10
luaw If U»e wt»Pon;^B» m t.. Irt ft talUt*rT •ecTrtr*"* W>* h u sow in>r«vcd pnbUulton ot Uw i t ^ o{ mdar^ dereloimint. .A coMrntbUd A»>dlaUa Prew leriei .Urt._oa t-p . on* l©d»y, wriltea.by J?hn M. Yon want to m ln . thla: Hn>e*^ New» featoRL- A Rcffionnl Newspaper Serving Nino Irrittntcd Idaho Counties WAR BULLETIN CANBERRA, AnalnOls, Jpat, » <A>- Prlme MlnUter John M. CorUn dctUnd Isnlfbt that ri«*tdra( Itooserfll had pnmlMd AtutnUM etiouh plase* (o InenaM Ihe RAAFs itrtnfth by GO per cenL VQSi^JG/NO. 58 TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, TUESDAY, JUNE 22.1943 PRICE 5 CENTS STEEt LOOIS IF MM , STRIKE GOES ON Bj united Pres* T h e natioa's grcut Bteel mlUa, fewllns every vlt4il ww Industry, waroecf In Increasing numbere-to. dny that prolongnUon ot the naUon- wlilc coal itrUco, now In lU cecond <lny, cither would crlpplo their pro- cidctlon or force them to close. As Solid Fuels Administrator Hur- old L. Ickes ttud John L. Lewis, president ot tho United Mine Work- ers. met aguln In WaslilnRton In oil clfort lo end tlie strike ot 530,- ' 000 hnrd and so ft coal miners, tho atcci centers reported UwlndUng suppUe.n o( eo<U. A t PltliburRh. a spokesman for the United States Steel corporation said the rtrlkc will force it to bank more than ttaUot lu 37 blast /ur- nncc3 by Thursday. Six will be down by tomorrow, tho spokesman iidded, and tho result will be the loss ot thousands of tons of siccl for war. E I. Evans. Alabama manaBer for Rcpiiblle Steel, reported from Ondsdcii that unless the coal strike u 1* inded Immcdlntely. llie com- M pany'5 mUbi in that state will be shut down by next week. That wHl Jdlc nbout <^00 steel workers, an<: -N tho company now Li opi-rutlnR only between 35 and 60 per cent of nor- mal. Slccl Industry spokumen nt Chl- cngo s'll'l that producllon In mills In that area, IncludliiK the world’s ' . larBe.-it at Gary, Ind., would bo corlou-^ly curtailed at tho week-end. Coal' rc.'ctvcs already are reduced by the two previous strikes of tho pa.st CO dnys, tliey sald- Tljc sltlkd by the miners tor woffo Increases nnd other benefits elo.'!«l down all mines operated by DMW members throughout tlie na- tion nnd ihero were praetleaJly no disturbances. esmiKK ,P « m BOOST I 's . A.-Mendenhall. OaJdwell. was r elected dtportoicnl comtnander of . tho Idaho Disabled Amerleaa Vetcr- nai at a ttrcnaillned one-day con- vention htU in Twin FftJU Monday, and ft 20 per cent Incrwsa In dis- abled vetemn coniMnsfttlon w sedlor vlcc-commnndjf: 'Wllllain E. Stone. Tftln RUls, Junior vlco-com- numder; Walter S. Bulllvan.-Qrace, chaplain, and E. Raybom. Twin Falla, judse ndvoeatc. Tlie meeting. fCulled only two days before It eonvened. drew a good rep- resentation of- delegates from nine chapters: Canyon county. Boise. Po~ catello. Emmett. Twin PaJU. Idaho Falls. Gem .State chapter at large. Burley and Border chapter at Wil- der. Members from World were olso In attendance. The theme ot the scsslona. stress- ing adequate and Immediate carc ot World war n disabled T-eterans. was hlshllffhted In the convention legis- lation. Radai’, New Weapon, on the Production Line Iladir set* fbr the-HJ S. nnvT »ra constructed at a New England faetery of the General Eleelrie eom- D»nrr"nadar. • new weapon of World war II. Is an electronle device that »«ndi out nltra-ahort waves whieh are nflteled back on receiver*, revrallnr hldde n ships and r'»nes. their speed and direction of irartl. Radar pUyed a telling "h>le in the victories at Atto, north Africa and Jn (he south Pacific. (U. 8. nary photo.) >ii * ¥ ¥ ¥ * V . * U.S. Drive in Fog-Wrapped Aleutians Impossible Without Mii-acle of Radar vocational trtOning for disabled vet- erans o{ the present war. « Voting against "discharge tinder duress." when a disabled scrvlco man U foned to state that there was a prior Injury or diseased condition betoro his Injiiry. the group olso passed IcjlslaUon which stated that a disabled reteran Is entlUcd to com- pensation 6r-TJensIon unless in the case of a felonious misconduct. The D, A . V. ruled that the term "te- ]ottlous' misconduct" should not in^ elude a venereal condition controct- od before the injury. T h e 20 per c e n t Increase ot ...... ,■ pensatlon to all disabled veterons • w-oukt bo lo offset the rising cost of . llvlnir, the convention proposed. An increase from $40 to tCO nos asked for all non-jervlco pennanently and m ent cominandcr, two aesslMu. E. L. noybom assisted him 03 convention cholnnan. Soviet Air Force Hits Rail Depots MOSCOW, .funo 32 0U9—Red &tr force bomber* owrted eight largo fires and touched off heavy ex- plosions la raids on railway stations supplying tho BatoUeya front in the Ukraine, .th e Soviet mid-day commtmlque reported today os the Itusso-Oennan war entered its third year. The otticks foUowed a series ot raids Sunday night oq Oennan- held airdromes and on troop con- centration]. Numerous fires and ex- plosions were observed at the air- dromes. Other Russian bombers were credited with sinking a Oer- tnon tramport and damaging other vessels in a Oerman convoy In thq Atetlc. ' Only minor ^ u n d aetlona were reported alons the whofs frontwlth Oerto&n caniolUes' during (he past 34 hours being estimated at approx- House and Senate Deadlock on FSA WAflHmOTON. Jun# as (UJ9 — '.H ie fate of the twin lecurtty ad- ^ * jnlnlstraUon remained ideadlecked V today M the 1M4 agrlctiltunU ap- . proprtAtloa bill moved back to " •,house with no.cQmpromlw'te*u.M.,« on senate amendmenU reiuerting , 1150.000,000 for the »gencT w W th the lower chamber voted to e The AsjocUted P ^'WASHINGTON, June 23 <rt>-Ono of this reccnt mlroclw of radar al- moel certainly'Is the AlniUans cam- paign. DtspKoi. tho compjete elh; TOW of tu:5Ua^tc^«(i{l?rt3^ a .th'/^ subject, modern V*rfore,*l>vltm4ly would be virtually ImpoAslble along tliat fog-ciincd Wand ehalfi with- out Iho aid’Of Uili new, wcanon to explore the way and report tiie hld- shipn and plnncs. 'nu- Alcutlnns, oncc considered us^ci-i bccauso of Uiclr wcntlier, art recognized as having great stratealc value, Orodlt for tho change In opin- ion must surely so to radar—the wizardry of which, v.-e may assume, has been profitably employed In clearing tho tliori northern road to Tokyo. I n (he Atlantic, radar hns been found Invaluable In convoy opera- tions. It enables task force, com- manders to maintain constant checks on Uio ships In'their charge, despite dorknew ond bad weather. It keeps 'thcm--^tully inlormed. loo. of the presence ot aurioced enemy stjbmdrlnea-for mlles^arotmd.'- use of radoyln convoy <«ort- Jng clo,«ly approWmaU.‘s (he origi- nal t4>cUcni purposes ot tho appara- tus os ouUlned by Dr. Albert Ho>t Taylor of the naval researcli labor- atory and un a.viocliile. Leo O. Young, In a memorandum to the nnvy department In Scplcmber. 1023. They made Ujc then revolutlonnry suggesUon that with rndlo detecUon equipment, dcstrbyera opcrnOng on parallel lines several miles apart could promptly dbcover the paasflge )I nn alien vc«el between Uis lines 'Irre-’pectlve of log. diirkncss or smoke serecn." Tlie .^u<;gcstlon nppnrenlly mndc lltUe Impression on the men who could huvQ Blven a go-nhcad. be- cause for eight years their memor- andum got no approval, support or results whRever, Taylor ond Younpr. however, hod iflad# not only tiie basic discovery ’ Accessary'lo tiie development of m- dlo-eflulpntent but ftJso-iiW'tVivl- lloncd Its tactical m cs. The discov- ery camo abtnii, as Li so often true In eclenUfic work, os a by-product of another problem they were work' ord Bti ru> >•. Ctlgnn B) FLASHES of LIFE' COSmiNATION OIIAKHHEnSBURO, Pa., JOne 22—Thieves opened tho safe of a bottling plant the hard woy, by bat- tering oft the knob. They needn’t have bothered though. The comblnatlo:* was pasted on ihe door. CONES OKAHLOTTB. N. C.. J un o 2 3 - Driver J. H. OoIIoway stopped his bus In front ot the Kit K at soda shop, lie mopped hb brow and went In. He brought back IS cones o f Ice cream-one for himself ntwl one foi each ot his M pnssengera. MOIVER ^ SYRACI;BE, N. Y„ June 22-11 was a careful thlcAwho stole n lawn- mower from Uic Ross King home. Neighbors reported the m nn cm a lew yards ot the lawn, apparent- ly to see It the machine was wortJ stealing, then walked otf with It. CLIMBER BIlilNQS, Mont.. June 23 -Os. car DJorgum's tree-cllmlng horse Is back to earth asaln. It took the firs department, block and tackle, and three hours' work lo do lU Bjoigum said the animal wi frightened, tried to Jump through _ high fork in a cottonwood tree ond got stuck. None (board. Buhl and Jerome Yotiths Captives WASim<QTON. Juno 32 MV- Four Idaho soldiers are among IBT Americans held prisoner ^)y Gir- man; and Japan, tho war depart- ment SAld today. TTiey Included: Pfc. Howard W. Molesvorth, son of Mrs. *KaU W. Molesworth. route,one. Buhl, held by ” — lany, and p ;t Dean V. Hen* n, son of Rtx. s . Henderson, ' two. Jerome, held by tUs Jap- Body of Boy, 7, Found in Canal BOISE. June 23 O lJ!>—A three-dty search by couoty lav enforcement authorities and volunteers ended late y«ated»r xrith dlsoorery o f the of ■ntomai OlockUnff, sewn. under Roosevelt bridge in the RJdenbaugh omal mat ot BoIm. IDs younttier was drowned urday when he I«n Into t h ^ from a check gsU atop « Jxfag« bear iru found about one mUe .. low tha apot where he plunged Into the witer. fiuntroTs Include h li parents, brother u d two listen. EVACUEE C EIR HUNT. June 22-Noboru Roy Todo. 11 . one of the seven clill- drcn of a former Seattle, Wash., grocer, drowned last night In the swift waters of the NorUt 6lde canal, which forms the southern boundary ot tho Minidoka reloca- tion sentcr. Young have slip.. while playing olong Its ........ .. nbout B;30 p. m. The body was taken from the water 45 minutes later Ja<it below the bridge ot the main entrance to Uie center, a distance ot about a mile from the point where the boy felt in. Members ot th» military police escort guarc were stationed olong the canal U wntch for the body before It wa; recovered, ond soldiers ond mem- bers of the intemol security pollci cooperated in rescue efforts, Tlie body was brought ashore by '* tho soldiers. v Tnda wa.i Uie son of Mr. and Mrs. Klnxo Tada, who operated tlie City Cash grocery In Seattle be- fore moving -to Uie ccnter. Other survivors Include Uiree brothers, Koruo. 20. Takeshi, n , and Shlgeni. 15. and Uiree sisters. Yoko, 18, Komlko (Kormti), tJ, and Uasuko (Carol). 5. runeral- arrangements had not been made this morning. Toda's death Is the second ot for the evacuee ... the desert lost tall. During t.. structioa ot the camp a coucasla workman drowned while swbunln In the canal. Postponement of Oil Probe Denied WABHINOTON, June 33 (/TV-The house public lands commltlM re- fused today' to cooscnt to a request of the attorney general to defer Its tnvosUgaUon ot the Standard Oil- navy department cantroet for deveU opment of the Elks hills (CaUt.> pe- troleum reserve. T h e eontraet, declareA ‘‘illegal and InvnUd" last week by Uie Justice de- BUTTONS BOISE. Jtms 23 M>-Anybody la the. miuket tor. buttons, snap fasten- ors u u l BSwing machine needles has untU July. 30' to submit bids to Uie Idaho department ot publio assist- ance, . • . - ~ oployes found Ui« articles in .. .tfoom. laiey had been left on frcBn « WPAsewing project. Fathers to Be Called as Last Resort-McNutt COLUMDU^. 0.,.June 22 (U .P>— Fnttiers will bo called for military service only when "every last ol- tcmatlve’’ has been exliausted. War Manpower Commissioner Paul V. McNutt said today, but he could not predict when that stop would become ncce.^sary, in a speech read for him at Uie 35th annual governors confer- ence. McNutt said that "arl(J)> meUc seta the date" when fathers will bo taken and that recently, although the month had been pushed back, "wc cannot yet say how far." McNutt sold the fortunes of war. tho lowering ot physical Etandnrds nnd taking ot oldeiv men affect the date when fathers wlU be called. Partial Victory By OPA Foreseen WASKINaTON, June 23 (UJ3 — Sen. Jolin H. Bankhead. D.. Ala., a leoder of the senate form bloc, predicted today tlint final congrcs- slonat octlon on the controversy over the office ot price admlnlstra- Uon would result In at least a partial OPA Victory. KIs predlcUon came ..ofter Price Administrator Prentice M, Brown ■pent most of yesterday ot the cop- llol trying to persuade his former colleagues to "give m e a fair chance lo do the Job." No oction on either the OPA o]^ proprlaUon for fiscal 1944 or the moves to restrict or oboUsh the agency's subsldy-rollbock program was scheduled In either the senate or house today. Allies and Axis Step up Mobilization for Invasion ^ It . American Bombers Heavily Attack Ruhr and Belgium LONDON. June 22 (UPJ-Form.. tlans ot litary American bomt>ers sscccsitully attacked the Ruhr nnd fWglum (oday, concenlrailng tlielr bombi on a aynthetlc rubber plant la nDr(h<rts( Germany, and the for- mer Genftal >Mo(ora plant near Antverp. Dr WALTKIt CRONKITE LONDON, June 22 (U.P.)— A biff force of four-cnffinc(i American bombers heavily at- tacked tiirKcls in G e r m a n y ’s Ruhr ami in occupicd Belgium today only a few hours after B ritis ii bombers hammered the nazi war production cen- ter of Krcfeld with possibly 2,000 ton.s of bom bs in one of the heavie.st raidH of the war. The dayliKht attack on the Ruhr, main arsenal for H it- ler’s armies, wa.s tho .second by the eighth U. S. air force. On March •!. the Americans attacked the communications center of Hamm, Only yjyiterday tho DrItWi radio broadcast a warning to tho populn- Uon of.Bclclum lo leave the vicinity ot mllttar}' objectives In antlclpn- Uon'oJ heavy allied raids. na^Utht Raid ' fAmerlcan hea\7 bombers from the middle ea«t command attacked Reggio Calabria nnd San Olovannl. Italian mainland termini of tho feny to Sicily. In daylight yester- day, a Cairo dispatch reported.) , More tJmti 700 Orltlsh bombers were engagwl In the nlalu oper- aUons centered mainly In Uic heavy raid on Krefcld. Official sourccA said that today's attack «os one of tho two deepest of Germany mode by the Amerlcatus. Thff Ruhr district had been ottacked by the American bombers who hit Hamm, but torisv’s mls.^lon was the first by the Fortresse.i Into tho real hcort of the Rutir valley. Strong Support American, British. Dominion ond allies supported tho twin American raids, the first by th e eighth oir force since it sustained a record Ia« of 25 aircraft in attacks on Kiel and Tlremen on June 13, A Oerman communique, broadcast by the Derlln mdlo. sold tho British nlRlit raldcr.i cau.wd heavy damage at Kfefeld. "particularly In residen- tial (luarters," Numerous blockjj ot buildings and two hospitals were reported destroyed. Forty-four bombers were lost in whnt the air mlnlsto- called a "very heavy nnd concentrated" aisault on Krefcld, on the western rim of Ger- many's bomb-scarred Ruhr valley. The exact slza of Uie raiding fleet was not d!.’<losed. but the overage (CanCnari «n F it* *. C«i«ain Cattle Flow to Maj-ket Very Slow CinCAOO. June 32 (U.fD-The war meat board met today in an attempt to fiUevlaie Uie naUon's crlllcal beef shoruge, while Uie now of cattle tp prlnclynl markets continued abnor- mally low, Meanwhile. Uie National Livestock Producers' ossoclaUon reported Uiat c.ittle feeders throughout the coun- try- ore reporting financial losses, arid tliat “too many o f them” have dlsconUnued Uie fattening of caU lie. , 2,200 Nazi Planes Poised at Moscow AT A RUSSIAN AIRACODRA PIOHTER BASE DEPENDXNO MOSCOW, June a (U.FD-The lu ft- wafto has approximately 3.300 fighU era and bombers on the central front facing Moscow, poised for offetulve operations as the Sovlet-aemon war enters iu third ycor, but the red air torco can m eet any enemy attack. Russian olr offfcera told respondents here today. Tunisia Exploded Nazi Myth O f Supermen, Marshall Says COLUMBDS. O,, June 32 {ff>-Tha Tunisian victory exploded the myth ot the nazi superman, s&ya <aen. Oeorge O. Monholl. chief ot staff ot the United elates army. 'The superman has hnd his dsy." the officer told Uie 35th annual gov- ernors' conferenee. “The democia- clei have called tils blufr.- Auertlng that psychological by- o f the African triumph been "of Immense ________ UarthoU saidf . , ‘.There has been a rebirth of the French arm y with a splendid ex> smple of coxirageous ond aggn^ve fighting pdwcr. The obscrvlnj na- Uons have seen selected Oennan ------ ^------- •Tlie allies have ^tdned confi- dence In eseh other, and the al- lied flshllng men. and Uie scales have so Upped that those nations who have been maneuvering mere* ly to be on the winning side f-nn dq longer escape the conclusion that there ls.no victory in pm pcct for Oermany." Joseph E, Davies, former ambas- ttdor to Russia, expressed belief that had not the red ormy stopped Hitler's eastern drive **the Oennana might have ovetun Africs; might have made Tunisia impossible, and might have m ad ............................. Japs^^lD India ■ *^”Had Uiat happened,--he tolj the conference, “our enemies and not we would today be dktatlns the global ilTtttegy.- less over the disturbance in DoUolt ond wanted to go to assist their fanilllcs." Prc-ildent Roosevelt, In a procla- mailon from Woshlngton, ordered that "all persons engaged In un, Jawful and Insurrectionary - .......... ___' retlro peacetuUy to their homca. Ho called on "all good clt- Uens* to "uphold the lava and prescrvo the publlo peace." Brig. Oeti. William Outlmer, In charge of the troops, disclosed that more troops were being held in rescrvo and that soldier forcea would be amplified today so they could patrol the publlo transporta- tion Unes. rights on sUxet cars had bccomo sq extenslve'thot some crew men refused to work. Mayor Edtvord J, Jeffries ordered all transport em- ployes to retum to tho Job today, however. Federal troops came to Uis city upon Oov. Harry F. Kelly's request OS rioting swelled to new peaks late last night with both mob fights and individual batUes so numerous that !>ollce were virtually helpless. The army begoB on InreJtlgatlon to determine ths .riots' effect On war production. Major factories kept producUon going but reported that m any workers, boUi Negro and white, foiled to coma to work. Climaxing three years of unrest between Ucgro ond white residents, the rioting began about midnight Sundoy, Army Troops Quell Detroit Race Riots DETROIT, June 22 (^=WAn army-enforced peaco settled upon riot-torn Detroit toimy -with the guna of tho military in grim command of the nrea.i where racial fights had spread death, terror and destruction. Ordered by President Roosevelt in a formal proclamation to desist, and with steel-hol- meted federal troops support- ing hia command, white and Negro antagoniata skulked in- to hiding after having caused tho deaths of 26 persons— 23 of them Negroes— during a calamitous day and night. At lca.1t 700 persons were In- jured and approximately IJOO ar- rested and Btlll held this morning. Ot the total under arrest police es- ilmated about 85 per cent were Negroes. On streets where the blood of both Negro and whlto hod run, i,lOO soldiers marched in paUot to tuL^lst the state mlUUa, slate polico nnd city police, iluthorlUes said condlUons were "tnilot," The troops, rolling up In trucks and Jeeps and armed with rifles ond mochino guns, reached Cadillac wjuore. heart of tha city, an hour before midnight. Word of Uielr or- rlvol spread quickly, Within 30 minutes, police lalft, the situation had much Improved. A related Incident which occurrcd Bt the Port Custer. Mich., army post lost night was revealed In o state- ment released by Col. Ralph W ll- tomuth. post commander. "MembesB of one ot the Negro (luartermaUer battalions," tho atotc- ment said. A"a\tetfptcd to secure onns and ’trucks ot' Port Custer Monday night, but were promptly arrested. H ie men had become rest- LONDON, June 22 (/P)— Highlighted by Russia’s call for a second front this year lo bring a quick termination of tho war, both axis and al- lied source.'^ Bounded invasion warning.^ today and the two sides continued m obilizing The B erlin radio, in a broad-- cast recorded by the London Evening News, liatcd concen- trations of allied troops and landing craft in tho Mediter- ranean, including what it de- scribed as "n m a jo r B ritish parachutc forcc." The axis broadcast followed oa allied signal lut night to under- ground forces la Franco to "be ready to oct any moment henco- torUt" Call (0 France Broodcostlng to Franca in the namo of "the Inter-allied high com- mand." tho BBO broadcast -urged Pfench patriots to "be well prepar- J" for an invasion. Tho broodcost recalled a promise msdo tho French eight months ago FLEE! OFFENSIVE WASirtNGTOH, June 32 (U ,R5— The navy announced today th a t American filers hammered ot thrco Japanese air bases In th# souUi P a - cUle, continuing an aerial drive Uiat Is believed to presage a fu ll against major enemy air centers in the Solomons. Array Uberator heavy bombers hit Kleta nnd Kahlll on Bougain- ville Ulnnd on Sunday, but results were not observed. The following day, navy dive o h d (orpcdo bombers, escorted by tight- ens, blasted Munda on New Ocor«la island, scoring hits and sUencins several'ontl-alrcraft positions. Lost Friday's U. S. attocks on Japan’s Gilbert island bases ot T ar- awa and Naum were believed to have been primarily reconnaissance missions. They fortified impres- sions here that a grand-scale Amer- ican ottenslve In the Pacific m ay be In tho making. 14 JAP PLANES DOWNED ALUED HEADQUAR-TCRS IN AUSTRALIA, June 22 M VAm eri- can Lightnings swooped down upon a large formation of Japanese t e - ros over New Quines yesterday, d e- atroyect at least li-a n d probably 33 —and came home wlUiout a single plane missing. Tlie 14 zeros blew up in the atr or crashed to the ground la sight o f Amerlcon pilots. "Tho remaining nine were In names and losing alUtude." a com- munique from General MacArthur's headquarters said. Their complete destruction was most probable." Today's communIC[ue also told o f ground fighting In New Oulnea for the first Ume In many weeks. Sharp patrol clashes occurred in the Mubo area 12 miles southwest of Sala- maua. Ten Japanese were killed and one wounded and one allied soldier waa wounded. “Mystery” Plane Trails Bombers OAIRO, June 22 <fl>-A mysttrioua white plane flying almost eight miles high trailed two miles behind United States Uberator bombers r e - turning from a recent raid on the Italian port of Reggio C&labrla, It waa learned today. Crewmen speculated that the plane which horered above at a safe distance for nearly three hours. mUiht have been a sealed cabin Jun - kers-B8 on reconnaissance. Appar- STAAtP HONOBS POIiAND CinCAOO. June 22 (UJJ-Post- moster General Prank 0. Walker formally placed on sala today postage atamp comaemorating Fo- landt reslstooee taUis axis. Seven Jailed F o r Sabotage In War Goods WASHINOTON, June 22 Edgar Hoover announced today that seven persons had been arrested at Rochester. N. Y., on charges of sab- otage In conncctloQ with allegedly faulty manufacture of Incendiary bombs and hond grenades for the Cnited Slates armed forces and their allies at the Antonclll Fire Works company. Inc., Sptncerpor^ N. y . Hoover, director ot the federal burcou of Investigation, said that those nrresCed were charged wlUi "rtlfully falling to properly ' Uie powder in the bomba and ades." nnd It was cha there were ottcmpts msi pass material previously rejected by army inspectors. Ho named these as having been arrested: Amerigo Antonclll. S3, a naUve of Italy, who become a na(unUlzed cltUcn of this country, president ond trensurer of tho company; Ben- nie Plteo. 31. a noUvo of Roches- ter. a foreman; John DerlUs. 28. i naUve of Rochester, plant superin- tendent; Joseph Dcritls, 10. bom Lattlmcr Mines. Penn, a plant t. perlntcndent: Dominick Barbollo, 30 , ot Saratoga. N. Y.. a foreman; Angelo Costanta. 34. a native ol Italy, a foreman, and Frank Blan- chin. 31, bom In Rochester, a fore- d gren- Four Governors Called for Meet BOISE. June 22 (/I^Rushlng ahead with his plans for a “sUte’a rights" contercnce. Governor Bot- tolfseii prepared Invltotlcns today ‘for telegraphing to chief executives of Colorado. Montana, Wyoming and Nevada. cause I believe they have had more recent experience with threats to their rights man some of Uia cUiera.” Bottolfsen said.' “If they agree, the'goremora ot those states can form a nucleus and governors ot other westem states may Join If they wish." The proposed conferenee would be held a t Boise. ^ttoUsen said he planned to Invite the gov^ors ol California, • Oregon, ............... i^uiiamio, ' wregoii, tvaAiuiigum. TItah, Arisina and Nev Uexlco, well os tho other four. 400 Nazi Troops Drowned in Ship 8TOCKHOLU, June 22 (n—Tmr hundred Oerman soldlett'drowned Juno 10 when the 3.000-ton Oerman ship Blrka sank off the Norv coast near Trondheim, reports Norway said todaj. . Pour- hundred -othera were ported saved. Invasion Plans Go Ahead-Knox WASHINOTON, June 22 (UJO— Secretary ot the Navy Ftank Knox said today thot prepar- ations for opening a European front have been going forward “right along." Asked at his press conference for comment oa renewed Russian pleas for a . second front in Eu- rope, Knox aald h o would not comment specifically on tho-So- vlet plea but be Added: ••Preparations for an ottock on Europe have been going forward right along. Thero hos been no ccssaUon in Uicse acUvlUcs." by a high BrlUsh army ottlclol that Uio allies would give noUca of in- vasion in time tor action from with- in the country. However, the BBO couUoned Meanwhile, the aermotis were reported to be taking strengthening precouUons ot both the eastern and western ends of tho Mediterranean, The Algiers radio said In a broad- vAst that Oerman headquarters for southem'Fronco bad been set up at r. Avignon, 50 miles Inland from the/ coast, where It said a large arroyl of new artillery hod been insUiIled. Crack Division Moved One of Germany's crack divisions, (ho eoth motorized Infantry, waa reported by the German rodlo to have! been transferred to France. The broadcast was recorded by Reuters. This report coincided with an- other from a usually reliable wurce in London that Qeman troop strength in France h a d raVicd from 9S lo 44 divisions in recent weeks. m?klng ft total of about 650,000 Uierc. Ih Bulgaria, whero the Germans have been reported instrucUng hun- dreds of Bulgarian aviators and (ConUnnte (ii Tit* Z. CstiBB I) FORTRESSES RAIN FIRE ON NAPLES 'ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, June 22 (UJ5-Al!led bomber fleets led by about 100 Ply- ing Portresses latarted more than 5S big fires, dhused a mlle-wldf flash of b u m ln f^ ll. and ^k-rtckejl many targets In i scries ot day ontt night attacks on Naples. Rcggld Calabria, nnd tho entire Italian supply ccnter for Sicily. Twenty-Uiree oxls fighters were shot do*Ti. Includins 20 by Ameri- can bombers frt>m tho middle east command. In a 30-mlnute running batUe over Cancello. near Naples, Fortress . gunners knocked down Uiree of about 40 axis fighters at- tacking them. TWO allied planes were lost in all opcraUoos since Sunday night. Tho Naples area was glvea a heavy pasting. About 50 per cent of UiB rallwoy track* -was destroyed at Cancello airport and sereral buildings were wrecked. The daylight attack yesterday by U, 8. heavy bonbets of the ninth olr force on Reggio Calabria, at the toe ot Italy, plastered a ferry. In tho straits of Messina, blanketed a rail- road siding and demolished a large area in the harbor. H ie ferry was seen capslsed later, Bcetbs also tell on targets in the (own of RegglS Calabria. RAF hetkvy bombers also attacied Uio aamo Uirgel* Sundoy night, causing flree but vlsibiUty was poor ' SDd results were not fully obserred.'. FAKE LONDON. June 22 Vichy magailae Bept J«n», which-, reached here today, published a ph*-.. t(«raph o f fin oU'Covered men. la .: the water cUnglog to a life nft.tin* \- der. a capUcn a.................................... U iB ereif'.'o f an I in the Atlantic." . ................. Tbft P h o ^ p h ken from tJje morid, n u Whleii V t y u - #ad-Uw ftewi-Hott'OmrtA- Serre." »ad-Uu (tu ^ -KoU Oo «Dd JotmUlU^ msfly inn r

MM Radai’, New Weapon, on the Production Line Allies and ...newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF069/PDF/... · ers. met aguln In WaslilnRton In oil clfort lo

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lu a w If U»e wt»Pon;^B»m t . . I r t ft talUt*rT •ecTrtr*"* W>*h u sow in>r«vcd pnbUulton ot Uw i t ^ o{ mdar^ dereloim int. .A coMrntbUd A»>dlaUa Prew leriei .U rt._oa t - p . on* l©d»y, wriltea.by J?hn M.

Y on w ant to m ln . thla: Hn>e*New» featoRL- A R c f f io n n l N e w s p a p e r S e rv in g N in o I r r i t t n t c d Id a h o C o u n t ie s

WAR BULLETINCANBERRA, AnalnOls, Jpat, » <A>-

Prlme MlnUter John M. CorUn dctUnd Isnlfbt that ri«*tdra( Itooserfll had pnmlMd AtutnUM etiouh plase* (o InenaM Ihe R A AFs itrtnfth by GO percenL

V Q S i^ JG /N O . 58 T W I N F A L L S , I D A H O , T U E S D A Y , J U N E 2 2 .1 9 4 3 P R IC E 5 C E N T S

S T E E t L O O I S IF MM

, STRIKE GOES ONBj united Pres*

T h e natioa's grcut Bteel mlUa, few llns every vlt4il ww Industry, waroecf In Increasing numbere-to. dny that prolongnUon ot the naUon- wlilc coal itrUco, now In lU cecond <lny, cither would crlpplo their pro- cidctlon or force them to close.

As Solid Fuels Administrator Hur- old L. Ickes ttud John L. Lewis, president ot tho United Mine Work­ers. m et aguln In WaslilnRton In oil clfort lo end tlie strike ot 530,-

' 000 hnrd and so ft coal miners, tho atcci centers reported UwlndUng suppUe.n o( eo<U.

A t PltliburRh. a spokesman for the United States Steel corporation said the rtrlkc will force it to bank more than ttaU ot lu 37 blast /ur- nncc3 by Thursday. Six will be down by tomorrow, tho spokesman iidded, and tho result will be the loss ot thousands of tons of siccl for war.

E I. Evans. Alabama manaBer for Rcpiiblle Steel, reported from Ondsdcii that unless the coal strike

u 1* inded Immcdlntely. llie com- M pany'5 mUbi in that state will be

shut down by nex t week. That wHl Jdlc nbout <^00 steel workers, an<:

-N tho company now Li opi-rutlnR only between 35 and 60 per cent of nor­mal.

S lcc l Industry spokumen nt Chl- cngo s'll'l that producllon In mills In that area, IncludliiK the world’s

' . larBe.-it at Gary, Ind., would bo corlou-^ly curtailed at tho week-end. Coal' rc.'ctvcs already are reduced by the two previous strikes of tho pa.st CO dnys, tliey sald-

Tljc sltlkd by the miners tor woffo Increases nnd other benefits elo.'!«l down all mines operated by DMW members throughout tlie na­tion nnd ihero were praetleaJly no disturbances.

esmiKK, P « m BOOST

I ' s . A.-Mendenhall. OaJdwell. was r elected dtportoicnl comtnander of . tho Idaho Disabled Amerleaa Vetcr-

nai a t a ttrcnaillned one-day con­vention htU in Twin FftJU Monday, and ft 20 per cen t Incrwsa In dis­abled vetemn coniMnsfttlon w

sedlor vlcc-commnndjf: 'Wllllain E. Stone. Tftln RUls, Junior vlco-com- numder; Walter S. Bulllvan.-Qrace, chaplain, and E . Raybom. Twin Falla, judse ndvoeatc.

T lie meeting. fCulled only two days before It eonvened. drew a good rep­resentation of- delegates from nine chapters: Canyon county. Boise. Po~ catello. Emmett. Twin PaJU. Idaho Falls. Gem .State chapter at large. Burley and Border chapter at Wil­der. Members from World were olso In attendance.

Th e theme ot the scsslona. stress­ing adequate and Immediate carc ot World war n disabled T-eterans. was hlshllffhted In th e convention legis­lation.

Radai’, New Weapon, on the Production Line

Iladir set* fbr the-HJ S. nnvT »ra constructed at a New England faetery of the General Eleelrie eom- D»nrr"nadar. • new weapon of World war II. Is an electronle device that »«ndi out nltra-ahort waves whieh are nflteled back on receiver*, revrallnr hldde n ships and r'»nes. their speed and direction of irartl. Radar pUyed a telling "h>le in the victories at Atto, north Africa and Jn (he south Pacific. (U. 8. nary photo.)

♦ >ii * ¥ ¥ ♦ ¥ * V. *

U.S. Drive in Fog-Wrapped Aleutians Impossible Without Mii-acle of Radar

vocational trtOning for disabled vet­erans o{ the present war.

« Voting against "discharge tinder duress." when a disabled scrvlco

• man U foned to state that there was a prior Injury or diseased condition betoro his Injiiry. the group olso passed IcjlslaUon which stated that a disabled reteran Is entlUcd to com­pensation 6r-TJensIon unless in the case o f a felonious misconduct. The D, A . V. ruled that the term "te- ]ottlous' misconduct" should not in elude a venereal condition controct-

■ od before the injury.T h e 20 per c en t Increase ot ......

,■ pensatlon to a ll disabled veterons• w-oukt bo lo offset the rising cost of ■. llvlnir, the convention proposed. An

increase from $40 to tCO nos asked for a ll non-jervlco pennanently and

m ent cominandcr, two aesslMu. E. L. noybom assisted him 03 convention cholnnan.

Soviet Air Force Hits Rail Depots

MOSCOW, .funo 32 0U9—Red &tr force bomber* owrted eight largo fires and touched off heavy ex- plosions la raids on railway stations supplying tho BatoUeya front in the Ukraine, .th e Soviet mid-day commtmlque reported today os the Itusso-Oennan war entered its third year.

The otticks foUowed a series ot raids Sunday night oq Oennan- held airdromes and on troop con­centration]. Numerous fires and ex­plosions were observed at the air­dromes. Other Russian bombers were credited w ith sinking a Oer- tnon tramport and damaging other vessels in a Oerman convoy In thq Atetlc.

' Only minor ^ u n d aetlona were reported alons th e whofs frontwlth Oerto&n caniolUes' during (he past 34 hours being estimated at approx-

House and Senate Deadlock on FSA

WAflHmOTON. Jun# as (UJ9 — ' .H i e fa te of th e tw in lecurtty ad-

^ * jnlnlstraUon rem ained ideadlecked V ■ today M the 1M4 agrlctiltunU ap-

. proprtAtloa bill moved back to "•,house w ith no .cQ m prom lw 'te*u.M .,«

on s e n a te am endm enU re iu e r t in g , 1150.000,000 fo r the »gencT w W th

th e lo w e r c h a m b e r voted to e

The AsjocUted P 'WASHINGTON, June 23 <rt>-Ono

of this reccnt mlroclw of radar al- moel certainly'Is the AlniUans cam­paign. DtspKoi. tho compjete elh; TOW of tu:5Ua^tc^«(i{l?rt3^a .th'/ subject, modern V*rfore,*l>vltm4ly would be virtually ImpoAslble along tliat fog-ciincd Wand ehalfi with- out Iho aid’Of Uili new, wcanon to explore the way and report t iie hld-

shipn and plnncs.'nu- Alcutlnns, oncc considered

us^ci-i bccauso of Uiclr wcntlier, art recognized as having great stratealc value, Orodlt for tho change In opin­ion must surely so to radar—the wizardry of which, v.-e may assume, has been profitably employed In clearing tho tliori northern road to Tokyo.

In (he Atlantic, radar hns been found Invaluable In convoy opera­tions. It enables task force, com­manders to maintain constant checks on Uio ships In'their charge, despite dorknew ond bad weather. It keeps 'thcm-- tully inlormed. loo. of the presence ot aurioced enemy stjbmdrlnea-for mlles^arotmd.'-

use of radoyln convoy <«ort- Jng clo,«ly approWmaU.‘s (he origi­nal t4>cUcni purposes ot tho appara­tus os ouUlned by Dr. Albert Ho>t Taylor of the naval researcli labor­

atory and un a.viocliile. Leo O. Young, In a memorandum to the nnvy department In Scplcmber. 1023. They made Ujc then revolutlonnry suggesUon that with rndlo detecUon equipment, dcstrbyera opcrnOng on parallel lines several miles apart could promptly dbcover the paasflge )I nn alien vc«el between Uis lines 'Irre-’pectlve of log. diirkncss or

smoke serecn."Tlie .^u<;gcstlon nppnrenlly mndc

lltUe Impression on the men who could huvQ Blven a go-nhcad. be­cause for eight years their memor­andum got n o approval, support or results whRever,

Taylor ond Younpr. however, hod iflad# not only tiie basic discovery

’ Accessary'lo tiie development of m - dlo-eflulpntent but ftJso-iiW'tVivl- lloncd Its tactical m cs. The discov­ery camo abtnii, as Li so often true In eclenUfic work, os a by-product of another problem they were work'

ord Bti ru> >•. Ctlgnn B)

FLASHES of LIFE'

COSmiNATION OIIAKHHEnSBURO, Pa., JOne

22—Thieves opened tho safe of a bottling plant the hard woy, by bat­tering oft the knob.

They needn’t have bothered though. The comblnatlo:* was pasted on ihe door.

CONESOKAHLOTTB. N. C.. Juno 23-

Driver J. H. OoIIoway stopped his bus In front ot the Kit K at soda shop,

lie mopped hb brow and went In. He brought back IS cones of Ice cream-one for himself ntwl one foi each ot his M pnssengera.

MOIVER ^SYRACI;BE, N. Y„ June 22-11

was a careful thlcAwho stole n lawn- mower from Uic Ross King home.

Neighbors reported the mnn cm a lew yards ot the lawn, apparent­ly to see It the machine was wortJ stealing, then walked otf with It.

CLIMBER BIlilNQS, Mont.. June 23 -O s.

car DJorgum's tree-cllmlng horse Is back to earth asaln.

It took the firs department, block and tackle, and three hours' work lo do lU

Bjoigum said the animal wi frightened, tried to Jump through _ high fork in a cottonwood tree ond got stuck. None (board.

Buhl and Jerome Yotiths Captives

WASim<QTON. Juno 32 MV- Four Idaho soldiers are among IBT Americans held prisoner )y Gir- man; and Japan, tho war depart­ment SAld today.

TTiey Included: Pfc. Howard W. Molesvorth, son of Mrs. *KaU W. Molesworth. route,one. Buhl, held by ” — lany, and p ;t Dean V . Hen*

n, son of Rtx. s . Henderson,' two. Jerome, held by tUs Jap-

Body of Boy, 7, Found in Canal

BOISE. June 23 OlJ!>—A three-dty search by couoty lav enforcement authorities and volunteers ended late y«ated»r xrith dlsoorery o f the • • of ■ntomai OlockUnff, sewn.

under Roosevelt bridge in the RJdenbaugh omal mat ot BoIm.

IDs younttier was drowned urday when he I«n Into t h ^ from a check gsU atop « Jxfag« bear iru found about one mUe . . low tha apot where he plunged Into the witer.

fiuntroTs Include h li parents, brother u d two listen.

EV AC U EE C E I RHUNT. June 22-Noboru Roy

Todo. 1 1 . one of the seven clill- drcn of a former Seattle, Wash., grocer, drowned last night In the swift waters of the NorUt 6lde canal, which forms the southern boundary ot tho Minidoka reloca­tion sentcr.

Young have slip ..while playing olong Its ........ ..nbout B;30 p. m. The body was taken from the water 45 minutes later Ja<it below the bridge ot the main entrance to Uie center, a distance ot about a mile from the point where the boy felt in. Members ot th» military police escort guarc were stationed olong the canal U wntch for the body before It wa; recovered, ond soldiers ond mem­bers of the intemol security pollci cooperated in rescue efforts, Tlie body was brought ashore by '* tho soldiers. v

Tnda wa.i Uie son of Mr. and Mrs. Klnxo Tada, who operated tlie City Cash grocery In Seattle be­fore moving -to Uie ccnter. Other survivors Include Uiree brothers, Koruo. 20. Takeshi, n , and Shlgeni. 15. and Uiree sisters. Yoko, 18, Komlko (Kormti), tJ, and Uasuko (Carol). 5.

runeral- arrangements had not been made this morning.

Toda's death Is the second otfor the evacuee

. . . the desert lost tall. During t .. structioa ot the camp a coucasla workman drowned while swbunln In the canal.

Postponement of Oil Probe Denied

WABHINOTON, June 33 (/TV-The house public lands commltlM re­fused today' to cooscnt to a request of the attorney general to defer Its tnvosUgaUon ot the Standard Oil- navy department cantroet for deveU opment of the Elks hills (CaUt.> pe­troleum reserve.

T h e eontraet, declareA ‘‘illegal and InvnUd" last week by Uie Justice de-

B U T T O N SBOISE. Jtms 23 M>-Anybody la

the. miuket tor. buttons, snap fasten- ors u u l BSwing machine needles has untU July. 30' to submit bids to Uie Idaho department ot publio assist­ance, . • . -

~ oployes found Ui« articles in . . .tfoom. laiey had been left on frcBn « WPA sewing project.

Fathers to Be Called as Last Resort-McNutt

COLUMDU^. 0.,.June 22 (U.P>— Fnttiers will bo called for military service only when "every last ol- tcmatlve’’ has been exliausted. War Manpower Commissioner Paul V. McNutt said today, but he could not predict when that stop would become ncce.^sary,

in a speech read for him at Uie 35th annual governors confer­ence. McNutt said that "arl(J)> meUc seta the date" when fathers will bo taken and that recently, although the month had been pushed back, "wc cannot yet say how far."

McNutt sold the fortunes of war. tho lowering ot physical Etandnrds nnd taking ot oldeiv men a ffect the date when fathers wlU be called.

Partial Victory By OPA Foreseen

WASKINaTON, Jun e 23 (UJ3 — Sen. Jolin H. Bankhead. D.. Ala., a leoder of the senate form bloc, predicted today tlint final congrcs- slonat octlon on th e controversy over the office ot price admlnlstra- Uon would result In a t least a partial OPA Victory.

KIs predlcUon cam e ..ofter Price Administrator Prentice M, Brown ■pent m ost o f yesterday ot the cop- llol trying to persuade his former colleagues to "give m e a fair chance lo do the Job."

No oction on either the OPA o]^ proprlaUon for fiscal 1944 or the moves to restrict or oboUsh the agency's subsldy-rollbock program was scheduled In either the senate or house today.

Allies and Axis Step up Mobilization for Invasion

It .

American Bombers Heavily Attack R uhr and Belgium

LONDON. June 22 (UPJ-Form.. tlans ot litary American bomt>ers sscccsitully attacked the Ruhr nnd fWglum (oday, concenlrailng tlielr bombi on a aynthetlc rubber plant la nDr(h<rts( Germany, and the for­mer Genftal >Mo(ora plant near Antverp.

Dr WALTKIt CRONKITEL O N D O N , J u n e 2 2 (U.P.)— A

b i f f fo r c e o f f o u r - c n f f in c ( i A m e r ic a n b o m b e rs h e a v i ly a t ­ta c k e d t i i r K c ls i n G e r m a n y ’s R u h r a m i in o c c u p ic d B e lg iu m to d a y o n ly a f e w h o u r s a f t e r B r i t i s i i b o m b e rs h a m m e r e d th e n a z i w a r p r o d u c t io n c e n ­t e r o f K r c f e ld w i t h p o s s ib ly 2 ,0 0 0 ton.s o f b o m b s in o n e o f t h e h e a v ie .s t r a id H o f t h e w a r .

T h e d a y liK h t a t t a c k o n t h e R u h r , m a in a r s e n a l f o r H i t ­le r ’s a rm ie s , wa .s t h o .s e c o n d b y th e e ig h th U . S . a i r f o r c e . O n M a rc h •!. t h e A m e r ic a n s a t ta c k e d th e c o m m u n ic a t io n sc e n te r o f H a m m ,

Only yjyiterday tho DrItWi radio broadcast a warning to tho populn- Uon of.Bclclum lo leave the vicinity ot mllttar}' objectives In antlclpn- Uon'oJ heavy allied raids.

na^Utht Raid ' fAmerlcan hea\7 bombers from

the middle ea«t command attacked Reggio Calabria nnd San Olovannl. Italian mainland termini of tho feny to Sicily. In daylight yester­day, a Cairo dispatch reported.), More tJmti 700 Orltlsh bombers

were engagwl In the nlalu oper- aUons centered mainly In Uic heavy raid on Krefcld.

Official sourccA said that today's attack «os one of tho two deepest

of Germany modeby the Amerlcatus. Thff Ruhr

district had been ottacked by the American bombers who hit Hamm, but torisv’s mls. lon was the firs t by the Fortresse.i Into tho real hcort of the Rutir valley.

Strong SupportAmerican, British. Dominion ond

allies supported tho twin American raids, the first by th e eighth oir force since it sustained a record Ia« of 25 aircraft in attacks on Kiel and Tlremen on June 13,

A Oerman communique, broadcast by the Derlln mdlo. sold tho British nlRlit raldcr.i cau.wd heavy damage at Kfefeld. "particularly In residen­tial (luarters," Numerous blockjj ot buildings and two hospitals were reported destroyed.

Forty-four bombers were lost in whnt the air mlnlsto- called a "very heavy nnd concentrated" aisault on Krefcld, on the western rim of Ger­many's bomb-scarred Ruhr valley. The exact slza of Uie raiding fleet was not d!.’<losed. but the overage

(CanCnari «n Fit* *. C«i«ain

Cattle Flow to Maj-ket Very Slow

CinCAOO. June 32 (U.fD-The war meat board met today in an attempt to fiUevlaie Uie naUon's crlllcal beef shoruge, while Uie now of cattle tp prlnclynl markets continued abnor­mally low,

Meanwhile. Uie National Livestock Producers' ossoclaUon reported Uiat c.ittle feeders throughout the coun­try- ore reporting financial losses, arid tliat “too many o f them” have dlsconUnued Uie fattening of caU lie. ,

2,200 Nazi Planes Poised at MoscowAT A RUSSIAN AIRACODRA

PIOHTER BASE DEPENDXNO MOSCOW, June a (U.FD-The luft- wafto has approximately 3.300 fighU era and bombers on the central front facing Moscow, poised for offetulve operations as the Sovlet-aem on war enters iu third ycor, but the red air torco can m eet any enemy attack. Russian olr offfcera told respondents here today.

Tunisia Exploded Nazi Myth O f Supermen, Marshall Says

COLUMBDS. O,, Jun e 32 {ff>-Tha Tunisian victory exploded the myth ot the nazi superman, s&ya <aen. Oeorge O. Monholl. chief ot staff ot the U nited e lates army.

'The superman has hnd his dsy." the officer told Uie 35th annual gov­ernors' conferenee. “The democia- clei have called tils blufr.-

Auertlng that psychological by- ■ o f the African triumph

been "o f Immense _______ _UarthoU sa id f . ,

‘.There h as been a rebirth of the French arm y with a splendid ex> smple of coxirageous ond aggn^ ve fighting pdwcr. The obscrvlnj na- Uons have seen selected Oennan ------ ^-------

•Tlie allies have ^tdned confi­dence In eseh other, and the al­lied flshllng men. and Uie scales have so Upped that those nations who have been maneuvering mere* ly to be on the winning side f-nn dq longer escape the conclusion that there ls.no victory in pm p cct for Oermany."

Joseph E, Davies, former ambas- ttdor to Russia, expressed belief that had not the red ormy stopped Hitler's eastern drive **the Oennana might have ovetun Africs; m ight have made Tunisia impossible, andmight have m a d .............................Japs lD India ■

* ”Had Uiat happened,--he tolj the conference, “our enemies and not we would today be dktatlns the global ilTtttegy.-

less over the disturbance in DoUolt ond wanted to go to assist their fanilllcs."

Prc-ildent Roosevelt, In a procla- mailon from Woshlngton, ordered that "all persons engaged In un, Jawful and Insurrectionary - ..........___' retlro peacetuUy to theirhomca. Ho called on "all good clt- Uens* to "uphold the lava and prescrvo the publlo peace."

Brig. Oeti. William Outlmer, In charge of the troops, disclosed that more troops were being held in rescrvo and that soldier forcea would be amplified today so they could patrol the publlo transporta­tion Unes. rights on sUxet cars had bccomo sq extenslve'thot some crew men refused to work. Mayor Edtvord J, Jeffries ordered all transport em­ployes to retum to tho Job today, however.

Federal troops came to Uis city upon Oov. Harry F. Kelly's request OS rioting swelled to new peaks late last night with both mob fights and individual batUes so numerous that !>ollce were virtually helpless.

The army begoB on InreJtlgatlon to determine ths .riots' effect On war production. Major factories kept producUon going but reported that m any workers, boUi Negro and white, foiled to coma to work.

Climaxing three years of unrest between Ucgro ond white residents, the rioting began about midnight Sundoy,

Army Troops Quell Detroit Race Riots

D E T R O IT , J u n e 22 ( ^ = W A n a r m y - e n fo r c e d pe a c o s e t t le d u p o n r io t - t o r n D e t r o i t t o im y - w ith t h e g u n a o f t h o m il i t a r y i n g r i m c o m m a n d o f t h e n r e a . i w h e r e r a c ia l f i g h t s h a d s p r e a d d e a th , t e r r o r a n d d e s t r u c t i o n .

O r d e r e d b y P re s id e n t R o o s e v e l t i n a f o r m a l p ro c la m a t io n t o d e s is t , a n d w i t h s te e l - h o l - m e te d fe d e r a l tro o p s s u p p o r t ­i n g h ia c o m m a n d , w h it e a n d N e g r o a n ta g o n ia ta s k u lk e d i n ­to h i d in g a f t e r h a v in g c a u s e d t h o d e a th s o f 2 6 p e rs o n s — 2 3 o f t h e m N e g ro e s — d u r in g a c a la m i to u s d a y a n d n ig h t .

At lca.1t 700 persons were In­jured and approximately IJOO ar­rested and Btlll held this morning.Ot the total under arrest police es- ilmated about 85 per cent were Negroes.

On streets where the blood of both Negro and whlto hod run, i,lOO soldiers marched in paUot to tuL lst the state mlUUa, slate polico nnd city police, iluthorlUes said condlUons were "tnilot,"

The troops, rolling up In trucks and Jeeps and armed with rifles ond mochino guns, reached Cadillac wjuore. heart of tha city, an hour before midnight. Word of Uielr or - rlvol spread quickly, Within 30 minutes, police lalft, the situation had much Improved.

A related Incident which occurrcd Bt the Port Custer. Mich., army post lost night was revealed In o state­ment released by Col. Ralph W ll- tomuth. post commander.

"MembesB of one ot the Negro (luartermaUer battalions," tho atotc- ment said. A"a\tetfptcd to secure onns and ’trucks ot' Port Custer Monday night, but were promptly arrested. H ie men had become rest-

L O N D O N , J u n e 2 2 (/P )— H i g h l i g h t e d b y R u s s ia ’ s c a ll f o r a s e c o n d f r o n t t h is y e a r lo b r i n g a q u ic k t e r m in a t io n o f t h o w a r , b o th a x i s a n d a l ­lie d s o u rc e .'^ B o u n d e d in v a s io n w a r n in g .^ to d a y a n d th e tw o s id es c o n t in u e d m o b i l iz in g

T h e B e r l i n r a d io , i n a b r o a d - - c a s t r e c o r d e d b y t h e L o n d o n E v e n in g N e w s , l i a t c d c o n c e n ­t r a t io n s o f a l l ie d t r o o p s a n d la n d in g c r a f t i n t h o M e d ite r ­r a n e a n , i n c lu d in g w h a t i t de ­s c r ib e d a s " n m a j o r B r i t i s h p a r a c h u tc f o r c c . "

The axis broadcast followed oa allied signal lu t night to under­ground forces la Franco to "be ready to oct any moment henco- torUt"

Call (0 FranceBroodcostlng to Franca in the

namo of "the Inter-allied high com­mand." tho BBO broadcast -urged Pfench patriots to "be well prepar-

J" for an invasion.Tho broodcost recalled a promise

msdo tho French e ight months ago

F L E E ! OFFENSIVEWASirtNGTOH, June 32 (U,R5—

The navy announced today th a t American filers hammered ot thrco Japanese air bases In th# souUi P a - cUle, continuing an aerial drive Uiat Is believed to presage a fu ll

against major enemy air centers in the Solomons.

Array Uberator heavy bombers hit Kleta nnd Kahlll on Bougain­ville Ulnnd on Sunday, but results were not observed.

The following day, navy dive oh d (orpcdo bombers, escorted by tight­ens, blasted Munda on New Ocor«la island, scoring hits and sUencins several'ontl-alrcraft positions.

Lost Friday's U. S. attocks on Japan’s Gilbert island bases ot T ar­awa and Naum were believed to have been primarily reconnaissance missions. They fortified impres­sions here that a grand-scale Amer­ican ottenslve In the Pacific m ay be In tho making.

14 JAP PLANES DOWNEDALUED HEADQUAR-TCRS IN

AUSTRALIA, June 22 M VAm eri- can Lightnings swooped down upon a large formation of Japanese t e - ros over New Quines yesterday, d e - atroyect at least li-a n d probably 33 —and came home wlUiout a single plane missing.

Tlie 14 zeros blew up in the atr or crashed to the ground la sight o f Amerlcon pilots.

"Tho remaining nine were In names and losing alUtude." a com­munique from General MacArthur's headquarters said. Their complete destruction was most probable."

Today's communIC[ue also told o f ground fighting In New Oulnea for the first Ume In many weeks. Sharp patrol clashes occurred in the Mubo area 12 miles southwest of Sa la - maua. Ten Japanese were killed and one wounded and one allied soldier waa wounded.

“Mystery” Plane Trails Bombers

OAIRO, June 22 <fl>-A mysttrioua white plane flying almost e ight miles high trailed two miles behind United States Uberator bombers r e ­turning from a recent raid on th e Italian port of Reggio C&labrla, It waa learned today.

Crewmen speculated that th e plane which horered above at a safe distance for nearly three hours. m U ih t have been a sealed cabin Jun - kers-B8 on reconnaissance. Appar-

STAAtP HONOBS POIiAND CinCAOO. June 22 (UJJ-Post-

moster General Prank 0. Walker formally placed on sala today • postage atamp comaemorating F o - lan dt reslstooee ta Uis axis.

Seven Jailed For Sabotage In War Goods

WASHINOTON, June 22 Edgar Hoover announced today that seven persons had been arrested at Rochester. N. Y., on charges of sab­otage In conncctloQ with allegedly faulty manufacture of Incendiary bombs and hond grenades for the Cnited Slates armed forces and their allies at the Antonclll Fire Works company. Inc., Sptncerpor^ N. y .

Hoover, director ot the federal burcou of Investigation, said that those nrresCed were charged wlUi "rtlfully falling to properly 'Uie powder in the bomba and ades." nnd It was cha there were ottcmpts msi pass material previously rejected by army inspectors.

Ho named these as having been arrested:

Amerigo Antonclll. S3, a naUve of Italy, who become a na(unUlzed cltUcn of this country, president ond trensurer of tho company; Ben­nie Plteo. 31. a noUvo of Roches­ter. a foreman; John DerlUs. 28. i naUve of Rochester, plant superin­tendent; Joseph Dcritls, 10. bom Lattlmcr Mines. Penn, a plant t . perlntcndent: Dominick Barbollo, 30, ot Saratoga. N. Y.. a foreman; Angelo Costanta. 34. a native ol Italy, a foreman, and Frank Blan- chin. 31, bom In Rochester, a fore-

d gren-

Four Governors Called for Meet

BOISE. June 22 (/I^Rushlng ahead with his plans for a “sUte’a rights" contercnce. Governor Bot- tolfseii prepared Invltotlcns today

‘for telegraphing to chief executives of Colorado. Montana, Wyoming and Nevada.

cause I believe they have had more recent experience with threats to their rights man some of Uia cUiera.” Bottolfsen said.'

“If they agree, the'goremora ot those states can form a nucleus and governors ot other westem states may Join If they wish."

The proposed conferenee would be held a t Boise. ^ttoUsen said he planned to Invite the gov^ors ol California, • Oregon, ...............i^uiiamio, ' wregoii, tvaAiuiigum. TItah, Arisina and Nev Uexlco,

well os tho other four.

400 Nazi Troops Drowned in Ship

8TOCKHOLU, June 22 (n —Tmr hundred Oerman soldlett'drowned Juno 10 when the 3.000-ton Oerman ship Blrka sank off the Norv coast near Trondheim, reports Norway said todaj.. Pour- hundred -othera were

ported saved.

Invasion Plans Go Ahead-Knox

WASHINOTON, June 22 (UJO— Secretary ot the Navy Ftank Knox said today thot prepar­ations for opening a European front have been going forward “right along."

Asked at his press conference for comment oa renewed Russian pleas for a. second front in Eu­rope, Knox aald h o would not comment specifically on tho-So- vlet plea but be Added:

••Preparations for an ottock on Europe have been going forward right along. Thero hos been no ccssaUon in Uicse acUvlUcs."

by a high BrlUsh arm y ottlclol that Uio allies would give noUca of in­vasion in time tor action from with­in the country.

However, the BBO couUoned

Meanwhile, the aermotis were reported to be taking strengthening precouUons ot both the eastern and western ends of tho Mediterranean,

The Algiers radio said In a broad- vAst that Oerman headquarters for southem'Fronco bad been set up at r. Avignon, 50 miles Inland from the/ coast, where It said a large arroyl of new artillery hod been insUiIled.

Crack Division Moved One of Germany's crack divisions,

(ho eoth motorized Infantry, waa reported by the German rodlo to have! been transferred to France. The broadcast was recorded by Reuters.

This report coincided with an­other from a usually reliable wurce in London that Q em an troop strength in France h ad raVicd from 9S lo 44 divisions in recent weeks. m?klng ft total of about 650,000 Uierc.

Ih Bulgaria, whero the Germans have been reported instrucUng hun­dreds of Bulgarian aviators and

(ConUnnte (ii Tit* Z. CstiBB I)

FORTRESS ES RAIN F IR E ON N APLES

'A L L IE D HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, June 22 (UJ5-Al!led bomber fleets led by about 100 Ply­ing Portresses latarted more than 5S big fires, dhused a mlle-wldf flash of bu m ln f^ ll. and k-rtckejl many targets In i scries ot day ontt night attacks on Naples. Rcggld Calabria, nnd tho entire Italian supply ccnter for Sicily.

Twenty-Uiree oxls fighters were shot do*Ti. Includins 20 by Ameri­can bombers frt>m tho middle east command. In a 30-mlnute running batUe over Cancello. near Naples, Fortress . gunners knocked down Uiree of about 40 ax is fighters at­tacking them. TWO allied planes were lost in all opcraUoos since Sunday night.

Tho Naples area was glvea a heavy pasting. About 50 per cent of UiB rallwoy track* -was destroyed at Cancello airport and sereral buildings were wrecked.

The daylight attack yesterday by U, 8. heavy bonbets o f the ninth olr force on Reggio Calabria, a t the toe ot Italy, plastered a ferry. In tho straits of Messina, blanketed a rail­road siding and demolished a large area in the harbor. H ie ferry was seen capslsed later,

Bcetbs also tell on targets in the (own of RegglS Calabria.

RAF hetkvy bombers also attacied Uio aamo Uirgel* Sundoy night, causing flree but vlsibiUty was poor ' SDd results were not fully obserred .'.

F A K ELONDON. June 22

Vichy magailae Bept J«n», which-, reached here today, published a ph*-.. t(«raph o f f in oU'Covered men. la .: the water cUnglog to a life nft.tin* \-der. a capUcn a....................................U i B e r e i f ' . ' o f a n Iin the Atlantic." . .................

Tbft P h o ^ p h ken from tJje morid, n u Whleii V t y u

- #ad-Uw ftew i-H ott'O m rtA-Serre." »ad-Uu ( t u ^ -KoU Oo «Dd JotmUlU^ m sfly in n r

Page Two TIMES-NEWS, T W IN FALLS. IDAHO Tuesday, June 22, 1942 .

A LLIES ANO AXISIFr.. rut 0»1

«up«rvl£lns Uie corutnicUoa or air* ileldj, tanka and bomMn «# be­ing accumulated, the Stockholm newipftper Altonblwlet said In a dlipalcJi to Hcut<r». /

n«> Drire UmlUd?Previous Kporli tliat UiB wrangle

between Hitter and hligcicn ltuir ]md been settled In (aror of llmll> Ing tlie of/enalve In Ruijla In order to meet a weatem Inmlon were aupported by th# Yortaliire Poit.

Oermany. sliecked by reccnt re. verees. is (aclng a mlllury and po­litical crisis, but the allies mu3t open a second /ront la Europe this ycnr If they hop# for a quick vic­tor?, the Rusilana declared on tha second anniversary ot ilWei's kn- va.'lon of the Soviet union.

In a spcclal oonimunlquo broad­cast by the Moscov radio, the Sov­iet information bureau tald:

"During the past year the Ger­man army liaa had no mlUtary juc- eeises. On tho conimry, It has juf- (ered one defeat alter anoUicr or the Soviet front and In Jiorth Af­rica. nius, as a result, the German military power has been shaken and a crisis enwitfi.

Not Enouih"But tliu Is not enough for

tor)', ever)'thlng now depends Jlow tho nlllES will use the favor­able situation for a second front, without which vlctori' Is Impos­sible."

nevlewlng Uie two jeari of Uie bloodiMt urugjle In iiUlory,

Beans for Butch

Germany has lojt 43,400 tanks, 68£00 Runs, and 43,0M planes an compared with IlussUn losses cf 30.000 Unks. 35.000' gum and aJ.OOO planes, said the communlqu ■was recorded by the Soviet here,

:t monitor

Today's unnlversary found the millions of soldiers facing each oth­er along tlie front virtually dead-

. locked, with activity confined to nrtlllery exchanges, scouting for­ays and a continuous exchangs of nerlil blows.

NO PACIFIC INTBRFBRENCE WASHINOTON, June 23 (UJ)—In

addition to sUUng at his press con­ference today that allied InTulon plans are iiolng right ahead. Sec­retary of the Navy Frank Knox,

' also said that u far as he knew there has been no Interference with Russian supply ship movements from the United States Pacific to Vladivostok,

Dutch, th e En*ll.ih bull maseol ot a battery at Camp Caltin, Callr.. b u hU own private mcu kit. and is a bit Irritated here as Sefft. Andy Yutms pretendi to nteat n bite. lU. dMroiy ilgnsl corpi photo.)

don’t know. But noUilng has de­veloped on that route which would provide an IntemaUonal IncldenU

•'Both sltles fipparenUy are keep­ing very carefully away from any-

• thing that would preclplute an In­cident while the Russians are cupled with Germany on the W' and Japan doesn’t want to take nualtt."

As for Uie United States’ Pacific supply lines, they too are function­ing. he said. Any tosses which have occurred, Knox sold, have been nounced.

: Morgan Elected Chest President

New community chest .officers •were elected at it meeting of the

. board of directors Monday. Officers . for the coming year are A. W. Mor-

Ban. president; Arthur 8. Bockwlti, vice-president: Thomas C. Peaxey, treasurer; and Jefin Baag. secre­tary.

President A. W. Morgan wUl choose n committee to go over the constitution and by-laws to bake recommendallons • for changes. U u-as decided tlinl Uie constitution and by-Inws were outmoded iuxl ImpracUcable.

Recruiter Added To Navy’s Staff

Nash Bartnagi, yeoman third elsa from Boise, has Joined the staff of the Twin Fulls U. S. navy recrulUng aulMtJillon. It was announced today by Ray Robbins, recruiter in charge,

Barlnaga has been attqchcd to the Boise main recrulUng station since Jnst October.

The HospitalOnly emergency beds were avall-

■ able Tuesday at UioTn'ln Palls, ty general fiespiuu.

ADSIITTED •Mrs. Donald P. Groves, Mrs,

Chester Louclu. Philip Schafer and '• W. C. Pierce, all of Twin Falls, and

Ceorge w . AnUiony, nier.DISMIBSED

• - trtckie -Wilson. Eugene Kerbs. Louis Kuka. Mt«. B. H. Downs and J. W. Wyatt, all ot Twin Falls; Valdl K. Baker, Frank Boyd and Mrs. Harley Henltln and son. all of Flier, and Mrs. Emeit Edmonja and daughter. Buhl.

WEATHERHeaitertd tight' shewen te^j;

cooler today and tonight High yes­terday 84; law yesterday Law this mbraing 4S.

Keep the White Flag of Safetii Flying

■i Kcj8 ttoo ttays icithout a traf/io fatalitvin our Uaoio y.filey . .

P V I . F E D M L SR t. R*7. F^ojik A. Rlitft. EpLlcopM

t>lflhop of Idaho, will conduct mem­orial services here Thursday for pvt. Fred W . noils, who died In (tie Philippine l.ilAnils June IS while

prisoner o f war.T h e memorial rltM will be held

. ; 0:30 a. m . nt the Church of th Ascension. Private Rolls was a sot of Rev. E. Lcallo Holls, vicar ot Un cliurch, and Mrs. Rolli.

Tho ceremony to be conducted b; Blsliop Rh«a. tl was annowtti will be communion scrvlce. Specla m usic and cliolr offerings ar ' Ing planned.

Stewart RoUs, brother of Uie late soldier and o. Uudent at the Uni veralty of Santa Clara, l» expected to arrive from California In " for the memorial scrvlce.

private R olls, at first reportec m issing In tictlon and then reported a prisoner o f the Japanese, u jnctnbtr of the AWfetlcan 1 on Corregldor.

300 DIED IN PRISONS WASItrNOTON. June S3 (URJ—

Three hundred American.* have,dlcd of disease and mtJnuirltlcni Japanese prison compj since .... fall of Bataan and Corregldor, the war deparUnent disclosed today.

T h e aimouacfiment was based reports from the International Red CrcM. Chief ca\wtJ ol death. In ad. dlUon to berl-berl. a disease of mal­nutrition. were malaria, diphtheria, dysentery and pneumonia.

Previously the Japanese had re- jrted 300 American deatlu due to i lU e wounda. —

PRICE O F m E JU M P S 40 CENTS

CHICAGO. June 23 </IV-Caltle received at tlie Chicago market to. tated only 6,500 head today—one oi the smallest Monday shipments In several years — and sellers forceC prlcca up 35 to « cents a hundredpotinds.

Normally, receipts over the week- nd In periods of favorable weather pproxtaato la.ooo.Livestock experts at the yards

told producers were withholding cattle from th e market m a result of th e sharp break In prices a week ago but that most of the losses have been regained and, as a result, they looked for a resumption of normal morkctlnga Aoon.

O ne of the focton bclUnd the curtsUled ahlpmervts. livestock ex­perts said, VOS the "confusion’ w hich resulted from Uie announce, m ent of the 10 per cent rollback In meat prices which led to the sharp declines & week ago. Producers who normally t uy light cattle and feed th im to put on addlUonal wSlght apparently chose to hold back cattle until market prices recovered.

Baby Son of Buhl Soldier Succumbs

BtTHL. June 23-James Richard Wheeler, three-day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Wheeler. Buhl, died Monday morning at the Twin Polls county general hospital.

Funeml nrrnngements are pend. Ins Irom the fpther, who :i

th e army stationed nt Texas. , vivlng beildea Uie parents ore o

brother. Ronald Dean. 17 months. Tlic body lies at the Evans and Johnson funerca home.

Divorce Asked in Marriage of 1911

Divorce su it has been filed In district court here In a mirrlaga which took place April 12. IIU at U laden. N»b.

Thtt petitioner Is F. D. Orcutt, who iKcuies Mrs. Dlmls A. Orcutt

•ty. eH aaks Uiat commurlty .- ..r - r — »wwded to lils wife and th^t custody «f Uielr (wo tons.

14, n o t be adjudicated by .- -- r t . O. C. HaU Is attorney

f o ^ th c husband.

Sight Killed in Crash of Bomber

MOSE3 LAKE. Wash., June 2S (>D - E ls h t army <lrmen died In the cnuih of a heavy bombing plane 18 miles «ouUiwc»t of here yesterday, Lieut. Col. Clarence D. Bamhlll.

officer at the Moseslake a m y air base, announced to­day.

T O O LATE TO CLASSIFY

H li e u i POINIS(F ro . P .( . On.) ___,

five per cent loss ratio IndTfaC Umt It may have totalled 800 l ^ b -

Severe Loa.^The loss equalled that suffered In

the l.OOO-plane raid on Colosne last year. However, most- of the force which attacked Krefeld wos believ­ed to bo four-englned SUrllngs. Hall- faxes and Lancaitcrs. whereas the Cologne formations Included a large proportion of two-engined planes.

Every type bomb from two-pound rire bombo to B,000-pound super block bustors was unloaded on Kr«- feld. which was one of the first clUeS In Oermany to feel the impact of the- four-ton mL'tslea. ReconnaH-

! photOBraplu sliowed that one . ..le four-ton super block-busters

deva^tnted r.lx scre.i In the renter of Krefeld on Oct. 2. 1042, In whnt

I regarded as an "operational r since the blast wn.'i so terrific that this type bomb could not b« tftMed In Englaml.

Oermiui plnnrs oKi'I'i struck back feebly iMt niRht and early today, scatterlnx a few bombs In eastern, southco.'^tcrn and southcni England,

e fell In the London area, where nlr raid I'ltu-nis were sounded, daiiwge both In Ivondoii and Uie

ether nrrius was reported slight and there were only a few ca.HualUes.

AIR nOMINANCE WON ADVANCED AIR DASE. NorUl- < t Africa. Juno 112— (Delayed) — P.i—Tlic nlllc-1 have won air supe­

riority over the axl.? nnd can bring It to bear as the supreme factor for victory In any Uieater Uicy desire, Llcut, Oen. .Carl A. Spuatz, deputy commandtff o t the African air forces,

lid today.Air power alone. In fact, could

knock out ft nation. Sphati said. If such strengUi w-ere thrown heavily enough against the nation's heart.

Spaatz' ctatements were based partly on h is observation of the Pantellerla victor)-, w-lilch he watch­ed In Itx final pha.iu from the deck oi a destroyer oil shore. The Ital- larr Island capitulated following relentless nlr bombardment.

Tlie allied superiority In alrplar Is true botli o s to munbera and qual­ity, Spaatz Bald, adding tliat Uie United Nations are moking new air­craft faster nnd better than the axis.

He said tho Pantellerla bombing, plus the acrItU victories In Uic Tuni­sian campaign, proved his belief Uinl all ponHcr ndmUilsVcred lo a naUon'a heart Is enough to. wreck It.

Twin Falls News in BriefHem* From fariland

W. 0. Ilonold h ts retumwj from a two-week, visit wliu » daughter In PorUand, Ore. . ,

Cadet at Keanii . nobert L. Kinder, an army pre-

Bvlatloa cadet. U now tUUoned Uio army air forces IrolnlnK ccnt«r al Kearns, qtah. l{o Is tha son o( Mr, and Mn. O. V. Kinder. I3fi Ash.

EDOCATORS TOLD lUSES 1 S T LAST

ALBION. June 22—Forty Idaho county superintendentn were warn­ed today by W. A. Arntaon. SeatUe office of defense transporUUen of­ficial, that school bu.ies now In op- eraUon must lost for tho ,duraUon. He urged cooperaUon In reducing

•The school bu.1 supply, li limited." he declared. "It Li a question of con- eervlng wlint wo have. Every mile cut off the transportaUon routes win extend the service life of the bus by Just that much.”

Amtson said cooperation between districts In reducing mUeage trav-

■ ■ bw es was one of Uie best_____holding wear on Urea andother equipment to n minimum.

The ODT man also suggested a service through, the sta te superln- dent's office by which schools need­ing buses would hear o t eecond- hand buses that might be for sale.

Publlo hea lth was an Important feature of th is afternoon’s program, vlth the schedule of speakers In- :ludlng B. !>. Small, Boise, state sanitarian, nnd C. E. Cotton, sani­tarian for the south central Idaho district health unit.

C. E. Roberts, slate spperlnten- dent of publlo tnstructton, said only three counties were not represented

the meeting.

1,304 Killed in Turk EarthquaEe

LONDON, June 23 .yr>-Ileut«rs reported from Istanbul today that UOl dead had been counted so far In Uie Turkish earthquake which shook Anatolia Sunday.

Pre.« dhpatches said about 1,000 buildings were destroyed and 1,000 were damaged In the town ot Ada- paz.1. near Istanbul, and It was re­ported offlclrtlly that about half the buildings in nearby Hendek were wrecked.

Hcscue trains carrying doctors, nurses and worker* were arriving from Ankara. Istanbul and otherpoints.

The dispatches said that Ada- paia’s main street \a s almost wiped out that the town's electricity aup- •1y was destroyed.

(An earlier accmnt bi the Berlin radio reported ■ ' ' ta’s 30,000 popul

0 have been kill

Cubs Defeat I In Morning (

CHICAad.Juna22a-"'w u

Cher, the Chicago Cubs defeated Ui, Plltiburgh Pirates. l-O here. Uils morning. Paul Derlnger gave up....... safeties.

—j score by Innings: PnTSBUROH OOO 000 0 0 0 -0 7 ICHICAQO ..... OOO 000 lO x -I i 0

Pedgajny, Butcher (8) »ad Lopes. OerrlJiger and McCullough.

POBSIBLE E&CATE ritOBED Louis Martin Stanley. Jrn 37. was

being held In the county Jail Tues- day while officers investigated the

H. C. E dm unds & Co.Pn6ftc j4«0Kn/anff

In Urter Quarten t t BIAIN AVE. NO.

Mme lo^ e ind Women of the Mooee wiU meet at 6:30 p, m. Tuesday, June 29, In the Odd Fellows hall. There wUl bo a business meet­ing and iolnt socUL

Biding Ctnb Bteel Pioneer lUdlog club wlU meet at

. p- m. Friday at the Dennis tuilHs academy and after a ride will go to Uie Claude H. DttweUer home for a poUuck supper.

Soldier VlslU ~ 'Pvt. Preston Henman is here on tBft week furlough from Camp

Wolter, Tex. He Is vlslUn* his fattier. O. E Henman: brottier. Dale Henman, jmd oUier relatives and friends In Ttvln Tails.

Reading Club Meet Summer tleadlng club will hold

Its third meeting at 10 a. m. Wed­nesday at the Twin Falls public library. The meeting 1s children of grades tiilrd slxUi.

Shed Calehci Fire A frame shed la Uie rear o

P. A. Julian home. 423. Main nue iouUi, caught [lr« a t 0;4Q Monday from sparks from a flj;e. The fire department quickly extinguished Uie blue, and damage Svas said to be slight. The property Is owned by Reese Williams.

ludler to Behool . :ently granted his bombardier

wlngi at Uie army's bombardier school at MldUnd. T ex , Lieut. Ver­non W. Crumrlne Is now taking t couTJS In "dead reckoning" tianga- Uon at Uie Carlsbad, N. M., ar alf field. Lieutenant Crumrlne the son of a A. Crumrlne, Tttiii Falls.

i Air StaUoQEnsign Harry Benoit, son

and Mrs. Karr; Denolt, has been assigned to the naval olr stailoii at Jack-wnvllle, Fla., for 10 weeks of training. Already occcpted air cadet tollowltig hla graduitloti from Uie U. 8. Naval academy.'An­napolis. Ensign Denolt will ftm be

t on sea duty aboard a destroyer Septembcv'. His brother. First

Ueut. Edward Benoit, is • " lU nt at Will R .

I, Oklahoma City.

San FrancUco Guesli .Miss Mayme Ssge u d Miss'

■■ boUi of SonPranclsco, have been vbiusg Mrs; Sage’s aunt, t o . Russell "

■e now In Ketchum for a visit.

Co. K to Meet Co. K, Idaho state guard, wlU

meet at the Legion hall n g p. m. Wednesday. It was announced by Capt, Winslow Potter, commanding officer. Maneuvers will be held in an area near Uie city, the captAln said.

Bebe Pair W eS •.Joseph O. Gross and Gladys Do­

herty. boUi of DoUe, were married afternoon at a ceremony

Prisoner’s Wage Rule Uncertain

The question of wages to be paid axis prisoners working on farms here alter conitrucUbn of the pris­on camp at Paul remained up in the air Tuesday, after the question had been passed to the army by D. L. Fourt, Boise, director of tho emer­gency farm labor program.

Upon Innulry by tho Associated Press, Fourt flnt said ho Uiouglit 5?T agreement would bo reached whereby the prisoner* would be paid prevailing wage scales, so they Would not compcte unfavorably rlth other farm workers."Pan of tho prisoners’ pay. -

aald. might be heM baclc by the army to be given the worker# upon Uielr return to their own countries after the war."

Fourt later salilie had oaked war partment offlclales for a state-

. on salaries to be paid prls-......j for form work, but that hehad received no reply.

Aerologist Posts Open to WAVES

phenomena of the atmosphere, Is field open to a selected number of qualified applicants la the WAVES. . Seventy women are tp be chosen within Uie next few m onths, the navy announced. RequlreroenU for applicants Include a college degree, with at least one year of differen­tial or InUgral calculus and at least one year of college physics.

In calculus andphyslts Mc d«lT*We. and 'KOcnts\ under SO are preferred.

In addition to becoming regular officers In Uie WAVES, women

oglsts will be given an extend- .ree course at Boston insUtute

of technology and possibly a t otlier well known technical schools. Spe­cialist Ray Robbins, chief navy re­cruiter here, said Magic Valley ap­plicants should write dlrecUy to Uie office of naval offlcar procurement, Beattft.

Forest ChutistsWill Fight

33 CP>—PalFire

BOISE. June 33 cn-Parachullsts equipped with special sulfa to pro- ‘fct them ogalnat falls and flames rill help batUe forest fires In Idaho

Uils summer.F o«sl« C. N . Woods

- said plans wcr« com­pleted for use of Uie plane-dropped fighters who •■will cany standard fire fighting Im ^i ■ — *■ ": such I

.. ttxe, shovel •a tf water bag. Wood said plans for combatting

flrea In Uie nation’s foresU In Uie fut<ire Included Uie use of beUcopter planes.

Wanted—Male

B ookkeeperPerm anent poslHon, s o o d payt good future. <*!▼« r « f « rencea, «*p or l«n c* ..AvjtJlabimj cj|biQ«J*. n w ^ ry._______ _____

■ Bex M r, Iimea-Nfl»» .

Max G. Bandy, pharmacist's male f lril class and a savs overseas vet' eron. San Pedro, Calif, »nd Mr*. Maxlno Pilgrim. Maywood. CaUf.. have relurneS to their homes after

week's visit with Uielr parents.

OUier relaUvej.

Drill Time Changed A change In time for tonight’s,

drill of Co- Idalio volunteer re­serves, was announced by Capt. W. E. Clark, commanding officer. The company will meet at B p. ni. today at the Legion 'hall, rather than the usual 7:30 P- m.. Captain Clark said.

IN 6 0 1

Naval Ueut. Olln E.'WeedmaK-ls In 'Twin Falls on a three-day leave from his base In New York' City. Ueutenant F’reedman lived In Twin Fulls for a brief period 37 years ago —at Uiat tlmo Uie-MagV; City" was only a few months old, and so was the lieutenant.

Lesion Will NominateA special meeUng of Twin Pc

Legion post No. 7 will ^ held 8 p. m. Wednesday for the nomina­tion of post officers. It was an­nounced by Harry J. iSiylor, post conjmander. The Legion election will be held July 31, and Initalla. tlon of officers will come In August

Wyoming OuesljMr. and Mrs. C. Clyde Smith had

os dinner -guests Monday Lleut.- CoL Wllllftm A. Ranck and Mre, Ranck. with children. Jean and Charles; Capt. E P. McCormick and R. E. Sharp, all of Sheridan. •Wyo.

BirthsTo Mr. and Mrs. Chnrlts Bolyard.

Twin Falls, a daughter, Monday;Mr. and Mrs, Ralph M. Robison.

Hansen, a daughter. Tuesday, and Mr, and Mrs. John Hollon, Twin

Palls, a daughter. Tuesday._all bom At the Twin Falls county general hospital maternity, home. To Mr. and Mrs. Otl* Cooper, Jerome, a son, Sunday, at the Wren private home.

NaVlgaUon Training '• ,► j'LleuU Ernest J. Cook, son of Mr.

ind Mrs. D. Harvey Cook, 580 Fifth avenue enst. has reported to tM Carlsbad army air field, Carlsbad,

M., tor a course In "desd reck- onlng" navigation. Lieutenant Cook recently wa. awarded hU wings at the bombardier school at Childress,

Marriage Lleenses Three marriage licenses were Is­

sued bv the county recorder Tues­day morning and Monday after­noon. Those receiving them were: James Juker. 31. and Ruby Pflstcr. 23. Buhl: LaVell Jay Dates, 17. Twin Palls, and Kathleen Perkins, 17. Murtaugh: Joseph O. Gross. 43.

"and Gladys Doherty, 39, both of

BUHL, June 33-Worahlp sen- ices conducted by Rer. M ark-0, Cronenberger, pastor of the Twin Falls Christian church and presi­dent of tha state board, this after- noon opened the Uire«*day 44th an­nual eonvenUon of Swith Idaho ChrlsUan churches being held in the First OhrbUan church here.

’The opening worship service be­gan at 3:30 p. m.. after reglstraUon and assignment of rooms had be­gun at 1 p . m. Delegates and vls- ito n earlier had begun orrlTlng from Uie 18 souUi Idaho churches to be presented at Uio meeting, tad are being quartered In the homss •ot Buhl Christian church members.

Ship Borrlier Drawing on her experiences on a

ship sunk In Uie souUi AUanUc. and a period u a nazl prisoner. Mm . a . O . Henderson, Canadlaa missionary, was to cllma* Uils aft­ernoon’s session of the convenUon with an address, ’'Powtf In Ui« Midst of Peru.” Mn. Henderson wat a passenger on the ‘’Zanuam,’ which was torpedoed early in Uis war, and her husband now is serv­ing. against his wlU, as a physician In a German prison camp. -

Another outsUuidlng speaker .. this afternoon's program w u to be wmiam B. Holder. Indianapolis Ind., director of church mainten­ance for the United ChrlsUan Mis­sion society.

Rev. Alvin L. Klelnfeldt, Burley pastor end convenUon president, presided at the afternoon session.

Legion CbapUU). . jronenberger" will ondiH

worship services opening tonight session, which will be presided ovi. by Paul De F . Mortlmore, Pocatello, secretary of tho church'a state board and naUonal chaplain of the Amer-

Seen TodayPrt Prtston Henman, f it _ ..

fiddle and 30 pounds heavier, hceie on furlough from Texas, sporting ft couple of medals for his eagle ey» as a marksman . , . Man-oo blcycle, wearing blue Jeans and blue Jacket, pedaling noochalanUy .along ’ - walk, holding on to empty v li... Jug , . , Soldier and girl friend In roM «oior«d d m s. walUi^ hand In hand . . . . Arlene Lowery busy at newly created Job of deputy city clerk . . , U. 6 . marshal’a prisoners being herded out of courtliotise af­ter spending night co the toad In JaU here . . . Oreen coupe bliUiely cruising second sUtet north wlUi no hood over engine , . . Cixrl Haw­kins complaining that photo makes him look not as alender a s It might (Uie camera never llesT) . . . And Uils post card to BeenToday: 'U li car wlUi two' American Sags on back, driving between 60 and «0 miles per hour, between HoUlster and Twin . . . Yes, you guessed It, I read Seen “Itoday—A TTmes-New* Prlend."

nnd Rev. Teddy W. Leavitt, pastor the Clirlstlnn church at Ellens. rK. Wa.-ili.. will speak on "I Am

Not Ashamed."Tlie convention will continue

through Thursday, closing that night, after election of officers and trnnsactlon o f other business In the oftemoon.

Warning Hits at ‘One-Plate’ Cars

Motorists who remove one license plate—or both plate^-to escape having speeding vlolaUons reported *- the office o f price odmlnislration

J simply Jumping from one fry­ing pan to another.

That is the warning Issued by State Policeman W. L. Ohancey. who «ald such had been one effect of OPA’s recent announcement Uiat speeders would face petuilUes In the form of gosoUna ration wlUi- holding.

■The department of law enfone- ment U strictly enforcing the law requiring 1043 plate* on motor ears," declared Choncey. "Drivers of ma­chines without intense plates are Inviting prosecuUon." .

Throng Expected At Ceiling'Parley

A largt crowd ot Twin F alls tood retailers is expected to attend the meeUng at 8 p. m. today a t the Park hotel at which Uie new “dol­lars and cents” celling program is to be explained by state office of price admlnlsUaUon officials from BoUe.

‘This Is an Important program." declared Carl N. Anderson. raUoti board chlcf clerk, "and n o mer­chant selling food at retoU can a(- ■jidjiM, to be thwe."

■nfe program to be- discussed, ihlch will affect more than 700

food Items, Is to go Into e ffect here Thurstlay., -

Meat Shortage in Idaho Threatened

the L

shortage was probably because of congressional elimination of a sub­sidy program which was designed, the packers sold, to cover losses suf­fered by packers In lowering the prices of Uielr meats to reUUl ouUets in atcordance with rollback price orders which went Into effect today.

* W A I T E D *Used Cars

A N D W E ’ L L P A Y H IG H E S T C A S H P R IC E S

G LEN G. JENKINS

A RATION TIP - ByV ' I A t h N T O T E l .U M E

I B O N 'T HAVE TO 0 S 6 A N V M ORE P O IN T S FOR

moi ninctAILK

D/ ^ n ' s R i c H r , ' \

n 'iQ U M T IT Y . m o u A u r y

THAT'S BBINO

Starts Tomorrow!3 S « ui e, thra S06

MED AS IT WAS. Ue..At White Heatr

TODAY & w ed ;

Tuesday, Junft22,1043 TIM ES-NEW S. TW IN FALLS, IDAHO- . > Page Thrco •

ntnEsitioRv: P H T ltiC L E A Il

COLUMDUS, O.. June 23 (vry— O cn. aeorea 0. U onhall, nnoy chief of «lio rtecntly vislUd the American the»t*r of war, de- ctu-ed last night Uie Onlled NH' Uoni’ “pilltrn for rlctory is clear.

• Oentral MMshal!, to ft »peech pre- pwred for the iSlh goTemors* con-

• ■ lertnee. werled -Uiero l4 n o vie- , tory In.prospecl far Ottmnny." then ■ JuiawSv

■The tupennan hns had hla d#r. The demoernclu ha<re called hu bluff."

■The pattern for victory Is cleat. Uie officer said. "If we had se t 0* BUge we eould not have provided A more Jharply dtJlned picture th»n that offered by the battle of tilslB.

& "Thcrt we hod; A perfect exnmr • 9 of eoordlnawd leadtrtlilp lor nlllfd action; on niSfmbUg* of ovrr- whelmlng military power, air. land aad sta; the explotlve effect o f tl * skillful appllcaUon of that powel

Critical EommrrThe general warned, however,

tliat “this It a most critical summer both for us and In Ihc hhtory of Uic v?orld."

•■We have paiied through the period ot military adolescencc." I'e sold, "our Initial deployments have bceri completed and lines of com-

"QuantJty producllsn of both and materiel, (lie former Ik nti ■ a pattern os tlie laltcr. is n on In lull blajt. Tlie entm)''* Initial ad­vantage In men and suiu, niid In ahlp* and planes. ha.s been over, come. We have ulzed thr Inltlatlre, the most vital foctor In war."

General Marshall cautioned that . while the Tunisian triumph se t the ^ t t e m 'the tasks will be Increas­ingly tlllllcult. MSMally with the BTt>t hazard of on over-watcr approach

k and a heavy balilc to be mnln- ■ tnlned .beyond the beaches."

"The way will be far from en»y. the losses heavy, but the victory ccrtAln," he said,

Difficult CondillonBHe observed, too, that the Ijnttle

for Attu Island htul special slB- nlflcnnce since "«c encountered probably thr most rtiriiciilt of flRht- Ing condition. ’ In nn amphibious opcratlcn-

Tlie general advUed sgalnst wa of opllmbm conceralim the war r aLio fignlnst "linsly conclusions Impromptu conceinlons rcgnrdmg the uillltailon of nlr power or any special weapon In this war."

. "f am convinced more and more each day," he added, "that only by a proper comblnailon nf wnr-mak- Ing means can we achieve victory In the shortest imwlble time nnd with the greatest economy In IKc.

"Panlellerln was »n experiment tor which there'appcarert Ui be. nnd

.proved to be. a fnunrt logical basis, However, the Uluntloii there was •tinlnue fts w llie clinracter of the

. Islnnd. ihe qiinlUy of the giirrl-'ion, I the complete n.-ival control of tha

surrounding waters and the proxim­ity of allied airfields.

'The victory of Tunisia was fa­vored by overwhelming air powtr, but the itsult wottW have beeii f atalemate ulthpatagncHlycJroupd ojidnaw i action.' ^ ^

He’s Advancing

FIRST SGT. W. I. WEBLINO (Army al; forre phel»_6laf(

Encravlnii

Buhl Boy Fast Climbing at Big

Army Air BaseLA JUNTA, Colo.. June 23—One

of the younffe. t firU RerpionU at the La juntn nrrny air field t w ninrd I. Weillite ol the I03nd ba-'ie hadqunrters nnd A. B. i ron. It Li his l&.ilc not only t. . Dcrvlse the running of the orderly roomr'sliut to' keep watch over his m en whoS^old down Important po­sitions in every staff olllce .on.the field.

In years of experience, ' Vcs: he is called by intimates. Is a r comer to the army. Shortly after his Induction at Fort Lewis, Wash,, June 4, 1041. he wiui sent to the nrmy air forces advanced flying school at Stockton field. Calif., for hl.n basic trnlnlnK. Upon completion nf hU* basic, "Wc.s" was nsslnned to duty on the fllRlit line a.n nn ' plnne tnschiinlc, where lie made olid cln.u spocliillst In lliree mdnths.

In September. 1341, he wn.s taken off i»he line nnd placed In the er (Anccrliig office rw; a elfik, nnd wi soon promoted to corporal. Alti rlRht ninnlhs of clrrl;lnK diitle.?, Wc.sllng wa-s tiaiisfiTr’d u> Die c dcrly room. In ihb capaciiy he b promoted tc> sernrant on June 1042.

Ordered lo l.n Juiil.i In help i llvntc Ihf ntlvanerd flUng tcliool here. SerReniii Weshng wa-s ap­pointed nctlni; lirsl sergeant of Ihe cndre ihni iirrlvod here to form the bate lipatltiiiarier.H jj]uadron.

H e l.s a 11.11 Ivo of BiiTil. attending the Unlvmltv nf Iilnho Imm 1335 to 10311, 'vlth Ihe oml.'-slcn of a ye.ir In which he worked a.s as.<;lstani mnnagcr ot a itore In WttiaUh'ce, Wn.'ih.. in earn his lulilon to return to school.

After he left the university he was employed In the eiiRlneerlnR dcpnrUnent o! the Dunlier Hlil imd Sullivan Mining company w tl l tlie tim e of his Induction.

PLANE CAllERr PROIECTGONVOY

- By DCDE inVIN L0NI50N. June 23 M'}—As n pas-

inger bn a,freighter on Uie flank of the flrat major convoy protected by -one of the new pocket aircraft- carriers .1 had a dull time, by and large.

^v e r a l days o f battle Involving the convoy's escort, both ships awl plants. bro\isht n o t one "acUon station" alarm, only one actual clash w ith in ,s igh t and but few bombs or depth charge explosions wliMn hearlngp

News of the battle came to the shlp.% of .the convoy by voice, radio reports nnd Instructions which flew between the ships of the convoy, their escort vcsficls and the protec­tive planes overltend—a drama that .leemed to be played In another world.

One D attle Seen •> Kxcept for one clailj which was visible from ono of our carrier* about ^ ix miles away—I might Just as well have been listening on shore to a radio account of the struggle, which ended w ith every ship In my group reaching port safely.

The plane dived from the sky and relca.icd Its bombs. A column of water reached for Uie clouds. The plane dived repeatedly over tlio spot, machine-gunning the partly submerged submnrlne. while several c.«ort vciiels sped to th( - complete the kill.

Not a sun on our ship .., except for one light anti-aircraft gun—nnd that nt a tin can.

Mo.m pf the battle was carried out by our Aurfncc cscort and planes which were out o f sight over the horlion IB to 20 mile.? from the main body of tho convoy. Tliat'o iow

DIplano J*atrol Tubby little biplanes taking off

from the pltchlnj; deck of a convert­ed merchantman carrlcr patrolKd over nnd around the convoy from early morning un til diuk, rcgardlcw ot the weather on the changeable Atlaiillr.

Shi)re-ba.«cl SunderlamU and Ul)- eralor.-. occasloniilly pn.%.s«l within .sight of the convoy, too, but thrlr prc.sence Kcnerally was only Icam* rd from the rudlo. whasc cryptic c'hKttcrliiK told one dramatic after another.

One pilot forced a surface with liLs bomtvi. Then he reported that he was diving again 10 niaclilne-(yni the U-boat. As hw ship .screanied Into the attack he left

ijimlller on nnd we could c roar of hLs of his Kuiu,

LDS to Require Right Answers ' I’o 7 Questions

OOUEII, June 23 (/T) - Members I Itie L. D. S. church who i

called lo serve iia missionaries Mho desire to'bo married In i temple must be preiiared to e satlifoctory amwcra lo seven ques­tions, said Thomas • E. McKivy. as- tbtani^lo twelve, nposlles, as north Wtber Hake quarterly confcrence

as held Sunday.Tlie .seven quc«llonj. .Do v«u otjscr\’c the word of sixth

'Worn? 'Do you pay tithing? Do you keep

lie Sabbath day holy7 Do you attend Bacramcnt meet-

Ingj?Do y : Of

Lord In vain?• Do joii lead a virtuous life?

Do you sustain the authorities of tlie church?

e .".lid "If ever there was a tli netd^ tlip bles.slng.1 of OckI now, because we arc livlnK k days."

Final Meeting of Church Unit Held

JEROME, June 22-A final mcet- hiK of the Rcncrftl r.\ioclatlon Prr.vbvlcrlaii women was held In cluircli parlors w ith more thai In attfndance. ”

'Die church parlors were de ated with bouquet-i of peonlc.i nnd ro.i« nnd Illuminated by candles held hi candelabra,

Parildpating In the ceremony were .Ml.w Marlon Pranson. Mrs. Wllllw,! G. Phoenix. Mrs. S. C. DavLs, Mrs, J. R . Webster. Mrs.' Floyd o, Deetlall nnd Mrs. Lumar Dydley,

c . P. Sm ith, general lely president, prc,'.10cit at the btisl ne.'.s .'r.vsion" which loTlowed.' Tinan- clal ami reports o f the year’s ac» tlvUIcj were reiul by Mrs. C. W. I'rounson nnd Mra. J. T. Stclle, pre.sldent'i'of clrclcs one and two.

Mrs. Alrlan I.Ind.say, who'^reccntly rctiirnpd from Colombia, spoke.

S TA TE’S PUBLIC AlO LIST L O I R

BOISE, Jutie 22 oi’f—There were IBfl fewer persons receiving public assistance granL-i In May Uian April. Pubhc A'.slsiancc Commis­sioner H. C. Baldridge said. Includ-’ ing a drop of 85- in the number of recipients, of old-age atslstunce.

Tlie total recclvlns all assistance ;as 13,C03, repr«entlng 13551

households. All categories showed decrea.scs,

Total expenditures was ,Mfl232«,- l, a dccren.se of *4,576.40. The av- rago payment wa.s t21.12 , up five

cents.neclplenu of old-age as.sLslance

numbered 0.8B7. recelvhig »268,4»7. down *1.038, tor i\n Jiveroge of

ReclplenUs ol aid lo dejJeniltnl children ininibor 5iB2 children In 2,101 famllle-'. a ilecrciise of 62 families and ir.9 children. Expendl-

ires In ihLs eategory were »71£6S, decreai.e of J2,10G. The average

as »3!i.4B ppr family, the same I In April, or *13.36 per fhlld, up

Six fewer blind persons, 253. celved n:vMsti.iirc lotallnK *7.07 decrcoic of Jlic. Tlie average *27.97, an lncrva.se of :o in-nt?

Direct a.S'l.stance went to persoiw In 44 roiintles. down from April. Toul expcndllures

golons Predict War to End in

October, 1945WASHTNQTON, June 22 (/r)-If

members of the house arc good Judge.s. the war uon't bo over until October. 1043,

Reprc.tcnutlvc Wikon', n„ Ind.. recently mailed ballou lo all mem­bers. asking Uielr views on Uie hrngth o f the war. >

CompUlnB resuiui today, he sold October. 1044, was tlie average date selected by the 140 who answered as the time the European part of the war will end. An additional year will be refiulrcd to finish oft Japan III the Pacific, according the consensus,

Herr arc the reMilLs nf (he piill 0.S dUclosed by Wllfion:

Twenty believe the war In F.ur- opo will end thLi fall; one believes the Pacific war will crtd this year; nine believe the Job of beating Hit-

next yenr and 21 expect It to tak until' the early part of 1045; fiv mcinbeni Uilnk 1040 will ilnd \is sli fighting Germany.

...... aa-i *14,0B3B4, a decrpflK'*328.46. ivnd Uie average pa’ "'“

*17.01. nn lncrea.se of S7

R U P E R T

Ffe, DcB BuIIocIc, stationed at San Angelo. Tex., spent a short .furlough here with his parents, l ir . nrid Mrji. Alonzo Bullock, returning to his base At San Angelo.

Mn. Lillian Hnyne.s and son Fred Haynes have returned from Cali­fornia,-where h e has been In de­fense work and Mrs, lisynea visited.

More than 40 members of the Rupert Christian church m et for &

velcoms party at th« parsanoeft- for B«r. D. E. Allen. Mrs, Allen nn d - family. A u^elU cvenlnB was 'cni joyed-Bnd>e«lsptc5ente<l,- :

Mr. anil Mr*. Craner and bnbyi Burley, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Snapp and two children, Rupert, are visiting nt Anderson dam.

Mr..and Mrs. Ilarry MldtlestcaJ • and famlUi have returned from

LbC A L & INTERSTATE

MOVERSI.C.C. LICENSED TO

OPERATE IN * <VESTrBN STATES

tah-ldaho-Calif-Nevadg-OregonF O R D T R A N S F E R

Phona KULLY INBUnED CAHItlEnS.SKILLED EFFICIENT MOVEnS m iO

AltE MOf?T CAREFUI. MOVING PACKING. 8TOIIAOB AT LOW COST

Conneei H'ith Van Serrica Anynhcr* In Amerlea

Dtimpgi’Qund Odors Bring New Protests From Citizen Group

The nibbage disposal qucsUon, >-hlch made city olflclala feci last year that the summer was hotter than It probably really wa , flared nealn at Monday night's meetinE o( Uic council, when a delegation np- peared to protest continuing use of tho dump ground toutheoat o t Twin Falls,

, Tho delegnUon, consisting o f 11 . realdentj of tiio dump ground vicin­

ity and headed by Carl JiJhgst. made I Its appearance a few hours after

drlHlng had begun on a well n t Uie , dump ground which Is designed to . luniish water for the control o f fire - and abolemcnt of a smoke nuL^ancc.

The delegation teemed lo be prompt­ed by Inlerprelalloii ot tlie well as an IndlcaUon that tlie city la plnn-

' olnglorpermonentujcofUilsdump Sround,

,,. Jungst, proprietor of the Inde- , pendent Packing company, was first

of tiie delegaUon to oppeoi•tated the case ___before Ihe oUiera arrlvcd-seven in

. « ic group and three in anotljer.CompUIni of Odor

He said that when dumping In that locality began last summer tlie resldcnta were Oisured it was only

• temporary measure, ond Uiat h ne- locatlon would be souglit. He said mo dump ground had been a con­tinual flro hotard, Uiat refuse ond dead animals create on unbear-

• Able odor, and Uiat resldenU of territory affected were "up In a

Councilman Truman T. Oreen> hnJgh. whose deparimcntal duties Include garbage and nibblsh dispo- aa). explained to Jungst that the

. welj now being drlUed Is i ' * plan for eventual handlin, >..v c l^ dump in the way it Is handled «t Salt Lake City. For Iho prcsei

.ihe said, this will mean keeping t dump weU soaked. op< having .. m in on hand to jypefvlse dumping.

, Wth • a view to vering odorous matter and oUiefnlse tending the

. premises.Qreenhalgh indicated that later

on It may be poalble lo place a raoU buUdoMT-al thc.dump ground, M Is In opemUon at Salt Lake City, *0 os to level off ood pack d<mi

.material dtunped, and cover It with

.olrt where necessanr. Tlie council- n a n indicated hi* beUef Uiat these measure* wUl eliminate fire and ttiQke ffoin the dump, and reduce

opof to a minimum. This, h# »|(1. Is the COM at Salt Lake City, Wtero tijB dump ground Is located “ Out * mile from the city limits. •Orecnhalgh emphaslied that '

• rity had been unibla to find ^ c r dumping sites where the'cost

•“ would not be prohlblUve.OUien P nia i

delegation1521'“ prot wt -

Herbert Os- O' Under*. They vlr-

tu o ^ h d d their nose* as they do* KJibed tftft odors tanaaUna from

« Iwid owned by the city, ^ decUred th*t ‘MmetWng b os W ie done about it rlfht away."

Several llmc.s dnr:.......... .........slon nicmbora of Uin delegation In- ferrcd that court ncUon might fol­low Uie city's failure to alleviate tJie sUuiiUon.

OrccnlialKli, Miiyor D«t A. Ewcet arid oUier infmbcr.'i of Uie council sketched Uie troubles Uie council ha-s had with garbage and tra.sh disposal since I. G. Pf«cott up hauling it last summer, and nsk- ed for Ume to work out the prob. lein along tlie lines no-j/ Intended.

"There l.s no qiie.slloii but tJia- anlmnl carca-vic.s must be burled," declnred Sweet. ‘TJiat wc can sec lo. and we shall. Tlie rest ol the prob- Icm will be solved by u « of tlie well now being drilled, nnd cmploymdit of n man to supervise dumping.'

T iie dlscu-v;Io» was carrl._ . . . jiilnst a background which began ore than a year ngo. brought Jer- n c county Inlo the picture with

a vigorous protest agalmt Twin Fall.s dumping on the north side of annke river canyon. riW jinnlly landed the unwanted stepchild In the city's lap u-hen Prescolt dccldfd It wtw more trouble than the busi­ness was w t h .

chrbage to Hop City oiflclais—Grecnhalgh at

timo also had ehargo of traali gartage disposal—purchased a r ern- earbage disposal bed for a irnck already owned, by the city, and Qreenlialgh and Charles P. Larsen mudc a trip to Sail Lake City to ie« how the problem is handled there. 7710 edible garbage is now fed to hogs. As for Uie trash dump, Uis city six monUis ago was planning the well, and the pump was secured ftfUJr Jong delay. All equipment Is ----- ready fo r ................

b Twintho well is completed Palls Canal company.

AnoUicr poalble ultimate Boluuon to tho garbage and rubblili disposal problem camo in discussion near tlio closo of Uie meeting, wlieo John B. lla>-ca, city engineer, recommended eonstrucUon of an Incinerator. It could bo bulJt on Uie site of the present dump ground, he »ald, and would,, pw ld e „.Ulc:.cheape«.long^ Ume method of solving Uie question.

“W e should Uke o les«m from history." declared Hayes. “They ore digging up old clUes now that bur- led themselves In their own debris.”

Mlgbt JOe Forced Kayes pointed out Uie existence

; B modem move to halt dumping of garbage and other refuse Into water course ohonnels, and to th o poesibUlty thot Uie ell, time might bo required to build — - typo of disposal plant.

/o r Sweet also dt*pose euggestlMi ihat refuse be over the Snake rtver canj-on rtmrock during Uil* part of the discussion,

"Plana are being made for cor.. strucUpn of & ecenlo drtre «intn tho canyon after the war." he »ald.- “It couldnt be dumped U«re."

T h e final decision of Uie group oa Uie dclegaUon'B protest va* to pto< cfcd v lth present plans, vllh a re* quest for patience on the part of the prot«ston until Uie efficacy of this method caa be detr— ' ■ S T A N D A R D O F C A L I F O R N I A

• Pago F o u r TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FA LLS, IDAHO

Tl01«. MUblllhlk] IB IHJ, I

P04tafCk« In Twia8UUCB1

PT CAnSlEB—p;

S E C R E T A R Y C U R T IS A G A IN Secretary o f State G eorge H. Curtis h as a

fa c u lty for Jum ping to the dcfenae of the n a tio n a l n d m ln lstra tlon 'w lth some statenienL In w hich lie goes com p lete ly overboard.

W h lJ e t h e g o v e rn o rs o l Id a h o , Wyoming a n d M o n ta n a 'h a v e j o in e d fo rc c s In a s t r e n u ­o u s p r o te s t a g a in s t fe d e r a l e n c ro a c h m c n t o n s t a t e r ig h t s . S e c r e ta r y C u r t is m ak e s a n a t ­t e m p t to r i d i c u le s u c h o p p o s it io n . H e o v e n g o e s 50 f a r a s to a rg u e th a t"b rO B c le n lp J o f B o v e m m e n t c o n t r o l a p p a r e n t ly Is t l io b e s t t i l i n g f o r a l l o f us . - .......................... - ......... - .......... -

G o v e r n o r B o t t o l f s e n o f Id a h o J s - f ig h t in g t h e g o v e r n m e n t ’s p r o p o s a l to c o n s tr u c t a s to r a g e 'd a m a t A lb c n l f a l l s , T h e d a m w o u ld r a i s e L a k e P e n d O r e i l le ’s w a t« r le v e l to p r o -

. v ld o 2 ,000.00 0 a c re f e e t o f s to ra g e w a te r f o r u s e a t t h e g o v e r n m e n t 's B o n n e v il le p o w e r

, p l a n t . ^■ T h e g o v e r n o r o f M o n ta n a is J u s t as b l t t e r - ' l y o p p o s e d t o a s im i la r p r o p o s a l f o r a n e xce ss

s t o r a g e d a m t h a t w o u ld ra is e th e le v e l o f F la t h e a d la k o I n t h a t s ta te .

“T h o g o v e r n o r o f W y o m in g h a s th re a te n e d w h a t a m o u n ts to “ c iv i l w a r " I f th e g o v e rn ­m e n t goes a h e a d w i t h I ts u n d e r -h a n d e d m e t h o d o f a n n e x in g J a c k s o n K o le as a n a t i o n a l m o n u m e n t .

D e s t r u c t i o n o f p r o p e r t y Is n o t th e o n ly o b je c t io n t o r a i s in g la k e le v e ls . ’The loss o f s t a t e c o n t r o l o v e r I ts o w n n a tu r a l reso u rc e s Is r e g a r d e d as e v e n m o re s e r io u s . A n d so I t Is w i t h t h e n a t i o n a l m o n u m e n t . V a lu a b le g ra z ­i n g r ig h t s a r e n o t t h e o n ly th in g s In v o lv e d b y a n y m e a n s .

__ B u t j t ’s t i l l v c r y s l m p le to .S c c r o ta r y .C u r t la . H e w o u ld J u s t t u r n t h e w h o le w o rk s o v e r t o t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d e v e ry o n e w o u ld be h a p p y . \

‘ “ r h e g o v e r n o r o f I d a h o w i t h a w h ls k b ro o m • « a n a o t h o ld b a c k t h e s e a o f c o o p e ra tiv e p r o ­g r e s s f o r t h e c o u n t r y i n g e n e ra l, " says M r . C u r t i s b l i t h e ly . " I d a h o c a n g o a lo n g ( w i t h t h e ' r e s t o f th e c o u n t r y ) t o p r o s p e r i ty o r g r e a t ­n e s s , o r n o t , a s s h e c h o o s e s .

“ I t m ig h t J x is t aa w e l l b e rc co g n lz c d t h a t t h e t h e o r y o f s ta te ’a _ r lg h t s , as h e ld b y r e ­a c t io n a r ie s a n d t im e - s e r v in g p o l it ic ia n s f r o m t i m e im m e m o r ia l , Is n o w a s fu U le as o t h e r v o t e - c a t c h e r s o f t h e p a s t , l ik e - th e ‘ b lo o d y s h i r t / ‘ th e f u l l d in n e r p a l l , ' '54 :40 o r f i g h t , ' a n d ‘ n o e n t a n g l i n g a l l ia n c e s . ' ,

“ T h i s n a t i o n Is o n e a n d is g o in g p la cc s . A n d t h e In te r e s t s o f t h e n a t i o n a n d o f th e s ta te ."

! a r e c o m n fo n : ” , -V-S o c ia l is ts , c o m m u n is t s a n d th ose w h o a re

r e a d y to s w a l lo w p e w d e a l ls m in i t s e n t i r e t y w iU a g re e w i t h S e c r e ta r y C u r t is . T h e y h a v e n o h e s i t a n c y I n r e p u d ia t i n g th e c o h s tltu U o n , T h e y ’r e n o t c o n c e r n e d a b o u t s ta te r ig h ts , b e ­c a u s e I n t o t a l i t a r i a n is m t h e y v is u a liz e a n e a s y e x is te n c e . T o t h e m , c o m p le te c o n tro l b y ' th e g o v e r n m e n t s e e m s th e lo g ic a l s o lu t io n .

B u t m a n y A m e r ic a n s s t i l l b e lie ve th e re Is s o m e m e r i t t o p e r s o n a l I n i t ia t iv e , w h o p r e fe r a d e m o c r a c y I n w h ic h t h e p e o p le h a v e a v o ic e , w h o a r e n o t r e a d y t o t r u s t th e i r fa te to p o w e r - s e e k in g b u r e a u c r a t s .

I f S e c r e t a r y C u r t is p r id e s h im s e lf In b e in g •a s h r e w d p o l i t i c ia n , w h ic h w c 'p re s u m e h e d o c s , w e . m ig h t r e m in d h i m o f o fte th in g h e h a s o v e r lo o k e d . M o s t o f th e s e w e s te rn s ta te s o f o u r s a re s p a r s e ly p o p u la te d . W h e n i t c om e s t o v o t in g , t h a t ’s a f a c t o r t h e g o v e rn m e n ta l b l g - w lg s k e e p i n m in d .

I f t h e y c a n ta k e th e re s o u fc e s o f th e s e s p a r s e ly p o p u la te d s ta te s a n d ^ o v e lo p th e s e re s o u r c e s i n t o b e n e f i ts w h e r e th e e le c r fo r is r e a l l y c o u n t . I s S e c r e ta r y C u r t is s o s u re t h a t th o “ i n te r e s t s o f th e n a t io n a n d o f t h e s ta te s a r e c o m m o n " ?

F o r ' In s ta n c e , l e t a f e d e r a l ly - c o n t r o l le d C o lu m b ia r i v e r v a l le y a u t h o r i t y de c id e t h a t th e w a te r s o f S n a k e r i v e r c a n bo p u t t o b e t t e r u s e t h r o u g h a g o v e r n m e n t p o w e r p la n t I d O r e g o n t h a n i n I r r i g a t in g th e fa r m la n d s 0 s o u t h c e n t r a l Id a h o , t h e n w h e re is t h a t c o m m o n In te r e s t?

I n v ie w o f t h in g s t h e g o v e r n m e n t a lre a d y h a s d o n e to s a t ia t e i t s t h i r s t f o r g re a te r p o w e r , w h o I s th e r e t o s a y t h a t n o s u c h t h i n e w o u ld b e p o s s ib le . A n d s h o u ld I t c o m e to p a s s , w e l l p r e d i c t t h a t M r . C u r t is w i l l b e , s e c r e t a r y o f s o m e - o th e r - s t a t« - th a n - l t iR h n ____ I

TUCKER’S. NATIONAL

W H I R L I G I GFEAR— Allied exptrts di^tiot look for » «pcedy lur-

I render, of the Qennoris. dejpUc erowlng evidence of I U)B United Natloiu' overwhelming lupertorlly on

_ land, sen and In Uie »lr. Their pes- ■Unlsm conccmlns lh« dat« o( f i­nal victory la based on economic raiher than itrlcily mlUUiry fac- t«rs.

Junkers, who wo the eonirolUna class In the telcli, hara always tak­en A Ions rango and teUbli vlen- polni. They are utterly reaUiUc. &’cn before the Ink wu dry on the treaty of Venalllej, and at a time when Qermany acemed doomed to remala a eecond-rate nation, these plotters were haUhlng »chemea to regain European and even world

dominance. HlUer and the present conlUct are tho producta of ihelr eonnlvonce. i

It U expected mat they wlU flsht on unUl u'ley Imve crcated such chaos on earth that no country can einergo as the victor. SpecUically. they want to prolong tho war untU Uie Drltlih empire cracka up. enmity la engendered between Moscow and Ui# weaU

ipltala, and the United Slatca becomei vlrtuaUybsnknipt.

Tft-o recent developments'r« tude aa well fta the concern c grim pro.specta, Nail papers wamljiBS thnt Uicy will not iu

/ n d the Pope's Inteat - f a "glqbul re>Vatlcur

’flecl Uils mental atU- if statesmen over Uieso have carried definite

Ifcr alone In the atter- ila the

consumern becaiisc

phnrmnclea have

whose let

KURVIVE—Numerous cs prises muy be compelled to of the lack of faclUtles for

Laundries, neighborhood food stores, dress ahopa been the principal casualties la expected to lengthen within especially after Ubor day.

flcod every Washington --...-I, ...— vw..B.v.v,..,tiiji iijullybags os well, attribute their trouble.? to the policies of OPA and Paul V. McNutt’s war monpower commission. Honest mer- chanu cannot competo with bUck market competi­tor* who nre willing and. able to obtain suppUea Uirough pnyment of Illegal charges.

Alihoiigh federal and local ofllclals are tryUiK to do their best, they ndmlt candidly that It Is almosf- Imposslblc to enforce the prlce.JUlng lawj and ng- ulaUons as It was to Impose prohibition. A large part of the public, they say, shows no dlspcBltlon to com­ply. and this rebellious 8t. to of mind is spreading rnther than dlmmi.ihlng.

Tlie lo.« o f skilled speclalLits to war Industries and 'tlie armed scrvlce.i has hurt the smaller establish* ments and will eventually hit the big chains. Wlth- .......... ......... ..................... dnigglsts, driven

e not auch Ion

t their cus r tntny of then

cleaners the retailers tomers. If the strife 1 will not survive.

— - ....... .Insiders regard the Iniemallonalmachinist*' threatened withdrawal from the Ameri­can Federation of Labor as a tempest in a teapot. No action can be taken until Uie executive commit­tee meets in August and It is prob&ble that the dif­ficulty will be pntched up by then.

The Incident is chlcfb’ Important because It high­lig h t Wllllnm Orcen'a worry about the turmoil In his ranks. Harvey Drown, who heads the mutinous mechanics, has right on hU side. WlUlam L Hutche­son's carpent«rs have been Invading the michliilsLs' fields, a fact tt)nt was conceded some yeirs ago,"

It Is incumbent upon Mr. Green to serve warnings on violators. Ho carried out tliat duty until 1033.

But the A. P. of L- leoder is afraid of tho burly Hut­cheson, who hasscs one of the largest and most pow­erful. orgaiilzaUotui of workers In the nation. If Btll should enforce labor dccrces. Huteh might pull outteam u .1 John L. I*wls and have the.................. ’iU i hlfl plaugh on Mr. Green

Mr. Drown, on the other hand, runs a comparative­ly small outfit, and only 12.000 oj his members are affcctcd by the Jur^dlcUonca dispute.

GIIEW—Moviegoers may t>e shown more films de­picting the diplomatic Intrigues which preceded atid coiitrlbuwd to tho present worW conflict. It appears that production of "MlMlon to Moscow," based on former Amboisndor Joseph B. Davies’s book of tho same name, lina started a vogue in this line.

Apparently as an offset to this attraction, a rival cinema corporation Is trying Ip persuade Ambassador Joseph C. Orew to allow hla "Report from ’itikyo" to be translntcd to the screen. In that volume ho de­scribes how Japan prepared steadily and jtealtlilly

a aljowdown with tho Uncled States. So fsr th<

HOW THINGS APPEAR PEOM ®

PEGLER’S ANGLEIn Uiat case, congress reroked his

decree «nd coogreu undoubtedly would do the some If Mrs. Roosevelt, through execuUve order or 67 other peremptory means should attempt to Impose the limitations on fre« elections which she oo« advises. H us her proposal Is not Immloeat- ly dangerous but It does show what Urs. Roosevelt had In-znlnd and. on

Tuesdfl^Juno 22, 1943

CHIOAGO-Mrs. velt has been prophetic so often la the past that It would be

A NA LY ZING C U RREN T NEWS

FROM NEW YORKHUNOER-iTTio great Soviet war

machine has done so well lliat many persons expect It to perlurro mlrncles beyond Its capacity.

tinaij'st*-Of recognlted------warn us Uiat nussla has n

her peak irhed

...........— .incl bymeans of her own resources cannot Iwtter her mater­iel output rec­ord. Should a des­perate lllitCT. 1ml- t t t t ln g Hlnden. burg In the iMt s t r u g g le , pack everything Into one mighty stroke, t h e Mc«covltea

Aikrt c o u ld be sorely_ wounded.The cables from abroad hare

pointed ei^ouraglng pictures of the. dnmage . inflicted by red aviators

VIEWS OP OTHERSBE CAREFUL SENATOR

Idaho’s Senator jSiyj Thomas told Price Adminis­trator Brown lu Washington Wednesday that price

s fanners received for nator that hs thought

1 good price."

roll-backs were lowering ,... their cattle. Brown told the the farmer was getting "a dc

Whereupon Thomas fired ____' I beg your warden but you’re not advised of the

..................." ■■■ t 'at the fanner is get-cattle, hogs or ani'thlng

Of course Senator Thomas was viewing the farm­ers’ situation from tho comparable ccuts that go into farm production. OPA Brown was comparing prtsertt farm prices with those he recalls from ether years but he was overlooking many basic condlUons.

PUrmers In this community well understand what 'raomas'waa telling the price admlnijtralor, and these some formers know from actual ilruigle the unfair prcdlcoment tliat they are battling b order to comply with their patriotic desire to meet food for freedom Boala,

Drown-may or may not Uinve been speaking the mind of the President, but tjie chances are that he made tlic statem ent with authority to discuss the matter.t.In the extreme situation facing this r

farmer* are' to be Compared In ei-ery waj soldiers, ’n iey carry on despite the Washln; handicaps. And we tlilnk they will continue until they linvo a chance to rectify the i tho meantime they find what little consols la 'In the efforts of well-grounded men Ui,;Thomas. No one should assume, however, that they ----------paying attention to the white collared.......

liter. In on toere

C O M M U N I S M I L L E G A L T h i s Is w h a t S u p r e m e C o u r t J u s tic e J o h n

P . C a r e w f h a r g c d a t r i a l J u r y i n N e w Y o r k C i t y t h e o t h e r d a y :

" T h i s m a n h a s n o . r lg h t : t o b e a c o m m u n is t. C o m m u n is m , t t i e a d v o c a c y o f c o m m u n U m Is a c r i m e u n d e r t h e c o n s t lt u U o a o f N e w Y orfc a n d t h e la w s o f t h e U n it e d S ta le s . N o m a n

- h a s . a l e g a l r i g h t t o be a c o m m u n is t h e re “W e c a n ’t v o u c h f o r t h e v a l id i t y o f th e la w .

. b u t w e a p p la u d t h e lo s le .

AfTERTHOUGHT )• T h e n e w J a p a n e s e m in is t e r o f s l ^ e w ith o u t -

- p o r t f o U o h a s w a m e t l h i s p e o p le t h « th e y n o w " .-,/ac© ^ 'a n u n p r e c e d e n te d ly g ra v e s ltu a U o n ." ■ ;;.2 a o u r h j m b l e o p in io n M r . O o to ’s w a rn in g ; ls ; {V n 3 p d e I o f d n d e r s t a t c m e n t . W b a t th e N ip s

■ i s u t t e r a n n ih i la t io n , p r e -■ '« ^ d d e v a s ta t i o n « u e h U « v e n n o t t e r d m i n e m ; , k n e w . •. :

cooner. .I* ,--'";- ' - V . ' f t - . , '

bureaucrats who make the 'damformed Washli:good prices’* »t................

’The farmer would Uke to have a fair deal and some day soon h e - ls opt to step up and demand ft in' a way Uiat tho present adminlstxatioa wlU be « long lim e forgettlns.—Boise Statesman.

............. .— - - .................ent lor a pay as youBO tax for monUis President Roosevelt h u signed

•th^bUl-and-the-new-setup wUl-aoongo Into-effKt.-^They caU It “pay as you go," which It 1*. Jou wUl

have the tjullc of your tax deducted from your pay check If you a w empkiyed. In any event you wUl pay currently <]urlng the year In which your liuoffle Is earned.

You've no doubt rtad that you are to be -forgiven" 75 per ceot of either your 1041 or 1H3 tax, but don't ffo out aad spend the money, because y'our gain may bo long delayed. The fact Is that you will pay Just as much this year, next year and the year after that i you would nave paid anyway, plus 3S per cent of no year’s t « .The gain la Uiot U ym should die or lose your

Income, and yoTTwHrao-toUi eventually, though we hope not for a long time; you or your heir* wlU not be left with a bill to be paid the following yeaiv la thl5 sense there will be a gain. To Uie treasury there wUl narer be. a loss because U will keep edlectlng from you or whoever takes yoUf-pUce as touch or' more Uua before.-Najnpa Pree Press.

V]ee>PresideQt Wallace pU ss the orstnluUon of a W A alter tho war that wlU make the old WPA look Uke lyienny-aate game. TUs new WPA plans a pro*

s p e ^ :!hUlKms ofdoUara'’ on pubUo *orki.

( tU T 0 kra a s / l « r t a t that U ne.-> W alU c« iSoff.

Inflicted .■n tne luftwaffe li

night. They have mlnlmlied the retaliation meted out by Ootrlng's f l lc « on Qorkl and other Slav auto­motive centers.

Pressure on StaJln's transporin- tlon system has never been eased Thirty-eight million people fled from the najl InvBsion: their trc' to tho Urals ond distant filbcrl. created a_prcIonged rallroail and food crisis.

rorty million Inhabllanls o f them workers-wero lost ii. ....vm- plcd territories. Ijist winter’s Soviet odvan'ces set some of Utem free. But-Jhese were dcstitule and Uielr rchablliutlon has further drained lim ited supply depots.

Ten million potential laboreti perbhed. In Leningrad, for example, more persons died of hunter than from bombs, fleed’sent by tho Amer-

’fsr « lle f Wll furnish 1.000,000 tons of vegetables and

grains this year but even this gift is small in tpmparlson with na­tional dearths.'

STALIN—On June 33. the sccond miversary of HlUer's attack on

- i? . **■' Jeremonlesw ill be held throughout the Vnlled States in honor of the Jlutjian pco-

pie. Among those sponsoring these events ore Owen D . 'X’oung. famou.i manufacturer, and Thomas W. La- mont, hend of J . P. Morgan and company. Inclu.slon of these out- sUndlng capltalisU In such a list would, have, been unthinkable a few yearn ago and therefore Is ex­tremely algnificunt.

It may astonish some conser- vatlve.1 to l?am that vyall street today Ls a rooter for Stallntjts mag­nates do not accept any more than previously the social doctrines of communism and they want no pink reprcacntrvtivc of these ideas clr cullttcd in the U. S . A.

But Wall tcreet looks upon Russit a.1 a highly orgBnized Industrla p:iipire whose succcas In the war I; the result of big buslncis practlbe: ci: ;lc(l i:o:n the American corpor­ation system. In peace times they expect thnt the Soviet union be a proritable market for our glneerlng projects, goods and loans.

Tlinirc.sident of one of the lar- Rcsi flrnM In tlie United State* made this Intercstlnc comment

I tlUnks and a headed Atnerlc

la concerned

- Mrs Roosevelt suggests that Inasmuch as unions have now been forbidden to contribute further •--ampaigaftmds ... elections In­volving fe d e r a loffice. Uj« national ____ _should limit the amount o f money 'o be spent by candidates and ration idvertlslng space and radio Ume. Qually among Uiem."I think It would be a grcot step

forward.- Un. nooievelt wrote, "if ■' i government allowed a ll candl-

tfs to spend exacUy tho same amount, gave theniso much time on •he radio, so mucl\ newspaper ad- 'ertislng tpace and so much cash or traveling and ocUially meeting

“It would really be a good thing f this expense came out of the

Uixes and we never had to have any funds ralwd by political organiia- tlons except for e/lti.-nflnnnl =r>rlr — actual poUdes

Oicjo aro concerned, that there might not bo

I believe that this Is the boldest at- tack on the American form of gov- ermnent that has yet been made by any fellow-traveler In the new deal admlnlstraUon. It Is more danger- ouslsecause Mn. I ^ e v e l t Is her­self a Urel«s, cunSIhg and clever wllUcian who b the more effective because ahe pretends to be utterly naive and to have no influence in Uie government whereas slie has made many appointments iind has

al radlcr 'ed from elements

munlst front.On# of these was the »25.000 sal-

ar)- limitation /int propo-ted by the ^ m u n ls t party as a platform pro-

The President hastened ..Uiis limitation to congress twice retouffed and then proceeded 10 limit jialirlea to thtf communists' figure by decree.

the basts of post perfcprobably tells us what the t _______isU In and around me goremmcnt are cooking for the people of this free republic.^

Under this plan. President Roose­velt would be allowed, let us say, *IJ»0,000 out of the treasury for his fourth-term campaign, already well lUJder way, with hb wife trouping M the country on conUauous pollUcal errands disguised as war activities.The other candidate would be allow­ed a ilka amount, but the President Vould have his ofllcUl travel allow- nnco to spend for political tours, in tuJdlUon to tho campaign iund taken

, <Urect:y and openly from Uj« trea­sury.

Linilted to a certain period of ra­dio time; President Roosevelt would be able to campaign for reclccUon off-the-record, so to speak. In fire­side chats and oUicr addresses to the naUon on tho progrtu of tJie war and other Issum of public im­portance, wldle the rival candidate would be strlcUy limited, Presum­ably. alUwugh she did not suggcit penalties for violnUon, tho rival candidate could be punished, per- ' haps sent to prison. It he should rig

• station of his o------- - - •

verging would bo a HlUeresqu# Ui- -roalon of the freedom of expression and of the pres.i and may have-on- other mouve than the ono stated by Mrs. Roosevelt, This limitation A l would not bother either S e 5 u RocCTvelt or the otiier fcDow, for - "-il nominees do not aiual- ,

!wspaper space. Butly buy . ...............•imitation ts there Just Uie same, ind )f It con be sp iled to adi er--

tlsing by candidates It can be ap­plied to ftJl other advertisers.

In addition to all tJiese fasclnat- -j<S posslblliue,, we have Uie fact that president Roosevelt's party has

3cnt sums of money beyond calcu- -itlMi, out of Uie public treasury, for pollUcal purposes during the last 10 years and continues to help Itself to the people’s taxes to perpetuate It­se lf even in time of war. a sourcs

T noiiD L E -T he long threatened canners’ revolt against OPA has erupted In New '^ort. Indiana. Marj-land, Texas and wksteni states. The movemeat shows signs of spreading because the Industry Is ready to pack thla year^ first crops but cannot estimate profits until Washington acts.

If the big companies refuse to andle th e peas. com. tomatoes

and beans now ripening, retail mar­kets will be glutted with fresh veg­etables above normal consumer de­mands. Already aplnach is l>elng

■“ widespread areas.^LBt*)» Srea

dumped li ___ ___In the season there will be scarcity of tinned foods.

Spokesmen for the national trade jrganlsaUons In New York sajthe processors are rebelling i n ____to bring matters to a head; they have been waiting weeks for deei- aloiv? from the government on price

IN WHICH A MAIUNE STAFF SEItGEANT DLU6UEB

Staff Barge Oene Harrington. _ arine who's home on furlough.! as standing In Oeorge Wl] ' tlllwlck of business, all dolled

In his marine blues.Came a very yotmg but .very r

coclous urchin. He peereq_ up Sarge Oene and piped shrilly:

"Hi ya. major. Dee. this makes the second major 1 knowl"

p the back. red flunh etnrted )f Gtne’s neck.)

Said the.,urchln then:"How come ya ain’t been J

r-eH"(The red flush - reached G

:an.>Said the urchin:"How many tulis ya sunk?" (Tlie blush became 100 per c

PotMORE ON MARINES

glimpsed the following

levels and t uidlea

'U S E O'F O IL -B A SE N O S E D R O P S M A Y B E H A R ip iU L

B y DB. TII0.MA8 D. HU8TER8 Many peopI« ate slUl using nose-

drope having a mlneral-oU base. de« splt« the fact that their harmful ef­fe c t exposed new ly a gtneraUon

ago. 1710 lAlula- uon of oils. espe-. clsiUy *nim»i and mineral, but olso s o m e vegetable o ils ,. la iTDtati&s to the lungB-»nd capabi# o f” pro- duclni » particu­lar tg^ of pn*u- monla known fa t «r Upld monlt. '

Because oil Is light. It Is refcdUj

aspirated Into the lungs. ’The over- inxlous mother urglilg eod-Uver oil ir castor-oU onto a cry tog chUd swr

succeed In getting aa much oil the child’s lungs u Into Ms si ach.

’The useless habit of pennlttlog medicated salves or vaseline to trtcWa down th» throM 1» anothtr method o f .Instilling.oU Into tha, lungs. A few 'drois a d v or Ui<lr Intake from a sptay Set iha duration of the average -cold" or alega of hay fever may be the means of in-

' lecttug % cotuldtnjble amoo&t o! oU Into the lung*. ‘ ‘

I f the oil Is uineral oil. It is «»• poclally daagtrcaa, betwae lunea have ho meana of dliposlsf of

Dr.

cept by c o u g h ljig .'l^ S u ^ & ‘ j ve-reflex ii co t cUaulat«lo|

tgain because of the lightness of the oil.

Tlie. irritating e ffect of the oils , varies with the kind. Animal oils produce tho severest reaction, some vegetable oils appear to be entirely non-lnjurlous, but castor-oll is ca­pable of producing extensive dam-

Mineral o il produces '-'flamtSatlon “'«Jlnlng_o£-the-*lr-pa*sagw;

Ind In cocnmoQ w ltli any oily ve- hide, is capable of canytng germs ilong with It. These, la turn, find t avorable son to grow on In the

damaged hing tissue, thus bringing on a broncho-pneumonla.

Nature h as surrounded man with enough dancers, as i t b ; It Is fool-

llsh for man to add to them unnec- l e ^ l l y . A recognition of the means by which oils aro Introduced Into the lungs, and their ellmlnaUon. an the only tools needed to avoid this leedltss trouble.

Forcible feeding o f cod-Uver oU. mineral oil. or evco millc should be avoided, eapeclally If the chUd Is cwlng or lying on 1I« back. Mineral oil nose-drops havp l io proted value, and the demomtratod dangers that they may cause in children and adults, both alck and veil, are suf- f l^ ^ t reason for their complete

------ ^aet th a t many havesurvived tha use of BtKh oUy prep- laraUom.is-TOrelyxiot- to their ad­vantage; m aayhava aurrlved tmall- poz and akuU tracturea without making either coodltloa desirably. '

Shoshone (txeet Monday:Sarge Oeorge Paulson of the m a-

Ines, attired In that Impressive ipparel. was talking to a friend.

Meantime a tiny Japanese boy, maybe five or eIx years old, was itarlng at George with eyes of

hero-worship circling to study him, fn awe. /rpm a ll angles . . completely'ignorlng the civilian gent to whom Oeorge was chatting.

IT LAST, A SrEECII MAKEB UNMABKEDt

Dear Potsle:.................- prominent a ftt .

dinner speakers (he’s ah Elk. if that helps Identify him ) Is being congratulated theae days for m ak­ing the most hoasst-'sUtement of tfie year. • -

His slip o' the tongue was as follows:

■Fellows, before 1 begin my talk. I want to say something.’

/ —Uateaer Inn

PAUL BUNYAN MOSQUITOES Dear Pots:

‘Thank heavens, one big hazard to s fishermen Is finally easing off up

here In the Ketehum country.The mosquitoes on a ll the water-

'ways have been as voracious______'tards. tis Impudent aa* simians and withal large enough thla season to afford good targets for a trap shoot­ing club. But the stagnant pools are gradually drying up Md these strlcUy Idaho-ilM mosquitoes aren’t the menace they were a few weeks

By the way, one fembilne wlelder of the angleworm lure on Warm springs brought In IB nice trout one rJght-dnrlng~the"Treelcr^iind-haa gotten six or eight nearly every evening ilace. They tell me her male rivals are thlnklns of trailing her to find out hov ahe does I t

What with loU '^of.navy boy due around here at any tine, th l should become the m ecca of a lo ot lady anglers.

~ C ^ ! e y flamno

CONTENTB VALUABLE ■nie -T-N editor U lla us that

there's one thing he likes about aU this mlpeographed publicity mall th a U > ^ In on a d a l ly n m - paper three or Iwr tlmea a day.

He says he can practically alwsiys teU by feeling a "hooey” letter whetberlt has what he wanis.

If It doesnX.)iB tonea It Into thi wuUbasket unopened.

If H does, he qulckllke opens U and rescue* the var-aearce m etal paper clip. ^

-FAUOVB LABT LINE . , Daat ipank tho baby—

renwaber what Iba book aays!..TBE GSNTLEUAIf IK

XEIBD BOW

C LA PPER ’S O B SE R V A T IO N S

NATIONS AT WARLONDON, June 21 (By Wireless)

-Approval of tlie Pulhrlght reso.- lutlon by the house foreign affairs committee Indicates there la still hope Uiat congreu will support par-

Amer;la t lo

n Uieo maln-

News from home n the last few

weeks, ot least as It appears in tha . press here, has Indicated a DUS • dlslntegra-f tlon, Tlie coal' strike, the rubber strike, ahd now William Gr«n’s ,, _advice to lab^ to Cl**"-'

be! If the anU-strike bill bccomes iw, plus what appears to bo nued griping over rationing, are

all.dlsqulcUng. Do these signs mean that America is abouf to turn Its back again on the ta.\k of main­taining peace after this war is wonT

"nio acUon ot the house foreign iffalra committee U the first sign

recently that Ihere Is stUI sentiment in, congreas for following through to give enduring- purpose to whai the American soldiers over here art 'Isklng and losing their lives for.

Already some of the men o f the 'American eighth air force with whom I have visited' si riving in Digland hav killed. ’Twenty-four big bomb­ers failed to return from the last raid on Kiel and Bremen.- Oneof the survlvon said that of th ..........with whom he had played poker the night before only tr...........

Until you have been her© It is I difficult to visuallte the size o f the I operations that are being planned. Indeed, unless you are here it Is difficult to rtallte wh*l has already been done here—the vast number of airfields, the enormous atippty depots which are almost clUes in themselves. And then, when on top of all that you see the beat of Amer­ica's young men trained for « year or more In modem killing, and re­alize the countleu tragedlea for our people as well u>many other peo­ples, .l.t seems the most tontasUo lunacy not to make an e itia t to

revent a repeUtlon.Here tha war Is W mlnulea away.’

It Is even less than that, for 1,300 jlvlllani were killed or Injured in air raids in England during May. Some are killed eveiy few nlghta In London.

This war reaches everywhere. It will be worse the next time, because planes now In the experimental

-stage-whleh-iwobably„wna’t-m ake ■ this war will be available for the

next one. And Uien there will be no place In Amerlco where you can conalder yourself safe from danger such aa bllU-rldden England has suffered, or from tJie worse ham-

liat German cities are tak-Ing t

stay out bf any fe that

imyblg wai............- Ible-thi . . . .

two Umes. Hencc It seems to mo unansweroble loRlo thnt the Inter­e s t of Amerlco. requite that we do everything we can lo prevent an­other one.

I believe America has far roora moro power to shape thlncs ofter th e war than we have ourselves re­alized. Tl\ knockout tilow ot U\e wav w ill come from America. Britain and Russia have carried most of the load up to now, and art still carrying St, but tJie extra punch will come from America.' without which It la not likely that an"uncondl- tlonal surrender could be forced.

Also, all such machinery as food__^^—. relief. rehablUtaUon, and.medictfl measures against plagues wh|<ii know no nnWonai boundary lines, w ill Ik fuelled largely with supplies from America. It Is up to us to see th a t In return conditions are crealcd ' to reduce the chances of another big '

We won’t escape paylos the price b y rtluilng to patUtipale in ma­chinery to preserve the peace, for th e price would eventually be a depression with another cycle of war. Thfvt Is the,price of a negative poUcy. .

AU the American soldiers 1 have talked with wont to get IhSj lob I

I soon as possible so , I < home. It would be t

............ IngroUtude for what Ith ese Americana are doing 11 con­gress and all the rest of us did not

everything In our power lo build . . . J means of preventing a repetition of auch sacrifice.

•DANGEROUS ’niOUOHTE’ 'Dangerous thoughts" Is a eharga

brought by-Sen. Robert A. Taft, Ohio Reptlblican. against the na- Uona] resources planning board.

The term is strangely famllUr In American ears- The Japanese have traditionally Jailed and punished * citizens for harboring 'dangerous thoughts." and the complaint Is commonplace in nozl circles. Amer­icans, however, have been brought up to believe that a free country U one in which thought and Ita expression are free.

Where would this republic have becnJtth e maker*-oMH'eTevoIuU5K~ had not Indulged their Inuglna- tlons7-Lew litca Tribune.

•A

HISTORY vQF ^W IN FALLSAS GLEANED FBOH T S E FILES OF TUE TIMES-NEWC

15 YEARS AOO, JUNE 12. 19M , 27 YEAB8 AOO-JUNE tZ, 1915.................. ............................ Fec«Ie of Twin Palls and vlilnlty

w h o are Interested in the subject ' of ChriaUan Bcitnco wtre trtaltd to • rare lecture on that subject on Wednesday afternoon In the high

Onwth of vegetables' and com waa retarded and hay making was interrupted by cool weather and lack Of sunshine throughout south­west Idaho, according to a repore Isstied by the Bolie weather bureau.

OrganEutlon of a Ci 1 toown and opeiite t h e _____charda, one of HUthem Idaho's btst known apple producing tracts, ' h a s t>een eompleted, piacUcally &U of th# alodt in the corporation which U to b« known u the Hlalop Or­chards, Inc. being owned by, man-

•>. T h o n e« 1 for $3S,-

The sign car oJ tha Idaho depait- ment of the A A. A. went tbrougb: Twin PWli yesterday.

school auditorium.

m the U nt game of the series to ba played with Buhl, the locals were defeated by the close score'ofT to"' 0. 'Z%e game was cloee frctn start'to flnlah. and except for a n ^ c ^ t a ' a c d l t t t , the dropping of a ball a ( a Ught moment, the gamg would h a v e been a tie. '

J . a t Shank, fanner probate ^dge.of Buhl, hav# •

eased a ranch near Buhl. wtw« they will engage In aheep raising

- . Tuesday, Juno 22, 1943 TIMES-NEWS. T W IN FALLS. IDAHO • Page Fivav;

D. A. V. W omen Elect Burley Member as State Commander

Hunt Art Work Will Be Shown

An nrw and Imndlcralt exhibit o( orldiiial work of ruidenU c( Ibe Minidoka rclocallon c«nl«r T.1I1 be held In the bajtment ef tlie Tw’ln Fall* public library June 3t. 20 and

The exhibit will be under Uib jDlnt «i>otuortlilp ot the union orgnnUfttlan of ehurchu of Twin Falls and ihe Hunt community Bcllvltlej dejmrtment.

Paintings, bitwrbruili handl- crait. knltUng and croctictlns work will be shown. The txWbll will be open Iroip-7.to 9 p.;n. on June 34 nnd from 3 (c S p. in. and from 7 (o p p. m. on June 35 and 29,

B uffet Luncheon Held for Dorcas

M rs . M y r t le D a v is o n , B u r l e y , w a s e le c te d a n d in a ta l lc i l na c o m m a n d c r o f th o Id a h o D is a b le d A m e r ic a n V e te ra n s a u x i l ia r y , n t a M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n c o n v e n t io n m e c t in f f h e ld a t t h e R o g c rs o n h o te l.

T h i r t y d c le K a te s r e p r e s e n t in g B o is e , C a ld w e ll , B u r le y , P o­c a te l lo a n d T w in F a ils c o n v e n e d h e re f o r a o n e d a y sess io n , B tr e a m lin e d c o n v e n tio n in

. k e e p in g w i t h w a r t im e r e s t r i c ­t io n s . M r s . R u th C u r r ln g to n ,B o is e ; c h a p la in , a c te d as c o m ­m a n d e r a n d M rs . J o h n B a is c h , j r . , T ^v 'in F a lls , c o n d u c tre s s .

other ofJiclaU named and In- sulled were Mrs. Clara Older. Cald­well. senior vlce-comminder; Mrs.Hazel SulUvan, Pocatello, juniorvlce-comroander; Mr». Alene Ham­mond. CaJdwcll. treasurer: Mrs.Monlda Voughn,' Boise, eliaplaln, and Mrs. Zelma Mayte, Boise, his­torian,

OUicr olflcere are to be appolnl«l by the commander. Mrs, Vaugh act­ed u Installing officer.

Precedlna the elccUon nporta of th« ocUvlUes of the various ausll- larlea wtr6 given with «P«UI ait«i- Uoa being paid to war work. The STOups are coopcraUng with tho U 50 and ■wlU aid the Red Cross In malting surgical <ircjjl.-4 s.

The PocaUUo group dbtrlbutes - cookies nt Uie troop IralavUi.con­

junction wiUt the local USD. U waa reported, Mcs. Vaoghn. Jwspltal chairman, reported on the card por- Uea lield regularly at Ihb Bolso hos­pital, sponsored by the various aux- Ularle*.

H ie Ceeur d'Alene report wn» read although tlie group was not repre­sented. Hils auxiliary has contrlt>- utrd substiintlally toward tlie rec­reation rooms at boUi the Boise and WflUa WnllB hwpltalJ.

Memorial serflcM for membera who hare died In the past year were conducted, Nampa Ls to be the site lor the 1014 convention.

An Informal liinclieon lor auxU- lary members was held at Camp­bell’s cafc precfdlns the business ses.slon.

Brief devotions of hymn, ecilp- Wire and praytr opened the meet- t c ; of tho Dorcas society ot the American Lutheran church at tlia tiomo of Mrs. Myrtle MulvlhUl, 'Washington courts.

Hev. H e r b y Hopp and the presi­dent. Mr*. II. 0 . Thompson, read a wide variety of itema of church nowa, local, national and Interna­tional., A buffet luncheon was «cn-fd.

Mrs. A. C. Rutherford, guest, read letters from a former member of tho soclcty now Uvlng In Yaltaa, Wash. Mrs. Andrew L«ne ann'ounc-' ed her coming departure for Se­attle where her husband b em­ployed in the shlpyajdj.--------------__Outal-dtiy-wJll'be observed InJuly, with Mrs. Rutherford enter­taining Bt ft potluelc luncheon.* * * Installing Rites ,

At Burley BethelnuflLEY. June 22—MUs Janice

Klink. newly elected honored queen of Burley BetJiel of Job's Daughters, was liutaJled nt a spcclal meeting a t Uio Odd Fellows hall, with Ma- eonj, Eastern Stars and others os gucsis to wltiies.*! ihe service.

Miss B etty Jean Rustay, retiring

Marian Martin Pattern

Other officers are Miss Elaine rtedfleld. senior prince.vi: Miss 6hlr- 3ey Dunn. Junior princess; Miss Ar­lene Wolf, guide; Mbs Lonna Lou Claj'ton. marshal;;Mlss Mary Uiu Hill. Mlsa Mary' Frances Red- field, MLS.S Olndys Ramsey, MLu Maiine Sulmon and Miss Vema Deno, me.vscnRcrs; Mbs Gloria HIU. treasurer: Mi,-. ^rralne Redflcld. recorder: Miu iHelen Deardorlf, chaplain: Ml.u Donna-MaeRae. sen-- lor caiuxllun; Miss Carol Cunning­ham, llbrarlnn; MIm EllaUseth DrU- keU. Junior custodian, and Mbs Sara Denman, nnulclan.

DurlnK Ihe program Mbs Den­man playcci a piano solo, end Miss EllzabclJi Drkkell played a violin solo.

4-H Club NewsVICTORY WORKERS

Various cuU''6f meat were dls- cussed w hen tlie Victory Workers 4-K club met nt the home ot Yvonne Jones wiUj Mr*. J. M. Pierce oa leader. Miss Jones ond Wonlta Echnitker demonstrated a vegetable salad. Work was done on the re­corded books, Alice Jean McOresor will entertain al the next meeting.

Weds at Temple

Mi*. WlllUm ..............................-was MUs Inn Marie McEwea. Kimberly, prior to her maniage al (he L. D. 8. temple. (Staff En- PM lnt)

Miss I. McEwen Marries in Utah

became tho bride of William Henderschott, Portland, at a emony performed in Salt Lake City in the L. D. S, temple.

The'~rwmal nuptial took place June 11. Mlsj McEwen wore white satin fashioned w ith long- alccves. a sweetlicnrl neckUno and trimmed Id seed penrb.

The bride lias been employed Sacramento In tho office of fin way company. She Is a gradi-otc the Kimberly high school.

The bridegroom grnduBted from the Portland Polytcchnlcal school and Is employed os a radio technlt- lan. Mr. and Mrs. Henderschotl will make their home In Oklahoma City, where he l.i employed with

Hhe-*lgnal corps in Uie radio rc' pair department. T h e couple stop­ped en route to their home at Kim­berly to visit her parents.

>f. X. >t

Nuptial Shower ' For Filer Girl

. FILER. June 22 — Mbs Eloulse Moreland was guest of honor at a dinner party anil th o w r given by Mrs. Jay Ccbb, Ml-' .'j Bctiy Johruon and Mfsa Patricia Bccm at the Cobb heme. • . .

The 12 gxipjts were seated for din­ner at fmnll lable.s- decorntcd with bud va.’ es of rosebuds In ptvitcl fhnde.s. Onmcs of pinochle ana bridce followed with priics going to Miss Shirley Ann MoreL-incl nnd Ulss La Ree WiUlam.s,'

C A R E O F Y O U R '

CHILDRENDy ANQELO PATRI

iplalnlsOne of the commonest eagrown people make against _____b summed up In tbe world Selfish. He. she. “b M selfish you can’t llva wlUi him.”

Lbtenlng Uirough tho story tho basic fact coon becomes evident. T h e cooipUlnant U aeUlah and b . plalnUig because hla comfort, hla

eace ot mind, perhaps his tecurity 1 the household, la disturbed,“He rushes Into the house, calls

for something Ui eat, slams doors unUl tlie whole house shakes, a l­though I have told him a liundred times that I want to sleep frtxn —o-thlrty until a quarter of four."

■She keeps wanting new hau, new shoes, movies, all the tim e and I teU her that we aren't made ot money bul^t doeinl do Uio sUghUst good.

•'My son earns good money But a ll he gives me b half of It. Ha puts

he has over after meeUnj h is expenses, into Uie bonk. Instead o f letUng me have it for things for tho • ouie, or for myself. I haven't hod

new coat In three years."Need Leaderahip

'Tliose children ore • so selfish. They turn on the radio for their programs and I never get a chance to hear the ones 1 want. I'm going to put the radio in my own roott and let them do without, that's all.'

A" in every phase of living, It takes two sides U) establbh a crisis. One niiLU pull (tgalnst the other or there b lit) trouble. In living with children one mu-'t be careful to establish ground for Me on one side. You the other. Once Uiot U done settingup n cry of Selfbh helpsTlic hcnd of the family m stage for service and cooperation from and to every member of It. Somebody must always step bock and then wbely manage things . - to 4rin consent and cooperation from the other ild« and of cours* th a t leadership U laid upon th e mother.

\Vhy not manage no as to have that aftimocn nap before tho c h n - drcn get home from school so as to be iree to welcome them, hear their storie.i. and sit with tliem while they have afternoon lunch and keep a hand on Uielr doings, an ' . to thrir ways for tlio afternoon? Children need Uiat attcnUon.

Must Ba Qulded When did tho girl have the la st

new hat? Did slie pick It out herself and like lt7 Has site an aUcrtrancot Docs sho know how much money Uiere b for hats and movies and living, or does she see you buying wlml you Bwm to like without thought of a budget? She will n o t understand about thb unless sh e ,is taught and If she U unWught, nAd inexperlcnccd, why call her selfish?

Son earns money and he gives a share of It to the household. US' takes eate of \\\f. ou-n cxpcnKcs. Some he pub In the bank, saving it for MJmo day In the future. Wliy 1.1 saving selfi.'h when children do it end Just honorable thrift when par­ents do It lor them?

If a child grow.s up wltliout Uiought of hb parents luid family, thinking only of hlm.-ieif. he Is e x ­pressing what he ho.-! been Uught. or what he has not b^cn taught, by lUs parents. Example Is Uie best teacher, cooperation the best m eth­od. in child training.

DHUma Iroublri uu>Mr rftkct pool li>lnlnf i ht run of j'urcnu. Anit«lo

In hli Ifiilfl Nn. I'-IS, "Krtlllnii Trou-

Tlie executive board ot the Bap- tbt church, Rhlch Includes th« Alice GIbta circle officers. H U meet at 3:30 p. m. Wednesdayxnt tlie llemmn L. Dodson home, 346 Fourth avenue east.

a O R O K

A S /U W /H S f

COOL YOUNG BASQUE Make this fetching young basque

frock as a change from iports or tvork clothes- Marian Manin Pat­tern 9031 has a pretty ne/kline, with contrast of yoke, cuffi and aklrt band. Tlia skirt band may be otnlt- Ud. and cap sleevtlcls ar* optional.

Pattern i0 3 l may' be onJtred only in misses' sizes 1}, 1«, IS. It and 30. 6 Im 16 takes 3 yards M-lnth fabric,

dgtoe

a w d SK'TEKK CENTS li -RjlnrTor Ihla Marian Martin pat-

Write plainly 8I2K, N/ur* AMBEB8, STTLE POMDEE:

The Matlan Martin tumme: pattern book u fuU ot U make aevlnc easy. Bead T S CENTS more for this boot

"•'ad your order to "nse nme»-- I departmenl, Twla

'i You con depend on Ciorox. . . it's ultra-refined, frea from,caustic,an exclusive parenled quality.fealurd. i U is oxtra-genlle in bleaching . . . extra-efficient in I

,.dUinfecting. Ciorox it concentrated...'o little goes a ^ • long way. For unsufpossod efficiency, for true econ­

omy, use Ciorox. There'* only one Ciorox, olwoys ask' for it by name. Simply follow directions on the Igbel..

/ • W h a l f s

(tIOIIOX'ClUIII

_AMIDICA’S FAVOniTE BLEACH AND USIHOLO OISINPICTANT

CLOROXm rV R O M CAUtTK

PalU.Ii

Griaduate Nurse

l/eola Norrli. daughter of Mr. and ^ r». Waller E. Norrli. Kim- berly. haa gradaaled from De Kahler hoipltal school of nurs­ing. Rochester. Minn., as (he third in her eUas of 92, Mlii Nortb plana to Join the ranks of army nones this fall, mtaff F.ntrav- fn»l

TiiBraryOifers Food Pamphlets

Several home food production Icoflets published by a unlveraity extcnilon service and designed to f i t needs of the times are available a t the Twin Falls public library.

Conecmltuj -poultry are "Home poultry Flock." 'T'eedlng and Caro o f the Backyard' Poultry," and "A Backyard Poultry House," Help for rabbit rabers comes In "Home Rab­bit Production." and "Hutches lor a Backyard Rabbltry."

Food processing aid Is slveii In “Home Canning." "FTeeilng 8tor- aRe," "Homo Bottling and Canning of Fruit Juices, Including Tomato Juiee," and "Drying of Vegetables and Fruits In the .Home,"H- * *Madeline Baisch

Feted by FriendsHAZIXTON. Juno 23-T5io Pres­

byterian church basement, made attractive with boskets ot peonies, painted daisies, columbine and roses, was Uie tcene of a bridal shower for Miss Madeline Dal.'ch, whose wedding will take place next Sunday.' A'number of out ot town guc.its were present and about 45 friends and neighbors. Mrs. Elmer Rleman. Jr.. lang two songs; Mrs. Gordon Murpliy gave a reading nnd MI.m Marilyn Hadley played two piani soIo-1. Mrs. Arthur Babch wa.n hos' less for this occasion.

C o n fe re n c e R epo'rt O f fe re d to C hap ter

•WEMDELL. June 2 2 -n is fllor of the West chapter held a special meeting'for tho purpose of Inlllat- Ing a candidate end receiving re­ports of tliB Orand chapter held recently in Weber.

Dbtlngublied guests Included Mr*. Lillian J. ' Barton, worthy grand matron of Idaho; Mrs. Etella H. Phlnney. Coeur d'Alene, grand treasurer: Mrs, Grace Jolinson. Twin Falb, grand conductress; Mii. VUglnla Albertson, Jerome, grand Esther: Mrs. Paeth Eaton. Wen­dell. grand organbt. and Mrs. Draco Boblcr, Twin Falls, state Red Cros.1 chairman of 0 , E. fl.* H- *Red Cross Rooms

At Guerry-HomeCASTLEFORD. June 2J-It has

been announced by the ehairman, Mra. MarUn Miller and Mrs. Cluj- les ahorthouse, that the Red Cro.u work room haa been tran-iferred • from the Baptist church to a base­ment room at the home of Mrs. Maurice Ouerry for the summer

Tile room will l>c open four days each week, Tuesday and Friday alii be apon.iored by the Methodbt W. 0. C. S.; Wednesday.'* by the Bap- tbe,Ladic.i aid luid Thunsdsy by the BvcrywoniRn's club, nowcrer, the (icneral public b iirned to attend any one of the four days.

Mrs. L.'J. Hanlori Hostess to ClubJ

Thlrly-thrcc ad'ulta and l i chll- - dren attended Uio Shamrocit club'-- meeting a t tho L. J . HonUin homt with MI’S- Hanlon and Mrs. Em­mett Bauer as hostesses.

Urs. Frank ValenUng received the war stiunp prize. Contest awaxdj went to Jiro. Charles DurUng, Mn. CUlo Orahtun and . Mrs. Gaily Da­vis.

auesb o f the group were.M n. Ray Asscndrug, Mra. Fred McWll* Uami. M rs. Wllllnm Orossman, Mrs. Ralph As.«ndnip. Mni. O. n. Durilng, Mrs. W. H . Ford. Mrs. H.W, Reldemnn. Jr., Mbs Loulsb Campbell. M bs Marie Nelsoa and Mbs Hazel Booth.

The next mccttaB wlU be July IS at Uie hom e of Mra. I. A. Camp­bell.

Vows E x c h a n g e d a t P r e s b y te r i a n M anse

Rev. O. L. Clark read wedding vo»’i for Charles Henry Watcrbufy, Boise, ond Doris Irene Wheatcroft, Fairfield, lo st week nt tlio Presby- lerbn manse.

Tha couplo was attended by Mbs Fay Sanford, Fairfield. Mr, and Mrs. Waterbury le ft for Bolso to make their home.* * H-

Maroa Women’s club b to meet Tliuriday a t tlie school. Mrs. Cecil Brown and Mrs. Harold Halnllne - will be hoste&SM.

The T I R E o r TOMORROW ^ A ^ r o M v f

T H E W O R C D -F A M O U ^

FIRESTONE t>c4ctxe 0umfUm TIME I S N O W B E IN G M A D E W l^St

Ttt t totteButapreniTHE MARVELOUS T tew SYNTHETIC RUBBER

TU S r u you’d exp«fcf, Fireitone b FIR ST to build the ^ (ire of tomorrow for th e car owners o f Am erica. I t U only natural that Flrestoiie should be th e leader in working out new proceues. In creating new com poutidi a n d In building be tte r tire i from A m erican-m ade rubberi tor Firestone has alwa^i been th e p ioneer in .developing new m aterials, new m ethods and new m achlnei that haye-rttu lted In trem endoui advance* m en ti in tire deslgn> constructiqn and perform ance.

F ro m Firestone h a v e com e lu c h re v o lu t io n a ry Improvements a i the FIR ST (tralght aide tire, the FIRST rubber non-tkld. tread ,Ihe FIR ST com mercial demountable rim, tbe FIR ST patented GuD^-DIppIng Procesi, the FIRST balloon tire, th e FIR ST Safd-Lock C ord Body, the FIRST Super-Speed C onstructloa and th e FIRST ptacdcal pneum atic tractor tire,

l a 1933, Flrettone b t^ lt th e FIRST synthetic ru b b e r a irpbne dres for o u r a rm ed Utttct. I n 1934> Firestone b u ilt iti F IR SI^iynthedc rubber passeoser car tires.

In 1940, Hresfone FIRST went Into p roducrion on synthedc rubber pauenger car llrej a n d J ^ n the m an u fac tu re o f its own lynihetlc ru b b e r , c a lled Butaprene, the same type that was later adopted b y the • Governm ent. A nd today Firestone It m ak in g synthetic • ru b b e r dres for passenger can, trucks, buses, airplanes, tractors, farm Implements and all types o f w a r vehicles.

A ll o f these years of ejperience, all of t h o knowledge that m ade these FIRSTS possible have b e e n called upon in 'p roduc iiig the new Firestone DeLuxe Cham pion T ire m ade vrith Firestone Butaprene. I t la now TOdy for th e car ovvners of America as released b y tho G overnm ent. But do not thinic that th e crisis U past. A m erica's greatest rubber supply ij itlU o n the wheels of its 27,000,000 cars. So you must con tinue oU o f thi ru b b e r cbnserva tion measures that h a v e b e e n effective. However, if you are elli^ble a n d requ ire n

.tires, rem em ber thU — in mileage, in strength a n d io[ safety th e n ew Firestone DeLuxe C h n m p lo a T ire upholds th e Rrestone tradJdon of i n R «bber — Synthedc or N ofuraL”

M (• tk« V«4m • / WriUiiM »(U Mr*. M«tr MtmHm H J »n t '~rtr

UVt Tllili, iAVt- OAlOllNET J»V[ TIME *ND SAVI MOKIV >» ONE-SIOP SHOPWNO *I VOM H O i^ n M J IO K I •’ * DEAIIB OR riBESTONI sioSE lOR THINOS YOU NEED EOI HOME AHD CA>, FOB WOU AND ;liK |!M ;iO J^

I

JPage S ix ' . TIMES-NfiWS. TW IN FALLS. IDAHO Tuesday, June 22, 1943

ii-nUkn i t Bmoolli-itrldlnit

. lie wniilcd 1(L/A nftfr liLi l liilcriiaUoiiiil IlfCtilciiK". July J. n'li'AllWl” *>" J»'J' 10-

Ills 3,000.incler rccord nl will be hl.s oblccllvc nt San CL'.CO. July 17. Al BiMlcm, . hp’U nRnln run two nillfj work Ifllcr. July 31, At Clcvflntid he’J! nttpmpt to lowrr liLi 2,COO- mclcr murk ol 5:11J-

ncKliU Ti. .Mftt llarir Oil Docld-I, mi.uoii divinity ntii.

rfent wlio won tlip nndonal I.SOO- tnctcr chninplonfhlp in tlie Rood time of 3;50, cxiirts'crt Interest In clashlnft with tJic Swedish lllcr, nt any dlitancc Jrom a mile to 3.000 wettrs,

Mopp.i Uint Rlcc wniild meet Hncgg OBnln Iniled wlien li- " "today aiilKtitd

J3n theSport Front

Dr GEOHGE F. nift>MONU,'

Bub Denton, the Kimberly Rolf tnr. would like to' Piilci; tlic ' Jiiniunu'nt which will open n Illicrcjt country club Friday bill

e salti

Pro Loop Will Play 40 Games

CHICAGO. June 23 Ml - Tlie NallonnI Football league concluded in most-Ifnpornnl nitcUng In his­tory Mondny by adoptln* a «-gnme schedule (or 1843. bcslnnin; ScpL 10, wllh n Rome between tlic ChlcnRO

•Cardinals nnd Llon-i ot Dclrolt.and endlnft Dec. 9.

After n 24-hour deodiock. Green Bny. New York and the iien- com- blne<t club. Phlladelphln>PiitsbiirRh, rcached ft CompromL'C In the ichcd- ulB making. slgnalllnR the clase "f Uic prolonged confab,

Ucductd trotu 10 lo tcatrui tJie leafftte retained the home-nnd- tiomo fenlure oC iia Intra-dlvlston competition and added (me game ORaUlst ench member ol ilie other division, making 10 Rnmra for »uch club. New York. Wn5hlu8ton Phllntlclphlft . rittsburjh w nwartltd six home tonUjts,

Tho new combined club booked two sames In Pittsburgh nnd lU (our othcr contests In Phimdclphla, Be- j:auso o( pnrk dllllcultlea arising from Uic complicated status of tin major league bnrebnll raccj, Duf. lalo, ti. Y„ whlcli had applied foi » Ironchlsc, vns named aj the sKl of one league jtamo betviecn Uie I>ctrblt Lions anil the Chicago Car* dlnaU on Oct. 17.

A lost minute action eliminated, . ior the duration of the war, the

Sept. 20 date In tho plA}er limit rule. This gave each elub an op­portunity to retain all Its players until Its first gajne, Tlie old rule made U mandatory that each team cut to 25 men on Sept. 20. unless Itj initial Ramo fell on a previous ilatc.

Keller Leads Bond League

NEW YORK. June 23 (/Tr-Chnr- Jcy Keller. Yanltee outfielder, hold.1 n sllRlit cdgo as n "salesman" In

■ the basebnU war bond lenRue's tlrst official report, luued yestcrriay and

' includltiR games from last Tuesday ,to last Sunday, Inclusive.

Hitting four singles, two doubles, ono trlplo and two home runs, the Yankee tlugser cost his iponsor, the Eastern Air lints, an Btldcd 147,- 600 In wiir bond pledRes.

Eastern. Air lines bid ll,3J0.Ood lor Kfller at the auction of 37 New York ond Brooklyn playersj and ORreed lo pay »2i00 for each tingle, M,000 for each double. t7.S00 for each triple and 110,000 for each bomc run coUcctei by lh«

Brooklyn’s Dixie Walker Is ni.. nine A close second. He brought the top auction price of *1 1 ,« 0,000 from the Brooklyn club, a social organ' Izatlon. and his week's "tale" wu V1S.000. ‘

61d Oordon of the OlanU Is a close t\ilrd. costing the Inltma- tionnl Buslne.ss Machines. Ills spon- sor«, ,odded pledge of <<3.500,

Seeded Players Win In College Tourney

EVANSTON. lU.. June 23 _ •With Its No, I sUr, Francisco Se- Bura. university of Miami, on the eldellnes because of n (int round bye, the Notional ColleRlnte Athletic Aas<HJatlon tennis

Coivicquciitlj If tliere rtiiffce ilmt would IIW lo KniiniimeiU experience ai

Tlic MnKlc Viilley Is known to hnn >110 ciitrnnl In (lie Miitr t4)iirnii ncnt. which mil lie n tliree-dni’ al air. He t.s Hollo Olbboiis. er-

Tlie w ■cmlniily hnsn’t piny at Ihe country club nny. I'rcd Stone, !ifiinnRcr ol the course, salt th a t between 00 nnd 100 links- m en and women played there Sun. clny,

“It na.1 the best turnout that ive-vE had lliU year and, I leHerr. about the best In the last In’s years," stone rrnorted,

Sunday really wiui tlic first Rood Holiday tJint the Rollers have had thl.s year. And t'In bctlcr fihupe.

Tlie RoW tniinnRer salA Ilmt he Is plunnln^i n tournaincnt nnd Vi'ill mnke an Uie event

James Howell Cobb, ton of T>rus Rnymond the Great, nnd brother of IV ln Falla- Her.schel Cobb, would like to be a big league bnjeball player, he nnld In nn Interview Uic army upeclnllzetl replacement cninp. Camp Maxey. Tex., where he Is trnlninR for a coinml.wlon ' "mcchaiilMd briDcli of the .........-B ut.-, he suited, "baseball players, you know, are born, not made," ant’ confes.wd he lacks the natural liil- cn t of, his father, Tlie youtli wai hiducted with other New Mcxlco Military institute cndcu recently.

Yc Olde Scrlvcner was cnrrled down memory lane the other day utie ii tt new s dt.'ipttlch said Ihal, M>uc SclinicllnR, -former world's heavyweight champion, wa

Betjln ha-spltal trj’lng to recover from wounds suffered In the Oer-

parncliute Invasion ol Crete, sctma Just tho other dny Yo

Qlde acrlvcncr Wtts trudging to the StatlcT hotel In St. Louis to Inter­view the big Uhlan.

••w inScrivcni. , ..................... . . . . ,I'll ask him If he's going out to .. August Durcli." who wa.? then head of Uio Anheu-ser-Busch brewery and one ot tho nation's leading citizens of German extraction.

Yo Olde Scrlvcner was ushered Into SclimellnR's room but discover­ed that tho Oeminn couldn't under- fiUuid a word of English. Conse- (juenlly, the Interview hnd to bi Uirough little Joe Jacobs. Schmel- . _■ mannGcr. who now has''Eon« to hla reward.

'•Welt, I guess Maxle will go . . t to fee AuRU.1t Busch while here?" tills old word puddlcr quer­ied.

Jacobs put the awstlon lo Schmel* ..ig nnd tW.1 reply cajno back U TO\lRll Uie inannKCi;

••Wlio's AUKilst Busch?"And that look all the kick out of

the Inicrvlcw,

Orovcr Davis, the cojiservntlon of­ficer, suggests that Ir dog owners wlU Just keep their eonincs tied up Jor the next six weeks, therell be n lot more birds to shoot nt next fntl. He saya the breeding season will continue Uiat much longer.

slarltd oU »llh s«tice\y a Tlpplt ot cxeltemept.

Tlirce of the meet's six seeded players went on to the Northwestern university's courta ui.d won without much trouble. Tom Brown, Jr, Call-

■ lomlA seeded No. 2, trounced James Lolhnjp, nilnoli, fl-1. «-2; Earl Cochell. Bouthem Calllflniln. No. 3, disposed of Notr# Dame'* Hobert Piught, fl-a, 8-3, »tm-Bo>ert m an, WMhlngton, No. S min, went three teU to beat Jiine* Gales. Illinois. 6.1, 4.6, e-1. .

Landis Reinstates $75,000 Pitcher

prrrSBURO H. June 32 (U.PJ • Jolinny Oec, giant Pittsburgh Pirate southpaw whose ailing slioulder forced him Into retirement several yetira ago after the Pirates paid a reputed 175.000 for lilm. wm bftck on tlie active player list today, pre­paring to accomiiany the club on It western swing this week.

Daaeball. Commls-sloner Kenesaw M. Liuidls rclnaUlcd Gee yesterdny.

Jolinny Lindell, Ex-Pitch^- Now Leading Yanks In Hitting, Says Hell Die Learning How to Play

By. CHIP BOYAL ' AP Fealtire* Spcrla W i.„.

NEW YORK.. June 33—Johimy Unclcll s ^ s h e 'll die "lonrnlhg how lo'play baseball."

Tlie YankeeaV ex-pitcher, who has made good In Uio outfield with n wnllop. J* ' cohlldenl’ that he'H continue to Improve but ho Hasn't any Illusions o f being another Babe Ruth.■'Thero’fl only one Dahe Rutli."

i-mlled .Johmiy. 'Thcyll never find another like him."

Maybe the 6ifooi-4, 250 poui^r, 1» rlgjit about not btinff ns b lir^ succ'cjs from the mound to tha outer garden, but' If worK and con- Iltlence' wUl' do It, n«'s tlila year's best bet.

One thing about Johnny, he Im­proves every day," xald MnnaRcr Joe McCnrthy, only him about a tlilnR his darndrst to do ii.-

Uwlell gives »n ilie credit

:e and he t>

- bnckMl* me.sttcll to be able to play

every dny, I hated th a t bench RnrmlnR when 1 was o pitcher.

• KOI an entirely different slant ba.<eball now, thanks to Joe,"

Jolihny laid Uval Iw was a worried at the start of the

lit his mental' nttltudc hoa roved wlUi every game."I'm bCRlnnlDg to get a better

Jump on the ball. The grounders

Cards Win on 4 Rims in 6th

CINCINNATI. June 22 f/T} - A weird sixth Inning meant four runs lo the e t. Louis Catxllnais and they corillmied on to defeat tb c Cincin­nati Iteds. 0 to 2 . before M.1S7 fans. In a nlRht game that was halted by weather early In the eighth inning.

•nie Reds scored a run In the second on sUiRlefl by alpve Mesner itvd EtSc Tlpiot\ ond a- Uncc by Edaic Miller, but the world cham­pions got n brocc ol tallies In the tlilrd on lui error, singles by Howie ICrlst and Cappy Walker, an d Danny Utwhller'B double.

In the Clnclnnnll haU ot the third Max Marshall singled nnd Trank McCormick imashed a two- baSKer to left to score him . .

Billy Bouthworth's ninners went I work In the sixth. Whltey Kur-

owjkl's BlnRle wria kicked Into the right field bull pen by Woody Wil­liams. who fllleclvln at second for tlie Injured LollW* Frey, icurowskl raced to third, and scored on San­der's fly to le ft . Marty Marlon tnpped an Infield single- pitcher Howie Krlst bunted safely and Lou' Klein doubled to score Marion, Krlst stopping at third.

KrLit came hom e on n long fly :id Stan Muslal laslied out a triple ) send Klein acrais Uio plate.

f .S iK -i;1bUtflnn.

Y e s t e r d a y 'sStars

GaleiitoWinsby ) i n f

-------------; Toin,,jiroa 2]—T ^ O ,^ « n to , Oftoge, N. J . Ust

•olCht teiocked out Sailor Pred aias- St. Louis, in UiB .eeond nwA

Of^.ichecluled lO-Wim. ',. O ^ t o weighed 2» , ____ _____

end came afur jo aeconds'of ;^ :* e t» n d round, a rijht cross :

_____

By The Associated Pm*Joc Medwlck, Dodger»—Hit dou­

ble nnd two singles to drive In three ina In victory w er Olanta. Howard Krlst, Cardinals — Held

Reds to five hlta Co win sevcn-ln- nlnff game. '

Trosky Goes Back to Farm

CHICAOO. June 3J m — Hal Tro.'ky, for nine years one of the Cleveland Indians best hitters, Is bnck In tho farm system-T-ralslng OTi and hogs.The big first boseman h a s done n about-face, deciding he did not ire to return to -tlie Tribe after

his year's layoff t o recuperate ftoin headaches. He w as going back to his farm In Norwoy, la., where he <as bom 30 years ago.Trosky made no secret of the fact

he still was nursing n grlevanco ngaliijt the Tribe. After h is self- imposed retirement in 1D13, he said ■ ! •«« mallrt a con tn ct containing

big salary slash. He Insisted the It was made bccause th e club's

thought he w as ' •

THE STANDINGS

ti a while

dbn't boUier tne - .............. . _they used to- 1 »tlli hare Uj learn to throw f*ster while in motion w ith tJie' bnU, but m gel it.-

That determlnatlon'Is wriilen all over .LlndeU's career. He met ono disappointment #ft«r uiothec In nlj! minor league days at Arcadia, Calif., Joplin. Mo, Kansas City, Oakland and Newark.

When he came lo tlie Yanks, h e thought sure he pitcher. He had just losing four at Newaix, and hi corned run averajt of j.».

They told him that lUs pitching repcrtoir; would-be to mucli bet­ter If he could master n knee-high slider. Ho agreed tp do it. Ho npenC to much time on it that ho lost his sizzling fast ball. Alter several postings, he knew he was through as a big leogue pitcher.

aiva up7 Not Johnny Llndeill K c grabbed a bat and began to make a nolao as a pinch hlller.

.McCarthy took a liking fellow'

HAEGG WILL TRY TO BREAR THREE OF HIS SEVEN RECORDSConqueror of Rice Outlines Program

Dj ORLO ROBERTSONN E W Y O R K . Jun e 22 (/P )— N o w t l m t h o h a s s h o w n A n ie rJ -

c a n t r a c k fu n s t h a t he c n n 'r c n l } y r u n , G u i ld e r H n e u B is B o ln p t o m n k e a s c rio u .'i as s n u lt o n n t le n a t th r< ;e o f t h e B c ve n w o r ld r e c o rd s h o h u n p up la s t s u m m e r in S w e d e n .

T h e G n e v le { ir c i t in n , f u l l y ' r e s te d a f t e r a p a r ty c e le b r a t­i n g h i s caHy v ic to r y ov ;e r A m e r ic a ’ s G re p .R ie e in th e n a t io n a l 5 ,0 0 0 -n )e tc r c h a m ­p io n s h ip S u n d a y , v is i lo t l t h o A m u lc i i r A t l ' l c \ ic H i i iu n ’s o f f i c e S lo iid i iy an d o u t l in e d th e p i 'o f f ra n i f o r U io r e m a in ­d e r o f h i.s A m e r ic a n to u r .

To.Iteniime Tralnln*He -then returned in ilie New

Hnmp. hlrc

g tathe 1 Yaiiee h

Nov, Long John Is becoming one o f the most dangerous clouteri on Mama Joe's rosier, as witness Uia'e two homer.i In a recent gome. He doesn't try to outgueis the pitchers. •T know better than that,” imiled Johnny, "but I keep my eyes open for that fast one."

Johnny's only intctcsts his family, (a wife, four-year-old ion and four weeks old daughtef) an occasional card gilme, and buebsll.

I f all goes weU. and he continues lo pound out those base hits. Johnny says he'll ploy with the Yankees as lone as they want him. and Uien he'U realize his nmblllon-to OMi ft far the )

Jack Wins by Technical K.O.

.WASHINOTON, June S3 (jPi — Beau jBtk. former NcwTOrk-rccoa- iilzcd lightweight Utleholdcr, scored n sixth round technical knockout over Maxle Starr, tough IlHle Indian soldier from Edgewood arsenal, Md. Jack weighed 13!S, pounds, etarr

Starr, nn unknown outside of Washington, was floored for a count of nine In the first found and hit th e canvas twicc In Ih? fifth, taking counts of five and nine.• Referee Eddie Lafond stopped the

bout after one minute,.55 seconds of the sixth when Starr drgpped to the floor after absorbing a ter-> riflo barrage of straight righU the Jaw.

Stnrr was outclfti.v:d throtsghout but showed wlllingncis to mix witli Jock. •Tlie Bcnu," former Atlanta Negro, was awarded every round Uie AssoclnWd PreM score slieet.

Jack. Who lost his lightweight ow n to Bob Montgomery In New arJc jfveral vccks ago. drove Starr

the lopts Tcpcnttdly with n hard rlghthand attack. He mls.sed fre- rjuently, however, thereby allowing Stnrr to last as long os h f did.

The win was the opcnlnR phase of a . . . .

Brooks Get 6 Runs In 7th, Beat Giants

B R O O K L Y N . J u n o 2 2 ( /P > - T h o B r o o k ly n D o d g e rs s p o ile d th t t N a t io n a l le a g u e d e b u t o f l e i l y K e n CUjihc w i t h a s i x - r u n o u tb u r s t i n t h o ' s e v c n t h in n in g lo b e a t th e N e w Y o r k G ia n ts , 7 to i ; in , a t w i l i g h t g a m e l im i t e d t o e ig h t im i in g s b y d a r k ­ness. --------------------------------------------------------

C haae, w h o m th e G ia n t s o b - ]ta in e d f r o m th e B o a to n ' ‘ R e d Sox f o r o u t f i e ld e r 'B a b e B a rn a

'o e k , h n d a l l t h e bc .s t o f th e g o in g i n t h e e a r ly in n iu g .s ,

five fram es he allowed only t and no runs whUe hls team- nlpped big. Babo Newsom for

ihdr tally In the third Inning on a fumble by shortstop Alble O1o£.-,op and singles by Dllly Jurgcs and Nick Wllek. •

Newsom, gaining hLi -■seventh . lory Bgalast two dcleats, gave nine

often tlircatened, but •t in the

lltld. Twice New Vork runners tlirown out at the plate.

Chose weakened In the alxih to let the Dodgers tie the score on two singles surrounding a stolen base and tlicn collapsed In the scventli.

Joe Medwlck, mnking a bid for regular action In the Dodacr.s. left field again, made three o f SrooX- lynts nine hits and batted In three

.ordon. It « 0 0 Mrt.ltk. II

if 'nimxip. ilcrmtn. In- Wlirk. Medwlck i>, lV»U.r 5, Two , w.llrt, T>C**

SPOT CASHFor Dead or Worthless Hor»ea.

Mules and Cowi Can Collret OUa-JJ, Twin FaHs MAHY ALICE moOT FAIIM

s wltli

Cordon. rt>k»M .

8!fa S it­

ing bb headaclies.Arriving in Chicago last week

with a pile of luggage, Trosky, de­clared: -I have enttugh elr“ ' " “ '•'• me to last through the ’ lei," He worked o w w lL Louis Drowns, aw-altlng tlic arrival of Cleveland Jor b series w ith the Whit# Sox, and displayed enthus­iasm to get back In unlfonn.

Roger Peeklnpaugh, the Trlbe,‘s Tice president. flnoU j had a con­ference with him— nnd announced that Troaky-yould return to his farm because Of various considera­tions, Including eommltmenta to - - Iowa farm pool.

"I'd now like to pUy bo«ebaU Clilcsgo or St. Louis," Trosky said. •Then 1 couW be n e n i iny fftrass Itv Norway and could reach them Quick­ly If my help in the man power shofUge was'needed."

It would be a problem ior the White Box or Browns to obtain him, however, since the Iradlnjt dead­line was midnight, June 15. About tlie only way would be for Clcve- Itmd to get other tewns In the American league to wMye. o n him, and that's Improbfcble.

Stepliens’Back Injury Improved •

ST. LOOTS. Jun« 3f m— Vem Stephens, the Browns' ghortstop, show* rapid Improreinent JTCcn * back injury vhlch I t —might keep the leading American league hitter on tiia l?tnch » lew days.

Stephens retired >ln th# finst la- ilng of a doublelieodet opener Sun­

day with • pulled back muscle* i

nEAD TIM ESiNEWd^AKT ’ADS. fj

Joe Heving Is Forgotten Man

hr It.\Y DL08HEH CLEVELAND, Juno 23 uT;—In

less Uian a month Die strictly un­predictable Cleveland Indians have dlpsy-doodled from tiie American league leadertlilp to Uie ceUar and back up to third place.

One of the noteworthy Uilngj. nbout It is Manager Lou Boudreau's apparent, I w ot conlWcnco in Joe Heving. one ot the loop's HET'TCjIef pltehcrs. i

Going east In itrii plucc In t^ W ^ Muy, the tflbc droi>pea 16 of 10 t skid Into n virlual lie lor lust, Uic hit n winning slrtnk good for seven of the lost eight starts and a d ia l- Stnglng spot only JWo anil one-haM games behind New York.

rltchera Lacked Control One ot Uie biggesl foclors In tlie

Indliuu' long losing string w.is rooklo pltclicrs' lack of control.

• 'Ji spread to tiie veterans. Tlie walk Icet one game. Cicvelund took four out 01 five from Clil-

cago but U re<iulred 18 pitching ap­pearances. Every llUiger on tiic 'ftlbe stalf worked except Heving.

Kentucky Joe, 38. has bccome Uie forgotten mon.of the bullpen. He savod countless games lor oUier fllngers while winning 41 and drop­ping only ](I In the live years cnd-

wlUi last season, but has made six relief appear-SSy"

.......3 tills canipaign.Called cn only onco when

needed saving, he hu7led 1 0 _____nlngs agnlBSt Detroit, giving five hits and one tun—tlie

Olher Flteber* Used In his oilier five rescue Jobs, the

Indians were two to five ruas t«- hlnd.. When tho games were close, Boudreau hsi called on Mike Nay- niick, Pete Cente>, Ray Prfat nnd Al' Ho Reynolds, and was dlsapjiolnted In many casts.

Boudreau soj-s he feels Heving, _ control specialist. Is effecUve only against ccrlain ciubv Joe Isn't In a position to do more'thwi observe discreet, silence, but he isn’t on U. different player who would welcome relegaUon lo the bench. —

iMJnpr League ‘ Resulls

IN%2i*riMAl*LUCUBJuvlinur I. 8>r>ru>« 1Turofito 4. K««uk J ............Stnacrnl 7. Jrn*y Cllj t

IndUMPolb r. C«ltmb<u I “ “’*80^I«R N ASSOCIATION

A'8 OPTION HUBLEB PHILADELPHIA. June 33 m —

The Athletics announced today they have opHaned rooUe pltctiCT Tom Clyde, to Wllmltvton. DeL, the ■Class B Interstita IcoftiB.

S W E E T C H E R R IE S

YoiSl get the same ThriD we did, . , when t v e u n w r a p p e d the n e w G e n e r a l T ire

f r o m A m e r ic a n -M -c id e r u b b e r ! ,W e’d hcar^ a b o u t it, o f course. W e’d hinted about it to y o u ia so m e of ou r ads. '

B ut here it w as! A G e n e ra l T ire from American-Mad<f rubber.

Yes, sir, here w as th e ac tu a l proof of all the n:ionths. . . t h e long d a y s and nights . . . that G enera l T ire 's chem ists and

engineers have d ev o ted tp th e licking of America's rubber p rob lem .

The tread is G c a e r a l ’s fa m o u s Silent- G r ip design. The

sam e extra strong

c o rd s acfc in the

..hodyf as alw ays. T h e same G eneral Tire craftsm en w h o h a v e alw ays g iven you General’s q u a lity a r c building it. /»

Scores o f peop le h i v e been if> already to see our d isp la y of G e n era l T ires bu ilt w i^ A m cricaa>M ade ru b b e r an d more are coming ev ery day. ^

We’re su re th a t y o u , too, w ill w ant to see first h a n d w h a t Am erican engineer* ing ingenu ity has accom plished. TTiat is why w e’re in v id n g you to come in now . . . or an y tim e soon . . . and le t us show you th e G e n e ra l T ire s tha t everybody will be ab le to b u y someday. ,

UNION MOTOR CO.Ford ★ Mercury ★ Lincoln

Headguarfersfir General Tire Quality Rieeapping by Experts Who Know HowIHO CKRTinCAn IIOUIIIIO pen MttlMOIK TtRltl '

Tuesda^i June 1013 TIMES-NEWS. TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Pago Ssvcn '

8 N A Z 1 I L A N E S■ Jun« « OARJ-A Tlyinit PortrcM

etued th# ‘nmodHblrd Kid th« c— th it took h u out >lut FTldtr . eelvfd the African ilr force equiv­alent of the »tate chimplonship todw.

Her explolt-ehoolln* down eight o f -35 Ocrmui plenei that attacked

1 her over the McdlterrBneen and then reaching » sUe be*e with 140 bullet holes dotting her «lde»—drew

) thle line !n «n olfleW telephoned ‘ operation* report:

-Ye aodar"•■'fit lee\ lu ll ifte the le»8«e champion*," First Ucul. R. li. 61M , Las AnselMp'tho co-pllot, said. "It

A Wk4 a swell time."“ Fljlnt FlnL Jttalon

The crew wiw flying ll» first ml»- slon In {lie plMie, a vetirnn of bomblnff altiicloi on France, to help out in the Friday Meiilna mid.. After itJ bomb run, the Tliunder bird wa.1 sliot out oJ formBtlon b: enemy llshurs and wu lost «ecr tIrujBllnB alone Juil above th<

r n’ater. AxLi planed attacked her from all tides. Tliey Included Mes-scr- schmlt lOO's and Focke Wulff PO'a.

-When we got down on the wnter thoM birds could only attack as from one direction," films said. "As they turned up they had to tltsplay their bellies- We gave them the works, knoclcing hell out of one plane'after another. It was swell shooting."

<The pilot, Ueut. Eujene O. \ man. 38, Uttle Rock, Ark., aald enemy planes "all seemed to have, personal aulgnmenu labelled Thun' dcrblrd.'"

Bellered to«l . .The boji at this base were ready

to write off the Hiundcrblrd and her crew u lo st. Tlien lliU messog#

^ came over the telephone line from m Tunis;

•“niunderhlrd landed Pantellcrla. All crew safe, none Injured. Ye Qodsl Plane rurinin; tight laatlns ,«J«lnutc.v . . Shoi ilo»n Into «e* eight Oerman flghwrt one which blew up in midatr. ilireR ot plunged Into Medlitrrmienn on I

Divorces Granted By Burley Court

BUHLEY. June 33-Mrs. Irene Barclay. T*ln Falls, hsi been grant­ed a divorce decree Irom Wnyne A. Barclay on grounds ol cruelty. A minor child was temporarily grant­ed to the plaintiff, with the stipula' lion tliBl ihe defendant may vlsl' tJie child at reasonable times.

Donuld Buck was granted a dl- varce Irom Mn. TruUi Duclc In dis­trict court here Inn w«k. and the plaintiff was granted custody of

Another divorce was granted Mrs. Dorothy Johnson Jrom Charles Johnson, with the custody of three

, minor children going to the mother ^ and 430 per month for their care.

D. H. Charles received a dlyorce degree from Mrs. Vivian ChaxJea. Tlio defendant was granted a moIJ^- tary settlement and restoration of her maiden name.'V&laa Beamaru

Robert W. Oranc h u . filed su \l for divorce from'Mrt. eaUle Eva Urant to whopi/be wm married March 13. 1C31, at Tvin Falls. The plaintiff charges desertion and saka that he be given real property belonging to the couple.

Rebekahs InitiateHAILTY, June 23 - Rebekah

Snowdrop ledge ot Bellevue held Initiation ceremonies for two isem - bers’of the Occident . Rebekah5 ot Fairfield. The two initiated mem­bers were May Brooks and Cleo Jones. Members from Falrfletd and Deborah Rebekah lodge. HaUey, aL'U) attended.

HA ILEY

ti

Mr. and Mrs. Alee McDonald, who , have been employed In war-work ftC

t Ofiden for the past several moattu, have returned to Hailey. Mr. Mc­Donald has Uken the position Of foreman at the Olorgetti ranch near Oan'netU

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Anderaon and family, Jerome, are.vlsltlns at the tooaie of Mr. and Mrs. T. T. WU- liams, Mrs, Anderson 1> a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Williams.

Ueut. Donald WUso'n of the army air base, Casper, Wyo., la visiting his parents on a five day furlough,

Mr. and Mrs. Aiigui McRae. Paul, were Hailey visitors the past few

t o , and Mrs. WllUam A. Brod- head, with tbelr daughter. Mrs. M, Dale Arvey, and grandson, BUly, Boise; are the guests ot Mrs. K ath­erine French for-a tew fiaya,

Mr. and &lrs. R. O. Buttram have purchased the Broadhead residence on Second avenue and pUa to r

Mrs. C, M. Hart aftd granddaugh- , ter, Tobble Jean. Elcgman, Arls.. ) are gUbstd at the home ot Mr. and

Mr«. Otorje Allen for the aummer.Petition to estabUsb record title

to community property In the m at­ter of the eiUte of Man E. Brooka was filed by Torrtste P, Josaelyn and Charles Josselyn on the Jos- telyn nuich near Carey.

Guy Wilson was arrested by8h«r- Iff L. C. Outzs on a charge of drunken and disorderly' conduct Juna.17. On being arraigned before Probate Judge Oeorge A. McLeod, he was fined $10 and costa.

W EN D ELL -h-

Mlsa Marian MacQulvey. CaldweU. vlalted.at the home eJ her par­ent*. Mr. and Tdn. O. D; Mac- Qulvey,

Mr«.. Anna Kappel h u enrolled for the aummer school aetata at Albion. .

Mrs.- Winiam ;oocld, Lebanon. Ore.f U vlsUng at the bo^e of her home ot her daughter, Mra. Tom Oatea.

a.iX.'SKiS^va :‘Sa week vlU> hla partnta. Mr. aod Mra. X^Boy Bchotiweliar.

^ filial Ida May PeUrsea baa en- ■ rolled, for ■ radto eouraa atW elaer.^ Mrs, D. H. Tarlatatr and Mrs.

W, W. Kelley, attended the chapter of Idaho, O, E a to W»1

— wlwM-itra..Lmian.j._B*rten- — elected woHhypMd matron or the grand eftapter, |

Yipee! Rescue After 66 Days ou Pacific Island

1 • ■ A . ^ — .....- . IJam pinf, and yelfini with Joy alter being marooned on a south Pacirie liland fnr CG days, these five

m em ben of a B-17 bomber ertw wave frantieaDy aa their lont-awalted mcu< plane files nver and anaps their plctnn. Note the life rafl on the b»»ch and native huU In llie baekground. Tl.o men are. le f t to rifht. Sgt Donald O. .Martin, Dttatnr. Ill,; S tt . William H. Nlcholi, Kelwr, Ark.; Bgt.- Jim II. Hunt, Effiocham. lILi Set. Robert J. Tomball, San Antonis, Tex.; and l.ienl. Rmrit H. Rule. Ranta Bar* bar*. Call/. AUo en the Jaland iul not on the beaoh when Ihe picture waj miie iras Theodore II. Edwarda, Yennfstewn, 0 . (OHIclal U. B. army aJr aorpa photo).

Many Obstacles to Be Faced _ In Post-Wai’ Food PlanningB y OVID A, MARTIN

W ASHINaTON. June 22 (flV-One ! the f irn big Jobs facing pool-war food planners Who ptirUclpaitd In Uie recent UnlUd Nations center- ence orj tood and agriculture at Ho' Sprlnes. Va-, Js to aaUsfy a MUiourl "ahow-me” attitude p r e v a ll l i amons this eountry’fl facinera.

The conference, at which H4 r tlon.1 were repfteentcd. Issued (iDclaraUon that an econmy freed from w ant and Hunger waa possible

,and la id down thetsuUlne of a pro­gram ior promoting abundant pro ducUon, distribution and consumi>- tlon b l food.

At fir s t blush. It would seem thai farmers would hall such a declara- Uon. W hy should they do other that, applaud plans that envision greater markota for them? Hasn't It been said th a t farmers by nature want to produce abundnnUy? Uncontrolled Produclion Oppostd Llko their broihera in otiier lines

of ecoQomlc productivity, however, they w ant to see a profit In (heir endeavor. They have no desire to return to the days of uncontrolled production, uiunorkeuble surpluses and rxUnously low prices auch as prevaUod during a great part ot the 20s and 30.s.

They have learned, through cjtpcrlence, how to band together and secure, wltij the aid of govern­ment, prices more nearly In line with w hat they think are right and Just. Su ch cooperation has Involved, Of course, curtailed production rath- r th an unllmltM output.

Henc«. It Is but natural that fami- jrs should Inqulro aa to whether any program calling for a sharp expan­sion In -output would assure them satisfactory returns. -

Qeneral PrtnelpleaIh c rood conference adopted___

general principles pertaining to farm prices. It recognized that pro­ducers should receive a "fair return" for th e ir products. It did not at­tempt. however, to define such a re­turn l a t«m s of currency or prod-

It d id state, however, that the post-war program ahould encour. 0*6 t h e developing ol tarmJng sys- tema dcstgned:

(1) T o maintain soil fertility ai lerels which will suataln yields aiiC In-^re adequate return for labor;

(3) T o protect crops and Uveitoclc from p estj and diseases, and to favor steady employment throughojit the year. '

One Important phaaa of the Hot Eprlnea program la a plan tor i world ••©ver-nonnal granary" to ita blllie supplies and prices of major storable agricultural conunodltJes. Fluctuating prices have been one of agrleulture's major headaches.

Cbangea InTolred I t ie jMst-war program would In- otve «ome rather slgnlflctnt

chanaea In this country’a fanning pattern. And In those proposed changcs exist seeds of opposition,

The TTnlted States, aa well as all other counU lu, would direct lU ag- rlrultunU etforta first toward the production ot sufficient food to pix>- vide a ll clUzena with a sutrlUonally adequat® diet. And productive fscU- IUm a n d effort above this would be employed toward supplying foreign markets.

A program of that kind for this countjy would Inrolve greater pro­duction for the domestic marbu, but posoU>ly reduced production for export marke^. Much land, effort and facUiUea used In the post to produce such bis export crope as wheat, cotton and tobacco would be shifted to the production, of lira.

Advoc:xtea of the program aatld-

H E L P theW ir Effort

Your worthlew or dead hotie i/ cows, sheep aad bogs will brioc' you coAh -and will tupply our --------------- • Trtta fata for gly*cerlnel

Ca<b paid for hides, pelts, tal­low. household tats, bones. Call coUeat Twin FiUi. » < ; Ooodlni, 47; Hupert. “

HIDE &-TAaOW-CO,

. . chirses that It ia a new schcme' - give awoy Uilji country'a foreign agrleuituroJ marlcet i.

AnoUier phase of Uie program likely to encounter alem oppoaltion Is the principle that It Is the duly and responalbUlty o f government to provide ail clUrcn.i with an adequMe simpl ' / f nulrlUous food If they UiOTSMves are unable to do ro.

Tfi5prtnclple Is likely to Involve BXtenslvo use ot wJiat ia now term­ed subsidized consumption. The use ot subsldleo at the present time to encourage greater food production and to prevent increases In con­sumer tood costa—rccognlied aa a form of government subsidized con­sumption—has evoked sharp oppo­sition among some farm orenniia- tlma and aome tann-etate lawmak-

The food conference program calls for social aecurlty measures—such u family aJlowanccx, social Insur­ance and minimum wages—ond dl.- re«t distribution to assure proper dieU to underprivileged groupa.

Aid for Farmer*Another recommeridatlon of Uie

food.parley, which runs counter to attitude of some farm leaders, per­tains to sovcm m ent a t.<tftnce to low-lncome farmers who have liiad- tquaie tools and facilities of pro- duoUon.

itiona were urged to adopt a under which such fftrroers

would he provided machinery, equip­ment and materlnla at low -r-* Such prograjn.% would resemble hobniuilon profinuna At this coun­try’s fami security ndmlnlstrotlon, m agency jinder attack by eome 'arm orsanlratlons and leadcm who :onl«nd It has adopted com m u-‘“ ‘-

D E C L OJame.\ Dalton hoa returned from

Salt L?kr City. Mrs- Dalton operated on at the U D, • S . pits]. Her condition Is reported sallsfactory-

Mrs, Durdell Curtla and children left for Salem. Ore., where they will visit her parenu. Mr, and Mrs, James Sldwell and tomlly,

Mr, and Mrs. CRve L1nd--vey ..... family, and Njr, ^ d Mrs. John HomhoUt, Hazelton. were gueafs IK the home of Mr. and M rs. Joe Walker.

Mr. and Mrs. Riley Uah visited at American Falls.

A. A. Morris, Grants po-is. Ore, Is here visiting friends and seeing to business interf.it i- Mr- Morris was a former resident ot Decla.

DR. 0 . W . ROSEAnnounces the opening of -

now offices at228 M A I N A V E . S . -

In the Wlboo Bldit. Across

L E G A L A D V E R T I S E M E N T S LEGAL A D V E R T I S E M E N T S ■

KETTCIHJM June 31—AccordingI naval officers In charge of oper­

ations-at-Bun-Valleyy where the large hotels are being converted Into naval convalexent iniUtutlona. all work Is progressing and the buUd- Inga win be In shape tor early occu- pincy.

Capt, J. T, O'Connell -luid Copt P. M. Rcilion have stated that the personnel of the staif has not yet been disclosed, and *lhat detach­ments will be expected here very shortly. Preltmlnkj* forces corulst- Ins ot former employes of the Bun Valley resort are alrendy busy with gtntial »iranBtmtn\ nl Ahe tsUb- llshfnent.

Captain O'Connetll. 8an Diego. Calif,, will be the commanding otfl- cer of the local post, and Captain Rohow, Oakland, Calif,, U tlie med­ical corps execuilvs officer. Both are naslgneci here for an Indetlnlle period and primarily are engaged •. Inspection of tlie big Union Pacific Institutions Uiey are to oocuy. Thus tar the officem have said the com- mcKllous bulldliig.i nnd spacious grounds make an Ideal setup.

A detachment of sailors hnv rlvcd during (lie week, but the ■ mandant states that the first body of any con.'ilderahje/proportlon will arrive within tw«\Aeckt. nnd will ronslBt of from 1300 to HOO men. Nearly all homes that were vacant since last fall, «1Il be requisitioned.It WAS jtstcd.

No mtWt atiM\s aie as yet flte- closed, owdUing the compleUon of the staff and public relations de­partment.

Captain O'Connell wo.i at Farra- gut tor a considerable period and Captain tlohOT? wiu on dutyat-Pearl Harbor.

Twin Palls, Idaho ) May n . I9is lOlOO o'clock A. a.

b e g u l a b may scbbionThe Donrd of County-Commls-

slonera met at this time pursuant to rcce&i. all members and the clcrk present.lUaolatlen to Sell County Preperly

T h e following resolution was of­fered by CommliJloner Molsnder. who moved Its adopUon:

WHEREAS; Certain real estate ..ow stands In iht name ol Twin Falla County wlilch has been ac­quired by tax deed, ond which Is not now necessary for ttie use ol said Twin Palls County, and

WitEREAa, Provision la made In Section 30-703 Idaho Code Annolat- e<l and amendments tJjcreto. for flu saJe ot such lands.

NOW. THERETORE, De It re' lived that certain real esute which

,.3W staiuls In the name ol Twin Falla county having, been acquired <y tax deed, and vhlch Is not no«

.lecewary for the we ot aald Coun- tji. be listed and advertised for sale In the Tlmes-News, Bald tsie "

KETCHUM-

Mr. a Will Riley and Miss Riley, T»in Falls, spent a week

their summer home 6n Warm Springs creek.

Mra. IUmI Grant and little niece, Janci, sper{t two or. three days at the summer home of Mra. Maude Cummins, ou Warm Springs •cj^elc, and returned to Sho^one. They will leave for Ogden In a few day*, where Mrs. QranV wll\ be with her daughter. Miss Mnry Jane Grant.

Sheep arc bcslnnlng to appear on the summer ranges of tlTe Warm River forr. I, nnd additional flocks are on the way.

P jT ilili iU 'Eculhion loDing 4 lo 1} hou lougll. Intei«. 5pugh-»;iof •mbonoi.m.M; MOY'» flovofhilp. C6fnbofd.Wu/

m a y

F O R A D D ED ENERGY, B E T T E R HEALTH

. . . at least

2 SLICES. of ■ Butter-Krust .“Enriche^”

BreadT^

^ E V B R Y

MEAL'!D o n ’ t t h i n k f o r a m in u t e t h a t E n r ic h m e n t o f W h i t e B re a d is j u s t a n o th e r f n d o r a n y t h in f f o f t h e k in d . I t ’s a p r a c t ic a l s o l u t io n I S o u r w a r t im e fo o d p ro b le m , r c c - o m m e n d c d b y g o v e r n m e n t n u W t io n a l e x p e r t s . W i t h E n r lc h c d B re a d . U n c le S a m h a s fo u n d a w a y t o p r o v id e th e A m e r ic a n p e o p le w i t h a m o u n ts o f V it a m in s n n d M in e r a ls t h a t a re r e q u i r e d to kee p t h e m s t r o n g a n d h e a l th y .

Make It A Habit!T o be fure that you are cetUns BUffleleat amotwU of- protein, vitamins, calcium and Iron In your dally diet, eat at leut two altcea of Enriched BUTTER- KRUST Bread at every meat T h a f i your best a««iraace ot properly balanced menus. Mate It a habit. At leu t two aUeet « t arery m eall

n e ll Uke thU enriched triple-deeper: Flake left-over fish ’ and maah srten peM ; rali as a spread and apply to one aUee o f enriched bread. For the second deck, spread brie (ration-free) cheese, end lettuce. A French drr.viing may be added for extra iplce.*^

B U Y B U T T E B - K B t l 3 T B R E A D F R O M Y O U R 'G R O C E S

Proceedinsis of the BoafaNO* County Commissioners, Twin PallsX^unty, Idaho

T tlrt 2»th C f Ol Jui1043. at the hour ofM-.-sMounUIn War Time..............Enat Front Door ol the Court lloiLie In Twill rails County at Twin Falls, Idolio. Terms ot said sale to tie a; follows;

All purdiases of tlOO-00 or lindei win be for casli; all purchases ovei HOO.OO and under 1300-00, one hal. coah. balance one year; all pur- chaaea over (300.00 one/tnlf ca h. balnnce In two ejuitl onausl pay- m ents. Deferred payments to beai tnt<rc3t at tJie rate ot six per cent- im per annum, Interest payable an- luaUy. Both sucli Interest and prin­

cipal to be patdJnJlLe oftlctof.lhL. Coiinty'Auditbr oJ said Twin Falls County.

The motion was seconded by Com* mlssloner Potter, and upon roll call the votfl"ft-aa: .

Commissioner Molander: ) Commissioner Potter: Yes Commlsslon«-arecn: Ves Routine- business n-ns traniscled

untU the hour ot fl;00 o'cloek P. M when a recess was taken until 10:0 o'clock A. M. May 21, lOt).

ERNEST V. MOLANDER. A ttest: Chalmior

L o icx noBEnTs,Deputy Clerk,

Twin Palls. Idaho May 21. 19U 10:00 o'clock A, M.

REGULAR AlAV IsEBlilON The Board ot County CommLi

^loners met at Uils time pursuant to recess, all members and Uie clerk preaeat.

Order to Draw Warrant The County Auditor was author­

ized to draw warrant on Uie Poor fund lirOie amoimt of 138.00, pay able to StaUi of Idaho Dept, of eut> lie Assistance, in payment of sup­plemental Dircct Relict payroll I the monUi of May. ioo .

Resignation and Appolntmeot The Board, having before It the

petition of more Umn Uilriy quali­fied electors of T«ln Falls County. o.ilclng that C. A, Bulles, ot lYIn Polla, be appointed to the vacancy In the otUce of Uus Clerk ot th< Dtatrlct Court and ex-offlcIo Audi­tor nnd Recorder of Tuin, Falls County, Idaho, whicli will exlsfTfhen the accepuince ot the re-slgnatlon of I*aul H. Gordon becomes eltccUve. w hich petition was received and filed on Ulla Jlst d?y of May. 1543;

I t vros moved by Commissioner Molander. seconded by Commission­er Potte'r, tliat the rcilffnatlon of Paul H. Gordon, as Clerk of the O lst^ct Court and ex-ottlclo Audi­tor \n d Recorder, heretofore filed w ith m e Board and not cepted formally, be accepted, such acceptance to beccne effecttve May 25. 1043.

Upon roll call the vote was as lows:

CommUsioner Molander: A>e Commissioner Potter: Aye Commissioner Green; Aye I t was then moved by Conv....--

aloner Potter, secouded by Commis­sioner Qr^en; that 0. A. Bullea, o: Twin Falls. Idaho, be and he U here­by. appointed to III! the vaci6icy oc- curing )n the office ot the Clcrk ot tho DIsUlct Court and ex-offlclo Auditor and Recorder, on May 20 J943. thU appointment tflfbecome ef­fective on said dale, ehd to covei the remainder of the term for which an election wa.? held for said otnci in November. l»«,

Upon'roU call the vole was u lows:

Commissioner Molander: Ay* Commissioner Potter: Ays

' CORunlssloner Green: Aye ' RouUne business «as transacted unm the hour of J:00 o'clock P. M- when a recess was taken unUI 10:DO o'docic A. M. May 24, IBU.

ERNEST V. MOLANDZR. Attest:, Chairman,

LORj^ ROBERTS,Deputy Clerk.

Twin Palls, Haho May 24. 1943 10:00 o'clock A, M.

REGULAR MAY SEB810N The Board ot County Commis­

sioners met at this ■■

which amoMiit -was paid In full evidenced by Auditor's CertUlcate No. 3109. It was moved by Commis­sioner Molander. seconded by Com-

iviloner- Potter and unanimously ...rrled, that when paid for In full, all delinquent taxes (except special njsesament) on said property t- £ancelled, that deed Issue, and (hi tho chalnnan and clerk of the Board ba authorltcd to execute the same.

Routine buslneM was tran!acu>d until U\e hour of SiOQ o'clock P. M. when a reccss was taken until 0:00 o'clock A M. May 38. 1943,

ERNEST V, UOLANDEU, Attest: ' . Chalroian-

LORA ROBERTS.Deputy Olerk.

Twin Falls, Idaho May 2d, 1043 0:00 o'clock A-M.

REGULAR MAY SEHblON Tlie Board ol County Oommls-

loiicrs met at this lime pursuant > reccu. Comnjlssioners Potter and

Oreen and Uie elerk present. Com- niLi.'doner Molander absent, and CommlMloner Potter acUng chiilrman pro tem.

Bond Approved and Oalh Takti Bond of C. A. Dlillrs b.i ex-ofllclo

Auditor nnd Brenrder, In amount of «10,000.00 wim HarUord Accident and Indemnity Co, approved, and hl. otilclal oath taken before the Donrd,

Rouiine buslneu wa.i transacted until Uie ho\ir of »:00 o'clock P. when a receaj was taken unUl 10:00 o'clock A. M. May 28, 1043-

BEN E. POTTER, Attest: Chairman pro tem-

C- A. nULLES.Clerk.

tol-

uus time p u rsu e 'mbtra and Ui^dlrk

er ef Ponib { n, County Trtasuier.

to recess, all members present.

TransferRose J. Wilson. ............................

requested- approral of transfer of funds to correct «rrors found In her offlco in Uxes collected for Uie years 1639, 1810, 1(41 and M3 asroUows: ---------------

Debit: Ind. School Dbt. No. i. »2aj3; Ind. School 01st. No. 4. t3.48; F iler Village 113,27; Murtaugh VII- Inee. I.IS; and 'Castleford Village, *3i a . credit: Intl. School Dlst. No. I, *17.09; Ind. School DlsL-No. 0, tl,«; Common School Dlst. No. 4. $2,4S; Common School'Dlst. No. S3, $3^; PUer Highway, I1JJ7: Murtaugh Blshw ay. 1,18, and T & A. U£8.

Transfers were approved u re­quested.

Sale of Ceonly Property T h e following entry U made tc

correct Uie minutes of May 17,1943;Tho Worth One-half ot Lot 4. aU

o f Lot« 3, 10 and 11, In Block 31 ot R oger*» Townslts fjavlag been ol* fered for sale at reguUrjtix sale M »y 18, 1943. and not baring been sold , the Board on June 1, 1943, ai shown in Book 10 ot CommlsskoerB' Journal at Page 1«. Ilxed a mtal- m tnn price for prlnte sale ot said iDlB. Thirty dayi cow baring elapsed s in ce the publlcaUcn of ailil mini* m um Um Board at thU U»« •cceptod-the-offer-of-MrtrBreec# Siim cer for said lots In the amount J3i •«-»<> plus lino recording fee.

1107.10! Dr. J. B . M an*y, county physician. »JJ8,00.

Lora Tolman. dtrk. treasurer, 1117.10.

Ruby Welnbergirr. clerk, county agent, (131.10.

Bend Appfeved ^Bond ot Clarence H. SchUt aa tiounty Coroner, in the amount of *3.000.00 with Commercial Cajwalty Insurance Co. was approved by the Board,

Routine business vu transacted unUKtho hour of B:oo o'clock P. M. when a recess was Uken wqtU 10:00. o'clock A. M. June 4. 1843.

KENYOK .GREEN, Attest; ChalrmoQ pro leili.

0 , A. BULLES,Clerk.

-------------- Twin Falls, IdahoMay 3S,"I943------------10:00 o'clock A, M.

REQULAU MAY SESSIONT lie Board of Coun& Commb-

sloners met n t this time pursuant to reccM, CommUsloncrs Potter apd arcon and the clerk present. Com- mtsaloner Molander absent and CommlMloner Potter acting chairman pro tem- ' Hospital tjaiar? Claims Altoi

Hospital Bolary claims wen _ lowed and v,-arTonts were ordered drawn in payment thereof as fol­lows:

Charlott Armstrong, nurses tide, »60i4: Berdeen Aufdechelde, msid, *44.03.

MnrRtiret Baker, nurse, tSJ.lO; Clco Barton, nurse, *101.10; Bcmlce Barron, nurse. *S.OO: Marian Bever- Idgp. nurse. $117.10; Katherine Bll- yeu. nurse. *50.10; LoU M. Blskts- lee. nur. e. *5.00; Beulah Budd. mnld, *S3.1U; Edna Bryson, nurse, *48.47.

MyrUc Clematis, maid, |58.10| Stfilla Corey, dietician. *115.10; Loulao Cowles. nurse.'*15.00; Edilh Coit. nurse. *I01.10.

Olorlannci Doinon. maid. *U.IO; Lfturn Darrlnst/jn. nurses olde, *51,10; Qindyn'Dcnn. nur.w, *1001)3.

Mtixlno. Elllolt. clerk, *73.10; IlftJph Elliott, engineer. *130.10-

Dorb oam ett, nurse, *5.00; Al­berta Ohumm, miild. *1333; Harriet Oilman, nurse. *97.10; Stello B. Orenz, maid, *39.10; Grace Grltfln, mnld, *53.10.

BcrUu. Hansea, maid, »H3T, Marffuerlte Hans, nurse, »7J0; Tracy Haskins, stipervlwr, *97,10; Emily Hclde, cleric, llhrajlan, *120.60; Mary Hlclu, nurses aide, *73.10; Retta HIU. maid, tsa.io; Adnm Ronateln,

(M.S7; R y ^ Hunton, maid, JJ3.10.'IdnhOyOept, Store..Inc., a&slgned

l^alm y 's j -e ly n Peterson, nurse,

H ./C , jeppeson. SupL. *183 0; F aith Johnston. Lab, and X-ray Tec., *110.10: Marjorie Jollff, nurse, *10.00.

Clara Belle iqine, nurse, *33.77.Leila LlncolIS. nurse. *106.10;

KnUalcen Loutlt. nurse, *90,10.Alice K. Maag, nurse. *00.10; lola

Mockcy. nurse. *30.10; Dorothy Mal- ovoz. nurse. 804.77; Newty Malhta-s, onesthetlBt. JHO.IO; Lenli MoUock, matd. ta .\0 ; Ada MaiUce, <nurtes nide. JJ8.10; Inci McDpnald. nurse, *01.10; Katherine McFarland, su­pervisor. *115.10; Darbaj'a McKin­non, supervisor. *118.93j7Treva Mil­ler, maid. *16.47; Margnftt, Murphy, m aid, *io,43. /

Luella Nellsrn. nurst. *37.10; Es­ther Nelson. I-ab- is X-my Tec- *123.10; Genevieve Neater, nurse, *117.10; Olndys Nlcliolls. nurse. *101,10; Mona NlchoUs. nur.ie,*8i.io.

Lily Packer, nurse. *93.77; H. N. Prather, orderly. *118,10.

Juanita Reeder, nurses aUe, *58.10; M>Ttlc Roberts, nur.se, *96.10; Helen Robbln.i. nurse. *35.10; Mil­dred Rj-man. nurses aide. *70.60.

Ln Preal Sands, nurse. *00.43; Ra­chel Schltflcr, nurse, *88-10; Fran­ces Schmldt„ maid, *53.10; Betty Schneider, mnld. *4IJ7; Joslc Bhee- ley. cook, *72.10; Johanna sievera, nurses aide. *56-10; Harriet Elerers, nurse.1 aide. *58,10; MUly Smith, nurse. *87.10; Peggy Smith, nurses aide. *18.00; Mary Slone, aneslhet- Ut. *140.10; Preda 8wearlngcn,'cook. *77.44.

Mabel Tnylor. nurses aide, *3750; Marian Turner, bookkeeper. *101.10; Tw in Falls Bank and Trust Co- as- ------- - clalm.i: W. M. Helps,

CITATION IN TllE PROBATE COURT OP

TWIN FALLS COUNTT. STATE OP IDAHO.

In the Matter o f the Delinquency of Dean White, Don Bchleler and Robert Sehults.'*

) Minor Children.THE rtxtPLE OP THE BTATT.

OP'^IDAHO.To Russell 0 . White and G am ett n.

White, his wife; Dorothy Bchleler. - a widow; and Ed, Schult* and Yevetta Schultz, hb w ife.By Order of thb Court you -ara

hereby cited and required to appear betore the Judge of this Court, at the Court-room thereof, at tho Oourlhouite. City of Tw in Falb. County of Twin Falls, State ot

■ Idaho, on tho JOth day ,of June,1043, at 3 P. M. on said day, at a hearing to ba given on an informa­tion filed 'by W. W. Lowery. SherUf Of Twin Folia, County, State of Idaho, accusing your m inor child. Dean Wlilte. Don Schloler w «l Rob­ert Schultz, respectively, of the crime ot burglary, as will more fully ippear by the Information on file In laid -matter, nnd praying for afomraltment of each.of-aaid. minor-----children to _th#_Induslrlal_’ftalnlng

Dean Wilte, Don Schleler nnd Rob­ert Bchulta, and then and thera show cause. If any there be. why the said minor children sh all not ba commltteil to tho Industrial Traln- Init Scliool according to law. And for the failure to attend sold Court on said date you will be deemed guilty of contempt ot Court.

Witness the Honorable O. A. Bailey, Judge of the Prohate Court ot tht; County of Twin ra ils . Btat* ot Idaho, this 14th day of June, m%3,

.0. A. BAJLEY, SEAL \ Probate Judge.'Publish; June IB. 33, 1943.

*62,43; Beatrice Mspti. nvrse. *85.60 —*128-03.

IdA May -WBgner. SupU nurses, *168.60; Connie Wallcs, maid, *53J0; Betto Walls, maid, *29,33; Deane W all. maid. *39.43; Haiel Word, maid. *53.10. • r

Routine business waslfShsaclcd

BEN E. POTTER.Chairman pro tem.

lULLES,

Twin Falls. Idaho June 1. 1943 10;00 o'clock A. M.

iR SfAY SESSHHr-' i Of County Commb. a t this time pursuant

.. - mmlsstoaers Potter and .O reen and the clerk present. Com­missioner Molander absent and Commluloner Green acting chairman i>ro tem.

Salary Claims AUawed.' Salary claim s were allowed and

warrants were ordered. drawn ' payment thereof as follows:

D . T. BoUngbnAe. oounty agent, 437.50; w . C. Brown, Janitor. *11110.

John Grimes, weed director, 1121.10,

B«Uy — Inst;-»11T;10.', E . W, McRoberts. elevator opera- ior, *44.10; S . lu MoUiv laaltoi

r, Depaty Bapt.

)bert«. elevator

NOTICE TO CIIEDITORB IN THE PROBATE COURT OP

THE CODNTY OF TWIN FALLS. STATE OP IDAHO.

ESTATE of Edwla F. Anderson,DEOEASEDr--

Notice Is hereby glvet\ by the undersigned. Executrix of the Estate of Edwin P. Anderjon. deceased, . to the creditors ol and oU persons

ig claims ngalnit the »ald_de- .......... d. to'exhibit them ■^Ith thenccessary vouchers, within four moiUhJ after the first publication- ef thb notice, to the tald Executrl*. ' at the law office of J . H . Bland- tord. In the Twin Falla Bank is TSMit Co. B id e , In T w in FalU, County of Twin Falls, State of Idaho, this being the place fixed, for the transaction ot th o bu.»lne»s of said estate.

Dated June 7, 1943,FLORENCE E. BONNER,

Executrix ot-Hhe ^ t a t e ot Edwin r. Anderson, deceased.

PubUsh; June 8. 19. 23, 29. 1943.

SUBOIONB IN THE D Ism iC T COTOT OF

THB ele v e n t h JUDICIAL DISTRICT OP THE STATE OP IDAHO IN AND FO R TWIN . FALLS COONTy.

C. E. MILLIGAN, PlalnUff.

JULIA SORENSON.'FRANK'SOR-"'' EN80N. GUY SORENSON. OUS­TER SORENSOtC ANI> BLAND SORENSON. BEING TH E WID­OW AND SONS AND HEIRS OP HEBER O. SORENSON, D E -., CEASED. ALL O N K N O W N HEIRS AND UNKNOWN DE- ' VI8EES OF IIEDER C . SOREN­SON. DECEASED. AUU UN* KNOWN H E IR S AND- UN"- KNOWN DEVISEES O P JULIA BORENSON. FRANK SOREN- . SON, GUY S<5RENS0N. COSTER SORENSON AND BLAND BOR- EKBON, IF ANY OP THEM BE DEAD. AND ALL UNKNOWN OWNERS O P LOT 21. BIOCK 70, T O W N C IT E O F TOTH PALLS, TWIN PALLS COONTY, ; IDAHO, Defendant.The Bute of Idaho sends greet-

litgs to the above named defendants.You are hereby notified that a

complaint ho-5 been filed against you in the District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District of tho SUte ot Idaho In and for Tyin' . Falb County, by Uie alrave named . plalnUtt, and you are Tjereby 'dl- reeled to appear and plead to said complaint .w ithin twenty days of ' “ - service of this summons; and

are further notified that unless . . . to appear and plead to said complaint within the tlm o herein, specified, the plalnUtf wlU take Judcment agalrist you as prayed In - said complalnU Thb action Is In- - stltuted by tho pblntUf herein to quiet title In plalntUf and against the detendenas W and to Lot 21, Block 70 of the Original Toiraslle ot the City of Twin Falls, I n ^ n Pnll* Counlv. Idaho. . ■*Routine business wasTfahsaclcd pniig county Idaho. *

unUl-(he-honr-of-3:W-trt3DcrprH: in-wUnlMWeftOTTT h a te here- lo affixed the seal of said Dbtrlet

clock A. M. June 1, 1943. y tjja a ist day of June, 1913.C. A. BU L L ia

(Beal) .By Marjorie Balia. Deputy.

0 . 0 . Hall, - . .Attorney for Plaintiff,

Twin Falls. Idaho.Pub. June 23. 39. July S, 13, 90.10.49.

AOurt 0«N « Aa IM^ M M l in

. .. pago E ight TIMBS-NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Tuesday, June 22, 10'J3

WOMEN WON'T TALKB O A R D IN G H O U S E M A JO R H O P P L E H E D E I D E E -

BY'RENE.RYERSON MART

SUSrENSE CHAPTER XVI

It WBS Deputy 6lmw who took Charge, lie phoned Ilie doctor nnd told hlnj to bring a slonitvch pump.

• • Thet* h9 ordered lu all out of Mar- ; Bsrefs room eiccpt Clnrn nnd

Saroh imd Mnttlsoii. lie snld tlicy'd t» needed to I'clp,

I went down to ihe Wg Kiunrc «hllc-Ulcd ttlcUtn ntwl some ccffcfl on to boll. Maybe a cup of K hot and blnck would bring p e out of tlie nlRhtmnre In which I wns

. moving wlUi iJic cloRScil nnd fm n- Uc ctfortfl pcculUuK bad drctiiriR.

The nlfihuiifiVv*hlch hud bcirun tJit moment MaUlKin I Iwokc into Margnrct'K room nnd snw her gray tace and touclicfl lirr clmnmy Imnds. The nlglitiiinrc whlcli Imd tucked mo Into ll.i rtcpths when I glanced ol the table Ijf.'IcIc her bed. ■jlic glnxa tliftt I Imd Icll llicrc wan empty, and thn small cnvtlopcTvlilch had contained the rpmnlnlni! Bleep­ing tablets wa-Vtorn rnnRcdly open.

Clint Matilwn's voice founded miles away. "I iimili wc need n d o c tor. Mrs. Kralli.”

All Ihu i>honi'» 1..................-do*n*tnlr6. I rciiicmbrr liolilliiK tIsliUy to tha bniinhter as I slnrlcd down the iilc|n. fnr I was faint with Rhode. I »a.' nearly at the tom whtn , omcullL■ b:m«e<l knocker on the Imll dour, t opened It and thcro In »"• rlnKurt cntrnncc *t«>d Deputy 6liaw. He lifted hLs cap, pnilled nnd wa-1 KoliiR to »ay. ghosily.

•'K'fial's linpprnrd?” lie hnrKcrt.I told hlin. trjliiK to keep n-.

volcc steady. He took oier wllhout nny foollsll. prcllmlnnrlcs.

momlns calls and caiiie bnclt nnd went away agaln.

Dcputy Bhaw ttw 5\\vonc anotlier police car came with three

'n It. Tlicy luftsrd an Inhnlator

•e looked

up lo Margaret'i i ^ - c n t away.^ Clint MallUon cam 1 o'clock nnd ate 'vllli

pipe oitcrwcirri am' BOlns out for tlme went back up. iatra.

He S-- - -.......-

1. Tlien Shaw

n my e

, •'No—It Ixn’t that," he added hu- tlly. "Shc’.i not liuane. She undcr- standa wliat you W to her a--*nnawcra quilc sensibly. But 1 memory's gone, SJie doc. n'l i memUcr -tinyUilns llint’a happened. Not even her Rrnndson's deatli."

Tlio doctnr'ii volcc seemed to con:. from n Brent distance a.'\ he flnlOicd in hts deliberate fa?lilon; "Wliat .she nr«>d-i now In rest and quiet. And—licr memory mny return In lime, Mr.s. Orady Is with her Qow."

So lie went iiwii'y nnd left r e siandiiiK there, riitlier r.tupidly try­ing 10 tnke III the full Import uf his umrt.i,

Connie, too. acted a.i If she couldn't f]Ulle grasp It all nl once. ,gho .wiilkod stiffly over lo a win- dim’ nnd iitoo<l slflrlUK out flt tlic decpcntnff du'k. After a time, over her .ilioiilder, without • lookln* nround; •Tlie doctor says Marsarct doe.m't even remember that Dcreic L-i (lead, that odd? ”

Katliy Jerltfd her head up and lookeiHit Connie Intently,

Will Orudy acted the mt«t nor- mni <il any ol u.i. He i»A1.0ied olt imotlirr cocltlnil. m-u Ihe jdn.w down, nnd nibbed his hands toRether, •Tlie old lady's touKh. Oiie.w It would tnke more than n Bleeping Inhlet to finish her off."

Waller nwreed witl) hlni In nn ab'.eni-inlnded •■'Ort of wny.

Tlicn tlir rlliuier Koii« sounilrd nnd wp wrni Into the tllnliiK ronin.

Will Onidy !uit nt Waller's right. He innde rliiirw nitsiakei with lin silver nnd hb biK voice boomed constantly. It otiirfcd to me H- nnlly that he wn.s lalklnK too imVh even for a man embaniwiedj)}', th!!'prrscnce-of"scrvnntJt and more ImplcmenUi bc.'lde Ills plalo than lie knew how to u c. He had some* ttilng on hL-, mind nnd wns trylnR to cwcr It with a flood of talk.

I wondered what It wiu.Kntliy dUtiirbed my reflectloivs

with Kimo remark, and when I tume<! my head to nn.wer her. I cnURht Clint Mntttwn watchlnR me n.i Z had been watchliiR Will Onidy. I icmcmbcreil vM \ vmensc Ui cpcculatlve Intentnc.w in h when he liad looked at m momlnR In tlic brenkfnst roo: other man with somctUIng mUull

(To be continued)

P i e ' X'M A.SHAMeO OP VOli FOOTPA.OS.WWTIN6 TILL T

O ^ T O BSD TO ' UURB FI»Ta6R,1WTOYOUR ' PET T V HVRCENiV 6AKA5/ , ‘

, FAWHR.T'm SHOCKED.' ' —-VOO, A,MA.M6.TEUR. r PteWlNG. VJlTMTHElR.., l TOP-SERGEft.K.T OlCB.'

VOUR FIDDLE- I ' l ip pO P '6 • ISCtlTOF 7T TUME, Nve^op.' j Aw,Kre.uo.

■ POP IS ^ X GO'T OPIi M t h e 6U S.

AT-nA&€T O P.'------

M E COULD f THROWN- /SEvjew I

THROO&W A COMcRETe

MIVCER/

; HOTTEB. II FOREST . F1R6/

B y 'F R E D H A K M A M ?

W A S H TUBBS B y LESLIE T U R N E R

O U T O U R W A Y By W IL L IA M S

H O L D E Y E R Y T i n N f i

And shook his head. "We can't tell yet. Mrs, Kralk. We keep her walk- inR, one on each side of her holding her up, aiw we talk to her and try............. iltrate her attenllon. But

y half coiwclous..'

■Oo°y^u’mlnd‘''f'’'/w -X w im READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS. L IT E ’S L IK E T H A T___ —B asked Mnttlson.

Of course he didn't- I watched them wander off down by the lake.MatUson wns bfoad-sliouldered nnd B hall a head taller than Kathy, n ie y made a nice looking couple.

Tha doctor came back (igaln pbout 8 o’clock and was upstairs for more thiLfyian Iwur. Vflwn Ua caino dawn he fiuutcd mo up In the living room.

—'Walter-had mixed cocSlaH.f and wd were sipping them and waltln? for Uie dinner Eong' We were all there except •Will Grady's wife. Blic had

moving nway to Rvold spealclnj. The middle of tJie afltrnoon slip had gone over to their room In the loivc- nnd sent bacic word Uint slie liad hcBchoclie and didn't want an dinner.' >

The doctor }o«ed very grave r h e crossed the room toward me and m y heart drew Into a ):nol. He took l ib gIo£se.i off. polished Uicm with B handkerchief, and cald slowly, ••She’s Rolng lo live." He held hLi Kjnsses up lo tlie llgh and then pollsJied them vigorously again, ••But her mind—”

My heart stood still, and the hor- _ ror of my quIcK guess must havo

ahone In my face.

•'No nmttcr how dl.sguited you Kcl, don't ever again throw up >'Our hands in dlspalrl”

■ T H IS CU KIOU S W O R L D B y F ER G U SO N

a n s w e r : Kodiak Usnd, o ff south coast or Alaska.

ORCHY, I

B Q O TS A N D H ER B U D D IE S B y ED GA R M A R T IN )OV^.Xt^j-HOW iti-u ,ut'coi^S5s% .w\u

;se

G A S O L IN E ALLEY By, K IN G

B y N E H E R

T H E G U M PS

■ WHArs THE TWOLSLB, ANOV7 PICK VtJUR CHIN UP OFF THE FLOOR, VCI SHOULD BS HAPPVAT TME s u c c e s s OF xve

TEARO0A\-

•'Toduy Is nieatlcss Tuesday . . . . o whnl?!"' t

S ID E G I ^ C E ^ By G A L B R A IW I

0LJT JON 5TABDUST IS A HliiH-PRlCED FOfTPUNE TEUER- HB DEMANOeO HALF THE PROFtTS.

B y GUS E D SO N .

I CANT TAKE ANV , CHAMPAiJNE BATHS

D IX IE D U G A N B y M cEVOY; a n d S T R IE B E B ,

MISS OOGAN- MAKE IT UDub”^ :NOUCH SO OUR ' -------------RWILU

T H IM B L E TH EATERi=c^?ese,MW-r e iE i^ /w t><SHALL-B&

JVE^.AWIFWTHIMKSIVL 4 . ^ ^lETiHA MARW 'ER F O n r

rerc>EP>'

$

‘VA'ecEMAUXUDOUW t>^EAR CHlSEtlM'

j o j R j [ p t y o u ^ .-^WDIMMWtOAV. l<SHftU.'Brah>4SOU f tC R 0 6 « W H > --------

STA R R IN G P O P E Y E

SMELL THIS?)

B y FR A N K B O B B IN SA L L E Y OO P B y V . T. H A M L IN i

r -

• Tuesday, Juno 22, 1943 TIM ES-NEW S,. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO ’.Page N i i if e

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINGW A N T AD R A T E S

(A Oloteion et 10 wotrfVi* DEAPUNES.

>• locorral ioMrlloa.

S P E C IA L N O T I C E S

usfnoTD— 11.00.;u J. mil. -I^* M «..lne 1

\e E'

S iU H O U L S A N D T R A I N I N Gml BOW

x -iM V ;d s '

C H IR O P R A C T O R S

RRMKMBEH rar >■

7. BV>r

r>l Iin liark. R<»trd.

SITUATIONS WANTEDCillKNCEl

H E L P WANTED— F E M H iB. BEAUTY OMttu

«urt. ArtUlIc EXI’EHIK.SCKI)

(INSCl). beaut

G O O D W A G E S for woninH

Tiho Is wllllrw To WORK and LEAnN

—A good future—(AttlUbllll, .ulnntBt ncc«e«r,)

•H!B ALBUM

• HELP WAN T E D - MALE TVa'ntEO a t OKCt-Hin tof lombtr

ytrt work. Apptr Home Lutnb.C«4l Conipifij U«DdU' • »

hor.., .rm P IN ^ B O Y S .

■ WANTEDApply In person cT ~

< ^ H E B O W L A D R O M E

B U S II^ S S U IT O K T U M T IE S

l » m i . r i l V i r ^ pw ' Tol

U N F U I{N iaH E ItiA l* 'rar

ISm MAGIC

»

I 'U H W S H E U A I- l-S .iilKtJt: r» t. .iKiticillr mulps>«i. l<i

»iod tUxin. Mtnto btth. ri»on« lt»

NlCC rei nom t? inm at. IU4*o»dutu. t « Fl'Hi tT.nm m»l._______V>»NC>r~*l JulUDen Ids •(■<) Om1>

Bunitkw AMrtainU, Bxsad

S«T«nil «rwui wnb. Phan» IIW.liUAUD AND KOOM

m c s ^ T S T r o r s s r i s r i s r s j cItO 8l.th .WM Mttl.. . .

“ U N F U IU ^^l^D HOUSESVilBEE r««> .KIM Ici. l-hpB*•ninEfi room kTuTTw^Tr’fuTnbhTit. In-5T... MxltRi bouif, thrc* bcdrDoai.

HaMwood lloer*. «nd >loktr.CtiBcliimP .4 Admau. l-hos«

~~F'UK W IBl)]il) H O U SK aIROOl

• n ^ A L S m W A N T i i i r

IWANTTOBOV - ‘ G O O D 80 A C R E S

Either norUj or »ouUi clde. Will pay cash no» with share of crop or tftji pajMsaUm.-

•; WWU-BtDrM. Ttme4.-New» ••

M i s a F i ) B B E N T

Wti 8AVE ?lrtprc«r and Diutpnwt

CTORAOB for th* nn o t ot f u r n l^

I n t c r m o u n ta in S eed C o.AND

F o rd T ra n s f e r Co.

WANTED—RENT. LEASETWO or iSrM btdraom (cnt,bd~ koa»«.

CKCIt. C. JONgg T.>tlan. ti

6 ROOM UODEHN H0I7BE Stolccr. glossed In porch, Imnt-

«ood llooiB. Real buy &t )3900. terms.

H E N S O N & B A K E RPHONE 563 •

H o ra e o f D is t in c t io n

DISCRlMINATINa B U Y ^ Charmins. Livable. Oenutlful grounds.

For •rcninunaat cull—..........O..A ., ROBIMBON

N I C E 4 R O O M H O U S E {Contrtl* b»ijnit^ futty a rn.

F A R M S A N D A O lf e A G E SyOKTY’r ? ,.. „ ...J red. i ,.[1.. (rt,„

builillno. 111.000. /■IM ACRES— J»IUi bulMloi

s w im ' in v k t w e o t CO,

Pot NvlcWITH POSSESSION- 80 Bi;re*. North Side. 80 shnrea

water, good set small lniprovc> menti. "New'' elcctrlc llgliU. deep well, good water. Well lo­c a te on goodfoad. School bus. Priced (or quick sale, |7S per acre. Including all cropa, bearui. potatoes, nlfalfa.'Owner leav* Ing state. • •

160 acre good stock ranch, mostly hay and pasture. *68 per aero and po&se.-ulon.

B E A U C H A O T & A D A M S 137 Main Avenue East

rt. «n h(«s«f. in T-la F.IU Countr. <loitr to ntikit.

|| ro«t >t«k and dtlij rinctin. n« htvff Tftflor rr*>lnr tlibLf.

Ltndltird'a ibirf c( U09

F A R M IM P L E M E N T S

R E A L E S T A T E F O R S A L ErUIWIUCEO aparUQint hou» fcr »l«-

JiiMllMi loe«ltoa. C«od Ineorafc «1 FKth « « t .-------------------------------

B Rotin house; good Ioc*tl6n.“ " Two apartment houses, close In. « opartoients each, paying good

dUldcnd. SCO—Woody 8eiO

MAQIO VALLEV REALTY CO. H# Ir4 A»fc Wm> p. O. Doj IM D>en> «lt-B Ertalsn. llll-W

S E E D S . A N D P L A N T S'(eV mU 'I 6<mth 1<4 >alSE^ED^Ul

H A y 7 g 'k a L N A N D f e e d

r. WariUsd Uilllnf &

pei trirdlBir—trlfid «BT«htr G i u u l<. I-boc OtM-QI.,

UIl.t.ER UILUNO senvicE

L I V E S T O C K — I ' O U L ' n i ^

CHOICE CwrriJcyGENTLE lour rm r ^0~iiilcl)» hone, lui

SI-mTKI> FoUn.1 Chlm

G O O D T H I N G S T O E A T

1. SoxUi Pick. CfiitAl

R E T A I L H O M E

m i l k ' d e l i v e r y

EAffrSlDE OP TWIN FALLS Mon.. Wed.. Fri. ’

Y O U N G 'S D A I R Y !Phone S4

B A B Y C H IC K S

W A N T E D T O U U YOASI! m M for o«.d fomliurf. , ictm

•- ifitlni h««ur» Uorin't. I'hont ICiUUU

nto bon .

sood DMd

WE PAV spot ca.-ih for used ci trucks and trailers.

CHANEy-^OTOR CO.

T O P C A S H P R IC E SPAID F O B LATE MODEL

06ED CARS AND TRUCKS Bee U9 befor* you sell

M a g c l A u t o C o m p a n y

----------- M IS C . F O R S A T e ■Kl/5FlltSTKOM ulp hitnmer. KoT O?',

, —LOOK-6. V 10. 13 Inch boards.

Shlplap and 6 In. flooring Cement and wallboa ‘ TWIN PALLS LUSf

W A T E R S O F T E N E R SPUOE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR DELIVERY FROM OUR PWAL SHIPMENT.

A B B O T T ^ P L U M B I N G C O .Ph. tt.W Dodcr nd«llt7 Nit't- Jtixk

F R DIT JARS Buy now a l ipeolal prices w M e^toclu are^omplete.

3.quort ___ia c do*.GAMBLE 8T<5RES ,

B U S IN E S S A N D P R O F E S S IO N A L

DIRECTORY» BATHS AND MASSAOBS e MmEoaRAPHiNo-

• iM otffiy tiTloanL jotiM ro. HOMt3 4oj t.6Atja B y !s. tUaU ,a T nu t BalMltti.- Pbono »0<1, mPAINTlNG and DECORATINO

• TYPSWHn-•-VPHaLST£RlNO. ZT~f e : i a ? r c r , - £ i w r p X ? i

M IS C . F O R S A L E

BlliHQ It Uut troy«ti^»rtDay b«fog

• rood*—lro<u«n. •hliu,. urrx. .hem inHlouM.

“V O LC O "

Orders for July delivery now being accepted.

INVESnOATE "VOLCO" CINDER ATTIC INSULATION.C I N D E R P R O D U C T S C O .

F U R N IT U R E , A P P L I A N C E SDINKTTB MV IncMln* «.bl. four ,

-F O R RENT—Late model

Blngcr sewing machlnea PorUble or cabinet

By the month- SINGER SEWING MACHINE

COMPANY 131 SliQshone N.' P h .,a«

H ardwoodd i h e t t e s e t s .

F iv e P ie c c s

52D .95 a n d $ 4 4 .9 5

W e s te rn A u t o S u p p ly Co,

R A D IO A N D M U S T C "IV mt.l<ireU rtr r«dlo«—»ll mo<iell :

DtJMAS-WAIUlEIl MUSIC I

. A U f O S F O R S A L E

!»»• HUDSON .rtan llo .. H .lk .„. CoJ rul-Ur. U». North ^Vuhinsion «Jlt

T r u c k s a n d t r a i l e r s

D'»re I* Inch lr»cUpr plow. BUnlcjr

■ A t f f o ' s f e i i V l C E S P A R T S

i IN-STORES OP J 4 PER CEN

SAN FRANCISCO. June 23 (,V>- -Tlie economic tomndo of war hi played freak pranks :acro&s Uio Ii western business landccapc.

It hM whirled up doparUnent store tmdc to an average o l *1.74 in the lin t five months of this year lor {Tfety dollar of the 1040 period:

•That In spite of the shuLUng olfof many hncs that formerly -----leaders In department store ......ness, and restrictions or falling sup­plies In other lines..May sales tills year ran $1.

every May IflW.dollar.. Increases over Uie Joat year, reported today by Uie federal r<- tervo bank of San Fmncbco, ra around 30 ccnts on the dollar 1< May and 35 tenta fsr the Ilrst fh monUis of 1943. V '

Afere Striking loereaseTrade whirls In dcpurtmcnl Eton

nppcared somewhat more striking Uian In most other lines. They con trasted, for example, with losa of tli bulk of the fonner enormous autc mobile sales.

But department storo trade h no means kept pacc wlUi the genet al Increase In spending. Bonks .^ l i cd checks aggregating 87 cents or on the 1040 dollar in May. and 84 cents more for the year to date.

.Oreat as has been .the attcnUon paid to rising living costs, they would appear to have •logged far behind Uie rLio In big su>r& sales, and sUll fortlier behind totui spend- Ing.

The far west's living cost«. on thi basis of tomputallons frotn-naUon- al industrial conference board ta­bles. appeared up soniB 32 cents on Ihe- dollar In Uie west since Uay. 1040. and about 31 ccnts for the fia>

. Quallly Decline Net Shown Ihcae Increases, too. have been

distorted by Uia economic wlads-'of war. Ihey faU to show declining' quality of {oods. or poorer -service.- Most significant of a ll..th ey lall to show the havoc o f t « e s on small incomes. Should subsidies so d roll­backs so financed bccome algnllN

jcant In the worker's budget, the Uv,* ing costs Indexes wUl have ,to berevised to show the tax expense or Uiey will become relatively worth­less In Unelng Uie'real cost o f llvlni; Utnd. , ' <

Spokane departmmt sQa-es led , the west vlth » May gain o f 4S per ccnt In sales'Over last year. The! Bolse-Nainp* area galaed per cent; . • - • -v •

Real Estate Transfers1 by

JUKE UDeed. Home.Owners L o u i Oorp,

to Venion Grimm, *10; lot 1. Uu- taa] subdivision.

July 1 Is Uie deadline for filing entries in the annua) ram sales of the Idalio Wool Growers association to be held »t Filer Aug. 4. accord­ing to a remlniltr Issued by M., 0. Claar. Boise, lecretarv ot the asso­ciation. cusr pointed out that Uie entries must b« received In Boise ^ n or before the closing day.

A good outlook for the 1043 was reported by the secretarr.

"The rams to be listed hero will consist ot the best rams coming, from the ouUUndlng flocks of pure- b'reds In Idaho," he said. "Thff (Ctal offerlneo- will be equal to that of prior Bales, and will consist of Hamp. shires, Suffelks and Suffolk-IIamp- shires. Studs and range rams wll comprliB the showing,

A new advantage for buyers a' the 1D43 sale aUo was Explained by Claar.

“No arUflclal coloring of ony kind will be ptrmllted on rams sold In thiJ snlf," he said. •'This ruling was adopted lasl January ond f'l breeders have been notified several Umc.1 (0 that elfect. Also, rams that are yearlings or older wcro closely shorn in April. Here again the buyer

n look a and 6 I theirnatural, true conilltlon. ttulton type rams will disclose Oielr quality and condition. Du;cri linvo often ex­pressed a dfsire to sec ranvi tlmt have been shtated in the spring, and with no arilllclal <;o1oring, and tho commltlte Is trying It out this

P L I S A B L E T O ■ M B A R R I E R

- By HAROLD V. DOYLEAN ADVANCED ALLIED AIR

BASE IN NORTH AFRICA. June 22 Lieut. Otn. Carl A. Spaatz

declared tliat any barrier against Uie odvancc of allied forcc-i could b# reduccil by air ottack and that the United Nations had the re­sources to put the requir’cd number of planes lo the task.

The Ameriatn commander of the north Alrlcsii air forqea said the destniction or ntutralltVUon of any such bnrrler were incrcly~n mutter of mathenmllcsl calculation.

Spantz «-»iohed tho fiiirrcniler of Pantcllcrla frow n dc.itroycr off­shore alter the Italian Inland quiver­ed benentli the hcavle.it nerlal bom­bardment ever delivered to a tijrgct of iU *lie.

That vicloo-. he snld. os well os the allied sir, triumph In Tunisia, proved that Uic alllc.'i have attained air.superiority and that air suprem­acy could bccome available in any plac« that the allies choo.?e to apply their air .superiority,

■Miu 1 Airilr forcf

I Is vltiil in warlnre ond that sue- ceisful msjor operntloii-i are poMlblt only If control ot tlie air has first been obtained.

Ho ,s;ild lie M-M cliitcd over tin work of American and British filers in pounding Pantetlerin intu defeat.

'Ifo said the tiling that impressed him pio.'ii Kos llie accuracy and pi clsloii wlUi which largo miuises of planes cnn be applied, again;' particular target.•Spanu luld he wa.-? convinced that the Pantellerio open , well os others, was madts possible by the ability ot Flying Portresses and oUier boniEcr* to operate in large formatloos in daylight and drop their bombs accurately despite the worst tho enemy could do li fighter opposition and ground fire.

Force Would Qe Adequate This fact, more than any othei.

was responsible for the emergence- ot allied air supremacy neceuaiy in Uklng Pantellerla. he sold..

Spaatz cautioned that although Uie allies had tho rcspurccs for neutralizing or destroying any bar­rier against advance, the appllca. lion of tills principle must nevei bo sUirted until .the force ^ hand is adequate for the Job. He sold the same sclcnUlIc factors of

■must, be applied that an c in building a bridge.

Cour^enies New Trial to Stephan

CINCINNATI, June 22 MO—Hold, ing "there Is no IrevcjSible error oi Uie record." the sttth U. S. clrcuH court of appeals todoy for a second time denied a new trial to Max Stephan. Detroit restaurantei under ncntence to be hanged July for treason.

Tlie court’s decision came scarcely two hours after counscl for Stephan and for Uie sovemnicnt concluded arguments before, a flvcr(udii bench.. The aupreme court of the United

States had thrice, refused to inter-

Piggyback Rescue

'Itanbta m l* wem by V. 8. ■m y medleal laldter cffeeUTn carrier ter ‘eanaltr” on in aam « e n In Enil^d. Thai Gnten osrrUr -leaTe»-ii«^and e re^U wounded m*» frsa sUppbg 10 U)8 tronnd. r .

Markets and FirianfeeW H E A I c i l i S

IN STOCK SALESMarkets at a Glance

NEW YORK. June 23 WVThe stock market fiddled, with selective and modest recoveries today but the notes were to faint to touch ofr much of a comeback symphony.

Slight Improvement appeared tho start. Prices sooli retre&t.., however, and by mid-day declines of fractions to a point or so pre' inated. Irregularity ruled at close.

Turnover of around 700.000 shares was another one of tlie year's smallest.

Attracting' support were U, Steel. Bethlehem, Southern Ri way, Pennsylvania, General Motors, Chrj'jler, A rr ie r lc sn Telephone, Western Union, Westlnghouse, Bears Roebuck. Internatfonal Harvest! and Oliver farm, \

Bonds wcro relatively steady.

New York Stocks

NEW YORK, Juno 32 stock markat closed irregular.Allied Stores - ----------------- 13',4Allis C halm ers__________ _ 38'4American Can ......................85'.4

__ IS....... lO'i_ . Smelt. 4: Refln. _ 4l‘i American Tel. i Tel.American Tobacco B .Anacon;io CopperAtlanUo RcflnUig __Doltlraoro as Ohio pf ............IIHDcndlx Aviation Bethlehem BteclBurroughs Add. Mch. _____ i-Canadian Pacific ___________ t

Coca Cola................. ................iOfl'4Colorado F A: I ............. .........ie’4 ,Consolidated Oil Pjlawaro _ _ 33V| Com Products ......................... .........

GoodyearIntematlonal lla m e ste r ------63*iIntematlonaJ *Tel. ii Tel, _ .International Nickel Can ___ 33',;Kennecott CoppeiKresgo SS ......... ...... ..............23?i

Miami Copper ....Montgomery Ward Naah Kelvlnator ..NoUonnl Biscuit _Nation

Packard Motor . tPenney Stores _.Pe«n R. R..........Pullman Cor. —

Radio Corp of America ; Radio fieith OrpheumRcpubli? Steel ............Reynolds Tobacco B _

cbuck____________ 17

St«wort Warner ._. Studebaker Corp. . Sunshine Mining liSwift i! Co.___ __Texas Co. — Timken ....... ............

N. V. CURB STOCKSBunker Hlll-SuUivan .....CIUM Service

U. S. Sets Aside Farmer Supplies

WA8HINOTON. June 23 Aotlng to assure supplies needed to Increase food production, the war producUon board today ordered manufacturers and wholesaler! to se t aside for sales to (arm dliUl- ,butlon ouUet.1 . specific quanUUes of some 50 h'ard»to-get Items needed on farms.

The pereenUge IS be set,aside 'nirlM from six to PO per cent. The lis t of. Items affected, tncludes au. Ber bits. -batUrle*. chains, chisels, drills. grai;i scoops, grease guns, ttnrneu, hoes. fraeUonal hortepow* er motors, palls and tubs, pipe fit­tings, pliers, screw Briver*. sherels, tiro pumps, valves and wrenches.

Since June 1 the WPB has moved to ■ assure ments ' actions:

Arranged wiUi the army for the loan of 30.000 tons of barbed wire; •Allowed farmers to obtain general IndustrinJ equipment Itemi without furnishing A-1-0 priority nUngs: Allowed manufacturer! the use of metal In tho manufacture' of stwk watering ..Unks and stockman^

, knives, and Increasing the produo* l_Uon of chklns..

jsure food producing Impl»<{ a to farmers by the foUowInf

- ‘i:As* were used by 'North Amer. Isan Indians'u eoib u ItU.

LivestockMarkets

84UbI« ui4 ..... .............................

I! la.

. " ■ « r

..tr i Eoxl >ad cholc* ICO U tO(it'ui'i.foo: •iliktt C-. 4 lUen iiiil^rorUnn^^Uidlt b

e.SO: b«t lotiE rcmrlliKt• rllnsi IlMO:

s'.l.bl**!.'*,!. -l.tOO. lotil . CoUirtilo ltd cllppc'l I,• kins^ lll.IS; niwlluw U

iuVhlfr*»»f» *dwwnvr»rj tz jcn aridn I7jt.

r.m. I

c” ?tO'‘'lo« Clou

tiroi (OOi ^1,i i i i:i

°»l«^TwJuIt'— .

i l slill ■r.K] H9

A t. .«!S .1ii i i s ;

S«.l...... ,1M»| lir* i

: MVj-No r»hl.OJW: Ko.

riS''r.o'

S1S.S0

t a i l i to Bood cow* IIO.S;sr*d* cowt tl.TS to S0.7SI pfftctical

°HUliUihid on lUuihtir '

U3 flS.<0 on KOO«t to ehal<« rrowt i

*d'iw“wUd**lii >UKl>«n uni f£*tl«n ncstlr lio.toUS.SO: vrrr few Boixi cjw, otrercil; >

CiliUi lUuihtt^hl»h«ri ni»Jliiin‘iincl Kood il« /i IIJ.JO io llt.SSj .crtriJ load chokf IH.CJ U IU:bulk Bood * nJ chor

ilFlsThrn'"- 'firm

LOa ASOELEsTlVEaTOCK

BT*dr« tlow, Urvtir go^^tojrt»It»^Color»do^^t 5^"on

li i ' ’s'lJ**J>' lll?M.*'*'

BAN FRANCIKC’O LIVESTOCK U FRAKtlBCO, m . n |Ui-)-C«I. M.. Sakbl* to; (low. tUxii ftctdr; two pirkacM lav nolluin 9*0 to I,Oil lb.

titrksc* tOS Ih. Orrtoni tl 190 to 2<0 lb. dlUornUi IK.M :l»lns vtTT vn>\.

Bhwpt l.tMi rood to I ilMdr: deck la lb. thorn No. 1

(tJ^)—Spot and tu. tincUDt lodu ■ ~ r burins priei

? o M \ 7 r t r . " o f S ; i b 'uiKhannd it its *hllllu> Mr <1:

CinCAOO. June « (ffV w heat hitures fluctuated nervously over a runge ot almost a ccnt a bualiel today. Cash Interests were -sellen. .while shorts snd lolller interests

ere buying on Ui# declines. Un» irtalnUes over the Imposition of

-.filing prices on wheat contrthuted to the uneoslness of Uio marlcet.

All deliveries of wheat finished .it virtually the day's highest levels, unchanged to H eeot obove tho pre- 'lous <la5p. July »t.42H-l,43. Sep- ember s(.43s-!i; cats were % to '1 cents lower, July 65Si. and ryo vas unchanged to ’i cent higher,

July 95%-Tt.

POTATOES:ACp. Jon. :i |A>-(U5I>A)—Ar-

tmk >«), tcul U. t). >hli»

I Kuthtrn’ Tilsmsh dcmaiul- «

B utter ami Eggs

CHICAGO. Jacve K poullrr,B^iruckii flmi unciixtO It r«i!ln(.

CIIICACO ritODlICE CIIICACO. Jun. « (fl^-DultorJ l.iSI.- Ibk) iteid/i uatliiiictd.U ilii S5,«"V Ural ««h *r»d«l .

Miniii" Stoelcs

AlU Tunntl -illniiUm U'c»nllrf

S i

i

S S ' - . iS .

i;

fx ■.01; !Cn

Stock AveragesCcmpltrd tr Tha AuMlatld Ftmi -

t h e » 'a'’?’'' "a”' ''wi'o'u* 'ji7 - to!s sl'i ■ sslo

NEW yORK, JtM :: W>_Nf«r».7 ' top naalllnnt ,b«x4-1irmncu lodir. .tlrrtinir «( >rl>rlrei ot Julr.

^rtlfl»t«d cn«M Sl.Ot.l

Rawson Hints of Slash in Liquor

BOISE. June n M-I-Lcland W. I Rowson, superintendent of the stats .{ liquor dlspenssfT. Issued a wan}- Ing today that exces-slve buy’-* mlght foree a reduction In Jdal,. . liquor ration to one pint weekly { Instead/of the present ono quart

Rawson. completing plana for i conferenco ot oillelali from western rnonopoly states here Prldoy and Saturday. taliWhe ono-plnt-per- week ration hii become .etfecUvs.. In aeveral dates.

Twin Falls MarketsLIVESTOat

Chole* bolclitra. IIS to tSO lU .-^ltl.t 0*«^«t»M^b«l4h«r»^ti# to SM

BOrr w n u T

OTHBR GRAINS (BarUf aa4 m u maikx Clsnuus wlU

(Md«> d«a»ni. H» nsUomlty t< dalb priMt «wt«<l Uu nr* I0» to tl< f n » vodUUdu ..Barl«]> »' »*

»d).

~ l . No,

g S ! « a K r S 6 + = = = B U

S 'a la?

Page Ten TII.H3S*NEWS. TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Tueadaj, Jtma 22, 1943

A U D l i m O V E D•nie report of Uie nnnual Twin

PalU city nudli. rnnda by H. O. Ed­munds and eompany, showinff cJly tiffoJrt to ba In good slinpe. -wma up. provRd by Uio council ita Monday

■ ni«lit nieeiinKs. \"An MiunlnaUon of o{

procccdliisj/' n>y« the report, •'IndU cates Ihnt Uie council Li in cloao touch wlUi on mailers pcriaSnJng city flnancc). and expcndlturca ® - bcms kc'pt within Uic nmourts op. proprlatcd. Icavlnj Uic city In a tm ini llniiiicIM w ith allcliy Rencrnl fumls mnlnlnlninB adcquiile ctnli rcseni' nnd n o i

Mitcrixl ttnrrant i oulAlarollnK." cicik'4 Record* I’caUed

•TTie cUy clerk'ii fwords." Rnid the report In nnnUic-r plncr. "wcro lound to be In Uielr usual excellent condtllon.''

Tlicsc would bo [virlly rcxrorcW kept by tile Into W. H. KkirKlRi.-. who died laat Dccoiibcr, nnd [xirlly Uioso kept by Cliarlej P. 1-ursrii, clly clerk, wlio hna brcii In tJic oKlce «lnc^ Uie vctcrnn clly clerk's

MLw Arlene Uwcry. di\UKlil<;r of Sheriff Warren W. Ly*<’r>- mid Mr.v Lowerj-, was ninmliiti'd dipvity clly cleric at Uie mcftliij Mntul;iy nlKlil, cflixuve .MHiiclny, nl a f.Unry Ol S85 per giomii

l- )\ir Tuln jduDi'. were np- pallitcd l.ml«iriiry llfisiiiiril.i lit t ie niiinlclrmi jvol They ini’ Klvln Ro<l- Bcrfl, Uolj Hii(fiiiaf.!<r. Alvin Ciild- weH nml William S5. Ji.ms, 'CouncUnMn 0. II. Coliiniin fx -

pinlneil that Uirie nrr ttinporkrynppotnunrnt.i roi>u 10 rtays. luo (UkU\«Zenns Smllli .vxl SIM py StOii'- cll, llfOKiiiirdi. will be nltendlnK * >e Red Crau nquallc wliool m U tah Tlicy will gn to work as Ufcguard; when tlicy return, and two of Moii' dny nlghfs temporary nppolnimPnts will be made pcmianent.

Acllni Mans(rr •nic Imminent dcp.irture of LJoyd

Spiclmiui for Induction Into tlio “ wmy calls for appointment of n n c -

pool miuinger. and Colemnn Jones would fCW roiuingcr i< tJio time being.

In connccUon wltli dbcu.talon < Uie recreation program, Colemnn said there Is a good clinnee tJmt con- Btnictlon may be;<ln stion on twc rods nsplinlt tennis courts In Juycct park. DcIlnlt decision on thi.i m nt- ler ftwnHcd a mccUng ol Uie recrc- Atlon commlHee Tuesday night, hut the council Indicated Itj approval of the propotuil. ,

Four buUtllng pemlta were proved. Tlicj; went to Feather RJvcr Lumber coni|Viiiy, 201 Tlilrd nvenuo west, ncIdlUon to bedroom, *00: WU- bue S. m u , 251 SevenUi uvenuc cast.. realilnRle roof, IlCO; Don Stnf/ord. J2B Siioshone'street west, rcpnlra. »200, and Dert A. sweet, movlnB ISxU Xrame house ttom 228 Elm point outside Hie dty.

Gii-1 Believed Emerging From Coma

NEW YORK. Juno 22 laPJ—R cp. Sam Rayliatn, D.. T « , plcd«itia his "unfailing and unwa.verlnK” support to President Roosevelt, said 4at night lliat he would have rio pact In nns’ atvU-admlrvUlraUon moves wlUiin the DcmAratlo pnrty,

"Wo must follow tlie leader," he' said Qt a tSO-B'pIate fund" raisins dinner ot th* DtsnoctftUt naUonai and jtate committees.

Moat of the speech was an attack- on complaints about conditions on the homo ftonl.

"Complaints Uicre arc—almmc on them—and on Uie whisperers w ho have private Information, pn tlio rwlSo comn\«nUlor» who lell you the news behind tlie news when It Isn’t; some of the columnists w ho write things the press asjoclationa dqn’t write. wh» wiUe TMTnor,'* h e said.

"They are doing you and me nnd all of us a great and'serloua d ls- Mrrlee."

Ambrose O'Connell, e.tecuUve 'Vice-chairman of the Dcinocmtlc naUonnl committee, nald the R e ­publicans were waging a wm o t words.

v . F . w . m i sLinVISTON. Ida., Juno 22 (U.B —

4. a . MftttmUlci.KtUoag, wa.-i elect­ed department commander by d e l­egates to the lUh annual eonvcn-

. _tlon of Idaho Veterans of FbrelBn War.'who eotvcluiert ihtSr meeUng yesterday.

Alto M. Burdick. Tn-ln Palls, wi elecfcd' prcsldent of the attxlllari'.

Idaho Palls WM ictccted for Ui« ia « convention. >

•Charles M. Shadduck, Buhl. elected senior vlcc-commander; Jack Musser, Bol.w, ludse advocate. ot\d K. Richardson, FarTOgut. chnp- laln.

U W. Itoopy of Pocatello Is past• commiinder.• ■ Resolutions aslted llie national or-

- der to permit BdmUslon of ellglblcs. of the present uar on payment o f

S2, to suspend dues to thoie now . with mlUtary fon:ts, and that np- . iiropriata steps be taken'to Insure

Inclusion ot 13 capable commls- aloned offlecri of tha army and navy at the post-war peace i Xcrence.

A Cl.day roma, canwd by ileepln* »1clinfu, WM belleted e bwly, ilmivn with her motlier. Mn. Wilfred Tenbody In Rn Jtobcn Kranr. Doritrn'* mgslc tearVier p»ayc4 h»s YloUn beV to lium >lic tune. TIirn alie opened her ryes and becan to • ness liaTB been lenilhenlnf.

for elfhl-yetr-eld Dorlees Dawn r ea - nlefo. She lald tliat several days sro the child's bed, nlien sudden]^ she btg'an

tk. 8hice then her periods pf contcloun-

May Lead Couucil

GEOnOE ALBEItT SMITH . . . 73-year-old No. 2 member

of the UU.S. council of twelre (postles, reeanled as likely »oc- ceuor (Q Elder nudcer Clamiin, 80. who dled.nionday.

HAZELTO>(

. A large attendance w u recorded at the special P»Vhei‘» day &er\'lces

. o t the L. D. 8, ehurcli. and also nt the PiMbytcrlan children's day prt>- BnuusWlUi a special |lo offering so - tng tQ tiaUonal mission*.

A mast necUDg of the taxpayers et Uie *111880 of Uiselton Toted fav­orably on tbe iucjtlan of a five, mill addlUoQol U t; ont uid Above that which tbe board of trustees may levy.

. ' Mrs. Bm er Rleman and inn KIMS returned to Uvtlr home her©

, ,a n n Pelafleld, Wis, where Kleth :S u been enrolled in the mlUtary .'Bckdemy. •' > -

M lnltla taty Krvlca (or t«o saem* bo held t y Adelaide R c-

^,beUh. Jodgtt.oo lHunday evenlDg.

SALT LAKE CITY. June 22 (/5V- Tlie Latter-Day Saints cliurcli day tr\ow\td the paxilng ol on. .. lu lenders, 8G-year-old Hudgec Clawson, president of the cr •

[ twelve aixatles.EldctyClawion died In -his home

ycjtei>hiy afternoon. Ho had been 111 sincc ^une 12. It appeared likely Uiat Ills successor would be Ocorgc Albert BciUlK, 13, No. 1 oi\ the council of twelve, under usual church procedure.

Elder Clawson had been prcsl. dent or Uie council «lnc»> I9 ia >kI«« Jleber J. Ornnt. hlmscK In ir healtli lor moiitlis, wa.i made i rcs' Ident of me church.

The council president's long ca reel' hrldfted tlio pioneer days and modem times and taw him rhk death at the hands of an angry mob nnd (er\'c a prison sentence In defense of lila beliefs,

Wlven he was 22. he w;as j with £Ider Joseph EUindlhg oi miMlon to Qcorglfl. n icy were upon by d mob nnd Standing sliot to' death. Elder Clawson said he expected to meet the same Jatc, ■ Lit was allowed to go. '•

He returned to Georgia later _ .. witness In the trial of three men charceU with Uie slaying, but' thry were ac(]iUtted.

£3der Clawson twice was marrlecl. Between the two marriages, one year opart, congress enacted the Edmund-Tucker iitw. banning plur­al marriages.

The Deseret News, church net paper, reported Uiat “hundreds men nnd a number of women" wi Imprisoned. Elder Clawson t . . . elrcn a four-year sentence, but wu released several months before hij term ended.• Boin at Ball Lnlte CHy March J2. 1857. Elder Clawson was 13 when the first railroad train pulf. cd Into Uie Utah capital. His fother vits an a&soclate c>{ Jt»tph & prophet of MormonlsmAnd vj ii hazardous trips across the P

Ills sun'lvors Include two KyiMd Bradley ClflWEon and li>. renze Snow Clawson, both oC Salt Lake City, and two daughters. Mrs. Horace W. Bond. Salt Laka Clly, and M rs. IVsy. Hooptx. WMhJna* ton.

Funernl ter -lces for Elder Claw­son win be held Thursday at 12:15 p. m. In the assembly h&U.on Tab- emacle ~ square. Speakers will b« high officials or the churcti. All church offlccs will bo closed dur­ing the services.

Church School to Picnic WednesdayEpiscopal diurch aehool plcnle Is

to be held os planned at i l a. m. Wednesday. June 33. in Harmon p a r t

Chalrmiin for refreshments. Mrs. A . I. Norton.

U. s. eutian Campaign .Would Be Impossible Without Radar

I Pir»on and—n fiict which nlio Is true nuch ^search—It had

Went Into Bro»di:isltngIn 1021 expcrlment-i by Tnylor,

Youns and Louis A. Oebbard. look Uicm Into the field of radio brond- ca-iUn«. Parullellng the pioneer Uon KDKA nt PIttsbursh. they cumul.ited qulto nn Incldtnlnl rcp- utntlon-n.s purveyors of cntertnln- ment nnd oratory. Tliclr rtjtular profirnms included a broadcast by President HardlnR, flr.st chief e: cutlve to "go on Uie nlr." One e nlnft they put Uio marine bnnd Uie air nnd got fan mall from states. ,nie scientific purpose was gnther rnngo dnta on naval comun- IcaUons.

B ut Uie work was by no meaiw fun nnd fan mull. By Uia . umn of 1022. long hours of sMidy uiid lab­oratory research had brought con­stant Irnprovement.s hi rqulnment and mettiods, nnd Taylor and Young were spending gruelling hours undi;. u blnztng Washington sun broad- cnsllnB lr«n a tl'xcd IrnTumhtcr U a portable receiver on the Vlr«lnla Ride or Uie Potomac river. They wen worWng wltlj the new, super-lre- qucncy. or short viavts.' At- the outset o f f ...........................

proved—.

they noticed that ships moving up and down river dtstortod- or " Kcured" ttielr signals, as rndlo pert.i put It.

Hero wn.s Uie new Idea.nlstortlon Discovered Early

Almost sincc tlie dlLcovety ot radio 40 years before. It had been known that larpo obsincles, a moun­tain or great building, caused dbtor- tioii In the wave pattern.

But never before had It been recognized that co small an object n .ihlp would produce o similarly notlccnble re.sult. '

Tlint was the first discovery, the principle, which tho naval y fclentists contrr

lopment of radar.It was at this time—.as

Uie orlRliml findings were prove that the propo.'ial wa.n made to . them out at sen by destroyers. But that wns considered so fanttusUc n prnctlcal contribution to the art o{ wnr tliat'no'oody In poslUon tielp dill anything about It.

Nobody. Uiat Is, except Taylor and hLs ui-'oclntes. Prom the first tl^covery of 'interference with the wave pattern, It 'vna but n short step to evolution of the theory and technltjue of radlo-echij or flection.

Ill this the wnvo Is like a stream of liRht thrown against a mirror. The fiict that It Is reflected proves the presence of a reflecting object.

of the first radio transmitting equipment embodylnc Uie electronic “pulse" principle now used In radar cqulpihent.

Broadcasting of high-frequency pulses permitted the use of greater radio- entrjy without blanketing out receiving equipment during the per­iod of rccepUon o t a weak echo. It thus became poiidlble for the trans­mitter to thtBw out a Btrles ol pulses (Uielr.apfed Is at the rote of eight times around the world in a second) against the lono sphere—the world’s ctcctrlcal roof ftbout IW mUts up— and for Uie recelVfcr to pick up tho reflected waves between each pul«e.

That made possible the rapid, ac­curate and continuous IndlcaUons of range.

Measured -Eleetrio RooP Tlio rirat use of the pulse reflec­

tion principle was Ui the Held ot pure sdence. Young collaborated

stltutepulseCaroegldeeply

: . r ' S . 'involved in t

naturally were. , . ____ the experiments.

Between 1033 and 1030 they the CQUlpmcnt to prove tho existence, mca.<urc UiBliclBht and determine the behavior of the world's 'electrlo roof," offlciaUy nam ed th« Ke&nelty- HeavUide layer In honor of two physicists who hod theorlied about Its exUtence seven! years earlier.

Meanwhile improvemeflta ot the

M A TTRESS.REBUZLCtfla • RZSIOVATmO

WOOL CARDINQ CVEBTON M ATTB£S8 CO.

m Second An. 8 . PbMM Sl-\f

apparatus continued. I n 1025 m n . Matthew W . Schrenk, who had gono to tho naval research lab­oratory frrom Western Electric compliny ol Chlcaeo. developed way.-; of amplifying, sharpening and shortening tlio waves which pro­duced about the kind of puls omitted by modem radar.

Ano!ffc<5'‘tP''ForwarilOn June 21. 1530. radio delectlon

took onothcr great step forward— atirt agoln It wm Incidental to yilu-- rweorch. Up to that tim e the navy' M3II0 sclentlits had been Interested ^Vlmarlly. >o far as-detection eonccnidrt. hi the tactical po.'.slbll- ltle.1 of dlscoviTlng enem y ships at

On that notable Juno dny, T.iylor, Young and L. A. Hyland, a sclentUit now associated with the Ecndl: portion. Were working on a hlRh- frcquency blind landing system for aircraft. Tlicy had their nppaiat: set up nt Boiling field, the iirniy n station at WaahhiKton. wlUi Yoimij operating a transmitter and Hy­land a receiver tiom a distance away.

Tlie experiments did r we|l so far as Hylana ... cemcd. He wa.s worried by tho fact Uiat periodically the pattern o ' wave.s he picked up showed consltl eroble Interfefcnce.

He checked hL'i equipment but It Was In good working order. He stud­ied the landscape but found sourcc for thc lnier/erence he getting.

Finally he noticed that the Inter­ference cecurrcd only w hen a plai . pas. ed through the rone of radio activity ciea»«S by Young's trans­mitter. Hyland cheeked h b obser­vation three or four times nnd then excitedly reported his discovery Tayloi and Young.

"I don't believe It. but It's so,” Hyland said.

"We all got pretty excited." T n /- lor recalJed rtcentiy. "We knew Uiat anything whijih would detect plane.i would be of enormous im­portance In defense."

tX« be cftntlnuued)

I L B E I A R G EAKRON, 0 ., June 23 1044

rubber supply twice as largo as Uint consumed In this country In a nor­mal peace-time year was foreseen last night by Har\ey '8 . Firestone, Jr.

Basing hb estimate on expected production of SJO.OOO tons of s)-n« thetic and antldlsyed nntural rub­ber Imports, the president of Plre- slone Tire ond HuBber company said In an address prepared for radio broadcast (NBC):

"I believe I am not unduly .. Umishc when 1 say that Uie rubber situation presents a much brighter picture today than U did even ,at Uie beginning of Uils 'year. •

“Onder the lorceltil and Irtlelll- gent leadership of Rubber Blrector William M. Jeffers, tJio syntheUc rubber program h u m ade execp- tlojva«r good progfcjs and by the end of Uils year Uiero wiU be In operaUon synthctic hibber plants with an annual capacity ot UO.OOO tons. This piodutllon, plus t h t 't o - portaUons of natural rubber that ■ e may expect next year, will glw

s In ll)<4 nearly twice as m uch nib- :r u this country consumed 1& normal peace-time jear ."Of 12.000.000 passenger car tires

to bfl released for elvillan use this year. I.m/xa att oa hand and Uv« remaining 5.000,000 . will bo tDade frnm synthetic rubber, the manu­facturer reported.

FOR 1 muUOPERT. June 3J—MlUtwy rttea

wero accorded AvUUon Cadet Verl Chamberlain, who died Jtme II near Eagle Pass, Tex., In' a plane oush. at the Rupert L. D.'B. tabematle with Bishop Wayne Tanner In ch a r g e .^

The boUy wdS receh-ed by the Goodman mortuary with Cadet Vlrv bU T. Jdhruon as mUlUry escort. George E. Marshall post Aaerlean Legion was In cliarge of the mili­tary ritual. Speakers at the service wer? Jesse Bobera. ond Norlas Thompson.

Prayers were offered by Bishop J. Dean Bchofleld and Albert Harrison. Music was I provided by Mrs. Stella Bassett and Tlilrl Butler accompa­nied by Mrs. Irene Madsen and Prank Wat*on with Mrs. Roy Hum­phries as accompanlit.

pallbearer:!, all classmates Cadet Chamberlain, were Henry Stark. John Tracy, Iiobert DocKter, Vtinoi Btarnans, Qtotge Knight and Oordon Nelsoit. Bishop Wayne Tanner dedicated tlio grave. The flag whlQlt draped the casket was presented to his rooUitr. Mr»; iiSah Chamberlain by Cadet Johnson. Burial was In tho Rupert cem'elf0.

Cadet Chomtierlaln was bom In Rupert. Feb. 0. lau. and Bradualtd from Rupert high scliool with Ui« 1041 cIoAs. Young Chamberlain'en- llstod as an avIaUon cadet in the spring of 1943 and had tralwd at Kelly field ond Hheppard field. Tex,. Spartoii school of aeronauues at Tuka, Okla. and had completed hlA basic flight training at Strat army air field, Kan., May 24.

Surviving arc Ills parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira L . Chamberlain; six brothers. Jack. Rex. Uorlon, jerry and Richard: iour sisters, Mrs. d . C, Cutcheon, Misses Marjorie Dc?l* and Mario Chamberlain.. --

HARVARD, Neb.. Jdhe 23 «->-A 10-year-old youth with an umailng line of legal chatter claimed own­ership to Uio municipal loll in. ttils town of approximately 700, provid­ing a headache for the town fathers.

Ra’icrt Pinckney said he pur­chased Uio Jail, locauid on one of four lots acquired at a tax sale,'for

total sum of six dollors.He said he told city officials be­

fore the sale the Jail was on ont of tho lots offered, but that "they only laughed at me."

City officials took Uio view ___■en though the Jail was offered by rnr In Uic sale, the deed Is in- illd. Municipal property Is not

taxed, Uiey argued, Uierefore Uie deed didn't convey anything.

But Robert claimed the Jal: lca.scd to the city by the builder, and therefore tsn't municipal prop­erty.

■'ve got a warranty deed and (;oocl us gold." he Said confl-

dcntlally. "It's a swell Jail. It has thrco fool -ioncrete floors, two rooms, eVecirio Hghls and running water."

He said ho will present the city council wim a bUl for *20 at Its mccvlng lor rent due him ilnce last May 11, the date of the sale.

'To my knowledge Uiere havebeen IB drunks lodged In the .......he "I'm tiilWtd to len use of my property."

He Indicated he would call the entire matter settled If tho city paid hln\ S20. plus for the building.

C A S T L E F O R PMrs. Dale Reese and two daugh­

ters returned to their home In Boise after spending tlie past week here vlslthlg relatives nnd friends,■ Mr. and Mrs. Leo Clin Conmd re Uie parents of a sotf, Billy Dean, orn nt the Buhl hcepiul Jime 15. MtsS Mildred Houk and Miss Del-

a Blackliam hove gone to San Dle- „o to spend the summer. While thtrt they wUl visit at the home ol Miss Blackham’A sister, Mrs. Johnny Thomp.'on.

Mrs. Paul Fields and Jimmy have le ft for w visit wlUi Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Fields, I»rlest XUver.

Mrs, J. J. Hcldel recdvcd word o f the deaUi jrf h is uncle. James Ross. OJ, SebaMopoi. Caltf.

AJr. Roy Haley is spending seveJ o l days In Los Angeles on a eoo bined buslnei s and pleasure trip.

MUs Ruby Hcldel and Mrs. Almoa GeLss. who have been vtslUng at the J, J. Heldel home, have left. M n. aelss returned to her home In Wallowa. Ore.. and Mlsa Heldel went to Boise Where she Is employed. ' "Mrs, Harry Scott and daughter.

Jean, .North DakoUt. and Mr. and Mrs. NocLMoore and Uiree children, Mounuiln Home, vlslt^ for a short time at the home of Mr. and Mn. Henry Scnften. Mrs. Scott U Mrs. Senften's aunt.

W e W ill P a y --------2c e a ch for H A N G E R S

a Cooperate w ith us. please, b y . fttuihlng a hanger for every one we relepe to you.

;O Y -N A TIO N A Lanfiertn A Dry Cleaaert

Fh. 6 6 or 7fld

SUN VA LLEY STAGESO p en s i t a s u m m e r vacA tion r u n

M o n d a y , J u n e 21stFratti Ketehom to S«m <n* M ondayi, 'Wtdnesdayf. Ftlday* »ora Salman.I« KetchtHni Tuesdays, Tfaanday, Salsrdaya

The car 1e»ve* Twin F»JU at 8:15 a. m. retnrnlnf <«.Twln Falla at 4 p. lo.

i.m boyl Ifere'5 your chance to go Xlshing over Oalena Sutomi by the lakes, and on d o « o the river. Plenty of tourist cabii available. For further lofonnatlon call your local stage depot.

j ; L . S c h w in n , o w n e r.

*

S i - . .

LEATHER BAGS$ 3 5 0

O v e r t h e s h o u ld e r b a g s t h a t n rc r o o m y a n d d u ra b le . T a n sha de o n ly — a d ju s t a b le c la s p lo c k n n d k e y .

MAIN F!X)OIt DIIT GOODS DEFT.

In fa n ts A n k le ts"29c ■

R a y o n n r r d c o t to n n n k lc ta . S ize t o 7 ‘/o . S o l id p a s te l c o lo rs o r fn n c y s t r i p e p a t t e r n s . J u s t re c e iv e d to d a y .

MAIN FIO O R DRY GOODS DEPT.

Munsingwear' “Cefhnese” H O S I E R Y

$ | 1 8“ N u r r a y ” R a y o n h o s e m a d t5 ,o I cclanest! y n m 5 4 g a u g e s h c t ; r l u l l f a s h io n e d . C o t to n r e in f o r c c d to e , rou nd h e e l t h a t w i l l f i t p e r ­f e c t ly . P r o p o r t i o n f l l te n g th s . S h o r t re g u la r a n d lo n e : . N e u t ra l . s h n d e . I n s iz e s t o lOVs- P A IR .

C h i ld r e n ’ s S e e rs u c k e r

JumperSKIRTS

In solid -color* wiUi novel embroidery trim. Rose, red and dark blue. Sizes 7-14.

$3.49m a in ' fl o o r

h e a d v - t o -w e ar

• N e w S h ip m e n t

C alifo rn ia

SLACKS$ 1 0 . 9 0

Red, Iuggsj»,,goW. green. Sires 12 to » . Smart Coll. forola style pearl buttons. Saddle eUtchlng, patoh- pockets.

Z-PieceDRESSES

In butcher Uniai. Jersey eyelet pique and sltantung. 8 l» » lo » and U to SO.

$ 8 . 9 0

$ 10.90

Women’s, Misses

DRESSES * i . 9 8 , » 3 . 9 S

»4.98liOlB of colora. patterns and styles. SharksUns, bem>

'b erg i, spun rayotis. Rayon prints, and seertucken. B u y now fOT Bummer vaca* Uons. Regular site* la to 82. Junior m ios site 9 to 17. fC O NO UY BASEMENT

Girls’ N o v e lty

SANDALS

$2.9SOpen toe and open beel stylu. College heel. Leather toles, covered beels. Sizes SH to ». •

No BUmp Required.

, ECONOkIT BA9EAIENT

Children’sBrown

Si^NDALS

$1.98Bites 0 to 3. Sites not com­plete. See our non.ratton shoe table for other odd lots.

ECONOMr DASESULVT

I d q h o D e p t . S t o r e“I f I t Isn’t Right, B r in g It Back”