgfiU and chilly days lii town or in the country . . . You’ll not go wrong In r.clectlnt: for lilni one of tlii'.':c «annc.'t-oI-warm eoat.':. Our scleclloti Inchulc.'i Vilrlou. styles, fabrics and flnl.shr , . . . Ste this line of coat.s l>eIorc you decide un tlmi glfu All regular

Men’sStaple

M en’s Genuine Moleskin

Sweaters Pants100“ Wool worsted sweaters by "Cooper ”. These will warm Uie body as well as the heart . . . a gift you can be sure will plea-v: any man. Warm close woven knit, fitted cuffs ond neat neckline . , . Ideal for wear under coals. Shown In neat heather tone browns, navy blue and Oxford grey. Sizes 38 to 48,

Heavy black and white salt- pepper pattern atnplc pants . . . Ideal for dad or grandad's gift. Warm, economical, r.en-- Icciible. Maybo he Isn’t saying anything atout It . . . but he’s bound to be delighted at tho

■ scrvlcc and wamith lie knows are his when you give him a pair of thece mole-skln panU', sizes 32 to 42.5.45 3.24

F or th e Men—

Leather House Slipperswith worm fleece linings Uiat are tops In comfort . . , Mccllent for .service . . . neat enough for loung* Ing . , . sturdy enough ‘ out doors. So ft brown kid uppers, leather soles, rub­ber heels.

2.98

4.95

I

Some prefer

F E L T S !For fra-.ty mornings, or cooler night* . . . yet they're cool enough

to be preferred by many, even In the summer. Come In colors of brown or grey. Bolt padded ' leather soles, rubber hetlj.._ 1.49.0 3.95

IDAHO DEPARTMENT STOREti"The Chriitmaa Sforc”3i3i3lSi3i5@>3l3t>SlSS!9i3)3)Sl3t3i9l3t3SiSlSi3l33l3;3)3iS)Sl9)9!%3i3iS)l