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THE TW IN FALLS N EW S TODAY: Unaetllcd Vol SS, No. 295 _ v TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH SQ. lOll Price Five Coi Spirited Clashes Mark Hearing on Canyon Projects Reclamalion Commissioner Takes An- otlier Day for Arguments on Power Company, Proposals ' Hearing on Idaho Power company appllcoUons to develop four' lower Snake river power sites enters final stages today, following an afternoon of Spirited arguments that marked presentation of evidence and testimony before Reclamation Commissioner E. V. Berg In the Jerome county courthCiuse; Opponents and proponents of the plan to • Install hydro- electric plants involving Box Canyon and Banbury, Niagara hnd Crystal springs refused to ^Ivc an Inch of ground through- out yesterday's four-hour — hearing, attended by 150 per- sons who Jammed the district court rooms to overflowing. WlUi n nuntlier of wIUipmm yet' imheard shorlly before 6 i>. in.. CommSuloner Berj; eontlciucd the hmrlns until f tt. m. today. OluBrvcn believed- Uii\l today Uie formnl procecdlnsfl will be fol- f lowed by a’ call from Conimtwloiicr Berg for cxprcnalonn of jienUmeiit cislon upon Uie request of E. h.- .lUybom. attorney for Uiose oppos- ing the developments, to select a disinterested enirtneer to Inv^tlRstc and report his /IndinBii. T)iU prob- ably would be followed by a de- cision ."wlUiln iw>coup1e of weeks." Commluloner Berg Indicated. Tht Isnies ' With today'* teetlmony expected to elaborate on contenUoni pre* *ent«l yesterday, tha U»ue* Involv- ed are these: : T h« opponents contend U)at the burden of proof reatB upon the pow- er cocripiuiy, that the conpany U not ftcUnr In 8 ^ faltb in aeeUng-the dBVdopmmta, that power eltca: ready .dmloped an sufficient-to crut frotn tho ( the T t ot w sf' company ,'a»^thftti it, 1i dew. . the la actlclpaUoa or future needi, that the developments would benefit rtclamat4an and that an ef- fort will be made to preserve ^enlc beauty and sporting opportunities wherever possible. • Fotfr AlUrfiejr* ReprcMntlng the power company were A. O. Inman and Jess Haw>, ley. Boise, attorneys, with- WUIIs eullivan, BoUe, and R. W. Hudel- son. Ooodlng, also sltUng at Ute counsel table on behaU of the Ida- ho Power. R. W. Carpenter, division manager of the Idbho Power com- pany from Twin P U b was present, but was not called to lotlfy. Witnesses for the power company were H. L. Scnser. chief enjlneer. and B. O. Russell, euperlntendent of production for the company, from Boise. InlUal clash between opposing at- tomeya came when Mr. Raybom moved that the burden of the proof be placed upon the power company to show the need for power, that It }s acting In good faith and that the power wlU be^put to beneficial use. Tb this the power represcntatlvo replied that the applications had been made and that « called to provide ' orotestanU to a) le hearing was ahow why the per. FLASHES of LIFE Almoit Z«Bt VINCENNES, Ind.—Robert Can- 1-noo, elactrfdan at-work-Ueop ia-th« New Julian ooal mine east of here, lost hla poeketboofc. Weeks later a ftnman on » Bal> Umor« and Ohio railroad locomotive nearing nor», QL.'fotmd iboveinH'of coaL The pocketbook had ridden out of the mlaa oq a coal conveyor, been washed and sorted and dumped Into '.^ a hopper and found lU way through ,<^a coaU^ sUtlon Into theJoeomoUfe Now They Know DANBVnXE. N, Y.^Draft b .effldalt.had t6 turn detectives Ut locate one reglstrabt In this area but they w,ere finally .able to reach tbelr- man. On hit registration he had Inscribed h ^ ' address simply u ‘’QrandfflOlher'S farm." I t took <iulie a whUe to find cot Just who ^grand- OatbaLooie ^ ALOTQUBRQ17K, K. you nin aeroM eomeona. lugging a Clrll war oannoQ aroand irtthotit a Ueed!^ notify .the.AlbuqueRiiie poUee dt* 'partnent.' Jerome Power Hearing Attracts Many Germany Withholds VTilitary Assault, Stirs Old Hatreds ssagBt25:«nemanesy“u:'j\s=^^^ POWER D ISPU IE Protestor’s Attorney Asks Disniissa! Bccause Work Stopped An. Injunction suU to reitrain Uie Idaho Power company from de- veloping the Niagara sprlnp site In Snnkc river conyon was dismissed in dUtrlct court In Twin F%lls •j'ealer- dny on motion of E. L. Raybom, at- torney for Uie petitioner. Harold R, Harvey of BuliL Tlse attorney nslced dlsmlml be- - luse, he said, tlie power company had moved drilling equipment away irom the site the day after the suit Junotlon It had been argued the power company was dlsrcRivrdlng a hearing pending before Idaho com- missioner of reclamation on Its ap> pUcaUon for permit to develdp UiLi and three other Bnake river canyon Bites.' . > Hearing before the commissioner was held at Jerome yesterday after- JamM W. An affidavit by J. D. Orr. assistant* general manager, and H. L.‘Benger, chief >englneer for the Id&ho Power company, offered in court yesterday was to the effect that the drilling equipment, which had been brought from Spokane, had been' removed from the Niagara springs site. Attorneys for the power company. Jess Hawley and A. O. Inman, both of Bobe. were In court ready-to re- sist the Injunction suit when Ray- bom asked for Its dismissal. JURY HOLDS FILM PRODUCER,JURIST W illia m Fox’ Banl<raptcy ProceedlngsLead lb Indictments ti nfun- urt Judge, PHU-ADELPHIA, March A reUred U. B. ctrcult court. WUIIam Pox of movie fame and of his attorneys were Indicted to- day on a charge of conspiracy to obstruct Justice In coUrt matters dealing with bankruptcy proceed* Ings on portions of Fox's once vast lS.000.000 financial empire. A federal gmnd jury ipeclally In- structed by Attorney General-Rob- -crt H. Jackson reported It had foinfc^ldcnco that POx and Mor- gan a Kaufman knew that Judge J, Warren DavU, whUe on the bench “ wouM be Interested In and would accept and ncelve.x x x sums of money and other prtsents'* In re- turnJor_racUon_favorahletLtO-Pnx. The 82 year old bald-headed pro- ducer whose moUon pictures made screen history stepped to the bar immediately after the charge was made, entered a plea of guilty, and from his pocket paid out five tl.OOO bills for bond. ' *T am abeolutely Innocent of the chargea brought,” DaVla declared later at hb LawrencevUle, N. J» home. Indle^nent of the 14-;ear-oId LawreBcevUle, N. J . Jurbt, who was «Bpolnted to the bench by President Wlllan in . 1930, marked only th< second time In the nation's histon that a member of the federal Judlc< lary has been so charged. INTEREST in (he hearlnr opsn-Idaho Power eompany (A develop 'power iltea aloQg Snake north of Buhl li illustrated by theM pliotes taken during prnceedlen yesterday sftemoon in the Jerome county eoort house; At,top appear principal! In tlie hearing, and, shewn from lefUJo r l | ^ L. C. Hamilton, reporter; E. L. Raybom, attorney for protesUnts; Harold R. Ilantey. one of Th*-«frol anU; Wllllt Sallivan (sUndlnc at rear), poner company represenUtlve; ,R. \\. Iludclian, Coodlnr ncy general; *and Com * Is a view of lh« andlence. (News photai and Enirarlnn) Agrement Ends Five-Week Stlrik^ of 1,500 Workers SEMRS okeh Appropriations Committee Sets High Witli Billion Dollar Measure WASHINOTON. Mnrcll 23 m — Acting witli the some speed used on defense, bllllonii, Uie senate appro- priations committee today stomped approval (in a SU40.0I0.7M farm bUI. largest. In hJftory. ' Senator Rus3tir,(D-an) who,will act a.1 flooa manager for Uie nppro- prlaUon. In the senato Monday, said U im was “ not any qucatlon" about senate.passage. He' and other farm-minded eenn- tora agreed-that 'a. fight, If any, would come when the measure was sent back to Uie house whlcli pre- viously :had voted only $800,000,000 for the admlnbtraUon's agricultural prognuzi. ' As reported to tho senate the an* nual bill supplying funds for mlllloru of farmes^and Oietr families wa.i above the hou.ie total, . (CoeUiia«d OB rur* S. ColtimB t) (By The Associated Press) One Of the first group of.strlkc3 turned over to tlie defense mediation board for settlement was lifted out.ot lU hands last night when a CIO committee and the management reached an agreement ending the five weeks’ work stoppage at the Unlversal-Cyelops Steel Corp., Brldgeville, Pa. CIO workers also ended their strike at one Bethlehem Steel company plant, but walked, out at another. A meeting of a CIO union at Hoboken voted to empower Its executive committee to call a' strike of 1,500 workers In the shipyard of the Bethlehem company there. But a simul- taneous meeUiiK of another CIO union nt QrooUyn named a ncRO- Uatlng committee to meet Monday wlUi spokesmen for Uie BeUileliem manasementjit two Bethlehem com- pany yard* Uiere. 6pokc.<imcn for Uie Hoboken union salU. however, that "we shall use every menus offered" by federal ........... - seek a sctllemetit be- Nazi Ship Sails For Russian Port .8ANT06, Bratll, March 38 ~ -Tlie-6i«7-ton—German— freighter. Z>resden with. clearance papers for a' voyage -to Vladivostok. Russia, soiled "kt' U:Oa p. m’. today In an ap- parent >ttempt to penetrate the BdUsh, blockade. . Commanded by CapUIn' W. Jae- ger, the vessel “had a crew ori9 and had'been In refuge here since Nov. M. 1839. British aources declined-to state whether any ships in the »ouUi At- lantic patrol were on the lookout, but It was recalled that the big aux- iliary British crulsec Asturias re- cently steamed out of Buenos Aires Bent on Peaceable Strike, ^ Q O Ejects Trouble Maker ■ JOHNGrrOWN, March 38 (IP) —A news repreaentaUve of the New Tork “OaUy Worker* 'Cce-Ume or- gan of the Ootmnunlst party, was of U>e CIO the*n^&5 wtiro the delegBtioo'.eotvnd ttoe-'dlnlnc worn. .......... . .• ••Xiomo .aj. yoa'»„lolDf’ otrt of 7'm an Amerlcaa clUsen; my t«xes and I doot have to loin^- Z^^ed. . • "Youi-U .‘either get out-W town rum or Wherewith Lories hit and eoat were-handed him, he was escorted to hls.matoaobUe.'dilTea to thrclty lxaiUaaA.ioU.j3ot.tonUaD;iJ^ "W9 mn gttac to have a peanaUe •triks ud.WB dent Intend to have «UBh p e ^ o around- to stir up CIO Members Return to Work at One Beth- lehem Steel Planti But Walk Out in. Another 20(U)00 'i'roops For Nazi Arinv ANKARA. Turkey. Miircll Sn i!i'. Germnny h NrtidliiK >ii< ncldltininil SOO.OOO troasi^ Inltl HuJciirlft i<i aiiKnient lirr strlklnK Inrre u|. ready caIIiiiiiIciI ut niorr iImh 300.000. A iiriilrnl (llplmniil ulu> came from Uiichnrf:,! iiv v,hv n( Bo(lii,'i.Al<l umlKhi. UnoHlclnl rciwrUi nln> tli.it Brltbli troops coiiihiiicd to I:ui;i In Orcpce Incliitniii: tlir key Ai- genn i>ori of Siilontkn. Tlic (llpiomnl . wiUI Oi-rinn:i forces In southern BiilKtifln were forced lo rely on hor.ier. nud iinilo.i for traiujjort bccause of li:ul ronds. Few Qemiiuis were *i.i- Honed on tlio BulKuriiin-TtirkbH .fronUer, he snld. but mnny Hul. Kurlnn soldiers were In ixisUlim there. All Turkey Juhllmil n*i-r the Vugoslnv government coup. . . a strike tall Is issued. The dis- pute Involving both the Hoboken and Brooklyn unions Involved de- mands for a contract. noard Orders Hearings Tlte medUUoifboord moved swlft- ports elrcuUted Uiat Uie administra- tion might seek sweeping new pow- ers to deal with defense prqdueUon ^ppsgcs. As a flrst'ftteprthe txxinl’ordered hearlhga In W«hlngton today on strikes at Uie Vanadlum eorporaUon, BrldwvlUe, Pa., and the Comell- Dubiller company. South Plainfield, N. J, a hearing on stzikcs In four plants of the IntemaUonal Barvest- er company Monday. Tlie board siao asked' that work be resumed at all plants while iU Its closed plants. More than 30.000 workers are employed In its four Illinois and Indian* planU where the CIO farm equipment workers organldng committee' haa called sUlltes seeking wage a d J u it ^ U and union •recognltlpn. The Vanadium strike Involves « 0 workers who proteetod emplcemient of noa-UBiea pUi)t-«iaqk' 6&ne 3,300 are involved ln.«he Gocnell- Dubluer strike, called by-the APL rlNTtrical union when contract nego* thiUoDS Ki>ke'down,. . ' Wage toeteese ' ..iherft wer» 1600wprken eo'strike • •»’nlversal-0’-*— was uod wage* Increase. OUierwlse,-the dayt labor devel* amenlA included the following: i 'Ihi United Automol^ Wotken <010> uuuwnced u t tnfoimal agrment-to .end an IS-dv-etzlke U.S.NMEPS Admiral Stark Silent on Destination of ' Squadron WASHINOTON. Mnrcll 38 m — CrypUc sutcment by Uie United States navy sUrred speculation to- night that American n-nnhlps might be kept Indefinitely In Uic South Pacific for' Uie sake of tjjelr mortd Influence on Japan, -r As a fohnldable squadron of eev-' cn. flghUng.ships sailed away from Brisbane, AusUvlls. Admiral Harold R. Stark, chief of operaUons, Issued a.fltatcnienl-Uiat.hcJi(mj.To_eom- ment" as to lu future .duUnaUon. The movements of a smaller f o ^ which vUited New Zealand w«re screened la. as complete official sec- recy. ■ ' Both contingents were ostensibly on training cruises from Uielr 'nor- mal operaUng bases in Hawaii and titey put into Uie BriUsh empire south PacUk: porU for "good will and recreaUon." Ttie clrcuMtanees of the formal sUtment Just when mlnUUr was Ip ______ _____ strongly U « t Uie state department and the navy’s higb.oominaod were at least wUUng to keep Tolgro guessing'ka to Amer- ican ' Intentloos of strengthening aoU-axlB defenses In the souUi Pa- oUIe. Suapiclan-that Uie cruise to Uioae winter*'wr*» aa attempt to I-"— pressure Japan has been vi p ^ t e d l y in^mokyo 1^ ^ and iour destroyers actfved Varch 1« ftt Aueklaad. New Sealaod, wlth- ont »awBea.annoaneemwit, la a PMtfio m r any attempt to blockade JapuiiiroaV! be butt in the eoulh PMttle. .iti»te8itts-s«ree.- . ROOSEVELT SPURS- BALKANS ’REVOLI President’s Message Urged Boy King to Resist Axis Moves ■WASHINOTON. Mnrch 28 Ml - Pre.ildeni Rooaevelt Kivve full rec- ognlUon tonight to the new Yiiso- slnvlan liovemmcnt headed by the boy king. Peter II. and sent him a message encouraging him to mUt axis aggression. ■>- "I extend the hope.** Uie presf^nt »nld "that the rWaUona between i w government and the government of the' United SUttes may be mutually beneficial in the support of ihoso principals of liberty and tolerance, cherished by Uie Yugoslav and Am- erican peoples."; The message, made public by the suite department. Utrew Uie wliole weight of-the govertunenl behind the encouragement given yesterday to the new Yugoslavian .rcRlme Iv Sumner Welles, undersecreuiiy of state, who virtually promised Uie Balkan kingdom Uiat aid would be forthcoming under the leiue.lend policy if Oermany launched an «t- uck. Yugoslavia may have to rslt months, according to Informed esti- mates, for substantial fulfillment of' the pledge of American aid. Military men expressed belief ib- day, however, that heavy contrtbu- Uons could be made under the lease- lend act should the Yugoslavs pro- long a confUct with the Nazis-into next Winter. Tho Yugoslavian army — esU- mated by some Informed sources here at 700.000 effeeUves despite larger numbers reported In cables from abroad — was reported reasonably well-equipped with Individual weap- ons. These would include rifles, ma- chine gims. and field artlller>' of German, French and other manufac- Wire. On the oUier*‘alde of Uie ledger are shortages of mechanized etjulp- ment. anU-alrcraft* weapons and a crucial weakness In the air. Tlie Yugoslavs lack not only pinnes but pllou. Some csUmates credit them wlUi fewer than 800 planes, many of Uiem anUquated. For anti-aircraft de- fense tha kingdom must rely mainly on Its mounuins to make an In- vader's bombers fly at a respecUul jUUtude. ISH FORCES CRUSH UAL HUSSOUWra DAVOHXBR ------------- Croat Leader (’oiinls Cost of Rc^sislancc, Threatens - Caltiiief S|)Jit J 'Ily'-nir A;.,.«U.I«1 Prr:M HELGRADlf March 2« -Yiit;cislavlu today rcinidlulccl. In ef - fect, the axl.s alliance aiul Intyinied quarters clo.sc lo tlic new Rovenimoiit prrcllclccl Unit Gennany -would withhold mllltnry a.s.sault at lea.si momentarily wIilJc iryltit; to break, up. the country from wUhln. -Hitler would try lo aclilcvc tlii.s coal. It wa.s auRBe.'ited.,by cxplolllnK old Serb-Croal halrocl:;. llic Yugoslav army. I,200,U(JD .strong, stood mobilized at the Irontler.s. ready for any ml!l- -nfy tlircat, but shurpcsi In- terest shifted lo ZuKieb. where tlip Croiil IrinhT. . Vln- Ptrmlcr VliKllnilr Miirrk, (IcbaHxl wllh lii.i llptilctiiuif. wlu'thoi- in rnimlii Iti the iiw r:nl)liii'l. Marrk Cnunts l.ool .Mauck. n holdover Irom the "axLV Kdvcrnmcnl ulilcll u;i;. klckril om ■nmrsdiiy. win i.uld lo frnr llinl Crontln. the noriluTn imri or llic country, woiilil brcir »ic first fliry of liny Germim or llallnn iituick: niul lhii-1, he dcilrcd lulflllmeiit < i llir Viennn iiKrccment of In.M day. ~ Ocnniin news iiKciicles clrculntc<l -itoriM. cmilloiisly lui yet, that M«- cek imd been forced'nt jibtol point lo enter the new cnbltiei nnd thnt the Croiitii were •'reatlesji." TliP'Rovernor of Crontla .......... demiood. however, to be iiegollntlnR wllli Miicek nnd tlir new'premier, Oenernl Dii.iiin Slmovlc, for conUn- ued Croat reprcticntntlon In the cab- Inet, It Is recnlted here that the “divide and confiuer" toctlc wa.i uned .»uc> ce.s.ifully by Otrmi«*y ogaliist Crech- o-ilovakla after niaer-s neUJftck of Moy. 1038./»,'lieh President Eduard Benes mpWUsed the Crcchs to defy Uiejteii ' ■ Pact Left Dangling , Aware of Uio «ltuntion. the new government Informed Germany that the pact signed last TucKlay at Vi- enna by,. Uie men who were over- thrown two days later, would be neither renounced nor mUflcd. but would be left dangling while Yugo- slavia malnUUncd ''full and abso- lute" neutrality towards everyone. This amount* to outright repudia- tion. nnd high dlpIamaUc sources said Uie Germans iwd been told Hat- ly Uiat compliance was “Impossible because It would bo contnvry •’ “ will of the Yugoslav people." Tils arwwcr to nn “urgent" de- mand for a sUitcmcnt or Uie Yugo- slav otUtudc was unsatisfactory to Germany. Tho German minister. Viktor Von Heercn. was reported au- thoritatively tonight to have deliv- ered a new two-point note protP4t- ing Uie beaUng of Germans and de- manding a satisfactory written dec- laratlon of the Yugoslav poatUon. reminding Uie government that Ger- many considers the pact binding. «f a AIJI Prankster Edition Spreads Draft Age PROVIDEKCE. it. I., Match 18 (/T> OonstemaUon lelgnod at Piovldmce ......... .today; n • nadergroduates, 1 the Cowl, atudenU* weekly newspaper, read that ail between Uie ages of 18 and 4 8 ---- * tep. for.ccsnpulsory mllllary setrlce and.V«‘ ready for Indudtloa la June. Student^ vent through several momlng'tlassea la « •«Bi>daie un- til'word was passed around that the; Oovl «as fouc days early vlUi lU annual April first prankster edl- Uoa • Army Men Declare End of Eastern African Cam- paign in Sight CAIIW), Mnrcll M (Ay-A iwodic- ' tion Uint "Uie end of Uie eastern AJrlcon campiUftn l» In sight" Va» voiced Jubilantly tonight by British anny men who reported tho Italians In disordered fllglit down Uie high road to Asinnni. Srltrean capital, following Uie British capture of Cluren. Uic Fiuiclsls' African.'Ver- dun.” :ounted thoaiands of prlsoncit vast quantlUen ot^ war Jtorts token, the British axmcpunc«a,’ . . In-Oie route of Uie.35.000 PBscUt'de-^.^-^ fenders of the Sdtrean mounbUn fortress whlcli fell I»t« Wednesday. . -Tlie conquerltlg Imperial forcee. Including a column of free F---- Uoops, swept on post the c town nnd were reported c Uie heels of the Pnaclats headed for Uie colonial caplUl, 43 miles to the> southeast. “ . With Italian resistance at caieren smashed after a seven-wedt siege and other BrIUsh columns borlns' deeper Into Ethiopia the feeling grew In British quarters here Uiat It wouldn't be long before Mussolini's men are Uirown out of their colonial empire completely. V. s. Proffer* Aid On tho other hand. V. B. Minister - (ConUnufd on F«c* >. CelDBB li News of War InSiimmaiy (By Hie AssoclaU^ Press) Yugoslavia repudUtes the Nasi alllAnce; Ocrmans show dlslncUn- aUon U> fight and apparently seek to Inelte racial hatreds to destroy .........................."icrlln Is re- a fuller ex- Thousands of Frenchmen In un* occupied Marseille denioMtrate for the YugosUvs, Ignore police re- sU'alnt. BriUsh report new^ attacks oo Gennan arsenals and Italian sup- ply lines; acknowledge nearly 10.- 000 British civilian casualUes since the.atari of tho war. but-say Uiat 1.000 were'kllled-and 7,000 loured In recent RAP^ralds on Bremen, Germany, and'230 killed in Ban-' nover. •Italians declared In flight in Srl- trea; BriUsh claim victorious end of the African campaign la near. Between Mother-in-Lfiw and 7— t)rafttp O n e>-M a ^ ’% n --^ o 1 HEW YORK. March 38 n McnUy mairled ny mother-ta-Uw iuttm r have b e « cUMined ■■ l.A . SBtf have a very lowyicdn xnanbtr. Xt tkeep m-rnuxiMf Mcnt X vfllhtT* to to. to camp. I f X' iuinoaneb By n u « rtaKs.X^hKn lba eU:tady «tt«r 4o,yaa '.T1u*;wss.— ttr A few Ofttoem:-'.-.: :v.\ ■■•“/•F' *'^o« caa X flni .out':iiQr-d^ Qftmbo^ 'X did X doot IcaDW irtu^'piy Ibeil M o d ig.- BRITAIN SCANS .WAR CASUALTIES Heavy Blows Reported to German Arsenals, Ital- ian Supply Lines LONDON, March 28 (/P>-BrlUsh -Ir and iea forces reported be blows to Gennaa araenals «sd Ii Ian supply lines tonight while ea the home front Great Britain, ao*.. knowledged civilian >casualUes o f' nearly 10.000 since the war started. . The RAP blasted the great Bhlne« ;. Industrial centers o f Cologne;;; and Duesseldorf and the Oeman?. hekl French "Invaaloo ports" ot Dunkerque; Brest and Calsh, the ' air mlnlsUy announced.,. In the Medlterrmnean; the admlr>< alty sakl. the submarine ParUUaa f torpedoed a 8.000-ton nipA troop ship and * 10,000-^.1 ItaJ? .... .. WlUi only a brief :dayll8bt; ilum':i} In Londoo, tbo<flnt'«lnee tli«al8K.i,. of March » . Britain cor"- ....... enjoy a virtual .ie>ptt*‘l mw attack* which r —■ parlliunentary B^crrt- security ministry, klUed 383M ctvUlaos slnea thegl of thaw. • The seriously injarad. V Inioa aald at KnrcMUe. t< 168. wiUiout revnung.

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T H E T W I N F A L L S N E W STO D AY:Unaetllcd

Vol SS, No. 295 _ v T W IN FA L L S . ID AH O , S A T U R D A Y M O RNING . M ARCH SQ. lO l l Price Five Coi

Spirited Clashes Mark Hearing on Canyon Projects

Reclamalion Commissioner Takes An- otlier Day for Arguments on Power

Company, Proposals

' Hearing on Idaho Power company appllcoUons to develop • four' lower Snake river power sites enters fina l stages today,

follow ing an afternoon o f Spirited arguments that marked presentation o f evidence and testimony before Reclamation Commissioner E. V. Berg In the Jerome county courthCiuse;

Opponents and proponents o f the plan to • Install hydro­electric plants involving Box Canyon and Banbury, Niagara hnd Crystal springs refused to ^Ivc an Inch o f ground through­out yesterday's f o u r - h o u r —hearing, attended by 150 per­sons who Jammed the district court rooms to overflowing. WlUi n nuntlier of wIUipmm yet' imheard shorlly before 6 i>. in.. CommSuloner Berj; eontlciucd the hmrlns until f tt. m. today.

OluBrvcn believed- Uii\l today Uie formnl procecdlnsfl will be fol-

f lowed by a’ call from Conimtwloiicr Berg for cxprcnalonn of jienUmeiit

cislon upon Uie request of E. h.- .lUybom. attorney for Uiose oppos­ing the developments, to select a disinterested enirtneer to Inv^tlRstc and report his /IndinBii. T)iU prob­ably would be followed by a de­cision ."wlUiln iw>coup1e of weeks." Commluloner Berg Indicated.

Tht Isnies 'With today'* teetlmony expected

to elaborate on contenUoni pre* *ent«l yesterday, tha U»ue* Involv- ed are these:: Th« opponents contend U)at the burden of proof reatB upon the pow­er cocripiuiy, that the conpany U not ftcUnr In 8 ^ faltb in aeeUng-the dBVdopmmta, that power eltca: ready .dmloped a n sufficient-to

crut frotn tho (the T t ot w

s f '

company ,'a»^thftti it, 1i dew. . the la actlclpaUoa or future needi, that the developments would benefit rtclamat4an and that an ef­fort will be made to preserve ^enlc beauty and sporting opportunities wherever possible.

• Fotfr AlUrfiejr*ReprcMntlng the power company

were A. O. Inman and Jess Haw>, ley. Boise, attorneys, with- WUIIs eullivan, BoUe, and R. W. Hudel- son. Ooodlng, also sltUng at Ute counsel table on behaU of the Ida­ho Power. R. W. Carpenter, division manager of the Idbho Power com­pany from Twin PUb was present, but was not called to lotlfy.

Witnesses for the power company were H. L. Scnser. chief enjlneer. and B. O. Russell, euperlntendent of production for the company, from Boise.

InlUal clash between opposing at- tomeya came when Mr. Raybom moved that the burden of the proof be placed upon the power company to show the need for power, that It }s acting In good faith and that the power wlU be^put to beneficial use. Tb this the power represcntatlvo replied that the applications hadbeen made and that

« called to provide ' orotestanU to a)

le hearing was

ahow why the per.

FLASHES of LIFE

Almoit Z«Bt VINCENNES, Ind.—Robert Can-

— 1-noo, elactrfdan at-work-Ueop ia-th« New Julian ooal mine east of here, lost hla poeketboofc.

Weeks later a ftnman on » Bal> Umor« and Ohio railroad locomotive nearing nor», QL.'fotmd iboveinH'of coaL

The pocketbook had ridden out of the mlaa oq a coal conveyor, been washed and sorted and dumped Into

'.^ a hopper and found lU way through ,<^a coaU^ sUtlon Into theJoeomoUfe

N o w T hey K now DANBVnXE. N, Y.^Draft b

.effldalt.had t6 turn detectives Ut locate one reglstrabt In this area but they w,ere finally .able to reach tbelr- man. On hit registration he had Inscribed h^' address simply u ‘’QrandfflOlher'S farm." It took <iulie a whUe to find cot Just who grand-

O a tb a L o o ie ^ ALOTQUBRQ17K, K. you

nin aeroM eomeona. lugging a Clrll war oannoQ aroand irtthotit a Ueed!^ notify .the.AlbuqueRiiie poUee dt*

'partnent.'

Jerome Power Hearing Attracts Many Germany Withholds VTilitary Assault, Stirs Old Hatreds

ssagB t25 :«nem anesy“u:'j\s=^^^

POWER DISPUIE

Protesto r’s A ttorney Asks Disniissa! Bccause

W o rk StoppedAn. Injunction suU to reitrain Uie

Idaho Power company from de­veloping the Niagara sprlnp site In Snnkc river conyon was dismissed in dUtrlct court In Twin F%lls •j'ealer- dny on motion of E. L. Raybom, at­torney for Uie petitioner. Harold R, Harvey of BuliL •

Tlse attorney nslced dlsmlml be- - luse, he said, tlie power company had moved drilling equipment away irom the site the day after the suit

Junotlon It had been argued the power company was dlsrcRivrdlng a hearing pending before Idaho com­missioner of reclamation on Its ap> pUcaUon for permit to develdp UiLi and three other Bnake river canyon Bites.' . >

Hearing before the commissioner was held at Jerome yesterday after-

• JamM W.

An affidavit by J. D. Orr. assistant* general manager, and H. L.‘Benger, chief >englneer for the Id&ho Power company, offered in court yesterday was to the effect that the drilling equipment, which had been brought from Spokane, had been' removed from the Niagara springs site.

Attorneys for the power company. Jess Hawley and A. O. Inman, both of Bobe. were In court ready-to re­sist the Injunction suit when Ray­bom asked for Its dismissal.

JURY HOLDS FILM PRODUCER,JURIST

W i l l i a m Fox’ Banl<raptcy Proceed lng sLead lb ■

Indictm entsti n fu n -urt Judge,

PHU-ADELPHIA, March A reUred U. B. ctrcult court. WUIIam Pox of movie fame and of his attorneys were Indicted to­day on a charge o f conspiracy to obstruct Justice In coUrt matters dealing with bankruptcy proceed* Ings on portions of Fox's once vast lS.000.000 financial empire.A federal gmnd jury ipeclally In­

structed by Attorney General-Rob- -crt H. Jackson reported It had foinfc^ldcnco that POx and Mor­gan a Kaufman knew that Judge J, Warren DavU, whUe on the bench “wouM be Interested In and would accept and ncelve.x x x sums of money and other prtsents'* In re­turn Jor_racUon_favorahletLtO-Pnx.

The 82 year old bald-headed pro­ducer whose moUon pictures made screen history stepped to the bar immediately after the charge was made, entered a plea of guilty, and from his pocket paid out five tl.OOO bills for bond.' *T am abeolutely Innocent of the chargea brought,” DaVla declared later at hb LawrencevUle, N. J» home.

Indle^nent of the 14-;ear-oId LawreBcevUle, N. J . Jurbt, who was «Bpolnted to the bench by President Wlllan in . 1930, marked only th< second time In the nation's histon that a member of the federal Judlc< lary has been so charged.

INTEREST in (he hearlnr opsn-Idaho Power eompany (A develop 'power iltea aloQg Snakenorth of Buhl li illustrated by theM pliotes taken during prnceedlen yesterday sftemoon in the

Jerome county eoort house; At,top appear principal! In tlie hearing, and, shewn from lefUJo r l| ^L. C. Hamilton, reporter; E. L. Raybom, attorney for protesUnts; Harold R. Ilantey. one of Th*-«frol anU; Wllllt Sallivan (sUndlnc at rear), poner company represenUtlve; ,R. \\. Iludclian, Coodlnr

ncy general; *and Com * Is a view of lh« andlence. (News photai and Enirarlnn)

Agrement Ends Five-Week Stlrik^ of 1,500 Workers

S E M R S okeh

A ppropriations Committee Sets H igh W itli Billion

D o llar Measure

WASHINOTON. Mnrcll 23 m — Acting witli the some speed used on defense, bllllonii, Uie senate appro­priations committee today stomped approval (in a SU40.0I0.7M farm bUI. largest. In hJftory.' Senator Rus3tir,(D-an) who,will act a.1 flooa manager for Uie nppro- prlaUon. In the senato Monday, said U im was “not any qucatlon" about senate.passage.

He' and other farm-minded eenn- tora agreed-that 'a. fight, If any, would come when the measure was sent back to Uie house whlcli pre­viously :had voted only $800,000,000 for the admlnbtraUon's agricultural prognuzi.' As reported to tho senate the an* nual bill supplying funds for mlllloru of farmes^and Oietr families wa.i

above the hou.ie total,. (CoeUiia«d OB rur* S. ColtimB t)

(By The Associated Press)One Of the first group of.strlkc3 turned over to tlie defense

mediation board fo r settlement was lifted out.ot lU hands last night when a CIO committee and the management reached an agreement ending the five weeks’ work stoppage at the Unlversal-Cyelops Steel Corp., Brldgeville, Pa.

CIO workers also ended their strike a t one Bethlehem Steel company plant, but walked, out a t another.

A meeting o f a CIO union a t Hoboken voted to empower Its executive com mittee to call a ' strike o f 1,500 workers In the shipyard o f the Bethlehem company there. But a simul­taneous meeUiiK of another CIO union nt QrooUyn named a ncRO- Uatlng committee to meet Monday wlUi spokesmen for Uie BeUileliem manasement jit two Bethlehem com­pany yard* Uiere.

6pokc.<imcn for Uie Hoboken union salU. however, that "we shall use every menus offered" by federal

........... - seek a sctllemetit be-

Nazi Ship Sails F o r Russian Port

.8ANT06, Bratll, March 38 ~ -Tlie-6i«7-ton— German— freighter. Z>resden with. clearance papers for a' voyage -to Vladivostok. Russia, soiled "kt' U:Oa p. m’. today In an ap­parent >ttempt to penetrate the BdUsh, blockade. .

Commanded by CapUIn' W. Jae­ger, the vessel “had a crew ori9 and had'been In refuge here since Nov. M. 1839.

British aources declined-to state whether any ships in the »ouUi At­lantic patrol were on the lookout, but It was recalled that the big aux­iliary British crulsec Asturias re­cently steamed out of Buenos Aires

Bent on Peaceable Strike, Q O Ejects Trouble Maker

■ JOHNGrrOWN, March 38 (IP) —A news repreaentaUve of the New Tork “OaUy Worker* 'Cce-Ume or­gan of the Ootmnunlst party, was

of U>e CIO

t h e * n ^ & 5 wtirothe delegBtioo'.eotvnd ttoe-'dlnlncworn. .......... . .•

••Xiomo .a j. yoa '»„lo lD f’ otrt of

7 'm an Amerlcaa clUsen; my t«xes and I doot have to loin^- Z ^ ^ e d . .• "Youi-U .‘either get out-W town

rum or

Wherewith Lories h it and eoat were-handed him, he was escorted to hls.matoaobUe.'dilTea to thrclty lxa iUaaA .ioU .j3ot.tonU aD ;iJ^

"W9 mn gttac to have a peanaUe •triks ud.WB dent Intend to have «UBh p e ^ o around- to stir up

CIO Members Return to Work at One Beth­lehem Steel Planti But Walk

Out in. Another

2 0 ( U ) 0 0 'i'roops For Nazi Arinv

ANKARA. Turkey. Miircll Sn i!i'. Germnny h NrtidliiK >ii< ncldltininil SOO.OOO troasi Inltl HuJciirlft i<i aiiKnient lirr strlklnK Inrre u|. ready caIIiiiiiIciI ut niorr iImh 300.000. A iiriilrnl (llplmniil ulu> came from Uiichnrf:,! iiv v,hv n( Bo(lii,'i.Al<l umlKhi.■ UnoHlclnl rciwrUi nln> tli.it Brltbli troops coiiihiiicd to I:ui;i In Orcpce Incliitniii: tlir key Ai- genn i>ori of Siilontkn.

Tlic (llpiomnl . wiUI Oi-rinn:i forces In southern BiilKtifln were forced lo rely on hor.ier. nud iinilo.i for traiujjort bccause of li:ul ronds. Few Qemiiuis were *i.i- Honed on tlio BulKuriiin-TtirkbH

.fronUer, he snld. but mnny Hul. Kurlnn soldiers were In ixisUlim there.

All Turkey Juhllmil n*i-r the Vugoslnv government coup.

. . a strike tall Is issued. The dis­pute Involving both the Hoboken and Brooklyn unions Involved de­mands for a contract.

noard Orders Hearings Tlte medUUoifboord moved swlft-

ports elrcuUted Uiat Uie administra­tion might seek sweeping new pow­ers to deal with defense prqdueUon ^ppsgcs.

As a flrst'ftteprthe txxinl’ ordered hearlhga In W«hlngton today on strikes at Uie Vanadlum eorporaUon, BrldwvlUe, Pa., and the Comell- Dubiller company. South Plainfield, N. J, a hearing on stzikcs In four plants of the IntemaUonal Barvest- er company Monday.

Tlie board siao asked' that work be resumed at all plants while iU

Its closed plants. More than 30.000 workers are employed In its four Illinois and Indian* planU where the CIO farm equipment workers organldng committee' haa called sUlltes seeking wage adJu it^U and union •recognltlpn.

The Vanadium strike Involves « 0 workers who proteetod emplcemient of noa-UBiea p U i)t-«ia qk ' 6&ne 3,300 are involved ln.«he Gocnell- Dubluer strike, called by-the APL rlNTtrical union when contract nego* thiUoDS Ki>ke'down,. .

' Wage toeteese '. .iherft wer» 1600 wprken eo'strike • •»’nlversal-0’-*—

was uod wage* Increase.

OUierwlse,-the dayt labor devel* amenlA included the following: i 'Ih i United Automol^ Wotken

<010> uuuwnced ut tnfoimal agrment-to .end an IS-dv-etzlke

U.S.NMEPS

Adm iral S tark Silent on Destination of ' Squadron

WASHINOTON. Mnrcll 38 m — CrypUc sutcment by Uie United States navy sUrred speculation to­night that American n-nnhlps might be kept Indefinitely In Uic South Pacific for' Uie sake of tjjelr mortd Influence on Japan, -r

As a fohnldable squadron of eev-' cn. flghUng.ships sailed away from Brisbane, AusUvlls. Admiral Harold R. Stark, chief of operaUons, Issued a.fltatcnienl-Uiat.hcJi(mj.To_eom- ment" as to lu future .duUnaUon.

The movements of a smaller f o ^ which vUited New Zealand w«re screened la. as complete official sec­recy. ■ ' ■

Both contingents were ostensibly on training cruises from Uielr 'nor­mal operaUng bases in Hawaii and titey put into Uie BriUsh empire south PacUk: porU for "good will and recreaUon."

Ttie clrcuMtanees of the formal sUtment Just when

mlnUUr was Ip______ _____ strongly U «t Uiestate department and the navy’s higb.oominaod were at least wUUng to keep Tolgro guessing'ka to Amer­ican ' Intentloos of strengthening aoU-axlB defenses In the souUi Pa- oUIe.

Suapiclan-that Uie cruise to Uioae winter*'wr*» aa attempt to I-"— pressure Japan has been vi p ^ te d ly in^mokyo 1 ^

and iour destroyers actfved Varch 1« ftt Aueklaad. New Sealaod, wlth- ont »awBea. annoaneemwit, la a PMtfio m r any attempt to blockade JapuiiiroaV! be b u tt in the eoulh PMttle. .iti»te8itts-s«ree.- .

ROOSEVELT SPURS- BALKANS’REVOLI

P resident’s M essage Urged Boy K ing to Resist

Axis Moves■ WASHINOTON. Mnrch 28 Ml - Pre.ildeni Rooaevelt Kivve full rec- ognlUon tonight to the new Yiiso- slnvlan liovemmcnt headed by the boy king. Peter II. and sent him a message encouraging him to mUt axis aggression. ■>-

"I extend the hope.** Uie presf^nt »nld "that the rWaUona between i w government and the government of the' United SUttes may be mutually beneficial in the support of ihoso principals of liberty and tolerance, cherished by Uie Yugoslav and Am­erican peoples.";

The message, made public by the suite department. Utrew Uie wliole weight of-the govertunenl behind the encouragement given yesterday to the new Yugoslavian .rcRlme Iv Sumner Welles, undersecreuiiy of state, who virtually promised Uie Balkan kingdom Uiat aid would be forthcoming under the leiue.lend policy if Oermany launched an «t- uck.

Yugoslavia may have to rslt months, according to Informed esti­mates, for substantial fulfillment of' the pledge of American aid.

Military men expressed belief ib- day, however, that heavy contrtbu- Uons could be made under the lease- lend act should the Yugoslavs pro­long a confUct with the Nazis-into next Winter.

Tho Yugoslavian army — esU- mated by some Informed sources here at 700.000 effeeUves despite larger numbers reported In cables from abroad — was reported reasonably well-equipped with Individual weap­ons. These would include rifles, ma­chine gims. and field artlller>' of German, French and other manufac- Wire.

On the oUier*‘alde of Uie ledger are shortages o f mechanized etjulp- ment. anU-alrcraft* weapons and a crucial weakness In the air. Tlie Yugoslavs lack not only pinnes but pllou.

Some csUmates credit them wlUi fewer than 800 planes, many of Uiem anUquated. For anti-aircraft de­fense tha kingdom must rely mainly on Its mounuins to make an In­vader's bombers fly at a respecUul jUUtude.

ISH FORCES CRUSH UAL

HUSSOUWra DAVOHXBR

-------------

Croat Leader ( ’oiinls Cost of Rc^sislancc, Threatens -

Caltiiief S|)JitJ 'Ily'-nir A;.,.«U.I«1 Prr:M

H E LG RAD lf March 2 « -Yiit;cislavlu today rcinidlulccl. In e f­fect, the axl.s alliance aiul Intyinied quarters clo.sc lo tlic new Rovenimoiit prrcllclccl Unit Gennany -would w ithhold mllltnry a.s.sault at lea.si momentarily wIilJc iryltit; to break, up. the country from wUhln.

-H itler would try lo aclilcvc tlii.s coal. It wa.s auRBe.'ited.,by cxplolllnK old Serb-Croal halrocl:;.

l l i c Yugoslav army. I,200,U(JD .strong, stood mobilized at the Irontler.s. ready for any ml!l- -nfy tlircat, but shurpcsi In­terest shifted lo ZuKieb. where tlip Croiil IrinhT. . Vln- Ptrmlcr VliKllnilr Miirrk, (IcbaHxl wllh lii.i llptilctiiuif. wlu'thoi- in rnimlii Iti the i iw r:nl)liii'l.

Marrk Cnunts l.ool .Mauck. n holdover Irom the "axLV

Kdvcrnmcnl ulilcll u;i;. klckril om ■nmrsdiiy. win i.uld lo frnr llinl Crontln. the noriluTn imri or llic country, woiilil brcir » ic first fliry of liny Germim or llallnn iituick: niul lhii-1, he dcilrcd lulflllmeiit <i llir Viennn iiKrccment of In.M day. ~

Ocnniin news iiKciicles clrculntc<l -itoriM. cmilloiisly lui yet, that M«- cek imd been forced'nt jibtol point lo enter the new cnbltiei nnd thnt the Croiitii were •'reatlesji."

TliP'Rovernor of Crontla ..........demiood. however, to be iiegollntlnR wllli Miicek nnd tlir new'premier,Oenernl Dii.iiin Slmovlc, for conUn- ued Croat reprcticntntlon In the cab- Inet,

It Is recnlted here that the “divide and confiuer" toctlc wa.i uned .»uc> ce.s.ifully by Otrmi«*y ogaliist Crech- o-ilovakla after niaer-s neUJftck of Moy. 1038./»,'lieh President Eduard Benes mpWUsed the Crcchs to defy U ie jte i i • ' ■

Pact Left Dangling , Aware of Uio «ltuntion. the new government Informed Germany that the pact signed last TucKlay at Vi­enna by,. Uie men who were over­thrown two days later, would be neither renounced nor mUflcd. but would be left dangling while Yugo­slavia malnUUncd ''full and abso­lute" neutrality towards everyone.

This amount* to outright repudia­tion. nnd high dlpIamaUc sources said Uie Germans iwd been told Hat- ly Uiat compliance was “Impossible because It would bo contnvry •’ “ will of the Yugoslav people."

T ils arwwcr to nn “urgent" de­mand for a sUitcmcnt or Uie Yugo­slav otUtudc was unsatisfactory to Germany. Tho German minister.Viktor Von Heercn. was reported au­thoritatively tonight to have deliv­ered a new two-point note protP4t- ing Uie beaUng of Germans and de­manding a satisfactory written dec- laratlon of the Yugoslav poatUon. reminding Uie government that Ger­many considers the pact binding.«f a AIJI

Prankster Edition Spreads Draft AgePROVIDEKCE. it . I., Match 18 (/T>

OonstemaUon lelgnod at Piovldmce......... .today; n • nadergroduates,

1 the Cowl, atudenU* weekly newspaper, read that ail between Uie ages of 18 and 4 8 ---- *tep. for.ccsnpulsory mllllary setrlce and. V«‘ ready for Indudtloa la June.

Student^ vent through several momlng'tlassea la « •«Bi>daie un­til'word was passed around that the; Oovl «as fouc days early vlUi lU annual April first prankster edl- Uoa •

Army Men D ecla re End of Eastern A fric an Cam ­

paign in S ightCAIIW), Mnrcll M (Ay-A iwodic- '

tion Uint "Uie end of Uie eastern AJrlcon campiUftn l» In sight" Va» voiced Jubilantly tonight by British anny men who reported tho Italians In disordered fllglit down Uie high road to Asinnni. Srltrean capital, following Uie British capture of Cluren. Uic Fiuiclsls' African.'Ver­dun.”

:ounted thoaiands of prlsoncit vast quantlUen ot war Jtorts token, the British axmcpunc«a,’ . .

In-Oie route of Uie.35.000 PBscUt'de-^.^-^ fenders of the Sdtrean mounbUn fortress whlcli fell I» t « Wednesday.. -Tlie conquerltlg Imperial forcee.Including a column of free F----Uoops, swept on post the c town nnd were reported c Uie heels of the Pnaclats headed for Uie colonial caplUl, 43 miles to the> southeast. ■“ .

With Italian resistance at caieren smashed after a seven-wedt siege and other BrIUsh columns borlns' deeper Into Ethiopia the feeling grew In British quarters here Uiat It wouldn't be long before Mussolini's men are Uirown out of their colonial empire completely.

V. s. Proffer* AidOn tho other hand. V. B. Minister - (ConUnufd on F«c* >. CelDBB li

News of War InSiimmaiy

(By Hie AssoclaU^ Press) Yugoslavia repudUtes the Nasi

alllAnce; Ocrmans show dlslncUn- aUon U> fight and apparently seek to Inelte racial hatreds to destroy■ .........................."icrlln Is re-

a fuller ex-

Thousands of Frenchmen In un* occupied Marseille denioMtrate for the YugosUvs, Ignore police re- sU'alnt.

BriUsh report new^ attacks oo Gennan arsenals and Italian sup­ply lines; acknowledge nearly 10.- 000 British civilian casualUes since the.atari of tho war. but-say Uiat 1.000 were'kllled-and 7,000 loured In recent RAP^ralds on Bremen, Germany, and'230 killed in Ban-' nover.

•Italians declared In flight in Srl- trea; BriUsh claim victorious end of the African campaign la near.

Between Mother-in-Lfiw and 7 — t ) r a f t t p O n e > - M a ^ ’ % n - - ^ o 1

HEW YORK. March 38 n McnUy mairled ny

mother-ta-Uw iuttm r have b e « cUMined ■■ l.A . SBtf have a very lowyicdn xnanbtr. Xt tkeep m -rn u x iM f M cn t X vfllh tT* to to. to camp. I f X' iuinoaneb By n u « r ta K s .X ^ h K n lb a eU:tady «tt«r

4o,yaa '.T1u*;wss.—

ttr

A few Ofttoem:-'.-.: :v .\ ■■•“/•F' *'^o« caa X f ln i .out':iiQr-d^

Qftmbo^ 'X did Xdoot IcaDW irtu^'piy Ibeil M od ig.-

BRITAIN SCANS .WAR CASUALTIES

Heavy Blows Reported to German Arsenals, Ita l­

ian S upply LinesLONDON, March 28 (/P>-BrlUsh

-Ir and iea forces reported be blows to Gennaa araenals «sd Ii Ian supply lines tonight while ea the home front Great Britain, ao*.. knowledged civilian > casualUes o f' nearly 10.000 since the war started. .

The RAP blasted the great Bhlne« ;. Industrial centers o f Cologne;;;

and Duesseldorf and the Oeman?. hekl French "Invaaloo ports" ot Dunkerque; Brest and Calsh, the ' air mlnlsUy announced.,.

In the Medlterrmnean; the admlr>< alty sakl. the submarine ParUUaa f torpedoed a 8.000-ton nipA troop ship and * 10,000-^.1

ItaJ? . . . . . .WlUi only a brief :dayll8bt; ilum':i}

In Londoo, tbo<flnt'«lnee tli«al8K.i,.of March » . Britain c o r "- .......enjoy a virtual .ie>ptt*‘ l mw attack* which r — ■ parlliunentary B^crrt- security ministry, klUed 383M ctvUlaos slnea thegl of t h a w . •

The seriously injarad. V “ Inioa aald at KnrcMUe. t<168. wiUiout revnung.

TWIN PALLS NEWS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO. SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 29,1941

1 11, GAM ,DRAFIB LEAVE

m Counties C ontribute Sev­en M en Each to M il­

ita ry ServiceSALT LAKE CtTY. March,28 (-Pi rome aiid CuulA countlrj .cnii*

tributed neven men cach »nd Dlnliic county Uireo to Uie* finnt srotip o( southern Idfthcutns Inductrd Into tlie army here today under the March dratl QUOtA.

The leleeUve »crvlce recrulte wero prdercd to Uie Port DourIm reception center, wliciice later Uisy will be dt<patched lo trntnlns campn.

Prom Jerome county came: Law- rcnce Leonard Catper of Kimberly. Harold Campbell Reeio oT Kazellon, Alfred Aleximder Cajwert. Lout Al­len ?eiulcr. Jolm. Prwicrlclt. A»l».

Ollvef Tom JohiiMn ntitl Jo© Rosa Hinton, nil of Jerome.

Prom Coasla; Orval Wayne Jolm- •on and Donald Earl Oardnnr. both of MurtAugh; Dale Wexley MorrU. WlUlam -Campbell RlUhcy. Francis Duane Hayden. Wlirord James f^ .i- cott and Merlin Le Roy Oncru. nil of Burley.

Prom Blaine; Herbert JameA }(nn> P aen of Ketchum; La Velve KennetiiV. TViwlv'AnH

lAGREEiNTENDS 5-WEEKS SHE: to back up demand for hlelier

.wasea.In BwCon. 000 CIO employei of

the Walworth Manufacturing com­pany returned to work after * four*

• day strike which won them wage In* creaMs and other eonctuloni. -At Gary. Ind, there was amall-scale

’ pkkeOne ot tito Cameele'IUJnola Steel corporaUon'a plant by CIO members who ot>Jected to employes worklne ' without pald*up union standlnflr.

AdiS'Chalmen Reopens The Allls^Chalmers Manufactur­

ing comptuir. Milwaukee, re-opened Its plant at the

miniiicr rfqiic.\l by-attorney Rj»y- borii Umt Bie ixfucr coinpmiy coun­sel bo rc<)UlrF<l lo pre.%ent n prinm (ncle ciL'.c. CoiiiinLvilotier Here re- que.itcd tliiii It cnll It-s v.llnc '.i:s,

, AliU Comml«lon»r AlUiouiil> Leo Drc.iMiilinn. Bobr.

au>Ut4uil nitoriicy ec:icrnl. «vlio served -lu l(Ki>1 lulvL-ior to ConimLi* sloner Bf«f. »Wleil nL utarl of Uic hearlnc tlmt Uie curly plinac* be devoted to evldmcc and teaUmony nnd antiiinenti be postponed until, lAKr. Attorney Inmnn presented wlmt Mr. Rnybom lnt«r Urm.ed “an arjremcnt for Uie power company" In his openlnB »talement. ' •• Alter revlcwlns poat proceedlnsa. including the Feb. 28 hearing at BoLse. of which lie wUd "a* a mat­ter of law no htarlnK was held, al­though wo all did a lot of tAllUng." Mr. Inman continued by pointing out that the power compftny U in* teresud In developlnK a sound pow- r program for somhcm Idalio and

Interested lit

oinctals wtu> asked Immediate re- ~ sumption of work on lUJMO.OOO in . defense orden. But bow many or itji ■ ‘7400 producUon employes returned ; to th’elr ]obe-wss dUputcd.

' Ttae CIO United Autocnoblle . Worken, conducUnff (he two- . moDths-old strike, said only a huuUul. 'nte maoagement reported

. that 1J03 or » normal shUt oX 0,* j 000 were at work. A union BiMt4ng -• was aet iae this morning to decide . whether work should be resumed de- ^splt* failure to reach an tgreement V. WUi the company on demands

vhlch Included a union shop.... Ib a atrike which began last Mon-' ,1 day in BethXehtm'a partst plant at : P*.. enploflaff 18,000,

was settled by an agreement pro* ,,'Vlding that the employes represen-

totloQ plan. an.unaffUlated union, ahould boM no more eleotlons on ccppany property until there is »

' . dscislea on an appeal to the courts I. from ft lybor board ruling that it U »

“company union." The CIO -walkout- was ta protest against an E3tP elec*

tioo.Ib e aame question was involved

;■ ta a aeir.w»lkout of CIO members . ftoa .the company's Ctunbrla plant- at Johnstown, Pa., employing i5,-

to complete preliminary .....tjon by digging a few holes." nnd read-a lettpr,by C. J. Strike, jiresl- derit and general mnnacer, BoUe, who WM unable to attend.;

Attorney Inman concluded with the statement Uial "the Jdaho4>ow- er company has been a 'good citizen' of southern Idaho for 2S years.”

SenJi Letter Mr. SUIke'a letter as introduced in

evidence reiilewed the xompany's policy of "c^elopinK omallvplant sites o( sufficient site only to take care of anticipated demands of our system in -me immediate future," adding, "those who are familiar with the future reclamaUon program In

any fur-

-.flOO.

Gortraar Promlaes Beer MILWAUKEE, March K im —

, Oovemor Juliua Hell fraUmlied ' with strikers ouUlde the AllU-

Chalmers company plant today— V and promised to buy them 8Q bar-

rels o f beer when ,tho sUlke„waa

. He handed out dollLr bills to two h young daughters of one of the strlk ;• en. had a CfO button pinned on ■; his lapeL gave a dollar id anoUter /-worker, and plajed chauffpur to a t. atrlker who wanted a lift to stMke J-. headquarters. -:• One of a group called out to tlie . governor:

"When this strike U over will you give' us a b «m l of beer to cele- toraUT"

, ■ i n give you 60 barrcli." the gov- emor promised. “Yes. and H i make good on it too." • >*“ ■ »

■ A ir Raid Patrols Don’t Forget Pets

LONDON (/t^Pets in London get air raid t»trol strvice. too.

The organization^ rescued 47.000 . dop,. eats, rabbits, caged birds. ' horses and monkeys during the last

months-of 1940. Ambulance , Ice was provided In some In* ; .atancea.

. Our Dumb Priends* iMtgue has flzst aid centers. hwpltaJs and tern- porai7 rest homes for anlmali, Spe-

eUl A. R. P. wardens remove pets trapped under debris or abandoned la areas atade dangerow by delayed

. acUaa bombs.

-MOST NATUEAITATHLETT' BETAINS-ina CUAMPIONBHir FORT o o ixm s . Oo]o. (ffV-Bob

Ibackeray Is Colorado stato's "most . aatural attUete" for the second {.’[ .aeeutlTe pear. ■

Thaekerajr. high point man at the Big Bevea confdence track meet lu t ^vlng. scored 8,530 points la a ftf*-*T«at test staged by Tcmmy T ^ pU h . M i i o l education ■truetor and vwlmmlng coach.

Oontcsbuta had their choice of Vauch tesU as chtnntng.-’'standing

V ing • k*"*' and l»g lift.

OrandfatJier

COOKED fO O D S ALE

■ M rtS e l8 rto j(ta7 ,;M iK li. 29 : ,

jObel* Ke. «~ IM bod lrt C ta t l

Keep the W hite Flao

I S a tctu 'F ljjin o

Twcnt]j-twn daua w ithout a latal tra / llc '^ cc ld cn t in our Maaic Vallcv.

CLASHES MARK POWER HEARIN

tnl Icllnwntts for the entire Idaho I’fiwer nystem, not including, home mtnor otlrcM. are estimated at 100,-

.Ru.Mll Te«llfle«nV',ilmoiiyby Mi'I Ruaaell indlcat-

i-(Kil):ii an estimated 35 per cent of prr ;lll power Rericrated is aold to

!>• UMh LlKht and Power compnny. ■liirii 1' ownrd by the same interesUi s the liliiho Power.At rIo.'e of this queitloning. Coin-

ml.yloiiiT Berg added, before reccM- liiR the hearing briefly, tliat "Mie Idahn Power company Ix Mlllnu a vfr>- brer part' of power o ltslde

Ri-iMilcd upon remmihg of pro- cwdliiR'. Mr. Senger lenttdfd That • thr In to develop only Tlox can­yon utiil Bimbury. and hot tn de- vrlop ^ilasara and Crystal springs Immcdlntely.

He wi»s asked by Attorney Ray- >rn, "Arc yoa mnkJng lbp.''» fJJJngs 1 » iir(vnulloii?",to which the en*

Khifcr rppllcd. "No, Just to be pre- parprt."

AskPil by Attorney‘ Inman wa.n. '•Do yon think Uie volume of wciter

Mitticleni to make the flllng.i worih-ilille?"

Thr ft.-.wcr was. ••Yes."Afirr offering datA rclatliiR to

the mntter now tn the hands of the commlvsloner as evidence, in- cludliii: material as to power being proiliicfd at Upper JWlinon. Lower ealnioii. Twin falls, Bhoslione faUs.' Swim Jttlls. Tliousand Springi. Ma- la<l, Clear Lakes anti American fidLi. Atiomcy Raybom moved Unit. CoinmK'loner Berif appoint "a dls- hiterr.iicd hydro-clcfltric engineer to hivr»Ui.-ute nity-^ irififcfd port lo th^s’Commliiioncr.’

/AcUen Aw«lied No Immediate action wa.i teken

iipon this request.Mr. Hawley Uien an»e to demand lat wiincMCs be produced, "to up­

hold the allegations tliaC we have been acting In bad faith" and he alw.afoerted U)at -such cluima fchould not *be made without evl* dence whicli would Justify -refusal of

IT application!!.’'A remark by Uie attorney regard­

ing Uie.norUi and m th sides, drew ft ahitrp rebuke from Attorney Ray­bom. who pointed out that Uiis did

Bt enter, into the controversy.The opponents' counsel, who dur­

ing Uie proceedings pointed out

IdenUIIod hlmtelf os a Buhl former.lisrvey Speaks

, "Al Uie BoLie hesting I main­tained and stm msinUln Uiat scenic, recreational and sporting uses for water a^e beneilclal uipii, and iliat the wators of Crystal, Ni­agara. Banbury and Box canyon are already appropriated by Uie peo­ple of IdiOlo and put to beneficial

MUmey Inman had eariJer pointed out Uiat pictures end oUier

of Blckel sprinRS

thet development in reclamaUon 1 very largely 'Sependcnt upon avail­ability of an immediato power mar­ket so that a subsUnUal portion of the Investment cnn be amortised Uirough sale of electric power.'.

First witness to bo called w-as En' glneer Benger. whose testimony wa: largely confined to costs and tech­nical data Involved. When Attorney Raybom asked. -"Do you have any demands now that you are not able to meet?" the engineer remained silent, and superintendent Rus.%ell was later crots-exontlned upon the matter of developing power'hefo'for

» In Utah and oUier states.Cngineerlnr Data ^

Rere briefly is Uie Sengcr tesU- mony upon expenditures nnd nntld- pated kilowatt gencmtlon at sites involved* although esUmates are vn> certain as they ipay be increa.ied by thejefense program r --'Bo*'canyon—Total for diversion dam nnd power plant, $580,000; 4J00 kllawntts.

Banbury springs—S0O.ODO for pipe line; power plant at Box can^n would be utlllted.

Niagara sprinca—<00.000 for diver­sion work; 3200 kllowotts.

Co’ital springs—tOS.OOO for diver* slon dam and pipeline: 3.000 kilo* watt^

Crou>examlnallon by Attorney Raybom of the engineer Inchirted;

Q—Where dn you expect to use Uils clectricllyT

(Objection enlere3 by power t....pany that this was not relrvnni, but overruled by the commlwlhncri.

A—In the system of Uie Idaho Power company^

Q—Where would the customers be who would receive this power in the system of the Idaho Power com­pany? ■

A—Oregon. Nevada and Idaho. Q—And UUh. too?A—Yes.

Englnerr- Silent <^Do you have uny demands that

you are not able to mect-wlUi pres­ent faeillUeo?

(This wasTollowed by silence, af­ter which the engineer explained that the company was aitempUng to Anticipate future demands).

To this Mr. Raybom asked If this was not speculation.

IMming to lower Salmon falls and Its power plant. Mr. Raybom asked how much power Is belng 'generated at-present, to which Engineer Sen- ger replied. "It is generating 1JOO kilowatts."

Later quesUoning brought out that M.OOO miowntfJ coutd be prortded as potratlal power with reconstruction of tBrplant and raising of the dam to develop more head. At Twtn PalLi polcnUal generaUon b 13.000 kilo­watts. as compared tri the present Ojoo. it was brought ouL

The witness also tesUfied that to-

“ F O R S Y TH IA FOR E V E R Y ‘G A R D E N ”

, S A L E O F

Forsyth'ia Shrubs . 1 9 c e a -

. T0DA7, SAT. HAS. 29Ui

The.Window Shop

SENATORS OKEH. HUGE FARM Bl

, I-.C. Or.es414.ess.773 , hlKher Ulan President Roo.tcvell's budget rccommen<laUons, and 1303.051.833. above last year's approprlatlQiia.

*At least' we didn't hIt’ Uie *7.- 00O,000OT0 mark," Mild Senator Nye B-ND). member of . Uic senate 'farm bloc," anti a critic of the Brlt- Ish-ald proKnun.

A.1 UMisl the bulk of funds will be UAcd for benefit paj-menis to farm­er* coopcraUng in the adinlniatra* tion's attempts to balance produc*

on with demand."nid house hod provfrtcd MOO,000.*

,X) for "soil conserving pa>-menls" and 1313.000.000 for "parity pay* mentfl.” aenatora approved Uie <500.-000,000 but raised Uie "par........to , *450,000,000.. and then ...........Uint. S150.000.000 of It be paid out Uils year to cotton, wheat, com. tobacco and rice growers complying •1th the farm acta.OUier major Incrensett by the sen­

ate group Included $39,000,000 for surpliu removal operaUons includ- 'liig the tUmp pljuj; *7.000,000 casl) and 135.000,000 loaning power for the farm security administmUon which handles nirol relief; and »4,-. OOOMO additional for forest roads and trails. - ’

The- house ogrlculture conimlttee,■ ■■ -ccommcnded pasjage of

Involved In Uie controversy relevant, as they would not be In­cluded In Uie power development plan.

Touching up6n Uils point. Wit- ess Harvey said: "All have agreed

Uiat Uie Blckel springs group U acenlcally valuabls to Uie stato. and that recreation and sporti In this area were a leglUmale use of Uiese waters. Therefore. 1 malntoin Uint it is admitted by all Uiat scenic nnd recreaUon uses of Blckel springs Is beneficial use."

ConUnulng In nn eifort to show the magnitude of water involved, Mr. Harvey Mid:

•'In the «-m lle stretch of ____I below the falls (Shoshone) there > 11 'sprlniss of Uie first magnl-'

tude.* the Inrgcat of whicli would furnish enough water to supply New York City, and altogether the springs that dlschar«a into the can­yon In this stretch, yield t water to supply all the cities ». United States of mors than 100,000 Inhabitants with 120 gallons a day for each inhabitant,"

4 Spawning Ar«jtHe cited Uio fact Uiat B o x ___

yon Is one of Uie few trout spawTiing areas remaining In the river, and that It would be commensurate with Uie stoto fish hatcljery.

Producing a picture of Niagara springs, Uken by Robert Coud of Cu/il. ilO added, T lm t Is what I consider a verv beautiful piece of water.- despliA the Utters In Uie audience (this apparently directed at laughter- from Uie audience at Uie ardor wiUi which he made his asserUons).

A display of a number of pictures as introduced in evidence, with

pholoe- of "Devil'a Washboard" at Clear Lakes drav -ing obJecUons from Attorney Inman, who claimed it did not enter the controversy. The poster compared a woter/aJl scene and a dry watcrbed in an apparent effort to show how the power patiy had "beautified" one power site.

Tills was admitted in evidence by Uie commissioner. -

OUier comments mads by Mr. Har­vey included.

CIUs Surrey ."I desire to read into Uie record

the following statement token from page in . Qeologlcal Sur\ey Water- Supply paper W?. publUhed In 1035 by Uie V. S. government printing offlco:

The company ddalio -Power company) is controlled by Uic Power SecuriUes corporaUon. which b controlled b}- the Electric Power and Light corporaUon. which in turn -is conUwlled by the Hcctrieal Bond and Share company through pervlsion eontracU

"I call attenUon to this somewhat involved and entirely out-of*stat< control not tor the purpose of con-

legislation to increase penalties for wheat and com produced'on'non­quota acreage from 15 to 60 cents - '-••shel. The penalties would apply

if two>thlrds of the producers coimiiodlly voted for the es*

tabllsliment o f quotas.The house committee also ap*

proved Uie selling of the 1041 crop loan rate on corn, cotton, tobncfo and .wheat at 75 per cent of parity.

This would make the rato for whent about &5 cents a busliel.

Window Display Troubles Driver

A Muruugh youUi. Hollln Walker, I. was scnienced'yesterday to pay

$35‘flne becau.ie he had covered the, windshield nnd side nnd rear win­dows of his car with a collection ot arUclea including stickers and signs, book matches, beads, goggles and nrUcles of cloUilng.’Includlng a piece t a girl's stocking.He pleaded guilty to a reckle.vn

driving charge based on Uie prose­cutor's opinion that drlrtnfr a car "covered" wlUi articles of non-lrnn»- parent nature Li in fact reckless driving.

Justice of the Peace G. T. Swopo Imposed the fine and sUpulated it sliould be served In Jiill al tile rate

■ *1 a day If not paid.

B re v i t ie sIluslnrts Trip — Marsliall Cliap«

. jan. Twin Palls attorney, was In Jerome yeinerday on business.

B«T»e VliUlorn—Mr. ond Mrs. C. A. Robinson nnd Mrs. J. Gray of Twin Fnll* were buslne.is ■visitors in Boise Tli«r.iday.

Daughter VIslU — Miss ' Lriili Molyncaux of Ely. Nev.. Is ti Kucst at ilic.home of her purenti, Mr. and Mr.v J. N. Molyncaux.

To Wa»lilnelon—Mrs. N.'llie O.i- trom of Twin Palls has gone to Spo­kane to attend a northwe.n mtwlc confcrence. She plans to be gone one week.

TarenU of Son—Sfr. nnd Afrs. Tru­man Rathbun Of Hansen nre the parenls.of a son bom ycsterdny'ftt Uie .Twin Palls county general hoe- pltnl maternify home.

ParenU of Girl—Mr. and Mrs, H, L. Canfield of Kimberly arc Uie parents ot a daughter boni yester­day at the Twin Palls county gen­eral hospital maternity home.

Scouten'to Meet—Commiisioncrs Uic Snake river area council. Boy

Scouts of America, will meet at Uie Park hotel in cxecuUve session to­morrow. beginning at 10 a. m,. offl* clals said yesterday.

Famils of Sob — Mi;, and Mrs. Miirry Bcrlbncr of Twin PalU are Uie parents of n son bom early yes­terday morning nt the Twin >'alli county general - hospital maternity home.

naed—Applicants for marrlsge licenses issued at T«-fn Falls cotra- ty recorder's office" yesterday were TlieobUd W. pehrmann and Helen Schnefen boUi of Jerome; LouLi A. Dillon. '31, Kimberly, and Bnma Irene Sliockey. 18, Tw-ln Falls, .

Allomey VUIta Jess Hawley. Bolxe attorney, who Is in Twin Falls for n district court cn.se. renewed old acquaintances while here. He prose­cuted the first criminal case to be heard In thS local district court. Uien sllunled over the Idaho Department store.

Slirlner's Event — A number — Twin Falls Shriners and their wives wl^Kattend the nnnual dlnner-dance of Uie Pocatello Shrine club to* nlRht nt Uie Bannock hotel In tiutt city. Tlie affair begins at 7:30 o'clock and will be attended by Shriners and UiPlr wives from all southem Ida­ho.

IWIN BROTHERS N DRAFT Q

Deadline Nears , In Registration

RegUimtlon for next Tuesday's municipal election moved up to 5.453 persons last night, nnd Uie deadline for signing necessary forms U B o'clock tonight. Chief Rcglstmr W. H. Eldrldge nniiounced.

No regl.itratlons will be ncccpted after 9 p. m. today, nnd only voters who were regl.itered this spring will be eligible to vote April 1. the of­ficial pointed but.

The rcRhtrallon bv words la.it night w.is: No. 1-1071; No. 3-2008, No. 3—1304.

dcranlng bJg nionopollcs or W<iJ! street Intere.-iti, but to iitrcas the fact that;

“Tlic Idaho Power company is not controlled by Idnho cltliciu. While present offlcc and 'field personnel nnd director.n nre Idnho cltizensi- Uiey are cnUrely subject to outside authority . . . and this outside cor­porate auliiorlty (vin scarcely be ex­pected to take the same Intercnt in not despoiling Idaho as long.as they can monopollje and make money from our slate."

Mr. Hnrv'cy add/d that the com­pany Is showing ‘Lad faith" In ap­plying for j>owcr*|)ermlt3 on these springs because they have no need for additional pow»r,He pointed out Uiat "As a-ssurance Uiat Uierc will be no shortage of poner during Uie period of con.itrvctlon of new gov-' emment power plants, a 161,000 volt trnnsml\slon, line Is Jiisl being placed in service between Anaconda, MonU. and Qrace. Idaho, adding SSMOJclIowatts to power available.

At cJoie of U>e hearing. Attorney Hawley quesUoned the witness to determine if he wire Uained or had prncUced lis an engineer ns qualifi­cation to comment upon technical matters Involved.

Upon Mr. Harvey's answer that he had studied the quesUon only as a layman interested in preserving this secUon's scenic resources. Mr. Raybom pointed out Uiat this pro­vided anoUicr reason /-hy Commis­sioner Berg should appoint a quali­fied engineer to act as consultant to assist tn reaching a fair decision In the controversy.

» Fine Wntch and Jewelry i

i REPAIRING II Finest Equipped Department! i ln th« Rocky Mountoln West|

|R&G JewelersiI Twin Falb I

You'll be proud to serve fra> grtot, refreshing Schilling Tcm. Cotnpere iu quality!

T w in Falls A rea to Send F ive Men Replacements for

Arm y DutyTrfln broUiers. Russell S. Orcutt

and Rex Eugene OrciiU, Iwih of Twin Falls, with three other young men will enter military »er\1cc ns mem­bers of a replacement quota leaving 'I'wlii Falls next Wqlncsday evening. Captoin J, H. Seaver. Twin Falls draft board eecretary. announced last evening.

Other members of the delegaUon ..ra aifford B. Turley, qiaude E. Mnglaughlln and Cleo I. CanU-eii. all of Twin Falls..»Jlicy are to be inductod into mill* Ury service nt Uie Salt Lake City ceceptlon center, to replnce four rejected nt previous call nnd who was ill and imsble to be sent in the March quoin.

The April draft quot* for TwinPalls No. I aren calls for nine I-----nlen. >

Wyoming Guests -* Mr. nnd Mrs. "Chuck- Helm, former Twin mils residents,-were guestA from last Tues<lay until yesterday morning at Uir home of Mr. nnd Mrs. Evan Tarr. Yeiterday. Uiey went to Sun Viillcy where Uiey planned to visit li lcfly before returning to Uielr home at Jnckson, Wyo.

Guenli—Nancy Ann Moore. 8, and her brother, Tommie. 4, children of Mr. mid Mrs. Burton . Mooro of Blackfool. will itpend some time In •J'wJm FfilU with Uielr gnuidpjirenis, Mr. And Mrs. E. E. KaU. Utcr tlidr fuUicr leaves to enter the nillltary service as captain of the Qiackfoot natloniil guard,. orUUcfy unit. Mr. nnd Mrs. Kail will lenve for Black- fool today to return wlUi the chil­dren.

Enter HospIUl — Admlttnnce.i to Uio Twin Falls county general Iim - pltnl yesterday Included John Mc- Cajikej'- Mrs, Harr>' Scribner. Pa- tridn Kalin. Mrs. Katherine* Gard­ner and Mrs. A. P. Nelson of Twin Falbi. Mrs. Carl Chisham of Flier. Mrs, H, L. Canfield of Klmberlj-. Mrs, Truman RaUibun or Hansen and Joycc Weaver of DuhL

■‘''Revival Continue* — "Esau. Uie Modern Sinner." was Uic subjtct of Rev. aernld Worcester's address at last night's meeting of the Naairene revival at Uie Twin FalLi church, •Rev. Esri Williams, Kimberly pastor, who headed a delegation from his church. Jed In prayer. BervJces will conUnue nightly, except Saturday, next week, and services will be at II a. m, and 7:45 p. m. Sunday, ac* cording to Rev. L. D. Smith, pastor.

Roosevelt Returns T o Florida Shore

PORT EVEROLADiS, Fla., March 38 W') — President Roosevelt re­turned to UiU MUUi Florida port shorUy bifore midnight tonight nf-

♦•eek’s cruise off the Florida in Uie White House yacht Po­

tomac. 'Ind/csttona were that Uie presi­

dent would make hU Jackson day the wardroom

of the vessel tomorrow nlcht.Workmen placed two Telephone

lines along Uie docks where the

execuUve It 1

Knights Tcinplar Hold Inspection

Annual Inspection of Ta’ln Falls commandery. Knights Templar, was conducted following n lamb illnncr Inst Tliursday evening at Uie Ma­sonic temple. Austin A. Wolker of Boise, deputy grand commander of the Idaho grand commnndery. ' Inspecting olflccr.

Other dlatlnguliilied guc.ils In­cluded Prank O. Ensign of Boise, right eminent grand commander: ArUiur Hawk o f Boljc. grand treas­urer and Dr. R.. -A. Parrott of Twin Falls, grand sword bearer.

Claude M. Oorden Is commander of the Twin Falls commander)’.

Tha.lamb for the dinner wos fur­nished by Clyde McClain, Officers' wives were in charge o f the dinner.

Rush Sighted for New License TagsLess than half of Twin Falls coun*

ty's 10.500 automobile owners who purchased 1S40 license plates have obtained .the license togs for this yenr, Ocorge A.'Chllds, county as­sessor, snid Inst evening.

He pointed to Uio deadline al midnight next Monday. Mnrch 31. nfter which cars without the currcnt year's license will nol be permitted

I opcrnCe on the highways.And he indicated Uiere probably

will be somewhat of n. ru.ih.at the elcvenUi hour for Uie new llcenic plates.

KNOINKKUS CI.UIl ATi;. I.- S. n. EI.KCTS OFFICERS

POCATELLO, Mnrch 38—Elec­tion of olflcera o{ Uic Associated Engineers club of Idnho Southern unlverslly wn.n Jield reccnUy which time Clayton Goddard, civil enslJieer student Jrom Salmon, was clecicd president to succeed Bryce Bemictl of Shelley.

Oilier officers elected .were Veryl Lnrsen.-moclumical—cugliiccr...&lu- denl from Idaho Falls, ns vlcc-pres- Ident nnd Donald McDonald, me* clinnlcal engineer studgit ' f rom Eden, as secrwaty-ircrfaircrT*

Tlie new o/flcPr* will W e offlcc the fltSbof April.

when Uie chief 1 ueek ago. liieie lines

would be used to bring Uie specch as ore for radio transmission o v » three national nelworks. Tlie sP^h Li scheduled for 0;30 p. m. (EST), 7:30 p. m. (MST).

NfilS WMLD

(0,nlln«td InmArthur Bliss Lane delivered formal­ly an' American proffer of full aid 10 Yugoslavia In resisting aggrcssfou and Uic young King Peter swore oi the crniw to "keep forever Uie unity of Uie nation" and its ln;Uf*hdenee:

The Turkish mlnLiter was report­ed to have proposed to Premier Sim- ovic a mutual assistance pact.

The Germans were pictured as electing to reserve their mlUtary power as a last resort, but German quarters said nearly 3,000 German UTMle delegates, cconomk: expert* and JournalisU were leaving Uis eotitilry qulckJy.

Troops stood guard at Uie German nnd Italian legaUons.

To Uie Jubilant Belgrade public. Uie center of the universe today war nol in the council cliai»bers or thi fronUcr redoubts, but, the altar o Uio Serb orthodox cathedral In Bel­grade. ‘

Boy King's PledgeTlierc 17-ycar-old King Peter

stood In the bright uniform of general of aviation.

The patriarch, in red and gold robes. prc.ientod a golden cra«.

Peter rcverenUy kissed It and sol- emnly Intoned:• "I. Peter the second, ascending lo Uie throne ot Uie kingdom of Yugo* »l;ivla and Uking over royal power swear by God Uifl-almlghty Uial * will keep forever the unity of Uii nation. • Uie Independence ot Un country, nnd the Integrity of sUie tcrritor>-."

Tlie dimly III old building echoed to Uie shouts of the assembled Uirong.

Tlie rest of Uie government took Uielr oaths amid noisy confusion.

The U. a nnd Briaih minUlcni who altonded. had to fend off good naturediy the hanUshakes and klssea of the crowd.

U. 8. milltory attache Colonel Louis Portler was elevated to'.the shouidera of sturdy Serbs amid ex­clamations of "Long live Rooseveltl Long live Amerlcal"

From B oi«-M r. and Mrs. T. M. Robertson. Jr., OrBoise, arrived yes­terday morning for a weekend visit wiUi friends nnd relaUves.

ItlOST BRANCH STUDENTSUNAFFECTED BT DEAFT. s

POCATELLO, Idaho, March 38 Ut) { Approxlmatoly 70 per cent of-the students nt aniverslty of Idaho BOuUicm branch wUI not b« affect­ed by Uie draft. Registrar Dorothy— Reqiin said today. .

She pointed out 713 studenls ara from 17 to 30 years old. while only 100 ore 0 sdrafl oge, 21 years or

READ 'n iE NEWS WANT ADS.

And yoB'r^ nyon neglect to Imped our wide selecUen of Jt X G wed can dur­ing onr Quick Actli>n sale, be-' fore deciding on tbe''beat- ear for yon. Alwaya. ll»?t aatisfac* Uon. ar lOOft^fund.38 Plymouth. 0(^ Sedan — .$450------oiler Jtoyal Sednn _____»335

... _.JRC Deluxe.Sedan — $305 30 Ohr>-8ler Royal Coupe ..-4650 30 Ford Dlx Fordor Sedan _.»60a30 Ford Dl* Ooupe.........._I4#530 Clievrolet Town Sedan -.4526 30 PlymouUi Dlx Sedan — $S35 30 Mercury Town Sedan — »73640 Ford DU Coupe ------- 480540 Mercury Town Sedan — »8M 40 Slude Champ Sedan _4099 37 Lincoln zephyr Coupe -_$53437 Ford Tudor Sedan ........$325TRUCKS TRUCKS TRUCKS^0 Dodge Truck ................. $00535 Ford Truck, has Brownllpe

sa^'hevroiei 'Sick -- -----$32530 ChcvrolBt T ru r t..........

30 Dodge pitkup ..30 Chevrolet Pickup--------$30530 Ford Pickup —$39530 Ford I Ton Panel -___$405

Many others, alt makes, all mod­els. See your Ford Dealer first for savings of (75.00' of more.

Tw in Fa lls M ortuarySUK>*T C. J-llllllpfc, MtT.,

Ai UuntaCinini K. IlliMlEfK CtrH* E. Klekot I)sy ■ Nliht Ambnlance Ph. 81

we’ll modernize the kitchen and bathd too!_

YES and we’ll insist otiSTANDARD SANITAlY FIXTURES-

— Nor.Down- P a y m tn la !_

N o , M onthly PaytnentBl

N o In terest CtiHrffedl

Until O ctober!

EX-CEL and IM H O.branded beef. . . from

Magic VfiUey’s unexcelled stock

W H E N YO U CHOOSE T O havo b M f tor your main coursc in any meal, you ore miikinff a wise choicc — and -when you

chooso Gx-CcI or Idaho branded beef then your choice Is even wiser. Ex*Cel o r Idaho brohdcd beef is the result o f carefu l fc&dins-<zj?ht in our^owti pens o f the choice of- M ag ic V a lley Bto^.^

P a ck e d a n d d U t r U f u l ^ bg

I IK jH IO p a c k i n g CO.T i i iB jT o B t ./ i i i r t o

s J t " * * • rg » t ' l i i . t - i t

TWIN I^ALLS NEWS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHO. SATUJlDAY MORNING..MARCH 20,1011 p Xge t h r e e

DEMOCRATS WAIT ROOSEVELT TALK

$ IO O -a -P la te D inner Called O ff Bcoausc o f Presi­

dent’s AbsenceWASHINOTON, Mardj 28 (/P> —

Wlin »..Ta«Ilo apeccii by Prwldent RocMvelt- iho prlnclpAl Item of the proffnun. Democratji In doxens of eltle* win BAther tomorrow niRht for their annunl Joclc5on day dinner and party Jubilntlon.

But (hU Ume tho obocrvnnce will be unique In that hero in Woahlns- ton. there will bo no » 100>p«r*plftt« dinner attended by,the prealdent Mid Ura. Roosevelt The pruldent. VACiktlonlnB at sen. will speiik to

, dlnen elsewhere from tlie ward­room of the prvM«nliat'7acht, Po­tomac.

Tlie dinner hero was lUJCcremonl- ouAly colled off wh»n U uns found that Mr. Roosevelt's absence wm seriously affecUng the Im i minute sale of the $100 tickets. Tlie p<)rty mtmbera had borxnlscd oif»eelnR-<ui well u hcftrlns Uio pre.ildent, and Uiat was. that.

But In other placcfl. where tiie prices run from >S0 down to tlO or less, and the UckeLi hod been sold to Democmta who expeeteU to hear the pruildent only, the dinners will so on. A corps of Democmtlc orators U cn route to. principal dUn to fUl out the program.

Ai alwaj's before a presidential ‘ speech, Utero was mucli speculation

as to whot Uie president miRht sny. Ordinarily. hU nddrcxn would be of a political nature, but in view o f tlie effort at national unity In connec­tion wltl) tiie> defense and aid to EhsUnd program, many thought UiU would not be Ute cose.

Usually, Uie Jackson May dinners are held on the Saturday night closest to Jan. 8, Uie anniversary of Andrew Jackson's victory at tlie batUe of New Orleaut. Tliis year party leaders and stjiff workers were too busy at tha( Ume with plana for the then approaching InsuBura*'—

GAINS CHARTED

A griculture D epartm ent Re­ports S ix -P o in t Advance

, fo r Y ea r

WAflHINOTON. March 28 OP) — ReflectlnR moderate advnnce.i In grains and cotton, Uie genemi level of farm prices gained 0 poInU dur­ing the l2*month period ended March 19 to reach 103 per ccitt of the 1010>M nvemge, Uie agriculture department reported today,

alight further Increasea v ........dlcated during the last half of March, tlie depivrtment added.

DomenUt demand for farm prO' duets,-A litlected Irt Mnsumer pur­chasers,'continued on Uie upgrade In March, but the Increase u-aa wild to have been -flmaller U>an In other reccnt months.

The department said abundant supplies'of farm-producls

crops, nearly ft year's supply of cot­ton was already on hand. Slocks of eraln at terminal markeU were •bout 30 per cent higher Uian a year ■go.

T ie Index o f prices paid by farm' ers for non-agriculturnl prodiicls re. malned at 123 per cent of Uie 1010-H average In mld-Mxtrdi, a level that has been maintained alnce mli' December. f

E lection D ate .Set at Gooding

dividual petlUons for of city offices huve been circulated •nd signed by a large number of voters. To. date no new names have

*^^umne for filing peUUons Is 10 'days prior to elecUon.- Qty Clerk £. L. SUlson wtU post election no> Uces about April 1. ReglstmUon will be In the city httll.

PeUUons have been circulated for A. P. James,^ayor; El. L. SUlson city clerk: Hannah Bailey, city treasurer; Prank 1/ewls. Bert Bowler Robert l^on and Herb Meyer, cllmen.

Judges Essays

WILBUlt L. CROSS, forrner fover- nsr of Conneetleut and long lime editor of the Yale Review is t« be final itkin ef tiie^EIks national patrietle coDTtll Kii iil|b*M students. J. II. nisndford. nations] defense commlilM ehalnnan ' of Twin Falli Elk*-lo«l|'e, iiaa been advUed.

Jerome WomanSlill Missing

JEROME. March 28—•Hie tlieory leld by Jerome cotitily pollcc au- thorlllea, Uiat Uie bo<ly of a woman, found murdered at 8|>earninn. Tex., liuit week, mlKht be. Uint of Mr*, (tachel llftll Wntle of Jerome., was jlasteil foUowhiR receipt of n wire iMt Thubday monihiK by Shcriif Lee S. Johnson, from Uie stierlff of Hansford county. Tex., stating Uiat Uie woman found Uiere had arUflcial teeUi. Description of Mrs. Wade UUled wlUvthat of Uie mur­dered woman, exccpt for the fnbie .eeUi, Sheriff Johnson stated. •However, police here are i...

searching for Mra. Wnde Who dU- appeared from Tu'In 1- ills county a few week.'i ago. She hiul gone Uiere wlUi her sLiter. Mrs. J. S. Westfall, Jerome, and when ln.it seen, wiis cnrr>'h>g a ciiaucI vloUn which she had wL-ihcd to sell. She had mentioned Uint Mie had desired for soAietlme to Imvel to Texas, and said (hat slie had a htinbnnd Uiere. She (ILi«p|>e.ired from Twin FiilLi March 14. cntchlng n ride from ttiat city according to police re|>orLi. Mrs. Wnde had ridden wlUi a' motorist o.i fnr ns Uie vliidiict near MurUugh.

She W0.1 ducrtbed n.n l>eliig about 41 years of nge. but looked several

s oldtr; wa.i about five feel, Inches In hplght, and welghetl

about 155 pounds. She lia.-j blue eyes, and lldht blond iwlr. When

k-enrlng a light

Ing elUier a black or red drens. Slie was belle\’c<l to be wearing n blue velvet tiiiii-stvlc hnt. iind gold wed' ding ring wlUi orange blcnsom de- sign,

Mr.i. Wade had • been suffering from 111 healUi for »omcllme Jerome pollcc said. She was a former school

lAPKE VBS AXIS SW IE

'CircumstancGs Deemed Un­happy fo rM atsuoka

in Berlin

and llamt' In ETUilopla. Tlie Chereti victory will free addlUoiml Brltbh ah’ forces aiid troops, good troop.i wlUi tlie of vlctor>’ on theirlips, for u.Np In the JJnlKnju.

Should Mutsuokii ciirtf to ciliI up what Uie co. t of Italy's partnershli) tt'llh 'NazI Orrmuny tia.i been thai •far, and wlint she has to show for It. It mlKht well give him iiiiii'.c about a<lvlslMg Tokyo to get out im " ' Slnga]xiiip attack Ilmbr

Beriln, wholircisldeT^mn Yugosiu' la's refusal to come to Uie party. Japanese Foreign Minister Matsu* oka. the guest*of honor, did not have a very happy iime of It np- parenUy, nor couJff Italy's represen- taUves at Uie fesUI board have been quite at ease.

I f the Nasi high command, caught as much by surprise by the Belgrade coup as It Indicated, It U a fact worm noUng. Berlin's boa.n- ed Intelligence system. Uie advance guard of Uie flfOr column, failed It for Uie first time.'

Chalienge te HitlerYugoslavian "neutmtlty" In the

circumstances amounts to a formal illcnge to HlUer and Uie next

mov6 In the deadly game Is up to him.

HlUer's lexicon docs not Include either Uie word neutrality in Its accepted sense, or Uie word fUll. Nations not acUvely wlUi himrated against him. It 1* now c....Uiat MnUuokn must have learned a lot about that during his Berlin

,Kiizl cen:,or8 have pav<ed pre.ts . ports from'Berlin raying vlriuiilly that Uie Japnne.%e vl.iltor wiui con* fronted wlUi soni'e sort of demand that Tokyo make good on the neb- uIoiLs terms of her alignment wlUi Uie Rome-Berlln axis. He has been told. It is indicated. Uiat If Japan hopes for axis favor for her dreams of expansion she miLit attack Sing­apore. Britain's powerful far eastern naval base, already Nwarmlng with hard-flglitlng Australian defenders.

If Uiat was Uie tenor of Uie versatlons In Beriln. Mat.iuoka lirobably was gl\d to leave.

Rad News for JapanWlKit happens In Uie Bnlkaiui as

an outgrowth of the Yugoslavlair about face ngalnsl axis domination Li likely to Influence Tok 'o pol­icy much more than what onybody In Berlin told Mntauoka. He itheod' Ing next to Rome. luily's, clrcum' stancu at Uie time of his arrival there will hardly make for liLi e of mind.

Tlie Itallim' African empire . not merely tracking up; It Is bust­ed by the fan of Clieren In, Eritrea

Mends Named f<ir Two Institiflioiis

BOISE. March 28 (-r>—Appolnt- lentof Dr.W, E. Waldrop of Piirniii 1 commiuidant of Uie sute soldlcr.i

home here and of Dr. Harry So- ])hus Stahr a.i acting superlniendeiit of Uie stflte hospital south at Black- foot was announced today by Lewli Wllhams. Idaho director of charli. ible Inslltutlons.Dr, Waldrop, who held Uie position

under fonner Governor Bi\n:llln Clark, succeeds William McKennte, who will vacate Uie post April 1. Tlie new commandant Is a Spanish- American war veteran.---------------

Wllllam.1. said Dr. StaJir. member of Uie state hoiplUU staff., would yrve as InsUtutlon head while Dr. O. J. Cromwell, present superlntcnd-

.1 on a year's leave of absence for army .lervlce.

teacher, and had made her home here with her sl. ter since last September. .

ASK YOUR GROCKR

D R I - S P U D S

Horned Toads Get State Protection

forth may room among tlu^ cacU unafraid at beComlDg tourist sou* Yentrs.■ H ie ctate leaato poaed and lent

to the B^vemor for his signature - » blU prohibiting the kining of the repUlea wboeo «plny. ferocious ap- pcaraace beUes their genUe nature.

J ' Sponsors o f the.blU aatd the toads ' helped keep down red aolA. In the

puknany o f than have been stuff­ed and sold to tourisU. ^

HEAREvangelist

J A C K F R E E

L a a F .

- ADVENTISM, r f l s It Of Ood or'tha DerilV" U“ w ^ .why Eva' nftises (ot dtfend AdTntisnu

c i m B i f ; : ,Clii

Mil "Afier this i*ell cup of Hills ISro>. Coffee Ishould^hsvc s goo d Ri m e (odi2>>s.^

IH li “ Maybe you'd pUy your bcKgamc ifyo .; ' ■ - ■'second

Head of Gooding Schools Kehired

OOOttlNO. Mnrcli =B - Slipcrlll- tendent M. W. Tate has btrn ap­pointed for a new term as head of the Coo<ll»K hchools by members ol the board of the Ooo<llnB tchool dis­trict. Tlie appointment for ix new

of one year was mado whh unanimous approval of the

board.Superintendent Tiile has held his

(losiuon for the last nix years, iiav- Uig been appointed In March, lOS.'i. "e r serving previously for live years

director of high schpol athletics, Mr, Tate" camb here in 1D30. la-, athletic teams made an ouLitandlng record In dbtrlct competition.

ESTO ME LIQUOR TAX

Prospects fo r ‘D ry ’ .State or 20 Per Cent P rice '

H ike S ightednOISE. Miiich ifl '-MiiclilneryIU1 ^el up t'Kliiy uiidet' which Ilqonr'

ooinpuiili's would |my ii 20 per cent' lax on the 'vholr.mle price iis an- Uiorl:u'd bV th - 1041 Iilnho trglsla-

but tiow the miu’hlni’rj' would oixrrate wa.i"ni)en to f]in-:.tion.

I’ ras|>ccls of a sUile niiwlc "dry" exclu.slve of bi-er t;y relit.iil of toni- IKiiiles to U to the xtnlr illspcnsiity or of a ::o i)cr cent lncieii:.c In Uie price of Honor to coiiMinirrs were envtiionwl by reripoic.Ible offlclaLi. who refused to be rjuoted. Rrclirrtnt! WIL1 talk of a .vpeclal lr«L',lutlve

nihke up tin- $1.0(X).000 in

mise. ,Sja.000 llri^.ivlns Kund

Tlir "machlni'ry" cpiitrrrd around a S3.'i.ono revolving fund the state Iward of exiirniiiers autlioriri-d Ailill- Jor. Calvin E. Wrlglit to srv up from lifjuor fund nv-erves.

f'TOin It will be |>iild the 20 iier cent tax at the time liquor l.i Iriiinfer- red from warehoiii.e balhiii'iil to the state dLi|M'ii.ii*ry—a.1 li rciiulied nn- drr'Uie iicl, sftllnK up the levy.

Tlie rcvolvhiK fuiKl. In turn, thr boiirtl dcclded. will Ixr roinibun.cd by dLKOunthii; bills iif Uquor coniiwinlr. 20 i>er cent when Hi t "are pm.entcil Uie state.

The new meUio<l. arrlvetl iii iiflor Governor Clark hnd tir.l;‘ii-d ihr tnx be collected. dlffere<l from that biik- geUed earlier In the week In an oJUulon of Attorney General Bert II. Miller addrewcd to Ptod D.ivl-. liquor dLspensary sui>erlntendeni.• Tlie earlier :;olutloii would linvr had the revolving lund relmbursc l Irom Uie liquor fund, which .Li made

I iHollt nn the . aie ofliquor. UiitltT It, scemliiKly, thr dls- tllIrI^ wauld hjn<' imtil nnthlng,

DtilitiPM' ,\Urrn:>tivrn'A' lli>' lli|ii»r c'ontI):itllr;. unilldto Iciuiik; th'-ii' till’-, (it.'.couni*

t.. pniijirlure.' pi'-.ciitaiivrs imvr nrKUCd the >11'. n>!iri:.MH)ry. tlmt. ptiylns U

u;iiui>i iiu'.iu It lov. iin Mtlr.i (o Idiiha Alt'-iiiiiini;, iPiiiuinliii; were coii-

alrurti ;v. tii'ln;; "'IthiT irtUMil to .'.ell — nii'ViiiK liliilm (Irv- or liiereii.'tn«

whnlp.nir iirk'r Mifflelrptly to make up till- lu\.

Tlie iiiltiT i ri;ii.i. II .wn,% arfu'-*!. would tx' t:iii!.iiiimiiil. to |ilarliii; n

. er crnt Iii\ on liquor InIdaho.

Neither iThmi;. •Aimld Insure. 11 lus ;lili. Uic' Sl.C'iiii.odO'In rcvi'inin

biidKet-Miiil:c:- »t ihr 104t Ireblii- liire antlclp.i!' il.

not only tliat inr ji/um.iKio m e\. •(•ted t.nx iiM'iiiii' wtnild be iin- ‘alliibic't)\ii liquor protlt.'.

would be lo'l. niii prollt-n now nrr dlvldetl .'lO j>rr I ' lil to the tJlte i;en-

vilUiHes,llM. imnilel!>:ili 7unlor <‘ollei;r il

Doo.itlng tlv price of liquor 20 . T cent to thi; wiiiiiiiner. on tc of 11h» recent r^r rfiil inesen.-.e l "In r>I-UI)." wiAilii mr;in reiliirr l vo

iiyiiiK le.v.er rev<

of.H iUs Bros. Coffee have learned 'to their delight chat it can be used is’’ in.aojr kind ' o fc o ffe e 'o a k e r .^ C tM itt OAtncC produces the maxi* mum o f flavor and a r o o u - ^ e rery 4^alities that make coffee enjoyable and cause your family and guests to ask for s u n n d cup. •

m .'TN iOlAICnONSAKY tarn ( COFFEC'I

MIONTM OF THI

7M Cbm«e* b t« l>reduMb«it r«MH«iiiM ip Q o u u s M ju o K g . m c o u t r o n ^ M p o r ^

M iM * <rf Hlfa I m C ^ a cda a n M in r a d

M m

yjO G ELS PHONE311-312

SALMON, Half or Whole, Pound . . .1 2 c

I S c

3 5 c

HAMHUIlGKit, Kre h Ground.: Pnundi ...........-.....

2 5 cDICED CAIIROTS, Tierce*, No. 2 Cans,3 for ............ .: Z 5 cMIXED VEGKTABI.KS, Peaks. No. 303 Cans,1 for ..... ................ 2 5 c

::.2 5 c

TOMATOES. Utah tialld Pack. No. Z Cans,3 for ................... 2 5 c

2 5 c

I S cPEACHP.S, Sun Kiit Sliced Halves,No. 2!i Can ... 1 5 c

TOMATO JUICE. Pierce* Utah,

' i j : ______ _________. i s c

SALAD TIME DRESS- • • A m ING, Qu^rt Jars ■;......

COR.V MEAL. Sperry, Yellow or White.9 lb. Bara .......... -........J l9 % i

WHEAT HEARTS, Sperry. Large P k g .__ 2 2 c

- 2 1 c

L i S c

2 5 cSAUSAGK. rure rork, round • 17*/2CPOUK ItOASTS, Loin, round ..... 1 8 cro iiK c iio rs .. Loin, Pound ..... 1 8 cSrillNG LAMII. Kfllled Shouldrrn, round ......... .......28-cSPRINO I.AMR STEAKS, round ..... 2 8 cSIIILOIN STKAKS,roand ........................X ^ CrOHK MVKK. lillced. Pound ... .........9 cLAMit STEW. Pound . .......... I'.. S cPORK SPARE Rins, Pound ...._. 1 2 »/2C

Murtauffh Juniors Stajre Chiss IMay

MUnTAUCill. .M;.r.h .K-A.iaiui- ottd enji>vi'it lln’ jiiiiior clir.v p!;iv . the hik:li M'hoiil auditorium

■nlllr^dily p\rnliiK.Tlie ci.'.t. viho ptiv i-iii'-d, "Friulin'I the Hlii-..'' h.v .InmiA C. Piirk'T,

IJurjrlxir's 'J’ools 'Frap

MO.'iC'OW. Miihn. Mnreh 2S i.JV- A r.i.-iir til:i(l<- iiml a piece of I'l-ilo-

ti Atitlionv neiiudoln.

and rrlliipliane In one of Uie prb- Mirr's j)Ocket.-,: llecldKl to hold Uie^ turn for flimrrprtnt Identlflcati ,nir- dl.scoveml articles often 1

used to pick loct'i. Moody sald.V^

a * " .

iiluTlIf a. K. ,Mo<

cilon wuii n tiur-

,h-lliii, »nd Cl.it

ee. itiiipli

llK itideil

Mu., llllth Wtl.-.on

Jil;i\liiy proinptors.Sp-ilnl nunilx'r.". wet'-, lriiiii|K-t

Ml!'!. -'l.m-Uv .’iliir" l)V Koi-est niih".. :ii-. oiiipimird bv Mr.- . lyriiv Ctirh-tnrrer ........................ly-tt oiliy Vou." Kny- Wetrlrh. ne. c f>jii|)iin|pd liv Alton Cunnlnsli

1.. 1-: 'tTinirr, « iio «llr.'<-te<l theplav. n-Crlvril n Klft durlgi.>rtr:. iili-. .loii.

NI-AVS \VA^" AU.S CICT RI':SULTS.

LADIKS ^ll;i\e your l:n!.tpr pcrmnnent

Klvcii t>y rxprrlrliiTd opprn!or . ltrc;ul;'r' S-'i Wl Dimrt Oil Whvp-

Sprrtsl 2 fur S-'.-OO Complete K! «!i;si; iu :a i !TV sTUOto

niione (la Undrr Flrtpllly niiiit:

T J *

B r o w n i n g 's

U S E D C A I

S P E C I A L S !

1»37 CHRYSLER SICDAN

Hit.s r;i(!i<>, ]i<-iitur. i''iill tlc- Iu m : <M|iii])iii(-iit. I'lnisli cx- in t K 'x x l SiK'ciul—

$435-1937 PLYMOUTH

•, SUDANjtiici liciilpr

$425 ^i;a.Kv (.• M A C Tcrm.s

M i l e s J .

B r o w n i n g , I r i c .

5 c

, 2 6 c

, 1 2 » / i C

1 6 c

Include With Your Order Today

S O I L - O F F . G L A S S C L E A N E R , V A N B R IT E W A X FO R Y O U R S PR IN G H OUSE c l e a n i n g . A I.- SO S P A R K L E FO R YO U R C L O S E T B O W I— -A N D D R A IN C L E A N E R FO R

D R A IN P lFE S l.

O F L Y O FO ft S P ID ER S IN Y O U R B A SE M E N TS

-W E P A Y I S e . lN TRADE~FOR EGGS

o n d ’6 la b e l * from

C h icken o f t h e S ea

B ra n d

G r a t ^ S ty le T u n a ,

o r W h it e S ta r T u n a !

5m MtMlY Mtuna tmm f t r i l i t rP4lM4ihUp4ait3»fftrt

S t a r t n o v to build up a set o f 4 or m ore o f these -

unusually beautiful 10-ifich"M fttW hite” Califom i»Pottery

plates; add oew glamour to your table! They ate availaUe

only to uscf) o fih ese quaiity.ttuus. 1 . Am eiica’s.fitvotites;'; i.;

for 29 years, bebuse oaly the tender l i g b tn x u U padoeA,- ContainingVttafl)io»*‘A ’*and ta jcUoaie,fl«rdc»<al goodoai..(..' '

' 'D " and Iodine. dTecdre pre- Send six hbe{s, with 21k i a ' vencrre o f Dtuntioful goiter,it’s cub, M .O ,,oc d ie ^ ...a hetlthful, dUidoos food . . . ooc fionpte^; ^and an temoatkJ food . . ; an £ n i^ a n d S B b d F ^ y ^ « ^ > y ^ ^ wijr you serve ic, . TTjis pottery noe scidi i i w -

Get six ouu o f ibis & in o « Simply,write’*SeodiD&~^B qnali7tuoBtod7...aod-sem . taeaoditoftcn.YootfiuBilywiU/Mirit! !y b o rB a io e a ^ i...............Some like i ( i f t f . . . some like it SeadraVAN.O

' & t f ; ; .b « .a U « « fc e it’s ••tops” O x l i

PAGE KOUB TlfrlN-FALLS NEWS, TWTN FALLS. IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 29,1341V .

TW IN FALLS NEWS

■ r.ll.. Irlmho. nixl.r ih. .cl s(RltRSCIdrTinN RATK8

fluu oTTalCT"

Mllli Tb-.r. f » Uuih Strwt. Sib" rnn«{>«>. C«II(.

« will b« publlitin) fAll Mtin* r»«jiilft<l hr I»w or h» on1

MWnt JurtodlttJon to b« t>uh1I>hxJ *«-k In III* W*4and«7 luu* nr ihli ril»r H-lfll I. a A. 191} mi tiM th*r«u> L

K E Y LAH O R D IR PV TK SW hile public attention has been focuscd on

Btrllces rctnrdlng defense production, a slluu- tlon potentially fa r more .serious hiis been developing and nears a climax. This Involves the pending ncgotlntlons- by three powerful C IO unions with three key producers— the so ft coal, steel and Automobile Indujitrlcs.

T ha t the three unions arc engaged In coh- certed action there Is every rea.non to believe. The demands indicate oigrccm cnt on a com­mon bacgalnlng position and are simultan­eously presented. .

Although In the soft coa l industry negotia­tions were necessitated by expiration o f the existing contract, there was no such necessity as to the others. Their contracts have some

. tim e to run. In the circumstances, therefore, notice o f requcits fo r revision given Jiwt when

- t h e 80f t coal negotiations were about to be­gin Is hardly mere coincidence. Rather It appears os though the C IO strategist planned It 80, believing tha t by m oving together on the same bargaining plane and at the same tim e they stood a better-chnncc o f forcing a showdown before congrcss acts to cool the strike fever. ^

As to the merit o f thi.s strategy a great.; deal’ m ay depend upon the outcome o f the spft coal negotiations. T o date miners and- op'erators arc far apart on the wage Increase Issue. Unless accord Is rcached In a few days a strike o f the 400,000 m lnere In the Appa­lachian fields seems Inevitable., fo r It Is tradi­tiona l w ith tho miners n o t to work without a contracL. Meantime both in stcci and automobile In­dustries the CIO gives evidence o f its deter­mination to press its tigh t vigorously a t every possible point. The new M ed iation board, ob- v iouslyrls not set up to stave o ff the triple th reat thus opposed to defense production. I t ta n n o t act untif a ease Is ’certified to It by the labor department arid then it has power only to summon witnesses and make recom­mendations.

rcnson.s, but hero men figh t the enemies of men. I f one must draw a moral, that Is the meaTilng o f one branch o f the work o f the Rockefeller Fouudailon a-i told In its annual report. One o f tlic many aspects o f its acti­vity. In this InsUmci-. Ls the endeavor to solve the puzzle o f Junslo fevers.

Many unfamiliar words appear In the .story of the adventure into the unknown by the .scientists o f the Foundation in the e ffort lo wipe out this mcnacr. Among them are the ncde.s aegyptl mastniuo. the sabethlne and llie haemogoRu.s, Many other desIgnatlon.s arc equally moanlni;les.s to the general pub­lic but o f utmost importance to tho.se who arc working quietly In behalf o f the menaced.

The men who art- rarrylng on this laborious work In the Junglr lalToratorles o f Central America and South America are among the unsung herot.s of modern civilization.

Elimination of oiio type o f mosquito so far known lo be rc.'^ponslblc fo r .spread of a dread disease may be credited to the labor and .sacrifice of .s-tk-ntl-sts who are preparing to Ro deeper Into the Jungle In order to learn how to help their fellow.'?.

Olhe^Points o f ViewPATRIOTISM VKUSIJS CONFORMITY ‘

Away back In ilic loiirth Krndc. pnlrloU.'un an btsiillfiilly slniplp niul miu-rcte. Euch momljiit u woiiUf-Milute Uip Iliic. ii-ciU: Uic pledRc ot BllrKliuici iiiul -lotiictlnic OitrliiK llir diO’ wc would slug tiic "Slii .Si>;iiiRle(l liiiimpr." Th<Tn were crrliiln wiiys one mu:, (old n ting, too (It liiid to do with irliiut:Ic.iiAnil tncn lliere wfre ccrinlii mctllo<l3 nud rcHUlnllou hj''uMch oi:e nil.irc/ or Jo«cm| one’s (Ian niid 1j which one Jiung lil:i fhu: uimn tho wall. Tlial wa pnirlnllnm. nwny tmck In tlie fourili Krndc,

• [lltlon:;. ';rioilMu Imii

II scem.i, pnIrloll. m plnu Dcrou tiiu Ailiindi (lici,c dii}’3, nlld poll:;tili

c Inl 1L% o . Now,

r ndvn Ym . there’s ; dlKer

..riibbInK ii Kun iind skip, where they nre hiivliiB n war (iK ji Mr, Miller. Drmncriicy II In iiKiiln up to the Unlird ■iiii 11]) the mc.vi. Whwf lUle iiiui’s nUle, ot cour.iR. EiiKbiid

■ battle.e In the iiiitr itlnm V ' knop

P A R IT Y P R IC E F L O P ; There are growing signs th a t a ^ u l tu r e Is n o t,to get the fu ll parity prices (10-cent

^cotton, $1.13 wheat and 82-ccnt corn) that K s l t bas been demdnding. Farm leaders le ft

W hite House coriference w ltlf a distinct im - .^presslon that President Roosevelt Is not going

fu ll dlstoince with them . •, P arity prices would require an approprla- ;;j:tlon o f about fi h a lf b illion dollars or the ^^adoptlon o f something like the certificate ; ^ l o n whereby processors would put up tho '■' m oney and collect it In th e form o f consumer

.taxes. Alternative proposals arc h igher prlcC' ’p egg ing loans and direct prlco-flx lng.; President Roosevelt was represented to be opposed to 100 per cciit parity but more In •favor o f price-pegging loans o f around 75 ;pcr cent o f parity.• Possibly the effcct of .higher farm priccs

j^ills feared in relation to the cost o f living. Tha t . j^ o r k s two ways, however. There nre at pres- l i ent strikes fo r higher wages in many plants [-^producing thlniis the farm er miust buy. I f V^the farm er can not get h igher priccs but mast w ^ a y h igher prices, an unjust .situation will

J,-,develop for him.I t w in strike the farmer as particu larly un­

just follow ing all the pledges made for his Iwelfare.

today and that which wc were exi>o.scd lo la the (oiirtii urade. U is more compIcx niid Icui pulpitblp than the old piilrlolism, Out it doc.m‘1 necc.vniirlly mean Roing to war, and It doesn't meiuj lhatjhc Unllc<l SWtes U Uie Gnmd Old Ounrdiaii nt the rlRhlA of nil (he illile i>eople. either. It almpiy means that the majority of Joiki. in America have lo ’begin lo Ihink for tliem- iiclves. mther than let oUicrs who nro more •'well- Informed" do their ihlnklnK tor them.

You (iou't have lo be n patriot to ro bliirliis ott down Ihe .itreei every time nomeonc blows n buRle. nnd you don't liave lo be a pnlrlot to die In Europe. P.sycholofiy, iin .cxcrcl.-ied by press, radio, aud lecUircr. ix wondertn] nnd cnn make people do itlmoat anyUiljis. It can even make them ro to »ar.'• Tlie real patriots nre KOlnr to linve'n liivd time of’ it from now on. TJioy arc roIiir to be bombanlrd by .niirrowneas and iiy.itcrln, and Uiey will be iooki'd upon wlUi .utter contempt by i>eopIc who lone n«o gave up Uiinklng for ihem.icjves. Tlierc i* always n place for Uic "heretlcni" thinkera. hut stones and bnrr, are apt lo distort InlclllRent tliought and a man Imi’i tlie same wiicn lie comes out, Tims, true patriotLmj

ofteiydnngerous. It li always ea.<iler to be a con- furmlst than n patriot, but n Innd ot contonntsts would not bo ft land of the free.

11 would bo Amerlea,—University ot Iilniio Argonaut,

NAIVE MR. HARRISON Senator .Pat Karrl&on. chnlrmnn ot ihe

nance committee, makes the .conservnilve c.itlmaic that Uie lend-iense bill will require new inxe.i to the extent of from a billion lo a.billion nnd n halt doUars, Perhaps hUi cons«n,’ntl.im Is reason for hli conflilcnce that the natloti will Lake it without pi'ote:il. He says; "Tlie people seem to realize ihai it tnkea money to do Uils defense Job well nncJ 1 hai»-i\rBrd no »qui ' about Inxes yet," ^

Mr. llanljon appears to be snill.v out of tuiie wUH tUe times. U Is trve that the American |>eople reall*. Ing the purpose ot the cleteniie program, are willing' lo pay the bill, lo pay imlil It liuri-i -.But lhal doc.i not mean tiiey nre not going tlo .wjunwk about it. SquawklnR Is the innllenabie right ot Uie sovereign loxpayer. a rlRht he hns cherished nnd exercised ^om

The Romance of the Little Red Hen St. Lawen<;e Ftoject Involves . Far More Than i|266,000,000 ^

National Whirligig 'ewR Behind' The News

time ii ncmorlnl.—Lewiston Tribune.

PERFO RM ING M IU A C L K S > t-1. The report o f Rear Admiral S. M. Uouinson. I »-chIef o f the bureau of shlp.<i.. on naval con- "':stru c tlon Is Important by- reason o f what It

reveals o f achievements nnd al.so aS an In- ^dlcatlon o f the nation’s enormous industrial

fr^otentla lltlcs .r-v- •'Frankly, i think that we have accom- t j;plished a mlraclc In this build ing program up

-to date." Admiral Robinson said. "W hether It ^will break down some p l^ c la ter on I .do hot .'know, but the speed w m which everybody . who has anything to dd w ith this building •program has gotten tinder way has been a ,1 m atter o f great surprise and satisfaction to

> connected with It,Under the stress o f th e emergency, war- ilpa are being turned ou t from t,wo months

a year ahead o f schedule. A ll navy yards '^'are operaClns on a six-day week and threc-

iShlft Uosis. W hatever delays have occurred are attributed to lack of skilled labor and a

^ ’ shortage o f shipyard facilities to match the ^ ^ tw iM )c e a n navy program. Un like other de­

c e a s e ’ industries, shipyards have no t ye t been i^ahut down by strikes.t r W nen^toe' principal demand o f the crisis'

K f b to r s h ^ a report which shows tha t m lr- ■ K M le s o f ship production a re being performed

one to be received with .great satisfaction ' the American people. I t such results can accomplished In one fie ld o f Industrial en- iTor, they ^ be achieved a ll along the

MORB;MICROBB HUNTERS • U en figh t other m ea elsewhere fo r various

TUG RIOIIT TO WORK Tlie wife of ihe pre.<ildenl U—among nn amazingly’

long list ot activiiles—a syndicated newsput)cr column-, 1st. Not Intreiiuently her publicly expressed views give n clue to the direction of ndmlnistratlon ihlnkinR, Recently n column of Iiers voiced some exceedingly inlerpstlng opinions on the subject ot labor unions."

Mrs, tloosevett believes in unlon.i, belleve.i every person has a right to loin a union on tree choice. nci:nowled»M that In some InMances Uiers tinve been abuses in the labor movement nnd believes such abuses should be fought. Out the moM significant thing she said was this: " I do not believe Hint every man and

Oman should be forced lo Join n union.* ■• Now as n matter of clrcumMance. many ot us are

uuder no computsloii to Join any union. But os a mailer of both circumstance and law. It so happens that large numbers of men and women nre forced to Jpin unions or forego employment. Tlmfs the way tho closed shop union works. It’s legal, nnd liia spread j>l Uie ciiued khop liiu been aided uid abetted by the noci>evelt ndmlni.urutlon. »

Tlic Im.ilc (luesllon la not whelhcr every person should be forced lo Join n union but whether any perxou hnuld be torccO to Join ii inilon. It Li nol an eiisy que>tion. To {Krniit Indivldiial.i to get the bfnetlls lhal unions have gnined for llielr mcmbrrs without Joining llie union would, of coun.r. greatly weaken the unlou movement. But If UiC iiovcniment pcrmll.i or niuiljt.' the compuLwy enrollmrnt ot iinlon mrmbers. It obviously follows that sooner, or lalcr the Rovem- ment must Ret nround to proiecUnR both the union mrmber.i and the public from nbuses—actual or poientlnl—on the part ot tinloii oftlclnh. Probably that K the way In which we nre lieadcd.—Magazine of Wall Street.

SAVING THE «AGK IIKN Sl>ori!.uicii./Iockmcn and Ju\t plain bird lovcrx are

ciieered lo know tiint iht State Game department Is safegunrdlng niid incr^Alns Idaho’s sage hen populn- tlon. y ■

Tlie drab gray "P ^ o u U i Rocks" ot the range lami.n swooped daiigeroujijfr close to extinction two years ago, Tlie sagem had mled to thrive on dl-y yean nnd stock grating prnctlccs Uiat enuilled no plans for waler-liole con«:n’ftUon nnd development. Waterle.w slrelchen make poor nestlnn ptaccs.

Like Plying Portresses wlUi an overload nf .ga.wllne And bombs, sage liens nro slow on the Mart, Tliey make eo y tArgels for sliolgun bta.il.v Open sea.t(ms and hunters wlUt no respect tor bag iimiU raLied Bain with sage hen density.

T «o yeiirs ago the game depurtment went Into ac- Uon, U st yenr- 17 <0-«cre traei.i In ilie stale were closed, fenced Ught. sl>rubi and seeds pluUed. reser- voln lieaped up. Fliie etfecla ot iliesc havens already have been’ noHced;

It is encouraging lo hear that nn even broader program Is outlined tor ibis yenr. Tlie (utt>legged. nolQ'>wlpged cnge hens nre as typical ot Idaho ns sagebr\wh. They deserve to be perpetuated in Idaho bird lore.—Boise Stalesmnn.

Breakfast F o o d ,LOST^W THOUOHT __________

Wtfe=-Dff*you realise Ditt- 20 years ago today we •became engaged?

Absent-minded professor—Twenty-five yeanl You •hould have retninded me befbre. It'* eertainly time v t got married.

youPREPARE TO PAY

Raitui: « man outalde who wanU to __abott coiiecUn' a bill. He wonldnt give me his name ‘

B ««s:‘'What doea he took Uker- lUstuj: *He iQokt Uk 70U better pay IL”

j th# doctor c

WASHINGTON By Ray Tucker

KELIANCH i’ resldcnt Ronnc las Riven secret orders to fortify ur Allnntlc defen-ie.n pending iructlon of the tw’o-occnn hlch will not be completed before

1010. The eight bases acquired from Drllaln In the destroyer trade per* mil a defen.ie system whicli should make the tJnlted Stnte.i InvulnernbU to an oversena attack.

K. D, R, has ordered that the ma­jority of new nnval veucls. includ­ing batllciihlps nnd cnil-iers soor. to be commissioned, be nulffned to our Pacific fleet. He appears -de­termined to frlRhicn Japan cut of any warlike measures - and move- menla. nnd io tar ho seems to have succeeded. Bui our most modem planes. Including pursuits nnd last bombers, are being detailed lo serv- Ice In the Atlantic. Tliey nro being sent to the ncw-ba. es which stretch from Newfoundland to Trlnldnd.

Airplanes operalhig from theite outlying bases can prevent any at- Uick on this, continent, according

P,D,R,'s military advisera. nicre* /ore, the president relics .on our fleet In the Pacific nnd on our ex­panding acrini force in Un lantlc. . ^

SAVINGS. Jcm7 II , Jones «neak-

At-

ed 1 fast 1 tilt prlvabankers when he financed the ..

:tt J137.000,000 Usue by Uio aUile .. Arkansas. He knocked down tho Interest rale at a time w’hen f « l- Tal and stjite governmentJi must engage in heavy financing tor war

' purpoties. He hns set n slow tin clal pace tor tile years ahead.

Private bankers hnd agreed buy the Arkansas. Issue at 3 'j r ceiil. a fairly lilRh price, llien, the sugRcsUon of ceruin political friends In the-sUkte. Jeue agreed to handle the securities on the bn- sl.i of percent. The private blinkers chnrged that llie trans­action would be ruinous lo Uic gov­ernment, Je.'.se laughed Uiem -off. And bmiliialiy Ihe same banklnft

I buy till. ndlcate wlilcii iiuLitcd Interest rate was Riad bonds at the lower tlRU

Mr. Jones .mved $16,000,000 fc uic ot. Ark»iuia.s. But wlu

has done—and this wiui Ills li lylnc reason tor interference—i.i to 'jwer the rates which Uncle Sam

lll’linve to pay toi

HAVOC. Herr Hitler Old a ma ilflccjit Job of concealing the fac ibout Ills construction of a Oermi navy, according to belated reports from our attaeiies abroad. He has a much stronser fleet than Londjm or Wasiilngton credited lilm wlCh be­fore the dutbreak of ttie war In Sep* tcmber ot 1033.' Der.fuehrer clty-allckcd foreign )b*ervers, according to the current Uieory. He permitted tiiem to see ind report on his vast air cxpan- ilon. Men like Colonel Lindbergh. Al Williams nnd Major Trumnn Smith, our air attache at Berlin, brought back n’arnlngs of Oermaiiy’fl air superiority. Uiitortunntcly no­body believed them, .But he ,never allowed anybody to visit his shlp-

HEARI) AT THE HEARING A few momenta of 'merriment

spnrkled against the backdrop ot seriousness during ycslcrilay nlt< noon’s power hearing, at'Jerome.

Harold Harjffiy qf Buhl, one of the Protestants, was pretaclng his tes­timony wim Uig commeia Uiat li£ personally liked tlie power compile Vs employe*. BUT , ..""Doe* Hint Inelude its lawyers?"

interjected Jess Hawley. Boise nt- tomcy for the power company, somewhat doubtfully, as the quip followed several earlier tliarp changea'between the two.'

¥ J* ¥ . mother point a power com­

pany attorney oiked a witness It h« thouRlit the company waa fin'ai '

"We won’t argue about that at il." observed Attorney E. L. Ray-

born. who represents the protesianu. ¥ ¥ ¥

e Harvey-Hawley cccnblnaUon figured in yet pother bit of give and 'take when the lawyer' ques> Uoned H.R.H. about the exact plaelneof proposed power faculties In Box ^anyoil.

'"^eit. tlie Idaiio Power.eompany hasn't exactly taken me Into iia con­fidence/' quoth Mr. Harvey dryly, lo which the barrister said, equalh' dryly, ~Oh. I thought maybe youhtd-been.ilteplM_wlUi..theni.::____

Helsh ho. .

WE TARE ISSUE Night Editor feels-dutybound to

ehailenn a recent headline In the intercsu of keeping JoumaUim on » high plane.

The headline In question speaka of "Pour Hundred Fifty interested8p«l*torfc“ .......

•No doubt the baadUne writer'i Intentions were good, but Nlgbt Editor would b« wlUlof to bet hU bottom dollar, or aftould we aay bot­

tom nickel to play safe. Uiat in all that throng’thcre must have been " least one i>pectato Ing serioaily nboul trying to tievist w keeping

going yos lc* 0 tys and meafs c

* *THIS CAI.L.S KOR AN EXPLANATION

'•Dear Night Edlior—"1%‘e heard n lot about leopards

changing their spots, but little had ever occurred in the way ot ^erlffs clianglng/Uic ntrlpes in th'dr ties tmtll I looked at Uie receiit portralta of W, W. Lowery and compaiiy.. “One cvenluR I pick up the paper and Iiappeti to notice the stripe* run down from left to right. Tho nest morning I take another quiok glimpse In Uie otlier paper and same stripes are running from rtgnt to left. As I have been-liTlng rtght- lately. Uiere must be borne «splnna> ' tlon besides the obvious'one.”

-WORRIED. Dear Worried- *•This is to assure you that you have

been definitely living right and that the mysUry of the misguided itripes came from printing the negative up« side-down, wrong side up or vice verso In Uie first picture.

The sheriff Is also innocent.—NIQHT EDITOR.

DOWN BUT NOT OUT .. it-waa a great-reUef -to all who witnessed tho Incident to noUc# that the sudden, not. to mention tionc- pected, collapse of a chair at * local hesuiry yesterday embarrassed the boatelrr owner. Lynn Stewart, as mueh U not more than tbe erstwhUo oeeupant of the chair,

Wbtreaa tha vlotlm arose calmly, shook off the dust of battle and gaUiered up tlu parts oMba d ^ , Z«nn blushed large blushes. course. thcM bhishea might bavo been caused by suppressed mirth.but Uila U only « remote

yards. He put Uio lid on all dau concernlnR his building of a hav. Jt wa.i typical Hitler strategy.

Our inlest chcckup coiivinci Wa-nhliiKlon that Hitler hns a extremely powerful fleet, and 011 whlcii can work great liavuc r .\en. According to Uie best cond dentlai reports, lie iiaii about tc battle crul.sen of 35.000 tons eael.. SCO submarines and a tremendous fleet of nmnil auxiliary ships. Un­like Uie Kaiser, who kept Jils navy In home ports. Hitler means lo make an all-out navnl attack in con­junction wlUi his air blltskrjcg ngaiiiNt. England.

AGUKKO. Plordio H, LhOuardla will run for reelecilon as mayor ot New Vork., He will not annqunce ills decl.slon for several montlu, but Ills mind Li made up os a re.->ult of several talks wiUi Pre ildent Romo- velt, P. D, R, win back llie Little Flower in spile of National Chalr-

Cd Flynn'a protests,. UiOunrdla does hot want to lor a liiird term. He promised

Mrs. LaGuitrtlla. on his rcelectloii in 1037. that he never would seek elec* live public office ngnln. He could retire now on a pension of approxl- iialely $12,000 a year. A man of

simple tables, the may’or could live :omforlnbly on Uiat Income. But ie wnuLi lo keep in thi llme)l|ht; le would die otherwise*.

lie ha.1 been offered* the Job of ecreiary of labor, but-he won’t take I. Ho believes—and Uie president igrfca—tiiat Uie New York mayor- lUy Is a far more tmporUnt defense poM than any assignment at Wash- iiision. So. P. H. L. probably will un again for mayor, and P. D. R. lill support him.

l''0:i>. Under plans framed by President Roosevelt and SecreUry if Agriculture Wickard, the United Jtnles will become the granary n « l i as the arsenal of demoarncy.

' i«U In Uiisnil nbout America's food ....

tritiution pnie by comporlaon with tlie new program for feeding Europe,

Secretary Wickard will announce his plan within a few weeks. He, will crili u|)on all' farmer*, exoepC producers of cotton and tobacco, to ' row and grow and grow. He will dvaiice loans ot such slu that Uiere ■ 111 be R new incenUve for'produo-

...........- ______ _ with food.Millions—perhap* billion*—of doi> krs worth ot foodstuff* will be

shipped to Europe within the nest few years. P. D. R. and Church* 111 have conie to an agreement, «]• Uiough It will not be pubileited for severni weeks, on'feeding the starv­ing peoples of EMrope. 'Dtcy wiU be fed-Mind with American food.

LOBBVnSTB. William 8. Knudsen geu $l a year as production inasac*

r of O. P. M. He U enUUed to 110 I day for »pen<i*, but he b u never lubmilted an expeoM account to the

>treasury. jR t b paying hi* way.He hB*i%t)ted a houM on'tn ex­

clusive avenue whleh eeata him at I 'Imtoaoo n month. Recently a few friends suggested that he give up the house, and Uka a imaU apart roeiit in a ivtel. BUI gave the same answer—or explanatlea*>whlch Jlai Parley vouchsafed when he both £>cmocraue.na0mial-ch»lrmm and postmaster general.

- If I Uve at a hoteir »*ld Mr. Knudson. *'all kinds of strange.peo- ple—iobbybt»~wiU rush up to me and shake hand* wlUi me in the hotel lobby. I gotta be nice to piem. But' they may be-«eiling me-the presld«nt->the O. P. M/-dowa the river'on the atrength of that hud* shake... So 1 aUek-te a y house.'’ /'

Aceordlagceordlag tohuman ’eye niov^vlnvolt ut 100 tlmei

NEW YORK WHIRLIGIG By S. Burton Heath

TREATY. I f national defense niid sld-to-Britaln really are our prime concern right now. Uien It'ls a tools' gold brick Uint President Roor>e- veil is handing us in lUs St. Law­rence power and nsvlgaUon project. Prom the defense viewpoint It is nol power. Il is norna\\iiuUon, and 11 is nol M66.000.000 buuvery mucli

U may bo Uint the n3lon wants lo develop Ute InteninUoiinl Rnplds levUon qf Uie St. Lnwrence'river to produce two million electric iior&e- power—one for us and one for Can­ada. TJie country may want W build a deep waterway from Montreal lo DuluUi, with stops nt Buftn|o. Cleveland, Detroit nnd Chicago. Per­haps we are -In pasltlon lo divert t2CO.000.000 from the nuiionitl de­fense. nnd to spare, U)ou.uind.i of skilled workers tor somewhere be­tween four nnd ten yean.

Congress and Uie coiirls wUI have to decide. The president can gel n majority in congress tor anyUiUiK to wiilcli lie pins the defense label, Thelni not to rcnwn why, Nntlonal defcnse-ia Ute watdiword. P. D. R. know’s best..But after conKres.i has rubber-stamped Uie Hrc)»5i-d law, It win bo tor the coiirui to suy wheUier a treaty—which requires two-thirds acquiescence lu tho Aeii- ati'—(.int wiiat wiu required nil (he time. Nine year.i sro Mr. Roosevelt believed n treaty was nerdcd. Now he thinks h^can get by with n law.

RUB. Bdfore congreu yields to Uie plea of nnUoniO defeime. Uiere are several considemlloiui whldi iin- doubl«dly will be cnilcd to lu at- tenUon. AU ot Uiem rest upon au- thorltnUve, Impartial studies. Each 1.1-weil documented, and available to anybody Interested In .fact. None Is unkrtown to the pre.sldent.

A slngIe*stoge dam. to turn Uie St. Lawrence rapid:;' enemy liiio electricity, would cost »327,S93,000 by Uie president’s tlgufco.-Tlie.ie seem reasonable, In^l03i a Rroup of top- noteh cngtncraf>pui it ai-|ie2.0« .- ’ 000. n ie M5.000.p00 margin ought to take care of increased costa In Ui# Intarvai. To caiiallie the Inter- naUonal Rapld.f fitretcii for deep- sea ships would ccMt $l00j 60.000. But $130,708,000 ot this Is common to boUi nnvlRnllon and po»-er. ■*

Tlie ovec-ail cdAt of »3C6.170.000 raises no quesUon ot price—.vi far Bs It goc.i. But U'lere'n Ihe rub. It Roe,? only from Colquhoun Wand'to a little nbovt Croll island, a dLv Unce ot about fifteen mlles-but It Is 183 miles, from- Montreal to Un toot or Lake Ontario, and anotliei 1.160 miles to DuIuUi. ,

DiiLUSION. Speaklnt of navlRfl.

tion-tor « 2fl,000.000 we will have prepnred some fifteen miles of St. Lawreiice to handle ship* drawing 25 feet of »»*<r--whlc3i -Is to say. more Uian half of Ulose which .ply the waves from Ii*urope to Uie U. s.We hliall have remaining some 170 mlle.s ot the river between Montreal nnd'Lake Ontario which wUl be ennailrcd tor vessels drawing no more-tiian fourteen feel of water.

To sctul freighters from Britain to Uie mouUi of the Niagara river, be­low the tnlls, we and Canada will have lo dig up funds to deepen the canab above Montreal by at least eleven feet. To get Uiem to Buffalo. Cleveland. Detroit. Chicago ajd Duluth it wjil be neceasary to ex­pand or replace Uie Welland canal, deepen the channels between thi upper lakes and enlarge the locic at Sault Ste. Marie.

Tivcnty yeunt ago Uils was esU> mated to Involve a further ccet of almait *300,000,000. It would be no -j. Ie.- i now. 60 either the 1336,000.000' ■ program is a 1500,000,000-or-more ^ project—sneaking up on us—or eUe he naviRationni aspect Is a fraud md n delusion. If aU f;e are lb have ■s H-toot navlgaUon, it is Uiere ' low. If 2S-foot channeU, Uiey will cost more than we ara being toJd. U 30-fool-Uie deplh'from Oie AUin- tic to Montreal-the whole may cost up to $550,000,000.

GHOST. The minlmtun time esU- mated for the power project U tour - • years. Engineers believe Uiat five U more probable, and say that rela­tively minor delays might make it require six'years. The time estimat­ed tor Uie navlgaUon project is iboul eight years. I f elUier of the*#:im be <ltied Into the naUonal de> cn.w-nnd-Bld-to-Britaln sch em e.' lien u-e must start now digging our- elve* In fdr a pretty long war.I f we need more power for defeou

»>roducUan. ve can get It quleker In oflier ways. One 1* building steam > plants where they axe needed. Ttie power they produce would ceet more . nt the bus bar.ln Uio generaUngsta- » tlon, but llttio if an/ more at the P factory wliere it is used. The plant* Uiemselve* would be cheap^ to

'construct, and «ould be made avall- i ble more quickly. Another ta ^ in-

exisUng

Buffalo cnn bo expanded.EiUier of Uicse pinns not only

would give un power In time (o uie it for nntlonni detense—If that real­ly Li what we need II for-but would .-inve IL1 from building ghost towns ill Uie fields of norUiem New Yoric or, In the allemnUvc, having to .■ipciid enormous addiUonal nans for ' tiiamisslon lines to bring the pow*

from Mnssctia to our factories.

■•Atler .wlillc. Just lelmyproRram."

Frederick, you hear mc7 Turn off thut radio nnd come to

le table nnd enl your dinner hke huniiin being.""Can't you wnlt n minute? I have

to listen now. I can eat later."•No. you can't eat later. You'll : now. wilii Uie family. What do j Uilnk Uiia b—a roadside stand? u turn o ff that thing and right w. I don’t care—You've no busl- « tuning U on when you know it

Li dlnnerUine. I ’m sick and tired if serving meals and letllng them

get cold, and having people ent at 11 hours. You’ll eat on lime and

1 mean it."Nobody can blame Uie mother of

1 family for InsisUng on the family -ecogniUon of mealtime, especially the main meal, the only one at fhlch the family can *lt down 'to'-

teUier. But If the family Is going to be angry >nd upset, distressed by such an entree. Uie spirit of Uie at* fair i » going to be killed anyway, so what’s Uie good? Some way of saving mealUme and allowing the cl}lldren to iUten to their favoritu hu to be found.

Everyone Milst Bscriflee Seme Time

. II b Imposalble to manage so Ui»t every Member of Uic family cnn henr every program ho would like to hear and *U11 preserve a/uem- blance of family .unity. Some ad- JusUncnta hnve to be made. Some chUdren will accept that sltuaUon

start. Atler Uiat the whole le ho.-! to be gone over care­

fully, and n wny found lo allow as many as possible lo henr as mueh as pos.ilble with Uie least possible

sacrifice of feeling* and hnrmony.

It will budbcovcred that nobody can have n hundred per cent of his wishes, Patncr and mother would like a period ot quiet. Just when , the dance program, b - o n ;' abler wants to hear a musical program Juat'when brothsr's favorite’ halr- mlser is on. Moat of the programt arc on more than once a week. A session cnn be skipped wlUiout great loss. ’Tlie listener* will have to take, turns. A schedule of hour* will have to be made and accepted. After Uint, mother insists upon keeping the schedule.

Mother Must Sort and SehednleFather usually wnnte to hear the

news. He sltould have Uie Tight of wny. even if that means somebody hns to forego Uie serial clOMst to hlk heart. MoUier may like tojiear ari odd program in Uie evening, and she should liave soma conslderaUon,- too. I f fathers and mothers took their share of Uie program* and had less sympathy wjth the grief of the . children over the loes of some ot th* dance programs and the comedy routines, nobody would loM much and the family might have a more peaceful esbtence.

The radio can be a highly Impor­tant force for culture. Informatloa and guldsDCo If It la vlsely used. Ail that comu over tho air U not of equal value, as measured by truth, art, or good plain fodder. SoOiebody has to Ibten and do a litUe lorUag, and It looks as though that duty, like Uie many oUiars, faUs on moth­er. She ha* to Utten anyhow aod Uie last word may a* well be her*. ,

Mr. r«irl *111 a i» t>monal ittMlUn to

WtlU \KaU4 N««t. I‘. O. D«z IM, TImm S<u>r« ' Kuckiii. York. N. Y.. mclMlnc •for nrpl/.

FILERGuesU Leave—Mrs. L. P. Barron

and cliiidren, who have been guests of her parent-!, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Eiinb. the past week have returned to Corral, Ida.

FUtorei Arrive — Gilbert SmIUi rtporla the new poetofflce futures have arrived aod wUl be installed In the L O. o . P. building which ha«-be«n remodeled for posbjffice quarter*. . ,

SMUiera Trip-Mr. and.Ur*.J. Zfacaw. Mrs. 0. R. Carter"

and

EleoUoa 8«l->City election wiu be held AprU 33 with regbU^tion open­ing Thursday. No candidates have been named as yeL Officers to be chosen are ma>-or, two councllmen for.ward one,..two.councilmen tor ward two, & city derk and a treamrer.

Offloeti Named - Olrl Reserves liave elected new officers: president, Josephine Jones; v I c e^realdent. Marie Reichert: secretary, Ploriee Smilh: treastirer. Beatrice Thooa*. They wlU give • formal dance April 11 wlUi O; R. numbera .of the dl>*

'triet and esooru InvltAd. , ■EogUsh Ctob—A freshman Eng-

Gene Hagier. secretdy; Thebna ;Ltermonn, treaaurtr, and Bob WU- bon. reporter. >. ■

To CalUomI*—Mr. and Mn. Hugh Brown, who havb been vUiUng at Uie Earl Monland home. h«ve gose to California. 1' Atuiivenary Dinner — Ur. and . A I Mrs. Homer, fichneU gava » no-ho*t f dhiner party Wednetday ovenlng for. a group of friends, Uie oocu- ' 6lon being Uielr twenty-fifth wed­ding anniversary. , , ,

Women at Branch Form ‘Pep ’ Club ,

‘ POCATOiO. Miteli Orttf to increase interest In athletle' event* at Idaho fioutbem unlvoslty. a women'* "pep* club to being or-

ftganbed. H ib club will be pattamM aster tlmUar ocginliaUon* on'the , campus of eastom unlvenItlM '*bo«^ ' . half-Ume entortalnment a»i66U>aIl -«nd basketlMll games recalVa mudi publicity. * , • ’

Two freshmen vomsn, Mis* Ar- Une Smith of Twin n o i i and MU*Mary Alice Swanson ot Pocatello WUl draw up « oeaUtuUon to-tba , •

cbosm by-ttw itudast-ooaiitf-UM I-^-'^ Anodatad Weowi-^BtudQit 'eetnea tran tba woaen who wm tttam to . ’ tha,campia;i 'Mae •- ■,be*^pottna»toW^';. , I

TWIN FALLS NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING. MARCIT 20.1011 PAGE3 FIVE

S O e i E T Y ' EVENTS and CLUB NeW IFirst Sub-District Conference of WSCS jOxgamzed at Twin Falls piethodist Meet

Orgiinlgatlon'of the first sub-dlslrlct confcrcncc o f the W o ­men’s Society o f Christian Service o f the Methodist church In Idaho confcrcncc was effcctcd a t an alUday meeting ycstcr- dny In Twin Falls, attended by one hundred (Ifty -n ln e regls*

. tered delegates from nineteen south Ijjaho towns and Tw in Falls. Following thc-volc a t the morning meeting to organize Into a sub-dlstrlct group, Mrs. Ed Burnett o f Buhl was electiid president o f the organization during the afternoon.

Also, electcd a t the afternoon meeting were Mrs. Hugh Craw­ford o f Burley, corresponding secretnry and treasurer, and Mrs. Lloyd Ollmore o f Jerome, recording secretary.

Lannl Deltcatlon ^AU WS.CB. . organlzaUons In Uils «ub-dlalrlct were roprcsent«<l y(Mt«Kl«y except three, and honors for the InrgMl deleffnUon went to Burley. wlUt olxtcen members nl Oic mectlnRs. Buhl WS.C.S. wm sec­ond with (Uteen preunt.

PourUen pcuitora'Irom tho to'wna represented uero i»lso In attendance and were Introduced at tlie noon luncheon by Rev. W. H. Hertcoa of Twin FiOls, dlntrlct MethodLil nu< perlntendent, T lidr w(vca were trodueed by Mra. Albert Parrott of Rupert. hen{) of the MlnUtera' wives ftssoclatlorf.

One hundred and eighty Ruests were present for tlie luneheon. eerved In the Methodi.it chureh bntement.

' with tontythla (iRQrIntr In tho table decontUoai. Circle No. 7 or Twin

The Riomlns meotlns was opened by Mrs. Roy J. Evans. Idaho eon- fereneo president a« well as Twin Falls W3.C.8. presldent. who tun)ed the meetlns over (o Mrs. C. O. SmlUisan of Buhl. Kccond vice-presi­dent ot the Idaho conference. She presided at both morning and af­ternoon sessions.

Mrs. C. H. etinson played organ

Mark Moorman of Mnrtaugh pre­sided aji conference seeretAry.

Momlns devotions were fed by Mrs. Van Houten of Kimberly and reports from all groups represented were heard, At tho close o f the busi­ness se.ulon. during which it was voted io ontanlze, a quiet hour was observed, under the direction df Mrs. T. P. Warner of Twin Fnllfl.

Komlnatlnc CemmUlMA nominating committee was

noniM after the organization action was taken, and reported nt the nf- te'moon meeting, which betan at 3 o’eloek.

Following group. slnglne at o'cloclc. devotions.were led by Mm. Rnss Wollford of Rupert and two vo­cal seleeUons were offered by Miss LaRae Williams of Filer, accompa­nied by Mm. A. E. Beetn. She eang "Otannlno MIo” and "Bweet Mystery of Life."-. .

Mm. Evans presented Mm. John £■ Ha>-es, guest apeaicer for tho af­ternoon. who spoke on "Spiritual Defense," and Mra. Smithson pre­sented Mrs. E»ans. who gave her re-

of the western JurisdleUonai meeUnc.held lost December In Los Angeles.

Mrs. Banllla Clark of Idaho Falls, secretary of tho Idaho conference, was a guest and spoke briefly.

The Rev. Mr. Hertsog closed the meeting with a few reAarks and prayer.

Mrs. C. Loucks Re-Elected Head By Lend-a-HandMn.'Chester Loucks was re-elect

' ed president of the Lend-A-Hand club at their regular meeting held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mn.' Otto Jackey. She conducted the business meeting which fea­tured the«leotion of new otflcers.

OUiers on her staff will Include Mrs. • •• •Mra. WaTttf ivmer,*‘^ a s w r ; Mr&

. M. Kuykendall, secretary, and

tlonshlp to naUonol defense. Five Junior high school girU. led by Miss Luellla Norell. offered a number

sals vnong members and a commun­ity aing was agcqred. with Mn. Ralph Taylor at the piano.

- Outeta were Mrs, oari Weaver, Mrs. Roger Lewii, Mrs. Joel Bmltti; and Mrs. Kellie Orlggs. Refr«sh> meota were served by Mrs. Jackey. Mrs. Msia and Mrs. Ceorse Pomeroy.

Pre-NttpUal Uventa . Fete BetroUied Pair

BOBL. March 3$ — Bonorlsg IiIiH Bemiee Xhler. daughter^of Mr Mn. 2. D. Slier of Filer, u d Hleh- ard Atklni. ao&' o f Ur. and Mrs. Frame Atkins ot Buhl. whOM mar. riaga U set for FMday evening, March M, at the • Olowr iMnity Lutherfta church, many dslkhtfui pre-Duptial oourtoila wera. givea duriog the paM'Week. ■

Leeoard Leth. RvdollA Peterson. El> v ia Moh. AUreiL.Snmer ana Kan. AeUi Sae/chbr wsr» hosU at a mia>

' cellaaeous ahower and cud party at tha Fkliriew baU in their honor. About OHS hundred friends aad r«l> au m m at present Priua at.eanU were airarded to Mrs. Oraea Bax* ter. ittd Oiear Oarlwn. Mrs. Uenaaa Vostf and O, o . Brooks. Mra. Oeotva Leth aad Frank Barftb.

Mrs. ■ B. Peters 'Named Head by V F W AuxiliaryMr.i. Bertha Peters wua electcd

president of Uie Veterans of For­eign Wars auxiliary at their meet­ing last Wednesday night nt Die homo of Mrs. Wnndn Elliott. She succeeds Mrs. Gloria Pomeroy, who presided at the meeUng.

Others elected Include Mrs. Eleuno- .a Sejil, senior vlee*preild««t; Mrs. Mamio Rlngnell, Junior vlce-presi- dent; Mrs, Alta Burdlck. sccrcwry: Mra. Wandn Elliott, uejisurer; Mra. Com Simmons, tnislee for eighteen monUis: Mrs. Lena Quint, trustee for twelve months Mrs. EUiel Bicltnell, Uustee for six monUis. Mrs. Pomeroy was elected chaplain and Mrs. Pearl Lewis, conductrcss.

OUjer officials wlil be appointed by Mrs. Peters following her In­stallation April 33.

All members of the auxiliary were present at the meeting last Wed­nesday evening, and enjoyed a so­cial hour wlUt members of the poet It the close of the business session.

Mm. Corn Summers was preMnted with a birthday gift from the aux­iliary .and Uie refreshment table

as centered with a clecorated cake. Next auxiliary meeting will be held

April fl nt the home of Mrs. Dexste Tt&ttr.

Miss Chase W ill Attend National Scholastic M eetMiss Virginia Ann Chase, presi­

dent of Uie Assckilated Women Stu­dents St Uie Unlveralty of Idaho, southern branch at Pocatello, will leave next Sunday evening for Lub­bock. Tex., to attend tlie national Intcr-CoiieglaCe Scholastic conven­tion. according to word received here by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. w . R. Chase.

Mr. and Mrs, Chase will go to cateilo today to visit their daughter before site leaves for Texas, where she plans to be about a week.

.The president and president-elect of the A. W. 6. of unlverslUes and colleges Uiroughout the nation will attend'Uie convention In Texas,

President-elect at tlie Pocatello school is Miss Riith Wilson of Idaiio Palls, and she and Miss Clmse will will leave togcUier Sunday evening for the southern city.

The convention will bo held at the Texas Technological coUe«e.

Recent Bride Feted at Tea

BUHL, March 2S-An attractive soolal event of tlis week was the tea given by Mrs. J. H. Barker Wednes­day aitemoon at her home on Twelfth avenue honoring her daugh- ter-ln-Uw. Mrs. John M. Barker.

Niqety guests called during the afternoon. Assisting Mra. Barker in receiving were Mrs. 0. M. Merrick. Mrs. B. A. Webber and Mra. LJoyd Bynie. . .

Spring colon of green tmd white ere used in tlie decorative theme

at the tea Uble. A low bowl held and greenery as

Spring Dancing Party Ai~ranged By Hostess PairiionorliiR a nuinbrr oC lliclr

friends, Mtns Mllo Tiickpv nnd Miss Belly nhcii Slewiirt riUcrtaliirrt nt

Inrormal sprlnR dnnoWl: party night at the Odd Fellows hall.

Carr}’lng out Uie AprinK theme, yel­low and while cre|>e paper stream­ers—and. daffodils figured in the decorations.

Mrs. Enicst Tucker and Mrs. O. W. Slewart. mothers of the ho.«c!.ses. were present during the evenliiK and Mha. Noef Bniiey was a special Riie.it.

Punch was serx’ctl througliout the evening by Miss RuUi McCarthy and Miss Ellen Rnc Jailin.

Oucsls included Mini Ann Eiia- worUi. Miss Betty Lu Bi.lley. MIm Marlon Tolbert. MLvi Ciirmcii Vixs- quer. MIjs iCnUiiecn TJiomeln. MIm Rita Ankeny, ML-j. Caroto. MlUcr. Miss Dorothy KrniKri. Mi.vi Jtine Pnwnall, MIm A llw i ' nichiinl.ion. Miss Bnrhnra Price, MU.i RtKcmnry Harmon. Mlsn Qnll Poulton and Miss Fern Salmon.

Ted Turner. Bill Olo:,c. Wc.sley MnrUn. Bob IJetwrllPr. frank Fior- cnee. Art Becher, Don BiiIacIi, Dcim Joslin. Kiirl Brown. Pal Cuppel, Dick Victor, Jim Hnydcu. Jiu:k Jor- don. Bill Lake..Bill Stephens and Murray North.

Irish Program Entertains ClubAn lrb>h program' under the di­

rection of Mm. Martin Suliivan. en­tertained thirty members of the Emsnon nnd one guest. MLss Julifl Shepherd, at their meeting .yesterday allernoon at the home of Mm. Tom Baird.

Members nnswered roll call with Irish Jokes nnd opened the proRram wIUj group slnRlng of Irljh sohrs. Severiil lrl.ili Rumes were played with prlies Rolng to Mr.s. A. O. Kail, Mrs. Elmer DomcH and Mrs. P. S. Cappel. White eieplm^t went to Mrs. Leon­ard Holloway.^*

Mrs, Puy Uoiiowny and Mis-i Shep­herd offered a grottp of Irish songs as duels,'accompanied by Mrs. El­mer Dosseli on the guitar.

Mrs, Knll gave the Rural Federa­tion reiwrt during the business meet­ing. conducted by Mrs. Elmer Dos- setu It was voted Utat members who do not answer roll call as planned at each meeting will be pen­alized.

Hostesses. Mrs. Baird, Mrs. Bob Anderson and Mrs. F. S. Cappel, served refreshments at the close of the meeting.

Catholic League Sets Annual Sale

_ centerpiece for the table. Indi­vidual cakee and wafera were also in the chosen cclonu

Presiding at Ui# tea service during the flmt hour were Mra. Bay Weaver and Mn, Harry W. Wright. During the second hour. Mrs. Charles Buss- man and Mrs. Will Hawkins poured, and Mm. James H. Shields and Mrs.' W. A. Gray presided at the third 1 hour.

Vocal numben entertained the railous groups. Mra. J. A. Howard sang "A Rose In the Bud" and “Sing Me a Song." Mrs. W. J. Rlpplinger was her accompanist DurUjg the second hour. Mrs. James D. Pence » n f “At DawntBi" and “ I Hear t Thrush SI Eve." with M n . o . R. Overbaugh as her MeompanUt. Tm the third hour, Mrs.. WiiUsm Watt sang “In Uy O ^ en ," by FirisUme and ‘‘Rosas of Picardy," by. wood. Miss Ines Roger* pisyed the piano

On Tuesday of last week Mr. and Mrs. T. Q. Wilson were hosU at dinner in honor of Miss Zhlar and Mr.. Atkins.-Other guests IneludM to , and Jttfc Frank Atkins, Barotd aiM Oecrn Atkins, Mrs. George Baugh and Kiss Bonnie MoQulvey.

n f - w b « t - d * t o rback as far u the 6ton« Age. and its origin U unknown.

PliAIN DRESSES I

= 3 mC ^ H a C A B B T ’ .' A'.l

' ■ ■ C M A N E f i ' i

‘Fluttery’ Kashfon Tfrills

Infants’ Shower For Welfare A id Set by Auxiliary

SUTTERFLT DUTT0N8 set ihe pace for thU Ulm suit In a navy iilue 'eerded woel falirle designed by Cdrt Parilmann. Tlie tulltrry Isok of the buUnns Is picked Up In the lacy blouse, the flowery hot and »elL The shirt plesU reUln a slralght-llns look.

Bernice Ihler-R ichard Atkins Plight Troth at Taperlig(^Rites

DUMH: Marcli ” 11— Ml.s.*; Bonilrc Mnc Ihicr. cluiiKhlcr-of Mr. and Mr;;. iC. D. Ililc r o f Filer. :iiul Richard Curl AtlJnis. son o f Mr. and Mi;:. Frank Atkins of Biiiil, were united In m arri.tgc a t a tapcrllKlU ccrcmony perlortncd IoiiIkIU nt T:30 o 'clock at the Clover Trin ity church with Rpv. W. F. D.-vnncnfotdt o tf l- clntlnp.

A rccn))U()» lor .seventy lollowcd In the rccciH loiirooms o f iln- ohiirch.

The brlilc, Blvcn In marriaHf by her father, wore a w h ile--------------------------------— .......1 ciiibrolilcred ' U fle tu wcddins

;own. .styled w ith , a train. Avi'cthcnrl neckline and p u ff­ed slocvc.'i- Her traln-lcnutU •<>:<>iiei .Mvle worn win. ii'rr.itii (if Jrt'.ili flower;; iukI slinilllc'd II ColonlKl llOUI|lU'L <>I lllllr’.

iml wlilte inrnallons.,\lUnd t'ouplr

-Mi.i. non Klmver of Buhl wm. in.i- toii of iioiior for her si;iifr nnd wov k Iloor-leliKlh pink laffelu j;owii. i>T.I«n«x! with n pleiilrd Ixxllcr. jniff- (I .'IrevM niKl i> twcrtlirurt nrr^i- iiic.' Slic iiirrled n Colcitiliii boii-|iirl Ilf I

Miu VirKiiilii Cnx nf Buhl.11* II (>fi'i(li'r blje nei iloor jrjjjiUi ;i’wn; Miv. IJonnlr McQulvey of Ihiiil. II ycllDw ofiiiUKly MIk-.Hrnilcr .\lcycr ot Clover, iin nr|in •l>:iie l iJIria nii>del: Mr.n. Klnir lliler nf Filer, iin iiprlcoi rhiffoii trork, snii Ml.sn 01k« Meyer

•. i\ IlKht iiuik Uiffei« m<><. bridc.imaids. Eiich currk'd

Colonial bcmciurt of hwei-t i><-«.s.• Wllilnm AUiniA. brotlx-r of l

lincleRrnoiu. wiu'beni man iiiul ii.sh- re Wllliird Ihler of l-’ilrr, Hnf- Atkin.'. Elmer Ihler nnc

Oeorse Atkltw. broUier.v of llir cou­ple. nnd Ikib Wll-'von of l-llor, r I'lijiln <>[ ilu- i}rHl''(!rr>om.

U’rddlnr Munir .Mr;]. Alklns. •(lie biiilrsrooni';

riiolln-r, sniiR ••Q Promise Mr." uc- coinpiinlnl. by C. WeMerkamp, who niso pliiyed the trodUlonni

Gbming Eventa

SO.N'O PRACTICE - Clrl neser>es and Trl-Y girls «

will sine in the P.wlm Sunday c’ lire linked lo meet at 4:30 p. m. Ii. , (iiij M Ihe y.W.C.A. rooms for prai!«

Plnns for Ihe nynual cooked food and apron sate..to be held the Bat- ur'day preceding Easier, were out­lined at a meeting of tlie Catliollo' Women’s League last Tltursday night *nt die parlsli hall. Mrs. Max Oray presided at the bus­iness mealing and Mrs. Owen Bucluinan will bo in general charge of the sale.

Mrs. Lyonsi Smith was in charge of the .evening's program, which 'fn- cluded selections by an accordion band, membem of which were Miss Barbara Jacklln, Miss Henrietta Mil­ler and Mlu Wanda Allen.

Marlin Swecley sang “Old Man River," accompanied by MLm Mar­jorie Albertson.

Mrs. Even Tarr Feted at PartyHonoring Mr*. Evan Tarr on her

birthday anniversary, Mrs. C. A. Bickford entertained at a party last Thumtfhy afternoon her home for

group of'frieruls. ;DecoraUons featured spring flow, rs and contract was the afternoon's

diversion, after which gifts were presented to the hononie. "

Mrs. R. M. Kimble won high hon- ■s and Mra. Del Tucker, low. Desserf was served following the

games.Other guests were Mrs. Albert Wegener, Mrs. John Baisch. Jr.. Mn.

-. E..TVler. Mra. E. O. Blokferd and Mis. Flave lo'dum.

’Teen-Age Dance Arranged for Youth of Five Twin Falls Wards

Climaxing the year's activities for Junior girls and Explorer boys o f the Tw in Falls stake L.D.8. church, a gala 'teen-age dancc was arranged Inst n ight sfl the stake recrcatlon h a lljn Twnl Foils with representatives from all .five wards in attend­ance.

Quests were received by Mr s. M. C. Phillips, in the abscncc of Mrs. Mnbic P'ctenson, and M. O. Crandall, stake supervisors, Approximately one hundred and fifty were p rcaen ffor the eve­ning’s festivities.

Bach ward Intercepted the dances-with clover shunts, and the Kim berly ward arranged a number of mjxers, which were con------- under ihe direction of Mcl

, stake activity director. iOration.i '/eaturc«l the trl-col-

, red. white nnd blue, with streaihem and balloons In these col­ors covering Uie celling mid large tettem In theso colors spelling “weU come" across U»e front of ihe or­chestra stand, where bidtooiu) also figured In' the decorations. Oene

Refreslimenta were, s e rv e d tijroughout UiB evening from a white Uble, nco&s whlcli red and blue strenmeni made an Interesting con­trast. Membem of ,Uie First and Second u-ards of Twin F^lls were in chiirRC of serving punch.

SUke M.IA. board membera and their partnera were guests.

S eed a nd B u lb E x c h a n r je S e t by N e e d le c r a f t C lu b

Pollyannas were made at tlte meet­ing of the Needlecraft club yester­day aflem6bn at* the home of Mra. Frances mlnnerly. The meeting will be held April u at the home of Mra. H. Dokes.

At yesterdays meeUng, membera answered roll oaU with household hints. It wu suggests that mem* ben have their dish toweU oom- pleted and in at the next meeting. Mra. Slna Laird was a guest.

- S E E D ^G A R D E N , F L O W E R

Comple^ Line, All Fancy Stock

'pink mid blue" sliowei—noi ilif khiri where mu- thliifc. In li-rin;. nt sonicthing made by Imiiil or ly putclliuied tor ihr cxpcrU-cl flilaiil for II frieml cir reliiilvi-—Ls iilmin'-d for the next liieftiiiy of Twin Falh unit. Aniericun U-utnii iiuxiltiiry.

This !.liowrr Vlii tx- lor thr rhild R-elforB «'orl: of the iirnc «ii<I clfi.-. elUier new or in k(«<i coinliiion, tlimiRh liecondliniiil, will bi- broiiiilii lo the nieelliiK next \Vr<lne cll»y r v - nliiK. April -, nt itir Anierlcnn Le­gion Memorial liiili.

Becniise Uie supply nf lufinii wi-ar hns been exlmii.'twi, Mr>. Vernon lUiwuon. .lervinK Her r.c-ond t<Tin ai chninnan of the unll'fl rliild wel­fare commlltee. .MiKKc/itixl llii.i mean.-, of replenishlnK the elothlni;.

The Biirmeni;!. wll be receiveil ami ^Ine^ In the inpply room ot Uie aiixillnry. locnletl in the b*i-'ement of the Memorial halt, and <ll',iMi>iit- ed lo worUiy Indlvldualr. an ret;uc:.l.% come In.

m. LaWAon coiniiirlilcd tlintle her prlmars: coii.sifleratloii' nins’ fnmlllt': nid is nbo r.. led to others from ilme (o \li'iie. shower Is imrt ot the ituxllitiry’fl

otaertanco ot Clilld -WeUrtre im.iiUi, iR ob-ierved nutlonitily ihruuKh- April.

Kalthoff-Jagels Ceremony Read A t Los AngelesBUHL, March 2H — Ml:.s Gladyri

Jngel.i, dsUK^r ot Mr. nnd Mr^ R. L, JsKet'. of Buhl, beciunc the bride of Emile Knllhoff of Los AnRele.i oti Miirch 16. at a church ceremony nt Ihe Little Mnnor of MarrlaRc chapel, Louis Jnitel.t of E-wondldo. cousin of the bride, performed tiic mnrrlase ceremony.

Cnlla lilies, ferns nnd Klacllrfll <lec- ornled the nltsr. Precertins the cere-, "lony, '•f Lovo You Truly." wns sung.

nie brteie wan given In mnrriiiKc by her fotlier. Her gown wn.s nn af­ternoon ensemble of ror e pn;,lrl. nnd her corsnge of white rofiebuds.

Miss Irene Hahn of lluhl, friend of tiie. bride, wius mnid of honor. She wore a blue afternoon frock with mstchlng accessories.

Miss Iva Rlx of Los AnReles was aije wore n sold color

Guest Day Set By Farmerettesill.-, for a liue&l dny observance

. i>oi-lui-K luncheon, to be held rnday. Aiirii i i . nt Uie country hornet • Mr.i. Ted Scott, were outlined at le mecltnR of the Farmerettes club .'.'.U'liliiy nfLcrnoon at Uie home Qf tr:.. Alton Wllllnms.Gtie:.t.-> of Uie clnb were Miss Lobi

Williams.'Mr.-.. J. N. Molyneaux and ii<-r (liiUKhter. Ml. s Lenh Molyneaux (■ uf Elv. Nev., Mrs. Irvins Prcscott ■ luid Mr». O'Dell Roblnsoi). wljo was

jied 111 .V. n club member.DiiriiiK A couic.-,t condiicled by [r:.. Wtlilami. Mr.i. Carl Boyd won

lii;;ii lioniir:.. Tlie afternoon' was ;ciit at sewing and visiting, nelrcsliment-'i fealurlnR nn Easier

ilvi-snc. conclvwlcit the atlernoon's en­tertainment.

ni:AD THE NEWS WANT ADS.

rciii-.vFollowiiiR a wedUlus tilp lo Salt

l.ike City, (hr couple wUl be at liDiiie In Uiihl. jk’herx .Mr. Alklns Ix nr oclstwl wiUi Ihe soil conservStfon

Tlie brlrie’s Rolnc nwny ''n;.rjiJHIc wii.i n nllt.tnrd Rold snll wlin'v.niue^ atve.vjirlc.t.

BervinR at the reception wax MIm; tlinlce Meyer nnd Victoria.Meyer,

Tlie pink nnd wlilte wecldliii: aikc ws'cufln tradilJoniil manner by Uie bnde.

Mr.f, RiHlnljih Marten;, tuid mi. Utiiinld, iiliiyrd ]iiitno nnd vloUii r.e- lfs:tlons during the wedding recep- ttoii.

'llie brlile Is a graduate of the nier hleh ,vli«i1. nnd the brlde- lirooni is n Kraduate of llie Buhl liiah school. He nttendc<l Uie Uni­versity of Idaho at Moscow for two years.

Camp M ary Lois Arranges Pa rty

Husbands of members were gnesLs when Camp Mary Lois,'Daiwhtera of Uie Utah' Pioneers, enlcrtalned lajt Tliursday evening at Ui<; Idaho Power company auditorium. Onmes. principal enlci'tainmant. were uilBer the direction of Mrs. Maty Richards and Mra. Zelphia Lincoln.' ' ’

Mra. Jennie Crowley, Mrs. Aurora Milligan. Mra, tula AUthuon ' '

dress with mntchlna nceesj.orle8. MLvi Hahn and Mlwi Rlx wore com- ages of pink camellias.

L«n Kalthoff, brgUier of the bride­groom. wns his best man, nnd Ctnr- ence Borchert of Los AnReies. waa usher.

Tlie bride was groduated from the Flier high school. Mr. Kalthorf Is a graduate of the Almn. Mo., iilgh school, and also atlenderi..lhe War­ren's school of aeronauUb at Los

celved by Mrs: Maude Mobley, Mrs. Richards nnd Mrs. CroM-l«y.

Camp colors, green and while, figured ‘in the refreshmeots and decorative scheme. Refreshments

ire in charge of Mm. Mjrtle Q(e- . r. assisted by Mn. Jane Bell. Mrs.

Ivy Jensen. Mra. Purdett Farmer and Mrs. Elda Wood.

Awards at the various games went

>- ENDS TONIOUT“ FO U R M OTHERS”

1 LANE SISTERS GALE PAGE

Slorts TOM ORROW .MItolU Shew ToBlte

Doon Oi>en iI:SO P. M.

Kiddles' S t Show - 1 0 A..M.

-UNCi:.E JOE-K'S-Nerge Air CondiUoned

c c c aL A 8 T -T IM E 8 T O D A Y

.U O N EKROC, COMEOr Csrloea • Serial # News

70will reach

^ T F I

N. B. C. Station

on your

R A D I O

D I A L

3 T A R T 8 TO M O R RO W

ilii(ftorr4wti FORAGOB' :- WiK$ttsoirs

• «os;[Muiious

A GIFT SHE'LL CHERISH

DIAMONDSpriced from

$10 to $1000 .

B udget Accounts Invited

H e ilamood nliiatre jou give her now becomes si ones ber foremost, lifelong treasiuik No o tW gift you ever ijve. re<atdless o f Its vslue, can rival In htr ejet tkat sin|le siooe o f deathless fire that ^jrmboUm aQ yout . bopcs'andibys. ‘

We shall gladljr Help j-on selcct (be wiblnyout raesnstbat-iamoat worthy of jw if choice. Welnvii* • you to let Us explaia bow cutting, color, decree o f per*. ftcUoT) and carat weight oil influence the tntrinno vmlb. of any slono you otay cboose our.larfe seleciioo. '

R & G J e w e l e r s ,"The Home of Dianumda'*.

. T W I N F A L L S ‘ .

PAGE SIX TWIN FALLS NEWS. -nVIN FALLS, IDAHO. SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 2U. 1941

H E A R T ’S H A V E N Ruih

t o

YESTEnpAYs Mrt. Mirbotr'i „ apfdltlon or pUno to a remo(«S UUnd off the North CBrollna cout &aUrt«d DDt b»ir biulnni, hair Jiul j 9 » Urk. Mrt. Marbury wuit«d to Rbay M» old hooae. *n<J th«re wu

old hotue on Ihe UUnd. nut ?^^er plane hai not returned, the ■“ retaken are anlaconlitlc. and

_jw7cr liowe and hU assbUnt Jim Droliuard are pUnnlnt »om f thlnc. Not to mention the fael that two romancn an brlnr dli- loeited b; the preacnte of Drett Bod man.

ampler 13- SheU Out ot Newhm

Brett Rodmnn. suddenly serious. Mid qulcUy:

" I t there la luiy ddnser. thould ip> wnnderlnft around alone. I aUlI cant bfllevo that any ot Uila b deUbemte . . . cxcept.lhat we

would have a houacpnrty." lie added ironically. “Bub Inlpntlonal or not, no ono should tnks a chance wandering nway. If Ham wanU •walk about, I II Ro wlUi him."

E!ve w u trrttnted na slie usually was, at one of Dretfa pronounee- menta. He seemed so amug .ond cocksure. She didn't suapfct that he bad anythlnic to do wlUi Lhelr predl- cammt—le would be auch a Billy way to sell a house!

Neverthelesfi. B r e t t nodman's calm naaumpllon Uiat Uicy were n lot of helplfM sheep and were imik- Ids the wont of ft bftd siuintlon. nn- Doyed Eve more and more. Of coursc,

,• the admitted lo hcrnelf, Drett hi no way of knowlns thnt nho v

' one of this Rllded,company . took safety aiid eruie for Knvnli

i-. • She had ,won<liT«l Intely vj-lwt Jir , r. would ray If she nhotild suddenly

admit the tnith, WQtild he admit. ■■ then, thothe wax ben'lldcTed o.i they I were? Or would he sllll feel Uiat V. the}i:.wero maklnn a RTcnt to-do •' noUilns? 8l»e saw a chnnce to

even and said swlflly:" I think you’re making

much of tills tempomry embor- J raasment. Mr. Rodman. Anyway. \ If Ham wants to walk hla do*. Uicre 9 la nothing on earUj to prevent It.

is Uiere? Lordy Mac ha.i his rIfiliLn.", “Hear _ hearl" sold Nell Bow­

' l l appreciatively;But' Brelt looked at he»

•pprovlnsly Uiat Eve wan a lltUe V»freh l she had none top fax. How- ^-ever. h « said only:

. “Miss Prentice Is reodUiR some- r.w ns Into my fllatcmcnt .u^t was

not there. Of course I dont-be- Leve there's an>-UjlnB to net ex- dted about. Anyone. who sIa$-s near—the house sliould bo safe enough." he added patronlzlnRly.

■ rDut I Ujought Mr, Milliard In­tended looklnR around the Island. And I don't believe he should ro Blone. In tliat case. Wo siiould all ■tiek tORcther.”

Eve felt as If she had been reprl-. monded like a child, and she thouRht

- ^ a t perhaps the others nKrcrt. At any rate. Mr. Howe and Julie and

' «ren Olna asreed wlUi Brett Hod­man.; Sve looked at her plate dbcon* •"lately and felt sorry for herself.

' r tor

I w li l^ ihi nledr"^ nR

.............................................. I folt)' iJightly uncomfortable. But Uinl—

that Iceberjr — Bh'e UiouRht fierce­ly. wanted only to Rct them away.

, He was wllllnc even to hulillUatc her and Ham to Rain his point.

Later, when Ham was stardlns . In-the hall puttlnR on Lordy Mac'i.

. hamciis. E\’e slipped, up to him. '.and whispered:

■ “Listen — tliat Roilmnn doe. n't know It nil. I f you want to do a

..ntUe explorinR. I ‘m wlih you." i'-- i "B Ightr Ham tthlspercd back. ^-*Vut BO. Into the lIvlnR room and •, tty you're sleepy, or sometlilnR.

H ien. Instead of ROlnR upstairs, ollp out U)rouRh (he dooru’ay Into the lower hall and m «t me at the aide of tlie house. Tlien we'll go down to Uie bench tOKcther."

' • Love In Doubt; It was fim to wink at him and

asree. but . later. sIlpplnR out ' -througtr Uie door from the hall UiaC.

M Into the transverse hallway. Eve' ■flu onythlns but Adventurous. The

''' night hnd a damp chill that .was definitely unfa orable to advcriuireT

v, But she resolutely 'threw a coat over her slioulden and'went on to

< the side door. She started when Bom spoke to her, almost at her ' elbow.

‘ Say — thU Li pretty swell of • you, but Tm fecIlnR that I wasn't ■ io unart. I don’t mind RettinR mixed up-lJi .anythlnif myself, but

V X don't want you . . .•'! . “Noa**"-*'“ '■said Eve; wlUj

it-heartcdne,is she did not fecL -.jdman Is Jant bolng too cau­

tious. After tliLi la oi'cr. we'll lauRh at our Jitters."

“Well . . . maybe—" Ham ngreed cautiously.

He led the wny down to the beach. Lord? Mac care­fully on his leiish. That Rentleman. tlndlns that he was expectcd to be quiet, cortfully reatmlned himself.

'«Bd even rotated to do more than growl In tils Uiroat as the white cat-darted around the iMuse.

Once .on _tJ»e i bcach, however. Earn allp'pA the Jeash and J^rdy

, Mac ran wildly* up and down, pre- ..tending that Uie wnter was at> "tacking him and Uien pursuing It as the wavce retreated. Ham and .’Sre stood .there lauRhlhg at him,

, Eve at ease for the first Ume In umany days, "nien suddenly Ham de- - i t r o ^ the peace of the misty night.

—r - “Say, Eve." he beRan without r.preamble.- "do -ou Uilnk Olna will mrer. marry, me?",• •*Why, Homf* Eve was almost at

low for- wortls. "Why—why do .you ask me-that qucsUon?’ she

ab» wouldn't'tay to me.'* Ram went •\inhappily^'l Itnpw I'm not

,jebr-to look at." he added hum- Ir. “eotntMred to Nell or to Brett' todman. And I don% know much tent anytblng-^en houses. Bat

L aina-lor M-long—^___ '( undentand. Bam.'not trust herteir to say

M moment. She betelf had the Increasing amount of

aina and Brelt managed to be lier. But U Ram were soUclnff

b ^ r lo r , too, t>erh«ps It was I she thought,felt the eo)d of tUe night wind ^ '- :a sd palled hflr coat mor»

mnid her shoulden. ’ talk to Olna, ah* pnal«>

ed the disconsolate young man at her side. "I know she likes you. Ham —you remember she protested aRalnst you coming 'out h«ro to- nlKlit,"

•Ttml's rlRht, slie illtll" In Ham's voice was nil tlie wnnder of nn ex­plorer flndUiR a new world.

"Wlille 1 led ymi on." Evo con­tinued with a remorseful laugh, "But conje on—we must Ret back now—and certainly the beach Li quiet enouRh. . . ."

Itun for LifeThere was ft soft swUhlnR noise

and a i>op[>lnK sound Uiat mlnRlcd wlUi the beat of the sea on the r.hore. Bvn wouldn't have been quite nure she heartl It, exccpi that Ham's hand was nRaln.it her elbow and he unsed her quickly: •

••Lie down—flat on the sand. Here —LoVdyt Do*Til"• "But what—whnt wa.i It?" aske<I. Tlie .-oind wiis cool nunlnnt her fingers, and damp from no much rain.

"Somebody shooUnR at ui. I think, Keep down," AR«ln there was a soft, popping noLie and tliU time Eve sftW' a little s|)urL of'sand nJiool up towni^ Die sky. All at oncc ' bCRan to tremble violently.

"Steady—sleodyl It's Just .some­one up at Ihe house—trylnR to b< smiirt." NeveriheleM his arm wo.- around her stioutder. nnd lie didn'i .lound too rrniuiurlnR, Hsr liow lonif they crouched there, Eve couldten.

But there were no more noises and Ilniilly Hum a.iked her If Jhought she could run for It. Eve nRree l. with no feelluR one way the other.

Ham locked her amui In hLi und wlUi the same Restcre Uiat brouKht tliem to,'lhelr feet, he started to run. They did not stop utj'lll they reached Uic front porcl) and pound­ed up It, bunllnR In the front door. The others came out of the llvlnR

: Julie ran oveEve.

•'Oh. my dcarl You're as white A Rhost. What Li It?"

Eve could only bury her head In Julie's comfortluR •shoulder.Ham. with Olna clInRhiR lo hLi manoRed to say:

“Let's all Ret back In the llvlnR room." Tliey turned and followed wltliout objection, and Uten Ham said suddenly. "Has anyone left tl)ls room?"

For ft minute no one ntwwcred. Then Nell cleared hLi tliroat and spoke.

''Vcs. I did. I went upstairs to Rct ly pipe and to have a look around ir Evo, I Was.unen.iy about her—

I tapped on her door, but slie dldnt answer. And I cnmc down BRaln. I was about to apeak to Mrs. Emfirson about It when we heard you running."

"I went outside for a breath of air. nnd to see If It 'was raining.” Jim Drolfisnitl put In. "But there

LI such a heavy mLil I dldn t suiyIS." -----S"No—you came rlRht buck." Mr.

Howe agreed. -What's Uie trouble. Milliard? You haven't told u.i yet," . “We were shot a l^ " Hom pnuwd and ft-as Rratlfled- by Ujc asioiinded faccs of his ll.iKners, "Eve und I decided to Rive Lotxly Mnc n run on Uie beacli." he confeaed. "We didn't Uilnk nil (Ills htish-husli bu.ilne.u wa.1 nece.vuirr. Well." he ndmltted Rrlmli', "we were wrong. Somebody Allot at us-not once but twIcc, nQd Uie slioU ciune uncomfortably close.

'We kJiow now Uint there's no one Uie Liland except ourselven nnd

Uic J.ickson.i. If you were all here In UiLi room or accounted for. It must be Uie Jacksons,"

•'Odd we didn't hear Uie .nhots," Mr. Howe 'said. "Bui Uie fire Li criickhiR.'so we mlRlit hnvp confused U)e noLM'," He glanced at Jim Drols.iard nnd as qulcKly glanced away. i'Well—anyway. It's over. Now the question Is—who did fire the sljols?"

••One of Uie Jack.ioiis," said Julle positively, "rve • never liked Uiat .woman. And slie snld she didn't WBiStNW around. If we could have got o»^y the first day. "It might .liavo bec\ all right. But. na it Is, she may Itnve decided to do us in, ■ne by on e.V ^ ' /

"But don't yotrtliink we should have Uio Jacksons In here and quui- Uon them?" asked Mrs. Marbuiy. “Really — If Uioy don't want ua... .-

'•You'd ask them If Uiey shot at

MllIl.'iRl lind Miss Prentice?" Ihe lawyer lnlerrx»ed smooUtly. ''Oh, no, my dear Mrs, Mnrbury. I f Uiry reaH>' hjive not to tlie point where they will stop nt nothing to Rct rl<l of 111, wf mii't remember one thing."

'•And wliat Li Uiat?" snld Nell shnrplv.

•'Tli'Ti-'s vrrj' little wn car. .. nbout i;—lit Uie moment,". Uie lnw- yer s;ii<l wlUi finality.

To be continued

The Literary Giiidcpost

Atmiit This Land of .Qura—Wli'-ilier or not March goes o

like a Inmb, It will leave behind „ drift of "pinco book.V* worth nny mnn'n ntlrntlon.

It will leave behind few mor .. wnrdlnt: book.i that the new LouM- nna iiialr Guide, one of the best of the miiny prepared by the federal writers' project. New Orleans people snmrtlnies Ret a little tired of henr- liiR ilii'lr city called ''charming.'’ yet It Is Hint. The new state RUlile shows tlinl the whole nlatc has , chnrm: lliere li n thick veneej of varied history over It-n work-a-dny Bctlvltln. Spain. Pmneo. Britain nnd Africa h.ive left nn Impre.ii on Loii- • Inlima, In addllinn to the whltes of America. It Is fn«clnatlnR lo the wny truth runs Into romnncen as one rends, and to see how little Is lost by the communal metho<l der which all the K'lldes have been created. 'IlnsllniM: M).

Tlie Soiilh Carollnn-KUlde Is : of the .'nme. exceptlMR that the his­torical ninterlnl Is Miinted In n dif­ferent wny. Tlie Up Countrj- and the Jiow Country In South Carolina both are dcv'eloped nhend of the central section, and each of the three hns 11.1 dl.stlnct ehnrncter. H ie character buds. n.i It were, In'the towns with as Charleston nnd Coliimblii. nnd In the Brent plniitntlnns. "South Caro­lina; a Guide lo the Palmetto State" is. like most of the other Riildes. nn Invnlunble iioiirce book on Amerlrn, (Oxford; $2.7:)).

Tliere nre two more stnle Riildes, both from tli<; we.it. One Li "Colo- ra<!o: n Oiilde tp the Hlshe.st State," nnd everythlnR that has ^eh'Sald about It.i predeecMors applies to It. with a rever.ie twl.it. Instrad of re- crlvlnR Its people. In the. beRlnnhiK, more or levs directly frdm nbroiul, Colorado's populace came to It with Uie Irnpre.vi of Anierlcnn life upon It. nnd for Urn mosl part Uie r.nfety vnlve tided down,vTlio re.vilt Is a commonwenlth of unloue flavor, lii- coinpnrably bcnutlfiil. swIfi-niovlnR nnd slroiiir, (1I5;.11mks: $2.50).

Vnrdls FWier'wns sent to Nevada to help on the Nevndn .State Guide —-Nevada: the Sliver State," While worklnK on this, he turned up the material for "City of Illusion," pub- ll.ihnl this week. Tliero Is enouRh tnnterlal In Ihe for a hundred more noveb.r the Iwok proves Hint Nevada Is one ptale where fact out­rides leRcnd. (Blnfords & Mort: -.50),••

Healtli (Council Official Resigns

JEROME. March 28-At n well- attended meetlnc of the Jerome henlUi council Wednesday after­noon nt the home of Mrs. A. T. JorRensen, Mr,. Lee McVey's re.ilK- nntlon as chalrniiui, was read nnd accepted. Mrs. McVey ha,n rc.ilKn- ed because, of 111 health, nnd her poslUon ha.1 lieen filled by Mrs, PhoebQ Tlioniason, formerly vice- chairman,

Ml.-a Elva M, PiiBmlre. Jerome county publle health nur.ne. was pre.ient nnd »t;ited that elRht chll-

In the county had received eye . QlA-v.cs lor Uieae children

paid for by' the Jerome Lions club, Mls.1 I’ucnilre nUio reported Uiat there nre .several children who nre In need ot tonsllectomle.i. with two of the Rroup being Riven care Immtdlnlcly.

Wnys nnd means for rnLilng funds to carry on ilie ncllvltle.i for the’ year were dl%euMtd nnd U was de­cided Uiat the henlth council will sponsor a Iliri'c-nct dramn, to be directed by .Mr.i. Luele JorRensen,

An advcrllsUiR committee wns named with Mrs. Imes as chnlr-

.; Mrs. A, T, Jorgensen, Jerome;

Crossword Puzzle

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Iniorinal hockvT WalkttiK itlcki

tr>. Oppiirltia s 'S f ; , . , -T. r f s r .

S '

'Selutlon Of Yesterday'a Puxxle«l, Soima !. Cltr In ICansai

3. Vuratlan with­out Wcinnin*

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0. Dllta 7. Until a.'Intervsl of r

Mrs. Nellie Llckeley. of' tho Kails City district, and Mrs, Hu7el Coir, wlio repre ent.1 the Grnndvlew nnd the Pleiisunt Plains district.

Announcement was made of nn ofllcere' meetltiR th e second WKIiieiidny In April, nt 8 p. m. In Ihe Jerome court house. At this lime, work will be plnnncd for the year.

A niiL\Ical proKruni waa pre.sent- ed nt the uieetliiK UiLi week. wlUi Mrs. Wllford niomp-ion playing "Tlilne Own." by Qaiiav LnnRe; Eu­gene Poulter. BlnKhiR. "Reces.ilon- nl." by Kipling: Mr, nnd Mm. Eu­gene Poulter, slnRhiR iicliuberfs "Serenade": nnd Mrs. PouUer shiR- Ini;. "SonRS My Mother Tnuglit Me,"

Less Uion 80 years m:o, tomatoes were called "love apple;..'' nnd were cultivated for show, not for food.

Survivors of Slave Owners PAUL .

Share in Negress’ Estate Father Honored — Mr. and Mrs. Morrill enterUlncd at a fnmlly din­ner Sunday honorins hb fntlier on his seventy-tlilrd blrtlidiiy.

Return—James MoHcur nnd son of Rlrle cnme lost Friday to visit Ills fatlier, Harve Moiicur. Tliey

FORT COLLINS, Colo.. Mnrc1l -28 MV:-A Nexro woman, bom In sUivco’ nnd IX wnrd of Livrlmer county for n \f;ir.i. licQuenttied u ilinre In Her $10.3,'>:> e.stiite to survlvor.s of tlie fnmlly which once owned her. terms ot her will disclosed todny.

Tlie powesslons ot OeorKlunna Cotl were not dl.scovereil until two dny* nfirr she died Mnrch S nnd tho

CninbrldRe, Mass., whose fiimlly once owned Mrs. Coff.

Al|>crt snld he would petition to linve the will ndhiltted to probnte. Amona tho bequests wiu one of »li)00 lo James A. Lunn of New Hn- veii. Conn.. now dccensed. 'Hie will Instructed tJint If benellcliirles hnd died, their sun-lvors should receive llifl bequests.

Lnurn NelLson and son. Widlnce, who has Juifretumed fronfnii 18 monUis mission In tJie wc.st central (llsUlct for Uie L. D. S. church.

Dlrtli .Announced-Mr. and Mr.-i. parents of a Klrl born liuit .Monilny at pnrenu ot girl bom Inst Mondny at the hospital In Moscow, nccordlns to word received by Uie (trnndpnrenui, Mr. and Mrs. KelUi Merrill, nr.

Husband Honored—Y. M. C, club members and husbands were guesta

nnk<'d reimbursement for the com iit tnnliiialnlng her nt the county old people's home since 103<, ,

Herbert A. Alpert. nttomey. nn- nounced ycsterdny he hnd been re­tained to rcpre.'.ent John Lunn of

‘niKY'U STOP Mlin-SLINGI.SG' TOPEKA, Kan. OTj-A ciinipftlKn

lins been slnrted lo mnlcc bis trucks wcnr aprons on their rear wlieeLi lo protect cars aRalnst muddy shower biilhs.

day evening In honor of husbands. ^ A dfwcrt supper waa served, foU W , lowe<l by Uie game*. i '

Relums—Mrs. Cliarles Francisco relumed last Wednesday from Soda Springs, where she went #ome time • flRo for a major operation.. She.waa accompanied by a friend, hira. Clara Wlienlley of Salt Lake City, who sjieiit sevetW days fit the Francisco home.

Conclude VUIt — Mr. and Mrs.Mnrvlri Loosley and family accom­panied by Mrs, Chris Rusch return- - ed SuiKlny from atlcngo. where they had spent several weeks vlslt- InR at Uie homo of Chris Ruachr-Jr.

. According lo records, < lands

POPEYE THANKS FOR THE LIFT, GOONY!fiiRE SOU OUfTE ‘ E NOU HMJS NOT V WE -SEft <XX*4?y \

3 * / thwjkNALU 1 WELL.V OKAV, \ TMERE NO / US'?. CaSr \ «=eA<bOOM/l UWOER I

WE WILL TAKE' IN THE

V6RV — - t;— "S' \ WELW I

JUST KIDS JUST BETWEEN FELLERS

I'VE CWeCKED ON MIS PAST, Mia TPELAWKSV. AKD MS CECUTATION K SPOUE55, EVCEPn- fW 1WS EPiscce wnw 'B k:STEVe^^I WISW NtXI'D TALK .TO-WM—HE'S A PISIB BOY AMD C5E5cRVES KCR6 THAN HE WAS

GOTTEN '■■ LIPS

NOW. I WANT SOU TO t30 IN LIKE A LmLS MAtg AND TELL HM WCfW SORPY -iVU ABE AND T6LL HIM ' ' ABOUT VOUeSELF JUSTASNCO TOLD

DIXIE DUGAN WHO’S 'AT THE DOOR

SCORCHY SMITH

VSH4T CT'tA KNOW./ A 0Oy fiieu 6C0UT CO'.N'S TV6«

GOOD CScD R X V €TRYINC ID TAG ^ wrw- A ■TO'AMY-CUN.' UA/- ■

START OF A FIGHT TO A F IN ISH

GASOLINE A LLE Y SOMETHING ELSE TO tfORGET.>*w WWW, I cAtrr h m ' B e m M w r.M io n e m SDsnas.aettnopi ttreWBEWfl'C£l39i»'' ■MUST KCEOOKEP-HMSBIP-

THEGUMPS THE POT CALLS THE K E T T I^ BLACK

S " ' . , 6

TW m T A IL S NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 29.1941 PAGE SEVEN

Jerome High School Lands Seven Places in Finals of State tournament at Filer

Kimberly and Shelley Furnish Chief Opposition to Tigers in Battling

For T op Ring Honors

FILER, March 28— S ettin g & scorching poco tonight as acml- i final battling nftrrowed the field to 22 o f Idaho’s finest high

school boxers. Jerome placed seven rlngstcra in the champion­ship round o f the state Invitational tournament.

^ h en title scraps in 11 weight divisions get under way at the gymnasium here Saturday..at 8 p. m., the northaidc Tigers, a veteran m itt crew, and boxers from seven other schools figh t It out for top honors and a collection o f trophies.

Kimberly and Shelley, each with four classy seekers In the final Jousts, w ill provide chief opposition for the Jerome lads.Flier lino Uiree wlnnern tonltln. uhlte Busar Olty. RJsBlna. SU An- Uiony nnd MounUln Home e*ch had

A crowd of MOO funs lumcd out to MO U » milling which produced only one cleui ktioelcout And one of the technical variety.

Alex KlnsfaUier of Jerome atoi Bhouje, Filer 108-pounder. In . . third round, and William Ehler, Jar< ome heavyweljht. was awarded ' technical kayo triumph In tha Im end round .when McDonald ot We. trich iuffered » broken thumb.

One of the beat olaahes on thi, <juo Oi UIB uu»a*ioo Vi. »<■tV program was the &fcCuUmvh'Tar>

lor punchfeiit. McCullough became one or Bbetley^ repreMnUUvea in the final# by taking.tb® decision af­ter a fast and furious duel with the Jerome boy. The winner'a opponent In the l»4<pound championship fray wlU.be John MorrU o f Kimberly.

cblon-over Van 61c^ o f Aahton In another thrllUng atrugBle.

The toumament’a champion and second-pIacQ teama wlU receive tn>* ishtu at the close of the meet Sat­urday night Gold and silver gloves will be awarded to the 11 individual UUeboIden sod runnen-up.

Semi-final results:n POUND CLA9B '

Hendricks. Sugar City, deelalontd BarUett. Wendell.

R. TlAher. Jerome, deciaioned An­thony. Filer.

100 POUND CLASS Sage. Bhelley, deciaioned LItUe,

IdahoBUtter, Filer, jledaloned Mllanl,

IM FOUND CIA88- .Benton, ShsUey; deciaioned Oeorte

QuesntU. Kimberly. .KlQsfather; Jerome, kayoed Shouie,

• Filer, la third round.. , 116 POUND CI-^8S

4| Rushes, Kimberly, deciaioned Timm. Jerome.Markeson. Shelley, deciaioned Grid- ley, Mountain Home.

124 POUND CLASS V. Hall. Jerome, declsloned Gard-

ner, Idaho Falla.Damon. Riggins,

Castleford: fight atopped In flnt round when cut over Brown*a eye began bleeding.

m POUND CLASS ' Parker, Bt Anthony, declalntd

Hendrtekwn. Idaho FUl*v- ' Holloway. Jerome, deolsloned

Scott. SheUey. '1(0 FOUND CLASS

Joalio. Filer, deciaioned Smltti, Ashton.

O. Hall. Jerome, declsloned Mor­gan. Kimberly.

' m FOUND.CLAB8 Ray Butler, Kimberly, deolsloned

Boltz. Idaho FWla.Bpenc«r. Filer, dedaioned Farley.

Mountain Home.1S6 POUND CLASS

iloned-VanBUhop. Jero ' ackls. Ashton.

„ finmeraon. Kimberly, declsloned I' Denton. Filer.*

IM FOUND CLASS Norris. Kimberly, deciaioned Keck.

CaatlafonL*.- ,McCullougb, Shelley, 'deciaioned

Taylor, Jerome.HEAVYWEIGHT

----- U mmonr-Mountaln- Kom»,-deM-Iloned Uaon. Biggins.

Ehler. Jerome, von technical knockout in second round t)onald. Dietrich.

Tha first half o( toeoy'* prognm, a 30-bdat smlon .held this inom* ing, sent the tcumament into tha R^nUfioal *.itaffa.'BttUlnc covered eight weight dMdonsr wllb'refolU aa foUovs:' -at-

- IM ^ U N D CLASS Sage, abeiiey. dedtfooad'Steae of

Mountain Soow;- BltUeri. n itr.

IM POUND CLASS

Jf-R w ^ o ^ : ^.Fray.a aVBhousa, ner,.awBrded daeUon over ’ Lyla n$ia."O utltfare, whan

wu ftsppad in seoood rotmd dut to

S K f e cnuss

P O T ^ CLASS

DapVafm'.SaO. Jartana. deolstonad

j^A^too:, P o ^ O a i ^ ,

g n b e^ U . weodtp: Jtfltart.

110-raUNO CLASS -

F»Ds[ ...... ...........- — - .

Schniiilt Slates Light Scriminage

Idaho Coach Bars Spectators From Football Practice

SessionsMOBCOW. Mallo. March 2fl f/TV-

Coa£h Fcancia Schmidt is eonducu Ing football spring practice at the University of Idaho behind closed gates at Neale sUdlum.

At the InlUal turnoiit. Schmidt had 50 footbnll men and twIcc ihnt many apecUtors on hantl. since since then, the spccUtor* have been stopped at the galAs.

Schmidt explained tiie training session waa “routine” but Utat he wanted a chance tO'"get acquainted" with hU players. He said he hoped to have the squad .In good enough condition to start light scrimmage

Redskins Accept San Diego’s Bid

WASHINOTON. 38 W -The Washington Redskins ot the National professional foottiBll league wlU train next fall at Ssn Diego, cullf., owner Georgq P. .Marshal] announced today.

In paat seasons, the squad has trained at Spokane.• The H«Ukklna' office said an Invi­tation to train at San Dlcgo

graphed today that h® waa "denot­ed to accept."

Marahall said the move to San Diego was suggested by Emie Plnck- ert.- former University- of BouUiem California all-American back, who last season completed nine years with tha Redskins.'

Jack”to fly .... ..... ......... . ......week to arrwige an Intersquad game for the benefit of the police asso­ciation.

ler. deciaioned CUfton Dailey. Sho- shone: Bneraon, Kimberly, deci- sloned Sayko, Mountain Home,

m POUND CLASS Partter, St. Anthony, declsloned

LIndegrih. WendelL

TournamentFinals—

FILER. March 28 — Following Is Uie lineup of Saliirdtiy nishfa championship matclic« at the Idaho Stato hWi school boxing tourna­ment at Inler gymimllm:

OS round* — Vcrl llciicirlrki, Su- car City. vs. Rclnbeld Flklxr, Jer­ome.

100 Pounds — Jack Kate, Shelley, vs. LeRey SUttw. Filer.

lOA Pounds — Hunrl ll«nto't., Hhelley. vs. Alex Klnifathsr. Jcrottir,

lU round! — Otb iluxliei. Kim­berly, v«. Clyde Markeson. Slitllry.

m rounds — Vernon lull, Jer­ome, vs. Harold Damon, lUnlns.

IB founds — Don Parker, St. An­thony, *s. I.yman Holloway, JrroTne.

HO Pountln — Eddie Jo«lIn. nicr, vs. Gilbert llsll, Jeromr.

148 Pounds — Rmy Dutler, Kim­berly, Ts. Lyle tipencer, Ftlrr.‘ ISO rounds — Clarence Uhhop, Jerome, vs. Bob Enic^on, Kimberly.

IM Pounds — John Norri«, Kim­berly, n . Martin McCullnash, Shel­ley.

ileavyweltht — David Lemmon. MounUln Home, vs. William Eliler, Jerome.

Bank to Report For Arm y Duty

WASHINGTON. Mnrch 29 (,?) - Tlieodoro Paul (Ted) Banle, deposed ntlUeUc director and football conch at the Unlversltj' of Idaho. Moecow, haa been ordered to active duly wlUi the army at WashlnRton. D. C.

Bank WA.1 recently dismtued at Idaho and Pmncls Schmidt, former­ly of Ohio State university, appoint­ed to succeed him as football conch.

The former Idaho mentor la major In tiie Infantry rcaervc.

MOSCOW. Idaho. March :s (;iV- Major Tad Qnnk. outKolns Unlver sity of Idaho football coach, who to day was ordered by-the wnr depart­ment to report for duty nt Wuali- Ington. D. C.. Mid he waa sdvLied he would b« aaslgned as coordlnntor of the athleUo branch of the newl created finny morale division. H said he would leave within a »eek.

Conn and Barlund To Sign fo r Bout

CHICAGO. March 38 (J>-Pro- moter Bill Rand announced today that the Billy Conn-Gunnar Bar­lund fight hero April A wuld ' scheduled to go 13 rounds.

The fight originally was set for 1« rounds, but Conn Insisted on a 15- round limit. Rand finally effected the compromise after several days of haggling with the prlnclpsli.

Contracla .for tho fight will be signed next Monday after the new- ly-appolnted atato athletic eommla- Blon ukea office.

JOHNNY RUCKER SEEMS SETFOR GIANT STARDOMB/DILLON GRAHAM

Sports Editor. AP Feature ServlcoMIAMI, Fla.—A young fellow who

waa a disappointment most of last seasoncenter_____have ever had.

He-i the kid from Crsbapple. JawJa>^obnny Rucker.

This time last spring h e ______toast of the Gtanta' camp at Winter Haven. Bporta wrltora dug deep for adJecUves to deserlba him.

But ha got off to a bad start. Johnny was billed as the fastest man in the maloti and everyona wanted to sea him streak. Fans fait they hadnt gotten thelr-money'a worth unless Johnny beat out a bunt to si)ow hla sprlntlng'ablllUea.

Inaily, after ht had gona 1____« U ftraliht. times without.*

. . Manager BIO Tenr benched him.*- Qiit he d ld n ts o n d ^ to tha tnlnori « y i " hb Just -lat tilm i ait araundaad watch. And laKr la thsi ■easoQ Tarry.stuck him into tha lineup sgtln.

Rucker's v m w m s only around

be had to bang tha ball a t ______400 clip to boost his ’ averate' sohtyV. - .

Johnny Hgufes thst ha was tblak> is so Biuch about letttng • fast

start toward first basa that he was "■ t away , from tha ball. Ha

thatls why he didnt get his

dnrinf tha early exhibition .J6hnoy tot U s reputaUm as a

Sad merchant when he w ^ play- wlth .AUanU in th i Southern

asioolatlon in 1U9. He ran 100 yards In a baseba ll..................•aWMs; WWdils tra) ______sirelid Uib base* in I I seeoods. Vtour tlawa_tbat.seasatt-hO-jcorHL.trom ftritansh>|t«a.' ' -

B iT ttv ’ a w 'b a Bs.'craat asC(bii» .Uisr fastTOQBntCT «fhe « f Oaorgik a ga rter o f.a centnry

And tha aiaotrttiiaktats a H t had.* M l

ir , tha ______ _

. JOHNKV B U <ȣK Speed^Bep Ataoet Balnea .Btm

spends'his off seasons .worklnc on the farm near Alpharttt*. Os. .Rucker U.a tood-looUng. blaek-

hklred youngster of a«. -He stands two lachei over aU feet and weighs 175.

Hell play,-center, with Mtl Ott ia right and Morrio Amovlch who was bought Xrom the Beds. In left, dot Moore and Frank Demarco an slated to be utlUty . outfielders. .

ob*4m ^ * dont boast any itart-of tha hiftlMt'wiioDeM to“ c ^ o ^ “ »«tn tloo iifocused on Rucker. Gabby Hartnett,

^ tomata-red faoad catcher from thft Chieage Cubs, and JM Oivngo. p r ^ T O obtained from th« Cardr inala and U booked at third ' Rariutt U expected to'cate)

IDAHO FIGHTERS ADVANCE TQ FINALSLaime Erickson,

Kara M others Score Victories

By GEORGE A. SCOTT S T A T B C O L L E O E . Pa..

March 28 (;P)— Tw o o f three defending champions advanc­ed to the championship round of the national collegiate box­ing tournament ton igh t In a thrlll-packcd program o f 1C sem l-flnal bout^.

The 1940 champlon.s- who moved to w ith in a atcp o f a luccc^ful title dclenxe were 120 p6und T«1 Knro and 103 pound Lnune Erickson, of Idnlio. Tlio third

llftnkln of WUconsin. who tloiuil chnmplon In 1030 but left his title uiidefcndctl Iwit. yenr.

Idnho ntko h#d a. Uilrd finullst hi 127-pouiid Frwik ICnrn. a brother ef Tc<l. to shnre the lend In the fight for unofficial team honors wlU) BouUiwci.ti-nV LoiilJilniiu Inslltuto of ijifnycltc. which ulio sent Uirec men Into the fInaLv Wbcoiuln. Wiuihlmttoii state, Penn Binte nhd

slLst.1 each whlcl llM ond Louisiana State unlvi liad one ench.

Erickson outpunelied Fenton Somrrrllle. Virginia’s Eul«m as­sociation champion, In a slutfcst, while Elcieii Sandem, Houthcrn ronlrrene« champion from North Carolina, registertd a mlnnr up­set In oulboxlng heavy hitting Fred Logsden. ef Kouthweatem Louiilana. in the other 1C5 pound bout.BonUn. ft grinning, bobbins

puncher from Superior. Wls.. car­ried the right to Joca. AppurcnUy rcftllilng he uiu behUjd lifter the first two rounds. Joca, a Cleveland, O., boy, opened up at Uie start of iho third and hn,d the better of an exchnnse- of punches to the heiid niul body, but Bankin was aliend at Uie end.

Kara, who captained the 103S American OI}-mple boxing team, had fnr too much experience for Har- ger. Always Uie master. Uio Idaho ACC. gave Harger a neat three round boxing le.vion to win the decision hands dou-n.

Kara's best weapon was a stmlght left which he landed on Ilarger's ntomnch nnd head nnd tlien foU lowed with A smaahlnjr rlRht to the head. Horgcr gave a game hibltlon. iiowever, and so won . erod'd that Uie decLilon in ICara's favor brought a few boos.

Don Harper of SouUiwestem Louisiana .won a close decision over Bob .Webber. Pacific coa.it chom- plon.'ln Uie oUier 120 poiuid semi­final.

Another Southwestern Louisiana entry, Edwin Ourso. had less dif­ficulty In conquering BUI Stanley. Penn State sophomore, In Uie 171 pound doss. Ourso outpunched Stanley from start to finish and von golnff away.

Kara’s younger brother. Frank.' also advanced to the 121 pound finals by oulpolnUng Dick Mly- agawa. a nimble iittio Japai>eM puncher repreaenlinc San Joae. Calif., Bute.'Kara's experience gave him the margin over Mly- agawa In ait otherwise fairly even bout.

Louis Trains fo rW ith Musto'F igh t'

ST. LOUIS. March 38 C«V-61lRhU y groggy after having lost a bout

th the sandman. Joa Louis t

title match with Tony Musto April.8.The champion napped most of the

way on the train.Kegardlns tho challenger. Louis

said sleepily he had seen Musto fight, and whllo he would pref bigger opponent, he didn’t thir made much difference.

W liirlaway Wins At Trop ica l Park

. MIAMI. Fla.. March 38 OP) — wnirlaway. one of the winter book Sentueky derby favorites, scored his second victory as * three-year-old at Tropical paiie today, to the mild'sur- prisa of a public thst had seen him beaten twice.

The crowd made ' the Warren Mght colt second ehoioo in the

.etunr. with Ofcao and Books' Blue Lyiy BS thoiavorito. but Whlrlatvty.

In convlnclns stylo a m a short and one-half furlons dUtime«five

u t .Off s low ly................. .. .......

Springs purae, WhlrUway onrhaul- ed the lesden la tha stretch and beat F. J. Buchanan's Zacstlns by a half-length, with Blua U ly a head further back. •

Trainer Ben Jones said ha was well pleased with tha result but '»|uId~not start Whlflaway acaln

^ . a l -Ttopteal.BMk. Ba_______ship hhn t o - « ^ la n ato next derby tuneup.,

KEEPCOOLCindarctmulaUda. dbea tha-Job.- 80 moeh. for so Utti*. Get/ oor

• obBticI; hIocfe.,pIsster.'roof.' and -iBsulaHan. Bsst by .twt' tha l a ^ who UTts in ft

Jerolne JBrick;Co

Old-Timeis Still Make Foes Say UncleCompcllll<,t kport has little room (nr uililctcn pn .l mldclle-age.

Most' ef thn pace-setters are in tliPir 30';;. Bui every now and Uien an exiranrdlnsry atar comes nlnnB niio Is nbln to keep step with the-leiulers at an age when lit- slioiilU t>o fiuzlng fondly into ft ncrftpbook *nd ihlnklnK of the good old duy». ’nicre’s Wllllc Hoppe, who Juat won the world Uiree-caOilnn hllliiirrls crown cit 53. Walter lliigen. one cf golf's all-time ncet. mkiii will be SO. hut he can sUII- shoot a grcul nme. Dill niden is snoiher bonlcrliig on 50 but there are few wh^sn beat him when Bill u-snu to put on the preMure,And as another baseball season surt.'., Ciitrleiv Root of the Cubs ts ready for hU IdUt season.

CHARLES BOOT BILL TfLDEK ^VALTER HAGEN ^VILUB HOFFB

WSC’s Big Team Meets Wisconsin

Pacific Coast Champs Play Badgers fo r National

Cage T itleKANSAS C iry . MftrcJl 28 « > -

WsaJilnRton SUitc nnd .Wbconsln. two colleses wlUi basketball sj’s- lems as far apart as their . home eourlJi, collide 6ntiirday> night for the national cage tlUe.

Tlie Cougars will prenent the hur­ried sti'le Uiat propelled them to tho Pacific Const conference cham­pionship and the western' regional plnyoff crown.

Wisconsin U more dellberato and used the bounce-pass In taking tho Dig Ten tiUe ojid then repulsing three other aspirants for the east-m NCAA bcrUi.Tliroughout Uie season the Bad­

gers were victorious In IB of 23 gapics and Wa.-ihlnglon state, after winning 13 atralght, finished wlUi 11 victories out of 18 game.i and with

scft«on record of only five losses InI games.Both quintets took light drills on

the Municipal auditorium floor late todoy..

Tlie Cougars average one Inch t.-iller Uian the Bndgers' and are slightly more Uian !♦ pounds hcav- 'ir per man.

•Tlie only ca.-vualty In Uie Cougar camp. Captain Bay Bundquist, ft speedy gijard. was declared fit by Coacli Jack Prlel and Dr. w. H. Oohm, team trainer and plij-slclan. Bundijulst was thrown to the floor In the Cougars' triumph over knnsas lost weekend and was able to play In Uio final half.

Much of Uie far westerners' pliy- slcal superiority Is concentroted In Paul Llndeman, 6 foot 7 Inch pivot and reboundcr who welghi 230 pouhds. Much of tho Wisconsin hope u centered on CaptAln Oene Big- Jund, also a center. He Is Uiree Indies sliort^r than Llndeman and weighs 33 pounds less.

F. F. A* Cagers HoldToiu’ney

OOODINO, March 38—“nie south eentrnl Idaho Future Farmers ot America basketball tournament, a single elimination meet expected to draw eight quintals, will be held here Saturday.

11)6 first of Utreo smIods will sUirt In Uie morning at 10 o'clock. The opening game of Uie afternoon Is set for 1 o'clock and the cjiam- plonshlps are slated for 7:30 p. m.

F J A teams entered in Uie tour­ney are Ooodlng, Twin Falls, Bey- bum. Murtaugh. Kimberly, Buhl. Filer wid Bupert.' An ali-itar team will be named and pla<iuei wlllbe awarded Uie first and second tesms at Uie cloa* of Pisy.

Little' R ock Team Retains T i t l e

8T. JoeCPK. Mo.. March 38 CffV- The Uttls Bock Flyers Tftalned Uiefa- women’s national /c' A. V. basketball champlonahtp tonight wiUi a IS to 18 victory over the NaihTUla Business coQess Ktrls.

Cobe Jones May P ilot Denver Club

DErNVER, March 28 m — Cobo Jones, former second baseman for Uie Pittsburgh Pirates, was offered the poalUon of manager of Denver's entry in the reorganized Western league today.

Jones Is now In Chicago with Uie Holy Family high school basketboil t«am he coaches for the National CnUiollc tournament. He la 33 and was ■ manager of 'the BartWviile. Okla.. club In the Western' Associa­tion eight years ago.

illness forced Jones to give up hU major league career.

Elwood Romney, buslneu n..... .ter of Denver's new team, planned meeUnRS today wiUj Pueblo Cheyenne representaUves In ar. .. fort to bring those elUes Into Uie leogue.

Norfolk. Neb.. Sioux City. Iowa, and Sioux Pftlls. 8. D.. are definite entries with Denver. NelUier Den­ver nor Pueblo has had organised baseball since ths old eisht-club Westsm loop folded nearly a decade ago.

Cubs Overwhelm W W leSox, 11-2

Pasffeau Scatters Six Hits W hile M ates Jump on

American LeaguersXiOS AHOELES, March 7 a m —

The Chicago Cubs cut loose ivilh a 14-hlt barraga today to swamp their cross-town rivals, the White Sox, 11 to a. In a flve-lnnlng game abbreviated by rain.

Claude Paaseau. cub ace, scatter­ed six hits to tho Sot and was never In danger of fallbig behind nttee the Oubs.tnjt across /our runs In the first innmg.

The score: B -H EChicago (A) _ — 300 OO^ra, 8 ‘Chicago (N > ------ 410 43-11 14

(Called end fifth. r»ln>DleWch. SmiU) (8),.and Dickey:

Passeau and Bchefflng.

At olearwatenpiL- R H EDetroit (A ) ___ 300 020 000-4 9 2Brooklyn (N) _00l 313 OOx-8 8 1

• • .Benton (fl),McKaln (8) and Wyatt, Mills (7) '

Ptanks.

At West PalnTseach. Fta.-R H E

St. Loula A Team(N ) ------------000 105 000-8 - -

Rochester OL) OOO OOO 030-3 9 3 Mahem, Hutchinson (S> and Mon- iso; Drlesward, Drumbeloe (8) and

MueUer. Beal (8).

At I

BenH ogan Takes Four-Stroke Lead

P lay S ta rts , in $ 5 ,0 0 0 Open Golf Tournam ent a t

AshevilleBy BILL •BOKt

ASHEVILLE. N. C, Match 28 OT) —Den Hogan didn't play very good golf today but he did put togeUier one of Uie ino«t Incredible roi ‘ ‘hl« career and tot* « foiU" _____lend In the first round of the ts.000 "Land of Sky" open golf tourna­ment with ft four-undcr-par 87.

I f till,-! r.hould seem a pftntdoxical stntement. cmwider the fact that Imttine Benloniin mUsed four greeas to Uie right or left, was short of flnothcr with his second shot, and ovenvhot yet another. Thot Is not Uie kind of golf which, under averftRc condlUons. will make man's s«oro outstanding.

Until Hogan came In. one of Uie lft.1t to finish. It looked as If this would'be the first POA-

New Vark (A) 30t 033 060-17 18 . *Tont«ora«y -_000 000 100- l 8 f

Ratttag. U a m w and Dickey; Krmnser. fimlUj (4), Ferguson .m and P e l«K «. Bttgirt (8). •

At Miami Btsch, Fla.— R H B Washington (A) 001114 000-7 IS 3 PhiladslphUCN) 300D0001»>« 10 3

Leonard., Dean a ) and Ferrall: Orouehf Hughes (8), and Uvington and Warren'(8). - ■ At San Funando-«ttsfaurth <10 n . Baattl*. Oancelled-ntln.

ifC T T m8FBINQ

' SHADE TREE^Linden, Ash, Sycamorv, Hadcberrjr.

ORNAMENTAL TREK—Idaho Locust (d «-k Uvra- . der-plnk bl(>oni8). No aeed

• FRUITTREE:— Cope> new seedlMs and coreleu F ^ .

:, EVERGREEN— Fllixsr’s Jun ipet^he tu L rd l^ ln u t . -tolked «bout.creeping.av«rgr?!^ ;_>

^VINBS—fauve, flawtriag Q enta tit-riitilid n d boi> |i.v.- (putple or red).-

lilt. STEERS INSTRUCTOaIN THXSICAL EDUCATION

MOSCOW, Idaho, March 38 tfP) — Dr. w. H. (S m steera, an outstand­ing football player at tha Univer­sity of Oregon two decodeo ago, will be a vlslUng InsUucVsr In physical cducaUon during the aummer session at the University of Idaho, June 16« July 2S. .

Dr..Steen, who obtained his doc­torate at Columbia university after leaving Oregon, now is director of healUi and physical education at Ithaca college. New'York.

tourney In years In which par wasnt broken or (led at least oner. But III Uie some threesome with him was Open Cluunplon Lawson LltUe, who matched par with a 71, and a few minutes later was tied for second place witli Sammy Byrd, the former Viuikee ouUIelder.

Ky lAffoon's 72 wn.i good for next place, a shot ahead of Ray Man- grum of Oakmount, Pa., and Leon­ard Dodson of Kansas City, '«1io sank a 30-footer on the IBUl to win about SlOO In side'bets. The 74 bracket wi\s very popular, taking In POA Champion Byron KeLion. Hor­ton Smith. Jimmy Ttiomson, and Ralpli Ouldalil, runnor-up to Ho­gan here a year ago. "

Bosox Swamp 9 to 2

.n *2 8 < fl> :T h 8 ^ J ->5d to a 9 to 3 ex-’

................ . over Uio worldchampion ClnclnnaU Reds- today with rookie Earl Johnson and Em­erson Dlckman holding ClnclnnaU to four hits.

AU Of the Reds' blows were against Jolinson. who presided for the first sU Innings.

Boston sewed up the game In the fUUi with four runs.

The score: R .ltE .Boston (A> ....100 140 300—0 13 ~Chtclnnatl (N) 000-010 010—3

Reds,

N e v e r B e f o r e

S u c h B a r g a i n s

1030 Chevrolet Deluxe Sport Sedan ~ 'O ood condlUon,heater -------------- « 7 51030 Che\To1et Coupe-^tor, finish, u p h o ls t e r y good,

lo le * ^ P w iT c o iS o ^ fS S a :heater ________1937 Ford Coui conditioned, radio, heater ----------------- S 27 81938 Chevrolet Town Sedan—

Sl?DS'“£ .s 3 iS ^ .

1938 Plymouth Ooupe — Ooodcondition, heater ------S 29S '1935 Plymouth 4-Door

condlUon___________ S IB O1935 Desoto 4-Door *Sedan_______________S IC S1033 Oldsmoblle Sedan S8S 1933 Hudson Coupe —

D Ptek-

1930 Ford H-TonP an el____________1936 Chevrolet IH -ToaTruck — ---------------%i1933 Chevrolet IH-Ton Truck1933 Wlllys Panel .

For Ths Best Deal 8e« ■

I

Finals TonighiIdaho State High School Invitatl

BOXING TOUItNAMENT

I F i l e r H i g h S c h ^ l ^ y m i f a s i u

t Fights-A l l

I ’ b ^ O o w ^ . (h e ‘l

PAQE EIGHT TWIN FALLS NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 2D, 1D41

MOTOR, STEEL STOCKS WEAKE

• iM o s t JSSUGS Hold Dcciinc! , to li/Iinor A m o u n t: List

Average Off .2

WIari<ets At A Glance

Bv PnEJJKIlICIC OARDNiJn NEW YORK. Miircli 28 (-IW nif

Mock mnrkrt (otlny Kiivr. ii|>'iill <>:. lU rnllj'lRK iiilv-iinUKr o( Ui» prrcctl'

InK ArAsloii u'lihmil nny pnriiciilarly adverse ncwa to nccoiiiu for the'

. bncknlldi-..SWrJiUj’ Jou'fr Ir/iflrjicJr.i devrlop-

C(I In tlic lL l iilirr n:i cnrly nltcinpt to cxtriKl TliiirMliiy''' .uptiim tiiPi CTlli lift»-lu-iirtr»l rcMKiu.'.p. Motors

, • nnrt Bt/Tls wcnkfnetl Iti tlic thlnl . hour ntid c1»Iiir rw-rMloivi rnimwl

.li'om /mclloiw to nrnrly :: potiiu. Tlicre were » lew wliler dljM,

Tlio one rncoiirnKliiK hlriiw In tlif relrent wiiiT the nlnckcnliiK of vol-

. ume. Traiutfera lottilcd «2,(110• tharcs iisntrwt 651.JM tlm dny l>e-

iore. Tlie AsaoclMetl Prw* nvemfin of CO atoekfl wm off J of n point ,nt

. 41.4. U»iw PlImlimKnic yeslerclny’* ndvnnce of UiLt com|x»llc.

Some of .Uir dny’s sellluc wius ni*• Wbiit«l lo fenrs llie (leriatice of . Uie Nnzl» by YukorIhvIh inlRlil. re- ‘ •all In roUllnlory metwures whichwuld be uiinetlllnB markelwbie. Ex-, pectatlons Uie WnAMtiRton Koveni'

■' m»!nt would Uikc a firmer alnnd In ]abo^ dispiile.-i ntllf were bolxierlnir.

Motors were tlmlcl UirouRhput. Ralls, senerftlly. nRftJn were buoy­

ed by tt)D brlghtenlns'traffic otit-• look. Aalda fpm Union Pnciflc. ‘ which unftceounUbly fell to a new

yeftr'a low, moat he!d;decllnea to mi­nor Amounts. \-

Clirj-aler wui nnolher lender (o reach new low mtiufxl for 19«.

Unlvenui] Pictured preferred roI "U p 3 (|n B few tmnMcUdiia. rarti- ■piount Pictures wna up 'i nfUr

postlne a new top for the yeiir.. Aarlculturol commodliles bounded upward u consreulonDl conimlt(ees

Stock Averages(CemplM br 1

■rt ^

!^NK rh'.nt.

Trend o f Staples

month Hn >n>a—N>« )»ll hliih.

Nt- Y.rk Cllj

:UASGK ropiwii .if a r»nl

ih. »i*t^ .Inll.-rrc«- rirli»i» Iru.lln* li. dKllRlni u ■ prir. of I

Metals' Iftw YORK—T ^ r 't euiUna

: »rlM for d<-n>lr«l mtiiU. r>nu itr Ih. ■■ i 'f b“ “ ■* Ul-" ^' Tint Snit C'-..

LMidi__N<w York t.M-WTWnT.;r7• >!ii.«V'k»w tofk RU

Quid

**W*lf»»nnr».*^Chlni»f •Wli'r* rtr unil.neUlUe ranWnt. >Iui/ ptlji

V i.nNnoN nU)NDON-!<i»l >•, .1

lag p tif it l i t .hi’

R KILVKRrnil

■Wool Market’s Weekly Review

Th« Commtf-

•> w«nt«4 •real* art «>nratD«<l. b<

«r gwIllU. TS.r« bo bwn i it» call for Mourttl. oewlt of MS for th« wooSfn trad* mn4 'tiim«A CMITMU r»l.'Jn tb« wnt. l>»r« Tj!r'i«*n *

_ bulMM 4on». I’rlCT« on lh« w ‘ «>t *»j8in« rftairM frwn ewiBl»7

. rrobabi/. »IU> ih*a*ard« asaliul bl<i non acUrllf will b*

.. ................ . and r. M. lUel* I.AI lat .XM] (IM r . H. chMDlBs M.tt. .fiSSSS'— ............. .L i,---- \Mt ’A blaod ranblBa »l la I.m

wytUg H to Ml H b M M b-

NewYork STOCKS

L iv e s to c k M arke^ts

I ID.Ot -......

a’ il'Cn;".^.V’I" rholfl 'qS-;..'!”!! 1

OMAHA LIVKSTOCK OUAHA—Hue*: *.6a0i !■»

«; Ii.«d mil Choif* l»0 in SJO U

m.ilr liiiliWt. itnH ; 'roi.l(uin 'M**

KANKAB CITY- t.lVKSTOCK KANSAS L-ITV—1ln*i! I."00; »l.i

...............ml fh.iit.

Tw in Falls Markets. Twin r*ll> dliirlsl Bttkil

aelffht bulfhen. SIO "i- "rlilTl buCchmT'sJoi 'li

............................Uiid»f».lBhl butclMfi. leg la I

h«rp< I il.r lU-

u.ioti.1:

(On* ilMirr QUolnll.Cnln-«n4 Mill

.iS!!: ioo-^Hd ku .Stock f.»l. IBO-pounil lol. ____>SMk fox). »e6-i«und. lau ____

I de>l*r nuAi i.Soft wh^t ...V (Two doUn a

ZOjeaiMla C<

W A N T E D D r j Jank o r Prairie Bonas

IM MUm Eaat, Sontti * f • TwtoVwia ■ . .

D AH O BIDB * TALLOW C a

rr; Cl.-I u, rMr< ItO to : » i>.iun>

i.ksvkuT ivkstock

WHEAT BHGHES

G rain M a rke t Responds lo Invcstm onl and Com­

m ercial Buyingny FHANICLIN MUI.L1N

ClIICAaO, March (.T)—Eulurs- ro invi-sUnrnt and coincncrcliil liuy- inir llfl/!d whria and com prices lo now IilKlin for Uie xenmi todny and to the bent Reriernl level Alncc laxl Mnv. when ninny <;oiiiino(llty vnlue.i coiiajvsed witli Uie Ocnnnn west- w»rtl Inva.'ilori.

Whent rofir as imicli nii 'JS cciiU » biLshel iind corn lu much a.t IS itl. the iKiik of Uic buylnR movt- iii'-rit. May wheat touched DO'ri, iiiKiiest In ten inonUm for any con-

i. except for the 00\ lop touch- r<i by December futtircji. In Uic MKn miiiket bo.it Krnilw of whent .«oi(i a.1 lilRh M 05’i while corn WHS around 10 renlA.

Biij'lnR wn.1 Irwplrcd by proBress til K'RWatlon In conurru calllncfor

Mu-cd bii.slc lomi mtes. Uie of- iiciat situation In Uie BiUknns and

irUi of oUicr commodlUes. De- M>itc heavy profit laklnR In laic (iciumBx, due lo weoJuiou-of Acciirl- :les and pra-.iwcts of Incrcwed loan wheut re<lemi)tlon.v whent cla\pd ■■ I ’ i hlRlier Umn >'e.ilcrdav. Miiy 00.80'.. July 88-07Ti. Corn wi« Ti

up, May July Gil’ ;-67:■ lilKticr; Kjybciins l ' » - l ' i

lilRher; r>e S*Ta up nnd Inrd 12-lS hiKlier.

lillATs'TAUI.l;

jui!: -

h~-pt :l; •iMilr: tw-l r<

10; —ktiir .1.10

IIOSTUN-Al.i.t

POTATOES

CIIICA«U-lV-.ili« p.tt tinuil

T l i l j ' . i r T fe V '. n . ' . lumlir

: iiriiVtleallii I i" itunwgla. I'tar

. . CoW.Uni'. *-J.hH, 'r!innn'«/k.

S rmrl^O ptr .nii.U, S, No. I .lU.l -«rlr Ohiu.. I r.r r'r C'nt II.

uu>lit7 »:S ': I r.r M i>rr ifn :<>. I nunllly } on uui-lu.lf lUa Trlump)>i. rntUin M(L.. oa

rtmlM, WMhr.1, N- 'T.'"n, ».17 f.w

I.C)R _A>;(;i;i.r_H i-dtatoi-.slor.: ' iln»krp..' ’ I.'tr., lOft 'i>,i,ntj .ark..sf"?* IItih 'lluur’l.' (I! k‘ 'l’ ‘l.oj^

!*toOi“{iT.h I'• «• »■”

lOAllO VAI.lll'o rOTATOI lu , n

A)—}*ot*l*ir.: l<. aliipplna |>«1>.1. lia.rVI 01. .i.li.rrr.1 .aWl.«a all Iranii

10 prr rrr,i aBr ; i.tja.ru.

OVkkrra I.IS li..l>« A. prf ,

pound .acka it.-. 1.8. to

.'s.'-No. 1 ...KM SSl

i;>4 I'o tt: .;ilh.li ‘tn-'r«0, Ca.h lA 1rrowrt* bulk

p». u. o. f'o. ,. w, iliirW: Cirioadt t. o. b.

nuaMU

Denver Beansu « . « : artat

•s m —riaji

Seed Potatoes Certified Seed

Til# Qn>lllr U'Gowl '. . . The rriea Lew-:.

Bloa Tar RmeU .R«d Taf RtMeU B)a« Tac-Bllt*.

FROM MOtn-ANA-LONQ VALLEY-ASIITOM. BENCn

SEP

E. S. HARPERrhoM ZMl Sonth Track Lua

Twin m u

nl>H nntninal lo (}', ;

ClIICAJO-' r.nry’ rrA ti.lT

Butter and Eggs

• lod»> a. Iraiirn ixMrml c^al< rral atatrmonl. ainir.1 at rltmnlr'■yL <hiw';*io < i..lnrr on tarn ol I».:»a Kin., Wurld f> i« kat to I'l polnl. i n turnnvrr i

CRIME NEVER PAYSspARTANSBuna. a c. (.rt—A

booUeircer told a federal «fflccr here that he delivered n 10-RnIlon kej; of moonshine whiskey on his back to a man whose office 'was «n the fifth floor or n' bulIdlnR and the man paid him with a chcck — that bounced.

USED CAR SPECIALS

'2D Pontiac Coupe ns -*20 ChevTolel Tudor $ 65 '34 Ford Pick-Up ....$ 95

Ford T u d o r ..... 5195’ 34 ChevroJcl Tudor.$195 *37 Chevrolet Sedan $450 *37 Dodge Sedan ......$425*37 DeSoto Coupe ....$445*39 Pontine Sedan ....$665

NED DeGROFF PONTUCCO. •

Uotiel D«in Bids. Twta FiHi

Services at the ChurchesDRVOTIONAt.9 ,.J Adventist Leader

Ilt-ST CIIKIHTIAN ■ ml Hliu.h<>li* .llrrl. Cru,nii!.»rB.r. mliil.l»

r Mr., U, N, Ttrrr. » “•

‘la^’' "Ha"irr> u. .* Call tlM

t l - J t

i'ti»:snYT»:MiA.s’

.. tn, MnM.f.' Ki-lll>-"hlp . P. m. Thiir..|a», Uill"' AT animll' Cun"rrB»l'lcinii m.-e'

I .mr»lJn»: Hr.,

>. p. m.. Iklhcl

irNAZAHKNK

t SClKNtVrUiirrhCliurflw.

'th. CnlilVni" M u.' .!< lh< Urd n

P, m.. quartrflf tii tlns o( Ih

...... ' pa.lnr, :;1l> ii. tn.. W«!n«d«». In-• tructlon for <nnflrm>lkin, >.p, m. Thiirx Hay. mr#ilnji m l.ailif«' AM .oclrty,

m. Thuriilnr. irr.-linK nf thcWdlhir

Bcfil Estate Transfers

Pumlfhed by the Twin Palls TlUe and Abstmct Company

Wetlnetday. March SO Deed. S. S. Grom to M. Plynn. SI.

Lot 6 B!k 3 Jonrs Addn.. Deed. L-J-Miller to D. R..Chureh- 111. *SOO. E 'i of Lou I. 3. 3. Blk 10. Blue UkM Addition West,

Deed. G. n. Panto to A. T. Leon­ard. *250, Lot 10 Blk 1 New School Addn.

Deed. L. n. Boyenger to C. T. Wchardwn. *100. 8>i Lot 4 Blk 3. Sweet's Subdlv.

Deed, M. S. Lucas lo P. L. Krcft. *2000. Lot 2 Blk 03 Twin Falls.

Le».'e, It, M, Morrow to J.-Kecgan. NENw;.ii:i6 .

Deed, R. L, SmlUi lo J. J. RUBe. *10. Lot 16 Blk 20 T*'ln Falls.

E14)ER GEORGE BELLKAU. preal’ dent of the Idaho Cenrereiice oi tieventh Day AdrenUaU. addreasei the esnfreeatlDti at ‘Trophecy Speak." Ubemaele In Twin KalU laxt evening, and will »tn-ak there acaln at U a. m. loday and Sui < day ctenlnr.

[Neighbors’ Churchesl____ ______ ___ ..--------------trJKKntIR fR>:HIIVTKI(IAI

, : r ”-

tttMK MKTIIOIUST .

i'll ;£'aHl"“'urrl‘ •■>; 'Jr/'\ra’i>*!'n l‘|j““‘ii ’'i«(li t.-il i.f th. ««ik uf th.

MIIIITAIICII irtlMMlINI J<u.r>> Miil Cuuitrr. mln

Church .ri^.iu':''p!*m! Kp’wiii i‘i5\,«u™;^Ji:il0»u; MAITI8T

I. in. W.inhlp ><-rvlr.

I llaimrnt''j mu.If. liiruMv

CASTI.KKtMtU IIAI’TIST

•<Tvle-; a nifnvirlil »<T*lr<- t.

KIMIIEIII.T NAZAIIKNK lUri Wllllim.. p..t„r

.. m. Huniltr ((hen!, lUm .■U»«r. '.''ml"jun’lir‘ 'iSt rknkir’*'N“ ‘\” ’‘ ri

I'f Ih* iIltKlInn or Mn, Corrn* II l>« liven Huntiay.

Burley, Rupert Win in Debates

RUPERT. March 28—WUinlnB KM* ond place In the district debate fes- ■' nl at Albion Wedne.sdny. Rupert

(}i wliool'debate te&nui will ? .stale tournament at Caldwell, ^nv and Saturday, April 4 and 5.

ftiiMUon thl» year Li “Re- vcd. Tliat Oovemment Powers

Should Be Inerciised." Keith Scho­field nnd James Brockle are on the uesatlvp team: Donitld Taylor and David Smith, the nfflrmaUve.

Biirlry took first place In the meet' Wedne-vJny. winning alx debates. The Rupett.taams,won five. _ ...

TOWEt-A-DAY BLACKWELL. Okla. (Vl’f-A.t «

hftbby Mrs, O, A, Boyles makes dlsll lowels. She .Marled In 1031 and n v* h«.s 1.150, fUl or different dealimR- Shft tries to make one each day. except Sunday.

Mr. Merchant:We *re your headquort«5» for eommorclal refrlgwiUon and m ^ e t«^ lp m m wal] kinds. W» tnitaU and aerrlce

. rrlfldura eommwdal refrlg- eratloD planU and all typu of W er show eajea. Phene 800 and aak for a rrprewnUUva . . . bell slsdly |tr» you aa aaUmato on your n<v equip-

D e r m g i e R ’ s

tklnff to Uak9LU UigM 6r4 Pleasant-

PIIUtT MimioniHT It. a. McC«lll.l*r„ininiil*r

t:4S •. m. Churrh MhMl mion. wi.U ' ««ln*b*’'-Rll«lV A hicli tcNol >lrl.- (honu or Mlu UicUI« Nonll wll

MIm Tfinxkmvrlon ' A" br Dtlbfuck

j r br M.niUl..r Palm Hun.

> m.mkcniw. lh« rll. —... >Ih«n who to .Inlra. 1 id Wnlvymi Irafftir.Ion anil Ulluothlp. (

AKCK.SHIO.S KI'IKCOI'AI. Thlnl avinu* and S«rnnd m

Itff*. Innit t- Jmkln.. »lcar Kifth SuniUir In

April* Sr ’ ll-Vlrn choir ptafllr# to fi,lli,w iPIKHT CIIUKCK OK Tl

*'AT‘’ .*s'llll.'r?';

wi*f<l. 7 p. m. Ynurif pwipir'a .rr.lri-. P. m. K>an|p||ii(e onilr.i K»ni;rlln I .'<|iarW> ptrarhinc aptrlal u>ni. ami ol

ciiiiiini ( Arnol.l Wali

UNITCP HK(nilIIKN Cotnrr -nilr-l av.nu. and Third .Ir

ll»». K. M. H.iuih. pa.lor 1. in.. Sun.Ur .th.«l. U a. in, .ofhip. «i>» P. m.. Chrlati.n 7:Sn p. m., trrnlne prr.fhinr.

iiMilay; .l.k rail, anr tim., dar -r ni«l.t; ..ifcinnBtion ria.*<« Inr n<iit‘Ca1ii(>Mri al th. rrnorv. Itlii. UVr. Iloulrvafil. Mon.lay. TUr.d«r,, •niUM.Ur and Krlday

AMKIIICAN l.i:TIIKnANr, Kaitrn, j

It mrmbrr.hip iKn.r >lli W a

CasllefoHl Honor ' Slmlenls Listed

CASTLETORO. March 28 — Tlie tionor roll fbr the third.nine weeks |)erlod of the CnsUeford schools has been announced as follows:

■•A" honors:—John Dartnasa. Jun­ior; Gene Bronn. sophomore, and Jerome Zach. freshman,

Tliwc recelvliiff no Rrade- lower Uinn "B" are: seniors; Maxine Bmckctt, Virginia Wachtrlc,. Marie Plnk.slon. Leiiort Wheeler. Irene Blnckham, Marib’n Hill and Annie Lou Raedels. >

Junlon: Gloria Haley. Mahr Con­rad. Lumlr Zach and Florene E311- .son: sopJiomores; R, C, Heck. Della Rritbb tuid Gladj-s Pinkston; fresh- menrrPaolln# Reeae awUWIltiur Peterson.

Elshlli grade: Jtmmie Brown. Tomla Joo. ' ’hyllis Re cm, Lcom Ifftinmond, Robert Melaler and Bct-

■lurphy; seventh grade; Caryl . ..y, John UUl, Wayne Hedc. Roy

King and Darwin Manshlp; sixth grade: EUeen Ebsrs. 'Deon Ham­mond. Vlrglnbt Brabb, Betty HIU. Jean KInyon and Ha Sample. '

PlfUi grade: Jean Conrod, 'Pautlne Dori«r-R«viv-Orlggs, Olobt-Klnirand CftUierlne Reese, and fourth" grade; Jimmie Bulk]e>-. Billy Rlnuert, John Sliaer. Rachael Ann HesaelhoU. Jeanne Kud Sac and Libby Novak.

Apparel stores. Including shoe Atores, have Increased 11 per cent In number and 23 per cent Ih soles slnco 1935. according to the cen-

H O R S E SWe IJSTO a flneSelec- tion.of^oi4 horses to sell. TnSS^irses are' some_ot Magic Valley’s f in e s t — traded to us for farm machinery by farm­ers changing o^er to power-farming.

M cY E Y 'S

R efiab ilitation C la im s .B ig f la c e in Hugo Appro­

priations Bill.WASHINGTON, March 38 f,D —

At Uie urBintf of a spcclal home commlttcc which has been Invcstl- Ratlng Uie liiteratjile mlitnitlon problem, the Kcnalc approprlaUons committee lotlny boo.ite<l Uie niral rchabllllntlnn loan proKram or Uie farm security ndmltiLslmUoti for tJie next ILvriil yeiir from the lioitse-ap- proved total of 8100.000.000 lo 1125.- 000.000.

Commlttfo Bclloii follow«l lc.iU- mony by Cliiilrmim Tolnn (D-Callf) of the house commlttce Hint the loan proKmm nfforded Uio bc.u and cheapest moans of kerpliiB i>olcnUnl .

ilRxanta nt home on the fnmi. ) The Cali'fanilnn snld Ihitt Uie

budiiet burenu lopiied t25,000.000 off FSA's 1012 loan proKram on the. Uieory Uiat Uie defense boom wnultl provide employmrnt opi>orliinltlcs for many near-<leRlllute raniicrs,,

Tolnn disputed Uils. nrstihiR tlint his coinmlUee wa.s of Uie o|ilnloti that no benefit at pre.seiit tn slRht from defciue expaasloii wouW greiit- ly.nJier Uic iiimibcrj needJnc re- hablllUiUon lotuis.

Ruperl SlatesK ite Tourney

1 by.... ...P.A. recreation council, will be held Snlorday. March 20. Tlie toiunament. formerly achedule<l for March JS. was postponed becauw It confllclcd wlUi Uie grade school bss- ketbnlUoiirnament.

PrmhUiR Khool Rrounds will be'thn .'£cne of the contest and ench con- teMunt must have made .Uie kll« he enters in the event- ' P l '

Bill Child Quits Slate EniploynienlBOISE. March aJ (,V>-B1II Clllld,

Idaho public a.vtLslAnce director two year* and now nn a<lvlsor niild loday he w'niild leave slate employ April 1 for "private work.”

Chief stalbtlclftn for Uie publlo lusl.stance division Uiree yearn be- , fore bdiic appointed Its head by Uw now-abollshed public welTare bonrd,Chlltl was siiccccded a month ago by Albert Lee.

Arm y’s Call Hits College Pep Band

CALDWJX.L. March 2B </D — ' Pourtcen Collettc'or Itliiho sUidcnU, members of national (tuard batteries nt Caldwell and Nampa, wll be In­ducted Into the army as part of tlie 183rd field artillery April 1. Ten piny In the college pep band.-Tlic meti will be encsmperi in

Ui<;lr home Uiwns uiUll April 0 when they are to bo sent to Cheyenne.Wyo.

COME LO O K B U Y SAVE

TW IN F A M ^. WRECKING

In open for bnalncM on the KUIBERLY ROAD, HIGIIWAT SO — Eaat tide of Twin Falla- SATUROAT. Msreh 29. 6 aom ea .grotmd for. awfe Mil tnek parts. Our new block bnUdlng b fall of auto and truck parU Ures.

plele lUxk well amnci^ and clean. .GEORGE.& HARRY wUl b« able to aare IsU of car and trvck owners money*

D R IV E A M IL E A N D S A V E

The Tw in Falls Wreckers The Jerome A iito Paris Thfc RupeK A u lo Parts

TtacM three bnUlta all tay “llello'' t « everybody and Invite you all to eeine and see bow many good n*«d part* there or* in aatoa and (racks thot'ar* wreeked out. For the GRAND OPENINO SaU utday, March 29 and alae Mon­day. March 81. and Ttieadoy. April Ut — the Twin FaUs Wrecking will §cU any food osed parts for car or track at 40% or le « frem~tbe new price en genuine porta — any in^ke. The Jerome «toek win also be ladsil* ed In (his opening aale.'Als» for •penlnr doyi-wSU MU-five. (S) gaa tanks tBllable for chickenor. pig (ronghs fo r ------ S l.O OModel A wire wheels 2 5 f Chevrelet dlse ,

Car wheela — wood —

Car wheel r im »- ____-Tony' taak* . ___utiL—LttSt*-.esebThe above ■peclat is at oU three ptaees.Cone and get le^iialntad. Oar Mot(o to ' I f we baveot; get i t - weV try ear domdest U cH It for yen." Wa wUl try t« aerre the camBonlly^Jn.av^ leapeei and to give it a easpfete a wreck* Ing and OMd porta aerrioa as It r~rnitT ''We or* wteeklBg d «s aal irveka sp ( « l t t » mbdeto. ■ '

T W D f F A U S

\ TWIN FALLS NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, SATURDAY.;HORNING. JIAUCII 29. 1911 PAGE NINE 1Be Sure to Watch the Classified Columns. Good Buys in Used Cars Every Day

W A N T A D R A T E S

' PubllcaUoD in boUi Ui» NEWS AI4D TIMES

BMCd on Coil-Fer-Wara1 day— —— ______ So per wort3 days — 4c per word per day6 days...............3c per word

per dayA mlnlmuni or Un words Ij required In toy one elusltled ad. ThCM nt«s Include the coml^ned ctreuUUMi of Ihe Nbwi nndTHe Tline*.Terms for all clutlfled »d* . . .

CASH

C O M PL E T E COVERAGE A T O N E COSTIN TWIN PALLS '

PKOKE 33 or 38 POtl ADTAKER IN JEROME

Uftve Ads at K W lUiot Deer SUnd

D^OLINES For Insertion In the News

0 p. m.For liuertlon In (As Times

^ 11 «. m. ■This paper nibscrtbes to the code o! eUilcs of the AasocUUon of News* paper OloMltled Advertising Men- •lers ftod reserves Uie right to edit or reject any classified edverUilns “Blind Ada" carrying a Wew» - Time* box number are strictly coMlaentlal and no InformaUon can t>e given .In regart to the advertiser. 'Errors eftoutd tM reported Immedi­ately. No allowance wlU be miide for more than one Incorrect InserUcn.

S P E C IA L NOTICES

KILL rocic chucks. Perm

T R A V E L & RESORTS /

RIDES, passengers Los'Angeles, Ban FranclKo, PorUond. Seatae, Chi­cago, other#. Share expenses. Trav­el Bureau, 617 FouUi East-1880.

SCHOOLS A N D T R A IN IN G

FIVE graduates have accepted civil service Jobs Uils jnonU«, Call or write for Informntlon. Twin Palls Suxlness University.

6TENOORAPHEBS, bookkeepers, accountants needed In business and Bovemment. Enroll now: Twin Falls Business University.

1 InLos Angeles In center of activity wlUi Western Aircraft Engineers. Short, Intensive, low coet plan. In­terested men given free qualifica­tion test. Write or call Boom 34. Caledonia Hotel. Twin Palls.

B E A U T Y SnOPSC O tm m n N O . pennaaent wave

specioU featuring two for one. Dlckard Beauty Shop. Phono Mil.

MAROILLE^ March. AprU ment. Phoa

*5.00. MJM permanenu. half price. Idaho Barber and Beauty

•, Shop. Phone 4M. •

EABTEB Speclal-All better priced oil wsvea—half price. Mrs. Neeley

•Beauty Shop. 330 Main North. Phone 355-R,

S IT U A T IO N S W AN TE D

- CHILDiaSN eared for afternoons, evenings. BS3 FlfUi EasL Phone 330U

RANCH work or track driving. Mar« rled. 30 years experience Twin Palls tract. Postofflce box 318.

H E L P W A N T E D — MEN

TWO boyt to work tor boart and room while atundlng Tsln Falls Buslneaa University. Phone 314.

SALESME^f for jubscrtpUon work. Good pay. Seo Mr. Korab. Pratt'a Cabins. Evenlnn*

n tolearn heatlns and a! with the world’s largest Installers of warm air furnace*. Start earn­ing money at once. Chance for ad­vancement. Holland Fumace Com- pany. 138 Third Avenuo south.

' H E L P W A N T E D — MEN A N D W OM EN

o » in bliton' of the corpora- Excellent opoprtunity ia of-

jerM to teachen for pleasant and profitable work during summer vacatloa raootlu. New nlet plan

- and eompletaly caw aditioa. Ouar- anteed looono. - Write to The Quacrt* Oocporation. UnlwHty Natlooal Bank SuUding, SeatUt. WatUngtOD, for eomplNa details.

FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

' • QROUMD How two rooms, lawn, th»d«. wllayjout. 0381-J3.

7 ^ r a a ^ prin t* eatnDee. gar- age. Adnit*. SU B«tatb Avenue

- TWOTobmirMuaDabnrBI^ Sedcmd .Avenue-Marth.'1409-J evenings.

TWO room modem ^artment. PrI- vata' «ntraac«.- 339 Plftb Avenue north.

rOBNIBBBD Kparteenta. Juita* ^ n & i^ ^ b o p a 4B& OatU Boma.

. LAROJ! troQt Tocn opataln. Lights, ■ „ ■ IB JO. -PMoa

I t ’ s A ;

Yes air, when you sU rt to

look fo r a used car don’ t

♦ forget th a t muny real buys

ore lisited in the Cluflaified

Section o f the News-Timcs.

There Is A Special Column Devoted to

“Autos for Sale”Always Read the

. Classified Page ^

H A Y . G R A IN . FEED

FCftl SALE—Hay and potaioM, enr- rols nnd artli lMkea. Phone 0107-Ji

MOLASSES &UXINO and PEED OIUNDINO

MORELAND MILUNO SEUVICB Ph. 318. Filer. Ph. calls o8 grtnding

ODERN8BY cow. about to freshfn. 34 wuUi. 3 west South Park. Plimie 0207-J3.

IB HEAD good work tjorses. A few matched t«ams left. Hughes and Smith, back of Hollenbeck Salen.

'm ) to firteon head good work hor.ies. A few matched teams. McVcys.

ISO HEAD owes and lamb^ clieap. Alr.o 37 calves, all sizes. Jack's, at Edpn. Plione 11.

WHITE LeRhorn, straight run. *8. Custom Imtch, 2c egg. Nob Hilt Hfttcherj-, 4H west Bulil, Iloute 3.

FU R N IS H E DA P A R T M E N T S

SMALL apnriment. clo^e In. <18.00. Inquire 1409 Ninth Ewt, Phone 3373.

a ACRES to fent for crop renl. Close in. Inquire Everureen LodRc.

FTjWlSHBOa

U N F U R N IS H E DA P A R T M E N T S

APARTMENT—15 P

VACANCY April 10th. OnUs Apart­ments. Inquire 225 Fourth Avenue east.

APARTMENT housc. furnlslied. Oood income. Fine locaUoo. 333 Fifth Avenue EasU

$18.00—Two rooms, bnth. modem. Private entrances. 338 Third Ave­nue cast. - ,

VACANCYI .Desirable apartment. Phone 1317, Reed apartments. S33 Shoshone north.

ROOM A N D BOARD

EXCELLENT menla, alr-condlUoned rooms. Priced right. 137 Fourth ■Avenue ndrU*.

F U R N IS H E D ROOMS

Third avenue west'. I

U N F U R N IB B B D HOUSES

1—6 HP. Gen. Elee. farm mower.1—W.C. Model Allls-Ctialmers trac­

tor. new model, on rubber.1—No. 70 Oliver tractor, recondl'

tioned, on rubber.1—10 ft. recond. Moline grain drill. 1—3-row Krengel corrugator.1—3-row Krengel corrugator.3—3-row Oliver potato planteni.3—1-row Oliver potato-planters.1—Oliver 4-row B and B drill.1—McCormlck-Deering B and B lirill 1—John Deere B and B drill. 1-iMoUhe B and B drUl.

M O U N T A IN S TATE S IM P L E M E N T C O M PA N Y

F U R N IS H E D BOUSES

M IS C E L L A N E O U S FO R R E N T

BY LEAS&-Oood business location. 160 M>iw North. ReasonabJa. Phone 873.

R E A L E S T A T E LO AN S

FARM asd city loans. Northem Life tnsuranea Compaoy—Fred BatM, Phon* .1379.

REFINANCE rour present loan cave monay. Low tat«rest—long terms. National Fvm Loaa Office. Twin Palis.

HOMES ITOR S A L E

3 ROOM modem, stucco'type.'318 Blue Lakes. Phone 88-W ,

m oB ilx-roc(a modem home, hard­wood floors, fireplace, . shade, shrubbwy. K. L . Jenkins.

NEW B-room, PJsrce strtet Finish- ' ^.basement, stoker. Insulation.

7S foot comer lot. Pbooe 1S39-W.

4-ROOM8,4 years old. Located Bu­chanan ftroet. <300 down, C30 -month. Immediate poasetsion. Post office Box 330.

BBVStf' cabtnS'-uiiM'dODblBs,'' tout singles. Double construction. ICusI be Aoved. Selling aacrlflce. Jaek%

FARMS AND ACREAGES ■ FOR SALE

OOOD so near

ACREAOE v im mqdsm home. Would coqildar Urestock and ma- ehlncty as part paymnt Hl-Bu>

F A R M S A N D ACREAG ES FO R R E N T

R E A L E S T A T E FOR S A LE

300-EOO R.OP. flircd Hanson L«g- homs, 13c; Reslslered mating Legliorm, n.I. Reds, Nil. Reds. Barred Rocks. White Rocks, Bulf O(;plnRtOM.’ 0Wc. Uvkbmivguar- nntM.- SpKlal ctcan*up sate each TiicidBy and Saturday, cockerels. Sc. We take furniture and grain in exchange. 800 heavy chicks to place on ahares. Hayes HUOrade Hatchery.

U ACRE tmct, Bood location for building, city water and rcwasc available. Plionb M85-J3.

A FEW choice resldeQce\ Davidson division. InqulN son Oroceo'.

Springs. 10 miles above Ketchi....Convenient swimming, fishing, skiing. Indoor well water, fireplace, beautiful location; Inquire News- Tlmes.

DIAMONDS-Wc-ll pay cash for your diamonds. Box 4, care News- Tlmcs.

F A R M IM PLE M E N TS1040 MODEL B Allls-Chnlmers trac­

tor, plows, spud, beet tools. Terms. Walter Starr, Route 1, Phone 04B3-B3. •

SEED S A N D P L A N T S

LIMTTED supply Of Red poUtd seed. Zeller, 6 miles south, M east, U south of Wendell.

ket, Bluo Lakes north.

ONION jeod. Blue Tag certUled.rui- sets; Nebraska Blue Tag esrtlflod SUss TVlumphs, uncertified Phone 437._____________________

340 BACKS good, clean Bliss Tri­umph seod potatoes, one year from certification. Orowers' Market, M4 'Mala South

REAL'dry Xarm certified Blue Tag RuiseU. and Bliss Triumphs, grown on dry land by WalUr Bergman. Box es, Ashton, Idaho. WJono 010- « v

WHTTBOnlaa Bsed. RlTsnlds strain —test-oe% germination. Xo stock at count7 agent's office and my residence. BuhL Phone 334-W. E.V Molandar. • .

SEED-^POTATOES■ EARLY BLISS 1

GLOBEI fancy stock SEED i t PEED CO. I Ituck Lane

YELLOW Sind whit* Aggler Mussar Riverside sweet eptnlsb seed. Also red globe Oregon Oas- ver and Southport white globe. Marcus A, Pcaetoy, W.Shoshoos. Stieet Westj Phooe 3308.— '

CLO^Q U ALITY J ILFALFA — ^ and GRASS SEED

iotts'weed free . LOWPRIOESI

- Oompare w qu«ttty TOi prices.: _ • nrCBRMOUNTAJN BES) AKD' FUEL COMPANY

SOIL A N D FERTILIZEB

•eiLu aln is . V M v OtiMbBten. hTtoek U|»..nwoa * « .

H A T . QBAJN»!J1SB0 .

wii cHj uwii oicr .1. 4U- aaj cuui>-ping. Knife Machine. Floyd UlUer. nier. Ph. 73J3-CaiU off grinding.

L IV E STO C K FOR S ALE

B A B Y CH ICKS

Plioiio 203, Filer.

L IV E S TO C K — PO ULTRY W A N T E D

HIOHEST prices paid for your fat chlckcns and turkeys. Independ­ent Meat Company.

W A N T E D TO -BUY

BATTERIES, cotton rags, iron and mixed metals. Seo Idaho Junk Howe.

M ISCELLANE O U S FO R S A L E

school. Krengel's Hardware.AUTO glass, canvas, canvas repair­

ing. Thomeu Top and Body Workr .

a give yon an offer.

Life ’s Like Tliat By Nehcr

*‘Hc rabiseil the liuHl sn n w ^ n in nml huvh hc‘n ‘j,'onnii ' r igh t there until they sUirt aKiiin."

M ISC ELLA N E O U S FO R S ALE

STEn, posts. Wood pipe culvert. Tent^, urps, quills. I comblnaUon safe cheap. Idaho ^unk House.

NEW and used wool bnc* and fleece tlcK. Abo bWckwiilth iron. puUuyo, etc. L ..L. Langdon; 100 Fourth Avenue Wcat. Phone 1562.

ONE Seegrr RefrlRerntor Co. two keg beer unit coiiiplole, real .bar­gain: also one new. nevef used. Electrolux deuner. S. W. Miller, Oakley, Idaho.

PREB-tl55 Spout can with five gallons oil at regular prices. Um- Ited—one deal per person—this moiitn only. PatronaRC refundn accrue to non-members as well nn member*. Co-op Oil at Filer, Duhl, Twin Falla.

H OM E FU RN ISH ING S A N D A P P L IA N C E S

STUDIO couch, Wilton niRB. Ha\11- Innd dl. hes. chairs. C38 Main norUi.

WALNUT diJiIng sot, kitdien stove, Maytag washer, bedroom suite. *37 DC Soto sedan. IBi Addlion----

BATHTtJBS, closetsjlnks. lavatories, medicine cabinets, water soften­ers and plumbing supplies of all kinds. Krengel's Hardware.

ATTENTION HOME OWNERS WE now have complete'ttock Acme

quality wallpaper, palnLi. varn­ishes and calcimine, C. W. & M. Co.

R AD IO A N D .MUSlC

GOOD u c(l piano pricitl for quick sale, Duyncs Music company of' Idithn.

A U TO S FOR S A L E

jGfl.'i buys a '39 Pontiac Sedan. Good »lm|w. Low mllcaRe, Kood niljlx-r. Ned De Groff Pontluc Compu^

■30 Dv Luxe Ford V-n. Low mlli-i 30 day KUiir., Jiut like new.. S

Clicv. Panel. New finish, IlrMcIn.M condition................. ... »K5

•35 Plymouth S door .neclnn.......*25040 olhrra to choose from.

BAJSC II MOTOR CO.iOS. Shoshone South.

•30 De Luxe. 2 dr Chcv./ccond.,.«2S ■3(1 Dodge Pickup, extra K«od .. $215 ■37 Ford 3 door Sedan, new palm.

motor overhaul.................... *395■39 Plymouth De Luxe coupe.... »«r>We have some good Model ■‘A V

in stockW O O D Y S E A LMOTOR COMPANY

T R U C K S A N D T R A IL E R S

A U TO PA R TS — T IR E S

LABOR SECREIARY ClIESfClOENTS

Miss Porkins Points to In ­dustrial Mishaps as ‘ M a jo r Hazard

LOS ANOELES. March M MV- Spcri'(iir>' of Labor Pcrkliw luild In an Interview today tliat Indu-itrliil acclclcnl.1. ratiien thim strikes wi

le major Imeiird of IndUKtry. "AccldenU are the moal serlnu.f

drliiy In ilio defense Indu.itry »elui) prr-M'lit." .ihe di'cluri-d.

••New men. rush of work. crowdr<l floors, ovmaxlng of facilities, iind prol)ubly Uie u-ie of old machinery

imr case.i. would account for of the IndiLitrlal Injuries. Tlir

lou of time Is serious In the pro­duction schedule"

MLu Perkins said she dbvoutlng tlje serlouMiess of striker, but said one needed only to com­pare tJie "terrible numlwr"' durlni: tlie World war to realite Uiat con' dliloiw Uiul Improved greatly. .

■-nie numt>er of man duyK lo'.l In 1940 and 1D41' Uiroush Mrlke.s U ■ fcr timn In many years.” she said

Except for the suikes In indijs' irle.1 where the’ goods are moai needed, ihere'have t)cen no Import' ant strlke.v TI10.10 In tiie defense indnstrlcs have attrncte<l most

iiniount of tlnle ld.it has t>ecn •niall/'• Ml*s Perkins amingetl to leave by tmln tonight for San Francl.-xo.

Former Pastor al Caslleford Dies

QA.STLEPORD. March M-Wonl ha."i bren recolvetl of llie death of R*iv. Earl Slm.1 at Llvlnp.ifon. Mont. ^ij^Iarch 12 of a heart attack.^ 1 0 Rev. Mr. Sims, who wn:

hef iinc 10 build a church at South ncnti, Wash.. wa.*i en route to Wash- intrlon. D» C.. when death occurred.

nc and his wI(b Uved al Cai;tle. ford n few yet\» a«o. leaving In .July. 1037, aflL?* cntilneerlnR the l.ulldlng or Uie ' *10,000 BaplL't church In Co-Mleford.

Fulls and surrounding commun­ities.

TTie Rev., Mr. Sims held the title of chiircli Invlgerator of Uie Baptt't church ajid was sent anj-where ill the United States where It wn-sthought his .'.en'lccs would be help­ful In orKonlzlng and building churches.

He wa.% S3 years old.

GOODINGNoUcea Po«led—NoUces have been 1

jKixtod for election of tnatee* for Gocxllng county common school dis- irlrt.i to be held at Uie school houses April 18.

Itcumoi Sludle*—Bob Wlilpkey hu.'. reltimed to the University of Idiilio. noutheni brancJi at Pocatel­lo. after siwiidlng Sunday with his parcnLv Hp’ came from Burley-where lie had Jttfl delivered,.a 84-hors^

r TuylurcH'tt airplane, which lud brought Irotn Alliance, 0 «

for rvtc Hill.ICtcl CroM Meet—Gooding coun­

ty chapter of the Red Cross met at ' Lievru L.ucke's office Ttiursday eve- iiinK and approved poj-mentji for » ' ion.Ml operation and for several piilrH of glasse.% for children of the

niiity;SliHly (,-Iub—Members of Uie Book

Rtuily club met Monday evening st home of Mrs. Emmet Clemons,I Mr:.. A. O. Clemons hostess.

.Mr?. Myrtle Turner revle*-ed the book -Not For the Meek.- by Ellia- brth 'Dm'ing Kaiip. Uie Literary (Julld choice for March.

Kaitern Trip—Mrs. BurtOT W. DtlKRr. left Wednesday, for. Ws.ih- 1«finn. D. C,. to spend two. weeks

lir-r dauKhter. MLis Sabey who 1;. taking her master s

decrfv nt 0«llni;det. .\flwDrtggs wliJ teach III HartforrT^ext year. Mrs. DrlKKJiNOso will visit In Hartford And Camden, N. J. and In Mlnne- niiolis ancKNorlh Dakota. She plans

? ikway Vlx week."* or two months, lorch MwUng — Mn. Leater

Jonri of Nampa, suit« superintend- (-ni of pi'hniiry and Junior depart-, nirnt of reilgloan education of the Christian church, and Mrs. Nellie French of' Boise. i»ero leaders of a Sunday school insUtule held Thurs­day evening at the Christian church. Representatives attended from Bur- , ley. Rupert, Twin Falls, Buhl and Goodlnif,

VIsitn DaucliUr — Mn. Mamie Hameit Is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. T. McGUI. In Denver. She win also spend a few days In James­town. Kan., visiting her father and sbtcr.

Play nay Ret—Ooodlng Coimty Rural Tcnchent assoclnUon met Fri­day evening In Wendell. Plans were dl.tcuued for the GodtilRg county rural play, day Friday, May 2, « t . Orchard Valley. Each school will . pre-vnt n stunt or number for the/i, program In the morning; » plenle dinner will be served al noon s ' the afternoon will be given over _ games. Each school will also take samples of work completed durl&g the year to be exhibit^.

HANSEN

GOODRICH Ures, batlerlc,«,-acces- sorle.f. Motorola Auto atid portable radios. Make your own terms. Auto Service Center, 144 Secnnd street East. ■

Business and Professional

D I R E C T O R Y^ a i / i s and Mdsslgea

Sta-Well. B3S Main W. Phone lU.

Bicycle Sales and ServiceBLASIUS CYCLERY.

- -Chiropraeiore-Dr. Wyatt, IBl 3rd .Are. N. Ph. 1377

Coal and WoodP ^ N E 3

for Aberdeen coal, moving and Uansfcr. McCoy Coal & Ttansfer,

CotdStorage Lockers

Floor SaMing3 Locust. Ph. lOOe-J.

■InsuranceFor Fire and Casualty IniurtlTce,

Surety and .Fidelity Bonds, tee Swim Investvoot Co. Baogh Bldg.

Job P ri^ ip gQ U A L IT Y JO B P R IN T IN G Letterheads . . UsBPleees

' Keif Skops:

, Money to Loan'.

NEEDXASH?See "tBdtr <Riwaa

CASB CRSDTT OOMPANT BS. 1-3 BurkheUsr Bldg. Ph. Ttt

Money to Loan

SEC Rulds Oil I Bond Sale Fees

WASHINGTON. March 28 (,T> - Tlic aecurlUes commlaslon ruled to-

^ day Uiat Morgan Stanley A: Com­pany, Inc., New York investment bankers, cannot collect JlOOiK in fee.s In connedilon with the sale of $35,000,000 Of bonds of the Dayton Power and Light company In Feb­ruary. 1040. '

Tlie commission asserted there was a powlblo absence of •‘arm’s lennth bargaining" between MnrKan.Stan­ley and Dayton Power and Light. It was Uie first order of its kind Issued by the SEC and It decld(;d..whai has been regarded as a key case In one phaso-of uUllty financing.

$25 to $1,000O N YO U R CAR

UP TO 18 MONTHS TO REPAY Contiaats ..refinanced—prlvato-aales

flnanced<7« ^ advanced ■

Consumers Credit ■Company ^ ■

’ Pacific Finance) AVE. NORTH

AUTO LOANSlaace your present contract—

reduce payments—cash advanced, W E S T E R N F IN A N C E CO.

' Nest to Fidelity «ank

Osteopathic PhysicianDr. S. J. Miner, 413 Main N. Ph. 1D77

Pcdntihg and D£coratingLee Burks-Pbone I430-J,

-Ralio RepairingBob Oukffl. IM Main N, Pb. Bie-J

POTfTSLL Radio, U3 and ATenae ft.

Speedometer Servlee

TgpiswritersB>lM. n e t il i «aa mrrtek. Pboae oa

^ V p h p U t e ^ g

CASTLEFORDDaoghUr VUlta—Mrs. Loyd Utter-

back of Benecla, Calif,. Is vlslUng her mother, Mrs. Lucy Ab.4ilrb.- Oondnet-Meetlnr— Revrand-Mrs. Lawrence Veltner of Chicago con­ducted services- At. Uie Baptist cliurch Sunday evening and.atso p la y e d several trumpM and ac­cordion numbers. They are en route to Notus, Idaho, to conduct a re­vival meeting.

Sister Visile—Mrs. Margaret Pru­ett. of Boise, is visiting st Uie home of her sister, Mrs. E. D. Logan.

Paster VUIU » ReV. and Mrs. G. Braun of Elko, Nov ' spent Monday and Tuesday at Uie home of Rev. and Mrs.'O. M-. Baerjien.

Ends Visit — Paul Ulrich left Fri­day for Yakima, Wash., after spend­ing the winter at Castleford.

iteUUve* Visit — Norman Thomp- -in . Mr. and Mrs. Leland LewU and daughter and Mrs. Bvorett Randell, all o f Moimtaln City, Nev.. visited relaUves a i CasUeford from Satur­day to Tuesday. .

Missionary Speaks — Miss Hazel Wood, returned ml^onary from In-

Harrali of Saeramtnto, Calif..' and Mr. and-Mrs. Sidney Ray and sons of -Spokane, have left for their

’ es after vislUng Mrs. Runyon's Mrs. Bay's parents, Mr. and

Mn.‘ Jtiin th&i pasti ^ t h .

Perry Services Held al Gooding

' H o o d in g , March 38 — Pimcral ser\’iec.f were held at the Tliompson chapcl for Mrs. Harriett Perrj-, Sat­urday evrfnlng. Rev. C. II. NorUirop. piutor of the Baptist churcli, offUl- attng.

She wa.1 born Dec. 1?. ISGO at Mont Vernon. Ind., and was married Feb. 38, 1870 to Hcnrj- C. Perrj-, who precedi^ her In deaUi 10 years ago. Froip Mont Vernon they moved to Omaha, III., In 1684. living Uiere until 1003. when Uiey moved to Kar- rlsburg, Ore. They lived therc'un- tll Mr. Perry's deaUi In 1931. - After Uiat time slie'llved for five years with her clilldren at Ooodlng. The past five yeerv she has been living wlUi her daughter. Mrs. Burris. In Pueblo. Colo., at whote home she died Mareli 10.

Mrs. Perry Is survived by the fol- lowfiig clilldren: George and Wal­ter Perry, boUi of Gooding and Mrs. S. J. Burris of Pueblo, Colo., and Mrs. Mattie A. Knight of Ooodlng. Other survivors Include 11 grand­children. and four great grandchil­dren.

Branch Britton sang nt Uie fu­neral services, accompanied by Miss Louise Blbblns. H ie body was taken to Harrisburg, Ore.. for interment. Mrs. Knight and Mn. Burris accom­panied on Uie Sunday afternoon train.

Clark Asks Funds For Fire Fighting^WASHINGTON, March 3B —

Senator Clark (D-Idaho) asked the senate appropriations sub-commtt- teo conslderlng-the agriculture ap­propriation bill (HR 3735) to In­crease Uie funds for forest fire co­operation with Chp sUtes to t3,S00,-

The measure as It passed the house carried «3,3SO.OOO fbr forest fire cooperaUon which was 1150,000 more than appropriated for the pres­ent year.

Clark told the committee Uie fund was aliared with aU Uie sUtes and I fv n li in protecting 379,OOOMO acres of forest. He ^ d loss from forest fires amounted to about 338.- 000,000 annually and lo Idaho i.- 305,000 acres of sUte and privately owned lands were in need of pn>- teeUon. He said that for every dol­lar spent In the sUte.-for-flre pro­tection by the federal goremment the people of Idaho-----------------

F a n n e r s A t t e n ^ n Z win PSF 7W the hlghect mu* kM^pttoa tae jroar ranch-----

tnct.rASUlBS.

. . hOOK ' Vw #. pay.’ -------------t e horse lijdet, and tip. ---«ea tito .can 'a c ;:c ; '.I.'

Rtturru Here—Mrs. HatUe Oatley ' returned Tuesday from her three monUis' visit with relaUves in Kan­sas. She come here from Wichita. '

Leave* Hospital—Mrs. G e o r g e Buhler aged mntrOn (}f Bock Creek, wa.1 returned to her home MondaXr> following ten days at Uie Twin Falla '' county general hospital-where ■' received medical-attenUon.. UUh Trip-W . B. Stanger left for j Jalt Lake City recently to Join hla - srlfe, who has been Uiere for th« j»s t three weeks near the L. D. liospltAl, where their small daug* ter, Verda. has been confine# I . . cause of a serious Ulness. The child win be returned to.her home next' week If her condition continues toV Improve, sccording to her telaUm ■! here.

SUUon Open*l-Tlie new Walksiej^gas and oil sUxUon on the hlgl:---- 'north of town opened reoenUy business. Will Walker, owner; h,.— to put In a grocery departmeotjf wlUUn a month. Mr. and Mn. Tra f - Sisco, Jerome, are operlttng th*'; -■aUon. . .

Enter Array—Albert TjnfT'Wii, ioq ; of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barnhill, and'- Joe Froellch, Jr., son'of Mr. aod'i' Mrs. Joe Froellch, left recently Salt Lake City to enter training tlie United SUtes anny. '

FOBAIER BOISE BS8IDENT ' '} INJURED. BY AirtroMOBiue^

. BREMERTON. Wash, I ' ' ‘ M >-Irl M. Baker. 83, at.._ manager for Uie Bremertaa 1.. Searchlight was in a hospital b today wiUi seveA injuries a '* - Ing hit by an.autotnol"nesday. He formerly w___________manager for the Idaho Daily 8 t a t « ^ mao at Boise, and formerly emplsar*^ ed by tho SeatUe'Uma.

The price of wheat to ............ha* more than trebled slaoe Atignst, 1B39. la Bwltxerland It has more than doubled, and la Sweden tt hai risen abeut M per cent

L E G A L AD V E R TI8E M

ANOTHER fiCMUONS 'IN THE DISTRICT COURT

THE ELEVENTH JU D IO X A Ii DISTTRIOT OF THE OTATK-'O IDAHO. IN AND FOR' IS . COUNTY OP TWIN FALCA --

Xrene M. Flank, .

Russell R. Plank, Defer

T H E gT ATg OF.IDAHO. 8 ORBgnNOS T O TBS • * NAMED DEFENDANT?

You are hereby; ,aoUfied; eooplaiflt' .beso'. tOMlli

_ ______ JHdldalvESUte of' Idaho. ’ In . - '■ of Twin Palh,*t:

^ r t e d ^ a p p M T

ot tha.aervloft:at-tl jrod are fuitbar n

TEN

«PUO’PUIN

D c v e l i^ e n t by O u t s id e Capital Viewed 'as ' Desirable.

''DecLilon to Attempt to ln(«rMt . ’OuUlde conccrri in rtoveloplne Uio . :*Mri-*pucl” tn<lii»try here »nd a

Uvonble report upon Uio outlook ■ Sot ImprovlnR Ui? mtinlclivil airport

comprised ma]or biiilneM bffore yw- luiichikMt mccllns ot Uie

. T*'ltT PWU ammber oj Commcree ol U)e Rouemon liolcl.

A fpKliil (idvLAory coiiimltlce. up* polnt^U) coiwldrr flndlnBi of iin InveiU^Uns ktoup on Die J»tflto

. pdMlbllltJw If tJikcn over by an out': »lde flnn. Members flf Ujo ndvLiory 'tgroup wet?( Bert A. Bweet, wljo re-

,J port«d. V«m A. ClJBpln. W. A. Van ti'Iiigelen and Harry Eaton.

..Also commenting «pon tJjc plan was R. S. Tofflemtre. n memlxr of

■•.the orlRlnal InvestlRatlnc commlt- ; ,Ue. and It was ngre«l tliat Prc.il- ‘•d«nt Harry Elcock will appoint a

f. -ipeclal eommUtee to uel In touch .. .'with lnterr.il« which misht catablUh

proceulnR plant of thli nature t/.bere..--

Advantate* Seen capital Iroiii elsewhere nsiiimes

‘the re*pon.ilblllty for developlHB U»U K'lndustry. whldx coiul.ils of sJireddlnn V and dryintc spiidA for iwcluiRtnB and

:'dJatrlbuUOn. It U viewed n.i an ouet ‘ ‘ > UiU MCtlon In provWlna addl-

J emploj-meut nntl In rellevlns ame extent the potato surplus

^'^oUem.Tof/lenilre, who. wlUi Claude

_J)elwcllef' and B. P. Parrj- of the tiChamber aeronautics committee, has ,,’bMtt cltecUnK Into poulble mean.i

bripslnff about lons-needrd Im- %'j9rovementa at tlie municipal airport. V;Teporte<J PTogreM and ihaL work • ttiould be at&r(«d by next MU. If not before.

K's; Chairman Frank L. Cook o fllie j.-'eurrent activities lund drive report-

that It has opened satLsfactortly Kafad ahould prove (niccex.iful “K we Kfellow through.*' T>ic campalim has

tlOpOOO'obJecUve. and soIlcltaUon d TliurMla}'.

Banquet Bucceu J. Vallton, member of the

~ 'ttM arrahglns tiie recent l>anquet d on the eve of the neUvlUn fund re, commented that “ evervone ( well pteased" with the event,

—j^ e d by ISS penions.!^A brlef-’ report upon last Monday ~ ^ t 'a Twin Falli county Tiupoy- S ' league meetlhir was offered by SK. BlamStbrd. vkc«-prtstdcnt. resided yesterday in the absence 1 pTHident E3cock. and he told

Mip ol how taxpayers went iisly on record as favoring

____ and improvement of thea-Vails county general hospital. • enlMgwnent U enabled under

..................1, dratted by Mr.

Fliers Held

s.\^.TWIN FALLS NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 20, 1041'

FIVEAPPmiS-illJVORCES

One Man, Four Women W in Dccrees in Uncon-

tested SuitsOne ni'.m uml four women wi'ic

grnnleil rlivorce (lecreen followtiiK unconlc'tid hnirlnKs before Ju<Ik<' JaniM W. Portrr in tll.urlcl cotui In Tulii l''iills yc^le^dny- ,

On KrouiitlJi of cruelly. Mip. Norma Kanic.i u'li.'i Rrnuird a divdrri- (roiii

Under Irnii.i of a properly M'lHe- ment wlik'h the court opprovrd, Mrs. Kame. heoomc.-t Bole owner ot ihe Central rootii.i In T«'hi Knlh, and Mr. Kiirni'» rcliilns lou In (he Kariits MvbilWUimi ftnd nn acirwRc In the UrKnn addition to Tu in Kalb.

Mr*. Vclinii Fftiter. amntrd a di- vorce from Talbert I. PVwter on cruel­ty (trouiids. WM Blven cu.slo»ly of an 8-yenr-old dnuKhicr, youiiKOsl of their three children. Property set- tlenient i>rovldfd each parent should contrlbiiie to the child's ftupfiorl (or a de. lRnnted term and the fatlier tiiereaCier itiouUl uay iw «. mouUi (or that purixi e. ‘n;e mnrrlaRc look place al PorlLi. Kiui.. May 31. 1017.

Mn. Pauline Dirk of Uulil.'mother of three irlrK 2‘ lo 7 yenr;. old, uiu-. Rmnir<l n.illvorce Irom Wlllliim Dick on Rrounds of extreme cruelty, uiul was awarded cu.->l(xly of the chil­dren. niic marriaKe look place Nov. 0. 1933,

Mrn. I.lllliin McMllIiiii, mother of ft two-yiMr-old lion, wiis uninicd it divorce from Rilwiinl McMillan on

^rouiid.-i ol (lejieriion shice May. 1037. 'lollowinR their marrlsRe at I/)Kun. Uliih. July 31. 1030. -Hic divorce complaint had • ijeen filed In July.

CaMMANDKfl W. 1). SAMTLK. executive ntflcrr al Hie naval air •itatlQn at Peiuacola, KU., au- nounrcd that Enilrnu JMeph C. Th8mp»on (bolt«ml, 23. llealdJi- hurr. Calif,, and Paul C.^drown Itopl. -33,' ChlcasD, whsse plaJ<e iwooprd low anil ilrcapltuled • woman In a field' near itaberti' dale. Ala., facrtl a pouliile CAUrt martial and wrrr belne held der arrent In their ^uarten.

I^ u tp R ^ istra tion Increase Sighted

Report Shows Condition of

Idaho RoiilcsBarring'nlldes and "iviiRh spots'

mont of the statc'.i majljr hltihwiiy.i arc In b« * 1 eondlilon, netwdJns ^ the report of the Jdnlio stale hlRh- way department received JasfnlRht.

Motorlsta should Ruard aRalnst sod shoulders on the Old OreROn Trail highway, which b In Rcnerally "good" condition, the report nho*s. Sawtootl) park highway Is In ROOd condition also, with tiie sector front the Nevada line to Ketchum describ­ed as fair. Tlte Oaleun. nummtt. roftd 1* oiwn. U'1U» local Inquiry ndvUed.

PollowlnB are de.icripUonn of i.taie routes: Bol.ie-Stanley. fair. j>a%*ibli slides, closed beyoTKl Idaho City: Idaho Central highway. Dixie (o Hill City, not recommended, closed J-'alr- fleld to Hftllcy, balance ••fiilr," Saw- tpoUt' park hlgiiway, Slio.ihone Richfield Bood. balance fair; Hoo:-e. velt highway. RtJOd. east of Dlcirlcli open but not recommended.-

^aheral Services For Arm y Selectee

E' OASTIiOCHD, March 38 — Last ■■ • fDT-PJlvate Truman V. CrLi-

I. 30. Of CasUeford, who died at army hospital at Fort Lewis,

, March la from bronchial d at the Albert-

I . funeral home chapel In Buhl lay, March 24.r. Cecil Hannan, pastor of the * rd and Buhl Methodist

___s. officiated.r,-Wkma S. Parker sana -No Night

and rSoftly ariff Tenderly.” ed by Mrs. C. R, Over- 0 also played the prelude

District Meet al Brelliren Clliiircli

MlnLitera of the Church ol BrcUiren In Ulnho and we .. Montana will a.>;M-mbIe. with their wives at A dlslTicv MOTffTrnct- \n Twin PalLi next Moiulay. .March 31.

Ilev. ir. a, McCalllMcr of Ttt’ln Kails MethodLit church, will lead a dUcuMloii of Uie Bubjrcl, "Economic ClianRes and the Piimlly."

Sessions will be held at the Church of Uie Brelhreii -in Twin Pulls.

Member* of Ihe Oulid will .ser dinner for the !ue u nt noon.

Twin Falls Infant’s Funeral Arranscd

Infant Heck, .wn of Mr, and Mrs. Jiunes II, Heck, bom Mareli II, 1941. died ye.Hertiay at 1:30 p. m. nt Ih Twin rails county Keiieral hi».iiltal.. Funeral *cr%-lcoj. wil Ih> eonducied at 2;30 p. m, lodny by Hev. A- C. MlHer ot Uie Chuich of ihe Breili- ren. and burial will be In the liler I.O.O.F. cemetcn- umlrr direction of Uie Wliite niorluarj'.

Sur 'ivltiR the-lnfiini, be:.|ilr; parents, are six brolher.i ami ill ter.

slock trailers and small all- around trailer*, tractor. wason*. farm wacons and feed wasons.JERO M E AU TO PAR TS

Phone 41 ______ ' Jtrome

You can g e t this b eau tifu l, . sm art-look in g

patriotic emblemp tttiocic pin can b e w o ia coda7.T b is pin has bcm made inilsble Vkn Camp’s q d m i^ y . _lt u youa w i i 3 Van Camp’s4tbelf .and one dime. GetVouc lupplf o f , Vuj Camp's ptoduct* « your p o c a 't todiy!

r^nCo«np^W,Dop».U,Bex144,NewYori(,N.Y.•*Am m i 3 lebch frea Von' fUata mH M • • bMiidW polrtolk pin:2=isr

D, VnnZttute nlk'Rcd cnielty In his suit for divorce from Janut May VaiiZnnie whom he married nt Win- ncmuceii, Nev., Nov. 10. 10<0. ’Iliey had been nepnri«te<l Mnce Feb, 23. IMI,

Ha^elton Youlli Dios al Wciidell

JEftOMK. March 28 — Rex Lynn DouKliLi. (our-ycar-old sou ot Mr. and .Mrs, M, W. DouRlas. of llcuel- ion. died Friday at, 4:30 a, m, at tlie Kt. Val^llllnt’B lin;,pllal where !k had been admitted only n (ew dayA before. y

PendluR funeral arranRcmcnLi, Ihe body re.ii.i al the Wiley funeral homi In Jerome.

Rex Lynn was born Nov. 20, 103B. at IluTelton, Ue leaves, besides hLi pareni i.'two brotiiern anil three Ms- leni. J. L. Dowla.i. Kermlt Dour- las. and Shirley DoukIm . Murllne DouRlas and Oallya DouRlas, all Idents of Haielton,

Charles W atson Pays $ 1 0 0 P enalty lo r Striking Girl

Ex-EmployeA maimr.lne Hulucrlptlnn crew nnaiinr. Chnrles Wni.son, 27, iif

tsaliluiore, Md.. ycslcrdiiy paid tiou fine plus co.‘,ls'of the trial In dl.i- Irlct court In Twin Fnll.%, lor (,irlk» ins a former employe, Ml.s.i Elnie Rled, 22, .10 lliiil she (vll iiiid dU- liTcntcd her hip, on- a local hold stairway. '

Vat. on was found tcullly of an u..t- snult charKc liv a jury'at trial the flrht of the week. Thejjifyh verdict

il the ))ro:.i ■ which accii.Ked

. ciiarKe nf s.uault with nieann likely to cnu5e Rrent bodily Injury.

Sentence wn» pronounced ye.\ter- day by Dislrlcl JudRe Jnmc.i.W, Por-

WaiAon now liices anoiher dl.tirict rnurt trial in a Ault lor <lauiaRes which Ml.is lilecl brntiRht' aRahist Watvon and ihr corponitlon by which he Is employed.

Deadline Exleii<led In Essay* Conlesl

IIiKh .nchool ewvnyisis now havf ... Ill April 15 to complele their entries In the Elks nallnn-w1de ej»say con- lest' on tlie Mibjcct, "Wiiat Uncle Sam Means to .Me," J . }{. Dlandford. clialrman- of the Twin Falls leilRc defense committee, announced. Tlie previous deadline wa.'i March 31.*

Evays are lo he .•.ulimltteU before April 1& lo Mr. Dlandford. or an- nther member nf the committee which Inctude-i .1. J, Wlntcrlioier. Elmer HolllnRsworth. JI. R, Grant and W. W. Thninan,'

School I'ruslees To Hear Official

tit l;M p. tn, today nt Ttt'ln Falls hlRli .- hool will be nchool inistces of Mlnliioka. Jerome. Twin Falls and Ca^ia counties to hear State Superlnirndent C, E, Hoberi.s discuss new lenl'latlorbaf/ectlnR ed­ucation.

Atlelulance nf a|l possible tnintees from the counties name<l Is urRed.

Banquet a l Biihl For Moose LegioirMiwe Legion members will ...ui-i

al the Odd Fellows hall In Buhl next Sunday for n one o'clock ban- nuet to be foll..we<l by . n frolic, ’lljomah L. Bmithrherderrnnnmme— ed. Offleera are to be nominated OurlnR the bnslne.-a se.vilon.

W i l l i e W i l l i sfly nCUEIt’r'QUILLEN

"Kvrry time a swell ^Vestcrn mnvle eonin, I've fnt a had cold or I've been bad nr Dad has Just paid the rrocery bill."

IL ul

GER FINEO

Motorist J:iilc<l For 'I'ipsy Drive

HawUiome, Nev.. molortst, Rus- .\ell DrownhiK alla.s neauf6rd John-

hiLS Ntarletl .servliiR :i 30-day in Twin FiilLs coumy Jail nflcr

l>lcadinR RiilUy to a drunken driv- hiR charRC. Tlie t.entencc imjxv.ed by Justice of the Peace O. T. Swope also requlre.i Drownhts lo jxty *100 fine,

BrowiiliiK wi« nrre.ste<l by Ttt'ln Palls iwllce officers In.'.t March 23 after hajilleRedly stnick and 0am- aRed badly anoiiier ear IwlonKlni: to Robert Pullen. DamnRes to the Pul­len car were pjtimated at SI.'.O, In Uie colll.nlon DroiniUiB recflv^d 1 acrons tlio nme.

Siininioiis Conies For J.M. W oolley

JOseph H. Woolley..«4, Twin >(01.% county fanncc since I013, died nt 1:30 o'clock Friday nwrnliiB farm home souih of Buhl,

runeral services, contluelcd by

ONCEREOSEIZEO ORDWTATION

Jan V a ltin , Author of Best Seller on Communism,

N azis, Detained ^NEW YORK. Msrcli 28 (,V»-Jan

VaKtii, auUior of the best seller. "Out of the NIahl." wn.% seized for dejiortallon proceedlntis today, but lie riunv away from Ellis Island im- miRr.’ltton station with nothUiR but pnit-e lor the treatment accorded him.

•They were kind lo me In there," ValtJn told re|X)rter* in his first •■miL'-'-" Interview since he wrote hla book. He had po.itcd SS.OOO'bond lo Inture hi.i appearance'at a hcarUiR April M when he will aii.swercharRes lhal he b In Uie country lllviially..

•llie larRC, ruddy-faced man wij(X.i' tale of Communist and Nazi lonuie.-i abroad Is In current cle- mand. ;,aid he was Imprfcwed deep­ly by tlie Immigration .procced- Inii.'.

"The difference between tlic brut- i| torture one iihdersocs In ques- UonlKi: In aermany or Riis.->ia and ihc ireaUnent 1 have received Irom American offlclaU Is the difference bt'twrcn democracy and Nazlim or Coiniliunt-sm." he said.

Valiln. wiioM- real name Is Rlch-' itrtl ./ulhw' Ili'rinaii Krc(», <(eM:rlb- e<l In his book undersround con- :,|)lriiiric.i aixi overt terrorLim tliat lift Mild constituted tiie CommunUt inovriiieiit, of which he was n prorn- Ineiit member In Oermany.

"When I can apply for clli/.en- shlp. 1 shall be deeply Rraleful," he . aid. "I rcRard America fl-i my coun­try now. I hoj>e to sUiy here In |>lte or t:(>mmuiilht.s' attempts to Mnear

e «r. a spy."in Wa.shlnRton, departmenl of

Jutttiei' officials . ald he iiiul "jump­ed ship" and entered llleitully on March 6. 1D30. nV Noriolk. Vn.; ihat nr had .served a tlircc-year senlente. from IB20 to lOK). in Cal- Ifohila's San QueilVln prison for a.s- sault; th.ii he had been deiwrk'd lo 'a<'rinany on Dec. 0, 1029; lhal he hail beloiiRcd to an organization advociitih:; the overtlirow of the Unlteii State;; Rovemment by vio- U'nce unci personally advooiWd Llib al Uir tJmc of hU tmr>-.

Tlie department .said Kreb.'i ad­mitted Julnink* the Commuiii;it i»irty III 19H and clul]iie<l tie quit in 1937.

Utiili Veterans • T o He:ir Benoit

OCiDEN. March 28 1/1’,-Harry Be­noit of IVIn Faltv Idaho, wa.% an­nounced today as the principal .Kiwaker at the aiuuml sprlnR •'wreck" of the Uiah Forty andElRhl,.

DenolV t'l former national commit­teeman of the American Lealon of which Uie t'orty and ElRht Is a fun orgmiiuitlon.

W e a t h e rday.

High tcmper«tiu-e Prldny 60 de- sreea, low 33; east • wind.i. partly cloudy. Barometer 25,78 at S p. m.; iuimldlty. 2S to 88 per cent of sat- uratjon.

' ~/By Tlie Associated PrcxiiScattered very.lluhi ahowcM ex­

tended from California northward throuRli Orecon, but by JYlday cve- -nittK hnd not ext<nded east of the Cascudc.t or eierrns except at n few scatlerctl localities In easicni Orc- Ron- and centml Nevada.'

Skies were cloudy UirouBl'out live far west and iemi>en»turea conUn- iied mild for tiie season.KUllona - Max.Min.Prre. Wlhr.Holse .... ..... ... ex 4< .00 CloudyDurley ........ ....64 31 .00 CloudyButle ........ ....S7 23 .00 CloudyChlcajo-........41 33 .08 Pt.Cl'y.Denver ... -.... « 23 .M CloudyVon Ancclet .. S7 M. .03 Cloudy MnU-at. p. , .37 JO .00 Clear New york City BO 35 .OOPt.CI'y.Omaiii .......... 47' 52 .00 Cle*rPocatello ...... et 32 .00 CloudyPortland. Or*. 73 4S .00 CloudyKt. IxiuU ......45 37 T Pt.Cl'y.Salt Lake City 6S 47 .00 Cloudy Han Vrwiciseo Bi 51 .63 aouiySeattle ......... 70 43 .00 CloudySpokane ........ 7J 40 .00 CloudyTwin Fall*..... 66 32 .OOPt.CTy-tVashlnifton . 56 42 .00 Clear yum« ........... M SI .00 Cfear

The Day in Washiiiffton

<Dy The Associated PrcAs)The delcnie medlaUon board or­

dered hearlnsa on all strike casco re­ferred lo It by Ute labor deport­ment. One of the hrartnea. however.

jt cancelled when a settlement waa ...ichec In Uie Unlversat-Cyclopa Steel compiuiy dispute at Bridge* ville.'Pi. •

Tlie refiual of the navy depnrt- uent to discuss Uio iuture OesUnn- lon of a squadron of seven fliihtlnK

ships led to a belief In some quar^ tern Uiat Uiey'-mlght be kept'ln- dcfhiltely In tiu! souUi Pacific for the sake of ,Uteir moi^l Influence on Japan.

Tlie senate »ppropimli._ ... mlttee apjiroved a »4J80.284,n« n t onal defense supply bill which ei

-.-..tl Items for 4,700 more i»n ibtn and money to expedite pilot.tnUij.

One American company pro^iKed 324AS0A31 poonda o( copper dar> - ins 1030.

THE TOP GHAOt fACKtO J WAYJi IMtCf SOUO fACK •• ReAOT IN STARKUT'S.MODtRH SUNtn HANT .

Process Doubles L ife of FaUi*i<i8

CHICAGO, March 28 (/11 — Tlie development of a new process that doubles the life of fabrics wa.i re­ported to Uie seventh antniiil chcm- urRlc conferences,

I'ftbrlcs treated wlUi the new clicinlcftl and latex proqes.i develoi>ed by the U. 8. RyUber company were Mild to rci.lst shrlnklnR and repel moths ns well as gtve twice Uie

Dr. M. C, TeiiRuc of Ulc comiiniiy's Reneral development dlvl.-:lon told nf. ihe-pi'occ.ss and its wide i»villjill- tles in on address ye.sterday to sev­eral hundred leaders of aorlculture, Industry and science nltendlng tlie confercncc.

FalU mortuafy chapel at ?;30 h'clock Monday aftcmnon. Burial will be In the Twin Palls cemetery.

With his family, Mr. Woolley c._... to Idaho from Kansas In 1013, aiuf farmed near Twin Pnlls until movlnR to Buhl In ID30. He was boni Jan. 22, 1B77, at Esbln. Kas.. and married on May 2fl. IBM, to Eflle Havens., Survlvlnc arc hi.s wife; Uirce sons.

E^crett and Carl Woolley. Twin Fan.s. and Bnile'Woolley. E\’erett. Wn.ih.: one daughter. Miss Edith Woolley, and five Rrandchlldren.

Ijioiis Hear Nurse On Sight Saving

Miss Vlrchihi McConnell. Twin Palls school nurse, was Ruest flank­er nt II mectlnK of Tvi’hi Falb Llona club nt luncheon yesterdny.

Dlscns.slnR eye conservation and cooperation wlUi the district UealUt unit. . Parcnt-Teacher associations and the Lion* cltib. Mi.w McConnell told of a number of InlcresthiR cojics InvolvhiR visual defect.s.

SiRht conservation Is n major proj­ect of Lions clubs throURliout the United Stales,

Stanley Phllllp.s. chalnnah ot the eytftlght project and also club pro­gram chairman for the month. In­troduced Miss McConnell, Dr. O. T. Luke, vice-president, presided In Uic nb.icnco of Harry Balsch. club presi- dent.

Bob Hlhkley of Burley, deputy 'district Rovenior: G,’ L. Fnnisworth and P. L. Copenlnit. Pocatello club members, i ’ere guests.

R ich field Names Election Entries

niCHI'-nELD. March 28 - Tlie re­cent mass meetliiK held at the town hnll to nominate candldote.i for town councllmen was well attended.

John Workman, ciialmian and Ijoard-holdover, presided. 'Iliose go- lue oui of office. Orrin-Babb, T. B. BriL'ili, Anna Ftnlon and Leslie Biishby. were renominated, but Brwih. Fenton and Busliby declined to serve again.

Others nominated were:Two for two-year terms. Melvin

Poi>e. Charles Smith. Birk Albert; two for four-year terms, 8, O. Piper. Orrln Babb and J. W. Ebert. Jr.

Rru«lar election wlH be heli} April

Final U itcsfor Herbert Enierick

Funeral services for Herbert S. Einerlck. who died Tuesday at .Den­ver. were conducted yesterday alt- enioon ut tlie Wlille mortuary cha|)cl. Rev. Mark C. Crot'cnbeiter offlclatinfc. Burlul wa.s In tlie Twin Pulls cemetery.

Sonii.i were by Mrs, O. T. Duvall, and Uiese were ''In the Oardcn” and "That BeuuUfui Limd."

Pallbearcr.sr were Earl Wttt, Ou? Kinney, Amo,i Howard. C. I. Wads­worth, C. W. CftsB and Bill Jenkins.

NEWS WANT ADS GET RESULTS.

B R A N D M E A T SYour 'butcher knows Uiat a qu&Ut;

-product will brtng you back for morel Tliat’s the reason he stocks Fails Brand

. Meats—he can be sure you'll always be able to 'depend on Uielr .quality. Let your butcher recommend a cut of Falls Brand Meat Uie next time you orderl.-

Falls Brand QualU{/ Is Backed by

I N D E P E K D E N T M E A T CO.

A Name You^vc Known for Years

W EEK E N tK SPECIALS

VUlt both our lot-v One be. twren Bhnihone and 2nd »tr«el north on 2nd A’le. north — and one at Ihe ra^ee.

4MoS Ford five _pai

Ih a^ ‘ .5 6 4 5I9}6 Lincoln J^phyr. Radio, Ueatcr. Nevr tires. Low mlle- ««" ..............;......$695IStO OldimobHe koune. Radio and hraler. New ear jnar-

, • "«« .........-....... $775I 1939 Chevrolet t door. Radio ; and heater. 16.000

mile* .......... -.... .......SG351938 Cberrelet 2 door.

... ...................... $495^1038 Delaxe riyraouth S door,

pttadlo knA heater. A-t S495| 1BI7 Plymouth eaupe. Rwllo and heater-------------S395

CHANEYMOTOR CO.

U l Slain’ Are. B. Phon* ISU'Oldsmobile Sales

antJ Scrvlcc