DeValera Truman’s Solons Okay Rule Gets Cost Plan...

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- LATE BULLETIN BAGDAD. Feb. « OJi»wTIui ln < | c b l a e t Uslsbl rc)ecle<l Ibi AncIe-IrM| trtalj dfB«d tut noalb Sn E&<tuid whleb looched «n vUttprud rlotinc U tlUj e«UtlT, .VOL. 30, NO. 295 A Re^oiul Newspaper Serrin? Nine Irrigated Idaho Counties TWIN FALLS,-IDAHO, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1948 FRICE5CENTS DeValera Rule Gets Vote Test DUBLIN, Feb. 4 (U .R>— Ea- mon dc Valern’a 16-yenr-old rule as prime minister of Eire was challenged nt the ballot box today by Scan MacBridc, . Dublin ftttomcy who has W rockcted into political promi- nence within the past year. An cxpcctwl M per a n t of Eire'# ).BOej70 volcn bcEsn balloUng a t 0 BJn. In the holiest general elec- tion Sn 20 ytitt. 117 t>»U at BUke At itake are 1<7 uata In the dsll elfeann. Elrc'J national oaiembly. Dc Valera'* Hanna fall (Qovcm- ment party) wUl have to win 7i »eata If he U to remain m prime mlntatcr. Tlie prcdlcUon Is that he will win only U to ca. MacBridc. tha «->'car-oM chal- lenger, 1* expceled to take 30 seaU. BhouU de Valera fall to win ft par- llomtniary majority, the choice of ■ now prime mlnbter would depend upon political deals to produce - coalition leader. May Be RcpUced Should dc Vtlen fall, the betting l3 he wouW be repJaccd by Mac- Brlde. the new political «Ur who has led hU klann na poblachta (Repub- lican party) out of political oblivion In the pajt year. KtacDrlde'a pm y. which did not exist In the last cleetlcn on May 30. 1IH4. prtsted de Valera eo hard In two by>elcctlons that de Valera called a general election 10 months aliead of achcdule to head off bis young challcnser before he gained t more strength. By-Eleetlonf Lost MftcDrlde's party won both elec- tions. Tlic present dall was to have continued In orilce until next June, but 11 was dissolved by de Volem on Jan. 14 and new elecUona were called lor today. Voting will end at D pjn. and counting will start tomorrow. Filer Woman, 86, Charging Trickiii iji so- claims her _ _ or forsery to get'htr'ont.-ef-___ home, according to a complaint filed Wednesday In dLilrlet court. Mrs. Barah A. Deem alleges her dRUghtcr. Mattie E. Hommerqukt, alio Filer, hiui filed papers with the recorder which "purports to be a surrender" of Mn. Beem'* llfeUmc Ifftee on the properly. Chariei Trlekcry As she has been bedridden since May 20, 1045. she claims the In- atmment was either forged or trickery wiw used to get her to sign tlic paper. Her doughter seeks to sell the property. Mrs. Deem alleges. The alltgallons grow out of an .......................... c between Mrs. Beem Missing Baby Returned Mr*. L«o1j B. Andtn weeps oi ihe holdi her baby. Lean. *U-months- old. following bit rctDn after being Ukea from an aat«mablt« *t % coBntrr donee near San Dlcgo, Calif. Mn. Oorotby Parker. 17, (left) childlcii wife, tald the (o«k Ibe baby becaose her heart yemmcd for one. Her case hat been referred to the probatlea d'epartiaenl withoot crfmlna) charge. (AP wlrepbsto) and her four children. The oUiern are E. A. Beeni. Grover C. Beem and Belle Tittle. The agreement was made Dec 1, 1D«. Exchange Told In exchange for turning over pro- l>erly to the children, each was to pay her tIOS a yeor. she contend.?. Part of the agreement called for her lifetime occupancy In the quar- ter ftecilon she gave Mrs. Ham- merqulst. Mr*. Beem states. Mrs. Deem asks that her lease bo declared valid, and that her mir- render of the lease be set aside. She Is represented by Attomc>-8 Ornydon W. Smith and Leonard H. Jocolu. ^Motorist’s Heart Fails After Car Sitids Into Ditch BURLEY, Feb. 4-\Vhlle attempl- Ing to get his car back on tho high- u-ay approximately 13 miles west of Burley after It had slipped on the Icy ro.id. Joseph A. Orme, 57. died of A heart aiiack at 0:25 o.m. Wednesday. John W. Blerrell and George A. Conrad. Twin Falls, who were help- ing Mr. Orme get his ear back onto Uie road, reported that he suddenly feU over and died Immediately. Papen found on his body show he was a candy'salennan working out' of Salt Lake City, OUh. 3 Soviet Charges Rejected by U. S, WASinNOTON. Feb. 4 «> -T he first three of Soviet Russia'* ourcnt series of protests against American military moves abroad have been dl'.mi»ed as groundless by the state department. But Moscow may have somewhat ^ b e tt e r luck with the fourth, received ^yeslerdny, U eJiarged American fliers with 10 specific acts of clreUng or flying low over Soviet ehjnplng near Japan last falL-A^jepSrtmcnt spokesman tald the alleged IncHlerts will be Investigated betore a reply la made "eventually." Russia complained last year that U. s. army planes had flown over the Soviet occupation tone In Korea without authorisation, l^e stat« department acknawledged then that fronUer vloUtlons might have oc- curred In bsd weather and pMged prereqUve measurta. U. s. Sifts New Arms Aid to Greeks, Turks WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U.R)—Secy, of State George C. MarBhnll di.scloscd today the state department is considerinK the possibility of a new military aid progrnm for both Grceco and Turkey. Mar.shali told his weekly news conference that specific pro- posnls for a new program for Greece have been received from the American mission in Athens. They are being given full study. Comparable figures proposing new military aid for Turkey en route here. Gen. Horace McBride, a member of the 'U. S. military ^d mis-sion in Turkey, is bringing the new figure.'? to Waahingtoru Tlie original Greek aid program »-as $3,000,000.000-half of which was to be used for military' purposes. Because of Greek communbt war- fare against the government at least glOWO.000. of the economic funds already hare been transferred to the military. The original Turkish aid program was $100,000»0. all of which was to be used for mlUlao’ purposes. Need b Known The need for additional military Id In Greece has been known for )me time. Otlicr Marsholl news confercnce hlRhllRhts: 1. He was unalile td say when tlie. proposed aid for China program will be sent to congress. 3. He reiterated the need for en- actment of the European recovery program (EnP) by April 1 because funds for the Interim relief program will be cxhaa<ied by Uiat time. Debate Zane Merger 3, He confirmed that tlie United States. Britain and Prance will be- gin discussions In London on F^b. 19 looklng'toward the possibility of creating a "triionla” In western Oermany with France. U. S. ambos- Bador Lewis Douglas will reprtsent the United Statev At present tlie Bria'^ and American zones 'are Joined economically. 4. Reports to the state deport- ment from Greece offer no zub- eUnllatlon of press reports from Athens Umt virtually all of the U. S. aid mlttlon there. Including DwlRht W. Griswold. Is planning to leave the end of June. lot ‘Drilling’ Coimt Denied In Court Here He didn’t ••clrlll" the slot moclilnes In the Blue Pig borbecuc last Dec. 13, a professional automobile stunt rider told a district court Jury Wed- nesday. He Jait lost 40 cents play- ing them, he said. Mlllon Burke. 3<. Long Beach. Calif., who Is being tried on a sec- ond degree burglary charge before Judge Jomes .W. Porter said he wos In the Twin Falls area at the Ume looking for sites to put on a show. Another Charged He dfcwrlbcd Charles ClprcssI, 3fi. Los Angeles. Calif, as a professional motor ci'cle stunt rider. ClprcssI ako Is charged with the attempt to commit larceny at the Buhl e.itab- llshmenu o*-ned by Warren Bis- tcrly. Tlic two were accompanied by Charles Dent. 28. Los Angeles, when they were arresled. Dent, who has been turned over to the FBI. Joined titem In Omaha, Nebr.. Durke said. Dent was anxious to get back to the west coast, ond they were conclud- ing thetr swing about the country searching for "stunt Jobs.” Burke said. He said they «-cre advised to SO to Buhl and then to Fner. Literature SIUjIdc Under direct examlnaUon by Ray Agee, hla attonicy. Burke, who also cnid he was n tank-tester during the war. testified that Ulcralure de- Bcrlblng his cxplolu was mLulng os were other personal bclonglnRs. Burko said he had asVed the of- ficers obout his literature, but thot he still hadn’t received It. He said the officers arrested Uie trio while they were In Lee Jordan's cafe, n ic r. ProseeuUng Attorney Bserett (c«Htiii.iM r«i« t. c«ui.p j) Klan Rides Again In Georgia Town SWAINSBORO. Ga, Feb. 4 (JV- Hooded night riders of ihe Ku Klux KJan. IBO strong, rcdedlcated them- Eclvea “to the protection of white womanhood- here.last nighu There would have been more' Klansmen present, said o leader but others were unable to obtain sheets. In single file Uie white-robed Klansmen marched around the town *quare and through the resldenUal aecUon. ending on the courthouse lau-n where they sang “Aiacrlca," On th# last note a masked leader shouted: “May we rcdedlcale our lives to the proUcUon of white womanhood?" A torch then was put to a 10 foot cross and as 11 burned there were cries of “Where’s Drew PearsonT" Where’s Walter WlncheUr Truman’s Cost Plan ‘Doomed’ WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 (/P) —Senator Sparkman. D., Ala., declared today that most of President Truman’s anti-in- flation requests arc doomed. The Alabama senator has been one of the leadera in the fight for the Preaidcnt’s 10- point cost of” living program. Sparkman told a. reporter the hopelessness of the situation was made plain by a senate banking subcommltlefl decision to klU a bill which would have permitted pre- poraUons for meat rationing. *-MUdnt B l i r •That bill." said Sparkman, “was by far the mildest antl-lnflatlon measure before Uie bonking com* mltUe. It seems mighty clear that tho Republicans are not going do onyUdng obout' .living costs, i cept extend rent controls in some form or another." Acluilly. one Democrat Joined two Republicans In recommending that Uie "get ready" meot ration- ing bill be allowed to die. One Re- publican and one Democrat voted tor II. The lubcommlltec report before the full banking committee. Defeat Foreseen Chairman Tobey. R.. N. H., himself In favor of the measure. predlcLs the msln group will back up Uie subcommittee when the bill comes up f« anoUier vole, probably next week. The full cofflmlltee also expects to vote next week on leglslaUon which would meet Mr. Truman’a request for stand-by power to restore ra- tioning and wage-prlce controls on a limited basis. ’Tliese are the measures Spark- man says do not have a chance. Early Rent Action Meanwhile. Senator Taft. O^ chairman of tlie senate Republican policy comraltUe. said he expects a rent control extension bill to come up In th# senate about Feb. 18. The present law expires Feb. 30. No extewlon bill has cleared subeommlllee yet. but Chairman Cain, n.. Wash, said he hopes to have soma sort of a measure In the hands of tlie full banlclng com- mittee by Friday. U« taiil u-.\t while ho does not know how his four subcommltteo colleagues feel, he will "strongly rec- ommend” that congresa free from controU “luxury" homes and npart- menLi-probably tho.'ic renUng from glSO to t23S a monUi and up. Old Warrior Burns Salraie worken al Seattle. Wash, pat the torch (a (he woodwerk o! the '.Moonlight Maid" which letend uyt fired tbe flnt thot In the badte of Manila bay. The ancient tcmcI I s being scrapped for lU itecL (AP wlrephoto) "BLOCS- DEPLORED LONDON, Feb. 4 MV-Sweden’s Foreign Minister Oesten Dnden de- plored today “the division of the world Into different blocs which mutually distrust, fear and oppose each other.- Oregon Votes Set On GOP Bidders SALEM. Ore., Ptb « WV-Oregon Republicans were tlrtually assured today that the names of Thomas E. Dewey and Harold E. Slassen would be on their Msy primary prcsldcnUal preference ballot. Robert Elllolt of Portland, chalr^ an of the Oregon Republicans imp- porUng the former Mlnnesou gov- ernor and candidate for the OOP nomination, said petlUons to place Stas.'en on the primarr ballot circulating. PetlUons for Governor Dewey of New York were filed with Oregon election ofndala earlier this year. Senator Taft of Ohio h u Indicated he Will not enter the Oregon prlman' field. Preferential ballot petitions be fHed In Oregon without apprxmU of the candidate. “Ease up” Urged In Warship Visits WMHIKOTON. Ftb. 1 IJ, _ Italy Is reported to hare suggested informally to the United eutes that it would be poUtlcaBy amart to ease up on visits of Amerlean warshlos to Italian ports. , The presence «f United States Mediterranean fleet units in Italian harbors recently h u been attacked by Russia. Italian communists hat-e been a»kln* poUtJcaJ capital of It. India Militant Band Barred; 60 Ai-e Jailed NEW DELin. Feb. 4 (U.R)-The go\'- emmenl of India formally banned the militant Hindu youth orcanlin- Uon Ro.-ditrlya Sci'ak Sangli tonight after scores of Its Icadcrs’had been arrtaled In a nationwide .campaign against U. • A formal government stalenicnt on the suppression of the RSS said the "cull of violence" which It spon- .'.orcd n u m b e r e d Hohandns K. Oandlii among Its victims. Aceualt Related The organltaUon wo-i accused of "acL's of violence, anon, robbery and murder" In oddlUon to ••exhorting people lo terrorist methods to create dliftffpcUon sgalnst Ihe govern- ment." The ban was In keeping with the government’s program outlawing private armies. The campaign against extremists had brought about the arrest of W members of the RSS, Including Its New Delhi chief. Among those held without hearing under the govrenment order ban- ning military groups was Karl Chand, New Delhi leader of the RS3. the sulking arm of the ex tremlst organization Mahashnbha. ..........Bom Newjpaptri. .... The assassin of Gandhi was editor of a Mahassbha newspaper Poono. Crowds gathered today and burned all copies they could find of news- papers which supported the Hindu extremists, including those backing Mohasabha. Indian Boclallsls demanded the re.'^lgnallon of the government for failure to prevent the assa.sslnatlon or Gandhi. Farm Devices ‘Black Market’ Probe Slated WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 <U ,PJ—Chairman Clifford Hope said today that hi.s house agriculture committee eventually may come up with some legislation to control what he termed a "scrioua black market" in farm machinery. The Kansas Republican made his fltatement in announcing that the committee will open public hearings Feb. 10 on tho entire question of farm machinery shortages. He said repro- 'sentatives of the agriculture and commerce departments will be heard first. “1 expect the hearings wlU nm about a week and xrlU Jocluds itpr»> senutlres of farm machtoery maou* facturer*. dUtrlbutora’ ---------------- ................Hope- More Snows Predicted for Rockies Ai’ea By The United Pre** More snow flurries are In store for Idoho and Utolj tomorrow. Uie Salt Lake City weather bureau warned today. rorcca.ilers said the flurries would begin tod.-iy In nortlicm Idalio and work tlieir way souUi and cost, prob- ably hitting Utah'.'^ populated areas olong the Wosntch mountains by tomorrow. Tempemture-s will remain about le same, however. New Wave Told Meanwhile, the Chicago weaUier bureau office reported another cold wave moving .slowly southward from northern Canodiv and predicted It would bring the most r.cvere cold of the winter to the already, beleagured middle west and cost. K. L. Jacobson, forecaster al the Chicago bureau, sold the new cold wave will niove into M innuota and the Dakotas tonight. It will spread eastward at far as Indiana and Michigan by tomorrow nlghu Sub'^re Temperatures Early today, even before Uio new cold affected the nation, sub-zero temperatures were reported from the Dakotas eastward to New Eng- land. Heo\7 rains and snows pected In drought-stricken Calif- ornia M far fouth as Bakersfield. But the weM consl'n largest light and power company Mid the rains were too late to avert an electric power sliortage. Solons Okay 2 1/ 2 Billions Budget Cuts WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U.B—House and senate budgtt makera agreed today on a ?2,500,000,000 cut in Pm id«it Truman's budget. That would leave a i>otcntiaI surplus of $10,100,000,000 for tax and debt reduction. BecauBO of the admittedly tentative nature of their esti- mate.'?, however, the congressional spokesman shied aw»y from concluding that their budget would leave room for the full ?G.500,000,000 lax reduction voted by the house. The senate intends to keep the tax reduction bill on ico until it gets a better line on whether the budget will stick. An agreement on the proposed budget cut was reached at a meet- ing of Uie :o-man auboommlttee of the house-senate budget groupk lu nccfnmendatlons wlU b« submitted, to Uie full 103-member commlltee Friday. Chairman Styles Bridges reported that the sub*group agreed on aa es- timate that gcn-er&meDl receipts under present taxes would total 147,300,000.000 In the fiscal year beginning July 1. Ttiat figure was nearly 13,000.000.000 over M r. Tru- man's revenue eaUmatc. Bridges also disclosed th a t the subcommittee had agreed that gor- emment spending should total no more th a n $37.300,OOOAOO c o eo p a m l with Mr. Truman's esthnatA c l |39.> ees.ooo,ooo. Asked If Uie budget mgreement would leave room for the full $8.- W0,000,000 lax reduction ty the house, Chairman John Tabs. TL. N. Y, of the hous» tppToprU- Uons committee remarlced dryly; T he arilhmetio vouk] look that waj-.- Kelther be nor Bridges would of* r a more positive commltjaeat» Bridges said the group laade no as- sumption on the of cut congress finally will apptore. School Cheer Mai'kets Take Sharp Breaks For Big Loss NEW YORK. Feb. * lUJ9-Sh>ds. bonds and commodlUts cracte) sharply today with gralos abowtnf one-day Umit lanes rao<tnc to 10 cents a bushel la wheat aad ooUoq down as much as tT k bate. Losses la the stock o a itst nsgtd > more than 3 potaU &a tte aam Ust with IndlTidual isnea oft 9 and 4 poiata. Selllag I& atocka col nodcr tRer the ccoimodltr mazkct veakeacd early In tbe day azkd Uie decline carrtcd the tadustrtal poup to a new kiT tor PMriy «l(bs BflUoB TTtpe* <m The decline wiped cot n o n than bUlion dollars ta market ealoa- UOBs of listed stocks and ta ht> dastiials was the widest tr a k a&x* aid-ApriL m r. In commoditlea adUnc btc«a la r»ln*. precapted largely by fen- proTtag dop nports ftuca Eotep^ coupled wtm prospects for a c»d winter wheat crop la the xralttd SUtes. VW t D en II Omta Wheat In Chicago was down II ccnu a txshel. com ott • c«u aiid cats « ee&ta a bosM km r. Oottoa wia <knm as atitfa w «us Army Overrules M’Arthur Edict WASlltNO’TON. Feb. 4 C/r>-0\er- sea-s news conespondcnU were able today lo leave U. 8. occupation rones and retuni without being rc-accred- lled. afier the army department o\-erruled an order by Oen. Douglas MacArthur. The army ruled yesterday that rrportcfs now can leave the tone> on special aislgnmcnls for periods "aggregating not more Uum 30 days In any six monUis period." MacArthur’s order, which resulted .1 a number of protesta, had re- quired newsmen to be re-occredlted ofter leaving Uie far eastern occu- pied arta. SECS RENTS OOOST WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 WV-Tlghe E Woods, federal housing expediter, said today he believes rents wiu go up 50 per ceni cn ihe overage If congress falls to continue rent trols. Forestall Unifies Service Airlines WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 CU.fJ-De- fen.»c Secy. James Forrcslal today announced . Ihc-.mtrBtr.-.tffccUve Marcli 1. of Ihe air transport serv- ice ol the air force and the naval air transport service. Forreatal named MaJ.-Ocn. I^u- renee 8. Kuter of the air force be the first commander of the co; blned service. He will take oi March 1. Rear Adm. John P. Whitney ot the na \7 was named deputy com- mander and ordered to report for duly immediately. The air forte will control the com- bined transport scrvleo to be known as the military air transport scrr* Ice (MA’TSI. This combined alr'traniport serv- ice wiU run all tho scheduled air transport n^ed by the armed forces. It will also run a large por- Uon of the non-acheduled air trans« port. Approval Near on AirpOrt Building Civil aeronautics aUon approval for Ihe coiutrucUon ot the admUtlstraUon building at tha Twin Fails municipal airport Is expected !ate this afternoon. Mayor H. G. Lauterbach announced this morn- ing. He called a special meeting of the city commlssionera with CAA of. ’Iclals at 4 p. m. today In the city hall. The-meeUng was called wlUi only ahort'notlcc. “Wc ^'ant lo get aUrtcd a.i qulck- I- ly u possible," the mayor said In I ■nnmmHpj tJjj Jneetlaj. brought out in thoM determine our next CetaplalnU He said he and oUier memben of the house agriculture committee still I rccelvliig letters from all porU Ihe form belt complaining tlu t farm machinery Is scarce and that when 11 Is available It often carries premium price tag. Hope said it may be powlble to work out tome program wlUi the farm machinery makers and dlslribu* tors to ease some of Uie more crlUcal machinery shorUges, He empha- sized, however, that the committee will not nhy away from leglslaUon If It l3 necessary. Price Probe Set Tlie committee fUro is going into Uie quesUon of the Impact of farm machinery exporU on domesUo sup- plies. Including the possible effect of any farm machinery shipments un- der the long-range European aid program. Although the farm machinery pic- ture gencnUly is very tight, Hope .laid one of the most critical short- ages Is tmelors. He said second- hand tractor*, like a\ed aulomo- blles, are bringing more than they coal new. Retlitntlca tte nzst dMcr leaden' workshop to be held In Idaho and one of tho first In the naUon began at 3 p. m. today at the Twin Falls high school More than IM stude ' Annual Dinner of Lions Club to Be Held on Feb. 25 Plans for the Lions club’s annual banquet honoring chartcr members on Feb. 25 at SU Edword’s school were made Tuesdoy at the Uons regular luncheon mceUng. H. L. Clark and O. J. Bothne were appointed chalrmcn for the ban- quet.. OUier committee members in- elude Dale Henman, Robert Hlnk- ley. Vernon Riddle and Ver Cox. Guest speoker was Kent Tatlock who told the group of his recent trip to Florida and Havaiux. Cuba. He wu Introduced by Oraydon Smith. Quests for ihe meeUng were Ralph Karris, M erritt Shotwell. Eraest BJork, Hugh Tullock. William Long, Richard Frasier. Robert White, Har- old Cress, Richard Lawmico and Ren Reed. Ing 34 schools from eight Magic Valley counties were on hand for the opening session. Uad Meetlnr FIo>-d Luft. Buhl, was master of ceremonies for the afternoon meet- ing. The address of welcome given by Bcmell Wright, IClmbert)' and John D. Flatt. principal of Twin Palls high school. Introduced the University of Idaho yeU king, the featured guest. Emie Crancr and Eleanor Mae Wall, student reprcscntaUves from the SouUiem Idaho College of Edu- callon. gave short talks on "Going lo College" and “now Should School Organizations Cooperate to DuUd Unity of Purpose.” StBdenU ’Talk Talks on “School Splrif* we.'e given by Keith Warner. Heybum: Uine Sidewall. Burley; Clara Corta. Hailey: Roy MUler. Richfield: Bette W alter, Filer, and Catherine Reese, CasUeford. O. Ncfsger, BuhL spoke on "School Morale" and Beverly Crowley, Twin (CMllaM4 «a r a n Z. 1) U. a em dm l u d AsMrlew lie all off mote than & potnt. O njs. Icr and General M atcn vert off mote than m ta Vxlr group, Reports Tell of U. S. ‘Landings’ LONTWN. Feb. < WV-Tasa dis- tributed a report from Rome today that American '•engineering troops” have landed la former Italian North Africa. —The-Russlan-nrW5 agency quoted a snail Italian newa agency. Ageruia Itallsne D. Informaxloae. which it said is “eoaneeted with Itoliaa co- lonial circles. Reporting the purported landings r an unspecilied number of Amer- icans In BriUsh-occupled libya^ the Italian news.agency was quoted by Toss as saying; “American en^eering troops have laaded at strategical points In Cire- nalca and encamped west of Bengasi and in tho el Aghella coastal xcne." England Acts To Halt Pay; ' Profit Drives LONDON, Ftb. 4 M V-ltw BrtUjh "led today for » halt Yellowstone’s Brnins Answer Debates on Bear Hibernations YnXOWSTONB NATIONAL PARK. Wyo, Fch. 4 WJO-Word verbal batUe raging over I quesUon, "Do bears hibernate?” has finally reached tills snowtwund bruin mecca where bears outnum- ber experts on bears by al least two-to-one. They do not—In the opinion of Andrew A. Alley, who operated the park garbage truck la the winters of IH3 and '44. upholding the con- tention of Dr. Charles P. I^man. assistant curator of Barrard's museum of comparative soology. Brushing aside scientific nocaen- clature about "dectleraUon of meta- bolism” and changes In the rale of bean’ 'Tasomolor acUritics." Alley says; T ksoT that at least one of Tel- lowstone’s bruins wa.^ up and around at very frequent Intervals tnm De- cember through March. When I threw anything particularly odorous over the dump In the morning gar- bage haul. I would coasistenUy find this old fellow, a big dark brown, digging around when I returned in Uie afternoon with the ashe»." Alley declarec that Leon Erans and Al EUlott. park rangers, will ■Itest the accuracy of his aUte- ment. and that P;iank Lind of Gardiner, Moat, who droT* th t gar> bage truck tbe two foUowtng w lntsa reported the thing. He (aid that oldUmen ta th* park Tlclnlty have reported thetr winter camps being raided hr bnilni No fmm thw bean. on Increased wages and It was a BXPTe to check tanaUon. Prime Minister Attlet'a tabor cmment Issued a white paper 9ar« tag: 'It u essential that'there tboold be no further general Increase ta the level of perscoal Ineocses with- ous at least a cormpopdtsg Is- creise In Use vohaae of pewmettai. *Unle» we are prepared to check such a tesdencr. we shall ttsd oor- selvta enable ta fuuui o«r expert task, owirg to the rise ta cats, which will be reflected «a the market." In trcognltlon ot the British economic podUoa. Attlee pUnaed to take the floor la the hcuse ot ccn- mons and outline tlw need for self sacrtHce by BriUsh wisrtta aad nployen. The goTonment cautioaed against the danger of a race between rtxtag prices and ptnoaal tncce:e«. say- ing p.ic« -aJwajs win In the loeg run," The white paper said wage eame» always are Uxe grcatot viiitnn, - ---- ---------- --- ---- ------ •There U no justtflcaUca at the present time for any rfee in tncomw from profits, rent or other Uka sources." the white paper said. •Rlso In wages or salaries shockl only be asked for and agreed upon la eaepUocal cases." The white paper prcelsed. bov- rtr. that, except for taxatioo, the government wlU not tnletfen vtth Individual tncomes. Thli ra aortd specubtlon Uiat the labor ncta» might impose a fixed ceiling c s !&• ‘Protesf Walkout Of Germans Halts FRANKFURT. Fth. * UJ&-A 34- hour protest strlks by soae l^SOdjm to SjOOOjXO German w oiten ended quleUy eariy today vha mtea leaden cksed their strike bead«- - quarteta In Stuttgart and Baaaamr and went boaa. The walkout tavt!^^cd a n t m.(W ta the ABurlcan n te stata U Haanorer arta ta tte'B ittlft i ___ - betwMo mam ud usuot . Otnca nrku* ta tbt Bitttt i AlDKASSKniD . V ' . WA8BINaTOK.M.4tD-««CC*» tarr Ot (b* i&MDr aaM t'ku ^roDaaa ta PMttk - idateaaAv

Transcript of DeValera Truman’s Solons Okay Rule Gets Cost Plan...

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LATE BULLETINBAGDAD. Feb. « OJi»wTIui ln < | c b la e t

U s lsb l rc)ecle<l Ib i AncIe-IrM | t r t a l j dfB«d tu t noa lb Sn E&<tuid whleb looched «n v U ttp ru d rlo tinc U tlUje«UtlT,

.VOL. 30, NO. 295

A Re^oiul Newspaper Serrin? Nine Irrigated Idaho Counties

TWIN FALLS,-IDAHO, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1948 FRICE5CENTS

DeValera Rule Gets Vote Test

DUBLIN, Feb. 4 (U.R>—Ea- mon dc Valern’a 16-yenr-old rule as prime minister of Eire was challenged nt the ballot box today by Scan MacBridc,

. Dublin ftttomcy who has W rockcted into political promi­

nence within the past year.An cxpcctwl M per a n t of Eire'#

).BOej70 volcn bcEsn balloUng a t 0 BJn. In the holiest general elec­tion Sn 20 y titt .

117 t>»U a t BUke A t itake are 1<7 ua ta In the dsll

elfeann. Elrc'J national oaiembly. Dc Valera'* Hanna fall (Qovcm- ment party) wUl have to win 7 i »eata If he U to remain m prime mlntatcr. Tlie prcdlcUon Is th a t he will win only U to ca.

MacBridc. tha «->'car-oM chal­lenger, 1* expceled to take 30 seaU. BhouU de Valera fall to win ft par- llom tniary majority, the choice of ■ now prime mlnbter would depend upon political deals to produce - coalition leader.

May Be RcpUced Should dc V tle n fall, the betting

l3 he wouW be repJaccd by Mac- Brlde. the new political «U r who has led hU klann na poblachta (Repub­lican party) out of political oblivion In the pa jt year.

KtacDrlde'a pm y . which did not exist In the last cleetlcn on May 30. 1IH4. prtsted de Valera eo hard In two by>elcctlons that de Valera called a general election 10 months a liead of achcdule to head off bis young challcnser before he gained

tmore strength.By-Eleetlonf Lost

MftcDrlde's party won both elec­tions. Tlic present dall was to have continued In orilce until next June, bu t 11 was dissolved by de Volem on Jan . 14 and new elecUona were called lor today.

Voting will end a t D p jn . and counting will start tomorrow.

Filer Woman, 86, Charging Trickiii

iji so-claims her _ _o r forsery to g e t 'h tr 'o n t .- e f - ___home, according to a complaint filed Wednesday In dLilrlet court.

Mrs. Barah A. Deem alleges her dRUghtcr. Mattie E. Hommerqukt,

• a lio Filer, hiui filed papers with the recorder which "purports to be a surrender" of Mn. Beem'* llfeUmc Ifftee on the properly.

Chariei Trlekcry As she has been bedridden since

May 20, 1045. she claims the In- a tm m ent was either forged or trickery wiw used to get her to sign tlic paper. Her doughter seeks to sell the property. Mrs. Deem alleges.

The alltgallons grow out of an .......................... c between Mrs. Beem

Missing Baby Returned

Mr*. L«o1j B. A ndtn weeps o i ih e holdi her baby. Lean. *U -m onths- old. following b it rctD n after being U kea from an aat«mablt« * t % coBntrr donee near San Dlcgo, Calif. M n . Oorotby Parker. 17, (left) childlcii wife, tald the (o«k Ibe baby becaose her heart yemmcd for one. Her case hat been referred to th e probatlea d'epartiaenl withoot crfmlna) charge. (AP wlrepbsto)

and her four children. The oUiern are E. A. Beeni. Grover C. Beem and Belle Tittle. The agreement was made Dec 1, 1D«.

Exchange ToldIn exchange for turning over pro-

l>erly to the children, each was to pay her tIOS a yeor. she contend.?. Part of the agreement called for her lifetime occupancy In the quar­ter ftecilon she gave Mrs. Ham- merqulst. Mr*. Beem states.

Mrs. Deem asks that her lease bo declared valid, and that her mir- render of the lease be set aside. She Is represented by Attomc>-8 Ornydon W. Smith and Leonard H. Jocolu.

^Motorist’s Heart Fails After Car Sitids Into Ditch

BURLEY, Feb. 4-\Vhlle a ttem pl- Ing to get his car back on tho high- u-ay approximately 13 miles west of Burley after It had slipped on the Icy ro.id. Joseph A. Orme, 57. died of A heart aiiack a t 0:25 o.m . Wednesday.

John W. Blerrell and George A. Conrad. Twin Falls, who were help­ing Mr. Orme get his ear back onto Uie road, reported tha t he suddenly feU over and died Immediately.

P a p e n found on his body show he was a candy'salennan working o u t' of Salt Lake City, OUh.

3 Soviet Charges Rejected by U. S,

WASinNOTON. Feb. 4 « > - T h e first three of Soviet Russia'* o u rc n t series of protests against American m ilitary moves abroad have been dl'.mi»ed as groundless by the state department.

But Moscow may have somewhat ^ b e t t e r luck with the fourth, received ^ y e s le rd n y , U eJiarged American

fliers with 10 specific acts of clreUng or flying low over Soviet ehjnplng near Japan last falL-A^jepSrtm cnt spokesman ta ld the alleged IncHlerts will be Investigated betore a reply la made "eventually."

Russia complained last year th a t U. s . army planes had flown over the Soviet occupation tone In Korea w ithout authorisation, l ^ e s ta t« departm ent acknawledged then th a t fronUer vloUtlons might have oc­curred In bsd weather and pM ged prereqUve measurta.

U. s. Sifts New Arms Aid to Greeks, Turks

WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U.R)—Secy, of State George C. MarBhnll di.scloscd today the state department is considerinK the possibility of a new military aid progrnm for both Grceco and Turkey.

Mar.shali told his weekly news conference that specific pro- posnls for a new program for Greece have been received from the American mission in Athens. They are being given full study.

Comparable figures proposing new military aid for Turkey en route here. Gen. Horace McBride, a member of the

'U. S. military ^ d mis-sion in Turkey, is bringing the new figure.'? to Waahingtoru

Tlie original Greek aid program »-as $3,000,000.000-half o f which was to be used for military' purposes. Because of Greek com m unbt war­fare against the government a t least glOWO.000. of the economic funds already hare been transferred to the military.

The original Turkish aid program was $100,000»0. all of which was to be used for mlUlao’ purposes.

Need b Known The need for additional military Id In Greece has been known for )me time.O tlicr Marsholl news confercnce

hlRhllRhts:1. He was unalile td say when tl ie .

proposed aid for China program will be sent to congress.

3. He reiterated the need for en­actm ent of the European recovery program (EnP) by April 1 because funds for the Interim relief program will be cxhaa<ied by Uiat time.

Debate Zane Merger3, He confirmed th a t tlie United

States. Britain and Prance will be­gin discussions In London on F^b. 19 looklng'toward the possibility of creating a "triionla” In western O ermany with France. U. S . ambos- Bador Lewis Douglas will rep rtsen t th e United Statev A t present tlie B r ia '^ and American zones 'are Joined economically.

4. Reports to the s ta te deport­m ent from Greece offer no zub- eU nllatlon of press reports from Athens Umt virtually a ll of the U. S. a id mlttlon there. Including DwlRht W. Griswold. Is planning to leave th e end of June. •

lot ‘Drilling’ Coimt Denied In Court Here

He d idn ’t ••clrlll" the slot moclilnes In the Blue Pig borbecuc last Dec. 13, a professional automobile stunt rider told a district court Jury Wed­nesday. He J a i t lost 40 cents play­ing them , he said.

Mlllon Burke. 3<. Long Beach. Calif., who Is being tried on a sec­ond degree burglary charge before Judge Jom es .W. Porter said he wos In the Twin Falls area a t the Ume looking for sites to put on a show.

Another Charged He dfcwrlbcd Charles ClprcssI, 3fi.

Los Angeles. C alif, as a professional m otor ci'cle stunt rider. ClprcssI a k o Is charged with the attem pt to commit larceny a t the Buhl e.itab- llshm enu o*-ned by W arren Bis- tcrly.

Tlic two were accompanied by Charles Dent. 28. Los Angeles, when they were arresled. Dent, who has been turned over to the FBI. Joined titem In Omaha, Nebr.. Durke said. D en t was anxious to get back to the w est coast, ond they were conclud­in g the tr swing about the country searching for "stunt Jobs.” Burke sa id . H e said they «-cre advised to SO to B uhl and then to Fner.

Literature SIUjIdc Under direct examlnaUon by Ray

Agee, h la attonicy. Burke, who also cnid he was n tank-tester during the w ar. testified that Ulcralure de- Bcrlblng his cxplolu was mLulng os were o the r personal bclonglnRs.

Burko said he had asVed the of­ficers obout h is literature, but thot h e still h adn’t received It. He said th e officers arrested Uie trio while they were In Lee Jordan's cafe, n ic r . ProseeuUng Attorney Bserett

(c«Htiii.iM r«i« t. c«ui.p j)

Klan Rides Again In Georgia Town

SWAINSBORO. G a , Feb. 4 (JV - Hooded n igh t riders of ihe K u Klux KJan. IBO strong, rcdedlcated them- Eclvea “to the protection of white wom anhood- here .las t nighu

T here would have been m ore ' K lansm en present, said o leader b u t o thers were unable to obtain sheets.

I n single file Uie white-robed K lansm en marched around the town *quare a n d through the resldenUal aecUon. ending on the courthouse lau-n where they sang “Aiacrlca," O n th# last no te a masked leader shouted:

“May we rcdedlcale our lives to the proUcUon of white womanhood?"

A torch then was put to a 10 foot cross and as 11 burned there were c rie s of “W here’s Drew PearsonT" W here’s W alter W lncheU r

Truman’s Cost Plan ‘Doomed’

WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 (/P) —Senator Sparkman. D., Ala., declared today that most of President Truman’s anti-in- flation requests arc doomed. The Alabama senator has been one of the leadera in the fight for the Preaidcnt’s 10- point cost of” living program.

Sparkman told a. repo rte r the hopelessness of the s ituation was made plain by a senate banking subcommltlefl decision to klU a bill which would have perm itted pre- poraUons for meat rationing.

*-MUdnt B l ir •That bill." said Sparkm an, “was

by far the mildest antl-ln flatlon measure before Uie bonking com* mltUe. I t seems mighty c lear tha t tho Republicans are n o t going do onyUdng obout' .living costs, i cept extend rent controls in some form or another."

Acluilly. one D em ocrat Joined two Republicans In recommending th a t Uie "get ready" m eot ra tion­ing bill be allowed to die. O ne Re­publican and one D em ocrat voted tor II.

The lubcommlltec report before the full banking committee.

Defeat Foreseen Chairman Tobey. R.. N. H., himself

In favor of the m easure. predlcLs the msln group will back u p Uie subcommittee when the bill comes up f « anoUier vole, probably next week.

The full cofflmlltee also expects to vote next week on leglslaUon which would meet Mr. T rum an’a request fo r stand-by power to restore ra­tioning and wage-prlce controls on a limited basis.

’Tliese are the m easures Spark­man says do not have a chance.

Early Rent Action Meanwhile. Senator T aft. O^

chairman of tlie senate Republican policy comraltUe. said he expects a r e n t control extension b ill to come up In th# senate about Feb. 18. The present law expires Feb. 30.

No extewlon bill has cleared subeommlllee yet. bu t Chairm an

Cain, n .. Wash, said h e hopes to have soma sort of a m easure In the hands of tlie full banlclng com­mittee by Friday.

U« taiil u-.\t w hile ho does no t know how his four subcommltteo colleagues feel, he will "strongly rec- ommend” that congresa free from controU “luxury" homes a n d npart- menLi-probably tho.'ic renU ng from glSO to t23S a monUi a n d up.

Old Warrior Burns

Salraie w orken a l Seattle. W ash, pat the torch (a (he woodwerk o! the '.Moonlight M aid" which letend u y t fired tbe f ln t th o t In the badte of M anila bay. The ancient tcmcI Is being scrapped fo r lU itecL (AP wlrephoto)

"BLOCS- DEPLORED LONDON, Feb. 4 MV-Sweden’s

Foreign M inister Oesten Dnden de­plored today “the division of the world In to different blocs which m utually distrust, fear and oppose each o ther.-

Oregon Votes Set On GOP Bidders

SALEM. Ore., Ptb « WV-Oregon Republicans were tlrtua lly assured today th a t the names of Thom as E. Dewey and Harold E. Slassen would be on their Msy primary prcsldcnUal preference ballot.

Robert Elllolt of Portland, chalr^a n of the Oregon Republicans imp-

porUng the former M lnnesou gov­ernor and candidate for the OOP nomination, said petlUons to place Stas.'en on the prim arr ballot circulating.

PetlUons for Governor Dewey of New York were filed with Oregon election ofndala earlier th is year. Senator T aft of Ohio h u Indicated he Will no t enter the Oregon p rlm an ' field.

Preferential ballot petitions be fHed In Oregon without apprxmU of the candidate. •

“Ease up” Urged In Warship Visits

WMHIKOTON. Ftb . 1 IJ , _ I ta ly Is reported to h a re suggested informally to the United e u te s th a t i t would be poUtlcaBy am art to ease up on visits of Amerlean warshlos to Ita lian ports. ,

T he presence «f United S tates M editerranean fleet units in Italian harbors recently h u been attacked by Russia. Italian communists hat-e been a » k ln * poUtJcaJ capital o f It.

India Militant Band Barred; 60 Ai-e Jailed

NEW DELin. Feb. 4 (U.R)-The go\'- emmenl of India form ally banned the militant Hindu youth o rcan lin - Uon Ro.-ditrlya Sci'ak Sangli tonight a fte r scores of Its Icadcrs’had been arrtaled In a nationwide .campaign against U.• A formal government sta len icn t on the suppression of the RSS said the "cull of violence" w hich It spon- .'.orcd n u m b e r e d H ohandns K. Oandlii among Its victims.

A ceualt RelatedT he organltaUon wo-i accused of

"acL's of violence, a non , robbery and murder" In oddlUon to ••exhorting people lo terrorist methods to create dliftffpcUon sgalnst Ihe govern­ment."

T he ban was In keeping with the government’s program outlawing private armies.

The campaign against extremists had brought about the a rre s t o f W members of the RSS, Including Its New Delhi chief.

Among those held w ithout hearing under the govrenment order ban ­n ing military groups w as Karl Chand, New Delhi leader of the RS3. the sulking arm o f the ex trem lst organization M ahashnbha.

..........Bom N ew jpaptri. . . . .T he assassin of G andhi was editor

of a Mahassbha newspaper Poono.

Crowds gathered today and burned all copies they could find of news­papers which supported th e Hindu extremists, including those backing Mohasabha.

Indian Boclallsls demanded the re.'^lgnallon of the government for failure to prevent the assa.sslnatlon or Gandhi.

Farm Devices ‘Black Market’ Probe Slated

WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 <U,PJ—Chairman Clifford Hope said today that hi.s house agriculture committee eventually may come up with some legislation to control what he termed a "scrioua black market" in farm machinery.

The Kansas Republican made his fltatement in announcing that the committee will open public hearings Feb. 10 on tho entire question of farm machinery shortages. He said repro-

'sentatives of the agriculture and commerce departments will be heard first.

“1 expect th e hearings wlU n m about a week and xrlU Jocluds itpr»> senutlres of farm m achtoery maou*facturer*. dUtrlbutora’ ----------------

................Hope-

More Snows Predicted for Rockies Ai’ea

By The United Pre**More snow flu rries are In store

for Idoho and Utolj tomorrow. Uie Sa lt Lake City w eather bureau warned today.

rorcca.ilers said the flu rries would begin tod.-iy In nortlicm Idalio and work tlieir way souUi and cost, prob­ably hitting Utah'.'^ populated areas olong the W osntch m ountains by tomorrow.

Tempemture-s will rem ain about le same, however.

New Wave Told Meanwhile, th e Chicago weaUier

bureau office reported another cold wave moving .slowly southw ard from northern Canodiv and predicted It would bring the m ost r.cvere cold of the winter to th e already, beleagured middle west and cost.

K. L. Jacobson, forecaster a l the Chicago bureau, sold th e new cold wave will niove in to M in n u o ta and the Dakotas tonight. I t will spread eastward a t fa r as Ind iana and Michigan by tomorrow nlghu

S u b '^ r e Tem peratures Early today, even before Uio new

cold affected th e nation, sub-zero temperatures were reported from the Dakotas eastw ard to New Eng­land.

Heo\7 rains and snows pected In drought-stricken Calif­ornia M far fo u th a s Bakersfield. But the weM consl'n largest light and power company M id the rains were too late to avert an electric power sliortage.

Solons O k a y 2 1/ 2 B illio n s B u d g e t C uts

WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U.B—House and senate budgtt makera agreed today on a ?2,500,000,000 cut in P m id « it Truman's budget.

That would leave a i>otcntiaI surplus of $10,100,000,000 for tax and debt reduction.

BecauBO of the admittedly tentative nature of their esti­mate.'?, however, the congressional spokesman shied aw»y from concluding that their budget would leave room for the full ?G.500,000,000 lax reduction voted by the house. The senate intends to keep the taxreduction bill on ico until it gets a better line on whether the budget will stick.

An agreement on the proposed budget cut was reached a t a m eet­ing of Uie :o-m an auboommlttee of the house-senate budget groupk l u nccfnmendatlons wlU b« subm itted, to Uie full 103-member commlltee Friday.

Chairman Styles Bridges reported th a t the sub*group agreed on aa es­tim ate th a t gcn-er&meDl receipts under present taxes would to ta l 147,300,000.000 In the fiscal year beginning July 1. T tia t figure was nearly 13,000.000.000 over M r. T ru ­man's revenue eaUmatc.

Bridges also disclosed th a t the subcommittee had agreed th a t gor- em m ent spending should to ta l no more than $37.300,OOOAOO coeopam l with Mr. T rum an's esthnatA c l |39.> ees.ooo,ooo.

Asked If Uie budget mgreement would leave room for th e fu ll $8.- W0,000,000 lax reduction ty the house, Chairm an Jo h n T a b s . TL. N. Y , of th e hous» tppToprU- Uons committee remarlced dryly;

T h e arilhmetio vouk] look th a t waj-.-

Kelther be nor Bridges would of*r a more positive commltjaeat»

Bridges said the group laade no as­sumption on th e of cu t congress finally will apptore.

School Cheer

Mai'kets Take Sharp Breaks For Big Loss

NEW YORK. Feb. * lUJ9-Sh>ds. bonds and commodlUts c ra c te ) sharply today w ith gralos abowtnf one-day Umit la n es rao<tnc to 10 cents a bushel la w heat a ad ooUoq down as much a s tT k bate.

Losses la the stock o a i t s t n s g td > more than 3 potaU &a t t e a a m

Ust with IndlTidual isn e a o ft 9 and 4 poiata. Selllag I& atocka co l nodcr

tR er the ccoim odltr mazkct veakeacd early In tb e day azkd Uie decline carrtcd th e tadustrtal p o u p to a new kiT to r PM riy «l(bs

BflUoB TTtpe* <m T he decline wiped c o t n o n than bUlion dollars ta m arket ealoa-

UOBs of listed stocks and ta ht> dastiials was the widest t r a k a&x* aid-A priL m r .

In commoditlea adUnc b tc « a la r» ln * . precap ted largely by fen- proTtag d o p n p o r ts ftuca Eotep^ coupled wtm prospects fo r a c » d winter w heat crop la t h e xralttd SUtes.

V W t D e n I I OmtaW heat In Chicago w as down II

c c n u a txshel. com o tt • c « u aiid cats « ee&ta a b o sM k m r . Oottoa w ia <knm a s a titfa w « u s

Army Overrules M’Arthur Edict

WASlltNO’TON. Feb. 4 C /r> -0 \er- sea-s news conespondcnU were able today lo leave U. 8 . occupation rones and retuni without being rc-accred- lled. afier the army departm ent o\-erruled an order by O en. Douglas MacArthur.

The army ruled yesterday th a t rrportcfs now can leave th e tone> on special aislgnmcnls fo r periods "aggregating not more Uum 30 days In any six monUis period."

MacArthur’s order, which resulted . 1 a number of protesta, had re­quired newsmen to be re-occredlted o fter leaving Uie fa r eastern occu­pied arta.

SECS RENTS OOOST WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 W V-Tlghe

E Woods, federal housing expediter, said today he believes ren ts wiu go up 50 per ceni cn ih e overage If congress falls to continue re n t trols.

Forestall Unifies Service Airlines

WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 CU.fJ-De- fen.»c Secy. Jam es Forrcslal today announced . Ihc-.m trB tr.-.tffccU ve Marcli 1. of Ihe a ir tran spo rt serv­ice ol the a ir force and the naval air transport service.

Forreatal named MaJ.-Ocn. I^u- renee 8. K uter of the a ir force be the first commander of the co; blned service. He will take oi March 1.

Rear Adm. Jo h n P. W hitney ot the n a \7 was nam ed deputy com­mander and ordered to report for duly immediately.

The air forte will control the com­bined transport scrvleo to be known as the military a ir tran spo rt scrr* Ice (MA’TSI.

This combined a lr 'tr a n ip o r t serv­ice wiU run all tho scheduled air transport n ^ e d by the armed forces. I t will also run a large por- Uon of the non-acheduled a ir trans« port.

Approval Near on AirpOrt Building

Civil aeronautics aUonapproval for Ihe coiutrucU on ot the admUtlstraUon building a t tha Twin Fails municipal a irp o rt Is expected !ate this afternoon. M ayor H. G. Lauterbach announced th is morn­ing.

He called a special m eeting of the city commlssionera w ith CAA of. ’Iclals a t 4 p. m . today In the city hall. The-meeUng was called wlUi only ahort'notlcc.

“Wc ^ 'an t lo ge t aU rtcd a.i qulck- I- ly u possible," th e m ayor said In I ■nnmmHpj tJjj Jneetlaj.

brought ou t in thoM determine our nex t

CetaplalnU He said he and oUier m em ben of

the house agriculture committee still I rccelvliig letters from all porU Ihe form belt complaining t l u t

farm machinery Is scarce and th a t when 11 Is available It o ften carries

premium price tag.Hope said it m ay be powlble to

work out tome program wlUi the farm machinery makers and dlslribu* tors to ease some of Uie m ore crlUcal machinery shorUges, H e em pha- sized, however, th a t th e committee will not nhy away from leglslaUon If It l3 necessary.

Price Probe Set Tlie committee fUro is going into

Uie quesUon of th e Impact of farm machinery exporU on domesUo sup­plies. Including the possible effect of any farm machinery shipm ents un ­der the long-range European aid program.

Although the farm m achinery pic­ture gencnUly is very tight, Hope .laid one of the m ost critica l short- ages Is tm elors. He said second- hand tractor*, like a \ed aulomo- blles, are bringing more th a n they coal new.

R e tli tn tlc a t t e n z s t dM crleaden ' workshop to be held In Idaho and one of tho firs t In the naUon began a t 3 p . m . today a t the Twin Falls high school

More than IM stude '

Annual Dinner of Lions Club to Be Held on Feb. 25

Plans for the Lions club’s annual banquet honoring chartcr members on Feb. 25 a t SU Edword’s school were made Tuesdoy a t th e U ons regular luncheon mceUng.

H. L. Clark and O. J . B othne were appointed chalrm cn for th e ban ­quet.. OUier committee members in - elude Dale Henm an, R obert H lnk- ley. Vernon Riddle and Ver Cox.

Guest speoker was K en t Tatlock who told the group of h is recent trip to Florida and Havaiux. Cuba. He w u Introduced by Oraydon Smith.

Quests for ihe meeUng were Ralph Karris, M erritt Shotwell. E raest BJork, Hugh Tullock. W illiam Long, Richard Frasier. Robert W hite, H ar­old Cress, R ichard L aw m ico and Ren Reed.

Ing 34 schools from eight Magic Valley counties were on han d for the opening session.

U a d M eetlnr FIo>-d Luft. Buhl, was m aster of

ceremonies for the afternoon m eet­ing. The address of welcome given by Bcmell W right, IClmbert)' and John D. Flatt. principal o f Twin Palls high school. Introduced the University of Idaho yeU king, the featured guest.

Emie Crancr and Eleanor Mae Wall, student reprcscntaUves from the SouUiem Idaho College of Edu- callon. gave short talks on "Going lo College" and “now Should School Organizations Cooperate to DuUd Unity of Purpose.”

StBdenU ’Talk Talks on “School Splrif* we.'e

given by Keith W arner. H eybum : Uine Sidewall. Burley; Clara Corta. Hailey: Roy MUler. Richfield: Bette W alte r , Filer, and Catherine Reese, CasUeford.

O. Ncfsger, BuhL spoke on "School Morale" and Beverly Crowley, Twin

(CMllaM4 «a r a n Z. 1)

U. a e m d m l u d AsMrlew

lie all off mote th a n & potnt. O n j s . Icr and General M a tc n v e r t off mote than m ta Vxlrgroup,

Reports Tell of U. S. ‘Landings’

LONTWN. Feb. < W V-Tasa dis­tributed a report from Rome today tha t American '•engineering troops” have landed la form er Ita lian N orth Africa.—The-Russlan-nrW5 agency quoted a sna il Italian newa agency. Ageruia Itallsne D. Informaxloae. w hich it said is “eoaneeted w ith I to liaa co­lonial circles.

Reporting the purported landings r an unspecilied num ber of Amer­

icans In BriUsh-occupled libya^ the Italian news.agency was quoted by Toss as saying;

“American e n ^ e e r in g troops have laaded a t strategical points In Cire- nalca and encamped w est of Bengasi and in tho el Aghella coastal xcne."

England Acts To Halt Pay; ' Profit Drives

LONDON, F tb . 4 M V -ltw BrtUjh "led today for » halt

Yellowstone’s Brnins Answer Debates on Bear Hibernations

YnXOW STONB N A T I O N A L PARK. W yo, Fch. 4 WJO-Word

verbal batUe raging over I quesUon, "Do bears hibernate?” has finally reached tills snowtwund bruin mecca where bears outnum ­ber experts on bears by a l least two-to-one.

They do not—In the opinion of Andrew A. Alley, who operated the park garbage truck la th e winters of IH3 and '44. upholding th e con­tention of Dr. Charles P . I^m an . assistant cura tor of B a rra rd 's museum of comparative soology.

Brushing aside scientific nocaen- clature about "dectleraUon of m eta­bolism” and changes In th e ra le of bean’ 'Tasomolor acUritics." Alley says;

T ksoT th a t a t least one of Tel-

lowstone’s bruins wa. up and a round a t very frequent Intervals tnm De­cember through M arch. W hen I threw anything particularly odorous over the dump In the morning gar­bage haul. I would coasistenUy find this old fellow, a big dark brown, digging around when I retu rned in Uie afternoon w ith the ashe»."

Alley declarec th a t Leon E rans and Al EUlott. p a rk rangers, will ■Itest the accuracy of his aU te- ment. and th a t P;iank Lind of Gardiner, M oa t, who droT* t h t gar> bage truck tbe two foUowtng w ln ts a reported the thing.

He (aid th a t oldU m en ta th* park Tlclnlty have reported the tr winter camps being raided h r bn iln i

Nofmm thw bean .

on Increased wages and I t was a BXPTe to check tanaU on.

Prime Minister A ttlet'a tabor cmment Issued a w hite paper 9ar«tag:

' I t u essential th a t 'th e r e tboold be no further general Increase ta the level of perscoal Ineocses w ith- ous a t least a corm popdtsg Is- creise In Use vohaae of pewm ettai.

*Unle» we are prepared to check such a tesdencr. we shall t ts d oor- selvta enable ta fuuui o « r expert task, owirg to th e rise ta c a ts , which will be reflected « a the market."

In trcognltlon o t th e British economic podUoa. A ttlee pU naed to take the floor la th e hcuse o t c c n - mons and outline tlw need for self sacrtHce by BriUsh w is r tta aad

nployen.The goTonment cautioaed against

the danger of a race between rtxtag prices and p tn o a a l tncce:e«. say­ing p .ic « -aJwajs win In the loeg run," The white paper said wage e am e» always are Uxe g rca to t viiitnn, - ---- ---------- --- ---- ------

•There U no justtflcaUca a t the present time for any rfee in tncomw from profits, ren t or other Uka sources." the white paper said. •R lso In wages o r salaries shockl only be asked for and agreed upon la eaepU ocal cases."

The white paper p rce lsed . b o v - rtr . that, except fo r taxatioo, the

government wlU no t tn le tfen v t th Individual tncomes. T h li r a a o rtd specubtlon Uiat th e labor n c t a » m ight impose a fixed ceiling c s !&•

‘Protesf Walkout Of Germans Halts

FRANKFURT. F th . * UJ&-A 34- hour protest strlks by so a e l^SOdjm to SjOOOjXO Germ an w o ite n ended quleUy eariy today v h a m te a leaden cksed th e ir strike bead«- - quarteta In S tu ttga rt and B a aa am r and went boaa.

The walkout tavt!^^cd a n t m .(W ta th e ABurlcan n t e sta ta U

H aanorer a r ta t a t t e 'B i t t l f t i ___- betwMo mam ud usuot .

Otnca n r k u * ta t b t B i t t t t i

A lD K A S S K n iD . V ' . W A 8B IN aTO K .M .4tD -««C C *»

ta r r Ot (b* i& M D r a a M t 'k u

^ roD aaa ta P M ttk -

idateaaAv

. /

PAGE TWO TIM ES-NEW S, T W IN FALLS, m A H O WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4,1948

School Ctieer Leaders Open Session Here

irr*a r>i< Obi) p»r». I*T0 ■ U U on “InleneholMUe OourtMlti."

The evening profrw n will feature K banquet a t 5:30 p. m . In Lrglon h»Jl. Mllcliell H unt. Jr.. form tr yell k ln j « i the U nlvertlly oT Idaho, will prcilde as m u te r or cvreinonles. Talks oti urUform* will be jiven by litaxlne Dybw. Kimberly, and Patjy Sm lih. lU gennan.

-W liat 1» a Ocod VtllT" will be the subject o{ tallcs by Mllloii IU>bblni. nupe rt, snd Lois Harper, PaubStUse of Acrobatics by Yell L«ider»’'^ lU be d iscuurd by M arpierlte Oandl* DC*. Twin Palls, and Uils Blmmorw. Hai#lt<m, and -W ha t Can Pep Clubs D o r will be the subjccl ol Doris Ann Weaver. TUln Falls.

Rose M. North, dean of girls a t Twin Fall* high school, will speak on T h e Proper Conduct of a Yell Leadrr."

••When to Veil" will b« the subject of talks by Cliff Cheney, Ooodlnr. and Hazel Gordon. Eden. ’'llandTlns th e Crowd" will be discussed by Phlllls "njrTbeaush. Wendell, and Nelda Robinson, Oakley, and "Half Time Stunts'’ will be explained by Ralph Adsmi. Jerom e, and Doris Daniels, Olenns Ferr>'.

F la il pointed out th a t he hoped th is convention will be the llrst of a series. "It Is a wonderful th ln j and a srea t experience (or alt the s tu ­dents." he added.

OackRround music a t the tn-o . . . alons will be provided by the Twin Falls pep band and orchestra. Com­m unity slmtlne a t the binnuct will b« led Lenay Helck, Kimberly,

Keep the White Flag of Safetv Flj/ing

Now 10 days without a traf/ic death <r: our Magic Valiev.

Former Resident Of Buhl SuccumbsBUHL, Feb. + -M rs, I ly m a Har­

vey, about 44.died a t <:30 a. m. Wed> n ^ a y a t a nursing home In Idaho Falls. D eath was due to a cerebral hemorrhage.

Mrs. Harvey, the widow of Clar- ..ice Har^’ey. Buhl, was th» alster- In-law of Harold Harvey, also of Buhl.

Ftmeral services will be held In IdaKo Falls and the body will bs Ukcn to S a lt Lake City. U tah, fur cremation. T he family requests tha t no flower* be sent.

Former Gooding Resident Passes

CainpbeU. 73. who died a t 7 W e^ eaday a t th e home of her daush ter, Mn. Harold Holsinger. In W endell, will be held a t 3 pjn. Sat­urday a t the Thompson chapel In Ooodlng. The Rev. Harvey Harper, Jercoie, wUl officiate. Burial wUl be m ade In Elmwood cemetery.

M n . Campbell, a former resident o f Ooodlng. had bcm living with h e r daush ter for approximately one year. She and h e r husband, who died th ree Tears ofo . resided on a fa rm north of Ooodlng for 35 year*, f ihe was bom a t Bellalre. O.

SuTTlYlnj besides the daujhter w ith whom she tnode h e r home are one son, Everett Campbell. Bellerue, «nd f lw trandchlldren.

Garth Reid Gets Pencil for Talk

G arth Reid was awarded the pencil Tuesday n igh t for his talk on S4D. Olen T aylor a t Ui« r tfu lar

o th e r speakers were iU x Uoyd. w ho siioke on Rep. John Sanborn: D ean Shlppley. on Rep. Abe Ooff • a d W alter Slaushter, who spoke Sen . H enry G. Dworahak.

Chief entlc was O. J . BoUme and Individual crltlei were A1 Nelson Clyde Koont*. I r a n Skinner ane! M erwln Helmbolt.

G ordon Scott presided a t raeeUng.

Funeral Set for Accident Victim

Funeral seifvlces for Frederick A. Dabbel. Tw in Falls business man, will be held a t 3 p jn . Friday In the LOS tabernacle with Bishop Sher­man Swenson officiating.

Mr. Bsbbel was killed Instantly Monday when h e was struck by an automobile a t the foot o fyRattle- snake pass n e a r T r e m o n ^ . Utah, while adjusting chains o p ^ s car. ,**fl3»lal will be In S ubm I memorial park. X

Slot ‘Drilling’ Count Denied In Court Here

(I'ria Tm * Om >M. Sweeley Is scheduled t« croas- examine Burke's story Wednesday afternoon, Swcelry placed six state's wltnr^ses on the stand Tueodiy

Initrum ents Found Durke iidmiited th a t drlllmg in-

strum rnts found by officers In the Clpretsl car wrrc his. He said tha t a life-like model gun w u Ctpressl’s but he added ap ressl had other toys for his child In California.

Burke denied th a t a newspaper clipping found in the car belonged to him. The newspaper article dealt with the operaUon of slot machines, and their m edianhm eccordlnB to the testimony.

Burke and the other two were arrested a ft« r Easterly charted his machines had been drilled. He gave a description of the lOll red con­vertible belonging to the trio who were In his restauran t a short time before.

C aofb t a t FUerThrough the radio report of Buhl

Police Chief Clyde Prior.- the three were picked up In Flier by State Police Lieut, A. E. Perkins and State Officer M. J. Bays. Jr.

On Tuesday afternoon Judge Porter denied a motion mads by Agee for a dlrectwl verdict In fi of Burke and Clpressl.

Pupils In the n in th grade civics d e as of the Twin Falls Junior hlah school were spectators during the day's proceeding. They were under the guidance of Mrs. Morris Roth.

Tivin Falls News in Brief

Magic Valley Funerals

BUHL—Funeral servlcea for Ray­m ond D. Pease will be held a t 3 p.

T hursday a t the Buhl Methodist church w ith the Rev. Olln P ane tl, pastor, officiating. Masonic riles will be under the direction of Wil-

Roberts, worshipful m aster of the Buhl lodge. In term ent will be In the Sunset memorial park In Twin Falls.

TW IN FA L L S-T ho body of Pvt, Morris R. Swope will be received bj- the Reynolds funeral home Thursday morning. Oravealde serv­ices will be held a t 3;30 p jn . T h u n - day a t the Tw in Falls cemetery with the Rev. M ark C. C ronenberjer officiating. M ltlta rr r itea ' will be conducted by th e local post of the American L ^ lo n .

The HospitalEmergency beds only were avail-

«b le Wednesday a t the Ta-in Falls county hosp ital vlaUing hours are Snm 3 to i a n d ! to 8 pan.

ABMITTED K ra . Lucinda Robinson and Mrs.

M ary Silva, Twin Falls; Duane Du Puls, VaocowTr, W ash.; G ary Whlt- nsorc, Ooodlng: Mrs. c . p . Boas, H ollister; Mrs. ESnma Gross. Kim­berly, and Mrs. W. P. HoUoway, Filer.

OIS^Ut)SED C lark MUes, baby boy BuUer, Mrs.

H . C. G eairy and son and Mrs. Rob­e r t Chrlsttnson. Twin Falls; Mrs. E a r l Loughlln, F iler; U L. Ellison B uh l; Mrs. Bertha Cralg and Mrs E lcser H agctman and daughter Eden; M rs. Norman Doty and ton M urtaugh . and Mrs. R usifll TTlvilt a n d daughter. HsMllon.

Weather

TW IN F A L L S -F tm e n l awrleesfor Frederick A. Babbel.wiU be held a t 3 p jn . Friday In the LOS taber^ nacle with th e f lis t w ard bishop, Sherman Swenson, officiating. B ur­ial will be in th e Sunset Memorial park.

BUHL — Funeral services for Mrs. Belly Lester R ush will be held . 3 p jn . Friday a t the Albertson chapel w ith th e Rev. P . W. Jackson of the Nazarene church conducting the n tes.

BURLEY — Funeral services for Ernest Kidd will be held a t 3 p jn . Friday a t th e Burley th ird ward LDS church w ith Bishop Lawrence Tolman officiating. Burial will be in the Burley cemetery.

O O O D IN O -Joln t funeral serv­ices for Mrs. EUiabeth M. Perry and ler brother. Irw in Riddle, both Mrsa. A rl t. will be held a t 3 p jn . Friday a t the Thompeon chapel tt1th the Rev. William J . Lam bert-

I. pastor of th e Methodist church, officlAUng. B urial will be made la the Elmvivod cetneteo'.

Mrs. E. 0. Rush, Buhl, Succumbs

BUHL, Feb. 4 -M rs . Earl O. Rush. 45, a form er resident of Buhl who has lived in PhoenU. Arls., for the past year and one-half, died Monday a t the LDS hcxiplUI In S alt Lake City, Utah, following a llngerins illne.u.

Mrs. Rush WHS bom a t Camden on Oauley. W. Va., Oct. IJ. 1003. She was married on Sept. I, 1030. In Vale. Ore.. to Earl Oscar Ru-^h.

Sunlvors Include her hm band: a son. Don Rush; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. L, Rapp, Camden on Oauley; six slatera. Mra. Wade Drainer, FlemlnRton, W. Va,, Mrs. Paul Norman. Long Run. W„ Va,; Mrs. Leon Murphy, Gary, Ind.; Mrs. Lucille FalUi, Camden on Oauley; Mrs. Lewis Gross, Levi, W. V a, and Lenora Rapp. Camden on Oauley; and three brothers, Lee Rapp. Ridgewood, W. Va,. and Luther

app and William Rapp, Gary. Funeral services ^rill be held a t:

3 p. 'm . Friday a t tlie Albertson chapel with the Rev, P. W, Jsckson of the N au rene church officiating.

Attend nm erslMr. and Mn. w m b T h r t l to U aad

Mrs. Uonel Dean left T uesday for Colnnsn. T rx, to a tte iid ta « funeral of Mrs. Ida Tbrelkcld. th e m other

' Mn. Dean aad T h r tik tid .

Fay Call Hesdquarten a cd bfcadquarters

company, ICrd ta f in try r e s t a ta t . tU drill a t the A xertcan Letlon a ll at a p ra. today. Payro ll checks

will be distributed a t t o a l j h f s drtU, CapU W. F. Potter has a aa o u ac td .

Jobs UstedSeveral Job openli^gs fo r sales- en. bookkeepers a ad st*ao»raphera ere reported W ednesday by A. J .

Meeks, manager o f the Id a h o « u te employmeai serrtc« oftJc« he tr. There are aUo openings fo r teachers of all school grsdes. h e added .

Mrs. Ainsworth, Pioneer of Area Claimed by Death

Mrs. Theresa M aud A insw onh. d^ed I t 10:30 p .m . T uesday !a her home a t e n T hird avenue w w * ’ lowlni an extended Ulneas.

She was boro on N or. 3 . IBTS. la SkEbiersdale. L ancastersh lre, C ig - land, and came to the U n ited S U trs w ith her parenu In 1889. S h« movtd to Carey f rc a CoalrtUe. U tah , in 1S9S.

Mrs. Ainsworth was m a rrte d to Joseph Leon Ainsworth Sep t. 27. 1890. In L«gSQ, U tah, a n d cam e to Tw in Falls with her h u sb a n d In 1023.

She was p.'iceeded l a d e a th hy he r husband in IMO. a n d fay two sons. Leonard Ainsworth In ISM and Royal Ainsworth In 1940.

She Is survived by six eoas. How­ard . Melvin. Joseph, W illiam . F t td ar>d Dee Ainsworth, all T w in Falls; six dsughten, Mrs. IjCo sa M eC na iy . Mrs. Ada Bopp. Mrs. B e th B ell and Mrs. Irma FeUen. all T w in Falls; Mrs. Elnma Smith. Bols«. aztd Mrs. Anna Morrts. San Joae. CaUf.; four brothers. John Howard. T w in FsBs; Arthur Howard. Carey; Jo sU h How­ard. Merced. C alif, and E lm os How- ard. Long Beach. Calif.: th re« t:> . ters. Mrs. Jennie P t lp p e a a n d Mrs, Mlrtam Dilwonh. both C a re r , and Mrs. Bertha Weaver. M erced , and 30 Rrandchildrea.

Tlie body is a t the W hite ra o r tu a n pending funeral serrlcea.

A daughter was bom Tueaday to M r. aad Mrs. C. p. Boss. BoUlster, a t the Twin Falls county hospltaL

M rH lag FeslpwtrdBlcktl school.Tocni m others have

poitpoaed the meeting scheduled for th a Friday until i ; j o p jn . F ri­day. PW>. 13.

Skatiac Party TwUyMembers of the Methodist church

Youth FVUowshlp will meet at 7 p ja . today a t the rhurch betore gotag to an b e skating party a t Cr»*n'* lake. Members are urged to fcrtag food aad transporutlon.

Bealty &Mrd U MeetA srr.eral memberi-Mp meeting of

th e M u'-c Valley tta lty board wUl be held a t 7 p jn . today la Cie R a se ao a hotel toffee shop. Paul FVeach. Rtipert, g r o t speaker, will U ll of p lsas for the state convtnUoa to be heJd la Pocatello Feb. 30 a n d :L

Services Held for Rupert Resident

RUPERT, Feb. i —Funeral services for M rs. S a rah Andrews Craven were held a t th e PentecosUl church a t 3 p . m . Saturday with the Rev. Robert Sweeten In charge.

Mrs. C lare Wllco*. acctwipaaled by Mrs. Sweeten, sang two solos.

Pallbearrra were Edward HUl. Boy Cunningham , e r , Oeorge Nickerson, a i r e n c e Bagnall, E. O rter and Her­bert LaRue.

Burial was made In the Rupert cemeicrj".

Final Rites Held For Chris Block

day a t S u n se t Memorial park with Bishop J . c . Frederlcksen of the first w ard LD S church officiating.

Pallbearers were Floyd Weeeh. Lloyd W eech. Rex Weech. BJwsrd King, F ra n k Lundy and N orrll Rey­nolds.

Veteran “Opens” Red Cross Drive

A disabled patient in the veteran.i Olplfal a t Solse has pre.iented Uie M aJStU f chapter of the American

w ith Its first donation for ..!• i w ^ m d drive, to begin of- flclaUy.eo M arch 1.

Mrs. Helen Bailey, director, sold Joseph Berry was jiA-Wng through Tw in Falls In December while on his way to th e ha 'pllal and asked the Red CroM to loan him enough money to buy a meal.

The loan was returned to Mrs. Bftlley th is week and Included an ftddltlanol »3. which Berry requested to be given to the Red Crais fund.

Fire Razes Small Ranch Structure

JE310ME. Feb. *—A Jthocgh the center building of th r w •dJoirUr.g buildings on the G . E. B ooth ranch was In flames by th e ttm e Jerom e firemen arrived early W etfnesdw . they were able to save b o th o f the end buildings.

T he fire started a round a n over* heated coal stove tn one end o f.the middle building, a m achine sh o p .'o a one end of the burning buiVUng was a gralnery. A pump hous» was the other end. In addlU eo to sj. . - ing the two buildings. R rrw e n al>o saved a quantity of m achinery and tools from the bum ing s tructure .

your top listening

favorites for tonight

6:30 Meet Your Music Maker

7:00 Duffy’s Tavern

9:00 Supper Club 9:30 The Great

Gildersleeve 10:00 Dennis Day

KTFI-AM,a n d

KTFI-FM

Seen TodayRed-headed g irl chailng city bus

for three blocks on Addison a\xnue -« b e caught It. . . U b ra rtsn J e u e F rster adm iring yellow Jasmlaa blooming outside llb ra rr . . . boy riding rumble seat style on back of his baby brother's atroUer. . . Mis. Evangeline ^yhlle hun rtng along Sccond stree t north . . . John F la tt and high school students pre­paring for checr lead en ’ convenUon . . , Woman removing e ar ring be­fore using telephone. . . Seen a t Golden Olo\'e figh ts; G roup sneak­ing out of gym to get quick smoke between bouts a n d proud papa em­bracing son who Just won norlct

R g b t , . Tvo g ta ts coming to tha tw cas o( woman » h o Just couldnl get her car away fresa tcy curb oa M ata avenue.. . Ju s t seen : Mrs. H. A. P aya te . a1 Nelsesu Lula Speoeer, Ada PovtU. RuskU Biggs. BUI Mo- ta n aad group hustUng to U cn j *.ub luncheon meeting. . . A ad o \rr- heard: Oeot taking noUee of shspe- ly redhead driving down street say­ing, "All that, and a Bulek too.-

Driver FinedBURIXV, Feb. 4—O le o a Stsrtln

Burley. « u fu-td gioo and tented to » days In Jail Wednesday by Probate Judge H enry W. Tucker — a drunken drlvlag charge.

READ TUIES-NBW3 W ANT ADS.

T w in Falls and rlelnlly—.Mostly cloudy w llh orcaslooal light snow ton igh t and Thursday. Little change l a temperatore. High yesterday 31. low 20. Low th li laem lng I!, a t

So, u « spedd reminder tUs ValcDtioe’s Day, ProTO to j-our e*r th»t you ttill fed **iJm way’ — See yotir MOeage Kfercfaaat aad tel up a date; Thai jour good friend to a thoroogh “Oil-Putb.**

tMs. C M dM i Od C b ^

You’ll find that you’re driving a **nughty hlgb-jteppcr"! Leu adds, le&s earbon-^eu sludge due to When you start any trip yon know j'ouH get Ihert,

So. be kind to yosr car->sliow tome affection.Buy Conoco for “extra protoctioa”!

TODNESDAY, FEBRUARY I. ISdg TIM ES-NEW S, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO. PAGBTHBES"

Analyst Lauds Nehru’s Stand In India Strife

B r Dtwrrr M a c k e n z ie AT Forelpi A tta in Autijtt

J*w »hirU l Nehni. prlmo mtnUter ot Uicdu dODxlnloo o t lodla (dttaful (Usciple of th e msrtyred

—Oftndhl h u de> [clAred th a t the

• t o r i l t o l ip e « (

.itrlte-tJT U the Usue oi which h li goreni' m ent will •C u d or fall.

T haffl N thn i’a laaswer to thoae j«'ho slew the Ma> !h«tma. U 'l hts

to those wUo.___ Borrnunent

t«lU ut, ^ plotted to kill Nehru and other members of h b cabloet bccaujc they advocaU-d pence with Uie Moilenu as O andhl taufh't.

Good lor Nehnil Such a ilnnd lor r tjh t and Justice i le u n ’rs «ucceu, but Q andhl't death emphoiliefl tha t the prime minister v lll be up against this appalling foci;

Seme W ant StrifeThere tUll exUts in this to n ?

world of o u n pcm-crful InleretU that don't want peace—or If Uiey want peace. It muai be th e kind they thenuelvcs ImpcM by force. T haf* the reiuon Uie United Natlon.i ci)n’t function. I t 's Uie reo-son why wurs .%U11 continue, and It Is rraponilble 111 Brest degree for continuation of the economic chaoo In many coun- trlrs.

Ilotk-ever, Nehru hiui recognlied tills truth and his declaraUoti hss been backcd by concrete nctlon. The home m lnbto ' a t New Detill haa uboUshed •’»ny orBanltallon preach- h !f violence or commimul hatred." And we are likely to hear th a t this h i i hit in powerful qunrterx. The Boremment also has banned private cdmrounal arnilr.v

rlea d i for Peace A ma.M meeting attended by

tlmated half million people heard Nehni call on Indlan.i not to Uke the Uw In Uielr own hunds. for " that U ]ust Uie th in s OimdhI would have abhorred."

n ia t 's ihc way N ehru Ij lAckllng the high and mighty who. for their own purposes, want w ar in India, As lo r the hundredi of mlUloru amon£ the rank and file, they w ant peace. \nd becau-w of th a t ilcilrc among

mawcs. I bilcvc tlia l in the long run peace will win In Indin.

Costly Canine

B utch, a female poodle, U one of the coiU ett canine* on record. B« costly. In fact, (hat her Chi- c a to m a ite n eonldn’l arrord to keep h e r. Btitih has the habit «f tw allsw lnf coins. Bhe's shown w ith th r re (juarten. ihrre nick­els, fire pennies and a alrret car token she eooihed Up a t ChIea|o’i Animal Welfare ItJgue shelter.

Heyburn VisitorsHEYDURN. Peb. ■•-Mrs. Annie

Paraon.v Los AnRclc.i. Cnllf,. was a gUMt ia. t week a t th e home of Mrs. Grace DexJcr.

Mr. and Mrs. F rank Darrough, Pocatello, were IJe>’bum viiltors Sunday.

ATTENDS FUNKRAL ACEQUIA. Feb. 4 - Iv n n ChURg.

Modesto, Calif., wh6 Attended the ...v » ku uu euncrmgi' uL O ct INNEU-AID, Bold by tU drug

\b lted with relatives In Aeequla. ' itorea,—Adv.

Back HomeFILER. Feb. 4 -M r. and Mrs. Jay

Cobb and Mr. and Mra. Leonard FUihcr. Kimberly, have returned rcen a vacation trip to San Fran- isco and Los Angeleg, Calif.

F . U . Hudson has returned from bU4lne.« tr ip to Mmcs Lake. Wash. Mr.i. Hudson, who also has returned hoine, haa been vliltlnit rclailve* In DoL'.e,

Gas Almost Choked Him

*‘My s to n a eh swelled with gas unUi I could hardly breathe,” said one mnn llvinB near here: ‘T couldn’t sleep. In fact had horrlhla nights. Wo.1 always constipated. 1 got IN- NEIl-AID. OhI what relief! II worked .vs much gad from mo tha t my stom ach reduced 4 Inches. Can breatlio freely again. Sleep soundly now. Bowels abo have been given a G reat Cleansing.". INN En-AID Is the new mixture of

13 Juices from Nature's Herbs. It relieved many people who had •r been really helped before by

any medicine. Taken shortly before cneals it mixes with your food, thus elimlnatinB tlie poisons ihal foster stomach trouble. I i will cieanw tlie Mwcls. c lear gas from stomach, en- Iven liver and re.Tiove old bile from

system. So don’t go on sufferingl

THE NEW 1948 LOOK IS THE

WELL GROOMED

LOOK

Be the m an who’s appearance

Is envied wherever you bo. Send

your clothea to u i for tha t well-

groomed loekt Our scientific

cleaning methods preserve the

ntwnesi. O ur cars glvei them

lang«r wear.

Te*, we clean Broadloom carpet­

ing, i ta ir and hall m neen In

7»ar borne.

Officcs also located at

J E R O M EPhone 7g-J

t i t E. M aln -1 door west of Chnrthman and Yonng ford

Garage

H A Z E L T O NPhone 35

Cash Grocery

H U N T — Bob*a Drive-In

Magic Valley Cleaners

220 SHOSHONE E. PHONE 2487

East Idaho Polio Center Work Set

POCATtLLO, Feb. 4 W V . l n t iteps toward setting up polio treat* n e n t centers were underw ay today foUowlQg arrlral of E U ubeth 8u l- llTaa and Isabel Nichols. ph}'sical therapists from the .itntc polio cen­ter a t Bobe, yesterday.

Miss Sullivan said .he Pocateilo ceoter may be quartered la the basement of Swanson hall on the Idaho State colIcge campus.

ArrangemcnU for a sim ilar center In Id^ho Palls are to be made later this week.

Filer VisitorsFILKIU Feb. i - H o y MeteUf. Salt

Lake City, Utah, spen t last week* end with h b sisters. Mrs. T. C. Andenon. M n. fv e re t t MoUee and F ra Metcllf.

Mrs. Ebie Johns and family. Boise, and WUllam Harahbaiger, a student a t the OoUeBe of Idaho. Caldwell, spent Jsst week-end with the ir parents, Mr. and Mrs. J . T. Harahbsrser.

Jerry Leeper and Alien Lee. also studenU a t the College of Idaho, spent their between-setne.uers holi­days at the home of the ir parents here.

BKATEB IN nntE D niCIIPlELD . Feb. J-M rs . Allen

Bruckner tustAlnc<] a compound fracture of the left leg while skat­ing cn the town pond last Fbday, Stie was taken to the Wendell hos- piUl.

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PAGE FOUR TIM ES-N EW S, T W IN FALLS, IDAHO

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUABT 4, IW8

BT HAIL-FArAni.e IN ADViNCB WUUa U*k* u d KU* CmsIt.a, l i t »«BUi . --------Sr «u konih._

All a«tlc« rtqolrvd frr U<t «r br *rl«t *( M«n ef tespfuel )srMirtloa la b* publUM «Mklr. vlll b< poblUbid In IM ‘ngniSir W«m of Ihli pi»rr »unatBI Is B«ttloa ll-IU I. C. A. IML M •<•!«] thtrMa bf Clu»t.r l i t . I»ll Sm I.i U ir itf trltjM.

DOUBLE TALK It has been 8UEBest<d that Riusla and the

weatem powera could get along together, II only they could understand »ach other.

Bccause so few Russians are permitted to see our civilization, and so few non-commun- lats are permitted to ace Russia, wo have to exchange information and Ideaa in worda. But even after they have been translated, words do not always mean the same thing to the two peoples.

There arc some who argue that Moscow has not violated the various agreements sol­emnly made by Messrs. Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin, but has observed them strictly, as she understood them. It Is our fault, they feel, that we did not understand those words and phrases the same as Btalln, Molotov and Vbhlnsky did.

In hope of avoiding some future mis­understandings, here are a few definitions of words and phrases constantly used by Soviet and communist spokesmen, which mean something different to them than to us;

Aggression: Any attempt by a non-Soviet, nation to encourage or help a small country resist Soviet Interference.

Collective bargaining: For Russian workers, a process by which they arc permitted to ask for small favors. For American workers, the right of the workers to demand what they want from the boss—or else.

Co-operation: Unquestioning acceptance of the Soviet will and viewpoint.

Democracy: Rule by the supreme Soviet, or by agents selected and directed by the kremlin. A legislaturo la permissible If It limits Itself to ratifying decisions of the Soviet agents.

Election: A poll in which voters can vote ; for one approved list of candidates or—if ; they dare—can vote against it, but not for an

opposition slate.P^clst: One who criticizes the Soviet union,

praises capitalism, or objects to having native . communlsta work for the Soviet union against ; the interesta of their own country.

Freedom of press: The privilege of printing' what the kremlin has authorized. Also the privilege of publishing what the kremlin has not forbidden—with the risk of liquidation If it is something the Hremlin would have for- bidden if it had thought in time.

Freedom of apoech: The privilege of agree­ing verbally with what one’s superiors say.

Imperialism: Similar to aggression, with the further meaning that the non-Soviet na-

. tion (usually the U. S. or England) is helping the weak country In order to establish econo-

: mic and political domination.. Labor union: An organization of workers through which they can be told where to work, how long, under what conditions, and for how much pay.

Monopoly: Any buslnesj that has become big.

Right: (Noun) The nearest synonym In English is privilege or sufference; there are no rights In Russia as we understand them. (Adjective) Only communism and the Soviet union are right; everything and everybody else is wrong.

Sovereign nation: One controlled by Mos­cow but permitted to have Iti own offlclah, provided they are selected or approved by the kremlin.

Victim of capitalism: An unemployed per- aon in a non-Soviet country, at a time when there are Jobs for all, who can live in Idleness on public charity better than Russian workers can live when both husband and wife work 48 hours a week.

War monger: One who criticizes any action of the Soviet union, or disagrees with ony statement of ita spokesmen. Includes the compiler of this glossary.

TUCKER’S NATIONAL

W HIRLIGIGWASiriNOTON—C ongw um en »ho h»T t eocapletcd

1 cotudtaU ou* and.deU llod tludjr of the plan'd ortglnil •JloMUon ef fiindi *nd coiuncxUtlM regATd 11 Bi M full or poUUcal and economic w t»k- n u te s th a t Uiejr do n o t believe thc7 c u i defead »■ vote on the h ia U n ii nex t No\-embfr.They concede the need l o r » generil,European recovery progmm. but! they have coniflneed ihenuelvei that!Jl niu*t bo trtmmed and hedged with rejtrtcU oni. ^

A more preajlng difficulty. In thelilopinion, b the fact th a t the adm lnli- traUon h a j not tormulAted a basic! foreign policy in connecUon w ith thfl propoBwl. four-year expenditure oil tn.OOO.OOOfiOO. or oa JuftUflcailon f « | auch an Invejtment. I

N either President T nunan nor Secret*ry M anhall haa w ld cor- grew on the far-reaching and fundam ental reason for auch a cosUy and harardoua adventure.

A B O V S I^T —A n»tlon-by-rutlon onalyalj of the proposed dlitrlbuilon of cash and gooda aeema to weaken the argument Uiat tlie asslitance U dealgned ^rope '"*"* the apreid of communlun In to weetera

Although Prcildent Trum an toft-pedalled this angle in htfl recent report on th e niate of the union, possibly to "flppease“ Henry A. Wallace, S e c r e t e M ir.tii.]] conUnues to highlight I t in hla public addrewes.

in fact, the state departm ent'* re le a« of the Mo«- iw-Bcrlln "eonJlrncy negotiation*" In 1530 w ui de­

liberately timed for Itn effect upon congressional dellberatlona. '>

Even l»rejldrnt Tnim on had to amUe when he explained thnt the da ta had been made public for lt« value and interest to "hlatorlans." Kobody thought to ask him why cfiually Im portant m aterial bearing on top-level declalona Is aUll locked In (ta t« deoart- m ent safes.

fiU SCEPTlD LE-The fac t Is th a t slightly more than 65 per cent of the proposed *17.000,000,000. according to theae congressional breakdoinw. li deatlned for seven countries which are no more ausceptlble to M yth lng remotely resembling SUUnUm than t n the nepubllcan conservatlvea of Indiana and Iowa

ticketed for 15.340,000,000. ^ ^ f «.750,000,000. th a t m akes ato ta l of 008,000,000. Despite the elecUon of « labor Bovemment. which already seem j to be t a i n r pop- tJw lty . nobody contends Uiat Britain Is headed for Moscow, especially In view cf Bcvln’s recent attacks on Soviet strategy.

Ireland, which grew w ealthy by rem aln tnf ou t of th e war, U slated for the sum of »«7.000,000. Iceland, wnich haa a population smaller than th a t of Trenton. N, J,. will receive 138,000,000, T he advance U generally regarded as a "bribe- In return for the bases which Iceland seems reluctant to give us.

ItE V lsIO N -H olland. which has fewer people than New York City, will be given M ,438 ,000^ lTe« oBsln. there seems no danger th a t the Dutch bUTBhen will stage a communist reroluUon. n i e »ame con­sideration applies to Denmark, which will ge t »M3 - 000,000.

Although ttie comunlst rote In Norway to ta ls only •even per cent and no country has g resU r fear or twUTd of the Soviet, Oslo Is down for *3«,000,000. ^ ^ a l , which stayed otJt of th e conflict and which n*s been govemered for years by a dictator, will be handed 1150,000.000. Communism Is Ylrtuajly non­existent there.

T he th ree enemy counWcs—Germany. I ta ly and A ustria—will benefit to the ex ten t of six bUUons.

In perusing this pa ttern of foreign aid. congres- alonal critic* begin to believe th a t Uncle Sam Is em­barking on an lnt«mftUonal WPA, E\'en allowing fo r Uie need of European restoration to prop up world trade and to relieve human misery, friends of the Marshall plan th ink th a t Uiere m ust l>e a shftTO revision downward, a possible Ume lim it and the application of mor» buslneasllko methods than s ta te th e array. UNHRA and alm llar ngercles have shown In the paaL

WHO PAYS TH E TICKET? T-N staffers were slavlrjg a w y oa

the old rock pile Saturday night when a city policem an d ro p p ^ In to phone the police sta tio n to report he had recovered a a tolen aato. Yep, It was parked righ t In fron t of the T-N office.

An>-way. there w as a ticket for overume parking on th e auto. W hat we want to know is who pays the 11 fine for overUme parking? Is the owner of the c v stuck for same? WUI the officer who found the auto be required to pay th e fine? O r If police find the person who stole the car, will he be required to pay the fine for overtime parking?

If this Is one of tho.te occasions when the ticket will j o ou t the w in­dow, It leaves a good opening for evasion of orerUme park ing fines. If • driver re tu n u to hla c a r and finds

ticket under the wlnd.ihleld wiper, e can leave th e c a r alone and re­

port It stolen. Police "find" the "stolen" c a r -n o fine,

n o HUM D E PT .A woman p»TfhoIo»l»t of Ihe

Csllfomla departm ent o( educa­tion declared th a t ''to>e, honor and clierUh- pledges In the m ar- rlsge eerrmony ought (e be “tern l« shreds." The woman piycholo- gu t is slog le.-U nlted Prew oewi Item.If she e>-er gets m arried, aheni

have her chance to tear 'eo shreds.

PAINLESS EXTRACTION Dear Oent:

See where slot m achines In Tft’ln Palls bring In more Uinn *2,000 a day for the city and operators. Seems to me th a t suggests a n obvfous way to eliminate aU the worry and fuss caused by varloai drives for funds which are held everj- year.

Why c a n t slot m achines be used to assure the success o f these an ­nual drlvtsi? Let th e organlraUons

concentra ted drives

HJDW THINGS APPEAR FROM

PEGLER^SANGLEPrank B. H ogui. tb e d istric t a t- e ither "penonaUUea' themselrei or

toroey. evoked a strxage resu lt when — ..........- * *he addressed th e aim ual dinner of the New York Boxln* W rlten as­sociation on a recent evening.

Unable or unwUllnc to tarry , Ho­gan p e e r e d In, with a elothespUt on his nose, and damned the prize­fight racket for the c o r r u p t i o n which all honest

len know It to tK.The response of

some of the elder statesmen of th u abandoned s lu m of the very under­world. lUelf.

I i n s t l n :tlve wotkTMk r«tift

for one week, and one week only. Then the following week could be designated, for example. Community Chest week with aU procee<l.i from all slot machines going Into tlie Community chesc fund.

Seems to m e th b would bo a good sysifm to fUl quotas fo r such drives

Contributor

abuse of Ifogan. which betrayed the morab. feelings and commitments

these press-agenta and apolo­gists.

T hat an association of professional Journalists shoiUd act as h u t to an annual reunion of crim inals and oUier repulsive parasite* who . .. not be called crim inals only because they have not yet been convicted. Is. Itself, IndlcaUve.

There Is legitimate excuse for Ihe existence of an ossoclaUon of writ­ers asalcned to the cauliflower beat. After all, there are sim ilar soclellrs of reporters who cover th e city hall, the sUte capltol and W all sueet.

I note with peculiar In terest that there Is no social organization of those who cover the news of unions and take It th a t here th e Individual cannot bring himself to Invite un - ' necessary conU ct on h is own time with the vermin he deals w ith In the line of duty.

The writers of boxing In New York are less fasUdlous because these conslsiorlcs of plckpockeu. hl-Jack- ers. professional thugs, a n d fog. bound bums are voluptuous orgies, consciously enjoyed. Such excess U beyond the call of social duty and the remotest border* of decency.

The fraternal sp irit of m en Impll- eated In their field of more or les; tKautlful letters no m ore compels them to enterU ln th e objects of Uielr sppralsal than tiie charter of the Patrolmen's Benevolent asso- claUon requires them to bid to their dinners all the beggars, violators of the parking and fuU-stop laws and dellcatessen-kecpers who strew the gutters with plckle-butts, cabbage leaves and moroso tomatoes.

Tills departm ent of ou r Jour-

a e re n m e n o r le a . c u rr la g tt who. a t the Urns of th« p tndi w»i

houM w ith th i prtndpal

T h la fpeetmea of th e T tm lfo m a l (b t -« n v le r U flatm ted alx dayi m v e c k h r a m laof New T o r t paper. H e rcTemli u i oh>aMlon with tha t w hich medical p a a d lu In the E s q u ln a a u t cmM a f t v y ta a ago detcribcd u tha erofcaoui trUagle.

T b e fight w r l tm are. tn the main, fana themselves. They wtnet a t ctlUclxm of th e tr%de but are. by

- - tra ln ln ti unequipped tojob th a t would put their

p re d o u i g v a a b tyeod peAL T b s y a r t Bot w p o rtan tn the city-

t id e aeas* th e tcn a . Vnllke the u rch in s of th e BroKlway-HoJlywood beat, th d r r t a m a f t r Ignoring

:*n dalou» n m ara no t sordid, 'n tc :^ Just d e n t reallM th a t a

fram e-u p In a prUe ttg h t or the presence of an habitual ]aU-blrd m th e a u tu s o f unom cial o v n tr of a wholo tU ble of tighter* might be news. They don 't know bow to check a poUce blo tter o r a court record.

B 08*Q and hte a w b ta n t Alfred Sco ttl, patJeoUy tried to Jnstn irt the f ig h t wrjltera In th e d t l s e n l duty to a o d e ty when b e becomes a n r e of crim e. Tbey failed.

T hey w e« trying to ovw om e In

“Hiey are obUvloui to the under­world about th an , to the works of th e eommunlsu In RoUywood and to new* stories which they cannot recognise because they nerer wett reporten .

P or m onths a fte r these eesays touched upon the notorious auo- claUon cf Duggsy siegal, Oeorgt R a ft. Leo Durocher and a prominent Hollywood confidence man well- known there u Allen 8mlley, the response of radio pratU en and the iioderworSd eolianns of our press was furious denial and abuse.

T he proof of Frank Sinatra’s as- soclaUon with a gang of underworkl ItaloB and of hU arrest on a charge or seducing a female was followed by an amusing tirade of self-ln- c rlm lnallng apologies.

TTie subsequent assasslnaUon of Slegal as he sa t with Smiley In a region reserved for the more exclusive tcum of the Hollywood trash was a deliberately unfriendly blow to t ^ prestige of the present bums of thU cult.

T he ensuing dlscJoiure In these articles that the Bon Vlvant Smiley

J ? Smeehof. or ^ U k h o f f . an ex-convlet and *-et- back from Canada, subject to de- porUtlon. was a further discredit to th e same achool of Incompeienu who had drunk with WllUe nioff. the old Chicago mackerel, when he was th e H a r^ U h r of Hollywood.

“n io writers of pugilism and the rif f- ra ff who do most of the Holly­wood propaganda are so far lost to the hfppocratlc code th a t conceal­m ent of truth, not reporUng of news. hM become their conscious policy.

They regard themselves u pro­tectors of the -game" in u,e cue of prize fighting; and of “sliow- business," a term of wide and a ll choosey embrace. In the c*.v v. comedians, gamblers, bawds and swindlers., ^ e y . . t r y to make light of the ImpllcaUon of several degenerate Hollywood personalities In the great M ergenthaler swindle, one of these M rs . S t a n le y P h i llip sU tte r paid affectionate trlbuto t ^ - i r o n troUop, with a record

a tew days a stabbom ifflsaUCy shared by m oti of the American people who bawl for a c re cops wben the crime waves break to d ostraclsa the honest d tlzea who squeals on the taekeucr with a battery of slot machines behind Ihe notlcA stoce.

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DEVOTED TO IDEAI^ OF FINER AND LESS COSTLY FUNERAL SERVICE

TW IN FALLS MORTUARY

P U B L IC PRO BLEM This year the American people are being

asked for the first time to contribute to the flKht of mcdlcal aclencc agalnat heart disease. The campaign la being conducted by the American Heart association, a group made up largely of specialists in diseases of the heart and blood vessels.

■nie association’s program Is as broad os Its appeal. I t aims at expanding research, professional education, public education and

. community service. One particularly Impor- : U nt »Im, It seems to us, la to establish a •'greater number of local heart associations.

Th« eventual goal Is a local association in every alzable city and rural area.

These local groups would have access to w w knowledge and new activities developed by the American Heart association. Ideally ^ eventually—themillions of “heart cases" throughout the country would at last receive highly profes- flloaal diagnosis, treatment and care

That, at present. Is a distant goal. It can­not be reached without a lot of worU and a lot of money. Heart disease today causes one out of three deaths In this country.

to middle age and beyond.Great discoveries remain to be made In the

cause and prevention of the various heart . diseases. They probably will bo made but It •. for research.

Better treatment for sufferers from heart and <ome relief from the worry and

, hopelesmeas that accompany it, are surely pcwlbie. But they wUi require time and money for professional and public education.

STRAIN—congrcism en also question w hat they regard as the too glib assurances of Secretaries H arri- m an and K rug th n t the exports of goods wUl not impo-ie an undue stra in on o u r own rr.w irccs and economy. They are thinking of the long-range and national defense aspects of ou r dwindling supplies of c eru in essenUal m oterlalj such as the following:

Steel: The MesnbI Iron ore range In M innesota cannot fight nnoUier war. We mny have to rely to r the principal Ingredient o f steel on U bm dor. Vene- w clft and Cuba. V. a s tee l Is alrendj- expanding Its Sparrows Point p lant In Maryland In expectation of WBterhaullng Uie ore.

Coal: the supply seems unlim ited, but a g rea t deal of our re.ier\-c.i are deficient In necessary metiiUurglcal propertle.^ Constantly deepening mines, higher wages and refusal of young men to remain In or en ter the Industrj- point loward^shortagea and soaring prices.

rrmOADB—Petroleum: Federsl officials. srm y-na>7 planners and Industrial spokesmen are more worried than they admit. IJomestlo supply falls sh o rt of

postwar consumption by approxim ately 700.000 barreLi ri day. We may soon have to im port from the middle east and th e Caribbean area, and In the event of war they could become "trouble spots." No great domestla field haa been discovered In years.

Tim ber: More than 70 per cent of the nation’s homes arc .lUn built of timber, and plastics are no substitute Depletion of our forests has no t been maU:hed b r eonsen'aUon methods, and lumber costa account for the Impossible prices of homes and rents.

Finally, the shipm ent of consum er snd capital goods on the vast scale originally planned, from w heat to machinery, will make Inroads on exLitlng sun'nlles and postpone the era of the key rem e<i to r InflaUoo— volume production.

I t r S OOT flOMETHINO THERE Dear Pot ShoU:

1 haven't heard m uch about tha t potato on Idaho-s 1D43 license plates, but to me It appears to be ju s t an ­other boner. Rem em ber aU the criticism about the sk ier la.ti year? One guy even said th e skier looked "ke a grasshopper, I th ink .

Anyway, some ou t-of-state friends stopped here the other day. i noticed Uiey were looking ra th e r closely a t all the Idaho license plates . Finally, one of my visitors asked, ratlier carefully, w hat was th e algnlfic.mce of the aj-mbols oa the license plates. They couldn't make any sense of elUier Uie '47 or '48 pbir.i!

L ExplaJnrd

THEY SAVED TAXES All those veterans who c.ished

the ir term inal leave bonds last fall saved a lltUe In the w ay of taxes for some future year, a ta x exj>ert de­clares. We'd heard several veW wondering If Uiey were KOlni; tn have to pay taxes on th w c bond.s, to we asked a representative o f the bi'reau of Internal revenue.

Ills answer was tlia t tlie bonds did no t constitute U xable Income, but each veteran would have to pay Uxes on the Interest obUlncd from the bonds.

FAMOUS LAST LINE And bsw oflen does February

tiSTS fire Sandays?GENTLEMAN IN 'HIE

rouRTn now

. ............ .. inNew York, has looked so long on the frightful mien of vice th a t when the like of Hogan comes along to .'peik u he did. ha lf a dozen eport reporters respond boorlly nex t day with eesays th a t m ight be headed; •'Sir, you are speaking of the racket I love."

May I say th a t I long ago shan' doned the Idea tha t th e secret this derotlon Is bribery. Most -. those who TVTlte for p rin t and recite, by a ir publicity fo r the moving pic­ture, night club, gambling house and radio rackets a re notorlouAly venal,

Tlic.ie extortioners o f d r l n k a Christmas presents and guest per­formances by expensive s ta rs c a n t even spell, much less write. T heir fun ' over the exposes of social, moral and pollUcaJ corruption snd xortlld a?.soclaUon w ithin the past •“ monUis WM the direct effect '

obvious cause.They are, w ith few exceptions

LAME BACK CORRECTIONIs pleasant nnd painless Back-

‘ aches may be associated with I rheumatism, arthritis, lura- , bago. stomach ond kidney dis­

orders. If you have Wed I eveo 'th ln j else try ad just. menta Relief Is oft*n obt4xln-

_ ed after first treatmenu

DR. ALMA HARDIN c in n o rR A C T O R

I UO &laln North Pbeoe «J2«

K L I X i s K L I C K I N 'With Radio's Beat Entertainment!

VIEWS OF O T H E R SOUR FIRST STHENQTH

President's a ir policy commission In a report on' Its recently completed survey. This clTlllan group has come to undersund . u th e country 's mlUUry airm en navo been InslsUng for more than two yean , th a t It Is fuUle to try building b strong defense of the United States without developing a n a ir fo rte able to function as ou r quickest striking a n d hardest punching m ill, tary arm.

In practical terms, this m esas deroUng a larger percenuge of our m ilitary budget to developing a tr power. Should w sr come sgaln. we would have to depend on the a ir force for the blows to counteract Itnmedlstely an assault on ou r mainland or tCTrltorlal outposts. Sea and land offensives would be necessary In Ume. B u t they would never have a chance to get tmder way If our bomber and fighter squadrons wers loo puny to carry an atomic war back to the enem y's own bases w ithin houj9 a fte r the f irs t attack.

T lie ^ fo>cs ItssU, having come through so brll- l ^ t l y In W orld war n . can be depended on to keep lU techniques up to da te and m aintain the f l ih t l n i skllU of Its members. T lio a irc raft Industry, now reduced to a shadow of Its wartim e value, wlU have to be revived In p a rt through government aid. T his will require some ineresse !n tho.producUon of new ty i planes for military use. Mostly, however, Jt should I achieved by a g rester emphasis on research to keep the U nited Stat«s ahead o f aviation develoumenU anj-where else In t i e world.

p follow the resUsUo p rofram urged by th e a ir policy commission we sha ll probably hsve to discard some long-estsbUshed Jdess about a n adequata defense of th e nation. O ur previous reliance on a powerful 3-ocean fleet fo r our p roteetlon m ay be among th>m TOs concept a^d th a t o f guas safely manned from behind U nd ram parts simply do n o t m eet fully the ' security demands of th e atomic ««*: 'Above a ll else

^ power o f the b w t quality obiA i^U e and one always a t th e ready m a rk ^ K a n s S

6 : 0 0 p . m . J u n e a u S h i n n

IdaJio's Own News Commentator

Women are so sllly-msklng almost as much fuss oter a bridge prise u men do over a golf cupu

6 : 1 5 P . M . E l m e r D a v i s

With Ncw8 Direct From Washington

7 : 0 0 p . M . P l a n t a t i o n P a r t y

**With Vie Duke of Paducah'*

7 : 1 5 P . M . S i N G i N ' S a m

Now Heard at a Neio Hour

K U X“IT CLICKS"

N E W S U I T S

New Spring' Suits are now here. Smart new patterns and shades. Featured in the la test s in g le and double- breasted models.

S4500 $6500

WORSTED-TWEEDSTWISTS

Regulars—Longs Shorts—Stouts

Special! N Y L O N special!L A D I E S ' H O S I E R Y

First Quality Full - Fashioned

Beautiful sheer nylons . . . in an attractive shade for now . . . as well as spring

A t Real Savings

SPECIAL $ 1 A PAIR

2 pairs for 1.90

ALEXANDERS138 MAIN AVE. SO. TW m FALLS

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY •), 1018 TIM ES-NEW S. T W IN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE I

Two Vet Help Measiu'es Get House’s Okay

WABHINOTON. Peb. 4 M V -T ro blUj bcneliUng TeUnma broke out ot A lo s-Jus a jid p a u c d the bouse by tbumplna m ajorities T uw day.

One « n t to Presiden t T ru m * a oo » 170-< Tole. U wouki:

1. lU be the kUowaoce lo r un> aarriK j r ttw u is In coUffc from t a ■ Bonui to $7S.

I Pay » married stu d e n t w ith dfpendenl *105 » m onth , and those Win two or m ere depcndenU »IJ0. ■nie payment lo r all m w rted s tu ­dent* now is WO.

Moit Await A«reejaenlThe othet bill would rs isc the

amount • r tte n m tAfclng on>thc-jot) tralntas can r*ceJ»e from hU em . ployrr while se tttn c ffoverrunent subsblenee aUowance^ I t pu se d . 371-5. but It dUXertd w ith th e rtr- tlon passed by th e senate «od m ust await An agreement betw een the two chambers.

As spproTcd by ths houM . I t would »How single men to receive « 5 0 a month tn combined allow ance and u la ry . those wlU) one dependent in s . and those w ith two or more *350. Th# present ctlU nes are i m ror single men ond 1200 fo r m ir* rltd.

No lUlM in SobtlsteaeeThe present ceilings on subsist*

ence allowances would n o t be chaag* ed. These are a m on th for olngle TeUrans. and ISO tor m arried re t- ersns.

Z3«th bills passed th e eenate last summer. The house veterans affairs committee approved them CTialnnan nogcrs. a . Mass.. set to get them before th e house.

Mrs. Rogen estim ated the c rtu e In benefits to college veterans would cost the govem m cnt ap p ro i- Inialely (317.000.000 a 7eor.

This’U Slay’Em

Three t i a a in the la st fe a r m enths. tbe CeUalaJ alrUnes om e* ta New Torfc was robbnj. and by (be M ae bandit, l ie get SCM ta Octebcr, (U t In Nevember a n d Sl.OM this raonlh. Bst M asager B. A. Beski. placing (he '■ antl-bsTgU r' Ugn In the wtadew, U tinta the Strom wonllar may h a re some cffecL

Business VisitorsACEQUIA. Feb. 4 - M r . and Mrs.

Hsrold Seamans and ch ild ren drove to Salt Lake City. U tah , to a ttend * meeting of J . n . W atkins com­pany represenlAtlvcs. T liey also vis­ited Mrs. Beamon’s m other. Mrs. CluiJUne Dlnaham.. Tony Jolley m ade a recen t busi­ness tr ip to Missoula, M ont.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTSK o n cr o r rniVATE s a l e o p r e ^

E.STATEIN TiiB 1-iionnATj; c o u n r tw in

, XAI.LS COUNTY. HTATK O r inAim. k iN ijiK »iait»:k oy n iK i;.- ;ta te o r I f aha r . iiuTi.i:it. oi:cr.Asi:i>.

.SOnCt IS HEIlEllY QIVCN T?.«t Ih. UAj<n!(r«<] AdmlnUtnUr of lh> n tala cl Ad» E. iJulI.r, win h 11 at »rl-

<»!• i» Oif hlshc. 1 bi>l.I«r an. 1 lub. Jki 10 coBtlmition bj Ih. o U IToUu Court, on or itu r U>« Ulh d ir of >'•)>■ nMrr. UK. 4I Uq oVWk A. M. of *ikl rfiT. risht. till* M.Mntrrf^l of xM

t» ot i:; .: f« i; T iif-vcc j j i t isI Il.mi a Iln« p.talUl to th> touihimUrr IIm ef taiU Lot S; THENCE ilh Ul.t Im mloni ■ lln* p>r«ll«l Ik* bauh<J«IT' Ub« of **U L«ta Iht iculh houn<Ur7 lln* of uM. S; Tlir-VCX w « t so f .« .Ion,-«alh tuuniinr lint of mM l^t I lh» poini of btclnnif.r.

? *7 '***': itiil lunM l utlnii m 1<I prr

Anderson Smart Man, Nichols Finds; Lets Wife Boss Garden

: for »M ; h< unJrrtlsnnI ffk « of Kr.nk

• rr. » l l .J 1I001-5.

of AJ« t

By IIAILMAN W. NICHOLSWASHINGTON. Feb. 4 (U P J-

Cllnt Anden^ii probably Li the fimarteit gardener In the world. He nerrr plans a back yard plot th a t’s too big for h is wife to handle.

Don't mlsuncltrtUuid the._ lar> ' of agrlcul- H tu r e . I t Un’t U iat | iA e doesn 't s e t o

ooot ou t of p la n t­ing. hoeing, acrap- Init and Just plain u-alchlnR things grow. O r swelling up ns big as the next o n e w ith pride In telling the boys a t the cfllco how tender

77- - —... r r — his strlnB beans U .m .. o ,down to a nice, leafy d inne r rlRhi ou t of the garilcn. H e ccrlalnly does ciijoy all those things.

B ut the simple f.icts a re tJiese: 1) His wife b a better gardener th a n lie is. j) One Garden expert In the lamlly Is enough. 3) lie 's too busy telllnB other people how to ■)Ian fnixlo.ii Kardrn.'. T^iTnly mil* Ion ot 'em, So ihnt wc can w.ilk

around aliK a ttun.-nylull of vckcI- able.i—M one of Ills llc u tm a n u puts l i-a n d help Iced Europe n t the .Mime lime.

Ajidcnon se n t Into the m a tte r thoroimhly whm he hpoke before tlie Nmioiml Onrdcn InAtltutc here. I t was a nice cola day for It. And It gave a tn&n that w arm feeling to dream obout again getting his fingers Into the Kood earth and planting a bed of red radishes and yellow turnips.

Tlio colorful seed catalogues have been out for some time. P re t­ty pictures that make tlie m outh water. Yellow bantam com. G reen cucumbers. BrlRht red tomatoe-'i. bect.% cauliflower nml potatoes.

T he Kcrctarj' and'hls liclpers told the garden i>eop:e how the>- can have tlitlr parsnljw and feed E u r­ope a t tlie Mjne time. T here will be. he predicted, a shortnge of m eat come tlie first o f May. T he I more vegetables we have on th e I table, tho lts.i meat wcUl w ant. I

Some of the loins and 6labs of bacon, of coune. go to Europe. Also, the more we prow, the w ell >ia\e to eat and tlie mo

tu Iced the hungry of Abo the hoe and rake

iRstit ays th a t the average home -n—even a little

fam ily be- *100 a year, too. Anderson says it I heap of pleasure to nature ou t there a t

she gives the weeds and potato bugs the \ery c'A Dickens. H e even comes out of the shade to give her a hand once In awhUe. b e sold, when lie has the time. A nd Mrs. A.'s permluion.

Secretary Anderson, by th e way. w ants people to know th a t he Is a farmer a t heart. He was bom in South Dukota, where men o re men. and mo.«ly ffttmeti. He still h a i a place up there, although h is pres­e n t ■hane.Meod" is a fann tn New Mcilco.

Tlie secretary acts like a farm er around the department, too. H e ' wears blue shirts m ost of th e time.

Well. sir. the seeretao’ o f agri­culture niecu the a d d test th is year —ou t tn New Mexico. He has jilant* ed 50 acres of m ebns. And by har» vest tl;ne he says h e will know i-hat kind uf a farm er he is. The iversBc ralnlall m New Mexico Is

only four inches a year.Wc'll be waiting fo r a report 00

how your garden grows. Mr, Sec- rctarj-.

Bund Leader JFlees^Dachau

Prison CampU U NIcrf. pfb. « o m - P « U Kuhn,

deported leader of the O ertoan- American bund In the United Slates, eecaped from the Dachau intern­m ent eamp last night. actoTdln* to American authorities.

Kuhn was awaiting trial-before a O ennan denazification co-irt tn Bavaria on the basis of doeumenta th a t were sent to Germany from the United SUtfo.

D epw trd in IHi Kuhn was deported to O ennany

from the U. a In Sept.. IM l. and vorfced lo r a while a t a Munich chemical plant. He w u scheduled lo be tried on a charge of havtng been a w ard chief in the nr 'r party .

As a ma}or offender he would have been subject to a maximum prison sentence of 10 j-con.

K uha was arrested on h is arrlvU in Oennan}', la ter released, and w rested again last July. D aring his period of freedom b e lived with his wife, D sa, and »on. W alter, who were deported to Germany In F e b , 1M1. on the exchange sh ip G rips- holm.

KatnralUed O tiseaKuhn was bom In Munich In 1K»6.

w ent to the c . S. after W orld war 1 and became a naturalUed cititen In Detroit In 1934.

He became a leader of the O er- lan-Amerlcan bund tn New York In

the lUO^ and arrogantly preached n a » principles, holding two mass meetir.gs tn Madison Square garden,

t n Nov, 1939. he v a s found guilty ' dishonesty tn handling bund

funds and sentenced to 2 ‘4 to S y ea rs in Sing Sing prison. His c ltltenshlp w as re»-0ked tn 1»U and he deponed two yeara later.

Speaks Here

PTA at Bickel to Hold Food Sale

Qickel achool PTA wUl bold a food sale a t 10 a. m. Saturday a t the Sears and Rocbuek store here.

Mrs. LeBoy Arrington Is In charge of the sale. She Is being assisted by Mrs. AlU Webb and Mrs. M onts Moore. Any person wishing to make contnbuUons to the sale m ay oon-

any of the corrmiliiec members o r may bring the food to th e store during the sale.

>Vhen In

JEROMEPATRONIZE

THEO W LFine Foods— B «r “We Nerer Close"

Bean Seed Tests Okayed by Group

BOISE. Feb. * (U.fi>-The Idaho Crop Im pro«m ent association has approved u ln le r te jtlng of Idaho seed bear.a lor certification pur- oa^rs. ExteaMcn A-ronomLn E. W. W hitman ."jld loday.

Samples from seed lots will be grown at Indio. Calif., between Feb­ruary and April and disease readings Uken.

Salvation^ Army’s Officers Renamed At Local MeetingAO members of the b o u d of di­

rectors of the SalvaUon Ariny unit In Tw in ?wlls were reelected a t the annual boanl meeting a t the P a r t hotel Tuesday n ight, according to Mr*. RusieU Miner, publicity chalr-

BRIO. IL B. COLUER . . . dlvtsloDBl SalraUoa Army

eotBBiatsdef, rertland . wh® w u th e fea tsrrd ipeaker a t the aa- noal board meeting «f the Twin Falla tinlt ef the iialvaUw Amy* AU etficer* were reelected a t the meeting wblch was held a t tbe Park hotel TacwUy aigbt.

Plans Charted for Ice Guessing Game

McCALl* Feb. 4 (ILR-The Payette Lakes Chamber of Commerce today began making plans for the annnal guessing contest on the breakup of Ice In Payette lakes.

P rltfa are awarded to the person gucA-Jng clof.est to the time of the breakup, which occurs anytime be­tween mld-AprU and mid-May.

Wyinan Zachery. chairman of the chambcr’-n Ice committee, .said a full- scale publicity campaign will be Uunclied In tho near future.

ART HOGGANPAINTINO

PAPEB UANGINQ

j^ r . ALtCBAHONS

BE.MOUELING

DECOaATlO.SS

Worfc Cuaranftfci” niPERIAL nALLPAPEBS

PHONE 2263M

T he officers are Hugh PhUUp*. chairm an: L jle Frazier, tfce chair* m an: Mr«. Genevieve Dwight, MCTe- ta ry , and Lem Chapin, treasurer.

Featured ipcaker a t the annual meeting waa B rtg ..lL B. OoUler. Portland. O re , diviiional SslvaUoo A rm r commander. He said the local u n it o f the SalvaUon Army b In th i best condiiioa In S} year* and de-

AGENT . PHONE 1069W 137 LINCOLN

Idaho FFA Meet Dates Are Set up

IDABO PALLS. VM. 4 <UA—T h e Idaho Future P a n n o i of America UMcUttcQ Will hold t u anaoa l meeting la Boise M arch 33-37 ln< stead of April M , Pret. O rra l Kaa* »en said today.

OonvenUon speakers will Include Eugene Hansen. Garland. U tah, n a ­tional FFA student secretary, u sd G ot. c . A. Robins, a n honorw y member of the state o rg an ia tlo a .

The finals in the annual PFA public speaking contest will be held > t the same time. The agenda alM

dared tha t community cooperation here U better than ever before.

Present officers will remain i IndeflnlUly. They ore Maj. C lara Nielsen and Sgt. Jessie Clark.

WALL TILE

LINOLEUM

ASPHALT T IL E"Spedam int In Floor CoTertng«“

G.&G. FLOORSn iA d d is im W ^ Pbe&etOOtM

M O V I N GService

Anywhere In

UTAH—IDAHO—TALIP,—NEVADA—OREGONSkilled. EfflclenU Caretal Mevera. Packto*. Movlag. B te ra n a t

_ tow Oaat

P Q P Q Transfer &nuHLEY — PHONE 25 Storog© Co.

to c lu d ea tw ard la te rtf ito U C i_____d e r m iBd atna 'asaanxj tfCfiMfc .

BBTUKNB H O M l 0A iO 4f?. rw ). J - M r * . * e k

K lnnbory bat retam ad f r t n Da - m , Colo., wBfer* A a has be<B rtudylng a t Ihe coUtge o f pi for the l u t ftmr tnonths.

Blue whales olten cxcecd 100 feet In length and IM tons In weight.

STOPIn e a t Los.'. 1

Wlndcrr

ORDERYour Alico Aluminum

STORMWINDOWS

with Summer Screens

Idaho Engineerinff and Sales Co.

S5» Secead K. Fbene C T

GO NOW-Go GreyhouniT!

T h li U the he igh t o f th e b r ig h ^ H g h c le a io Q in C h ic a g o a n d E a s te rn b ig c itie s . Y o u 'l l t e e tb e b e s t p U y t, God fu n I n tb e gay n ig h t clubs, en jo y c u ltu ra l ■ t tra a io n i and be w e lco m e d a t h is to ric th riaes ,

A tk th e l o c i t O v e r la n d G re y ­hound agen t ib o u t m oacy -sav ing f a te s and convenienc s ^ e d u le s th ro u g h ro m in tic S alt L ake G ty .

there are nolower fares!

L. W. CARTER

VSIQS BUS DEPOT i n ta d St. E, Phone MM

g r e y h o u n dn pacing tT A ita i n , .

/ \ i r k T i l f o r d s 0 r o u t o s !

W h i s k e y A c h i o v o i n o n l S i iK 'o

Park ft T ilfo rd Rnrrrt, we wlib emphasiie (bat they will fiaJ exsctly the same type ofw hlskey as always, but imtatifr, richer and e rcn finer lastlngl

N o w m o r e i f ia i i e v e ' ’

s M . ^ « c 2i c a /

- a n d t h e b e s t v a l u e

an EVEI RICHER, FlIER TASTll\fG | S

PA R K & T IL FO R D

- in c re a se in P rice /X o in c re a s t th e qua lity o f a high-quality w h tik e y u itb o n t m m a u n g Its p r ie t , t« a o acc o m p lish m en t t t any tim e . T o d a y i t Is a m'tractt*Y « th a t i s th e « o r y o f th is be ttcr-th an -e ter P a r k & T ilf o r d R ccrs* . R tc h er! F in e r ta sting! Cestlier to p roduce— b u t i t w o n 't c o s t y u i one c e n t m o r e ! F o r th e g r ta te it taste-plcasurc a n d th e g r ta l tU w h iske r- vaJuc, w c su g g e s t th a t you a sk fo r P a rk & T il f o r d R u e m - t o J ^ !

To o /tf and ne»f f r /e n d s —T o j ^ o . e w ho ba»e Iook preferreJ T otho je tfrin jtP ark& T ilfafdR tw rr*

for the first tim e, we promUe ibetn «tu- uue-ptt^ure as well as ^ n^tly xtrdert/in ry uiisJtey botb ofrhich w ill surprise and delight

PARK * r iL fO R D D IS T lL L E fiS . INC., HEW YORK . 6 2 J 4 S GRAIN NEUTRAL S P IR IT S • 1 6 .» PROOF

/ / IN

I

DIJBARRYDerma Sec Fonnula. *2-00 Sl£e $1.00

I

DOANS

4 5 c

SARAKA

lO-o*. site ..........3

SALTS

" : . ° ‘' V . . 9 8 c

GROVESCold

)iets____ 4 9 c

T r o l i n g e r ' s

presents

44tMM

EGG' CREAAE SHAMPOO

^ D IS T lN C T iy DIFFERENT

^ N E W LIQUID

C R E M E SH A M PO O

^ f^E N R lC H H ) WITH

CASCADE BUBBLE BATH. 51.00 Valne 49<

DENTAL CREAM, Giant-Size Colffato ......„ ..4 1 <

GILLETTE BLUE BLADESPackage of 1 0 ____ 49^

GILLETE RAZORS, with5 blades...................... 49^WHITMAN SAMPLER

Some in HeartBoxes ....- ....... -...$2 .00

UPJOHN UNICAPS, Mnl. (iple Vitamins. 100 day supply......- .... ™ .$2 .98

BATH SALTSi Wrlsleya all fragrances, 4 lbs. S9<

BOBBY PINS, 10c packafre,3 fo r ...................

PETROLGAR, all numbers, $1.00 size ........... „_ .89^

TOBACCO. Pocket Sire Tins, 2 for_______ .21^1

Created by th* wortd-fomoui cosmetic house of '^^+U A a;)

WAVE KITSS ™ ! ^ $ 2 . 0 0ReSills ........ $1.00

SHAMPOO" . ^ ! ! ! ! _ _ $ 1 . 0 0

TISSUES- 2 5 c

VALENTINES

ThermometersCUnlct] tnC any ln f Case _______

A A Ju s t In. StQTer^ H eart Boxes.C A N D Y --__ 85c $ 3 .9 5

perlenced In tilling preseripUoi nee<is. We carry ths tlneat in phannaceutlcal lines ~ we OS your pretcrlpUons sUlUuUy, ac< cTirately, prampUy. Remember the prescription U yocn — aik th a t I t be tUled a t TroUnstra.

TROLINGER'S

PAGE SIXTIM ES-NEW S, T W IN FALLS, IDAHO WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4,1945

Repeal of T-H Law Top Aim Of Rail Union

POCATELLO, m . 4 yr> -R epe .l o f (ha T U t-IU rU rr labor U v w u tcnned Uie prim»ry obJecUre for IMS of Uie IdAho JUUwsy LcfU - UUve MaocUUon a t eoncJialon of a confcrenM.

•Hie aaioeUilon, tn a reaolulion exprcued confWeneo In Sen. Olen II. Tiylor. D , 1<3», but said I t dl< no l bellcTC the th ird pa rty a io « ' tn tm would Jm to thB best Inttreata of the people.

Tw lor Mid he had been ln « te d la bKom» a vice pretldenU al candl- daU on the Uoket headed b r Henry A. WilUce. Taylor ha* aald the invl- taUon U lUU under couJdersU on.

Other rraolutloni adopted by Uie

Approval of legiAlatloQ to con tinue ' ren t control.

OppoftjUon to univertal military tralnlnc.

Approval of President TTumiui't Income tax proposal

nequested aaendo ien t of the Id«‘ 1» llQuor la w to perm it w altrew ei to work In rC2taum nt« w here liquor 11 Mid.

A requcit tha t th« ISifl M aho cestary approprl'

America No Longer Land of Unlimited Resources, Krug’s Annual Report SaysT\J0.Tv^vy p .k • t >»«M< j __•________ I __ ___ _ . . . . .WASHINOTON. Feb. * tU.FO _

America U no longer the land o unlimited rfsoiircffl.

Now Uiere m u it be "full and wUe' le of every ouncc of rcraalnlnif

reaourcej for m ilitary nnd economic iccurtiy, Seey. of In terior J . A. Krue today.

In hl» dcpw unent'a annuol re­port, Krug Bald Uie federal govern- m rnt mast Ilnanee m ost of ih# blc Pfoeram re<]Ulred to con.wrve and

develop natural rtcourcu. T he costa a re "be>-ond the normal financial ability of private enterprtje,' cald.

S irtislng Uie need for expandlns fuel, mineral, power and food ba&e, Kruc said, "we have a long way to go" just to repair th e dam age of -po it wanton exptolUUon.”

Oil l« Uie "jr»ve*t problem." he Mid. Out there are alao "aharp and dangcroui dc/lclenclea" In Induitrlal

Baruch’s Plan Hard to Takcj But Solons Can’t Cry Politics

aUoM to acUvaU the conaUtutlonaJ Office of Uie lecretary of labor, and to atrtngthen Idaho laws covering ctnployment of women nod ch il­dren.

Expiration date* of U rm i of offi­cers w u extended by the asMclaUoa from September, 1M«. to ScpU. leiO. Offlcera are H n n e r M artin, Pocatello, chairman; L. B. Allison. Olenna yeirj-, vice chairm an, and George W. W arren, Montpelier, aecretary-treMurer.

B, H. Nokea and A. P. Peay, boUi of PoMtello, were elected directors.

Land Sales Slated For 2 Area Cities

BOISE, Feb. 4 W >-Edw ard Woox- Jej-. tt»t« Jand depvUncnt commit- •loner, said today u gtat* land sale* will be eooduct«d d tirlng Feb* ruary.

Sales to be held laclude: Shoahone, 23, 130 acres, and Tw in Falls,

■ Feb. 34, ISO acrea.

■ALEB^fEx' n i ,S UBOISE, Feb. 4 M V-Flve tmila of

a ta te land sold a t a sale yesterday brought t3I,#3J, W w aM Woorley, ■tate land ccRunluloner, announced.

T he land Is located sou theast of Boise near Orehnrd.

T he largest unit, cow lstln* of 330 • e r a , was <oId for «5M0. I t was appraised a t Two 160-acreun its sold fo r M.OOO cach. two other 100-acre ualta sold fo r *4.835 and •4,100.

Uy PETEll EDSOh- WASHINOTON (NEA) - Elder

itate.m an Bernard M. Bamcli, In nls laxt two appearnnccs before con- grfMloiiol

TtUt Edson

_____ ON T RIPHBYBORN, Feb. 4 -M r. and Mrs.

H ugh Oheney left Sundaj- for a two.week Ylslt wlUj reloUvcs In A rijona and California.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMEN're

ju to i .s tc o roR r so v iN o IN Tiir. puodate" cou'kT Of nviN

rALUi COUKTT. STATE 0? IDAHO IN THE JIATTER OF T lir ESTATE OK DELLE LYNCH 8MITI kno>B u DELLE L. SMITH. ru n s ta l 10 IB crdn- of Mid C«urL

n>d« Ml th> 2nd d>r of y'thru.rr. in*.Uif IKh (Uy of Tfbruirr. lS4t at tin

^ of «ld d*7, « th . Co«« of U>« .lid 4, u ,. Courtof T-ln Cotir

• U or Idtko. hu h.--d p:.c« -

How* l< ■OPolnM u"ij

mlttecfl, h u made s u tc m e n u t h a t must have .scarr<l the nightih lrts off all th e angels of peace In heaven.

In spite of hlJi avowal "I do not believe tha t we

going to u.'e guns o r Hint vc are going to war." everything he nays adds up to pre- peredneis for anoUier w nr._

Coupled wlUi Bome of the’ oThcr :hlng.i that have bfen ttalng on oround h e re -l ik r the recojnmenda- lons from President Trum an's com-

mLislona on bulldln* up air power and establishing u n ltrraa l military .ra ln ln g -th e outlook Is pw.lUvely frightening, B ut If tha t's the way things are going. It's Just as well a know about them and prepare :or Uiem.

Laat October, Baruch tesUfled be- ore Sen. Owen Dreu-iter‘» war In- ■eetlgaUng committee on mobllltn. Jon plans. He pre.^enled a l7>polnt program lor economic, mllltur «na spiritual preporedncis. I t provided for work-or-flght compulsory »erV' lee, an M-day Industrial moblllia- tlon plan, taking un fair proflla out of war. stockpiling. Intensified «1- enUflc research and Intelligence w rk . deeentrallzAtlon of clile.v wid th e building of underground war plants.

Baruch properly qualified theie Id eu by aaylng. "If thejc things ore

. . . Uiey will help prevent H e exprewed high hope.i for

the United Nfttlonn os Uie instru­m ent through which jiesce might be a ttained. ulUmately. Dut he r.ald tha t, un til Uie becomes effec- Uve, the u . 8 . should n e t drift along wlthmit a plan for total, im­mediate defense.

Baruch made no estim ate of what a ll Uils would cost. Obviously. It would be many billions. B u t If this Isn t quite scary enough for you, add ~ i a load of his new Ideas.

In his testimony before the . . . . a te foreign relations committee, where he endorsed the objectives of the M arshall plan. Uarueh spelled out an 11-polnt, two-year program of h u own for pu tting -the rountry

what, to many e^rs. may sound

l»iod ftbrutrr 1.MAI

PgW biir.k, <.11. 11 .11

I of Ui«uld D«Uf Lr«h S»d!Ui. kna-n u H«ll. L. BmlU,. d»- for hMMsc Oi. >ppli<MU<in of

nllh. for Ihr lutiinc* lo hlir of Ailmlnlitrttion with WII

K«n ind »h«r» •wr wn-on lnl»r- ............. . c.nUit th« Mm*.

^ u c n o N s .W atch this column daily for news of Maglo Valleys farm aucUons and for the date their listings w ri appear In Uie Tlmes-News. Check Uielr ads for locaUon and all neco«*ry InformaUon.

FEBnUARY 5Oiear Peterson

Advtrtlsement, Feb. X-4 3. S. 4i D. C. KennUon, A aetloneen

FEBRUARY 5 B. W. Nelson

AdTertisemeat Feb. J - i Harvey C. lT er»n. Auetloneer

FEBRUARY 5II. C. Steelimlth

Adrerll.«ment Feb. :-3 nopkJns A Ilarroei), Atielloneers

FEBRUARY G.’ilarlla Rtink*

Ad«-frtlJcinent. Feb. 4-S IlBUenbeck A Hollenbeck, Aocta.

FEBKIJARY 9Leo Naneola*

AdvertUetnfjil. Feb. 6-7 Uopkln* 1 Harmon, A netloneen

FEBRUARY 10Bay WUklnson

AdTertlseneat Feb. I nopklns A Ilaraon , AtieUoneen

FEBRUARY 10l> W. Sisson

AdverlUeaent, Feb. I ' Hollenbeck A HoUenbeek. Aoets.

FEBRUARY 11w . t Saekett

^T trtlsem ea l, Feb. 8A HoUenbeek. AncU.

FEBRUARY 11t a d Jolm Moor*

Feb. fl-io H»pklna A H araaB. A ocUoaeen

FEBRUARY 12C0Bm0Blt7

Farm tSMehbutr AaeUoa RhU, taotiff

B o p k tu * a a n a a a . A aeU oaaen

F E B R U A B Y 1 7Hay Btaehart

HMfcni.dc ii

AUTO nnd TRUCKGLASS

SASH GLASSWE ALSO HAVE single and double eU^ngth saah. . . Crystal Sheet Glass for desks or Uble to p i

BENTON'SGLASS & RADIATOR

t29 Sad Ave. E. Phone 4M-W

100 per cent renU nented........oniy. Not for iw In time of war. like hl.i first 17 polnu. For u.ie now.

Price cutbacks »nd freezes. Wage sUbllltaUon. A longer work week. ConUnued rent controls. No U j cuts, save tlwough a return to w artime ojnorlliatlon. Tills would be offset, however, by restoring a t least 60 per cent of Ihe exceis profits tax. Pofitponement of public worka e*» cept on schools, hospitals and hous­ing.

To top thU off, Danich prxiposed setting up a •'recovery adm ln lstra-

bolh foreign aiul domes­tic economy, subject only to control by the President and secretary of slate. In effect, this new adm inis­tra to r would ippear to be p retty much of a second President, a po­tential man on horseback and dictator.

A.? If this weren't enough. Baruch ren propowd that the U. 8 . acquire

Joint military bases overseas, with :he U. 8. and Murshnll plan coun­tries making mutual deferue pact»— guaranteeing to go to w ar in ci of aggrtaslon by another power.

Many Europein countries m ay be rxpected to want no p a rt of th is a tte r . Tliey will consider I t a m eas­ure to drag than Into a possible war between the U. 5. and Soviet Ru.wla. P lenty of Americans won’t be h a v ­ing any of this, elUier.

B ut wait unUl Uenry Wallace and Uie Moscow radio get hold of lu They won’t have to strain very hard to make out that these Barucli plans —all 29 points of them—are vicious warraongerlng.

AU the quallflcatlotu of B aruch’s sU t«ncn ts to Uie senatorii will be overlooked. Baruch believes th a t th is iwld and re.wlute action will beat back the clawing fears of Inflation

home, and magically lift the fear of another war from U>o world's ilioulders.

If It will do U>at. okay. B ut If Dr. Banich's dUgnosls Is correct, the world Is a lot sicker Uian m ost peo- )le have reallwd. And they will mvc to swallow awfully ha rd to get

his prescrlpUon down.If Harry Truman h id suggested

U:lB program. Republicans and busl- ness generally would accuse him of playing pollUcs, wanUng to be a dictator end run a planned econ­omy. Since It Is Baruch who la m ak­ing proposal far more drasUo than tho President proposed In his recent message to congress, alt anyone can ilo Is bow three times, touch fore- hend to the ground and say, “Allah has spoken.”

minerals tn d an "Increasingly sh o rt supply’ of Dietallurglcal coal for steel production.

Unless electric power ou tpu t ._ Increased, industrial expansion “will be seriously and irretrievably botUe- necked,“ Krug said. R ehabilitation and Irrigation of agricultural and grazing land Is no t keeping up with the rate of over-use, erc«lon and demands of an Increased populaUon, he said.

country must stockpile and develop substitutes for w ar-depleted strategic and crlUcal materials be­cause Id an emergency Uiere will not be enough Ume, he aald.

I t must also plan now for the needs of a populaUon Utat will rise to 147,000,000 In IBM. 155.000.- 000 In IMO and perhaps IM.000,000 In IDOO.

On oil, Krug fiald the nation hi no reserve capacity of ’'any sig­nificance." Furthermore, there has been a “sharp falling o f f In the average site of new fields. T here must be not only Increased discov­ery but aLvj sj-nUietle producUon, more Imports, more secondary re- coveo’ and subsUtutlon of w ater power to run Indu-itrlal plants.

Krug /.aid the "easlly-diseovcred mineral deposits now are being ex- jilolted or have been exJiausted.’ There are Immen.ie knotfn deposits of medium and low-grades ores th a t a n be substituted for critical and itrategle minerals. Dut s'here Indus- ry can find no "early reM rd ," the

governmcni must set up the pilot planU and develop processing m e th ­ods. he said.

In this connection, there Is need ir '•far more extensive research’

in the preparation of low-grade coa for industrial use. he said,

Tlie over-all encrty output m ust be expanded "rapidly.” While there is enough coal, oil shale and w ater resources to last "hundreds of years," there Is need for capital In­vestment to tap these f>ouree.i.

T he electric power situation will be ".lerlouV for teveral more >'earn because of the steel shortage and •’curUlled" federal programs for dam construction, he aald. B ut de­mand requires a 37 per cent In ­crease over Ill<8 cspacliy, by 1053. he Mid.

Cropland reserveiv—areas which w be Irrigated or drained or o the r­

wise brought into use a t low cMt— will be absorbed by an expected 10,- 000,000 Increase in popuInUon by moo. Ttppsoll ts belnjf lost a t the ra te of 500,000 acres a year. K rug Mid by conipnrlion a "puny” 71,000 acres of irrlgaicd land will be opened for farming In 10<8.

The rehabllltntlon of 200,000,000 acres of grazing lands m ust be "ac- celernted far beyond Uie present r a l e " - 1 .000J» 0 acres a y e a r - I n order to meet •‘minimum" require­ments of meat, JeaUier and tooL

Europe Needy Will Consume Excess Spuds

WASHINOTON. Fe*. 4 tUJD — Hungry Europeans will eat million bushels of V. B. inU toes Uils winter and spring.

T he potatoes were purchased by the U. 6. govceniment a t prices averaging jliO a bushel to support producer prices In thU country. Since they can’t be rc.iold to Amer­ican consumers Trtthout driving prices doB-n again, (iie potatoes are being shipped abroad under the for­eign relief program.

The state deparunent has _ nounced Uiat It Is taking 10 »hlp~ loads, or about 3J37.000 hwJiels. off the agriculture departmem'a hancl.i for shipment to Italy and France, ’riie army previowly took 407,000 busheh for norUiem Europe,

The a g r i c u l t u r e department. whlcJi already has disposed of tome poutoes Uirough domestic Indus- U-lal channels, gtlll has more than 3.000,000 bushels on h an d -a n d Is stlU buying more. Department of- flclal.n said the anny had agreed to take several million bushels of addl-

Limit ExtendedWASraNOTON, Feb. 4 W >-

Uon told R epresenuure Sanbora. R , I d ^ today O u t the 30,000 pound carload limit for Spanish onion* has been e*t«nded until June 30. I t was to have e x p l ^ Jan. 31.

JERO.ME MAN DIBECTOR BOISE, Feb. 4 O. Batt,

Caldwell, was reelected president o f Uie Idaho StaU Life Insurance company a t Its annual meeting here Tuesday. Direeiofa elected Included H . L. n ils , Jerome.

WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-

WUknt O U>d-AaJ rn H Jtap Oat U M b iU K«ab| Raria' to C«

Tb* llTtr tbotild pottf svt alonR 3 plnli of >tl« luin Uta you^wtU mrr lUr. U UiU ill* 1j sot Somai Irmir, not loo-i tUT nol

tional poutoes, if they remain plus.

Lost year Uie V. B. ahlpped about 10,0000)0 busheU of prtce-support potatoes abroad.

California VisitorsDECLO, Feb. +—M n, Q m er SUn-

sky and son, Iran , California, are TlslUng a t the bome of her mother, M n. Julia Ballard, and her broUier, Vosco Parke.

Ur». Charles Behr has been called to BanU Crus, C alif, by Uie deiUi

of her stepfather,'W U llam U P ln e . ' U r. LaPlne lived in Declo f o r » num­ber of y ean .

CASTLEFOIIO VlfilTOBS CAOTLCTORD, Feb. 4—Mr. and

Mrs. Leo se n ften and daughter. Colfa*. Wash-, vtalted last week wlUi Mr. and M n . nen ry Benften.

CU Um u up TCW itoi■up«u<l. Yra lU Kur,lo«k« puBk.

It u ln thoM tJli, mil» Cuut-t UtU«Urw mill lo r« Um 2 plBU bU* (lo»-|fl| Irxir lo IB*i« TDtl r>d ~un u d Ub ** r..t ■ todtr. tsan in lA m klaibU. now r i^ . Mk tor Ctrur’i Uuu U tk IVU. SS( u aay dnitnorh

P U B L IC S A L EI will sell file following property at public auction at my place; 3 miles north and 1>4 miles cast of Jerome.

T H U R S D A YFEB. 5 - I P. M.

VISITINQ FRIE?a>S HAZEXTON, Feb. 3 -M r. and Mrs.

Ous Rice. Fallon. N ev, have been vlslUng friends and relatives hero rollowlng Uielr marriage In Elko,

H EAR D ROOFING and

INSULATION CO.m Third A ft So,

A L L TYPES of ROOFING

ROCK WOOL INSULATION

O.P.s. Frozen Food Lockers

COMPLETE PROCESSING

NEW WAXING METHOD

A Few New Steel Lockers Available

Meat Rationing Is Possible R ent Vour Locker Now!

347 Main East

R U P T U R E D ?Correct fitting by an Akron- trained expert assures you ofcomfort and satisfaction.

Lady Attendant for Women

PRIVATE FITTING ROOM

SAV-MOR DRUG

FARM M ACHINERY

VAC Case Tractor Cose 16” ilttRf-oR Plow for

Tractor Tractor 4*row Cultivator Tractor Field Renovator • Tractor Bean Cutler, new Oliver 2-way 16" Plow McCormiek-Deering 5*

Mower 2-Scction Oliver Harrow McCormlci£-DeerinK Dump

RakeRubber Tired Wajfon, 32.tC

TiresRubber Tired Wobor,

600x16 Tire.s Moline Superior Grain Drill Beet & Bean CulUvalor, 4-

row with attachments. John Deere Spud cultivator John Deere Side Delivery

Rake DiscWalking Plow FloatTwo Wheel Trailer DerrickCyclone Weedcr

HORSESTeam Bay Horses

P O U L T R Y

2 Dozen Whitc-Rock Chickens

MISCELLANEOUS2 H or Houses Ncck Yoke, Single Trees,

etc..2U Rifle 2 Set-s Harncs.s

HOUSEHOLDGOODS

WaahlnfT Machine Three-quarter Bed, SprlngB

nnd Mattress

TERMS CASH

W a y n e S i d w e l lOscar Klaas, Auctioneer John Darnall, Clerk

~tlie nm 1948

P O W T M CA F IN E M U M ADE EVEN W INERI

P U B L I C S A L EHaving rented my farm I will sell the following at public auc- tion at the farm located 3 miles south, l‘i west of Jerome or 1 mile north, 1 west Canyonside schoolhouse on

F R I D A Y , F E B . 6starting at 12:30

MachineryJohn Deere tractor, excellent condltlpif John Deere 2-way hnnR-on plow Cultivalor for bcnn.s nnd i>pud.s, complete

l-Sectlon steel harrow Tandem disc, nearly new SlcCormick Deerinjr tractor manure

spreader on rubber, nearly new. New Idea side delivery rake AC combinePick-up John Deere hay chopper Manure loader for tractor Power buck rake 7*Fool tractor mower Iron Age hinglc row spud planter Rubber tired wagon nnd rack Phosphate drill, nearly new Concrete mixer ^ronado power sep.irator DeLaval mllkinc machine 14 Rolls 36-lncli wire 37 Steel posts 65 12 ft. panels

Lunch Served on Grounds

ii-TON INTERNATIONALPICK - U P TRUCK

In Excellent Condition

20 TO N S CHOPPED H A Y

LivestockBrown Swiss cow, freshen with 2nd calf

soon.Brown Swiss heifer milking with 2nd

calf.Brown Swiss heifer, milking with 2nd

calf.Jersey cow, 3 years old, milking. 4 gals. Jersey cow, freshen py date of sale Jersey cow, heavy springer Guernsey heifer, springer, first calf Guernsey holfer, yearling S Brown Swiss heifer calves 2 Brown Swiss bull calves

TER5IS: CASH

M A R T I N R E I N K E o .,„r. Hollenbeck & Hollenbeck, Auctioneers R uth . Cunnington, Clerk

A PrpdMit tj GntTdt fiHtn

G M ^ p d m - M a t i c D r i v e o p t i o n a l o n a ll m o d e l s !

Fortm ott aoooR tbu« a d v u c e a e a u It tha tr e a t Geoaral Moian H rdn -M ttie O riv t— cow oSertd i i oKjooal tqu ipneo i oo *11 Pootitc c*r». PoBiiat li tb i low cit'pric td car la tho world to prorJdt tU s grt«t

Coupltd with ih lt g r u t •agloeedog triumph i i • u riid o i InsprtmrDcst lo beauty tod luxury. Nfw exterior »marta«M exteadf Iram the oew n d J tto r grill* to the n r tan l ln ed rear

exp«nly bicaded to «ehirr« o«w ai

Riahoiaojr—ftsd * a tdtoh dm o< chroi mouIcDag add( « deft touch o l ao d e rs itr . Englo* aad chaitit b a re b««a refiood w b e rm r potiibU —but they rtm aJn. b a ilo llr . the *anie

lyooajTabui fa ib« #utoraofi»-o fndu itrr with goodseit tad dtpeedtbllity,T Jtr# M tntay moft tbingi we co«ld tell >t»u about ib i Bcw PoQtiac, {or tb«r« ar« co u a tlu i itaprovem.ati which add to in traditJoail quality and »*lut. Dut we fe«l that, fo r thoi* wbo Jncv Pooilac, we ae«d ooly la y ——b i n Ii, by (ar, the m oil ht*atUml Pootiac e rer built- b e r o li tb* moit Uxnritm, Pontiac ever built ~ b tr« ii the aw dtptndM , Poatiac e re r built

V e wlah only to add tb u It If b c r e - ^ n dliplay le our (howroom—and that you are moit cordially iarlted to tee aod io ip e a It.

B A R N A R D A U T O C O M P A N Y203-223 SECOND AVENUE EAST t w in f a l l s , IDAHO

' V,'EDNESDAy, FEBRUARY 4.1018 TIM ES-NEW S, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO

l ! Leaders of BPW Meet With Local

Group at DinnerT he tU t« prtdden t o l the Bua-

lne*» »nd PnrftMlonaJ Women, tin . r ra n k le AlworUi. and the dlitrtct president. M n . Lucille Hardta*. B urlcr. w fre prtacnt a t the r f w l i f business and dinner meetlnf or the local organlzallon Monil»y erniln*.

O the r p iesta were Dr. and Mr». Tyler. Ooodlng. Dr. T)ler. director or th e s u te tubrrculosls hosplUl i t Ooodlng. dracHbed the hoaplUt *nd showed lan tern slides of the trea t­m ent of patlenta. He w m Intro­duced by Dorothy CoUsrd. proeram cto lrm an .

Mrs. U srdln« spoke on the district nieetlnK w hich wlU be held In Good­ing. the Btftt« convention to be held

S un Valley in June and the n a ­tional (invention vhlch Is sclirduled for Ju ly a t F o rt Worth. Tex.

Mr.v Alworth c h o « the meettn* for hpr annual officlsl-vl.ilt to the T a in FaJU organlraUon. Also pres­ent were Mrs. Vivian Nye. Mr*. Illldesard Walker. Mr.i. Mable Oruel and Mrs. O racc Parsons.

T h e meeting opened w ith Invo- cstJon by th e Re\-. E. Leslie noils. Mm. M arlon Dunn, a lons-U m e member who la leaving won for Call- fom ln. was presented a gift by the president. Fannie Amej-,

Filer AH , PEO Plans 'Bil' Party

FIL E n, Feb. 4—Plans for a "DU" party were made by the Filer cltap- (er AH of the PEO sisterhood a t a lunchcon tneclliif: Monday »t the home of M rs. E. E. Hang with Mrs. L«rcns Schaefer na aw litan t hostess.

T lie party will be held a t 7 pjn . Friday u t Uic home of Mr. and Mrs. Itiy L. S lirnrcr. Twin Falla. Each member b rcfiuesled Ui bring table ser^'lce.

Folloft-ms the meeting two con- t«t.-s provided en lfrtalnm ent with pritcs BOlnK 10 Mrs. A. F . Wyllc. Mr.i. Riisiell Hall. Mrs. L W. Haw­kins nnd M n . I. A. Anderson.

>(■ * *

Baptist CircleFILER. Feb. 4—Tho Baptist Mis­

sion circle m et recently with Mrs. nuw ell Jesr.cr. Mrs. Qlcnn Reed and Mr*. Ivnn J c « e r were o-'-AlsUini hoale.ves. Mrs. J . M. Dunlay p ro jram chairm an. The devotlonala

c led by Mr*. J . C. Mujigrave.

!► Play ContractH L E R. Feb. 4 -M rs . O. J . Clillds

, enli'rtalned her conlract bridge club . Tl)Ur»day a t a 1:30 pm . d ru e r t

luncheon. Bud vase.i of talisman ro .'jc fl centered th e refreshment tables.

Marian Martin Pattern

f * *

CalendarAmigo Star club will m ee;, with

Mrs. Frank Jl. Brown a t 8 p.m. Thursday.

V V VR ojal Neighbors of America will

meet In rejulnr fesjlon a t 8 p. Friday a t the lOOF hall.

* * V-Tlie Lullieran Women’s Mission*

nry le.igue of Immanuel LuUienin church will jnert a t 2 p.m. TJiurj-

ay a t the church.* * *

Tlie Wljemaii Circle of the BaptU tMl.\ilonivry society will m eet a t 2 p. m. Thursday a t the home of Mrs. Stanley Walters.

» # ¥FILER. Ffb. ♦—Tlie WSCS •.vjll re; Tliur.vlay afternoon a t the

Melhodbt church. Mrs. H urrlc it McDcrmld li progriun chairm an.

¥ ¥ *

Make RecordsThe making of phonograph

recordlnjr.' u w the enterta inm ent featuro whrn Mr. and Mrs. Dlnlne Bird enierialned SQUllla club mem­bers and Uielr hiubands Saturday evening a t a pinochle party.

Prizes were wan by Mr. and Mrs. Elton Wllsnn. Mr. and Mr.v Bob Lclchllter. Mrs- Paul Miller. Mrs. Eldred Raylor and E1U* Fuller. Re- fre.'hmcnu were sers’cd by the hostess a t the clo.^e of the evening.

Wendell WardWE.*JDELL, Feb. 4 — Tlie P rie st­

hood and Relief socjety members of th e Wendell ward held th e ir regular meeting a t a p.m. Mond-iy wltli Bishop Ray DUon conducting.

Alter tli'c exerclics the Relief ■lely ndjoumfd lo lUi room where

the minutes of tlie la it meeting were read by the fecretar^-. Mrs. Bei.<le Kaiscns nnd Mrs. Mar>- L.mcaslcr r « ’leivr<i the theoloty Iwwn.

* * *

Beehive PartyHEYBURN, Ffb, 4 -M rs. Hugh

Chenej- entertained a group of 13 from her Beehive cla.-s a t a party I iu t week, Onmes and rrfreilm ients were enjoyed.

Washington PTA Board Urged to Vote for Bond

At a meeUng Tuesday afU rnoca a t the Woshlngton aehool, all memben of the WaJhlngtoo.PTA executive board were urged lo vote fo r the bond Uiue on Feb. 30 when the purchase of a new high school site come* lb ballot.

Attending the meeting were Mrs. Max Lloyd, president: Mr*. H. A. Pij-nter, vice prcildent; Mra. I. M. Jackson, seeretar)-, Mrs, Ernestine Beeson, fifth grade rtxanmoUjer chairm an: Mrs. C. L. K illlnger. chalr» man le r (he polio drive: Mra, Charle* Pullman, study group chairman; Mrs. C, D. Prior, chairman of th e community chest fund, and M rs. C, M. Convay. chairman of youth recreation,

Mrs. ^ lo r and M n. Conway gave reports, and Mrs. C. L. KUllnger an ­nounced that the W aslilngton school PTA group raised *110.10 for the polio fund.

The group voted to send teacher's. relief packet to Europe through the Red Cross, and there K'as B dlscuulon of the need for lunds for the presidential expense a t the state convention, for Un teacher*’ relief luad and for the school records.

I t was announced th a t Uie ne.\t regular PTA meeting wUl be a t 8 jjn . Monday. All parents and e.'.pe- :lally fatliers are urged to a ttend .he Important buslneu meeting nnd entertaining program whlcli will be a panel dlscaulon by Wa.%hlngton school fathers.

PTA's Council Endorses Bond

The Ttt'in Falls council of th# PTA has officially endorsed the pur­chasing of land for a new high school site, the Issue to be voted upon a t the Feb. :o bond election. The endorr^meni was made a t the meeting of the group Monday evi ■ig a t the Idaho Power rooms,

Mrs. Ralph Elliott, pre.^ldent, C( ducted Uie meeting. Mrs. R. J. Hawr.n and Mrs. Lionel Dean dls* cuf.ed plans for tiie Rtale eonven- Uon to be held here April 23 and 33.

Reports were given by a ll local presidents, who announced that 18i38 lunches were served during the month of Jruiuary In all of the schools. Mr^. John Hayes gave a report on legislation.

The next meeting will bo March 1.

Reports Given Wolther League

Reports of the C hristian growth committee, the Ixjokslore director, the irei.'urer and the r.ecretary were Klven a t Uie monthly m eeting of the Waltlicr league Monday evening It the Memorial LuUicran school.

M artin Helnlcke opened the meet­ing wlUi prayer and K enneth Barth, president, conducted the buslne.vi.

Tlie recreation und en tertainm ent committee for March Includes Glenn TJiaele, clialrnian. Jacquellnc Klglit, Wilma Thleme ond Nell Stlege- meler.

J decided th a t the league will give a play with Ruth Becher director.

After the bujlnerj meeting the group adjourned to tlie Louis Relnke home for a skating party . A chill supper was sen ’ed after skating.

* * *

Bridal FeteCASTLEFORD, Feb. *—M r and

Mrs. Clinton Quigley, recen t bride and bridegroom, were Jionored last week with a surprUe shower by a group of friends neighbors.

Games were played wltli Mrs, Earl Hudson winning the prlr<. To con­clude tho evening's acUvltles the couple opened their gifts.

* ¥ ¥

Kardo WinnersGLENNS FERRY. Feb. 4 -W ln - ers In the K ardo club p a rly were

Mr*. Miles Miller. Mrs. Lee Me- Anulty and Mrs. E. E. H lbbcrd. The hoste.u was M n . J . L. Sum ner.

Valentines Are Decoration for

Bridal ShowerA red and white ralenU oe theme

was followed In the decorations a t a bridal shower given Monday In honor of bride-elect M arUn Tcasley by Mrs. Tim Kenney a t her home a t 381 W alnut itrvet.

Red camaUons and candles o roa . mented the sen ing table, which was centered with a g n u p of small dolls arranged lo represent a bridal pro­cession.- The dolls were labeled with the names of the bride-elect and her bridesmaids. Mrs. Donald

P A G B H E m

Kottraba will be h e r m atron of honor, and Naomi K lrkm an and BeUy Lu Bailey wiU be brldeamalda.

M lu Teasley. who wUl become the bride of Victor Oraybeal on St. Valentine’* day, opened her glfLi be­fore the fireplace. Oamea wer< played with high p rlie a t “he an s ' going to Miss Klrkman,

Those attending wer« Mrs. Vem Teasley, Mr*. L. O. Nelson, Bulil, Mr*. Kottraba. Mr*. Edna Lalng, Miss Klrkman. .Mls-t Bailey. Mrs. P. L. LawTence, Mrs. A rt Cannon, Mrs. Dean Vickers, Jean Brown. Kimberly. Belly H erbst, Mrs. C. O. Wyllle. Betty HUIegas and Ruby Carlton.

* ¥ ¥

Decio Daughter Feted at Party

DECLO. Feb. 4 -M rs . W ayne O. Lewis enlerlalned a t a birthday parly Friday In honor of her daughter. Margaret, on the occa­sion of h e r ninth birthday ann i­versary.

Games were played under U ie’di­rection of DoroUiy Rae Lewis. Chicken dinner was served a t a table ccnterrd with Uie two-llcr birthday cake which was decorated In pink and green.

OuejU a t the affair were Bethea Matthews. Lois ChrliK nsen, WUma Bunn. Carlo Sparrow. Carol Turner. Ronald Osterhoui, DJci: B Jair. OJfJJ Loveland, Gary' Sclimldt, Kelly Wells. Mcrilyn Alien, Maurice D ar- rlngton and the gue.it of honor, who opened his presents o fte r dinner.

¥ ¥ ¥

Buhl Fetfes .BUHL. Ffb, 4 -S everaI BuW

cluhs enjoyed gatherings recently.The Sunday Night club met a t the

home of Mrs, H arriett Lewis. Mrs. Calhrine .Miller played high for women and S.iul Moore, high lor

Mr. and Mrs. H, A, Meeks cnU r- talned the Saturday NiRhl D inner club. Mrs. P . F AUiquist and Fred Hartlng held the high scores, '

The Monday club m e t w ith Mrs. Luke Sonners wlU> high prUes going to Grace French and second high to Mrs. Grace Wegener.

Drive for New Members Begun by Beta Gamma

Teams for a membership drive were aelected by the Bet* Gamma girls It a meeting Tuesday n igh t a t the YWCA rooms. Betty Punk U eapuin of the beta team and Jeanett« Slelnhauer of the gamma team.

II was decided th a t the loaln# team will enU rtaln the winning team a t a party March IB, To b« scored as a new member a girl must declare her membenhlp. attend the party Feb. 17, the meeting on March 3 and the banquet on March B.

Mlsa Funk and Edith LoFontalne gave the committees report — —v February party. U will be a progressive dinner party with Ihe first coune In a Lincoln Lheme served a t 1 p jn . a t th e home of MUs Btelnhauer. 406 Third tlreet north. The m ain course will be a t Melba Holt's home and will be In a valentine theme. Mrs. R. L. Reed will entertain a t the deasert course, which will be In a W ashington theme.

The gu« t speaker for the nlng. M n. H. L. D essenbuner,Introduced by Margie Albee. She reviewed the book. "M am a's Bank Account.’

The president. Miss Holt, ducted the business and read a let­te r fra n Carol B ro w , are* project chairman, on "Know "iTour North-

Reports were given by the treas- :er, Dorothy Van Valkenburg, and

by the w»ys and m eans committee.Mbs Sleinhauer was appointed chalnnan and Ruth Stelnhoff, co- chairman. for the world-wide ob> servance day banquet on M arch 9.Mrs. R. O. McCall. Miss Van Val- kenburg and Betiy Lou Powell were named for the finance committee.This cocnmltlee will purchose Emily Post's "Blue Book of Etiquette" for study lessons.

March 2 wlU be the dat« for nomination of new officers, Joan LeClalr, Beverly Ollnson attd MLu Albee were appointed on the nomi­nating committee. Tlie president told the group about the Young Ma-

ira of llie YWCA, an organisation young married women.

Local Musician Receives Honor

Corey PinochleCAr e ’, Feb. 4 - Mrs. Alex Al-

breihscn entertained a t two tables of pinochle recently. High score p rlic was won by Mrs. W. C. Eld- redge, and Mrs. Lyndon Adamson won low prize. O ther guests were Mrs, Alfred Billingsley, Mrs. Lavor Contes. Mts, Dana Mea.-icnger. Mrs. Irvin Spencer and Mrs. Lavor Justesen.

"Fires’ id'e Chat"FILER. Feb. 4 -M r» . D an DavU

•as hwte.'s Sunday evening to 37 members of the ’'Fireside C h a f a t tho Filer LDS church.

-Mrs. M- A. Condle and daughter, Ivj'. Twin Falls were special guests.

H e a r t b u r n

Mr*. Nellie .Oslrwn, well-known local music Instnictor, received notice Monday th a t ahe haa been elected to membership In the Na- Uonal AssoclsUon of Teachers of Singing, w ith headquarters In New York.

The dlstlncUon of membership In the national organlutlon has been awarded to only si* teachers In tho sU t« of Idaho. Mrs, O. P. Duvall, TV-ln Falls, Is also a member.

¥ ¥ ¥

Unity ShowerXmiTY, Feb. 4 -M ri . Freda Kess­

ler and Mrs, Luella Kessler. Burley, were co-liodte.sses a t a mlscellanous ahower held In honor of Mrs. Nancy Kessler Bunn, who was married recently In ihe Balt Lake Clly LDS temple.

Mrs. Bunn, who formeriy lived In Pella, moved witli her parenl.s. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kes.iler, lo Nysta, Ore., a year ago.

Mrs. Condle apoke on "Making _ Succe.u of Life” and her daughter played sw eral accordion eolos.

Couples in Filer Give Card Fetes

FILER. Feb. 4 - a o T « r a l Filer couples en terta ined recenUy a t< ard portles fo r small satherlng t of their friends.

Saturday evening Mr. and Mra. R. W. Pierce gave a no-host dinner and card party for Mr. and Mrs. Merl L eonard. Mr. and Mrs. Jack lU msey a n d Mr. and M n. Don An- drew*. H aielton . Prl*e* went to Mr* Leonard a n d to Pierce,

Mr. and Mr*. Roy Grubb enter. Ulned Sunday evening for Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lux. Mr. and Mt*. WUIlam W liiers and Mr. and Mr*. Clayton Boyd, FoUowlng a social time the heslesa served refreshment*.

A no-ho«t dinner party was given Saturday evening by Mr. and Mrs. Hoy R eichert fo r the members o! tlielr pinochle club. Mr. and Mrs. Russel] H all were eue^ts.

The d inne r was sensed buffel style and acacia wn« used to decorate the rooms and <ju*rtei tables.

Jllgh score prlrea went to Mr*. Charles Z och and Fred Reichert. Low scores were held by Mrs. Flor­ence D uerlc and Charles Zach, Mrs, Reichert received the traveling prUe,

Mr. and Mrs. CecU Macaw were host* a t a pinochle party Saturday evening fo r Mr. and Mrs. Dale Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Allison. Mr. and Mrs, Lehm an Edwards. Mr, and Mra. G ilbert Sm ith and Mr. and Mrs. Dole Bcott. High scores were held by Mrs. Adams and Scott, and low prize was given to Mrs. Smith and Adams,

¥ ¥ ¥

Castleford SupperCASTLEFORD, Feb, 4 — Mr. and

Mrs. E arl Conrad, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Conrad and M r. and Mrs, Olen Mey­ers were hosts for a plnochle-supper party held recently a t the R. U Con­rad home.

Six tables were In play with high prizes going to Mrs. L. O, Conrad and G len Hill, low to Mrs. Geonre Bllck and Plow'd Bowers and travel­ing to M rs. Jo h n Bllck and Don

1 Reese.

Sponsor SaleF IL S l. Feb. 4 - O f n c m of th t

Filer Order of E u te m s t v TlQ spoDMr a nm una te sole Friday aad 6Aturd*y and a coofced-lood ta li Saturday a t th e Idaho Power eco* pany. Flier.

Members are asked to leave rva* mage contributions a t U u sc n r i 'i by Thuraday erenlng.

« « *

BookloreDECLO. Feb. « -T h e D edo Book*

lore club met recenUy a t the bom* of Mrs. Clifford Darrlngtoa.

Co-hostesse» wera M n . Vaaoe Parke and Mrs. BIO Mattiiewa. Altar a short buslnesi meeting Mra. John Reneher. Burley, reviewed the drama. 'T h e S ta te of the Union," - rccent PullU cr prise winner.

Next meeting of the club win be Feb. n a t the home of Mrs. Vasco Psrke.

¥ ¥ *

Bridge MeetingBUHL, Feb. 4 - T h e Friday Bridge

club was entertained la s t week a t the home of Mra. Saul Moore. Mrs. Jsy Tliomas was a guest. Blgti prif# went to Mrs. Moor* a sd teo-

■ a Mrs. Moss.

Hennei DIttrtu of KOKTHIT’

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our policy o f "n o cany-overs" means greater savings for you!

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a ^ i r e .w d u p - p a t l e n i 8258. W liat : aSfidornble little frock and Iwnnef,

all da intily ruffled—w hat a swagger llitle cnpc. Easy sewing for motherl

This p a tte rn gives perfect fit. Is ea»y to use. Complete, Illustrated sew c h a r t show.i j-ou every step.

Pu llem D2&8 comes In sliea 2, 4., Size fl, cnpe, l>; jTds. 64.1n.;

ffoek and bonnet, 3 yds. 35-ln.Send tw enty-five cenU In coins

. ^or ihls p a tte rn to Tlmea-News. pat- irm departm ent. Twin FalU. Ida.

• Pflnt plainly name, addreM, lone. sire und style number.

Now Is the tim e to sew for sprtngl FKteen cents more brings you the brand-new M arian M artin pattern book, c ram -fu ll of e iclttag spring fa.ihlona for ever^-onel P Iu» -a free pnllera p rin ted Inside the b o o k - two belU to give you th e new look. BetUr have th ls l

Tot&TeenShop120 :t(aln Avenae Ne.

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Tecn-Affc Dresses On Sale

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Boys’ Work Pants ...,51.00 Sizes 6 lo 16

Ski Sweaters ........... „$5.00Boys’ and Girls’ Snow Suita

PAGE EIGHT TIM ES-NEW S, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4,1948

S E V E N K N O C K O U T S F E A T U R E G O L D E N G L O V E S 2 5 - B O U T B I L L

Peek-a-Boo?’ ’ ’ Preston Heavy Gets Off Canvas To Kayo Oregon Foe in Thriller

Local Hockey Team Gets ContestPor th e f ln t H ire In the hliloo- hocktyplsylnj ffunlly a t EVeleth. ball *Ur. irtll be the goal tender.

iriU CO out tnm the * « * to p!»y ft oppcue an iW-Mr K w n Irom the h u been »1n-j« n e . hockey leasue there. terlne here,

T h a t wJU occur fW). 14 when k DfPiul, *ho form erly played « t The Twin PalU players have beensextet, coached by Arnold DtPaul, Uie Unlverilty of Illlnola. Vk1ll bo dfUlInu on Wllaon U ke and DePaulT « la r» iU high JKhool initruclor sUUonftl a l center on Uie local hopea to Introduce the game to theTfho I# • member of 4 famoiu sejtet. Bob Drips, high school foot- Ma«lo Valley la ter In tho teaaon.

W E N D E L L T O P S H A I L E YBruins Lose to Buhl; Pirates, Pilots Victors

O n th e

S p o r t F rontW it h

Yd Oldc Siwrt Scriim rr pkh Vm uji al ihf CoMcn Clotd loiimamrni <ini/ piiJ* 'em rfotin-riK^'f here:

Tho Bent*, filled rlRlil up lo their necki with boxing for th o f l r j l time In the history of the Mnelc Vallfy, really tnlaed the "Dcmp.viy-FlnK)" bran'l th a t was Uic night's flna le-the ht4»-ywclBl‘t bout betw een Dnle Panler. Prcilon, Ida., and Jack Diane. Eufiene, O re .. . . P a n tc r. down In tiie f irst round and out on h b feet a t the bell, showed tha t h e had the ilu tf of which chnmplona ore made by coming back In the necond to win

________________ _ on a technical knockoiit.YOSS’ nomlnaUotis:Tlio closalejl fljjhter — J a

Pentecost, the L cw lstouu . Moni. middleweight, who de feated Albion's Johnny Wright, a really fine blJfer . . . Penteewt dUplnycd the beat punch In the eaulUIower buslneia— A le/t hoot, somcthlnff ti:at no flgliier should try to av: I f he hasn 't a Rood one.

The most durable—M o* Falr- ehlfil, Buhl. U*hl hcavyvrelxht. who look nay MefUe's “ Sunday" punthe*—and they carried lots of

Cage Tourney Qiamps Battle David Cagers

T he hirsute House of David baj- kelljaU 'w lm ds will appear a t Uie Kimberly high tchool f>7n Thurs­day n la h t and don 't be surprised If they are handed a little surprise.

Kimberly Coach Paul McCloy an­nounced he had arranged for the powerful Saragc-McBrlde team of Wendell and Ooodlnj lo oppose tlie 'Whiskered boys In the main attrac­tion of the doubleheader th a t will bo played for tho benefit of Ute M arch of Dimes polio campaign.

T he Kimberly American Legion •will rponsor the game, McClo>- said, wlih the Legion courtm en lo fsee Miller Produce eooipany In Uie first battle a t 8 p. m.

Si g n s t i t i i c o n t h a c tP n rS B U n O H , Feb. 2 (.P,-Ven-

emble Honus Wagiier, laid up with a bad cold, neverthelew took time o u t thU week to tlgn his 37th Na- tJonal leamie contract and his 16th a s a coach lo r Ihe PltUburgh Pi* n le s .

- r i fh l I the b u tto n and back for more.

Clesneat one punch—T l ia t Uirown by Dale Patterson. OoodlnK. novl:e welterweight, to knock o u t Dnrrell Knapp. Ontario. Ore.

And the ancient word puddler’a pet peera of lone s ta n d in g —A ■ecend wbe has the auUaclty to dlmb Inlo a fighter’s c o rn e r wlth- eot carrylnc with him a rudl- raesUry knonltd te of boxing . . . The podgy one bos seen a t leait l«o boys loK, when th e y thould hare von eailly, through no faolt of anyone but the seconds.

AND TIIA Ta T lfA T F O R NOW, rxcept: Tlio old typewTltcr'a nomi­nation of the h a p p l» t gcxU In the arena-Y OSS himself, w ho for once la teeing tlie greatest f a n s In Uie world getting more th a n their money’s worth.

Magic Valley Prep Box ScoresnunL « . W S TALtH *

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READ TMES-NEW S W A N T ADS.

W A N T E DDEAD OR ALIVE

Horsea • Moles - Cow»□ Icb a t Prieet P a id

•For Prompt Plck>ap

CALL COLLECT 02SO-J}

PERCY GREENE TROUT FARA!

Scoring 13 twlnta In the final quatter. Coach Keith Judd 's Wendell Trojsns brought the w inning streak of Coach Jack Boden's Hailey Wo!' vcrtnes to an end by a 4M 0 aeon la it night. Carrol Kearley's goal la Uie last few seconds brought the Wendell victon-.

The Wendell Junior varsity won the preliminary. <1-31 v lth CulIN son of Wendell and Shaffer of Hailey both scoring 17 point*.

AnoUier upset was recorded when Hansen defeated M urtaugh, » -27.

overtime gome. T he score was 25 -a a t the end of th e regulation period.

Stella Johnson scored 17 pointss Hansen won the g irls ' gune, 36-

30. Sisters. D. and Q. Rose scored 0 and 8 polnt.f, respectively, for llan*

Meanwhile, th e Twin Falls Bruins fell before the Buhl Indians. 42- 32. after Uie Indians took a Jl-B lead In Uie f irs t qua rte r and ln>. crease<l the mnrgln up to the third qusrtef ir?icn tlw D ru tas ea~" '■ life witJi IS iw lnts.

Osterkamp scored U points Duhl Javeea won the prellmlnarj'.32-J7.

Docs Come BackThe ending o f iheir vlttory slresk

by Buhl lost week apparently failed lo perturb Coach George Hays' Ru­pert Pirates. They cam© back lost night with a 17-33 trium ph over ConcJj HowmU Stone's Oakley Hor­nets In which Olbson, th e Buc’s atar guard, rang up eight field goals and six free Uirowa for 23 polnu.

Tlie game was close fo r the first two quarters during w hich the B u u gained a 2S-31 lead b u t they In­creased their advantage to nhie paints In the th ird fram e and then In Uio final came ihrough wiUi 13 points to eight for the plucky Hor- neu.

Oakley won Uie Junior varsity preliminary. 32-30, b u t the But's’ Urigucn was the leading Korer, as usual, wlih 12 points. Taylor had 10 for Rupert.

Reaiklni Preai FiloUShoihone's Redskliu gave Glenni

Fern ''s Pilots a hard battle before succumbing, 13-37. a fte r being be- • Ind, 17-5, in the first frame.

Although Williams m ade 11 points, Shwlione lost the Junior varsity 3rellmlnar>- to the Pilots. «-21. floaglond had 11 points for the Junior Pilots.

Twelve free throws, six of them by Spires who made 10 points, gave Albion a 12-3i victory over Declo. Albion was trailing unUI the lo. t ■hree minutes of ihe game when D. Berg and Fries of Uie Declo team 'ouled out. allawlng Albion lo ring jp 10 polnls to seven for Dcclo In the last quarter.

Albion won the Junior varsity prc' llmlnary. 43-3<. Jonen had 11 points for Albion and Bosburg seven ' Declo.

Bliss Wln< in Last Q uarterB1L1.V Uftmng 23-13 a t Uio half,

ncored ID points to eight for King Hill In the Inst quarter and h eir game. 3B-20. Both teams made A field goals b u t Dll-u proved better it the free Uirow line.

Carol Thompson scored 11 point*IS the BlLu girls continued the ir winning streak wlU) a 23-20 vle- tor^‘ In the preliminary. Sundvall had 10 points for King Hill.

Maxwell’s IB points gave Coach Jack Martin's Ilngermnn Plm tes a33-31 victory over Eden. Eden hod a IS-H lead a t the hoU.

Green not only to«ed In the w in­ning ba-^ket but he scored 20 points as tho Eden Junior varsity won the prellmlnar>'. 20-31.

Haxellon W lnt a t WireConch DennU' Hatelton B.idgers

trailed, 30-27, bu t rang up 33 points In the final quarter to defeat Ace- qula, 10-3(1. Acequla made 15 field goals to 11 for Hazelton but the Badgers rang up 13 free Uirows. Brown had IB polnl.^ fo r Hazelton.

Budd's lS points helped Hazelton win Uie Junior varsity gome. 28-18. Dalsogllo had six for Acequla.

Gene W inn. Vaaeonrcr. W ash . Isn't playing p ttk -a -boo wlUi Ibe fan* a* the photograph tc tgesU . He's rraUy la trooble. J n ii having been knocked down by Larry GUe>, Jerome featherweight, bis

1 la tb* tir» ta

foUowlag a drawing fa r pairingsBy JIM QUIGLEY

Dale Pantcr, 101. Preston. Ida., last n igh t exploded a right hand In the face o f Jack B lane, 190-pounder from Eugene. O re , In the second round of the ir scheduled three rounder lo climax th e ccd of the first round of boxing in Uie Tlmes-News-Leglon third annual Golden G lona toizmamenl.

About 3.&00 persons In the Twin Palls high school caw Pantcr win by a technical knodcout a fte r SO sec­onds of the round liad expired. Pnnter came beck to win for he had taken a. nine-count In the f ln t

round and was obviously out on his I feet when the c o n s sounded.I Twenty b ouu in th e open and , novice class were fought In which sereo were won by th e knockout

.route. Of these th ree irere of Uie technical variety.

Tbrc« DefacdU ■ Three oUicr bouU w ert won by defaults, and th e n igh t's entertain­ment Included rive bouts la the nib-noTloe dasa.

Six of the m a tches »e re woo by Magic Valley en tran ts . O f Uiese rep- resenUUves f r r o Twin PaUs a n d j Ooodlne won tw o. while Jerome and Kimberly each w-on one.

neven of the c o n le its were axui by boys it

Tonight’s Golden Gloves Bill

Harry Bell, defense a ta r of the New Haven lUimblers of the Amer* lean Hockey league, drives midget nulo racing cars In the off-season and was the Saskatchewan cham ­pion In 1&13-13.

Double Win Gained by Savage-McBride Quint

JEROME, Feb. 1 — A double win was chalked up here la s t n lghl when the Bavage-McBrlde team of Gooding and Wendell defeated both Uie Flier M erchanta and (he Twin Falls Setfs in (he Jerom e Jaycees outlaw basketball tournam ent.

Tho Oooding-Wendell team

TabulationsTWIN KALLH HEI.rS t l . IlETDtr

ver Filer &3-33 and the Selfs 60-10.■The Selfs split a doublchcadcr,

losing t« Sava^c-McBrldcs and winning over the H eybum M-Men. The Selfs-M-Men score was 51-32.

In Uie final round j of the Ojkley Whlteley Spuds-M urU ugh Phillips CC game the Oakley team sunk c bo-skel th a t gave them a 23-27 wli uvcr Uie .Murtaugli team In the cvc- nlng'.i Ia.^H•st cage game.

Toeaday*! Scores T » ln Falls Selfs 51. Heybum !!•

Men 33.B;»vage-McBride 53, Pller Mer­

chants 32.Oukley Whleley Spuds 23. Mur-

. . . . . laugh Phlllliw GO. 27. if ' . i Jerome Jayeces 35. Independent ». M.Mrn J. 3J_

I. Mir . I

te (I ptiUuniuili I S o|lI»,r,r. t

DUnLKT JATCRFW « . SIIOSIKISE RCUMKINK S(

Ilullrr f t (I pr'ijbo*W> fc (I I

• 1( 1 S4t*iT>MrUrU« :t. 5<lri> S4>acr-»<Uik)« 11.

BAVACt-UrnniDB U. FtLEK MERCHANTS 3}f* (» pfif'IIcr fc ft pt

- - - J.NCIubHW f « 0 I:;TCh>noin .r < I :0 AP.n i J J

Chritlmim i 1 lljorJ»n I 0 1Tnlkli Sf«r» «t

.MAJOR MELTING -J^:R0.\1E. Pel). 1 - A ni«ttnK

of the team m inuger* In the South Idsho M ajor Basketball league will be held a t 8 p.m. Frl-, day a l Sho.ihone. President Mur­ray OTtourke announced today.

Rupert Jean Seeds 31. Wendell Uons 19.

Burley Jaj-cees 13. Shoshone fled- sklan no.

5.ivase-McBrliIes SO, Twin Palls Self-'. 10.

Wednesday's KrhcduleCama-i Lions vs. C.irey M-Men

a t 5 p. m.Jerome VFV/ w . Scotl's Cafep jn .Buhl Hardware vs. Eden-Har.elton

a l 7 pjn.Wall Food Slorc.'. vs. Albion Legion 8 pin.

He) bum M-.Mcn vs. Flier Mer­chant.'! a l S pjii.

Murtnugh Phillip C6 v.i. lo icr of Comas Llons-Carey .M-Men a pjn.

Oakley W hltclry Spuds vs. winner of Camas Llons-Carey M-Men I t 'p jn .

U m p C o m e s BackPOCATELLO. Feb. 1 tJ^ -L eo

Enger of St. Louis has signed a contract to ser\-e as an umpire In the Pioneer baseball league again Ihls year. President J . P. Halllwell aruiounced Enger's signing.

Enger umpired in .th e Pioneer loop 111 19(2. bul la s t season was w ith the Florida International league.

RUrERT JEAN REKO. SI. WE LIOSH U

nuMrt f t ft pf|W»nJ,tl " ' 'ka ( S I lIU M itiir t

:ilmp»on ( 3 2 l[An.lcr«m r ]>krn^ 0 0 0 r Krith e

j(cM a : Ml rriita eCglirr t e c Uunn e

1 0 » KIrtIa 0

IS I is[ ToUli « fitan >i k*Ui nu^xrt 10. WniJtl. .. Fm thro»i Rirrfrt S. W«n-TcUU

___ T o w 'll M v a r b * a h n m \i I f y o o w r v *

' ' f o r G e n e r a f f o n s —A G r e o f K e n f u c / iy f o v o r i l o "

JCBOUi: JAVCEEH St. INDE< rESDE.NT MEAT M

Jtrom* tt ft [>t Ind. UmI ft ft Sll«lin»r t » » 4 f- Klorrac« t » I

Sab novleo claM—Alien P a tle ru n . (hooding, 118. n . F rtd Hoastoo, KeUo, Wash., 110; Tommy Boland OaUrio, Ore., lU. vs. E « SUecx, Jerom e. liS ; G ran t Jones, Jerome. lU . n . Don Colter, Goodlnjr, 121.

Novice flywelglit—Carlyle Udy, Twin Falls, t i. Vojmo llanscs. Abet. decB, Ida-i Danny Mahana, Lewlslown. MonL, n . Blax Jackman, Aber­deen.

Open riywelgbt—Bob iU rrls, Great Falls. Mont., Tf. Dan DooobBe. Balte.

Open banUmwelghl—Lvan Gntiirle, Shoshone, vx. Ned Dayle, Ballc. NoTlee featherw eight-D ick Chamber*. Helena. M ont, vi. DeVerl By-

ington. Twin Falls; Larry Gilea, Jerome, n . Lavon Green, Jerom e: Uarold DicklnMO. Twin Falls, vs. Hal Roger*. Aberdeen.

Open fealherwelght—Dan Pacheco, Silver Dow, A. C , Satte , n . Dave O'Leary, Helena.

Novice Ughlwelghl—Dwalne Knlgge, Shothone. n . Gil Smith, Helena; Uoyd Nelson. Aberdeen, t l D elou Jenet, Jerome.

Open lighlw elgbt-T ed Jordan. Butte, va. Paul M artin. Eegeae, Ore.; Joe .Malla, BolU, vi. Lee .Majarieh. Great Falla.

Novice wellerwelghl—MeUln DarkdoU, Sboihene, Tt. Bad RoMnson, Falls: BUI Fleming. Engene. vt. Lamoyne Bylngton. Twin Falls.

three defaulla. O th e r conteiU saw two boys from Eugene. O re . the wlnBcra and one each frwn Pres­ton, Aberdeen a n d D ayton, Id a , and Vancouver. Wash.

An unusual touch waa added to the affair when a b o u t was resumed af-

Open w cilerw clgbt-C harin Peotccoit, Lewistown, ra. Gene Glbaon. ter a IO-mtnut« r tc t s s while the G reat Falls; Royce G lih , Eogenc. rs. Jerry Fojawana, Welser; Joe An- doctors examined Klo AUawa. 115, tonelll, Butte, vi. Mickle Sllcock, Twin Falls; Dick Wedoa, Esgene. t». Jerome, who c laim ed a foul In Uie Arnold Emler, Vaneoover. Wash. | third round of h is bout w ith Paul

Novice mlddlewclghl—Darrell Kniggr, Shoshone, tv Dean P a ttenon . Manin, 131, Eugene. Ore.Gooding. I Fool Claim ed

Open middleweight—Jack Mills, Shoihone. ti. K en Blaller, Chinook. The bout had gone one mlnule. 33 MonL; Lyle Taylor. Daylon. Ida., v*. James Pentecost, Lewlstown. M ont seconds of the la s t round, with Mar-

Novice llghtheavywelght—Keith Henry, Kimberly, vs. L. D. Paddy, Un subiUnUalli' In th e lead, whenAliawa doubled u p near Uie ropei. Referee Louie D enton coUcd for a doctor.

After Alzawa v a a declared fU lo continue. It d id n 't take M artin long to convince the crowd he could do Uie Job w ith no doubts as to a low blow. He .nt^iggcrvd Aleawa and Den­ton gavo MarUn the fight on a technical knockout,

KclUi Eckel. 115>pounder from Boys' Ttown. Neb., had the crowd wltii him but th a t w aM it enough. He lost Uic duke lo Pe te Mschlch-

Twln FaUi.Open llghlheBTywelght—Eddie Taylor, Vaneotiver, va. Ray McRae,

°o '^n*heavyw elghl—Floyd Kirby. Gooding, T*. Dave Dlalter, Chinook.* * * ¥■

Tuesday Night’s Fight ResultsNovico flyweiglil—Vaync Hansen, 109. Aberdeen, Id a , won a 2 U I

decision over Bill BavU. 109, Chinook, .MonU Novice flyweight—Danny M ahana, 113, Lewbtown. M ont, *on a

ananlmous decision over Gene Lalebarge, 113, Kelso, Wash.Open flyw elght-B ab Harris, G reat Falls. M ont, won a nnanhnoti*

decision over Bob OweM, 110, Welder.0 .:en"fl’ " lg h ‘;-U rn ''D onohogh! Balle, M onl, won by default of .Max m

Jackman, Aberdeen. Ida. ,Novice fea then .e igh t-D e Verl Byington. Twin J a ils , won a 2 to 1

decision over Don Johnson. G reat Falls. Mont,Open featherwclghl—Dlek Chambers, 120, Helena. M ont, won a 2-1

decision over Uke Aitawa, 12C, Jerome.Open featherweight—Jay Evans. 125, Butte, MonL,

decision over James Ledaklj. 12C, G reat Falls. Mont.Open fealhen»e!ght-D av* O'Leary, 126, Helena, M ont, wan a imanl. ions decision over Claude Brown, I2G, Weljer. uNovice llghlw elght-G Il Smith. Helena, Mont.. won on default bj

Earl McCartliy, Eugene, Ofe. IOpen banU m w elght-N rd Bojle. 115, Butle, won a nnanlmoos deci­

sion over I’ete Donnell. 116, Eugene. Ore.Open banU m w elght-Pcte Mschlchowskl. Eugene, O re, won a ananl­

mous decision over Keith Eckel. St. Anthony. , . , „Open lightweight — Paul M artin. 131. Eugene. O re, technically

knotked oat Klo Aliawa, 135. Jerome. In third round.Open lighlw elght-U on Smith, 135, Weiser, won decision from Joe

M auna, 135. Butte, MonL Novice welterweight—Fred Zemlock, 111. Bolte,

Allen Baker. Twin Falls.Novico welterweight—Bud Roblnsni

Uie flt3t round.B y ln tton W ins ^

DeVcrl Byington. 126. T ain Falls boy. won a crowd p leascr by a spilt

unanlmoos Ji'rtKW' decljlon w e r Don Johmoii.127. G reat FalL-*. MonU Bylnglon (lupllcatSiT hls 'b^o^er's win of the evening before. N.

A .'.oUd right to U ie ^ w of D jr- reli Knapp. 118, Ontar1o>Ore.. won im action packed bout frocn De.\ PatIer:on. 117-poundcr from Oood-

' lug. Knapp had to be a.'uhtcd from the ring.

A third round tcchiUcal knockout aas Korcd by Ray McRae. 173. Gooding, over M ax Fairfield. IK. Buhl. The bouU a slugging maUh

. . » ,„„,|ffw n Uie beglunlne. had only fourby defaall from \ k , » h e n s-topped.

p II k I Bud Robinson. 115-pounder fran115, Twin Falls, knocked outLeon Adamson, 115, Aberdeen. Id a , In Ihe second round. . . . Iguns from Leon Adanwon. 115, Ab-

Open wellerweighl-.Mlcky Sllcox. 115, won a technical knockout « ertccn. Robln.wn flnlslietl him off In the second round from Glen Brown, 115. Gooding. minute, 37 ."icconds of the sec-

Open w ellenTcljht-D ick Weedon. 110, Engene. O re , won a decision from Kenneth Olsen, 110, BoUc. | a pier ilx brawl ended when Olen

Open mUldlewflglit—Lyle Taylor, 160, Daylon, Id a , won a decision nrown. 115. Oooditig. could from Albert Smith, ICO. Gooding. come out for the th ird round of 4

Open mlddlewelghl—James Penlecosl, 160, LewUlown. M ont, won a tou t wlUi slu<Klng Mlekie Sllcox. derision from Johnny Wrlgiit, 160, Twin Falls. U5. Jerome. Broa'n's legs couldn't

Novice miildlenelght—Dean PatterMn. 117, Gooding, knocked out ,Darrell Knapp, lift. Ontario, O re , in the second round.

Novice light heavyweight—Keith Henry, 167, Kimberly, won a decision from Herbert Lltrman, 161. Tekoa, Wash,

Open light heavywelchl—Ray .McRae, 173, Gooding, won by a tech­nical knoekout from .Max Fairchilds, ICO. Buhl, in the third round.

Open hravywelghl—Date Panter, 191, won a technical knockout In the second round from Jack Blaine, 100. Eugene. Ore.

SUB-NOVICE BOUTS Mill Pennock, 77, Twin Falls, decUioned from Bob Stanhope, 75,

JeromeBob Pennock, ES, Twin Falls, declslooed from Keith Chyfr^ogh, 83.

Gooding.John Eriy, 85, Twin Falls, ontpolnled David Heaton. 84. Twin Falls. Howard Klnsfather, 103, Jerome, won a decUion from Freddy Ilcmple.

103, Eugene, Ore.Larry Crane, 09. Iw ln FaIi^ won a decUlon from LeRoy Tracy, 96.

Twhj Falls.

I tro tte r. led all liar- th e grand circuit Ix-.t

year In money won. gathering ♦55.810.

Hoot Mon. 1 itis racers on

Verle Moser WinsHoward Lcland wa.i eliminated

loat night in the city blllio/d tourna­ment a t the Eve^Krl^cn parlor i he was defeated. 115-50 by Verle Moser, who hnd been given a 10 point handicap. Leland had a high run of H . Tlio game went 53 to nlngs.

Tonight the 'loser of a no-handi­cap. 75-polnt game between Ross

MACHINERYREPAIRING

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Idaho’s Pioneer and B«st E<ialp{>ed Machine Shop

When your machinery needj? c a r e f u l hand work trust KrcnRcl’s to do the job with

KR EN G EL’S SAY:It pay.s to keep your fnrm too].«t in good repair. Bring in your weeding knives, duckfcet and otlier cutting tools for sharpening during the winter months and have them ready for use next summer.

ICRENGEL'CINCORPORATED ^

218 2n<J A v t 8. Twin Falli. Ida.

Gay and Ray P rtls will be elimin­ated. Al scheduled ts a game be­tween F rank Green and Addle Mar- Undale. MarUndale will be spot, ted HO points In a ^Xl-polnl game.

If You Prefer an EASTERN BEER

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Or a Western—It’s

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DRASTIC CUT IN PRICES

LIMITED SUPPLYFormerly Now

Customc-Airc Oil Heaters ..... ....$ 60.00...... ......S 4100^nergan Oil H ealers............. ..... 5119.95______ $ 75,75Sporton Radio & Phonograph

Combination ...... ............Hy-Temp Electric Heaters __ Reelite

^$148-50 ._S 5,81

Norge Refrigerator, ased. 1941 model, has new anit. Can give same grutrantee as on a new Norge.Was $225,00 .............. ................ ................ j^ow $175,00Good line of Flourescent Fixtures for bathroom uid Kitchen Reduced 15^ . ^

S H O T W E L L ’SU T IU T Y SERVICE CO.

S38 MALN AVE. SOUTH TWIN FA LLS. IDABO

A cron th e Street f n a O. P . Skagts

Slore on Btaln Avenne East

PAGE TEN TIM ES-NEW S, TW IN FALLS. IDAHO WEDNESDAY, FEBRUASY 4.1&48

M a r k e t s a n d F i n a n c e • » « «

Livestock GrainStocksMarkets at a Qlanc«

HCW TORK. r»b. 4 ( jn - Stoc»i.-U>-»r: Ml«d MtrMj.Ilaii4>— Ib bmd rrl/MLCoMtrt—W*ai b«»» Ilg»14ill«>-

.. . II I. »,a.rWbMt—hickr J« »ral Halt ooMf bMTT IkukUllDi

Con.-Dr«l..« a l llmlu

“‘i i V - : " ” ‘"'I*

low good hvlfcn ■

fmi] eaivM Tr*i*rt S<.00>til* 7M: UKal I.M«; tn«r*Ij7

KtW YOnK. rtb, wItA <c.mn»lllr lulur mott irrrr* atekrt

4 in-SUxk* Join*-*

•rtlnni WUl«d I

NEW lO n K STOCKS NEW YORK. Feb. t W >-

AUlcd 8 to r« ............. - ..............27SAUJa ChMmcrs ..................—American Airlines .................American Car t Foundry ..—American Ra<Jl#lor --------------13^American RoUlnB MllU ..........2BHAmcncan Bmelllng i : RcHnlns SIAmerican Tele J i Tele .......... ISOSAmerican Tobacco b ----------Anftconda ..........- --- ------- ---A T 4: S r

n * €lc<iln« •u

Uarrh

rUTtlRCS TAnLB ClIICACO. »-.b. *

Ui«i> illtb Low

Sheriffs Sale of Property Sought

The Robinson In rtsU c en t com- ponr peUUoDcd dlAirlct c o u r t Wedr.esday to order a ah e r ltrs aale o( the South Park p ro p e rtj of Marlon B. M urray and hia vlTe. Edltii M. Murray.

T h rou jh th tl r attorney*. Qraydoo W. Smlllj and Leonartl H. Jacotu. they lu r th rr oaJc Uiat « receiver of rents and proflU on ihc property be appotated by the court.

TJie company caim * It holda a 60- day prornlisory no te lo r $300 aljned b)- the M urrays Au<. 19. IMS. Al­though they pu t up the property as

urlty, the Murraya have failed make paym ent, the complaint

SUtM.

C anadian Faclflo _

C crro de Po*co _

Commercial C r e d it .................. 38’.;Commonwealth Southtm pfd . DS’iConsolidated C o p p e r------------ H’iConsolidated E dU on-------------22!4C ontlnenU l Oil D elaware------ <8'iC o m P ro d u eU _____________ Ol’vC rane

rholf» liiht -tlsM* ::.M; me. Uavla ououbit ;o.M and b*l'

c.ii:« iio; loll) <■:

Elcctrle A u to ______________ *5^iElectric Power A: L ig h t---------15'E rie R a ilroad ............................. 8'G enera l D eetrlc — -------------34'G enera l F oods--------------------- M’G enera l M o to rt_____________ M'Goodrich — — ------------------- s :G oodyear--------------------- ------- <1'G re a t Northern Railroad (p f)_ 38’G re a t Western Sucar ...--------- 31H udson M o to n --------------------17'Id ah o Pow er__ _____________ STn ilnoU C e n tra l--------------------M'InU rlake I r o n --------la t^ m allonal Harvester Intem aU onal Nickel C»n ,In teroatlonal Paper .... ............ 474tn lem allona l Tel 4: T*1 _____ 13K cnneeott .....— ..... ............... 4SSLockheedLoews ............................-....... . 17M id Contlnf{nM«Cetrol(um__40’

.. IQ-

Mentcocnery W a m ^ - . . -N is h K elv ln ato r______NaUonal Acme ............NaUonal D U cult............ .N ational Cash R eslstrr _N ational D a i ry ...............N ational D istille rie s .............N ational Power A: L l jh t____New York C e n im l........... ........ 13'N orth American Aviation____ 0N orth A m erican ........................1«'N orth Paclllc ......... ............... . IBO hio O U __________________ aPacilJc O u _______________ 31'F a d

n finl pilraU ro )< br>n'|.tO k»rr •

Potatoes-Onions

>«ulofi«l blsbrf ana

8AS rRANCISCO ;ANri.sco. r.b. « lUin—r i ...

I..I >n.l c..>J it~r.

Pair of Crashes Listed by Police

T no Tw in Falls residents tele­phoned police headquarters Tuesday with Inrom ullon about sU sht ac> eldcnts which resulted w hen thetr vehicles skidded over the Icy streela Into parked earn.

John P. Asli. 170 Filer avenue. |jf>rlcd a t 5:20 p .m . th a t he , Into the rear of a pickup truck at Shoihone e trte i nnd fourth avenue iouUi. He reported alight <lamBge to hU own c ar and none to the pickup.

C. Carbon. 345 Seventh evcnue reported a t <:15 th a t he was

haliln i a t the slop sign on Second routh. Eolng towards Shoshone aueel. when his car slid Into a parked car carrying license 3T-5750.

Services Held for Victim of Accident

Two Magic Valley Youths Join ArmyTlic enllatment of D w ight L.

Castle, IB, Hulil. and R obert C. Foralfj-. 17. Rupert, each for three years In the nrmy, was announced Wedne.iday by F irs t LleUL Geome P. Claxton. officer In charge of Uie Ttt’ln Fall.i army recruiting station.

Cnslle, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark’ln J. CosHe. Buhl. Is en route lo ihe nnny a ir force IndoclrJnallon center a t San Antonio. T ex , three months basic tralnlnir.

Dc.nilncd for service In Uie arm or­ed forces, Fonlcy. eon of Mrs. Mabel

For'lcy. Rupert. Is traveling lo •I, Ord, Calif-, fo r basic tro ln lns ,nd Inter asslKnment o t F t, Knox. Cy.. Lieutenant Claxton said.

January Building Estimates Triple

E'.tlmMed construction during Jnnuar>- olma-il tripled th e cor* ' ■e. ponillnB tlRures of the s.ime

nonth n ye.ir m:o. CHy Clerk Con- .[ance J. LcL'.er ja ld W «lnesday. In 1W8. tlie flKUre tt-ns M7.230 while In 1017 It was $30J00.

TJie Incrc.ue can be e.\plalncd al- ift't enllrely by planned constnic-

llDii of dwclIlnR.'i. she .t.ild. Mrs. LeL'cr iw lntrd o u t tiiiit no perm iu lor tha t i>i>c o t coti.slructlon were JoiiKht Ift-M ye.nr. while tliU year 10 hare been asked. E-'tlmated c( if the.-.e totaled J45.000. slie said,

RUPERT. Feb *—Fu-ner.il *_____for Etmer W. CuUey. who <ru killed In an » :dden t a t Buriey, were held i t 3 pm . Friday a t the Christian cb-orch la Rupert. T b« Rev. John McClure conducted th e services.

Mrs. Kenneth Heiulerson played the prelude and psfcUude and ac­companied M n . Gordon Ooff, who sang a solo, and Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Drewerton, Actqula, who «»ng a duet.

Pallbearers were Carl Plnsoc. Carlyle Wafer, WUllam Steiner, John Carlyle. Lester Ro m and Irvln Holloway, a ll eo-workera of Mr. CuUey’s a t the Bunting T ractor company In Burley.

ifonorary poUbearcra were Ernest Ralls and Carl Fenton, R upert: Howard Boden. Burley; E. P. Halpln. Pocatello, and Jock R. Halpin, Mo­desto. Calif. Caring for the flowers were Mrs. Em lo M ancie and Doris Anderson. Burley. Joyce CuUey. Mrs. WllUam Uewellyn, K arleen Haag. Betty Jean Haag and JoA nn Jones.

Burial tery.

s tn the R upert <

ClassifiedW A N T AD RATES

It p<r »*T

(kb«d. <uh n u t uc ea p w r«Qr arte O U S U N es t« ClMtUM ««I7I

W«*k dirt, II a. Dk SiM S auxu

M7 .. .T ‘" „ c r ___________________*mi»d A<l>~ t n (t/faU; cemrMnUil ksd »• larsmuUott can b* f lm l« r isu d u Um •dttniMT.

C m n tboaU b« laa«IUt»•cm >U1 *t Oitdt (or lMorr«<t lu « n ^

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

BUSINESS CORNER FOR SALE

8 M0DE31N COTTAOES

Award Presented To Cub Scout Boy

At the meeting of pack two of the Cub Scouts Tuesday evening a t the WoihlnKlon school oudltorlum , Al- lyn DlHKel. Jr., was presented the silver arrow-wolf rank award.

The attendance flag, awarded ti the group with b rg es t represents lion of parents, was received by dei six.

I t wa.1 decided th a t Uie meeUngs of the pack will l« held on the first Monday of each m onth w ith the next meeting lo be M arch 1.

Cub Scouts Slate Dinner on Friday

Pa/MiM' n lsh t and a poUtick dlri' ner ulll b« held a t 7 p. m, Friday by Cub Scout pack 67 n t the P in t Metliodl.1 t churcli. It was announced WroHMday by F rank Briggs, tnsU- luilonal rrpre.'.entatlve.

Tile lOia charter of th e pack will be pfe.<irnted and the Rev. George O- Roscberry will be the speaker. Drlggs said.

S ca rs Roebuck ...Blmmoru Co.........Socony Vacuum .. Southern Pacific Sperry Co. .S tandard Oil C alifo rn ia___S tandard Oil New Je rsey___Studebaker ....... — ......... ..

T rans-A m erican ' n*T w entieth C e a tu r> --F « _____18\Union Carbide .............. .... ....... Ofi»U nion o n _________________ 33'

’O m tod Aircraft ..

U. 8 . S m elting _____________44U. S . S tee l_____________ ___ 72'W alg reen ........... ......................... 31*

W estern U n io n ........................ J5SWesUnghouse A irbrake_____ 3fl>»WestlngbouM E le c tr ic______ 37t;W hite Motors ....... ; _________ 20».Woolworth ______________ 4S‘;Z e n i th -------------------------------- ai»;

N*W YOBK CURB N EW YORK. Feb. 4 W )-

A merlcan Super P o w er_____ KClUe* Serrtce .

N iagara Hudi TeehnJcolor .

U tah Idaho O igar -

SON BORN .OLENNS FEORT. Feb, 4 -M r.

*ad M rs, Jac)( Sasser, ^Tlngfteld. Or*., w e t tu paren ta of a *on bora Ja n . 19. S u se r is a Xonser Olennsrtzr j'ra u ta u -

r* ir»0-K.Miodi{ ht*,| n.c

Jerome Man FinedPrayne Shouse. 24, Jerome. wi

fined SlOO and $3 costs ofter he pleaded miUty Tuesday to a drunken driving charne. He appeared before Judge Jam es O. Pumplire)-.

Shouse WM cited by Twin Falls clly police early Sunday morning.

FAIRFIELD MAN ILLFAIRFIELD, Feb. 3 - Leonard

Koonco. m anager of the S ica a r t Lumber company, ha.i ^ e n con­fined to his home with Illness for the lost several days.

Potato an<l Onion Futures

(Courleiy E. W. ^McRoberts and C oapaay . Elks Bldj, TboB* »01

Judge Appoints 3 Estate AppraisersProbate Judge S. T . Hamilton

W ednesday appointed E.-»rl LaHue, A. O. Benoit, and Ouy H. Shearer to appraise the estate of M arsarct Erlc.on who died Nov. 32, 1047.

A hearing will be conducted a t ) a. m . March 5 on ihe petition

o f her husband. Peter Erlcson. Filer, fo r llUe lo th flr Joint real and per­sonal property.

The only other heir U Morris Peter Erlcson, a son, according lo the legal papers.

Petition Filed in Estate of Woman

Letters of adm lnbtratlon wcr« M)uc:!it Wcdnesclny by O tto O. Smith In the e-.:.ite of h is wife. Mrs. Belle Lynch Smich, who died Dec. 31, 1017, He IbLi the estate m under H.iOO In vnlue,

•JudRe S. T . H am ilton set 10 Feb. 10 os tim e for a hearing oi m atter. -Smith U reprr.^cnted by R.ivbom nnd Rnybom.

HLi wife left a will daletl March IS. 1541, bu t nam ed no r ir c Ftulth raid. Tlie o ilier heir Is a Lebiid J . Alliuiin.

School Bus, Auto In Slight Mishap

A school bus was Involved In a colll-.lon Monday six mile;, .-ruth of IVrr. wcTcirdlnK to a rrixirt filed Wfdnc.'day i-t ttie .•'horlfl i office.

Acconlliif: lo the report, nn auto­mobile driven by M. Coi>cnhaver, n ie r . had stopped belilnd the bus driven by .Martin Kniepp. BuhL the bus backed Into the other damaging th e grill.

DischargesRobert Edward Hawley.

Butter and Eggss rnANCisco r

Bickel Leads in Polio Donations

With a contribution of tM3.40. Bickel school h as donated the high­est amount of any elementary school In T »ln Falls county toward tlie march of dimes collection. County Supi, Oorts Strodley announced Wcdnc.-.day.

She ncknnwledced receipt of con-j trlbuilons from seven other school dl;.trlcls. Falrview No. 24 donated » » . Hollister Independent No. 0 gave S8.45. Syrlnga No. 13 contributed M.15, Lucerne No, U and Elmwood No, 43 each donated SO and Wosh- Inslon No. 11 gave M. she said.

SPECIAL NOTICESoi a :5aUAkWG:»tto.i.jin,.

Ul SU. A»T»»« EmL.

t . T»Iq r>IK M«b«.

> orrtn SsirplT. Cbrk Licit

PEHSONALSei’t;NCCa~t<>r^«r%~Hi». Lnlt CtrdtV

" r« ~ » ll»ui,____________;______

BEAUTY SHOI»Sl>i:UMANEtrr9 U«4. 0*<I

wmwm ti.M ap. Aniitk S*toa-

»»»«» MJO. D«>at» *

SCHOOLS & TRAININGTWIN FALLS

(Ull BUTllni LtiiMi, »»0 .IKAUTICIAHS U« la fTMl 4<s«e4. <M

CHIROPRACTORS

LOST AND FOUND

LOST! SMALL RED PURSE

w m i IliTEH CanUbInx K«r> >n<i Xcrr;

-ntW A R D -

PHONE 1647 or

Hearings Set for Estate of $40,000

Hearing on the J40,000 estate left by Arlo A. W arner wtio died Jan . will be conducted a t 10 a . m. Feb. 20, acco.'dlnK lo papers .ilgned Wed' nc.-;day by Probate Judge S. T HamlUon,

Petition for probate of the will dated March 1. 190. ha.i been made by LouL^e Wlimer. widow, who was named executrix. Tlie will was wlincT.*.fd by J . R. Keenan and J . P. Tliomo-'',

Mrs, Wiirnrr U represented by P.irn-, Keenan, Kobertoan and Daly.

S‘14.5 Sought in Suit As Result of Crash

St.inley Tliomp-.in Li suing L a- •Mn:it Haley fcr J413.WI a n d costs In probate court, ni:::<>rdln!; lo a com­plaint filed W cdnt-day,

Tlie suit U the result, of a .March 17. 1547, automobile accident when •fhlcles driven by the tw o men col- Ided two miles south of BuhL

Thompson Is represented by A ttor­ney Oraydon W. Smltii.

nLLW a STATION AND LOO CADIN LUNCU

ON tllCUffAT t>

CALL 3 7 w ! BUHL

wlU

A N EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

FOR A MAN O B A GROUP OP MEN. n>oo«7 lo toTal. and «bo wtr It to gti laUi CroecTT nu»ln«- ■-------^ nitiOMBtll, tin. »fl.t U

tcrr la u tau u .

WRITEBOX Se-B TIMES-NEWS

UNFURNISHED APTS,L)lt~KK.S-rr

I ta (hlldltu cogplt.

FURNISHED APTS.

BOARD AND ROOM{lOOU'mncl~t«4tJ lo, IQ

FURNISHED ROOMS

COKrUllTAULL tlm liK r

HOMES FOB SALE W r S S T S T !- koOM - 4 , .— **• !»<»• PkoM r

• ta T*la M k , 8 a »»-B.

? « • «ii4 *11 r. dMU*

NXW 4 BOOM IIOKB »llk batk. gm.

DEWET CAUCHCT, PfcoM l««. flW

r BCOnoOH Im*. UU» n TIM ATniw ZttL T«rw.I DEOBOOJt ko«-. «oi«a , >ai far.

Ob iliibwar l« Is riUt.

JOHN B. w n r r e OEOROBfllCE

i:» 40i A.t N. rhaaa IIU

WODCim DESlCNtD ^ b • d ra • mOMW ■WoJ *** rifwUca.K*'' *•'»*♦. Iml loiliaa. ckM lo. rca.wl«,

CECIL C, JONEStlfaUln Ciek a Trut •

PHONE 2041

n v E omi, laod'm bul b«*t. iel«< In. II.M4.M.

CHOICE lou eo Tt;l<r Sltttt.

‘ I HAVE SOME VERY NICEt aad I Mnom lioaiM

W.n locaM. all BittltrB. harlwood 'loon, full tttiranli. itokar bfat.

sEvcnA Lw m i iPAiiTMEirra F. J. BACON

t i l Uala K rbsM U1I.W ■ tll ).n

UNFURNISHED ROOMShil'A‘LL~r°gm.."l4. c.•lo.*, no «lhrr fumllnr*. l-boot KtJ

FURNISHED HOUSESFnirN is»t:u~ c.t,in.' w 1».

SITUATIONS WANTEDfOH UlUT in i t l biulit

f-ArnHllANOlNCi. •

bTUAW ballnt. will on I'tent

Custom teuhJiOllrrr Wll.»n -I

CU.STOM rlo-ins

Stock AveragesC«ii»irfd kr Ttia A«McU(>4 TrM

rillCACO rotlLTRV

Twin Falls Mai-ketsUVE.STOCI

CSnlr* fcuUhiff. IM.:iS Iba. _0..rw,l|hl buuhrn________rackini u n . hn rjracblni towi. Ji*ht .

a <lMl«n gaoladl

4 OoTtr. 10> Iba. .KX'S'ul"__

• 4«Uan qooUd)OEAKS

C m t 'lan b m No. I _ _

I k *

POTATOES (IXtWtTW)

fowl. 4 lU. aiN] <r

irrada D . Mfdlum (r*d< * Small craJ. A Larz« (rw)* C .

(Om iMjrr

U>« liUba E n rtvlacOTt U T«la rallt t Pool 4 (Jaa.

AA ______________________4

I; Oct tTt.O; tVo. I

LO C AL

MOVINGStorage

R A IN B O L T 'SPHONE 354

RADIATORSERVICE

Clean-out. Boll-out, F lush and Rod-out. Repair and Recore. Hew Radlaton. Expert work, sa tisfac­tion guaranleedt

The Radiator Shopu s t s d Are. E. - FbotM tS19

In. Rral ItO {>«r nunlh: rampl<t» ml.hf<», llf#l»T B<u>I purcb»« •.. !!<■« tun. Tlm».H>-».

M is a FOR RENTn r io n «an^<r«. r J o n Tnd p o U iW m .

bh rouf e-B rioor. a«4 iiM Ubor

^O ir"»:N T . cauU c

oitnt. forBl.b«i cf u

oopl. .liK Alldr«.

arannonl. Wcrkinc rmjplt. I-hcina 7S»-J » and I

a ar»rlm«ot. I'hofi» (

LOCAL Iniuriori rix^uli

MONEY TO LOANman Wfnilil hk* to borrriw

r r l r . l . IMIrMoil. Kan I

SAVE HOHCT M balUlBC e«« or rmoddlBa. Tlai asd malnkal PhoM CSS-Jll.OSCAB U. OLSON. CONTUACTOB

HELP WANTED—FEMALEWANTCOi I-TMtical aon* for r« t boai

- uotkT. rboo. eunu.____________rrt:u : : n>l< lo na'lutxti touRirr.

llrla In mnjn-n hT but tu t. rbos*

irrrhan*!!*,** (orpnntk <• : j atHl U. aaUt a<ip<rlrfi7a dnlrablt b

»tw »«ci a in^a^ I 'l la u t D .tlrr.'^ 'ta^

C ROY HENDERSON W hen In need of a

L O A NSECURITIES CREDIT

CORP.Radio Bldg. Fbos* 680

n-m b«rnoBua In Io>a aa<t can m«r« In JO.U,. .!» . la. baa r r .r ,.

W. A. 0»lrao<Ifr—Raalior .LEM A, CHAPIN, Agencp 'ri» rb«B«

2 MODERN DWELLINGS

tcsUnf. I'ounilaa I

CECIL C. JONES> Uanli a Tniil fiklr. Pbono !0I1

SPECIAL

BAXTER Si CO,Abora IdtSa r in l KilVmal Pank

lUlIL I’llONE l»-T

REAL QUALITY , PRICED TO 8ELL

3.1* of tb* bMtrr nnainKtad henn. All riaa batd*uod rimn, J nka b«;!n>0BM. IlnH ck>«t. (lrr»Ucr. •llnMU atxl ciollMl kUetim. Fall (lal>K>a rUil*rrd bu<B>«6l of Iaa ap»rtm«el nrr aull/.

BILL COUBERLY0> Ualx C. Pbono UM

U, HEITLER rbaoa Ul

47c LAND BANK LOANS

TH E T W IN PALLS NATIONAL FARM LOAN ^tSSOCUTION

lU T1itr4 Am m SxUb. T»ta FaUa

HELP WANTED—MALElla.:MB Spnm B<lu Co.

d ««amUIOB. Mnt ba<a car.

f JiHH ti»IP. .Tntia or B.arT .~

J4i^heitPrices Paid

r 0 R

D E A D a n d U S ELE S S

ANIMALSP H O N E U S C O L L E O

IDAHO HIDE & TAUOW CO.

tk>B lBUIIli<aU> xllb tha arrttf. If rwi ha» U>* rtquirMl abllltr. vrKi «• (all datalt. nr>t Ittln, Olironla LkjgM r.rtllltcT Co.. naa t» . Paaa4«i». Callt,

fACTURY"UUn>;— .sCoiar>«<* llnr (or r tinw or akla llnr. I

p« «Uj- li

HELP WANTED SLVLE.FEMALE

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Fo r Xi:>rri W ar* b ^ «a IraU. A U '? .

W lU .' MU at .Valla aUlVa. Saa Ba!^ R... ........ _ . . .

LOANS & nNANCING

W. C. ROBINSON(Acroaa fn>m Radio OUs.l AltNOLD r . CSOSS, Urr.

u a lUlB Nertb Pboaa

4% LonffTcmi FARM LOANS

Tasta«aa oT Iba E«altabl« Ufa. APPBOVB) KOIITOACE LOAMS

TIIBOUGIIn s c L m r national oan i

o r TWIN FALLS

NEED MONEY?SEE

To«r loeallT awaod cradlt eoa^u,. }Lma Idaba'i bgalaaa la Uaba.

Itaua aa lov ai av-

RELIAKCE CREDIT CORP.

IDAHO FINANCE CO. LOANS

BOMES FOR SALE

FOR ONLY $7,000rhli Ttrr W«!I l«ali.j boiBf oa Utla

arra«« »sL I >ir7 nki Una rvoma and a rood uUllw poRb. All •«tt

0® • foo< atuacur, lot TiU h raill7 w b Ibt IT.OOO.M.

BILL COUBERLYto* Mata A«. t PhcBa J«»

BEAUTIFULTwo UJroofB aiodarn beaifc-forBlabKl •r uafarsUbKl. tlnplua. oak (loan, full casirat bat«anl alib (lalibad rooai. ilohar. floor iril». UoD<]rr tuba. f«>« bach jard. >bad,. <i,o!et locaUoB.

K. L. JENKINS

KtCE tbroa b«lnoa bon«. nrwpla«.

SEVUAL I . . »«tro«. boo...

iM Acncs • crady for »Uca.

I t>r Jtreta*. IS acr«

PAT DALY , PHONE 2158

UIAU. bMMi m ba<raaaM.~Bedai

4EW 1 bainea boo** «• H tm Umtc

of tiQlll-Ja raUarfi. t4J«0M. Co4Wnu aM laawdUU »c«ailoa.

C. E. ADAMSI MAIN A V I EAST PBOK* Ml

PAGE TWELVE T1M]:;S-NEWS, TW IN FALLS. IDAHO WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4 ,19«

Indonesia Aid Seen as Help To U. S. Plans

THE RAOU£. Tbe NtthertiBili. Frb. « MV-Queea WUhrtm;n» I« « - CMt to tiiy • rt« l ccsM bctlca to ih f MjirtiiaU EvXIndies v b r a the Cm itd S u l o o! la^tfonc&lA ««cu3 tr.U3

‘ Blessed « lth o t a r n c h n c! th« e*rtii. k Unllcd SUtes oj baScsetl* ] i. c u i U k r m (rra t ibare i&'lix ccc* I : moa flch l mffttoit f» a t!e »sd th e u id la a «pcclil bnocML

TtQt cC E m uTh« m tcurch apoi» to IlaUir.fi'S

m tftlm e »Uln on rrtr=5 f trr.ii Ih f N tthrrU nds East Urflrs. » t f ? r * new fed tnJ Ui'.rrjn h is be«n lo n n r i c r^ rr D auh jpcsj- aonhlp. ThU t x t r a m ilrtu iH r »U Indonesli eicrp : I:ii;=r3U aiTpubUf. »hk h h i j b<ra tnv;! panJclpttle. T!ie in lt r to aS3i:2 tlon wUJ trrp aie for a I r« aottrrlfin Uni'.rd S t i tn cS nciU under the DuUrh crewrj.

“In frtT fciMJfia'.toa *:Ui the N tthcrlacdJ. Su ruasi «id the Aa- tU la . a soTtrtUn I.-.doani* »•-! be able to ca.TT on h rr ecccossSc rie- Ttloiitcrnt. which aL-eadr brtcre the » a r » v \ unprrcexlealcd la A:ia. “ the ipieen JilcL

m n Aid LtfMt)"ProTldins Europe and A=s«nci

with her soais and ra* c a lf r lilv Indono ia «U1 be able to snalr a r t i l conUlbuUoa to the tr ta ie = d ^ etfoTU no* betrj; a s ltd troea the American p«>p!e taidrr Lhe iU n h iU p!»n.*

The <jae«n s-aU 'co lcc ia llia k dead." s :ie added ~H a a j « U be th a t the soIuUoa beisc trach td la IndOBKia Till K t a p a t tm fee j o luUon* In »Wer parta ot Aiia."

Tivin Falls Radio SchedulesK L K

( u u n x o c T c i x s )

VX&NB&AT

THVKSSAT

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T S

o ncDrroKsSOTICt IX T ilt I'ltmiAll. lULK

FALLS COtNTT. STATE Is tb* >UtI«r •( U« L.UI* •( rUlK£.NTC

E. PAJtSOSf. Mi««la« I V fuwu.

t» U* wVl ruarviru »! Or CW m > T«;a til

n*TEO Uii :>4 < tiOROTirT J t.’

rcte«*ry *,

rrt«»ry. A-D, S- CUArMAX

lft«T IW nn: mt Ua• tW uU u tte( lU rrr Dxwil. Buk u j TrsX wta Tdt, CMXtr «! T>la U 4 ^ Util W u la. t w

I •suru* Arr~»»T

/ •». .« rit r•• lt»TTT KnwU

♦ Tn^K r JUnl.

KVMV(Its* l o t o c r c i z s )

^XBS xlMirmaiBUlWXONiaOAT

i.-*« Cu>s:<:i<ki 8i:-» l:M N«nt«{vr ef Air:.■« •C4fcfi »i«tur : : l i Fpetltxtit ~I'M Mcmun*. » M<U; l:«0 •l-Mlw r>ruto >:M C<.U«<i CloTM

I llr»<IIIarr

U V<-<ir Ncl£kt<r

0 IUn>rJ Mop

K TFI-A M -FMIlt7» KILOCTCLES)

iHDC »UUk.W.b» Kt)

7:M 1^11^.^^..™

! S ub'i«»*iIs»»bu Show «.-M i.Su;t>r Club »:IJ Nlo*-Klfl»« njUl^a *;M iCrMI ClUmWrt*

0 «WofU N»w» Ro«iwlii»1 Uxf< Vall«T AtrL t llrMkCul WilUm

li Nuun Nr<>. MurVrti •0 aR>,Ib. !WtUb It lUconl llrv^w

» iK n tt Htak' JIill

Army to Sponsor Radio Broadcast

. «rUJ Ja t “ :30 p. la . Wednesday orer atatlwi K i n . r . »aa announced by Ptral L ir^t- GeoiTe P. O a itc a . otfU rr tn e h i : ^ cJ the TwrultlnB station.'

T tse B fv m crtsn » ill be entliJrd - n v l i Is Your Hew R e c u l a r A rray .' B m d caaU vQI consht oT c - i j i r , la:e?Tle»s u d other leaturea c r a te d eatirely by the recrultlns

jSi. L lr j te s a a l Claxton explalsed. U U planned to make transolp*

U oci ct th e b ro ad o su lo r db trlbu-

} oUier radio stations, he

N e v a d a , O r e g o n , U t a h , W a s h i n g t o n •

MOVING all OVER

A L L O V E R T H E U . 3 .D IR E C T C O N N E C T IO N W T H V A N L IN E S

Twin Falls Phone 246

m m . . M nniE YOU HHIST us OUAUTY

•O m tB «K o n AOTHMITT 0» T«| COCA.COIA COUfANT ITI « 1 N F . I L L S C O C A -C O L A B O T T L IN G C O M P aI j Y

“Jet” Planes Shown to Be

Hogs on FuelWASIIINOTOH. Feb. 4 W >-A Jet

plane eata up fuel a« tu t u &50 IfoUcBia an hour, the ah' Iorc« dis­closed today.

Convenllonal alrptaoe enclaes set along on 100 to 12i gaUoiu.

The fuel consiunpuon rate for the h ljh speid Jet planes came 111 an a ir force annoUnctfnent another subject. This had to do with a new radJo-telephore syatein lo give Uie Jet pilots quick coatoct with weather forecasters.

“Properly-Umed weather briefing l2 of critical importance to the J ri pilot," said the air force, " la fuct, knowledge of the weather ill« uailan which will exist a t the des­tination a t the exact Ibno of a r ­rival Is vlUL

"Due lo fuel consumption of such a ircraft a t low altUudM. often u m udi M S50 ciJluns an hour, once 0 J r t pilot has let down to land a fte r a long flight there may be insufficient fuel remaining to pro­ceed lo an alternate b»M aome dls- liinco away."

Commercial air lin en customarily nlloK' for a t least an hour's flying

be>’ond a scheduled landing Held In case bad weather closcs In.

Traffic FinesPtaurteea pm oc ts u a e s c d •

total of IIS tn f l a n Ic r tia rtlc U v TlolaUois In Tw in P a lls Tteaday.

U abcl Holmes paid » fo r o rtf- Urne p»rk laf la th e portafftee soce while th« o the ts c seh p«!d t l for orertlm e pa rting l l t e y atv Perkins. A. U . Baxule. BIB Coubei^y. B. C. U uffm aa. J . a . Bow«rd. Den D urall. Mrs. Beatrice U cEee. 0 !can O ott, Mrs. A. >. Kelseo. Mr*. Thehaa

M arla H un t and theLem Chapin agency.

OAKLTT GUESTS OAKLEy. Feb. 3—i l r . and Mrs.

C. H. Black, Ogden. U tah, wet* guests last week o t iSr. aad Ura. K arl BUek and Mr. and J t a . Cecrge ErlckKR.

READ rn n S - K E W S WANT ADS.

SNOWY(he amozins new powdcnd bleach has 20 adraatajTCs over old •fashioned liquitj bleaches.

18Snowy mokes clothes smell Sweet and clean!

Watch for No. 19

Mitchell Himt Is Named by Alumni

Twta Fk3s mhcffal o f tb e C anrr> sity f t Idaho T te d a y e « h t ckrted MVtchen H ea t, j r , t tm tx r j to xr- ptac* U ra. S c d V sp fa y who kaa rt&lgaed.

The eleetloB w »i bcld » t aa ahaa - e l s e e t i s s tn th e Powrraadhsrtsm a t w h k h t i* l u w a h iaa l j« ie U rT . J a s e a I.y>. oc t- Used the a so c la u o n 's acnpe aa ca paiTd with th e V aadal Booeten.

■WhCe th e Boocxen a r t prtssajfly Iciereated ta a th ictlca. w^ are ts te r - esird hi a sy th t:^ Idabo^* be

The local c e q p disccssed spHag acUTUies azid th e execBtiiw « e a n li-

k ig k a t o a B t ^ SL *mi9k A a p lrim b

t » « u tu tn ic ta d to d n w B9 p to a te r tuKan projects,

ty le plans to m««t w tth a h m rt

day ta B o tcy . R l d a j tn Rspett.

ta Coodi&g.Be tbow td coloRd BioUen p i c t a a

of the 1M7 W ashtast(n .Ii!aho toot, ban p o e c t th e a h a s d m e rtts t.

of Tender Beefcifred) vegetables..; a rich and toxty gravy ; : i yours lo en|oy at a saving of tine, effort

and money. Treot your, self to Van Corop^

today.

DENNISON IN GOA\'Y□ M E A T B A I X S , t a U c a n ...........................................39 c

IGA RED ALASKA□ S A L M O N , 1 I b . t a U c a n ...........................................( J c

McGOVEEN PINK□ S A L M O N , 1 l b . t a U c a n ...........................................5 1 ®

EAGLE COMRION OIL□ S A R D I N E S , V4 S ....................................................... 1 5 c

CLEAKWATER GRATED□ T U N A , % s ............................................................................ 3 1 c

spEEmrs□ P A N C A K E F L O U R , 4 l b . p k g . ...........................46 c

FOR PERFECT mSCl'ITS□ B I S Q U I C K , 40 o z . p k g . ..............................................4 5 c

BETTY CROCKER JOB A PERFECT PIE ^□ P Y E Q U I C K , p k g ..............................................................4 7 c

PIERCrS SOLID PACK□ T O M A T O E S , 2*^ c a n ................................................ 2 1 c

VAN CAXir.S□ H O M I N Y , 2 * 4 c a n .......................................................... 1 7 c

PICT KWEET CREAM STVLE COLD. BANT.□ C O R N , 303 c a n .................................................................. 1 7 c

RO PACK CUT□ G R E E N B E A N S , N o . 2 c a n ................................... 1 5 c

CARDEN COLD FRENCH STYLE□ G R E E N B E A N S , N o . 2 c a n ................................... 1 5 c

.STOKELY HONEY POD□ P E A S , N o . 2 c a n ............................................................. J 3 c '

HUNTS FANCY□ S P I N A C H , 2 ^ c a n ........................................................1 8 c

SACRAMENTO 'A*

□ T O M A T O J U I C E , 46 o z . c a n ............................. 2 1 cCJI.B. FANCY

□ C A T S U P , 14 o z . b o t t l e ...........................................19 cSUNSWEET

□ P R U N E J X n C E , Q t . b o t t l e ................................... 2 8 cWEGNER FANCY

□ A P P L E S A U C E , N o . 2 c a n ...................................19 c

n i ' x r s im o L E ttn t ecled •

□ A P R I C O T S , 2 % c a n ............................n r x r s r .v v c r

□ F R U I T C O C K T A I L , 2% c a n ........DEL MONTE F.W TT HALVES

□ P E A R S , 2 H c a n ......................................s u . \ n x s F.CS'CT SCGUENTS

□ G R A P E F R U I T , N o . 2 c a n ...............V T A n T A U Z r BED SO C » PTTTED

□ C H E R R I E S , N o . 2 c a n .........................Sl-NTfT JIM

□ A P P L E J E L L T , 1 2 o z . t n m b l e r .IC .\ P tT lE C.VJE .VXD M.\PLC

27c 39c

- 43c- 17 c 28c

16c□ s m u p , 24 o z . b o t t i e ........ .......................................3 7 c <

B R £E U B B IT COU> UUJH.

□ M O L A S S E S , Q t b o t U e ..........................................4 5 cSTAY c s t s r IN n : c .u a o b m u x

□ P O S T T O A S T I E S , 1 3 o z . p k g . ............................1 7 cTOE FA V O K m : nO T CXSC.\L

□ C B E A M O F W H E A T , I g e . p k g . .........................2 9 cXAC.

□ S H R E D D E D W H E A T , p k g . ................................ J g c

27c 45c

.1 •ONE PArK.\GE‘ ASSORTMENT□ P O S T T E N S , p k g . ........

StOTTIES'S□ C H I N A O A T S , p k g . .....

KJBTOTSH M A C A R O N I , 24 O Z . p k e . ............. - ........................2 9 c

■reXAS NAnx.\L□ G R A P E F R U I T , l b .

JUNTA nE-SVNKIST□ O R A N G E S , U i . ....... ............................................................... S c

AKtZONA r.LNCr□ M E W C A B B A G E , R l . ....

G.AKDEN FKESn

6c

................. SVic□ R A D I S H E S a n d G R . O N I O N S , b i m c h .......... 6 9

r.VXCT SXO BOYS□ T O M A T O E S , 1 I b . c a r t o n ............. ....................... 2 9 c

R I N S O

Contains Solium, Pkp. 37c OXYDOU

P e r P k i r . _ _ i ^ CTKUPorPklT..

lucnS C D S

I N A N T

W A T E R

34c

H E R E A R E M A G I C V A I X E T ’S P R O G R E S S I V E , D q i E P E N D E N T I . T O W N E D I G A S T O R E S

There’s an LG.A. Store Near YouBvnh

Ert> Brothers Market

BVRLEYEconomy Grocery Shelby Drire-In Plk -H- Pak

CABETPattersonrs Market

CASTLE FORDC. Ss M. Food Scrv'lc«

JEROMECity Market Hl-Woy Market P ipers Grocery

RICHFIELD DECLO

Shaw's Market

DIETBlCnOletxlch M e rtu U ls

EDENBob’s D riTt-Ia

BCPCKTV foodlaad

M » eh » ia FWd S tc.t W hlU ej^ Market

SBOSnONKa t r OroeeiT arsi Ma:kz:

T m S TAILSJaisea" F ttsS S er Y crk ^F to d s