final city edition truman ordersnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/times-news_tf...final...

14
FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr of the Twin I'hIL s Cowboya baseball team in the Pioneer league for lU lG will bo liarl Bolyarcl. 33-ycnr- old navy o%'fr.sen.s ve(oran aiul a (opnotch minor /eaguc hitter. That was the word received by telephone from Chicago Wednesday by M. J. (Maury) Docrr, president of the Cow- boy club. Devine, western repre- ive and Kcoiit of the New York Yankee chain, told Doi (hat Bolyard signed Tuesday House Okay On Hospital Plan Viewed Denies Charges WASHINGTON. Do< Jap’s Prince Leads March Into Prison Princess Gives Out With Mean Rhumba Wiggle LONDON, Dcc. 12 OI.R»-Prlu- ctM Ellrabctli. vcrj BWbliy In a Karlcl evening nown, ulgglcd n mean rhumba nrouml n Mayfnir nightclub (lancc floor iimU rar)v this momlnj while the kli r.nt n home liiK loi ‘Patton Grave,’ Says Bulletin From Doctors Idaho Trout a World Record rroval of the m( vott yesterday o Scnatore Wngner Murray, U.,'Mont. ihmild be brondei cent rccommcnclnl Tniman. F.Prlrit *ald lie Worta to cjcpanfl brace Mr. Tnimnr UCO .C iOO .OOO In federal funds. : OOOJXW for Immcdlnto tiirvey.i hospital necd.1 nnd S7S,0(»,000 i toriny to if Jiipnncsc K headed by a? tachlocd PrUict ilo of the )r :tlBn ^Jlnl; ;d, hnndlchnr-iiius- Mormlmnsa Niishl- ncrlnl fnmlly. Shlgcru Yoahlda aik, Konioa C d End Dallas i „ __ , ird was with Dallas In I ' Texw IroKue, hUtliitf .310 In m: cn lie Joined the na e,'p;ilt! Docrr, U kno' major loop luba . Navy, Piqued, Quit Tapping Nip’ s ’Phones WASHINGTON. I i by Lt.-Col. Henry C. t vcd In t t Peni aavnl Int. Harbor of the JRJ Woodnim said Iti his jiUlcmc thnt Hear Admlrul (then CaptaU Mayfield, navnl tlklrlct InlclllRcn. olflccr. hnd ordered Kurvelllancc tlif Japanese consul’R telcphoni Ins iircllnilntiry tr;i went 10 the Oreal Irnliilng center whei n In British Samoa. •15 recently <llsclinrKcd. nir Lcajue Caliber : .'ild thill Prnnk O'nou; Wg league star who b r..„ ;oLit for Cincinnati, told him Fallj, If It get., Dolyartl. wll 'itil plnyc) ijor leagut •ahwhlle told the diet that. Japsi alrcndy ha.'i brauhed to allltd head >CrcAumluB dlplomatlo tc •iiuiui »ith the rest of the worlcl A critical questioner In the die ;tortfd tint Billed r,uspcn.ilon o .pin> world diplomacy Mwwet nek nf conlldniee In the cabinet.' "I.S Jnian not bcliiB rccognlrcd lu 1 lndPi>eiident slnte?" the fjur.-i- •>ncr, nep. M.i.^anowke Ideka. de- manded. '• Ywhld. e II the d ha 1 Off. 1041 cffcctli PDI had one line Upped and 11 thh line learned before the that consulate officials were Inj nil their papers. ................... Ytinfc.s had not Juc DIMnggio in ccnter field " Nick Cullop, ex-Pocatello i ;cr who stepped up to mam lip of the Columbus chib, told Docn- that Bolynrd should bai from .<00 In the Pluneer league. l.<Lshmiin, former T^^’ln atiaeer who will iillot Idaho year, pml.Ked Dolyord .!> l-ii. s. c.!unn !)• Former Mayor Is Near Death Joe K. Koehler, owner of the noxy titte r and former Twin Falls mi A ! j In "very crlUcal" condition tift veterans' hosplUl ot Dolie and Is not expectcd to Jlyc, relative: Wednp.sday afternoon. The former mayor. 111 wlUi a heart condition, hardening oi arterifs and complication, wa- ..... expected to live through Monday night but responded to InJccUo: Mm, Koehler and their daughl and wn-ln-Iaw. Mr. nnd Mrs. Max O. Uo>-d, were called to Boise Mon <l»y ntght by doctor*. Mrs, Koehler a-lll remaUl In BoUe »Hn her husband. The Lloyds hav, returned. "jP «Plle of liis condition," Lloyt sain.Wednesday, -he reinonbers thi carrier boy. ri-fl ■-the c olnc 0 lets' Par- is jched- FLASHES of LIFE ALBUQOKRQUE, N. M., Dcc 12 -For seiillmentiil rcusoiis, Dr. L. A, Noal bTOdcast fin appeal for retlUTi of s bronrc plaque taken from hl.i. yard. He cxplaliipd the 20-pound casting, bearing the figure of wuntri’ doctor In a buggy, hnd bei In his poiscjslon more than a de Three days later It reappeared, along »-lih a note of apology from college boy, who wrcte: lertly took Uic plaque to hang ■■■■n, I collect Blgns, planning them at the end of my ranklnft Ji' until mldnl ar.crlme.n r.i Diet members criticized the imciit slinrply for pemilttlns -cst of Prince Na^hlmoto, member of the Imperial hou.-;. n Sugamo for a flight .ehterett' e an-lval of Mrs............. ... e ^ f " * lu paralysis, Concb- inn's wife Beatrice rei le III the American ai lere ycslerdtiy aftemi iirdous flli?Iit from th . After seeing him. i I have .-ccn Ooorsle before nnd he alwt It all risht." ' during the nlRhl ;w York mcdlcal iiuthorltl .^ald the drop In puLsc was not sti ilflcant. Tliey showed concern i Announces Moves To Curb Inflation WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (U,R)—President Truman today announced the government would place iirice, ceilings on old and new dwelling.'i und would rcinfltitutc government priori- ties on building mnterials. Ho also announced that he wa.H ncceptintr the suggestion of Reconversion Director John W. Snyder, for the appoint- ment of an over-all government bou.sinff bos.s. He appointed Wilson Wyntt, former m ayor of Loui.«ivillc. Ky., to the job. W y att’s title will be housing expediter. The new housing program, aimed primarily at curbinjr in- flation in the real estate market, was in the form of recom- mendations from Snyder to the President. The President said he approved the progmm and that it would be put into ef- fect ns rapidly as possible The progr.im ha.? three basic vbloa* !urplu.i hous inlts lUlldlnK uiat^Tlali. Including army md navy barracks and dormllorlcs, held by the government will be •:a.-;ecl Immediately to the jt: nd local communities. 2, Priorities on building mal il,% which >.liould be In ell hortly. A regulation to tills effect : bring prepared now. Blngli multiple rtwelllnR housing units 10.000 r priorities c tntement said this nterlnls Int real' nd Kootenai rainbow, cauchl In Tend Oreille r, l» llie larfe^t rainbow ever landed, aeeordinc to ml Stream Bja*»jlne. i;. U’. Drflnbacb, Sandpoint, who li shown holdln* the champion. (I’hoM by RomHall) Fact-Finding Board Namedjn GM Strife ’WASHINGTON. !)«;• appointed n fact-fintjiny. bcntrd .>t© Ihveatifote the •Motors auto strike. H« ealdie «n«eted botk'.Ubor a 3. CelllnK price,-! on old and ne? ouslHK- While Mwe steps In thL Ircctlon can be taken by the offlci of price ndmlnlstmUon and thi crcdit ogencles of the government, legislation U \nece.'jary to provlda for celling prices on the boIa of old and new housing. Such legljlatlon Is pending before the house Ing and currency eommlttce. Bnydcr told Mr. Tnimon th»l •^uch, authority U essential if we ivert furUier akyroekeUnj Driccs. and the prlcc con- or hor Steel Unions Gird for Huge U. S. Wallvout Nazis Forced 4 Millions to Slave Labors NUERNDERG, Dcc. 12 han 4,000,000 cannucred laborffi^ i-cre forced Into virtual slavery | 5 ;- Jenriany by murder, etarvatl^', rson and kidnaping. AmeriiJJK:- irosccutors disclosed today at rnr crimes trial of 21 nul war taders. Tie carefully-planned slave eys- em to provide workers for Ocrman rnr plaiit.i and farms was described s a "wild nnd ruthleM manhunt carried on cvcrjTvhenj" In « naaJjuj labor commlMloner'a own presented a«. ovldmce bcforD l 5 ‘ '^ 'itcmatlonal mllltAry UlbunaL Prealng tha charge* of "ertm »'’* jalrjt humanity" agaJnU Adolf lller's top aldea. Assistant V. S. Prosecutor Tbotna* j. Dodd disclos- ed by the Germans* oim recordj more th a n 4,000.000 men. wo- and chtldfoa gt U dUferent nMIonalltles b a d ‘ the relch ' v*r I AUhou* led his to face trial ( of tl chiirg If deal Only last week. Gen. Tonioyukl faninshlla was convlctrd In Mat; ' ly a U, a. military commL^slon laving condoned wholrsali; O ' ages by troops of hLi Phlllpiili command and wm sentenced to laiiged. He has begun a ^crlc,s ippoah which will reoch MacArtf ind the U, S. supreme court Marines to Stay In China Zones, Says President c Japanese have been ( Government Units Entering Mukden TIENTSIN, Dfc. 12 (/Tf-Chlnf U-MlnR'» r tcrod Miik(l< The fifth < Mid Lleut.-Oen. T ' means that a e any Importiin Japanese left li will . in my ro .. Dtc, 12—Leaving college c suni'RisEu TOPEKA, Ki the front door place" accounted for a surprise breskfiut reunion yesterday at the Paul Edgar home. Returning home from the service, noma.s HJchard Edgar didn’t want 1awakra his purcnls at 3 ajn. and found Uie door key In Its old fa- mllbir pl.ice. He tiptoed tlirough the house, went to bed and appeared breakfast. : was most flurprlted of all 1 he found at the table : brother*, also In the te r had preceded hint home. China th Secretary of Stat. ..... recently declareil Uiat under tin surrender terms the United State; Is committed to help get the sur. render Japanese units home, Mr. Tniman also wa.-s asked at hi: news conference about Bymc.s' de- parture today for a Moscow meet- ■lih Foreign Commissar Molo- nd Foreign Minister Bevln. replied only that Uie trip wof planned a long time ago os part of he program ot foreign mlni.itei lectlngs Bgtecd upon at the Yalta Dachau Germans Declared Guilty DACHAO. Dec. 12 (UJa — Forty lozl defendants In t h e Dachau itroclty trial were found guUty of Par crtmlnallly totlay. ' An American military government ourt deliberated two hours and IB minutes before announcing the blanket conviction .of all the Ruarda and other attaches of the notorious concentration camp hen nie •. protmbly tomor I be n iccd Byrnes Departs WASHINGTON. Dcc. 13 (,T) — Secretary of St.He Byrnes left by plane today for Moscow where he plans to tackle half a dozcn.crltlcal is.sue.'' on which bU three coopei tlon hM been .'tailed. Mrs. Roosevelt May Get $5,000 Pension ASHINGTON, Dec. 13 Legislation to provide an annual of t3,ooo to Mrs. Anna RooKcvelt. widow of the late ................ipwed today by ■U ..C . j..v.iinyn3 committee ect to approval by both the and Uie house, the legljlaUon 1 establHhed precedent of nlng the widows of former -Ills nnd granting Uiem free >llh CIO United Aui strikes iiln y to II . UAW c ................. rontnbute to fund for i lupport for 175,000 Oeiieral itrlkes; f^c.’ltlcni TYuraoii fact-finding bo.ird In a^ dispute. Admlnktralloii— Prcslcteii le;- befni both Ubor and n l^ aKement^T<»p«Tlt«.FiliU tU« board, Mr. Truman named as members of the board Judge Walter P. St.icy, ch.ilnnan of Uie rcccntlabor- mnnancment confcrencc; Lloyd K. Garrison, clialminn of the war labor bonrd, anil Milton Ebenhowc president of Knnsaa Mate coUegi SLncy Is chlcf Justice of the Nortl Th. rolinr ■Went admitted thal legislation he has ask- oi coiigre.M. tho board In thi 1 case would have no legal •horlty (o cismlne the books of :ompany. He . howe thnt he coopcratl........ ...... ........... d whether IhL^ meant he ex- the company to open It; .•oluntarlly to Uie board, Uit nt reiterated that he ex- mutual coopemtinn. etrolt, UAW President n, J. Thoma.i and Vice-President Walter P. Reuther pledged "Uie union's co- operation" In ,?upplylng the fact findhiK- bonrd with infunnatlon, Uriloti lenders t, Tnnni icstlon th a l : and abide centa cclllngs itcd ficrvlce; Tlie si; -atcd iK ...... Snyder arc; T o Increasi ibjccti' Ing n nU-rlaLs. . strcncUien Inven 5 prevent hoarding. T p r tc ntroLs building materials, . To discourage unbound lend! practices and speculation. 6, To cnlLst Industry's aupport In ncreaslng production nnd fighting nflatlon. •ovlde informallan advL Ihe public. .service valuea Sugar Ration Ease Possible Cm CA GO , Dcc. 12 (UR)-E.irI B- ^Ilson. chief of the agriculture de- artment's sugar brandi. hinted today th a t civilian sugar rations ly be cn.5cd by spring, ' le told the annual meeting of ; American bottlers of carbonated . illled c ^otal of forclfi by January, 1045. As deUlls of the nad alive Jabor system were unfolded before Uio court, even tho accused HlUcrttes tlrrcd uneasily and some pulled way In their seats from the trio amed try Dodd ns chiefly respon- Ible-bull-neckcd Trits Bauckel. SS cneral and relch labor commls- :nner; tuave Alfred Rosenberg, of- clal nnzl philosopher and admln- i.irator nf the occupied Ukraine; :-.iKl Albi-:i Hpecr. relch munltlcma minister. One report taken from Rosen- berg’s flics revealed that babies bom on slave labor tmlns were thrown from the windows, Speer nat with hb face In his hands m Prosecutor Dodd declared that "force and brutality as a method of production found a ready adherent in the defendant 8peer.“ Hitler ordered forced labor for 3.000.000 Russians and Pole.-i In October, 1042. and an additional 1.000.000 In M a rc h . 1B43, the evi- dence dlscloscd. riting to Roeenberg on March l«3, Sauckel ordered the shlp- t of captlvc laborers to be speed- ed up to 10.000 a day. latlon en CIO Amal- rkm of Amer- : Manufactur- r.a1d he hoiKd th a t 1047 ntrol of sugar by I Administration Joins Senate, Othman In Deep Concern Over Jelly Bean Crop President. IIOSIK FOR CHK1ST.HA8 WABHINGTOH, Dec 12 (lipj — Prrsldrnt Truman t«lay announced will fly to Indepmdence, Mo.,- ChrWmas day to have dinner th the home folks. fcelectcd .11 bash the OPA. Tlie Jelly bean behind, on liLs best greei n fpockled nccku I came to Wa.^hlng troubles belore Sen ly of Montana, wlv ns too lexcepl far . and the senator's commll When hli stock was low. Barliydt testlllcd. he ordered a new suppl; from Chicago, only to be Informrt that Jelly beans no longer were being produced. ••Tlicy told me the only thing they had W .1S South Sea Inland Jellies." he continued. "I ordered some South Se.i IsUnd Jellies," they to be stjuarc Jelly bean Only DIfferene "You nean that was Ihe only dlfTcrence?" demanded Ken. Ken- neUi Wheery of Nebraska, -One Jelly bean wo.n oblnng and the other wo.’i square?" •••■ there was one other dllfer. Barhydt replied. “The ncn South Sea Island Jelllea cost three us much as Uie old Jelly ThU meant tliat one cent would . >nly two «ju»ra Jelly beans at B arhydfs Jelly bean counter. Tlils Jiifrontrd him wlOi a Ijuy- 1 tho part of Ihe Jelly strike 0 bean eon.vimli Barhydt wantet Ho whlr.pered alleged Jelly be: senate'.'; clerk, who handeit It to Jerome Ney. the OPA's price chief- tain, who said he'd bring back ob- long Jelly buaa'i. or cloie di square Jelly be.an faetorj'. TliBt r.olved th a t and everybody fell relaxed, except Jlarhydt. *ho fumbled In his pocket and banged the 1 down machinery, the other of blue peelers," he said. ble t I plec t steel. . “Potato . . Id. The senators tnappcd ...... r :lon. Barhj dt told how he had made friends and Influenced housewives If Walden by rctalllnif tho llrjt lft.« steel potato peeler for 10 cents, OPA again. "Aha." said Senator NVherry. "And I could not gel steel potato xeler* a t any price," Oirhydt said. ‘I had to take thU plasUc pouto peeler, which I have got to sell at. nta. ThU would not b« *o Ud, ,'t th n t It Beta soggy (Uke a Salvador Dull painting) In the dish- water. rurthermore It will not petl potatoes.'' Tlie government's going to fc»k into tIUs. too, as floon lu It flnltbed ■ith Jelly bean*, Veterans Find No Jobs Here I the Twin FVUs a ncd they KOUld c< back A. J. Mei-k.s. director of the United ■s employment service office said Wednesday thal he had ilcally nothing to offer the vet- I trho pa.<a through his office each day seeking that part of re- idjustmcnl to civilian lUe Utat In- ;ludes a paychcck. U jl month 139 persons, most of hem veterans, algnetl up at Iho USES office. qU or them seeking ,ork. Of this number 124 w«re re- ferred to Jobs a n d 66 of Ibein oc> tually went to work—about SI per :nt ot the total who wanted work. Late In Novemt>CT the number of Jobs available began to dwindle un- « are but few poet- UoM open to returned aervlcameo, or anjone else for that matter. In Ihls area. It wis reliably reported that the ! Amalgamated Sugar company plant here had comp]et«d replaclag lt« staff of 7S wom?n used durlns var- time «ith male help, most o( It m r vets. Group to Coordinate U.S. Medical Service WAaHDJOTON, Ded,.lS (fl — Preildent TntmaA today art up a nlae.membw oommlttM to.^«onlfc. r nate tovenuncnt bm<11c«1 n n le a . Ill Ont major tuk«' Vbitt House itatement s&id. Oifl-- ^ nyi ot tncnaaloe tb« '*«• clUUe* ot the Unlt«d autai'T) admlnlatratlon."

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Page 1: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

FINALCITY

E D I T I O N

TRUMAN ORDERSBolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop

Plnycr-m niuiKcr of th e Twin I 'hILs Cowboya baseball team in the P io n e e r league fo r lU lG will bo lia rl Bolyarcl. 33-ycnr- old navy o%'fr.sen.s ve(oran aiul a (opnotch m inor /eaguc hitter.

T ha t w a s th e word received by telephone from Chicago W ednesday by M. J. (Maury) Docrr, p residen t o f th e Cow­

boy club.Devine, w este rn repre- ive and Kcoiit o f th e New

York Yankee chain , told Doi (hat Bolyard signed Tuesday

House Okay On Hospital

Plan Viewed

Denies Charges

WASHINGTON. Do<

Jap’s Prince Leads March

Into Prison

Princess Gives Out With Mean Rhumba Wiggle

LONDON, Dcc. 12 OI.R»-Prlu- ctM Ellrabctli. vcrj BWbliy In a Karlcl evening nown, ulgglcd n mean rhumba nrouml n Mayfnir nightclub (lancc floor iimU rar)v this momlnj while the kli

r.nt n home liiK loi

‘Patton Grave,’ Says Bulletin From Doctors

Idaho Trout a World Record

rroval of the m( vott yesterday o Scnatore Wngner Murray, U.,'Mont. ihmild be brondei cent rccommcnclnl Tniman.F.Prlrit *ald lie Worta to cjcpanfl brace Mr. Tnimnr

UCO.CiOO.OOO In federal funds. : OOOJXW for Immcdlnto tiirvey.i hospital necd.1 nnd S7S,0(»,000 i

toriny toif Jiipnncsc K

headed by a? tachlocd PrUict

ilo of the )r :tlBn Jlnl;

;d, hnndlchnr-iiius- Mormlmnsa Niishl- ncrlnl fnmlly.

Shlgcru Yoahlda

aik, Konioa Cd End Dallas i „ __

, ird was with Dallas In I ' Texw IroKue, hUtliitf .310 In m:

cn lie Joined the na e,'p;ilt! Docrr, U kno'

major loop luba .

Navy, Piqued, Quit Tapping Nip’s ’Phones

WASHINGTON. I

i by Lt.-Col. Henry C. t

vcd In tt Peni

aavnl Int. Harbor

of the JRJ Woodnim said Iti his jiUlcmc

thnt Hear Admlrul (then CaptaU Mayfield, navnl tlklrlct InlclllRcn. olflccr. hnd ordered Kurvelllancc tlif Japanese consul’R telcphoni

Ins iircllnilntiry tr;i went 10 the Oreal Irnliilng center whei

n In British Samoa.•15 recently <llsclinrKcd. nir Lcajue Caliber

: .'ild thill Prnnk O'nou;Wg league star who b r..„

;oLit for Cincinnati, told him Fallj, If It get., Dolyartl. wll

'itil plnyc) ijor leagut

•ahwhlle told the diet that. Japsi alrcndy ha.'i brauhed to allltd head

>C rcAumluB dlplomatlo tc •iiuiui »ith the rest of the worlcl A critical questioner In the die ;tortfd tint Billed r,uspcn.ilon o .pin> world diplomacy Mwwet nek nf conlldniee In the cabinet.' "I.S Jnian not bcliiB rccognlrcd lu 1 lndPi>eiident slnte?" the fjur.-i- •>ncr, nep. M.i. anowke Ideka. de­

manded.

'• Ywhld.

e II thed ha

1 Off. 1041cffcctli

PDI had one line Upped and 11 thh line learned before the that consulate officials were Inj nil their papers.

...................Ytinfc.s had notJuc DIMnggio in ccnter field "

Nick Cullop, ex-Pocatello i ;cr who stepped up to mam lip of the Columbus chib, told

Docn- that Bolynrd should bai from .<00 In the Pluneer league.

l.<Lshmiin, former T ’ln atiaeer who will iillot Idaho

year, pml.Ked Dolyord .!> l- ii . s. c.!unn !)•

Former Mayor Is Near Death

Joe K. Koehler, owner of the noxy t i t t e r and former Twin Falls mi A ! j In "very crlUcal" condition tift veterans' hosplUl ot Dolie and Is not expectcd to Jlyc, relative: Wednp.sday afternoon.

The former mayor. 111 wlUi a heart condition, hardening oiarterifs and complication, wa- .....expected to live through Monday night but responded to InJccUo: Mm, Koehler and their daughl and wn-ln-Iaw. Mr. nnd Mrs. Max O. Uo>-d, were called to Boise Mon <l»y ntght by doctor*.

Mrs, Koehler a-lll remaUl In BoUe »Hn her husband. The Lloyds hav, returned.

"jP «Plle of liis condition," Lloyt sain.Wednesday, -he reinonbers thi

carrier boy.ri-fl

■-the c olnc 0

lets' Par­is jched-

FLASHES of LIFEALBUQOKRQUE, N. M., Dcc 12

-For seiillmentiil rcusoiis, Dr. L. A, Noal bTOdcast fin appeal for retlUTi of s bronrc plaque taken from hl.i. yard. He cxplaliipd the 20-pound casting, bearing the figure of wuntri’ doctor In a buggy, hnd bei In his poiscjslon more than a de

Three days later It reappeared, along »-lih a note of apology from

college boy, who wrcte:lertly took Uic plaque to hang ■■■■n, I collect Blgns, planning

them at the end of my

ranklnft Ji' until mldnl

ar.crlme.n r.i

Diet members criticized the imciit slinrply for pemilttlns -cst of Prince Na^hlmoto,

member of the Imperial hou.-;.

n Sugamo for a flight

.ehterett'e an-lval of Mrs............. ...e ^ f" * lu paralysis, Concb-inn's wife Beatrice rei le III the American ai lere ycslerdtiy aftemi iirdous flli?Iit from th . After seeing him. i I have .-ccn Ooorsle before nnd he alwt

It all risht."

' during the nlRhl

;w York mcdlcal iiuthorltl . ald the drop In puLsc was not sti ilflcant. Tliey showed concern i

Announces Moves To Curb Inflation

W ASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (U,R)—P re s id e n t Truman today announced th e government would place iirice, ceilings on old and new dwelling.'i und would rcinfltitutc governm ent prio ri­ties o n build ing mnterials.

H o also announced that he wa.H ncceptintr the suggestion of R econversion Director John W. S nyder, fo r the appoint- m ent o f an over-all government bou.sinff bos.s.

H e appointed Wilson Wyntt, former m a y o r of Loui.«ivillc. Ky., to th e job.

W y a tt’s ti t le will be housing expediter.T h e new housing program, aimed p r im a rily a t curbinjr in­

fla tio n in th e real esta te market, was in th e form of recom­m endations from Snyder to the President. T h e President said he app roved the progmm andth a t i t would be p u t into ef­fect n s rap id ly as possible

The progr.im ha.? three basic vbloa*

!urplu.i hous inltslUlldlnK uiat^Tlali. Including army md navy barracks and dormllorlcs,

held by the government will be •:a.-;ecl Immediately to the jt: nd local communities.2, Priorities on building mal

il,% which >.liould be In ell hortly. A regulation to tills effect : bring prepared now. Blngli

multiple rtwelllnR housing units10.000

r priorities c tntement said thisnterlnls Int real'

nd Kootenai rainbow, cauchl In Tend Oreille r, l» llie larfe^t rainbow ever landed, aeeordinc to ml Stream Bja*»jlne. i;. U’. Drflnbacb, Sandpoint, who li shown holdln* the champion. (I’hoM by Rom Hall)

Fact-Finding Board Namedjn GM Strife

’WASHINGTON. !)«;• appointed n fact-fintjiny. bcntrd .>t© Ihveatifote the •Motors auto strike. H« e a ld i e « n « e te d botk'.Ubor a

3. CelllnK price,-! on old and ne? ouslHK- While Mwe steps In thL Ircctlon can be taken by the offlci

of price ndmlnlstmUon and thi crcdit ogencles of the government, legislation U \nece.'jary to provlda for celling prices on the boIa of old and new housing. Such legljlatlon Is pending before the house Ing and currency eommlttce.

Bnydcr told Mr. Tnimon th»l •^uch, authority U essential if we

ivert furUier akyroekeUnj Driccs. and the prlcc con-or hor

Steel Unions Gird for Huge U. S. Wallvout

Nazis Forced 4 Millions to

Slave LaborsNUERNDERG, Dcc. 12

han 4,000,000 cannucred laborffi^ i-cre forced Into virtual slavery | 5 ;- Jenriany by murder, e ta rv a tl^ ', rson and kidnaping. AmeriiJJK:- irosccutors disclosed today at rnr crimes trial of 21 nul war taders.Tie carefully-planned slave eys-

em to provide workers for Ocrman rnr plaiit.i and farms was described s a "wild nnd ruthleM manhunt

carried on cvcrjTvhenj" In « naaJjuj labor commlMloner'a own presented a«. ovldmce bcforD l 5 ‘'^ 'itcm atlonal mllltAry UlbunaL

Prealng th a charge* of " e r tm » '’* jalrjt hum an ity " agaJnU Adolf lller's top aldea. Assistant V. S.

Prosecutor T botna* j . Dodd disclos­ed by the Germans* oim recordj

more th a n 4,000.000 men. wo- and ch tld foa g t U dUferent

nMIonalltles b a d ‘ the relch '

v*r I AUhou*

led his

to face trial ( of tl

chiirgIf deal

Only last week. Gen. Tonioyukl faninshlla was convlctrd In Mat; ' ly a U, a. military commL^slon laving condoned wholrsali; O' ages by troops of hLi Phlllpiili

command and wm sentenced to laiiged. He has begun a ^crlc,s ippoah which will reoch MacArtf ind the U, S. supreme court

Marines to Stay In China Zones,

Says President

c Japanese have been (

Government Units Entering Mukden

TIENTSIN, Dfc. 12 (/Tf-Chlnf

U-MlnR'» r tcrod Miik(l<

The fifth <

Mid Lleut.-Oen. T

' means that a e any Importiin Japanese left li will .

in my ro

.. Dtc, 12—Leaving

college c

suni'RisEuTOPEKA, Ki

the front door place" accounted for a surprise breskfiut reunion yesterday at the Paul Edgar home.

Returning home from the service, noma.s HJchard Edgar didn’t want 1 awakra his purcnls at 3 ajn. and

found Uie door key In Its old fa- mllbir pl.ice. He tiptoed tlirough the house, went to bed and appeared breakfast.

: was most flurprlted of all 1 he found at the table : brother*, also In the te r had preceded hint home.

China thSecretary of Stat. .....

recently declareil Uiat under tin surrender terms the United State; Is committed to help get the sur. render Japanese units home,

Mr. Tniman also wa.-s asked at hi: news conference about Bymc.s' de­parture today for a Moscow meet-

■lih Foreign Commissar Molo- nd Foreign Minister Bevln. replied only that Uie trip wof

planned a long time ago os part of he program ot foreign mlni.itei lectlngs Bgtecd upon at the Yalta

Dachau Germans Declared Guilty

DACHAO. Dec. 12 (UJa — Forty lozl defendants In th e Dachau itroclty trial were found guUty of Par crtmlnallly totlay. 'An American military government

ourt deliberated two hours and IB minutes before announcing th e blanket conviction .of all the Ruarda and other attaches of the notorious concentration camp hen

n ie•. protmbly tomor

I be n iccd

Byrnes DepartsWASHINGTON. Dcc. 13 (,T) —

Secretary of St.He Byrnes left by plane today for Moscow where he plans to tackle half a dozcn.crltlcal is.sue.'' on which bU three coopei tlon hM been .'tailed.

Mrs. Roosevelt May Get $5,000 PensionASHINGTON, Dec. 13 —

Legislation to provide an annual of t3,ooo to Mrs. Anna

RooKcvelt. widow of the late................ipw ed today by

■U..C. j..v.iinyn3 committee ect to approval by both the and Uie house, the legljlaUon 1 establHhed precedent of nlng the widows of former -Ills nnd granting Uiem free

>llh CIO United Aui

strikesi i l n

y to II. UAW c .................

rontnbute to fund for i lupport for 175,000 Oeiieral itrlkes; f^c.’ltlcni TYuraoii

fact-finding bo.ird In a^ dispute.

Admlnktralloii— Prcslcteii

le;- befni

both Ubor and n l ^a K e m e n t^ T < » p « T lt« .F il iU tU«board ,

M r. Truman named as members o f the board Judge Walter P. St.icy, ch.ilnnan of Uie rcccntlabor- mnnancm ent confcrencc; Lloyd K. G arrison, clialminn of the war labor bonrd, a n i l Milton Ebenhowc p residen t of Knnsaa Mate coUegi SLncy Is chlcf Justice of the Nortl

T h.rolinr

■Went admitted thal legislation he has ask-

oi coiigre.M. tho board In thi 1 case would have no legal •horlty (o cismlne the books of

:ompany.H e . howe thnt he

coopcratl........ ...... ...........d whether IhL meant he ex-

the company to open It; .•oluntarlly to Uie board, Uit n t reiterated that he ex- mutual coopemtinn. etrolt, UAW President n , J.

Thoma.i and Vice-President Walter P . Reuther pledged "Uie union's co­operation" In ,?upplylng the fact findhiK- bonrd with infunnatlon, Uriloti lenders

t, Tnnni icstlon thal : and abide

centa cclllngs

itcd ficrvlce; Tlie si;

-atcd iK ......Snyder arc;

T o Increasi

ibjccti'

Ing n nU-rlaLs.. strcncUien Inven 5 prevent hoarding.

• • T p r tc ntroLsbuilding materials,

. To discourage unbound lend! practices and speculation.

6, T o cnlLst Industry's aupport In ncreaslng production nnd fighting nflatlon.

•ovlde informallanadvL Ihe public.

.service valuea

Sugar Ration Ease Possible

Cm CAGO, Dcc. 12 (UR)-E.irI B- ^Ilson. chief of the agriculture de- a rtm ent's sugar brandi. hinted

today th a t civilian sugar rations ly be cn.5cd by spring, 'le to ld the annual meeting of ; American bottlers of carbonated

. illled c ^otal of fo rclfi by January, 1045.

As deUlls o f th e n a d alive Jabor system were unfolded before Uio court, even th o accused HlUcrttes tlrrcd uneasily and some pulled way In th e ir seats from the trio amed try D odd ns chiefly respon- Ible-bull-neckcd Trits Bauckel. SS cneral and relch labor commls- :nner; tuave A lfred Rosenberg, of- clal nnzl philosopher and admln-

i.irator nf th e occupied Ukraine; :-.iKl Albi-:i Hpecr. relch munltlcma minister.

One report taken from Rosen­berg’s flics revealed th a t babies bom on slave labor tm lns were thrown from the windows,

Speer nat w ith hb face In his hands m Prosecutor Dodd declared that "force a n d brutality as a method of production found a ready adherent in th e defendant 8peer.“

Hitler ordered forced labor for3.000.000 R ussians and Pole.-i In October, 1042. and an additional1.000.000 In M arch. 1B43, the evi­dence dlscloscd.

riting to Roeenberg on March l«3, Sauckel ordered the shlp- t of captlvc laborers to be speed­

ed up to 10.000 a day.

latlon

en CIO Amal- rk m of Amer- : Manufactur-

r.a1d he hoiKd th a t 1047

ntrol of sugar by I

Administration Joins Senate, Othman In Deep Concern Over Jelly Bean Crop

President.

IIOSIK FOR CHK1ST.HA8WABHINGTOH, Dec 12 (lipj —

Prrsldrnt Truman t«lay announced will fly to Indepmdence, Mo.,- ChrWmas day to have dinner

th the home folks.

fcelectcd

.11 bash

the OPA. Tlie Jelly bean

behind,on liLs best greei

n fpockled nccku I came to Wa.^hlng troubles belore Sen ly of Montana, wlv ns too lexcepl far . and the senator's commll

W hen h li stock was low. Barliydt testlllcd . he ordered a new suppl; from Chicago, only to be Informrt th a t Jelly beans no longer were being produced.

••Tlicy told me the only thing they h a d W.1S South Sea Inland Jellies." he continued. "I ordered some South Se.i IsUnd Jellies," they to be stjuarc Jelly bean

Only DIfferene "You n e an that was Ihe only

dlfTcrence?" demanded Ken. Ken- neUi Wheery of Nebraska, -One Jelly bean wo.n oblnng and the other wo.’i square?"

•••■ there was one other dllfer. Barhydt replied. “The ncn

S outh Sea Island Jelllea cost three us much as Uie old Jelly

T h U m eant tliat one cent would . >nly two «ju»ra Jelly beans a t

B arhyd fs Jelly bean counter. Tlils Jiifrontrd him wlOi a Ijuy-

1 tho pa rt of Ihe Jellystr ike 0

bean eon.vimli Barhydt w antet

Ho whlr.pered alleged Jelly be: senate'.'; clerk, who handeit It to Jerome Ney. the OPA's price chief- tain, who said he 'd bring back ob­long Jelly buaa'i. or cloie di square Jelly be.an faetorj'.

TliBt r.olved th a t and everybody fell relaxed, except Jlarhydt. *ho fumbled In his pocket and banged

the 1downmachinery, the o the r of blue peelers," he said.

ble t I plect steel.

. “Potato. . Id.

The senators tnappcd . .....r:lon. B a rh j d t told how he had made friends a n d Influenced housewives If W alden by rctalllnif tho llrjt lft.« steel potato peeler for 10 cents,

OPA again."Aha." sa id Senator NVherry."And I could n o t gel steel potato

xeler* a t any price," O irhydt said. ‘I had to take thU plasUc pouto peeler, w hich I have got to sell at.

nta. T hU would not b« *o Ud, , 't th n t It Beta soggy (Uke a

Salvador D ull painting) In the dish­water. ru rth e rm o re It will n o t petl potatoes.''

Tlie governm ent's going to fc»k into tIUs. too, as floon lu It flnltbed

■ith Jelly bean*,

Veterans Find No Jobs Here

I the Tw in FVUs a

ncd they KOUld c< back

A. J. Mei-k.s. direc tor of the United ■s employment service office said W ednesday tha l he had

ilcally no th ing to offer the vet- I trho pa.<a through his office

each day seeking th a t part of re- idjustmcnl to civilian lUe Utat In- ;ludes a paychcck.

U jl month 139 persons, most of hem veterans, algnetl up at Iho

USES office. qU or them seeking ,ork. Of th is num ber 124 w«re re­

ferred to Jobs a n d 66 of Ibein oc> tually went to work—about SI per :nt ot the to ta l who wanted work. Late In Novemt>CT the number o f

Jobs available began to dwindle un- « are but few poet-

UoM open to retu rned aervlcameo, or anjone else fo r th a t matter. In Ihls area.

It wis reliably reported that the ! Amalgamated S ugar company plant here had comp]et«d replaclag lt« staff of 7S wom?n used durlns var- time «ith male help, most o( It m r vets.

Group to Coordinate U.S. M edical Service

WAaHDJOTON, Ded,.lS (fl — Preildent TntmaA today art up a nlae.membw oommlttM to.^«onlfc. r nate tovenuncnt bm<11c«1 n n le a .

Ill Ont major tuk«' Vbitt House itatement s&id. Oifl-- n y i ot tncnaaloe tb« '*«•clUUe* ot the Unlt«d autai'T) admlnlatratlon."

Page 2: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO W EDNESDAY, D E & 12, 1 9 «

Bolyard Will Boss Cowboy

Club for ’46t r m r t t i OKI)

highly Bs result of aMoclstloa with him on the coast.

Doli’orrt will come to T»lii FalLi la early spring, or possibly late win- rer. to confer with Cowboy dlrectofJ.

Tr»In on Coast Also announced Wednesday wm

th e fact that cindldatej for tlio Tw in FalU club will train oiv iho Pacific coo-st, lnsle:id of In the soulli and cast ns hort orlslnnllyplanned.

Doerr said the Yntiks hnvt rangefl with Oakland and 6eiltlr of th e Pacific Co.^'t le.-iauf l<i t younR Yankee prospccLi Into ll fralnlnE cnmri’ lo fUmliiiitc fip'.’ o f shlpplnif ttie:u acro.'s itie co tr j ’.

•'At tho end of tlie Coast league training," he «nld, "yanlc piospecW for Twin TnllB will be picked and will liavc nnoilier full wiclt < in training as a unit. Mniiajer Bol- yard and Scout Devine will do tlie selecting for T«-ln Falb ''

Doerr revealed that the Cowboys •will "work clawly" wllli iind through th e Blnghamlon. N. Y„ team of the clofs A Eailcm lensiic. Dliighamton Is n Yank fnrm and Yniikfe-OTned players on opUwi will ronic t( Cowboy* chiefly Ihroiigh Hut club o r Norfolk In ihe cla-« 11 Piedmont league- Some may possibly com Opolcnnc.

■’Our conlmcl Is directly will Ynnk.1 ,” Doerr mM, 'Inil n league rule;. provlUi- that the Jora can't option dircctly to a It below class B."

Waitress Freed Under Bond; to

Face Trial SoonAchsa (Jackie) Bmlth. former cafa

waltre.KS here, was freed from the covmty Jail here Tuesday on Jioo cash bond pcurtins tria l a t ihe Jau- ua ry term of dWrlct court on a charge of aiding an attempted de­livery a t the city Jail ae%eral weeks ago.

Ball to r Miss Smith was supplied Ijy her slater, Mrs. Jewell Todd. Kimberly.

Clarence fAce) Jiicob.»tn and Clyde Pease nlmo.’t cut their way to Ireedom with a doren hacksaw blades tha t Police Chief Hoxsrd W. a ille tte Mid MLu Smith and Joan P^oe Carpenter admitted smilggllng to their boy friends. The escape at­tem pt waz discovered and lolled.

The Carperter woman has been a t liberty since thorUy after being held for district court trial, her m other posthig »00 bond fo '

. release.

K eep th e Whtte Flag o f Safety Filling

Now 21 da]/s wUhout a tra ffic dea th in our Magic Valiev-

Youth Injured, 5 Unhurt As Autos Crash on Highway

■win F .s boy »ifercd m inor face other persons csciiped Injuries iit 11 p. m. yeaterclay a t tiio Junction of lilKhways 03 and 30 In a two-car colll.slon, John E. L«l»rr. state piv- trolman. reported. Doth car« were badly damaged, one rolling over at 'le result of the cra-'ih.Injured woa Shirley niilnehart, 1, 340 T h ird avenue west,

treated In the T nin Falls counly hoopltal. A passenger In the Rhine- hart boy'll machine, LeRoy Alvls, 1C, 120 T lilrd avenue

injured.The ther I drive

Robert o u tlie r . ;!3, Filer. Pn.'..nen?ers In the O iltner machine Included Evelyn Loudenslager, 15; Barbara Comegys, 17, oncl Emma Hamman, •3, Filer.

The Occident occurred. Patrol- lan Leiser salt!, when Oiltner at­

tempted to make a left turn and his car waa struck in the rear by the n h tn e h a r t machine. The Ollt- ner machine “rolled over upon be- Ing stnick," Patrolman Leiser sold,.

Seen Today

Twin Falls News in BriefAaxUlarr to M eet

The Veterana of Foreign War nu i- lltary will m e et a t 6 p . m. Thurs­day o l the Moose hall.

Oecames P a r tn e rRay Moon purchased a half

Interest In th e Moon's Paint and Pumlture s to re . 301 Main ayenuc

from h is father, E. O. Moon.

B etunu to S ta tionRulon J. Skeem . navy chief avln-

lion pilot, le ft Wednesday for San Diego, Calif., w here ho is stationed. He spent tw o weeks visiting his wife and relatives.

Daoghler IfereMrs.' Josephine Uiir.sl, Olympia,

Wa*h.. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bulle.i. arrived here Tues- lay to fpend Chrbtmiis with her larents.

Program Announced ■ Tonight's feu ture on the llomanca of Camas Prnirln program, broad­cast a t 9:30 p. m. over KTFJ. will

DischargesWayne WUUrd Threlkeld, Fran-

• <da W alt: Loren O. flosencranls. certificate of aerrlce; Claud L. Har-

• Mon. Leland O, OflUcr. Haro’d W. Anderson and 'Arthtir. W. Pufahl.

I The flftspita! 'O nly emergency beds were »v»n>

ablo a t the Twin Falls county gener­a l hoepltal Wednesday.

ADMITTED ESvln Nd.-ion. iOiiiberiy: 3, D.

Burks, Jerome; Clarence Llodsay F lier; Mrs, W. K. Worsley, Mrs. Al­b e rt Crowley. Buhl; Mrs. Florence Stokes, Carolyn Lawrcnce, all of T w in Falls; Mrs. August Heslbeck a n d Mm, M m ill Wi'

DIEMISBED A urtn Ilatt, Murtaugh; 8ae Llv-

Jngstone. Duhl; Mrs, J . M. Boyd a n d »on. Eden; Mrs. H. R. Hostet- ler. and Mrs. Kenneth Hall and daughter. Kimberly; and Mr*. Ver- lln Owens and son, Tv.-ln Falla.

The WeatherTonight. Thunday and pfobaWy

Friday, partly eloudy and lUjhtly colder. Lowcal lemperalure tonight 16-50 for aotithwesl: 10-15 for toulh central. Yenlerday high » . low 21: today low n .

¥ ¥ M ¥

Temperatures

Dtnr.r ____ _

SSf,X"S„-:SL L«ial« . TWIN FALl^ ... ■WuhlnrMn ..

High school girl In brown coat, rudely remaining on wrong side of Second street north sldewslk. bump- Ing older woman carrjlng armful of pockogea . . . U. N, Terry and ■■■ ’V. F ra n ti In downtown huddle

some printed cards . . , Olant •ouncr'.ptii.i egg brought to Seen

'I'oday by BUI Dj-c . . . Qeorgr Van- Tllburg .•;p<>tt1ng frlimi wnlKltig post barber ^ihop, slgnalllnK a grcctiiig by waving iia lr clippers In the air . , , Dlond yoimg Indy in window of Fidelity National bnnk, sepmlng lo have a b it of trouble with bolky add­ing machine . . . Dr. 0. W. Rose striding around comer ol Second street w est and Main, mtMtng colli­sion w ith a no ther pedestrian by twc Inches m axim um . . . That oil com­pany C hristm as po.iter on billboards Jatt about funniest yet . . . P. O, full of packago mailers couple of minutes before opening hour , - . Lot. of toys In store windows, and

looklna pretty good for this 'of ye& )^oo . . . Olrl Jumptna

’oft'o f gruy flSipe. running Into gro“ ctry drlve-ln on Shoshone, running

'c lear back to end of store, running back to coim ter to pay. running-out to car again . . . And orerheard: •7!ij-a. sweetheart," from hifky e*-marlne Bud Ollb (hut ver ’ platonlc-llke) to pretty girl In floral company store; boy In library as hlJ lost coal button pops off, "Oh oh, there Bocs another onel"

Burley Man Is Fined For D isturbing PeaceTom Ham ilton, 30, Burley,

lined >i& and 13 costs whei pleaded ffUllty In municipal court

turblng th o peace a t the Model cafe.Officers said he Insisted on drink­

ing from ft bottle of lltiiior a t ths establishment.

M agic Valley Funerals

TWIN P A U ^ — Funeral services for Oeorge H. ehcrrlll will bo held

3 p jn . Thursday at the Twin Palls m ortuary chapel. The Rev. H, a . M cCalllster. First Methodist church, w in offlclote. Burial will be In the Sunset memorial park.

BUHL—Services for Mrs. Margar- Howard are tent.tUvely set for 3 . m- F riday ot the Hagerroan

Methodist church. Burial will be In the H agerm an cemeter>' under direction of the Tlioinpwn funer­al chapcl.

ttelurn From Georgiaand Mrs- C. W, Burr have

nrrlved from A tlanta, Ga., where were recently married. They nake th e ir home here. Hurr local rr.ilclent and his wife

had lived In A tlanta.

Parent.1L and M rs. Jack Thomas . .

vliltlng a t th e home of Mr. and............., W. T liom as, 1503 Poplar............ S tationed a t Cherry Point.K. C-. L leutenont ond Mrs. Thomw

to a tten d the wedding of his shter. Helen, w hich will take place Sunday, Dec. It5. En route tliey visited tho p a re n ts of Mrs. Thom-

a t Cisco. T ex.

Deerte Signed D liubclh Hutt,-

from Kenneth B. of neglect and nc Ing to a decree fli Tuesday. Although

ccclved a divorce iutt.i on grounds -.'Upport, accord- I In district coun

...... ........................ tho divorce wivgranted Friday by District Judge James W. Porter, the dccree was not . lgned until rccontly. The plaintiff rtcelvcd custody of two daughters, 11 and 13. T h e marringe waj North Hollywood. Calif., Aug. IS. 1030.

Rn Route Home First BrI. H arry B. Long, Jr.. ha.?

nrTlve<l from Ja p an and Is en route home, according to word received by hla wife. Mr.i. Gladys Coiner Lonn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. \V. Coiner. Sergeant Long Is riow n Ft. Lewis awnlting discharge and .^pccts to bo home Sunday. Long en'ert over-vea.s lii the PacUlc area .nrt had been .'.tiitloned in Japan Ince V-J day. I n Renlce 38 months, he veteran wear.', threo combat tnrs and the beachhead arrow.

Traffic FinesSix motorists paid flnc.i yesterday ; police hc.-idqiiarters for tr:iffic

iloliitlons. Pay ing tS w.u Don UaL«h. who w as ciiarged wrth ’'hU^ aftd run property damage" after

illegcdly crashed Into a telephone polo a t Third avenue east and Seventh s tr e e t cast late Monday. Paying )2 fines for second vlola- •' 5 of overtime parking were Oro-

Hartley and Delbert Lance. J. L. Mondmgon a n d Dr. M. Grootej paid fines of *1 cach for overtime parking. W illiam Voss paid J3 for failure to stop fo r a stop sign.

Ir PusengenHenry Schmitt Jeft for Bolw.

Charles (Chic) Crabtree. pubUe reU- lloiu officer for Zimmerly Airlines, returned today from Pocatello. All traveled by Zimmerly Airlines.

BirthsBens were bom Tuesdoy to

and Mrs. Albert Crowley. Buhl, and Mr. and Mrs. Eiwin Harper, Twin Falls, at the Twin Falls county general hospital m aternity home.

Filet <0 flalmon CityGeorge Pcnson. d istric t superin­

tendent for the Flecher Oil com- ■. flew to Salmon City on bu«i- Tiie.sday afternoon. Flying ■Riylorcraft plane. Per«on will ■n sometime tod.iy.

Oon to BoUe Louis K. Evans, local appliance

dealer, left Wednesday for Bolsa ' attend a regional salea meetlog the Hotel BoLrc where new appll-

will be previewed. Ho 1» pected to return Friday.

Ptilllon Filed A petition for probate of a a.1 filed here yesterday In probaie )urt by A- a. Hen.--.on in tho i '■r of the estate of B ertha Noel, ltd Oct. 23, lfl<5. O. W. Wit.-Uln,

Tu-ln Falls, 'ivas a ttorney for tlie petitioner.

, Ileported__,- pcirrs, Royal hotel, reported

to pollcc Wedne.^dny th o t on night bag contointns his armj charge papers, a p a ir o t trouiers, a shirt and a shaving kit was stolen from his trunk In h is room on “

bltorcB Suit Filed Francis Leo %Volt filed a divorcc

-ilt In district c o u rt Wednesday sgslnst Pauline O oslin W alt, charg­ed cruelty and asked custody ot their son. 3 'i . T h e couple )— rled here May 20. 1042. W alt dl'charged from th e navy six daya

RIs attorney is J . R. Bothwell.

Minor AccidentAn automobllo driven by John

Cristobal, 330 N in th avenue north, and a pickup truck operated by H. a . SJortesen, M17 F i f th avenue east, colUded a t the intersec tion of Fifth avenue east and Blue Lakes boule

Wedne.^day. b u t police reported only minor damage w as done.

Mra. Roy Bos-ion and children. Oall and Eddie, have arrived In Twin Falli from H ot Springs. Ark.. to mako their home here w itl Bo?ion, Mnglc Valley editor of the 'nmr.^-Ncws. Mr. Bosson flew to Hot aprlngs to drive h is family here. Thry have purcha.sed a home at 1J37 Ninth nvemie east-

Sailor, Home on Leave, Wounded

LeRny Moore, 10, sailo r home on le^ie. wn.-i wounded in the left hand Tuc.'tlay altemooii w hen Uie loaded " pistol he w as cleaning charged.

The mlslmp occurred a t the home o(*hln t>arents, Mr. nnd Mrs. J. {t. Moore, who reside tliree and one- half miles south of B uhl on the Clo-er highway.Mooro was brought to Tw in Falb

county general hosp ital where X-ray examination showed th a t the middle (inKtr ot his hand was fractured by the bullet. He rem ains in the haspUal for trea tm e n t of the In- Jurj'.

THEY’RE HERE JUST ARRIVED

200 PAIRS TENNISSHOES

H eavy ca n v a s u p p ers.

Sturdy h e a v y duty ru b b er

so le s . C olors brow n

and w h ite .

J . 1 5

These arc w ell m ade for

sturdy service— w ith re ­

inforced m olded to e tip —

corrugated c re p c ru b b e r

boIps—'n-ell B haped arch

for good fit.

Shoe Department

n e rr io l l Building—Aeron trera Tlme»-Nei»»

Qerk, StiU Missing, to Face Chai-ge

Kenneth Eldum. 31, n ig h t d ts t clerk a t the Park hotel u n til he was mlased from his post shortly before 4 a , m. Monday, has been charged Ir. probate court here w ith embez­zlement In connection with th e theft of tM9 from the hotel regLiter.

PoUoe, called by the supervisor of the telephone company a f te r oper­ator# Wert unable lo get th e hotel ewltehljoard to answer, found Eldum misting.

A checkup by Mrs, J e n n y Stew­a rt, hole) manager, revealed the shortage. Of the money ta k en »18 belonged to Harold Klelnkopf. oper­a to r of the hotel dinette a n d cock­tail lounge. He had placed the money in the regLiter ovem lgiit.

Mni. Stewart said th a t n n addl- lional | i » in the register w as not molested, 'nie tea, she sa id , was covered by insurance.

Eldiun was employed several weeksHe SI mtly

marinecorps and tfiat Forsyth. Mont,

A cheek of his room a t th e hotel revealed that all his c lothing ex­cept one stilt was mLsstng,

Airline Workers to Eat Elk Steak Now

Junne Dauer and Beth H ansen. Ztmmerly Airline re.wvntIonl.^t;i in the Rosersou hotel, havo turned thumbs down on beefsteak—a t least for a while—because they received gifts of elk roasts and elk ham burg-

■ Tue.'d»y.M to Hansen announced W cdnes- »y tiiat the elk ine;it hud arrived

the day before by air from Lewis­ton with the compllmenta of Bert Zimmerly, owner of the line . Zlm- merly shot the elk on a recent hunting trip and duulbuted m eat to his offlCM and stopj In Idaho.

Dealer Attending Mercury Preview

Oram O. Padget, TAin F a ils auto dealer. Is In Salt Lake C ity for a preview of the 1940 Mercury' and Lincoln automnblle.^ at ttic factory branch of tho Ford motor company • 'la t Is located In that city.

The Mercuries are scheduled for putjllc exhibit here and throuKhout the nation Friday. Llncoln.i will be shown fhortly after the ftrr.t of the year.

Boxer Sentenced On One Charge,

Held on AnotherHarold K, Cochran, Arltona prize

lighter, wjw sentenced to serve 10 doj* In the county Jail when found Bullty In probate court here W ed­nesday on a charge ot battery in connection wlUi an attack oo E l­mer Turner at Buhl lost Thux»d»y morning.

Judge C. A. Bailey then held Uio defendant, for trial in district c ou rt on B charge ot assault with In ten t to commit grand larceny a fte r a preliminary hearing in which de­tails of an attack allegedly m ade on Freeman Yoctun were brought out. Bail was 6et a t ISOO.

Cochran Is asserted to have slug- get the two men and to hove taken a bottle of rum from Yocum durlna the mcIec.

Loan Deadline N earFarmers arc reminded by Ben

Jansen, chairman of the County AAA tioard. that the deadline on applications for potato loans through the commodity credit cor­poration Is Saturday, Dec. 15. Ap­plications tor these loans may ba made either at the AAA office In Twin Falls or Duhl, Jansen salt

Burley Baby Dies of A ttack of PneumoniaBtTRLEY, Dec. IJ-R ichanl BmlUl

Searlo, elght-month-old »6n of Ur. and Mr*. Smith Seatle, died Tues­day a t Ih# home ot hH parenti near here as • result ot an attack of pneumonia. His father bad b«en In­ducted Into tho armed services last

Noble Mann. Rupert.P u n e n l services are pending word

from the father. Arrangements ar In charge of the Payne mortuary,

REA D TOIE3-NEWS WANT ADS

LAST TIMES TODAITI

A S H O C K I N G FIL MI B R U T A L L Y F R A N K ! l*P'

FLUSi Newf • Cartoon Comedy

“Calling All Plhben"

Thanks for Reading This Ad

Buhl Woman, 35, Claimed by Death

BtJBL. Dec. 13 — Mn. Margaret Howard, 39, died Tuesday momlng a t th e OOckUng hospital where the h o d been a patient on# day. Bhe waj b o m Dec. 18, 1»09, a t Blrdavjew, W aah., and was tho wU« of Shelly I3. Howard. Buhl orul the daushter o f J . R. Russell, Hacerman.

Services are tentatively set for 3 p . m . Friday a t the Haganaan Meth­o d is t church. Burial will be in the H aserm an cemetery under the di­rec tion of the 'Ihompson funerml chapel.

y o u rsp in e lC o n tL a en ta lO ilC o m p an y

▼M-taneNEW-DAY GASOLINE

CecrTUSllMS. CCThfiialil 0>J CosMor

Page 3: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1 2 ,1 9 4 8 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN' FALLS. IDAHO

G reater Than Evep- V

W H IM y S M EClearance of Ladies Fine Cloth

■COATS"PLAINS - PLAIDS - CHECKS - TWEEDS - TWILLS - PASTELS - ALL WOOL FABRICS - WELL FINISHED - WELL MADE

Colorfuland

Sm art

• BLACKS• BROWNS• GREENS » TANS® NAVYS « BLUES• Blended Tweeds• Colorful Twills

and Many Others

PLENTY OF FREE PARKtNG SPACE

This Is Truly a Great Collection o f Fine

Smartly TaUored, Well Finished, W ell Lined and

With CareEully Blended Buttons and Trim

OVER 200 COATSON SALE THURSDAY, 9 A. M.

FORMERVALUESto $ 4 9 95

ALLGREATLYREDUCED

NOW

1419

95

95TO

LT. GOLDIVORYPINICCHERRYLILACROSEREDGREENWINE

Sizes for All 12 to 50

Choice FabricsOF

PLAIN FLEECES PASTEL FLEECES NOVELTY TWEEDS HERRINGBONE TWILLS SHEPHERD CHECKS PERSIANA CLOTHS CHICLNA PILES

STAPLESF or those that

w ant them

NOVELTIESFortheY oun|;er

Set

In th e Herrfott BulUIng 2nd St. W e s t Across Prom Tfm es-News

USE YOUR CREDIT - 3 Ways to Buy-

Page 4: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PA LM , IDAHO WEDNESDAY, DEO. 12. 1 M »

Atomics I'^t Main Reason

For MeetingD r iX)i;is r . rezasle

Cnlted Ptmi BUH Ccrrrtpondent•m# conJtrenco of th« b lj th ree

iarelgn mlnlilen Khcdulcd to s ia r t la Moaeow ne« Bauirdny liru on Unport&nca l u berond lU dl3ca‘;^Ion oi tha Rtomlo bomb.

Atomlfl enerKT Ls, of couna th e moit Important topic In Uio world prtsent, but ttio Uirea mlnliicr.i n not empowered to reach atiy blndint; decUlon on 11. Tlie Uc.n they do Ij to eicluinito vicM.

B; onnuuncing Unit the atomic bomb U onn ol the mnln purpo.^c.'i of the meeting, the United SLnte.v. □rest Britain and Rosjla presented a pliiiLilblc exciuc tor not IneludliiK Fraicc and Chinn In a InrKcr fc.'Jlon of the big live.

DlspcII Biuplclon'Die real purpose Is to dispell sii:.-

plclon cunonj Uie UIr tlircc, not only resordliiK the atomic l)omb, but on more lininpillnte problems of postwar adJiL'tmcnt. DccL lonj on Interna­tional control of ntomic energy nnd the sharing ot lu accret-i will require more coiifiTcncw llian Die present one, with coini)lete nuiii'mcnt nmoiiK the iirliiriple |ii>wcr:i iiocv.Mry be­fore the Uiilli'il Natlua'i ori-Miilrnllon can tiUvC Qvfr.

Mcan-Alilli:, ctic ur,;ciil n vl■.^ lIy

P o t

S h o t s

OLD OAO WOHKBD ear Pot 8hou:

I undcrjuind It <•and Uie bet wiu A couple of our

Kot t

I done on >n hands c rn about ;r; one said It (Old It would.

jnrcllnc of tlic Uiiltiil Niitlnii

UNO U nnt ciiipow('f<‘(i tiy lia chnrtc-r to make the pi'iicc. Ijut [o cnforc ftfler It Im.? been made.

Arree on Trocedurr Trocediire for laying down the

peace iiiiL'.L first be .-igreed upoii by the United St.Mu, Uu.v.Ia and O renl Britain before any progtcr.i made. They are the dominant powers, nnd Ihelr direct lnterc» cover nlmo.1t every corner of ihe earth. In contrast to nil the whose spherea are limited.

The MOKOW conlereiice h povlbllltlcs, and It Is n1ino.il that tlie three mlnbters will do Uielr be.’t to offMt the unfottunate psy­chological effect ot the failure of the council of five In London •Brea on nnythlng.

Reaction among the otJirr natloiu to announcement of the Mo,scow meeting ha.i not been entirely favorable, the attitude Aerms t one of hope, for It Li generally recognteed that U the war-tlmc cooperation among tJie blK three l.i to vanWi. llie UNO Li an empty testure.

t \ ’en France, which might have been expected to object sirongly to tha limited meeting, has taken it with calm- yoreljn Minister Oeorges BIdault merely pointed out In » •peech on Sunday that m n c a doesa no t expcct any final decisions readied a t iJoscow. and In any event, will not feel bound by any­thing decided there which a.ffecta Prance. He Intimated, incidentally, th a t Pranea his an Interest In every­thing thn t concenu the luturo world atmcture.

wouldn't work Hc;mlt, 110 wii..

Came a certain local gathering (I on 't Identify H (uriher for Icar of

.itepplng on somebody's toe.i>.going well when sLidtlenly bettor 1 came da-'lilng In from another

"Anybody . . .n the

'Hirce Kuya palled out IjotUes, Bat- ir No. I grabbed tlie neareit. And

look a good long ' ' '"Tliankj,'' jiald he. "It jure makes

le wooiy to pco > woman /alnt.’ Bettor No. 2. they t«U ma, forked

acroaa the 110 while the stupefied bottle-owners gawked.

—Downtewner

ANHWER6 Oil ABE TIIEVT

I'm no mntliciiiiitlclun but I'd <ay the niiawpr to Uiat gralna of wheat on a cliecKsrboMd problem would be somewhere around 80.000 husheli.

—Norlhilde 1‘uuler

:^c;ir Pol Bhota:Where does that guy get thnt

:hcc(ccrboar<i purple whereby you double the grains ot 'It kernels of corn?) on tha squares from 1 up to «41 Tliey not only -.vouldn't fit on tha checkerboard but they wouldn’t fit in your hoaie, either.

—Cat.ilan

Weed Poison Not So Good

In Idaho UseMOSCOW. Dec. 13 W - Idaho

fBrmers who hoped iot t quick, su: nnd economlcnl weed killer wl have to wait, Lambert Erickson an O. I. Seeley, weed apeclalliiti of th University of Idalio. itld today.

Tha aupposedly rovoluUonary 2- D hormone, which h»d been to sat-; lafoctory In other »eclIons, has not been too satisfactory In killing all types of weedl In Idaho, the s|>e cUllst «nld.

•'Wo arc not ready to cast ou the old catnblL'hcd mctliodi of wce< control and must con.<ldtr 2-4, E aa n auppleinrnt to tlie old proce­dure ImitcBd ot a repUcement.' Qceley explained.

In only one liutancc—a treat- ent of Canada thtstle In Owyhee luniy—under very iinuiual moU-

luro and Mil conditions did th* reaults look like a complete kill, ha added.

Erlck-ion said he was not iur« wh«t benefm could come from « r«- Bppllcatlon of the chemical to no*, loiw weecl/i.

"Oordcnm lioiilil beware apraylnr Rnrrirn plots with chemical for the purpose of kllllnj

srrtin .lome appllcatloai

AUies to Finance Imports in Economic Policy for Germany

WA8HINQTON, Dec, 13 C/TV-The »Ut« departm ent today announced bro.id BcaJe economic policy tor aerraany w hich calls on (tie UnlU- austc-1 a n d other allied powen to Ilnance a proffrnm ot German Imports

' jtean.6uch a id wUl be ntcesssry „

"prevent disease and unrest” In tha ahattered nation, the d e p a n r r" ’ said. T h ere was no ettlmale ofamount o f money Involved In

roposed financial aid, bu t It rlicved th e American ahare ralfht m Into hundreds of millions.The policy aUtement forecasts

great hardsh ip In Germany this winter, b u t calla (or ita rtlnz a alow recovery In the spring. I t Is aimed a t gettlnK aermnny back on Its own feet economically nnd Indus­trially li> lOia,

Tlila m eans what official! here called a "delayed process of reeon- atnicllon" In the rtlch to jive head s ta r t on postwar recovery the E uropean neighbor* th a t Ger­many once o\:rrnn.

Under the American plan, the German standard nf llvlnB In 1918 would n o t be allowed to exce«d that

le M>il t:s four

— Tommy

ItECNION AND SHOES case you didn't know, Johnny

Schultr, quarterhnck for the Bri footballers In 103j and 1034, ? among the Wnko prUoncrs rescued from the Jnjis. Incidentally worked under Bud Klmca a t W

enmmy etcwurt didn’t know Jolinny had been rescued un few weeks ago, Jiut before *ho« ra­tioning ended. Sam got a phona cnll. •'Tills Li Johnny echull2,"

voice. "No," said Sammy.Mid the voice. "Have you got a i stamp?" ' Sure," said 8am. "Let havo It," sntrt Uie voice. -'The i pair ot shoes I ’ve got Is a pair navy guvB me."

Sammy dug up the sta Johnny jo t the ^hof.1-an d weni to Boise In shiny fooiwenr to n the four-year-old son he’d ni

Deadline on Red Tokens Extended

BOISE. Dec, 12 (-D—A5i aiteailon of lime has been given retailers for surrendering of red mllon tokens. Walter Dlefcndorg, district OPA rn- Uonlng executive, cald today. Tlio time liai been set at Jan. S, IS40.

Dletendorf also said thnt tlon banks will have until Jan.In which to tlilp out the collected tokens to r reproceislng.

N«w* aUbllih*) II'ubliilitd <*Ilr tn<l 8un<!ii7 at II

SKond StIMt WhL T>la Falk. Ii^ho. tUi* T1rna-N«*» r»b:i.lil«f

CARTOO.N' TAN NOW Dear PoU:

Wliy stop tho cartoon? I learned and remembered more trom it than from all tha rest of the paper.

—A Reader, rieabo

■-.."sL'J...-.closet noin Christmas! . . ."

TOE GENTLEMAN IN n i E T iunn r ow

Arrives in StatesJEROME, Dec. 13 — M/Sgt. Carl

Nlms, son of Mrs. Anna Nlm.i, Je- n telephoned hLi mother thL-

week telling her ot hLi arrivnl Ir.states. He has been In service

four years, two of which he spent over.-ieaa with the lOih weather Rqundron on tho Afrlcsn Gold coa.it, the Pcralan-Arablan gulfs, Pale.itlne anti Cairo, Egypt. He will »rrlve about Dec, JO a t flan Prancl-ico whare ha will be Joined by his sLj- ter. Mrs. Jana Nlmj Prescott, and hl4 mother.

Castleford Couple Buys Buhl Grocery

DUIIL, Dcc. 13-.Mr. nnd Mrs. Lyle W ortlilngtoti. Cn.illeford, hnve chn.'.cd the Tlintchcr grocery nnd .lervlco station on tho 01o « r road com er near Buhl. Worthing­ton recently received his honorable discharge nfter tlirre yean In tha army, w ith one year spent In Oer- ninny. M rs. Worthington taught In Wlllowdnlc nnd Cnalleford during hLi absence. Tlie plans ot Mr.Mrs. Charles Thatelier. toTmer c

re Indefinite a t prrieiit.

“Dead” Heroes Back in Japan

TOKYO. Dec. 13 (-?) - Mora than 41,000 Japanese soldiers whckie nnme* a r • enshrined among nippon’i heroic war dead nre coming home to n.Monlshed tnmlllM.

They were »uppo;.ed lo have given thi'lr llvr.i Klorlniuly for the cinpcnir In baiiznl charges. Tlielr drath.i hnd bicn ol/lclully announced by Imporlnl head­quarter?.

Among them was a unit of 500 men th a t Imjwrlal headquar­ters •'confirmed" gave their lives for the rmpcror on two Jlina. The entire 500 returned alive.

The Jnpane.if dcmobllllatlon mlnL'.tr>- li baiy restoring the.ie men to irgal life. Members ot the diet ore demanding a full ex- plnnntlon of Iidw they were er­roneously reported dead.

Senate Okays Federal Aid Hospitid Plan

WASHINGTON. Doc. 12 (/?) — A te<lerftl iilcl ho.'ipltal proRrnin ex­pected to provide 1700.000.000 In cuiiflructloii during the next live years won ss'nnti- approval today

voice vole. Tlie mrasura now o th u hou.sc.

. . rovnl CAine after Uie senate rejected n long series of amend­ments offered by Seas. Murray, D,, Mont.. a n d Wagner, D, N. V.. which they said would bring the bill Into ‘ nc w ith President Trum an’s i

■nt conHrcaslonal message for ntlonnl health program.Bcn-x H ill, D, Ala., and Taft, R..

0., teamed up to defeat the Mur- -W n^ner propo.inh, which they J would tend to remove propi le direction and control ot tl

program.

of Its IMropoan neighbors.neither would the ex-enemy __ ,U7 b« rsduced. officials tm;diaslzed. “to a na tion of forcsten and goat- hard*.” G erm an Industry wotild be sharply restricted to mlntauni paacaitma needs a t the outset.

Secretary of State Dyme» I aecompanytaK announcement nld the policy declaration had been fonvarded to U.ilted State.i occu­pation authorltle.i in the American » n e of w estern Qenimny and also to the govemment.1 ot nuasla, Brit­ain nnd Prance , the other occupy- Ing powers. The tour natloris nrt supposed to work out by Feb. 2 IMO. their flnnl progriun for tJi< removal of induitrlal equipment from G erm nny as reparations.

H ie stnto (lopartxnent declarnUon the flr.1t formal interpretation by

any . - • .....................

upon nt th e Potsdam conference last August. The announced objec­tive was nnd Is to disarm Germany Industrially and leave her a t Icut as veak ns nelgiibnrlng eountrlei.

The fltnt^ment dirt not say whetli • tile proposed tlnnnclnl aid woiilc

Involve a report to congress foi funds. The U. 6. nrmy ha.i beer using some of Its fimiLi to finance shipments o f wheat Into Germany bat after th e control of Germany Is placed In civilian hands the ; ey prc.iumably would have to frctr- some other ogcncy.

Increase in Farm Labor Funds Asked

WAfJHING’TON. Dec. 12 (/P)— Colorado senators will a«k tho ten- a lt appropriations commlttta t< double the am ount of monty ap­proved by tho hou*« for Importation ‘ fsm labor In 1940.Senators Johnson. D.. Colo,

and Mllllken. Colo., told a re­porter today they would request an appropriation of $38,000,000. Tha amount authorized by the house in Its puingc of tho deficiency tppro« prlatlon bUl was 114,000,000.

Johnson said It la eatlmatcd ___x>ut 75,000 Imported workers will

bo needed, of wlUch about 7.500 could be uied In Colorndo, mainly Ir gar beet fields.

Both senutors also &tld thoy wtll protest any move by tho commltteo to re.'itore an original provUloa ol the deficiency bill to p tn n lt the secretary ot BgrlcuUtire lo lery c.nanes against fanner* using im­ported workers In o rder to help dc- frw costs of recruitm ent. ’This pro­vision was eliminated on the floor ot the houAc. Johnson said he had hesrd thnt attem pts m ight be made in the senate committee to restore

-SMITH-ROOFING COMPANY'Always lh» B est for Leo'

Plsc* A dranca Orders Now2»S W. A D D ISO N , Pho. 147

Rupert Man Honored By National Group

MOSCOW. Deo. U W>-DUUa- gulahed service certlflc»t«s of Ui< Natlonsl Association of County Agrl'cultural A ------UcAJexani ., .Dalgh, Rupert.

awards were m ad e a t the a&soclatlon'a annual convention non In piofreH a t Chicago b u t the twc ext4niIon agtnts were unnble to at- lead, and thiu had to receive the awards In absentia.

UoAltxander has been agent ol the "Worth Idaho distric t since No- vember.« 19U, and form erly waj county agent of ta ta h a n d Benewah eountlts.

Diljh Is extension a g en t for Mini­doka county.

Bus Agent AppointedBUHL. Dec. I J - * * LtoeMffln.

TraiUwayi, t i the local i the Ptelflo BolAka bus route «t«n week. ‘Hi* BheU oil itaUon oi

la local depot for th e n n r

ikmmm

. . . TOPS FOR QUALITY. PepttCaUt Comp<sny. Lon} Uland Cilt/, N. Y.

frnnchiied B ctile r: PipsUCola U ottlhg Co., of Ticin Fallt

Two Courses AddednUHL, Drr. 12 - Mrs. Norma

Broft-n will be the director ot new a n course laititutecl In Buhl Jun ior hirh sclioal. Entirely ■•oliintary. about ninety percent ' he stuilcnt.i rc.spoiided to th e com r. Tnrranco llcirvcy li Instructor Jie nc'w hntidicraft course of the Jiinliir hlKh, InMltuted a t the sami

Ci-catlvi- orlRlnallty, with eni- pli:i.il.i on the tiindamentnLi of de.

nnd color will bo given «pecUl tl'^'i Jn the hnndlcraft cU'ses.

EnUNd u Ir«in. I'l.ho. ot

4 pMwrflf* la Twio

SUD8CRIPTI0N BATM T CABRlKtl-PATUILB IN ADVAKCB

nr Ih, ,..t_

:r tersosnbl

All ustlro rrjulrvl br law «r br artrrptiblbhad WMklT will b« publU T>ior«l4r biu* of <hi< rifir c 6«cUeB IS-IOS I.aA. ItSI u 1, ta br n>t>Ur ISI. liti Smlc:

KATIONAt. nr.PREanVTATlVEJ

NewCOPPER

CORESM yoor radiator ta "SHOT- •Qd beyond repair, let u* tn- »t«a B new copper core. Then jo a t e a r will perform a t peak cffltiJency and you con forget nuJIator irooUal

HARRISRadiator Shopi n te d Ara. B. PboM U1

THE BIBLEThe R«T. n . O. MeCalllilfr

Dec. 13—Oalatlnns »-"Be not iJe- celved; Ood Is not mocked: for whataoever a man soweth. tha t shall he also reap, ro r he thst sowmh to his flesh shall of the fleoh reap corruption; but ha thst soweth to th# Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting.-

i r C O lD SRelltra mlseiT direct -without

LnUB^SiVJCKS

TWIN F A L L S ’

% LIONS CLUBPresents

“The Whole Town’s Talking”

W ednesday and Thursday N iRhfs

Dec. 12 and 13 —8:00 p. m.

HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUMTICKETS: On aala at Bav-Mor D n u . J . Hill. Ijafeway (M ain north), KInri, New Central M arket or from any elnb member.

FARMERSRANCHERS

BE SITKE TO ATTEND OUR

“DAVID BRAD LEY”DEMONSTRATION

To be held on ▼acnnt ]ot bnck of our ntore.

THURSDAY, DEC 13th1 to 4 P.M. T h is Week

DEMONSTRATINGThe time and labo r sav lnff atlvantitRcs of a D avld-B m dlcy

MANURE LOADER&ROLL-OVER SCRAPERFALK’S, Selling A gents f o r . . .

Twin Falls Phone 1640

Generai'i new Factory P la n authorizei us to "go tha lim it" to k e « p y o u r p resent tirei running la f e ly . , . g u a ra n te e s you prio rity

d e liv e ry of the N e w G e n e ra l T ire . . . allows you l u l l c r e d i t f o r u n u s e d m ile a g o l

^ I / O U M A Y D R IV E I N T O D A Y a n d place y o u r order for the N e w G eneral T ires you need and be ^ a ro n te e d priority delivery after

ra tio n in g ij discontinued. O ur tire e x p e ru will k eep your present tires o p e ra tin g by th e raoit advanced m e th o d s o f tire maintenance . . . un til y o u r N e tv GeneraU arc delivered.

Fu ttherm ore . . . you -will get f u l l credit for yonr nmued milenRc . . . tow ard the purchase price of y o u r N e w Generali.

Y ou w ill get delivery of the N e w G c o e ra l T ire . . . the new dre already p ro v e d to out-pcrform any tire ever b u i l t . . . a tirt w e ll worth w aiting for.

Com* In and get fAo d * ta U s , . , Come In foday to

m ake sure of getting y o u r N ew OeneraU •a r ly l

9 > » T T u n i o n m o t o r C o .[GENERAL LINCOLN

General's ❖ Steps lo Tire Security

Page 5: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1 2 .194R TIMES-NEWS, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO PA G E JT V B

ByCVA Rapped

Ballot oi Idaho Grange

BOISE. Dec. IJ — e i i hundred emhuiliuUc delegnUa In ftli«TicUue» «l tha a n n u l meeilng of the Id»ho SM1« Orange held in Moscow. D<' ccmber 4. 5 and 8. adopted a resolU' tion opposing pending ••aulhorily' legislation, declaiing th a t Idaho «awr rlghUi represent a sacred herl- tags- In opposing tho CVA leglala- tion the resolution adopted listed the following reasons:

•'We do not wont board ot appointed from w ithout the ...

jjln ro lred to Imvo complete Juriadlc- f r lion and control of o u r water and

othtr resource.1 in our Stale.Wo do not wont any federal

*S(ney so powerful th n t It can nuJ- Illy, or In any way adversely affect our present water righ ts, or ellm- Innla ejbllng federal agencies."

The Grange meeting also adopted a re-iolutlon endorsing the program for the development o f Idaho'i isurces.

Abo the meeting o t the Idaho Farm Dureal federation held In Po­catello on December 3rd and 4th., a TKolutlon was adopted strongly opposing tiie creation of a Columbia Villcy Authority. N. V. Sharp of Filer, President of th e Idaho State Reclunatlon AasoelatlSn. mat with the Farm Bureau and discussed " CVA,

knM of Wajblnstn

ili:Art IUk«r neiri(JijlHIo* U*M

:U iH t r<rk!nii!? lUpplnut

) StorrI rram Tr«p!<^, ^n ti CIisi CiUllns

:S E ; ' ; : ;

cn tb« iclieduln.Th. flnt, Sondir oa A.BC «t 1..........

m.. ii iha nmiionil football iMcni pro> fr»lor.il th,rortnniMp

unlir Is IK* yr*r, Dm. tt. ilat«l for II id p. n, hr MBS. 11 UkM plae* »t Kont-

l>uUn{, Ugat or eliirnrlii

«:1S E»tl Godwin! a CurUln* ’0“ f*' l*tlO p.

CASHPAID

For d<ad and osckssI HORSES - COWS

win alao pick np h e n M t

PHONE US COLLECT Tirto Fans SU

GM4ln( <7—Sspert S5

I Idaho Hide & Tallow Co.

We H ave Selected the Complete Line of

General ElectricEQUIPMENT

Now, became General Electt'ic has EVERYTH IN G electri­cal for the home, is known world-wide fo r its reliability, and guarantees eveiy item it manufactures, we can serve Magic yalley better than ever, before!

ELECTRICITY'S GREATEST TRADE MARK

With the complete G eneral Electric line, wa are now in p o s i t io n to proviiiu our patrons w ith cverythiriK in cloclricnl e q u ip m e n t from curlinn iron.s to 100-ton ice mnchiiicH, room fans to com m erc ia l a ir coiuiitiuiiiiitf, electric motor.s from l/2 0 th h. p. to 600 h. p . T h e v a s t cnginccriiiR- resource.s o f G eneral Electric will be n t our d isp o sa l to a.s.si.st you in every e lec trica l, refrigeration and nir cond ition ing p rob ­lem, from the sm alle.st to th e Inrge.st commcrcini in sta lla tions. N ever befnrc has such a com plete electrical equipment .sorvice been a ffo rd e d the people of south ccn tra l Idaho.

“ ome /ifij&Ceeutcea,!-s _ _

fLAm/IIEIROHER UECTRIC SIKX CLOTHES DRYER IIIItfE fREEZERE1ECI8IC WASBEK

H ere is but r p a rtia l l i s t o f th e many G-E homo appliances t h n t w ill be available a t D etw eile rs : RefrigerntorB, a aizc for every n e e d ranges, a model for ev e ry p u rse . . . w ater hentcra . . . hom e frcczeV a . . . home laundry e q u ip m en t including conventional w a'3hers, a u to ­m atic wnshcrH, clothes d ry e rs , f la t plate and rptury ironcrs . . , e lec tr ic blanket.s. . . e lectric s in k s equipped w ith dishwnshers and d isp o sa ls . . . •steel cabinets . . . rad io s rnnffing from consolo phonoffraph co m b in a ­tions to small table m odels . . . roasters . . . toasters . . . w a ff le iro n s . . . electric fans . . . iro n s . . . grills . . . heaters . . . coffce m a k e rs . While all these appliniices a re no t yet in stock, we will have th e m as soon ns they become availab le . We’ll be glad to pnt your nam e on o u r preference list. D eliveries w ill be made in the order in w h ich th e y are received.

ForChrist77tas

Give a G-E g i f t card for

Christma.s. We w ill deliver the

Item you se lec t aa soon as it

arrives. Tlie an tic ip a tio n of

receiving som e outstanding

G-E appliance w ill ' be a real

Christmas th r il l . G if t cards

available a t o u r s to re .

Tune in on I h c G -E H o u r of

C harm E verj* S u n d a y E ven-

Fluomcent and Incandescent Lighting for Home, Office and Store — Wiring and Motor Repairing,

Commercial Refrigeration, Comprcasora, Forced Air Cooling, Gravity Evaporatora, Cold Storage Pianta.

Heating and Summer and Winter Air Conditioning, Oil Fur- nacea and Boiiera.

Store Equipment, Display Caaea and Boxea.

Buy Equipment Where You Can Get Service!

DETWEILERS"Everything to M ake Living More Pleasant"

I ■•'lock o f „ " ' “ W n , “ '■‘m tn l / m a t e s f o r sU , " '" '’' ' t e j

I fulfil) «nd tvfii ^ to

Page 6: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

Farm Policy Asks for Full

ProductionsBr WILLIAM J . CO^^VAY

CHICAGO, DfC. 12 (-r/—AkHciiI- tuml economists wlio nnnljicd the imllon's /srm price policy came up with Iheso Ideas:

1. Ftill production is rtfslrnblr.2. Prices (ihotild be more Hexlblf. a. Tlic present pa rity formuls L?

outmnded. ' i. Tlic coiuito' ns fi v.-Mole slioiiM

t>e kept In (inch n healthy economic condition thiit liciivy coiirmmpt will ii.wire good prices fnr In

S. It ncrlcultiirnl Incomc falls be­low n fair stnndiirrt, Rovernmpiit paviiiriits should make up tlir di-Il- rlt tn Uinl continued prodiiellcn of needed food and fiber will 1 rrunrdrd.

Tlin’c were the prcclomlnnnl Mrs exprr.''cd by 10 ogrlcullurnl oeotK inlMs who won *12,500 In p rlje i 1 R cmilpst spon-snrcd by the Aiiier: can F.imi lio iiom lc ii5v)cliitlm Tliclr articles were i>ublbhed In th orRsnUitlon's JnurilAl .-ifter til JiiriRes liad eonsldercd

TIMES-NEWS, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO

ri by 3

hcaildepirlinrrIllliioL'

Twill FaUs Soldier Helps to Plan GI Ski Center in Japannf *VI(*'Cr 1«n'» y*nnrir *v1 */\ ^U ne of jltlhig Isn’l confined to

Mnglc Vfilley nor America—occupa- lion troops In Japan ore planning a ski tow and lodRc near T akam atou lake on Iw.i nioiintatn, Sst. Wllllnm F. HnrtfeWcr, T«!n FnlLs, ^iTlte.i hU .asler, Mrs, Mnrvln Mnttlile-son, roato three.

A former ski patrolm an n t Su Viilley, firrRfant U artfcldcr wi iitnciin the American personnel wl: rxamtJied the natural features and

•ather eoiiilltloiis preparatory to tilii,< iip/kl <i|iil|>iiient In tlie rc - jn of KeiHlal tin Homhii Island.

The actlviiy b (le,-,crlhcd In a Ja p - r. e InngiiaKc newspaper find th e •Hire shown here b aL'.o p rinted Ihn [Mivf whlOi KerRcnnt H ar t-

(ler sent hb ,«l«ter.In i>reslo!is leilers rccelvcd by •s Mntlhtr.'oii, the /-.kler descrlbrd - renlon ns ’'n ie Bun Valley of

ttealhcr on' e main L'iland group

n ie pri.w u lniirrs wrrr nlmoit iin;inlmoiu In piitllnK the "oul- modnl” Inhel on th-- p.'xrliy formula —price forniiiln (leslpncij lo glee fiirmtrs the purrhnslntr poaer they had In the 1010-H period. If parity is lo t)c used ixji a Rtnndnrd. they cnnl(nded. the form ula should be chanced to bring 11 up to dale.

In ndvocatlng g rea ter 0?xlblUty In prlers, they asserted prices thnt are loo rigid restrict consumption If they nre fixed too h ig h for many ivilemlnl buyers, and slow down .••hlft.i In production am ong varlcuu farm products If fan n e rs cnnccn- trnte on growing h ighe r priced; crops.

Boms of the experts rURKCStctl tha t ftlce.? be allowed seek their OTi-n level, while other ntcp-. shniilrt be taken to keep the national come on a prosperous plane, thus mslnliln stronc markeUs. Thi Bovemment, they added, shoul make i)p the difference If farm pricf or farm Incomes dropped below reasonable level.

Youth Attends 56 Schools in

Past 10 Years

Gunner for Army Given Discharge

Whltis . W hitaker,

Falls, was released from am iy duty, Nov. 11, Ho cd with G eneral Fallon 's a rm y as first KUiincr d u r ­ing the d r i v e through cen tral Europe and th e Rhineland niid on

) G erm any for surrender. His

wife met him In City.

sKEn route homethey vl.-.llod relA-

I>iwney. T lvy have two IJonnld Jr., 3, and Velma

Sgi. Wllllim F. Ilartretiler, a t rlfbt holdint kl pstet. and tiro of hU expert tk> comrmdra of the lltb nlrbornr dlTliIon ire shown here mapping lorallon of the ikl low and lodge L’. H. eectipatlon lroop« will set up on Iwa moun­tain for a "fit Hun Valley" oil Honshu Inland nt Jipan, iKtaff

Business in Depression, General Says

CLEVELAND, Dec, 12 <^'/-Busl- ncM Is now entering a primary post­w ar deprcijlon, Brlj.-aen. Leonard P, Ayrea declared today.

"We do not ea.slly think of pres­en t conditions ns eoaitltullng de­pression becau.'< Uitre arc still many evidences of mnterlal prooper- Ity," Uie economist aniT vice-presi­den t of the Cleveland T nut com­pany declared In hLi annual ad- dreis prepared for delivery before the Cleveland Chamber of Com'

"Neverlheler-s ne are technically enlerlnir deprewlon bccaibc unem­ployment Is Inr- wine, production Is declining and nallonil income la falling. At pre.sent the.se condltloiu are not at alt alnmitng. After i ery great *ar there Ij a period depression which muslly colncldcs ' timing with the Iraiultlon from

■ ar economy to a pencctUnc omy. ThL-i one will lajt until our na­tional Incomc stops lalllng and be- Rln.s lo Incren.'-c once more."

"That change will in all probahll- »:• take plnco In lOiO. and perhaps a.', early as the middle of the year," the retired nmiy ofdrer predicted.

READ TIMES-NEW8 WANT ADS

DPIIL, E>ee, 12—Zedlc Dradcn. 15, son of Mr, and Mrs. M . Z. Draden, a tenth grade s tuden t In high school, enrolled In tlie Buhl high school recently and thereby hangi a tale. . . I t waa the SOtli school which he has enrolled In 10 yei of schooling.

His father li chief of a party of three men now wotklnB In tl making a geodetic control along the Snako river a n d h engaged In such work fo r the U. B, engineers for 3t) years. H e lias w ed In every state In th e union the family travels w ith complete traller-housckccptng facilities.

The Juney here Is being nit conjunction with mapplnR activities and an air photo mapplnK follow the pre.sent one here. The Bradens are visiting M r. Braden's sister, Mrs. Claude K aelln and fnni- lly. while here.

Scout Leader Talks To Buhl R otarians

BUHU Dee. 1 3 -K crbcrt West. Scout executive for the Snake river area, talked to the B u h l notary group at thslr regular meeting thU week on-various phaaea o r Scouting. Stewart Clelen, new local Scoutmas­ter. also mads a few remark.?. Dr. John Wurster presented J . J, Bren- nen wltli a fountain pen In behalf of the Rotary club, as a token of their appreciation for his work with the Rotary troop of Boy Scouts.

Boyd nolfe. of the F irs t National Bank, «-as received as n new mcm-

• ber and given the obligation.

Funeral Held for Jerome Resident

JEnOMK, Dec 11! - FiincrnIice.' for Frnncb Alvin Dluiu ___held MniKlAy at the Wiley funeral cliiipcl. at a p. ni. BUhop A. Leo O l­sen, of the flr.n wnrd, LD3 church officiated. Burial was In Jerom e cemetery, under direction of Wiley funeral home.

Dor,T D.ivLs and Iona Minor, companleil hy Laura Tliuc.wn, nlshcci nni.slc. Speaker;! were D Hendry nnri Dbhnp Olion. D. K . Hendry offcre<l benediction.

Pallbearers were Albert Baicm an. Ivan Ualcman, -Alphonro B atem an. Iy e Conklin, Klby Shiirtz and Elvln llackworth. The grave was dedi­cated by Bbhop OL?cn.

Production Head fo r Red Cross Selected

JEROME. Dec, 12 - Mrs. C. P . Smith, Jerome, has been appointed Red Crcky production chalrmcui for the local Red Ciuir. chaptcr, U w.-is announced this week by ci. chairman L. W, Grevlng.

Mr*. Smith sueeecds Mrs.Arndt, who serve<l the piwt During Mr.i. Amdf.s j.crvlce, there vere completed " bedside b.icr..

325 a V hou.'cfilled kit bae?, 300 palr.s hospital .''hoe.', 35 men's pajatnn,*, 1, 0 navy hoiL'«wlvt% 33« »,v.hclotlv,s, 15 raonlB Jnjkel.v and many nth

Quota was much

MADE IN niAHO FALLS

VICKKRS & M.ADRONU5 M.MN E.

or PHONE DJIM or 1083J

Idaho Man Given Legion of Merit For Achievement

HEAEK^UARTEna PAR EAST A m FORCES, Manila, Dec. 12- Perry a . Nelson, of the counterin- '■ 'llgence corps, has been awarded

' legion of merit »t Ksr East air Xorces headquarters for exccptlonilly m entorloua conduct In the perform- ane« of outstanding fer\lces. The presentation was made by Urlg,-i“ D onald R. Hutchln.son, elilef of a

an impressive ceremony held recently.

Nelson b from Id;iho. HL' \ H elen (Llndsayi NcL'on, and .’ames, Uve in Mo.'.co*-. He L

M n. licit A. Net'.on,

WEDNESDAY, D EC. 12. 1945

6 Japs to Die For Killing

U. S. Aii-menK W A JA t£lN . Marshall Islands

Dec. 12 (;P) — A United SUtes mlU-' t.iry commission yesterday loujid six Japanese officers guilty of the de- cap itation of five American airmen on th e island of Mill In Febniory 1041. and sentenced them to b« hanged.

Two defendanu were sentenced ta life Imprisonment for Ihelr part hi the a trocity and two others given .sentences of 20 years each in prison.

The time and place of the tlons were not set as the cas miwt be reviewed by a higher authority.

Japancic_£howed no emollon

NEL30N ICOn.SEN

EX-INSTItUCTOil IS HOME JEROME, Dec. 1 A former In

struc tor In the U. -S. nrmy's educs tlona l program. In Munich, Qer m any, former .S Sgt IVed Jacob- acn . 33. aon of Mr mid Mrs. John JncoUicn. pioneer r Filer. Is home.

Jacob.sen will leav Boise where he will o f anJcs manager of the lloLsc Scara Iloebuck store. He w.is Krndiiated from Jerome high ;,chool

Going oversexs in January 1D13, Jttcohsen .'.crvcd In Ihc Normandy, no rthern Francc, Ardennes, Rhine­la n d and central Germany cam- palgru. He first entered service In O ctober 10« and received training

Camp Kohler, Sacramento, Cai ; , C am p Crowder. Mo„ and Fort Jack-

'n. a C.He served

slKnal r e p a ir .........Thatiksi^lvlng day harbor andharged Nov. .............

form er Elsie O.'iterlnh. l^kln Falls, d au ghter of Mrs. Gc.irhardt Oater- iDh, route two, T*ln FalLi.

of the commission, read the verdict Tlie Japanese were charged with

rounding up the five airmen, whose bomber had crashed on Mill atoU and beheading them in «cparate ex- ccutlon.1. Tlie defense pleaded that the officers were carrying out or- dcr.i from higher authority.

Among tha^e scntcnccd to die are 54-ycar-old Col. ChLiato OlshI, senior arm y officer on Mill, who ad­m itted he ordered the bchcadlnj of three of the filers,

TJio name-1 of the executed airmen never were mada public.

Farm Land Value Increase Noted

WASHINGTON. Dec, 12 Ml - Farm real estate values continued to Increase during tlie four months ended Nov, i moving upward an averase of two per cent.

Tills Incrrane. reported In a state- mcnt of Uio bureau on agricultur­al economics today, brings the Unit­ed S tates Index based on 1913-igi- valuca to J33 -n rlso of 11 per eeni from November, ID«. and 60 pei

• above 1C35-3J.

Ex-Hunt Doctor Blamed in Death

EEATTLE. Dec. 13 HV-Dr. James Munosawa. Japanese physician who relumed to Seattle last May from the Hunt. Ida., relocation center. Is in custody on an open charge Ir connecUon w ith a police Investi­gation of Uie Dec. 3 death of Beulali Le Clair, 18, of Shelton.

Detectlvc Capt. Richard P. Ma­honey said th e King county autopsy aurgeon attribu ted 'the girl's death

an attem pted abortion.Mahoney says ho has a signed

statement from M tnoaaw a uyloE he had perfonned an operatloa on the girl.

Oarllc U Indlsciw us In soulhwest Siberia. From th e earliest time gar­lic has been tued a a food.

Evening S te a k Dinners Fried accardlnr to jo a r direc­tions. We're open exery day and nliht except Mondays.

MODEL CAFEI t l Sboahone &1. Weat

Now all girls can have ^ i adorable curls and w aveT

CHILDREN'S HAIR NEEDS SPECIAL CARE Get yo«r doughler YOUNG SET, lfi« cold wove pormartont specifically mode for children's finely fextured hair. So eaiy . . . tokos iirtf a few mlnules fo do. Rerrvov© euHerj in 2 to 3 boun. . . end lo, hoauliful bovndng curls and waves thot do not re­quire nightly plnnlng-upl Rerrembor- don'f use on adull preporolion—imijl on

"YOUIfG SET'!COLD WAVE

PERM ANENTu f M l a O t f m a tU ^ ^ B t a t S

SAV-MOR DRUGOPPOSITE ORPHEUM TH EA TER

honorably

SPEEDFIR KINKI)BUHL, Dec. 12-Georsr niclwoii

W apato. Wash., wn.i arre.-itrfl by r lice Chief Hal CiinnlnRhani ... chnrgcs of rxc^rtllnR ttii- .ipted llmll 1)11 lower Broadway. Coming lie- fore City Judge Uernard SUirr r

f (lay. : th e offense.

SCHOOL PI,ANDUHL, Dec. U--

Uie Junior high H an-cy. announces h igh school will prM ob-icrvancr program

^ N e e d a T a x i ?

Phoate

511 1 0 0 0l | ♦♦♦ F or Proitipt, C ourlcnusY

Y 24-HOUR SERVICE *\*

I Checker f I Cab Co. I

FAMOUS IDAHO

BAKERS• Washed • Hand-Selected

• Specially Sized.Sent to any city in the U. S. — Rxprcs.s

ChnrRcs PrepaiiJ

10 Pountls 15 Pounris .30 Pounds

Utah-ldaho-Calif.-Nevada-Oregon

FORD TRANSFERWrite. Wire or Phon

2 2 7

$ £ . 5 0 $ 2 -0 0 $ ^ .® 0PHONE OR MAIL YOUR ORD ERS TO

E. S. HARPER CO.Phone 2203 Twin Falls, Idaho B ox 992

FULLY INSUKED CARRIKRS. SKILLED EFFICIENT MOVERS \« I0

ARE MO.ST CAREFUL. MOVING. PACKING, STORAGE AT MW COST.

U'e Connect With Vfcn Service Anywhere In Amerlfi

Harm, m m forlable sllpperv-lhe |ll( th it will b rinf la sdns Joy to every member of the family. HVve & vide oUDrtment of T u n lr a - for the klddlM, “Comfy*- for dad »nrt mother. •T re tlleV for >1> and "Knwk. •boulV for brother. Make your seletclon U,. day.

r$169 to $595

f f u d u m - C t o f k‘‘Footwear f o r th e Entire

Christmas together...Have a Coca-Cola

. . . welcoming a fighting man home from the w a nHome at la s t. . . to wife, to child and family. With Christmas in the air. AH the dreams of a lifetime rolled into one momcfit. A t such a time Coca-Cola 6ta right into the picture— the familiar, friendly inv i' tation Have a Co\e adds the rcfrcsliing touch. A happy moment ia an occasion for Coke—and the /viujc that refreshes.

lOmiO tlMDU AUTHOIITY OP THI COCA-COtA COB ART »»

T W I N F A L L S C O C A - C O L A B O T T L I N G C O M P A N Y

* H m Morion D ow ney K T F I11:30 A. M.*

_ u (bbmlitloB■*Cali«*tr« tS» rtjtiUred ti»da. ^ mttti aUd) ditUsfuiifa tb* (n d , 0 « c t ofTU Ccck-CoU Coau«iv.

Page 7: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

W E D N ESD A Y , DEC. 12,1945

G w y Draft Boai'ds May

Call Youths■WASHINQTON. Dcc. 12 m - T h s

war tltp arta ien i iald today locil clvtllnn ngciicle.1 similar lo d rill bonrda would select young men W undergo a year's compubory miliury Irslnlng 1( a law for Lhai putdom la pawea.

Tlio dcparlm enl eraptmltcd UiBt the irn lnc fs would nol be considered as being 0 p i n of Uie srmy and would n o t bo iub jecl lo aciual duty w ithout *peclal outhorlrftUon of congrcss.

I army prtvaUm onth, whereai BcLi (SO.

Tlie arm y’£ plana were outlined by four m ajor generals lo Ujb house mUltary commlLlce ns It neared tha end of hearings on a pe.icetlmo training bill.

Tlio generals proposed lh a t tho anny tra in 700,000 annually and tho navy 200.000. They estimated HO.OOO to 240,000 would bo rejected yearly although physical standards would be lower than they have been for draftees.

Men 10 through 20 would bo sub- Jcci to training. The year of train­ing norm ally would begin at 18 un> less a boy had not then finished high nchool. In which case ho could wall u n til ho graduated. A boy of 17 who h a d finished high school could .-itart training then ent-1 consented.

TIMES-KEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO PAGEBETOJ:

Here’s Husky War Trophy

Funeral Held for Gooding Resident

GCX>DrNO. Dee. 12 - runeral services fo r W aller C, Perry conducted n t the Thompson chnpcl wlih tho Rev. N. S. Anderson of tho Gooding BnptUL church offici­ating, Music wna provided by Mr*. Otto Joslln.

Born April 21, 1881, a l Evansville. Ind., Mr. Perry died Saturday. Dec. B. lit the home of his brother, GeorRe Pero- Surviving arc one son, 6/Egt. OeorRe F . Perry, n patient In a h03i)ltftl a t SprlnRflcld, Mo.; two sisters, M rs. B nm a BurrU, F^ieblo. Colo, and M attlo A. Knight, Good Inu, iil.so ono granddaughter, Wyndu Perry, La Cro.^e Wls., a* well a ' brother In Qoodlng-

Pallbcarcra were Nell WarrlnKtor Paul Brownlee, W alt Bonnlng, bert Meyer. E. L. Cramblnt nnd Knlph!. Burial was In Elmuooi

Man Uninjured As Engine Hits AutoBUHU Dcc. 12—Glen Stroud

taped Injury here a t 8:30 p. yesterday when Uie car he ... . driving wns stnick by a locomotive a t the Union Pacific railroad cross­ing a t Broadway, Clyde Pryor, miU’.Uial. reported.

Stroud'.-i car. a fte r being struck by t h e locomotive, w a s swung about and glass broken in a door.

Couple to Be HonoredBUIIL. Doc. 12—Mr, and M n.

Stellii Wood. Who have been called to iriiRland to nn LDS mission, will he honored a t Buhl ward LDS Ing house n id a y daughter. Lowent them on th e ir nc'

-I boon

frlend.1akc

........ Their\ will accompany

cw as.'ilgiunfnt- The active In boUi wartl

here and Uielr Ki to the meeting.

Even Customs Agents Didn’t Bother This War “Souvenir”

Br nOTTIERNobody iht homecoming of LItut. Joseph C. Rj-an,Even ewtoma ornciaij in Kew York kept hands off. Because, among Uils

Teler»n eomUt officers war Eouvenirs. was a large German war dc former ratmber or the Oerman canine corps and a personal guard of aennan colonel.

Lieutenant Byan, commanding a machine-gun platoon, was an offi­cer In the « » d Infantry rfglment.lh« Jftpanew American outfit over- m s , After fUhtlng in Italy with tho fif th anny. under the command of Oeneral Clark, Hyan and his regiment were transferred to the Prench-oeeupled theater in Eepteni- ber 1S««.

Tot the final drive in Italy against the Ocrmans, the «2nd rtjlm en t was ordered back to the Ita lian theater tn March. 1645 It was d u r­ing thU drive lhat Lleulenani n y came ocroai the German war d and decided It would make a coi panlonable pet and guardian.

Be Deeatne Mucot So Tr«U was "liberated', from

tho oppressor and became the mas- >t of tho American n;jiment. Trau Is a German Alsatian wolf

dog or shepherd dog. He Li of rare breed and is •'toi«' for r^rsonal protection. ,.

He was trained by tlio Gcnnnns for w ar duly, and wa.s used for guard service with llic German army. He Li Irnlned to kiiixl: dnwn Ihe enemy rather timn hite lilni. When Trau was llrst c.iptuncl he was reluctant to e»t mid .ml pIcIou.i of Ills newm ajter. Ueuteimnc I?yiu Baid,_However. after Ryan Irarnci a few German word-i so he could commond hlj new compai

friendship developed, hb master command? him li

ind they arc ‘'settlnK fine,” tho officer chuckled.

Had Run of Ship Trau accompanied hu msster nil

. le way from Italy to his home In Tain rails. Ho hnd ihr nin of

the otfnii vrv)nKP and friend of llie snldlem

I machlne-liifanlry and became gun platoon leader,

Reijardlng tho loyally of the Japa­nese American soldier* and their devotion to duty, Ryan said: 'They were among the finest fighting men In Europe and on and off the bat- llcflelds they proved that they are and always have been loynl and devoted patriots of tho United St.-ites."

Lieutenant Tlyan li n son nf Mr.id Mrs. H arry e:. flyan, 138 Walnut

street, and Is now on leave. He will report to r t . Douglas for rca.vilgn- ment and plaas to flntih hLi univer­sity work after he Is discharged from tho service.

along

Here In Trau, happ.v In Idaho »t the home of Ills master, Lleul. Joseph . ny»n. who brought him back (o (he fitatei from Germany. T rau. a

German war dor. wa* a member of Ihe German canine corps, w hen he *»» liberated by Ryan from a German colonel. In the upper pholo he I* shown In a playful mood with hU new tnaiter ar.d Incidentally •'show-

photo he glres a forma! p«se In th e parlor

Lake City,a senior In tlie Uiilvrrslty of

Idaho, where he wii. majoring In political Klence, U'lHeiinnt Ilyan entered tho servhe anti received his commission nt Fi nnmtng. G a.

\5 then altacti'd In Ihe 442n<l

Last Rites Held For T.E, Walker

HAZEXTON. Dcc. 13 - n m e ra l aervlcea for Thonio.i Edward W alker were held at 2 p.m. Friday In the Hazelton LDS church. Burial wns made In the T aIh Falls ccmclcry under the direction of the W hlto mortuary.

The opening prayer wm by E Packer. Speakers were Bishop E arl George. Eden, and Elder George Mendenhall. Haxelton.

Benediction was offered by Harding, with the dedication of

rave by Henry McKlnnack.Three duets were sung by I. _.

Watson and daughter, Norma B ur­ry. accompanied by Dorothy IUjIj I- ■ elt, another daughter.

Pallbearers included Newell John- >11. Earl Johnson. Glm Jnn.scn.

Donald Jansen. Dobble Walker. Wa>Tie Walker.

Flower girls Included Dot H ord­ing. Aline Harding, Alice White. Ella Johnion, Utnhna Hoclutrusser nnd Beth Howell,

Corporal Thrice Lauded for Work111. l-hllllp n , Kouraba, ton of and Mrs. J, A. KoUraba. 301

Filth avenue cast, stationed In itiln, China, wllli tiic flr.'.t mar division, recciilly wili the rcclpl

• excellent pcrlurmnnce o ' clurlng Uic Inmslon aiic __ loii of Okinawa, Corpoml Kol-

trabu received comiiiendiitloii the commanding officer of hb . pany — company A. first n transport bottnllon.

Thc whole company aiTO rrceivetl congratulatory recognition from .-. commanding officer and recognition from the commanding general of the first marine division.

Who Is She?

Owner of Property Wins Eviction Case

Ivan Winn, Buhl property owner, as granted po.s. e-wlon of h lj prop­

erty late yc.nerday by a Jury In pro bate court.

Mrs. Harold Andcr. on, tenant, named as dcrciidaiit In an evlc-

□II conyilaint flle<l In probaie >urt asking for puNse^lon of the

property which was de.scrlbcd os be­ing located a t 302 Fourteenth street Uuhl.

Oraydon W. Smith iin.s i.ttoniry for the plaintiff. Jury nieiiiber.s In­cluded Carl E. nitchey, foreman; o . . Oertrude Llmni, GcorbC

•" T. 6e.il.Cooper, Emil Ihler a

"NELLIE"(Official U. B. nary pholo-tlalf

ennavlnf)

Any reader who can answer the !0-l que.tilon of the crew members If the light cruiser, U83 81, Louts, "W ho and Where Li Nellie?" provide her complelo name, address a n d —of course—telephone number, will receive that amount In cai...

T lib pretty brunette Is Nellie, pfn-up Kirl nnd good luck charm for the crew slnco October, 10«, w hen she "reported nbonrd" after

the way from

ho picture In a baggage mlxup. 6ho kept them from harm during Pa­cific engagement.i nnd now 33 soll- or.i chlppcd In « apiece for a re- w ard lo the person who can Identify

------C a ll—SCHW EITZER St SONS

TruckersUvesloek A Oeneral llauUni

Anywhere In Btato

Insured Carriers - Standard Itate* . Prompt Serrlc*

PHONE DO nLEn

French Civil Workers to Strilte Today

PAWS. Dec. 13 (U^>-MorB than 1,800,000 police and other civil work­ers will ho ld ont-hour token strikes throughout Prance today to protest the government’s refusal to grant goneral »20 a m onth pay raises.

Strikes were scheduled from :p .m . (10 to 11 a. m-EST) in s<

places and from 4 to S p. m. otliers.

Besides Uio police. Uie striking groups w'lll Includo teachers and em­ployes of postoffices, subway and bus lines and public offices.

Oas, electricity and water utlllt and railroads will no t be affected.

Union offlclabi called tho strike yesterday afternoon Immediately after tho labor m lnbtry announced refusal of demands for the *20 In­crease for a ll workers retroactive to Aug. I and a rescaling of all salaries and peasloru beginning Jan. I.

A government offer of »30 a month Incrci.sa fo r workers earning lcs.s than MO a m onth was rejected.

THREE CYCLISTS FINED BUHL, Dec, I l - ^ a y Shropshire,

Homer M cFnrlln and Jack Nelson were asseAied fines of »5 apiece by City Judge Bernard Starr on charges of disturbing Uie peace with ex- ccsslve noise and fast driving on mo­torcycles in both the residential and business distric ts of the city.

ATTENDS CONFEIttSCE BUHL, I>cc. 13 — Supl, Ccorgc

Ukeness, of the Buhl sclioola, went to Boise Friday to atlend the con-

RefundSEATTLE. Dec, 13 — Vottt

years ago la s t Saturdjty, M n. Edna M. Sondo. secretiiy for Hongkong M ines, dlmbed into a station wagon a t the Pod Amerl> can airways offlco in Kongkoti* to rido to th e a irport and board a M anila-bound clipper.

Ttio trip ended hurriedly when the Japanese attacked the city.

Today, Mrs. Sondo, released recently from Internment a t Hongkong, walked Into the Pan American airw ays office hero to claim a refund on the round- trip clipper ticket she never got

Icrenee there o f schf -1 executives. Mr. LikeneM, a repre.iental.iyo of tha fourth district, was nccompanled by Mr.i. LUene.' .s.

DO THIS WHEN

COLDS’ COUGHST IE K N O T S IN TIRED

ACHEY C H E S T MUSCLESn u b Penetro ca cbMt. throat and back to r u t t^etter, and so fMi bet­te r. For P ena lro (I)

bAak’local ccnirestlra! <2) n o lle v es pstn at nerva cnda in <Ii« skla. (3) Looient phUrm.

like Penetro. Graod- m a'a (smous mutton auet idea mad« better b y jn ^ e m acJence. tie.

piNETRDMAKE IT AN

ALASKA CHRISTMASHere's the Christmas ilfl everybody will enjoy.

ALASKA LIFE MAGAZINE, published monthly; packed cover to cover with atorles. articles and pictures of Alaska |j / » as It Is today. One year subscription, 13 thrilling i.isues d ^ i O U 1M8 ANNUAL PICTORIAL. Alaska Lllc s big 102 pago book of up-lo-the-mtnute Pictures of industries, dllea, scenory. people travel information. -t « aA brand new book, now on press......................................... l.UUALASKA REFERENCE MAP, showing highways, rail­roads, a ir routes, cities, towns, smaller settlements. 1 n nOompletely Indexed ....... ......... .............................. ... .......... i . U w

B efu lar Price ........ -.............. ....... ...................................... s a s aBargain Christm as Gift /p f iPrice for nil th r e e ............... ......................... .......................J o Z .O ywrite namM «ort adflrrwa very rlitaly of all ptrtona to whom you want

Dangerous mixture . . .D u r in g the w ar there was little p ro d u c i io n of c iy ilian goods, an ti a lot o f the th in g s peop le h a d w e re w orn o a t o r used u p —

People d id not spend the high wages th ey earned, so savm gt increased rapidly.

T h e resale i* tha t America has b u ilt u p trem en ­d o u s buyifig pow er.

L o ts o j bujttig power and Utile to b u y m ake a dattgenm s combmathn— like chem ica ls th a t ex­p lode when p u t together.

W h e n p eo p le need things badly a n d h a v e p len ty o f m oney , they a r e api to pay to o m u c h f o r w hat they n e e d . IN FLA TIO N then b eg ins!

I t ’s a dangerous m ix tu re — shortage ojgoodi a nd plenty oj money.

T h e answ er to h ig h p r ic e s a n d ioflation is plenty o f goods.

America's factories sh o u ld be workhtg day and

night to turn out th e th ings people n eed—to bal­ance needs w ith goods.

Instead—w hat d o w e h av e? A d cfnand by UAW . C IO leaders fo r a 3 0 p e r cen t w age increase; M ore than tha t, a s t r ik e w h ic h ha t d o s e d down

G eneral M oto rs p la n w . B o th are ioflstiooary. Both m ake the m ix ttire s t i l l more dangerous

GENERAL MOTORS"M on a ttd Better Things for More People"

JUST ARRIVED - NEW SHIPMENT OF

TOYSI TOYS!

L ast week onr toy tl«ek was alm oit depleted. Then, out o f a clear iky and direct from th e North Fete, came a bnge track load ot new and excit­ing TOYS. So DOW we can offer yea a grand selection for boys and girls of all ages. Listed here are Juil a few. Come In tomorrow and see

J u n ior Desk a n d Chair SetA real desk and ehair set for s tn d y or pUy. Hard- wood conilnicUon In na- Inral varnished finish.

BULLDOZERA ’‘make-belleTe' Beabee brxllds a landinx field with Ihls eaterplllar-type bttll- doier. Bright red finish. Nobe-Diaklnr rmtchet.

S1.69Steam ShovelA sturdy toy All wood wheels turn when pulled. The covered cab revolvea in all directions and Ihe hand crank raises and lowers the scoop shorel!

S1.79

Child's Table

Chair SetFor make-believe or ' 11 " //y real meaii. Tennewee ^ oak conitructbn. Natural finish. Two chairs and table. ReguUrlyS7J5—NOW ........... o D t i f O

Plastic

A tin y hoste.<3 enter*

a n d c r e a m u '. .£ l * i9 8

c m B ook sn}r boys a n d s lr li trom nurterjr through teen ag«. Picture books. odTeatar*,

' nit ouU, coloring

r.._10c„98c

221 Main Ave. East Twin Falls, Idalie

Page 8: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

Marine Chief In China Has

Strife FearsB7 IIAI, DOVLK

TSINGTAO, ChlnB, Dfc. OTr- The Job of commantllng more Ihnn M,OCO United Stales mirlncs In north China’* powder keg Ls In tht hands of n 57-j’fnr-o!d major-gcn- cml, bnllle-testcd In two wnrs nnrt somewhat uccujtoiiirtl In tlcklWi fitualloru.

Maj.-Gcn. K eller Knirlck nockty, » jumma cum laudo gradunto ol Iho hnrd *chooLs of Bc.illrmi Wood iind la o Jim n. lin^ had more nctlvc than dull du ty In hLi 33 >c;irs with the mnrlMc.-; on tlirrc foiitliictils and on more Islands th: rcndlly recall.

■'My blggc-il worry ha." fear of grttlnR iniolvcd In China'; trnlrlclrtal s trife," Rockey confcwcd riurlnK IV rccctit plane Illjhl here from ehiiiifrlini.

Bluff, fortlirlK hl niui jr t cllplo- matlc m npproiicli. the "nock ot Jwo JImQ" Lv .1 large, stronsly-bulU man who hns . Iron-gray *eamed, lea thc rj' face n piercing blacfc oyc.v In I him, one har, ttir odd r having seen h im r ime-.vlirri' before and then of remembering v.hcre—Ih# obverse side of a biilfolo nickel, except tha t h e iincl the Itidl.in war­rior part the ir h,ilr dlffcrcntl)'.

Rockey Joined ih f iiiiifliir.i In peaceful Phllndclplila In 1513, After weathrrtng Q crm nn nrilllery nnd other ham rds nlong the Marne In the flrr.t W orld war. hr rptunirrt home, then .•ipenl four years with the Haitian rorL'tublary.

Aftcm'ard. nocltey rcnni tcriiu nt;;ca. "iixnt tw o yt;>rs In Nlc:iraKun and did ita ff work In Witihlngton before he look up what he calk hLs •'moat Intcre.'tlne work"—organizing *nd training th e fifth marine dl-

HU fifth one uf the (llviilonj that landed on Iwo Jltnn last Feb­ruary, and Jt was his men ttho planted the S ta r s nnd Stripes on -Mount Surlbsehl nnd took both the louthem and n o rthern end.i of the Island,

Speaking of th a t deadly " liow.- Roekey aayo, "we opened It and ■ closed I t/ '

Now he commnnrts the third i phlbloiu corps w ith peraounct rtprtaent n rollcnll of American tlvlty In the Pnctllc.

"My Blr boys came from M.i ind the Philippine-,, niy marines from Hawaii nnci a half-dorcn other Island groui«. a n d my •enbrc.f from erer>'where." h e said.

R ^key 's m arines have complet removal of som e 2,000 altird w prisoners nnd Internees that tl Japanese liad he ld In north china but hQvo not y e t completed dba Ing the Jap an ese and ev,icuattng Japanese civilians.

Now the m arines arc chleflv ployed In seelnc tha t the railroads

--staa open so th n t coal moiw dmvn to Shanghai nnd HonKkons. itockcy and the m arines are keeping their

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

num .. D-r. 12- U i in c . .. . 'tl ol Mrj.. l.jdui Holnic;i, Buhl, Jiiis

rtcchcci II mcilltiil <tl.'.i:liurKc from the 6uii Viilley convalescent hospl-

lloliiiei hii-1 been iinder troat- it at the Hun Valley hospital for c time following hi;, return to United Etale.s from the sinking lie iiircraft ta rrle r Saint Lo. c wns one of 350 su

the Snint Ix), which was I-ejte In October, 1044. durliiR Itie nulling defeat of the Jup flte l u Imt polnl. Holnu.s served jil/jiu,. Iircc- yeiirs, and wiui it ;.Hident lii

the Duhl hiKh Kchool when he Joined avy Iji Fcbruiiry, 1043, Jle four campaign ribbons with

battle stars, and .served nt Snipnn, Marianas, Haliiiaheru iiiid the Phlllpiiliie rnKaKcment.'!. He iil.so hold^ the piin>Ic heart.

YounK Holme.i plans to return school to take a four year course fore. trj'.

Nazis Tried “Worst Gas”

On InmatesWASHINaTON, Dec. II —

Eeiintor* heard from a inllltnry rov- emraent ofdrlal today U iat Oer- many "developed th e deadliest pol/on gas In the world" by testing " on concentration ram p Inmates,

The testimony came /rom Col, Bernard nenisteln, d irec tor of the division .>f cartel, mid ex ternal n»- Bcta, U, 0, mllllary goverriment Germany. He subnillted a statement to n senate military subcommittee headed by Senator ICllffore, D-, W. Vft,

Beroslcln nho offered w hat lie «ald was a German denial of n Standard Cll compnny of New Je r­sey eontenllon tha t the United Stales lienefltted, ra th e r than fercd, through Stnndard',s prewar rclatlniv' wllh the hit; G erm an dy

nw, I. O. F.irbcnlndustrlc,On the pol'uii kb.h m a tte r, he said

tha t many plants and a ll stocks of poison ga.' were destroyed by order of the Oermnn Rovrrnment before occupallnii hv the Rii.-.- lnn.i. Bern- fltelii cniUiiuifd:

•secrel.^ IlK- Gcrii

Church Rector Is Banquet Speaker

The Rev. E. Lc:.lle Rolbi, rector «f the Ascension Eptscopol church here, was the speaker n t the father and ton banquet held Tuesday night by the Mcn'.s BroOierhood of the Baptist chu rch .

The rector compared shaping one's life to th e putting togcthor of an old faahloiied Jig eaw ptirjile, "While we build up the life thnt 1.1 vl'lblp from th e outside, we ,'hould also build up o u r Inner schci," he said,

George W arbcrg was toailmait- er. The dinner wa.i .served by Scout troop E9 under the direction of ficoulmastcr Elwood Bobler. Mem­bers of the 5cr%'lnc commlltee from the n ''" '* ...... ... _ ..

I'vo (olos w ere presented by Tommy Chugg, accompanied by Caledonia Bailey. Piano duets M re played by PhyiiL'i Burkhart ond Miss Bailey. Tlie meelhiK cIo.-ed with the ScoulmiuMcr bene diction led by K e n t Tatlock.

Enlist in ArmyT/Sgt. Jack Buck. In ilnrnr ot

«ie army recru ltl.ig ollko In i|,e Burklioldcr bitlldlnB, rcporinl late yesterday Uiut T uesday enllMmcnt.-, In tha regular a rm y Included .Mil­ton L Prye. 17. ro u te one, Wtndell and Ddward L. Hobla'son, l? route one. Wendell.

BotJi enlisted Tviih parcn:..' con­

fer service In th e EMropcan the.itc' and left ye.iterday for Ft. Dd:;ql,i

Streets DecoratedBUHI-. Dec. ll’-V leto rv Chn-.;.

mas Is bchiR obscrve.l in ihihl Kith •IrlnRs of eolored IikIiI.-. uluiin Dro.id way for the tuo bti.'^inc:bloctv tint along the he.ivlcit b1u.lnc.s5 block: oil Main street. 'H ic Chamber o; Commerce authorlrcfl the ChrUima' decorations com nnttrc 10 .'jxiid nr lo J200 /or street dccoratioiis.

Gooding Masons Select Officers

GOODING, Dcc. 12 — J. Schrelber was elected worshipful master of the Or-odlng Masonic lodKC at thrli regular nicctliig. Schrelbcr ,suci.-icc1.s RoRcr McMa- han.

Other oiriccr.-. elected acre: Dljthe Clrmon.s. :,ci.lor warden; John r . Clcju-'er. jtm lor warden; Lloyd Siilvely, secretary; H. T. Stone. trca.Mircr. Apiwlntlve olllcrr.i MU be nniiuHl u t a Inter dale

Joint ln.\[allall(jn ccrcinoiile.'. will be held with the Co^moix.lltan chap­ter of E.-Lsteni S ta r on Dec. 10

NURSE COURSK PLA.VNEI) nUHL, Dec, 12—Mr^. H arry WU-

on announce.s th a t she will enroll 0 pupils now tor a .-iincrnlrati'd

Uig. '■.hlch n1ll begin the fore part of Janunrj-. The classe.', will meet tn the afternoons h i the Rod Crois

covered■'Our Investigation h a s dbclosed

tha t nn I. O. Farben official at Wupp'-rial-riberfeld developed dc.idllr.st pol.'on Kiii In the world.

gns. iinknoivn to th e military authorlllr.' of the allied nations, eonld hnvf penetrated a n y gas mn.nk

"I.

. Thes(rases were not only used on help­less people during the stngcs of experimentation, hut were la ter tised

h full knowledge a n d acqules- ice on the part of F arben to

temilnntc whole group,-. In concen-

MEASUREYOUR N E X T

TRIP IN

M IN U T E S

g.o...B Y A IRrilO N E 178G

ZIMMERLYAIRLINES

l.obby lloKerson H o ld

ration camps such a.s Aitschwltz.'’ The senate liearhiK Li d irec ted nt

■ lie que.':tlun of faricls,.or In te rn a ­tional agreement* amonii companies -■ *0 the dULMon of world m arkets .... . the exchange of lechnlcal In­formation.

Missionary to SpeakJEROME, Dee. 12-The Rev. Ei-

iicr Schmelienbach. 1. mls.ilonary iho was bom In Africa and npcnt 0 years there, will be gnest .speaker

Jerome NaMreiie church jHibllc l5 In-•Si/nday, Dec. 15, '1

lied.

W ED N ESD A Y , DEC. VI. 1945

Who Is He?

By CHAJILE8 C. MERRILLBcni near Humphrey. Mo..

1831, Uils boy Is known to his fam ­ily *tid frlenda by four different names, none of irhlch Is the name given him a t birth, ,

He led the normal active life uy on a Missouri

farm on which hU father "didn't raUe much ex­cept boys — and. of course, a plen­ty to feed, clothe i n d e d u c a t e ;hem ." T h e r e were tlx boys and •■’0 gltls. So this boy's wife rejoices that he. being one of the middle two, learned tomake himself handy In the kitchen.

He contracted the we.slern fever early In life, emigrating 10 the sta te of Washington In 165D where In due time he heard of the 'big ditch" be­ing dug Bcroes the .■..-.Kebruih desert ot fdaho,

came to Msglc Valley In 1005 ___________

look . . . . ,

Whllo working 00 » nmch near Curry he met a girl from North Carolina who wa» tlslttag her b n - ther. He married Uie girl in isoa. To them three jl r ls and bom.

Tliey still operate the original I60- crc farm on which they proved up

Livestock, especially purebred sheep Is the chief form Inleresi, Tliey have retired from farm to town life maintaining a quietly hospiuble and gracious home. 'When > conversation iliifted to pclltlciJ affairs mention was made that ex-Ooremor BaW- rldgs nnd ex-Qov. C. Ben Rosa had each been In th e habit of making overnlsht visit* w hen p .- in rr through their town, ^

FLU HITS nUHL AREA RUPL-RT, Dee. 13-Sevcral eases ol

flu h a w been reported In Rupert, both among adults and among stu­dents In the schools.

Oakley Pioneer Passes in Utah

SALT LAKE CriY, Dec. 13 l/fh- Mtb. Cecllta M. OroTfr. mother of Preston Grover, chief or the Asso- e latcd Press bureau In Delhi, In­dia. died yesterday of a heart

Mr.7. Dro r and her hiiiband.

W ^ter L. Orcnrer, assisted 50 yM n ago In the ook>&lzatIon o f Otklr? In M uth-centnl' Idalio.

COCFLE BUTS FAIIM FAIRVIBW, Dec, la — Mr. and

Mrs. WUllam Lallisj, Ogden, Utah, hare purehased the Cheney 40-acre tract here a n d have moved here to make Uielr hom e. T helf children Jjave enrolled in the schools here.

DRIVE to BUHLFOR D ELIC IO U S

PAPSH ceO temlee Cream .ilade to O rder 1-or Vour Party

(Any fl»«r or com bination of flayon)

B U Y IT BY THE G A LLO NPasteoHzed to

' SPECIA L THIS W EEK

Paps Ice Cream ShopMaglo Valley’s Best

Phono 30 Dnhl. Idaho

LOVELYL A D I E S

DIGESTIVE TRAC?' Doo’t expect to c r t r r j

headaebo. »our atomach. p u and b>d omtli by taJdac Boda nail otl>rr •It.a- Itari if t te true e»u»o of j-our tioubl« ts

> lnt£hcuB.yourr«a]trotibl«laiiotki llaftam aeliatall.Btj.....................-lr*«»h»r«60r.ofy<

It la thelntntlnil' ABd » W i t i ^ ' blocked it f i l l ta

thlsg to clean It o u t eUcctlvety— Mstur* « t b a ^ on her fnet.. Get Carter-* PUl* ri«ht bow. Tii» them ai directed. T bey scsUy and eS«e.>.. tlwly “iniblo«k“ your tllgeadvo triet.

th«irw chit.Y w Bet scauln. rtlkf

EX-CEL-CIS_______________________

H e a u l t f Compoa Iq iMthcrettrf. , , , . case with doublc-faccd

rntffor. Ideal for travcL Kic contains: Hand Crcmc,ClMniiDg Creme, Foundation Crcmc. Nicht Crerac.Astringcnt.Lotioa, Eau dc Colocne. Face Powder

EX-CEL-CIS

V a « /y S o a p

EX-CEL-aS Saik Oil MF o r« ItOTxiotUjpcf/umcd

beaut)- bath.

f r i u s Plut T a

P errine P h a r m a c yP E R R IN E HOTEL CORNER 2nd St. W e s t Across From Tbnes-News

Page 9: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

W ED N ESD A T, DEC. 12.1948

Varied Sociala D»y on a Dilly" wUi the

them e of tho dinner party planned b7 th a Tw in Fsllj cftapter cf tho Id ah o W tltW a lu ju e a t 6:30 p. m. M onday. M tm ben wUl g»ther ftt the hom e of Mrj. Hftrry Bmotk.

I t o . Franccs neld a n d Mrs, C atherine Martin compose the menu commlttM . The »oclal hour U In cliarge of Mrs, Belie Eaipey. Mrs. Vic Qoertzen will bt totulmulcr at tho dinner.

Newly elcct«d olfleera will Uk* office th a t evenlnn. They arc Mrs. O oertscn. prcfldenl; Mrs. Letha T ester. Goodin*, vice - president;

♦ U rs. Eleanor Fo»ler. Kimberly, iccratary-treasurer.

OwteolnR officers are Mr«. oilTO May Cook, president: MrJ. John t Ilnyci, vlco-preeldcnt ond Mrs. O o ert« n . Jecrotary-trensurer.

« « V Mrs. L. B, Tyler, preclrtent of the

Mary M artha c taa of the Baptist church. u-M In thargo of Uin pro- gram hold Tuejdaj- afternoon by the KTOUp a t tho homo of Mrs. Pay H um .

Mrs. M. O. Kuykendall v u In charge of the devotional* on 'The C hristm as etory.” Mrs. Berths Mc- Vry led the group Mnglng and Mrs. H erm an lUco was in charge of the cloolng prayer.

A mUcellaneouj sale ua.i hald by the KTOUp. Mrs, ThaodoMa Co«n led th o birthday prayer. nio.-e hRVing birthdays were Mri. Lucy Carder. Mrs. Ray Doud. Mrs. Allle Morrla. Mrs. Norah Nlcholj. Mrs. Phoebe Bnodcrass and M;«. John nodm an. Aa-ilstant ho.iUsaM st tho meeting; were Mrs. R, J. Blley. Mrs. John BlJJJrss a n d Mri. J. B. W akem.

¥ M-The prc-school iludy group

Ing woa held a t the Idaho Power Rudltorliim Tuesday evening, with Mrs. Charles Young condueUng.

D orothy CoUard, health unit, spoke to the group on nieniies, in­cubation p e r i o d , treatment and compJlcatlons. Margaret McClain, departm ent of public aijlilance. apoko on foster homej. She slated tha t there were 100 Ilccnacs for fostflr hom rj In the state of Idaho. Tho homes house 500 chlldrea There la no cliargo for the licenses but definite standfirdj must be met by the homea. Care It the most Im­portant.

'T w o-T hree Look at Me" was given b5- Mrs. L, Ollle.iple who' pointed out th a t the two year old child should be helped to saUily hi* curlosltlfcs.

M n . P . N- Orcen dUcii.ued 'Trl- ■rnipha a t Two." She added paranta m ust comprombn In things In order that the child be^well Bdjiutcd and happy.

Mns. M. A. CHBISTENHEN (Lenen ptio io-iU ff engraTlni)

JEROJ.IE, Dec. IS -n o ra Mor- [an, Jerome, and Warrant Officer ■ I. A. C lirlstciuen exchanged nup-

al TOWS In (I double ring ceremony t Reno. Nov., Dec. *.Ths former Miss Morgan hna been 1 ba lncAs a beauty operator number o f years. Cliristcnsen ..

turned frc*n overseas duly with the navy. He entered the service In January. 1030.

The couple has no definite p k _ whero they will make their home until the brideffroom receives orders from the navy department.

month a t a p. m. i t the Idaho Power company sudllorlum. The next aeenlon tvlll be Jnn. 4.

¥■ *Tlie Chrlstmnr, gift exchsnte lor

membcra of tlir Addl.-ion Avenue club wna held Tuesday evening ai the hom e of Mrs. Albert Wegener. Mr*. W ayne Tucker and Mrs. Cliff I^ng , dnuKhtera of (he hostess dU- trlbutccl Klius tha t were under a llghtrd C lirhtm ns tree.

Each member ako ri^tlved two handworked ten towels, and an apron from their secret siiter. At thla meeting names of secret sisters wero revrnlrd.

rollow lng a socliil homenta w ere served. Tlie .............Ing will be a holiday party when husbands will be gur.ar I t will be h eld J a n . 25 a t the home of Mrs. Olynn Bmlth.

Mrs. A. W . echrank, Mrs. T . ... Bchwelckhardt. Mrs. Iluby W ein­berger. Mrs. O m a Whltton, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Shlrck, Mr, and Mrs. E. A. Rice, Mr. a n d Mrs. Lloyd Mason and Mr, and Mrs. Q, C. Majors,

The group will hold Joint in-ital- iHon with th e Ma*onlc lodge

Friday, Dec. 21.«

airlt" league of the Twin Palls high school he ld Chrtstmas parties Tuesday afternoon. Conlrlbutlons were taken fo r the Children’s Home In Boise. O ajaea were played the group aang carols. Refreshments were served, A gift exchange was held with Sctnta Claus presiding. Olrlj were rem inded to nil Christ- m ts boxes w h lth will be leni tx Huihnell ho.spltal In Utih.

ICappa Beta wUl be hoits al lowBhip supper a t the winter tute of tho young adult group of the south easlerii distric t of the Metho­dist church to be held ht Twin Tails Btmday, Dec, 30 from i to 0:30 pjn.

More than 60 Maglo Valley young people are expected to attend, the Bev. II. G. McCalllstcr, piLilor of the local church, stated Tue.sday, The dinner will be Bcncd at 8 pjn. In the church basement. Mr.v J . P. Welnmnii Ih chairm an of the serving commltlee.

Tlio S .........ly held a piesocial recently nettlns 150.76. Tlie prouram wn.i furnished by Sharon and Phyllis M clnturf and John Dean. Prltcs were won by Curtis Eaton. Patty Howard, end Velma

A potluck dinner will be held by the Pldell* claw of the nnptut church n t 7 p. m. Tuesday, Dec. 18, a t the Dnpli.it bunRalow.

Mr/I, R obert Andrews nnd Mrs H armon Wolfe are cn-chalnnenl The a ffa i r will be Jn the form of a C hristm as party. Mr.». Vie Oocrt- *«n will be In charge, of the dcvo- tlonaU.

The WnyslUe club members gath­ered Tuesday afternoon a l the home of Mrs. Quincy Norris for a potluck dinner a n d Christmns party. Mrs. Emily Ballard, president, wa» in charge of the basuicji meeting,

Mrs. K enne th Hendricks, a form­er mlsj^lonary to Japan, spoke to tho group on "Cuatrm.? and Hablt4 of tho Japanese people.”

A gift exchange was held. Mem­ber. will meet aftnln In January,

Mrs, Pnye Oordcn was elected worthy m ntroii of tho Tw'ln FalU

I chapter o f Order of the Eistem f Stars n t a meeting held Tuesday

•yenlng a t the Ma.sonlc hall,Mrs. O orden succeeds Mrs. IL A

Ballcbury. o th e r officers chosen were: C laude Oorden, worthy pat­ron; Bessie Carlson, iMoelate mat­ron; John-N cl'on , a.vociale patron; Mrs, C atherine Potter, secretary; Mr*. Flora Dumn.', treo-'urer; Mri- Lol* H ailey, conduetrea; M n, Oer- tnide Moseley, asaocUto conductress

tJnafflllated members *cn-cd re- freshmenta. They were Mrs J T O n, chairm an. Mrs. Mnry Com­mons, Mrs. aenpvl-.'ve m-lght, Mrs. H. A. Oroho.iky, Mr*. R. O, McCslI,

Blackham- Klmberly, wii and Ice cream meeting will I

Thompkln.i, nucllonccr. Coffee

•err served. The Jiin. 10.

HANSEN, Dec, Is-M rs. George Henry wa.i elected orwlr of the Royal Nrlshbor.-! a t a meeting held Tuesday nlKhi in the MWa hall. Persons oteervtng birth anniversa­ries during the pn.sc three month.i

ere honored.Othor officers elected Include

Lena Bohln, vlce-oracle; Mn. Hugh Sanderson, recorder; Mrs. Miles Weech, receiver: Mrs. Haney Fom - wait, chancellor: Mrs. Dra Albln. marahal; Lelln Henry, assistant marshal; Mrs. T roy Slsto, Inner sen- tlnel; Mrs. F ra n k Wright, outer sentinel; Mrs. Lee Haslam, three- je a r manager; Mrs. Cal Bill, past oracle; Mm. F ^ y Rude, musician, *nd Mrs. Weech. drill captain.

The victory Ja r prlre was wun by Mrs. Henr -,

» V *BUHL, Dcc. 12 — Mrs. By Barron

entertained In honor of her son Michael’* sixth birth anniversary’

¥ * *BUHL, Dec. 13 — Mr*. Pearl

Roberts enterta ined at a pink and blue ihower lo r M n. Lea Mae Robert*.

« « «BDHL. Dec, 13—Tlic Buhl Btwl-

neu and Proferjilonal Women's club met a t the home of Mrs. Elva M a­son, Ollma Martln.son was assLst- ant hcwtfsa, Rcporta were given by committee chairm en.

B0HU Dcc, 12 _ Honoring the birth analversnrles of Mrs, a . J Flncke and C. M. Plckrell, Mrs. Plck- reU entertained a t dinner and bridge. PrltPo w en t to Mrs Fred Hartlng and P. r . Ahlquljt.

RF*AD TIMES-NTW a WANT-ADS.

PATRICIA nA IG U T (Staff cniniTing)* * * •

OAKLW, Dec, IJ—M r. and Mr*. Samuel R, Haight. Oakley, announce

9 engagement and approaching inlage of their daughter, Patricia, Robert Atwood, oon of Mr. and

Mrs. Frank H. Atwood. Lewiston. Ids. The wedding will take place Dcc. 25 at their home.

■mo bride-elect grndualed from the Oakley high school In ICtJ. She attended Stephen’s college a t Colum­bia, Mo, and graduated In 10«. While Ihere shs m ajored tarlal work and was affiliated with the Alpha Pi Epsilon, national hon-

'.nrlal aororlty. She . . tended the Unlvcrnlty o f Idaho for

year and Is now employed Moscow.

Atwood graduated from the LewU- ton high school In 1041. UntU hU

'large he »er\’ed w ith Uie elev­enth airborne division. H e la a Jun-

In the school of forestry a t the University of Idaho a n d also lerve.s as president of the Sigm a Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

CalendarThe Lcnd-a-Hand club will me'>r a Chrl.stt7ui.'i party Dec. U i le home of Mrs. R, O . Taylor.

>!• If. ¥Mrs. C, D. ehalf. Tw in Falk, will

be hMtesi Friday to the Filer Wash­ington Bridge club,

* * *The Wiu'hlnglon club will meet

Thursday afternoon a t th o home of Mrs. David Thornton, Flier.

" * * motherB of Blckel

school will meet a t 3 p . m. Friday t the home of Mrs. n a y Moon.

J* ¥The Afternoon guild of th e Zpl*co-

pal chiu-ch will meet a t 3:30 p. m. Thursday In tho parish hall for a ChrLitma.ipsrty and gift exchange.

^ ¥The Lincoln school PTA execu- ve board will meet nt. 7:45 p. m.

Thursday, Dec, 13, a l Uio U ncoln,' ■ b'.illdlni!,

* * ¥The ei.ir Social club will hold

10 halt dinner party o n Dec, . .• •-1 honie of Mr. and M rs. Ralph

rrlage

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

Magic Valley Social Tid-Bits

JEROME, Dcc, IJ - Announce­ment was mafle of the engagement of Vhlan T crtj, Jerome, to Dwight Lee, son of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Lee, Malta.

Lee was discharged from wrvlco last month.

Miss Terry graduated from Jerome high school in I« I. The bridegroom elect graduated from the Malta high school and attended Brigham Young University. Provo.

* * *BUIIU Dec. n -M ary Lou Pryor as honored a t a pre-nuptial shower

held at the lioine of Mrs. Bryan Slmcoc. Mrs. Lou Ayres was assis­tant. ho.steas. Gue.sU were Mrs. Muriel McOray, Mrs. Nell nujsell. Mrs. Clyde Pnor, Mrs. Ivy Duffy Mrs. Mattie McRae and Mrs. Curtis Pryor,

¥ * *MOSCOW. Dec. IJ-BonnIe Burn­

side. Rupert, h a been appointed by the Inter-chiirch council cf the Uni­versity to aaslit In the coming world student service fund drive.

¥ ¥ n MO.SCOW, Dcc, 12—Staff head for

he IMJ-iS Onlverslty of Idaho Gem Include Mary Jane Hawley, Buhl, of the activities section; Barbara Smitli. Jerome, administration; and Dorl.? Oochnour, Burley, secretarial work.

* ¥ ¥FILE31, Dcc. 13—Tlie North Street

Dinner club surprised Mrs. Dale Scott on her birth anniversary. A no-(iiMt dinner and Christmas party with gift exchange provided entertainment.

¥ ' ¥ ¥BUICU Dec. IJ - The annurJ

Christmas progrnm and gilt ex­change was held by the Women'* Chrl-itlnu Missionary society a t tlie

of Mrs. H. 0. Dever. Hos- were Mrs. Ray Bishop. Mrs.

Claude Cromer and Mrs. William fltombaugh. Mn. Roy Bmlth ad- dre.«ert the group on "Uprooted Americans."

¥ ¥ ¥JEROME. Dcc. 13—Tlie Jerome

Do Boles club motored to Ketchum Tor an outing. Loretta Huber, Peg- r ' Thorpe and Frank Scheme! com­posed the committee in charge.

BOHL, Dec. 12—Honoring Mrs. Luella Baum, Ashton, state presi­dent of the American Legion Auxil­iary, the Btihl unit met for a lunchton- Mra. Baum outUned alms of the arganlMllon. stressing tha t better hospital conditions for the wotmded boya was one of the chief obJecUvei. Out-of-town guest* were Mra. G. E. Kunkle, district presl-

.NCr. and Mrs. E m ec L DCoitleford, announce the ___.. their daughter, Marvella June. MaJ. Tlioma* A. Davis, son of .Mr.

Mrs. Comer A. D^vis, W arren, 0.

The single ring ceremonv wa.i *olemnlzed in the chapel at H»mil- ton Pleld. Calif., a t lO a. m. Nov. 34,

presence of Iriends of the bride and bridegroom.

Capt. Charles A. Uerseth officiated 1 chaplain. The bride was given I m*rri*g» by her faihe.-. a.'jr wore powder blue suit and black

ceisorlej. Her corsage was composed of white orchids.

Mr*. Lu Donla Nelson Bryant, sls- T-ln-law of the bride, was m atron

of honor. MeJ. Edgar H. Doug Jr.. San Francisco, who sened ov seas with the bridegroom In E ng­land and Belgium, was best Cpl. EJnery L. Bryant, Jr., wa.i uaher. Opl. Leslie Brooks prc&ented selection.

The couple left after U\e ceremony for San FraneUco on their wedding trip.

The bride graduated from Caslleford high school und a ttended Albion Slate Normal school. T he bridegroom graduated from Ohio high school and Ohio Wtsleyan un l- ver-slty where he waj a member of Delta Tau Delta fratern

Tho Buhl Women of th e Moose ■111 hold a chicken d inner Saturday, ICC. 15. Tlie lodge will m rct the

evening of Dec, 13 for a potluck supper. A gift exchnnge w ill be held.

* ¥ ¥Ctrcle five of the W SCS o

Melhodbt church will m e et a home of Mr.-; L. B. Wnll. 312 Wnl-

street for a 1 p. m . jxitiuck

The genera! meeting of Uie Pre.i- byterlan Women's association will be held at 3:30 p. m, Thur.Klay Uie church parlors. Mrs. A. Olllrsple will be In charge of t . „ proKram which will include ChrL!t- mas eongs by tho mtwlc depirii of the Junior high school.

dent. Twin PaU*; Mn. Blanche Beath, district lecrelary. also of Twin Pall* and Mrs. Myrtle Winkle, president of the Filer auxlll&ry.

Arnold, Kimberly, and Dlllle son, Burley, are among tlio candl- dntc.1 for the annual A8UI "Hol­ly" cjueen. Representatives arc cliTOcii from each women's hall or sorority house on tho cani:iiu, ll io pre.ildent of the sophomore cla.'a will crown the queen on Dcc. 15 nt tho formal dance.

nUPEUT, Dec. 13-Mrj, Luclla Baum, dcparlmcnt pre. ldfnt. Ash­ton, vLilled the Rupert American Legion auxiliary. Also vlsUlng were Mrs. O. E. Kunkle, filth district pre.'ldcnt. T»ln Palls; Mrs. Velma Treadwell, department psn-Ameri- can; Mra, Blanche BesUi, tilthtrlc t secretary. Other gu rjls___Mrs. W. L. Le-^her, Mrs. Dale Rus- tay and Mrs. Charles .McDonald, all of Burley. Hostrues for the eve- nine were Mrs. Edna Dlljrr, Mrs Lucille Brown and Mrs. Grace ler

BUHL, Dec. 19—The presentation of jeweb to members of the Duhl Rebekah lodge highlighted the ban. quet held Jointly with the Odd Fel­lows. Twenty-five year Jewels wen presented Mrs. Bert Womtch, Mrs. H. 8. Cunningham, Mrs. Anna War­ren, Mra. May Reed and Mrs. John

Announcing A NiEW

LOCATIONThe lIjnldaUon tnislee* of

t b o Minidoka Censumen' Coojwrallve annatnces (be opening ef its new offlre In Beattie, Waahlngton la re* anme the operation pertain­ing Jo the llqtJldallon of Ihe aald Minidoka CensGmer*- CooperatUe, nanl, Ilabo.

For any business or la- qnlrr a* wcD oa Ihe Dotlee of addrea* changa er (h> re­fund of membership eqollles and patrenage slsmps (Is­sued during the period from April 1. 19<S to Jnly 31, ISIS) yoD are reqiiesled to eotnmu- nlcatfl at tho foIlowlRf id- dresa:

Minidoka Consumer’s COOPERATIVE

Liquidating lYiislces ». 0 . Box JOsa Terminal Annex

Seattle 4. Washlngtea

□landers. Clyde W llllama__ . . . .*enled a 43 year Jewel and J. W. EustU a 43 year Jewel. Offlcon elected by nebekahs were Mn. A. O. BUwell, nohlo grand; Mr*. Unn G am er, vlce-noble grand; Mr*. Oeorge Baxter, secretary; Mn, L, r . Hudson. Lr*a*urw: Mra. Ueniy JCramer, financial secretary; Mn. Fred Ilartlng , Mr*. Nell Shaub and Mr*. WlUlam BUmple were elected tnisleea. Mrs. George Leth Is italf captain.

¥ ¥ ¥BUHL. Dec- I2 -M n . Wlllls Samp-

.-.on. PEG a tate organiser, held an­nual Inspection of chapter "S' al tho homo of Mrs. Stanley Webber. Mrs, P . C. Marquardson and Mrs.

BTJHL, Dec. T. O. WIUson VM electcd presMest of UU' Garden Trlenda. Mrs. Ibjoeli WkU was chosen seereU ry-tT M iiw at » meeting held Uw t o n s of Mn. PrlU Kaater.

« « «BUHL. Deo. 13 — Ur*. WUlUm

Stamble ent«rUlned her club. Ur>. H. e, Cunningham and Mr*. Albut Kast von prizes.

¥ * *BUHL, Dec, 13 Mrs. SUnboth

Homllng entertAlned her brldr* chib. Prize* w ent to Mn. W. A. Thompson and Mrs. Uvla W(stb7.

A B rea th o f Summ er

'"or C h ristm as . . .

csovER

Sneet tnd fkwh t i * country ilawn, tfali beloTod Richard Rudnut fragrance eomea b psclasM •* u Yanty OoTer ittelfl

TROLINGER'SPHARMACY“The Prcacriptlon Pharmacy**

t;MpBtUARY/iJ ai Mrs.’ RUniey PhOliffr ,

* ¥dinner.

The Pa,-it Noble G rand 's club wUl meet at 8 p. m. T hursday at the home of Mrs. A. D. 'Wlloon, 189 Ninth avenue east. T here will be a Christmas gilt exchange and elec­tion of officers.

n ie American War M others will leet *L 1 p. m. Friday In th e Legion

hsll for a potluck dinner. Rolls and coffee will b« furnished. Member*

LAME BACK CORRECTION

ts pleasast and palnleas. Back> acbM tnay bo a«soct*ted vltb rheuiaatlizn. arthrltla, hnn- bago. •tomacb and kldnsr dl*< orders. U yoQ bar* tried ererythlng else try »djust- meot4. Relief 1* often obtAln- ed after first treatment

DR. ALMA HARDIN CHIBOPBAOTOB

IM UatD Nertb Pbent tSIt

^ u st . rriu e d !

LARGE SHIPMENT Electric Water Heaters! ORDER YOURS NOW

DETWEILERS“ Everything; to make living more p le a sa n t"

Cargo T oiletriesFOR MEN

A Quick Way

To A M A N ’ S H E A R TCtrf. Of o ttrffooyou cnr, fi,« a //■, ^ ^obo«fcofor ,ri«orrfy /..S psn< /ft,« |7 .30«p h r a S l ^0-ft -rtrflco#, w *w ^apuH ,h^^^^ box sfc««hero olong wllh a Hny Aef . ; . ft* g ^ i fhe Sfafsm of hiitfcjt. I . trino . « f t,

R q w ie s - M a c k C a

V _/A PTU R IN G the crisp freshness of th e seven eeas CARGO to ile trie s o ffer a row experience— tru ly au ndven tu ro In luxury l

MEN LIK E CARGOIt* clean fr w a n c e , the loothln* eoolnes* of troplo moM lim - Ijilscent of tho blue white ipray of the open sea. THa romaneo of far off places I* captured In the *parUlng brown Jug with lU acarlet "Marco Polo" cap. OAROO will be cherished a* « Rift for in It 1* .cMed the quaUty that makes for luxurious sroomlng.

L eftFour piece set corn- pleto tilth ehavlsisoap. lotion, cototne a n d men'* tale.

Per Set J 6.00

Tliree piece set c«n* talnlns colofme, shav­ing lotion and talo.

Sing-le Items...............$1.50Sets From....$3.00 to $6.00

TIUM Cleeo Kt with shav-ln* loap. lotion and raeni talo

j^ o w l e s - ^ a c l c (^o,

Per Set {4.60

Page 10: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO W E D N ESD A Y , DEC. 12, 1045

Major Leagues Turn Down Coast Team Attempts to Be Third Big-Time Loop

CHICAGO, Dec. 11 (i£p>—The m ajor leagues today turned down the plea of th e Pacific coast Icaffuc to bccome th e third uinjor league in ba^ieball.

The m a jo r leaguca, in a surprise aniiouiiccmeiil a fte r a day long meeting, Hiiid, how ever, th<it th ey recognized th e Pacific coaat league na •'i)otential major territory,” and o ffered

-------------------------- the coaat loop th e servicea,

Bruins Romp Ovei- Filer Quint for 43-26 Win

• nlKlit vlth

faUcd to !,hov.’ cliis.'. A callbcr v tliclr lioop UcUcj-

At ilic fir.-.t qujrtcr Filer liflrt to nil a (o 7 hold on T»ln Kails' IcDd but th e Druliis clarlcd IriK In llic i.econd ha lt ntul inilltd iiwny to a 13 to 12 lead. na-M'l' prcdlctfd by u Tlnics-Ncwf, ;.c "waa tlic boy to ftiitch" mid i.w ed 19 coupls to pacc llie o r Bnilns- F n r Flier. O rllitl nndClnln r

ttiaa 33 goals, f throw t:

, scorrtl /.lleinly :ciil oil atlcmptrcl I .0 out of n oil

1 Cubs downed I ’ll

BL’HLEY 50. ACF.tlUIA « ACEQUIA, Dcc. 11 - Hurley t

Actqula 50 to 45 here lanlglil ni the local club hud led 2<-23 n t hsHwny point.

McE^'Cn. w ith n Inlllr.', lilsrti point man for Burley, followeii cla-,e- Jy by L. Tnylor of Ihc .^amc c-luU. F. Stroud T\-n:i high for Itic locals with 13 counters.

Tlie Burley team Tiaa jtlll frrsli after n tr ip to American FalLi liul night In n-hlch they were beaten 25-24 by the Anierlraii Falla club.

In a prellmlnnry Knme tonight,

nuiie.II 3Q t 11.

pt AfMIl

- - - ; 1

(iOODlNO 3C, .SHOSHONE 3iiHOSHONE, Ucc. 11 — Oood

owned Shoslionc 3i> to 32 lii

[f ik'sirod" of a cooperating committee.

I'ollowlni Li the Join of American league Prei.klcnt Will liiinltlie »nd National leiiBue Presi­dent rord Frick concerning the Coajl league’s ivppcal, which was iipproved by the minor le.iRue.i laat

••.Mftlor |r.ii!ii,' .'.tiitii.s Ir. no t A m at­ter of IcKlslatlve flcflnltloii. 11 <le- licnds iiptm flit of tlic factors which rtetennlne the ability of the nieni- hcr cluba of n league to plve major Icjisue opportimltlr,-! to tlic playcra \vli(»e citnlMCl.i Ihry hold.

•niU dcpdul.'; upon tlic i.W.c of the

,0 nilii.ir ICiiKUe:.. urn whom they (t from the mlnoi

ciirec InneflU of the .'.elc iiles »uiil(l be curtailed."For ihf.'c reaaons It Is the > .

)n of the majors th a t this reque.nt inulrt nt lliLi time be refmed. '•lln.>fver, wc tccoRnlze th a t th

•iclflo Co.ul leaRue Is potentU injor If.iRup territory and ma. icntunllj- be able Uj tjiiallfy under idjor league ulnndardj Therefore ir major lengiies offer to the flc coast li-.iKiie Ihr .'.rrvlco I'.'ilrfd, of a .ooi>rrMln« con:

Horse Trainers Accused of Dope Tactics in Race

BALTIMOnK. Mrt.. Dec. 12 lUP Traliifis V. A. McCIlntock and

. Fersa-(ui, ncrased of btlmulntl cehnr.'c at tlic recent Plmll

KING HILL 35, FAIItnELD 14.FAinPJELD, Dcc. 11—The local

btgl) school took u beating here la il night when fi King Iltll quintet dnibbed out a 55 to 14 win.

I lulled oil Fairfieldnttcmpta U of the giunc, vhllo the ahead to ta lly 30 point:

Fntrfleld girls won 24 prfllmlnsry contejt.

•ictors

GLENNS FE hR Y 2C. WENDELL 14 WENDELL, Dcc, 11 — Followlns a

tic a t the end of the first period, Glenni Ferry iiulled away from Wendell to take a 2G to 14 win.

Ojle, G lenns Ferry guird, was high man wltb <lx points.

Glenns F e rry gIrU won 40-3T In a preUmlnorj' Bnme.Clfnn, r»rrr IWfndo!) It ft rf

s r : ■

eiili needed l>olh i tie and bo Into nn but the bnky cei

ciAiMi; rosTroNEi)BUin,, [)(■>•. 11 Uuhl's fir

;.C|H-Cliilcd ijit.'Krlball Kanic ol tl ;.cajon wti called off today v,h(

!lord rpjxjrted th a t nearly cI'laj

C,-i.sllefor. had (inly four

Jimmy Walker Is Boxing Honoree

•i — JiimHEW YOItK, De., Walker, former ............

lected by New York's boxing writer today a t the 1045 w inner of the Ed- .ard J. Nell memorial plaque, glvti Jinually to the pcr.-on resarded a; mvlng done the m ast fo r bc.xlng

during the year.Named In honor of the As..ocl;ited

Prcij sports writer iind forclRi respondent killed In the Sj civil war eight years ago, the will be formally presented n

il banfjuet of the boxing n Jan. 23.nuinr.s were pl.iccJ In no.

It a luncheon mcellng c........-."1 today. W alker gained 12 of

the 24 votes cast. H is selection then made unanimous.

ball team lluurcd Uint of a laiiics hi,' wn.s uic tu^. . irrcclly spelled.

Anyway, Lone Point Saved ’em From “Sliutout”

Here's one for ilic record books;The Ktrh’ basketball team of

Hareltoii lilRh school ccorcd 02 jKilntJ Tiiciday night while Its op­ponents of Miirtauch high :;choo| innnaged lo druji a lonely free lois tlircusb the huop. 'n i a f i right, the Korc was 9J-1,

But tlie Murtaugh girls liavo an explanalloii coming. T heir en­tire flr.-.t Btrliig wn.'. home with llii. !3am lineup lij ;,ren u busk

18 free thrt (X)(l. Lehii

i>linrp<;h ci

WeliciKler .'chr.li

Coast Gridders Back to Normal

OOI>SAN raANCISCO, t

Priebe Warns Against Fall Of Fish, Game in Area

iiii Inunedlate, orgaiiljcdictiip la anged. Walter Priebe, clialrmo: the Fourth Dhlrlct A.-^.oclalcd

Bixirbmcn'fl clubs w;iial c< It Park

hotel, said Wedne--.fliiy tlwt dL'--:u; lions of nn upland bud taiictuary >nd a definite fljli planibig pro^ran would be "must" llenn at the a,vso- clntlon'3 round taWe.

Incrciue lii Ib!i. Ijird aiic Kiinc cannot keep uii the In- ------- ... .1-------- - pufiimci

Reeves Wholesale Keglers Lead Tuesday Bowlers

Basketball Scores

’ iJPi — Jim d rl;:ht hiind- 1 obtiilnccl by

HEAD 'HMES-NEWS WANT-ADS,

•SHEEP SALE-----nOO Bred White Face

RANGE EWES-olds with a lew brulicn mouth ewes br . 15 lambing.

Sale S ta r ts 12 Noon Thurs.. Dec. 13

BURLEY LIVESTOCK COMM. CO.Uurlry. Ida. Phone 5 or 13 day»-CI nlflils

Oar rcxular Thunday sale atarti Immediate!; after the the fale ot iherp

YJeiu ^ai iorcra tAIRPLANES

Available for

Immediate DeliveryTo Ex-Servicemen—

Jf jou art a World War n Teteran you e»n order jour Taylorcrafl Place now for delivery at once. The Tay- lorcraft factory li selling aalde a certain ptr cent et production for aervlee men . . . for firsi dflivery.

AH Other O rders Accepted for Spring DeliTerj-

1000 Springs Air ParkHsgerman, Idaho Delbert Clampitt, A^ent

,ody

. . . . idUig mowball in July, Tlie wc have been BCttlnB

rough lumber rlojed down the t day bccau,^e the snow Is four-fcct. lecp at the mill. It Jiiowed two feet n forty-eight hours. Can you :hat? Of courje thnfs the wi heard I t - I m gl,id I wasnt tl Wc still have quUc a bit ot din

on niHl II limiied number of ich boardi In Uie odd widths indom Icngtiia. Wo can alie these

rough 2x4's so they work for tding Ju-n I

•ojd 11t In t

Wc > of

nth ply '

lU for Inch plybourd none avullable-lo us

e do have some 'i-lneh tempered (iheeli, ako some

•d In poor quality Mme high priced

marine piywoou mat is woterproofed and win do for boats or for outjldc construction. There are some small sheets of S ply»ood-

We have some factory made kltch- e cabinets that come In jectlons and can be made lo /It most any

kitchen. Some of them have .'Inks built lulo the dralnboard. These cabinets are made out ot dry Oik plywood, Tliey alio have Inlaid llnelotim on the drnlnboard niKl chrome edging.

We expect to gei In a car of com- lusitlon roofing ioon and also a car if nev brick siding. Flooring and

drop siding is Juat out of the ques­tion for the prestnl. however we wlU get fir tloorlng as toon u the strike ■ .«etticd on the coast.

We have plenty ot shakes for sid­ing and No. 2 shlngiu. These shakes

beautiful Jab U you put an undercoat o( shlnglea dc«m first. We still have plenty of pUslar. ce-

cnt. nalLj and chimney brick. If Hiding material* tan be obulned u can Bcnerslly find them ot the irry Barry Lumber Yard, Hope

you are the same,

HARRY BARRY SALES COMPANT Qn lb« Road t« Ui< noapllal In

Twin rails

10 district unlcijj a oelier organ, program b Introduced." Prlcbe

fald.At present he explained, the list)

planting wtup is entirely unorgon- Ized, while there is no bird reluge for phcas.inls despite the fact Magic Valley bojst.1 one of the finest plieasant hunting districts in the tire nation.

Two Season*The meeting Tliurjday will be­

gin a t 4 p.'ni, with committee c tfiions and will be climaxed p. m. with a illrncr-biislueis n Ing which will feature no speakers but a prugrom of commltlee reporu iind dt.'iciLuloivj of resoluUon.'i to be pre.^ented to the Idaho Wild Life Federation mcetlnR mul Idaho FLsh lUKl game coiiimls. lon scislon.i which i.t.irt a t B«l;c Jun . 12 until Jiin. IB

A, E, Brlggi, new cupervbor of Ihe Minidoka nstlonal forest replacing John Maltlicws, who went to the third dLMrlct, or Payette national fmc.'it, will offer a report a t ihe meeting,

DrlgKfc «ii,i fonnerly connected with the Hiiniboll national foreit in Nevada, and will report on the condlthu o! the Ml/ildoka future big game prospects as seen In hU

uly uf the situation sincc takingr the r locality,

ountles, wllli at least 5( ire aiUlclfjalcd at the an- Pritbo said, Tha publi< is not invited becau.^e o: ice, but each delegate L e gue.1t.

Demiis SmithBUYING

PotatoesAT TOP PRICES

Capable, Dcpcndiihle Sorting Crews

Phone 34-Jl Kimberly

Three Fined on Jerome Charges

JERQUE. Dee. 13 — Accused oC dUturblns the peace, WllUam Bparka paid a fine of (20 Then he appeared before Police Judge Jo« Day.

WUllom Ernest McGovern, arrest­ed on churgcs of dninkeuness. waa aaseased a ime of $30 or fUt«fn days In the county Jail, Ra is remaining In Jail In lieu of pnymeot. Roy Dahl- qutst, nppem'Ing before Police Judge Day, w iu ns. cssed a fine of »30 or 15 days In Jail,the city following her anest for th eclty following her arrest for being disorderly,

Carl Jensen, arrested on charges of peace disturbance nnd dnuiken- ness. U being held In county jaa His ca. c has not been heard.

Pat McGovern, anested Satimlay night on charges of asserted drunk­enness, la stUl to be heard.

COU.NCIL TO niEET JE n o M E , Dee, 12 - Tlic MetJio-

dist church choir will rehearse at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Lee Mc-

Yey. F riday , erenlng at B, p,m. Tt« church BCtaool workers’ council will meet, at th e parsonage, for ICi regu­lar m ontbly ituOj meeting.

SCaqOL PLANS raOGBAM FAIRVIEW. Dec, IJ — Tha Palr-

vlew school program wUl be present­ed at 8:10 p. tn. on Dec. 20. accord, ing to a n announcement by the teachers. Mrs, Qnlly TverdJ and Mrs. Marion Hamby

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

Top CASH PricesFor YoM

PotatoesSCO

MICHABL-SW ANSON. BRA D Y PRODUCE CO.

Phone 1080 O ffice : Sande BJdg.

Res. Phone IMt

t h S ' a F R A G M N C E

PUBLIC SALEOn the grounds south of the Shell stnlion in Hollister, on H ig h w a y 9?, on

FRIDAY. DECEMBER 14Lunch Served on the Grounds Sale S ta r ts at 12 Noon

TRACTORS-MACHINERY

10-20 McCormick-Deering T rac to r

.\.C . Tractor. A-1, excellenl ru b b e r

Ilonie-mudc Trnclor w ith C o rru g a to r Good Spring Tooth Harrow A.C. fiO Combine wilh seed bean nnd

scour-klecn altachnient Hume-Lovc Reel for A.C. 60 John Deere Side Rake Walking Plow Small L isterInternational Trnclor Tandem Di,‘iC2-Row Horse Btan Cutter Garden Plow and Planter Oliver 2-bi)ttoni Cnng Plow Dccring Horse Mower 6-Scctlon Steel Harrow Tractor Buck Rake

Dccring Grain Binder Cultivator Shanks and Tools John Deere 7-foot Tandem Disc 5-Fool McCormick-Dcering M ower McCormick-Deering Polalo C u ltiv a to r McCormick-Dccring Bean C u lliv a to r 2.Bottom Tractor Gang Plow3-Section Wood Harrow 10-Foot T ractor Grain DrillI Ditcher lO-fool F lo a tA-t)-pe Hay Derrick w ith pulleys & cable lO-Foot Huy Rake Equipment Trailer 2-Bottom Di.sc Plow

SHOP TOOLSBlackHmilh Forge O u t r i t and Blower Blacksmith*Vi.se Blacksmith Anvil and S tand Power Grinder

300 Amp. H obart D. C. portable o r stationary electric w elder, like new

Aceleylcne Welding O u tf i t w ith cu tting attachment

Miscellaneous m otors and p a r ts for Chevrolet, Dodge a n d Model A Ford

Scrap Iron

MiscellaneousBrooder Stoves Cabinet RadioCombination Book C ase and Desk Combination W ard robe and Drawers Lawn MowerForks. Shovels and m a n y o th e r tools

and miscellaneous items Rubber Tired Wagon a n d Ruck Set of Harness 2 Horse Collars DeLaval Separator

COWSI Guernsey-JerBey cow . 8 years old, 4

gallons.1 Guernsey-Jerfiey cow , 7 y ears old, 6

gallon-s1 Heifer Calf, ^ m o n th s old2 year old Milking S h o rth o rn H eifer,

springer•1 year old Milking S hortho rn , fresh

6 weeks3 year old Milking S hortho rn , fresh

8 weeks

TERMS: CASH

W. F. GEERHART. OwnerW. J. HOLLENBECK, AacUoneer G. R. HOLLENBECK, a« rk

Page 11: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

W EDNESDAY, E E a 12,1946

No Licreases Seen in Beet

Harvest PayPresent wags mlrlmums for Uiln-

nlflf, hoelnj, topping and loidlng o fbee ta nTB fair aod It b po«lbl# Ui«t they wui no t r t« next yeif, H arry A. Elcock, dtjtrlct m»n»ger o t the Atnalgunat(d Gugar com­pany. flald Wednesday rfiardlng the FYlday trl-atale heaHng Ui dlatrlcl courtroom on 1013 trajM.. The annual hearing, to b« at-

A tended by «tate beet growers’ uso-

r „ s i! , ,- to r " • S "4 -S !“

Skit About Babes Gives Lions New

Slant on MedicsA m U undfrslandlng about btbira

which shocked a husband and wUe and puzzled ft conMlentloiu TOiker who on ly wanted to do hb Job. waa featul'Cd in a IB-mlnute aklt. -Dou­ble Eatposuro" or "It'* Nice Work If V ou Can G et It," preaented by and fo r the Llona club Wcdnciday

t a P o rk hotel luncheon.D eane Shipley ployed Harty P.

B arren, and Horace Holmes w u his w ife. Olive, the two being a dia- consolate couple who had no chll-

Sc. 5'S?'.S-

IlMES-NEWS. TWIN PALLS, niAHO PAGE e l e v e n :

Pedestrians Who Ignored Traffic Lights Get TagsA score of tickets v u handed

violators of tra f jlc slgnala here Tuesday n igh t In a surprhe drive by city, s ta te and county olllcers.

At least six of the tlcketa went to pedeotrlana who walked agolnat red lights. Police Chief Howard G illette said.

The chief had wanied a week ago th a t pedeaUlans as wcU aa motortita m ust obey the traffic signals here.

Gvic Groups to Ask Waiver Of U. S . Rule on Highway 30

. A rewluUon to aaJc tha t the federal highway commUalon waive th e IW foot n g h ^ - w a y rcBUlnllon fur the.prop<«ed Improvement of hlRhw’ny 3 between Twin Falls And Duhl, adopted by representatives of th e c organtatlona In T w in Fnlis and Duhl who met In Joint seiilon a t

Markets and Finance

omiiuta 11C4C.

. ............ - ..............

Park hotel (his Federal, aid In building roadj

^uJrei a 100-foot r lc h t of v.(vy, Dm J. Cavanagh. civic and c . of leader and roads expert, tola meeting. Before th e r.tnic can to put up the funds for the tcdcral Bovemmeat to m otch, th u rejuls- tion must be waived. WhentIOM '

GrainState’s Highway Fund Not Enough

To Match Grants

Deadline on Tax Payments Dec. 22

lliiS

s-tsr'i = 'sr sr-rUon Phillips woB^recovcdrg^m ^p“jny aMocltttlon, said Wed- "'O will ^^.<ldclim-kcd liu m crcw d the sn ipn

““ " ™ u sd a Council i

m s® = ^B u jld in g Blocks

CINDER p R O D u cTsS .T w in F alls Office

* i-.vv-uiiiiii-iv-ijuciiiiK lUIDDlC n o w1 Two-Boltom Oliver Plow 1 TAvo-Way Horse Plow 1 Four-Bottom Oliver Disc Plow 1 McCormick-DcerinB P lanter (n e w )I McCormlck-Dccririf? Corn P la n te r 1 16-Hole Grain Drill1 lO.foot McCormlck-Decrlng T an d em Dlac2 I^ w Wheel John Deere W agons and Racks1 New McCormick-Deering T ra c to r Cultivator2 Horse CullivalorI Acme Bull Dozer for M or H T ra c to r 1 Eversm an Land Plane 1 Wood Land Leveler 1 T ractor Mower 1 4.Horse Fre.sno

1 2000 Gallon Red Cedar Tank 1 John Deere Corn Sheller 1 Cement M ixer . 1 G as Enirinc5.Scction Wood Harrow 1 C h a tlo n D ikhJr 1 Horse Bean Cutler1 McCormick Tractor Bean C u tle r__ 1 row

TM o.W h«l Trailer .1-Hor.e F re sn o 4 Seta Good Hamejki i c i r c le Saw

Public AuctionFRIDAY, DEC. 14

STARTING AT 11 A.M.Lunch on Grounds by Filer Grange

20 - CATTERPILLAR TRACTOR

3 MILK COWSe

14 Young Ham pshire

EWES, Purebred •

Purebred SUFFOLK BUCK

•Some Woven Wire

o

Misc. Small Tools

-HORSES.Gray Gelding, years old, unbroke Black Gelding, 4 yrs, old, saddle broke

1 Vz Ton FORD Pickup 1 A-C Combine Majestic Coal Range

These Items Offered fo r sale by

ELLIS COATES2 ^ ’aR6ns and Rfickfi - 1 M C Side Rake 1 Lctz H ay C hopper 1 Nap C orruga to r I Oliver Mower, 6 foo t 1 Moline Bean C u ltiva to r

and lools 1 1-Ilow Bean C u tte r 1 2-Row' Bean C u lle r 1 Set H arness

TERMS: CASH

FRANK A. SIKESOWNER

COL. E. 0 , WALTER, Auctioneer LEW IS H A C K . Clerk

BEEN SICK FOR SO LONG fWhy don't jau ilT o NATUnE « chanct to lU rt from the tiiu# or year trouble, atid BEE HOW BOON NATUnE

CAN PUT YOU ON tOUB FEET AGAIN

THE NATURE’S WAY SYSTEMiln Ave.. North—Opposite the Toit Office—Twin tails ihone HSD for Appolnlmcnl—llouri: 9 a. m la C p. m.

UUTon C o laton -M . K. Hartlg—M.ry A Zupo NATUROPATHIC PHYSICIANS'

I ^OPEN INVITATION ^to visit our a

PUMP d isp la y !

The housa publlo linds commit- ■r today approved & fen>le pa«ed III extendlnd the period within

:h rcdtmptlon claims may be ......T he town, a prosperous mining

tiu iip In early rtaya, woj cor\-ef' out HI |)Ubll= landj but many of lli « t - l in o faUed to eitablliJi title to their hom s Jltcs- A special act of con- Krcfs In low save them the rtRlit

Bonds Reinstated For Accused Pair

C ash bonds of $JM each, ordered forfeited Txiesdoy when M n. flchlr- rel! Shank and John M. 6Iefrted failed to appear In JuaUca court for trial on charB « of UIcrsI oohablta-' tlon. were reln.stated Wednesday by Judge Jamea O. Pumphrey.

O. C. Hnll. attorney lor Mrt. Shnnk appealed to the court to set aside th e forfeiture order, becauje' he aald. he and hU client w*r» un- der th e Imprcrjlon that the trial date was Weclncjday.

In relnstatlniT ttic bonds. Judge Pum phrey set the matter for trial Thursday.

Associate D ea le rs }■ Enunett Smltb—Jerome

Kimberly PlumblnK— Kimberly

Bolloo Bros,—G oodlor Smith riBmbInc—nal)e7

Slmmoni Plomblne— T^fn Fails

Ree*»l»r Broa.—Sho*h«Bo CUode CampbeU—

Weuaell No-Way Plombtnx—Bohl

Tayler-a Serried—Fllet

Plumbing • P a in t

Krenjrl’s Intllf yoi , _in at your tonvcnlcnce and wltncM an tttual demanstra- llon of the follonint types of Falrbanks-Morie pumps:

Page 12: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

P A G E TWELVE TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO W ED N ESD A Y , DEC. 12, 1945

Rep&itOniiie WoJiBy General G eo rfje C. M a rsh a ll

BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE RED RYDER By FRED HARMAN

ThI* ta the a n d of i i buJiUmenU o f matrrlAl icIrcUd frem Qmenl M anliRira ffporl on the wlnnlni of W orlJ W at II-

XXII BtVOND THE nlllNE

In ilx wcclu Uio comblntd elforis o t the nlllNl (irmles hirt aclilevfd a major oyccilve. The Ocrman « ill wc-sl ot llic lllilno liad bctii clc.ire<I ot i\ll hoslllc torcM- The r lv rr Itrolf liad bctn forccd fortiiUoiB 'hdom or ncllon of tlio Ocrro*n dc- fciv'o on the cMl brink wm scrlomly ciirlnllcd. Ociicrnl EL'tiitiocrr w. now rcndy lo launch Ills ollcnsl' bp.voiul llic Rlilnc.

Severn I coMldtriitluiis govcrni t.lio aclcctloii of Llie llrc^ north i th o Hulir tor Uio nialii cffon. d rive hi thL' jeclor wiis llie quid c at means ol denying wtial vp.stli rcn)nlnc<l of the once rich ilulir li d in trlf" to the enemy. n i: .•.trclch ot the illilne be'/iecn Kir merlch Unrt Wc.'.cl

tho Bemagcn urcj ImU exttnded the bridgehead to a depth of miles and a Jciit;th ol over DO. 1 O erm nn lifuli cummnnd. rxiicctliic and immediate ilrlvc on the liuhr from thU dlreclloi), had coiicen- tra tcd atrong torcto ot army group "B" north of the eicg river, To their great r.urprL'c. Qenrrnl Ilodgea hrokc . . . . .-..-I— jbridgehead

3 Man

_______ . . . 'J tor a larcrd era'n n d tho Qrrmnru hnd Ijroiiulu up orily relntlvcly interior (orcM lo op-

l l i n l 'r l 'r r the uditly rolling tiiriilii n o rth ot tlic lliihr mi.s ina.'. j,ult.iljlc fo r mobile aiuI tank: ojierslloai, th e type of nartnrc It ivm dc.slrcil

hLi arm or drove to Umburg, ttlzed a brklgo over tho Lnhn river, roccd aluHK tlic eupcrlilgliwiiy

Fr.-uiktiin. Other nrmored riiw ot thu Ilrst ftrmy, I>cc<I- M.stw.iril ikJi IiLM n.’i 40 mlla ti rrachrd Mnrbiirn and Olc.s cii

by ’U March, nnd then swims •iwarcl tliruiijh the lilll country of K0.V5C1. 'IYooi« of tho Ui: •' cro.%scci tJio river a t Mulnz

rretucc the Ocrnmn pocket bypis^cd :wccn Maliis and Frnnlcfnrl while the other Ihlrd army force.i

drove on to-.vard ICa/.icl nnd the line 1)<- Kukh. riv,T. WlUi colld coii- . between thflr nilvaiiclng coriis, flr/it nnd thlnl nrmle* aerc now

r.xcciitlnK a miu-sUe th ra i l to the if Grr-

3 force uhL ; .1.m otor fuel.

After ft heniy iitrlal and nrtlllery preparation, the .-.ecoiid UrltWi a rm y bci;un mi a.'.':aMlt crosslnR th e nhlnc UurlnK the evening ot 23 March. Next niomlni;, the U, S.

. 17th nnd ihc Ctli Brlthh nlrborn <llvhloiL'. were dropped north iiorthcA;.t ot Wc.'el. lltllL'h troo|n iTn;vslnn llic river .^oon fot:iblt lieil contact with the alibarne totce.i. T h e U. S. ninth army crosied be­tw een Wcicl and Duisburg early th e 2Mh. meeting light lo inodernte rc.-.Litancr. Within two brldKOs had been built r iv e r and the Brltbh-Amerlran

• hrldKChcad stretched 2S mliri nlonK th o Ilhlne to n maximum deptl 6 mlles-

Elienhowtr rra lte s Troop*General Elsenhower tcm alth

n in th when It jumped oil. He liCrlbed the attack In a letter;

" I have Ja'il IlnL^hed n rapid i o f Uic battle front. Yr.'lfriUy

n in th army to wIlhc.m ll. )ump-off a n d tho early sUige.s or Its Rhine crc .'i.'ijnfi, Slrojiiou pcrtoraifd In hL' iisunl ontatanillng style. Our lo i n killed, during the craving, wcr In one aisaull divlilon luid !0 In o th e r. I £tny«l up mast ot n l s h t to Kitnc.vi the preliminary bombnrdmcnt by 1,350 guns. It wa: a n especially IntereAllnR »lfiht be' cau.-!e of the tact that all the Riin.1 w ere fprcad out ‘ ‘th e flA,'hej troi; lin e 10 llie oilier were all plainly visible. I t w. s real dnimrirc.

" I have noted iio many i a n d oiiU'lattdlng Incldnili In the forw ard arpa.1 that It would almcx-il w cnry you lo tell you otperformance.? ot American l...... .troopa. For eismple, the engineers o f V II corps laid a trc4d»-ay bridge aeroM the nhlnc In 10 hours 11 minute.';. Wlille not actually d e r lire, IhLi Job wn-i done under battlefield conditions wlUi all the neccssary prccautlotu taken lo pre­v en t unusual damage by a sudden concentration of enemy nrllllery fire. I t was a brilliant pertormsnce."

During the rrltlcol «rcli ending 22 March, • United State.i aircraft nlonc mnrio H,<30 heavy bomber attack.*, 7JC3 medium bomber at­tacks, and 29,081 fighter sorties a gainst targets la Europe.

B y 35 M arch 'hard fighting In

S ID E GLANCES

The (oinpl Germ an military e. tablL'ihmenl

under wjiy. the -icctor ot Ileld Marshal

M ontgomerys northern army group. •• a. n in th ormy prc.i.^ed Into

ihweat section of the Ruhr. Siill fu rther to ihe north, rc.sL-itaiicc on th e right flank ot the 13rlil.sli M'coiid army slackened con.ilderatjly toward the end of March, and arm­ored trooia broke through to Ual- men. Meanwlille, on the lett Hunk of th e Jiocond army, the enemy wlth-

Dutcli bonier on a 30-mllc froiu.D urlns the la.n week of March

both of Ucnernl Dovers’ ormlc. In the rou th croMCd the RJilne. seventh .'.ent the XV .corps, mjindc<t l>y MaJ. Qen. W. H. Unb- ll|). iicra-.s on a 15-mlle front t)C- twri'ii Gcrii.'ihclni nnd Mnnnhelm Our triio|>3 took Mnnnhelm and nd- v-nced 25 miles caM ot the [thine. The I I corps of the tlr.il Ktench amiy cro.-jed the Rhino near Oer* mcr.^hclm and e^IablL'hcd contact with Uie flcvi'iith urmy .vjuth of Heldolberg. Hy 1 April, m neli troo|x^ had advanced 18 inllc-^

T he magnitude of the otleiv.lve smothered rr.-.Litancc all, niung ft-e.steni front. The shattered < dhlon of the Ocrnian trarviport

the .siutalnc^l sj>ec<l ot Ihe allied advance prevented the enci from coordlnathiK a drfcrvslve l!

, wctor. He did otter bit re.'L'itnnco n t l.vjbtrd points but

e by-passed by Uie nrmorei' columns, leaving pocket.s lo be mop ped up later. During the month of •• ■ nearly 3.W.000 prLionera «

on t)ie western front.NEXT; TJio Knoekoull

Buhl Kiwanians Sec South Pacific Films

DUHL. Dec. 13 - Doyd llol/i former major In the aniiy who Bjient

le on ChrlJtma.5 bland In the Bouth Pacific area, exhibited

colored plcturc* of the «iutl Pacific i«t the regular meeting of thi Klwanl.i club thU week. He iil^o hat movies of the Ilawnllan bland.v

W. Bugs-’ and Dr. Vern Anderson, dcntUt nnd doctor, re- 01>ectlvcly. who have been In service

veral years, and are nieinbcni B uhl KhvnniJ club, were prea- . Uie meetlnK. Dr. Uant.s will e practice at once In hLs uld

rooms over the First National bank. Dr, Ander.-;on cxpcctj lo beghi prac-

ns soon as possible. He re­ly purchased Ihe residence of

John Noble. 430 North Droadway.

B y GALBRAITH

WASH TUBBS By LESLIE TURNERWTHtl/^ui^OVi ----------- -

-oouB mkwtv wice\twaitE0*2Cur BIB. H£ 90XTON I N£« /noN’T SHTiV UP rOOM

CIVILIAN I rod W5 DlSCM«?/5Er, aoTHcS

OUT OUR WAY By W ILLIA M S

BOOTS AND H E R BUDDIES By EDGAR MARTIN

LU-’E’S L IK E THAT By N E H E R

"By Uic time I'vo Ilnbhcd sliopplng I alwoyi forget where I parked my CM,"

THIS CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSON

« vxxivo yuiy\JWOCSt-bT\ONWei.V.».)-^ '

wt f*-«0W ft 6 ’ROWV5-09

GASOLINE A L L E Y ' By KING■ G llOltJiNC tl AT 50 I B C05H. IHAfS M ITS BiOGtk’ ] W PEU0W5 1

POttnCS a (ilCNIH, etff FOB I IB Hictliri? THiSN ||i THAN *vc j too»; /mccuno • a i3 TiMCG SAKE ra t f i 'oyl B ive'D tuvc A vfAci; [c/isE roe ^ ■ ficuw d oi

is.oe c c v n i c . r

T B r ( I M l sTH.RTEEKJ WILL ^THEAUTOMOBtlE WOULP ^

e s A MI6KTY15HOCT / HAVE TD 0f?EAhC UCWK<5QUEE2e,My<5oop , .......... ........................ ..

V/1FC-. ‘EVEEV TWO MIWUTtHi

By GUS EDSONiWAT AUTTZ^/vialfJL^ I ClSHT, /V.,.—

» 10U ThlN^ •jtX/s'cov/ViE CAN PP1VS A VACATION rO U I?7_yC M l'^ A . LfTTLE

J -— ^WAY.THEM WE 'H A V E T D CONTINUE

ON POOT-HCfS^e_ >-=007.'. liCOCXCjKlSP/

AW JVC A/fiVBI? EI/£ fZlppeM OMACAKOLK€-Llt

DIXIE D U G A N ByM cEVOY and STRIEBEL

fN WHAT NOW l5 0NLyA8lD©ffiSSa'T,

EAPUY >!VMERICAN INDIANS &REWBOUNTinJL<3KipSLCT4& ■ BEFORE THE OAtycFcmwBUS. ,

BY HAND LABCR AL0N8, A WEirWOiJK: OP IRRIGATION CANALS 150 MILEff IN LEH&TH WAS D(M, TWROUSH THE STONY S O tL TO CARRY WATER FROAVTHE SALT Rl>/ER.'THE Ditch es ran6eo u p to s o f e e t inWIDTH, AND T£N FEET DEEP IN PLACES.

S a o 'ii/ic y

SCORCHYi

r YEAH, rn p u•nuK cffco-r YE/AH, WSKS5 THS AnSMC C THIS ftSAK M>i}l£ H ia M THS 0SAWSKA...TM5<fe>S£J8 5TEAM-H6AT T " IVWLC Uy.L«Y..

mcef ACE . . . ,n where « rrs u» ton/

S iO K H Y f I\T N£>£K HEARD OP rr j EXISTENCE...TWS V«ETATI5K » TR0P1C4i, not > AlA5«J^N...Mft-KA5WTlT /eeen b£pc«< 1

. APlACt HK£ T._ « u .e p rr'rnf vau-ev <? *«,WKS5.'.IT

IN N EW < 3 U IN e A .)N PEWSELY FORCSTED AREASt SOME BIRDS UVE THETOTES, NOT/W TH EM , AND MAX'S WEV/Eft BEEN SEEN TO PcCOt ABOVE THE ^Ot-'NO

By EDMOND GOODTHi« IS THAT PUCe. AND n

5U<0E l«X5 U>«* THSy tVBtt RiSHT„.M're FTCTASiy THB FlCST AHTW (NHOS_rT'»UXEW.NA PKWSYAt <MTE ggiu Kim£><Ty

HAVENT INTOTHEl.. . . TOO MUCH A3

THIMBLE THEATER STARRING POPEYE

fAHOy. OSCAR,. ^ ARB yA O iA Y f ? }

THE HAJjneS ACE CAaWING AWAV y -me DEMONSy \WELt=='V- I - 'CIA ) '

I

ALLEY OOP By V. T. HAMLIN'f I

Page 13: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

W EDNESDAY, DEC. Ifi. 1945 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO PAGE THIBTSEN

T R U C K S AND TRAILERS

S?wf*fo roMIt?*'* r i ^ ' ' bbt'TKAILEH

»uUi, '4"

p.IXK _m^n(|-T »llh

B BcCulim

L E G A L ADVERTISEMENTSFedera l Worlcs Agcncy, Public

BuHdlnga Administration. Olflce of tho Division Engineer, 538 0. a Ap­praisers’ Building a»n Prancljco Jl, CalUornlu. Nov, K. 1B«. Scaled

L>, In uipUcate, »111 be received thU office unlll 2 p. m.. Dec, 31,

1045 a n d then publicly opened, for. fumlflhlng the maierlBls, ind per- formtaB th e work for new water pip.

it th e U. 0. P O, Twin M lj , % In strict accordance with ipeelflcatloM dated PD-Dlv-T

October 15. 1045, and drawings (If any) menlloncd therein: And the genera: conditions dated Sept. IS, 1942 a n d ncitlendum thereto dated May 15. 1B44. SpccUlcatlona and other da ta may be had a t the office of thp custodian of the building or the office of Uie dlvblon engineer. J. E. S tan ton . Division Engineer.Pub: Dec. 12, 13, 14. 1045.

NOTICE FOU PUBLICATION D epartm ent of the Interior, 0 . a.

Land Office a t BUckToot, Idaho. December 7. 1545.

NOTICE 1j hereby tlvgn th it Doylo L, suga r, of Route No. J. Tirtn Falls, Idaho, who, oa September 4, 1943, m ade Homatead entry. No. 053281, fo r EWNE!4, NEKSE^t, Section 34. Townihlp 11 South, Range 16 Eaat,' Boise Meridian, has filed noUce o t inteatlon to toaks Three Y ear Proof, to estabUih fUim to Uje land «b<«’e described, befon Jam es O. Pumphrej. U. R Com­missioner. a t Twin Fall*. Idaho, oa the 18th day o t January. 1»48.

C laim ant namea as wltatOHit :an D rltton. of 158 MiUn Are. S ,

Twin Falls .' Idaho; E. !>. IlubCRi< of 158 M ain Avt. 6., Twin FtUi. Idaho; Charles ODeU. of Route Nol 3, Tw in Palls. Idaho; M. R. T u Ausdlen, o l Routs No. J. Twin PUls, Idaho.

FRANK E. OeEAY, BegltUr. Publish :D tt. 13, 1», » . IMi; Jan.

a, P. IMS.

Officers SelectedJEROMB. D»c. 12 ~ Al ft in««tb)(

01 the JM8 Jerom# countjr AAA «o». : mlttw Monday, ofllcar* ft.MerotaT7 ftnd a treasurer to tan- > for the et«uiii» jm . S tm t •»!«-; , phrey waa again eleelM Mostuy, .*hu# KrB. euala .KontUnd'.irw.:. named tieaauiw. ; Alt«a4ttig.- U z. Pool, eauoly ch»tna«a5 Vl«a ■ Nelscn. regulftr auabu. , -

Page 14: FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERSnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...FINAL CITY EDITION TRUMAN ORDERS Bolyard Signs to Manage Cowboys In Pioneer Loop Plnycr-mniuiKcr

PA G E FOURTEEN TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, mAHO W E D N ESD A Y . DEC. 12.1946

Divorces in England See

Heavy RaiseBy D EW IIT MACKE.NZIE

LONDON. Dcc. 13 (.T^-Tlie heavy liicreasc In divorcc In Qigbncl rep* rc se n u Ui large iltsrcc tlic opening of tlic Iloodgntcs tu the accumula­tion of grleiTincrs bclwccn ttic sol­dier ovcr^ciu". iinU liLi mhiiis buck lioine.

Wc tlon 'l need lu mli 'ITiorc's been n lot of unfnllhlulncii on bo th sldci. 'Die mnjorliy of tho iwlllloncrn urc soldiers bu' lalnly tJoe:.n’l nicju that h;ivc Ijccii more unfnlthtul than tholr men,

Tom m y AUcliw ;ometlii iiiilvc outluok on tlih sgrl of thing. l"«r Instnncc. many murrled eoldlera <loii't corvslclcr ttial tliey'vo co.nmlt- Irtl adu ltery by niJoclntlng wltli an unm arried iady ot iirofeisloiially ciiny virtue.

Ecforc 111.'-. CMC eumes up far trial. Tommy likely will swear tu lib at- lorncy witli great fervor iIihi he h.i'in 't committed adultery, 'llih L'i an Im portan t point In F:nglbli bw. becau.'.c If a petitioner Li KulUy uf tnL^conduct. and doesn't mslie ii

Kct.i

o Uic c • Is thrown c

. the ir dcmaticLi:

•D o you mciin to swe-.r ttini l ia v cn t liad any relation.^ wl womivii :ilnco you've been over*i

To tliLi tlic lutonWipd yoiiiis Vetortj:

"Of cour-10 I've lind rel.itloiw .... nom cn. U'ho Vue tfmci 'n 'l ndultcry .m long as they nitirrlcd.-

I t th e n take.'; k powerful lot

pUlnlnj to muka Tommy under' Blond Hint ho h as violated the law Ja it Ds much ns has his wife whom ho Lt sulnit- Tlil;i inealu thu caao will be dLsraliied unle.ia Ilie court glvei Icnvc to amend ili tltlon.

Mrs. Mac and I liavc dug deep Into the ren-'onn for the liicre.iic In di­vorces, and th e chief coii.rc probably haa been llie protracted .^epnratloii nccc.'.iltated by the husb.iiid'u duty overseaa,

lliLs hiu been a long w;ir, nntl tlic solcller.i have ben i aiviiy from tlid

Ive.'i In maM ca.'.e;i between 40 amI monthr, wltlioul leave at hunic.Naturally thW lia.s cuntribuletl ti

Immorallly. I t ha;j Rheii nioii chance for playing about. Probnbl; ■■ here ha<l been no .'.ciijiratlon

e would have been no divorcc.

Divorce Decrees Filed in Court

^'l^o divorce decrees, grnnletl Frl- iiy liy DL',trUl Judgo Jainp.". W, ofter, bill im.^l«ned until recently, avi. now been filed In dLitrlct court, Newi W anm bakcr wnj uranted dl-

orce from Clarence Warm.^bakcr, •. eiir had ch:irge<l extreme cruel-

Qlio received custody of «oiu, .•uid 10, anti (laiiRhter.n, 13 and H.

he wa.1 Riven the furniture, car anrt a Flier lot. The cou|iIe married Nov.

t. 1921 at Clayton. N. M.Alberta Uncltnian «;u divorced

from nny L. iluckmnn, nlioni *hc ■ charsed wllh extreme cruelty

received SOU monthly alimony the furn itu re nnd ciutody ot

daiighterfl. 1 nnd 3. l l i c couple mnr- leil Feb. 11, 1033 ftt American Falls.

Lnrcest windmill ever built Jtandi Oolden Outo park . Ban Francisco, ha.i IV capnclty of 50,000 gallons hour. '

Area Council Of Scouts to

Elect FridayOfdceDi ot the an .ikc river are.'V

council for the coming year, wll! be elfctcd Friday nl th e annual Boy coul banquet, to be held ot 7:3 . m. In the Park hotel, Herbert I I'r.'l, Scout executive, announced. Tlic ofllccra of thU year who ur

to 1)0 replaced by the commute election nre 115 follow/;: Tlie nev. E. Lcille R0IL1, cotlncl! pre.ildent; noy Painter, tre.w irer; and WllSur ij. mil, commLviioncr. All three rc of TR-ln Fiilb.Vlce-prenldentfi, ch.nlrmen of their

ffipectlvc dl.itflct/i, -serving tlil. ye.nr, re: Henry Tucltctt, Dlalnc: Unlelgh ^ Smertley, Buhl; Adonis Nelbon,

liurley: Rosel Ifale. Ca.vila; S. L. Bulllvan. Gooding; C, Y. WllllamAon, Jerome; Tlicodore Sturgill, K-H-M district; D. G. Hyde. Minidoka; Oeorce Neddo, H aft river; O. J,

—Cull—POTATOES

—W A N TED —

IV fhmtlretl..._........ 3 0 * ^Any ainnunt, delivered to plant

ROGERS BROS. SRED CO., Burley Potato Flour Mill

Bothne, Twin ro lls: Jack Keith, Lincoln,

Dri n. C. Mabon. Jerom e, U In chorsc of arraiigcinenti fo r the b.Mi- quct. Anyone inlcre.sted In iittendhig may do so by phoulna the Boy Scouts olflce for reservations, Wc.';t

U. S. Goods Bring Fantastic Prices

SHANGHAI. Dec. rJ 0 ’> — U n. scrupulous bl.ick m arket operator*, denling In United State:, products bought on the (.ly fro«n .■soldiers nnd hnllore, urc gettliig fan tiiiilc prices for American canned goocl-i, ulgnr- el.s. candy and other luxuries.

A numiier-llCllM If 810 c re, U.

S..money. A ixjpular bniiul a itt.ts rll ' for DO crtif. n p:ick. Nick­el candy bars cckr,t 35 cent.:.. A .'.even* l)0und can of proce.v.ect Amcrlcon cliee.re wld for the eriulvnlrnl of $33.

Tree Crop Brings In 180 an Acre

Wostc pcrei that grow nothlr.s < »ceda can be made to produce tlio rat« of KO on acre planted black Jocust trees, declared Vernon Ravenicroft, extension forester the University of Idaho, occordlna «ord received here by Albert Myl- rule, county agent.

According to nacen.<«roft, ‘•lo­uts grow Into one of tho finest pe of fenco posu In about 10

years. And an ocre of southern Ida­ho Irrigated ground under ordinary condltlon.1 will producc about 1,000 po»t.s In that time with a value of nbou'. »e0O If cut and cared for In he right way."

STUDtNTS StLI. BOND.S aOODINO, Dcc. 13 — GoodlnK

high ecliool Btudent.i /.old *17,853, mnturlty value, of boncts In an Inner clxy contest held recently. The 3r class won, celling M,505Blue.

PUBLIC NOTICE!CONNECTIONS A T WELLS FOR DENVER,

CHICAGO AND ALL POINTS EASTW« are n«« ronnrc tlne with Puclflc Grejhound Lines a t Wftl.s. Nfvad.i; »bo Uurllntton Trailw»y»—Hnuthem racitir H. It. and W eil^m PacIJle R. n . Serrlee to I.. A.1.1 not afferled. I.ravlnR time for Twin Fnlls;

10 A. M. AND 0:15 I>. M.

TWIN FALLS - WELLS STAGESEJuy Tickct.s A n y tim e Phone 2000

Open WRA Lands To Vets, He UrgesWASHINGTON. Dec. 13 (/P>—Sen.

O'Mohoney, D., Wyo, wanta 67,000 flcrts of Irrigated loud, med durtns the war by the war relocation »u- thlrlty, made available for vetemns.

A bin (0 open tho lands (or seltle- menl In accordance with reclamo- tlon laws will be considered by tho senate mllllary affairs commlttce this week. ©"Mahoney cald.

The Iiind.1 covered by the O’Mii- honey bill were Included In Jap.mese relocation centcrs nt Hart mountain

I Shoshone project, Wyornmg; lint relocation center on the Mlnl- ikn projcct, Idaho, and Tule Lake 1 tho Klamath project In Cali­

fornia.Most of the land In the projccli

WM obtained Irom tha rtclunsUon scrvlce and ilnce has been dccl&red .surplu.1. Under the present surplus property law they would bo sold by the general land office, O’Mahoney explained.

---- WATER----HEATERS

Heat-O-MaticrLECXniC WAXEB nEATEnS

2 Unit • 40 Gal. Ctpacil)'

$119.95ROB’T E. LEE SALES CO.

Plumbing Pcpt.551 Main Bo. Phone im v

H ig h est Prices for

PotatoesW o Are Now Baying at

t H A ZELTO N i H A N SE N t KlM BEnLY - MURTAUGH

? W . W. and W. T. Newcomb

Id a h o '! IMoneer D ojers & SUppers"

DIYRON IIAnniS, Btzjn Mnrtati*h. Phone S3 W aB D B L00CK8

KlmberJy. Pbong U li M ain Office Bnriej. pho. tH

TtmiE AY 1FA.1I IR

Kiilranco Jier, enhance her bcnuly with Cliri.stmas a llu re frofn the Mayfair . . . P retty pifta nil on diaphiy now in their best fe.stivu m n n rc r. F o r the newest, mo. t cnpti* vatiiifj Kifts sh o p now n t the Mnyfnir.

i t’s the little things tha t count

W h e n S a n ta w hi.spcra tn hi.s h e lp e rs . . . an ti tells th e m whnt to s t u f f in h i s o ld puck . . . hc'H Miro to h av e p le n ty o f .slippiTH for all th e k id d ie s .A n d h e r c ’K w h ere you'll find fio m a n y b c a t i l i f i i l style.-s lo help keep f ro m d is - n p p c in t in f f a n y o f the yottnRHlcrs.

Juvenile Shoe Department Headquarters for

Children’s HOUSE SLIPPERSBoy’s F elt

SLIPPERSBoy's felt r.lijipers of toft warm fleecy folt. Colorr. of brown or Kroy. Bi>It pad­ded buckskin leather roles lur fcrvlcc,

............... $1.98o th e r fells for boys st Jl,«

Sizes V/2 to 8

LEATHER SLIPPERSJicrc 's u real prnctlcal, senlce ullpper for t o f brow i kid leather. Smarlly styled tV erette cut. Soft padded w ie s...................

: boy th a t likes a nice co.->’ slipper

$2.49Other Leather S tyles $2.19 to S3.15

I.iltle ficnfssize.s n im ilar to above 8 to 3

k id d ie s —MISSES

S L I P P E R SO f Real Leather

These are w ann . they're tturdy, Uiey're dif­ferent, These lovely blue kid lenlher jlipper.s ore In seml-boot style, Wann $ 0 1 0 fieecc linings, soft sole ..... .........

FE L T STYLES

F o r a c tive feet. Thcy’i! keep w arm in th c su fleece lined felta with K re a l s tu rd y leather.soles. fl»-j p C o lo rs o f rose and b lue ........................................................ W 1 • / i7

Growing: Girls

SLIPPERSH ere’s ;i line of iwvclty fe lt sHppcf.t

fo r the lartrer jjirls in colors o f ro.sc and li>?ht blue, .Shown with fla t o r colleiro hoelH. Smart itoiu-jiom trim . W arm fleecy liiiiiiK.s. m - | q q H ard leather .sole.s.............

NOVELTY SLIPPERSGay muKi-iiot print.s in cozy co n ifo rtab lc crofis .strap o|)en D’Or- say .-ityle. Idea! for the larger g ir l th a t likes the new nnd differ­en t. Medium low wctinc heels.

H andkerchiefsHave plenty of dainty, feminine hiind- kerchlefs on h»nd lo add a flnl.shlnt; touch to your Chrlstmiyi packaRcn and card'). Whatever jour dc.'ilres yoii'll find them here now.

35c,. $3.95

IRISH LINEN

......65c

Sl.OO

Her r.ivorite . . .

HousecoatsThe Rift .‘!hc alwiiy.i look.s for

first. Make your .“election

now fi-oni th is slo ck in

■sucile or cicpe.

$5,95,0 $24.75

They Make Excellen t G ifts

ScarSs and FascinatorsPretty icarfs in Mjiiare. or ob-

lonKS or Ilcrcy lilpht fa.',cunilors

to keep her warm. THey'rc appre-

clntcd gifts.

Scarfs from

.?1.98 to S-i.45I'asclnators

S1.98

vc’ve plenty o f o ther .slyle.s (00...$2.98

SupTffestions for

th e Outdoor Girls

INFANTS -SM ALL TOTS

SLIPPERSBnby blue and pink pluvh slippers in bootie styles. Soft, m y , vinrm, ivith soft soIi-.-i elellKhtfuI Klft fnr th e little o n e ....... $1.19

Real S h e e p Skin

Sizc.s 5 lo 8

BUNNY SLIPPERSDiinny sculfs nre the delijht of the >’ounge4i kiddles, they're so wann nnd diu-- iible. MotherK enjoy their practical ea*e for clennlns- Slip n pair ot theie

........................... $.149 ,.$1.98 -S iie s 5 to II

MANY OTHER LO V ELY , PRACTICAL STYLES— FOR EV E R Y SIZE AND ACE O F F E B E I) H ER E NOW

.- J Juvenile Shoe D c p a r lm c n t . •• •

DEPARTMENT STORE* ......-... “T/ic Christmas Store"

Dre.s.H or Sport S ty le

SweatersBrlsht pull-overs o r bultori Ironts In long or s h o r t sleovo Btylrj to top her sk ir ts and ebcks.

$3.95,. $6.95While S i n s -----

Ski Jackets •?10,95 to $16.95

Jantzen Ski

Sweaters ?8.95