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The Times-News from Twin Falls, Idaho • 4

Publication:
The Times-Newsi
Location:
Twin Falls, Idaho
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE FOUH WEDNESDAY, OCT. 81, 1948 TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO Our Changing World HOW THINGS APPEAR FROM PEGLER'S ANGLE TUCKER'S NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG ROSIER The United States face at lent live year of unparalleled production and prosperity If the government, Industry and labor can unite to frame a lound and rational program on Industrial disputes, taxes, wages, prices, material supplies and unemployment subsidies. Save for widespread uncertainty over these question affecting a tvO TYv I AO 1W NEW YORK The late President Roosevelt caused the reconstruction finance corporation to buy a 750-acre estate complete with a mansion Time. aatailithad hi 1U0S and tka Twin r.lta N.w, 'publiihad daily and Sunday at 180 fcrcond Straat Waat, Twin Faiia. Idaho, by tha Ttaaa-Newa Pnbltahini Company.

Enteral a. aaoond 1 man matt April U. poadoifica is Twin FalU, Idaho. nndar th art of Harcb la. RliHsrHIPTION BATES Bf CARRIER JPAT ABL8 ADVANC1 By tha week I A By tha month By threa montha If Tl) By aix months I 5 fH By tha year 1 I XL and other baronial buildings and equipment adjoining his own estate at Hyde park for $150,000 In 1942.

The ostensible purpose oi this purchase with public money was to obtain for the department of agriculture a tract of land and culti BT MAIL PAYABLE IK ADVANCE Within Idiho and Elko County. Naradat every employer and employe, the economic picture is rosier than harassed officials, manufacturers and businessmen had anticipated a few months ago. While these three groups make preliminary plans for next month's labor management conference in Washington under White House auspices, here ls an analysis of the economic situation as they see it today: a a SCARCITY Unemployment: Probably two million out of work By tha month -a-g ft cxm ri By thraa month. By six monLhi Vtv tha year t.ia II 1 Weekly Edition Only. I I estaU across the Hudson 'river, visible from the Rogers and Roosevelt estates, and members of Mr.

Roosevelt's personal following had made merry over the discomfiture of the once rich but now rather down-at-the-heel "Tories" on the opposite side. There has been no public demonstration of such discomfiture, however, nor, indeed, any recent publicity of any kind concerning this up- i river "heaven." i Another man, equally Intimate with the details, has said It was not necessary for Mr. Roosevelt to "protect" himself by buying the Rogers place with either his own money or that of taxpayers under pretext, because there was an understanding that the Rogers estate would not be sold into the hands of "undesirable" neighbors of any type. Nevertheless, as time passes and heirs die and their fortunes ebb, costly estates in the far outskirts of New York in some cases, do pass finally into the possession of In the possession of the department of agriculture, the Rogers estate would have been permanently secure In this respect and would have been conducted politely as a park. Outsida State of Idah Waatbraok Paflar By three month.

By six month! th raar To all Man and Women hi the Sarrieal 75o i (ln By throe month. By six months $2.00 By the year Complet new. 'arVis. of tha Aaeociatad and Unltad vated trees for public use as a forestry and agriculture demonstration project. There was no need of such facilities in the state of New York.

According to a favorite boast of the late President, reforestation had been developed during his terms as governor to such a degree that New York was a leader among the states In this respect. The property in question, the Archibald Rogers estate, has never All notice, reqairaa or iw th. nt juriedlcUon to be published weekly, will be publ in the Thuriay ie.ua of thia paper pursuant to aa added thereto by Chapter 164. 183 SeealoB Law. Idaho.

NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES WEST-H0LL1DA INC. Mf Market Street. San Fraociaco, Calif. A sir despite cancellation of war contracts, or far fewer than had been expected The reasons for their Jobless state are personal rather than economic, and give scant cause for concern over basic condition and potentialities. Some prefer a short vacation from their machines after five years of steady overtime work.

Others shy from new forms of labor at less pay than they received in wartime plants. A third group, as expected, has quit to live on unemployment compensation payment for a few months. The fact is that certain key industries steel, textiles, mineral and lumber report an actual scarcity of help. The unemployment rolls will mount when more millions of men and women are demobilized. But the retirement of elderly men and women from the factories, the return of many war workers to domestic, service and retail trades and the enrollment of veterans In schools, apprentice shops and an enlarged military estaollshment will ease this problem.

The farms can also absorb many ex-soldlers If the glamour and excitement of a fighting career have not spoiled them for ploughing and planting. The place ls so large, with 30 buildings scattered about, that there ls almost no chance of its being sold now to an individual rich country squire. A hope has been expressed that Cornell or Syracuse university might buy it for experiments In forestry or that some private school might be able to swing the deal. At any rate it Is for sale for $20(U 000 and the social or racial "desirability" of the buyers will not be questioned, now that Mr. Roosevelt is gone and his own ancestral park apparently is on the market.

Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt recently said she was not Interested in the countryside just 'as country and this might be taken to mean that she has lost Interest in their property. The army moved out of the Rogers place after Mr. Roosevelt's and the garrison was reduced to two officers and 32 enlisted soldiers. As TIIE GENOCIDES The forthcoming trial of the top nazi war criminals is, like the offenses of which they stand accused, unprecedented In history.

It is logical, then, that the legal talent which prepared the United Nations' indictment against these infamous 24 should have found need of a new word to define, briefly and with legal precision, the appalling crimes for which the nazi leaders are responsible. The word is genocide, and credit for its coinage goes to an American professor, Raphael Lemkin of Duke university. It is formed from the Greek "genos," which means race tribe, and the Latin "cidere," to kill. Its first appearance Ls In the third count of tha indictment, which states the defendant "conducted deliberate and systematic genocide, the extermination of racial and national groups, against the civilian populations of certain occupied territories." Perhaps genocide may not seem to carry a force appropriate to the monstrous crimes which it describes. To American and English ears, homicide, fratricide, regicide and similar Latin derivatives sound calm and impersonal when set beside the strong Anglo-Saxon of murder and slaughter.

Murder and slaughter are strong words because of association as well as sound. They are the common, sudden, instinctive terms for the act of taking life. Homicide is a word that belongs to the police, the lawyers and the judges. It comes into use after the machinery of arrest, accusation and trial has begun to operate. So it may be that genocide is the right word for the situation, after all.

The revolting deeds of the nazi mass murderers have brought all the leaders except Hitler and Bor- mann before the bar of Justice. The crimes to the personal politics of the de "WASHINGTON CALLING" BY been delivered to the department o4 agriculture. Instead it was used as a camp and barracks and training ground for a presidential household garrison designated as the 240th military police battalion (zone of (special) assigned to guard the President on his occasional visits to his own estate, and at all times, of course, to guard his property. This unit was carefully selected. It had 17 officers and 367 men under command of a major.

An army officer who, naturally, prefers not to be identified, discussing the battalion, has said that $100 a month would be a fair estimate of the per capita pay and allowances of the garrison. At full strength that would have been $38,400 a month for this cost alone. It ls impossible on the basis of the information now available to state the total expense, however, because the guard was first organized as a company on Dec. 16, 1942, and was expanded to battalion strength In the summer of 1943. It was "activated" or organized on the premises and communications and other expensive facilities were built by the army.

The Rogers mansion and other buildings were altered, additional wells were drilled, the water system was developed appropriately and, of course, facilities, according to army standards, were Installed. The army also paid the taxes and paid to a subsidiary corporation of the RFC an interest rate of four per cent on the Investment of $150,000 plus. The purchaser and present owner, the second district realty corporation, borrowed the money from a holding company of the RFC, known as Amalgamated Properties, which is owned by the Consolidated Realty corporation, all of which stock is owned, In tum, by the RFC. A man who ls in a position to speak with knowledge concerning the deal says there had been rumors that Father Divine, the Negro leader of an Interesting religious group, wanted to buy the Rogers estate as a "heaven" for his followers. Father Divine already had bought an MARQUIS CHILDS Pot Oh Shots RECONVERSION The nation's new, postwar capacity to produce and purchase billions of durable and consumer goods also warrant confidence in the future provided that the "ifs" mentioned above can be answered by the big moguls who will meet In the capital within a few weeks.

Here is a report from that front: Production: Major industries have completed physical reconversion of their plants in jig time. Heavy manufacturers report that December output will top the 1939-1941 average by 12 per cent and that June's will exceed It by 87 per cent. Barring continued labor troubles, automobiles can roll off the assembly lines at the prewar rate by February and at a six-mllllon-a-year volume by next June. Steel mills are operating at approximately 85 per cent capacity In spite of oontract terminations, and the scale would be higher save for a shortage of workers. STALLED Purchasing power: Consumers' wants and the wherewithal to satisfy them were never higher.

Department store sales, which slackened in August and September, now top 1944's last quarter, although inventories are still skimpy and unbalanced. Dealers in cars, radios, refrigerators, washing machines, furniture, kitchenware, building materials etc. report an unprecedented backlog of orders. All this machinery for full-speed prosperity, however, ls temporarily stalled by threatening gestures on the labor front and the administration's delay or unwillingness to proclaim a firm policy on wages, prices and profits. a a HOPE Key sponsors of the White House conference warn against over optimism about actual and immediate results.

They do not believe that the complex problems confronting management and labor can be settled overnight, and they think that any attempt to force an agreement on details would be dangerous. Their principal hope is that both parties can agree to and comply with the purpose set forth in para WASHINGTON A junior senator with only 10 months of experience has had a great weight of responsibility put on his shoulders. As chairman of the special senate committee to in tail at all times, it can be stated that individuals strongly out of sympathy with the President's politics undoubtedly would have been suspect. The present reduced garrison is quartered in the coach house of the nearby Vanderbllt estate. Unlike a portion of the Roosevelt property that was given to the government as a premature memorial to the late President, this estate brought with it an endowment from the donor.

The sole duty of the 34 men since the death of Mr. Roosevelt has been "to maintain the security of the late President's grave." It has been uneventful duty. The assignment will end on Nov. 1 when the grave will become a responsibility of the national parks commission. The purchase was proposed and put through by Mr.

Roosevelt, himself. The complicated procedure, involving three subsidiaries of the RFC, concealed until recently the fact that RFC money was used. Until V-J day "military security" prevented disclosure of the story of the household garrison. vestigate atomic energy and recommend legisla tion, Senator Brien McMahon of Connecticut also has a great op CHAIR BITES MAN! Ever hear of a chair biting man? Ask Owings F. Branrc, who ranches hereabouts.

It seems there was a chair with a craxked seat. Mr. sat In same. It bit him. Honest.

Unknown to his wife, Mr. promptly smashed the chair and made kindling out of it. GENERALS AND COLONELS Pots: A clipping from the army newspaper Stars and Stripes, dated "Ber portunity. A house com mittee made an unholy spectacle Marqtiia Childa nf Itmlf In the are committed, and the criminals have been apprehended through history's greatest mili- trivial and. ves.

frivolous way in which It handled this matter so vital some senators do not seem to realize. Senator Edwin Johnson of Colorado is for ending the draft. He is against universal military service. But he is also for keeping the "secret of the atomic bomb, and that seems a sure way to encourage a war for which would be unprepared. It is to the credit of Senator Mc-Kellar, president of the senate, that he stood firm against the pressure of those who would have sidetracked McMahon and thereby have overruled aa important precedent.

Under that precedent, the author of a resolution creating a special committee shall become chairman of the committee. In the past, this precedent has overridden the right of seniority, which is the sacred cow of the senate. Even the suggestion that It might be ignored, when a position of such power and consplcuousness was to be dispensed, caused a muttering of rebellion among the freshman senators. Before this happened, murmurings of dissatisfaction had been heard. The juniors resent the fact that the veterans most of them from the south, who stay in office year in and year out regardless of how the national pendulum swings arrogate to themselves all the positions of power and prestige.

A senate precedent has been preserved. But what is infinitely more Important, an alert and capable chairman has been selected for a critical task. tary operation. The time for righteous ven geance has arrived. lin, Sept.

24 (JP)" goes on to tell not only for us but for our children's children unto the umpteenth generation. Tn hezln with, of course, the about a 42-room mansion formerly By ordinary standards the Justice to be meted out is highly unusual. There will be owned by Nazi Minister Walther Funk on the green shore of Wann- see being readied for opening as the spokesmen for the accused, but there can be no presumption of any innocence. The record of their Intentions is too clear; the mute tes "Rendezvous club" for 3,000 enlisted HINTS ABOUT HEALTH BY DOCTOR O'BRIEN men. The news story continued "Twenty-four hours before the open timony of their millions of victims is too damning.

So no one doubts that the United Nations court will find the nazi war criminals ing it (the building) was requisi tioned for the exclusive use of general officers and full colonels. "The non-com columnist in the Grouper, weekly newspaper of the cer education In the schools should be stepped up all over the country. Over 150,000 die of cancer In the United States each year, and 50,000 of these had accessible cancers which, If treated in time, could have been cured. CANCER EDUCATION One out of every three persons has a good knowledge of cancer today, and young people know more about the disease than older people, according to Evelyn A. Potter In the RnHptln of the U.

S. group control council, commented. 'Any more of that and we won't give them their Jobs back house committee had before it the fantastically bad May-Johnson bill, which would give a single administrator unheard-of powers over a power that transcends all other powers. Who drew up that bill, incidentally, and how it came to be Introduced, ls a subject of much speculation on capitol hill. The special senate committee can now proceed to a thorough, impartial Investigation of all the facts surrounding atomic energy.

The committee can hear the witnesses whom the house committee refused to hear at all, or whom they heard with scant courtesy. a a a This is the desire of both McMahon and Senator Arthur Van-denberg of Michigan, who will be the ranking Republican member of the 11 -man committee. Both men were among the first to grasp the meaning of atomic fission. It was Vandenberg who put It to the first resolution, providing for a tolnt senate and house committee American Cancer fSPPf 1 guilty formally, as the. world has already found them guilty in actuality.

When the trial is over, history may remember them as the genocides the men guilty of plotting not only the crime of war, which the world so long condoned, but also the mass murder and extermination of a whole race of human beings. For crimes such as those no word yet spoken or written would have sufficed. Now mankind must strive to create a world in which the new word genocide need never be used again. rliT1! IIAGERMAN after this ls all over. Orchids to that non-com colum-1st.

a a a NOTICE, STORE MEN Dear Pot Shots: Can you help one more mother in BOB HOPE Society, Inc. Public education In cancer has been carried on for more than 30 years by the American Cancer Society and 1 1 predecessors. Purpose Is to teach lay persons the cause, nature, your grand column? For two years I have been looking for a football graph 5b of the formal agenda. This declares that "Once an agreement has been signed, no strikes or lockouts shall take place while It. ls in force, but that disputes shall be settled between the parties by other means provided in the contract." a a a FAVORS If capital and labor can agree on machinery to keep plants operating during disputes, regardless of eventual disposition of disagreements by direct bargaining or federal intervention, it is believed that the favorable forces awaiting release will be released In a golden stream for millions of producers, workers and consumers.

Prom the political standpoint, the success of the conference in improving conditions on the labor front Is vital to President Truman and the. Democratic party. The most serious threat to his reelection and Democratic control of congress will be In Washington's failure to provide continued employment. Should violent Industrial wars and disputes mar the years between now and 1948, the voters may attribute them to the vast political favors and power granted to organized labor by the Roosevelt-Truman administration. a a a INCREASES Although President Truman favors a general policy of wage boosts without price Increases, Reconversion Director John W.

Snyder and Labor Secretary Lewis B. Schwellenbach recognize that no fixed or national program embodying this demand can be promulgated. Conditions as between various industries ae too spotty. Their figures show that certain corporations can meet the CIO's request for a 30 per cent Increase without passing costs on to the consumer. But such an advance to the workers without compensatory benefits in price schedules would drive other firms to the wall Maximum Increases for numerous industries would probably be five or 10 per cent, and even then they would have to raise their retail levels.

a a FORMt'LA Behind the scenes, government officials hope to settle for an average raise of about 15 per cent, and the emphasis should be placed on the word "average." the spread would range from 30 per cent In some instances to only five in others. Possibly five per cent of the additional pay would be charged to the consumers, thus bringing the cost of living up on an average by about that amount. The manufacturers would be expected to absorb the other 10 per cent. Preliminary surveys Indicate that management, especially the largest employers, will settle on this basts. Principal difficulty will be encountered In persuading the CIO, which controls the steel, oil, textile and other big unions, to agree to this formula.

for my seven-year-old son. Some' Since we've been broadcasting on the service circuit we've been In front of some pretty tough audiences and taken quite a few chances, but never anything like the other night when we did our show CpL Harley Nagel, Independence, visited last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Silas Condlt. He was returning to Ft.

Lewis, Wash, after spending his furlough at his home. Harley ls an engineer Instructor at Ft. Lewis. O. H.

Bailey, Denver, has been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lindburg.

He left last week for Los Angeles to spend the winter with his son. Mrs. Bob Lone and babv daughter. how I always miss getting one. Surely there are a few footballs around that are good and not in use so I might get one and my boy won't be disappointed at Christ W.

A. O'Brien, M.D. signs and symp so that those toms of the disease mas time. A Hopeful Mother FLOOR on the fan tall of the U. S.

S. South Dakota and had stare right down the muzzles of three 16-lnch guns. Now I know how Tokyo felt. I wanted to dn A delegation maicans from the northslde walked Into E. J.

Maestas' office. who develop accessible cancer can go to a physician in the early stages and be cured. Surveys made by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health Indicate half of those interviewed know accessible cancer can be cured If detected In time, but it was surprising to know that nearly half the people did not know this. Cancer ls not contagious. No one has ever contracted cancer from on atomic energy.

President Truman at one point seemed to fall in with that plan. He Indicated that he would ask the democratic leaders in the house to go along with It. But something went wrong and the house would have no part of it. In the brief time he has been in the senate, McMahon has proved his capacity. For one thing, he knows the ins and outs of the Washington game.

For several years he served 'as assistant attorney general in rharffe of the criminal division of "We want to go back to Jamaica," Sheila Louise, have returned home from the Wendell hospital. Mrs. Long is making her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clark, while her husband is serving In the Pacific with the navy.

He is now In Japan. SSgt. Niel Nelffenegger, Fort Ord, and MLss Nell Bloxham, Pocatello, visited last week with his my show from the crows nest, but i. said they. "Why?" asked E.

J. "It's too cold," said the Jamaicans "No, no, it's Just a bit nippy, said E. J. they said finding a different type anyone else, as cancer is a growth THE WRONG APPROACH "We Just wanted to subscribe to these scripts the same way we'd subscribe to a newspaper or periodical," a member of the house un-American activities committee ls quoted as aying in explanation of the committee's request for transcripts of broadcasts by six prominent radio commentators. One wonders, however, if the committee would have publicized its subscription to a newspaper or periodical.

One wonders, too, if in spite of the committee member's disavowal that these requests were subpoenas, the commentators in question have not already been placed under suspicion by the publicity attendant upon this routine "subscription." No charge has been placed against the six broadcasters. But their scripts have been singled out for examination to determine whether they reflect any "subversive activity." Somehow this seems the. wrong approach in a country where a free press and free expression are basic rights. It smacks too much of damning innuendo and a desire to practice the Intimidation which has been all too familiar in some other countries in recent years. Bob Bopa "It's too cold on the floor," In the department of justice.

of egg there might confuse the crow. Those sailors were which develops In our own bodies. Two-thirds of those Interviewed knew this, but the other one-third still constitute a source of difficulty a great au- Besides being an enecuve ui-orfortlv rAnsble of taking for cancer patients and their rela' sisted the Jamaicans. "On the which?" asked E. J.

"The floor," said the Jamaicans. "Our tent floor. It's too cold. It's a concrete floor. Too cold, much.

We want to go home to Jamaica." E. J. finally talked 'em out of it, probably by telling them not to go tlves. In one instanc property dience, but I wasn't too anxious to get any belly laughs. The last time I got a belly laugh from a sailor thoee 13 buttons flew off and hit me right in the eye.

The Sodak (that's what the kuvs 1 care of himself in the rough and tumble of politics, McMahon has a deep conviction of 'the need to find some way out of the awful dilemma which faces the world. He has had a number of evening meetings with could not be sold because the house had been occupied by an individual with cancer. Cancer patients also report lack of nursing care because of the fear of contagion on the the leading scientists responsion for atomic fission. hnn is also the sponsor of part of those near them. Pain is not a symptom of be sister, Mrs.

Fern Winegar. 1c and Mrs. Robert Owsley are the parents of a baby daughter, Vel-ma Marie. She was born at the Wendell hospital. The father is serving with the navy In the Pacific.

Mr. and Mrs. Beryl H. Frazler, Forks, returned to their home Tuesday after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Harry Frazier. Bei'l is cashier at the Forks state bank. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Carlson, Portland, visited at the home of Mrs.

Charles Lindburg. Pvt. and Mrs. Bob Crawford, Miami, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Henry Clark. Pvt. Crawford has been taking special training in radar. He is now being transferred to Las Vegas, Nev. Jl MM 2c Keith Clark, has aW tj been visiting his parente, Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Clark. He has Just received his discharge from the navy. He joined the navy In January, 1940, and was wounded In the battle of ginning cancer, but as cancer ad a bill which provides for a method for sharing atomic energy with oth-, nDinm Tt makes more sense vances it becomes painful through Invasion of the tissues. Patients than any proposal put forward thus with accessible cancer who wait for call her) is one of our newer battleships.

I don't know how long ago it was christened, but every night sailors still sneak down to lick the prow. It was anchored in San Francisco bay about half a mile from Alca-traz. Before the show I went up to the signal deck and signalmen Kenneth Russell, of Marshall, and William McMasters, of Pittsburgh, let me look through their big 21-power naval telescope into a few cell windows. It was very interesting, and I think my brother Is putting on a little weight. far.

pain to develop before reporting to their physician, greatly decrease a w. ar nnt to try to come to chance of cure. with other nations Chronic irritation is a common cause of cancer. Nearly three- i.v...- on the use and control of this force, then nur nnlv recourse is to main barefoot on the chilly floor. a a a DOLL BUGGIES, ALAS Mrs.

J. P. Eh Dietrich Our known doll buggy supply, alas, ls gone. If we hear of any more, we'll say so promptly. a a a DILEMMA Dear Potto: Look, I go to work by the laundry whistle which ls five minutes too fast and I quit by the Idaho Power clock which Is five minutes slow and therefore I'm working overtime and not getting paid for it.

I protest. I want something done. Besides, when I meet -my wife and I'm five minutes late, I'm in the doghouse. You know, Potto, you're married too. Clock Watcher and Whistle Listener a SPELLING DEPT.

Latest gem to arrive at the T-N fourths of the group interviewed knew this. VIEWS OF OTHERS ARE WE BEING SMART FOR ONCE? It looks like we are playing a smart game in Japan which is so unusual for us that it is really something. Every American tensed from the beginning of the war that It was to our interest to rid Japan of the system of emperor worship and all that goes with it. But this was easier said than done. First a great war had to be won, but this wasn't all.

American attack on the emperor could easily strengthen him in the affections of his people. There had to be finesse. So we let the emperor take the odium of ordering his. country to quit cold before it was invaded, accepting defeat for the first time in all its long history. Here was a terrific blow to emperial prestige.

Then we made him a stooge of the "foreign devils," as we probably are in Japanese eyes. Aftei that we disbanded the great army that was the support of the system, and proceeded to break up the economic monopolies that made its chief beneficiaries rich and powerful. With this came free speech, opportunity for the people to air their gripes, of which they would obviously have plenty. So now Hirohlto ls his country's tain ourselves as a vast arsenal and laboratory of war. That is what False beliefs concerning the dis ease were more common In older persons, even in those who would Guadalcanal in November, 1942.

Hs ls now going to Yakima, to be expected to know better. Many 'Way Back When From Files of Times-News Join his wife and baby. thought cancer was due to bumos. Mrs. Fern Winegar and sons, Eugene and have returned falls and bruises, or eating food prepared In aluminum vessels, or eat REBIRTH OF A NATION The atmosphere of the recent French elec-: tlons was perhaps more Important than their results.

The significance of the revolt against the Third Republic and its constitution, the upport of General de Gaulle and the strength of the communists cannot be discounted. But one cannot fall to be Impressed by the sobriety and self-discipline with which the French people's wishes were made known. Order returned to Europe with the French Sections. Democracy, which has been warped a.nd degraded, was triumphantly vindicated. Violence was renounced as a necessary and inevitable companion of readjustment.

with free and peaceable elections, Franc did much to show herself once more strong and responsible. With this one step, ifce did much to reaffirm her heritag and reasirt her plac a a major from Malad, where they visited her ing canned foods. Many queer methods of treatment were given 15 YEARS AGO, OCT. 31, 1930 Mr. and Mrs.

C. H. Detweiler returned yesterday after a visit of a week in Boise. They were accompanied on their trip by their daughter, Margaret. parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Nief-fenegger. Her sister, Mrs. Wilson Ritchie and sons, San Barnardlno, credit for cures, such as the dally drinking of champagne and eating raw oysters. There is also a common 27 YEARS AGO, OCT.

31, 1918 Word was received by Mrs. J. R. Morgan that Dr, Morgan arrived safely in France and is connected with Red Cross work. Mrs, C.

T. Brothers has returned to her home in Pasco, after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.

Swan. office: Calif, came home with her for a short visit. Mrs. Jack Hlller, Portland, Ore, No. 1 political issue, and everybody who's ever been has been visiting her mother, Mrs.

one, knows you get hit plenty before the shooting stops. Flora Chatterton. Mrs. Chatterton will return with her daughter to "After two weeks of exciting visiting, they lefted Monday." a FAMOUS LAST LINE Maybe we can trade some of this venison for some THE GENTLEMAN IN THE THIRD ROW belief that only physicians who advertise that they cure cancer, are successful. Magazines, newspapers, books and pamphlets were found to be the best sources of correct cancer information.

Youngsters knew more about cancer than their parents so can- And the Japanese are doing it, not we Americans. Mrs. John E. Hayes, chairman of the publicity committee of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, left Wednesday to attend district Parent-Teachers association meetings at Pocatello and Rexburg. and will return to attend Parent- spend the winter.

This last fact is the most Important one of alL For only the Japanese can destroy the emperor system Teacher association meeting at Wendell on Saturday. READ TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS so It will stay destroyed. Nampa Free Pres..

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