12
g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional Newspaper Serrlni: FINAL. EDITION-' yOL.26,NO. 169 TW IN FALLS, IDAHO. MONDAY, OCTOBER 19.1942 U««l>*r A«4li tlgm . .( ClnnUUow PRICE 6 CENTS SOLOMONS ZERO HOUR NEARS U. S., Japs Mass Forces for Major Conflict on Isle JAPS BUILD NEW M P iN IO N . HIORAIKISKA HEADQUARTCnS. ALASICA DE- FENSE COMMAND. OCL 17 (De- Jayed) niJO—Ttie Aluka .defense comm&nd dbclued todn; that con- etnieUtin of »,ncw encampment at Oertniile cove on the loutt) «lde of Kljkk Indicated tile Japanese plan- ned • itubbora defence of the la* ]«nd. Officers Mid ncrlal reconnaissance thowed Uial bulldlnss and emplace- ments were belns built rapidly MoMln ‘'Marauder" bombers al> • lacked tlic area Uirough heavy onU- (.trcratl Ure Oct. IS anti iti a cargo (hip afire. The urtiiy lUo described dcuils of another attack, reported previously in naval communlQues at Washing' ton. In which four-motored liber - ator bomben itrtick deck-level ^ against ililpplng and mlUCAry ob- ^ Jecllves at Klska. Major John W. Watt, Walfrbury. Conn.. led the squadron of bomben, which flew to low Llwt one of the planea dip- ped the radio antenna of a Japanese carco ship. Velun(rers on Board . The txtw of WalVa plane made up of voluktrers to to^ In actual battle a new bomblns tech- nique which Uie Alosku) air forces 3iad been practicing. They lued tor- pedo attack methods. subsUtutlnR l.DOO t>ound bombs for torpedoes and launching the delayed-action mlis- llea In the water along aide a big Jap cargo veuel, OnUnarilj’ sUiAle- rngtned torpedo tu b e rs do that Protected b; a squadron of 32 Ughtnlag and Alracobra lotcf- ceptori. witlch engagtd Jap lero lighters and slrafed anU-alrcrall batteries, the Uberator* swept orcr the harbor leu fhan SO feet above the water. Sgt. Robvt J. Pltzceratd. Jersey Olty, N. J„ «atst gunner In MTatt s plane, « l an o-Lbanw ^Ire-wllh tncenOiafT bull##-s«4‘Xustlrt^ir Klou^ Amarlljo. TV*., anoUier gun- ^ ner. two Japanese planes afire 9 m thej^ irere Lr;mg to take off from tU« hirbof. Cargo KUp AtUcked As Watt tlaried ^ils bomb run, Capt, Marlon A. Morgan. Tampa. F1b„ Aaylgator, Jlraled ihc cargo fthip, and then the plane wm a few yards from tlie vf.wcl. Bombardier Lieut. Paul Puuck. ricmltiBton, W. Vn., loosed a *Uek o ' U»ree 1.000- . pounder.r. Watt pulled the plane up so cloJe to the Jap ship that a ulng tip severed a radio wire at. ihc most. Tall gunner Rosario Bourque. Mcchantcivllle, Peiin.. strafed thn tS«ck o{ Ih t ship fts plant aoaxed over. Ho had Uie seat of his pants shot away by a burst from the . Jopane.',e guns and 'came back "plenty scared" but unhurt. Durinc Ihc atuck. which Insted only 4S ofconds, sgt. Henry 3, How- ard, .Mowup, Conn.. held open the bomb bay doors with hLi feet and fired a sub-machine gun at the Nation’s Capitd (lets Wet Feet (NKA Tetepholo) Old dobbin come* to the rtscoe of a mere wolorUt'once more as flood vairn ef the Totomar river thrcatenrd Wsahlngton, D. C,. and sutttpBnain* artat. The river rece^td jeslcrday. Enemy Registers New Advances in Stalingrad Area * MOSC/HV. 19 (/P,;;r-GenDan troops. fldvanciuK over the bodies of hundreds of their 1160(1, added n new block of StAlingrad'fi crumblinff buildins:8 to their Holdings within the city todny a.^ the Rus.sinn defenders moved-in fresh troops in a dcspemtc effort to blunt and defcnt the latest naii assault, now in iUi .sixth day. s Nevcrthclc.ss, the forco of the onslauRht .seemed leaaened from tiic - fury of attacks get. The carRO vts«S ’j.sis Iclt- teiUWs in the water and observers noted many flrw In the harbor from burn- ing oil barges and shore IcutAlla- tlon». Zle%-en oUier Liberators bombed the harbor from- higher alUtudes, IL ilS ORDERS PRISON SHAKE-OP CHICAGO, Oct. IS (,T>-8 Utevllle penltenUary near Joliet, lIL undef- — «Tnt-»-ehamre-in ntlmmisminoa' Mid routine today while the nation- wide search /or Its seven escaped desperadoes continued. • aupcrvlslon of the prtion was as- sumed by Illlnots' public safety di- rector. T. P. Sullivan, who waa Riven full auliiorlly by Gov. Dwight H. O m n "to lakti any step* nceeasary to correct llie fnulta Uiat have be- come apparent." TJie Republican governor’s an- nouncement yesterday of the admin- istrative fjiake-up was followed by the resiRnntlon ol his appointee of about 15 monUis ago. Warden Ed- ward M. Stubblefield. Regarding the warden's resigna- tion, the governor's onji' comment « w U ut 11 w&s voluwar>-. b u t In »(tinounelng fiuUlvan's assignment to ^ n e post he said 'conditions have eilated at SlatevlUe prison which tall for reniedlcs." , On Oct, 0 Roger Touhy, B».i!l (The Owl) Oanshart and five other Ions- term convlcta scaled the prison walls to their freedom. All are still at large. No Students Return, . Schools Again Shut DLACKPOOT, Oct. I«-O ver pre>- tcsla or farm organliJitJona. the board of trustees called city sehools back, loto testlon after a ttn>weeks' harvest vacation. But so few atu- denta sliowed up today that Junior and lenlor high school were dismissed at mld-momlog-for an. oUier week, ■“ The studenU were out working' Id the Xlelds. c;irlicr in the sicKC, and Home ob.scrvcr.s qiic.stioiicd w hether this was-due to «n cxhfluslion of force.s or to n German shift of strcrtffth to the we.st to face n po-ssible scc'ond front, Th{ danger to Stalingrad sUll re- malned acute, wlUi U)c German at- 'lack tonctnitaltd Into nnrrcrw snl- ^lents In a desperate effort lb achieve a final break-through. Earlier rcporu had placed the Jlereeal lighting In the besieged city In Uie northern factoo' area aijjl jj. u-as assumed Uiat Uje new,-Oonnaa gain was registered there. "llundred.i of encmj; deod were left j!i the street and IS'tonks were knocked out,' the cojnmunlque said, U TUnn Downed ' Fourteen German planes support* 18 Uie German n.wault •were brought down by red air force pilots and antl-ftlrcratt lire, the commun- ique said, liidicating Uie, Intemliy of the Oerman drive toword their objective.- Among the axis troops thrown Into the storming bnlile for Stalingrad, the Ru3.i|ans said, wns the CroaUan legion of fOOO troop.i. forming part of the lOOUi German light Infantry division, Pravda reported that of the orig- inal <flOQ members of U^ls lesion only a single company or npprosl- mateiy 300 men remained os the ^ r m a n _co_riunandrra relentie.Mly puSiea’IJnlT troops towa'rcVinc-VoV ga fiver. • Tlie flghUng norUiwcst of SUlln- grad was only of local Imporunce. the communique said, but It added Uiat a Oerman concentnvUon of In- fantry preparing lor attack In that area was dispersed by red army UUerr fire. J Companies IVlped Got Red aimy troops resisting Uie Oerman drive to»'ard U\e Oroinv oil fields In Uie Mojdok region wiped out three companies of Oerman In- fantry and destroyed 11 tanks In rc- puUlnj atv attack there, the mimlque said, Tlie lighting In the Caucasus, at Moidok end Novorosslsk, Uic Ger- mas\.oecMple(l naval base on Uie BUek sea. was pushed hito the back^ ground by Uie ()ramaUo defense' of Stalingrad, Yesterday alone, said the com- munique, 3.SD0 nazl soldiers gave up theft- lives for Adolf Hitler's unful- filled dream of t*klng this sturdy clUdel on the Volga. Forty-five tanks were reported destroyed. Vote Asked for 18-Year-OldBoys WASHINGTON, GcL IB WV-Sen- ator Vandenberg, R,. Mich, pro- posed a constitutional amendment In the senate today to enUClcd men to' vote at i/ie age of 18, “If youjig men of 18 are to be drafted to fight for their counUj-," VandB\beig lald, “they should be' able to vote for the klpd of gcrvem- ment lie eououy ia.to have." Idaho Trails in Nation’s Scrap Metal Turn-In NEW YORK. GcUUf W - The iTiallon's neu-spapersC. iresli from leading Uie country-wide metal sal- vage drive which ended In mo«t itAtes Saturday — today turned itt plans for helping the government liUher lieavyvlndustrlal scrap ■Kan.M3, WliA an csllmoted'total collection w tar of 673-n ions lor nn overage of 97 jwunds per per- rpporllng ’States which already ha\V announced com- blntd salvage ol 2,7iJ,(n5 tons for a [>er person avcr.ige of «8J) pounds. Utah was nmdng the leaders but Idaho trailed. These ligurp.-s will be revised up- wards and mny change some stand- ings of the sutes. While the general drive was a 21- day effort wiiich begti'n Sept; 28, in wme ,<tale.^ It started earlier and In some later jn d return.? still w-ere pouring In av the oSflcc o{ iht news- papers' united scrap meui drive committee. According to tiie national hend- QMnrttii. Utah was tenth on the -^tate Ibt, with C8J pounds per cap- ita and a toUi of.lB,:00 tons. Idalio was near the bollom-wlih 7.0 pounds peiLpcr»on and a total of 2X100 ton.i. MMHURCRAFI npfip Rnii/iRc.n^ ajAP:CR OEN, . MacARTHUR-S HEAD- QUAUTEna, Australia, Oct. 19 (UJO —Allied bombers of Oen. Douglsia MacArUiur’s command, poundlns Japanese shipping concentratJoru In the northern Solomons, have j^red probable hits on three enemy eruis*. ers, a comtnunlque ynhouoced to- day. Fb’lng Portresses made their most determined &tUmpv to aid Amtilc&a forest factns th e new Jopftnese Uircat. on OuadalcansI Island by raiding the enemy shipping off Buln, In southern BougalnvUle, for severol hours .yestertlay, The coinmimlque said Uire; cruls- ■s a-eir believed lilt and a large ieaplnne tender and several cargo vessels bombed. One freighter was strafed and set afire 'and seven fly- ing boat.-! destroyed or-damaged. Farced U Withdrew In the 'and (ighUng on New Guinea, meanwhile, allied Jungle {Ighitrs, in a *han> cV.Vih with the enemy north of Templeton's cros.i- Ing in the towering Owen Stanley mountaln.-j, force<l the Japanese to wUhdraw etm farther towards Ko-» kOfla. Tlie enemy's retreat wa.i so pre- cipltMu th a t he abandoned mortars, machine guns and other equipment besides a relntlvely large number of dead, MacArUiur's communique tlliS claim any definite advance In the Stanleys, however, and It was under- stood that the aides Had not sUrt- ed the S.OOO-Ioot descent toward the enemy stronB point at Kokoda. In Allied Hands The allied lighten were forcing the Japanese to withdraw down Uie north side of the Stanley range by a comblnaUon of, fronul’pressure ond Ilanklng maneuvers.' A head- quarters spokesman said yesterday that Templeton's crouing, gate^'ay to.Uje nlne-mlle descent to Kokoda n5w v«A-tn-.«iUied-ld»a.<i alter a one to two mlle'advanM. Tlie Dutch Island of Borneo, miss- ing from the n e n for several monUiJi. relumed lo prominence when the Netherlands Indies gov- ernment Information service report- ed that 68 Dutch olJlcers and men had finally surrendered to the enemy after nine monUis ot re- sUi.mce. Tlicy hud been tl.lattic.tlic Ja\>- ic.'.e 400 miles north o( Balikpapan and Imd been forced Inland, where they conUnued lo resist. Their sur- render 'j.-fts tf»»S6u«c«J Urrt by radio Tokyo which /.aid—for the eighth time—th a t all hosUIiiles now had cpased In Borneo. 98,000 ilL E 0 ‘ r4iiE ira The final payment o( tIBS.OOO to migar beet farmers ot the Tft'ln PalLi, Burley and Rupert districts Is now behig mailed by the AmaU gamaled Sugar company, according U j Information tumhhed by tlie As- sociated Prc.vi. This money,'whlcJi complttea psy- lent for the mil crop. Is part of a total Ilnal payrnent ot Mti.OOO which soes 10 the Ogden, Lewiston and Nyssn-Oregon dljtrlcls. in ad- dition to UiLt locsUty. Tlie large pay- ment Is said to make an average of #fi cent4 per ton, bringing the total average for the crop to' J8-C per ton. II. A. Bcnnlng, president of Amal- gamated, .laid a t Ogden, UUih, today Uiat -She beet -crop now being her- vfsled 1s the largest In Uie history of Uie company, approaching cloM to. 1.000,000-tons,-------------- ----------- alUc£LlorC£i-ln CWna,_________ ------- Japs Drive on Guadalcanal 'FliDBlDA!..: _ST*TUTE MILES Jf’v' * „ GUADALCANAL! The UnlUd.SUln onil Japan were manhaling probably their great. e<t land. »ea and air forte* of lh( war for a decUlve battle In ihe Holomon Islands as a vMl enemy fleet bore down' an /m erlran-held Guadalcanal liland and newly airlvrd U. X, array troopi and planet Joined In the •(niggle. Jap laiidlnm en the Uland have'been, apparently, near the western end. U. S, force* were f»lahli»hed Jorther east larcj. FLASHES of LIFE By Auoclated Prtki’ Prohibition Is Asked At Army, Navy Camps WASHINGTON. Oct. 19 (U.PJ-Senatc M njSty Leader Alben W. Bnrkicy, D„ Ky„ predicted today that an amend- ment to the ’tcen-ngc draft bill e.itablishin}f'prohibition in areas ^urroiindinff miHtary and,naval po.its‘probably would be adopted "if it geta to n roll call vote." Asked if he would oppose the amendment, offered by Sen. Josh Lee. D., Okla., Barkley told reporters: '‘Well, someone probably will.” Tlie Deoiocraile lender said that legislation lowering the dralt age to it win TiOV be taken ■up In i^e »en- at«. until Thursday In order lo ac* commodaie senators who lelt the capital Ion the understandjng that no imporunt business would be tratuacted in their absence. liee has len-cd notice that he press for sdoptlon of his amend- ment. The amendment, previously turn- ed down by Uie senate military af- fairs committee, would prohibit tl\e Kale, possession, u.ie or glH ot all alcoholic beverldges. Including beer, irnarmy and navy posM ond within surrounding areas to be designated by the secretaries of war and navy. Lee told reporura that ''a train- ing camp li a school teaching the mail serious business In the world. Liquor Is not allbwed to be sold In or near the schools these boys would be attending If-they were not need- ed In the war effort." JIls amendment has the backing of the Women's ChrlsClanv-Temperance Mnion *ind other dry orRanliatlons. Offensive Looms On Japs in Biirma LONDON, Oct, 19 gath- ering of Billed mlllUiry leaders In New Delhi heightened ihe belief In London todiy that plans are being seeded lor tm o11en.Mve agnln.it the Japanese In Burma. ' The latest of Uie orrlval.i at Gen. Sir Archibald Wavcll’s headquarters wns Gen, Sir Claude Auchlnleck, former commander of BrllWi forces In the middle ea.it. who wn,i reported In line for appolnimenf'soon to.' Important pont. His appearance In New Delhi was preceded by the nrrlvsl of Lieut. aet\. Jen-n!i aniwell. chief of lUft War Manpower Commission Raps At Poor Distribution of Workers By JOHN KL InkCKLl.S WASHINGTON. Dc^ivlO HI.I>)-A top-offlclal of the war manpower •led today Uiat the so-called manpower crlsb has de- veloped because of "mal-dlstrlbu- tlon. raUier than a.n actual aho(V> age of workers.' He remarked Uiat American power wonies silll are Insignificant In contrast lo these fnccd' by the British. ^{any of this country's problems have been aggravated by employers and labor unions ~«ho suil act as If UiU were a peace-time labor market." he asserted. Thts official—who declined to (k quoted directly on grounds he' was expressing personal opinions —re- ported Uiat many war plants ^UII refuse to hire Negroes, women, ajed. or physically-handicapped workers, despite the-fact that serious labor shortages exist In the same locslN Ues. He added Uiat numeiwu Indus- tries are not cooperating wim WMO pleas that Uiey step up their train- ing programs. Shortages In nearly 150 categorJea of skilled workers al- ready ar^ so acute Uul the only “Some plants whl^i silll refuse to hire women could replace SO per cent of their workers with wo- men," he said. He mentlot\cd spe- clHcaHy *evcT&l •well-known war plants which sUll discriminate against Negroes. This and other officials agreed that despite-numerous local labor shortages which have caused seri- ous producUon lags In some indus- Uies, America is just gettlns started toward all-out roobllixaUon of its man and wotnonpower resources. WMC'* officials and Uie British press scrvloe prortded tht toUowins figures to Illustrate the sharp con- trast between the two nations' man- power sltuaUons: 0 1 B r ita in 's «C,’3SO.OCiO popuUUon. 16.000,000, or slightly more Uiui one- third. eltlier are serving In Uie armed forces or working lo dirtct war acUvlUes, Including civilian de- fense, but not Including sgrlcullurt. Of America's 134.000,000 popuU- Uon. about 30,000,000, or sUghUy less than one-seventh, trill be serving (R4-di the armed forces or working in dl- -wi m e war acUvlllea. includlog nelUitr civilian defense nor ogrlculture, by the end of this year. Britain already has mobilized Its mnupowet virtually to ihe limit, but the United States, occordlng to present plans, will have boosted the total of persons In war Jobs or the armed lorca only to 36,500,000, or about one-fourth of the total popu- IaUon,'by the end .of next year. Britain, by UrasUc (uti even In <;ssenUal civilian phiducUon ’and total bans on all non-essential pro- ducUon. has released hundreds of thousatids o( workers for w u Jobs, Officials reported here that "we're Just beglntilng’ to tap manpower In this manner. ■WMC Chalrman l^ul V. McNutt Just last night announced WMC's first "statement of policy" regard- ing women workers. The policy urged remoral of all barriers against women worken. Uist they be hired and tralfled “on a basis of cquaUty with men" and that tlicy bo given “free access to , foremen's supcr- vlsoiy, and technical Jobs." U uijed employers -to anaIjTe all Jobs la U»lr plants at cnce to ■determine which esn be filled by women and (o prepare for employ- ing the largest possible number." FULL TLME pinsDUBau, Oct. ia-^'!cu*r-. ley the Cliinaman," whoso proper name Is Yee Joe, doesn't 'do things by halves when Uncle Sam calls. Ordered for army Induction. Char- ley sold Uie laundry and made ar- rangements for Ills prlzo Chow dog lo be given to *'dogs for de- lenjc," "All I want Is a gun." he told ■>nerchanla who gave him n fare- well party. "I’m through wlUi the , laundr^-'buslncM unUi after Uie wsr. I'm even going 'to jiend my o»Ti clothes to the laundry now." L4TE DI.SCOVEhV PHILADELPHIA. Oct. I9-Ar- Ihur Susscl, anU<]ue denier, lias Just got around to dUicovcrlng' that he'd been robbed of 'Jewelry valued at U,300—three weeks ago, Sussel spied a couple of iewelry trays near an asli bln. Tlien lie re- called he'd taken Uiem out of the safe three weeks ago to diiplay a ring to a customer. Among the objects stolen were a baby's gold rattle valued at 1150. LATE PAY WUrrEPlSH, Monu Oct. il>-o. M. Moss Uiought he said 30 days but maybe It was 30 years, He.loaned a friend 1100 In Mny. 1913, so he could go east to,a Job. Moss lust received his llrst word from the friend—payment of IIJO. WRASSLER SPOKANE,'Wash. Oct. IB-^am McVey picked up a ‘few holdi by being guinea pig for the JuJltsu expert who taught Uie cops some new tricks. It paid. A deer Sam thought he'd shot desd Jumped up as he le.tned m-er It. Ttie critter, Sam rti»ned as -he- stored - venison" in-'r-locterr- ' 't know A thing about JuJlUu. EARiyjRiFOR HESSOEMAiEO MOSCOW, Oct. 19 IA>—Pravda. official organ of the*' communist parly, demanded today -Uiat Rudolf Hes], No! a nazl held by Uie BrlUsh, be brought to trial Immediately re- gartCess of his status as a war prls- Pravda's demand followed a fliu- slan statement- last week In reply to a declaraUon by refugee govern- menu In London, that Germany's "war criminals” who fall Into allied Ivand* should be tiled Immediately. raUier Uian held until the end of the war. 'To wall lo try Hess unUl the wir Is o;er would be incomprehensible," Pravds said. What U Hess? U he a criminal or a plenipotentiary rcp- rcsenUUve of Germany In Brit- ain?" Descrlblnj; Hess, who flew ta Brit- ain last May, as "one of the blood- iest Hltierlta criminals." Pnvda said: . . "He should not escape Immediate trtal since It U not Use IntemaUon-' ml convention ot war prisoners wtilch exempts war prisoners from trial regardlea of the severity of the crlma they. tuv« comialH^.*' pySANDOnS. KLEIN WASHINGTON. Del. 15 IU.P.)—The zero hour wns at hand (n the Solomon i.<ilands today. American marine.^, soldiers and sailor.^ were braced to meet ^/^'‘StroiiK a8.inuU" by hcavily-rcinforced Japanese troop.-? on Guadalcanal island. . ’ • American airmen were "dishing it out.” They and anti- aircraft Kunners baRKcd 17 more planw with the loss of only one of their own. But the TR OU GO SIEK Parmers-and tnickefs dolnt 51 per cent of Uielr business with farm- ers-wlU receive blank "cerUfleatea ot war 'tveceiiliy" from the Detroit office of OUT UiU week which must be filled out and returned by Nov. IS, according to members of the new county Uruck transpottaUon committee. Such Uuck owners may be denied gusollnec Ures and ports for ihcir trucks lf\the certificates re i)ot granted. *• Members of the county commit- .•e, of which Bmer WlUon. Hansen, Is tlie chairman, said that farrners able to fill out the certWicates wlUi- out help are urged to do so. How- ever. the cbmmlliee will nuet at a p. m. today In the ottlce ot coun- ty Agent Bert Bolingbroke lo set up district groups to aid farmeri In filling Uiem tut. “The ceiUJltales art MUtmely compUcated.' Agent Dolingbroke de- clared, "and most farmers probably will need assistance In filling them ■nifpersons selected to aid-Uie farmers .wlUi Utt .WanVs will be given insWtKUons >0 nw tlngs to be held TUbsdny and ■ wednesdsj nlghl, BoUnibroke nlecJsrcd. Tliey mosi likely will be Women because men are at a premium now due to Uielr engagement In harvest work. The campaigp to get In the cei Uficalcs will be sUgcd Thursday. Pilfiay and SaturCny 'which Ivave been designated as reglslraUon days. "Ttie letters bearing Uie blank certificates will have self nddrc-'Jcd envelopes." Bolingbroke declared, "Tlic.i« can be mailed baclr lo De- Uolt as soon as the cerUncates are filled out." ilollngbroke said the names or Uie UucK owners had been obtained Uirough Uie state automobile llccnse department. Bulletins WASHINGTON, Del. 10 <U.P- Araerlean naval ve»a«ls bearlly, bombarded JapaacM potlUeos an Goadalcanal while U. B, alm ea hammered steadily at every ihip and shore conetn- tnttim* In the BeltnenS, the navy annsuneed («day, DisclMlng Uiat U more enemy planea'were destroyed, Uie nsvr communique s>ld that n9 teecnl MONTEVIDEO, OcL 19 </Pr-Tlie Uruguayan govcnunent aulhorlred o private firm today lo raL« Uie hull of the scuttled Oerman pocket bat- tleship Graf Spec from the bottom ot the river Plata m order to re- claim Uie ship's steel. WAKIIINGTON. OtI. 15 The senate was asked tudsy (o go on retord wlUi a statement that '„the prire conlrol law contilns no anihoHxatton f«r dedueUons o( fstw benefit payments from par- ity pritM In live filing e( telUnn for sfrienllsral cemmodllles. ' MANCHESTER. N. lU Oct. 19 —"This countiy In IM3 wlU turn out a gr^atec navy Uian any nation in ihe world ever possewd." Sec- retary of the Navy Frank Knox told •■Manchester's own'* haval artatlon unit as It was sworn in. CourtTurns Down Sentence Review For Film Magnate WASHmOTON, OcL IS (Ufi)—The supreme court today denied the ap- peal of William Pox, movie magnate, ror a review of his conviction on charges of conspiracy to obstruct Jusllct, and cl the »ubse<jMei^l U ,000 fine and year-and-a-dsy sen-' ince Imposed on him. ReJccUon of Fox's peUtfon hlgh- ilghted me court's secood declsloo d»v of Its new l{M3-43 term . . The tribunal rejectad pleos of three members of the Jehovah's Wltnuses religious sect (or review of Uielr eonvicUons ojt charges of violating lo c a l ordinaacss of as many T c u s towns tn <SlsWbutt&g rtUglous pamphlets. Ther charged the oidinance vlotated the .consti- tutional guarantee* ot freedon o( prt» and of rdl8len;.*ni* Tbxm towns involved were ytawlUa. Paris and Comanche. 8Wt« caurtJf upheld Uis omiDinoes la «U caM*. navy mude no attempt lo hido tlic fact that the Americans’ po-sitlon is critical and thatf "in a' battle of this nature los.scfl mu.st be expected." The batUe was (or tha.alrfleld-on— Guadalcanal—a clearing cliopped Wit ot Uie dense Jungle by iho 0«pantM and captured by V. 8. marln&'^arly In August before the enemy had a chance to use It. The balUeground was a U mil# stretch of ant-lnfested beach be- tween Cap Esperanee at the north- west Up of Guadalcanal andTenaru, near the middle of the north shore. Narrow Area Tlie area Is narrow, the moun- - tains and Jungles extending close to Uie shore. Because of Uiat and the fact that both sides had given clear IndlcaUons of willingness to . pay almost any prlcc for control ot the airfield, losses on boUi sidel probably will be heavy. Tlte Japanese—on Ute -otten^vt for the Uilrd Ume u» try to rctak# th e .alrlleld—conUnued "softening up" operations over {he week-end as .-^irelude to a grand uaaull. They pcre using large-scale-bomber at-' tacks Saturday (Solomons time), the last day reported. , The defenfleri were being aided by heavy.army bombers advance air-naval base at Duln, 300 miles from Guadalcanal, In four n ^ t and wllh 2J''ioni:'or'bom bs ■£helud!n«'''~ many thbusands>ounder». Bombs dApped among destroyers, cruisers &nd transports and were believed to have scored direct hits on three cruisers. ------- Jap Disaster The effort; lo bomb the alrllfld ,n Guadalcanal <nded disastrous- ly for Uie Japanese. The.11 bombers and fighters 4I10I down by Ameri- cans brought lotal enemy plane losses for the Solomons batUe’ to more than 300.' ■nie attacks on Uie airfield coma Saturday momlnf and afternoon. R )u r^ n bombers escorted by eight flg h m attacked In the early mom- Init. American Hshttrs and anti-' aircraft batteries de.i;royed oU. of the bombers and two Jl the fighters. BatUe Ontcome v In the nxrly afternoon, 1&bomb- , -.-8 nnd a number of.flghteni tried again. One enemy bomber was prob- ably destroyed. There w-as UtUc oUier fresh netcs n the Solomon encounter,' How- .icr, a London newspaper dLtpstch from Pearl Harbor suggested that ' the outcome of Uie batUe might de- termine tthcUier the American* would find It pouible to-push north against the Japanese or the Japan* se pQ-‘>h south toward New Zcaliuid >nd Uie vital AustralasU supply Ine: Nn, ThLv report said the Japanese may have OS many as 2JO.OOO troops con- . centraied at Truk, their major baso In the Marshall Islands, ready to , drive MuUi If the attack on UiO Solomor}s sliould succeed. ONy’ SALE OF HOySESSJOPPEO WAainNOTON, Oct. 19 ai.Rt — Price Administrator Leon Hender- son. lo a move to halt *'phony" sales ot houses to evade rtn l control, to- day established two requirements . which must be .met before a pur- chaser can obtain the right to oc- ipy a’dwelling now rented. 1. The purchaser of such a dwell- ing must pay one third of the sell- ing price before an evlcUon cerUf- Icate will be issued by the OPA area rent director. 3. Three months mu.U then ps.M before the present tenant can b« forced to vacate. Henderson said Uiat borrowed money will not be considered satis* lactorj lor the down payment The amendment, cffecUve tomor- row, applies to all housing sow tin- der rent control except hoWs and rooming houses. 'n e rent control areas now cover 70,000.000 of the populaUon and by Dec. B wlU embrace '(he entire coun- , try. hous« trom «a ownet «b»iWW.oo>i,.T,>' 'cupleslt. '• PenalUea lor rtolai^ ' on convIcUoo. • *»»• • ■yttxt la pnsco lyoOTW. 'AXMSOTJECMAWasitTO

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Page 1: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

g} f a l l s COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA

W80.TONS 'C a n e c M K > f i r 7 4 8 l 0 B i

A Ifejional Newspaper Serrlni:

FI NAL.

E DI T I ON - '

yO L.26,N O . 169 T W IN FALLS, IDAHO. MONDAY, OCTO BER 19 .1942 U««l>*r A«4li tlgm . .( ClnnUUow PRICE 6 CENTS

SOLOMONS ZERO HOUR NEARSU. S., Japs Mass Forces for Major Conflict on Isle

JAPS BUILD NEW M P i N I O N

. H IO R A IK IS K AHEADQUARTCnS. ALASICA DE­

FENSE COMMAND. OCL 17 (De- Jayed) niJO—Ttie A lu k a .defense comm&nd dbclued todn ; th a t con- etnieUtin of »,ncw encam pm ent a t Oertniile cove on the lou tt) «lde of Kljkk Indicated tile Japanese plan­ned • itubbora defence of the la* ]«nd.

Officers Mid ncrlal reconnaissance thowed Uial bulldlnss and emplace­ments were belns built rapidly MoMln ‘'M arauder" bombers al>

• lacked tlic area Uirough heavy onU- (.trcratl Ure Oct. IS anti i t i a cargo (hip afire.

The urtiiy lUo described d c u ils of another attack, reported previously in naval communlQues a t W ashing' ton. In which four-motored l ib e r ­ator bomben itrtick deck-level

^ against ililpplng and mlUCAry ob- ^ Jecllves a t Klska. M ajor John W.

Watt, Walfrbury. Conn.. led the squadron of bomben, which flew to low Llwt one of the planea d ip ­ped the radio antenna of a Japanese carco ship.

Velun(rers on Board .The txtw of WalVa plane

made up of voluktrers to to^ In ■ actual battle a new bomblns tech­

nique which Uie Alosku) a ir forces 3iad been practicing. They lued to r­pedo attack methods. subsUtutlnR l.DOO t>ound bombs for torpedoes and launching the delayed-action mlis- llea In the water along aide a big Jap cargo veuel, OnUnarilj’ sUiAle- rngtned torpedo t u b e r s do th a t

Protected b ; a squadron of 32 Ughtnlag and Alracobra lo tc f- ceptori. witlch engagtd Ja p lero lighters and slrafed anU -alrc ra ll batteries, the Uberator* sw ept orcr the harbor le u fhan SO fee t above the water.

Sgt. R obvt J . Pltzceratd. Jersey Olty, N. J„ «a tst gunner In MTatt s plane, « l an o-Lbanw ^ Ir e - w llh tncenOiafT b u ll# # - s « 4 ‘ X u s tlr t^ ir K lou^ Amarlljo. TV*., anoUier gun-

^ ner. two Japanese p lanes afire 9 m thej^ irere Lr;mg to take off from

tU« h irbof.Cargo KUp AtUcked

As W att tlaried ^ ils bomb run, Capt, Marlon A. Morgan. Tam pa. F1b„ Aaylgator, Jlraled ih c cargo fthip, and then the plane wm a few yards from tlie vf.wcl. Bom bardier Lieut. Paul Puuck. ricm ltiB ton, W. Vn., loosed a *Uek o ' U»ree 1.000-

. pounder.r. Watt pulled the plane up so cloJe to the Jap sh ip th a t a ulng tip severed a radio wire at. ihc most.

Tall gunner Rosario Bourque. Mcchantcivllle, Peiin.. s trafed thn tS«ck o{ Ih t ship fts p la n t aoaxed over. Ho had Uie seat of his pan ts shot away by a burst from the

. Jopane.',e guns and 'cam e back "plenty scared" but unhurt.

Durinc Ihc a tuck . which Insted only 4S ofconds, sgt. Henry 3, How­ard, .Mowup, Conn.. held open the bomb bay doors with hLi feet and fired a sub-machine gun a t the

Nation’s Capitd (lets Wet Feet

(NKA Tetepholo)Old dobbin come* to the rtscoe of a mere wolorUt'once more as

flood v a irn ef th e Totomar river thrcatenrd Wsahlngton, D. C,. and sutttpBnain* a r ta t. T he river rece^td jeslcrday.

Enemy Registers New Advances in Stalingrad Area

* MOSC/HV. 19 (/P,;;r-GenDan troops. fldvanciuK over the bodies of h u n d red s of th e ir 1160(1, added n new block of StAlingrad'fi crum blinff buildins:8 to th e ir Holdings w ithin the city todny a. th e Rus.sinn defenders moved-in fresh troops in a dcspem tc e f fo r t to b lu n t and defcn t th e la te s t n a ii assault, now in iUi .sixth day .s Nevcrthclc.ss, th e forco o f th e onslauRht .seemed leaaened

from tiic - fu ry o f a tta ck s

get.The carRO vts«S ’j.sis Iclt- te iU W s

in the water and observers noted many flrw In the harbor from bu rn ­ing oil barges and shore IcutAlla- tlon». Zle%-en oUier Liberators bombed the harbor from- higher alUtudes,

I L i l S ORDERS PRISON SHAKE-OP

CHICAGO, Oct. IS (,T>-8 Utevllle penltenUary near Joliet, lIL undef-

— «T n t-» -eham re -in n tlm m ism inoa' Mid routine today while the na tio n ­wide search /or Its seven escaped desperadoes continued.• aupcrvlslon of the prtion was a s ­sumed by Illlnots' public safe ty d i­rector. T. P. Sullivan, who waa Riven full auliiorlly by Gov. Dwight H. O m n "to lakti any step* nceeasary to correct llie fnulta Uiat have be­come apparent."

■ TJie Republican governor’s a n ­nouncement yesterday of the adm in­istrative fjiake-up was followed by the resiRnntlon ol his appointee of about 15 monUis ago. W arden E d ­ward M. Stubblefield.

Regarding the warden's resigna­tion, the governor's onji' comment « w U ut 11 w&s voluwar>-. b u t In

»(tinounelng fiuUlvan's assignment to ^ n e post he said 'conditions have

eilated a t SlatevlUe prison which ta ll for reniedlcs.", O n Oct, 0 Roger Touhy, B».i!l (The Owl) Oanshart and five other Ions- term convlcta scaled the prison walls to their freedom. All are still a t large.

No Students Return, . Schools Again Shut

DLACKPOOT, Oct. I« -O v e r pre>- tcsla or farm organliJitJona. th e board of trustees called city sehools back, loto testlon after a ttn>weeks' harvest vacation. But so few a tu- denta sliowed up today th a t Junior and lenlor high school weredismissed a t m ld-m om log-for a n . oUier week,

■“ T he studenU were out working' Id the Xlelds.

c;irlicr in the sicKC, and Home ob.scrvcr.s qiic.stioiicd w h eth er th is was-due to « n cxhfluslion o f force.s o r to n Germ an sh ift of strcrtffth to th e we.st to face n po-ssible scc'ond fron t,

Th{ danger to S talingrad sUll re- malned acute, wlUi U)c G erm an at- 'lack tonctn ita ltd Into nnrrcrw snl- ^lents In a desperate e ffo rt lb achieve a final break-through.

Earlier rcporu had placed the Jlereeal lighting In th e besieged city In Uie northern fac too ' a rea aijjl jj. u-as assumed Uiat Uje new,-Oonnaa gain was registered there.

"llundred.i of encmj; deod were left j!i the street and IS 'tonks were knocked ou t,' the cojnmunlque said,

U T U n n Downed ' Fourteen German planes support*

18 Uie German n.wault •were brought down by red a ir force pilots and antl-ftlrcratt lire, th e commun­ique said, liidicating Uie, Intem liy of the Oerman drive toword their objective.-

Among the axis troops thrown Into the storming bnlile for Stalingrad, the Ru3.i|ans said, wns the CroaUan legion of fOOO troop.i. form ing part of the lOOUi German ligh t Infantry division,

Pravda reported th a t of the orig­inal <flOQ members of U^ls lesion only a single company or npprosl- mateiy 300 men rem ained os the ^ r m a n _co_riunandrra relentie.Mly puSiea’IJnlT troops towa'rcVinc-VoV ga fiver.• Tlie flghUng norUiwcst of SU lln-

grad was only of local Im porunce. the communique said, bu t I t added Uiat a Oerman concentnvUon of In­fantry preparing lor a ttack In tha t area was dispersed by red arm y UUerr fire.

J Companies IVlped Got Red aimy troops resisting Uie

Oerman drive to»'ard U\e Oroinv oil fields In Uie Mojdok region wiped out three companies of O erm an In­fantry and destroyed 11 tanks In rc- puU lnj atv attack there , the mimlque said,

Tlie lighting In the Caucasus, a t Moidok end Novorosslsk, Uic Ger- mas\.oecMple(l naval base on Uie BUek sea. was pushed h ito th e back^ ground by Uie ()ramaUo defense' of Stalingrad,

Yesterday alone, said the com­munique, 3.SD0 nazl soldiers gave up theft- lives for Adolf H itler's unfu l­filled dream of t*klng th is sturdy clUdel on the Volga. Forty-five tanks were reported destroyed.

Vote Asked for 18-Year-OldBoys

WASHINGTON, GcL IB W V-Sen- a to r Vandenberg, R,. M ich , pro­posed a constitutional am endm ent In the senate today to enUClcd men to' vote at i/ie age of 18,

“If youjig men of 18 a re to be drafted to fight for th e ir counUj-," VandB\beig lald , “they should be' able to vote for the klpd of gcrvem- m ent l i e eououy ia.to have."

Idaho Trails in Nation’s Scrap

Metal Turn-InNEW YORK. GcUUf W - The

iTiallon's neu-spapersC. iresli from leading Uie country-wide metal sal­vage drive which ended In mo«t itAtes Saturday — today turned itt plans for helping the government liU her lieavyvlndustrlal scrap ■ Kan.M3, WliA an csllm oted 'total

collection w tar of 673-n ions lor nn overage of 97 jwunds per per-

rpporllng ’States which already ha\V announced com- b ln td salvage ol 2,7iJ,(n5 tons for a [>er person avcr.ige of «8J) pounds. Utah was nmdng the leaders but Idaho trailed.

These ligurp.-s will be revised up­wards and mny change some stand­ings of the sutes.

While the general drive was a 21- day effort wiiich begti'n Sept; 28, in wme ,<tale. It started earlier and In some later j n d return.? still w-ere pouring In av the oSflcc o{ ih t news­papers' united scrap m eui drive committee.

According to tiie national hend- QMnrttii. U tah was tenth on the -^tate Ibt, with C8J pounds per cap­ita and a toUi of.lB,:00 tons. Idalio was near the bollom-wlih 7.0 pounds peiLpcr»on and a total of 2X100 ton.i.

M M H U R C R A F Inpfip Rnii/iRc.n

a jA P :C ROEN, . MacARTHUR-S H E A D -

Q U A U T E na, Australia, Oct. 19 (UJO —Allied bombers of Oen. Douglsia M acA rUiur’s command, poundlns Japanese shipping concentratJoru In the n o r th e rn Solomons, have j ^ r e d probable h its on three enemy eruis*. ers, a comtnunlque ynhouoced to­day.

F b ’lng Portresses made their most de term ined &tUmpv to aid Amtilc&a forest fa c tn s t h e new Jopftnese U ircat. on OuadalcansI Island by raid ing th e enemy shipping off Buln, In sou thern BougalnvUle, for severol ho u rs .yestertlay,

T h e coinmimlque said Uire; cruls- ■s a-eir believed lilt and a large

ieap lnne tender and several cargo vessels bombed. One freighter was s trafed a n d se t afire 'and seven fly­ing boat.-! destroyed or-damaged.

Farced U Withdrew In the ' a n d (ighUng on New

G uinea, meanwhile, allied Jungle {Ighitrs, in a *han> cV.Vih with the enemy n o r th of Templeton's cros.i- Ing in th e towering Owen Stanley mountaln.-j, force<l the Japanese to wUhdraw e tm farther towards Ko-» kOfla.

T lie enem y's retreat wa.i so pre- cipltM u th a t he abandoned mortars, machine guns and other equipment besides a relntlvely large number of dead,

MacA rUiur's communique tlliS claim any definite advance In the Stanleys, however, and It was under­stood th a t th e aides Had not sU rt- ed th e S.OOO-Ioot descent toward the enemy stronB point a t Kokoda.

In Allied Hands T he a llied ligh ten were forcing

the Ja p an e se to withdraw down Uie north side of the Stanley range by a comblnaUon o f , fronu l’ pressure ond Ilank lng maneuvers.' A head­quarters spokesman said yesterday th a t T em pleton 's crouing, gate^'ay to .U je n lne-m lle descent to Kokoda n5w v«A-tn-.«iUied-ld»a.<i alter a one to two mlle'advanM.

Tlie D utch Island of Borneo, miss­ing from th e n e n for several monUiJi. re lu m ed lo prominence when the Netherlands Indies gov­ernm ent Inform ation service report­ed th a t 68 D utch olJlcers and men had finally surrendered to t h e enemy a fte r nine monUis o t re- sUi.mce.

Tlicy hud been tl.lattic.tlic Ja\>- ic.'.e 400 m iles north o( Balikpapan

and Imd been forced Inland, where they conUnued lo resist. Their sur­render 'j.-fts tf»»S6u«c«J Urrt by radio Tokyo w hich /.aid—for the eighth time—th a t a ll hosUIiiles now had cpased In Borneo.

98,000 i l L E 0 ‘r 4 i i E i r a

The f in a l paym ent o( tIBS.OOO to migar beet farm ers ot the Tft'ln PalLi, B urley and Rupert districts Is now behig mailed by the AmaU gam aled S u g a r company, according Uj In form ation tum hhed by tlie As­sociated Prc.vi.

This m oney,'w hlcJi complttea psy- len t fo r th e m il crop. Is part of a

total I ln a l payrnent ot Mti.OOO which soes 10 the Ogden, Lewiston and N yssn-Oregon dljtrlcls. in ad­dition to UiLt locsUty. Tlie large pay­m ent Is sa id to make an average of #fi cent4 pe r ton , bringing the total average for th e crop to' J8-C per ton.

II. A. B cnnlng , president of Amal­gamated, .laid a t Ogden, UUih, today Uiat -She b eet -crop now being her- vfsled 1s th e largest In Uie history of Uie com pany, approaching cloM to . 1.000,000-tons,-------------- -----------alUc£LlorC£i-ln CWna,_________ -------

Japs Drive on Guadalcanal 'FliDBlDA!..:

_ST*TUTE MILES J f’v' * „

G U A D A L C A N A L !

The U n lU d .S U ln onil Japan were manhaling probably the ir g reat. e<t land. »ea and a ir forte* of lh ( war for a decUlve battle In ihe Holomon Islands as a vM l enemy fleet bore down' an /m e r lra n -h e ld Guadalcanal liland and newly airlvrd U. X, array troopi and planet Joined In the •(niggle. Ja p laiidlnm en the Uland have'been, apparently, near the western end. U. S, force* were f»lahli»hed Jorther east larcj.

FLASHES of LIFE By A uoclated

P r tk i’

Prohibition Is Asked At Army, Navy CampsW ASHINGTON. Oct. 19 (U.PJ-Senatc M n jS ty Leader

Alben W. Bnrkicy, D „ K y„ predicted today th a t a n am end­m ent to th e ’tcen -ngc d ra f t bill e .itab lish in}f'p rohib ition in a rea s ^urroiindinff m iH tary and ,naval p o .its ‘p robably would b e adopted " i f i t g e ta to n roll call vote."

Asked i f he would oppose th e am endm ent, o ffe red by Sen. Josh Lee. D ., Okla.,B arkley told re p o r te rs : ' ‘Well, someone probably w ill.”

Tlie Deoiocraile lender said tha t legislation lowering the d ra l t age to i t win TiOV be taken ■up In i^ e »en- at«. until Thursday In order lo ac* commodaie senators who lelt the capital Ion the understandjng th a t no im porunt business would be tratuacted in their absence.

liee has len-cd notice th a t he press for sdoptlon of his amend­ment.

The amendment, previously tu rn­ed down by Uie senate m ilitary af­fairs committee, would prohibit tl\e Kale, possession, u.ie or glH ot all alcoholic beverldges. Including beer, irnarm y and navy posM ond within surrounding areas to be designated by the secretaries of war and navy.

Lee told reporura th a t ''a train­ing camp li a school teaching the m ail serious business In the world.Liquor Is not allbwed to be sold In or near the schools these boys would be attending If-they were no t need­ed In the war effort."

JIls amendment has the backing of the Women's ChrlsClanv-Temperance Mnion *ind other dry orRanliatlons.

Offensive Looms On Japs in Biirma

LONDON, Oct, 19 gath­ering of Billed mlllUiry leaders In New Delhi heightened ihe belief In London todiy th a t plans are being seeded lo r tm o11en.Mve agnln.it the Japanese In Burma. '

T he latest of Uie orrlval.i a t Gen. Sir Archibald Wavcll’s headquarters wns Gen, Sir Claude Auchlnleck, former commander o f BrllW i forces In the middle ea.it. who wn,i reported In line for appolnim enf'soon to . ' Important pont.

His appearance In New Delhi was preceded by the nrrlvsl of Lieut. a e t\ . Jen-n!i aniw ell. chief of lU ft

War Manpower Commission Raps At Poor Distribution of WorkersBy JOHN KL InkCKLl.S

WASHINGTON. Dc^ivlO HI.I>)-A top-offlclal of the war manpower

•led today Uiat the so-called manpower crlsb has de­veloped because of "mal-dlstrlbu- tlon. raUier than a.n actual aho(V> age of workers.'

He remarked Uiat American power wonies silll are Insignificant In contrast lo these fnccd' by the British.

^{any of this country's problems have been aggravatedby employers and labor unions ~«ho suil act as If UiU were a peace-time labor market." he asserted.

T hts official—who declined to (k quoted directly on grounds he' was expressing personal opinions — re­ported Uiat many war plants ^UII refuse to hire Negroes, women, ajed. o r physically-handicapped workers, despite the -fact tha t serious labor shortages exist In the same locslN Ues.

He added Uiat numeiwu Indus­tries are not cooperating wim WMO pleas tha t Uiey step up their train­ing programs. Shortages In nearly 150 categorJea of skilled workers a l­ready ar^ so acute U u l the only

“Some p la n ts w hl^i silll refuse to hire women could replace SO per cen t o f th e ir workers with wo­men," he sa id . He mentlot\cd spe- clHcaHy *evcT&l •well-known war plants w hich sUll discriminate against Negroes.

This and o th e r officials agreed th a t desp ite-num erous local labor shortages w hich have caused seri­ous producUon lags In some indus- Uies, A merica is ju st gettlns started toward a ll-o u t roobllixaUon of its man and w otnonpower resources.

WMC'* officia ls and Uie British press scrvloe p ro rtded th t toUowins figures to I llu stra te the sharp con­trast between th e two nations' man­power sltuaU ons:

01 B rita in 's «C,’3SO.OCiO popuUUon. 16.000,000, o r sligh tly more U iui one- third. e ltlie r a re serving In Uie armed forces o r working lo dirtct war acUvlUes, Including civilian de­fense, bu t n o t Including sgrlcullurt.

Of A m erica's 134.000,000 popuU­Uon. about 30,000,000, or sUghUy less than one-seventh , trill be serving (R4-di the arm ed forces or working in dl- -wi m e w ar acUvlllea. includlog nelUitr

civilian defense nor ogrlculture, by the end of this year.

Brita in already has mobilized Its mnupowet virtually to ihe limit, but the United States, occordlng to present plans, will have boosted the to ta l of persons In war Jobs or the armed lo rc a only to 36,500,000, or about one-fourth of the to ta l popu- IaUon,'by the end .of next year.

Britain , by UrasUc (u t i even In <;ssenUal civilian phiducUon ’and to ta l bans on a ll non-essential pro­ducUon. has released hundreds of thousatids o( workers for w u Jobs, Officials reported here th a t "we're Just beglntilng’ to tap manpower In this manner.

■WMC Chalrman l^ u l V. McNutt Just last night announced WMC's f irst "statement of policy" regard­ing women workers. The policy urged remoral of all barriers against women worken. Uist they be hired and tralfled “on a basis of cquaUty w ith m en" and th a t tlicy bo given “free access t o , foremen's supcr- vlsoiy, and technical Jobs."

U u ije d employers - to anaIjTe a ll Jobs la U»lr plants a t cnce to ■determine which esn be filled by women and (o prepare for employ­ing the largest possible number."

FULL TLMEp in s D U B a u , Oct. ia -^ '! c u * r - .

ley the Cliinaman," whoso proper name Is Yee Joe, doesn't 'do things by halves when Uncle Sam calls. Ordered for army Induction. C har­ley sold Uie laundry and m ade a r­rangements for Ills prlzo Chow dog lo be given to *'dogs for de- lenjc,"

"All I w ant Is a gun." he told ■>nerchanla who gave him n fare­

well party. "I’m through wlUi the , laundr^-'buslncM unUi a fte r Uie wsr. I'm even going 'to jiend my o»Ti clothes to the laundry now."

L4TE DI.SCOVEhV PHILADELPHIA. Oct. I9 -A r-

Ihur Susscl, anU<]ue denier, lias Just got around to dUicovcrlng' tha t he'd been robbed of 'Jewelry valued a t U,300—three weeks ago,

Sussel spied a couple of iewelry trays near an asli bln. T lien lie re­called he'd taken Uiem o u t of the safe three weeks ago to d iiplay a ring to a customer.

Among the objects stolen were a baby's gold rattle valued at 1150.

LATE PAYW UrrEPlSH, M onu Oct. il> -o .

M. Moss Uiought he said 30 days but maybe It was 30 years,

He.loaned a friend 1100 In Mny. 1913, so he could go east to ,a Job. Moss lust received his ll r s t word from the friend—payment of IIJO.

WRASSLER SPOKANE,'Wash. Oct. IB -^a m

McVey picked up a ‘few hold i by being guinea pig for the JuJltsu expert who taught Uie cops some new tricks. I t paid.

A deer Sam thought he 'd shot desd Jumped up as he le.tned m-er It. Ttie critter, Sam r t i» n e d as

-h e - stored - venison" i n - 'r - lo c t e r r - ' 't know A thing about JuJlUu.

E A R iy jR iF O RH E S S O EM A iEO

MOSCOW, Oct. 19 IA>—Pravda. official organ of the*' communist parly, demanded today -Uiat Rudolf Hes], No! a nazl held by Uie BrlUsh, be brought to tria l Immediately re- gartCess of his sta tus as a war prls-

Pravda's demand followed a f liu - slan statement- la s t week In reply to a declaraUon by refugee govern- menu In London, tha t G ermany's "war criminals” who fall Into allied Ivand* should be tiled Immediately. raUier Uian held until the end of the war.

'T o wall lo try Hess unUl th e w ir Is o;er would be incomprehensible," Pravds said. W hat U Hess? U he a criminal or a plenipotentiary rcp- rcsenUUve of Germany In B rit­ain?"

Descrlblnj; Hess, who flew ta B rit­ain last May, as "one of the blood­iest Hltierlta criminals." P n v d a said: . ■ .

"He should not escape Immediate trtal since It U not Use Intem aU on-' ml convention o t war prisoners wtilch exempts war prisoners from trial regardlea of the severity of the c rlm a they. tuv« comialH^.*'

pySA N D O nS. KLEIN •W ASHINGTON. Del. 15 IU.P.)—The zero h our wns a t h and

(n th e Solomon i.<ilands today.A m erican marine.^, soldiers and sailor.^ w ere braced to

m eet ^/^'‘StroiiK a8.inuU" by hcavily-rcinforced Japanese troop.-? on G uadalcanal island. . ’ •

A m erican airm en w ere "d ish ing it ou t.” They and an ti­a i rc ra f t Kunners baRKcd 17 m ore p lanw w ith th e loss of only

■ one of th e ir own. B ut th e

TROU

GO S I E K

Parm ers-and tnickefs d o ln t 51 per cent of Uielr business with farm- ers-w lU receive blank "cerUfleatea ot war 'tveceiiliy" from the Detroit office of OUT UiU week which must be filled out and returned by Nov. IS, according to members of the new county Uruck transpottaUon committee. Such Uuck owners may be denied gusollnec Ures and ports for ihcir trucks l f \ th e certificates

re i)ot granted. *•Members of the county commit-

.•e, of which B m er WlUon. Hansen, Is tlie chairman, said th a t farrners able to fill out the certWicates wlUi- out help are urged to do so. How­ever. the cbmmlliee will n u e t at a p. m. today In th e ottlce o t coun- ty Agent Bert Bolingbroke lo set up district groups to aid farmeri In filling Uiem tu t .

“The ceiUJltales a r t MUtmely compUcated.' Agent Dolingbroke de­clared, "and most farm ers probably will need assistance In filling them

■ nifpersons selected to aid-Uie farmers .wlUi Utt .WanVs will be given insWtKUons > 0 n w tln g s to be held TUbsdny and ■ w ednesdsj nlghl, BoUnibroke nlecJsrcd. Tliey mosi likely will be Women because men are a t a premium now due to Uielr engagement In harvest work.

The campaigp to get In the cei Uficalcs will be sUgcd Thursday. Pilfiay and SaturCny 'which Ivave been designated as reglslraUon days.

"Ttie letters bearing Uie blank certificates will have self nddrc-'Jcd envelopes." Bolingbroke declared, "Tlic.i« can be mailed baclr lo De- Uolt as soon as the cerUncates are filled out."

ilollngbroke said th e names o r Uie UucK owners had been obtained Uirough Uie state automobile llccnse department.

BulletinsWASHINGTON, Del. 10 <U.P-

Araerlean naval ve»a«ls bearlly , bombarded JapaacM potlUeos an

G oadalcanal whileU. B, a lm e a hammered steadily a t every ihip and shore conetn- tn ttim * In the BeltnenS, the navy annsuneed («day,

DisclMlng U iat U more enemy planea'w ere destroyed, Uie nsvr communique s>ld th a t n9 teecnl

MONTEVIDEO, OcL 19 </Pr-Tlie Uruguayan govcnunent aulhorlred o private firm today lo raL« Uie hull of the scuttled Oerman pocket ba t­tleship G raf Spec from the bottom ot the river Plata m order to re­claim Uie ship's steel.

WAKIIINGTON. O tI. 15 The senate was asked tudsy (o go on retord wlUi a statem ent tha t

'„the prire conlrol law contilns no anihoHxatton f«r dedueUons o(fstw benefit payments from par­ity pritM In live f iling e( te lU nn for sfrienllsral cemmodllles. '

MANCHESTER. N. lU Oct. 19 —"This countiy In IM3 wlU turn out a gr^atec navy Uian any nation in ihe world ever possew d." Sec­retary of the Navy F rank Knox told •■Manchester's own'* haval artatlon unit as It was sworn in.

Court Turns Down Sentence Review For Film MagnateWASHmOTON, OcL IS (Ufi)—The

supreme court today denied the ap­peal of William Pox, movie magnate, ror a review of his conviction on charges of conspiracy to obstruct Jusllct, and cl t h e »ubse<jMei l U ,000 fine and year-and-a-dsy sen-'

ince Imposed on him.ReJccUon of Fox's peUtfon hlgh-

ilghted m e court's secood declsloo d»v of Its new l{M3-43 term . .

The tribunal rejectad pleos of three members of the Jehovah's W ltnuses religious sect (or review of Uielr eonvicUons ojt charges of violating l o c a l ordinaacss of as many T c u s towns tn <SlsWbutt&g rtUglous pamphlets. T h er charged the oidinance vlotated th e .consti­tutional guarantee* o t freedon o( p r t» and of rd l8len ;.*n i* Tbxm towns involved were y ta w lU a . Paris and Comanche. 8Wt« caurtJf upheld Uis omiDinoes la «U caM*.

navy mude no a ttem p t lo hido tlic fac t th a t th e Am ericans’ po-sitlon is critical and thatf " in a ' ba ttle o f th is na tu re los.scfl mu.st be expected."

The batUe was (or tha.alrfleld-on— Guadalcanal—a clearing cliopped Wit ot Uie dense Jungle by iho 0«pantM and captured by V. 8. m arln& '^arly In August before the enemy had a chance to use It.

T he balUeground was a U mil# stretch of ant-lnfested beach be­tween Cap Esperanee a t the north­west Up of Guadalcanal andTenaru, near the middle of the north shore.

Narrow Area Tlie area Is narrow, the moun- -

tains and Jungles extending close to Uie shore. Because of Uiat and the fact th a t both sides had given clear IndlcaUons of willingness to . pay almost any prlcc for control o t the airfield, losses on boUi sidel probably will be heavy.

T lte Japanese—on Ute -otten^vt for the Uilrd Ume u» try to rctak# t h e .alrlleld—conUnued "softening up" operations over {he week-end as .-^irelude to a grand uaau ll. They pcre using large-scale-bomber a t- '

tacks Saturday (Solomons time), the last day reported. ,

T he defenfleri were being aided by heavy .arm y bombers advance a ir-naval base a t Duln, 300 miles from Guadalcanal, In four n ^ t and wllh 2J ''io n i: 'o r 'b o m b s ■£helud!n«'''~ m any thbusands>ounder». Bombs dApped among destroyers, cruisers &nd transports and were believed to ’ have scored direct h its on three cruisers.

------- Jap DisasterT he effort; lo bomb the alrllfld

, n Guadalcanal <nded disastrous­ly for Uie Japanese. T h e .11 bombers and fighters 4I10I down by Ameri­cans brought lotal enemy plane losses for the Solomons batUe’ to more than 300.'

■nie attacks on Uie airfield coma Saturday m om lnf and afternoon. R ) u r ^ n bombers escorted by eight f l g h m attacked In the early mom- Init. American H sh ttrs and an ti- ' a irc ra f t batteries de.i;royed oU. of the bombers and two J l the fighters.

BatUe Ontcome v I n the nxrly afternoon, 1& bomb- ,

-.-8 nnd a number of.flghteni tried again. One enemy bomber was prob­ably destroyed.

There w-as UtUc oUier fresh netcs n the Solomon encounter,' How-

.ic r , a London newspaper dLtpstch from Pearl Harbor suggested th a t ' the outcome of Uie batUe might de­termine tthcUier t h e American* would find It pouible to-push north against the Japanese or the Japan* se pQ-‘>h south toward New Zcaliuid >nd Uie vital AustralasU supply Ine: Nn,ThLv report said the Japanese may

have OS many as 2JO.OOO troops con- . centraied a t Truk, the ir major baso In the Marshall Islands, ready to , drive MuUi If the a ttack on UiO Solomor}s sliould succeed.

ONy’ SALE OF HOySESSJOPPEO

WAainNOTON, Oct. 19 ai.Rt — Price Administrator Leon Hender­son. lo a move to ha lt *'phony" sales ot houses to evade r tn l control, to­day established two requirements . which must be .m et before a pur­chaser can obtain the right to oc-

ipy a ’dwelling now rented.1. T he purchaser of such a dwell­

ing m ust pay one third of the sell­ing price before an evlcUon cerUf- Icate will be issued by the OPA area ren t director.

3. Three months mu.U then ps.M before the present tenan t can b« forced to vacate.

Henderson said Uiat borrowed money will no t be considered satis* la c to rj lor th e down paym ent

T he amendment, cffecUve tomor­row, applies to all housing sow tin­der ren t control except hoW s and rooming houses.

' n e ren t control a reas now cover 70,000.000 of the populaUon and by Dec. B wlU embrace '(he entire coun- ,try.

hous« trom « a ownet «b»iWW.oo>i,.T,> ' 'cupleslt. '•

PenalUea lo r r t o l a i ^ 'on convIcUoo. • *»»• •■yttxt la pnsco ly o O T W .

'A X M S O T JE C M A W asitT O

Page 2: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

Psge.Two TIMES-NEWS, TWIN'FALLS, IDAHO Monday, Oclo!i>er 19. 1942

of "JndujtrltilUtd ngrlculiure" work* ■n. tlic measuiM *era preiiartd by L* FollcUe ind 8 t a Taixrl D, ThomM. D,. Utah.

Tlie |)ro>:niia Li' d^ lJ!nf<l to oeiu Villll the Innn Inlwr iilmso^T Uio muniwwfr problpm by puiilnB Tonn worHrrs on t "parity '- wltti Indiu- trlnl workrr* imd remotlnff much of Uie lncenll^e lor fum wo^«r» to uilKUif to v,-,ir liidusirlM. The billprovldrs;

Old A|« IniuTknce1. Extfnalot; of old and lu r-

vlvor'n- lMiir»nc« under the »oelU Mciirlty p i^ n m to cover lorra U'orlcers. II would Ix* called tlic afirl- culiural <mplo>wnt sublllr-itlon

3. DftemilnaUon ot fair «B«e» u ' dbtlnct f r o m minimum wiigcj . through a fystcm oT affleultural

K-a;« board! to be coonllnnted with - t l ie war labor bonrd. I t would be .’ oSJIcd tJie SKrlcullural wokc botird

•c t.3. Extension of the btneflta of the

fa ir labor ntnndnrds act (wnRe hour law) to employti In mdustrlaJ- Ised aKrlculturc. l l would be called th e asricultural labor standard*

Labor n«crullj' ,,4. Rcffulallon of the oi>cratlon of

private employment agtnelea, labor contractora and other fomui.of pri­vate rK rulttnc In tha field of In- duftrallzcd aErleuJture. I t would be called Ihe ap-lcultural lobor rec- ’• m ent act.

5. Cxtm^lon of all thn bencClta of - th e natlonai labor rrlatloni (Was*

n er) act to IndlvlduaLi employed u farm laborers Inindujtrlallted atrl> culture. I t would b« called ths agri­cultural labor relatloni act.

Down on the Farm

Farmer, 45, Dies Of Heart Attack

CASTLETORD, Oct. JO-Ralpli C J o n u . H3. fanner and aalo-mnn, died

. tmexpectedly of heart dlicaae yeat^r- day a l hL home noutliesat of here.

Mr. Jonej hnd not been ill. Ke wat th o u jh t to be In' perfect health ft| he worked In the field but was «ud- denly stricken with ft heart atU ck s a d died ahortJy after he «-as brougM to thn house and pu t to b e d / '

B om a t Kingston. Tex, March 8, 1607, U r. Jonea came to Idaho aa a boy. and lived a number of years ■t Buhl before m ortnt to Caatle- ford.

H e is survived by hU Wfe. M n Elewior Hays Jones: two sons, Hob- e n Clayton Jonea and Fred Weston Jones, a t home; a dnuKnter. Eleanor

. Pauline Jones, a t home; hU mother M rt. Lou Jones, Buhl: two brothers Reuben Jones. Buhl, and Marvin Jones. Bruneau, Ida.: and a sister, M n . Pearl Potter, Buhl.

■mo body was Uken to the Albert- a o n ^ n e m l home. Funeral arranfe- m enta had no t been made today.

Democrats Open Campaign Office

Democratic headquarters were opened todnv in a building a( 1!B Bhnshone street uesi,

Aaher B. WUson. Tn-ln PalljsDcm- ocratlc county chalrmMi, said the person to be In churj* of. the of­fice was to be chrvien later today.

There will be a Democratic rally Jn the high school bulldlnir a t Cm - tleford a t a p. m. today witli all the candidates present.

Seen Today.

Appointment o f G ra n t Thoma* a i Iilsiio dLitrlct m anager for Bear*. Roebuck and company had brouKlit a former resident back to Twin Falls lodsy to take over the Palk- Bears store m anagem ent from which Thomni was promoted.

TaU ni Mr. TJiomaa place here will be Jack Mullrn. who spent two jeari In T?’ln Falls a* M slslant m *n*«r of the FaUc-Seari *tw«; Ha left In 1030 to osa;ime m a n a tt- ment of the etore a t Lewiston,

In h t ' new post ns distric t head. Mr. Tlioma.1 will m a in ta in head­quarters In Boise. H e managed tha Twin Ffllij .'tore for th e p u t four years. Thomu stepped up a fte r K. K. Kepler, former o lstrte t manoser. Joined tlie U. 8 . navy,

Mr, Mullen announced here today that Eart Johnson, who has been a depsrtmtntal m a n n e r In th s Twin Palls store for several y ean , has been traniferred to Lewiston u as­sistant manager there.

e sirtady brillian t autumn scene, th ree member* anrh el the Ameriesn women’s volunteer servlets

1 bandanas as they io Inlo the fields to help hard-preaK d farmer*

Twin Falls News in Brief

News o f RecordMARRIAGE LICE.VSEH

Oct. 17—Charlie s irn trr , St. and Bhlrley Koenig, 33. both of Twin Palti.

FUNERALS RAWSON—Funetal sen'lce* for

Mrs. Cnrriii Lucia Rawion. sister of Mm. T. P. W anw r. will be held Tues- day a t 3:30 p. m. a t the White mor­tuary chapel. Rev. H. O, McCalllster, pastor of the MethodLit church, of­ficiating. Interm ent will be In T«1n

. Falls cemetery.

WEATHERTwin FalU and viclnlly—Lltll*

( rm pen la re chance lodsy anil to. night. n i |h yesUnlay TO, low r . Low this m eralng 34,

Vlslta Friends -Mr*. W. O rr Chapmon, Boise, vis­

ited 'friends here over the week-end.

J e n m e Y’bltore Mr. and Mrs. Ru.well llalstend,

Jerom e, were anurday evrnlng euestj a t the home of .\tr. and Mrs. Harr}' E. lUjodea.

Co. « DrilU Hegulsr drill of Co. 6. Jnycee unit

In the Idaho volunteer ruervea, will l>e held a t 7 p. m. today a t Legion h a ll. ' according to Cnpt. John Q. Adams, commanding officer. /

Callfarnla TiOetU Mrs. Berdle Saxter and three chil­

dren. San Francisco, are guests of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ifnrry E. Rhotles. They will also v la tt>^r. and Mrs. J. V. Tipton. Jerome, parents of Mrs, Bax­ter. while In Idaho.

W eek-End VUltoraMr. and Mrs. J . 'B. Pierce, Idaho

Falls, spent the week-end w ith Mrs. D. May Pierce of Uie Albnm studio. She is the mother of Mr. PIcrce. Tliey a b o vlalled Mrs, K, II, Bnb- cock. 167 Adami, the sister of Mrs. Pierce.

O/fleera W ill MeatT tic monUily mecllng of a ll officer

personnel of the T»'ln Fslls county battalion, Idaho volunteer reserves, wlU be held Tursdsy a t 7:30 p, m.. according to announcement today by MaJ, L, V . FoUom. batlallon- commanding officer.

Daek tJi Ja il C hester Dens. 7}. Twin Fall*,

re lum ed to the county Jail today from th e Tw in Fall* countj' general ho.'pltal. where he underwent an op- pendlcltls oce«rtl8n about two weeks ago. BeAi la awaiting trial ... . charge of first degree burglary In connection with the theft ot from th e Covey service station last month; Ills iMfld was set a t2,S00.

Beott Jn Navy Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Bcolt have re ­

turned from Osdcn. where they vUllrd briefly with their son. now Lieut, Chnrlrti Craven Scott, /'enlor grnde. United Slates navy, who has been called to duty and Li en route to Quonset Point, R, I,, to report, Lieut, Bcolt ho* been a member of the faculty of stanlortl university.

I number of

Immunization Is Given 984 Pupils

D iphtheria ,immunltatlon.i today la d been given to S33 puplh In •Va.ihlnRton, Lincoln. BIckel ond St. Edw ard’s .schools, anti t to pupils had received smallpox vaccinations, It was said a t the office of the district health un it, Khlch hss charge of the cltywide Immunisation program.

Mrs. M ary Ann Knight said the respon.ie h a d been good and the typhoid Immunlxatlon program would proceed wtUi reoppnlpg of school a fte r the harvest vscallon.

■'We a re hoping for a high per­centage of participant* In the ty ­phoid immuiiUallen p r e jr s m r ' ihe said, "because It is eisenUally a tional defense measure."

T he typhoid Immunisation calLi for th ree sh o u , to be given one week sparL ,

Mother Will Get Infant Son Back

Probate Judge C. A. Bsller this afternoon planned to return the sevcn-months-old son of Mrs. D U Spurgeon to h is no ther, who Uvei a t the Ellis lourlst camp.

Judge Ballejr took eharte of .... baby Saturday afternoon when he received word tha t the mother had le ft It. w ith tourlsu, who wanted to leave th e cam p and didn't know w h a t 'to do w ith the child. The In­fan t, Jesse V em Spurgeon, spent the week-end in a crib a t the Twin ra lla eotincy general hospital.

The Hbspital’ W ard 'beds v e r t available on all .loon ’.tlU * ,a fl^ o o D a t 'Falls-.ceim tr 's tn en d ' hoe;

A D M m X D .Miss U u r a D avis'and M n . R. L,

Bummenield, Twin PalU.DISMIMED

Paul Sm ith. M n. H arry Prather, M rs. W. l i J teed and daughter. Twin S l U : Dixie Jcffenon. Flier: M n. A lrln Joalyn and Loren Josly i, a ie n n i F tir y ; Ronald I rm o n . Suni VMIey. '

T rip to fjeattle Mr. and Mrs. C.-V. Hinkle. 3:

N inth avenue c u t, a re AwndLnn two-week vacation visiting Uit daughter, Mrs. llfly SccfcJf, ficattlf

Beta Ganun*Beta Gamma club o f 'th e Y.W

C.A. will meet a t B p. m. today In the Y .W .C .A .sroom s. Those at­tending are asked to bring maga­zines and scissors.

M t. Reek Gnfnge Mountain Rock OronRe will

Wcdnusdoy a l 9 p. m, for n buslneu se.inlon a t the Orange hall, Mrs, L BllIlnRton and Mr.v M. Ba^h. are members of the serving committee

Back Worn Utah Mr. and Mr.i. O. C. Hall returned

this monilne from Porlago, Utah where thry spent the week-end with Mrs. ChrUUna MoCrary,' mother, of Mrs. Hall,

ParenU Visit Son Mr. and Mrs. Nelton A n d m ^

were week-end guests of ihalr’ ion Ted \Veeks, a t the Hotel U tah. Ted has been statlonetf at, K eara i, Utah wlU) thn UnlUd' BtAtea a ir forces Ho hns led Salt Lake City for Los Angeles where lie will receive specla! training In the mechanical sdiool

By llnllod Press W arner Brothers' Hollywood show-

hou-ic, formerly "W arner'a Holly­w ood,-.is now named 'T lie Bette DavLi" and henceforth wiU show only Belle DavU" pictures . . .

R. r_ Wells, Canilcana, Tex, aviation eadel, thoush t he was "Jum plnr Io a conciuslgn” when he balled out of his trainer and the paraehute ripcord broke. But about halftrsy dewn. ihtt chut* opened Itself—anO C a d e t ' Wells landed gently In a en tton .fldd ; . ;: Movie Actor Mature'* relective

service board amiotlfieed: th a t his temporary Bppohilinent Irf-tho c o u t guard rcaerSe will be canceled and th a t Mature will be Inducted Into the nrmy. powrtbly by the end of the m onth . . .

' A Biirklnsham palaea apekei- man irports tha t queen E ltx ^ beth U up and around again, fufly recorerrtl from a recent a ttack ef bronohitls . . .81r Ccdrlo Hardwlckn has been

selected by W rlter-Dlrector Nunn- a lly Johnson for the role of a nail officer In the film version of John Steinbeck's best selling novel, m ie Moon fA Down" . . .

W hen Mr*. Iy>o Cordell called on Io Rpo'nior th e navy tng Chocaw a l Charleaton, S. C.. ahe brought alanc a Jog of Oklahoma weiJ water and u e d It. as well aa the tradillonal naval betUa ef rham pan ft. a t the Uunchin* . . . Three of her sons who survived the aJnkfrn ef Ihe L rxingtes wera a L M n , CardeU'i side.

Cattleman Found Dead Near Creek

BDRLEV, Ock I f t - t r J k John Oman, 78. a ca ttlem an of Yoit. Utah, w u found dead near a creek In the -sAnebrush Just across the state line in Cassia cotmty Sunday morning. Death was aacrlbed to a heart attack.

The aged cattlem an w as-found by a nephew. Harold Oman. Yost, who Investigated when he learned t tu t his uncle hod n o t been seen around liLi home slnco T hupday. He evidently had gone to the creek for water when struck. Ha was be- llered to hsve been dead /fora 33 to 48 hours when found.

Mr. Oman was bom in Sweden Feb, 3 7 .18C4, and camo to U tah 40 yean aga Ha never m a rr ie d ....

II* 1*. survived, by' tw d -o th er nephov's. Cart and -Aseal Oman, Yoit, and two nieces, Mrs. Twlla Fclhm au'and M rs .'R e ta Holtman, Yojt.

The body is a t th e Burley funeral home pending arrangem ents.

5 Motorists Hurt In Head-on Crash

BURLEV. Oct. l£>-^Plve persons ere slightly Injured in a head-on

collision of two automobiles a t Low­ry Orove on highway 30 between Burley and Rupert n l 13:30 Bunday.

The'automobiles were driven by Vem Horton. Rupert, who was trav­eling toward Burley, and Emil Mny-

r. Paul, traveling toward Rupert, Msyer and hla four passenger*.

John Schafer and Jo h n Kraua. Paul, and Nina Peck and J t m Biggs, Bur­ley, were the Injured persons. Moyer, the mo't severely Injured, wm treat- cd «t Ihe Rupert bo.*plUl. and the others a t the Cottage hoAplal. Bur­ley.' All were dLicharged a fte r re­ceiving treatment.

The automobiles were dpmollihed. According Io D eputy Sheriff Clyde

Craig and State P atro lm an Milton Recvcj, who Investigated, neither driver was a t fault.

Breck Fagln looking sUghUy sleepy a fte r three nlghta during which th a t sew offspring has wrestled w ith colic. . . Sm all boy urging btack ScotUe dog through departm ent s t o r e . . . Patricia Blaka looking dlffertnt without the glaaaes th e broke yesterday.. . Stacks of personal property tax noUcej a ll ready for malUng come Wednesday i i Asseuor Qcorve Childs' o ffice .. . Man ail riled up because h e nearly ran in to door

'Opening outward from Shoshone itree t grocery s to re ,. . Bigger sign on door-of rationing board pro- clslmlns th e opening and cloalng' hours more definitely. . . Demo­crats opening up calnpalsn baili­wick In f irs t block on Shoshone west. . . D os showing nice broken field running In dodging three c an to get aeroei busy street. . . And nmntcur chimney swrep working on houas 'roof on Fourth avenue north.

Leander Munson ' Taken at BurleyBURLEY, Oct. 10-L eander Mun­

son. S3, died a t 1:30 p. m . Sunday a t the Cottage hospiul, Burley, fol­lowing a lingering lllneu.

He was bom In Ch»mpol«i:. n iv June 3J, 1899. and came to C aula county from Oklalioma In 1019. Ho operated a farm near Durley unUI 19 yeara ago when he retired and moved Into Burley, •

Mr. M unsori leaves a wife, Lucille; two eoiu, lU y Muruon. Burley, and Earl Munson, Decio; two b ro then . Jam es Munson, Burley, and Je ff Munson, Springfield. Mo,: two ois* ters. Mrs, Carey Hendrix. California, and Mrs, Lucy Fanning, Colorado; n^ne grandchildren and greac grandchildren.

Funeral servlcM wUl be held a t 3 p, m- Tuesday a t tlie Payne mor­tuary. Burley, with Bov. Alvin

.Klelnfeldt. pasto r.o f the Christian cliurcti. officiating. Burial will b« In' the Burley ccmetery near the grave of a son. Carl, who died two m onths ago a t Vancouver while serving w ith the U. 8, arm y.

Beet Toppers Go To ‘Easier’ Spuds

A report«J shorU ge.of beet top­pers In this tem tot7 today was cred­ited to two principal factor* by How­ard SUples, manager o f tho U. 8.

-ipJoyment service office.:n Uie first place, spuds are easier harre.'it and those going to work

choose spuds over beeu. In the sec­ond place, a great many high school youtiis a re without trannporUUon. Staples explained, and In many cases farm e n have declined to furrjish them m eans lo gel lo th e Job. This WU.S taken to Indicate Umt the labor supply axceeds the demand a t Uiep r r i ^ t , becau.>e fsrrnera would fur­n ish 'thp transporution IX the in u rgent need of more help.

Staples said about 300 porsohs were assigned to jobs a t the employment office toda>'. About 78 per cen t of these were h ljh echool boi'i M S girls.

Man Asks DivorceCharging tha t his wife deaert«d

him Aug. 31. 1940. Slierman W al- bum filed divorce suit In district court here today against M n . Flor- encs Marie Walburh. 1710 pair m ar­ried Feb. 4. 1939 a t Arco. O. C. Ball l l attorney for the h tubaod. •

Woman and Man Draw $100 Fines

Two fines of . 1100 on pleas of ' guilty to driving while Intoxicated reie assessed today by Judge J . 0 . 'umphrey In m unicipal court.Ma>' Darnell. Twin Falls, who w u

irrested a t II p, m . Sunday, was ex­pected to pay her fine. O fflcen said ■he struck a car. on 'T liIrd avenue irtsl before she was slopped,

H. B. Hogue, T w ln f t l l* . wasited early Monday morning i___) car he was driving had crashed

nto Uie rear of a parked gasoline ransport truck on Fourth avenue ve.1t. He Indicated th a t hn .would erve time to paj- hla flno-al the rate if IIJO a daj-.

Victory Shop Now “Paying”BiisinessThe Victory shop, operated by Uie

Sunshine Circle club ftt 111 Second avenue west. Is a "paying '’ business.

Sellers haw received *152.30 in OnlUd States war stam p* for mer­chandise tha t has been purchased during the fln t-h a lf of October. . Proceeds of merchandise eold for t h e ^ benefit of the USD have totaled >17.40, to dale, i t t

The shop was opened Oct, 1 .. boost the sale of war s ^ p i and help the USD. B uyers'pay cash for the merchandise, and tho se llen re­ceive the N ulvalent In w ar stamps. Mrs. 0 . O, McRlll Is In charge.

Atlantic Shipping Losses Reach 495

By The Associated P m iD estfuctlbn of a medlunv-stred

J.Inlled S tates m erchantm an by enemy submarine action in tho Car­ibbean -about two monUis ago was disclosed today by th s navy,, raising to 40S the Associated Press tabula­tion of announced western AttanUo ship 10S.1CS since Pearl Harbor.

Two torpedoes crashed Into the u.sel. breaking It apart and klil- ig Ct. Com. Van Rensselaer Moore,

t7 .6 . U; retired. Moore, whose home was in San Diego, Calif., was a 191S graduate of Annapolis.

Forty-four siu'vlvors drlftod In the open sea for two days and finally « a o h e d ' a Caribbean port, from which they brought to th e Uni­ted p l a t e s /

SU M TO COLLECT A. O. U n en * a * k s Judgment for

tlfH.77, plus'tSO a ttom ty 's fee. In a proralMo;y note lu lt filed *K’ lnni Wilton w c k In probate court. Wilson and Sheneberger are illom eys for th e plainUff.

Soldier’s Tribute Attracts Throng

First PreibyU rlan church audl- torium was filled to capacity Sunday afternoon when frlendi and relatives, Includlns many from out of town, a s­sembled a t memorial lervlces for Staff Sgt. Raymond It. JosUn. who w u kUled In action Sept. 29 In Uie southwest Psctfle area o f war.

On a bUck-draped table, before Uie black-draped a ltar , flow en In memory of Sgt. Jotlln , son of Mr. and M n . L. E. Jotlln , Flier, were placed by offlcen of th s Tw in Fall* post. Veterans o f Foreign W an, a t the conclusion of Uie ritualU tlo serv­ice ef the V. F. W. ‘

Sergeant Joelln was i, member of the Oene Frederick PMnston post. No. 94, V. T : W„ a t Honolulu. The local poet sponn red th e memorial *ervlces Sunday.

Art Pe ten , poet a d ju tan t, and otiier offlcen were In charge,, and Dr. Orrlrt^PuUer plaj-ed T a p i - a t the conclu-slon of Uie servlccj. Oblt- uor)' wo.« read by Dr. a . L. Clark.

Mrs. Z. A. Beem and M n . Claire OlUilan. Filer.' aang "N earer My God to Thee" and Jam es Reynolds. Twin Falls, sang "Sleep, ^soldier Bay” and "America." M n . M argaret Peck played the accompanlnfenU.

35 Civilians Heli> Navy Recruiting

Thirty-five Twin Palls men have “enlisted" as civilian navy recruit­ers, according to Chief Machinist Mate Edmund Bannon, h<ad of the local navy recrulUng office.

*^And w hal’L,mora they're sending in recrulls." Bannon said.

"Enllstm enf blanks were sentTo several hundred prom inent Tn'ln Falls men through tho Boise recruit­ing headquarters last week.

T ie latest to enter the navy here 'as Nelson J. Coates. 23. son of Mr.

and Mrs. Charle.i E. Coates, Carey. He will be sent to a NYA school to Btudy as a 'rad io U chnlclan.

NEW MEASURES W0TDL1D~G ^ TO FARM WORKERSF I V E M E A I K

I L P LABORERSWASinNGTON, Oct. 19 Ol.P.'-Sen.

■ Robert M. La FoUette. P , W U, to- -d ay Introduced five farm labor bills

whfch he said would give "e^'ery able boiUad American who works on Uie land" an opportunity to help beat the alls.

Embodying a program extendinir

S M B E e i H lU O TAFO R N AV Y

BOISE, Oct. 19 a m —WlUl a (JUOU of 8«7 men for Uio first half of October, the naval recrulUng sen'lce has enilstod 211 in Idaho, o r 5T.4 per cent. I t waa jjinounced today by LL O. A. H ebert, officer In charge.

Bolse'a main ataUon slcned tip 01 per cent of lU allotm ent of 99 men for a percentage o t 90.B per cent.

Quotas, enlistments arid percent­age of men e n tarln f th e service Oct. 1-17 for other Idaho sU U ons were listed ax follows:

LMdston-44. 39 and t i S ; Poca- tcUo-fll. 2B and Tw in P a l ls - 04. 26 and 40.6: Coeur d'Aiane—iO, 20 and 40; Idaho Falls—49. 11 and 34,7,

■me Pocatello sUUoD inUsUd 1U,7 per cent of Its quoU for Uie naval radio technician program , re­porting IJ rec ru lu for the period, as against a quoU of 7.

Q uotu, enllstmenta a n d percent­ages elsewhere in the s ta ta :

Twin F a lls -7 , 6 and 71.4: B o is*- n , 17 and 8J,I; Coeur d 'A lene-7 . 9 and 0 .8 ; Lew U ton-7.. I and U.8: Idaho F a ils -7 , 2 and 28,S.

BUte totai»-«7, 43 'and M l.

■Last Honor Paid To L G; Ayres

Funeral services for Kenneth O. Aj-res, musician and son of-Mr. and Mr*. George Ayres. Twin PWis pit>- neen, were conducted Uiis morning a t Uie White m ortuair chapel.

Fat Daly sang two number*, ac­companied by Mra. Albert Saulcy.

Pallbearen were P . O. Shenebar- ger, .Arthur BockwJts, Roy Leedom. Ralph Busted, WalUe W hlta and Bill Daly. .

Intennent waa In tha Twin Falls cm etery.' Among those attendinx the serv­

ices were hU two broUier*. MerrUl S. Ayre*. Boise, and S g t V. A. A ym , United Stales marine corps.

Mexican, 31, Held For Knife Affray

Balentb Villa. 31. Filer, a Mexl« can. w u being held In Uie city jail today awaiting charget to be filed because of a cutUng scrape last night. Villa w u said to have Inflict­ed a knife wound on Belles MalUes, Twin Falls, In a bear parlor.

Chief of Police Howard Olllettfl said Uie charge to be filed had no t been determined.

C LE H G Y iN G E TS BICYCLE PERM

•nie flr* t mlnHter o r ih » ' fo ap em i— Twin F a lls county to b* raUoned a blcyelo is Rev. FT. Victor J . Lus- tlg. a siU tan t p u to r of SU.Bdward's CatlioUc church. U i act out on his application U » t Uie bicycle would be used In visiting hla parlshlonctt. _

Ministers of the gotpcl ara p e r - ' { milled to have automobUat and tires under the office of price ad- mlnliiraU on regulaton*.

Three men hav< been fra n te d , pcnnlta to purchue rubber boots. Tliey were Albert Eugene Caldwell, a form er and stockman of AmsKr- dam; H arney Alien Fomwalt, H an­sen. an employe of tho Twin Falls Canal company, and Joseph M. Van H andel, an emplo>'B of Uie Sweet- clover DalrySMmpatyr. Fom walfs ■permit was for hip bSots. Uie f ln t raUoned by the board. .

Oregon's- 1939 tuberculosis death rate waa 31.0 per 100,000 of Uie populaUoa.

Theft of $3,50,000 In Jewels Reported

EAST WILLISTON. N . Y., OcU 19 c-TV-Nassau county police said today tha t M n. Jam ea N. Hill, widow of one of the founders of the Texas Oil company, had reported ieweU valued a t t3SO,000 were etolen from her home.

Mr*.'Hill, who lives w ith -50 aerr- ants in a 190-acre esUtc called Big Tree farm a t nearby W heatley HlUj. told police tha t the Jewels. Includ­ing severa1,famlly h e l r i ^ . i , .were taken from a small *a 'fe 'in h rr dreaslng room, between Qct. B and last Saturday.

e a r l y 'rackaga* tntanded for oveneor

deliverr cannot be mailed too early Poatm utar M. A. s tro n k warned to­day.

"Quit* a few people ara heeding Uie warning to get Iheir over*«« C hrlstm u mailing done ear;^.".he said today, *^ut n o t nearly(%rmany u I expected. A fter Mot. l there WlU be alight chance' of packages reaching tnen staUoned in the more rtmota ouipceta by O hristmai.''

O lgantlc transporta w ith wing- . spread of 108 feet weigh U/OO I pounds when lOadnL

MBS. n iL L GUEST KIMBERLY, Oct. 19 &trs. For-

r u t BUI. who spoke a t the Kim-, btrly N^aarene church both mom- tn ( and evening Sunday, w u ths guest ef Mrs. Rachel O lrens. '

for Your Splendid Patronage

■■ .. ^ .

Q ua I i ty Wins Again,• (I U ontb) 1941 19U

1 , 3 4 9 , 1 5 0 Bottles of A lt He(6e(l>ergPremium Pale Beer were sold during the past three months.

THERE IS A REASONf

A lt Re^ielOBerg P rem ium Pale Beer is brew ed from the

c o s tlie s t'in g red ie n ts o b ta in ab le by M asterbrew ers of long

experience and scientific training in the A r t o f Brewing.

*Net«t r U t m to k ta ( r o a aetoal neortf. TW IN F A L L S B E V E R A G E CO.n , B. W h ltU ew Pbona

^^alvage Will Win the War! Buy War Banda an'd Stamp«l

Page 3: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

HoniUj, Octobir 19, 1942 ■ TIMES-NEWS. t w in FALLS, IDAHO ^ a g e .T h m ’

i L U i t t i O OF i S i S I E S

LONDON. Oct. 19 — Allied bomber* Intend w dUofSWiUe the n * il tnuuportiU on »y*w»n In Mol- U nd by .nnatlilns i t railroad ^ ard s t n d c&nal &!iippinc, ll ie N elbrrluK U

- sovem m cnl - in - e*Ue warned th e home population lu l nJffhl u llgbU iin«-«ke R A P raid on th e Bchnelder annament worka In oe* cuplfd Franco emplmsUed anew Ui« Irrm rndouj power and poaslblUUe#

.or the ilUed air arm.D utch railway workers 'were 'wani-

ed to »top work lmmfdUt«ly whcr « lr Blarmi aoundfd and clvlllani were ad'-Ued not to u « railway U olns during the evenlns,

Weak 8poU •Tlie Qermiin ir*n»portaUon «>•*-

t«m U oierwotked »tU\ Uuj resu lt Hint weak spou have develop^ m the enemy's « r orgonlMtlon. the broadcast statement ot the govem- m ent-ln-e*lle w ld ,J ^ ie allies know these wcttk spou. Thby muat atrlke n.1 hard os can to Iiftsten the end of the war.-

TJie warning w ld Oinl, “trains nwndlng on railway sidings during cvenliiKa and n ltj iu a re . likely to be bombed" and /M t frclRht trn la i also uaiild be b4nibed by daylight whenever rrconiiirts'nnce was pos* flblp. DnrKP.? nn<l n ihrr vcMeh on ra n a lj and rlvTRi w.111 be atlACked by flRlilfr plnnc.1.

C'Qunti on Approval Tlie sinlcmriit ackiiowldged tlw t

Uie nttacka wquld flicrea^e tlse dU- Utulllc.s oJ tlie home populftMon. but Milcl I t wa.' countlMB on approvol o( tlie uiensufti and added; "Tlici nlllfii win.’of cour:,c, «pare Uie civil­ian [Kiiiiilatlnn much n,i poalble.*'

SftlUTdl»y■ lllRhV ot- Oi RAP Va»- c<i.’.tr r bombers la Uie Bcliiielder work-1 At Le CreuMit. occupied Frnrfue, and H'e prrcL\e and devna. tollnK !■'

Facts Aboutlhe Candidates in Twin F ^ s County

M kS. BOSE J. WILSON

lnn»orlfts\^ ta rfe l wns CljcuhseO x n - thUNlAiilcally ft.s a new ndvancc In allied bombing tcchiilauc.’

Coniine after Uie dnrlng daylight rnld o f O ft. D by 115,United States R j1n s i 'o tu cs r- t>ni U berator

^ bombers on Ulle, tlic nltack.was re- V gnnfed a.'- a IienrieiilnK IndlcAlloit

o f the ftllled nbllJiy to jlefent the nnsJ cotiilnenlnl deleaiM,

nepetvd on. Surplus The four - motored Lnnco.-.ters.

with no jlKlitcr escort, depended su rp rbe to r the success o t Uielr mUsIon. Tliey approached the ta r- c c t trora a tre«-iojv h rlsh l and (loclEed all but tlie smallest towTis on Uic way. Tlie bombs were dropped Ju.-.t a t diisk M tha return home could be made under cover of dark-

l l i e Lancnstcfs met little oppo­sition and iMt only one pUinc as compared ta {our U. 5. bombers la it on the U lle raid.

Meanwhile. Oem\Mi dayHsht rnW* er*. inkiMB advantngc of low clouds, attacked neveral points on Uie east c o u t ot Brltnin. causing consider­able dnmBRe and Mine 'casualUes end flvhiK London lurec brief alerts.

Tlie n a tli. flying singly and far apart In an apparent attem pt to confuse .the ground defenses, ma- chlncd gunned and bomtied scat­tered areas.

H ardest h i t wi* »h ire* Jn .E fs l AnRllk,n*ar th e ’n iim ti'rf tu n rj'. ''-

O bim 'vm snlfl the O trm an ol 1 force, m aking the mmt of the fw e aU ie r . apparently uos cnrrj'tnK

out "reprisals" for the recent heavy British nnd A m erlcan^lris on nniU UTir indusWlrs, —

No bombs were dropped In Lon­don Itself.

Drunks Lose Wars, Says.WCTU ChiefBOISE. Oct, IIJ MV-Hlstory sho'

tha t "drunks alwayj lose In a « i... and th a t total abstainers always win," Mrs. Idn D. DWlse, national prealdcnl. toM dekswes to U\e Ida ­ho WCTU convention.

She advocated govemment action to esUblUh prohibitive tones ot liquor and prostitution around mill' tacy cam jB and declared;

-Some steps liave been taken U control prostitution — but we've n long way to go. A nation can't solve the p rosu tuuon problem by Ignor­ing ti\6 Ufiuar <iuestloti."

BURLEYMr. and Mrs, Wesley 6l«m ore

are the parentn of a daughter, bom OcU. IS. a t Uvc CotUce hospital.

Blue Tj-langlc Oulld met a t the« 'iome of Mrs, DIfllr Oochnour, with

12 m em ben present, Mrs. Alvin K lelnfcldf wa.-i In charge of the program, nnd Mta. SUinley BwM«<in reviewed an article on mlBslon.1 In Durmu. wlUi Mni, Lloyd I>rl3kell. Mrs. Orn'Oo Kelcher. and Mrs, Cora Brady giving short reviews.

Mr . Le.sMe Donnan and children , have returned to IJurle}’ to make

th tlr home, Mr. Donnan having -.nccfpiert dtJense work a l Bremerton. , Wash. • — • . . . . .

Mrs. Jam es McElwaIn retum nl from n vLilt wim her husband in SAlt Ijike Clii’.

Vtrnon Di\w;«n IfK lo resume h ti irn ln ln s near San Francisco, afler n furlough- jp e n t wlUi his porent.'. Mr. and Mra. A. R. Dawson.

Mr. nnd Mrs. Ted Rydalch, Val- ' StJo.'CMlt-. have Iot a vW l

wltli relatives. A \Mrs. M argaret Jncohs, teaclicr. left

this week for L « Anaeles. where slie will spend Uic h a n w t vacation.

Mrs. U ttU Pa>-i« ttporU an od­dity of na ture In lier flower garden, where a ItlAC, which usually blooms In Ihe-spring , ha i blOMomed out opw. •

« M r , imd M rs. M. H, King have " e e lv e d word of tlie birth of a son , to Ihelr daughter and husband, Mr.

and. Mrs. J , Pemberton Thatcher, a t Heno. Sept. 25.

M n, 0 . L. Earclay tnteilalnKl IiU chapter ^ f l t c r Homes club when members reported on fruits and

• veceiables cpnned durlne the sum* mer. Mrs. p. L. Swanson and Mrs. Rom Barocy rtponw l tn th t n t« method of trea ting Infantile’ par­alysis.

.Red Cross sewing was distributed a t the Sunshine chapter of Better Uonies club a t the boi&t o{ Mrs. Lylfl W hittle.

Mr. and t i n . I ra L. P r u t h a n announced th e enffagemeot.of their daujhtcr. Miss jTunlce Pros^ to Olenn S . Parke, wfc o t M t. and Mrs. 8am Parke. Provo, Utah.

BEAD'TIMES-NEWS WANT AD6.

Mrs. none Wibon. Buhl. RCpubll* -can candidate for county treasurer, l^ rcuiniluR VO pollUc& aSter an ab­sence of nine years.

Tile B uhl high school Englbh n.n<l drnmotlft^ Instructcr w m aw>o'n‘™ county superintendent of public In* slru c ilo n 'u p o n U\c death of Ml*s Chnrlottc Pond In 1J28 and Uien won elected to two terms In the ofJIcc, In 1033 she resumed leoclilng In th e Buhl school.. Mrs, Wilson came to the Buhl vicinity wlUi her parcms, Mr. and Mrs, Adolf Johnson, from Clear- m ont, Peun,. In 19D6 before the town- Rite of Buhl was laid out. O raduat- Ins from Ihc Buhl hlRh sdiool and from the University of Waihlngton, Seattle , in lOIO. she married Horacc D. Wilson, a World war veteran.

A fter h e r Jiusband died In 1024, aUe'b«Bttn teochlnj In Uie Buhl schools,, a position 8he.htta_licltl. ever (Once except for Uie five years sh e served as county supertnten- de iit of public Instruction,

Mrs, Wilson, who resides wlUi her paren ts northeast of Buhl, has 0ns daughter. M arian, a student a t tlie University of Idaho,

EliNF-ST V. MOLANDEB

The only hicumbent county coi mlsilonrr i.cckliig'reelectlon. Ern:V. Mnlnndrr, Buhl. Is Republican condldiiie lo r ihe four-year com mlislonerr.liip term for db lrlc t f;c I. }fe WHS elecit’d In liHO lo r im year.:,

Mr, .MolaiiUcr :.crvctl.2S yean. ,n highway commLvsloner In ih « v,i.v end, As a youth he moved to BM'.c valley lu 180S troni G rcrlty . Cnlo.. when Bol.'.r was .-.till In pioneer duj.i find Twin Falli county wiu m il jiist a Msebrur.h part of Cn.v.ia couniy.

After staylnK one summer In the Boise vnlltv lie returned to Colotirrto and In 1900 came to-.Twin T .illi county, lie bought ICO acres of deeded land nnd pu t In a ^tore nixl poitofflce. n i e po^to^ftce was called Deep Cceek and Mr. Molandcr .flPP O liitcd_poitaiasU r_T li»-oftlfe was la ter abandoned.

Alter that llmc he operated farm unill ID37. when he moved Into -Buhl. Ite Ir. mnrcied and hw. one f«n nnd one dauKhler. both living on farms In Twin Falls county.

iUADESIROyS M S PLANES

CAIRO. Oct. 19 ruJ5-iPeurteen hundred axLs aerial wrUes were d i­rected « a ln * t Uie island of M alta last week, during which 114 enemy alrcraiv w trp obol dt>wn by BrWsh lighter* and ontl-alrcm ft defense*, It was announced todoy.

Tlie rwyal n tr force news sen'lca said th e olllcd bag over the M edltcr- fan to n 'Is lan d icrtrtas du rlas Vast week was one of the greute.st of any week of the war. In piiyment fo r Uie IM axis bombers n!»d lighters ahot down. Uie RA P lc»t only ST-planert. Uie phot* of 14 of which wer« taved.

In addition. It said, scgre.’i of axis planes were clama|[r<l so badly they probably c ra shed ..

iMolW dlsputdits Mild 10 raJden .-re sJiol down yeilerday bringing

the total to 123),A British cctnimunlauc siild the

..xls conUnucxI lu atU ck on Uie h - land ye.sterday. using Increased fighter escorts for bojnbcrs,

Tlie RAP news fen'ice had high praLe for Spitfire fighters over Mal-■ I. ■ '

"One Spitfire wing th u week shot down fft aircraft," iirf.jU(l.

Tlifrc was no sctiviiy on Uie Egyptluu land front.^ ycMerduy. RAF loiiK riingo flRhleri siitucked iin east bound enemy .Mii);>ly .column be­tween s ld l Biirrjiiii and Solium, o conmiiuilque unnouiiced.

Parent’s Job Most Important In World, Bidil Throng Hears

Noted Sportsman Passes at Gooding

OOODINO. Oct. IS -A brlel 111- proved fntiil S.ilurclay to Dr. T.

W. While. C3, Goodltit:. iw lstiu it Ida- ho veterlnortiUi, wlio died In Oood- Ing hmpltAl.

DOTO » t Hlcltoo'. N. C.. In - i m ' e came to Idaho in 13M, He Itv.-d i .vc;irK a t Mulad, tind had HvnI

lit Gooding 13 year,-! a t the time of hl.i dMU), Ahi’lirdi'iit j.porUiman. he owwwl tu< i^ilcusilly faiiious ixilnV- er. Pilot J(5c. nJid mnlnlnlncd ihe Ooodlng dog kenni!\ for several

Dr. W iite b .-iiinivixl by liLi motli- •. who lives on tUf .t;inil!y

Uon a t Hickory, and a brother. Ed­ward Whtto. A- hevllli-, N.’C,

The body l.s iit (lie Tliompion fu­neral chapel in Ooo<llnK. A nephew of the iiliyslclan Is flvUiK Irom North Carollnn, nnd will return wlUi Uie body for burial at Hickory. Tliere will be no .'cn'lce a l Ooodlng.

BUHLff<)cl. 10—Tlw mMt Impor­ta n t Job in the world 1» tha t of being

faU^cr' or a pood moU\er. Dr. Chorlcs E. Barker, noted lecturer oC arotvd Rapids. Mlct;„ told a larse audience of parents and sutdents he re Frldoy night. He spoke under auspices of th e Buhl Rotaiy club In lt< com m unity day program.

ClUnE the fact tha t Uia youUi of th e naUon Is not txahied for Uils m oat ImportAnt Job In the world, he •anphoslied th a t Uic oenslble thing wouidJjtt to have experienced rooUi- e ra ^ o r f a th e n einployrd by high school* lo tench the senior txjys and girls Uio quallficfttiotis for being a Kood hi»bMKi or a Rootl •»He. )\W to be happily miirrie<i nnd how to have li Imppy home nnd raise chil­d ren In the proper manner to In- r.urc the ir becoming, good men and go« l women,• H e pointed out Uiat In tlie Ia;,t five yearn, starting in 1D37, botwecn 700 nnd SCO high .vhooh are offer­ing n cour.'c In Uie pructlcal thlngt

'Ife and child tro '' ‘ “ Tells Es.i«ntlab

S u U n g th a t boys o]id girls of liuli school nge. a rc going throuRh Oie

a n t e.iscntiabi for adults I n ___ _Uie'youUi, ■nier.e ewenUala inclJdc;

First-. ncsporf.lbHlllr.1 ol ainlt.i to- «-nrd th e youth, sUiUng th a t ndulLi, by th e ir a its , are the real tfathers

m S i E U l L L 2 f l NEW MEXICO

D ES MOINES,, N. M.. OcU 10 fU/J —T lie deaUi toll of am^y otflcers and m en killed In New Mexico plane crn-shes stood a t 20 today after the m ost disastrous week-end o t air mis­h a p s In the hL<itory of the stole.

n i e bodies of 11 men. killed wtien Uielr four-motored bomber crashed ARalnst lofty S ierra la Grande peak ft few miles southw est ot Des Moine. , were being: brought down the bare m ounta inside today.

T h e bomber, believed to be from Ute a rm y a ir base n t Rapid City, 8 . D ., trash ed wlOi great force a tfo i liu t- th e 'o n iy ia ir mountain for m iles In the no rthern New Mexico region S a turday morning, U was not- unUl la te yesterday, however. Uiat ft pRTty •was able to climb W ihe site of Uie cra.111.

•Nam es of Uie men were not dls- cloned by New Mexico officials.

(Nine arm y m en were killed F r i­day i\l8h t when tm w her tour- m otored cra ft h it a peak In the sou thern p a rt of the state M agdelena. Names of Uieae ......were n o t released by officlaU pend­ing notU lcatlon of t h t n n t ot kin.)

U|1VSecond; Support iJriiJccU'i Unit w.

make b r tttr men and wom<-n of bov.i and italliiK th iit Uwre a r t mors tcmptalloas facing Ilii; youth today Uion a t any other iinic. He cltfd the Bulil recreiiUonni park. Boy Scout and Cnnip Fire G irls fu-KanlLtlons a \ ^amllIc^ nt v;orlliwUllc SiisUtu- .Uons.

Attend ChurchThlrtl: " H . Ls- Uic plain, duty

every m an ond woman U> attend some clturch cverj- Sunduy." he Mild. “The religion of ou r forefnlheni ' mode Amcrictt irreat. and ler. iw n th n t we w ant our.country to bp and remain a Qod-fearlnR counirv,". FourUi; T tach smoU clilldrcn, un ­der 12 years, to m ind.

Fifth : Explain to iJ>ns and di.UKh- ttra U\c UiittBs they wish to know about sex life, from the ir first QUf-''* tlon. "Wlicre Did I Come From ?'’ He statwl Uiut p n ren u ’ refusal to IjOI •• child th e facts’about b irth for fear

( cau.MRit rmbarrftr-Mncnl. oltr-r Jnmiifte<l a child's charac ter Irrcpar-

•TlWy. H e-gave detailed dcmonsirn- . tloi« ot Uie proper m ethod of cx- I>talnlng Uiesc auesUons; al.io dem- onaUTiUnR how a. h igh schod Klrl can refu.He to be "petted and neckud“ and t>llll be iiopuJnr.

Dr. Barker spoko to the lilgh Mhool student.1 in a iipecial ns.-^cmb- bly program In the m om lni; <vn vUow to Make a Success o f Your Life," He spoke to a large group of rfouuy club members and gue.-iis a t a no< luncheon m eftlng Friday. Preside... C. D, Boring Introduced him a t Uw Uirec progrnnw.

Car Damaged as It Rams Bridge

GOODrNQ. Oct. 10 -A m otor caj belonging t J Roy Rumple. Gooding, was severely damaged when It stnjck ft concrete suanS rail on ft bridge over LltUe Wood river northeast ot Ooodlng Sunday afternoon. The f a r was reported driven by a boy who said he was 11 years old. and whare name wa.i no t learned. A th ird boy, older than Uie driver, was in Uie car. H ic occupants fell In Uie water, bu t nobody wtia Injured.

MUttPHY TO COl'.l'll IVALT.NF.BOISE. Oct. 10 lUPi-F-irl M ur­

phy. fccrrUiry of the Idaho Cham ­ber of Commcrcc. iwby s.-ild he liad acccpitd an Invllaltoii to nddrc« Uie Coeur d'A.len« clmmbrr T hurs­day on the prnjiaW fenlor clUr-en.'i' g ran t Inlllniive mewurr to be voted

a t Uie Rcnenil elfclion Nov. 3. ;

25 Persons Killed In London Crash

LONDON. Oct. 10 ( /n - A t least 25 persons were believed to have died OS a re.iult of on a ir cra.\h yester­day near a fMlwtiy :.U,tlos\-whtn an RAP plane undtr.-.hot an air­drome. nosed over and burst Into fiamej.

Men. women and children leaving trains scattered wildly as Uic pUnc struck^-Women ond children were among the casuolUcs bu t Uie ionr plete toll wa.1 no t'know n. - ■ ---------------------------------------- ----------

We are setting our incubator for hatch­ing baby chicks starting November 3. Chicks from this first setting will be available November 25. Place,your ord­ers now. We are doing,this to assist in the requesf of Idaho Poultiy Extension Service'for more consumption of poul­try meat.

SWIFT & COMPANY264 4lh A re. South ------ Phone 165

Women Wai'Leaders Meet O f I M C R l i E M U R E D

Jean Kno*. lefl. d lrtelor of the DrlU»h auxlllarr lerrllorlal »erv- Icr. rtUroisn Uie work of her un ll w ith K lrrclor 0»eU Culp Hobby, ot the Araerifjn WAAC*, »l Ihe British e m lao y in Wa»tilni(ari.

Larger Sewing . RoomSo\ightby

Red Cross UnitJKROME. Oct. 10 — Tlie year'a

budKCt tto-i dtNtu'Afd M f, iiicetlnB of the Jerome lied Cro;a chapter held a t the Jerome funeral chapeU

Effort.'- will be made to .•■ccure a j.ewlnK ro o m ^ lih sufficient space for r.torncc ol all gamient'. and nrilclts to be shi|iped •»oul and brnUKht to Uir local.chapltr,

A report. OJ) Ih/? J.irse nyioiifit rtf’ Rarincnis 'st^rd by Jrrome’ re.^lrtnnta wa» made by Mrs, E. M. Bi|0dgrax.i. leuini; producUon chairman, tihe nskfil for more women volunteers. stalhiK there Is ndctiuate nmteria! lo r evcrjone, Wpmtn des1rln« lo

^l1r^ r i cnnlnrt cither Mrs. Snoikro.'.^’ nr Mrji. E. E, LaTiirner, kniitinc rhnlmian.

M1S.S mva M. PiiKmlre. county health nur.^e. cave a reiwrt of tho showlnK Ot th r h rst nW ihm, "Uelore Uie Doctor Comes," SllT ^ald the hlKh rchool siudenLs would bCKln first aid clll. . work niter harvc.tt scu«on vacaUon etid;i. Senior Rroufni will take Uit Mnntlard llrst aid courT.e and fre.'hmen tji6 Junior first a id 'work. Five in.ilruclors, W alter V. Olil.s, h ish i.cht>ol principal: Earl S .' Wllllanu. boy*' plij'slcal educa­tion trac h tr; Mis, M nmella Ilnm- se.v, C a r l' WorihlnKton nnd MIm. D>’e r,^ ir l'- ' physical edueaiinn in - Bt^ucior, will Icnch Uie. clnsse.i.

NO CUREKENOiiiiA, Wls.. Del. IB (UP) —

John Mihier. 3D, ivlio was "cured' ns n n irntat inttent two niontlis rko Kuve the.-e rcMons Kxlay lor slaytUK liiH fatber on hunlint; irip:

•'An uiisrcii force outilile of me lold me to do It.

"I met a man In a tavern In .Mil­waukee who told me lu do It.

" I KOt a liood wave rcfcpUon and 11 wiL-i time fjjr me lo do It.■ •'I KDl Uie rlKlit illrecllon today. I d idn ’t cet it ycjiirrday."

B u t a tler the slayluK yeslccday he Juicl Kh'i'ti amitJier reason. As hla fa the r. Cllnlpn Milner, a:. Milwau­kee, Mumped lo Uic Kroimil with W o bullet.^ In hts back, the .non s.-/ld

•'I killed hla'. tic JliniiUlii't i -sent me to the Insane a.'5luin.‘

Fire at GoodingGOODIKQ. Ocf, lO-Mic Irom n

overheated stovepipe did a Miia an ionnl nf damage lo ilie hom*-of Mr, and-.Mrs. Ed Hiid-oti In OoodlnK Sunday nionilntf, Mr. and Mrs. liud- ron l\!wl gontOiunilns. Itnvlng Ih tlr Uirce small daliKhkrx iti the care of nn older girl, n ie lire Ktiirted ulillc the Kin wlis iirrpartne break-flLlt.

Death Valley. D eath valley. Calif,, Is about 50 m |Ies Ions and uvrrases SO to niilM wide. Item the crests o t, the encloaing mountain ranjcj.

CHICAGO. Oct. 15 M V -lnvIn Ka- dttis. 33, teTOMl li -ihrec» slate crime wove” by J. Edgar Hoover, was captured today, police re(>orted. when h« attem pted to hold up a currcticy exehanire oii the w cil aide.

Tl\e opersiUii of ih e cxihanKc called police who arrived in time lo beat Kodens tnio unconscloasness.

Police of the nation were wart ed by Delrolt uuihorltles oil Sept. 30 U\at KwltJy. was "pnc of Ihe most desperate crln iin ih a t I.itbc today," Tliey advbe<J partlclpanl.i in ' m anhunt;

•■Kodens will it.md for no ques- Uot\lt\S bv pclke oStVi'crs, iJe ha» been aniiWerhiK the first question with BUnflre."

Lt. Jaw ph Gallon of Plllmorc street police Mid Kadem wa-s l>eal- eii on the he;«l liy ra tro lm an Rich­a rd Nelson wlien NeLion found Kodens nienaclnt: employes of Uie cxclianfrc wiUi a pbtol.

Accordinn to Hoover. Kadens, taw ftbWlftK husband and falhw two small dauKlilers, deserted the arm y a t Camp G rant, III., on July H and on Auk. IC burKlarl7.eil the home of a Deirnli pollccmaii. lak- IttK ft pUtol. uiiltorin, bailsc and handcuffs. • '

llicreu[)on. Hoover related. Kadens embarked on n relKU of terror tliat Included one kldn;ipliiK, five rajv^. n robberlr.’i awl Itt aMioiiioblle UiefUi, miiny from tiu irnb drh HLi crhne rareer covered m weeki.

Idaho Man Given U. S. Air Medal

HEADQUARTERS. ALASKA DE­FENSE COM.MAND, Ocl, 10 .\fnj, Gen, Slnion D. lluckner an­nounced Corp. Hubert E. Afe- Kenney of Blackfoot, Idii., had been awarded an a ir nicdul for mcrltor-

nct.s lyhlle mnklnr repealed day and hljjhl ovfr-w nter instru- nit iU lUxht.'i in ley tondltloai to at- lack Uio rnemy in Uie'.WMtern Aleu' t lu u . .

A d id e r reIfo.sed from Uie tow plane ‘ n t 10.000 feet can carry full load for 30 miles.

Miserable With A

HEAD COLD?J iu t tn '* . >• Va-tTo-noI up eadtnostril. I t (1) ohrinkj swollen mem­branes, (2) toothcs IrriutJon, ond (3) helps c lear cold-clogged nasal pasiaKcj. Fol- m n m C v low tiic axnpletc dl- rccfions in fo lder. V A 'T RO 'N O L

Here’sSummary ; Of War Pictrae— By United -----------

LONDON — Possible alUe<J offea- ■" &lv« In Africa Mcn »s F rench a b U t. heavy naval strength to D « lu r; Frencli preas alarmed as r«port< of U, 8. troops arrlvins In Liberia; relaUons between tav o l aod Oer> muiy strained, h in t he may t>e re> plac^.

.MOSCOW Germans eonllnua drive a t Btallo?rad bu t m ok; ilo v prDgrcs. ; nazLt lose 0.000 m en and 333 tanks Iti U t days of flghUttS.

WASniNGTON-Solomon Ulaods battle hsnKs in. balance os reporU ' Dl cround acUvUly are awaited; Japs preirare drive tiBalnsl' American- held airfield; MocArthur'a bombers score probably hits on a number of Jpp Jhlps.

NEWIQUINEA-Austrollan Woops cl.asn Willi Japanese In area of Tem­pleton's cfoislns. ’ .

LONDON-RAP challenges Amer- iran Plymg Porlrejicfl in raiding Frencli nrms plant with ,700 Ions Of bombs In.seven minutes.

Woman Cancels Protest on Draft

" Of Youths, 18-19'BOISE, Oct. 10 t,V(—Mra. Sa ra E.

Hlrl of Uoisc who la.M week urged Idaho muilier.i and oUiere through*- out .the nation to protest the d raft­ing of IB and 19 ye.w old youU«, &ut]duy lAA LUt! was v lthdtaw lng her proteito,

"I believe tha t corujress will prob­ably lower Uie age limit despite what Uic |)cr^on. against Uio proposal may do, Tliccctorc,. . . 1 do n o t want to seem contrary to the naUoaaT interests." Mrs. Iflrt said.

She Indicated h e r own opinion o t Uie mnttrr had no t changed—Uiat she still fell Uiat youUis of UUs ag« , were not yet old enough to fighl— but Uiat not enough support had maicrlalizfd tb form a n crganlied protest lo congress.

The world’s first squadron of 18 torjVdo-planes waa built fo r ths U. e . navy In lD:a

POTATO—GROWERS

0 (?t our «iu you sell. •W( tho market.

MACK BRIGHTTwlnPftlls. O ttlccP h .114 '

nesiiience Pit. 0200-Jl BUVER (6T U. Jt. Z»SM ERLl

THE f -Z O N Ewhere cigarette^ are judgedT h a n ^ H l - '- T a n c and T h toa i-li tha

Jpn>TJtigef«»uodfordBare«e».QnIyye«/r • U lte aad diroas c»a Jtc ide 'wblch e ip -

tc n c m tcs b a t to y o a ...a sd how Jt affecn jw ir th ru st For your a s ie and th r ta t a re tbsolately individual i© you.

Based OQ die 'opericoce of oiU ions o f loiolcer*. we IielicT* ComctJ wUJ ful( yont "T.ZONI- w > n r .- Pro-re i t (or jourxU I

FIRST IN THE SERVICE

•nie favories Hgarerte with nca ta V tbc A nar. Ngrt.Marioti'attJ Com GuanJ is Ciunel. fOutd oa un u l u les reoudt (a PoH Eithiniti. Sales CMwaUuriei, Sbip'i Sctvlca SgwCShip-«5tottt>aadCafltw«a)

LpMOAH, w lio foTBt», schedttle, i f i« j t u p i r ^ ' to C u m ^ ^ '’ ihiase bombs

' ’flo* Jcrrr. -n>cr -fco' i x '- v iin.,a 'y t M s t e . J h e f t e t ^ ! " / ^

Page 4: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

Pa*«Ilour IIMES-NEWS, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO Mcmda7, 19, 1942

■ U >M«.

tW FsklUUtt C«a»»U.

EaU>«4 X Mten4 iUm m4tl<r April I. lil t. II thi rmtStM l« T«U rilt.. U4bo. t a ^ f U« *et ^ H u ti h l i l t .

• UMCIIFTION tATTl *BT CABUieH-rATABLK IN AOVAKCI

— - ■ --------- iS*i t U-wfrnoattT ^ . . . . . . ------ «I-WBf Ibl m » ----— ■:■ It-OO

■ K S . .<11 B

CoBCllU »«»« MfrUtt o: « AmocUM Prnt *i

II M Uwriu b7 CIIIPM » i . i m »«ukat Uw*

HATIOVAI, REPRESEKTATIVES Wf;.ST-IIOLI.IDAY CO. INC.

Ullb To»*f. «0 QMh b*B rrtncUni.

AMERICAN LA BO R PARTY- . Amateur pQlUli:lB.ns a n d th e public a rc • foHowlng Trust-B ustcr Dewey’s New York s ta le figh t ngalnst D em ocratic" C andldnlc Bennett, wlio h as served aa a tto rney Rcnerol upder F tank iln D. R o o sev e lt’and H erbert Lehman since 1030.

The Dcwcy-Bennctt cqn tc st a ttrao ta n a ­tional a tten tion for th ree reosona. One, of

• course, Is the young ex -prosecutor’a "color." A nother Is his presidentia l am bition, and th e p o ten tia l effect of th e guberria torla l election

• upon h is 1944 availability lo r th e O. 0 . P . : nom ination. Tho th ird Is th e f a c t 't h a t th e

President tried to keep B en n e tt from getting th e nom ination and s tO l.h a s n o t relented publicity.

But professional po litic ians f ind in th e New York race an angle by f a r m ore Intriguing th a n these. T heir prim e in te re s t la in the f o > tunes of the candidate w ho can n o t win, the

- American Labor p arty 's nom inee fo r gover­nor, a Democratic a tto rn ey of G reek ex trac­tion , Dean A lfangt. ‘

Although tho A m erican L abor p a rty was formed in 1930 and b o s h a d candidates In

' every election since, th is Is th e f ir s t oppor­tu n ity fo r politicians to dl-^covcr w hether th e unions can deliver th e vote.

H itherto , except fo r a n occasional assem ­b ly d istric t, the ALP h a s c lung to th e coa t­ta ils of a m ajor p a rty — usually , b u t n o t exclusively, tho D em ocratic — a n d h as etect-

Its own members to o ffice only w hen ’they also h a d th e support o l & m a jo r jJaxty.

■ P our years ago w hen Dewey lo st to Leh­m an . th e American L abor .p ar ty rose to its zen ith . A grand to ta l o f 420,000 persons voted on th e ALP line for Q ov em o r Lehm an. I t ■was th e Labor party vo tes th a t enabled th e D em ocrats to re ta in contro l.

All th is Is of Im port because th e American L abor party Is a lab o ra to ry experim ent. T he p la n was to determ ine w h e th e r un ion labor w as capable of function ing , politically on its ow n I t th e ALP succeeded In New York, th e n it was to be m ade a n a tio n a l party .

In all this, tim e the ALP n ev e r’ before has tr ie d Its wings all by Itself.

The en tire question w h e th e r un ion labor con and should have Its own n a tio n a l political party , run its own cand idates a n d function sim ilarly to the B ritish • L abor p a r ty m ay h inge upon how m any votes th e inconspicu­ous Dean Alfange gets in New Y ork In No­vember.

I t h® cuts M poor % llg u re a s m any expert observers anticipate, th e n organized labor Is expected to continue politically a s a pres­s u re group, endeavoring to exercise a balance of power by which it can force th e m ajo r p arties to heed its dem ands to some extent.

kO TIME FOR LOAFING The nation 's m anpow er p roblem , os b rought

hom o to th e A m erican people in President Roosevelt’s m ost recen t ftddress, la-now being

• l e l t th roughout th e la n d , M agic Valley In­cluded.

W ith hundreds of th o u san d s of employes wArUng in w ar production fac to ries and se ­lective service expecting to have between 10,000,000 ond 12,000.000 m en In th e anned forces, th e shortage of io b o r in th e average •community is becoming m ore and m ore acute.

T h a t’s why agricu ltural a rea s like oiir own m u st resort to every m eans 'o f securlng-help to h a rv es t tho various crops. Schools arc being d o sed fo r harvest vacotlons so s tu d en ts may w ork In th e fields. B usiness m en a re being u rged to perm it a-s-many o f th e ir employes a s possible to do likewise. Even th e women a re being asked to lend a he lp ing hand .

W ith a condition so se rious th a t such steps become necessary. It is reg re ttab le th a t the o perators of places of rec rea tio n m ust be asked to closc th e ir card tab les, pool rooms a n d the like to discourage loafing by able- bodied mei).

I t shoul'd be apparen t to everyone who Is ab le to work th a t h is help is seriously needed, n o t only for the good of h is own com m unity b u t fo r th e country as a whole. '

W hen m en by th e m illions a re being called aw ay frow the ir homes a n d fam ilies to shoul­d e r a rm s in defense of th e ir country, th o least th o se who rem ain a t hom e can do is to seek em ploym ent th a t will he lp to equip a n d feed th e m en in service. • T here is no p lace for lo afers in ou r p resen t em ergency .-----

CANDIDATE FOR A HIEDAL When war medals ore being passed out, we

nominate Warren Breaux, II years old, of Gaeydan, La. Be weighs 73 pounds, himself, bu t since April he has collected tons ol ecrap metal for our war program.

Sure. He earaed *2738 for his work. But w liat h w t lu ( • Iar.il9 with th e case? The laborer w ortH pat bis U re. and Warren

.lia d ao oppertw w r that wosn't avaUatJlo to any boy or n ttC tr ith inltlfttlre and a dash of patriotism. *':*' U n c le S a m w ill be . d o in g a n I n ju s t ic e a n d

, B U ^ g . a b e t i f h e d o e s n 't r e c o g n is e t h i s , su p e rse rv ice f o r d e m b c r a c / . J

TUCKER’S NATIONAL

W H I R L I G I GBU yD IST fr-P retldea t R o o m tU and o the r o fflclib

tn tlm a u ij uaocU ted with i h t w u effort t r t not pmi> In f 001 PoUy»on» p ro p a» a d » when tber n i f i u t t h ^ th » u d i l i i d tn . pw tteu lu iy K lU tr t a d M w oliiS?

rn llM th a t tha United NaUona are rapldlr w tnnlnf tha battlc i of pro* duetlon «Bd trazuport«UoD.

U u tr O crm an and Ita lian agenU or iT m pathU an lUll r w U t In tha UnlUd S tata t, and othermUlMl counWea wlU) th a poaaitle exetpUon of R u u la . D ie r havo plen­ty of opportun ltr to w a and read erid tncai o f our Incrta iina output o( v eaponi and tha mobUlratton of a m lfh tr m lU taa machine. T tity nnd meana of Bettto« th li laform atton

o a t TDCKCa b o undartu and thence u>boeUla capital!.

R e p r tien laU m 'o f landa no t unfriendly to Berlin and Rome, bicludlnf tmalneumeo, dJploiaata and joumalUU. hay* been allowed dUereet,gU mp«i of our arm am ent factorlea and th lpya .d i. Waahlngton U nol reluctan t to alford thenvthla chance, hoping th a t th r r wlU report what th e ; obterre where I t *U1 do the moat good—« r hann,

U U nol generallr known, bu t bundltU are even nov employed In tome of our key planta. They are exoelleni workmen but are kept under itr lc t eupervlslon. TIio d a llr product’o( the ir craftam anihlp U closely exam­ined tor any of u b o ta g t. TV Is svupecud 1 ^ 1 they, too.Vineik out daU on our crowing s lrrng th as th ry can It «>d th a t the ir commcnta eventuallyreach the dictators. '

CRI8IS—Manpower experta In Uie capital do nol beUeve tha t the United s u te s employment service c u i h tn d lt the IncttwVng^ dMiBprou* pioblem of deciding w hether an Individual can best serve In'the arm y. In a factory or on « /arm .'T hat Li the system advoclled by F-D-n. In «n a tirm p t to avoid the necessity of "it’ork or flRht" leshlaittii. /

The Kankly, In'not lUjilily regarrfcjl here orin many other secUons of th e ’country. i t IsXtaffed In many arean by »taro>eyed economists and/ioclal wel- forers wlUi cniy slight knowlcdse of labor indiutrlal condllioiu. Manufacturers seeking personnel have complained tha t they did no t obtain resu lu . while laborers looking for Jobs have too o ftra been given the runaround a t one o r another of the forty-five hundred offices which the President referred to' a t ’'grocery stores of manpower."

C u t Mr,’Roosevelt would like to defer any rea l crack­down unUl after the elecUon; m addition he aincerely hopes tha t such a democratic process as he .augsests will succeed. In this desire for delay-he has th e hearty wLihes of rrery poMUco on capltol hill. But th e experts do n o t think procrastination is possible In the present crlsU.

CtfANGE—The adm inistration has two aliarnaUvca which would obi'late rew rtln# to the wmbersomo i; .S £ 3 . and to leclalatlon freezing a man or woman to a maclUne or farm tractor.

T he f ln t consist* of the schema by which copper m lnerj and lumbermen are prohibited from 'quitUng their present posta for better p a ^ n x jpbs. No boolc sta tu te lesltlmaUzea such drastic i ^ o n . I t was ao- compUshed by quiet negotiation of an unw ritten afcreement among emploj-ers. unions and the govem- m ei|t. with tha U.S.E.8. aa the supervising agency. A d l g ^ or woodsman can. aa a. pracUeal m atter, waUc ou t.b u t he will flad It mighty difficult to ge t placed elsewhere. I t Is doubtful w hether such a lyitem coiHQ be effecUve on a nationwide icole, however.

Selective icrrl^e offletali argue th a t thtfuame objee> Uve can be attained through a simple change In Uielr regulations. They now have the. authority to defer a m an tngag td In an Im portant Industrial occupauon. S u t I f ha refusei to remain In th a t position, the proposed revision would give them power to alap a 1-A rating ag^taat him which could no t be modined to a lower lu tu s without their consent. T h a t amouflU t o ^ -work where we say o r fight" system, bu t lU adopUon would save embarraasment for both tha Whlt« House and congrtas.

RfCH—If. Uie federal and sla te governments and other cities exhibited an lota of the Ingenuity of the people of Selma, Ala., the present shortage o f scrap would disappear or a t le u t decline sharplj-,

During, tha .-Clrll war, a Confederate arsenal was running lull blast when word arrived th a t Union troops were advancing on tho place, ro lks dumped machinery U well' as manufactured weapons Into the Alabama rlw r. Recently swnebodv remembered the Jettisoned Junk and i t h u been reclaimed from its watery store* house.

K atlonal and local officials hava neglected rich mine* of matal. according to some experts. Among the articles which might be contributed are Uncle Sam's mall boxes, traffic posts and signs, manhole covers, fences, public trash cans, unnecessary furnishings of publlo structures etc. I t Is contended th a t there is no reason why many of these potential sources of planea and U nks and ships could no t be replaced by wooden

plaatle substitutes.

DOLlrARB—Red tape h lt-» colorful climax w hen tho procurement division of the treasury recently offered for sale "10 bags of wraps." Altfiough the am ount of money Involved In the traiuaeUon cama to only a few dollars, bureaucratic officials luued two page* o f tp « * IfleatJons. regulations and other thou-shalt-nota for th# bidders. "You would think they were selling the W uhlngton monument." remarked a cong#e«16naI

“Thanks for the Lift!”

OtheC Points of ViewGOING TO THE WALL

gloomy picture for the proprleton of small (s, especially retailers, as presented by de­

partm ent ot commtice, e ip e ru to the small bu-ilnes* committee of the United StatM senate. TJiey predict about 900,000 small re u il establishmenU out o f tha p reK nt 1.600,000 may be closed next year because of lack of stock; The same pro.^peet is fa?ed by 24,000 amali manufacturers who cannot convert to w ar pro­duction.

Tha- only hope oltered b the recommendation of Donald Nelson, w pfl ehalrrnan, tha t congress should aet to soften the blow of suspension and aid the small business enterprises in reestabltihln; themselves after Uie war. B ut th a t Is n o t rc jy cheertng for the small business m an who knows he faces drastic adjustments In tha meantime. Many of Uiese men will find a use lo r the ir abilities In some p h u e cf the war e ffo rt T heir employes may be provided for In the coming allocation of manpower.

As Mr. Nelson argued, they should no t be mustered out. They sitould ba merely demobilized for the dura< tlon, w ith provision to aid Uiem In resuming busi­ness a fU r victory has been won.—Lewiston Tribune.

m z CBISCLEItSThe Oongrtsilonal Record prlnU this letter to his

fa th e r from a ton working on a government project a t Coeur d'Alene. Idaho:

*‘Am working here and llke'IL Am getting tI31.7S a weak.

“Come out. Dad. We do no t do u much work here in a day M wa did in our home town. In two hours. Due to union rettrlcUons. we cannot drive a nail when we have to hgve a few boards nailed to a place to hold our pipes, ao we have some so-called carpenters w ith us. (We would never call these carpenters back home.) All thesr carpantera do tor the U 3 a day th a t they a re paid

’^ r about th a t—for an eight-hour day is to nail up a few board t to hold the pipe. We always did this our* aelvet back home. I l l be t some of these so-called car* penters do no t drive 13 nails a day some days. Joe ."

Joe Is making plenty, Ukes the money, the a w k and th# country. But he knpws he Is gatUng paid ou t of proportion to the work he tloes. and he deein’v like th a t. H e would really much prefer to do an honett day 's wotk for honest pay.

The tltuaU on Isn't exactly Joe’s fault, n o r ’the car. p e n u r 't . B ut n 't bad.I U 't bad for Joe's character to chisel on his employer, especially, when th a t employer I t h it nation, and the nation &e«ds'tvery dollar to aav» Joe's Ireedon a t well a t th a t pf other Americans. I t 's b a d .fo r all o ther

a J ■

cniMli tha'

POT Sh o t st t l th th *

G E N T L E M A N IN T H S T H IR D KOW

TONGUE EXCnClliE If there are any stuttercrfr.amon8 Lir .constituents wa recommend tho

following twice a day for a month; •r ick le paeJier*'* prospects of

getting pickle pickers to pick pick- lea far pickle packers te w k arer r. Plekle pickers le t^ c k le i go

yet to partake r V plesaantet plekln's In w«t«pr^uctloB, l£ a v

RUN FOR COVER, RAJAH! Dear P o t bhetsi

The IU }ah o< Rupert u y s ^ a tgtnerallx__cpeaklnc women arepretly a n d ' are pretty generally speaking. . .

-S lijw U n o a to .

PRINCIPALLY, THIS ’sEEfttS A ' . MATTER OF rHWCl?LB

Dear S ho t Pots;I f ’ U bo thers you wiiat Is the

difference between principal and principle you should Uike a gander a t' a suit tha staig of Idaho haa filed against a Twin PaUs man w ho employs Ju s t enough help to at« trac t the critical attention of the unemployment compensation {

In August. 1B«. he ran u p _____of 13,10. which he didn't pay un til Aug, 13. 1B42. T hat meant he owed m s . penalty, but he didn't pay that. A t a m atter of prlncl^ila he paid only the principal. But the ila te trlea all thp.-« ca«es, rrgard- to s of the amouni Involvwl,

And so th e suit lin 'i a matter of principal I t 's a matter o{ prln- :lple.

With th e four attorneys for. the plaintiff I t's a matter of principal.

Or are you d lu j' by now?I am. Goodbye.

—Tbe.Canny Kansan

MEliSAGi: TO ALL HOPEFUL CANDIDATES

i>ol«l U .t Auf. ] Gut K.lkrr. »n T-H rcpanrrThotot, >raU x Irticr. I- Ik. koun of K Sun-

nlUnc. '

worker*, trying to, be honest and decent and being p reren ted from doing lo.

This lanX p red u c U o a -lfi chiseling. I t cn iti.. tu tpayera. and i t chUels our men In Uie flghUng forces. —CaJdw dl Newi-M lnm #.

<Ur *,i?• Uctlon eomaii %

d U unlit lb nd." ..Id 1.. "Hr >1

neir *nd hMi1»i] for a ronnlitloii u pilot or Intlrueior.)^Dear Pot ShoU:

Prom now until Nov. 1 the one big phrase heard far and wide will be: “I am confident that l will win."

Election—the good old cuitom-of shoving everything else aside so folks can pu t an X alter itia name of soma gen t they never knew, or never saw. or maybe take a pencil poke a t th e guy who promised Uncle Elmer n Job but never gave It to him.

Herewim some Jottlnn to cheer candldaUs. I WTlte this fo r 'jo u r wleemed column a long time before

I, •.1.11. _

I ron for coroner two years ago? D idn 't I go a re tu d ta all those rallies where sema elob or erganl- aaUen Invites all the candidates lo make the ir appearance—then charges - t l a plate for aemathlng they get donated lo them for no th ing se th e dab roema can g e t » new floor, or tha. root can bo patched, or anotherN llee' ean bo Caked off the eld mortgage.

. Didn’t I talk to, hundreds- of people, and give them my card and h e a r them assure m e th a t ''e%<-n though I'm ft Republican I'll vote fo r you because l don't Uka tl)« o the r fellow."

D idn 't I lla In bed nighta and look u p a t tha celling and count all those voles I was going.to got?

B u t then who wants lo t>o coroncr 'anyw ay? There's no future In It.

W ell.'tom e Nov. 3 th e tt 's a of. guys who ara^golng to do sam e' thing I did. They're" going to h a u n t the newspaper office and lln d o u t how they came out. They're ko- in g to see the results posted a n d a re going to get th a t sinking feel­in g when t h e y see the beating Ihey'ra taking.

A nd w h en -1 f t all over they'll spend from now unUl March 15. 1M3 trying to figure how they cnn w rite off their election costs as ''bad de b u " or something on income taxes to Uncle Sam.

" I am confident tha t I will win.' I t rolls efr the tengne with a

aaUirylng swing.B u t it's fanny how many people

forget who It was they promlied to vote fer.

Anyway, does It matter?—0. A. XeUer

LOONY LYRICS Here’s a pome *'

- Of love and k luei—Cupid's aim Is goed.and >el He mfkes » let e( Mrs.!

—n'Tjy ind Daify

HOME SWEET HOMEU lya. Pot,<o:

A war conjtrucUon w o rk e ^ ^ t D rtsham City s,at down a t a lUncU counter and said lo Uie waltres.i: "G ive me a cup of black, muddy coffec, ft stnck of bum l tonst and a couple of scorched egRS. T hen come around and sit down on tliU stool beslda me and nag liell out of

.I'm hom tiltk,"—Eye Hear

HO HU?r DETT. '‘CandldaU* of Beth Parlies te

D ine • Together a t H ansen'— Tlraea-Nawa.G uadalcanal may look like

party .tea

i It uhiie i-melection so I «II a civilian.I knew a ll'a b en t peUUci. Didn't

KA.MOUB LAST LI.S’E . . Leek, weald a new h a t make

you say.J the t tha deer Instead ef you? ,-

THE GBNTLE.MAN IN THE THIRD BOW

HISTORY- OF T w i n FALLS'AS GLEANED mOM TUE FIL E S OP THE TIMEB.WEWS

15 YEARS AGO, OCT. » , m ?Mr. and Mr*. O. W. Wliham were

hosts a t a three-course dinner Tuet« day. Their daughter, Mlu Margaret Wltham, and Miss Oltnora Prltcher served.

Honoring Mrs. Prtd McCall, a t touU , fctn. H . F . Morthouia and Mrs. O rts.C ryder eniertalned-st t luncheon W ednesday s i the Orange Lantern. Kimberly. Mn. p, w, Mc- R obtrtt Mr». TWrniu liujhet won the bridge prtie*.

U n . W. B . dreenhow entertain^ tha Wedneaday Bridge club. Urs. W alter R elic / and Mr*. Wilbur s . B ill played high .

, S7 YEARS AGO, OCT. IB. 1118 A musicals of unuiual attmcUve*

neat will be held Thursday .after­noon under the auspices of the ^ ls> eopal guild a t tha home of Mrs. E.

MatVlcar. to* .. W. O. Taytor, Miss Tas'lor. Mr*. W. H. Dwight and M rs. R W. TrtU M i wIU Be m e perform ers.

H arry T . West transacted business In 'Twin Palls Tuesday afternoon from hla f a r a near Kimberly-

Ku t )' Denton wat In the c ity for a a h o n time Mordkjr looking bualaess tnUretta.

C A R E OF Y O U R

CHILDRENBY ANGELO PATEl

BATTLING CDILDREN ARE A PROBLEM

Some little ^lUdrcn. boys, often- er th a n girls, sMke and punch and push other llltle children jiwpUe a ll th t l r moU«ia can do?TOklns to thrar, spanking them, eeems to do no good. They* are sorry for tho mo­m ent. and, chlldren’a memorlM be­ing short, they do the same tntng the nex t lUne they ore with other children.

T h e beav punishment ta rtmo'’ from the presence o l oUier children. Make the separation long enough to allow the lonellnes-i to sink In so r wUl be remonberrd as an unplea san t experience. Half an hour won't help m uch. Make It a half day. and If lh a t does not help, make it the whole d.iy, nnd don 'f try to make the tiolntlon pleiiuint for him,

But punbhmeht Is nol cur must con,slder whst makes him so belllfterent. What mokes him want lo pu.tU and poke and punch? Study hl.^ health l im . Is ov tn lie l T h a t might mean trouble. A thorough ex­amination oj.vieh a child ofp cJoaes tho realDn for his i e e l . . . , pui'Oill th a t hn must flghChls «ay.

Examine Iloma Conditions Loot a t the conditions of hccpe.

Durtnif these hard yearn many fam* lllcs nto crou'ded. Living to?, t i« e to other jwople make.n children, and Rroa'n people, Irrluble. Too many people telling n child w hat to do, or telling h it mother w hat to dQ about him. makes a child pugnacious. M such conditions press upon the child, tr}' having him out of the*h«ue *s

iich a* pov<lble. under the care of me unclrrslandlrig person. 'Some*

time;i there I* a helpful relative or nriKhbor. or an oidrr child >ho lirlp In tills, .■» • ,

A tired clilld Is always Irritable. If this fighting sp irit I.i cne who does nol get enough sleea ' aoough quleu enough food of Uie right kind, ho 15 uncomfortable In body and coruequcnUy Itr mind, and h e trlea lo relieve himself by punching it out.

Usually a healthy child, well cared tor. g e u over this slnga early. The occasional one holds on t^ It and makes troub le for himself and hU family.

Too MuchttlrfTgy When you have had U \t *p«iftll»t :e Uie child, a fter you have done

all you can do by Isolating him. talking to him, allowing his jf i . feel the Inconvenience of his behaviour, give him a chanee to pound out hU driving energy on something tha t does n o t au^lter f y consequence.

Some lltjf t-b c ^ h a v e more energy than tliey 'can use in a day. If that energy la no t used Id hard play, chores and the like. 11 wUl drive It­self ou t by forcing tlie child to act, ujuig hla muscle*. T h a t Is why he punches and pushes and pokes otl»r children.

Dr. Johnston of Vineland train* Ing school, the wisest teacher of dis­turbed children we ha re , gives such children a mallet or a hammer. ' ^ block Uks the slum p of an o u . o r i i . butcher's bloek. and le u him thum p and pound H until he feels he haa h a d enough. H e glvct him broad-headed tacks If he U a llttia t»y. nails if he Is bigger.

“Itio point Is; Use the driving ... ergy purposeTully If possible: If not. use I t In pounding, hammertnB. kick­ing a foolhall. But use It. .

ANALYZING CURRENT NEWS

FRDJSLNEW^ORK

. _ kooklit. "your Chtld «t>4 Olii« P»- pk." •nclMln* la m t i la Mia and UrM' r«at •MBp, AddrtM TiiUI, e«n■nma-N***. r . 0. Bm II. suu«« p. » ,*

Man Without CountryPlve hundre<^ thousand Korta^a

realdlng in Manchukuo a r t men ■without » country since a law pro­hibits people without passports or official ccmsular registration from ] e a ^ o r owning landt la the new emplr*. T hat* Korasns amunlad themsclvea across Uia border while U wat Chinese terrllory.

SUPSBVISION—'H ti p ra iden ti^ v t r n ln s th a t grovlDc b c rt and girls v ia nMd«4 to p p cau te t ccoeem aooog e d u a- i o i . * n (y fo ro e e d lvupted curil- ctiluma tialeaa Mch ccimffumlty map* ou t a eoomioo tana* part-Uma « a - plojrmant procram . M asy prlnclpaliagr«a th a t pup tii ahould h e lp - ......ciaUy to i w a l T V g tco ^ B l

........... ......... p S r lenta and b u tin a s f I men wlS look be* I fore they l ia p . |

The reconla o f l luBULar and fa ll | dlacloaa Intelligent I handling of the I pmblam In m o a t l f tilcu lftinn a e e > |

i^ons. featuring I early morning ae*> u a x R T ^ 6 0 , flalurday

, .................... ....... ........ ; other r*po._show th a t c ity la d t often were tenta- Urely h ired * « d lransport«d » cou­ple of hundred mllea to the beny patches only to be told the Jobs had been llUed. O ne farm er le il a but load of kids stranded In the rain 10 miles from hom e. T hey were unable to pick In th e Inclement weather to he refused to pay the ir fares. Tots only eight years old tolled full time through the h o t season because tha boes could pay them less.

iJoat clUld welfare speclalUts frown on tha placem ent of little folks singly fo r aw ay In straoge famlllet. They advocate supervised group ef­fort, T h e ITtaslana In Uielr mad haste to save the ir w heat from the onruihlng na*la also lound Uils method besu BrJgadea were organ' lied w ith the guidance of Ufieher*. Champion harvesters were allo«'ed to assist trac tor operator*. Tha phys- IcaUy -unfit were appointed book- keepers and timekeepers. Thus eaclj did his o r h e r bit.

CENSORSHIP—Tha navy boiLsts ctf Its smoothly clicking teamwork but of late th a t Uctlc has been gummed up by lb-publicity section. Each' d ia tilc l a p p m a U y 1* % Uw un­to Itself reg ird lng w hat shall be m o tio n ed or m urrled. Lack o t uni­formity It entiling 111 will among shipyard workers who read the praise of o the r employes while their identlcftl perform ances are kept un­der the ottieta l bushel.

I t Is common knowledge th a t manyKla n u are complcUDg invasion

urges and various debarkation boats. W hen one such vessel was launched In a big A tlantic port the admirals banned ptiotos and ordered Uie newspaper# to IdcnUfy It mere­ly as a ''special croft." Later Uie Dravo corporation christened Its l i n t tank lighter. I n this Instance Uie event.waa proclaimed on Iroa l pages and the nary even suggested th a t camera m en snap slda views - a practice forbidden In recent year*.

Wltord Kaiser watched Uie cham- ppgne splash on his Initial ahlp of thU class and. declaimed proudly. T ills Is one of thw e Jobs th a t can't be done." 'The headlines relayed Uu story'. B u t '

baUen th a t th a lr aHorta a n aUght«l' by the preas a n d not tppredatad by tha lo ra m a a n t.

JUDGMENT—Th* affte t of Pr*i-Ideot 9oo*«T*lt'a g t l a promlsa ta punish war ertmlnala b anxiously awaltad by Tarlcua Kaw to tk totad-

ta ry n of m o v m m t* encogratla i— ..ro lt in occupiea land* and axis countrle*. Agent* report tha t r«- ^ alstance no longer I t confined to B mast hatred o r sabotage. 'The en­slaved peoples find comfort in te- ue tly listing p e n to s earmarked lt>r violent deaUi a n d In making, roster* of Uioae daaervlng clemency.

A Hollander. who»e faUier was killed In a concenU'aUon camp, U not in the mood lor tha slow-grind­ing wheels of IntemaUonal Juitlce. The characterltUc ol th is rerjuSUl- new In Uilt atruggle—Is that tha name* of Uia guilty, Uie dates, placei and fuU descriptions of their iln i ara filed for future referenc*. Bliould tha kin of the tqarDTs ba penuadcd from j^ n o n a l vengeance these rec- onlt will present damning evldenca a t allied tribunals.

AnoUjer strange trend, disclosed by Uie M anliaUaa groups. Is Uial Uie good enemies .a lso 'a re noted, Tha suffering clajues do no t all hold wlUi Uie VanritUrta who Indict an entire nallon. In Monray, lo r Imtancc, the

lUilneland families ha re risked death senteneia to ahelter refugees and victims of the geatapo. 'Their noble acta will no t be forgotten on Judgment day.

nONOIt—A cu rloai quirk In the ’ ps)’chology of French troops Is re­vealed by a recent episode in Mada­gascar. After a aharp b u t short bat- Ue the garrison otllcer* and poUui willingly joined De Gaulle. Ques- tIooBd about the stubborn reilitance. one of the anlllen-m en clarified, "We didn't w ant anyone to think o.

served In the Syrian > and Congo . campaigns against Vichy forces, re ­ports th a t a sim ilar attitude was evidenced In bo th of thoee earlier engagemenla.

"None bu t a veteran," he explalni. “can appreciate thehumlllaUon that every true F rench solUler suffered- when his country was so sulfUy de­feated by Uie nails. Here was an aimy steeped In the tradlUons cf Napoleon. PVxh and th e foreign le­gion Uirowlng dotvn lla we[ipons to the Boeches and aurrendelng Uie millions. This disgrace rankled In every outpont where tho tricolor sUIl waved. Eacli m ao vowed tha t If ha had the cliance h e would prove to Uie world th a t Trenchm en could iHU fight bravely."

The professionals In DtUear and Oran, he added, do no t care • fig for ’BUln. Many In fac t are sym- paUieUc to Uie cause of the de­mocracies, B ut they have sworn to do Uielr duty. Once they have dU- charged Uils debt of honor and wiped out the old stjiln. they will ardently Join Uie • alllM. I f United States forces Invade Mo^oceb o r west Af­rica, ho cautioned, they mustlbe pre­pared for fierce defentlve action—^ and Uierealtcr eager acceptance byw their old ’friend*. '• »

C L A P P E R ’S OBSBRVATIO’NS

NATIONS AT WARWASHINGTON. Oct. 19 — Tills up for liour* of tciUmony Ume and

Is j iu t a nickel's worth and It Un'^'part of any p lo t to ge t rid of con- grcis. I t isn’t typew riter strategy, nor I t It Intended to be destnicUve cf our In su iuuon t, A* a matter of f a c l j t l y n t

bu t Just a small auggesUon th . inljiht save I Ume of buiy m wlw have to win the war.

Why do th house and senate m l l l u r y a f f a l committees have to hold eeparate heartngs. on, the same day with Uie s a m e witnesses, over leglslailon to d ra f t IB and 19-

. year-olds? Q en - m ust be ra ther busy

•«»> r ig h t now. Yet he had ^ go first to the senate mili­tary a ffo in c o m m u te and tesUfy. and Uien hustle acrona the capltol p la n to give th e •same tesUmnny bCtore th e house mlUtao' afltir* committee, m aking the same polnu, answering about th e aame tjuejUoiia —bul taking twice as much Ume as

Congress Is moving wlUi a ll de*Ir- «d ipeed on Uie d ra f t legltlaUon. and this Isn't a complaint on the t ecore. A ctuary Uie hoa ie leadership pu t on a demofutratlon of how congress can act efflclenUy even In ipleasant m atter. 'These m e n _____up for elecUon In about two weeks and it Isn't easy to face mothera on an Usua th a l touches them a t clcae- ly as thU one of calling for Uielr sent aUll under 30. B ut the Presi­dent and the w ar dapajtm ent feel tha t i t U a m ilitary necessity, and congress Is responding to Uiat ne­cessity w ith prom pt acUon. A few Instance* of UiLt kind will go a long way-toward restoring public confi­dence In the ability of congress to do Uie hard thing* Uiat htve to be done for the war.^

The point t a m ralsUig It a detail - a n d yet no t a detail, because over a year's tim e the-duplicating ctra* mittee hearing* consume many un­necessary days fo r hard-pressed |x - ecutlve offlclalt.

Th* d ra ft leglslaUon U a good U- lustraUon. Che top men In the army are compeUed to go over, Ui* same tesUmony tw lc t and an ivcr the some ouesUona twice. Admiral King. wlUt the en tire burden of. all our naval operations on hi* ahoul- dert. had to sit a round In an empty commltiee room fo r 40 m lnutai be*

use tha *enale committee w at out lunch. Similar w u te of Ume h u

b««n notable In m u p o w tr h aarlnn------ stverml commltttea of

___.tiave h a d Paul UcNutt.rral Rershey a n d .o th e t'o ffld ils

ag%ln, each committee going < about Uia same ground aa Uie oUicrs.

so far aa I know there U no reason for eontU)Ulntf' th is tlme-wasUng pracUce-’eJcccpt ih e InerUa of habit,'.

■ there It a. feeling Ujat Uieself-importance of each branch of congress re^u lns I t to run Itt own committee .th o w t. ' But appropria­tions ■hearings, U x hearings, and most of Uie norm al buslnest that goes through the house and senate might be handled n t the committee level by Joint hearings, a fter which each group could prepare Its own lesWntlon or, amcndmenU, • Tlie woAte of time Is particularly n-Rret- table when It concerns lilgh officials who are can j'lng tha load of war operations.

This Is In no sense a suggtsilon for suspension of InvesUgaUons of the execuUve branch. Apparenily Presl-.'k dent noosovtlt Is annoyW a t Uiafc" Tnimatv commtitca and <!\« house m lllta^ and naval committee Inves­tigations of war waste. But liLi cracks about th a t won't atop Uits kind of useful checkup on the ad- mlntilraUon. He con shu t Uie preas off from Uie facU If he want* to t a r n It th a l la r. bu l he will .have trouble cutUng congre.-a off from cheeking up.

In fairness lo busy executh-e of­ficials, however, nnd In falme.u to Itself, conKrtvi could Improve «Its oa-n efficiency with good resulta to government all around.

We soon will be <»mlng Into com­plicated reeonstrucUoji problems of feeding and rebuilding war-ruined countrlfs, adjusting our tttflff and trade policies to postwar need*, re­converting our own eoonomy back. These QuesUons very likely will corn* . before Uie new oongraaa about to be elected. ,, ,

proeipt Im provement,of congres* i slonal machinery, preparatloa for 1 ■ doing the technic*; research u e -it - cessary so th a t members are a d C '^ Quataly informed .w hen they leg ta 'V late, are of utm ost Importance I f ■ congress Ij to be a really funcUan- . Ing body. OUierwtoe U>e Job will- j fall to the czecuUve by default. t

P ro m in e n t Boise ; Businessm an Dies.;

BOISE, Oct. 19 o n — Marry A, ;' IPrledmej'tr, O , prom inent Boise 1butlnatt man, died Sunday a t hU ' Ihome thorUy a fte r being itrlcken I wlU) a heart attack- , I

Priedmeyer bad resided In Bois* .for 18 yean. He wa* a member of iUia Sudier-Weganer company and itecretary-treanirer o t tb s Idaho 'Canadlan'Diedga company. I

Among tu m ro ra ta hU wife, Ur*. IUildred MehoUn Priedm eytr of \Bolt*, and a daughter, Phylllt, who 'Is attending college a t Colunbuf. ;Mo. , ■ • ;

I

Page 5: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

Plonday, .O ctober 10, 1042 TIMES-NEflSs. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO FagsFim

ALLIED AIR FG^^E NOT SUPERIOlJD!i_ALL TYPES, SAYS O MB E H E R J lC r a O N L Y H O P E

By ABTHUB r . D*CItEVE■WABHlNOTON,.Ocl. IB OLB-The

oWlce of »nr InformaUon. remli th a t the Unlied a u u a hod . wlUt deleal nnil btood ?or »a ”(

— tc m ln f tttJ ltn iin m ' to»iiW W” " during pe«ce. reported loduythe y n lw J NaUoni' »ir ton:«

• nor U It Ukely to bts superior.^ rnemy In all cul«gories. •'

In Its louz &«altcd ‘c«port «n Uie performknce of >me|lcftn m J l l ^ alrplincs. the OWl W d ; T tw Die public can expect.-and the beat

Miles of Britain’s Once-DerflicfTjand > Grow Food and Save Vital Cargo Spajce

equipment ------------eliftll be superior to. tlie equipment of the enemy "

No ----------- ----------The report, in prepamiion for

• nearly four Weeka, Mjattercd liopea »nd pre«Jletlon« tha t the defeaW or Uie axis «-ou)d be hastened by ab' solute onied superiority In nM t)pes of aircraft. I t wnrncd of future battles to be Iw t and "cnishlnR de- leftU" Uinl may l>e nuIlereiJ ant aaked Amtrlcntia to Indulge "to thi full Ihelr genlos for critical analy*

. iLi."Here are the hlglillRhta of tlie i:-

poKe.report:I. Tlic tinvy went to « (u s.Uli con-

iJderable Quantlllr.n of obxolticent p lonu nnd thus suffered looser «lilch could Imve been ai'olded,

3.'T!ie tvrmy aircraft score In the Piiel/le Is better than the enemy. But It couldlhave been Improvrd If •■me w n 'lc d hiul been more on the alert fo r Jap.inc.-«. treachery or hW moro ’ accuratcly foreciLit the

- performance ol Japanese alrcralt.”

A lo n r line of blndrrt. drWen hr flrU of H rllaln'i womfn'i land ___ ,whtal field. Formerly "dtrellct" land, unplowril for Ihe l u t iO yrart. Ihli 400. rtrlalm ed for w ar cnjpi.

moTCfl aerou Knftand'i b lccrtl field In Kuurz ,Dovni wa»

K taa Ulil liowii Jl'Some are 'i>.idJy rfe.-.lKnrd

* matclicd" ngnlii.il the enemy CQUlp- m ent and wine W 'k In action Swi

^ definite dcJlclenclcs even wlihln Uii purposes for wlilch th e y were de slRned.

No U’a m ln t 8y«iem»The "m(Bt cjLiMtrou.'." factor In

• the eiirly <lnys o f ihe'PftclIlc battle WA.-1 the •■complete lack" of air­raid warijhiB f.y.itcms. Tlie Philip­pines i>y3icn) wax disrupted by illth column nsenu before It had on'ct functional.

S. Tlie Unllftl S tates' medium and llRlit bombers are the best In tlie world.

fl. Firepower and protection Awtrkan.tlRblinB planes are tquaJ In all CMC.1 and in many are mijwrlDr

. to tha t provided by our allies and the enen\>'. .

7. Tlie J i i p . in e v - ^ ro " plane Is epectacular as ai^rj’lnii machine but Is deficient as a flRliter.

8. T h e P-3B, ft twln-enclned,• llqiild-cooled pur-sult plane, appears

to be o!» of llie be-it iilsb altitude, long ranse flRhtcrit In the world. Tiie puBllc wM ft.ilcc<l to re-irr<'e de- cLilon until the plane has been tc.ited In combat.

Can’t Dominate AllP. Pod.wsilon.of a craelc hlsh alU.

. ludB fighter does n o t^ e a n iwittery of the air. Tlie United Nations prob­ably n e v e r will be unque»tlone<l iwalcrB of i h t a ir a t till three levcto - s e a level to 15,000 fe«t, IJflOO to 25.000 and above 25,000 feet,

10. Tl\e P-39 (AltM0briv5 and p.<0 arc not rltflit fof opernUon under today's hlsli altitude Uctlw In Europe. Tliey are outcUi.v c<L by the Brltl.Mi Spitfire and the Oermnn M eaerschm ltt 100 and Poc^e-Wult

.100. B ut the p-30 ha.i proved iiplendld weaiwn on tlie Ru.ulan anti A leutian fronts, and Uie P - « Ls i

- 'f irs t line flphler WEKypl.• II, Two newer flRhler type.?, thi twIn-enRlneetl LocKhc«i 0-38 (LlRlit. n lns) and the slnKlc-enRlneil P-<7 »Th\mderboH> show sreftl proinbe

' lu hlRli altitude pursuit p lann.

B’-17 (Boelnf: Fl><f{t Fortre.'.ii over Europe lifts exceeded ev^n Uie "fond- esit expeclailotiR" of It* pratKS!\ci\ts, I t h u fliiown tha t the B-17 h ca­pable of hisli altlluilc bnrablnR.or f.ucli precWon tiiat It astounded al­lied obnervers, Tlie Consolidated D-24 • Liberator) ha.s been fully tc.iteil In Ihe European theater and ll.i i>or-

. fomiance iflid Kcncrnl characterl^llcs Indlcntfl It will m.ike a record par- ■allel lo th a t of Uie H-17,

Tlie report «ald tlic trv th about American alrplane.i lle.i between I' two eictrcmes of bellevlnR Amerlci

■ Mrplnne.-i are tlie be.st in the world ' and bellevlnR Drltl.'li. German and

Japane,<c plane.i are superior. T oday’a r tp o it cayiiontd \linV

, American air fnrcc.i have yet only BllBhtJy cngaRed the proficient g It - tnan luftwaffe and liAve only b&tely

' beeun Uie offensive ngalnst the Jnp-

Shield] New Plane*Tlie OWI study ilLielo-sed nof

l l» slioricomlnR.i of American c ra ft no t already known by enemy and allied expert*. But It carrTully shielded detalU of planes belnR de­veloped which. In »ome ca.ie.v carry '•fen.natlcunl prwnbe ot battle per formance,"

U riralt fmnkly wlUi the problem - ot ftlrplnnc cnRlncs. Dtvelopmml

ot the AllLwn. the only llould-cooled engine of American de.slgn now Ir m ass production, wm "late In Mart­ini: and wa.i carrlcd cn under Rrrai dlfflculUe.v It lia.'i no t yet caught up uK h Brlt- vln'.-i RoH.i-Royce, also belnc manufactureil In th li county’, and Orrmany'.' DMmler-Bcni."

Tlie Unlled Stale* had a ren.wn- flbly Rootl llfjuld-cooled enRlne—tha IJb c r ty -w h fp the last war ended, but In Uia late turned to llio

' ^ r a d i a l air-cooled enRlne Jor airline equipment and military bombers and

' fl8ht<r.i, Tlie rwdlti'BCcordlnR “ the Ttport, to lliiit ftlr.eookd Rlnea built by WrlRhf and Prait and w nitney arc uneoiinllcd for horsepower output. ruRsrdntrji nod idUtude performance.

Nearly Alrandoned ■ AlUioueh the lltiutd-eooled etiRlne *eemed an Ideal eniilnc for r.lngle-

■ *eat«r JlRhlctn. tlie repdrt tald. Uie • Anned eer\^lccs lost interest In U

and Ita development,. wa.i all but dropped for Beveml’y8SS»-_,

T he United States went lo war ■without n Bood Interceptor plane, capable of cUmblnR rapidly on short noUoe nnd-lntercepUnf enemy bcml>- t n . o v a tald. •

-O ur entry Into the war wlUiout . lucll an Invaluable piece of equip.

n v PAUL MANNING NEA S<mrlce

LONDON — Remember •wttV back when Benito Mu-vioUnl used to boast nil over the map about his great reclnmnilon of waste land, and prldefully point to It n* onotlier evidence of Uie g rea t efficiency of TiscLim?

Well. Uie DrltWi haven’t been do­ing any boastful pride-polnllng. but the simple fact Is Uiat Llielr land reclamaUon procm m makes Mu.uy's look like • n .whoolboy'a backyard victory garden. ThrouRh lla war­time cJioTl to jinve ihipplnR ^p»ce

.by. growlnc more, food a t home. Britain has reclaimed more wa.ite Innd tot naflculiure in the part eight nionth.s than Italy did under Mu-iioUnl In 13 ye.-»rs.

Compare Uie fact th a t Uie Itallaiv worked 13 yenr.i clearlnR the Pontlni niarshw wlUi only oue part of Bri­tain's reclamation program, the r.ec.

tion of Norfolk rcgalntd for proiliic. live u.ie,

K«lo« Sf4 I x 't lTlil.1 .irra of Norfolk Is a wsl

saucer of Lind below sea level oiicl below the civer.i wlxlcli flow to U\« sea. Tlirrc thownnd acre.i of land hftve been wre.MctI from the I) wn.'li of Udnl m nnhland and K from nil.« W/icJc toll lofiff ro'tt. veceLablr-, and reclinRlr.i r( wn com beckon to be harvested.

Of IhLi 3.000 acre.v which, drained behind M miles of <llke,<500 have been cleared since March ol this year. Before Auru^; wn; tlip entire 1,500 acrc. were In ei .

U'.-.t Miircli ; h b w.t^useic.W box land, tov tm l wllh bll^hf> lilsh tr Uian a man's headjiiul below tin biL'hf, lived jK)l;.on addrr.i iiml wllc ■ .1. U war. X rtfMla’.e kind of J\in- Rle which mnii <lh,-nrd«l n.i beyond lope of micmplion.

Today K hold.s lirarly crop*, of ai.t.v

Attd jitopeny by told what e.ich In.

:,in do to Help brint

Aiito and Ambulance Crash in Ail- Raid Practicc at Gooding

QOODIh*G. Oct. 10-ServltiR as fetw. <it Uve one example of Uir g reat need for more tmlnlng. b e tu r organization and cooiieratlon by ail rc.ildciits - - the coilL-;lon of a private c a r . ' , an ambulance during Uic "Incltlent drill" held In Gooding Sunday nInR. Although Uie accident o ally occurred the only Cft.iualty a denle<l fender and a mined tire on the Tliompnon nmbul.incj, ihe Jrtclclrnt brought home (he pojjIbU.Ity of greater conru-''ion .'ho'jld ii real ftlr vnUl occur hero.

Homer Iluclebon. fonner. Gooding resident- nnd now sta te defense cUalrroutu «aUl he would uri;e jtrlc l o tc rvancc of the following thre< polnt.i: . ' .

Not Honorary. m ti't br rci'OKliI.'cd tli:il np- ilmcnL^ on the clefen.'.e roiindl not honorao' appointment.^ but

It be in a d r 'to tho.'.e people who wlllinK to Klvr scrvlce anil nc-

.. Hint there Mioiild be iin more show of po1ltlc.i In cUlllan dolenif program.': than there I'. In the armed foree.i; nnd finally th a t Ihere mu-it be Immcillate .‘.petdlng >ip ol orRnn- liatlou and grill.

Following the Incident .ilrlll the public »■»% IswUfd to theAllowing of a'liinvip on civilian de-

a t the Junior lilRh school. Sam e. HRr.eltfUi. executive ot the defeiue cnuncll. gave an nd- to the c:-Unialed crowd rif 300

per-.otw on civilian defcn.-;c probleir.-;.He said:' "Tlie people "of England didn’t have time to coiwluct practice air raid drills. Let us make Uie moit

ir op^irtunlty ,’", Vance continued by saying

that civilian defense mean.'* the de-

clvlllan.i. an<l h dividual cltlr.en peare one day

All rhurrhr.-; of GoodliiK cooper- atcd with ihe meetlnR a t the school.

"Ilomb*" Drop At the defense renter fn Uie court-

house Uie drill got »under*-ny promptly a t Uie time set, MessaKes...... tn telling of bonih.i nnd lilRhexplft-.lve.'i dropped a t vital points In the city. One enemy l>l-'“ >e was leporled lorced down at ihc ath- leilc field. AlUiough there wn.'i -•'onie

the pa rt of defense ntltccr* the tJ«Rlnnli\x oS the (Jflll. Hint soon' pn.wed a^ Intere.- mounted and the need for inor iiriictlcc bccaine evident.

Defense offlclaL' for Ooo<llng, n now r.et up, are; B. L- sy iion . locn commander; Erie Whlpkey. control ler; Bert Bowler, communlcntlons, Troy Cox, water system; Herb Meyer, fire chief; Mrs. John Korn- her. nmbujnnce.-i nnd Mrs, Pearl Kirkpatrick, medlcil

. Barker and George EubanVs. roads; Sam Sullivan, pow-

nnd llghl^. Dr. P, E. Darrett, who nd-! the mefllcal unit, was jta

ll«ntd Rt the tfmpeprary hn>pitnl. Clnlr King, county commanrter. wa. pe nt,

CWfar<l BeyliiRton, co\inty thnlV lan. salfl th a t while there wrr<

many anglr.i yet to be cleared up he con.<iiJered the meetlnR hlRtUy ce.'jtul In Uiat ■■;vc arc now going In Uie right direction,"

nepresentallves of elvlllan de-. inse councils wore pre.ient from

Rlchtield, Wendell. IUl.is, Shohone. Jerome. ItliRerman and Ilazellon.

l i S C L E M I ) Of CURFEW RU

8AN FfUNCISCO, Oct.’ 10-Ir confonnlty with a presidential d|. rectlve announced Oct. 12 by Attor. ney General Francis Biddle, cxcniiit- Ing Italian ollens from aliens eiienii regulations. Lieut. Gen. 'J. L. Dt' Witt, commanding general of Uii w e s t e r n defense command nnc lourUi army, today Usued publli proclamation No. 13 effective a: 13:01 a. m. T his relieves such per- »0M Jrom curlew nnd travel re. strlctlons now nppllcablc._to Uiem in 111# several a reas of tlie western cle- f«tv.e camtuand.

tnie proclamnUon waa lssuc<l t< unify Uie nillltjiry rules with Uio;, announced by A tlorney Genenil Biddle,

I t nlio lifts travel and curfew Jtrletlons for Uioie aliens a t present stateless but who a t Uie -Ume a t which they became stateless were cltiiens or subjects of Italy, and aliens of enemy riaUonallUes during Uielr term of mUlUir - service In Uie armed forces of the United SUiies,

Tnc turlew regulaUons now oked by this new proclnmaUon . . juired Italians to be In Uielr places

c t reildencc bttwc«n th e hours ot 8 p: m. and a ft. m . At other houri U limited travel lo movement between tlielr place of rcsldenco ami etn> ployment or w ithin a dIstAnce of not more than five miles from their place of rcsidencc.

ProclamaUon No. 13 does no t ap­ply lo, nor In any m anner change, Uie status of Germ an or JapaDCse, aliens, or persons of Japanese

ff;,tr)^. Tlic.'c grotiiK will, remain subject to the peiinliles of. public law No. 503, 77th ronKre.M’ which provide for lmme<llnte npprelicnslon and Internment o r court p.'Ti.'ccu- tlon of any .wch per;.on.s guilty of Violating restrictions npplyliiR^i thrm under the vntloiu v^oclami tlons.

An army Mwliesmnii further etr pliaslKd Uic fRCl Umt Use for continued vlgllniice and exclu' ion of Individual dnnf;erou.i to II:. military security of iiip coastal front was not relaxed by this action.

w heat, barley, siignr beet, eiibbage and m ustard. Part ot It hold.^ mus- tn rd urcens lo be ploweil u;), ro the land will be nourf.iinl for ll)« ..

•niese 3,000 ncrr;, urc operated by only 21 men I'nd 10 gltls, now Uie clearing liu.i been complete<l. W ith ft lew uiictnrs they fnnii the liiiwl .M-vl-n duy.i H «A t. i l weeks a year. They work h,ird, and for Uielr work th r men nvcivr *12 ii week for It 50-hour week, unimg 25 cent-s an : hour for ovrrtlmr.'Tlip.girls get leas. T rac to r drlver.s receive $M.

Pul (n Lant UourvNo p.impered w oil;m are Ihe.sr.

Tlicy Icnvc home «i 7 ii, in, wliicli. tluntiK winter waiiUxj, will roeivn tw<i hours before dnyllRhl, nnd they don’t knock off uiilll 12 hours Inter, Some of Uiem bicycle H mile.i lo work. M miles 10 home a t Uie end ot a dny. All of them take 30 minutes.ot no for a lunch of bread and clliese.

And thLi Norfolk jiroject wns only one.of many lliroughniit the. lenRih aJid breadth of Uie llflUsh b l« - In ­deed. n lOO-acro ttliesl Held In Sus­sex Down.';, snid to be the la w .st l;l England, wns Jornirrly •’drrellft" lM\d which lv,\d nM Iwtn plov,-ed In 20 ye.ir.^.

i m ' o I S K SFOE’S i lH O O S

BOISE, Ocl, 10 rup>_Glrn Tnylor. Irtnho^a Drmocratlc Mnalorlal can- tlldnle. last n k h t in n radio fltldre.rs nccu.^ed hU Re|nibllrnn opponent, John Thomn.-;, of iwlns htr. frsnklng prlvlle!;fs lo nmil a "flood of elec­tion campaign lltrralufc."

TiiJ'lor n.‘--:rr:-'d tUnt TUomas h a d ' malk'd nut two dlf/cfeiit speechr.-. addlni: Hint If "r,irh voter reerlv.-il Jiwt one tree .'iiccrh, Uic -^w.tiicp bill nioiip wouM aimiyut to more than J8,000,'’, Tlic cowt)ov c.inil|(!nte tunlier Charged Uial ■■TliKnw dellvrrrd u speecii to a Rrmip of fellow rnndl- dates In ft hotel ro«m In Bot^e nnd then carrleil the .speech hack to Wnshlngton :o It roiild be prlnteil on Rovernnirnt pre ..-.r.i.iind delivered alllKUit |xi^.tm;r." , .

zmHiiincEffiiisra

S.^riTAQUIN, UUh, Ctct. 19 t/J' M.iJ. Chciley Gordon Peterson Of th r U.- a , nrniy air cOfps. fo n t« r odiiminnaer of the Arsjencan Eagle iflu.iiiron of Uie IIAF, trrlvcd a t the home of hU parents. Mr, and Mrs. Krifilmm Pclerion ot Snntoqilln. a fter living from QigUnd,

■niic-.e mountains look better to m r ih:iii annhlng I've seen since I k-r. home," Il:e fomcr Salmon. Id :i. }outh uld .

T iir lljlnR »ce »aSd heI arrivnj Saturday nUht, but -Uicrc

wio nobody ho.-nc and the house waa diuK .'

IlLi p;irenls hnd slater, Mrs. Emo- Kc;ir p. Clujicn. »ere vlsltliu a Mrk rclutlve nnd returned lo Uie hoii.-(* about five minutes after MaJ. Pflen,on affUcd,

He said. uould tpend about 30 da>3 here and then will return td England cui cscciithe operations of­ficer of tlie fourth USAF group ■nliich Is niaile up ol Ihe combined th ree form er American Eaitle squad* -ons of U.e ItAJ '- .

P e tm o n liMi been citiWtd wlUi iliootiiiB donn tevrn enemy planc.'s in d probflbly (Irstrojlng six mhers. W hile in U\? ItAV Iw m a * 110

,eepi in to enemy lefTltory nnd ;ui sho t down once, parnchullng

Into the E n jlhh elisnntl where he ' wa.-» .plckcd up by a Dtlthh iiavy Inuncli.

He wa.s awarded Uie dl.nhiKuWied service order by Klni; OrtirKC VI on Mnrcli 1 and on (>ct. 1 lecclved th e dLstiiigublie<l flying cm-'!.

On Jiine 50 he marrlrd Andrea Boyce. EnglWi stage and w een star from South Africa.

READ T1MES-NEW8WA.ST ADS,

Figliling Words for Fighters

Scavenger Hunt Held at Jerome

JEROME.'Ocl. ia -« r.irch for milk from ft Billy uoat's -Nanny," a black iind n white Jinir Iroin the blshopa head uhd a four-lent clover, etc., made, an Intetesttng evening ot fiui. nnff rntertnlnm ent for the M-riien

Oleaner girls of the Jerome,

Vi&rd IMs WMk,Tliesc w,ere Ju.it a fcMr Itemi the

young folks »en- .necking In a wav- cnRcr h u n t. The winning and VoMiiR blde.T enjoyed refri-shmenta together

The prourum wiui under the direc. lion of Oerihn Dulton Smith. Olcun- cr leader. nssbKd by Marjorie Folk- man nm l Vclnia nnd Vivlnn Tero'.

:i fly n,i much

0 C E D U R E G 1 N 1 FOR GAS RATIO

BOISE. Ocl. 10 (/■?>—The M »ho ' _ o iflu of prlM (ulmlnlslraU0n - t0( t* T -f l outlined. U k steps a n to f l iu . t l i o u ld - f Uke m preparixtlon for mlle««e gas 'lU on lngp lan to lake 'e ffcc l Nov. 33.

Car owners should get Tid o( »U excess tires. offlclaU explained, iinC0 no raUonlng card will be granted any npplicanl wlUi more U»«J I l « "res. Excess Ures may be sold or

iven u the govem m cnt through le Union Pacific railway expm s. Motorists, too. m ust record tho

serial nuinbera of tlte t i r e U reikept. MlItaRe ration blanks will b« made 6VMUt)ie In near tum re a t »U Krvlce stations o r garages, the .statement'said. Rutlon blanlu, along., with tire tnspccUon rccofds ilso available a t sen^lce siaUons and garages, m iu t Uien be* filled out and presented a t rationing ccnlera on reghtraUon dnys beginning Nor. 0. Periodic lire Inspections will be re­quired under the program, the OPA

lounfement stal«}.

Eat by AppointmentA'restauriinl In South Salem, N.

Y„ ffikes customer-^ by nppolnla jent.' I^^pec»ve dlner.s m ust bo recom- menried by .somebody, and w e re* qulrrd to call a t len.'.t two hours In navnnw.

MATTRESSREDUILDINO • RENOVAHNO

WOOD CAHDINO EVEHTO.V MATTEESS CO.

32t Second Are. S. PbmiC 51-W

SAFEWAYNUMBER I i -k Hou^ tt> tn n H in ih t ''K iith e n C ount h Nulriljon" -k JT i; farm -Jreth

prot/uet iheu ld be to IJ by th e pound ★ A H it o j fo u r a n d bukiiig needs * Rea'pei fo r b o m e-b a itd n l l i -

Glen Taylor Speak.s \ A t Shoshone Tuesday,SHOSHONE, Ocl. IP-G lrn T .iy -1

lor, Dcniocriiilc nraninn- Jor Unlicd I S tates senator, will talk lMf-./l;i.v evening, Oct. 20. at tin; Lincoln ditorlum,

Mfmbcr.-; of Ihe Dcmivfnilc Wi I's chib will erlrlirnti' rhib d;iy

f.en-lng doufiliniit- . nnd coffee to who altend.

n E P o i tT s c o w :m is si.ngTlie las'; of .a i-ow v,as. teiiorird

lo Uic .slirrltf':. office lodny by C. W. Hofer. who lives n mile :,outh of South' Park, n ie nnlni;il h a Ted Ouera^ey wllh -.ojiie whlti It. and wns tli.scovered to be ml;Inlc ln.st night.

m eat c m be by th e IMS- r e p ^ listed.

.... 10 give due coiuldernUon to the possibility of full American parUcU Mtkin in oeriAl w ar ove rteu ," the

RSAIPAYINCREAS

BOISE, Oct. le (ffV-The co^dl- tlot^al t l per day wage IncrtM.* granted miners Sniurdny win put many small Idaho mine operators out of business, H arry Marsh. M «e- tary of the IdaJio .Mining assocln- Uon. dfclortd today.

"The tm all mine opertilot* o t Ida­ho will be forced to sliui down be­cause they can't afford to pay this extra t l per day," Marsh said in an Inten^lew. '

The federal government, he con­tinued, will be creaung infbUon by permitting the'increase, “If mlnera get an Increase then other typea of work will be duo for nn Increase from »3 to ja per day,” he *ald.

Martn sAld the > lncrea.se wa:s recommended a t a hcnrlng Sept. 24 y a committee nppolnled by the or. labor board, to bo retroocUve j May 18.The tecommcndaUon aw aits'

opproi-al of James F. Dymcs. di­rector. of economic, stabllltatioh. Marsh reported Ihe incteas# would a ffe c t '6.000 miners In the Coeur d'AIrne district of idahQ alone.' .

R ^ T D O S - N E W S WANT ABA :

Deliglii your family with these recipes for home-biked rollsTlierc’j nolliinfi liLr Itie friijjfnnt aroma of freili iKHiipmade l>read or rolii haling in llie <

I olrr. v fnlll , t r , . MaUiu rn^^v, e'ljiecifllls’ if viiJ) nv tlir rerl|>ii for’ UKKIUdKli.VTOIl liUI.LS given WVnv. MaVe dough scv. era! dnv. in ailvsnrr, then -Impr, an<l linLr v.m nnnl. l>n„r|, .lo,.j:h.Io^,

HOOif Mtf 8AHmHm$Thil wBtti, your Stfiwiy li f«lturln|>«'ri[ylhln| you M id <0 intvn Ulclti)

til piletd law lo ur* you nan«y—ill to v«i eiill yovr moniy bicli, ■;

FLOUR • C lIO C biiA TE 'Kliclieii Craft, enriched. « lb n.ig 5 1 , 5 9 Ucrshey's. lb, ___ _rj.O U K . - ROYAL SATINDrifted Snow. <a lb. Bag ....... $ 2 . 1 5 BhotUnlng. 3 lbs. ______CAI.UMKT ’ . MILKBnkliig Powder, ib..............................1 6 i Chenib. Tall Cans, 4 for .CLAWJKH O IIIL ' M ILKB.ikUig Ponder, 2 ib’..............- ..... Popular Brands, 4 for —;VANILI-A CIUSCOWe.' t.'ii;. Imltiitlon, < o.r B o t lle ........ 15<f 3 Ibi.............. ....................^■ANILLA LARI)Schilling'.!. 2 07.. Boitle ............. .......3 4 < Pure Wlilte, 4 lbs. :______

• ('AKIC FLOUR KKKNStvnii-sdown. Pki;........................... 2 6 t Khortening, 3 I b j .________

_37<3 6 i

. .7 9 < i

- G 7 C

6 9 < t

'PemfSamKf

e niBM nnii .itnr. n llie

p. Hent milk', ati u l t

fri^eralcr. About 1 he you wnnl (ofcrvcron«|lnlie<!iiiiKli from rctrigernlcr: let riie al>oiit m miiwlts-. knrMS nml sliapt into roll.; hale for HO mi'iulr^.

REFRIGERATOR R O U S

Sift fIdUMnil I’I«T ■.ng«f. .In.rlrmng in W «e ln.«h liiil milk; M ir until "linrtrning i» niflted; eool lo l.ikeirariii, aUml 13 minute,. A<lil rrumMr.1 vrsst; mix Well. Acl<l flour; >tir until dongliJeavei .iilri (>r ImxvI. Covrr Imnl’ n ith clamp clotli: let n>e i'l nariii place iinlil light-aii.l ilonble in Ixilk. aKmit tioMT*. I'uncli liovirn. I’taeo on li^litlv lionrr<l l>o.r.i-.' knen>l .mill <loi>gIi i< .MoM Ininilr*ireil *lia[ie«, I V e nci j;fcn.tc<l liakin^ pan. Coirr •Itli <lamp< cloth. I..el fi»e in naim place until.l,...l.ln in l„ill. >l<n<i( 5lr) M.lniil..

JK L .S R IT KlYuU pectin. KoiU iM. c . I*. :IVclln. 3 PkK;:. ,.S U I ' l i U l i \ iG r.m ulnifd iJonp, IO X V D O L2t m . I’ki:. ..................W H IT K M M llClJle.ich. Qt...............................OAT.SQuaker. tniKe P k g ^ ...........I 'K A N U T l lU T r E UReal norL't, 2 lb ,-Jnr .......D U C IIK S S

DrfrilnK. Q t.......M IR A C L E W HIl>

■Ql........................................ ......C R A C lv E R SPremium'Sod.x^, 2 ib Box C H K K S KlO-nft'n Most Vnrletle.v

2 lb. D o x ................. .•____W A X P A P E RDiamond, 125 ft. Itoll .......F A C IA L T iS S U EA mctloan'BcUr. £00 a u f ....A E R O W A XLiquid Wnx. Ql. Cnn ........S Y U U P

...... ;■ 2 5 c

L Pi‘i : . ' 2 i e

2 3 C

Whtn you buy by ortl^lit— W fot |uil oKil you jil—Aot I ctni more. S«vt «a StItKiy futnnUtd-ftiili product. ,

............ lb . S i

........ lb . 1 2 «

.3 lb s . l o i

,.lb . 7* ,

L E m / C K . lotytl s r ro w n __

.B R O C C O L I, n e w c ro p ...................

C A R R O T S , f rc fih ly d i i ^ ...............

C E l'H iU Y , U ta h . wcU W cw h cd .

H A N A N A S ^ IU A S H .......... .......................... Ib . 4 <C A U L IF I .O W E R , Snow ba ll hen ris ....... lb .A P P L E S , .lo n ii th o n — A rea l c iitii iir

ii i id c o o k er ........ .............. ............... ..6 lb s . 2 5 ^ ,

1 ’S S f i i mI G U f l M m a p M S A T S

—M iib u n Mil with 4 forfc. If Oity not «nd Juicy tTtry tlm«—w»'fiddly J in you yow womy bidc.

.SIR L O IN S T E A K S —E x-C cI b e e f ....................................

V E A L S T E A K S —SIlOtlltltT .........................................

PO R K C H O PS—L o in -rib .....................................

F R A N K F U R T E R S .

K T F I — 12 N O O N W E D ., O C T . 2 1 s l

I t will surprise you to leam who Is hclplnit pay Senator ThomM' cam- pa lp i rxpcnsn .

It.J =

A b o u t th e covri* that motlier tooV. To help you pUn neo li tb « t are healthful t i well u atlraetive. t i e Safeway nomemakert’ Dureau b u pre- partil Ihe •'Kilchen Cour*e in N utrition.” 10 complete iei-oni hy mail. To rnroll, ]u tl wcite to Julia W rtgbt, I’.O .D oi CCu.CC.Qlkt^Bd,CaU{orn^ Caiiforma. HacloM U e for Iba-CMt of Uie eoUra courae.

saixwmr

Page 6: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

Page Six - TIMES-NEWS, TWIN^FALLS, IDAHO Monday, October 19, 1942

J''

NAZI TROOPS 0

LONDON, O ct. M.W l-MuUnle*. deterUont. lu ld d e s aad (cnenU ]ow« cilnc ot a o n io a n on m e Jncreua

-w jo n j t&B *0.000 O tn n w trc ' o( occuuUon In Norvftr. Uje N i r t ^ B<mTnfflefll>io-«xUs fonotd UKl*y to Xrolt reporti b n « th t out ot the bomeluid. *

Tiro Ur*e coneenWUcm M ap* w e n p o r t« l open«l ter rouUneer# k t e s the Plnnlah fron lk r »nd « JfMt 1,400 n*zl« were lo be — fWMl In one of Ihrai.

EwcvtJans B locks Oo« u i ib o r tu u re «ccount u ld

th»t J.OOO a e n n * n iolillera lUUctned north of Klrkene* rebelled n » in i t U3 order r«r'Utem-*o go to RumU knd U ul one ou t of ererr JO was ordered ejecuted. H ie order h*d lo

! be countemuinded. thl* report f e n l i on. bectuM n u l firing tqukdt re-

• fined to »hoot the men *nd Uio ' rebels were »ent lo concenlmUon

cftmps liuletid.Sulddf* were' declared mouaUng

i kt ta -aU rtnlns" r»te. in d deicrlers were repcrMd leaving In IncreMlnj number*, nuiklng the ir way ictom the FtrniUh frontier *lon_g routes AjlUned In learieU droppMl from Russian planes.

Aceounta of H lUrr's troubles with­in till 0K11 nriiiy wrre coupled with growing unrest among the conquer­ed peoples or Europe rebelling at the nail eainpalBn and recruit labor lor war IndusUles.

In both occupied and unoccupied Prance the nasls were laereaslnK their presjure.

Norwegian circles atUlbuted the alackenlng a a d morale In Norway

' to Uje *evcrc clUnate, particularly In tlie far norUi; to virtually nr hojne leaTU. fears of being sen to the Russian fron t ar>d the cold' ahoulder atUtudo of D8 per cent a the Norwegian people. '

J m Feroed U Work In Belgium. 000 Jews have been

»ent to the F rin ch coast to labor on anU -lntulon fortlflcaUons. the Bel­gian neiM agency reported.

German and lu i l a n troops .laid to have fired on a crowd of OreelLJianspon workers In Athens. H ie nuinber of casualties was un> disclosed.

In Norway, d lspatchei from flwed- . en said the G erm ans liave ordered

all Americans pliced under arreit. In Holland the Oermans were re-

• ported to have executed 15 more . Dutchmen for recent acU of sabot-

age and were said to be speeding a miiM erahiatlon of t])e imputation from coastal a reas where.tavaalon defenses are being atrm cthened.

Another Jap Sub Victim Torpedoed off Coast LAVAL CALLS IN GERl

. 'A * crewmen rig ladder* over the ilde of Ihrir rt*etie re*»el. ■ torpedoed, bnmlng tanker, l a ta t Jap iub viellm off the Paeirie roait. goes lo her (rare. One m an of the ere* of 4< was l« l In the attack wblcb took pUce la it Oct. i . (NEA Telephoto)

Grange Gleanings .B y J . H. CRAWFORD

King of Denmark Injured by Fall

STOCKHOLM. Oct. I t (Uil^-Klng 'Chrlitlan X 72-year-old, ruler of Denmark, was Injured seriously to­day when thrown from his horse during his m orning ride,, the Swed­ish telegraph agency reported from Copenhagen. '

The king was injured about the head when he thrown while

- riding In a Copcnbagtn ttreet.Bleeding profusely. h6 waa taken

to Amallenbort easUe. th e -ro y a l residence. In an ambulance.

The dlipatch said the king fell he*vUy.'

Later a hospital extwilnaUon re vealed no fractures o r coocussloa

The queen, who had been travel' b g tn Denmark, returned to Cop­enhagen.

An e>'ewltness nald, the king ap­peared to have sulfered m heavy fall) He remained motlorUess until spec-

. talors rushed to hi* aid.The monarch did. tjot lose con-

aciousnesi. bu t apparently suffered severe shock,, ' _

' Loans Available For Small Farmer

JniO M E . Octv W—Every amall and part-Ume farm er In Jerome county who ckn add even as lllUe as one cow. tv o hogs, 10 chickens or a family garden for all-out war food pnMuctlon tn '10i3 ^ secure

' a lou t through fann aecurlty' ad- mlnlstratlon'a war loan program, R. Verl Unander. coimty rSA super-

— vlMi’. has announced."Althoujth war loans can be made

up to tijo o . preference will be' giv­en requests for smaller loans so as greater number o f fan n e rt in this a rtu can be reached." Unander aaW.

Loan applications m aj' be mad* a t Uie court house on Wednesday and Saturday moldings.

HAILEYM is. SorUia Forren and son. Wll>

/red. Eureka, U tah, arrived to spend a few days a t U)e home of Mr. and M n. Hnulsce Mackle. Mrs. Mackle Is tlie daughter of Mrs. Farren. "

MIm Ruby Chess, Jerome. _ spending a few daj's this week vUlt-

— Ing relatives »nd friends.— ■»---------Mr. and Mra. H orry FleAlng. of

the Rocky M ounuin clut>. were In . Hailey on a sljopplng trip.

Mr. and Mrs. Alex McDonald. Og­den. Utah, spent a few daj's here thU ’week. They a re boUi employed a t a war plant.

Benny Bnxika. W ltchlU. K an- ar­rived here th is week. Be Is the of Mr. and Mrs. Jlarve Brooks.

Mrs. Lena H arris fell and sprained both ankles. Sho is now getting around on crutches.

Kenneth Uawklns, the National laundry tnidc driver aitd operator of the laundry, has resigned and left for T *ln Falls. Hla place has been filled by Mrs. Mallory.

Miss Roycc J e a a Justus. Ban Die­go, Calif, II Tlsltln* w ith her moth­er. Mrs. Roy Justus.

There wUl be a meeting n u t week of the business m en of Hailey to d licuu the problem o t changing the time. I t Is probable th a t they will decide 'to open an hour later t>nn usual. IliB Khoola are opi ' hour .later and tha object

...to.eorTefpaad w ltb tha t.U r. and U n . Ocnroy 0«lle»ple,

B urler, wera l a HaUe? m i BeUenie ' iooUflc after th e ir In te re tti here.

V i a B u r ie t L4P 1 - ' '

DEEP CREEK Deep Creek G range m e t a t the

Dee Btrauser home, w ith Pom6na Master Erie Jonea and Mrs. Jones

guests. Several communications were rend and the O range voted to have a cooked food sa le a t Quhl. /Several attended Palrvlew Orange Friday n ight nml took th e filth de­gree. ___^

A Tarled pro- grrun was offered by L ecturer T il­ley. R ..A . McDon-

inell read , an a r- Ucle o n conserv.' Ing « h a t m achln-

Orange m ntters and save sevcrnl comic readings. Mra. C arl H arte r read an editorial and .M n . Ahlm read an article.

RefrethmenU were aerved by Mrs. Btrauser.

c e d a r T r a wCedar Draw O range m e t w ith a

light atteadance. M r. a n d Mra. L. O. Cobb were ejected’ aa n ltem alrs to the State a range, T h e OninKC voted to send O brlstmaa boxe.i boys from the G range vice.

Tlie program sta rted wlUi a penny march. Two ahort rendlnn* told of the many uses to which n^llk hns, been pul and to perTioan who have not read along this line the number of thing! In which m ilk t.t a compo­nent part Is Indeed surprl.ilng. Tlie folks enjoyed a round of mailc. “Row. Row, Row Y our Boat." Group singing was also enjoyed. R efresh­ments were served a n d tlie folka vblted a bit before going hnme.

(e.1 t^ th e » In^ser-

EXCELSIOBExcclnlor Orange h nd -thclr Boost- r night program a t ih c lr Ilrst reRU- ir meeting In October. T lie m eet­

ing opened wllh gro\:p alngtnB ot ••Columbia, the Gem of th e Ocean." after which the flag was prejftit^d and the 'sa lu te wa.n Riven. Mn.^ter Floj'd Pslterson read th e mrtKaRe from National ^M a^ter Oos.i and added facts as to w hat ihn G nuige has done In the pa.'it and l.< now doing. The lecturer. Mrs. Floyd P a t­terson. presented the following pro­gram:

Saaophone solo. "Over the Wi Robert Pettygrove. accompanied by Mrs. A. R. H arney; readlnu. •‘Jo h n ­nie's History Lesson." W ayne Henry; group tinging. *iAmerlcn. the Beau­tiful"; rending. "The Mule," Char.

Patte»on: piano and violin I. H. If. H arney and D . A. P a t­

terson; a sWt. 'T h a PaelfLit.” Leila and Wayne Hettf>’; read ing . "I Like to Go to Grange." Mra. Patterson ; and as a closing.num ber the group jsng ••Auld Lang Sj’n r ." .

Refrtihmcnla were served by Mrs. Oeonje Henry and M rs. Cb'de Ed- mliuter.

APPI.tTO NAnd another Booster tneeU ns a t

TPaa attenrte<l by about CO peraons. After the address of welcome by the trtnsler. W. D. Irons gave a ta lk on •"What the Orange la D oing." Carol Miller then played a violin mIo, nc> eompanled by Evelyn M iyer. Mr. Avery, of Jerome, gnve a talk on hbi hobby. “Sagebru.'^h Carving." He

s of

ta in ln f a a u a b e r o f h l i M endi.

h li handiwork-- Micky S a u t sang two S0I08 and the meeting closed w ith group singing after w hich, dancing.

I almost forgot to m ention the potluck supper th a t waa - enJoj'Cd by the folks. before th e program. Tou see, the G rangers-go t used to trying to eat up the surp lus when we were told a ll the tim e th a t there was too mueh of th li and too much of th a t Now they alng a d ifferent tune and we seem to be ahort of everything bu t the llt te brown m en In the Pacific. I still beMere we wi short of buying power, matnly.

Several of the A ppleton O range memben are leartng th e community, to the Orange save tiiem k farewell card party on T huraday n igh t, Oct, s. The deftnlta postpootns of 8 t« te Orange m U i th a f lra t w eek m P e - cember meeU w ith th e a p p r^ a l of

pleton Orange a s well as m ost the Oranges lo th is aectlon of

Idaho. I t l i hoped th a t th e farmers wUl be freer to a ttend a t thU tim e, tb u t 1/ ihs meeting h a d been held la October.

Helen Hiatt waala to a t . . rubberl. The'atW ndance of officers wji4,;tmall for iwme reason. Uiough 34 members and three visitors were preaeiil. Tlic ballot was spread and Mr. end Mrs, Harley 'Wood were elected lo become members by Intl- Btlon.

All enjoyed the report of the chairman of the h o s le a commlUee. Mrs, Oamer, SLiler O am er seemed to Have a llUle trouble getUng the coffee started to perc. due to the fac t tha t they are meeting In the city tinll and electric.plugs seem to bfl lacking.

A letter from SLatj M aster E. T . Taylor tlianked the O range for a kind leUer of appreciation of infor­mation found In Uie Stale Granger. T he Rotary club Invited the Grange to hear Dr. Barker a t the high ' school Mn. H arry Davla thanked the Grange for a ttcntlon.1 bestowed cn her daughter. Mra. Ferd Dlerk- sen. during her lllneas.

Mrs. Orr. acting u lecturer, pre. rented a'program aa follows: 'Souf Jiy group. •'Smile. ' Smile, 6mlle“; Worthy Old< read a paper on thi work of cliemurgy In finding nen crops and new usea for old cropia grown In Idaho. Thouglj barely started, Uie list Is already large and mpldly expanding. M any of tlw herbs that we formerly got from Europe are being grown succe.yfuUy Jn tliH state, 131.000 acres being grorfn in the Boise valley th b sea son.

J . R, Crawford talked on •'My Im- pre.wlorui ot Hunt Rclocntlorv Ceo- ter," T »o foloa, "While the West Is Paling" snd " I to o k In to Your Garden," were sung by Elinor SleU man. accompnnled by M bs Curtla, Mra. Jam ri Speneer had a .icram- bled word contest, In which Worthy

Program Brings Pomona Grange’s

Contest to CloseJEROME, Oct. lI»-TI»e North flWa

Pomona Orange's membership con. has been concluded with thi

of the Canyonslde and thiFalls City Granges enlerlalnlng with

program a t the county organlzn- on ’s meeting,Mrs. Phoeba Thomavnn. FalLi Clt>

Orange, and Mrs, Lulu Uelser,Canyonslde- Orange, directed the pnsffram. TTia Juvenile GfJnseni im l n a t Germ any whose military and from Fall-i Cliy. presented t5iala» *uthorlU es and geslapo agenla mime, "Tlje Light Went Out." Mra • . - • -Loa.ile W ahl sang t«-o songs

of LIfa." •'At a Public Auction Bale,' woa the Utle>of a remling by MLu M ary Mogenien. Cani'on.ilde Grange »nd an original rending. •‘Mrs.Snod- graas Reads tha Loc.ils," was given by M n . Lulu Melser.

Refreshment* were served.

and I were raised on scrambled efTB.i.

Dean SmlUi. of the arm y a ir corps, non of Mr. nnd Mrs. Roy Sm ith, gave an Interesting account of his army life In brief, Dean told o f Uie won­derful hospitality of the USO and the tine talent In the shows they put on for the service boy*. He also apoke on Uie trip hom e from Ala­bama, ot Uie wonderful crop*' In Uie com belt itatcs. but said th a t the Twin Falb trac t looked best of all, Tlie closing number was a round. "Row. Row. Row Your Boat," Pump- kin pie and coffee were aerved.

Decio Man Named Road Group HeadDECLO. Oct, 19-H yrum S. Lewb.

Declo. has been reelecKd pre.ildent of the Idaho AssocIaUon of Good Ro.%da and Highway dUtrloU. Their annual convention waa held In Boise.

D. E. Morgan. Twin Palls, was elected -vice-president and Mr*. Jeannette Y, Chamberlain. Burley, secretary.

Capt Shurtliff Ski Troop Officer

ALBION. Oct, 1 > - C * p t . Wes Shurtliff and Mrs. Shurtliff have arrived from. Fort George Meade Md., where Capt. Shurtliff was given a four weeks’ course a* a special service officer. He will b« stationed w ith tlK akl troopa a t Fort Lewis fo r a time but later expecu to bo truu fcrxed to Lead^Hle. Colo., where a large *kl troop camp Is being built.

Mr*. Sliurtlltf and daughters ... rem ain In Albion with her parent.'!, Mr. and Mm, N. N. Naili. until Capt..8hurt]lff Is transferred, ^Vhllo in th e , ea.1t Mrs. ShurtllU n-lilicd In W ashington, D, 0.. BalUmore and Long Island, where she *pcnt two wedk* w ith Mra. Presl, who wm Bee M^rle Hanson before her marriage.

MURTAUGHMiss Edyth Trunkey, who teaches

Junior high In Murtaugli schools. Is «pendlng the harvest vacation In San , Diego with her brother end irtster-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs,' Ross Trunkey.

Mtis Pearl Kltch. hojne economics teacher Is spending harvest vacation w ith her parent* a t Troy.

M r. and Mrs, Hyrum Horton and daughter,‘'^Kftj-. returned' to their home In Pocatello after visiting a t the C. H, Tolman home, Mr.i, Hor-

m and Mrs, Tolman are slsteti. Ralph Buker.'Robert Noh and

Juno Lookablll Irtt for Bbhe for Induction into the army.

T lie women of the UD.S. Relief society held tn all-dsy meeting n t the church qullUiig. A pol-luck lunch was served a t noon,

Harold Randall returned to Mur-' taug,t) recently with an honorable dlstharge from tha l). s. army signal corps. He w u ataUoned a t Camp Crowder. Mo. He suffered a back Injury when ha fell from a pole, and was In Uje hojtfflal for three month* prior to h is discharge.

of s ta te PlCTT# Laval was reported t ^ a y to have o ile d tn the dread nazl g e su p o In his freniled effort* to forco p reach wtrter* lo take Job* In O ennan war fsctorles.

T here were report* la FlghUng Frencl) circles here that Adolf Hiller ««* displeased with Lavar* seWlce*' to th e axla cause and would soon call h im t o account for Increasing ■ ntl-nxu sentim ent In France, IC w u : believed th a t U r a l might be dl*- mlssed.

G lreo ClUtcnihlp.T h e B ritish BroodcatUn^com;

said th e Vichy government bad ferred F rench cltlsejuhlp upon MO geslapo agen ts to give them full le­gal r i« h t to -attend" to recalcitrant F rench workers tn unoccupied F rv ic e . Laval had promised to tend IfrO.OOO skilled workers to G et/any ; so f a r h e h a s succeeded In obtaining few er th a n 35.000,

R eports which f ln t appeared In A nkara diplomatic cl>cle* that Hit­ler w as peeved wllh Denlto Musso­lini were receiving currencj' here w ith th e addlUonal detail that after a to u r of several Italian cities, Ges- U po Chief Heinrich HImmler had Bubmltted IX report of growing anil- O erm an sentim ent to HlUer and th a t, a s Uie result, Hiller would con­fe r w ith M uM llnl In the Brenner paw.

Morale Lov ■ As Ita ly prepared for her fourtli

war w in te r morale w u said to be ut Ml n ll-U m e low. which reportedly was liuvlni; a noticeable ulverie af­fect on I ta l ian war contrlbutloa Re-

■ports_reaehln5 London from lU ly th rough neutra l sources .said the people were speculating whether P residen t Rooeevclt'a personal envoy to Uie V atican, Myron C. Taylor, dis­cussed th e poaslblllty of a separate peace fo r I taly In his recent talks w ith Pope Plus XU. Italian author­ities a re greatly conctmed m-er ex ten t to which these hopaj are Ing openly expres.^d. It was said,

An a ttac k by several hundred pcnannljs ‘recently on municipal buildlng.i tn Monteleona was believed sym ptom atic of the tension In Itily and .'especln lly of 'the resenlmtnl

This Greek Buys a W ar. Bond on $25 Per Weeik

Tom L«ourl**. a na tlra of Ore«c« who became an A°>«rlcan d U m i only » few month* ago. Isn’t f lrcn to u u d n g about h li saertflcv. B« s a n th a t putting 118.75 of hU I S salaiT war bands ereiy week doecn’t ereri seem Uka a Merlflca to a whoM wife and lo u r chUdrtn are tu r v in c somewbcre in .O reece —If t h » natU haven’t killed them.'

•nim works here In a «m»ii n g . ta u ra n t owned by hli brother. Bl* story would never have been told had n o t a Memphis couple brought the ir young son to the cafa a few dayi ago. The boy brotight griev-

is memories to Tom.- I have a lltUe boy like y o u -

somewhere In Oreece. I haven't heard from him. though, since the nazls w en t there."

v irtua lly running the eountr>-.T h e London Sunday. Observer's

diplom atic correspondent u ld Ital­ian nulhorlU es were uneasj- about repercu-islons which might develop from th e U nited Stales' freeing Ital­ian nntlonola of enemy alien italus-

Draft Rejection Rate Goes Down

BO ISE. O c t 10 WT-Tfie Ida^o rejection ra te for draftee* dropped to 17 p e r cen t during Oclober from 10 p e r cen t In September, the Fort Doufilo* arm y Induction board re­ported upon completion of Induc­tions here .

N aUonally, L t/ B. M, Harrlnslon, officer In charge, said, the rale lins averoffed betweesi 35 nnd 30 per ccnt since th e f irst-o f the year.

ALBIONN aom i c liap ter N a * Initiated Car­

mel nrul Loa Sater, daughters of Dr. C. I . S a te r. Into Ihe order, Mrs, Mnc A nita Johnson , organbt. was assist­ed by Mra. Nan Fierce who sang •T he S ta r of the East," Proceeding of th e g rand chapter were reviewed by th e 'w orthy matron. Plans were m ade to en terta in the Ma.ions and th e ir -wives Nov. 10, Hontesses were Mr*. J . C. W erner. Mrs. Wallace Av- erlU n n d J . B . Chatbum. -

B on ita Powell, anall daughter of Mr. u n d M rs, Parley Powell, wos token to th e Caribou county liospl- UI in poda Springs for an appendl-, d l l s oper.itlon,

O. W . Thomaa, Burley, and Capt. _ . E . S im onsen m e t wllh 30 of the m en of Albion and discussed the pos- alblllty of a n Idaho volunteer army post here . F ifteen of Uia men i ' ed for tlie volunteer service.

C harles Hepworth left for Salt Lake C ity w here be .will undergo an operation.

BUI Pe lm an , Jr.. and Marvin Tre- ma>-ne le ft fo r Oklahoma lo take Er­nest C alcf's car to lUm. Mr. Calet is sU U onod th e re with the army. Mra. vlattliew Tremnync accompanied Jicm aa f a r os Pocatello.

na ils who ravaged hi* cu t h im off from word or know­ledge of h b loved

Times were ha rd tn Oreece In 1S33. and Tom thought tha t he could provide lo r h b wife and theirfour children better If he .......America. B ut times were hsrd In America, too. The depression made It d ifficult to find Jobs. And Tom was heartbroken to learn Ihst be­fore h e could bring hla family to Join him he would no t only Iwve to.become an American cltlren. but also have enough money saved lo insure th a t they would no t become public charges.

H b bro ther had a 'sm all cafe here and Tom w ent .to work. At f ln t he could onljv save about W m onth to send home. T hen cai better tlme.f and better wages. The checks to Greece got blgRer. Hope began to arLw th a t h b family might (loon Join him. Then the naeLi poured Into Greece . . .

The checks and h b letters home t^ gan to be returned undellrered No word came from Greece about his wife and children. Tom wanted to fiRht. B ut a t 58 there are dlftl- culUes, Ha did th£ only thing he knew how.

Lives On M.25 a ^Ve«k It's B pretty drab e*btence. living

on I6 J5 a week. Half of it goes for room, Tom gets h is menb Included In h li salary. B ut th b LtijT a drnb llte lo T iw i becauie he knows h e ’s flghllnir HlUer as best he

" it la the onlv thing n do,' h e says of the bonds, •'It is an Investm ent In America. i If this country ROea do*Ti then even'thlng iTors dov,Ti. Some dhv the bonds may helo b ring the famllv.

"But now." he pdrt.» bitterly, ''1 hope every bullet my bond ' buv gees atrslKht through tha h e irt of Hltler."

ATTENnTNC DEVTAL c'i.lNlC OCODING. Oct, 10-M r. and M rr

D, W. McCombs had received word todav th a t their son, Alan D. Mc­Combs, navy hoapltal npprcnilft f irst cla-'j, U now In a 'dentol clinic for. a ten-w eek course In X -rsy and cleaning of teeth a t tlie V . S, naval hotpllftl. San Diego, Young MC- Conitxf enlLiled Aug. 10.

R EA D nM ES-N EW S WAKIMD6.

Mrs. Fred Craig Named Officer of

Legion AuxiliaryOOODING. Oct. I»—Mrs, France*

L.'Mills. Kamlah", departm ent presi­dent of the L«^on auxiliary, sp> pointed Mrs. Fred C n lg , Gooding, departmenv legislative chairm an a t the fourth db trtc t meeting held In Halle>-.

Mra. 'Tony Bonin. Hailey, waa ap­pointed dia lrm aa of Amerlcanbin,

U nit and post officer ichoob conducted a t the meHlng.

B. P . Moe, Kellogg, depv tm en t commander, spoke a t th s banquet. A movie’ of the 1941 national con­vention was shown.

der and Mn- Helen G riffith. Xet chum, auxiliary preaklenl, presided. Membership quota* were assigned.

Members atiendlnjf from Gooding ere Lloyd Srdvely, post c oom in -

der; D. W. McCombs, post adju tan t; Mra.’Em est Fields, auxiliary preil- dent; Mrs, William Schrelber, vice president, and Mr. and Mrs. F « d Craig,

U.S. Service Men. Will Get Shorts

For Tropics DutyWASJONO'TON, o r t 19 t*> -B or-

rowlng an Idea from the British, the ormy announced today th a t knee lengUi khaki shoots are to be Issued to American troopa In desert areas. The dectslon a-as made after more than a year's /e^earch.

B r ltl^ troops wear shorts for.vlr- tunlly an aerrlco In th a tropics Wt the United Stales army 1* reU lnlng long traiuers for the Jungles beclkse of mosquitoes, leeches and other pests.

0 6 E C R E 1 T E D

d Ju rb t. acoordlaf n ad a b t t o n hU

BOIBB, O e t U of w n -_am U . U o n a a . Id aho n p tc m * e a s t justlca -w te di*d n id a r . - w a j today *ent lo ^m kane, -WMh, lo r cremation.

I ta funeral w n d e n w iu be ‘held tor the TJ-ycar-old Ji ' to tnstmetlcDt' : death.

UeanwUle. specuIaUea d treloped as to whom .Oor. Chase a . Clark would.appciat ,l0 _ th e J i l ^ -«ourt — - bench to * e m the rem aining two y t t n of Morgan's te n n . UorKas, whojerved as chief Justice tn i m . f would have aut«aalleally becoras chief Justice again nex t J a n . 1. .

Among thoM mentlooed as *uc- - , j 0 or candidates ar« Zd 8 . E lder of. Ooeur d’Alene, eighth d b tr tc t Judge;, BartM J . Hull of Wallace, p ra ro ta en tc :r Democrat altomey: Frank Langley,

^member of the idahft bidustrls l accl* dent board; Robert Terrill o f Poca- tcUo. former db tric t Judge, and Guy Stevens of BUckfoot, sixth d b tr lc t - Judge.

Though supreme court juiUce* are elected on a non-partisan ticket. I t

(he governor will name a '

CASTLEFORD'The second group o f.arm y offlc-

la b from Gowen field, Boise, has been here the past few days con­ferring with, ths la rm e n on srhose land the runway was m ade In order th a t the anqy bomber w hich made an emergnicy land lns here last spring could take off.

Mr. and Mr*. Gene Reed have gone to Richmond. C a lif , w here Mr. Reed plans to work In a ahlp^-ard.

Corp. L. L. Black of the arm y a ir corps, San Bernardino, C a lif . ar« rived to visit h b parents. Mr. and M n . E L. Black. Corp. Black Is being transferred to an undisclosed destin­ation,

Mrs. Msr;or4s Vogel, BoU f. l i her* lixk ln i After bu tlneu IhteresU.

MrL ‘ Jim Feller* and children. Center. Colo. U vblUnc t>er parents, Mr. and Mr*. John O abhart.

...a can to be butit a fte r the war a re ' expected to be radically new In de*lgn and car-m lle econ­omy.

C O N S U M E R S" ih C N i i;iVA'i5 .•?.)«/ c r

T H A N K S ! ,■ to the people of Twin Falls County for Past Cooperation in Law Enforcement

LOWERY-D e m o c ra tic C aadldat* fo r Re-EIeclloi

and I — we of th is county can enjoy la coodoued satU factloa la law enforcement.

(Pd. PoL Adv.)

h e r b trtbda / a u n n ta r . O e t 27 b r „ a t e r t t t i l i v a t t i m b e c t f l u r M e a d s

a t h e r borne. 8 b a & f lu d a t« b ta r cfU r . and U n . FM« fialder. i _____

. Eddto Joe Brooki, MQ o f ICr. a a d BOHLOran**' la s t

to tan tay , p e t 17 Ijy en te r- n u K la r ulght. alone w ith th e Misses . /u jd .j jM j* Barah T t t e ’i th e one

(Paid Political Adv3

EVERETTM.SWEELEY

fo rPRlbsECy™ G ATTORNEY

. BSrU BixCA N n c s s T

Oontlnufl a tu ix essful handling ef T w in PaBa legal and business af- fa ln l

GET SCnvriNG MAD!'lu rn liTy o u r scrap metal now— Amenta neeSs eveiy pt»ssi6Ie pound!

* * * * * *

Do you part. DeUver ■* -your old »cnp Iron and X

steel to your nsarMt , salvage dealer as sooo

* as possible. Help pu t " Twin F a lb county over

^ the top. *

* * * * * *

★ I i t a k e t a h o a t 2 t S 0 0 t o m o f » t t t l

\ t c r a p t o r e p l a c e a L i b e r t y $ h i p t -

N EWS PA PER S’ U N I T E D SCRAP M ET AL DRIVE

Page 7: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

MqDday. October 19, 1042 1 TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO Page!;

'■SOCIAIL EVENTS -a n d .e i iU B NEWS

Sacf if ice of Leisure Needed In Wartime, Says BPW Leader

T h r t^ u s y w o rk in s w om en m uat cacrifice eom e o f th « ir lelsuro tim e d u rin g th e p re sen t crisis in o rd tt^ to e n su re vic­to ry and a l&sting p cacc , i s th e opinion o i M ise E v e ly n C asey , New York, new ly ap p o in ted field consultant o f th e N a tiona l F ederation of B u s in e ss a n d Professional W om en’s c lubs, Inc.

H iss Casey w ill c o n d u c t a leadership In s ti tu te h e ro Sat-

i n s t i t u t c H e a d

distric ts o f Id ah o B . P . W. clubs, and open to a ll w om en who a re .in te re s ted in a tte n d - infi:.

IniU tulf 6 e u J e ^All »e»lons wlU be held a t Ihe

Park hotel. Ww open ln f meeting cAlkd tor 9 ft. m. Sa tu rday in the banquet room, w h e n th e K tuol

' prepartUoni to protect people In air r tld i; the precauUons taken to pro* l « l Hie lieftllh ot the varloua J<l*ho comniuRtUu vlll be the principal toplcA {or dlam slofl, led by M lu Ca*ey.

Luncheon wUl be served a t noon In the VfneU*n room w ith th e T » ln Pnlls .B. P. W. club In clu irse or nrranjemenU. Mrs. K fle Rlhcrd Million vlll be toa jinxuter.

M n. Minnie A. D iveaport, C»U- ■’ell. it«t« pretildetit, wUI be In

•«» charse of the (Jtcmoon iicMlon from l;30 to *;1Q p. m.. when th e dlscus-

I elons on contribution of women ' toward "community and a ta te ." "In*

du jto '" »na "the /Ighllng fron t" ' will take place. M lu M. Ize tU Mc­Coy. Tft’ln Pall*, general chairm an of the ln«Utute committee, w ill.lead the dbcuulon on ‘ Co^nmunlty and S u te .- *

Banquet Speaker Mlif Cu«y will bs the speaker a t

Uie dinner meeting Sa tu rday a t 0 :ti p. m. At UiB Park hotel bonQuet Tootn. 'n i» public la urged to a ttend .

aundiy momln«‘s ccaslon. open* ins a t 9 a. ffl. in charse of M lu Caaey. will concern the role o f B.P. W. sroup* Jn forw artlnu th e war profTftm in th# atate. A pJcturc ol the state federaUon'* contrlbuUon to the national federaUon, w ith dU- cilHlon on the m u U r fne, luvl o the r toplci. *111 be conaldered a t th s 10 a . tn. K ulcn, under the dUecUon 6f Mr*. Darenport, A dljtrict m eetlnj o f cJubs In •onthem Idaho <TU begin » t l p. m. following the closing or th e institu te a( noon. Juom e B. P . W . club «UI be tn cbarB<-or the d istric t m eaU ns.

InsUtuU com i^uce Includet^Mlas UbCtay Q<' 'thothree . parUclpaUng distric ts, M lu

A Alt* Day. Jerome; M lu G ra d e ^ Pfoit, Nampa, and MIm B e rth a A t­

kin. PocaUlla Mlaj CuKv. a graduate , o f Hunt*

er coUeie, the JargeaUWoman'a col­lege Jn Ui« wbrJd. rec itfM h e r M. A. d ttree a t Cornell unlveralty. In the department of public ipeaklng.

' Shs h u been an acUve n e m b e r of the American AasoclaUon of O nl- venity Profeuon. tho N ational As-

— .joeU tloa of T tu h e a o t Speech, and the PaB-Ifellenlc House association o t New York.

CalendarBoard of dlrecton of th e Y . W.

C.A. will meet .Wcdnesd&y a t 2.-15 p. ni. a t the Y roonw.

* ¥■ *Lucky Twelve club will m eet

Thursday a t 2 p. m. a t the hom e of Mr*. 3. D. ataata.

¥ * * a r d » I^a i . W .S .C .8 . of Oie

. MtthodUt chOTCh. win m eat T u es­day a t 3:30 p. m. a t Ute hom e of M n. Charles saur. I<29 N in th avenue east Mm. Virgil M athers will bo auLitant hostess.

H. IfWomen'* council of Uie H ansen

t:ommunlly church will serve * dinner tor candidates of bo th po-

L Ililcal partlfs Oct. 31 a t 7:30 p. m ; ’ a t the Hansen Orange hall. H an ­

sen, Those attending are asked to brln* their own sugar.

»Circle No. 7. W .fl.C .S . Of th e

MethodUt church will m eet t m * pot-Iuck luncheon a t 1 p . m. Wednesday a t the homo of Mrs. M, imp r ounh.aYcnUB,

♦ * ¥Wdelis cliuu of the B ap tis t

church will meet for a Halloween party Tueaday, Oct. M. a t a p . tn. a t the country home of Mr. and Mr*. B. 0 . McMolUn. Mr. nnd Mm. Prank Wells will be in charge of enteftalnmenL

* * *Special Interest rroup of the

second ward M.I.A.. L atter D ay BalnU church. «1U hold » H a l­loween party following th e c la u session Wednesday n ight a t th e home of Mrs. J. W. Adamson. Jack Sullivan and M n. A nn Hutching* will be In c h a rje . « \d all Members are urged to a ttend ...

« « « n r s t m«Ung of the year for

V

ths Home and Oarden departm ent of the Twentieth Century club be held Tuesday a t 3:30 p. m . a t the American Legion auxiliary

rocm i. Mrs. 0 . P. Bowles will d is­cuss “Homes of Holland" and Mr*. ISffler F . Reas, Jr.. will be in charge of a demonstraUon show­ing how rugs can be made from « u l« su itrta ls .

♦ ♦ •Room Mothers MeetBkkel Pannt-Teacher auoclaU oa

room mothers, meeting Friday .^ te in o c a a t the hecne of Mr*. Cbvlee.Younc for a d e u e rt loncb - to o . 70t«d to KU> 'three delegates to th e 'fo u rth 'd is tr ic t eoQTention aatURlay a t Rupert. Delegatcf n a m ­ed were Mrs. Young. Mrs. L e t te r W ard M d M n. Ethel Gr>T.

, R S A D n U E S -H ^ W A N T A O A .

atrBCt«r ef *p*««h and a t ItBnter eoUrte and th e G rvnp Theater. wUI eendnct th e B. P . W. leadership dUtrict InslltgU her* Oct. U and 25. Among h e r *lu* denU liave boea CUffard OdeU aod rraachet Tone.

Boulevard Club Aids Red Cross

Blue Lakes Boulevard club la st week conducted an a ll-day aewlng teulon. maUnc garm enta for the American Bed Cross. A pot-luck luncheon was served a t noon. Mrs. Carl Pay was hostels to the eroup. with Mrs. Orrouj Bates as ossUlAnt hOBieu. >

T])e dub voted a contribution to Uie-Communlty Chest, a n d a«reed to make cookies for the OSO re c rr t- tlon center. A aiallowecn pa rty was planned tor meeUrCB a tth# home of JSra. Tom Merry.

Mrs. H. ijl. Paddock. Miss ElUa* beth Bholwell. Miss V irginia T n r f . cU and MUs CeraldJne McDonald were guejU.

* * *

Crocus Club MeetsCrocus club met a t the Home of

Mrs. Bessie 81ms la-^t, week. Mrs. B m ha MeVey preslilfd In t)ie ab­sence of Mrs, Inft Porler. who has resigned. CookliiR of apples was dlBcusseU.

Marian Martin Pattern ,

- alehderlUng . ; . . I f s atyla- r lgh t . , , it's a n a l necessity lo r a ll w om en-Pattem 0054 by M a rian , M aiun. Made In useful two*plece style, the top Is panelled la f ro n t lo r figure flattery: the m r t fans In aUm ' soft lines.

Pattern P0S4 may be ordered only In women's a lsu 3i, 3S. 40, 42. 44 aod 48. B in M. entire ensemble, requires 3!i yards M Inch. ‘

Bend BIXTEEV CENTS In coins lo r thli Marian M artin pattern . W rite .plainly B IO , NAME, AS* DBESS and S llY E NVMBEB.

)3aTe for Victory—wlUj our helpful new TaU and 'Winter P a tte rn B ookt I t's the best guide to hom e aewlns. w ith amart, easy-to-sew, th rif ty de- il|:n i for work, play, school. P a tte rn Book is ten cents.

e ts A your order to T tee*-N ew i, P attern Deparimeni, Tw in PU li.

Federated ClubsPlanning County

Meet for Oct. 21All mtoibrrs of f e d e ra te clubs

la Twin Kslls county a rt invited .to attend a county meeUn* a t Ui« Bap- t u t buBjilow w eda tm iy , Oct. 31.1 p. m.

Plans lor the session were co:. pleled When theof Women’s clubs met flaturdsy ait- ernoon' a i Uje p»rm«r»‘ Auto insur- ance conipsny auditorium.

Vor Federated O ubt All federated clubs in the county

Will be represented, and all su ie and district officer* and chilcmen will bo present.- Invluuons tuv« been luued _ Mrs. £Ua Carter. WcUer, prcaideiit of the Idalw Pedenraon of Women's tlubs; Mr*. FuUer Woodle, Albbn, president of the f i r s t District Fed* eraUon of Women’s clubs, and Mrs. B. a Arrington, Ogden, p u t stale president, to also be presenL

Regliirauon will besln a t 1 p___wlUi M n. Hugh Anderson In charge. Mrs. te e fimlth will arrange the tea Ubl#; Mr*. Ida Bweet wlU be chair­man of.the kitchen committee, and Mrs. W. A- Poe will be in tha rje ot Ihe room decorations.

Precran Ptaaned The prtcram will Include club re-

poru. community slnitng and slcal number*.

Halloween decol-atlons .will make the tea table ailracUvt.

Mrs. It, t Commons will pre.ilde a t the county meeUng, as president ot the Rural FederaUon.

We The Women

N ight Shift to v M ake Dressings

S tarts TuesdayBy epeda l redueit. ihere'U be

a “n lS h t e h j f f for the making ot surg ical dressings.

" I f I could work a t night, id filadiy -anoke surjtltal dressings for th o Bed Cron," several bual* ness women have declared.

T ho same goes, for -eevcral hom em aken ’nhcee hu>band» chn take care of the children eve­n ings, and leave them free for th is valuable service.

So — beginning Turaday. Oct. M . th e work fchop li\ U>« Venetian room a t Uie Elks building will be open from 7 to 10 p. m. You're urged to help In this worUme ef- foru

Choic^t “Mums” Will Be Displayed at Show

C h ry san th em u m s ar^ th e ir p rim e th is m onth , a tou r o f Twin F a lls gardens by representA tivea of th e Twin F alls Gnrdcn c lu b showed yesterday. H a rd y and sem l-hardy, th e c ho ’san th e m u m s ran^e fro m d elicate p aste l th rough th e w nnn a u tu m n colors to strong reds, on ly th o blues and tru e purplea b e in g m isslnff.' '

From C hina. India, »ad -J |ipan have coztla the species ot which tn - nusierablo varioUes have been ad* vertheci, T lio English type, comlog from C anada, is tho oewesl. Hardy, larsr. •U ff-it«m ined and early bloomers, 't iiey a re ' very desirable. sln(fe m any of the old type had stems too weak to hold up Uje lovely bloiwcni.

Flower Shew Wedawday BpeclaUy w elt.tto«d Is Uw ..

• « t for

Tunic’s Newest

B^BUTl

When you learned ‘ tha t th( nurses’ aid orgonUaUon needed vol­unteer*. did >*ou tell yourself.

"Of e a n t , « an tm m tn c y artsts m do erer) thlng I can to help— but I really don’t see why I should spend time.now getting nurse’s aid training. AfUr all. anybody, with oomreoci a«nu caa taka cate of sick peop laf

What Did T«a Do?■When you heard th a t It probably,

would no t be lonf unUl there was national gas rationing did you plan t -trip In your car after reasoning. 'I t will probably be the last auto> mobile tr ip I ’U se t to take in good- ne.u knows how long?"

When you heard tha t Uiere would x)n be A shortage ot a commodity r th a t one might be raUoned bC'

fore Jong, did you a ttu e th a t laying In a supply was no t rkalty hoanllni; —since you always-bought in large quantities anyhow?

When aaked to sew a t the Red Cross did you tell yourself th a t you didn't want to nu up your time -with •'busy work’'- b u t thought you would Just wait until you found 'Job to do?

When asked to put a t le u t 10 per cent of your income Into war bonds, did you say you oouldnt possibly afford It—what w tth the h l th c&st of llTinc-^lnstesd - of giving up erough In the way of entertainment ai^d unneoeusTy buylnc to make .. 10 per cent purchue of war bonds possible?

•F « ^ as WiwJ**When given a nutritional yard-

sUck by which lo Judge the meab you ferf your family did you tura up your nose a t It and ro r igh t oft serving th* ^ p e old mealj without /iven cheeking Uiem?

When asked to turn in scrap did you say complacently. "We ha re not enough to boUisr about." without CT-en bothering to ‘ spend a dsy searching In your atuc, basement, gVa«e, and back yard?

Y ou\e had chaacas to help win the war. ‘The quesUon Is, "Ifave you beea.wiUlns io-h«lp.-w-4\av»-you- talked younelf clear ou f^o t the noUon?"

« « «Halloween Party

For Mentor GroupSeveral mecobers ot the Mentw

club came In costiine to Uia meet* Ing of the group l u t week a t Uie hom e of M ^ M o n rt« Hayes. Mrs. Jo h n Wallis and M n. Melvlo P u sn

ere co-hosteases. .Halloween gam u were played and

pumpkins and lighted taper* formed th e decoration* lot th* Ttlrtshm tnl table. Favors were cake« which con­tained fortunes.

* « «FADED DBAPEBIER

Lined draperies th a t are faded may have extended use by simply tu rn ing the maUrials so th a t the protected tnside becomes ttie right aide of the curtalnf. Blp U e cur* tains apart, wash or dry deaa , as necessary, ttlteh together again and haog. I f the materials are washed, use a good, mild soap, lukewarm water, very ienfle handling. Dry In shade and p r tu before restltch- tag .

lUaiaUnd ItLurll Hrars a lunlo of polo p ink sUtf Mtin printed In hUck. a n d wotti over A *»m pink aatln sk irt, tihe al*o ircars It over a stre c t-le n fth lilwk skirt as a fh e r t d in n e r dre»s.

« « «Sty]e>smart this v ln te r t i a cot*

tum e bl£Mso-warm u a sweaBrr and blotue togeUier — th st 's of m a n y fUimel w ith a black and wine Ujread pJaJd. BUck Irish Uce •dcres the front closing, cuffs and collar.

« « «190 winter while Is the same

rich cream tone U u t pairs to beau- ttfuUy wiUt dufc lu is , and looks heaTcnJy wheo with formaJ g litter e r sh iip color.

WSCS Conference R eports Offered

O O ODINO. Oct. IB-Luncheon was sm -<d In the church parlors to member* of the W. 8. c . S. UosK&s group Included Mrs. Laura Douglaju. Mrs. E . L. Cone, .Mrs. V. W. Cnrsanr M n . W rlB ht. Mrs. 11. il. Evllslai and M rs. Jo h n Kornlitr.

Reports were tlven from Uie W. 8 O. S. confcrence held in 'Twin Falls- ^ o s e att«ndln< from the Gooding orsan lea tlon were Mrs. H. A. Chap­pell. M rs. L aura M. Wahlqulst, Mrs. Alice Qoodlng. .Mrs. E, O. Rantlolph. Mrs. Jessie Thomas and Mrs. Webb.

The fT oup voted to remember with Christm as R«i* tJl U\« boys of U e church w ho are now ’in Wie armed forccs, A commlltee epnslsilnB of Mrs, H aro ld Bright. Mrs. Tliomns. Mr*. R andolph and Mrs, Alice Rey- no jf!*_w 6S _aupala t«L lo_ni* ':U it.

'■^angem ents for Uie purchasing of gifts.

P lana a re under way lo r a n rum m age a n d cooked food sale tc sponsored by the W. S. C. 8.Oct. 31. p lace to .^ e announced la ter. \

Rev. and M rs. Wahl^Xst were the recipients o f a canned fru it and vegetable'show ’cr.

. » * ♦

Naval Enlistee Is Dinner Party Guest.

U r. will M rs. O. W. Chrhllaii U rtalned h u t night a t a dinner party In h o n o r of their son. Duane ChrlsU as, w ho left later th a t eve­ning for Pocatello to take train- ing. He recen tly enlisted as a radio technician In Uie United’ States army.

D inner ,waa ser^’Cd a t Ihe Chris­tian home. 1I2U SlxUi avenue .east. Guests were Miss Marion -DuntV. Miss V irginia Taylor. M lu Barbara Hall. Ja ck Cox. Homer D unn and the honorte.

M ,A costume blouse.'such as a po«’-'

der blue wool rabbit fu r one, made like a vest, b u t with long comrort- able cuffed alee^es, is a cl&ssls with separate sklrta .

WINDOW SHOP802 A laln Ave. So.

AD D ay Satarday* XJaUl I

Wednesday, Oct. 31, in Uie bastmeot of Uie T w in F a lls public library. A smsU admission fee wUl be charged, to defray expenses, and Uu net proceeds will be glvca U> ths DSO and the Red Croas.

At Uie g a rd tn a of M n. L. V. Bar- nett were aeen so ld standard chiys* anthemums. tru ly named: alabaster, a lovely w hite ; halo, honey and bron«: coronaUon. a regal brcnie; eliw, a deUcate p ink ; pom-j»Bttt*. a yellow-gold, low growing mum which has been blooming alnce the latUT p a rt of Ju ly and baa nst yet turned shaggyi.

M n. B a rn e tt h a s more Uisn 100 named chrrsan them um s growiag in her gardens, ranging from Uis Uny. gay Mitsl. a lovely ytUow wiUi red- brown cen ter, to t^ e beautiful Ros­alinda, a s ta te ly Incurled rose-pink with shades of violet, and orchid spoon, w ith lovely twisted peUli.

The E. J . C olbert gatden dlspliytd beauUful w h ite chrj’sanUiemum

■lUi-a lem on-prim rose center; tno* donla, a pu re w hite : ’bronge butter­cup, Which Is telt-iStacHpUve: But* cliff, a beauU ful yellow.

The garden boasU a number cfex* hlbltlon mum* which will bs In ■ ■ • t laU r in th e monU^.

Speedy were seen sliver moon, _ lovely single m um , and a number ot oUter 1&43 varieties, including de­butante, S ep tem ber dawn a ' others.

Several o th e r gardens hsve _ number of seedlings worthy of dls- play.

These and m a n y varleUes too numerous to m ention will be seen Vt’edJitsday's “m um " show.

Exhibits w’lll be accepted from

All Servicemen Invited to USO

Dance TuesdayAll m ea in the c

M. P . cam p a t Hunt. relocaUon ler, o r engaged in other war depart­ment acUviUes In the Ylcinlty—or here on furlough, can have "one ftae time" Tuesday n ig h t

'T*-in Falls ' contribuUon to th# morfle. and good Umes of soldien, ssilon. m arines and other branches ot the service—th e USO r«cr«iUoa center—will be the setUng for anoth­er U 60-*ponsored dance Oct. 30.

I Dancing wUl begin a t 8 p. m. music fum lahed by Will Wright's chestra.

The dance cceamlttee wUl be com­prised of Buhl rea ld^U . and.^lrls irtcn Buhl, CasUelord and other west end cotnmunlUes will be the aid* ettes.

Host committee Includes Mr. and M n. L. B. Byras and Mr, and Mrs. Oeorse Likeness. Mrs. R . R. Bran-

and M n . Vaughn' Shrlver. both

'The USO committee -urges you to ■tell every man In urUfotm you know,” th a t tomorrow nlght'a dance Is for h im and’ his buddies.

W affle SupperM em ben of Uie- V. F . W. suxll*

Isfy attended a waffle jupper last week a t the home of U n . Ralph QulnU

M n. M innie -J. Pyle and > M n. Elliabelh Henwood. Burley, special guests.

Mrs. Norton Elected/f Leader of P^heUenic|M rs, A. L. N orton Is th e new president o f th e P sah e ltea l^ ’'

association. She w as elected to th is office S a tu rday a f te r - , , noon a t- th e Idaho P ow er company auditorium a t th e t n l ^ ' m eeting o f th e yea r. M rs. N orton succeeds M rs. R olfert W em eri-w ho has m oved tp . no rthern Idaho.

M ra. F . C. S henebergcr Is th e new vice-president, succeed­ing M rs. Lyons S m ith , and M rs. F . J . McAtee is th e new aecrctnry, succccding Mra.Jo h n AndcrHon'.'

Hosteases a t Sa tu rday l eetsloa were Mrs. Sheneberger, Mra. H arry Benoit, Mrs. J th n AndtrK>n, M n .Norton and Mr»*iimlUi.

At bridge. Mrs. Anderaon and Mf«.LeRoy Uuglies won prlxes.

Meeting* win be held th e Uilrd SaiuTday In .each m onth, and prizes

a. m. unUl 3 p. m. Wednesday, and the show will lU r t a t 3 p. m. and continue untU 9 p. m.

E xhlblton are asked to fum lth their own contaloera. I t will Im a non-compeUUon community exhibit and a ll thrysanihem um gtowers-are asked to display their choice blooms.

The public Is urged to attend. Mrs. R. A. Su tcllff is chairm an of. th i •how. assisted by M n . P. R. Taber.

determined during the ‘Sion.

T ea was served following the games, the tea table being centered with bronze and yellow chrysanthe­mums. Tlie tallies were also In the chrysanUiemum moUf.

♦ * ♦

Unity Supports V ariedProjects

Unity dub memben chalked up a record of community service on three fronts, when the group m e t last week a t the home o t M n . Curl Bo)-d, with M n . M. Evans assisting.

The group voted to contribute 110 to the Community Chest; agreed to bake cookies for the USD recreaUon center, and packed a barrel o t fruit Jot th ’c ChlWren's home a l Bol»<.

M n . Ben O’Harrow read th e club eoUect and M n . D. F . Hankins led (he salute to Uie flag. Mrs. R. F. Boyd and Mrs. F lora Hall were guest*.

M n . B la Bailey and M n . Donfln flheplien^were In charge of th e pro-gnon. A pt .................................Mrs, B ttll* ..__________ _______vlew’ed Uio life of Columbus. Thumb* naU blognphles were given v the club membera. The group planned a pot-luck limch«m for Nov. l l a t the hOEoe of M n. L F. Sweet,

-------------- EXPERT----------------AUTO R E P A m iN O

and PAINTING -

The IDAHO’ SEnVlCE STATION

I 4S< Main No. P basa 7 ti

Events of Week AtY.W. Rooms

Monday, Oct. 19—Beta O asuaa c;ub a t 8 p. m.

'Tuesday. OcL 3C^V-CadeU a t . 8 p. m,

Wednesday, OcL 21 -Y .W .O .A ., execuUve board meeUng a ^ a iU p. m.; Negro Women’s S e rv le t ' club at 8 p. m.

Thurtday, Oct. 23 -Y OirU a t 2^0 p. m-. to which all sophoaera glrU' are invited; Blue Triangle club meeting e t 7:30 p. m.

Friday. O c t 33—OrganlzeUoa of a business group of Japaoes* girls a t Uig r .S .A . labqr-camp.

¥ * *

Party Given forMrs. Egbert, 85

MURTAUGH. Oct. Iff-M r. and M n. .A. L. E gbert-and daughters, ’ MISS Leah Bibert, M n. Lester Downing and M n, Mel Roy I M o a and children, accompanied by M n . Parley U b er t and children, were recent guests a t the home of Mra.J, A. Tolman, Oakley.

M n. Tolmaa cek b n ted her »5th .irthday wmlveraary the fore p e rt ot Uie reek. She has U nd in oaiUey since 1S81. Memben of her famUy include )2 living children; » grand­children; 76 * great grandchildren and one great-great-graodchlld.

> n g « io i iD im s i i F F a F M i i - v

HOirUSHESperiod In a wemaoH

Uf»-tiT I-Tdla S. n a u u m 's Vcf»* ubl« Conpound. » 's b«lp«l thoa*

W I^ A 'W A R BOND OB TH EA TER PA S S E S IN TH IS TIM ELY A IR P L A N E SPOTTERS’ CONTEST

A' fltorefull o f full's sm a rte s t /ihoes

^ c r c in Mngic Vfllley’s IcndliijrTiyol-

w ca r s to re . Show fo r men, women

and ch ildren. Shop personally

by m ail I

X - _

N A 'noN - UBINQ r r J

NAME O F PL A K t «•,!!.

OCTBTANDIHQ UBESL

A black m ara ca ln e 'softie." Per* fectly aeamless and desUned to give you th e utm ost in comfcrt combined- w ith smart appear­ance tor a tre e t o r d r e a . $ ^ 0 5

Spectator'pump showi^- in red, Un. and ta n and brown ctmblnstlon. It features the new lllu- aion toe to m ateV the am art tailored effect.

5 3 . 9 a .

J T T o A l l M . n w U h T l r e < J f o o t , w o • < ■ /

Y"Tr9 Tred-Flex"

Blue kldikin pump. Op­en toe and high heel — Just the b it of footwear . to r th a t new' blue out­fit. Reasonably priced aC

- S 4 .9 B

A new Mack gab* erdlne, low heeled pum p with alli­gator trim . Dutchy toe a n d house

;2 ^ V \t l lp p e r comfort.* 3 . 9 8

Moceaslo>toed oxford with vulcork aole fo r th e utmost In-.- aervlce (ihd com fort. Shown In't a n --------- ---- ------------$ 3 . 9 8

A D utchy-toed. aaddlJ^type o tford In ta n . TW* thS A U 4.» ;_ vulcork sole. A flattering ox­ford for any footl — $ S , 9 8

ih idU i^ -0atk

10 STEPS T a t THE STORYI Can you afford to Invcet ten elepa of

your U m o l a making & Trcd-Fltx , test? You’ll find these new Boatoalana offer ovciy-

th isg tired feet need. A supoSexibU ity ba&bcca buU t'into-thi). soles; th e entira shoe 1b TTolb* FiUtd for acUoo. lCeniDood,-ftbOT8, IS' an e w - ' goiog example. I n brow s tweed'Trith wing tipc.

Bostoniansfajso to fxaiTft

ORDER BY MAO,— SHOES.EXACTLY as ttLDSIBATEa) -

Page 8: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

Ptge Eight TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO , -Monduy, Oclobtr 19. 19«

ONLY 12 OF TOP-RANK GMD TEAMS KEEP PERFECT RECORDSAlabama, Ohio State Rate Top Position^

By OSCAB FBALET' NEW .YORK. Oct. 19 OJ.PJ

. —Oliid S U tc’s Buckpycs nnd Alabam a's Crimson Tide stood a t the top of -the national coUcgiftte football heap taday a f te r another unprcdiclablc week-end which le ft only 12

.m ajo r team s w ith perfect records.

T ht .lu t of unlxalfn ind unllwl u-a3 ilm htd by more Uiin onf*

third'KTuraay a j jcvfn Kama »ur- fc r rt Uielr f ln t stlhBclci to Icnv Uie JolIowiiiB cluljj Tllh cltan

EAST— Army. B o m c n colltti Drown and Syrncu.'.f.

SOUTH—Alnbams, Qeorsl* TK h and TCU. •

MIDttTST—Ohio SUt« and III! 'n o lJ.

. WEST—Siinta Cbm »nd CnllfW' nla prc-niglil,

t'ndrrcaird ba( Tird Six o iiirn und(teat«I but i Ik

a rt WMlilnglon, Koriii Cwollna, Wlseoriiln, O fo rsttw n , Penn s u t i and Ocorsia ,prc-(Hshl.

OolnK down to dcleat for tin first lime were Uie Iowa nnval cn- deU, Colsatt. TenncMtf, Vanrtfr- bljt. Norm Carolina prc-tllglit, Dil- qiiesne and WoAhlnKton 6u tc .

Notre Dome turned In Uie btg' seat upset when, tpirked by accii' rate Angelo BertcllJ, It cruslicU Uie •'unbeaublo" Iowa Cadtu. 3fl-0. prevlouily dcfeatc^l uml tied, tlie flBhtlng Irlsh.hnmmereil tlielr way back Into the nalloiml picture with a feat th a t Kansiu. Northwesiern, Minnesota and Mlchlcan had failed to aceompllsli.

Coltate DUitedOUir: •• iwl

defeated Duke b lu l uiibcatei *eatc. 31-0; battered Ml-«L\sIppl8iaW Wailop isnrttttftVcd VanUtsWli. 3J-d; Boston collego maliiialh ILi record

- with a I'O u-m over.Narth Carolina prc-fllKhl: WlKoniln rally to tAVond G reat Lakes, J3-7: NorUv

. Carolina hand Duqwe.me lt.i llrat (etback In two years. 13-16; Soutli- em California, beaten twice and tied once, end Wo.'Oilnsioti 6lat«'.i vic­tory march. 20-13, and unilertlnK Princeton deadlock Penn’s Jvy leBRUE crusher, 6-0.

Alabama rolled to Its fourth win by defentlng Tenneufe. fl-0. In tiio top game of Uie aoulh. Oilier Soutli- eastern conferencc cla.ilirj liad QcorglA romping over Tulane. <0-0; L8U stopping Mlialwlppl. 31-7. and MUaliilppI a ia lc halting Vander-' blit. Oeorglft Tecli breeied.pait Da- vld&on, 33-0; VPI tied favore<l Ken­tucky, 31-21. and In ttie JOuUiwcJt TCT3 conUnueO to ir t the pace wlU> a 7-3 win over the AhrIw. while Baylor stopped Texas Tech. M-7, and Texas poltalied off Arkama.n. 47-fl.

Ohio State Rolli 'Ohio Stale rolled on wltli a 2fl-0

triumph over Purdue aa other Big 10 balUes Aaw Illlnoli buU ut Iowa. 12-7. and Michigan pound Norlli- we.stern. 3<-fl. Mlnncsola came back wlUi a 15-3 win over Nebraska and Marquette dsn’ncd Michigan State, 28-7.

Santo Clara, an Independent, Bcorfd ILi Ihlrd vlcton- over Paclfir Cftftat conferencc teams by haltlnf Oregon State, 7P>. Olher circuit vlC' torlea, in addition to USC'a uiwet of Washlngion Stale, saw UKU\ l)at-< ter California. 31-0; Stanford trim

, Idaho, 5<-7. and WojlilnRiotj bump MonUna. 3S-0.

Army and Boston collrsc balUcd

Sportsmen ill Utah’s Deer Hunt Wounded

Dy United PrrMA lew uniruslw orthy Imnlers. who

shoot a t anyU)lng moving or of a brown color, Monday had succeeded In wounding teveral.Utahni, ihoot* Ing a horse and riddling a pickup truck u lll i bullets.

No fatalities had been reported Monday morning as.a new week of deer hunting got underway, bui Lalltln may be In t^ie offing on basU of Uie following accldenU

UnldentHled hunters, probably with buck-(c»er in d falll/ig eye­sight. shot Ted Williams, Provo. In Uie bock, and C, A. Cox. Provo. In the lea, as they drove thelf^plckup

anyon of the eight- rth of iloldeti to re­

truck 1

Doth men wen Fillmore ho.spllal, rcixjrtcd Wllllnms’

, treated : where alie coiidUlon I

Uie

- Sheriff Henry Forreiler of Millard county loaded a deer on his hor.ie and tied the equine to a tree. He left Uie scene momentarily • and when Uio aherlff returned, some hun te r had shot the horw,

OUier accidents Included; Wallace Manning, 48. Ogden,

wounded In Uie che.M when Ills rifle accldeiiUlly aijcharKCfl. .

R ichard Brown. 17, addreu not ited, gun-ihot wound In, the right ■ot. ,J. T . McCulloiiKli. Salt Lake City, id a companion. Injured when elr nulomohlle overturned.C. E, Frau(?ljto, American Fork, iffered fmcturcd ribs when he fell

Int

forc! •n ho; e Cadet whip. s Columbia, 34r0, aa ihe HirI bested Uie pre-fllshters. Navy jio ped Yale, 13-C; Darlmnuth, co quered Harvard, H-2; Syfacuse co ed Holy Cross, lB-0; Hrown nosed out Lafayette, 7-0; Fordham di per West VlrHlnln. 23-H; Cornell played Penn Stale lo a worelrw delidlock; Indiana b» lrd r itt , ID- 7; Vlllandva defeated ^'lorlda, 13-3, and Ocorgetown was held lo Uo by Auburn.

Ray Robiiison Will Tackle Tough Jannazzo Tonight

PHILADELPHIA. Oct. ID <Sugnr) Robln.'.on. tlie Jfarlem dan^ dy who Iia.1 cleancd up Ihe light- weight a n d welte.-wclglif boxhiK rajika In much the w n e ma tlint Joe Loula ha-i In the he *i'lgl>t division, pita hij iindefe.ated ring record agiUiut tough la y Ji nairo. In a .10-rounder tonight.

Promoter Hcrm an.Tajlor expecta a capacity crowd^f^IO.OOO to jam the arena to .*^ tch the heavily favored RoMnfim tr>' for hLi 37tti

>n aOvemlKht oil<U were lui high n.i

30 to 1 on IWbljiMn. but many think tha t the skillful Jannaizo, who holds Uie .Mar>Innd version of .the wcltem’elglit title, ha.s a good chance of upnettlng the doj*.

DONOVAN JOINK SERVICK NEW Yoatc. Oct. 19 W>-Arihur

Donovan, one of the nation’s best •knoau boxing referees and the third nian In most of Joe Louis’ ring battles, win be .iwom Inlo the mari­time Kcrvlce today. He wlU receive the railt^K of heuienanl.

HELPERKANSAS CITY,-Ocl. IP (,1>_

Ed Bengert met about the most accommodating minnow you ever heard of down In Uie lake of Uie O urks.

He balled a hook with this minnow, a fast chub, and cast wlUi h is new C5 rod. negligently Xorg«tUnff~To—hold- onto- the handle. I t sank tn <0 feet of w*ler.

U n ^ l f lS tn n m d (he spot, a<l' dressliv ft r e v rensrfcs to Uie o the r tiih, ^ n f f e r t w u stsrUed

'm tew m lsu tes lst« r (o s t t the Uttl« ffilosow struggle to the stir- tnee. atUl wearioff Chs book. He scooped I t ou t o f tfas:wftCeV and hauled in M fe«t o f Una Aod fate rod.

strearBryce' Hlnkley, Provo, suffered (

broken leg when lie wm kicked by e In Millard county.

Utah Redskins Returning to Winning Ways

DENVER. Oct. liU/lV-UlRlr.i Red- jklns are peering up Uie comebiick :riill In Uic Big Seven football con ferriice, a fte r a ntumbllng stilrt li Jefen.'ie of the title.

Tlio Utcs KulpeO victory for th first Ume In four start* when Uiey halcheled U U h SiAte 31-0 a t Lorhi Saturday. U tah was wrcaklns vpii

B for I(».-ifs lo SantJi Clnra, Afl . ind Brlglflwi Y ouns-and Utali

StAte wn.1 u i^ rtu n a te ly stnndlng'li the way.

U toir.vifcxt foe will be tlie caKey D cnvrr'P loncers, nt Salt Lnke Cliy nex>4aturdny. The Pltmeer.i squcak- rjl-^ovi-r Wyoming last, wrok, 17-H, by producing a la trm l-piiw run touchdown u minute and a half bc- lorr.U ie gainc'H end.

Coloriido. which l>cat New Mexico university 13-0 a t Boulder Saturday, will visit Colorado Slate a t Port CollliLs next Saturday while Wyo­ming tnngle.^ wlUi Colorado Mines o t Uir IK • •Ooldf

Champion With His Bride

Dcnv ind Colorado Sim lead Uk

LOOAV MARINES T U irM n i. OGDEN, U tah, Ocl. ID iuP)-Thc murines from the tnx^in training ichool Sunday racked uji un a to 7 victory over a. fasi-movinh; foollx-ill teiun from Uie lUTni’ air dei«t at Hill field. ■

w hoan. bid ra rh o lhe r coodliye a t a Net) Cochrane shnved off for Chleaso to retu

a »j*erlall»t. f in l rla».'«. In th e I '. S, navy. His bride, was the farmer Beatrice .Milano.

York C ity rall.vay 1 to acU vr duly a.i 1 New York model.

Redskins Still Seek Revenge Over Bears

By JACK CUDDY NICW YORK, O ct. 10 XU.Rl-Gcori’e Pi^c.slnn M arsh a ll, i

sym phony in iiiiliimnnl brow n. «iid an off-to-B uffiilo .shuffli in tin? «lro.'i.tiiiK’ room a n d th en iiraiK’cd up aii<l,do\vn. slapjiinj barc 'liack.s as Ricofully I'i-'* Wn.Hliington K o d sk in s had

■— -) juHt won tho N a tio n a l lca;ruc

Idaho Southern •Bengals Still Unscored Upon

Pitt^leeler Ci’idders Gain In Pro Race

Tlie Plltaburgh bteelera were def­initely eauvbllshed aa Uic aurprtv: club of th e NaUonal P iofe»lohaI Football league Monday bu t the biggest noise ot the loop conUnued to be the Chicago Bears, who lead the western division with U;e cir­cuit's beat victory record—17 stra igh t wlni and 33 victorlea In 33 gamea

Tlie PltlaburKh revival, accomp. ll.ihed by Uiree a iralght victories after earlier lo.ue.i to Uie Philadel­phia Eagles and Washington Red­skins. pu t the Sleelen Into seconS place In Uie eastern division. TJ« Steelers handed Uie Eaglca theli fifth lo%3 In bIx game.v M-0. Sunday as the G iants and Dodgers both lost to dtop Into a tie for UilnJ.

Bear* Stay I ’ndefealtd •Tlie Bears malnUlned the leaguo's

only perfect record by coming Irom behind to whip the Clanta. 20-7. for their fourth victory In o.i many circuit conte3l,n. Wa-'hlnc^pn. set- Ung th e . eastern dlvlaloh pace, trounced the Dodger?. 21-10, for their fourUi win agaln*t one defeat.

Green Bay’A dogged Packers clung lo second place In the wr.iltfm d i­vision. one game behind the Beam, by trampling Ihe Cleveland __Ram». «-2a , as Chicago’s CardlnaU "moved up Into third, ahead of the Rnnw, by blanking Uio Detroit Lions. 7-0,

The Steelers came lo life wlUi two touchdown.1 In the second half lo, defeat the Eagle.i anti stretch their win skein lo. three before 12.700 n t Philadelphia. Curt Samllg scootcino yards for Uie first .^teelcr touch­down In the Utlrd- aiiH Dick Riffle crow d the line for the olher In the foucth.

32.000 n e a r . ‘A crowd of 32,000 p.ickcd Wrlgley

field to w atch Uie Bear.i overpower tUn G iants. CUlcaRO t^orcd the first, lime It got the ball. Harry Clark re­turned the klckotf 61 yards to the OlanlA’ 30 nnd then te n m :i with G ao ' Famlgllcltr lo reach Uie eight. Famlglleltl carried It over on third lomi, After an exchange of puntn, he GlnnLs started a drive of their iwn and scored when Titffy Lee- nan.i passed to Ward Cuff on the ■iRht for a wore. Cuff converted lo live tUt GlnnLs th tl r ImI ‘polnV t»nd I Uriel lead.

Wa-shlngton Iooke<l like the be/.t In Ihe east a.% Sammy Daugh’.i Uirec ;ouchdown pn.ves ^parked the Red- >klas to victory before 2S.C35 a t Eb- :ct.'.’ Held. Brooklyn scored first. Pug Mnnders plunging over on the 'irst plav of tlip second quarter. ,ftrr Melyn Condit kicked n field

goal for Brookljii from naWKh lo.'L. ed the 1(

Power Swings toSouth in Pacific Gridiron Standings

B j BlieSELL NEWLANDSAN FR A N CISCO , Oct. 19 (/P>—Like the m an'w ho Itfokcd

n t th e g ira ffe a n d m u tte re d “ th ere lun’t no such an im al," Mr. Gu.s H. F a n ' m ay peer a t th e Coast confercncc footbaj s tandings today and exciaim t “I don 't believe It.”

Fac ts a re fa c ts a n d you canno t get around them . T he U ni­versity o f C a lifo rn ia a t Los AnRclca Bruins top th e league.

T hey a rc up th ere , n o t th rough fluke.-<. b u t a s re su lt of th e finest dispiay of bo th power and prcci.«iion foo tball th is wxiter haa 'sccn th is sca­

the la. t riiccc.wh

lulUn

ackers ti

t Green

Ni:\V YORK. Oft, 13 r

:e.-,-;, 23 Ot llinii ii of the Dig Six nil

M Wu-shlnglon of

Inclmk- LouMiiniv Tec: Ivcrslly of Uiildwin. Km llesp c)( W Intrr Pork. F.i

1 tirnncli. Wiiritiu

The Sports Round-upBy HUOH F l ’Ll-EllTGN, Jr.

NEW YORK, Oct. 10 (,T>-One 1C big (iue.iTroli.OO-be-scttlcd-1

AAU 1be how to cn field compeill

; tliLi winterrnore track and yhlch has been leilc club circles

, war. , . Tlie only r^ilutlon In lilght Is an appeal lo Uie dLitrict a.woclations to help *l1r

lip nnd to the clubs to re* o ihe lr old status of alhleUc In.',lead of being Just social

organliatlons. , . Closing of the ar- hereabouia was a serious

. Indoor track, I?ut AAU of- llclals hope to borrow Uie colleges’ outdoor tracks lo run a few Infor­mal meets.

TOnAY’S GUEST STAR H em R. H all. Fort Worth, Tex.,

Slar-Telegr»ra: “The slary be­hind Uie decUne ef football a t Iho L’nlTenlty e f Kansas appears to trace back to (he president ef (he aehooL I t teera t he U a H arrant man who wmnta (« make Kansas the Harvard o t the middle west.

—As far ii to n ttm td ’hc

SERVICE PETT.P rank Sliaughneay. Intem ation-

al league president, has two sons Ir th e ' Canadian army, one In thi United S tates na\T. two doing wai work and Utfee more who expect to en ter Uie service* soon.. , ' ’Shag," a form e/ Cona'dian nrroy major who hks been tu rned down on both side: o f th e border because of his age,

be tter m ia than any

kid of 21 and Ihey'll recognlre II jiooncr or later."

WAKNI.NO S'OTt;Sports writers and typorraphrr*

who have been troubled this year trying lo spell the name of Johnny SInykalohl. Manguetle's xU r xoph-

back, ean get ready for.ning r a t yea

Johnny's former hirli *chi>ol run- nlng-S3)sIr. Ray (llllly) Polcxyn. aki. is a standeut In the Marquette freshman backfleld.

MONDAY M.VTINKE Caicli Holmrs C .'T u rne r, whor

Richmond Miv.nnlc home KrI teams have \;on 70 out of 87 Rcinif In U \t par.t U ttsvr.oiv;. Is MronK Jor Uie T formation, but h e do have any mkunrterslandlng a lU . , “I t ’s the very same formnUon I playe<l under nt the old Fred- erick-'burg college 30 years ago." h< explains.

LAST LAUGH See. Taylor ef the Des Moinei

Register eome* up with th is one about ihe game In witleh Illinois oten»fielmed Butler U.. M-0. . . A Butler player w ii hurt artd the referee took time oat to have him rep laced .. . The lub who cam e In failed to report unUl a n official walked over to him aa a broad h in t. . . Finany the kid aald, -’I ’m getng Inlo tfie pune".. . “I know,- rrplled (lie effleUl. -b u t for whom?". . . The sub looked «TCr to Uie sidelines, *h«re h li prede­cessor was being lugged away, and repUed: *-For tb« deceased.’*

t i t lc - io r a t lo; division crown.

UK brawny, naked hof ShOACTl

r bowllnfcxilbrin Dodge 21 t

I111UI-.-1 were a true In d ica to r-g a ' WiL-.lilngtfin ft tiKhlcr hold on il ca;,trrti dhl'.lon Inid, wiUi four wli

one IbrJi, and helK liti'nrd tl

ty Chicago Brnr^ 1 playoff for Uir li-asi

"Gorgeoan George.'

Ihe Bear.1, who lire booming towai ihclr third .rlnilKlil wc.stcrii cron and i)c>«lblc Inik’ue rlmmpion.'.hi In lOtO. the nears bllghu-il Ma

mil li, the

lo third plac

I'.avoff. II ivoff hl.si ■ R<-d.'.kln!

.1 Ihc

<lroi)i>r<lme im iil

.••ian<imK.i and cnn'etjueimy liad iv tiUe lilt with George Haln.s’ Bear? IJut thU year Ihc WiishlngW n out look is different. wlUi M arshall In M.MIng he has the best tr a m In hLi 11 years witli Uie NaUoniil le.tgui

film G un. for Reara Miir'linll t-a-l-k-s o f 'th e eaitem

leam.^. but everyone know.s he'.s gui nlng for wesiem Bear m eat. We bi lleve Washliicton's "wet wnhli mnf nate- would be wllllnR ta give up h laundo’ em plrc-liicludlng oil 63 stores—If Me.urs. Daugli. Todd nnd comiwny, could lick the IliUn.s Bnjliis

December. He'd probably be gind low In the Jewels o f hl.s wife.

Corrlne GrllJlUi of Uie s ilen t ni&vles. Hence, you can ftpiireclulc h ts eUi*

Ion a t hl^ club's Imprc.islvc showing igahwil Uie KiiU3u.-.hcrs. who were nlfd UleRed^kln.s•mo.■i[ forroldable Ival for ea.stem honoM. You c.m ppreclale hU pw hlng exultation:

"Did you ever see any th ing like Baugh and Todd out U irre today? Hot as llrecmckerr.l W onderfull Wonderfull"

SUNDAY GAMES - Delrolt 31. M anhatiiin 7. . . Scranton 7. CanWus 3 Creighton H. Xavier 13 Dubuque 2J, Upper Iowa 13 Loj-ola 31. Alameda coa.M guard 8 St. Maiy's 27. San Prancl.sco 0 SU BonavenliKC 7, EVort T o u ch 6

READ'HMES-NEWS WANT ADS.

INSULATIONMATERIAL

PAL - O -

loiUll. C«rn 10%

G A M B L E S

louchdow Itedsklns Ihe lend lo keci

Isbell Paue i Cecil Isbell pa.«ed me ctori' over the Rams befori

Bay. His tosses ito ica louchdoftfi.1 except Ui the Packers made :

fir.sl down.^ lo Clcveland'.s 15, an . completed 27 out of 39 pa-s.ics for 330 yards. Tlie Rnms completed H ihelr 28 for 210 yard.*!.• A crowd of H,100 ’a t. Detroit watched Cardinal fullback Dob Mor row score the only touchdown of Uie came by raring r.lx yards nrounc emi In the final period n.i tlie Chi- cagoaiu handed Uie Lions Ihelr flfUi Io.\s In I

Sportsmen Ready For Opening of Rock Creek Hunt

Nearlv 500 souUiem IdaJio himt-s- men today began the migration Into Ihe Rock creek area of Ihe Minidoka forest for Uio first "exU-a-siiecliil'’ hun t in U lat reg lon -a hun t de­signed by the Slate game and fish department to reduce Uic herd.

Most of th e hunl(;r.< will returnIter a day oi; two wKli ihelr deer

- b u t Uiey w on't fhid the going m y iLS they did tn Uie Minidoka clal hum . Deer will be Just a.i •nerous—bu t Ihe country Ls lesX e.s-sable.IS Uie areiTs Aportwueti hea<le<l

the Rock cr^ek hunt—which ■ns Tiie.'.dav-ihe sla te game de- •tment offlclaLi were making wings for t h e annual Soldier unUiln d«er mid elk hunLi. Tliese ,wings will be completed Uxlay 1 will, probably be avallnble by

Steuber, Missouri Back, Leads in Nation’s Scoring

NEW YORK. Oct. JO (.D — Bob Steiftcr, senior halfback a t th e UnU

?rslty of MLvourl, Li the leadyig •orer today among Uie nalion'a coN. ge football players.Steuber, a fonnrr ciid. acortd

points Saturday lo boost hLs UiUil Ui 63. In five games wlUi the defend­ing Big Six conferencc champions, he has rambled lo ten louehdowna and kicked Uiree extra polnU.

He flcrampered 70, « and 35 yards for Uiree ot his touchdowns. Salur- Iny na the Tigers opened the defense if their conference Utlc wUh a « -

3 Iriumph over Kaiuas State.Second among Uie secllonal leod-

-rs Uiroughout Uie counUr Is Oene Fekele, sophomore fullback of Ohio State 's unbeaten BuckO'es, w ith 52 poinu.

A hunter will always Uike the line 3f least resistance.

Tlint'.i Grover C. Davis' opinion— ifler years of experience watclilng •ouihcrn Idaho r.porUimen goli ;cr deer, ducks, elk, phea-sunta, geese, TiounUiin goat, b ^ r . wolves, mbblts -a n d gophers.

As a result. Mr. Davis .won’t hav niucli to say to Uie people who pooh pooli the Idea U ial the Minidoka hunt Is Jiut a plain slaughter,

■Thai'* a tot o t hooey.'* tar* very efflclenl Sir. Davis. “I c«uld point out to you th a t th e .Mini­doka hunt can be i u d as («ugh as any In Uie counU7—and os proof. Ihli year we are having the Rock creek hunt Inside life Minidoka hunt—became some of Ihe places are 'loo (ough* for th e :: so-called sportsmen who wani-io really hare rough sledding when they track down a deer."II-.1 like lliLi. m e r e are deer ev-

irywhcre In the .Minidoka fore.st vhcH Uie avinunl bpi.'cial hunt, opei ;here. Of course, i t’s only nauiral ha t a hunter should get his deei

the C;Lslest way pos.slble-and that': Ily what Is done. Tlic sporl.’Jner lly shoot Uie first deer Uiat

sulLi Uiclr parUcular desire.■As » result, s a n e of Uio tougher

arca-s of the Mlnldokn forest, are nev­er touched, year.afte r year.

■Tho Rock ereek seclor, which will be ;iunU d In i h h e x ln -s p t- cial hun t opening Tuesday, li one of the more Inaccessible rc|loni and for tha t reason, (he deer flock Uiere when the firing s ta rts In U>* Minidoka hunt. The hunU ra won't follow-because ll 's^ to o tou th .’"

. Mr. Davis belfews Uiht Uie deer populaUnn In Uie Rock creek region will be Ju.'t as heavy for thU hunt n.s Uip Minidoka special liun t was reccntly-w hen U 70 out of I.4S0 hunters returned with prises.

parly froth t w eek-and 1 Uiey bi

son.That Ukcj In Uie University of

Santa Clara’s brand of ball. too. and Santa Clara IS Uie only m ajor team In or out of Uie conference which la undefeated and unUed. UCLA and Santa Clara meet In Los Angeles Saturday. ’Thai will be Ihe game pi the week.

Tower Swings Sonlh 11 look two week-ends to tu rn Uie

conference championship race u p ­side down, or nearly so. And the bal­ance of poVer swung ^ m norUi to souUi on the outcome.1 t f two games. Two of Uie first three teams arc rooted.ln Uic souUiem secUon of Uie loop. UCLA Is No. I and Soutlicm California, No. 3, In between Ls U nl- versllyof W&hlngUn, nhe^d of USC only In percentage,

Tlie UCLA Bnilns set Uie wheels In moUon. They knocked over Ore­gon State, defending champion nnd ruler of Uie Rose bowl, Lost Satur- d«}-. the SouUieni T ^Jans comp.’cfcd the conference transformaUon by toppling tho leader, Washington Stale.

Considered Upset The score was 28 to 12 nnd In the

light of what had Uunsplrcd before m ust be considered of an upjct na-

w'hlle USO was coming to life, UCLA boomed Into undisputed lead­ership wiUi a rousing 21-0 victory over Its keenest rival, the old Uni­versity of California, a t Berkeley.

■Washington moved up anoUicr liolch, wlUi an easy 35-0 win from

ronlana. Tho Huskies definitely inienders.OpposiUon eonildfrnbly more for-

Michigali andOhio State Show Sti’ength _

By C IIA R U S CUAMBEBLAIN'C m C A G b. Oct. IS (ff>-Mldwett

football .fy is—Uiose hardy souls toughened by Ihft shock o r ujMeU and purported to have a lo t of grid­iron grey m atter—went Into a spec- ^ ulaUve huddle Uidfy. ^

They predicted the game between Michigan and Ohio State (jt Colum­bus, 0-, Nov. 21, may decide Ui« Western conference UUe as welt os the mj-lhJcal nnUonal cham pion­ship.

Tlie midwest Is used to having a naUonal champion around, for MinncsoUt has taken Uiat lionor the past two years. Ohio Stato was Uio No. I team In the land la st week In the Associated Pres* ranking poll, and Uils week remains with Hllnols and Wisconsin u Uie only unbeaten outfits In the Big Ten.

Defeated only by the Ipwa Sea- hawks,/.^Ilehigan Is rapidly satntng support. I I is viewed freely a i Uio best Wolverine pack In a decade, and lh a t lakes In Coach P rlU Crls- ler's Tom KonRosilMd elevens of i m and 1010.

If Uiere Is a wiKkness, I t Is lack of relief men for Uic line.

Buckeye booster; are quick to say Uicre ore few. If any. flaws In Paul Brown's Ohio SU te machine which Is steam ed up by a senssUonal soph­omore, Gene Fekete.

Ohio s ta le nnd Michigan are. n< the type of teams lo get the qualms by lookliiB ah tnd lo see wUaV's com­ing up. I f Uiey were, Uiey'd probably fnint righ t now, for there'nre plenty of barriers to Jump before th a t po-. tenUal Nov. 31 showdown.

midable Ington Uils SaUirday. Tlie Huskiej

California Bears, nnd Ihc Dears arc plenty tough deaplle de­feats by Oregon State, SonlA Clam and^UC^A. T ie gome will be played

Southeni California brings If.,... found slrriigUi to San PrancL’ieo to meet Stanford, whlcli. salvaged r«me- Uilng out of a dLsappolntlng season by swamping,Idaho. 54 to 7.

Washington Suite and Oregon liitc meet a t PorUand.Oregon, idle la.si Saturday. I

on Idaho and should Improvi conference standing.

n ii'i ;.hotdifll<

h e a r-n n d Uia jKirt

•llio trouble canir nfter they had .sklnm'd II and cut It u i>-nnd decid­ed to have Mime frli-d bear meat.

•'U Incki'd very nice.” reports Jack •■Init Uic- txinr ww Just ;i TRIPLE oi tli5 wild side nnd It took con.ilderable IxTjiia.slnn of varlou.i kinds for the mroibcrs nf the party to be able W enjoy the sleati."

t-V Uie b-'nefit of !old-il:i tnli.’.liv,; Uu ncMon th l' 1

Poacr.Vcliil

r you;bnll Ians wlio have beei T».li\ PaUii BrMliW In

r-ar. I would like lopoli • 10« edition of Hat is one of Uie bc lleron

muv not be the best ou tfit he :o.iclifd-because I t doc.-ai'l have ■xix-rlencc or sUrngUi or weight the g reat outfit of 1330 boasted: larliiry nnd Bill Fol.som n t ends:

Bnb Hiimpion a t center: Bob Patton, Cluick liioTOas and o ilier big boyj ■ ; the linckfleld-nll of whom turned

It lo l>e college caliber players.But Uie I0 « Urom' Is iftnpll. fast— idclevrr.I t has some of Uie speediest track Id field men In Uie sUite of Idahc

—on Uie line aqd In Uie biickfleld.Tlieae boys cmi cra-ili Uie line, skirl

Uie ends—and occasionally toss In i pav. jiLsi lo spice things up.

They are strong defeniWely—on (he ground. A lack of height mskes the backfleld notorioiuly weak on knocking down enemy posses. Out lh a t Ju»l adds to (he oneertalnly of Uie.<ame and gives (he enemy a rhone^ to keep the game even^

i ^ B U Y FO R L E S S — •

S T O £ E O I LGasoline, Oils & G reases OPEN DAY & N IG H T

Kim bcrlv Roa*d. P h . 957

UNITED OILCO.

W E D E L T V E R

Potgto — Onion — GrowersW E A RE PA Y IN G T O P CASH PR IC E S

CALL U S B E FO R E SELLIN G

Wc will have p o ta to S lorago a t Hansen collar on h ighw ay and ODfon s to ra g e a t Twirl Falls.

E. S. Harper Co.’ . Phone 2203

Saturday’s Grid Stars

NEW YORK, Oct. 18 OI.PJ-Col- lege grid slara of Uie week-end:

Angelo BerUlli. Notre Dame halfback, who kicked four polnta, pftised for a touclidown and ic l up another In .a 2S-0 win over Iowa’s cadela..L e a n Gene Fcketc. Ohio Stale’s sophomore fullbac* who Mored 13 polnU In a 2S-0 win o»er Purdue,

Halfback Mickey McArdle. whose broken field running nnd two touclido»Ti sparked USC to a 2G- 12 u;Mct over Washington Stale.

Bobble Sleuber. Mls.viurl half- back who scored four times as Uie Big Six champs beal Kan-ias SUte, 40-2.

End Don Currlvan, who made Boston college's touchdown and played great defen.slve ball In a 7-0 upset of North Carolina pre- flight.

H um 'ln ' UanU MaiUT, Army's siege gun In a-34-8 triumph over Columbia.

Halfback Bllly Hlllenbrand, whcae pas-se.^'netted three touch­downs In Indiana's 19-7 conquest of Pitt.

Jack Wink, sophomore quarter­back. whcoB 101-yard run provided Wisconsin wlUj »a winning touch­down oi'er Great Lakft, 13-7,

Talsa Gridiron Star Sets up Scoring Marks '^ TULSA, Okla., Oct. 10 (-TJ—Lanky 6 lc n a Dobbs cut home nifty figures o r the nUilbUclans as the Unlver.-Jty pf TuLsa’s Golden Hurricane ccii- Inued a hlgh-scdrlnft pice th a t so

fa r ihla season totals Tulsa 213, opponenl.1 0.

■nic six-foot, ihrcc-lnch Dobbs quarterbacked Tulsa to a <0-0 vlc- wry' over Wa.\hingion uhlverslty o t at, Loub Saturday night and tu rn ­ed In g rea t performances In pa.'.slng.

10 out of 107 Against Washington, Dobbs Uirew

Uie ball 10 times, completing all .10 passes for 107 yards. Three of them ' were touchdown shots of 9, 27 and 10 yards.

H e-carried the ball four times, gaining 73 ynrds. One of his runs was for 50 yards and a touchdown.

H e punted twice for 129 yards, one 1 a Ot-yard quick kick from . 1 coal line. His second boot 05 yivrils.

e tu rned two punti for. 41

of U it his

He I yards.

Ready for Proi jDobbs, ft senior, specializes ! n «

.ihort paiaea, which he Uirows w ith k reat accuracy and speed. Coach Tom (K ltty l Gorman of W ashing­ton declared:

"Dobbs Is ready for a top Job 1th the pras rlgltf now. He can

step right from the collegc gridiron ■) a pro team a t 110.000 a year."

Dobbd. however. Is In Uie a ir force !sen’e ond probably will be called ) flcUve i,ervlcc upon his graduation ext June.

Last Second Score Keeps College’s Win Streak Intact

BALDWIN, Kan., Ocl. 10 </T>- Only one second. remained In tho :ame between Baldwin and Spring .1111 nnd H looked like Uie home team ’.s 2fl-game winning streak wns ended. Tlie score wa.s 0-0.• B u t the cen ter beat Uie timekeep­e r’s gun and flipped Uie ball In limn for completion of a 13-yard forward pn.s3 nnd victory No. 20, 0 to 0.

FARM FO R SALE!

You wouTdn’t stand in their way

None of ui would knowingly Impede any part of ihe war pregijim, but not everyone underitand* that care­ful uie of the telephone l i very Important becatiie of the volume of war call* which muft go through.

Pleaie don't make un'nece«Mry callf. don 't viili over .. Ihc telephone, and atlc the children n o t to u»e it

other than for eiientlal calli.

V pur h i l p » p 9 9 d s #fi# W a r P ro g re m

' n i KBHtMK m u TtlirUHE ( UUdHPH CO.

Page 9: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

M o n d a y ,'O c to b n -IV 1 9 4 2 :_ _ \T 1 M E S -N E W S , T W IN FALLS, IDAHO ^

S IA L IN G R A D *f t ; LOUIft 7 . KEEMLE .

o r The U nlW r rc i i W*r D e *- T b a 'U f iu a rt eetU&s i t r o c s t r

every d ji; U u t the 0 « m u u tx t s o t likely ta get beyond e u u n s n d . t ta u viB ter, e\’<a U they Uke Ute city, -wijleh Ij by no m ttm rcm S M .

P ^r the welKhl ot Uielr Basauit a n d U\e la u e t Uvty u « U t o t , t ^ l r p ro tr tH Is rcnui»ttbly alow. They gaJa » UtUo here *nd there, but ir l i no t a quc4Uon ol advancing evei u much u haU '& mile, bu t of U k- i n j «. jtrc e t or pcrliap* a Weclt o l building*.

I t the Oennana Uke fltaUnsrad now. the d ilef value of the aJtatw r- «d city to them «ould be a* an w l- vanced i tro o j point to e w er tliclr pMlUoni In the Don elbow, where they have- built an exlenilvc «yf'— or bedge-hog derensea.

fiUy Dig b I t aeenu IncreulnBly probable

tlia t the Ocrniant «'lll be able (o dig In ror the winter In the Don elbow a n d thttV they wtll bo able to hold It. w ith or wltfiout atallnsm d. T hey wUI be ondcr constant Ru.-.iiun p ru * cure, which mean* tha t Uicy will n o t be able to withdraw any conjlder- ablo pa rt ol tJictr rorcei iOT use elacwhere.

T lia t would l)c ft brcftJc for the BrltU li Jn Egypt or lor Uic United NaUot\s in Ih t wtM, sl\ouW l^^y d e ­cide to liiviule the conllntnt. I t aUo would have a bearing ou Uie HkIi I- Ing in the Caucjwua, where the O er- roans badly need relnJorccmcnta If they are to n in through along Uie windswept lower slopM or Uie moun­tains to th e . Grozny oil ricld.i or down tlie Blade sea coastal ro>Kl to - ^ a r d Bfttum. •

W inter 6Ul(ma(e«W hat a winter gtnlemate In Rus­

sia would do to UifcOerniaiw would be to enaWe tljcm to wiUidraw much o i U)Clr a ir rorce to bobter tlie de­pleted luttwaire l:i tl); w cjt or to support M arshal Er«ln Rommel In EgJ-pt.

• Rommer* poilU&n Vs none too good U- the British thould start an all- ou t a ttem pt to drive him rrom

7 IS yp t and Libya. He U Inlerlar 1 a ir strength, and Drltlsh and Amei lean lanes have been pounding his bases and supply line almaU n t will.

T here Li a su.ipleion In Infonned • allied circles tha t Rommel may be

sutlerlng Irom a serious uliorUitie or gasoline and oil and Uiot he has not been able to u.-ie pU the p lanes'he lias. The massive serin] assault on M alta m iy be tiie lUls a ttem pt to

' cover the movement of supplies •ero is Uie Mediterranean to remedy the denclency.' ^

As ror the a jr situation in the wmV. the Oennans m ay'be able to Improve the ir pwlilon this winter.

. prime MlnLiter W lwlon Churchill warned the British yesterday th a t li U patslble Germatly may mustei •tren s th and strike telling blows ai Britain.

H eller Tetnlque T he BrltW i and Amcrlcaai savi

i\iown Ihe OcTmans how ^ cfllc len t the ir 10^0 technlQUB In the batUi or Britain was In comparison wlU the present nlllrJ mtUiods, The. Ger

— 'm ans can profit by tliLi lesson' ant .perhaps work out some surprise o

A Uielr on-n.^ Germany Li sill! titrons In the air

I t l i esthnsted to have <^00 to 5,000 plane* In operaUen, a Jars# p a rt nt them In Russia. The number of serves and second line planes Li

. knott-n, German production u n t i l . .. cently was e.'.timnted a t UOO planes a week. I t Is believed to have laltn off «ll|!hlly. howei-rr. perhaps li p»rt due to the damajrlng allied raids on production centers.

T H IS CURIOUS WORLD

.W ISCONSIN15 a s i h e

O A /fO S P STATZ,NO T BBCAU5BOP THH /UNIM AL'S P«ES<ALENCE. T H E R E , BUT.

BECAUSE O F THE W AY M E N WHO WENT TH EBt.TO ' WO>?K IN EABUY TIA*£5 JURVIVEO

THB FIR JT W IN T E R IM

D U G O U T .5 .- BURIJCXVEO INTO TH E O R O U N D

UlCE

^ ^ p S N W J P E W -

COM. iM iir «u u m t . MO t a k e aVOLTRf

A S E R SeA N T ?J'-V x*x FtORCNCl J . BA w iA SK B y,

C A M E L SHAVE TONGUEi SO TOU&H

THAT THEY CAN EAT .O ic / z A s i '^

2 Officers Complete 159-Day Escape Journey From Bataan

P u s h B u t t o n ^One m'an. by merely prcwing pu.ih

buttons, stokes all Ihe coal-bum- Ing boHers Jn a «1-*lory New York hot^l. The boilers bum pulverised coal and. when n button Is.pu-shed, rxnctly the right amount ot coal to keep Uft fire a t proper hent I* au* w m itlcally relea.-^ed from the bunk- em to the fire box.

READ TI^fES-^^E\V3 WANT ADS.

ATTENTIONCash Paid

>> F o r 'W orth lcia o r Dead Cows, H orsw nnH Price of

Pclta f o r Dead Sheep ■ •

HIDES. PELTS. T A ^O W . FOR M d JUNK IlO N re .DoBcht

Call Collect Nearest Phone TWIN FALLS 3U. aOODI.VG 47

RUPEnT U

IDAHO HIDE & TALLOW CO.

D ; MUOLtN BPENCER Q EN. UACARTHUR -8 HEAD­

QUARTERS. Australia. Oct. 1# Ml —C apl. WUllam Uoyd Osborne of Loo Angeles and P in t UeuU Damon O ause of ^ n 'd e r . O t.. have a rrl' safely In Australia after a d m&Uc escape from the PhlUppli and a lM*day Journey by foot and smaU boat.

•■We arrived here not by any cj p e rt nnvlRBtlon but by tlie Rrnce c G od." declared the bronied Ostwrm

During tlielr long southward trip, w hich ended on Oct. II. tlie offlcera hid by day and traveled by night, several times escaping by a narrow Tnarffln eneonnt^rs with Japi troops and ships.

T hey survived a machine-gunning by ft Japanese plane almost w ithin s igh t or Australia and onee sailed r ig h t by two Japanese cruisers which Ignored them.

Despite the vlclssltude.-i Uiey en­dured . boUi men p u t on'wclght dur­ing th e long, hasardous trip.

I.SOO'Mlte Journey T lje rinal lap o t the voyage was

m ade In a 32-fool nntlve-bullt mo­torboat. In ' which Uie adventurers seV o u l on Auk, 15. Tlity completed th e ir liOO-mlle Journey by making It landfall w ithin 15 miles of the p o in t they had se t as Uielr goal.. T lie lr toe ended wlU) Uils entry:

' "We elosp this Ior with much re- Her nnd rrJolclnK."

O.'.bonie. on Infnntrj- ofllcer. fouRht nn Bntftftn prtilniula In the PhlUpplnes wKh a F^«p\no «n il and rrfiisrd to surrender when the Amor. Irnn force was forced to cnpltulnte Instead he elected to make n break for freedom with a Filipino officer; njul two Filipino privates:

T he four went Into the mountains, c u t bnek.to the shore snd rowed for in hours ftcrais Manila bay, .They tvnicic atrn?--' the m ounlalns'SliU o f M anila, working their wsy jouTh w n M .b y nlKht until they flnall: found rcfUKC In (he wllils near Tnnl volcano, where they separated.

N atlre Food Osborne betjan a iwo-month ex- tenc© os a fugitive living on ns- ve foodstuffti.wllcl fn jif nncl ves-

etablcs and always uektnB f. mcnns ol cschpe.

Cause, an airm an assigned ti porarlly to service w ith ground troo^xi dm iac-ih* batiW ot m ta sn ,' was en route to the front lines shortly before the capitulation,

H* unexpectedly encountered Japane.'.e armored truck bu t Jumped Into-a rUcr bed. The nex t n lsh t h e picked his ' way throuRh Jap.inr troop.i sleeplnK feet to feet on m.n scntiered nlonc the rlvrr.

lILi luck flnnll>L /nlled him. hoi ever, for a fte r .sv-lmmlni; nlo!ii; i: coast he walked ashore and w captured by the Japanese.

"I made a brenk for H and snn la I. boat, anchored off .nhbre. They spoiled i was swimming and tired allots, but mLvicd.

.Miss Again 'xhausted and i.Icpt in (hi ^ few^hourS. T hen I cu' wboal tied rtlnng side a n t King away. Tliey opened ' with inachlhc-gMM b«l

C M W i m KOODEN. Oct. 19 WV-Newip«per

tdverUilng was cited ss an tinpor- u n t p v t oi Iho v u effort durlDi the tw o ^ ay convenUon Stinday Monday, ot U^o TJtah-Idaho Newspa­per AdTerUilng Manager's bjlwcU- Hon. Special attenUoo was given u ih# trend of gcnrcmment advertising towards the newspaper medium. Sal- viige drives, w ar Dond sales, recru it

.Ing cam palgm for all branclje* of service ond Other progrun i of the national govenanenl »r# aU recog- lUtSng tb s nawtpapcr as ferUle ground Six getting IrfonnaUou fore the pubUc eye.

Hayden SUtes. ot the Idaho PalU Post-Regiit«r. pointed out the onif fact th a t even In communlUcs where many people had been drafc-n a*-ay by Uie higher wages of war Indus* t ^ elsewhere, adrertlslng kep i well apace w ith trends In a rtaa heavtls- endowed w ith war money.

Sees Belter Timet The high point of Uie conyentlon

came M ^ a y noon a t a luncheon > *^ cdcrlek p. Champ, o f L o- pictured be tu r times ahead. He

. iu>ptlmlsUc about, not only w lnnlne but al.so of a post-war build-

.. . period of good Utncs foi America.

About M m en were present a t this inchron. wljlcti wiu lirld jolnUy by le iidvrrtlslng maniigcrs and the

Osdcn AdvcrtblnK and Bales club, rluilcd in Uie group (iilendliiK were

. crol guestA not directly associated wlUj elUieror the i ro groups. Among these were C. N. Woods ot the fores-

-departm ent and members of his itf: Mark Peter«n, general m an-

- . t r or the Deseret New.i. and oUier Salt Lake and nesrby regions.

Btltea N tn td Leader On the semi-annual election Mon­

day monilng Hayden SUtcs of Uie Idaho Palls Post-neglster was made prMldent; vlce-prejldcntchosen was Cob Marlin- of U ynn. S ^ re ta rj-- *rcasurer nam ed waj Ralph Lee. Idsho Falls.

Next meeOiJg will be In April a t Idaho PftSli. It Usvtl conveniences ore avaiiuble, George Morgan, of th e O gden' Stwulard-Examlnfr, :hnlrman of the session today.

e dlstaiKi ne while I a few rifli

boat for loose a r stsrted I

House Votes to- Remove Age Ban

On Sugar LaborWASHINGTON, Ocl, IB (U.fS-'nic

house voted todny (o remove Un ban In U ie 'sugar act against cm' ploym cnt o t child labor In Uie sugn:

and sugar cane field.?, passed and sen t to the senaie i

b ill by R rp. DomenRenux, D., La. p resid ing Uiat during Uie war pay­m e n ts w llh T csp cc t lo any sugsi beet o r cane crop should not b( sub jec t to dedueUons on account o: th e employment of children.

T h e age limit Is now U years, ex- :p t w here a child Li a mctnbrr of

th e fam ily of Ute owner oT a large percen tage or Ui# crop.

COST OF U V IN O GAIN NEW YORK. Oct. 19 <>>-The n a ­

tional Industrial conference board repo rted today Ih# cost of living In Uie U nited SUtes In September av- eraged one-half of one per cent h ig h e r th a n In August.

mlwed nited 40 mnchlne-Kur

bullets In liLi boat when ho renchrc Correclclor Island,

ttTicn tlic surrender of Corrri;!- dor appeared Imminent, G aare took a naUve boat and hcnili^l for tli< lAUon m ainland by niKlit. A storm \ijs6et Uie boat, bu t he hurK on Mnill daylight and Uien swam n-'Oiorp,

LAter h*Jcnrnrd from nixtlves Hi another American wm .-irtklne e cape and throiiBh them arranced meeting. I t was montlvi. howevi before he and Osborne finally csr togeUier. •

M -I)»y TripTJiey bcRan planning Ih t lr lllKht

from.Luzon and ultim ately secured a motorboat w ith a c ranky Diesel engine from th e Plllplnos. T hey rig­ged a sail for a d d « power In casi of emergency.

o n Aug. IS with (he Americnr flag flying boldly from th e msst- hesd. they eet salt on a vojage which waa to la s t 6R hour*.

They lived on fish and rice, some of which Uiey obUlneri from na- Uves. bu l Iiwk a desperate chanc« enrli time they w ent ashore becausf Jnpnnese pMrolr. were ocUve.

Tliry had nn Atlas m ap on a Isrgf scale and a composA-Uielr only nav< IqnllhB etjulpmrnt.

Craic:,Wood, Babe Ruth Lead in Golf Tournament

NEW YORK. Ocl. ID (U.R)—Craig Wood, nauonal r>i>en golf champion, and Babe RuUi. home run king, turned In a combined 3fl-hoIe score if 338 to tie with S g t Vic O hcnl orwer POA llU cholder.-and Mat! Huort, MetrPiwUtnn champion, li .n ormy emergency relief exhibition

match yesterday.Wood topped m e field w ith a ndcr-par M whUe Ruth carded 70

O henI registered G9 and S tu a rt S7,

IN IN V E S IS H IS C

FORT WORTH. TtX. URauch, a sheet melal worker li airplane facU>r>-. not only b planes, bu t he p#y» for ’em as —not a t (he 10 per cent raK , b u t by tlie 100 pN; cent route.

He puls every rent- ot his pay ;heck Into war bonds.

After Peari Harbor. Rauch, a d ls- r lc t m&naStr tor a gum vending machine firm, started buying w ar bonds, bu l th a t wasn’t enough. He rin t'hed nn nlrcralt trainlrtg eourso

work 1)bomber fee In off houi

Tlic <i

•, lending h li n chlni

very

wasn't maklnc quile enongh to oui n SiO bond Xo I had lo

wnlt umil I got a rnL-.e.” he ijifd.Now he mnkes ennugh, so everj’

s eek hl. enUrc pay check Is used fi luy bmiiU throuBli the company's

payroll nllotmcnt s.-iving plan.•'Since I begun working a t Un

p lan t I huv tn l i i ' t i a nickel of my •salary for living niw i.'cs." he said, ^ • e can get aljinc on w hat Uie machines bring In,"

Married J3 yean, Raucli prcvlous- y had t.iken up kitting as a hobby ind knitted 13 .-iweslers for the Red

Cro.w before going to work in the r plant, .

Eight of Lont tain work of i

;urles.

Markets at i Glancn«V -

S»miI :

Iflnr u Im. S« hl*h«ri

- KEW YORK. Oct. J9 W >-Stocks tiovccl halUngly In a narrow nnd sntYtn rnnge today as uad lng ac.

Uvity slowed down sppreclably from :it levels.le market's sluggishness was a l ­lied In pa rt 'to greater cayiion he p a rt ot bidders, who w ert In­

fluenced by reports of naal gains a t Slallngrnd and Uie navy's exiwcta- iton of a fuU scale Japanese attack >n Qmidnlcnnal.. \

Acting a trifle better Umn Uie :ener»I ru ii In Uie final hour were

jUlltles, nlrcrafu. ralLi and sn a.i- sOrtment of Industrial specialties. Trnmifcrs amounted' to 150,000 shares,

Du Pont moved up more Uian a point and fractional progress was made by Air lUducUon. Olenn M ar-

Sperry. American Can, Owens- ... . ols. Sears Roebuck,. Anierlc,m Telephone. Wef.t^m Union and Pub- "c e^n'lcc of N. J.

CJc, m ost acUie the rallx. reg­istered a new top for Uie year. Aljo

iprmcd were Santa r e , Bouthen! Railway and Che.upcak« ^ Ohio. Eastman Kodali dropped more than

point In the .early proceedings.

Stock AvcraKes• Ai(»cUM i'tM

tnJuiU JI IU

Minin" Stocks

< C«n, --------------------J

«I«Uli ............ .>S

M A R I K - E T S ^ r ^ ^ N T T T ^S I O C l is iV E I N

GESNew York Stocks

NEW TfORK. Oct. 19 tU JJ-T ha m arket clucd Irtegulu.Alaska J u n e s u ____________ lUAUied S to re s_______________ 6MUa C ha lm ers____________ 3fl4Aroerlca(i C s n ..........-American Lxoinoute A m erican Metals .....

. « •- B

........................ - ...... _ IB^i.American Rsd, t i Sid, SaiL ^ SHAmerican RcUtag iiUls ____ l lAmerican Smelt.'& Itcfhilnc .... 39 !•American TeL & Tcl________ 133American ’Tobacco D ________43SAnaconda Copper .............38KAUantlc Refiiiljig......... ............. 18?;flaldwhi Locomoilve_______ :3 '»DalUniore A: Ohio ....... ...... 35iBene AvlsUon .

.. 304Durrouglis ......CaUfornla PsclfloCanadian P ac ific ............. ....... 6SJ . I. Cwe Co.................— J lo salesCerro de Pssco Corp. ----------- 334Chc.Mi)cakc k O lilo_________3«4Cho'sler Corp. — ....... ............63 SC cca Cola' ......... ........ .«>_...No salesColorado P. a I ..........Commercial flolvents Cotkvilidated CopixrCon^olldiited EdUon ..........Con.-'oUdstcd Oil ..............ConUnenUil C an ....... ........Continental O il...-..............C om P ro d u c u ----------- -—Curtlvi W rls h t_________Du Ponl ........................ ..Ftrcslono Tire U RubberFreeport Siili»liur .............0« n fr» l E lec tric_______

•m l' }?ood«--------------

....No.mles ....... 15'

O eneral Motors G illette Safety Raior Goodrich -----------34X3c*ilybar T lit A; R ubber___ 21'G reyhound cp, ____________ 1J')»H ouston O i l -------------------No salesHowe S o u n d -------- ............ 33’iInsp, Copper _______ ____ __ l lHInlem aU onsl Ifarvester ■ ■ 814 Intcm aU onal N ickel....___39S

K ennecott Copper .

• r S a r d ________

Mantgwnery Ward Nash K eM nator.National Biscuit .NaUonil Cash R egU w ,,,,.......NaUonal Dairy ProducU .NaUonaJ WsUJlers _________New York C e n tra l__________NorUi A m erican____________HorOi American A vUUon___NorVhtni PatllW __________Ohio OU ......... ...........................Packard M oto rs...................Paramounl-Pub. _ ________J . c , Penney Ca _ ________Pennsyhanla R. R , _________PeoplesOas________________Phelp# Dodge______________PIUUIP9 Petroleum ..Public Servlet of N , j . ______Pullman ..Pure Oil .Radio Corp. of America _Rodio Keith O rpheum __nepubllo steel .............Reynoldi Tobacco B ____Sen n Roebuck....................Shell Pnlon O U ________aim m w u Co___ ____ ■ ..Socony V acuum................SouUiem Pftc - lOSSouUiem Railway_______ ____ . .Bperry CorporaUon ................. 3«’Stonflard Brands . ____3'Standard Oil of California __ <3'Standard Oil e t.Ind lan* ...... .. 23SStandard OU of New Jertey 43atudebaker ................................. B'Sunshine Mines ____________ 3Swift <t Co...................................21'Texas Corporation ......... ........... 38'T imken Roller D e a rtn g ---------40'Transamerica ..............................5Union Carbide ______________ 73'

United States Rubber .United States S te e l.......W arner B ro th e rs ____

N, y , c iriiB s T o c fc s iB unker nm -SulUvan ......v.NosaJeClUes'Service ..... .................- 3 ‘Electric Bond A S h a r e ______

Livestock MarketsIE.VVIR lIVMrnCK

Time Tablei^

. F I L E R

PUBLIC AUCTJON SALETo bo htW a t U J. T ta tU o tk ra r m Located 1 n » « W est OD SenUi Park R o a^ - 4

THURSDAY, Oct 22SU rtltiB n t 1 P . M.

'T H E REGISTERED H O L S T E IN H ER D CONSISTING O F : .

2 4 — C O ^ S I N M I L K — 24— 4 S pringers, 2 Y ear Olds — 4 B red YcarlltiRs----- -

Several Bull Calves Rccorda a t T im e o f Sole

Also th e H erd S ire - .COLONY VALE KORNDYKE S IR H E IL p 803003,

an O utstKndlng 3-Ycar*0H, C la ssified “ V ery Good”

H ER D BANGS and T F A C C R ED ITED

Col. E . 0 . W aller,, • AucUoneer

. L . J . Tenckinek R F D 1, T^^'in F alls, Idaho

■ftry Margrave. LoLi Walkei Johnson, Betty A rthen, Pa

Irlcla Deem and Clarence Showers all students a t Uie southern branch. Pocatello, are apendlnc the harve.it vacation w ith relative.'. .

Junior Munyati, for the f trs t lime In |5 months, U vlsltins h is par­ents, Mr, and Mr.'i. V. H. Munyon, Junior Is a flagm an on a flaR.Uilp and B'as a t Pearl Harbor Dec. 7. Hi has several medals of decoration nnc durlnff the past 14 months h as trav­eled 00,000 miles.,

Mm. L. .H. Drown ho.< reiunied from S a lt lA ks City wliere she spent taro weeks.

Oovernom of sta tes »h ich have no t complied with Uie Prc.sldcnfs request lo llx 4C>-mllc.pcr-hour i p e t i lim its on the hlch'tniyg io save tires ha re been ureed bj- Ortloo of Defense T ransporU tlon D lrectar Ea.iiman to se ik necttssary testsU ' •‘3n or iMue executive o rde 's u

ilckly as possible-.

OUders In son^e Instances hsve wartO 406 miles and reached i l t l . tudes of 3 3 ^ feet.

HIGHEST CASH PRICESpaid for dead, old or disabled bones, m ulei u id co*a, Pot lmiB«dlaU p lc ftp call 0386J3-7T. aiABY y iu c e T B O trr f a k u

fVhHul,- nr MuMirrr ir.Ina ind moMr 'liu.m TaU..'

iiKvv,

I.ONI)ON tlAB SII.VUU IXINDON, Orl. 19 lUl'l-aiwl and fu;

S' WMlb«B8< , Mnra an ounfi T)i. *JUnV n« Knt- land, milnuln..! lu lold buflni al ]«l ahllllnc. c<t fin. ounca.

EailbtandNo. ( ll'lta .M ............. MS p. m.

‘ Bim8^i*osr7coNHtcTioNa Denver Beans Kh»toni ____ l-.W p. m.'

(Dili/ rte«pt Sandaj)

DENVCn. Oct~U lUPt—rinloa K.40I Gr.al North.rn IODSq II »■

)>«BIIibaDa<So. »S» taana ...................... *:«» p. » .

... Really New

lOilO p. m. I t t 'n VI. lluM and lli

rwiN rAi.L»-fiUK VALur

Twi,v'I'ALUH-nurEin'T* Dadtr. ate,

1 ----------- ------------ _IOlCI ». M.

ti*T'*lo «fur. •ora«f OB H>« tu.ltTi nnrtli nn . iMt* Btnk iiid Trtwl ri.r «l II Blaulta to hnr.

CLOfllKl Tr»l« K>

P.8KaW “ *

Metals

f«lr)» ai-U.r, n,..llrB. od «n<l Diolr. ItS',f"

Caltiai IT.OuOi <aIraa l.loe:r I afcctit 11

118; 5 Pat|(«i » “maXd't’-

'‘‘m!!;-!.: t.OOO: I aarir M-l

OCDES UVaSTOCK f:N. Ocl II U>-|tJ.SUAI-lloca

S09, tiAkl i*U-. ateo'. » r lr to IS< hIxhOI lop 114.31 on t>n< l>9

lb. .w.UhUI llihUf and h.*rl.t

u ith l jr p ra r .lu l Is IhU roat eoabtoaU en « ( (or tumberiaetaoA m a teb tar. d e t a e h a b i * w rap, a roond skirt. Ther ar« of whlia la a b 'sk ln . lined v lth r t l cnftltea f ln jb a m .

i-luM* iiaailr: toni is (hcl« l VS» to t m tr<r m .» ; fMdan I '.SOi (ood *I>T< hill] ibota It.

S*N francThco l iv e s to c k BOU'm fiAN rn*KCI8CO,^Oc l9

lOUd llt.tO la (111 lOI ib. Ortfon ir«n Sll.tD: irua lol to ■.««« Ib. ■

ShMTi Salakli 4lu guud S

:UK Xuk<t N««>)-Catllai fitUbU 1,000 Iradr lo

. Ihi. 114] Bitdlu® u> food c

NSSS C irr LIVESTOCK H cm-. Uo.. Ocu 1» t u n - 11 matUx lOe u> t u hi' '

:9.I0S,- eilrca 4.109! t>a«f aUm

WOOLHUSTON. OrL II t»7-{UB0A|-T1i.

wool markri oaa <ialK lodar. Salm w«( miSa ot inaU qiunlltlaa at anehania prl(«.. Sr«rt4 S blMchad wool » a i k.1

D i s t a n t P o r t

more than 3,000 miles from thi A tlonQ coctsn, and less th a n 001 mtlrs from the Pacific.

flS S E S R E P O lD GRAIN PRICES

GiSCAOO. O c t » UPHLcMtS racglnc from fracUooa to about a . cent, a buih il w tra post«d la tba araln and Kyb«an< funtrM trad t '• a t limes' today b u t ' U ii market slioaed enough recoverr power to check the decUns and p e r ^ t tmaU rallies frequentlr.

Hedsl&a sales accounted for (oma ol the ntfctoeaa. pan iculatly ia com. which was affeetod by ex'* PVidlns ha rvest. operations. Boj- bcans reflected lack of alerator or ‘ merchandUer b u ;ln s interest la view of the (overnm ent price r tw - antee snd the cm barro on ahip* ments to this m a rk e t..

Wheat cloned unch'anfed to U \oitei compared «lU i Saturday. Ore. t l ,£ ]^ .H , Majr |1JS K *H :

H-H lover. Dee. 80, Mar . osu U -S down: ry# W-H

lower; loybcans U » l^ lower.

TABLI

l i i ^ U « Oaa*

JBAIN

iiiHsS SI SsQ

lluH iii l i

CAHIJ CRAM CIllCACO, lltt. ]* (4>-Ko e*ib wkaal .................... - .lie - I f ..................

>« b>riu«i h

MaJU

1 la> « « ,a !^ a ,» npfa rral* ralla* Tic 1* 4tHa (o 41 11 No- ■ 4 iU U 4:H«iUBsU

Ka t» II.04N1 (aa4 SI*

•Bd aUBdard nlM llsn ISI.tO la <».

POTATOES

tOAUO r _____ ..■lrt iMulrr modfrai«..ilnnaad «oo4. mar*' il .llthilr itninMr ai Isdleabnl b» ilUbf

r,loe.||i. Mcka. Sl.»( to K4T.

l^ U ti Mhtt »alaa,lntluils|.(aab \x*e\tUS. I

_________ ______U 100.1b. a«k>. IS car

In ll-lb. U. B..NO. t . a!ta A, MrI tar » .l t ) 13. S .’)4». 1 and IStln

uUIJlr iratfr, < can IIJS . J eara II.SI1 IrfaSo •landard erada. I can IU9,

Ca.S In frawfri. bulk i»»f'nrti Ru< atU U, S. No. I, CBoaUr I IU jo II S>. an i>rrui«n>l lol |o«rtr. ■ Uw b«al bltlwr.

CIIICACO, Ocl. IR lUD-Arrl»aU III. > trick 4<l, toui •hipmrnia M7. Idaho, rlral. 17, >)ili>mmta l»i. Iilabo Koaaal irl.anli*, waih-l, ItTS to IMIO; lUndard aSa, «a>h*S. lU e i uthlly rrada. wuhad. .U. C<jlucado lUd UcL'Iutn. vubad. .10; ui.«ajhad IMS. Soacb DakMa Cab- m . an>a>)i»d, II.ID. Mlnsaaola ta i

I»koU IM rl'ar vailrr McUati............. —.d priM*. B.tm ila i Injury. UlWa 1

o ItJI ,- «IUi tpourd

Potato and Oiuon Futures

i!ii I" £S:_IU » lUS |l,«

CUICAGO ONIONB niiCAGo. o<L 17 <ui*i—sg-1>llnna>«urtll«ara 11

.M i-" .? ;.,

Tlie first account of u sa g e ' of leavy guns In aerial combat .was n to il wUcti Captain Guyricmcr employed a 37 mm. gun, TliLi gun, velghlng 100 pounds, was m ounted It the* base of the Shelne w ith lU •arreHthroujh the sh a ft: I t.h ad

effective ran{« of SCO yards.

TwinpfUs MarketsL iT ttroca

rholo. |l^hlbuUh»f.,^JI to Jl bulrhln! n» la iC

tlnilarwfltbt bulehfti_____i-acklnc K.W.. h»a .j---------

tllr prtPaa quotad.

(Ona daalir“ iSJtSfl

ir«a( Korthrma Na. 1 _ (Two d*al<n quoladl

(*rral N^nhrrna No. 1 _Crrai Norlh.mi No. J ___

" lur dMkn auotaij)

(Ona daaW eaoiad)

(On. d«lrr qootad "off Oia m aikaf)

Laahmi baat. a n r Sti lb. >,«(lwrn btna. osdar SH It

a rts . IM P

S& 'e.i‘

Butter and Eggsa*v riiASxisco pboduc*

SAN rltAKClSCO. Oct. I t (UPl-Dal-

fUta Jliie. trl»ku £(iai U m Mini ISc, aadl«a 4]Sc<

LOS AKotLsa raoDUCK LOB ANCELCS, 0<t. If («>)-(U«pA)-

Daiuti 4«,<0« Ita.i (IwaM t.ISt W l c m

IIH«. Ritdlui

Cblo■ M Quoiad br tha

Craamary II aeora. „ . . . . . . -------- iSf^a. II a«ra 4»t,

. tcort 4<Vc. II atcra 44«, (9 acora 4t^ej ) accn cat<trallanl catlola 4S«.KccM *1'* ' > neailaaJlr tlna | fraak imd-

adatu a d n u . local 4IM«. can «U I flnti. '-aal lt«,1hi)i » |U | (nrraBl tw«U>tt Sma.

Ittlaa llti<, ( M u SlUc.rpvItjT, ll<f, 14 mekai ( in a t l Kna

•lown, rolarWl, Sk. Vatb IK" llocka 111 I tprlvn, 4 Ita. ap. aelorad.

’IrmouUi ItMka tSM«. WWla Back*-

'blia t«(i ttaaU «q1ot«4 Ita. «UU . xnaa IM; ttiikaT*. tsaaa. aU.

m a # Itgibani, aid. »««. ywaa

Horse LoreryA story m U ut S tD f C

lay dyln» u tb# x w H » o t O - -

b t -ftaUooed t . -----------ooodwood aad. Trtadaor t ^ o f t

Gold ti mlaad th reush <iuarter of a nille from _ Norton sound, 'near K ona,

i m T S J S , '

Page 10: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

-■p<JiTen TIMES-NEWS; TWIN FALtS.- TD.AHO -------- ------ .MnnjTnr, OcfoEer 19..H4a

OUT OUR WAY By i R. WDLUAMS OUR BOARDING HOUSE. . w ith . . MAJOR HOOPLE

PtAY-BY-PLA^b y PAUL DAVID PRESTONTHE BTOBY! Wythe Miller. J9,

U Itf • pndleuncDl. .Shc'i in lore wltli Dmuie *Ur ba^it otthe UBWln Field e«lel pilot toc^^ btUI t<*in. which her d u l coBChri. Bot D iuse doesn't know II. Nel< ther docs Nuicjr lU lr. tix n c j It. » yoonr widow of > loldlrr who b a t been jlre n work »nd a placc to lire Bl the IltU a flr r Mie and- her ten were rtKued by Duane

- from afl aolo wrrrk. And now the rnttetul. adorlnr Nancy wanU niytlie to help her ''make Duane •ee.Rir, and lore me In return!"

FIGUTISC; STOCK CHAPTTll V

For'Uiree days iifier Ihclr frlKlil- enliiit eonver*ftUnn, Ulyilie didn 't ere Nancy JUlr. In fnct ihe <lfltbcrnlr!y •voided Nanry, nfrnirt pt u tin t .ilte hfrself tnlchl sny or do.

“You lool: like a iitrliiK of Bly honry," Pop Mlllrr told h r r ihiil Ihlrd d»y. "Vou dnn't ent, you don't Uu;Ji and tnlk. and tiu<l n tc lil a t 2 I Jicord you rryltu'."

TJial ftarUfd lily, Slie Im.krd wldf-fyed fit h fr fnllicr.

"Anil hanlil" i.nld tic wl'.cly. "Will jrou Itli mf or won't you? - If Jt ls ft worry, nuchln’l I in ktirm’7’

Good oW Pop. “Of coiin.c tirouKlil (o know, niy plarcd off nt iinitilni!., j-eamlnj to irll lilm nn ^ll^ lind told

I him prncllfally rveoUilnK el-c n to r IB yrara. Bui tlib time—

I "Dan'l be rtllyl" Stie forced •mil?/ “IVp.Ju.'t bfcn biLiy,"

"It U a love Biffllr." lie ndjudsed. ‘I u n t It swcethcnri?"

Bly noddrd.•1 could Ro lell lilin .....................

h t Is If lie doe.in'tJovr you. I could make lilm nit up artd—"

"Pop Mllltr, don't you dare Blythe * m luddcnly nlnrmerl. Hr Jusl mldia try lo rccklru n thlnRl Tlien »tie -«ftw tie wr.1 RrlnnluK. trj'Inif to cft.'c Uic licart pnlli. Next morornl .iJjp .'obblnj: n«nln ;' his shoulder and henrlnR tilm mut mur la her m If «lie were n tiny UttlB girl.

E\’cn 40. there wn.i noUiliiK she could tfll him. NolhlnR th a t she would. T hti new ihlnif U iat con­fronted her nn tuhill con.-.ldrrn- tlon, not a wlilmay for Inp-i nnd pcl- linK and tears.

. Stie tried to Intcre.sl herself In the •fternoon football prnctlcr.

Duane HoRan lilnixrlf ntood back on Uie 20-yard line nnd booted boll over the tll.iianl Konl. Pop'.s teams were fnmoiis for punlinc- fn itcrimmnse then Dutine b lu te d tiolrn Iti the heaviest lines the coach could

, devise «Bnln.it htm,■ "Dj'namlle Hosnn!" some nrimlr- Inir cadet yelleil. after ® 12-ynrd pu.Oi.

'S tie saw him drns one tAcktrr over the practice Koal before a knee touched uround. She fn«- hU face beiunlntr after each piny. Dunne

. loved football N-cond only to flying. O r tO' ranctilnR.

But Blythe; couldn't iKnlch him ' any longer, be^m e out ot the field

house yonder’ she tnw Nnncy Hnle comlnj. Blythe had kepi her blciclc near ot hand. She pretended no t to *ec Nancy, but s'svefl a rrleiidlj' hello*and-Koodljy at Uie cndet.i near her ond pedaled avay.

t~ - At dinner >he forced tienclf to ent, Pop nodded, approringly.

"But It xUll hn 't all righ t, eh. aweetheart?" he f.nld to her.

“No." Bly BKreed. Mother Miller wn.n not Uien In Uie room.

• •'OoJr'out tonW it? Dn;ice Jfj Oic ' V . B. O. hall."

■'Normnn a-^ked me. Normnn Dana."

•'Mmmm . . . But It Isn't him . It U7"

"No. Pop,""Mmm." Pop ttfn l nn e.Mlnc,

avoiding her tye.i,"Pop?" She spoke aller

minute,■ "Hmm?''

"If you — loved lomtbody — look,Pop. ^Tlend^Jllp U nwfullv Im­portant Lint 117 . . . I mean. It Lil"

_ "Mmm.""Pop. tun I so terrlbly-looklnu?

U;jly7"

Pop stopped chew ln: b rrjd In hand. He Ragnl a t h r r nnd frOKned. "You arc Die ««f>nd preilJest vlrJ God ever created," he swore, "and I Kill personnJIy choke tJie denle.'i It I £xcept for your Mom, you—”

"Ym , but—bu l^ o m . I Jleslrable Oh. Pop. you know wtjat I mean!'

I t ' wa.sn’t funny and It wn.in'i. meant to be. Pop MlUcr wiped his iHouih, hi.' Jinnrt.i. But ns h r lectur­ed Illi'Uie he gestured with h b bread.

"Honey. tJierc'« w m cthlnc you viint, nnd you don 't watii to tcl! mp. 1 don’t blame youi” I'd rather you wouldn't imleas you wbh. But I cnn cay tlil.i-U ic Mlllrr.i coine from flRhilnc Rtockl Do yoi; under­stand me?" lie almost ro.-ired that, nnd Mie did not answer.

"So did the McLendon.i. your mammn'n bloodi” he w ent nn, kcowI- Inir, challrnghiic- " If we want thliiK we net 111 W hnt do yo ti; tefteh tlie laiLi of nn nflernonn? To Alt back and wolt for the l>all or the runner? W jial'ilo HoKan nnd Diinn do7 They tear ahead! T iny KOI Tliey drivel Tliey drive fnlr, bu t Uiey tackle or they carry, und every coiich In Uie country would Rive hl3 Mill Ki linve. my two men I Tliey're KOKi-lter». hoiipyl" His tone dropivd, thpn Imck to tenderne.is, "Aw. honi-y KUl, If you—you—"

Bly WHS flnUhed eating. Khe got up. nim|>r<t liLi hn tr frlnne by way of thaiii: you. and went off tn ' room. Klic ijiiiited to be nlone

Kor five minutes she sinred nt noihlnc. tlilnklriK- Tlicn sllr turned to the mirror nn the c la e l door. Tile Blythe Mlllrr fAclnB her there WM—a-s Pop had nwured her — fjulte a-s pretty n.s n Rlrl need be. Ulythr flKoiveif Iierse/f on fniie be*

lll tlf in e n t of tha t Inct.She IhouRlit then of Nniiry Hnle,

Mrj. Wesley Hale, the cliar-r-i M'ldowl No. she couldn't even h ^larca^tJcftlly, Nnncy rrully ehnrmlnK. Nnncy hud no money but .Oie had Hint finer somctlihiK of nrl.itocrncy or "cliu.s." Some [leople ]\M !,ccm rdcfowecf wiJh l£; ofher* never hnvr II nt nil. Blythe re­flected. Do I have 117 . . . She tu rn- etl rU ht and left, rro r and front , . . W hat’.s more. Nnncy Is urt*elll.ili nnd kind, andliiLi berii throush so much ml.'eryl

Blylhc puNlied Ihat lhouKht tulde Instantly, I t would never dot FlRht ror ynttr rIniitK. Poit Im j m UI. Fleitl for whnt you wnnt. She. blythe ,'

had done Uie deccnt Uilng toward the nttractlve widow whom chance had thrown *o d ram alle*]]/ oiiio i Lincoln Pteid football team. B hod helped r e ^ u e ^ a n c y nnd baby Scooter.

BJie had given N^ncy cloUif She had Riven—yes. even frlentl- .shlp. when Nancy needed th a t- n lu dpci»cr. lu b tler forma. But i

.In Uie name of ttia i frlendUiip, Nancy had asked Blythe for hflp In V, inning a m nn th a t niyUic her- r.elf loved 1 True, Nancy didn’t know about niylhp'a feellnRs. And yet—

" It .wouldn't m ailer!" liljilhr »hU|)cred, to her.%elf, " I know wouldn't for ahe—ahr-a a flglrter too! If she wanLa som eth ing-a: ' anyway, she'i n woman . . . Ji

Tliat. DlyUie rcd-’-onet^ 'w us. Um jm of it all,Nancy Is a woman. 8(

Since time began women have gone after the Uilngs they wiinted—tlielr men—acrnpplnK If need b«. tooth npd toenalll Frlendshliw? Pnlr piny? Elhlcjj? ,Flne concepts fo r .Uie uchool mottoes, but In rcnl life- 1

BlyUie felt f.omeUiln{t elementnl stirring wlUiln her.

Her dainty chin w ent up, nnd through clenched teeth ahe whb- pered. " I’ll give Nnncy Hnle tlie darndest flRht she ever henrd o fl', (To Be Continued)

7hEPE 'SSO U R S1ST E R Y nO -O »0L V JIST T V W \ AND THE CHIIX^JEKI I’M COOMA PROVETDa n d I tcKyT w A srr h e r t h a t h e r w d s■ 'lOU STARTING AWV- \ TAKE AFTER, H E R /

T H lw e .' YOU'VE GOT \ 5 H E SEZ THEV SOMETHIWO UP VCUR / LEARKJ ALL TH’ V £ L E £ V £ RJGHT ROW Cy S ^ U p P i. .S

NOW.' / O FFA M E.'W A rT ... ¥ MDU WATCH IF THEV \

7 ;7=ri c o p y BEHAVIKj;OFFA 9 1 m e .' W O-BECAU5E /

/■- V ITAIKJT BORKJ IM 'E M .' .

VOU R E ^ E ^ B E R E 6 A 0 ,M l0 eE 1 .' 6 L ^ o J A FUMBLe I

WHV MOTHsRS GET ORAV

THE GUMPS

on. awBOllVE CKTT ACCEPTAHtES PROM HEARLV ALL T U e SOCIALITES

THAT I xyVJiTBOJi!

By GIJS EDSON

GASOLINE ALLEY"Dean, I'd like you lo m eet Pro-

fe.vvir Cram—A. D. }tnrvar<i. Si. A. Yale, 1-A D ra ft Monrd 27,'

By KING

SIDE GLANCr«5 liy G albrallh

long

SCORCHY By PRANK ROBBING •

I've been snvmu up tor n coM like ih»t for year.i ftiul now I've cot Ju.'t enoURh lo buy I t- Uut with Uie war nnd everything I wonder If il neighbors would Uilk." \

© y A a £ \ '= c T O C S ’, ^ c o r c w y . HAS *UCC£=P'C> IM DlVEljVlNC T \\’0 0 ? TH E JA P rC U r< 9 , BOUND FCR T H s'jA ? AIR ^ 9 £ , T 0 THE HIPDBN f!ELO IVW£C£ t h e e - /7 IS WAITING FO C A C T IO N ...

r DC.MT WOCPy A B O O r >OUC 1 PAL5> A1I$5IN(;.TWI6 S T L 'r r ,'

D sL lveC iT,'.. PECJSONALi T^£N THEV W O N T AM55 /I

WASH TUBBS By ROY CRANE

ALLEY OOP

RED RYDER By FRED HARMAN-

Q?W£i>J,fC'L»45, OOP'S STRATEGYVOHRED-------- 'WOW LET,CVEBTH'^____BEFOElEtEWYS

n -H>tjKr ihj patHoTOBg*By V. T. HAMLIN BOOTS AND HI!R BUDDIES

DIXIE DUGANw e e T*«ii<e8P^>v*;»iwT/

By EDGAR MARTIN

THIMBLE. THEATERCOMEDHEPETDBS

k v n B H H N x i e s ml4|iW AHUH6E '—

' " ■ n r ’

5'

STARRING POPEVEAHOV.MtUtZEZf

J '

VI? > (1 ,

Page 11: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

MooiUy. October 10, 1042

It i m e s - n b w s . t w i n k a l l s . j d a h o

— i r ----------- -■—Page I

PHONE38 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RESULTS

' at ' LOW COST I

WANT AD RATESB ued on Cat-per.wonl

I --------------i-to va »e«ii d v » .tc pe/ »ort per dW9 d v r ------- se per « r r t per d*jr

tatnlmua ol 10 w r t j 1*rtqulTMl U) t n ; oni cltuU led »d

Terms — Cut>IN TWIN FALLS Phone 88 or 89

IN JEROME CONTACTj m s . OEOftOIA CiUTBOW*. O l B u t etr Plion*

DSADLmia wetk Cw*. IV V m.

' S usdw . t p. D. S«Uirdft7

TbU P«Ptf uibtcrl&e* to code of cUilM of Ui« AMOditiOiOl NeW»pftI« OlM4\UW M \tS ’Lblns M taag tri iind rcMn'cs me r l jh t w #dlt or rt^ecl ta y cJ«- (iried Bdv«ni3ln<. ‘Dllna Adi* earrytflg ■ Tlmei.N**'* bui nuoi- b«r a r( iirleUy :on>l<lenU&l w;id no mfonnaUon can b« s irea m rtf a rd to -th* adrertUer.

Error* ihould b# reported Im* mcdlaiclr No allowance will be n iide lor m on Uian obb Incor* reet Iniertlon.

SPECIAL NOTICESPAPER hanger, painter. Work guor-

•n teed . free eaUmaUa. T. Towe, K lmberlr. Phone 109»J.

G IF T S bought hrre vlll be wrapped «fld malted U> irn'lce men poat* pald/MaU ovcrarM before Novem­ber ,1st. a to rt SUoji.

CHIROPRACTORS

TRAVEL & RESORTSLADY wonta ride to or near Mnrj-»-

vlUe. C»UI. Stiare npensee. Phone IM. Kimberly,

2UD1S ■wfcntert to Lm Anseles. Sherc expeaiej. Ptione Mr*. P. II. More­land, Ooodlnf.

BEAUTY SHOPSPERMANE.STS, *2.00. Mr*. Deamer.

, Plione 17«T-over lndei>endeDt Moat MnrlceL

EXTRA apeclal prices on all permo* nenta. Deouty Arta Academi'-Ar- tUUo Beauty Saldn.

PtIU fA NEN TS. »r.50. » 0 Jt»er»on atreet. Phone 1635-J. Uajme K ltu McCbM.

BPM IAL-M O O oU-. penaaaent, <3.00; oil permanent t3.£9.

^ IdAho Barber u d Jeau ty SIsop. PbOBO 431

LOST AND FOUNDBLACK leiithrr bUlfoId lost. Finder

pleaae return and keep money u rew ard. V. u . Routvwte, &IS Thir* teen th atrect, Bulil.

LADY’S BOld Gryeti loit a t Ttxaco Service atnilon, Malo.Thlrd eaat. Virginia Staker enpar'ed on back. IS to o w n penon -will retuni irtth» Jn three dayj. no quejtlona will b« naked. Return Tlmej-Neiri.

SITUATIONS WANTEDWANTED — Potato haullnj. Hav«

Bood truck. WUlU Brown, Phone 0IB1R2.

C O U T O E Bin de. lrc.i office work oiw m oons. filiorthnnrt, typtnj.

. Phcmo 13C4.

H ELP WANTED—WOMEN

Life’s Like That By Ncher

" I l 't motlier. d e a r . . . an9 thU la on* lUne youH be |Ud to m « h tr l’

H ELP WANTED—MEN AND WOMEN

WASH o r jreftio i a n . AppJy In per-• 6on. 05en je n l ln j Chtrn\>ltl 0 « -

m S iW A S H E R UiQUd. Oood a*V u y .- pennaoent poaltlon. Apply f t Newberry's Store.

Western Union OFFERS

B c p ila r emploinient in an in - dustry which U playing k Vital roje in the W#f effort to

Young Women 18-35Tho»* aeltctcd ■wlU be U usW to o p e r a t e automatic Telegraph' tnnchlnei a t W e a tp r n Union school a t San ta Cruz. CiOlfomla and will bo paid vrhlle learning. T raruportaU m fumlahed.

Personal Intenlew will be o m n se d . Apply.

WESTERN UNION - TELEGRAPH CO.

DU3INESS OPPORTUNITIES

WANTED TO RENT OR LEASE

MODERN fumLihed two or Uiiw bhlroom houie, im i bascrnent. D «

• 1. TJmca-Newg.

OOOD eighty, no ToekJ. Hare own equlpmrnt and help. Oood refer* enees. Box 42. Tlmes-Newa.

CARRIED n a n wlUi two boys wants to-rent eomp!etley lum lthed farm. Do* 107,'Jerome. ’

OOOD 40 acre*. Hare good equip- ment and reference*. Box iO, TlmesNsvf.

10 to 160 ACRES. Fully equipped. «ls yean on pretent farm. Box 41, Ttmta*Hew».

IflO ACRE farm. Have equipment, references. J . O. Complon. nouio3. Twin Fftllii.

MONEY TO LOAN

WE ARE S n U . MAKING LOANS

See w or our ngentx nt Jerome—a oocllnB—BurlA/ Rupert—Shoahone—B a n

• FIRST P03ERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSU

Box CIO Tft’ln PaJU, ldtt\io

FOR REN T or leue-C ofe and equipment. Doing good business. Mulllna Cafe, Kimberly.

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

FOUR rooms, modem eicept heat. Electric range. 131 Fourth avenue eaat. Phone 6ie*M.

FURNISHED APARTMENTS

, STEADY pwlUon. woman to aajlat V w ith housework, cnre ol 10 month ' o ld t»-lna. Phond l6<a*W.

ELDERLY lady to care for child af. t«moonB. Steadi’. B oi M,' Ttmei* N eva. V

EXPERIENCED acomatreu tpatiled, Apply in pewm a t Babbel's Cloth- Inir Clinlr. .

FULLY Vxperlenced wallrcM wont- « t . Apply In person. Covey Ooffe* Shop.

SIN G LE woman for winter houM' keeping poslUon. Write Box a u , Buhl, Id ah a

d iR L w a n t e d ' t n ^ clt&nlng de- partm ent. Experience not necea- aory. Apply Babbel's Clethlnj C to lc . Phone 8W.

BUSINESS m an ttimta housekeeper. T h ree p w n boya. school age. WU1 call fo r right party. Box 3 or Phone 53, RftUey. Idolio,

S N E R O E nO single or married , aa leslad lta .' Permanent poiltlon. F ine ' opportunity for ndvsnce* n jcn t. -Apply Jn person. Now-

• berrs-#.

, .............. . , .. ,p with tlie-fam-lly budget? Can arranKe hour* not to In terfere with hcsne w ort Per- •otjfci Interview neecs,«>ry. An-iwer a t cmee, fflrlng name and address. Box 47, T lrnes-N m .

H ELP WANTED-MENWEN. 20-30, for outdoor work. Oood

pay. CaU ercnlngs. 13U Heybum.,

B O ta w anted for Ttaes-Newi car- r lw ^ y e r y reutis. Apply In per. *on. Ttmea->tewi office.

truck f « hauling lumber. ™ l Creek Lumber Coopftiyr. F h « j , 004 o r 190. ^

THREE rooms, modem. Privnie baUi. AdulU. 4S1 Third avi-nuc c u t .

1 ROOMS, privaU bath, stcker lieat. u p s ta irs .. 4IB Ird avenuo norih. Evenlngf.

HEATED one room'. Electric rmme. refrigerator. 21B Third Avenue nortl^.________________ ■

ATTRACTIVE two rt

719 Second eas t

BOARD AND ROOM

FURNISHED ROOMS

2 LOVELY rooms, fireplace, private b a th Mid entrance, suitable for two. 630 3rd avenui north.

NICELY lunilaJieO large front room, aultabi# fo r two, Girls preferred. Home privileges. Cloee in. 43S 'nU rd avcQue east or 213-J a lter «:30 p. m.

U N FU nm sH E D HODSESTHREE room' bouse, bath, rtinse.

Call e v en la n . I8S N. Watblngtorw

FURNISHED BOUSES

M IS C E L L A N E O U S F O R R E N T

OFFICE space, either 3 or 4 roomt. Excelleol location. Inqu ln N(w> berry'i.

REAL ESTATE WANTED

WANTED — Four room modem house, close In, E. A, Moon Real Estate Agency, ptwmc 5 or 11.

I HAVE a, buj’e t for 40 acre* of land close to toa-n on groveled road. 1 hou.ies and lots. Also Hnall trnets. E. A. Moon Reol Estate. Phone t

HOMES FOR SALEFIVE room Douse, modem except

bent, Easy terms. Phone S c " E. A. Moon.

MODERN six room house. Fiimace find stoker. East p m . Roberts and Heaion.

ONE of the flnc.^1 new homes Iri tott-n. In Rood twlRliborhood tSAOO. Can arrange tenm .

T ROOM boiuo wlili large lot and splendid U tes. Not tm old house. Iff.750. Terms. ■>

Severnl small housH from t3M0 to 15.000 each. •

C. A. ROBINSON

lUTietoker hem. insi ble garage. Tenns.

Ne.it 5 room dwelling wlUi full b.’u m e n t , furnace and garage. U,1M.

CECIL-C, JONES Tel, W4I Bonk A: Tru.it Bldg.

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR RENT

IMPROVED farm 4j>tlles southwest ■JuW. Asher B. WlUon, T«Ir F#11s , >bone 343.

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR SALE

'80 ACRES, 1100.00 per acre. M r land, small Improvemenu. RoberU Si Henson.

IMPROVED twenty acres near Klffl- b ^ l^ Oood b«y WJXW.0O. w . O.

4 ACRES, three room house, out buildings. F ln t house north tub ataUon.

0 ACRES, south Of Twin Falls. ^ - medlate 'possession. Ttlepbone 3413*J.

340 ACRES .6.W . from Wendill. ISO Acres culUrated, «-«ll. elee- (rldty. good butlcUnss, idt»l stock ranch, good Jncomi pro-

. duoer.- conrenlenl terms, low Inlertat rate.S. P. eWKNflON, FJald Rep.

. Union Central l i f e Ins. Co.' Box l3 ta Jerom * P h o n t 409R

FARMS AND ACREAGES FOR SALE

40 A0RE6. ft room houae, »4,000. 60. WJOO, good Improvcroeote. M. 113,000, modem 6 room house, |7W ). good one. 80 to trade. Earl Murray, Phone TCer.

J7 A. on Salmon, h a rd surface rd. Oood soU. laya well lo r U rlgaun |. Domestic well water piped la house and corrals. All u n der woranwlre fence. Numerous outbldgs. Incl.001 lamblnc shed. 436 s h a m ter stock. M.000,00 csiah,

j . g / w H r g r

W A." north of Jerom e. 4-room house, bam , plenty of outbuild­ings. U,t00. Fed. loan . Terms and possession.

tQ A. Jerome. e-Toom house, clcttrleliy, dairy bam , deep well. <0,000. 11300 c a sh . '

We have cash buyers for 40 and a welMmproved 80 If you «'ont to sell. *e« o r write t u a t once.

. BEAUCHAMP i t ADAMS New LocsUon—13T M ain E u t

140 Acrri I miles- nS rth Jerome. Modem house, m odest out- buiw intv T here IS no better soli than this. Loys well for ir- rlgatloa Oood term s. |1 U per_

60 Acres good land, good Improve- m enu. 4 mllca from T w in FsJls. I»9 per acre.

190 Acres, small improvements, iencei tsA croes-lencc* wlVii woven wire. In good neighbor­hood not fa r from school. Class­ed as sandy land, b u t splendid for gnxrlng alfajfn. com and livestock. Grows good polAtoel, too. *30 per ftcre.

C. A. ROBINSON

HAY. GRAIN AND FEEDCUSTOM gnndla i, Phone S09 or

o s i UoKeaa BroUiers ’ UUUnc eemee.

C(ut«a Krindlnc—< nod ‘aoiywbere over 3 ton Sc. Ph. 04S7R1 TVIn FaJU or Filer 73JI. Pb. calls off jr lad lpg

MILLER UILLUtO SEBVIOE

U O U B SE a U IX IN O lo d FEZD OIUNDUIO

MOaCLAKD UXLUNO SERVICS Pb. 318, Filer Ph. calls off vrtndlAg

, FARM IMPLEMENTS AND EQUIPMENT

INTERNATIONAL j»w cr un it, sire T-40 In good CQCnUtlon. Phone ,01D1R3.

FARMALL 20 Wactor o n rubber. Would trade for Inle model plcX- up. Photic 321, CtisUcford. Fre<l Buckhaiur.

SEEDS AND PLANTSWINTER btrley, alfalfa, clover end

p u tu re gnu ies 'fo r fall plaA Unf Globe Seed and Feed.

Buyers of leeds of all kinds— Onions, csrrots. beans, peas Cloven, alfalfa arul sra ln .

GLOBE SEED & FEED CO.

LIVESTOCK FOR SALE

YOUNG milk cow.^ frcKhrn i . . . KoL'teln, Jeney, Guerrwey, black. Phone 1812,

32i HEAD of K«xl yeiirJtnc cwe.i.'not buckcd, a t Falls CommlMlon Company.

TWIN PALLS Kud tJull service, de­livered to fsrro. G uernsey and Holstein. PbantM «S-Rl-

YEAR old Holiteln bull. Eligible, p a ­pers are guaranteed. Phone 0105-R3.

PUREBRED Hampshire boar, three

Wo feituro cooiplclo stock of Dr. RohetVs, Dr. H ew's ^nd D r. Lc Gear's lines of remedies and tonics for csttle, hogs, alieep and poultry'.BAV-MOR DRUG STORE

GOOD THINGS TO EAT

OEUCIOUS, Romes. Jonnthrms. Box or truck load. I nortli. 3 east, Jerome.

TONS of apples, several varietlea. Also squash for winter stortng. Ready now a t G row er's.M arket, 664 Bouth Main.

WANTED TO BUY

OASH paid for bediteads'aad fprlngs at.Mooa's. Ptiatw 5 .,,,

WANTED:, Wood or wire hoaaers,, In sood condition, I '. ie tf tc h . Troy ' or Notional plant. ;

CASH paid tor usM {u m ltu n , atovt* and circulating bcaton . Moon's. Phone 0.

USED furniture benight, sold, and exchanged. S m t 'a B asem ent Btort. Phone

OAST and scr^p Iron. J s r o o a Auto Parts, Jerome—T»la Palls Wroelt- Ing Company. Twin Falls.

JOIN THE HOME FRONT

Economy DriveD o n 't 'w ^ 8 te t i r e s , s a . i . oil a n d ^f im e In

f ru i tle f ls s e a r c h f o r th in c H you need. You

c a n 8OV0 a ll t h i s \v}Vn a n inexpcnulvc

- TIMES-NEWS

CLASSIFIED ADJu B t u se y o u r p h o n e . W e'll be g lnd (o

h e lp y o u w o rd a n - a d th n t w ill/p ro d u c e

q u ic k , c e r la in r e e u l l s . D o i l now l

C.' ■ PHONE 38 or 39 TODAY

- ahd"'-ASK. FOR A N A ^A K E R

WANTED TO BUYu e r o bedsprlngj. raattress,

lattng heater, coal range, r w a

WE PAY CASH Four your car wlUi good rubber

D fO R o r r -w o o p m o t o r331 Matn East_________

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

31 INCH Champltjn drill press, floor tyiw, complete. Gtiles Mnclilne Sliop, Wendell.

NOTICE polnto pickers! Eln.stlc wrlsl while nnp ijlovcs 15c i>iilr. KiiiK's-mnln floor.

POTATO cellar and four excelli'nlly located loU In Buhl. Phone 302-Rl. Buhl or 2131, T a in Fall*.

POTATO cellar nnd two lots well lo- cm«l in Buhl. Phono 302-Rl Buhl,

, o r .I\3 l.T i'ln Falls.

STOVE repolrs. order tliem B'Btti.’s FvimllUTe SUfft. Phone 1235.

.410 0AV50E Ahotgun, |5J.r>0; nlr.o 13 gauge Remington niilomutic, $36.00. Oil Second north. Phone 31ta-W.

fiflOVE Repairs cnu be i’mrcha.%ed rowl.Larfje slock on hand. Bring niune nnd number of stove nnd If poiilble old p a rt wanted. Don'l

SPK cIaL Tlmcs-Ncws subicrlp- tlon rates U> s e n / e men—only IIOO (or a m iuflis (payable in advance). ’ Alldre.ues may be changed a t no nddlUonal cost, so place your irdcr todsyl •

SEND HIM STATIONERY

If you have a boy or friend In the lerrlcB he will like s ta ­tionery with the emblem of his

.serrlce a t the top. The finest la prtnllRg' a t 1cm cost! Bee us today.

TDJES*NEWS JOB DEPT.

HOME FURNISHINGS AND APPLIANCES

COMPLETE fom lture for 8 rooms, electric refrigerator, range. Phono •1757.

USEP'treadle sewing machine. Good coodltloB, •23,00. Terms. Wilson- Bates.

DAVENOSI J w t received onoUier large slilpment. Assorted colon, aame old prtces. ** '

TWO electric-coal TUilt*. and W X . C. 0 . AndersoD.

DAVENOe w ith ehfclrf, best sp rin t ccnstructtei, 18840. C la u d * Brown's Music Store.

rSED Wwtlnghcmse electric ran<a, enclosed eleroentA. Priced' to sell. Oamble stores.

UNOLEUM rugs, Cxia only »3JJ. A limited numbed of new washing aucblnesandrrlrlgerators. Cloud*

. Brown.

liO.ME FURNISHINGS AND APPLIANCES

GLOW MAID coel range, one used General Elfctrle refrigerator, fouru.ied WesUnghtmse ranges, Uirce u u d rad lu . Soden Elcclrtc.

HAND woven felt nigs. Rainbow colon, large u.\orimtnt. Bee Uiese today a t ipeclal Introductory prices. Moon's.

MURE5CO, kalwmine in bulk Buy whttt you want, bring Oack what you have left, *Ve‘ wlU loan your brush free, We havs a lar.ce stock or wall paper st prices fou can a f ­ford to pay. Moon's. W one fl. ,

W E HAVE only 77 be«lroom suites on 1-and. And about th e sume number Inner-iprlng mnttresse.'' a rid coll sprlndt, which we m U w ith eomplels sets only. T lpl B etter buy nor. Iforry Mw>grave.

CLEAN upl PfUnt upl Get ready for. . th e indoor montlii. We have every*

th in g to b'rtghien the home. A long cold winter It coming. Save coal by having thst broken kIom re ­placed while there U p lenty of glass. Bring In your sasti. No charjfl for setting, Moon’jf -^h o n e

RADIO AND MUSICos. plana 313 .SI ,e TO, oJlrf 1:30.

MARTIN' "Commltte*" handcrn ft irum p tt, p ilc ta Up seu. Adams M u-

A U T O S ^ R lS A L E£jOOD~1853 ^ e v tS e t coupe. .Good

tires, Inquire N a ll P ra tfsC a b in s.

USED parts for cars'> and trucks T w in Falli Wrecking, Kimberly Rood.

1040 BUIOK, low mileage, good rub ­ber. Phone 140 or Intjulre 120 Sho ­shone west. '

1P38 D E LUXE Pontiac tudor. Excel- le n t rubber. exccUlio^condlUon. 354 B lue Lakes nortli.''

iP35 CHEVROLCT, Oood rubber, low m llwge. Write Box « . T la ies- News.

IP33 FOUR door Dodse sedan, hklh ru b b rr; also Essex air conditioner, excellent ewitSillon. BlueUkRS.

TRUCKS AND TRAILERSFO R SALEl Ttt'o good trucks. In ter-

LARGE wheel b'ajj beet btd. s te w - ftrt. 9 east, 3 south, east end of Mn n.____ _____

■39 CHEVROLET truck with f la t rack . Excellent rubber. Oates Ma- chine Shop. Wendell.

Sxl4 TRAILER house, masonite. bulJt-ln*, good rubber. Jess T u r ­ner, Hanstn.

INTERNA'nONAIi tniok C-S 30. f la t ruck, tmder and ovenlrlve. N early new rubber. Qatc.' M achine Shop. WendeU,

AlH'O PARTS—TIRES

LEGAL ADVEftTISEMENTSANOTHER fiV.M510NH

In th e District Court of the Elev- f t\th JudltlaS Dlstrltl ol the S w le of Idaho, In ahd.for Twin F a lls County.

F reda M ae Robertsoo, plaintiff.

WUllar endant.TH E STATE OP IDAHO sends

iree tlngs to WlUlsm Robertson, tho- above nam ed defendint.

You * re hereby notified U iat a dom plalnt has been filed against you In tJst District Court ot liie E le ren th Judicial Olstriet of tlie SU t« o f Idaho. In and for T u la Fa}ls County by the abora named p la in tiff, and you are hereby direc t- ed to ap pear and plead to U u *01(1 coap la lD t within twenty days of th e •errice o f t^ili summoai; and you tr« fu rth e r notified tha t B o ltu ycnj

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL

DIRECTORYBaths and Massages M oney to Loan

m e pu -w e ll, 07 Mala W Ph. 166 0. JONES for h o m e s a 'd LOANa Rm. B, Bank A T rust' Bldf. Pb. M41.B ic it le Sales and Service

aio y ste Jn l blcrcli shop. Pb. 609-R, SALARY LOANS Strictly confldeBtlal

U to »60 to employed people oo four ow r t lp i a tm .

CASH C R E D rr OO.MPAKT Room 3, Burkholder Bldg ,Pb. TT8.

B i ^ i u s C Y o r a y . p h . is i

ChiropraetfirsD r. W yatc l&i ltd a« . N. P h . JJTI.

525 t O $750' O N -Y O U R C A R

1. FOR ADDITIONAL CASH.X- TO REDUCE PRBflENT

PAYMENTS, t TO FINANCE TH E SAL«

OP VOOR CAR.

Consum er^redit Co.(Owned 'ey Paclito Plnatiee)228 MAIN AVFNtie N O ST I

DiamondsR. U Roberts, Jeweler, 116 Sho. N

. Insect ExtermlnaiorBed Bug (UffllgiUoa T. p. Floral Co.

InsuranceFor Fire and Casualty Insurance,

Sure ty and fidelity Bonds, see Swim InvttUnent Co. BaOgh BIdg. Osteoppihic C h y iic ia n ,'

Job Printing Dr. O. W. Rose. 330 M. M- PJ». 837-W.

tTNEXCCLLED QUALTTYIn

LBTITERHEADS MAIL PIECESOUSINESS CA qns b r o a d s id e s

p e r s o n a l ^ a t io n e r yEngraving, letter p.-cu, lithography

business forms a specially.

HMES-NEM'a Commercial Prlntl&g Dept,

Plumbing and BeailngAbbott PlumblaB Co. ■ Pb. 9S-W,

Schools and TrainingV. P. Business Oolvt[rtSt3>. PboM i l i .

■' Trailers

Key ShopGem Trailer Company. Pbone 4)9.

■ Tupew riteriScliado Key Sliop. 138 Second street

sou th , back of l. D. Store. Sales, rentals a a d service. Pb- M.

Money to Loan U pholstering 'FARM and City loans 4 H ^ . Prompt

' M tlo a Swim Inv. Cv>. Ph. 661.Repairing. reftnUhlng. Cress t t Bni-

tey Fum. 130 3nd .St. K Pb. 6S9.

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.10 appenr and plead to said com- p ln liii within Uie time herein ifted. the plaintiff will take judg­m en t agaliijt you us prayer In said cwnplfthit. This Is nn actloa to ob­ta in n Decree of Divorce on Uie grounds of, willful desertion.

W itness my hand ond the seal of Uie said D^Uict Court, this 18Ui day of srptemDer, 1042.

WALTER C, MUSGRAVE, CIrrk.

TlAYBORN RAVBORN, A ttorneyi for PUInUff.Residing a t Twin Palls, Idaho.Pub . Sept. 31. la ; OcV !>, 12.19.1643.

NOTICE TO CLAI.’ U.VTHNotice Is hKtby RVven Uiat i__

' tr a c t wJ^Hoojia Qoiutructlon Co. of ■ Ttt'tn Fwff, Idaho, known as Project No, Misc. n i l , covering the con­struc tion for llie’teal coating 22,017 m llfa of Old Oregon Trail bc- tw icD JJ lty .an a Burley and SOJIIO m iles o f Uie BMi River Highway betw een Dec.to (vml Strevell kiiown 0-1 Ml.-icellaneoiu Project Number n i l in Goodlni). Twin Pulls and CiViSla Couiiiltj w.-a completed O ctober 0.1942 and'accepter Octotier X 10*2.

An>' f>crf.on, compsny or corpora­tion who lin.1 furnished labor, m a­terials o r siippllei Ijjcd on the woclC' p.nymrnt for which has not been miide. Shull file with the D epart­ment. Qt Publls Wctks. Boise. IiltJko. w ltliln ninety iDO) days from the above date, an Itemized statem ent o t n u claim lo r all amounts due a n d unpaid by Contractor.

F ailu re of .any claimant to file hla clfilm wlUiln ninety (90) day* from the abwe date shall consti­tu te a waiver as a(o ln it tlie c.itcty.

ALLEN C. MERRITT, Commissioner of

Public Works. Pub lish : Oclcber 14. 18. lO, 19 and• 20, 1043.

40,000 \fetch as lovie Stars Play In Grid ‘Classic’

and Buster Xeaten's comedians re- Itvned to the ir jobs of movie mak­ing today with fch lng lo la ti and muKirs u the result o f a contest 'played In the nam e of football a t Memorial coUsoum yeslerday.

U was the annual Jeodlng men- comedlans football gigantic, which the leading mem probab^ because It w u Ihelr tu rn , won 03 to 7S. The 40000 custom en got an after­noon of laughs and tlie united service organlu tlons and ML Sin­ai hoeplUl got th e gale recelpU.

After a hectic ^lr3t mlnpte of play, during which each teom scor­ed-CS points, U \t gam e stttltd down lo a n lp-ond-tuck contest. On the second play of Uie game, every man scored. Tliey h sd con­cealed collapalble footballs In their playing sulLi,

H ie leadUig m en nevpr were In danger and would have won By a wider margin If, l a the th ird petl-

^od. with M ontgomery racing nrouncl his oam rig h t end In the clear, the entire team b a d n 't (lop­ped a t the 60-yard line, aliere a photographer snapped the ir pic­tu res .

Injuries were numenw?. espe­cially among the comedians, who knocked themselves ou t when they saw a fleet of arm y Jwp* enter tlie coliseum laden wltlx pretty nurses.

Couriers Were SpeedyTlis Romans m aintained such an

eJHelent system ol couriers th a t me«- ssgcs were carried ^ tw ec n Rome and London In leas than a week.

A recen t analy.^Li of army olr force Smoke deprives London of 300 acc ldcn ts shows th.it 14 per cent are hours of sunshine every year In nor- th e re.sult of mechanical failures. m.il times.

Crossword Puzzle l | | | | | |§ | | | |ACROII II. no la

3 * “ ' J/c’E L I.t. E n i r s n e t i___s. In fjvor of O nrtii”

K. , i:.-Itird ft7 .i:. RSmiU. Ot*an thnrt

H n Klim. IV Si.” " ''"* '’’• • t s t f i ----- f * n v 5 S i p “

a . Ju e^ tln i

O riNib'l* palm(1. Dtclil*M, (til.; n. r:»»or - t>. Turn tn th* Itft «9. Wlrsnv.

00 ntlia BBBDII0

aai'“aaaii*iaiiaas s s

: t. ariowint s»«d ■ nihJudfmint It. Rlit

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Page 12: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF... · 2014-12-12 · g} falls COUNTY'S SCSRAP QUOTA W80.TONS ' CanecMK>fir748l0Bi A Ifejional

T1MES-NEW8, T W IN FALLS, iUAHU Uondoy, Oclobcr 19, 1942

bt j a c k d e l l' WASKINQTOH. Oct. 19 (,»V-nrt frtTTiirJkt^U on Kiugvil to dj’Minlw ft UsttUUve log'Jtm In Uie Mnftte

Ui to p u l Uu-ct im-port*nl blUi—lije propo«id to d ra f f l< •Mid 18-yeM-oWi. the'* rccord- bftftklng u x bill »nd b »6J«,DO0,0a •pproprtftUani nifasurf*—on Prei' Idenl Uooiei’c l t i dcik before the «nd of Uie week.

The ipproprlalloiu bill, cftrrj'lnt about M,000,000,000 for Uie navy. li»d the rU ht of w»y -and le*dfr# hoped to obUln lU ipeedy pM »«r to dear the tracki for coailder»Uoii tanorrow of the selective srrrlce tiropoeal. Tlio hotiie passed the lat' ler bin by * vote of 315 to 10 on Q&t. urdfty.

ApprsTiI by Tue*d»y Final congrcMloiittl approvol of

, ih« u x bill by Tuesday was re- sarded u a (orrgone concluilon. le td er i »ante<j to Ret It to the PrtaJdenl for his slsiiature by We^- ne»day w tJiat liicrea.%ed exctie

s could so Into effect on1- 0 UieTlierrw as little opposition huge approprlaUons m eaiure. and indications aere UiM i\ majority ot the tenale was prepared to so aloiiK on the drafUns o ' 18 and IB year olis »-}Uj only m inor chatijtes In the houie-approved bill.

D raft Effort ' Senator La FoUette. Prog.. Wls..

prtdlctcd an effort would be made to adopt a houi« provision delayInK the Induction of high school and college itudeiits until Ute close of the academic year ne» t June. The eenato veralon would defer only WbIi nehool jJitfJentJ and Oien only unlJJ the end of the current seme.iter.

In tlie background for la ter sen- a(« comlderaUon were two otJier pressing Luues—manpower leitWa- tlon and. a house-approved bill abgl- Ijhlng itAte poll Uxes.

CTIUNOKINO. Oct. IB l/Tl — SUlckcn by one of the^wont famine* of modem Umes. Chlne« arc dying by thousanda In the battlefield pro­vince of Honan »here 8.000,000 per-»ons are reported officially to b-----th e verse Of Blarratlon.

Reporta brought to Chungking by official-^ of the govemment and re­lief workers u ld tha t IB,000.000 have become famine refugees and th a t th e rflogged roads from Honan Into 6hen.tl and Hupeh provinces & n j ti rw n *1Uj dead and dylnj.

The altuftUon was Inteiulfled by th e necessity of lupportlng a large m ilitary force to hold tlie prctent f ro n t through tlie province against th e Japanese.

T>ie fam ine was attributed In port to two y e an of drought ctmdlUoru. crop-klllln- aprlng froaU and luctwt a n d rabb it plagues, but Uils w u coupled Blth the 'Japsnejs inva^on o f some dlatrlcU last October cans- ing abandonm ent of the rice crop <hd delay Id wheat planting.

CONGRESS HOPES TO GIVE FD R 3 MAJOR BILLS THIS WEEKJ P P R O P IIU T IO N S , ' U ’- S . T a n k F i g L l e i - G e l s T o u g l i - . f j | | | ( ( | [ 5y | ]| ( [ ( ; I t i s l i B e a u t ,S t o p

D B m m s E i - c « p i i i K

Vnieathed a fte r :o hoars 'ofroa. Ga.. pictured atop .

the s ir General O n n ta which participated wer naged. (PasKd by eenaor.l •nelee. Only two of

Japs Threaten Puiiisliment of Every Captured U. S. Aviator

ER S E R IE S■SHOSHONE. Oct. 1 9 ,— Twtnly

men from Llncol;i counly entered the servlcc last week.

Ten men left B)io.ihone and were accepted for army «en-lee a t tJie' Induction station a t Bol.ie. They In­cluded Caaey A. Porter. Franfc 1. Hartateln. KellosB D ahl. -Clarence Kurford. Burrel Uvlngslon. Thomaa Coleman. John Boesiger anfl Wil­liam Neu, Shcshone. and Robert Ad- kln* and Wendell King of Richfield, Coleman was acting corporal.

Three Richfield bo>-« who entered the navy In Boltc.are iThom Rej-n- olds. Keith Bwaln.iton and Lester Pate. Edward Thomason, Shoshone. Joined the marine*; Jam es Floyd, Shoshone. Joined l A ftlr corps ai Salt LaKe City lor-m ^honlen l train­ing bu t haa no t been' assigned.

Men from tills counly entering service from other points o f Induc- (J«j (ncJucfe JVed U oobeny a t Xiin* aas City, Earl Camel’a t Seattle, and

•Robert Parkliurat a t E lko,'Nev.Thirty-two men will be Inducted

Not. :o, the heavlrjt call yet for Uneoln county. Unle.is IcKl.'Intlon Is piuised before Ihnt date autliorlzlni; the calling of IB nnd lO-yenr-old

> boys, a number of tliu e In the next cenUnsent will be married m en with­out children.

G E M IHKES O V E R i m H

W JITEHORSE. Y. T.. Oct. ID (Un '-T lie United State.i arm y's north­ern most service command was In operation today with , arrival of Brig. Oen, James A, O 'Conngr at this Vukon frontier settlem ent to direct «uppllc.< of the arm y In Ala.^- ka and the vlUl north Pacific area.

O'Connor's command Includes the new M u k tt M ehvny. ralJB-ays. In­land water routes and pIpelltvM.

The 57-year-old general w is In cliarge of tunneling Corregldor fort­ress In the Phltlpplnu and r,uixr- vlsed road constnictlon of th e Alas­ka highway. HLi career has taken him around the globe.

Dy United PrewJapan extended axis cruelty to

war prisoners today by thrfnteiilnu •'^eve^e punishment" for American aviators sliol down while bombing Japanese controlled terrltor)-. I t wnJi lmpllc<l that t h e "punishm ent" would be death.

T ie hysterical ajm ounceiBent of Uio Tokyo, ratllo. whlfli Was repeated by the Berlin rndlp. f ^ m e d . Co-re­flect the IncreiuUiKly heavy jwund- Ing Japanr.ie »lilps n n d cm und forces are taking- In th e Aleutians and the Solomniis from American planes. I t alvi seeme<l to reflect a fear tha t the April 38 raid on Tokyo and otlier Jnpniie.v; c ities 1e<l by DrlK. Oen, James H. Doolittle would

)oii be repeated.Tlie shootlnK or ••pCinlshhiK" of ar ;irLsoners' Is prohibited by the

Geneva and other irea tle s o treatment of prisoners nnd practice In which civilized nations have not engaged In centuries, Japan was not a lubecrlber to the O encti treaty bu t announced soon after Its sneak a ttack on Pearl Harbor that It would abide by Its provisions,

“Kevere Punfshm enf’• today's amiouncqment wa.i am ­

biguous. I t renewed Ja p a n ’s claim that some of planes w hich ra id ­ed Japan ham bMn sh o t down by awertlns:

"Thcae amons the cap tured m em­bers of Uie American a ir force frhlch raided tlie Jaimnese m ainland April 18 who have been found Riillty of Inhuman conduct following invesU- Ratlon have been glvrn cevere pun- bhment Ih accordance w ith military regulailons.”

Tlifn. Toky6 radio continued, the commander in chief of Japanese headguflfiers for home defeiwe, had announced tha t crews of enemy planes taken prLvjner anywhere in Jnpnrttac-cofilrolJed terrJlorj’. would receive "similar treatm ent." I t talk­ed of the death penally, but did not make cleiir th a t thLi was the "se­vere iNinlshnient." I t also failed to make clear what wa.i meant by ;'ln- human conduct" bu t It seemed ob' vJoHJ lltat Uie Japnne.^ H'ho Jwve laid waste to scoreit of Cninese cities, killing thousands of non- combatants. w «e preparing to con­sider the dropping of a bomb any­where upon Japone.ie conlrolltd ler- rltor)', "Inhuman conduct."

No Raid P rlion rn T lie really strange tiling about tlie

brondcMl was Jhiit the 'Jatnne.'.e have no prUoners from Uie Amcrl-

April raid. All the' p la jin but returned to the ir "Bhangrl-LA”

bofiC; and th a t one maile a forced landing In Stbeclo.

lA ter. Domel In d ica te tha t the order wn.-i. a t least In part, the opening of a campaign of "utroclty propaganda." I t charged th a t the raids were carried o u t only to bomb ho.-ipllalj. schools and residences— mllltarj' objectives, according lo the Japanese, were • Ignored—and to machine gun school children.

- I t wa. established by Invejilsa Hon and al'O admitted <preaumsbly by the \ion-exbtent A mrrlfan prb' oners) tha t a group of school chll riren was maclilno^’unnetl In ortlei to glvrn Japanese cJilldrcn a Uislt of American bullets.

"American- pllot/i think only of dropping bomtn a t ranilom. fully aware that clvlllims miwt suffer,"

RADIOSTlie Veterans of Foreign Wara.

pout Bt Buhl and the KYA radio school a t Rigby will, be respon* slble for tlie radios a t a number of U8 0 centen In the near fu ­ture. I t was said today by L. W. FoUom, NYA perfonne} tupee- vLsor.

T lie Buhl veteraiw . collected (he radios, and (he radio «ihool H maCtng nece.viar>’ repairs. They will be turned o\’er to tlie OSO.

BURLEY BOY AT AIRBASE^ WILL ROGERS flELD, Okla.,-

Ocl, JS -P v t. EJwIn J, m nSle lj one of the soldiers stationed a t tills arm y air force bombordment base, a»- algned to a guard squadron here, lie

Automobile parls dealer* are re­sorting to Junkyard.^ to gel a supply of portA sufficient to keep customers roUfng.

R S S iyO ! F

NEW YORK. Oct. 10 ( ,n -T h e I n ­vestm ent Bankers association of A merica today opened its 31st a n ­nual tw o-day meeOng with the a n ­nouncem ent lbs major Item of busl- ne.u would be a study of partlclpn- tJon In th e war Ihrough- helping finance IL

•'But with reference to our busl- rsj dlicUi5lonj,"sald JoJin a KJeeJ:

of Cleveland. "I wUh lo emphasize th e point th a t It la also our patriotic duty to keep our organlzAtlon going —despite a ll dlscouracements and fntcrruptlons.

•ThLi requires consummate reso- lutJort and rescuree/uJnea,"

Tlie IBA's railroad KcurlUcs com­m ittee In Its report expressed th a t " the present continued lock of In ­te rest on the part of private capltAl an d the pct-ilmlsUe attitude oward railroad securities in general" would change because "we would, hate to nee govtm m cnt ownership of the railroads and tlie far reaching cotv- senuences thaC would /oIJow.” i

L ieu t Amei Tedd. V. B. a ra y nurve, prlmpi befer« Improvised ran lly Ubie In ber a erth era I rc r U nd qoarlera. {Pa*M« eeue r.)

Japs Put Tight Restrictions on

Siberian BorderNEW YORK. Oct. 19 i n - A Tokyo

broadcast said tha t s tric t restric­tions had been put Into effect today along the Manchurian frontier bor­dering Soviet Siberia.

T he broadoost, quoting a dispatch from IbliikinK, said the border con­trol measures were taken In the l^lerc.^IJI of national defeivne and restricted resilience and travel wltli-

tjjc !ront\er arex

DRAWDENVER. Oct, 10 (,r,—T m a

faster man wltl) one of these tlian any Jap I'll ever meet," John El­lington told the mLuus as he reached for tlie pistol In his hip poelcet. ‘'Just watch me draw l"

B u i John > « iiuJckej- o n . Uie trigger tlian the draw.

An explosion tore away tlie seat o f his britchej and his arm y In­duction a t Tort L ogui has been delayed pending healing of a bul­le t wound.

Motor taxes of all kinds lo Amer­ican motorUts totaled |l.703,IBfl,000 In lOM, according to a survey.

\

L lU RESc o s m m c

LOUISVILLE. Ky.. Oct. 19 OiJO— VIee-Presldent Henry A. Wallace said last night th a t "the cost of production of ssTilhetlca tires to grta t th a t It will be Impractical continue their m anufacture after the WOT.’

Completing a. series of War p lan t InspecUans. Wallace said th a t If cost of chemlcaLn could be reduced. Louisville might become the nation 's center of o ’nthetlc rubber produc­tion. He emphasised Uiat synthetic Brts would be produced for th e dum - Uon “» i t s y ioal.’'

Discussing the farm iltuatlon Wallace tild tha t unless farm labor Shortages are alleviated soon, the country faces a drastic mUk sliort- age by next year.

“Should the country encounter _ milk shortage.” Wallace said, 's o l­diers and children will receive all available supplies first. tJien war ro rken , Sfany civilians wjfl have to go without the food."

German Raiders Cause Casualties

ualjles and some damage in East Anglian toWTis today, while London­ers heard tliree alarms w lihln t» o hours. No bombs fell In the London

Tlie East Anglian raids 'were c a r­ed out by planes flying slngt>-. At ne town a facory was h it , three

peraons were killed and four others Injured, The raiders also maclUne gunned ciJbgej and rflflB'ay trajna.

HalloweenHere - Expected td Be

About the SameHalloveen in T v ln FioUf thU v a r-

Ume year will b« about th« tarn* as any other year. I t was aald today by Chief of Police.Howard OlUrtt*. Other localities have reported plana for restrlcUng the w earln* of masks, and other Halloween aetlTltiet. -

T w in Falb boya and clrU hare been pretty reasotubto ta d sporta- manllKc In recent y ean .” aald CUef OlUeite. "and I dooX th ink thla will be much different from recent Halloween observances.'

"We are particularly anzloua th a t property destruction th is year b* held to an absolute minimum, be­cause all assets of the nation are needed In the « a r effort, and we cannot aftord waste. B ut I have high hopes th a t our local boys and girls *111 realize this without the n e c e s s i t y of extraordinary re- strtctlons."

QUEEN RECOVERS LONDON. Oct. 19 W — Queen

Eltiabcth Is now fuUy recovered from a recent a ttack of bronchitis,

IS announced offlciaUy today.

E^iland'a prime minister, Winston Churchill, has been known to dic­tate letters while taking a bath.

W COLDS'M ISERIES ^

PenetrOBuiCoasset Um. SH, d o u b ltm p ^ S i/ . ■

Want To Sell Your Car?Jerome Is the hottest morket^In Southern Idaho. We always have

. a lar>;e stock of good, late-model. low-mlleage used cars and • Crticks and wiicthef j-bu w ant to buy, seJI or trade, f( wUI pay you

lo drive to Jerome and save. -ALSO COMPLETE STOCK OF NEW CHEVROLETS

A.ND BUICKS IF YOU CAN QUALIFY.

NORTH SIDE AUTO GO.Chevrolet and Dnlck Jerom e — Phone W

Changing of U. S. Youths Into Bomber Aii-meii Tops Marvels

WASHINGTON. Oct. 19 OI.D—T ie War deportment announced today th a t It has leased, for th e duration of the war. the White Piu« and Yu­kon Route railway, n m n lng from Skagway, Alaska lo W hitehorse, Yu­kon terrltorj', Canada.

T he line provides roll connection between the coa.st and Uie Ala.ikan

^Vhllehorse, headfjuarters of the nortliwest service command. Tlie highway will be opened about Dee. 1.

CSIing Placed On Pool Halls,

Bowling AlleysWASHINQTON, Ocl. 19 (IF)—

Price Administrator Leon Hender­son announced today th a t billiard parlors, pool halls and bowllng al- leys wxpuia be placed u nder price control abo^t Nov. 1, and that_ fees would not be allowed to ad ­vance.

"TTie.ie are pfaces’ where work­ers In the war effort and'm em bers Of the armed forces by th e Uiou- sands find relataUoh a fte r a day's W k ." said Henderson. “We are going to see to It th a t they will not be made to pay too much for Iheir recreation.'’

Henderson u ld the establUh-'’ m ents m ust not chCrge m ore thao..

■ (fiefr highest nrfees in 2£arch.f0<7. and m ust conUnue ipecloJ prices In effect during March fo r clubs and ch n lltr orr>nIaUoQ>.

By DEWITT .MACKKN/.IEI'Wlile Wnrld)

UNITED BTATE3 B O M B E R W lSq OPERATIONAL H E A D - QUAHTERS. SOMEWHERE IN DRITAJN—You can talk about your nqt" ttespons with st-iKKering. e//lc - lcticv..l)iil Uils fre-vh world conflict producetl no Krenler marvel than the adaptability of our yoiini: a ir- m tn—mofl of Uieni mere boys in years—to'Xlie complicated !,clcncc of waging war from Uie -Nklr.\,

We have seen Uiln In Ui^ battle with the barbarians of the Pnclfle,

seeing It now a t I 'ncle Sam's bombers begin to scourge Hitler's defen-iea In w estern Eur- *pa-

Mind you. the vast m ajorliy of our air forces aren t even veteran filers, to say noUiIng of tlielr Innocence in actual combat. Yet we noW s^e them taking Uie a ir in g rea t four-engln- ed bomben whlcli they wouldn't have been allowed lo touch before we came lnto the war. Only tried mailer pilots were perm itted to e n ­ter llif.^e sacred fortre.vej of the clouds, : .

Flying Sobmarinea Did you ever fee one of Uiese Le-

vlatlians? In m atter 'o f m eclianl- cal_ equipment Uiry a re like sub- marines on whiga.

stra in no m atter how many tt.nes they "110 ^

Tliat's ea.iy(to und rn taiid . TlilnV of an actor and hLi Jlrst night, or a runn tr walling for ihe gun. p.itlent walUng for the surewn'.i ■ ■ ....................... t.> tu l:knife 0

nerve tirnius you begin to sec how tlie nlminn feeLs—provided you don’t overlook he 1. about to midrrt.ike Jugsllng wlU) hb own life and Uie llvts of hLi domrades.

But after, the Initial strain iliry have a Job to do and th a t domlnairs Ujelr alteniJon lo Uie exclusion of other things.

Difference"Hot doei*’ haw been eaten _

' Ameilc* for sereral Ihouund yeaia. The ancient Uayai vuniKtecs naft« ed 4og» botti fo r food t a a lo c s*c-' rlXice.

LIftj and denUi rwn side b y side Uiroilgh Uie multiplicity o f dellcaU: Instruments which solve h ighe r matlietnallcal problems wlUi a fa - clUty whlcli mu'st make Elniteln 'rabc his yebrows.

■■ jur fledgling blrdmen ore ta k - Uiese grim g la n u aa Uiougli

Uie BITS and B34s were th e incu­bators which hatclied Uwm. They rjy ’em and tJiey make ’em figh t.. Now this transition of a n a irm an

from a novlee to a proved w arrior u i Instantaneous

thing. I t Is a mental reaction which eomcs when he first goes under fire.

' Battle TelU Test-Upon tha t nacU on depei

whetlier his m lna auu>mntlcalli- comes a cool. sure. fasl-U ilnklng m a- clilne or whether It collapses. And

0 man can tell In advance bow Is mind will act.It Is & fasctnaUng study and IVe Kn-talking a-lth a tot of our air en on Uie sublecL So w h a f3 hav . report here bos to do w im tlielr

'Irst reaeUons In bombing opera- tJoo^ father ihon with th e dam age done to- enemy ‘targets. Accounts already published make I t c lear th a t our ralfis are terribly e ffic ien t and will grow more so as ou r m en get the feel of Uie work.

m p a ra U en Is E lrs ln . Natufalljr Uae period of p repa ra -

tloQ for the f irs t nUd causes fierce nerve tendon., T h a t probably is true o f e r a r t in s u n and m u s y o f them A l t r a y i experience cooslderable

Utah Child Killed In Idaho Accident

BANID'a , IdiL. Oct. 19 l-l’J—Appar­ently run over by a tractor plow operafed by iiti gnviidfBther. two- yetir..old Elvln Lee Casperson *a.n killed Saturday,

T lie child, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Elloi Ca.'i>erson of Clearfield, Utah, had wandered from the lorm liouje Into Uie field. When Ca.M>eRoamade a second round of th e field h e found_ 'Uie-elilld-unooiLStl>jus 111 A'fUrrow.

He said he had ' been watching 'the fence a.s he plowed and tha t Uie clilld miisl have been caught In Uie e<julpment or run over b}- It on his first round. Tlie boy died In a h u - plta l a t Pre.iton Saturday night.

£.U u SA L E ANNIS FUR C O A T S ;America’s Finest for over H alf a Century! 1

J A C K R E I F F .Anni.<! F u r I^ p rc M n tn t iv e W ill Be H ere to AtlvLsc you •

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY

OCT. 20 and 21

JEROMEW alter V. Olds, principal of the

high Khool, accompanied by Delno McMahon and H. M aine Shoun, su­perintendent of fcliooU, left I deer hunUng expedlllon.

Mrs. John J. Sm ith and daughter, Slilrley, left for Ihelr home In Port­land following a vlidl with relaUvas. here.

Mrs, E, J . Bruce ha.i relum ed from Salt L i te City where she h as been vL-dUng rrlBtlrea Uie po.st week.

F. 0 . Preemah. Ventur'a. CaUf„ hsLf departed for his home a fte r hav­ing vWted the R. O . Freeman and J. Harlow Freeman families.

Mrs, Tadd Nelson and son, Jimmy, have been vlslUng In MerkUan wlUi her Sister. Mrs. Leo Jewell.. No Parent-Teacher assoclsUoo

meeUng* ha re been scheduled for Uils month, u was announced by of­ficers of the two wsanltaUon* in JeromV. Membership# are sUlI being accepted, and Uiofte wishing U) pay the ir dues fo r th is coming year, have b«en asked to tu rn them la to any P.-T. A. officers.

Dragonflies can look In a ll <11- rectloni, tfieir heads being set oo m iniature ball-and-tockel jolntj.

Extra Savingsj f l .erei low.1

$99.00RcRular $129.00

Bbek RussUji Pony # New Z ea­land Beaver « Sable Dyed Coney • Australian Seal # Dyed Coney % And Many Other*.

$129.00Rcf^ilar $149.00

Black Dyed Skunk • Australian Beal IFJnest Quallly) « B luk Persian Paw • New Zealand Beaver (Buckskin) • And Many OUien,

• All Purs subject to lo r . Federal Ta*

. A N N IS F U R Sothers 579.00 up to $595.00

Now, more than ever, you'll be looking for Value and Durability In a fu r coat, as well as styl.e and beauty, ,

* Voull want to be sure th e furs you b{iy wlU be smart and lovely over a period of year*. And so the ANNIS LABEL'fn a fur coat m eans m ore 'than everllf Jor. . you can, u a lrays. depend upon I t 'a s a guarantee of quality skins and f in e r workmanship - - a srabo l of ^Ine tradition and la s tin g beauty. We urge ^ to make in esrly selecUon for f irs t choice of smartest styles and best value. BU Y W ISELYII BUY NOWII

LAY-AWAY PLAN .

exclusive with

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• E R M I^fE

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