city edition seizures labor crisis -...

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FINAL . CITY EDITION PRICE B CENTS SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS Congress Starts Wrestling With Atomic Energy Issue Dy MAX HALL WASHINGTON, Oct, 4 (iiP)—CoiiKrcss at In.sL liiis come l.i Krips w ith Hit' mn-i ucrvc. wrncking problem of the war—ntomic enerRy. Today the lawmaker,s: 1. Appcnrad rcmiy to jiDku’ Pjc,fjde/}t TrmiDuj lo name n commi.v.vi(7n whi an iron hniiti the peacetime dc\’cloiiment of atomic cnersy within our Ijorc: 2. Said in iiiterview.s that they want a haiui in dccicliiiR how far to k ' o ii bomb Doolittle Flier on K. P. Tigers Whip Cubs on Greenberg Home Run BRIGGS STADIUM, Detrail, Oct, I (/!>) — T h e Uct TiRcrs came riding l)ack on Hank Greenberg's home run today to whip tbe Chicago Ciih.«, 1 to 1, in the second Kfmi of tbe 1[)'15 world series and oven tlie count at one win ai)ic but tnrllnu with the top ol Box Score. )KTrioiT, Oct. 4 (-r^fficU i 1) Nlchol.\oti, rf ..... llllMplr. c .......... lufhM , >s ... P ............... SreoT v ............. Erirkjon p _ ...... Il«Vcr XX ............ Totals ............. .—Hailed for j i-Bjiifd for DKTUOIT (AL) Wtbb, M .............. Mtyo. :b Cmmer. c/ . ......... Tfenbfrr I f ___ Callcnlilne. rf ...... ^ountrie:- All olhrr rii tnxc.s-nrc (l;^ArIc(l by rihlHR prolilrm broiiglit bc- : Iculjlntora by President 111 B solemn niCMA f. Jewelry, me t)cIori 1 ,1 commit. roontii inmnc:' liS JollllSOil CLIrajo (M.) . •nOEns'-Piflio '»fni Two Million GIs Disabled in War '/IV*AI' WAMUNaTON. Oct. 4 moji 3^.000 servlcfmrn um' atjied by wouiidj, dlaense or gcel' ‘Icnu In World w»r n . Wednes- A^lZ «'« Disabled' American Veterans. Ife says tlili is ‘h-m fivt ttoiL.., M^many « ‘’1 ' " ’orlil >l«ures thni one U\ ID-or C50,000—a r t lotAl^ Johiwnn, Earnril runs; Clilcai INL) 1. Detroit IAL| 4. Left < basei; ThleaRo 8. Drtroll 7. Bases < ballv Off Wyw 3 (Cuncnbinc .Mayel: off KHrk.'ton 1 <Gi^enbrr| off Truck.i 3 (nuRhes). Hark. Nlc! 'Ison). SlrlJiPoulj: By \Vy*c York); by Trucks 4 (Wysc, Johi on nteki-r): by tricknon I’llfliln'f summary: Wy.r. 5 lill f, empires; Jonla (NL) r arclla (AI-) lb; foi.la.i (Nl Summer* (AL> 3b, Time; 1;J7 Revolutionary ‘Magna Carta’ Set for Japs TOKYO. Oct. i (,1W GC I1, Doilnliii JacArlhur dctreecl n revolutionary iftftliii carta for Jajian lod:iv. or drrlni! tlir Imperial Bovcrnineia t. all b.arj lo frocdjin o .•■peech. rrllRlon and u.\scmbly, dk band Ihe brutal, still-ncllvc ••ttioiijrti police,' mid relca.^e their 3,000 polll •nl prkoiiers by OcU 10. In n letter lo the newly rcarxan l«t1 Jnpane.'^e ccntrnl liaison ofllce MflcArtlmr told the Imperial govern blimtly and clearly U> abolWi nil logWnllon reslrlctlnB freedom of •• • people. me letler nbo demanded removal from office of Home Minister Iwao iniaTakl, clilef.^ of the Tokyo and 0,'^nK.T nielropnlllaji pollcc boards nml ot the territorial pollcc of Hok- kaido, HueArlhiir meanwhile offered no romment on Riuylan demand.i for a foiir-po-*er control government to replncc hij rule In Japan, Globester Flight Near Washington HA.MILTON FIELD, Calif., Oct, 4 fUJ’J—Tlie army traosr Globester today was Wa.'tfilngton, D, C,. on Uie lait leg of * round Ihtt world fllRhi which It was cxp«t«cl to complete In Itu than 150 hours. The world circling plane arrived I Hamilton field, 35 miles north t San Franclseo, frc»n Honolulu ; J;13 a, m, (P3Ti. Alter n stopover of slightly more than three ho^irs, 11 look off for Wajhlnsion at 5:35 . m. (P3T). Weary and himgry ere liken to the tii meaj for drinks and a n United Preas staff co Frederick C, Othnian s been out of hU clothes ihrtc tlraej. In the eiXKhal g<Hag irno lU &1X11] <jay. War Fund’s Total Climbs Up to $7,266 11.000 I'atlock, C. R, HciKlo rrabln-e, Chic Hlntt, ; Carr paasoiigers ,ual oKlccrs teak dinner, )rrespondent ifficlftl re;iell Community $7,:CC.75 a t II First retun Mrs, njilph \ ouglii,'! Uorlasp, c rlo Illff and Mr. iliintcers on Mr; rcportliig. Their ; -ictory," Mrf loiincd by the Idnlio I’oin .ny. Is devotlnc hh time llil; 1 to tlip drive. Ills hciulquar- In the Chamber of Com- office nnd anyone who dcslrej kc contributions, and who ha.? ^cn canvasicd by a vohinleer worktr. may do so by malUnc lUi donation or calling nl Ihe Chambei of Commerce offlcc, Ot the $27,UOO Koal for Ihe city ol iind Romen nbrojid walllti to the aiiites the need f tlon and I'lilorialnmcnt :ntcr, chiilriiui jarri. declared. Be.Mdes USO of I War fimfl Ij ted Seamen',? service, nld. Philippine war China relief, Amerl- Ice, U. S, eommlttce if Enrujjcan children her devastated couti- County War fund goal s » Including the $10,000 quota signed Tnln Falls city. I’re.sident Tnm ian will ( tbe way clear for top Kove nation'K fuel supplie,H. The sei/.tire annotiiiccmpnt wns is= hour.s after all but one of I] oil cojjjji wuKc controver.sy arbitration. Jt WHS not immediately clear whether rank-and-file Flour Mill Resumes Processing at Plant Schwellenbach “Stumped” Over Failure of Company Arbitration ’Phone Halt Definite For Four Hours Here Tlicrc will definitely Ix' a four-hour interruption in tele - phone .scrvico in Twin Falls and JU ikIc Valley from noon to ■1 |T. m. Friday while Idaho employes of Jlountain States Tele- phone and Telcffraph company participate in the .strike vote ordered by the National Tederation of Telephone Workers. T h at w.i.-i confirm ed Tliur.sday both from Doi,‘<o and by .loe De;irdorff, Twin Falls, state pre.'^ideiit of the Plant Mi fedcTJitioii, .ler ,seiztire of all strike-bound oil plant,s this nfternoon, Icnvins ment oflicials to step into other major disputes threatening tho roni tbe W hite House last nisht le.s.s than three rejected n proposnl to submit tho coast-to-coast <-and-file oil worker.^, on strike in plants and refineries over a 15-statc area, would return to work under «overnment fiiipervision. In Wa.^hlngton. Prcjldenl O. A Knight of the United Oil Workera Inicmntlonal imlon (CIO) dlsclcaed ihai the union's executive tward would meet today when U "might have a stalemcnl," Elwood E. Phelps, cholnnan of the Calumet area striker* commit- tee, hiiil the 6,000 northern Indlaaa ore workers would continue on strike de.iplte federal aclzur# of the l>lanU, He blamed th# breakdown of negoUatloiu on "no one but tho Secretary of Labor Lewis B, Echwellcnbach abruptly terminated conferences between union and In- y rcprcsentntlvej yesterday I companies rejected his com- promise proposal to restore produc- tion In the nations oU refineries. Prevloujly. It had appeared man- :ient would enter ncRotlatlons In union's demand for a 30 per wage Increase. As tho WlUte House prepared lo ' - ......... ......... the oil Indusliy. y was reported 0 strlkca In Ui» .......;re an estimated 350 mines have shut down. - The solid fucU administration ytsierday extended emergency con- orc mining dlslrletj. lion irdorK, ».lio takr.i jirireci e by : f.'d 800 Violations In Rent Found '3W1I* WO'tn/iuttotBliBYcUttn iin covercd this far in rv house to hoiisi invaxs being made by CPA repro entatlvcs to determine If landlords Bve rcfflstercd Ihelr property ot lolating rent ccUtngs, 0. W, With- m, area rent dlrcctor-attomey an- ounccd Tliursday, Tlio JlRure Inchidii-i vlolnlloiis not ily in Tttln Fall,^, bii iilority. R will b national dl.Hpiite. Deardorff p;ild Twin FalLv Poin pert lul I3ur •rtlflcd ^ WlthK) . ,s obtained by Ihe ci , said, I, Wltlin to regbtcr hLs re,itltutlon for I action will be Pierre Laval Trial Breaks Up in Riotous Confusion Kin.ST CHKVnOI,KT KANSAH CITY. Mo„ Oct, 4 (UPJ- he first 1040 Chevrolet, Ilril car : that lliir produced since 1012, illed off the Leeds plant aisembly n Monday by a wild- . Thur.s(lay for a si.x H for approximately ited to run tbe plant nmnaKer of the firm, an- Argentina Is 111 Dog House Second Time WASHIHOTON, OcL 4 (,P>—Ar- gcnlln.\'5 anny-domlnatcd govem- back In the Pan-Amerlcar e-only four montlis after It United 6tat<a | Todaj r with other )ubllcs appeared about ready to Join In hanRlng up diplomatic "(in.-inintine" aign al the Rlo d» La Plata, Argentli norilicm boundar)’. Specifically, llie republics si certain to go ttUcad drafting a P American defenjio treaty that would exclude Argentina, While.tre.ily dlacuiiltjiu are golJig on. li'^?-fW>;Tr Unltrj Stttra WUJ lake the lead In riUcuaslons of what else—if flnythlng—the Amerlcaj ready to do about their perennial problem child. The lint nfflcliil step In the crackdown probably will come morrow, Tlie atate department haa aiked the Pan-Ainerlcnn union gov- cniors lo meet then to "conalder'' pa-,tponlnj the Inter-Anierican con- ference Khedulcd to open Oct. 20 In Bruzll. \cluaiiy, Ihe host government al- idy has callcd off tho,conference. ThU came after the United States :old Brazil It would not alt down al > conference table with the present Argentine government to dratt hcmL^phere defense treaty. TOJO ARM PARALYZED YOKOHAMA. Oct, 4 (U,RV-Fonner Premier Ocn. Hldekl ToJo> rlHht •m wa-s paraIjTed by hLi aborllv# ilclde attempt Sept. II, U wai re- vealed todiy. direct opera trob I : l-ival',5 lrcll^0I) Irlal s opening day of t iig .3 Phone Powwov Seen lUH-l deadlock of thi icll of forelb-i High School Boy, New at Archery, Brings Down Doe Sugar Discovery Ivlli A. Tliomoson. IS.vmr.filil ‘7 -^ . Alvlii A. Tliompson. 15-year-old TRiJn FiilL-, high school lad who be- •rested In archery tltl; summer, bagged his deer Tuesday evcaUig In the Minidoka forest. He was hunting along Trapper creek near the Boaietter ranger «t»- len a doc cama browsing _ The animal was about 50 yards away when he "let go" and the point of the arrow went “clean Ihrough" the deer, Thompson snld, H« wa^ using a lemonwood 45- pound bow and a qfdarwood broad- head, arrow, This Whs hlj flnt hunt with bow and arrow. His home Is at 650 Main avenue west. The >-outli .was tho fifth kiioaii arciicr to tjag a drer In Ihe t.i’fclul Minidoka forest bow and am<v hunU ForelRn SecrcLnn- Erne tlie DrltUli ral hind Kuurdcil tloor.s. Kivlii 1 leading .. .... -Ikcd privately with Attlee l;iier Bcvln had been reported nuent bitter persoiml cxchani Soviet Foreign Commissar Molotov during the three-wi in Is expccted to n parllnment iitjt week. Dlplomals exiircMert Ihe view that the head.s of the big three stales Would atiirt transatlanllc talk.s....... after Secretar}- ui state James F. Dymrs nnd .Wolotov have opportun- — talk vith their superiors. ‘Drop in Bucket’ HAVANA, OeU 4 (/T>-Ull3 Men- )?a, MiKnr broker who acts a.? Bpokesitinn for Ihe Cuban sugar In- dustry, expresaed belief today the findlnfc <if 1,600,000 tons in porta of a would not change prospects s;xlr of Cuba’s next crop, nicrr W at present," he nald. HiRh u-ie for aU tho augar that b<^ found," New York, sugar circles pointed he Javan suRar found U less than ht\ir a month's aupply based on prewar consumpUon of about 30,000.- jn?! annually, and saw no-rea- 0 alter prevloua tatlmaUa that the world cusar situation would not ' fMic^-ect In a baiaocc uuUI 1818. Tlie order blot-klng L;iva tcnipgrarlly from hU own Piirrntly left him without <if dcfcn.se. whatever. The , lawyer.-! had rcfav.-ri Ciirll. fend him. and Hint left th c In hb I Stormy Srene The .stormy ;-cene whicli broke . he flr.st Irlal ;.e,':lon In thi- French iit;h court of JiMU-e cimiuxed t :ull d:\y of bickering nnd rccrlmlnn- loni among I.avni, the Judge, ant Jther t»artlelixint.s, Liival tt-an weiiiling n crafty way hrouKli a bid f<ir .sympathy whi allon I ind the Judge "Arre.st the akc him off I Immediately." ii^s arms flalllnj? ii r.arco-stlc pro- :ndemned 1 the courtroom, ila. former Vichy clapped loudly Clark Next In Ickes Job? Raymond Tucker. Tlraes-News Wa.shlngton columnist, aays to- day Uiat Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes wUJ quit of hla own volition — and ex-Sen, D. Worth Clark of Idaho la under "serlou-s consideration’' as hts sue- Tum lo editorial page for Tucker, Pegler, Marquli Childs. Doctor O’Brien and, of course. Magic Valley’s ow’n Pol SiioU, Sjnid Siu phis Issues Will Be Studied by Federal Agencies (AP Special Jo Tlmes-Nens) 'ASlIINaTON, Oct. 4 (/V^MarkctUiR problems of lute potnto groweni will be placed before War Moblliiatloii Director John W. Snyder next Tuesday. Senator Brewiler, II,. Me., head t)f a consre.s.ilonal group repre.scnt liiK 22 •■'tnte.s, told a reporter a con fercnce had been urxanKed with Snyder In an effort to dctennln the responsibilities of various agen cles in disposing of the huge eur plus caused by concellatlon of arm Tlie delegation to attend the meet- ing will Include Senutora Brew.-,ter. I, D,. N, Y,. John.son, D , Colo,, Taylor, D,. Id,i,. and Reps, Dworshai, ft. Ida,, and Andresc) K.. Minn. Tlie only allernatlve. Brewster .said, would be congre.sslonul ac But. bccatue the potato crop U being harvested and Irosl Is In the offing, he hopes that Snyder can settle the matter quickly and seciu’c ;dlat« commltmenU from the FLASHES of r I l.'l/ By AnocUtea IjlJl J-i Ftesl sniBDonN LOGAN. Utah, Oct, 4-He finally p;ild the building permit fee. But city niflclals gave this report o( Rotlatlonn with one clll«n who constructing a residence, tarted building without permit. 2, Comnilisloners warned him by mall and received no reply, 3, Alter n city reprc.^entatlve tiaiecl off his proi>erty, he wamc<I again by mall, 4. When a warrant for hlj ai vns lasued, he challenged Ihe city ;ngln«er lo a duel. 5. Hauled Into court, he was fined four times the permit cost for con- tempt. Then he pold the fee, PICKUP POR’I-LAND, ore,. Oct, 4-HlUh- hiker James F, Mitchell believes you can’t be too careful whc»n for a ride MllcheU stepped onto a highway nd a BUt« patrolman obligingly stopped. The officer rccognUed MllcheU r» escapee of the comity Jail and ie ride ended at headciuarlert. IIUBTLEB HOLOnEDGE. Neb., Oct. 4-FrlU Brown of Holdredge Is an example of speedy reconversion. WItli hts dlwhar^e papers In hU pocket, Crown arrlred home from thearroy at « «. m. Before poon th» c matter stands. Brew- frlaln promise the potato growers have L%the avail- ability of a support price at BO per cent of parity. TJib, he said, would be »1,M. from which the agriculture dtpariment expccts lo deduct 50 rnts for Us costj;. Including hauling, radlns, sacking, loading. Inspection nd selling, Ilep, Stockman, R„ Ore,, was formed, however, that the farmer may eoro all or part of this co«t- deduction back by doing tho wort himself. Tbe Qcenclea Involved, besides agrlcultiue, arc the army and UNRRA. The cancelled army con- tracU left dehydrators high and dr>'. Brewster saya, with no m« jp* either of using their equip- or of adJuatmeaU on th t a r ^ contracta. ' , UHRRA. he said, b u dccilnetf to] mtraet for dehrtrsUon.. ttwnjSi; the agency It tentfttlvely conuhltm i espendlture ol »5.000.009 inn »V POUtOtt. Laundi’^ Firm Here Sold to Fergus Bl'iggs Sale of the National Laundry com- pany, Inc.. wJilch operates planU at Twin Foils, Gooding and Pocatello, was announced here niurjday by Mrs, Myrtle Sandliolti, president of the organization. She said that Uic properties had been sold to Fergus Briggs, vice- prtsldcnl of Uie company. The pur- chase price was not revealed. Included In t4)e property disposed of U the ’Troy National Laundry and Dry Cleaners plant here, one of the oWe,st buslne5,s lnstltuUon.s In the It was acquired In 1920 by the Seorga Eandholtz from WUlIam 1 . an uncle of Briggs, At that Briggs was an employe of the firm. Later Banriholti purchased the Imperial Cleaners and White SUr laundry here. In 1027 he built a cleaning plant at Gooding. Ho building a laundry empire that had lU start at Buhl in 1019 when hs bought the plant In that cUy. In 1020 he purchased plants at Biu'lcy and Rupert and In 1936 bought a firm In Pocatello. Tho Burley and Rupert planta were later ,sold and the Imperial plant here wa* shut down four yeara ago because of shortage of labor. Wien Sandholtz purchased the Pocatello plant he sent Briggs tliere to manage the firm. He stUl man- ages the Pocatcllo plant, but usually •spend-s hl.1 week-ends In Twin Palls to attend lo affairs at the plant here that require his attention. Mrs. Sandholtz will continue her services at the plant here, but plana to retire when conditions will per- L. C- Craig, who has been with the Troy l.iiinilry for eight years. Is superintendent of the plant htre. GIVE To the War Fund

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Page 1: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

F I N A L . C I T Y

E D I T I O N

PR IC E B CENTS

SEIZURES LABOR CRISISCongress Starts Wrestling

With Atomic Energy IssueDy MAX HALL

W A S H IN G T O N , O ct, 4 (iiP)— CoiiKrcss a t In.sL liiis com e l.i Krips w ith Hit' m n-i ucrvc. w rn c k in g p ro b lem o f th e w ar— ntom ic enerR y .

T o d ay th e law m aker,s :1. A ppcnrad r c m iy to jiDku’ Pjc,fjde/}t T rm iD uj lo n a m e n commi.v.vi(7n w h i

an iro n hniiti th e p e ac etim e dc\’cloiim ent o f a to m ic c n e r s y w ith in o u r Ijorc:2. S a id in iiiterv iew .s th a t they w a n t a h a iu i in dccicliiiR how f a r to k' o ii

bomb

Doolittle Flier on K. P.

Tigers Whip Cubs on Greenberg Home Run

B R IG G S ST A D IU M , D e tra il , Oct, I (/!>) — T h e Uct T iR crs cam e r id in g l)ack on H ank G re en b e rg 's h o m e ru n today to w hip tb e C hicago Ciih.«, 1 to 1, in th e se co n d Kfmi o f tb e 1[)'15 w orld s e r ie s and oven tlie c o u n t a t one w in ai)ic

b u t

tnrllnu with the top ol Box Score.)KTrioiT, Oct. 4 ( - r ^ f f ic U i 1)

Nlchol.\oti, rf .....llllMplr. c ..........lufhM, >s ...

P ...............SreoT v .............Erirkjon p _ ......Il«Vcr XX ............

Totals ..............—Hailed for j i-B jiifd for

DKTUOIT (AL) Wtbb, M ..............Mtyo. :bCmmer. c/ . .........

Tfenbfrr I f ___Callcnlilne. rf ......

^ountrie:- All o lhrr

■ rii tnxc.s-nrc (l; ArIc(l by rihlHR prolilrm broiiglit bc- : Iculjlntora by President 111 B solemn niCMA

f. Jewelry, me t)cIori 1,1 commit.

ro o n tii inmnc:'

l i S

JollllSOil

CLIrajo (M.) .

•nOEns'-Piflio '» fn i

Two Million GIs Disabled in War

'/IV*AI'WAMUNaTON. Oct. 4 moji 3 ^ .0 0 0 servlcfmrn um' atjied by wouiidj, dlaense or gcel' ‘Icnu In World w»r n .

Wednes-

A ^ l Z « '« Disabled'American Veterans. Ife says tlili is ‘h-m fivt ttoiL.., M^many «

‘’1' " ’orlil>l«ures thni one U\ ID-or

C50,000—a r t lotAl^

Johiwnn, Earnril runs; Clilcai INL) 1. Detroit IAL| 4. Left < basei; ThleaRo 8. Drtroll 7. Bases < ballv Off Wyw 3 (Cuncnbinc .Mayel: off KHrk.'ton 1 <Gi^enbrr| off Truck.i 3 (nuRhes). Hark. Nlc! 'Ison). SlrlJiPoulj: By \Vy*c York); by Trucks 4 (Wysc, Johi on nteki-r): by tricknon

I’llfliln'f summary: W y.r. 5 lill

f, empires; Jonla (NL) r arclla (AI-) lb; fo i.la .i (Nl Summer* (AL> 3b, Time; 1;J7

Revolutionary ‘Magna Carta’

Set for JapsTOKYO. Oct. i (,1WGCI1, Doilnliii

JacArlhur dctreecl n revolutionary iftftliii carta for Jajian lod:iv. or

drrlni! tlir Imperial Bovcrnineia t.all b.arj lo frocdjin o

.•■peech. rrllRlon and u.\scmbly, dk band Ihe brutal, still-ncllvc ••ttioiijrti police,' mid relca.^e their 3,000 polll •nl prkoiiers by OcU 10.In n letter lo the newly rcarxan

l«t1 Jnpane.'^e ccntrnl liaison ofllce MflcArtlmr told the Imperial govern

blimtly and clearly U> abolWi nil logWnllon reslrlctlnB freedom of •• • people.

me letler nbo demanded removal from office of Home Minister Iwao

iniaTakl, clilef. of the Tokyo and 0,' nK.T nielropnlllaji pollcc boards nml ot the territorial pollcc of Hok­kaido,

HueArlhiir meanwhile offered no romment on Riuylan demand.i for a foiir-po-*er control government to replncc hij rule In Japan,

Globester Flight Near Washington

HA.MILTON FIELD, Calif., Oct, 4 fUJ’J—Tlie army traosr Globester today was Wa.'tfilngton, D, C,. on Uie la it leg of * round Ihtt world fllRhi which It was cxp«t«cl to complete In I tu than 150 hours.

The world circling plane arrived I Hamilton field, 35 miles north t San Franclseo, frc»n Honolulu ; J;13 a, m, (P3Ti. Alter n stopover

of slightly more than three ho irs, 11 look off for W ajhlnsion a t 5:35 . m. (P3T).Weary and himgry ere liken to the tii

meaj for drinks and a n United Preas staff co Frederick C, Othnian s been out of hU clothes ihrtc tlraej. In the eiXKhal g<Hag irno lU &1X11] <jay.

War Fund’s Total Climbs Up to $7,266

• 11.000 I'atlock, C. R, HciKlo rrabln-e, Chic Hlntt, ;

Carr

paasoiigers ,ual oKlccrs teak dinner, )rrespondent

ifficlftl re;iell Community $7,:CC.75 a t II

First retun

Mrs, njilph \ ouglii,'! Uorlasp, c rlo Illff and Mr. iliintcers on Mr;

rcportliig. Their ; -ictory," Mrf

loiincd by the Idnlio I’oin .ny. Is devotlnc hh time llil; 1 to tlip drive. Ills hciulquar-

In the Chamber of Com- office nnd anyone who dcslrej kc contributions, and who ha.? ^cn canvasicd by a vohinleer

worktr. may do so by malUnc lUi donation or calling n l Ihe Chambei of Commerce offlcc,

Ot the $27,UOO Koal for Ihe city ol

iind Romen nbrojid walllti to the aiiites the need f tlon and I'lilorialnmcnt

:ntcr, chiilriiui jarri. declared. Be.Mdes USO

of I

War fimfl Ij ted Seamen',? service,

nld. Philippine war China relief, Amerl- Ice, U. S, eommlttce if Enrujjcan children her devastated couti-

County War fund goal s » Including the $10,000 quota

signed T nln Falls city.

I ’re.siden t T n m ia n will ( tb e w ay c le a r f o r top Kove na tion 'K fuel supplie,H.

T h e se i/.tire annotiiiccm pnt w n s is= hour.s a f t e r a ll b u t one of I ] oil cojjjji wuKc con tro v e r.sy arb itra tio n .

J t WHS n o t im m ed ia te ly c lea r w h e th e r r a n k - a n d - f i le

Flour Mill Resumes Processing at Plant

Schwellenbach “Stumped” Over Failure of Company Arbitration

’Phone Halt Definite For Four Hours Here

T l ic r c will d e f in i te ly Ix' a f o u r- h o u r in te r ru p tio n in te le ­p h o n e .scrvico in T w in F a lls a n d JU ikIc V alley f ro m noon to ■1 |T. m . F r id a y w h ile Id ah o em p lo y es o f J lo u n ta in S t a te s T e le ­p h o n e and T e lc f f ra p h c o m pany p a r t i c ip a te in th e .s tr ike vote o r d e r e d by t h e N a tio n a l T e d e ra tio n o f T elep h o n e W o rk e rs .

T h a t w.i.-i c o n f ir m e d T liur.sday b o th f ro m Doi,‘<o a n d by .loe D e ; ird o r f f , T w in F a lls , s ta te pre.'^ideiit o f th e P l a n t Mi fedcT Jitioii,

.ler ,se iz tire of a l l s t r ik e -b o u n d o il p lant,s th is n f te rn o o n , Icnv in s m e n t o f lic ia ls t o s te p in to o th e r m a jo r d is p u te s th r e a te n in g th o

roni tb e W h ite H ouse la s t n i s h t le.s.s th a n th ree re je c te d n proposn l to s u b m it th o co as t-to -co a s t

< -and-file o il worker.^, on s t r ik e in p la n ts and r e f in e r ie s o v e r a 1 5 -s ta tc a re a , w ould r e tu r n to w o rk under « o v e rn m e n t fiiiperv ision .

In Wa.^hlngton. Prcjldenl O. A Knight of the United Oil Workera Inicmntlonal imlon (CIO) dlsclcaed ihai the union's executive tward would meet today when U "might have a stalemcnl,"

Elwood E. Phelps, cholnnan of the Calumet area striker* commit- tee, hiiil the 6,000 northern Indlaaa ore workers would continue on strike de.iplte federal aclzur# of the l>lanU, He blamed th# breakdown of negoUatloiu on "no one but tho

Secretary of Labor Lewis B, Echwellcnbach abruptly terminated conferences between union and In-

y rcprcsentntlvej yesterday I companies rejected his com­

promise proposal to restore produc­tion In the nations oU refineries. Prevloujly. It had appeared man-

:ient would enter ncRotlatlons In union's demand for a 30 per wage Increase.

As tho WlUte House prepared lo' - ......... ......... the oil Indusliy.

y was reported 0 strlkca In Ui»

.......;re an estimated350 mines have shut down. -

The solid fucU administration ytsierday extended emergency con-

orc mining dlslrletj.

lionirdorK, ».liotakr.i jirireci e by :

f.'d

800 Violations In Rent Found

'3W1I* WO'tn/iuttotBliBYcUttn iin covercd this far in rv house to hoiisi invaxs being made by CPA repro entatlvcs to determine If landlords Bve rcfflstercd Ihelr property ot lolating rent ccUtngs, 0 . W, With- m, area rent dlrcctor-attomey an- ounccd Tliursday,Tlio JlRure Inchidii-i vlolnlloiis not ily in Tttln Fall,^, bii

iilority.R will b

national dl.Hpiite.Deardorff p;ild

Twin FalLv Poin

pert lul I3ur•rtlflcd

^ WlthK) .,s obtained by Ihe ci

, said,

I, Wltlin

to regbtcr hLs re,itltutlon for I action will be

Pierre Laval Trial Breaks Up in Riotous Confusion

Kin.ST CHKVnOI,KT KANSAH CITY. Mo„ Oct, 4 (UPJ- he first 1040 Chevrolet, Ilril car : th a t lliir produced since 1012, illed off the Leeds plant aisembly

n M onday b y a wild- . T hu r.s(lay fo r a si.x H f o r a p p ro x im a te ly ited to ru n tb e p la n t

nm naK er o f th e f i r m , an-

Argentina Is 111 Dog House

Second TimeWASHIHOTON, OcL 4 (,P>—Ar-

gcnlln.\'5 anny-domlnatcd govem- back In the Pan-Amerlcar

e-only four montlis after It

United 6tat<a |

Todaj

r with

other)ubllcs appeared about

ready to Join In hanRlng up diplomatic "(in.-inintine" aign al the Rlo d» L a Plata, Argentli norilicm boundar)’.

Specifically, llie republics si certain to go ttUcad drafting a P American defenjio treaty th a t would exclude Argentina,

While.tre.ily dlacuiiltjiu are golJig on. li'^?-fW >;Tr U nltrj S t ttra WUJ lake the lead In riUcuaslons of what else— if flnythlng—the Amerlcaj ready to do about their perennial problem child.

T he lin t nfflcliil step In the crackdown probably will come morrow, Tlie a ta te department haa aiked the Pan-Ainerlcnn union gov- cniors lo meet then to "conalder'' pa-,tponlnj the Inter-Anierican con­ference Khedulcd to open Oct. 20 In Bruzll.

\cluaiiy, Ihe host government al- idy has callcd off tho,conference.

ThU came after the United States :old Brazil It would not a lt down al > conference table with the present Argentine government to d ra tt hcmL^phere defense treaty.

TOJO ARM PARALYZEDYOKOHAMA. Oct, 4 (U,RV-Fonner

Prem ier Ocn. Hldekl ToJo> rlHht •m wa-s paraIjTed by hLi aborllv# ilclde attempt Sept. II, U w ai re­

vealed todiy.

direct opera

trob I

: l-ival',5 lrcll^0I) Irlal

s opening day of t

i ig .3 Phone Pow w ov Seen

lUH-l

deadlock of thi icll of forelb-i

High School Boy,New at Archery,Brings Down Doe Sugar DiscoveryIvlli A. Tliomoson. IS.vmr.filil ‘7 - ^ .Alvlii A. Tliompson. 15-year-old

TRiJn FiilL-, high school lad who be- •rested In archery tltl;

summer, bagged his deer Tuesday evcaUig In the Minidoka forest.

He was hunting along Trapper creek near the Boaietter ranger «t»-

len a doc cama browsing _ The animal was about 50

yards away when he "let go" and the point of the arrow went “clean Ihrough" the deer, Thompson snld,

H« wa^ using a lemonwood 45- pound bow and a qfdarwood broad- head, arrow, This Whs hlj flnt hunt with bow and arrow. His home Is at 650 Main avenue west.

The >-outli .was tho fifth kiioaii arciicr to tjag a drer In Ihe t.i’fclul Minidoka forest bow and am<v hunU

ForelRn SecrcLnn- Erne tlie DrltUli ral

hind Kuurdcil tloor.s. Kivlii1 leading . . .... -Ikcd privately with

Attlee l;iier Bcvln had been reported

nuent b itter persoiml cxchani Soviet Foreign Commissar Molotov during th e three-wi

in Is expccted to n parllnm ent iit jt week.

Dlplomals exiircMert Ihe view that the head.s of th e big three stalesWould atiirt transatlanllc talk .s.......after Secretar}- u i sta te James F. Dymrs nnd .Wolotov have opportun-

— talk vith th e ir superiors.

‘Drop in Bucket’HAVANA, OeU 4 (/T>-Ull3 Men- )?a, MiKnr broker who acts a.?

Bpokesitinn for Ihe Cuban sugar In­dustry, expresaed belief today the findlnfc <if 1,600,000 tons in porta of

a would not change prospects s;xlr of Cuba’s next crop, n ic r r W at p resent," he nald. HiRh u-ie for aU tho augar that b< found,"

New York, su g a r circles pointed he Javan suRar found U less

than ht\ir a month's aupply based on prewar consumpUon of about 30,000.-

jn?! annually, and saw no-rea- 0 a lter prevloua tatlmaUa that

the world cusar situation would not' fMic^-ect In a baiaocc uuUI 1818.

Tlie order blot-klng L;iva tcnipgrarlly from hU own Piirrntly left him without <if dcfcn.se. whatever. The , lawyer.-! had rcfav.-ri Ciirll. fend him. and Hint left th c Inhb I

Stormy Srene The .stormy ;-cene whicli broke .

he flr.st Irlal ;.e,':lon In thi- French iit;h court of JiMU-e cimiuxed t :ull d:\y of bickering nnd rccrlmlnn- loni among I.avni, the Judge, ant Jther t»artlelixint.s,

Liival tt-an weiiiling n crafty way hrouKli a bid f<ir .sympathy whi

allon I

ind the Judge "Arre.st the

akc him off I Immediately."

ii s arms flalllnj? ii r.arco-stlc pro- :ndemned

1 the courtroom, ila. former Vichy

clapped loudly

Clark Next In Ickes Job?

Raymond Tucker. Tlraes-News Wa.shlngton columnist, aays to ­day Uiat Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes wUJ quit of hla own volition — and ex-Sen, D. W orth Clark of Idaho la under "serlou-s consideration’' as hts sue-

T um lo editorial page for Tucker, Pegler, Marquli Childs. Doctor O’Brien and, of course. Magic Valley’s ow’n Pol SiioU,

Sjnid Siu phis Issues Will Be Studied by Federal Agencies

(AP Special Jo Tlmes-Nens)'ASlIINaTON, Oct. 4 (/V^MarkctUiR problems of lute potnto groweni

will be placed before War Moblliiatloii Director John W. Snyder next Tuesday.

Senator Brewiler, II,. Me., head t)f a consre.s.ilonal group repre.scnt liiK 22 •■'tnte.s, to ld a reporter a con fercnce had been urxanKed with Snyder In an effort to dctennln the responsibilities of various agen cles in disposing of the huge eur plus caused by concellatlon of arm

Tlie delegation to attend the meet­ing will Include Senutora Brew.-,ter.

I, D,. N, Y,. John.son, D , Colo,, Taylor, D,. Id,i,. and Reps,

D worshai, ft. Ida,, and Andresc) K.. M inn.

Tlie only allernatlve. Brewster .said, would be congre.sslonul ac But. bccatue the potato crop U being harvested and Irosl Is In the offing, he hopes that Snyder can settle th e matter quickly and seciu’c

;dlat« commltmenU from the

FLASHES ofr I l . ' l / By AnocUteaIjlJl J-i Ftesl

sn iB D onN LOGAN. Utah, Oct, 4-He finally

p;ild the building permit fee. But city niflclals gave this report o( Rotlatlonn with one clll«n who constructing a residence,

tarted building without permit.

2, Comnilisloners warned him by mall and received no reply,

3, Alter n city reprc.^entatlve tiaiecl off his proi>erty, he

wamc<I again by mall,4. When a warrant for hlj ai

vns lasued, he challenged Ihe city ;ngln«er lo a duel.

5. Hauled Into court, he was fined four times the permit cost for con­tempt.

Then he pold the fee,

PICKUPPOR’I-LAND, ore,. Oct, 4-HlUh-

hiker James F, Mitchell believes you can’t be too careful whc»n for a ride

MllcheU stepped onto a highway nd a BUt« patrolman obligingly

stopped.The officer rccognUed MllcheU

r» escapee of the comity Jail and ie ride ended a t headciuarlert.

IIUBTLEBHOLOnEDGE. Neb., Oct. 4-FrlU

Brown of Holdredge Is an example of speedy reconversion.

WItli hts dlwhar^e papers In hU pocket, Crown arrlred home from thearroy a t « «. m. Before poon th»

c matter stands. Brew- frlaln promise

the potato growers have L% the avail­ability of a support price a t BO per cent o f parity. T Jib, he said, would be »1,M. from which the agriculture dtparim ent expccts lo deduct 50

rnts fo r Us costj;. Including hauling, radlns, sacking, loading. Inspection nd selling,Ilep, Stockman, R„ Ore,, was

formed, however, that the farmer may eo ro all o r part of this co«t- deduction back by doing tho w ort himself.

Tbe Qcenclea Involved, besides agrlcultiue, arc the arm y and UNRRA. The cancelled army con- tracU left dehydrators high and dr>'. Brewster saya, with no m « jp*

either of using the ir equip- o r of adJuatmeaU on th t a r ^

contracta. ' ,UHRRA. he sa id , b u dccilnetf to] m tra e t for dehrtrsU on.. ttwnjSi;

the agency It tentfttlvely c o n u h ltm i espendlture ol »5.000.009 in n

» V POUtOtt.

Laundi’ Firm Here Sold to Fergus Bl'iggs

Sale of the National Laundry com­pany, Inc.. wJilch operates planU a t Twin Foils, Gooding and Pocatello, was announced here n iu rjday by Mrs, Myrtle Sandliolti, president of the organization.

She said tha t Uic properties had been sold to Fergus Briggs, vice- prtsldcnl of Uie company. The pur­chase price was not revealed.

Included In t4)e property disposed of U the ’Troy National Laundry and Dry Cleaners plant here, one of the oWe,st buslne5,s lnstltuUon.s In the

It was acquired In 1920 by the Seorga Eandholtz from WUlIam 1. an uncle of Briggs, At that Briggs was an employe of the

firm.Later Banriholti purchased the

Imperial Cleaners and White SUr laundry here. In 1027 he built a

cleaning plant a t Gooding. Ho building a laundry empire that

had lU start a t Buhl in 1019 when hs bought the plant In th a t cUy.

In 1020 he purchased plants at Biu'lcy and Rupert and In 1936 bought a firm In Pocatello. Tho Burley and Rupert planta were later ,sold and the Imperial p lant here wa* shut down four yeara ago because of shortage of labor.

W ien Sandholtz purchased the Pocatello plant he sent Briggs tliere to manage the firm. He stUl man­ages the Pocatcllo plant, but usually •spend-s hl.1 week-ends In Twin Palls to attend lo affairs a t the plant here that require his attention.

Mrs. Sandholtz will continue her services a t the plant here, but plana to retire when conditions will per-

L. C- Craig, who has been with the Troy l.iiinilry for eight years. Is superintendent of the plant htre.

GIVETo the W ar Fund

Page 2: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

Pago Two TIMES-NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO

Labor Gisis Is Marked by

Oil Seizures(From On«)

rMtrtcUne »hlpmfn« to cMfnilsl tisrr« /luth « hoapltab, titlllllp.'!. railroads, shlpa and ritj- trsnMt sysKms.

CoUapM of ncsoUsUons to ipulc Ihs two-WMlc-old pfirnlcuni wort sloppaje ninrkert fullurc in thf n«wly*orgRnlr«l Inbor dcpartm m l’. ' . Initial atlem pl to mcdlntc a mnjorl labor (llapulc. |

SrhwcllPnbach "Stunipfd"L<slx)r Sfcretary Schnpllf nbach

said I■' In I

K eep the W hite F lao 01 Sa fe ty T lv ln g Twin Falls News in Brief

Hoxo ic r c n days without a trat/lc death in our Magic Vallci/.

1-Iloiir Phone Hrcak Slated

In This Area

top

CJftipr.il Motur.' Prr-sldt-nl Wilson clinrscd ih:ii the UAW demnrd for ■'excfif. ft.iRc.i" i Msumptlon tliat ihfv roulil !> from pa-'t prolli,'. or from a-'jiimcd future cxcc.v prollls w,w not jound.

•X3ci)frfll Motors cun not nnd v not u.if monry .•mvcd up for yc: lor thf piirpnif (>[ modfniUlns a expandlns li.s plnnts, And for pi vldlng more Rood Joixi, lo p .v txci wnsM for work not pcrtormod," Wil.

Thf strmly-wordfd prniiou ment camp diirlnR the Ilrst day of nrffotlntlon.'! of the union's demand for & 30 prr cent blnnHct m l creaae, the eciulvalent of a. sixth day's work a t timp and n half.

New York port operAtlons paralj-Md again today a. n .strike of longrfioremrn spread to 60,CK)0 waKrfront workers, and unlor clttl5 reported shipping waa U ••UgWer than a dnim."

Consignment Sale Of Holsteins Set

“n ie first annunl Idaho State ■teln conslEnmcnt sale will l>c held a t Boise, Nov. 20, 1045, «heii 34 hend of tho best of the Idaho Holsteins will b« lead Into the snle^ ring, b e n Mylrole, county agent, jioun«d late yr^terday.

Conflgnors from the Mimic Valley Irclilds A. II. Ja«cl,», Bulil; L. J. Tencklnck. T ain FnlU; Purl Ma,',sey, Goodlnc; V. W. Caruni.»nc« WelLi, GoodUig; Joe Olvsl CoddlnBton. ChatlfA Hnger

E. Maberiy. niipr.rt.The selecUon committee consider-

•d CCTW families, and transmlttlnc abilities of these famlllps In ninVlnf; their selections. T>-pe, production ■nd breeding were the im portant fictoTB. All inlm als eelectrd ai males, tcswd for both T. B. Bangs dlaeise. Tliey range Ir. trom yearlings to five-year-olds, the •n lm ab being cows, heavy springers « id few open heifers.

The aelcctlon oommltt« Induded 0. N. Vickers, western flelilrnan of IhB Holstein a^w latlon, Portland, Ore.; O, C. Anderson. Boise, exten- Blon dairyman; Jagels, Tencklnck. Carson and Masccy.

The HospitalOnly emergenry beds were avail­

able a t the I'w in Fall.s co.mty gen­eral hoopltal Thiirsdiiy.

A D .M irrti)Mrs. Esther L 'no, T ain rnlL* .inrt

Mrs. Hex DavL^ Hnrelton. niS.MlSSED

Cllflord KUind!, Mrr. Wallacc rreemnn, Mr.i. Clnrencc E. Wibon, Mrs. Melvin Brrrcll, Mr.i Dexry Brannon and son, Mrs. La Venic I^awllnR. and so;i, all of 1N,ln Falls; Denn Hendrr.'.un. Cooiilng: John SlImmcr.^ HatL«en; Mr.s. C. n Mitchell and daushter, F.ilrfli-ld. Mrs. \V, L. Qarrbon nnd dniiKhter

D F.ills ttlth each loe»l inrUid- 111'’ --'Kfltw Iji a inimb»r o ■ ri;t rommimltlt.i. Tiklii Tails I'lr.'. Jerome, niirlry. Buhl, IlnK and Hallry. In addition lo

ol the ickphone c-mi.Mnjctlon v.ork'r5

Commenting on a jtati-nient by H P Htoirmel. Irtnho ninntiufr ol .Uoiintaiii States Trleptione and Ti-leKmpli company, I>irrtorff cnn- flnneri the fact Hisi a "((«••• iminn member.' uould be on hand durlns the four-hour break lo hnndle emer- Hcncy calk only, such u medical, fire, police, ete.

e »» such, how-wlll c a hall.

At Bol.ie Biommrl urged tlic pub- f lo (V'opcrate hy refraining from ttempl^i to make unnece&!ar>’ calls.Drardorff said he and other union

lembers aern trying to arrange a ndlo broadrnsL Friday, probably jr the wBlkoul prrlod, giving the iitlfinai federation's plclure nr the

Maple Viilley to»tu wllh tiie dial y.'tem will not be affected unless

Ijrenkdowii during the four hour* cce.vltnles mnlnlennnce work Sim­

ilarly, teletypes In 'l-wln Falls and other rltle.s. as well m networl radio leased wire.', will be \inaflect ed unless maintenance trouble de-

T o Sill Lake CllrMri. Mae Guffey has gone to

S a lt Uke City for » five day trip. Dlrths

A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. TUx Davis, Hntelton, on Widnc^- day al the 'I’wlii Falls counly gener­a l hcupltal m u ttm lly home.l.o»ei Uoe

Mri. Robert Schultz, Avant ap.irt- menls, reported to police lato yr.s- terriay that she lost her Peklngi-.-c puppy which WM black nnd three montfu old.

B«p«rli D ot Bitelionard Owens, rout« one, T'

rn llj, reported to police late y terrisy that he was bitten by a ion Sfpt. 28. Tlin yuiitl. ,M«ir,| tl lip flfrlde<l lo rrix jrl thi bile l>ollce after being lold la do .>.1) ft nune In a local doctor's onice.

W «k-End Here Mrs, Pearl Day, Eden, spent the

week-end here wItS her ton, Wilter Day, and family.

Air PassenfrnIVi.allc Hiiue.s and R. C. FL'her

left for Boise and J. Brant left for lywLslon all on TlMirsday. All thres traveled by Zlmmerly Airlines.

G ranfe to Meet■riie Knull GrniiKe will meet

8:30 p m. Friday iit the Pleajant View commiuilty .-enter. Members ore requeued lo brliif: sandwiches.

Kinds lUfleOrville Allen, rouie one. II.ium

ri'iK)rled to police iii-udquui i-rs la

Early Settler of filenns Ferry Dies

NJKs N him in

He < BliptL?

ikler. Shu 1

■ o.s a m einlxr of llie First . . church of Cotxleii.

Mr. Stimner Ls ;,urvlvrd by a n>t J . L. !3umner nnd his d.iiiKhter, Mr: Dacoii, i„,th of a icnn .i Fciry; brother, Frank Sumner, L<v> Aiini'ti:

Kranriclilldrcn nnd t-io grrat-crandrhlldren.

Plinrral servlce.s will be held 3 p. ni FrUlny al the Bey fiine chapel here wllh IJie Hcv, Don NoUidiirfi

claUng1 of C IVrrv.

in Oler

S e e n T o d a y3unc Munn tinkering with Inside elderly fellow's Model A Ford— . ending up by toilng the ear

behind hL-< own . . . Posters all over high school play, -Janie,"

«nd 13 . , . Woman strld- Ing along Main clutching, with a ,1

cloth . , , Young ladv wear­ing friiiged leather Jacket, carrying

box, and chewing a tooth- B-34 Liberator foarlng so city thnl nocks crane all

along the street , . , Thrte-way reunion of brother* from the armed forces. In front of no.iy theater, as FiTie.'t, John nnd Waller 8now shako hands all around . . , Woe­begone looking spnnger spaniel doe " h lrh has llterslly adopted Al Veeks, following him everywhere. I'en Inlo hts home . , , First truck­

load of beets being unloaded a t the T^iln Falls factory . , , Roy Fuller bending over jntata plants In big field alongside county farm lo fep It ihey're reiidy yet . . . Nu­merous little plies of straw In bean fields of I.es AnrtcDon's ranch In wako cl hU combine <he's got a EBilget which let.s ihe straw out In bunches so It cnii be picked up) . . .

.-erhearti: PlumpL'h but pretty high school girl as she spots Thurs­day closed sign on Peter Pan. the student hangout; 'Oh, Im gunna diel"

Majfic Valley Funerals

GI.KNN.S r m n v —pnineral er c<'a fur Charlr.-v ChrlMInn Sun le r will be held iit 3 p ni. Frldn it the Hey funer;il home rlmiwl wli l l ' rtev. Donald Nothiliirfl oft

FILFJl — Funeral Jei.«e \V Eaton will p in. Friday iit the Re' home rhuivrl The Ilev Filer Metliodlr^t ehu ato. Interment, will set memorial park.

be t

T\V1N FAI.US - run<Tii for Pele Uerzell will hr he p. m. Friday a t ilie Wliltr chapel The Rev T I. Wt MethclLrt chuicii. will Interm tnt will he In Siiiw

■ I park.

OAKLEY - Funeral .serUcr. ' l Mrs. Elizabeth McMurnvy will be a p.m. Monday nt the O.ikley .M:! tabernaele. liurlal will be In Oakley cemeteo' under direction of Burley funeral home.

BUHI^FunrriU . ervlc<• 11am Schuyler Day will I 2 p. m. Saturday a t the 1 byK-rlan church, with lh>- Oreenlte officiating. Bur

Sunset memorial p? ILi. under direction of t n funsral home, Qulil.

SHOKKONE — LDS .servire.i fo Cliiirle.' Arthur illiirry) Hiirrh ull be held al 3:30 i). ni. Friday iii Burdett morttlary chiiiwl. Ilurtal wl! bfl In Sha'hone cemetcry under th' direction of the Du.-dett mortuary.

During Ihe first sU months of I4S Ihe Qunrtermo.'ter Corps irouKh Ita procuring depots placed 1,417 conlracta totaling 11,655,- 4,000 with pmall biL'lntM firms

D UniSY - Futi-rn! .•en•l ■r. for Mr.s, Mflvlna Holm will be held «t 3 p jn . m dny a l the L D.P. taber- nncle here with Bl.-hop Vem C.irler officiating. Durlnl «111 b^ In the Burley cemetery under direction of the Durlty funeral home.

police ,s

Marrt:ige Li.ensesMarrijiKC l:ccif.c.\ were liiucd here

yc.-.terdiiy to Lcreii Miller and Oayn- nelh Body. Broken Bow, Neb.; Junior H. I.-.om, "l-wln Falls, and Loutf.e Giirey. Filer; Harry Jay

... FhH,'., and Dorothy Mac Bchlmjif. BoLsc. and Leonard

Petor.'on. T-.On Fallf. and .Max- ■ Gentry, KlmbTly.

Coal StolenArchie A. fiiiilth, 440 Main street

luth, reported to police rday Uiat a leallier coal, his prop- ty, wa.s stolen from him, with

billfold coiitnlnmg *13. He dc.scrlbed tho coal aji having a small cut the right .sleeve and the billfold being "a sUin|>ed. brown one," 1

Thursday, October 4, 1945

Solong Start Battle Over Atomic Issue

P»e» Oaaltry’s biggest enigma Into home and abroad claulficatloria In hla mrs-

B j AnocUted Prea MEATS. PATS. Ele_Book four

red stamps AI through Bl^ Uirough K1

good through Not, 30; 1,1 through Q1 through Dec, S r m '"'-.'iyKl' VI good thisjugh J»n. 31,

tiUCiAR — Dook four stamp 38 R.w;d lor five pounds through Dec.

SHOES — Book Uiree airplane 1. Control all m ineral wurcea of • , *• 3 and i good In-

atomic energy, p lan to snd .stock-1pUe». -----

3. Conaucl all ncceseary research.

sUc V

o Callfonila Mrs. \V. L. Sinllh and daughter,

Lillian, have led for their ' BantA no.'a, Calif., after two week.-.

. and Mrs.Barne.v Rerent Barnes home were Mr. a Clifford Bolyard, and Pat

of Jerome.

Accident Reported— It/'r D-ay. 1338 Sixth

rejxirted lo police flia f hLs iiulomabljp was damaged

We^ne.vlay afternoon when

clilnr while It was parked ■lock of Shoshone stre<

He furnished officers withnimil>er of the cnr Involved

Adenda KenlcesM.ftgl. Wayne Mlnniek will leave

h’Tldny for the army nlrbiisenee, ,Srlj.. after luivhig attended nenil .v-ivU'-'i tor h i' mother,. A .Mliiiili-k. fin;; Blue Lakes ulevnnl. The .soldier was 1 Oa, Al.i„ vl.silliiK hi.' wife ill dauahtcr. Barbarii'Joan, when

received word of h b mother'* nth. He had come here by plane.

Attorneys ChangedO. C. Hall. •JN.nii FaiLs ftttomey, .IS replaced by .Charles R. Oeoves,

Buhl attorney, la.si Monday M Lscl for Clyde Cox, Denver J,

Co:<, Horiitlo Cox and Ophelia Cox, defendant.' In a suit now pending

strict enurt In which Mrs. Lots plaintiff, .seeks to collect dam- of $35,000. Coun.sel for Mrs, Cox

U James n . Dothwell. Twin P^lls. Nameji of ntlomevs were transposed

Monday's Tlmes-Kews,

POTATOSTORAGE

A tHnnsen & Kimberly

S im plot P ro d u ce Co.

Kimberly Phone 80

eiperlnienta and operations . . . __ther development fo r "mlltiary, in ­dustrial, scientific o r medical pur-

3. iMut licenses io r private op ­eration.' based ••upon a policy of wide.'prend distribution of pencetlmr produce on equitable lerrru which will prevent monopoly.•'

4. Permit production. Import and export of energy producing eiib- stsncej only under conrtlllons I' prescribes. |

0/ censorship for Information about material ami ' equipment under Ita Jurisdiction, '

^Cr. Truman stre rjed that Immcd- i Uto scilon u neoea.snry to prescn,e !

nstlon's huge investment it brains and plants—th e army of r.ci- entlsts assembled to work out thf

nri the p lanta In WashlnR- Tennessee w here It was pro.

Ihlj .sounded preiiy rea-'on- •uio IV most congre.isment.

But many found room tor argu­ment In Ills President's brief o u t­line of his thmklnB along In ter­national lines.

It •

Fire Bug Biamed For Shrine Fire

BOISE, Oct. 4 (4V-Arsonl»ta foiced B window in the El Korah .Shrino temple here set fire to tho .'iiiicturr In three pluces with re- •uliant damages of *3,000. FUe Chief n ,.nk Pula.skl said today.

I'lrcmcn brought the blaze under r oiiirol In two hours.

,\i. investigation has been tUrted i.v Police CJiief R, o. Ha.'.!tln and S.iin WiiUgh of Balt Lake City, an iiuMiiaiice underwriting company In- vr.-.llgator.

__ unusual for PaulKruger, labulous B oer president of the south African republic, to ride TO mUea a day on u slngls horse.

North China Japs Will Quit Friday

IIHNTBIN. Oct. 4 (il'—OfflCliil -'iirrrnder of Japanese Irooiw In

China ti fentallvely sched- ul(<l for D «. rn. Friday at Tientsin.

Murine MiiJ. Gen. Keller E. Rockey, commanding the third am- phllilous rorp,', will as.'Ist national­ist Chinese generals in accepting the formal nlp|>onc.se capitulation.

Wlien or where Japane.'e troops al Chlnwanglao, Important all-year port 1C5 miles north of here, will ;.urrcnder has not been annoujiced.

Detroit Wins Second Game On Home Run

( r n - o».)•elf a n lu c tb« wall >a<1 miklni a en hanaKt catch. Oi:iUir ireut oirv Jtn to c»T»rfeiu. nich»r«A poppm tnjt John»a back of iKond bwe.

gSVEKTO INNINtS CUaO—NlcbolMn « u out OD a roU' M»ro to Vork- om npli IIIkj out

P ou r '& h 'fb ifl.^- i M tup By Trutt*. Stcorr w«nl In to hn t

aad lined out to Otwaben :

■nooifr-Pmul"*ir pltchf..

EIGHTH INNlSr.

A n o th erNew

F ea tu reSee Page 9

>Pl«. RlchanU ItooJ out t rJo runa, oo hJt«. no erron

CUJW-KIcMlJS Tnicta ftri» tun o3unt aod then mlkad. ailiranie rollen out to York, unustit- i. KIc&oUoQ taking •eccod od iha-SST ■sssMtt«J for incluoa and *true* out.

Ho runs. DO tun, oo «rroi. ona Hft,

8AILOB DISCIUBGEDIIAZELTON. Oct. «—S 1/c Byron

Carter Glbb.v Haxelion, ha« been honorably dUcharged from the navy his parenU have beett Bdvlse<t

S M B

NOW SHOWING I

PI.UB: Novelly and Newa

C O M IN G SU N D A Y !“I LOVE A BAND LEADER ’

Wllli Phil llarrl.s and Rochester

I !I* ...I lOe I T U S > SHOE POLISH

Jimw/iA , (Alxoup«a

r o ^ o l q r e e n>ou Rt wiicoM i ai rtaicKLLN$.'.

TW IN FALLS STORE

m a k e h a s t e

. . . S L O W L Y

O C R iiR l i l lC S A IE L ^30° HILL’S = 19' BARBAS0Ls;''3O'PHILLIPS’ 39'100 HINKLE'K

Autnllan Ail P;p«-S/not«n/DO YOU NEED

ANOTHER PIPE?1§? 25? 3^ *5Nitioailly (imout mikei of gcnuioe briira—fluny iiyies.

-------- -------------------------HEALTH AID WEEK

iLAXATIVE

SOc SIZE 60 c DRENE PEPSODENT SHAMPOO

f c 5 - . . 3 9 «

60* UURIHEForeyo . .4 8 *

QUmSABA 01 47*

Magnesia Tooth Powder 37c

EVERYDAY NEEDS

I

CIQARETTE CASE'Tiinspircnt pliitie . X ZIPPER POUCH 4 a . Fer tobicco, j.jo vtlue ZIPPO FLINTSKird, for lighter* . 10'

M33€B,nU cl 100

ASPIRINTABLETS

2^51<-

69« COLD C R U H Fcrfectioa, S-ox. 2

4 9 ' HOUTH WASH K e ller.p lm ... 2 « * 5 1 '

25* SHY CLUNER justrite. 2 N .2 6 '

3S* WITCH HAZEL Dickiofon'i, p t 2 (- S l *

50* 6I8HADIRE Amtcid powder. . 2 ' - 5 1 ‘

10* EPSOli SALT Pound picUge. 2 - 1 8 *

48'DEODORARTB T id y .jiy p o . 2 * -5 1 *

2 6 'BORIC ACID Pot.ndp>ckKe. Z ik SB*

FORHUU 20 SHUiPOO

t t . 3 3 ‘‘Buuilfkihatf.

S5«

FEERAMINTUXATIVE

K tadyrua I7p«.

CIMDYIE T.bku..o'.. 2S»lOSIPH 27*MJERflEIS u<kq... 79068* TEEL DeotUrta... 39«75*AL0PHEI wu.... 49®60* CALOX 'Tto«b *de. 43e69* DB6SUTIIIE .... 43«W IlCB VTVo-Mot.. 39“

I GLASS BOWL |

WALGREEN’S DRUGS WITH A REPUTATION

HJU.IBUT U veToacap.m e^ctfrT .- s y

SQUIBB B COMPLEX l o o c a p a u iu . lT s g

t .4 5 0U F8EB VAUBOL Liquid, m

US'bEAUTICAPS . T W

Page 3: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

ly , O ctober 4 , 194B

New Fabrics May Help Cut

Qothes CostWASHINOTON. Oct. « </P>—Tlie

next Iwo w ttka will tell whether BUppUes of low-cost clothing will incrwio »pprecl&bl7 soon, > w»r producUon boftrt orneW gild tod»y.

John D. Small, chief or «t*ff of WPD. told reporttrs It ftll dependa on the extent mnnufacturers make UM of a new program which glvca them government help In obtaining fabric for Inexpensive appareL The prosrnm went Into effect Oct. 1.

Small aalfl he wa» confident enough manufncturcrs would par- Ucip.He, and he added:

'•WPB and the OPA are united n stand tha t we are going to s low-coat clothing."

Meanwhile OPA predicted tht will be oome incrensc In BUpply such clothlnR by Nov. J.

Tlie nccncy nnnoimecd la.'!l night tlmt price cuts on a larne numlxr nf cotton, wool and rayon garmenta will go Into effect then.

So Uie public will know what pay. manufacturers will be rcquli !o affix rctnll price cclUnfc taR.i each grimieiit. Around 00 npii.ircl llcms Villl be covcred by the p vision, about twice ns many as present.

^ 1U3 far OPA ha."! failed to m:..._ n dent In clothing price.-., nllhoiifili II prrdlctrd iiiontli-s ni;o they

V e t s ’ O f f i c e r

This b tiie record on giirmcnt priccs; Since 1D33 they have climbed <5 per ccnt. Since ceilings were fixed on clothing early In the war, prlcf.i have rl5Pn 10 ix-r cent. Since the liold-the-llni! order wa.s K.'iucd May 10<3 they have Incrfased nearly

OPA saya the principal rea«on for this ha-i been discontinuance of low. priced lines by many manufacturers.

Evangelist’s Tent Destroyed in Fire

pipeoverheated blamed by firemen . . . .terday tor destnirtlon of a large tent being >wrt by Ilcv. O ar Rer*, loi I^amnge .?treet. for evangelical raeet- Ingn.

The tent, which had been erccled ftt Ihr R^msiKP street nddre^vs, wa.s Ignited when (he Rev. Mr. Itcc.i .'larted a fire In a lirallnK slovo. The .'.moke pipe, which rxtendeil lUrou«h the lop of the tent Ignited tha eanTis. Dc-ildcs the <lc.structlnn of ttu tent, firemen said that ' new lumber which had been for «eaL«, wa.i charred.”

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

CARL M. CURTIS . . . former resident of Bahl,

who has charfe of llie newly opened veterans admlnLHratlon contact office In Twin Kail*. lo- ealed in an office under the Twin Fails nank and T rm t company. (Staff pholo-en^rarinc)

3 Boys Held for Ball Park DamageFollowing a complaint lo police by

6 . Claud Stewart, superintendent of the city p.irk.s, tlint "boys were breakinR Into the ball p.irk,” jrallcc lute ye.ilcrdny tool: three Twhi T' " JuvcnllM Into ciLMody.

Urought to the police -Matlcn, of the boys who jmjIIcc said crawled tliroiigh the boardcd-u]> tlckct widow, denied tliat he hncl ■ntered the place ‘'except I The youllLi «it<’ relea.'cd on iwti recnt;nl7.iiir''. to appear Tliur'- ' ' before Pri)l)«lc JudHc -

Cattle B rin g 8117,000 for Record Here

The la rs es l number o f Mies ever recorded by the Tw in Falls I4ve- itoclc Commission company was reported fate yesterday by Tom Callen, co-owner, who said l.«9t head of ca ttle had been eold. Totil tales amounted to *117,000,

"\Vc had more Kood quality stock thin ever Ijcfore,” he stated, add­ing ihtit I t was ■•one of our best tales." T h e co-owner announced

,t the weekly auction wiU begin 10 a. m . next \V\-dnc.iday. Sale*

»lll slop during Uic noon hour and 111 resume a t 1 p. m . to continue lUlI aU catUo are sold.A1 D unn. Three Creek, sold »

load of feeder steers fo r II3JX) per hundredwcieht. Tlils price is more than s do llar hlsher than the top Jtccr price ft year ago which waa 112.80. D urm rola ano ther carload' tor »I3.00.

The fa t s teer m arket was topped by Quincy Norris. T-,vln Falla, whc told a sm all lot for t l4 30 per hun- rtrcdwelght. TW-o year old etcerj brought $13 to $13iia. and ycar- lliift stccr.^. »11J0 to S13.;i5.

Cliolcc cows sold for n diinc 1 lan lost week, brlnglnK JlliO

J12.C0. O ood cows brought $10.50 to Jll.50: fcedcm, ja to $OJO Choice hclfcrs nere Ik trd by Cal-

Questioned

Icn I 2.50 t $13.loi> figure

OOKl hclfcro .■loid J12.50; feeders, $10 to $I1J0' bulL'i $10 lo $11.70 and veal. $ lijo J13.75,

lley.

i an<I h: mated to be I $1,000."

'W e\e a I

line's diirlnx the j ic done damage c 1 the nclRhborhuo(

Tiiird Escaper of Four Recaptured

’aul Mitchell, 16, BoL^e, one of four lrinmtr.% of the s tn te Industrial 'chwil who c.icaped from lhat In- 'lltiillon 111 St. Anthony Sept. 23. iiu been rcc;ipiurcd, Jo h n A. Brown, 'l'«lii F;ill.i county Juvrnlle offlccr, »ru'' advised Wedne.' dny by Chnric.n C Flglcv, piirole offlccr of that In- .'llttitlun '

Wlih hl.s npprplien-Mon. only one r wlio walked iiway from

still » l liberty. He In t Kfltli Wll.'-on. li, nigby,

Ollbcrt Drty. 17, wn. taken Into » cu.stody nnn r Qoodlnfr three day.-i

r;.ciipec ■ LaPi

GIRiglitsBy nOUGLAR I.An.SEN'

WAHHINGTON (NEA)-Here :.omc neneral queatlon.i from ve iiii.s and their relatives:

Q. My husband was W years old when hs wont Into the array In 19«. Now he la 38 and still hn.i two moro years of college before can gel hli degree. T hat will make him 30 or 31 years old* before he can .«art looking for a Job. la there any provision for speeding up hl.i eduejition or getting a shorter course for him?

A. I t Is possible th a t some of the training he had while in the army would give him additional cre<llt toward gniduallon. Many colleges now are considering s .«ppeded-up set of courfes for veterans.

Q. Would It be prt^Jlhlc for n go to school for a year before claiming my rdn.slalemont rlght.-i lo tho Job I had t>efore I was drnfted?

A. No.. You have to apply for rcinstolemcnt within 00 days of your discharge from the scr%'lce.

Q. Is It true tha t the govern­ment will give an American flag lo the family of a dead veteran for draping over his casket?

A. Yes. Application must be made to postma-slers a t any county seat past office or any other post office designated by the vetcran-s adminis­tration. Tlie flag shall be given to the next of kin after burial.

Q. How much money doea a vet- e ras l e t from the goTemment while he l4 gettlns vocaUonal rehablll. tatlon?

A, During the training period and for two months after employnblllty la detennlned. a single person re­ceive* pension a t the rate of $80 a month, a married person $00 a month with $5 a month for each dc- pendent child and an additional allowance of $10 a month for each dependent parent.

Judne Brillrylntlm;i IK them up might r

their crnzy Ideav''

Castleford Schools Will Close Friday

will be re. imied nt s, Oci. 22.

Slutlrnt.s {ic. lrlni: • to Kmory Bryant r labor camp.

API'LICATIO.SS SOUGHTA|)])llc;itlon.s for the txjsltlon uf

'.r'.coruloKlcal nld for the wcuthii- bureau, in th e .itiitc.'; of Iclnliu, Moii-

Orrgoil ami Wa.shlnnloll, lire Ijcliin ;-)iicht by the Kovcrninc-nt civil

t comniU.^lon, H. F. nexroal, oriiml«ilon secrctiiry. announc- c ye.'.lcrclay. Complete inform- iii;iy be obtained by contacting :it In tile local jxist office.

Vlsconnt K e lx o Shlbasa«i (aborel lovernor of the BanU of Japan, «a.» qufstlone.l by U. S. aulliorllies followlnt ilininj ol :i Jap financial Instltutioni. (.M* wlrrpliolo)

Peace Officers Hear FBI Agent

nurty-flve nicmbfr.s of the Music Valley Pcbcc Officers a.'.soclnllon, meeting Tue.^ay night In the office room. of sheriff Jerrc Purdum, Shwlione, heard E. A. McMlll:in,

rut FBI riprr;.rni:.tlve, .•■i.e.ik irlDUs phiu.e , nt lullce work In- ng -ivhiit rei]iili<-d to iii.ikc :xl jMllro ..Iflccr,- U c D. Mc-

Cnicken. a.-.' L-.lant chli-f of tK'Dre and fecretnry nt the a.'.v)clatlon, re- ported I.Tte ye-iterdnv

Meiiibi-rs l;iliT at'.riidcd a t)’i.',l-

Rodney L. Connor Dies in RichfieldtlCiinL-LD, Oct. 4-Ilodlicy l.<e

Mr.cir, and ninterniil erandparriil:,, iiul Mr.- . Fr;ink Poi>c. both of

RicliflL'kl.Graveside sen.-lcc.i will be held iit

:30 p m. 'niur.xlny In the nichfleld (tneter^-. The Rev, J. If. Coulter, Ihoshone, will ofilclnti'. fJurlal will c under the direction of the I3ur-

de tt mortuary.

Tliis Carrier, Says He, Was

Jap ScourgeFor a carrier which wa.s In combat

only three months, Uie USS Cape Gloucester Is going to be long membered by the Jap.''.

Its marine corps airmen knocked down five Jap planes and were a scourge genrrally In keeping Jap surface unit." on the run.

Cpl. Don Nellsen, US.MC, toi Mr. and Mrs. J. R. NeUscn,SUth avenue norlli, recently ___his parents a le lttr de.'crlblng In detail hb ve.-jcl's part In bringing the little brown He L' a re:ir gunner on an Avengi torj)edu bomber,

rienly of Mlleai#As of Aug. 2(1, the date of I

letter, the .^hlp had -steamed 21,i . miles after It left North Island, San Diego. Cnllt., last May 23.

!lL'en ha-s n twin brother. Ma Pfc. Robert Nclben. Bnll luated from -I-wln l-'alLi

school In 1042, and for one . attended the University of Idah<

branch. Then tlicy enlLitn In the m;irl:ips. Uobert ti with t first marine dIvL'lon. and hn.i i cently enib:irked Iroin Oklnii'.

He has been ovcr.ieas 10 montki.I t ha.s been two months since t

Olou'ce.ster left Pearl Harbor Jii

:■ tired Tlielr ship war. in t Chlnii sea.

llelaxation went a-shorc on one of tho

recreation parties to a small Island In this area and enjoyed swimming

brow.ilng through a ruined Inge — nilneil by our bomb.s ehelU." the letter said. "TliL'i iittlc recreation after so many unbroken weeks a t .sea and after being tlnuoiL'ly alert for the Jnps 24 hours

day, for to long, really good."

CJi))e Gltiiicerter

.^Ignment—kI'Ui of palm nr the letter ;

y ior t t Ihe ."hip I

Srpi.KN CAil FOUND . 1040 Packard .'edan IwlimBlng r . A. lieldimniui. Kimberly,■•11 Sund.iy wa.'i recovered \ clay t)V Sheriff Warren

iCHT C o u c h sue to colds . . . eased

without"dosing".

V IC K S

STOPPED TAKING PILLS- EATS FAMOUS CEREAL

“ Now Regular as Clockwork,”

SayHE.\--constipationSiifr<Ti

A rc you conRtipatcd? Then read this sinccrc and iinsnliclted letter from an ex-coiislipatinn nulTcrer:

War tion find r

lo be free from constlpa- 3 take

other laxative? You may, if your conMipation is due to lack of bulk In the diet— and you eat a di.ih of KKI.LOGO'.S M .r^IlH A X every day. nnd drink plenty of w.itcr, U you are not eorapletdy satisfied, atnd tho empty carton to Kellogg’t of BstUe Creek. You’ll b« paid dou6I« y o u r m o n ey back. A LL-D R A N is not a purgative. ■ I a nnl»r(i(/i/ regulating food

de from the vital miUr Ini/ers of wheal. I t supplies gentle-ncting bulk to aid normnf laxation.

Gel A LL-B R A N a t your gro- r'a. Made by Kellogg's of Hattie

.Creek and Omaha.

Real Cream of Tomato SoupSS a ffidi Iqr itself-ife delicious

nsed as a sa a e e -iti superb

HeinzC o n d e n se d

Cream of Tomato .

t s w p l

One tin o f

N O M O R f CHILLY R O O M S will, this entirely NEW type ELECTRIC H EATER !

H ere ’s com fort fo r chilly ro o m s o r chilly days! T he T rilm ont Safety i ie a te r , b y means o f natural convectJoQ (o r c ircu lation ) is 99.93% effi- a e m . . . op e ra te s w ith o u t heat lo ss . Y ou can feel its cffeas in 5 m inutes

tin lw ' W 9 5 ° ' *“ *• p ro tec t ch ild ren and p e ts . ; . safestv m y ^ ^ ^ te a fc r know n! Even i f upset can n o t cause damage. Shock-

(»M 4*taclMUt nrd»«L

FARM AND H 0 M | B T 0 R ^

Be Comfortabh This Winter!

Armstrong Meridian All-Steel FURNACE

P lenty o f H ea t! Loio Fuel Cotll E fficien t O p cra tion l

22 Inch Size 129 Minlffltmi H domt . . . 83 lonK u U

m onths to pay.

21 In ch Size, §145 27 In c h Size, $185

I t pays to buy quality when you're Investing In a furnace! A good furnace protccta your health, eaves on fuel, pays for itse lf time and again. Dollar fo r dollar we don't believe you’ll fintl a better furnace today than th e A rm- Btrong Meridian! Compare value, anywhere, you 'll agree with us. Make your selection now! Have it inBtallcd before cold w eather seta in! B« comfortable thiB winter!

* RIGID CONSTRUCTION—heavy hot-rolled steel boiler plate for long service.

> TIGHT SKAMS ~ rivetetJ and welded, they prevent leakage of g as and soot into the warm air chamber.

’ E F n C IE N T BURNING SUR­FACE—Delivers more heat p«y pound of fuel than the average fum acc . . . saves you money.

6 Points of Superiority• DOWN-DRAFT RA D IA TO R -«x-

tracts heat from gases, makea poi- sibl® a lower coaeumption of fuel

• NEW DUPLEX ORATES—center dumping bars allow clinkers to be dumped without disturbing fuel bed. Shaker, placed high, operatex easily.

• HEAVY REFBACTOBY CHAM- BER O N IN G -ho lda heat, length­ens Bcrvice.

Electric Forced-Air FanFillers A i r . . . Gives Even Hent in Every R oom

Tlii3 fa n FILTERS your air, re* m orts all d i r t . . . forces i t to tb* fa rth est room in your home, gives you oven heat i novery room. An investment.

• 12-Is(ii P u ZHkOMter

• l/« R. P. 0«Benl-n«cfeteMskr, K oblxr M«bbM ,<N*t

• TbenBMUt OmUrtJ, Efn-deal

• AU.St«U Omb

L ib e ra l T e rm s—IE Desired—Use Y our C re d it

- FARM AND HOME STORE <-

•mm

Page 4: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

TIMES-NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Thursaay, Orfo5«r 4,1948

..Esund u iRcnd <Lu. ni>(l

T U C K E R ’S N A T I O N A L

WH I RL I GI GMUZZt/ED — New *nd t tn u ln j deUtls about the

rebukin* »nd »helvljij of Adm, J. K. Taiusig lot hla blunt dlKUislon of J tp in 't war tUni h u cnr

t 11 th« consr«4loni>l P e « l JUrbor board i prellmmary plans for It-i in Thli ind many similar lijcldpn •Ifnlflcant now btcaiue they i how our naval and military <!) were muzzled for political micJ lomatlc cotL^lderntloai.

Admiral Tauulg, who then mandc

Kidnaped and Held for Ransom

1 operaUiiK 'cnrcd befor

R iTniiE n - n

VOICE OK K X I-K IU K N CK

w hich likely will la n a t io n ’s Impon.iiit st

ired ly will bi' QiiotMl ( o rn tlons.

<tonslvely to fu tu

ftWlUl

s ta te

jr k ln g . CynlcL*3m n ly b ree d a llko

s u s p c c l . . . . A fu l l

C e r ta in ly Ills staliiiiG iit Is one t o p o n d e r a s th e n a tio n and the w o rld a t te m p t to c h a r t th e i r cou rse Into the m o s t u n c e r ta in fu ti • v e r coiifrnn ted by m a n k in d . Mr. S tlm s h a i m ada suRgestloiu w h ic h should n o t a n d c a n n o t be Ignoretl by th in k i n g p e o p le w h o * ro despera te ly anxloiii to navlK nle t r e a c h i o u i w a te rs aheftd w ithout c a ta a tro p h c .

T h e re ti r in g secretary u r g e d , In s u b s ta n c e , t h a t th e U nited States r e m a in s t r o n g In i m il i ta ry sense. While recoK n lz lng t h a t th i e ffe c ts o f Uie release of a to m ! : e n e r g y a n •u re to be revolutionary, h e w n rn c d . "W i m u s t n o t malcc early a n d ea-sy a-i.sumptlorL th a t th e d iiy^of nniilcs a n d navies a r c ove r.' C on tlhu inB , he cfiullonecl: " W e cnn b e su re 1 w a r sh o u ld come ngnin t h a t 1 In tt4 sudcSen intcn-slly, a n d a g a in a llow ourjeivr.'s to b e c. o f c o m p le te unreadlnecs.”

T h u s , h e urged thnt th e U n ite d S t a t e s m u.st bo p re p a re d for wli b o k l. A t th e satro t w o rd s to say about •o th e r n a tio n s . 'Hius:; " T h e second factor a h o fir.st f a c to r be in g .p rep a re d n ess ) ncccMary to pn le e d e r* h ip is an attitude o f t r u s t a n d fra : n e s s on ou r part toward fo r colicc tlve -lecurlty. aasp ic lo n on oyr part cs;Tesp0ri30 ilmonB those w a n d f ra n k a ttitude of t i ^ s t by our g o v e rn m e n t w ill strongly tend to le n d to a l ik e a t t l tu d e on th e p a rt of all m c m b e r j: of t h e b r o th e rh o o d of nations."

No th in k in g Ajnerlcan c n n re q u ire c o n ­v in c in g a s to the wisdom o f Mr. S t im s o n ’j ad v ice concerning p rep a re d n ess . E v e ry o n i Jtnow s t h a t twice w ithin a g e n e ra tio n th ( U n ite d S ta te s has been a b l e to p r e p a re foi w a r b ecau se aille.s held t i i c enem y f ro m o u r cho res, E rery thliiklnK per.son d o iib tle .ss s h a re s th e fear that tiie t im e m ig h t com e w h e n a n unprepared U n ite d S ta te s m ig h t bo fo rc ed suddenly Into a l l f e - a n d - d e a t h w a r ■without be ing given o p p o r tu n ity to g e t r e a d y .

In d ee d , Mr. Stim.scin's f a re w e ll s t a t e m e n t la one to ponder. It may r e p r e s e n t a p a t r i o t i c se rv ice fu lly as no tew orthy a s any o f th e m a n y h e h a s rendered d u r i n g his y e a r s o f o t im a n d ln g official .service.

FO R SFRVICC.S K K N O E H E O T h e te rm "ri‘d apple” Ls b e in g w ide ly u se d

to deac ribc the bill w hich w ould l lb o ra llz o benefit.^ a n d allawanccs t o m e n en lL stlng In th e p e ac etim e army and n a v y . I t m a y b e a h a n d y a n d w ell-intentlnncd t:iR, bu t I t Isn ’t ve ry fla t te r in g .

•'R ed app le" inipllfs c a jo le r y or u n e a r n e d rew ard . A ctually, k .u'Cins to uj, t h e b ill’s recom m endation.'! provide a m in im u m o f r e a ­so n a b le a n d dcci'in rniiipcn.'^at lon for .se rv ices ren d e re d .

I t c a n .scarcely be denied t h a t the a r m y a n d na v y In th e nex t lew years w ill be d o in g th e m o s t Im p o rta n t peacetime J o b th a t o u r fo rc e s h a v e e v e r been rctiulrccl to p c rfo n n . E n lis t e d m e n a s w ell « officers will h a v e the r e s p o n s i ­b ility o f supervising the b e h a v io r o f fo rm e r enem ies, of seeing to It t h a t s u r re n d e r te rm s o re c a r rie d out, of k e e p in g a le r t w a tc h a g a in s t s e c re t preparations f o r fu tu re w a r ,

Ouuslde th e ooeuplcci c o u n t r i e s th e y m u.st develop a n d maintain .‘• I rn n g e r defen-scs th a n wo h a v e know n betorc, a n d h e re a g a in r e ­sp o n s ib i lity will not be c o n f in e d to t h e top . I n w h a te v e r lorelRn land th e y find th e m - »elves, th e se m tn of the p e a c e tim e a c rv lc o w ill r e p re s e n t their rn u n try , g iving ta n g ib le ev id en ce of ou r good will a n d «D0d In ten U o n s .

T o r th o se mon tlie a rm y o r navy w ill be th e i r l ife 's w ork for the n e x t few y e ars . T h e y deserve a n d siiould get a d e q u a te pay f o r th e l Job.

or oprrntlon*.

WARNINO — Admiral ■; txirne out by Japan’s rcnrl .lequont evtnts. Indeed, c since congratulated him on I rcffTct that Uie atate and nr flclnlly ropiiiUatrd hU

After readme lh» Tannki Japanese premier In 1M7 Of Manchuria. Monitolla. c: the Archipelago, anti '>Ten

urged Increased akl to C promlae.v fortification of and mnlnlenanr* of the B

HOW T H I N G S A P P E A R FROM

PEGLER’S ANGLEWASHIKOTON—A* «vei7 child

leanu In tha n m j t v of school, ll«ht >ru Invented In •pprcoloialely <J00 B.O. bjr C lm « Lectulsrtua, th» EpheslM fUhennan in d pholsopher, vbo b«eam« az- u p e n t« d b«eause

> w u c o n s tu t- . bumplnc into door* In th« dmrk.For the next 8.-

f ta r i further

^ow, h o w e v e r , and the lonteri]. bumbig K wiclc dipped in mule-1 marrow, appears

( been the

artificial illumination, a l t h o u g h OUum Blclnl, of Genoa, the In­ventor. was publicly put to death by Pedro, the paltry, on a charge

'•turning night Into dne Intent.’' iimlshment and pop- in In luppon of It r'experlment almost

time. Many mep and 111 llvlne recall the coal- aa a novelty and a boon,

Brnndparunta lived In a nrUflclal llRht wm a lux-

aboard aettiemcnta exclu- whlch

aupereUi deterred furtl rnitu our tl: women still 1 oil lamp aa i

d o r (4 watch fire «(is1zih. (Bd that autoniatlcallr.)

Also in our time, Amtrtcan areht- tecta hit upoo a rather good Idea ot making plenty ot wlndowi and woik was ea^y on the eye* and peopla could rcccvnlse one anothti br sight.

Then came the modem deooratan a d an innovation called •decor" nd aa to what tha t meahJ literally

your gueaa is aa good m mine but you see It in some of th« rather pucker-mouthed msgozln* feature* by apeclalLMa In the home beautiful.

In B general way It mean* »ome Llie uglier'’ “ “ t uncomfort- } fumllure ftUice the inventloa of milking stool and lamp-shadei

. buckets that conceal meet of light or throw It In such a way

t you practically have to lie on back of your neck to read. And

Tieana heavy draperlea acrots .. windows to keep out th» day­

light and, aa If tho-'ie dlm-OUt lamiv - • n 't bad enough, they

ps like a six-foot length sas-plpo t ' '

leslgncd

u turn . . tralght

d they tay It li sup-

ur ' Of B

talnat . -nic)id presently the Welabi

rhlch would dlisoli'e Into ^h aa looked i

Ugbt

you

‘W A S H I N G T O N C A L L I N G ” BY

MARQUIS CHILDSWASIIINOTO.S-

X group ot

e pro.\lml-

belng. Ch’crflhnd- ved by the atomic bomb, this si :vlce WM poMlbly even more

portant In bringing the war t

nt<-rlor Li expected to ro«li;n ot b con after his return from neKotlnlln iniprli-iin pptroli-um tre.ily in London -jru that he may bfrmne Imlii'trr's aniUonif salary.•nie Idahoan wa., a close frlcni

■ruman when they aervert togrlhcr te WM cirfealed InM ycAr In a thrr inry. Altliough o rabid l^olntlonl!t d

1 pollc.. He

Koaspvcltin Is appoln U of the new deal and F. D, R.'a ,r Dennett C. Clark of Mbsoiirl, vcfl a federal Judgeship,Mr. Clark and Mr. Ickea are ol.

fact, aa soon aa hla name wiw men from Focal

the ce plac If It

explal

iesl4 swept SCT03 e Danube, Prcslc J ie conflict be cn

;lon already forgotte; igaliul Fascism.

•fer to this great?

They finally achieved a model which was not In production on V-1 day. If they had got It, the Invasloi of France would have been Impossl

because of the devastating ef t of shells equipped with prox

Imlty fuscj on ma.ised tnx>p«. Thi » bombing of aerm nnj' would tlse have been Impossible, to the dU'covery of the proximi­

ty fu.« and its fashioning went thi work of from 000 lo 800 scientists— physlrlsts, chemLita, n-itrono)

: different

1 whichrardiy t

)t bcln •

V I E W S OF O T H E R STTiough 'TVorli

yW eral Beslstrr ju st ended, hlstoi for a better nan: no t find one that h*« ever acqulrt «hl<ii fitted it Ik toricai reference. R Is

:amino tiie w a r

war !!• hu been approird for the

bably ce ff-r I

parchr u i n lhat they wlU

■ eo’body. No ir*r In history j deftoJUva name or one Dio th e r a s t frame o t hls-

eerUin thatthe Children of the men »ho fought th h war will not e&Il it what their fathers did,

"World war n - is » clumsy makc-aJilfL Moreover It su«gest« an laUnnliuble numbered setles of world »ar* to come, a tra«lc prcpfct indeed. Nor is Global war more «ultible. The flrat W orld war was also a ■lobal w.'»r, and there *cre other* before in.-vt. \7hat *« ire «c;-u;!onird :o call lti« F rrn.:h and Indian w.irs

gyv suropi u d b l« In d ia , U oo«al 1 Poel-Dispatch.^

w lans have often tried to deslgnat Iheir duration, aa the Hundred Years' war.

Years’ war and the Seven Yeans’ war, T :n called the defeat of Austria by Pnivl ; Seven Weeks^ war. rhe men who fousht thsi* »•talnly did not call them anything r term s have UtUe meaning today. BomeUme.i, wliei !j- two nations have been In confUct, double tltlp. f the 6panlsh-Amerlcan war may prove more de iptive. though our South American frlrnris mifrh

claim equal and earlier title to the name. The Chin- e«-Japanese war of 1804 and the Ka-.<o-Jap.me.<i war of IWM hare already merged Into our war a IfiOT-HS.

One historian »ugge«u Uiat the confllcl be callrc the Atomic war, a palpable sutxitltutlnii of a part oi the whole. Pcrharki a tentaUve -nifc-t:e.?t|iin by Dr Allan Nevlns, Columbia profe.v'or ol American htv tory. colored though It Is by wLihful thinking, maj be adopted by happier future Reneratloiv'. He hcipfj that It may be called the La.'t war. - New York Times

GLT.V COVE COMRAI)i:S The sumptu

Glen Cove. I^Soviet government for the next t entertainment and recreation ccn! of It. purchasing eomml-ylon.—Ni Workers of the world, arl^el Come collect lha'e

promUed p lf f Here, in halls of Morgan Ilk. built with sweat bf workers’ brow*, dine on iihcxnnt. sprawl on silk, skip your dUlecUc vows.

Workers of the world, relax! Morgan paid his Income tax. Though he did exploit the masses, what c,ire you for his talent when there's vodka In the glasse* and the Kremlin meeu the rent?

litre , you ’'wretched of the earth," Is a revolution's rorthl Her*, where tapltallaU frolkked, prlncc. lanced and tycoons played, lull your coiisclence.i In omfort: Dncle Karl i« Jiut a shade.Workers of the world, unltet—where the chandellen

re bright, TasW the life of good old Plerpont, never ear the Marxian «Tftth, After nil, yniir cnmr.ndr,

il.'o took the prUnrti.'>e ji.ith,—St. Louli

a coordtnatlni t together—thi arkable nervous

s!i)’ how loaf It would 3ver the cause and the er or Infantile paralysis

flOO men nnd women ther toward a conunon

rntlsts talk about their ;ch a glimpse of thU >f infinite possibilities.

B O B H O P E

portable ve rsion If Doulder d a m vhlch would be

to Sinatra's hou'.e. i n 't have to wear lilinsr monilng walkuig down Rubber floors for the t

used In Sinatra's broadca.Ms. would enable young girls to

id bounce right bark Into

sample of so many

—I Saw This

the dar thin: t last, t:erly

c" president of Uon ol Uboc. inflt for—(kill.

light, dtscrlbec .Ing halr-pin In a bottle, and of rube Jokes about hicks 1 hotels trying to blow It out.

But even as recently as Abraham Lincoln's boyhood only ths

;andle light In their

coin and a lot of other peopU

big chop luey place In Washington so dark you can't

menu so I mentioned ;llow and h i said U iiy difference because lop Buey, chow mein, foo yoimg and thi la people like It be-Idea, he

had Uother

tudy hit ha

t he had 4 heart of

But for that. Henry ?ord > av* had to think up some ame for hbi big de luxe Jot boiuands of Uncoln wnrehous< lorage componlea, cleaning yelng companies, ond hotels ' e called AJax or Konparli

1 lady, herself, and 1:

t away became If Ps- I forcr,lght hi would hat by IMS in tlio In-JKtnt/'.? primeval pitch ending again through

1 of dark

/ to £lllotl Rotv

of Ball-eyKi

31lott Roosevelt

H I N T S ABOUT H E A L T H BY

DOCTOR O’BRIENARTEftlES NA:

a prettyand said her hue-

r In Japan, can't find for him. A fold- a. He’a P « . T. J . Taplln: IS formerly Arlene Atkln- il. We understand Mrs. T. Ing University of Idaho branch a t Pocat- ,-i^hlng to sell her

a line a- veil

BPORTS DEPT.rUk of horning In or. ___of Mr. pudgy J^edmond,

the world serlM exactly 10 y.

Tommy Brldgrs ■ -g of Detroit ,

the Ctita, ph

the by. the 'nger I, 4 to 4. Their

champlonjhlp it was.

.•SIDERATE, NOT

I. 0-DMra. kSlight aging changes are seei le arteries of bablra and throi It childhood. As soon as we i •owing, aging changes in therles become mare marked u___ley are found In most blood vessels per.'Mjns of advanced years. Hard-

led arteries may carry as much blood as ever. In »om« Inslancea ictually more because they arc tretched and longer, but the vessel rail lacks elastic recoil, and this

Interfere* with the flexibility of clr- rulatlon-

The chief accident which occum n hardenUig of the arteries Is rup- iire. MoBt Tltaj cpnt In the body or ruptiu-e to oocur Is ' ‘ ' vhcre the condition Liipoplexy. A cerebral " a c .......:urs when a small or Urge vessel n the brain Is blocked o '

ippnrently i

QRA1.I.Y HARDKN faucets, shuttljig off or turning on the blood. In high blood treasure there is a tendency for the ar­terioles to be set for a unaller

; materiftU. The VC.W1 wall tlilck-

strcajti. •I'lic heart, lo overcome tlio difficulty and deliver the nec­essary bloiKl to various parts of Uie body, mu.it mcrea.« lha lorce

m o r e b r i t t l e , which may cniiie

of contractions and this rslsv the pre-vmre in the’system.

t u r e. Althou«li ■hardening of the O U R T O W NaU of’ u^'^M’ we grow older, the change does not

From out of the delude of edltorlaj copy that la being WTltten Uiese d*7l In connection with the futures of re­start at the same

age or develop at ths Sams rate In

turning TCtcrons, one fact stand* heads and sboul-ders above all the

, re- t; Many veter- ans and othen.ln Twin Palls and

I e lsew here , a re , wondering sbout I the posslblUtlM of

•'working at Jobi In town ana llrtng

t In1 dilT-

Ing d ls i ii.rr, wl'cre they can

. few chlckcns and a garden."It seems, from rending booUeti

oveniig thL? subject, that prospects or that sort of life arc good. This ountn' ts rich in Jiut such oppor- unltles. Some of the hajsrdl which

e large-' the

ale far

; beglnt ■n. If the ;

than I »nil IlemorrhagB is large . ........................

-------- .. a vital ipot Is af- -w ith 11,000 comingfectcd, paralysis of the face, arm ...............................

leg occur*. Moet of us suffer ly email itrokes u

without real paralys:Hardening " '

tlons. I popcorn and/or hog the

(7) A harmle->4 drug th a t wc emporarily paralyze little bablei Jlctures and keep them from sti ng scenes. (Same thLng for dogs, rats, ponle.i, and Walter Brennan.l

(B) An automatic lypeaTtter thal ould write this column tor m».

’Way Back When From Files of Times-NewsJ3 Yl'.ARS AGO, OCT. i . ID30

.\idrrable real eetate is report- chnnglnc hand* here this year.

n Falls Brulai defeated the .» Oakley squad here yestcr- i 9 to 0, In a hard fought foot- ime. Both teams were nervous beginning and laclced cnooth-

r r VKAttS AGO. 0 Superlntcmlrnt C. C

rie Buhl school* wl YMCA war work aa s.

»ent to Bulil yesterday *■

—ObMrvCT

Speaktag of the above. Pot Shots haa dt'coviTpd one case In which i

:unlly did have to remabi ui In the morning to chang"

clocks.The Rent vn.i Pred C. Parmer, thi

Union Pacific agent to Twin Falls. Cloclcs at the depot couldn't •hanged ahead of time Just bfci lomclxxly wanted to go to be<I. And Fred, as the bos.^ was the person

turn 'em back.He had to come downtowT) a t 3

to do it.

FAMOl’S LAST im S . . i<ow he finds his flTe e

tons ol hoarded cigarettes wi

Interference with the clreuli narrowing the pas-'age way. Pa Ite spots for this change to de

velop are the coronary arteries o heart, and the arteries of thi and feet. The circulation tends e less efficient in the heart and

loner extremltie* as w and we should not U; by over-cxertlon. Injuries of the feet, e\-en those which are *uper- flclal, have less of a tendency to heal promptly In older persona be- cause of insufficient clrculstioi.

Difficulty in high blood pressurt occurs in the. amaller arteries of the body which are compoeed chiefly of muscle. In the bcgtnnlns stages of high blood pressure, these cnall arteries develop spasm, while in the later stages perm tnent hardening occurs. Purpose of these small ar- terle« is to distribute blood flow 'here needed "niey operate like

;r tips inclune: Buy on an oll- -r road; get a good wster su[>- comfortable house and elec- In or ne.ir; don’t undertake

uch farming: keep ths f*nn ;ondary job; aim low at ftrji,

gardes and a few 'out on a itmb" by rs, too much poul-

O ct i-flo ra an s IJ. Key »er»«: Roman* lltsa •‘O the depth of the rlchea both of the vtsdcci and the kncnrledft of OodI how unsearch-

ore His Judgments, a n d ‘HLi p«st flndlug o u t r I

buj'lng pigs, c try and fruit.

ie whole m atter a lot rf .. --cfore you make the plunge.

If the town Job should end sudden­ly. how much oould you get for the •’farm” and how quickly could you get It In order to move elsewhere?

Take your time In buylnj. oo mat- ■r what the slie of the place. Dent t a glib u lker m U you somethin*

you should not buy.Vou can of course »et InfoimaUai

from many sources about this wb- ■ect or part-time forming. Write to •he University of Idaho, Uosoow,

and the depirtm ent of africultur*. Wa-shlngton 2S, D. O.

Contact your county agent Be's a nn who's been in the field a lot .id can help you solve aotne ot rour

prc^lem*. Xn Twin ra lU county, tha lent U Albert Mylrole. Bli ottiee In the oourt bouse..Anyone carln* tor further ad­

dresses of other source material will be aent five of them on % poeta] end - i f theyll send me tbelr rei^iest addressed to this column. e/oTlnet* Ne»s.

Page 5: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

WflgBBaj, Oeio()« 4.1949

Details Told O f Japs Used As Torpedoes

TOKTO. OcL 4 Japanesenawspnpcr Aaahi dljclojcd Wednes­day detalb of an untlemaitr kaml- ka*e corpj-hum nn tOT>edoe« fired from the dtck of submarines—which Joined with «hlp-crashlng planes » fuUle effort to fu rr the tide of

Uncovering one of Japan’s top mllltAry secrctj, the newspaper said liirgc submarines carried tU human torpedoes each, and medlum-slzed craft five.

n i c torpedoes were packed with two ton.1 of rx'plMlves and, uulclctl by a volunteer from the navy, could IraTel for 50 minutes a t 2S knota, compared with W knots for the ordi­nary torpeda,

Axahl snid the wcnpon ftus dubbed "kaltcn.” which means “turn toward heaven."

TJie operator could control the speed and direction of the imcler. water mlialle, and look about the I'ccan'o surface through a perLicope, If he wished.

TIMES-NEWS, TW IN PALLS, IDAHO '

To U.S. Post Mother States She’ll Prove Twin Falls Slayer Innocent

BOISE, Oct. 4 (ff)—D nnny W illiams’ m other told the state board of pardons y este rday sh e would “brinfi: wilticases from Twin Falls” a t th e January board meelingr to prove her .non was innocent of th e m u rd er of Twin Falls Policoman Craiff Bracken in 193D.

Pa»I5w'

Funeral Held for Jerome Resident

jm O M E , Oct. 4-Plnalwas p.tid Mr.?. Ella D.ilentnn............Wiley funeral chapel with BUhop A. Leo O iitn , ot the first nvird L. D. fl. church. offlclat^nB- Interment was In Jerom e cemctery under the direc­tion o t Die Wiley funeral chapel.

Mr.i. Haiel Glnes and Merle G mvlct .wng n duct, foirowcd by the Invocation by Juine.i H. Krrr,cy. First /■pcakri- wiu Golden I, B;irIow. and followlnft a duel selection seconil speaker was Bishop Obcii. Another duel then sung, Tliora Ooush nccomp.\nled a t the piano.

Bonpcllctlon wa.i by Dhhop CJinrli's H. Andrus of the feconil «:ir(l,

P.iIIbearers wore John Francis Blunt, A. E. Blu Conklin, Ivan Green, C. C and (fTOve dedication was by BLshop' Oben.

Store Opened by Buhl-Burley Pair

JEROME, Oct. i — Enoch Wall. IHihl, nnd Joel A. Tale, Burley, a noune« the opening of tJie Jrroi ^ im ltu re eonipiiny at 9 a. m. Sat­urday.

Wall and Tate will be co-owner. of the store. Oolden L. Wilcox, form- orly of Burley, will be tnnnager c ttje store.

MURTAUGHS 1/c II. n . Porterfield, stationed

At Sun Valley and Laural True, Glenns Fe ro ’. were recent guests Mr. and Mrs. E. B, True.

Mr. «nd Mrs. Art Decker a children. Westwood, C<vllf.. «re v_. n ine his slster.i. Mrs. Fred Herbert and .Mrs. Enrl Wold here iind hi.' pnrenta, Mr, and Mrs. George Deck­er. Twill Fnli .

T/5 Orla He.^tbeck h spending a * i day furlough with his parentf Mr. and Mrs. Aiinast He.slbcck after serving two year.-i In Iceland, He en­listed In Uie scrvlcc In December, 1042, and win report to the Prison­er of W ar canip at Kupert follow- Ing his furlouKh.

3/Sgt. Jack Rectur Is .spending 30 day furlouRh with hli parenLs, Mr. and Mrs, Delbert Rectur, after being stationed 25 nionths In the European theater. Ifc had previous­ly been In Panama 11 months. He entered the service Feb. 17, IMl,

Sgt, William Morrison vWted hts parents. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Morrl- Ron, here afler receiving his dis­charge « t Ft. Douglas, Utah. He was en route to Moscow where ho will visit his wife and son. Howard William, and will later attend the Unlver.ilty of Idaho.

Mrs. A. S. Byvcrson and Mrs. Art Menser have returned from Salt Lake City. Dtah, where they vhlted Mrs, Byverson's daughter. Marian.

A son, Robert Paul, was bom to Marine Pfe. and Mrs. Robert K. Stelnhaur, a t Bremerton, Wash., Aug. 37. Mr.s. stelnliaur is the for- m er rislp Davi.i. daughter of Mr, and Mia, Loyd Da\-ls,

J. tloward McGrftth, abovr, now aerrlng his third Urm aa goter- nor of Rhode [sland, has been nominated br President Truman to be aoIlcltoT general of the U. S.. saceeedlnr Charles Fahey, r t- tinned.

New Curtis Magazine Cominff Out in MarchPfOLADELPHIA, Oct. 4 OD-Tllc

Curtis Publl.shUiK company an­nounced today It will begin publlca- Hen of a ren- wontlily m/icazlne lo be called -Holiday" In March, 1948.

The mngarlnc—firBt major addi­tion to Its field -since prewar days— will be dei-oted primarily to recrca- : •'on and travel, thi> company raid

Editor win l>e J. Frank Bcamim. from United I'rc.ss division manager

Kansas City. Mo., and Atlanta.1 newsman for Cleveland. Hunt­

ington. w. Vn.. San Francisco, PltLsburgh and Philadelphia papers.

Mrs. Charle.s C hester. M c­Call. whose floii i.s serving a life sentence on conviction of first deirrco m urder, a s k e d the board only f o r a co n tin ­uance of the case until i t s January m eeting. Her quest wuH g ran ted u n an i­mously.

flho promlMd to prove with w lt- neiscs that 'this is the case o t an Innocent boy charged with murder,

hUe the murderer goes free.” Attorney Oenernl Prank Lnnglej

said, "we voted only lo continue thfl Mrs. Chester apparently wonta ime here wlUi o bunch of w lt- s and try this ca.se all over

again."Said SecrtUry of stat« Ira H-

Masters. another member of the board, "we are not promising a hear* ing-cicept on Danle. Wllllsms’ a p ­plication for a pordon."

“Wo *-on't oTBUe th a t~ r i l get a t ­torneys to prepare th e esse," K n . Chester replied. She a-yerted Williams "has been torturedtally by reallMtlon th a t lia I t ___vlcted of murder alUiough Innocent, Only the fact tha t he iia.s ■ strone and brilliant mind haa saved ftlm ."

Tho board In quick succession

AnotherNew

F e a tu re

denied appllcatlon.s tor pardon commutation of sentence by I otJier murderers. Tlicy are J. Britt Hargraves, convicted of shooting to death an Alameda town marshal In

on bauic a t Pocatello In 1540, Don Sellers, serving a 15-year-

to-llfc sentence for second degree murtlcr a t T»-ln F^iis, Masters vot-

■ ■ r«lea.'e ot Sellers, with Gov- Oossett and t_^nglcy voUng

to deny. Tlie denial of Hargmves fas unanimous.

COAST GUAnil STAMP WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (UP) -

'Qstmoster General Robert E. lUii- negan^Wednesday announced ls.su-

threc ccntstamp hon-

Kiclt-Off Staged In Jerome Drive

JEROME. Oct. i —n i t "klck-otf" dinner of the War fund drive for this county was held Tuesday even­ing In the banquet rooms of Wood cafe wltlj about 50 chairmen and workers In attendance.

Tho meeting was prtslded over by County Chairman R. W. WlllUm- son, who stated that the quota lor Jerom e county was »B4KW, WllllMn-, son eixpres.sed confidence that the: drive would be a fiuceeas and the county's quota rcuchcd. I t b plan­ned to complete tlie campaign In 10 days, Mr. WlllUmson said,

Prc-sent a t the meeting to jpeak as Cpl. Robert Peterson, relumed

veteran of the Pacific, who told ot his expcrleiices with Uic DSO, the facilities and recreation offered and locations of those he had been privUcdged lo visit. Frank M. nettlg. J-rom e attorney, was the oUier Apeaker.

Mr. Rcttig emphislied the need for the services being contlnutd by the varlo\is agencies of the National W ar fund a t this time even though hostilities have ceased.

With the total county's quota lel

at MAOO, tho unotm t bas been al> located aa loUowa: H u elto n and Eden, v l t h B, E. Qimdelflnger chalnnon. 11,600; H unt relocation center, w ith J. n . Nichola as chalr- min, *500: city ot Jerom e, with A. ■7, Tinsw all aa chairm an, 13,800,

Id the farming d istric ts of sur­rounding Jerome: H. E. Fmnson. northea-it section: Guji .Callen. northwe.st section: C, O. Minor,

ra.1t wcilon ond M att Kulm. west section, to ta l of *3.000.

Here’s Blow: He Finds His Bride

Still Across Sea

STRAY nOKSE REPORTED Fred Scnften, Castleford, reported

lo Deputy Sheriff Charles Parrott Wednesday that ho had located a stray hor.';c near his property. Prom the description given of tho animal there were Indlcationa th a t the horse might be tho property of Ralph Durham, who reported th a t he had

, horno two weeks ago.

AOEQUIA. Oct. 4 - l f s hard Imagine a tougher disappointment than the one Wesley Butler ran Into.

Ho went to San Francisco to meet his Australian bride, whom he rled while he was serving ove

AJJ set to greet her with

-Amctletn kU*. tsd to v«!oam Im t to tha t)nlt«d BUIw, h« dlKovered till*—

HU w U c-tsd 300 o tto AuttralUn bride* ot Amerie»n,*«nc« men— were forced to n i t la u i the n o t sh ip becauM tbera wun'C ■nUaUe trtuMportallon »p*ee.

And the next shipload of brldM doesn’t come untU Kovnnber.

(X3COC Plntnblng <I STANDARD FIXTURES |

JACUZZI AND RED

JACKET PUMPS

READ TIMES-NEWB WANT AD8.

Beware Congfroa eoBM mhThat Hang On

iROB’T E . L E E SA L E S CO .^! Plumbing Department

PboDs llB -w ;

d ^ n d l s f Tcn matt U n

CREOMULSIOMforCon)ii,CliettCoU,tinidiIlil

—ATTENTION—

STOCKM EN!POSSEMEN!

/Vew -fituJlMCjo!

PLASTICSMOOTHSOPHICTICATtOH

O VO

Pom m el SlickersBlack, double throughout. ElasUc wind cuffs and front s to rm flap Front end bnck extensions tha t f it does to saddl# m a a sk lr ti-b u ttan o t ank les........................ ..................... ..... 5 * 9 0

Cow boy Boot Overshoeswhile rtdlng-BIack buckle style Overshoes

... ........ 3.49Keep your feet designed to f it boot heels. AH sites 8 to 12, for

WOMEN’S H a tsMow «n art.-W herc did ,o « get h ? - ’

L w j"* , especially prelly.- Thw“ o( comment y o u ll hear -h en yoo*'ear j. „ew ha, P ^ n c y 't l Hats that dip over ihe eye or sit back on the hesd -h als /or ^ n a wear o, evening i „ black and colora; Sequtas, veils, bowi « fcatbcrt.

PLASTICS, CORDB GENUINE LEATHER

T ruly a lovely selection of tha newest developments In floa ■■■■ them tomoncw.

NEW ARRIVAI,S

JU ST 60 INDIAN DESIGN

R obe B lan k e tsiloe, gay colors for camp or ever>- dnj

FiN E QUALITY

B oys S p o rt S h ir tsLong sleeve stylea In fine print sport shirt* for school « or dresa wear............................................. ............................ 1 « 9 5

SMALL BOYS & GIRLS

% Length H ose

BOYS AGE 2 TO 10

ArgUe S w e a te rsOayly patterned sllp-on sweaters, a good per cent o: for warmth ....... ............... .. .........................................

ULTRA QUALITYL adles S lacks

* 5 c

1.9S

7*90

APPARELBALCONY

NEW FALL BLOUSES

The higti louoded netk biottse nultn tbe peHeet fad tot tiiose new gold oockUoe risgi. Tha tie front blow

. <• a srwefa! bruk »id> loe mach timpIicitT. AM wW 4een^ tailored b k g M Loofr duct daem.

H IGH QUALITY W H ITE GROUNDCotton P r in ts

Dainty pink, blue and green nower designs on fine quality 9 a . white cotton—Ideal for children, for tea aprons, etc............ ^ 7 6

NEW SH IPM EN T FLA N N ELETTE ANDG auze D iap e rs

$1.38 $2.19 Dot. $2.50 Dbi.

PLA N FOR W IN TERin fa n ts S h ir ts

Long and abort aleove. Pln aod Ue styles ready nt for fall and winter,_______________________ ' - 2 9 c

Page 6: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

Page Six TIM ES-NEW S.'TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Thursday, October 4 ,1045

Truman Asks St. Lawrence Project Okay

WASHINOTON. Oct. 4 i rre jldcn t Truman todiy r mcnclpd (O consrcsa *pccrty npprovnl of in agrtcmcnl bttwctn thLi coui fry and Canada for the dovclopmsi of Ui9 lonj-dljcuaed St. Lawrence river wnKrway and power projecu

The Prrsldrnt pointed out thsi Csnada, expfcUng thin counlr>’ tc Join fn complettnjt the a t. Law­rence project, already has built more Uian half of IW aharc of the under­taking.

••We, however. aUll have our ma­jor contribution to make." the Prts-Idcnt

e In-

Mr. Tniman recommended Ias pin. ■T the p<

fnclUtlca of the p r o je c t ...............dlnlp be followed aflfr construcllcpn by Ihe federal Rovrmme

"It haji alwaya been understood by the rr.'pon.ilble proponents of thl

projcct liiat the wat<

il become the 1/ New York. I )wrr Ahould be led by the st;

'TTiat Ahoiild continue lo be Ihe policy, and I recommend Ibat It tm W) dccUrrd by the coiiKrr.-.'.' Iir

Mr. IViiman pointed out tlint when the United 8tntr.i-C:iim(Unn Burcmrnt of March ID, 1041, for Uie development of the Orcdt Lnltes- St, I*wrence baaln Is approved by coiiitrcis, the two coiintrles will be nble to hamcRS ono of thn (treat-'H natural rcscnirccs on thLi continent.

He eiplalned tha t tho projrct would reralt in "opening the Oieat Lake* lo ocean navigation and ere- ailnK 2.200,000 hornepower of hydro- elrclrlr capacity lo be divided equal, ly hetwren the people of the United fllntfs and Canada.

FRUIT JAB EXPLODES ACCQUTA. Oct. 4 — Mrs. Pat

Tmry Buffered painful bums on one arm when a Jar of hot fruit, which the WB4 aeallng, exploded and throw hot liquid on her a

Tliis Plane Lands in Air Booster Meet Attended by

100 Persons•luck dim the

___ of AppletonThe home ecoiiomica co vlth Mrs, Charles Peat :halrman, wtLi In charge

banquet.TJie hall t

flower and Iformed the backgrojnd of the « Following the dinner, L « turer PhU lllrrel. auted that the i purpose of booatcr night Li to

.hyon iniere.n.

Houston Gave Japs a Tough' Fight, Freed Prisoner Says

The Oninge inasle •na Introduced anil 3me addres.s Anollii

Herb Sllbatigli, who -J'-r. Mr. eilhsuBti

Orange lilatory. He nl , . . the (Ire ln.iurHnr-r the OrnnR( ferliig. Clyde Nr-wbrrry, w been a member Itss than

.ailed upon to explain Joined the Gninur n.id ^ iplnlon of the (,rR;iiili.ui<

■iwrle,

nble <1 1 plim.-. I by I

nillrtli

Kllirht Officer R, A, Gregory, Cleveland, O.. »lr te< land te st pllol, Und.t h li ob»ervalli>n plane on th

l.ibora(ory'fi ■■nmtlle nystem," a t W rliht field, O . a Ihe plane lo a halt an It alldea alnng the tD»pended ri tith eqo.il ease from tlila cable. (U. S, army air force* phot

Mr:,. O. F, El: , ,umbcrfl, nccnmiwiileil by Mrs. Phil

lllrrel. John Woollry, ma.iter of the North Side Pnmonn, discussed the Pomonii orKnnlrjitlon nnd the need )f cooperation among farmers.

Edrcij Eisenhnucr Baw two rcnd- lnfis.__Sonny El.^enhauer abo spoke

Jaycees Oppose Present CVA Bill; Lash Federal ‘(ii-asping’llmoua oppMltlon—afWr plenty of verbal firework.^ aimed a t the ‘ 1 !!,'’'',

I lUcord H«T]ew

.k.rt>o.nl runtf.l

Bhoppm

Vrr-m th. Trori'.

Unonlmoua ,. federal government's offortis

CVA bill try th« Twli lazt night,

; Jaycee opp«lLlon organlmtlon t-ellevei northwest’d reiources.

I^etter* expreulng will be sen t Idsho’s

r JAMKS L. nAI.LEW

By OEORQIA CHATBUHN JEROME, Oct, 4 - The cruUer

Hou-iton didn't bo down tn Sunder atriilla In 19U without glvlm T ui Japs plenty and puttinj: up a - fight, aald B 3/c j . l . Ballew, year-old liberated priaoner who _ _ arrived home on fiO-diy leave after being reicued from three and a half years of captlvlly.

'15,® sturdy Hous-diaappearlng under the oily the U. a flag still waved

— , s maai. ’There waan’t one Jap shell which touched the fUg."

,ld Ballew. "although the sky waa -ight with shellfire and Uie Japi ^Pt their floodlighta straight on le sinking alilp."Ballew U son' of Mr. and Mri.

George Ballew, Jerccne. He will re- port to Camp Norfolk. Va.. for fur­ther training. |

NaUre. Scld Them 1 waj among Uie fortunate

to reach shore and I tried to i up with the fleeing Dutch, but wn.i impcwslbie, Tlioje ot ua who captured by the natlvea were turned-----to Uie Japs for 110

-Iping • ■

Wallet Found With Part of

Funds Missing

r Uio ap j w

Choir Singers Give Program For Junior Hi

A varied proKriiri of vi crs wa. pre.uiiml by

Falk junior high ;,<hool . . . . nn a.yeml)ly Wcdncwliiy under dl recUon of Miss Ella Mnc Wc.iscl, nt

n a.wcmbly Wedne.vtiiy.Numbers by the uroup Inchiried

Only Wl

Irst token prisoner, but the hard md exhausting work waa workmg m the railroad llnea. Dallew ••

He recalled how the met hoved Into the lower hold hip, which had been a«d ransport for cattle. The extremely rowrtrd quartera wrjp almwl ciiriii)Ie and while some ,ilep quattinc poalUons, Uiose sundlng

would try to fan Uiclr alctplng com­panions. Tlicre were no life Jacketa

led the prisoner* and at night the .) was blacked out completely, rar Moulmeln. Uie men a

licrdrd by guards, and bi work on the railroad. Most of prUoners worked from 10 to IB hours

ind the pay waa 30 cents

Teara were turned Into *m U »- and ths smile* inrniedlately turned into frow ns-for a Twin Falla wom­an tat« yesterday when police re­covered a pocketbook which had been lost earlier In the day In a downtown department store,

Mrs. Vlolei Downing. Fourth ave- ue west, lost her pocketbook con­

taining tfi] in ft dCTwntown depart­ment store. Loter In the doy. Mrs, Greta Madron. C8 Third avenue west, called police and told them *he had fotmd the pocketbook In a trash container in the rest room of tho department store.

\Vhen Uie pocketbook was brought ) the police staUon. it contained

*35, which waa $17 short of the reported by Mrs. Downing, itructlng what happened,

police wer« of the belief that aome other woman picked up the pockct- book In the store, took It lo the rest room, and upon opening the zipper on the hlllfold within the purso dLi- covered the *17—which she took, toaslng the bag into the tnuh con­tainer. The *35 was contained in n bank book which was aUo In the billfold.

You'n- hicky that an honwl p tr- I found your bag tho second time." i sk eg t. Tom Smith told Mr.i I

Downing.

Few Snorts, Gripes OK, Says Sarge, 77

Tclt. 77, who claim* to be tha amty^ oldest member, "a msn'a not a good soldier unless he takes ft tew snorts now and then and does'a bell of a lot of griping,"

T hat's what he told newtmen to ­day 0* he puffed pn a mellow briar pipe and walled to be mujtered out after 47 ycaia of service.

The reason he'a leaving the army now U because of a leg Injury re ­ceived In an automoblls accident two years ago.

Glrls- Women

are youl lpmwm

from loss of

eiOOPIRON?monthly p<nMs ttu l you p«l«. tie'durto^ow'^bl^'^liTicL

60 start today—117 Lydia B. Ptak- ham'i TinxTS —oa« o{ 1S6 ir a u t t blood.iron tonic* fou etn buy lo li*lp buua up red blood 10 tlv« Bora ■ireostb ana •acrgy-la (uab atra. ^^Tskea a a ^ lre c tc d -I^ U ^ 'i T»t>-

Tllcy bSp^B^d'u’por uio blood by rtiaiorclng Uu ta*mi>.

lydiaLPIflliliain’sT A O itf^

g. n., FrrM I'M* ru-nll: (, lUilo Si

Slaatn arxl .. . . ABC-* a. -------- - - - ,

Ib iI^ e t BterUi $. It Cs )llk«.

BEAD TIME8-NEWB WANT AD6.

Opposlnj ViewoppoilnB viewpoint '

TVA had raised living at*r ihe population It served MUthenat. Some doubt wiis vc

whether the Kavernmrnt actually luic all of powers nnd awnllow up prlvale tn - Krprlse,

In hb e-xplanailon of the pro­posed project. Smith said:

e blll'fl aUted purpose b to promote nnvlKrttlon, flood 1htap power uiid la 7ie entire Columbl nd other northwe;^ctcd by th e proiwied CVA would i

b)' the Prc:ildfiU. y bo removed by rurrenl reaoliitlon

. . f congroaa. Theresould be also on advL»ory council of seven members. One cotincllor would come from Idnhci. one from Wfuhlngtoli. nno'.hfr from OreRon and a lourtli from .Montiiiin. Th others would be appointed by the President.'’

AdTbary OnlyThis body would have onli' at

advlsoo' function. Smith j-cild. The CVA could n o t take posicsslon 0 privately ow ned water o r a jjrlvnti

tem unlcM they were foi lid. B ut II this water sup­

ply became unncceisary because thi had 'ta k en over th e dlstrlbU' water In that area, the CVA

roiild buy ilic ;.ii[ip!y by tho right of eminent domiiln.

Smith defined this r ig h t aa ihe covernmenfs power to buy any prl- vste property n l a price B d by law II the purchft.no wbj for the pi ' "

No Llflilt Hs empliaalaed tli.it t

llnill to the ascncy'a p <)ulra property for Its

would lurUier carry oui iii.'i of the bill. For tht 11 the CVA could nlsc t-1 area perioii.i, brlclge.r

> If UiLi

mllLj, ru;iiLs. fc ifn>:l5C5 and t oi>erty.

SmlDi I tional Irrlgnt

13 de?lrlnf

companlta If th r lr serv 1 sre nvnllnble.'Some peraoru tisve obJect<rf t<

I.*)# bill on th e ground. th a t Uii iho Power company piiys us laxes ; If a federal agency were U

supplant the firm , we would get n t es. T hat la untrue. The CVA lid lake An annual aTerage

th9 paat th ree years of th e am of tajes tho Idaho Power company

of community Col.'ilon, chair committee, reported tha t he could not promote othletlcs In Lhli area becauje no suitable building wa* available. A community center la a neceaalty, he said.

Veteran Donald Harder, Mlnnea- polb, Minn., and former army s u f f sergeant, was the guest of his bro­ther, C. E. Harder, Twin Falls.

Aa for the formaUon of a 8te- pUen Foster choir which would jing the compo.ser'j so n p . Colston suggested tha t ^vocallsu could be found among the Jaycee member­ship.

been hard on thi leather. His pnren'

celved a cablegram from hln other day. aaylng;

■Please send cIvUlan slices alr« me and one-half. Eveo'thlng go- IK fine here. Please Inform draft 3ard the wnr Li over and I • come home."

HAILEYQuests a t the home c

Mrs. Jack Mngers, Halle •nd Mrs. H, M. Coleman,

la., Mr. and Mrs. WlUli........ .........son, Dilly, Long Beach. Calif,

and Mr. and Mrs, Gilbert Nlchol- Tttln Falls. Mrs. H. M. Cole and Qllben Nlchol-.on are Mr.-i

Magers' mother and brother.Fred W, Miller arrived a t hi;

home In Hailey. He received hi.' discharge from the army air forcf Sepl. 30.

. and .Mrs. George McCoy h a u relum ed home from .N'drili Hollv- ,00d. Calif., where Mrs. McCoy waa ailed by the death nf her father,

Jim Guthrie.

IX City,

CpI. Hobson Visits Relatives in Buhl

lUHL, Oct. <-Cpl, Eugc , with Mrs. ifobson and small , visited for a week wlUi h lj 1 s In Buhl. Corporal Hobioi a 30-doy furlough following his im from ovcrsea.i duty with thi ■nth arTTiy In Oermi

rnble a■ ttle

“ Brownie's —SHELL SERVICE

g-WALL-TEX—I ACHE Q O A L m II PA IN T S II New Wallpaper Fatleraf I lA J b WATflOH PAINT STOfiE I g w IIM m ta d AT«, e |

—ROBERTS—W E L O m C AND R E P A IR SHOP

Back of n'oodbwD Station Opposlle Swift's

Farm ers — TruckeraF]ac« T o u r Orden N ev

B nnd U ii Foliowliii:• BEET BEDS « P t A t BEDS * STOCK TRAILERS

BAIXD BAY ,L0ADEE8 nAY BACKS, ETC

So fragrant- A O 6Schilling

V A C U U M PACKED

C O F F E E

P v t Baughman Is On Furlouffh in BuhlBUHL. Oct. 4-Pvt. Brrton BauKh-

man has been jpenduig a ahort fur­lough In Buhl with relatives, follow­ing the completion of his paratroop training In Ft. Denning, Ga. He visited a t Ihe home of his grniidpar- ent.'', Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gaddy.

His mother, Mr.v Maybelie Baugh­man, came from Oalcland, Calif,, to bo with her son while he was here,

ite Baughman report.^ to North Carolina for rpnfl«mnent at completion of hLs furlough.

Now Try

TOMATO SOUPRANCHO STYLE

$12241541 FORD

D cU ae Sedan Motor flnuh okay. Extras elude

$ 1 1 4 0IMl I’ONTIAC

Custom Torpedo sedan. Radio and heaKr. Drive It and

$ 1 5 0 1IM l BlIICK SUPER

Pour-door sedan. Radio and h e a t ! clean $1668

13« PONTIACPour-door tedan. Radio and heater. if you Uke a lat«s

.”’Zd.“'r‘ $1441

There’s 1 Western tang to the full, red- ripe tomato flavor of RANCHO Tomato Soup — a flavor z « t that's simply deli­cious. T hat’s because we choose orily big, fat, luscious tom atoes...plum p ’ein into gleam ing kettles at our Rancho farm k itchens...add cur special Wrstcm sea­soning (just so) ...cook cm to mouth­watering goodness by our own W estern Rancho recipe. It’s w-o-n-d-e-r-f-u-I soup. Try it and see!

T im -a ieZ it

teak for ibftt tlbtr R^aibo SoMpi—

V«e*l«bl<, Crwia «f M«tl<r»ra. Ajper«eu.. CKI<k.nN«e<t*. tm

' ^ ertiuntf b,,« 1,

3 w „r.. , ^ of P.B JT*

■tar. inw.L,. In ,

Page 7: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

ni«r«S*y» October 4,1945

Vets of ’65 Rather Walk

In Big RlarchOOLUMBtJB. 0„ Oct. i (U.B —

Pouftceii stttlw iru ot e i. BUahlne the i l r w ith thclr caiiM. protciifd Ihey would liavt -none ot those cars" lined u p Wednesday outaJda the E>eshlcr-Wttllick hotel for the parade of th e 70ih annucU encamp­ment of th e Orand Army of the Rfpublic.

« "Kell." bftwled Jiobirl nownd, 10!. of nipley. N . Y.. "if I cnn’t walk I

won't go.”But badgered by a group of

daughters of union veterans, when the time cam e the oldsters gruds- iJigly climbed Into the sleelt, open- lop llm oiulncj and rolled otf down the street a t the head of the pa­rade.

A brUk w ind lorced the M vet- trsna to tu rn up the collar.i of their blue coat*, trim u a n admiral’s drew uniform, but some firmly re­fused to p u t on their black rum . paljii haLi. Iniilstlng they 'd get - with those "toupee-accualns rcport-

Only eight of the «ur%’lvor3 o nnce dashing Orsnd Army ol Rtpiibllc /-.liowr<l up n t thr cnpllol T uesday night for Uov. Frjiilt I,. Lftu.'jCliB's rcceptluii. 'Hie nthct ,sU m ade early .ilnrt.^ lor bed In be ready for the pamdc.

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN PALLS, IDAHO

Ex-Wife Sues Sen. Taylor for $20,000 For Past Support of Their Daughter, 20

L O S A N G E L E S , Oc’t, 4 (/P) — U , S . S e n . lo r G le n H .

T uV m S : o “ v o ' T a " l „ ' ? S “K enneth MlUkowskl. declared th» t when

f ,SS{ ,5 ^ “ “the einjUiB cowboy,"In J8J9. she had nol obtained a coun order for support because T»tIot was not In California but was living In Aston Wyo •

Mrs. Mltikowski'fl complaint declared she obtained a divorce on charnes Uiat Taylor deserted her In Pocatello, Ida.. April 35. 1026, and had faUed M common reccssltks. "nity were married In Demine.N. M„ In 1D22, while Taylor was employed as a theatrical enterUlner m i l a g e remarried and U the father of children by his eeconiJ

Senator Taylor told newsmen he had not aeen hla daughter for nine

"At Uie lime of our divorce I offered to take the girl but my Insisted ahe wanted her, - he added. "Afterwarda I lost track ot my - - - did nol know where she was,- ^

Pagd Seygn

Richfield Rites Honor Mrs. Wood

niOHFIEIJ3. Oct. ^ -F u n era l ser- vices were he ld here for Mra. Inez Rulli Wood with the Rev, J. ii. Coulter offlclntliit. Sorvlcc^ were held at the McUiodhl cliurch with music by the cliolr,

nelatlvcj he re for the Xitncral were Irvin Wood, husband of th e deceased toman; two daughters. Hazel mid Bflty Wood; .■son>, Thoma.'s Wood, Deiuer. and Ed Wood, recently re­turned frnm Itn lj; jnc Wood, Pearl Hnrbor, nml M orrh Wood, tin- fouth

* I^cl(lc; [wn sUterj, Mr.s, A. J. Hos- tellrr. Dc.? Moines. la . iind .Mr*. C. !. Hartirr, F t. Scott, Knn.

Interment was in th r Rlrlificld w.xetery tinder the direction ot th( Biirrtelt m ortuary ot Stinshone. Pall- hoarrr.v wcrr H. C. Ed«arrij, I>linar >M»arcU, Max Procter. Ralph Ed-

Fay ChattlEld and Joseph

Alcohol Is Made |Last Honor Given Petroje™ For Mrs. MunsonBATON HOUOL', La., Oct. <

Development of a huge plant tor producing alcohol from petroleum, which now pouring out ID.OOC""' Kiillon.i a yciir iinrt l-, due for pan. lnn, wa;, de.'crlbfd today M. W. Uoyer, genfrnl manager ot the 1,100-ncre Dalon Rouge rellncry ot the Standard Oil company New Jcraey.

Tiilii tremendous flow of Indu-^trlnl alcohol, which c.in now be profitably a t 28 cciiw or 27 ce gallon as agaln.it the 70 ccntcent price the government has .......paying for grain alcohol..hws played a part In brightening the Industrial outlook In the south.

Boyer reiwrted hU p l a n t____crating a t full capacity and said his company had "Ideas ' for pushing atlll further.

Cleaning Solvent Highballs Kill 4\TTLE, Oct. 4 (,T)—Five moil.

Australiart Bride Speaker at Filer

riLEm, Oct. 4 — T he monthly riiW islve Bible claas held Its din- ntr meeting w ith 25 In attendance, • nrt heard M rs. Harold O, Trimble, sn Australian bride, compare An.i. inilt.in ru.nom.'i with thoco of the Unllfd State!..

Mrs Trimble Is msklng her home »ilh her husband and family In Fllfr.

Ml' Paul Pnttfrson wa. elected lirrslilcnt; Mr.-,. Lyle Abel, Mrs. Alire Pattcr.soii. Mr*. Sydney Own- bty. Mrs. Clnri'iict Edwards were

vlce-prc.sklcnt.^; V. A- Alll- joii iiaa elected sccretnry-treasur-

chiirce of nrrangemcnt.i were 1 . W. Wll.ion, Mr.

D. Abel, Mr. find Mrs, a n d Mrs. R u th Harrl-

Hnliowecn decorations were

It Mr;

N, V. Sharp Talks At Booster Meet

CASTLEFORD. Oct. 4—About 60 members attended booster night at the Ca.nletnrd Grange, A poUuck fupjiix-r wa.s .served,

■nie prnKram opened w ith the Rmuii,-ilnRlnK "Cod Blew America," A musical read ing . "Day Dreaming," WSJ given by Norms narrow with Dorothy Btotti accompanying her on th» pUno. Tw o wcaJ solos were given by Marie Bllck,

N. V, Sharp. Filer, prr.ildent of the Idaho Rcclamailon a.v.oclallon. who a is the gucat speaker, discussed Idaho's reclam ation program. The «\’etilng was concluded by the stag, mg of "Auld L ang Sj-ne."

The n e n meeting will b« held October 11,

SEyflTLI , , ......suffering the etfecta of polsonou.s

.' lutactured and drankiwed the death of at on.' —were ,'entenced irt Wedne. day to a

(Oimty J;.U. Tliev o -mixing low wincj

liquor they •Wch

least four p In .superior year each In pleadM guilt or *plrll,v’'

One of tlirni. Zack T. Hohb.s, 39. who tycamc blinded after hti ar- re.st, hart to be led to the bar by ro- defeiulant,-< for sentencing. Police wild the men mlxrd clciinlnK iolve)i! und water In the ba-sement o( a ".'kldrond " hotel Ia.a June.

BURLEY. Oct. 4 - Funeral vice.i for Mrs, Luclllc McGee Mun­son were conducted at Uie Payno mortuary with the Rev. L F. Obert ot ihe First Christian church ciiiting.

Mrs. Elizabeth Clark played the prelude and postlude. The funeral sermon, prayer and obituary Riven by the Rev. X!r. Obert. L were .^ung by Mrs. Peggy Newcomb, Albert Holyoak and A. L. Honka.

Intermcnl under direction ot Payne mortuary was In the Burley cemetery.

Pallbearers were Elmer Wolf, Tony Aasendriip, John Opedahl. John Hngman, Qua Lindquist and Chester Thompson.

ladles were Mrs. Rulh Wolf, Mr.i. Ethel Afisendnip, Mrs. Olive Hagman. Mr*. Hala Lind­quist, Mrs. Emma Opendahl and

Nettle Thompson,

Thousands Awaiting General LDS SessionSALT LAKK CITY, Oct. 4 i/P) —

Latter-Day Saints church members by the thousands today awaited Ihe opening ot the first gcnerul coiiler- eiice open to all comers since Pearl Harbor.

Venerable George Albert Smith, church pre.^Ident, tomorrow will

ICC Rejects Western Plea

On Rail RateWABHINQTON. OcL * (flV-The

luterstAto commerce commLulon Wednesday rejected the petition of western railroads for further delay In Imposing an order lowering rail rates on fresh m eat and packing- house products shipped from the midwest to mountaln-PacUlc states.

The commLv,lon also denied the petition of Uio western carriers and several we.stern or^anUatlon.? for re­consideration of the order. Issued June 8 but held In abeyance.

On Aug. 3, the eommts.?lon ex­tended from Sept, 10 to Nov. 10 the effective date of the. order. U at- fecU shlpmentj of fresh meat-s and packinghouse products from IlllnoU. Wisconsin, Minnesota. Missouri, Iowa, Kansas. Nebra-ska, Colorado and South Dakota to MonUna, New Mexico, Utah, Idaho, Arizona, Ne­vada, California, Oregon and Wa.sh- Ington.

READ TIMrS-NEWS WA:

Formosa Exploit Earns Praise in

Rescue of POWsUBS Kretchmer D. E. that among the f ln t to enter Taiwan harbor since the daya of Commo­dore Perry, Tlie Informationreceived by his parents, Mr. __Mrs. J, D. Btaals, Jerome, formerly of 'Filer.

A clipping from the Manila Tlmrj os abo received by the Staats

describing the

heavily jnlned waters of northeru FDrmoia, which wa-s effected at Kllnin Sept. 5, 'under difficult cir- cumstancfs,’ for succes-sfully imting IJOO allied prL'oners c

Rjmiosa. tlie commaiicteij men of the UStJ iCretchmer

and the tJSS G ary. t«,o destroyer escorts, as well as the destrojerj Finch and Brlster and the tran». port Santee and Block Island. 1

en cited by Rear-Adm. D. Ke n, navy.'Tlie two leading destroyer rts missed being sunk by a matter

GLEN II. TAYLOR . . . Idaho senator who wa>

■erved with lu ll filed by for­mer wife aaklnr $20,000 past aup- port for daughter. 20. The solon Is shown here laying .->way I banjo to lake up the more aerious duties as a V. ti. senator.

;t Ihe worshippers who 1 •eled here from throughout

United Hlate.s, C.uindu, Mexico llanallan Wland.s tii: i

day meeting.

ok -who’s

T tw o 0 roo» tiai In a ' '

A notherNew

F ea tu re»0U8 »OURStl.F A cue Of CflfftE

10 s t n i i DOWN BT rouit taaio rat K»if.Hous or HOK-stor uuoks...

EVERY THURSDAf...

6 p. m . KTFI

BUHL

JEROMEIT Mr- >nd M rs. Cliarles Sanbet^,

parents ot L. W. Sanberg, have been visiting here from iheir homo In Seattle, Wash.

Helen Law.ihe and Imogeno Bird anhed home from San Francbco where they have been employed by the government the p w t several months, MlM B ird has served os an employe of th e U . a. maritime ser­vice and enrollInK office, while Ml.'a I-aashe ha.s been employed with the war .shipping ftdmlnUtrntlon ser-

department.Word has been received here Uiat

Mr ana Mrs, C. J. Schuetz, Idaho Falls, have a dniiRhter. Mrs. SchurlJ.Is the former Ju n e Lan^on Pleasant Plilru school teacher.

Pvl. Custer K eyei left fo r Camo Adslr.Ore. For th e past 10 days h ? ' has been s-lsltlng w lti hla wife and i three children w ho are making Ihelr I home In Jerome a t present. |

Loren Gumca arrived oently from Oakland. Calif., where he received his dl.scharge armed force-s. Ouniea m

time In the south Pacific the-

. and Mr.';. Jack Coates chllrtren, Hennlston, Ore., arc Ing relatives and friends in Buhl and vicinity.

Lieut, and Mrs, Adrian Daw.^on, Hutchinson. Kan., visited recently with hij uncle and family, Mr, anil Mrs. Carl Herehdeen. Lieutenant Dawson wa.i en route to Seattle where he was to recelvc his honor­able discharge from the naval corps following five years of s Ice.

Sgt. James Schooler Ls now . tioned a t the POW earnp a i Rupert, In the supply department. Sergeant Schooler recently spent a ftirlotigh wltli his parents, Mr, and Mrs. P. E. Schooler, following his return from Uiree an<l one-half years ot service

Hawaiian Islands.O. K. Sebo. Portland, Ore.,

has been visiting her sister, .Mrs Oeorge Salisbury.

Mra, rva Reed, Lcb Angeles, haa been visiting friends and relatives In Duhl,

Joe Edgetl attended a meeting of J. C. Penney company In Salt

Mr. and ifrs , Ed Johnson attend­ed the dedication ot the new LDS teanple In Idaho Falls recently.

Fly.C A B IN -H K .A T K DlO-paswhger plane*

ZIMMERLYAIRLINES

n a il; fllghti leave a t B:36 a. m. and

4:01 i>. m.

— T IC K E T O F F IC E —RogenoQ Hotel

Phone 1786Airport n io n e .3I0-W

“ STRAIOKT W H EA TS F U V O R - / ^

BimwMiiic

What a tovM- t ^ „ i x rr Z ^ ^ "^ / ^ * £ * tr > £

- r “

P A N C A K I AM D W A F F L I H O U R

PUBLIC NOTICEIt was our intention, in this space, to an­nounce new and faster bus schedules. However, bus drivers have refused oiu' offer to arbitrate their wage demands and have gone on strike. Therefore, bus service ui our north>vest territory has necessarily been suspended until furth­er notice.

UNION BUS DEPOT * 137 SECOND ST. E. - PHONE 2000

OVERLAND GREYHOUND £/Jlf£SO H t 4 T I 0 t r U H I O H f A C i n c i T A H S , I N C O I I> o a <1 T l »

___ _______________

of yards from mini flalda tha t they miraculously passed between on their way to th e docks.”

The citation reads: “For evacu­ating prisoners of war from For- mtaa you were nothing short of sensational. T o every ofticcr ond man In your ahlpj Is duo resound­ing applause for shoving your now Into Kllrun before the occupation wlUiout thought ot self In a most worthy cause.

"The handling ot lu.-.'.enRera mid thetr care, like everything ebe In the operation wa.s done in Uie Am­erican way nnd there Ls nn better.

"I 1 s to : J the I : oftho commander ot tlie aeventh'flect. Prompt and determined action In the Fonnosa rvnciiallnti under clif. llcult clrciimstnnces wa.s a mag­

nificent perforwaace and « Ood*»end to our prlsooen. Well dona,(Signed) Admiral T bom u Kin­caid,”

BLACKBSnTU BOOP PAUL. Oct, ■<—Alvla SUmpson !i

putting in a blacksmith ehop la th« north part of town.

READ TIMES-NEWS WANT AD6.

Owcr A DUT3 N ettletonfl T ieV aarrJea to for life . Spoiled (o r o th e r k in d s o f footw esr. H e "-t*- pjy w o n ’t part from N e ttle to o comfort, « tyk “ont a n d otrt" c law I

^ 0 rea lize yoH ean ’t IaII in lovo w ilh a p a ir o f sbem»e*dbg a n WoVe s o n f o a w ill, t b o ^

pace y o n 'n eomc in and tr ie d tbem on. Please e o » aider th i s nn invit.nion . . . to a **dateS.

g .9 5 msnship buiUt this in £x keeps. T hird i N ettletoa

HA1.S nX K )R 8BOE DEPAfiTMENT

IDAHODEPARTMENT

STORE•TF IT I8 M T ETOHT, BRINO IT BACK"

Page 8: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

F » e < M g ii TIMES-NEWS, T W IN FALLS, IDAHO T S u n d w , Oetolw 1 , 1M»

Truman Will Be Best Man

At Nuptials■WABHINOTON. OcL < </1>-Prcs*

Idciil Tnimnn will bfgtn a week­end trip with « vUIt to Bfrryllle. V».. to serve m 'best mirn" for an old frifnd.

The White Hous# formally an­nounced W ednuday plans for the President lo att^iid the wpddliiR of Jud£c Bennett Champ Clarlc. for­mer DemocrnUo Bcnalor from Mis­souri, and Violet Hemlnd. actress.

After (he weddlns. the President will nttcnd a reception at "Bnl- rluthn," Ihp rstnte of Jrm rs Thom- .'Oil, not fur from the Grace EpU- ropnl church at Bcrry\’llle where the ceromony wlU be performed Snt- nrday.

After Ihe reception Mr, Tninmn M.1I1 drive to MnrtlnsbiirR. W. Vn 10 bonril lil.i plane for Blyllicvlllr

Pre.y Sseretary Clmrlc.i O. nosa 'nld ilint the preslclcntlftl p will pnure only briefly tii Dly vllle before molorliii; 2f> mllr: Carutlicr.ivllle. Mo. There the r ident will attend n eo\inty fnlr which hsK been on hb r<-hedule every year for more than a decade.

Everybody Alert, Jaycees Urge H. S. Students Miss Hemisphere On ExecutiveGroup Picked

Tile executive commltlt* h u chot.cii for the »tudent coimtU of T w in FalU hiBh school- Tlie coai- m lltee coiulsta of sWdenLs nominat­ed by llie merobcra of the council a n d elccied by the student body.

Newly elected members of .... committee Include DoroLliy Van Valkenburg, cltlzcnalilp; Peggy Rlngwood. eligibility; Helen Cooper, girls' tporu; JUn nusjell, boyi’ sports; Dick Harper, soclnl actlvit' a n d Eniina Lou Lulce, awcmbly llvltlca.

Cltlienship Cltkciulltp colicerm tlie highly

covetcd cltUciishJp cup which is awarded »l the end ol eadi year

nvlnR U : higher

Paul Soldier Hurt In Auto Accident

PAUL, Oct. +—A Paul .'■ervlccman was removed to Du.'ihncll lio.^pllal Tue.sdny morning for trenljnpi f.crloxis injuries .suffered late F when th r cnr he was driving Burley went out i)f control and i turned. IV o pn.'.'cnner.s c.'.cftpci Jurle. .

n ie Injured .scrvlcc man was Krauvi, son of Dave Krauw. Paul, who suffered a broken shoulder and IntfFnal Injurle.s when he from the ro:id a/tor becoming 1 ed by an uncoinlnK car, wllnei'^s said. PiU5cnger,i In the car were Mt^ Leah Krnuss, a sister, and an un Identified soldier, who ejcapcd In- ju o ’-

Tnken first to Uie Cottage hospi­tal, Burley. KraOiS was latfr taken lo the Bushnell hospital. He luffer od fc broken shoulder, collar bam and ecrlous damage to a lung wound recently closed by an operation. He wna home on a furlough at tlie time of the accident.

WUh Fire Prorentlon week comlnj op. and lliB U. 8. fire losi Jayeee* and the Junior Chamber of Commfrre lliroujhout Americ* i men to flf lit fire before It can itart.

' polnLs. Polnt.fl are given for participation In sporL';, plays, and

extra-curricular actlvllle.v P oin ts are deducted for tardies, un- excused abicncej. and detention hsll allpa.

aiglblllty is the keeping of ri ord.1 whereby boys purllclpatlng aporLa must keep the ir grades up

certain percentage or else U can n o t take pan . Also other i tiv ltles which require certain gradu a re dclermlned by thl* commitlfe'

Chosen Ai -mIj, Hembphere" to eonform to ipeelfleatloDs of the ctew of CSS Marblehead waj Beall Baldwin (atiovel of Colura- bu% C a ., now » model In New York City.

Opinion Says MVA Bill to

Die at StartBOISE, Oct. 4 OIJ — General

opinion In Washington is tha t the Missouri valley authority bill will die In eomnilttee, William Welsh, Boise, eecretary of the Idaho SUte Reclamation oMOclatlon, .<iald ■" ne-vlay on his return from tl- tlon's capltftl.

"But tha t doesn’t mean tha t other bills won’t be Introduced." said Welsh, who appeared before a senate sub-committee In oppcsHIon to the MVA and all authorltle.i. "Wc must keep alert and unified If wc hope to defeat tho.« mea.iurc.s. Tlie MVA hearing Li Ja it the first round of a long fight.”

WeUtj said Uie OIO and the farm­ers' union were strong in favor of "autonomoiH autJiorltlc.'."

Tile reclamation ai-:oclRtlon op­poses a Columbia valley authority and on grounrt-i It endanger.^ states rights and s' ‘

f hree Men FinedFloyd Thornton, 54. California,

nay Duly. 53, Ohio, and Robert Brooks, <C, Burley, were each fined SIO when they pleaded guilty In

10,964 CansinM BEHiY, Oct. ♦-•nn Kim­

berly canning kitchen bM nn> ned lo sm cam lo dsl4 instead of 8M na previously Minouneed In Tlmen-Ncws. The Instructors of the kitchen are Mrs, Edn« Kemp and Mrs. Omco Urban.

municipal court WedoBdsy to charges of being drunk. "nMrn- ton WHS picked up on a dovntowa, street. Duty was arrested at the SI. RenL and Brooks was tsten Into custody at the Pcrrtnt hotel. Duty and Brooks paid their fines and were released. Thornton via com­mitted to Jail for «1* and tiro-thlrd* days.

Prowlers Try Home Of Newspaper Man

E 'en a newspaper msn'i homt Isn't Immune from prowlers.

At 11.02 p. m. Taesday Mrs. Harry Gunning telephonrd police that prowlrr.s wore about her residence. 361 Sixth avenue east.

Police made a search of the area but failed to locate the Intruders.

Harry Qunnlng. night reporter for lie Tlme.i-News, shooi: his head

-hen advLicd ot the Inrlilent and remarked, "everything hsppeoj lo

BUHLMoJ. Worren Tcgan, with Mrs,

Tagan and daughter, Elaine, gone *0 Seattle, Wash., where they uitend to make their home. Major To?»n wlU be associated with tho tatenjBtlonal HarreMer company, for whom he worked before en­tering the service.

Mrs. Louise Loden, who ha.'i been visiting her brother. Dr. A. F. Kul. luiky, has relum ed to Ixb Angeli*, Calif., where she haa been visiting a brother for seveml months. Mrs. Loden Joined Mrs. Mary Worley In Boise, and with Mrs. Worley and daughter. Virginia, returned the rest of the way by car.

Mrs. B. T. Duncan and daughlcr, Mary, have gona to Grand Rapldj, Mich., where they will vblt Dr, and J4W. H. C, McCormick- Mr.v ^fc- Cormlck the forinrr Mabel Dim-

M ri. Ocrald lUclmrdson, who hus been visiting her husband's p:ir- enLi In Wallace, is vLsltlns at the home of her parentj. Mr, and Mrs, Clyde Bmlth.wn.

Mrs. C. W. Starkey. Mrs. Loul.se Williams, have gone to San m n - clseo, Calif., where they will visit Warren Starkey and family, and other relatives and friends.

•nie Rev. R. W. Jackson has re­turned from attendance a t the Nat- arcne mlnLMers retreat »t Ca.i- cade.

Mr. and Mrs. G, Oublcr havi turned from t visit with daughter and husbond, Mr.Mrs. Carl Shaner, Rlrle. Wlill th a t part of the country they nessed the opening and drdlcntlon of the new LD3 temple In Idaho Fall*.

Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Shank, Full­erton. Calif., Mrs. Ernest Shank and Miss Dorothy Gerber. Twin FnlLi, vljlted with Mrs. William Weydert. Mr. Shank hii.-i recently received hi' honorable ilUchivrKe Irom the mivj following 43 months in the .'.'■rvlci and 18 monttis ot overseas dulj'.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kasco aiu family have returned from Arkan- S1.S where they have been vlillliig wltJi relatlvei.

Mr, and Mrt. D,\f/hn Uayle..........baby have returned lo their home In Los Angelts, after spending vacation here with Mr. and .Mr.i, C. Q. Baylcss and other rclath

Bert Freeman left Thursday for Los Angelej, hiivlng spent the p.ist month In Buhl with hL-i mother, Mrs. May Freetnan, and family,

Mrs, Earl Redding and son 1 arrived from Portland and will make their home here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jone.?, while Mr. Redding 1 with the armed force:;.

Mr. and Mr;.. Janic.^ L> baby son. former re.ildenLs ol Duhl who have been residing In Washing­ton, have returned to Buhl lo make their home.

Mrs, GeraJd Tlionipson and baby came this week from Camp Adair, Oregon, where they Thlted with Pvt. OerBM Thompson, who has left for overseas duty on Okinawa.

O. r. Malacsoy, Miami. Okla.. wi a recent gw st a t the home ot M and Mrs. Carl Herendeen.

Rotariaii Finds I'licy’i e Lions But Stays: Army Nurse Talks

A vbltlng Rot.irliin. Dill Kail.'.Gooding, s trpp id Into llie Park liolel dining room Wei!iit:.Mliiy nrxin mid prepared lo dine wllli hl.i fellow Roiarlan.i. But he noticed a lot of strange fnccs.

Tlic faces boloiik-i'il to JJon.^ wlin were conducting their regular Wrd- iie.'day lunchroii meeting. O lrirv- Ing that they Bctined to tx- pretty nice fellows, the lunely Roturliin sat

resentatlves of both clubs got iilont; splendidly.

Army Nurse SpeaksPIrot Lieut. Ann Onrrctl. dausliter

of Mr. and .Mr.i. Homer 8;ixnn. HOI Poplar ntreet, told of her nrmy nur.sliig duties a t a htv.pltal t>aie on Sili>an. Her base coreil for wnund-

■ ■ om Leyte, Kwajalelii and Iwo campaigns, she s.iUl. Pre-

e had s<

fhiK on Saipan on Aug. 10, 104H. Once 150 Australian and HrllL'h rvlcemen were picked up by the

Pn>iofficer wa II Chalriii;

Visiting Phillips, Twin Falls, a of three and one-half U'e 111 the Ale\ltlans, noyark.

USES Here Takes Manpower Tasks

QUICK REUEF FROMSytnptwwefDW m sArtdnjtrem

STOMACH ULCERS ouETo EXCESS ACIDHu*tH«l|iarlt«niCMtYoa^---------O n r iwoaUOoe boUtM of tb tin U JtB D TBCATMENThavat>MS*^(«rraUof^TB«AT*i6PiTftar»p—

8AT-M0R DBUO THOLINGEIl'fl PHARMACT

office ot the United employment -service late

terdny aniioun...........Ing functions and pcp.'onnel manpower commission ' been trarL-iferred to th employment i.ervlce, A. J. Meeks, manager of the loca

Is transtcr wa.s . , -Itli the Presidents executive order of Sept. 10, whioh aboll.shed '.he WMC and transferred the USES XI tlie department of latjor," Meek.?

According lo the USKS announce- nent. A, J. Tillman, .-initc maniww- T director, under ihe WMC, returns o the position previously held by ilm a. atate director of tho USI25, ,nd the four remalnhis WMC

.>loyc3 in Idaho have been tr ferrcd to corrc.-;pondlng positions In the USES,

typical exanipk'.s i ser>lce rendered by the l/SES m llltao' and naval discharge center Interviewing program. Under thb progrom. USES rcprcaentatlvea on hand a t ull military' and naval dLscharge center.'' In Idaho to dl.v

civilian employment opporlunl- tle.s with the men and wi to be discharged. Tiese points In­clude the Sun Valley naval hospital, the Mounlnin Home alrba^e, thi Oownn field nrmy nlrbx^e and thi naval hospital a t Farragut, accord­ing to Meeks.

Engl ish Study Reveals Student Cousin of Twain

Rancher Suffers Loss of Finger

Thoma.^ Novacck, 44. Buhl ranch­er, sullered the los.s of a finger when hU hand was caught Ir coiiibme late 'IMe.sday afleriioon.

He >v.v; brouhgt to T r Iii Falls county genenil hospital for trea t­ment of the Injury Tuesday nlghl and later released.

WENDELLMr.s. Ray W ard and granddauf

ter, Susan Lambing, left for ... Louis, Mo., to vLslt her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Del­bert Lambing. Shs will also vUlt In St. Joseph, Mo., a t her brother's home.

READ TIMES-NE\VS WANT

T d f J i e n T l

I Mr,>, l?«e M. Norlli's EnglLsl ela.\se.s nre doubly Intere.-itcd Ir

leir current study nf Samuel n.5, great American author better nown as Mark Twain.Jack UlecL'oe,

dent Irom Springfield. Mo., .itartled the studenU by tilling them of Ills relatlotuhlp to Tvialn.

te his reijort on the famed novel- and raconteur. Uled-sne bro\inlit cla.vi a scriiplKjok of cIlpjilnKs

from Uie Kama.-! City Star dewirlb- TWaln's life. He aL'.n lirought a ) LViUe telling of the autlior's

was all material avallnblo to an Idah group.

A Ml.v>ourlaii, Hled.^oe dldn'I emph.'i.'.lre that T'.'.aln wai a prcKl-

FILERMr. and Mrs. C. r , Schnell have me to Tacoma lo attend service.

for h li sbter, Mr. Lena Wahlcrs, who died Bept, 23.

Mrs. R. K. Dillingham and Mrs. Jack Ramsey and Infant son. have returned from a visit with reUtlvej

: Pomona. Kan.Lieut, and Mrs. Robert Hnmmer-

(lUlst have gone to Rapid City, S. ~i.. for a vbit with relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Barton are vacationing at Magic Hot Sorings.

Helen and Margaret De Kloti. who ■e attending the University a t I ')«-, arrived for a visit wltli their

parentjj, Mr. and Mrs, O, P. De Klotr.Mrs. W. J. Fcnwlck find daughter.

Ine* Jeon, have returned from a day trip lo Boisi.

A notherNew

F e a tn reSee Page 9

KTFI8:00p.m^ CAMEL CIGARETTES

Page 9: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

j t a n d a r . O ctober 4 ,1948 -TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHO

lEA to Highlight “The Atomic Age’

S tu n ta foaturinff "Tho Atomic A ge” will h igh ligh t the annual program and dinner to bo given by the Idaho Educa­tion association a t 7:S0 p. m. a t the P a rk hotel.

Robecca C urtin Ib p resident o f the group. Each Bchool will p resen t a s tu n t for the dinner party .

Tho f i r s t num ber will be a pitch blend q uarte t followed by electronic harm ony from the ---------------—----------------------

Committees for 1945 Exhibition Named by Head

high school. Elsie Lindgren will superv ise th e s tun t. M unic technician w i l l be Charles R atcliffe w ith Elin Mae Wcs- sel {B accompanist.

EtunU Fealura Tl»e Junior high «:hool » 11] high­

light "RndlQ Activity Roll Room" «'lth A hrm e Hanaen nncl EleiirDT Bandmeycr In chargc; Dlckel school, 'R adio or th« Putiirf," under the direction or Mr»- Blnncho Iniinm «nd Mary Peck; Lincoln school "Tlie Atomic Bcliool" In chnrnc ot Ida Alien nnd Wiuihhiglon school, "Atomic Bmiuhlng styles," fvipcr- Tlsfd by Barbftrn Wftmir. :

Gladys White will be the sclrntlat and will be toaai for the occasion.

A long will be sun(j to Int «ach stunt. Idn Allen Is In of the son? writing.

1 protfrnm 1lOO to Attmd

The dlnnc first noclnl the group. I t wns announced il 100 ffue.iu have been Invited a will include tcnchpn of Tft'ln r.i *chool.i and Rchool boord nienilx and the ir wives.

Tlic commltifc In charge ot t •rent Include* Bcmlce Dnbco( ohalrmon of arransemenUi nwl.n by Barbara W amcr nnd CTenn

[ Mb* W all: Ida Allen, sons* a; Beth Dolan and Jenn Snlmon, df

History Studied A t D. U. P. Meet

Tha History of the life of William O. Moyes was given by hU dnugh- t«r, Ura. Eva Adamson, at the Lo- Sm-Bo-Ca31 o a m p meeting of Dniiffhtcrs of the Utah Pioneer/!.

The »««3lon wru held at the homo ot Mrs. Shirley T)'!er, J13 Filth stroet Bouth. Mr*. Lnrr>' Armaa, ftain board member, presented a wport oc the county actlvltirs of the orvMilzntlon. 8h« announced that the national convention will b« htld In Salt U ke City, Oct. a.

Mn. Tylsr wm in charge of the bofbuec aeftslon. Mrs. Thelma An- doreon gaTe the prayer dareon was presented r tf t b r the grcnip. Sii PX Ooodlng to make M enben will meet agal: d u home of Mm, Warren Adrunion.

Ura. Arrnga acslsted the hDetr-u to terrtne refrcslrnienU.

Commltteea : chryianthcmum by the T«-ln f i were named by .V president.

The exhibit la n

been customary In previous Members voted to hold

htblt the third or four! October dependlj

■Mrs. Hanley I

tiie annual fall ih lblt, sponsored

Garden club, John D. Flati,

G.A.A. Members Plan Basketball Tryouts Tuesday

Member* of OAA ot Twin FuOi high school held the first meeting of tile year. Prealdeni nalno Sabbel officiated. She asked members If they thought the coming games should be played by learns composed of sophomores. Juniors and senior*, or If each class shoiilrt have a team ot Its own and piny roch gnmt cordlngly.

Tlie pr&jldent read the new OAA conaUtutlon. Tills Inc-Uides the qunllflcatlons for recflHiiR QAA let­ter awards. Olrls m an partlslpale In two Individual sporia to receive a small letter and they must par­ticipate In four Indlvldusl and four single sporu to receive t large

Parsons to Be Honored SundayMr. and Mrs. George W. Par-

fO(«, early settlera ot the Twin PftJU tract, win be honored a t a reeepUon Sunday, Oct. 7.

Tlic uffQlr will l)e heUI between i and 7 p jn . at tlie home o! Mr. and Mrs. Horace L. Holmta. 378 Buchannn. duughter and son-in- law of the honored couple.

Frient f Mr. 1

Social Is Given By Highland Club During Afternoon

Page NIn«

MeT Glub Initiates 40 in Evening Meet

Two Installed at Karen L. Craner Rebekah Session

In a ccremony held by cjindlelight 40 new members were initiated into MoT club \Vedne.sday evening. The initiation w as held in the Idaho Power auditorium . Mothers were g u e s ti of the club. Old members were in formal attire and new members drc.tsed semi-formally.

There were th ree small tables containiiyt pink and green iapers placi'd iti a Bemi-circle w ith pucti of the three m njor officers seated there . Pre.sident Margie Holl sa t in the cen ter T reasurer Doris Young sa t a t th e presirionl's le ft and Sec­re ta ry l i i 't ty Alaiizct sa t a t i th e presidoiit’s righ t. Yvonne ,McBride, .sergeant - iit • arm s, vi.sliercd the ph’dge.s into the auditorium, MeT menibors

M n. Wanda Widmsf wu laslalled treasurer and Mri. iljrilj Dallan- tyne, staff captain, si tbt.meetl&S of the Primrose RebeUh lodge held recently.

InstaUlng team v u uacKBcd oS Mrs. Viola Ralntj, d«pulj presldemt; Mrs. Geneva lloUentifck, deputy niaralial; Mra. Clors Puls, deputy treasurer; Mr.v CUlr Anderson, deputy chaplain; Mr>, Marcriret W att, planlit.

Tlie group made arisngtraenLi for a card party to be held Nov. 1,'IMr* ther plnai will ^8 cotnpltKd a t the next tncetlng. .

Refrc.<hmpii

Feted a t PartyUrf. riOTenc* Lewlt e n u ru tn td

In honor of b s r (Hothto', K u ta L. Kraner'S lOlh birth anntrw w rr. . Hie affair was h a d a t the home ot Mrs. Lewli' mother, M n. Mae Lewis. Hi Lincoln street.

Game* wtra played and refraih- inent« were lervad.

Guesta a t the party were Bcock, Carolm Babcock, Bdwlna Hinton, MarUyn Latham. Jan WU- llAm», Carolyn R indall, Sharwi JellLwn. Ann Perry, Colleen Far­mer, Barbara Bufllngton, Mary Latliam. Shirley Fullmer, Sandra Le'sl!, Marie Post and Mrs. Grant A. Uwl3.

General committees for t for the ensutng year weinamed. They Include, M r a , ..........Hicks, Mrs. Carl Weaver, Mrs, Tom Speedy nnd Mrs, Alvah Jay. pro­gram; Mrs. W. T, Seal. Mrs, '

and MT.V Harr^’ Wilcox, , , , Up; Mrs. R. A. Sutellff and

Mrs. J, S. KIme*. housing.e federation committee Mrs. Alvah Jay. Mrs. Hanley

Payne and Mrs. Kenneth Kail'Harry Wilcox, Mrs. Paul Taber C. G. VanTllburg, M n. Clyde fey, Mrs. J. L. Hobson and C. B. R«iua; for the courtesy mlttee.

« * *

Two Initiated in National Society

AIJJION, Ort. ..........................Jolin.',on. stiilo

a Ganimn, 1

/ ^ to a»rrtn« refrcslrnients. SI- J Peeefved the while elephant.

« V

Calendarr u d u b wUl meet for a 1 .

hmeheon Friday a t the honie of b£rs. Laum Young, 130 Lincoln. The luneheca will lie /oHowcd by a ao- eteJ boar.

« » *Hi* «c60utlve board ot Lincoln

•rfiool Parent-Tenchcrs ascoclatlon will hold a special meeting a t 4 p. m. Friday a t the Lincoln school. All memben are urged to attend,

« « «Fireman's auxiliary will meet a t

p. m. Friday a t the home of Mr kannolh Royer, 520 f if th avenu •ast. The meetlntr will feature farewell party f<ir Mrs. Clifford Tlictiipeo*!.

T ie Royal Neighbors of Amerl« Trill honor Mrs. Alice Orosvenor Parma, sta te siippr\-lsor at a meet­ing at S p. m. Friday a t tho OdC Fellows hall. All ofllcers nre re. QUeeted to wear white.

¥ >/■ *

M iscellaneous Event^ — DUIIL, Oct. 4—A mlscrilnneoui f .y w i f l I n K shower honoring Mr. and ' Mrs. Harold McCallL ter was held

rocenUy by the Young People’s so- cJoty of the Nniarene church, at

[ th* home of Mr. and Mrs. J. R, Lone.\ An evening of games and slnglnK

was held. The honored guests recelv- ; «d gllt^. A feature of tJie refresh­

ment hour was a three-tlered wed­ding cake, topped with a miniature bride and bridegroom.

nal and EtJiel Rertneld. InjI In education In th.Saho southern branch were th irarj- state members Initiated, 'lla Knppa Qnmma la the n«

honor society for

Charles Shorthouse W eds in C alifornia

CASTLEJ-X5RD, Oct. 4—Mr and Mrfl. Charles Sho

jd n-ord ot the nianlu«c ot th d r RM 3/c Charles llobcrt Short-

houso to Vlrslnla May Cnhoe, :cr of Mrs. June Lennon. Do-

toga Bay. Calif.The marriage took place Aug. 4,

t Santa Rosa, Calll, The bride was O^iiid in a MccI blue tiftenioon re.w ivlih matching hat and bln cci'.v«rle.v Her corsnge was of gi enln.5.

Surprise P a r tyCASTLHFORD. Oct. 4-M r«.

rlcc Gucrr)- entertained the manus card club a t her home. The party resulted In a surprise birth­day pnrty for Mr. Ouerry. Mrs. Ken­neth Hudson presented him with a unique birthday cake topped wltli a mlnlatttre lamb and bale of hay. Eme.'t Reed took pictures of the - ip. Mrs, Baj- PcttUohn won lilgh

the afternoon and Mrs.Reed, low. Mrs. .Melba Wllkliuan

on guest prlEe,

PE o’h L P a r tyBUIIL, Oct. * -M rs. W. H. W right' itertalncd members of chapt'

of P. E. O. a t a lunclieon served at a t Wnnii Springs, j

noon followc<l. Those were .Mrs, J. H. Shields, P. Ahlfiulst, Mrs. E. M.

Tomlinson. .Mrs. Tom Hardin, Mrs. ■iVltson, Mrs. Rii' s Rlns, Mrs.

Johnson, Mrs. W. A. Gray, .Mrs. L, p. Runyon. Mr*. Charles

Australian AcidressesCivic Club in Jerome

; JEROM E, Oct. 4—"If you are one who bolievc.s A ustralia Is only a land w here there are boundle.ss acres of verdant CTasH and kangaroos, then you are mi.staken,” according to M rs. A r th u r Mcllveen, a native of th a t countrj-. A ustralia and itfl people a re much like America.

Mrs. McIIvecn was guest speaker a t tho initial m eeting of th e C ivic club. A nother guest was Mrs. Mcllvcen’s siste r, also

. a native A ustralian , who has .. comc to Jerom e to reside.

jf fcShe is M rs. A rth u r Moorman.' J ^ o t h young women m arried ^ Am erican soldiers in a double

w edding c e r e m o n y before th e y came to the States.

The sodjU oondllloiu, educational t^portunltlfs. govemnient. Indui tries, commerce and religion wei dUcussed by Mrs, McIIvecn.

The cltoat* Is generally temper- • te , and In summer hot and dry,•specially In the southern and ean- t n l part« bu t very healthy, sheMid.

FrlTolous baubles, Jewelry and col- ered finger nails were mentioned M "prohibited” among scliool chil­d ren. Mrs. Mcllveen mentioned th a t much stricter rules were In •ffe e t than «n many Amerlcnn ele- t&entary schools.

Speaking of the g.)-.i-riuiifiii. Mr,'-.. licXlvKn said tha t all pcr:o!is ol

age. who are eligible to toU do BO under severe penalty, reason, she snld was due I small population.

Later Shirley Gray played a selection.

Preceding the program, Mrs old Morris presided.

N unes of two new board bere, M n. Anna Parkln.ion and Mr*. Ralph Shawver were chosen place Mn. Ouy F. Sturgeon and Mrs. William Smith, who ha signed.

The chalm iaa of the hostess com­mittee was Mrs, E. E. Oonr wa.1 asiijted by M n. O k * t Fort. Mrs. R. H. caUen and Mr*. Arthur Chatbum.

Presiding a t the tea table, which M decorted by lighted yellow

. ^rs and a bouquet, were Mrs. H. Miller Procfor and Mrs, Enrl Jen.-ien.

Mr.H. J, A, G arrcti. Jerome, Intro­duced Mrs, MeUvetn.

CAN'T KEEP GRANDMA INt t B l W

Wlxa <SKon!«rof

Dm'I wiJtl A«k r n r 4ran1<t far Doui-i

ysarbkwLCrtOdaa'iPUfc.

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Page ten ' ■■ TrM ES--N EW SrTW IN -PA tLSrID A H O - TH ufiJay, OctfilJCT 4 r l9 4 6

SPORT

I Old# Siwrt Scrlvencr had to tftto It aniJ like It y« tm l»y after Ihe T-N got onto the Jtieet jcrtiun- Ing Uint Ihe Clilcago Cub.% had tftlitfd Ihc Dclroll DcngnU’ Ull In Uie opener or the world merles. Tlmt ii, he did a{t«r cslllns on Mr. Hcd Bell, in an effort to learn how the Bent thot ta ta and Bleeps baseball made such n remnrlc/ibli naming Mr. Wrlglcy's trni

You ICC. YOSS could u brr of flrct ju e iV j In hi Not flccond gueiscs, undei cause they belong txcl grandstand mannRers.

A query on Lial subjrc a bliist fro(ii Mr. n rd Be

: puclK>' on door onto Uie avenue.

"Just, hon- ft gent who Detrolts to win hold doTv-n a Jot

vsiwper

I- "Why knou- bcller."

And thnt a-oan't all—"The Tigers didn’t even 1

right to win the Amerlcai pennant—the Senators, the Drowna and Uic YnnJca wore betler, (He had to KCt In "the Y antV beca\ue Mr. Bell l£ A director are expected to Jieitt gcaion.)

"Why the Tigers are so frlahtened. th a t already they’ve called on the Senators lo finish for them.

•'Ahd thnt Newhoiiser guyl JIow could he pitch when he had his sh irt pulled up over hla head to keep frcRj getting tilled by tho bnlli the Cub^ h it back a t hUn."

thill left Mr. Dell gaiplng ..........a t the end.

And that's th a t for now, except; Today Li another day—ye«, In De-

Bruins’ Contest With Nampa to Begin at 8 p. m.

10 Blind Soldiers From California “See” Cubs Defeat Detroit in W orld Series OpenerBt /EBOV U8KA Dibble hosplUl ........................

BlUOaS STADIOM. Detroit. Oct. Bhrewd Billy BooUjwgrlh c*Uod i ilFl — BMeball cooimluloner A. the tom In tlx worU t«rlet epuu r. B. (llsppy) Chandler w u th# focal “Thou (inbi Iot« a U{t>bai>der point of photographer* m he mad* like Hal Newheiuer,’ ermcked BlUy hla Bcrloj debut In tho office m ade ihe K li Jaal before a r»7 partUaa famous by Kcne.%iw Mounlaln I*an- throng sellled down tor an after, dls. But those 10 b lind soldiers who nixjn of more shlTCring than ahoat-

ill tho way from CalUomla Ing." the series weren’t exactly "My Harry Brecbeen b one kind

Ignored either. The sroup was from of » lefi-haader (the cat wlilpj>ed

ball Budy York and1 Jest- eenilslenUy pnmpea drl»ea Into the

saxTica Soutbirerth. “I U t tt rl*«* lAgl; u ked Orlznm for his auU» bleacben . . . if u y had elostcd for'em dlpiy.<l*o stuff itod H»l UUm graph. the In tbe game. It wooldlo bam that ball throngh." •This LJ the first time In my life bare been worlh( listen tg Chla,

eix of the eight American league I ever did anything like thin." r»l») a doten pair of nylons from awanagers and four Notional league cracked the Dcacon, "hut I think Uetrclt company,pilots were In the #taJ3d5. you owe It to me," Jimmy Dykes of the White Sox

mil (Deacon) UcKcchnle, whose The nger* ilapped at] Ihelr long and Owle Bluege, whose Washing-Cincinnati Reds dropped 31 of 23 baUs In «h« pre-game wannnp when ton Senators waited In vain for the

Tigers to etumble, were ths only long-time precedent in Jumping American league managers missing away to a ane-gasie lead over Do- . . . th» senior circuit strategists In- du d e d Southworth, McKechnle,Prankle Frisch and Mel O tt, while such ex-boists as Trls Speaker, Ror- ers Hornsby and Bill Terry, took In

The Umbutlng Cubs broke

victory In nine years,Kat since Carl Ilubbel. OlanU*

lefthander, bent the Yankees' Red nufflng In the llrst game of th» 1D3S clauic has a NaUonal lesgua club gotten away on top.

54,637 SEE CUBS WIN OPENERHal Newhouser Proves Soft Touch for Happiest Man Bruin Hitters; Borowy Gives 6 Blows

Dy GAYLI: TAI.KOTD ETRO IT, O c t. ■i (/P) — T lie C liicaK o C u b s w halc<i tiiu liv-

Ihk (iiiyli^tht.'i o u t o f lln l N c \v h o ii9 e r a t th e v o ry o u ta c t o f th e w orld sc ries and ile fo atc d t h u D e t ro it TiKer.s, 9 to 0 , b e h in d th e sm ooth .■<ix-hit p itc h in g o f H a n k B orow y n s 5-1,G37 ch illed

ff tn s < iic d b y

First Game Box

In Detroit Is Cubs’ Manager

DE7TROIT, Oct, 4 l-n — The hup plf.1t man In Detroit la.it night wa ChBrle.1 Jolin Grimm, the In-iplrln? <8-i’car-old leader of the trlim phant Chicago Cubs,

T lir Ifalhcr-fnccd Grimm wi grlmiliiK from car-to-car ar whlfitllnt; with boyish enthujlrum i he led Ills chilled and shivering players into their stcam-hcatfd drc;jilns room.

"It’a II nlcc. cold day to net nine ruiLs, Lsn t It?” he beamed, Tlu lie liiunclied ln\o ii compllmeiitii), sjwecl; on Hal Ncv,liouicr, the Do-

EX-CIIAJIP Ht'R T FRESNO, Csllf.. Oct. * yp)-ItRlph

Giordano. 40, ^h o won the wor^lds weltcrwcl;iht crown as Young Cor­bett III, WM in a critical condition In Delano hojpSal

Back on tl . mine eiploilon In «nl,llcr Wobby Ka\ .lly of Nevada, lli after ratchln* a p

Four Games on Area Gridiron Bill Today

F o u r KJiinus a re on to d a y 's MuKic V alley K fid iro n aKOiuia w hicli n iav ;;ee one of th o a re a ’s five iiiu le fe a te d e levens fall l>y th e way.-^ide. T h a t te a m is th e R u p e rt JayveoH , w ho will oppose ( 'each K e rm it P e r r in s ’ im proved T w in F a lls Cubs a t L inco ln field th is a f te rn o o n in a con test fo r w h ic li th e en-

hiK'li .stm len t body; d is i eri.

T h e K u))e rt tea:Ihe ju n io r Briiin.s p lay ed a t R u p e r t tw o

d e fe a te d

iln-it Coach Tommy Ryan',s ,stron . dor varRlly tenni a t Jerome; tl- Buhl junior hl^h against the Wer

Magic Valley’s Gridiron Bill For Tomorrow

Tile follow Inc Li the schedule of footb;ill Kamp;; lo be played by Monlc Valley school teams

Kimberly nt HngcrninnFiler a t OakleyJrrnmc at Gooding (nlKht)Ituiwrt a t BuhlNampa ai Tirln Fall.i (night)Glenns Fcm- at HaileyRichfield at Fairfield

9-Pound TroutJEROME, Oct. 4 - The largest

trout reported caught by a Mag! Valley re.ildent was a nlne-poundi tha t WUlard Wood. Jerome ca operator and well-known golfe.. landed last Sunday In Big Wood river.

Wood used

Fishing, Hunting Dates to Remember

FlBniNO General troot tca»oo ends Not. 15. Magle dam (Uhlng tn d i nec. IS. Salmon d u n flihlng ends Drc. II,

o m o H0NTING D ad o — OcL IL

• - Oct. I t

Mickey Shader To Pilot Reds’ Pioneer Club .

OGDEN. Utah. Oct. 4 (,T) - R e- suoiptlon of rtoncer baseball league play nw l year will s« i the Ogden club tucked firmly u nder the wing of the anclnntttl Reds of the Nn-

Mlckey Sh'adcr, mnnnKer of th e Ogden club, said he has nccepled U ir Reds' offer ol jpon.'orsl:lp. TTis d u b waj ^ Cincinnati farm unit before league play wna dUcontttiued la

................j throa-n out bPaul Rlchard.1’ rlfle-llke arm.

I t looked llko the Detroit south paw star might aUnply have had bad Inning when he came back t strike out three Cubs In a row in th

;id Inning, T h e fro.stblllei ng had iibout it.i only chance I r during the afternoon when h

wliUfed Roy Hughes. Dorowx ani Hack as fast ns he could serve u hu southpaw shots,

Johnson led off Uie third for Ui Culis will) n terrific double to center

lldn't hold. Peanuta Lowrey ;d him to third, and he raced CavatretU 's ,Mngle. Pafko’s and Livingston’s s i n g l e

e the fire

the third Inning, The r aova into the dirt about ack of flrit »nd ball lo time to I

Boroirj- for the putout.:orld scries fans ever have

. lo carrj- a n overco ilfcrcd for the ir lap,i

temperature at game time w <5 degrees, which Is only shorUy ■ jve the frost line. D etroit’s train-

produced a couple of heaters U up the Tigers' mltLs in the

>cnetlt once Borofty bcgwi sallli ■Is , nowballs.

Manager Orlm of tho vlctorlo '■•flttonal leaguers announced he ^nuld throw Hank Wyse. who !2 and l06t 10 In the rcRiilar i »n, ngalmt Uie Tigers tomon . Sieve O’Nein ehoje Virgil Trucks. Jie rlghthanded (u t-balle r who Just ras released from the navy, to try ■a pitch his dub back Into the :hMnp!onshIp.

MeCBACKKN IN I'ACIflC BLOOMINGTON. Ind. - Lieut.

Bra.neh McCracken. Indiana basket­ball coach on leave, ha t set up one if the navy’s more elaborate a th ­letic programs In the south Pacific.

- WANTED -DEAD OR ALIVE

H orses - Miilcs - Cows Dlghesl Pdcea Paid

For Prompt r CALL COLLECT

0:86J3

Cn:ich Perrins annnuncccl today ;hal he had arranged a Raroe for hb Ciife with the Hnllcy var.-lty to

layed here ’lliur.sday, Oct, II,

DEERSKINSWanted

Best Cnsh Priccs

•IDAHO HIDE & g

TALLOW CO. I:diho luwiNt CO, rounuo.uuHo

3 pu t 0 gain I Jvlng-

■Si dS: it Series Figures

n ) — Oct. U -N er. 8.

5-N»r. Itt.Mlnldokk Vo. 1 deer — OeL (t-lft nnnU dks No, B deer — OcL H-ZL Albion eOc — OcL 14-ZL Soldier swiiDt«Jn elk OcL 21-

Nor. la.E ta o n A — O ct 3»-Nwr. S. Valler-Bebe elk — Oct. »-N(n-. S. Pocatello elk — OeL 15-OeL 19. M w a / lo r a t Hk - Oci. t-Hot. 10.,

By ’The AasocUted Prrw nR ST GAME

Paid attendance 5i,C37 G ro« terHpla jm .S U .O a Playen- thsre S113,1G0.33. Commlsslonef's share S33.:8M5. Clota’ ihire »37,7M.1I.Uacse*! ib M »T,720.11.

S cabs Suell S erviceEmenftO Se^ts. Prop.

GOODIXAR TIBES—TtBEa A. C. u d ChaapfoB Bp«rk F ln ri

Kimberly Boad a t S Tolnti E

thought he could lo second.

Dy this time manager Steve O’NelJl had decided Newhouaer had enough, and At Bi Ull,

Borowys slants, and ..............er Notional leaguer held the Cubs In check for a couple of Innings.

In tlie seventh Cnvarretta bounced his home nm off a rlghtfleld stan­chion. with none aboard, a.nd Pafko and Nicholson followed with alnglcj

UACB IN IDASO P&LU * • Btrotif • tnm latlre u t4

economical • 1 or a mllboo Agenta

V ICKERS & MADRON»38 MAIN E. PQONE <TI

e r FIJDOT 931M or ItSSJ

WANTED!Weatherstrip

AND

RefrigerationMECHANICS

APPLY TO

DETWEILERSTwin Falls Phone 809

'Busy Boys Are

Better Boys

*‘Routo w orh la an «xcel- Icnt w ay to o ccupy a b o y’s sp are tim e, and he w iti b en efit a g re a t deal from the o pportu nity to m eet the pu blic.’ '

Mrs. T. E. Hannon

A N ew tpaptr R ou t» /• th* B e*t O c c u p a t io n f o r a Schoolboy . • . /( T tacht*

a t I t Earn*.

i

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Thursday, October 4 , 194B TIMES-NEWS, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO Pags Eleven

f o r s a l el a BlrdieU t J o w aoU er U9 liU tn U c r hovie

vllh bu lU 'In i *U Diveno; yoolh b«<J comp.

with ip rln c * »nfl m a ttr e u 141 Tnult 1040 Ford Coach for

ble model pickup IU B l« k BcuU.ikln eo»l; B« 1

243 Trash burner; eo*I nnce* Sq. d ln in r Ubie ’

2H C'»n»ry ( in g en tnd !45 Bfcllonal bookcMB 2ia D»by Stro ller MT Qlrl-» bicycle US 10 doe*, (om e with UlU« obm

Othen bred uid one p m - brtd vli. Bock

Item s a t S to reBird u | r ; coffee tablet; I e*M»! nsed ar>d new d a i kitchen c sb lncls; b»by »lor« pipe; baby lUoUer; u dreuer; perfeetlsn hefttert; mcdleJsB cab lne tji «hlt« U tch- ta UbiB: d rop J«»f table; tna- h o fw dre*»«T: EiUto heat- rt)1»; Kerosene Iron; occwloAal th iln ; a n n e h s lr radio and ro d e

Hayes F urn . Exch.450 Main A v c . So, Phonn 73

NOTICE!The T\vin Falls Factory will commenco its opera­tions th is week-end. Many men are still needed to help m anufacture the bum per crop. Time and one- half will be paid a f te r 40 hours nnd the Company win also pay a bonus of 7 i^ cent.-! per hour. So m eet th e sh ifts a t 8 A. M. — 4 P . M. — and 12- M ldnlght. Cards will be sen t to all those who’ have applied announcing s ta rtin g date and sh ift. Radio K T F I will also announce s ta r tin g date.

The Amalgamated Sugar Co.Twin Falla, Idaho

PLA N T MENW A N T E D

STEADY PERMANENTGOOD PAY

Local Job— W ith Good K ulnre Posslliilillea

A pply In P erson a t

Idaho Hide & Tallow Co;l

A divorce suit was filed In d ltt rk t eoiirt Thursday by Velma Nc: against Raymond NeU on th groundi of cruelty. TJiey were n lied bers Oct. 3, 1937 and have soni. seven and flw. for whwe i tody Mrs. NeU petitioned. She ulced aJso lor household funilture valued a t $1,000. a sedao valued a t tl.lSO, »$0 monthly alL-nony during the suit and MO monthly auppotl for the chUdrm. fih« petitioned that tiie de> fendaDt be restrained from aeUlng wvy of their ccnanunlty property untH the court's deelslwi la render­ed.

J . U. Barccj t iu altorDcy.

POOL

............. "M»djw A

Page 12: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

'Twelv? —

I p V f B P J i V B f

TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE RED RYDER

ESCAPE TO ARIZONAx i n .

Carolyn wm nt a telcphcin '.•'H dlol HfHo. Ken? Llitcn Kca.

1‘ve got to Ullc to Bomcbody. I—I want you to be my gucal at lunch . . . No. rJ l pay or I won’t sol I asked you first, ftrd I tn fRinlahNl."

They met in Ornsso’*, % favored ildo street spot, and oj Jho her.-<elf hart wnmcd him. C.'>rol>ii wm full of convcriaUon. She Ifllkert bftwecn uilod b lt» .

■'Ken. don't ever tell a bouJ,” iho admonL'.hed, •'but our little trick worked to a Tl Mj’ hunch wm Somebody did try lo cel thm mcnt. nobbed Ihe frelKht tmir stjile the diuniny boxl"

He waa excUrd. "I now th« p;ii>er» Uxh momlnB. Tried to cull yciu. □oshl"

■'Yr.':. It'r. a rckxI thliiK »e .'Ub- (itUuteil rock.'.. Dol) so KniH'Iul he

IciiU I iniMii, were nilher vnUiublc to him. Kci!, will you u k r jwy f..r tliftt? A rew arrtr'

Ills llrv. tlKlilrneri. Bhi* hut^rcrt

••I kiL.v vt.ii I .llilli-t m en

told her*elf once, »h« v u ImaBlnlng all IhLi; mnybe L*tna wna honest and not Involved In Ireachpry n l Dm somclhlnK dfrp in Cnrolyn belled at Ihnt Itlcn.

6hc kept hfr taxi noUliig whll* she locBltd Bob In hU olllcc. -'Cnro- lynl I W03 wonilertiij whrre you—'

"Oct your hat i t (mpel " .ilie or- ilered. "And coat. Hnve you an]

Ifc lonkM nt her wlih fresh /iur- )rl.*e, but he mood In awe of Cnro- yn Ty>r now. He didn’t que.^tlon ler nt all. He hart ii Jew hiuulrcd loi:.ii,» in a .snial) olllce safo, ot ih.il Tlicy ilci«rlr<l In her .'llhoiil .sjK'nkliin 10 anyuiii'. rrwcnlly, lie ,-at b.ick and uiUlrd

I her, HL old. beloved lone en-Mnn nDddciily re-appcurrd.Ir. t hint ot personal fcflli,\ K»

••You Bill.” Bh" led hUr the plane ;

ilqiort. Her

somethlnK. fSonicIhlnn Import ••.Surely."•’Ken, I lovr Bob Hale. I'm

the deep end!"I filled.• It whrn *

tears then ! Ilftr<l her ■thing fur a

.•"tudy.hem!. Ken didn’t .JonR while, but hb (ace _______He h/Kl stoi)i>ed eiitlnn, Hnally nodded ever ro .ilowly, "All right." he whl.«pcred. "fm K-lad you me, Cnrnlyii. These things—havi bel"

Tliey undcrfttood each other; thi'y didn't nred to Ulk. Both k: had loved her and hiidn't <.■(0 in wonti.

’•Ken, you’re the nicest somebody In the world."

H b nodded again. “I understand. I won-t forKct. fn fact. Carolyn, ftlTf.idy kiiew,"

"You kiiew?”"Yop. A m an L-ji’t blind. You 1

lltUe things slip. And no woman would do whnt you have been riolnt for him unless—unie.-o—Well, poner to him! And Carolyn, I'll nlway around- AJwny.iI''

She wanted to cry then.••Eat your lunch," he commanded

pracUcolly. •’! think you need 'you're Jittery.''

" I do need It. But I'm going away." She suddenly stjueezcd hli hand. ''A million thanks, boy frlond And goodbye!"

She Kol up abruptly and him. paying boUi checks a t the u,.,-. Ho thought he imdarntood why; her eyes had gone ml.nty again.

r find smllliiK. "Am I »up;»i."i

ntik In Ihirr," f,lis pointKl, - | box. Bob, Is your pri-clutu

subitaiicc. I have hud ll tran.sf here."

e wa.-i abniplly Ficrlom nRiilii. He t laslilc to tnufli the Ijox. "But,

Carolyn—I"Tlicy had to ,'lioul above the

)r'.s roar. Somebody Iwd cla-.ecl the ibln door, and Bob ,<aw hrr ;.iKin I Ihe iillnt. Tlip ro,irlii; niiiUli>ll>-< he .shl|) Quhrrrrt, brjcmi to toll Hob'. chin diopiwd. He »ci.« Rinnd

IK Mt..|), (l t)V< r in Ihr low-crllli.K1 cabin Him.', and lie Krl|)p.(t lli ick ot a .sc.it.Carolyn -imlU-d aK.ilii rfa.^Miiiiii’

ly. "Sorry. Bnb. but Jint take R <-cu,> le pilot'.'- mine. I hired him ftiic

doing only what I ordereil I ’’ ’Hut—’'Sit donnl" slie ftlioiitcd. happily r. time. "It Jiiu had to be

way. We are koIiij to Arl:<ina ITo He Contlnuf<I)

FAIRFIELD

I n^REVJ CA^ PRCKE’ T f r T s S ^ KKKi ^jo as .M fioC E .m or w ow .0 6 T 5 Wi*0^1,eos5i.^vJE'vgqgi-patiJT

ThDndar. O cfoSer 4. 194q

By PEED HARMAN

.WASH TUBBS

OUT OUR WAY

By LESLIE TURNER

By WILLHMS

f ir r r r BACKi ' "'AO IMTMC

.AIES PCSj

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

LIFE’S LIKE THAT By NEHER

Mary .MiCsnn, Bolie,tending baOiif.'i. collcs'- gue.sl ot ■

McC.iii■nly ;

didn't try to follow her.

She went Immediately to fUid Dr. Halo a t stat« polle« headquarters bu t both ho and Misa Sorml had' eooB. In a taxi agnln, then, the moed back out lo the Jaboratory.

She h.id no Idea what to expect next bu t shn knew .ihe had to con­tinue he r rather desperate, aiida- olous action. Bob, of course, had told Ii«*iia Borm! about Carolyn'# ir tttln s tha train robber*.

‘’She’ll know Tm wl»e lo her tf Bob Lin’t!" Carolyn hiOf whlaper- •a , to herself, "At least she'll au.'ipect plenty and bo scared. And-<he11 righ t bock fomehowl"

The Indcflnltenca of tha t reason­ing waj Itself enough lo cau.« alarm She couldn't quite decide what to expect of Leana Sorml. Maybe, she

Iteciiy, Grr.ii 1. on a nUir-diiy

wlUi hlJ parents, X!r. and Mra. Jim Reedy.

S. Sgt. MUcliell Schnililt, mi Ir. and Mrs. Otrhard Schmidt,

bauon. Ore., lornicrly o! Ciimiui county arc veiling frltnds h Sergeant Schmidt has recclvcil ..... honorable dLicharge. He entered the service In May, 1543, and scrvoil overseas one year m tall gmmcr.

Bruce Laiimnn, son of Mr. iiiiil Mrs. Ofor«e Lanmnn, ciilljtcti In too array Infantr)- this wttk. Ho wlU report to Ft. Doiiglrvj, Utah.

'" t . Arthur Porkln.i arrived home week, eergftvnl Ptrkln.i «prvcd

In the Hawnlian lsliUld for two year.i. Before entering scrvlce he ^ employed on the lollcc force In Twin Palls,

Lucille Orahim of the bureau of reclamation, Bobe, H'ltlng h e r

Clwrlcs O ra -••—An’ who'* Utils baby a

By EDGAR MARTIN

GASOLINE ALLEY

fsKD \TKOW w\Vl voo wl

wwL'a.’t<SO\Si6f

y

> '»

By KING

THE GUMPS

S ro E GLANCES By GALBRAITH THIS CURIOUS WORLD By FERGUSON

ByGUSEDSON

D K IE DUGAN

THIMBLE THEATER

"By McEVOY and STRIBBEL

IT ISN'T “ DINS® ^ocrfoooA N '? .

M a w td w v s h av e n a m esI\DICAT1N6 TKE RACr THAT THEy At?E ON S T A T « LINES.'

LOUISIANA C AC^W /C^ CAt-IFOBNIA A fiA TC M A , OKLAHOMA

<3EOC©iA rsyA^OM A. OKLAHOMA /(f^A/OVA. WEST VA. rs X A t^A A M , ARKANSAS r^y/C O , NEW MEXICO

Awo OTHeas,

DO ALL INSECTS HAVE ' ^ C H /K w r N fS S

•eouclD of I t to kBbv tM V

SCORCHY«a '

By EDMOND GOOD

STARRING POPEYE

OLLEYOOE

' 1 K IN H A V E )

A N V T H I N G I/ a l l » DO ES )I IS CRO SS - S ( 1 W IS H ^ BLOW o o m u 1 KNOW S W H A T

n - I S A ^ 'V A N T S ( M E PINCERS )\ a n ' w is h f

( 1 K N E W < / S v I W H A T 1 Y ^ M E WISH HAS ;l W A N T S » / ;

iEspoHSieiLiKyjJ) W AN TS ■ \ COMB'D TRUE.f ^ A H O /

^

ByV .T .H A M U N

Page 13: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

Thursday, O ctobcr 4 ,1945 TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO

™ I ' " V . . —

CLASSIFIED* ADVERTISINGPago Thirteen

W A N T AD RATESfZUMd 90 Co«t>pfr>iror4>

la -«• elMlfUd t,

euo4w. I

n CUBlM >alr». IJV m. 6.«fd»r

il la U»

> n n (boiild b% nperUd la

^ wmatM. erperwacii e* sot. i. Swwbftll'e CDort 8^0. Twio

- W a n t e d -

P L A N T M AN

Aiiply In iKrwn Y O U N G ’S D A IR Y

l'E l{S O N A L S

JOIINhON-4S( Third •

" " r o S T a n i V k o u n droIIND: !<tr.x-l tr-1 1...1I r.if. I-k

wAN’i-m

1st CLASS AUTO MECHANIC

PREFERRED

T O P L A C E YO UR C L A S S IF IK D AD

Phone38

by t h o u a a i i d s tli io iiR hou t JIn g ic V olley w ho havo used

TIMES-NEWS Classified Ads

Preferred IjccauHe tlipy know i t ’s (he qiiiekcht, .‘ iin>i and most <-cononiicjil way fill thoir iiccdH. Tliey K''t vcuU.s!

L IV E S T O C K — PO U L T R Y

(JOOI) THINGS TO EAT

Phone38

S P E C IA L S E R V IC E S

l< :i9 Wat A

freak nocldciil In which lo(i<l«l witli baled liiiy ovcrturn«il, completely rtcmolbhlng the cub whU« the driver and two rider* es­caped Injury, occurred sJiortly afwi noon Wednesday on highway No. 03 Mven miles iiortli of Jerome,

The driver. Uoli Rjxltlpn.Fiillj, fclatei! Unit Iho lond ___have been lop heavy on Uib right (ilde Blncc ho wa* driving only M mllei per hour. Tlio injck overturn' cd u he M.US rounding n curve neai tho Oeorgo Silver Inrm.

Rodden wa. en route lo the Saund- ilfalfi\ mill, Jerome. Tlie on-nc

i; DROWN MUSIC c

H O M E S FO R S A L E

W anted! FARM HANDS

steady rmplo>Tncnt

CROOKIIA.M B R O T H E R S

S IT U A T IO N S W A N T E D

OUSTOM routo

H E L P W ANTED— FEM ALE

Wnntod Im m etiiatoly!

Now S a w y e r B n r-B -tt

WASTED2 W A IT R E S S E S

».M a hngr, ,n4 ,ALLEN HO-IT-b

snd RESTAURANTWilll KtTirlt

b o o k k e e p e m

W anted

R & G JE W E L E R S

H E L P W A N T E D — M A L E

Help W anted

W A L G R E E N ’S

-WANTED——

D river-salesm enW ai'ehousem en

CONSOLIDATEDF r e ig h tw a y s

MENWANTED!

The TW IN FALLS FLOUR MILL

Now, .ill modernr. n n o M u o i . ’si-:

SA N flE R -B A C O N

FA R ftJS FO R SA L E

F -P E T S

W A N T E D TO BUY

f'l

M ISC . FO R S, \L E

H E L P W A N T E D — M A L E A N D F E M A L E

B U S lN E S S O P P O R T U N rn e S

M O T O R C O U R T

mc»lt7Ti r*bln», r l« (uraltur.

■ IN V E S T M E N T

SW IM IN V E S T M E N T CO.

•MO A C R E S I Aci'ch C u ltiv a ted

l iE A L E S T A T E W A N T E D

M O N E Y TO L O A N

AND UVEITOCK

W . C, R O B IN SO N

ID A H O F IN A N C E CO. L O A N S

CHIC HIATT, Mgr.

N IC E T O U R IS T CA M P on H ig h w a y 30

SA N G E R -B A C O N

W A N T E D — R E N T . L E A SE

FURNISHfD or UNTURNISHEDH O U S E o r A P A R T M E N T

W A N T E D !

A 2-bed roon i Unfurni.-^hed Hou-ic

A P A R T M E N T o r D U P L E X

— CAl-t. « !t HAXHKR

H O M E S F O R S A L E

FOUR

L O A N S

AUTOMOlItLES-rUILVtTUnE

C«art««uj IWrrlM. Confld«ntlA]S e c u r i t ie s C re d it C o rp .

Quick, Counrout, Co»tid<aUilRELIANCE CREDIT

CORPORATIONLvintrd V. Utui. Utt.

Ofroilt* Tim™-t;»w» I’booe 1

FA R .M S FO R S A L E

I HAVE PGR SALE-

FAR.M S F O R iJE N T

•i TIlACTOIl PL<

i;QUirMKNT

PAUL W, SCOTT

r . C. ANUEKSUN'S Kurni .t ilonip Store

USED PIANOSIr. t clu." condition. Qimrnntec

P r ic ed from ?96^Q0 iin

M IR R A P IA N O S

RECORDSPo()uli\r and < liuv.lcil

Tile \fr)- Inlesl relciLie.i.

U S E D R E C O R D S30c eneh or Jl.OO do;^n

Why pay more?

NEEDLES, record carrjing caic.i and cabinet^,

MUSIC CENTERSpecialized

R ecord S e rv ice 10 Mam Ave, NorUi Phone J033

Cab Demolished But Three Escape

if the ti rlnKtan,

ck nnd h

1» hales top|)lr<l on to r frnci Silver Inncl, dmnnglnR both

;o and the wire on Ihe baJes.

Former Filer Mill Operator Passes

I W, Eat(riLEIt. ......M, pioneer resldrnt. d I7^rn.~Wc(1nes<lny from luck 11 hlB home. !!o hud been 111 about four montlL'.. i!e wu.i bom Oct. 21. Itofl In Coii<v,iy, N. H. unc

from Cot-

^ller , 1013,Ore. ■ttlrd

A L T O S FO R S A L E

R E M E M B E R I -

-rWILL PAV TO SEE

W a te r W ell Siipplie.s

FL O Y D L IL L Y CO.

FA R M IM P L E M E N T S

H A Y . G R A IN A N D F E E Di-tST N.Uo» UllUn,

In.ilnc-Crhi.l

ROBmsoN ~LlV ESTOCK— POULTRY"

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAi;

DIRECTORY

S E A R S R O E B U C K & CO.

POTATO DASKErS HYDRAULIC JACICS WlfEELDARROWS

W IL L IA M S T R A C T O R CO.

• BICYCLE SALES&SEnVICE

■ C L E A N E IiS <t D YERS

COMMERCIAL PRINTING

• CLASS-ItADUTOBSCmeB CtiM * lUd. 8» E. Plu WT

• HOME MAJNTS.IANCBUOUS CoatlraetioD •ad npilr. Ba>bi

ctttnrti. tietM. C«m Trtiiir Co.—4»

MIMEOGBAPHING

' .'/O.V£:i’ TO LOAN

• PLUMBING & BEATING

> TYPEWRITEBS

Lfnolnn. rm4r pul

• SOFTENERS

U. S. Army .MERCHANDISE

NEW SinP.MU.ST:

Twin Falls ARMY STORE

F U R N IT U R E . A P P L IA N C E S

S P E C IA L S E R V IC E S

E xpert Repair Service on all makes

SEWING MACHINESBINOER SEWING

KfACHINE COMPANY 19 Stobont DcrUi PboM »

B A L L E N G E R V eltex S e rv ice

.0 Filer Roller mllb Eaton a fermrr Odd rcllow,. If«lj;c

atrd

threeI Neljr«.s

vile, Mr . Eva Annlr Enton. reded him In death .March 26,

Siinlvon! Include two sons. Ralph -i\lon. Contact. Nev; Harry Baton, r\vln Kills iinil two Rrandchlldren ind four Rroni grandchildren.

Kuneral fen'lces will be held.nl 2 ). m. I-’rIdtiy ni the Reynolds fu- irral home chiipel. The Rev, B, L. ■Vhlte, Filer Methortl.M church, w)l )fflclalr. Inlennent will be In 0un- et memorl.-il pnrk.

Tanner Gives up Idaho Power Job

W. I. Tanner, chief clerk of the win Fnlls cllvUlon of the Idaho iwf'r ■ onipniiy for the pa.it 15 years, in re.'lKnrd hl.i position with the nrrrn. U uaji announced Thursday • Ralph W. Carpenter, division

Tiiiiner will go into private busl- In T uin Falls. He has been

iijjlojcd by the company for 20

Hi- mil hr ruccceded by Mi Olla.'on. [ormerly (ui.^lstanl chief

■!rk of thp Bol.ifl division of the nipnny. He haji b<'rn nMoclnted

I Tttln I-'alU Wed- movo his family

ion a.-! living accom- le found.

Twin Kjilh US I

MAN FACESrfiird Enl)crt, Twin FulK 1 by dejmty slierlffo lato y

.1 charging 1y In c

of Leeleathei

jullty before Probj Ddlley and was l own recognliance to . m, Oct. a. The com­

plaint WB» signed by Zoe Harsh- bsrgcr.

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T S

H IG H E S T

CASH PRICESpaid for lato model

USED CAItS,AND nOSM

( I t pay.>i to shop around)

T W IN F A L L S M O TO R Pbona W

T R U C K S A N D T R A IL E R S 'CHEVROLET I 4 ton trofkT C«U It

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T S

NOTICE TO CnEDlTORS IN THE PRODATE COURT OF

TWIN PALLS COUNTY. STATE o r IDAHO.

IN THE MATTER O F THE TATE OP P. A. Kennedy, known os Fred A. Kennedy, ceased.Notice Is hereby given by the

der.'.lgned, the executor of Ute l u t will and testament of P. A, Kenne- dy, abo blown ns Fred A. Ken­nedy. deceased, to the creditors of ind all persons having claims igalnsl the said deceiued. to hlblt them with the necessary voucher,% within four months after the first publication-'of this notice,

the said executor, at- the office of Ray D. Agee, attorney a t law, in

Twin .Palis Dank and Trust Building, a t Twin Falls. Twin Palls County, Idaho, thLt being the place fixed for the transaction of the biwlncjs of said estate.

Dated this Mill day of September, 101s,

HARRY EATON, Execulor of the la jt will and t«jta-

leni of P. A. Kennedy, also lowTi as Fred A. Kennedy, de-;n.ied.

Publish: Sept, 20, 27, Oct. 4. 11. 18. IMS.

L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T SNOTICE FOR PUBLICATION

NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR EXTENSION OP TIME FOR COMPLCTION OP WORKS UN­DER SENATE DILL NO. 13, SES­SION LAWS OP 1045

-NoUc» U- horeby. given,-that-on the 17th day of October, 1B45, at " - o'clock, A. M;. ft hewing ? be held by the Stale ReclamaUon Engineer, or hla deputy, a t Room 107 Stale House. Boise, County of Ada, State of Idaiw, for tbe purpoM of receiving any protects, testimony and evidence regarding mn ftppUca-

□ for extensloo of U ae ita com- . ‘lion of works under Permit t« Atfroprlato the Public Watcrv of the S u te of Idaho. No. 1B090. The ul<) protesta tn d evidence may b* *u2>-

'>

mltted cither orally or by affidavits by nny person or persons owning In pnMe.sslon of a right to the use

nnv w,Iters of a stream or source of Mipply affected by the said e> iloii.

1. The number of said Permit Is

2. The name nnd post-office ad- drr.«,s of the person or persons or coriwrallon holding .'aid i>ermlt or pfrmlt.1 arc: O. D, TlUey, Route a, Hiinjcn, Idnho.

3. The amount of water claimed by the said permit or permits Is 1.5 cubic feet per tccond from sub­terranean water which Is tributary to In Ihe Rock Creek drainage area. Twin Falls County. Idaho,

MARK n. KULP, Stale Reclamation Engineer.

Publish; Sept. 27, Oct. 4, 1015.

Civic Group Forces Test Locker Case

PAYL’ITS, Oct, 4 C/P>-H*n7 *. Kessler and tho Idaho Allied OWe Forces today carried their fight

.. itxalnlng a club n t PrulUtind from dL'penalng liquor, permuting drink- Ing on the prcmlse.^ and Irom op­erating slot machines.

Kessler, as corresponding lecri- tary of A CF-an organlraUon com­posed of churches and civic club* over the state—h;u oJked Attorney aenernl Frank Langley to ptuss on whether clutxi vthlch do no t sell liquor t)ul which mU drinks out of patrons' own bottle.s are within the

Langley hw replied Uic question U one to be cleclrtrd through the court*, and ho.1 Informed Ke.isler by latter that hfl would not Institute criminal setlon, deeming It the prerogative of the prtticcutlns attorney In the

Idat s 11(1110 (Ato a

■ K f.^r, ncllnK as nttomey for J. D. Wiitkin.1 and Evundena W at- kin.', filed a civil suit against Iva l-Yosi doing bu-ilntio «s the Chicken Roost club at Prultland,

HI.-, complnlnl Illeti In district court here ch;irges tha t tho Watkins nmde complaint to Uie prosecuting

iitiorney of Payeito county (W, R. McClure) sheriff, iH.irolri H. Qum-

'. the health officer and the imey general of the stale of

Idaho for ab.itcment of a nuisance,”

oljtal Tlic t

leR;J ac mplal: :linrgea lliut the

Chicken Roost Is a -liquor nuisance.imbhng nuLiance nnd ft pubUe

nuisance."The suit also is designed, appar-

ntly, to tcit the state 's 1D45 Uw •galUUiR operation of slot machine* •1 non-profit cluhs which make a

epecllled contribution to charity.Tlie allied civic forces failed in

ittcropLs to have the slot machine Uw declared unconsUlutlonal, first in the state supreme court, and later In district court a t Boise.

Dl.strlcl Judge Charles P . Koelsch ruled Sept. 25 th a t tho slot machine

not be tested by a clvU he held th a t adequate

means for determining corutltutlon- allty of the measure exisU under criminal statutes.

Pete Uezzell, 59,Rail Worker, Dies

Pete Ueizell, 58, mlb-oad em­ploye. died a t 3 p. m. Wednesday

Ihe Twin Foils ho-spltal follow- : a year's lllne.M. He has worked

the Union Pacific railroad com- pany for the past 30 years, coming o Twill Falls In 1028 from Utah.

He was previously employed lo allroad work In Maasachusetta. and las a mcmbrr of the Brotherhood i[ Trainmen. He wm bom March I. IS88, In London. England. Sur- 'Ivors Include his wife, Mrs. LcOM Jcuell. Twin FalLi, and three els- :ers In England. «

Funeral sen-lce.? will be held at 1:30 pjn . Friday a t the White mor­tuary chapel. The Rev. E. L. White, Flier Methodist church, will offlcl-

intermcni wlU be in Sunset memorial park.

Final Rites Held ForE.A.Landon

araveslde services for E. A. I* n - n were held a t 5:30 p. m. Wed- sday tn tho Twin PalLi ceme- 7- •Hie United Spanish W ar vet-

were In charge. Company K the Idaho state guard served t»

Ilrlng squad.Active pallbearer* were C, P. Me-

Nealy, Paul Taber, Peter Peataoa, A. J. Meyers,.Reese Williams and Leo Anderson, Honornrj- pallbew- crs were E- B. Johnson, L^wTcnce Clos, Alvin Car.ry. Ray Sluj'ter, H. R. G w nt and Stuart Taylor.

Burial was under the direction of le White mortuary.

Rockefeller Center, which covers ImaM 12 acres In the heart of 'ew York, Is the largest prlvalely- wned business center In America.

,GroSSw6rd Puzilfe?ACROSS

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Page 14: CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISIS - tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF076/PDF/1945_10_04.pdf · FINAL . CITY EDITION SEIZURES LABOR CRISISPRICE B CENTS

y a e e Fourteen TIM ES-NEW S, TW IN FALLS, IDAHO T harsday, October 1 , 1946

in th is .

IHImMAll Black Tailored. . .

COATSAll s t a r cnlloction o f new. Fp;ison c o a ts . . . ICvcr.v ono a c.Tlcniiar w ise w onder to . lo p Hiiit.s a n d rirtssM s m a r t ly . . . ta k e to p honora f o r looks jui(i se rv ice . Kv- o ry one ns black a.s th e [iro- vc rh ia l crow .

$29-75to

$75.00Sizes

10 to 46

Nothintr overlooked here. I'Jvcry style detail — every lypn finish and n wide .•‘e- li'ction of fabric ineliitlinj: herrin^,'t)ono twills, fleeces Meltons, Htiede.s.

N B W t - d a r e - y o v R e d

Now in Stock!.4 C om plete Liuc '

Colonial DamesP o p u la r P riccd

COSMETICSIn c lt'd in g

• Fncc Pow der• Skin F reshener• H and Lotion• R oukc

• Lip.stick

50/ to $3.50

N ol iirtce Eva tvinlred ol Adam fiat rhere been luch a Itmpflng cotor tor

Cva i evarvw htra in nail tnomtl,lifstlirh of*d in fata powder, loo. And

The STETSON....

MEDALIST

See the new Stct.son ca.'iuitl hal w ith the \ 'i t a Foil i.mce.sH . . . An cxccllent liglil weijrht hid with n li^ht rolled ed^u . . . In colors of blue and grey.

5 7 . 5 0

SLIPSAll white tailored slip- — tmred .style — jwr- fectly tailored of good quality rayon — made to fit and wear.

Sizes 32 to ‘14

1 . 4 9

H ere are new fnll and w in ter items you need fo r now and nil w inter Jong. F resh now arrivnls in high quality mcrchandific fo r men and women. Come in and eclect your Beeda today.

Jantzen . . . .SKI SWEATERS

, $3 7 . 5 0

Sm art A p p earan ce, Drizzle Proof, Seldom N eeds Pressing

There is no sm orJer looking coat in America

oncJ yot it's fhorouqhly practical.

You will use il thrcuah fho Foil, the Spring,

on oil but the colcJeit d a y i o f W inter, ond

even “ n ip p y" even ln gj in Summer.

As fo r comfort, it g ives with every move of

your body, yet fa lls back instontly into shope.

MAIN KLOOR MF.N'H STORE

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