i l l ® i] twi - twin falls public librarynewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/twin...si. ....

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si. . VOL. 11. NO: 12b. ^ i m i s pyRPORTED tlERSKiyBI Radio Experts Skeptical Re- garding Source of Messages; Relatives and Friends of Two Sweden-Bound Airmen Hope i; (By The Aasoclftt«d Presa) WASmNOTON. Aujr. 24-Tlic N coast gudrd cuW*r, Maclon. ra- dioed' hcadquArtera here la(e to>- ni^ht that she had abandoned Uie search for the missing plane. Greater RocUord. because of lock of definite Information that Uic the plane had been seen In the waters near Piskemes. Green- land. Tfto message from the Marion’s commander. Lieutenant Command- er E. K. Smith read: __ "Discontinued search for Has- — ielHnvvlow of unawthentlc reports or-.hl» being sighted-near Fls- kciT^^ Greenland." CmCAOO, Aug. 24—Allhough ama- ----------t«ur-radlo-0Derat0rg_ in Chicago. To- _ ledo and Brpoklyn received messages > last night purporting to come from the missing' Rockford-to-Btockholm filers, radio experts tonight were , franUy skeptical that the messages I came from Bert Hassell and Parker tl^ * M d friends of thc*~«lers In Rock* ford, Illinois, beUei-ect tho messoges genuine and that they gave added evl- dence that the aviators who left Rock- ford eight days ago. are safe. . The messases picked up last night ; and signed -Rockford fllera" said Ihc ° plane. Greater Rockford, woo down on a small island about SO miles o(( ~ ______ the coast of Newfoundland, yidlng 1 Ing that The Associated Press and ^ the filers* families be notified. I McMsgQ Wa* Bent n / While there was ■np doubt that tl . . such a message was’ sent. • skeptics *; pointed to many reasons for doubt- » Ing lu authenticity, it wa« on a « different wave band than thal oailgned • tha Jpteat«r Rockfor^ the mwage c ^vts'maaaatted u 'it hr aa.akpert, • while Hassell and Crama'.>.«i« inex> v perienced senders and the polaC where tl the messages said they were down was n hundrds of miles from the two vil- lages In southwestern Greenland over whleh villagers said the plane passed Sunday momlng headed east. . IIe*TT Penalty A heavy penalty Is provided for an ® operator attempting to perpetrate such a hoax but radio experts said it would B b almost impossible to detect such a tf person if the messages are fictitious. S To trace him. It was pointed out w many“ 'dlrectlon detectors' would have to be employed and there are 20.000 “ atatl6ns_ln“lhe counUy, ' ^ / Last night's "messages said the <i ---------- Mnders'wtroJd'bc-back-on the sir to- P ---------- nlghl ami thft , goYcmmcntJa.keeplna air channels clear to allow an op- w ---------- portunity-4fr-llst«ner»-to-tryLjor-oth- bi (ContinuM'oo ^ 6 'iwur tt MISTERS GflTHEH i T fl-IliO iG E -W llllS ^ Plenipotentiaries Representing 15 Countries Assembling in Paris to Sign Peace Pact j; - — u PARIS. Aug. 24 (;?>—PlenlpoUntlar- ^ les represenUng IS naUona were gath- ^ erlng here lonlght to enter a written ” undertaking on behalf of their gov- * emment that as among Uiemselvei, they will tenouoce »-»r as an Instru- “ ment of national policy. When this fomuUity is completed ttie pact will ^ be open for the adherents of 47 oth- F er natlbns. * The signing by the original IS will bring together the greatest diplomatic gathering in Paris since the consum- maUon of the peacc treaty of 1919.- AU the Paris newspaper*' bring oul the anology "betwen tbe arrlrals of "two great American dUsens. WUson and KeUogg. bent on the mission of establishing peace on earth.- AeU ot Ce«rteir As the sUtesmen are here to sign a pact tbat has already been nefo- tiaxedrthelr njeeUngt'aod-cenm»« - ----------tioas-wlll-basiora-aots'of-oourteq^aod — of dlpIomaticaUy takJog one anoth- r's measure, than anything else. Secretary KeUocg and Poreign Min- p Uter Briand of Prance met for the first time today. _It was Ur. ICeUogg^ first offidkl duty to eaU at tbe Ptcach , foreign'offltt and he taiud tber* with M. Briand for thre*-«piazt«n af _ an hour. Myron T. Berriek, United SUtea ambasndor, asd George A. ” Gordco. fint secretary of the United ^ sutes embassy, aceooipanled tbe ^ of tbeir departOMnl. tri no offldaL plan en tbe pregrua of tu tbe interpatttmentary onion, bat botb bb -fl n«t«nUy and today It beld tbe at- an 1 tenUes) ct the more than M taw- be tta>a« trom t l eoantrtei wbo are at- m (OoBtmwd on Pma t i 5 df THE i] T W I FIRST DETACHMENT OF ( ANTARCTIC fiXPLORERS i I READY FOR LONG TRIP • • mandcr Richard E. Byrt. . Three years of planning prepa- mion-s for his adventure to-ihe ;frlgld Antarctic, the vast, In- hospitable ' South polar continent, come virtualy to an end at noon e* when tho little vessel. City ol ( New York, saUs out of New York S, harbor bearing supplies and tba fint detachment of the men wbo /O are to make the boat their home f ^ the next two years. ‘ ' 36 The craft's desllnallon wUl be Dunedin. New Zealand, 9300 mUes . away. .Tliere she.,will be. Joined., by the freighter. Chelsea, and the whaler. Larsen, which arc t6 con- vey the real of the personnel and ^ equipment from the United fiUtcs ^ to the land "down tmder." The g Chelsea sails September l.-whUe ® the Larsen heads south about the ° middle of next month. Commander Byrd,' who plana * \ to board the Larsen In San Pedro. [ California, Gclober IS, made his final Inspecnon > of the CiCy of New York -late today. ------------------------- II O E iE R HOTEL'FIRE i m . / ' v I Early, Morning Blaze Catcties “ - ‘^69-Persons-in-Rooms; $10 J ;• 000 Loss; Girl Saves Dog ; I- ----- DENVER. AugV 24 match j tossed Into d pile of rubbish and *; „ baled paper was believed to have , - started a fire which trapped scores rr of BuesLi on the upper floors of :he “ ' flve-stpry Auditorium hotel and did . ; Idnmngp ftttmated .at llO.OOO here tp. tl Tlie early morning blaze caught f] many of Uie 309^ .patrons registered'lit I t the hotel In tbttr rooms asleep. Tlw, " a smoke.bUlowed. up a freight elevator shaft and sooiji fUjed .the upper hnll- a ways. 8prea4iX)g panlo ' among Uio - d awakening ^eita; As the smcAe be- re camc more Odense and cries ol *'flre'* t, eebped tbrougb .tbe tmaoipv m en and [. wcmen appeared at the w in d ^ of ° « their rooms' clad In pajamu and kl- ^ a monos. Fire U d d m M rt oi Fire companla pUcM ladders lo windows in Uie various floors and men and women gue«U came swarming it: ^ down. v< U Lieutenant A. E. OuffieJd of an en- d glne' company was Uijured and wtui a Uken to a hospital wllh Albert E. ^ I. Snyder. Stroudsburg. Pennsylvania, v t who had been overcome by the smok?. „ e While the ladder men were rescu- *{. 0 ing guesU from the outside W. E. ' Pierson, Sl-year-old elevator pllo*.. c stayed on the Job. rescuing loads ct = panlcky-men-and women. j- 3 "MU^ Marlon jCnrnahiui,_Itollyw^. |_ • who was in the dining room' «Urig' | - breakfaa«T-thouHht-o(-Jtutf.-h«r two- tn a room on the ftflh floor. Mias Carfiahan fought her way through smoke fumes up five fllghU of sUtrv - to reach the dog. Firemen rescued 1 bolh. • Crossing Crash Ends Lives of Three Iowa ) Persons; Two Injured 1 FOBT UAOISON. Iowa. Aog. U {/?) —'Three petMBs were fciUed and two t elhu* seriously injw ^ wbca their automobUe was stradTby a gaMllne car on the Barlington raUroad at Vlele. near hete teday. . v The dead, all of Toti BCadbon, are: , Mr. and Mn. GlfS Edlen and their daofhter. ZoU Mae. tlx. Mra. Clyde W. BJoet. FoH Madison. ' aad ber JS-jcair-eld daogbtcr. Dor- I o(hy. were Mrionsly Injored. ! FLIER BURNS TO DEATH I IN CRASH IN NEBRASKA r NEBRASKA CITV. Aug. 24 Elmer Fahrlander. 30. was bum- ( ed to death and Raymond Pahr- r lander. 23. his brother, was se- I rlously injured when Ihelr air- : pi«wo crashed Into a tree and burst into flamea near here to- day. I Raymond was able to extricate himseU but couJd not rescue his ’ “ brother. -T?»-pUne-wa»-o»tied— I —tnr—Raymond -who recently re- ceived a pUot's Ucense. ; CALIFORNIA CHINAMAN TO ; ANSWER FOR 10 DEATHS ! 8U8IN. Calif, iGig. 34 Loy ; Teung. CbbMM. captured at Orau — vaUer yMterday aad charged with tbe murder ot- U OrlentaU. was bound orer to tb* wpartor court for trial by JUitle* of Pmoa J. M. May- wood b e * todmr. O tttat* deciand the Chtn#** had UtU* to My exerpt ioriwSr'B5-wi*»tfTSriaff-oppor- ~ tunlty to u n half a dOMO more of bla cuuutijiawi. B* rrmaWld defi- ant ai^ ta tbe lae* of teatteoBT that he bad slain 10 pezaooa and wouaded am ral 9tban readOy wtoHtart bU ae«L E ONLY ASSOCIATED , . TWIN FALLS, IDA! SIllllTiJOyRNElfTO : ,FOR WEEK-END REST j -T ..... ' ( Ctieering Crowds Block Pro- ! gress of Automobile Carry- | Ing Bourbon Noniinee Bound for Democratic Party Rally (By The Associated Presa) SEAGIRT, N. J» Aug. 34-Ohecred by crowds which at times blocked the progress, ot.hls automobile. Governor Smith passed today through an In- dustrial secUon of New Jersey ond came for a week-end stay aU Uils sea- shore community • where Wood- row WUson made his home durln* the presldenUal campaign of 1012. Tonight Oie DemocraUc presldenUal nominee was quarter^ with his fam- ily In a hotel at Spring lake, two t miles from Seagirt. Tomorrow he will attend a huge DemocraUc rally and review NoUonal Guard troops en- camped here, wher# the sUtc of New Jersey provides Its governor n. • summer home. I ___.. gpends Night in CoUiain ' After on overnight slay in New _ York, where he went after hla notltl- f. cation In Albany, and a momlng vUll 5 to DemocraUc campaign headquarters. ^ Governor SmlUi Invaded New Jcr- I My. But nol unUl he had visited Jg the municipal building to register; I fiO ho could cast a vote Sor him- j _ self on elecUon day. No sooner had his motor car, wlthjn top down, emerged from the New e Jersey end of the vehicular lunnrl ci ut>der the Hudson than the Democrat- ic standard bearer became the center ^ ; of an enthuslasUc demonstraUon. ,n As his automobile moved throush! e OOGDISCmsllOllllllN'S s BODYINUD CULVERT: ______* * , EUCHGRN.* Wta.. (/P)-A « : dog,' (tigging «t ii-blanJcet ctiP t, vert-near here tbday, led police to Uie u discover; of the Seconiposed body ot an unldentUled yobnt; woman ciclhed only in a sUk undergarment. Roy Brice, a patrolman, attracted by n the dog, found the bod>-, hidden by c< the blanket, firmly, wedged In a cul- cl vert under the road. ct A post mortem.revealej the victim ^ as a young woman. 16 to 24 years tr old. who died from a punctured lung f due to a blow that ahaltered four ribs.' The woman had ben dead *rom ^ six weeks 'to two month.i, physicians ” said. [ ----------------- EARM-BELIEE. / W&'PEM PAVlNd; ( COMTRftCT. GU4 t u e } OFFICE or- OFFlHM_ eCrCi H U N T E R , POTmO «UCT COWTUA,C\ CrOe^.TO u \ ©luLerer^ p»ppomTME«r] ^ \ ano roNA : > PRESS Ni^^SPAPEn ^ Q ,: SA TOJpArMORN Seismogralph Records , Violent , Earthquake I W A M ^ OTON.^AUg. M Iff— ~ yemty^TBpurtirtM ^^ r eorthquak; i^parenUy 6300 miles dls- I U nt Irom Washington was recorded- I at 5:02 p.m . Tb*'disturbance reached lU maximum ftitenalty between S:40 o’clock and 8:4» aM still was ac- I tive a t 7:30 o'clock.' The dlrecUon was *■ not determined. . '■ PLANE RETURNS TO PARIS LE BOUBOST, Fnnee. Satnr- y day morning. Ang. S3 (;P)—The * monopUne Fnutoe returned, to tb« flying, field, tb ^ i momlng . >ihortly_ . afler taking for a non-stop ^ flight to New Teck. EO EflD LfM LS S M SM m Y Si II < I- t Fumes Thin Ranks of 16 Bra- ‘ zillans Hiding in Hold-of t ![ American Ship; Two May Die f -------- I 5 T —BALTIMORE,.. Aug. ?5_tjn=aixteeu. _ ^ BrazUlans. stowaways m the hold- •>( ,[ the American steamship. Slecl In- . ventor, were trailed under batlcned „ ^ hotches in deadly fumes of hydrocy- ' '^T.anlc acid used to fumlBale the nlilp , ;‘‘!oi quaranMne hw* .toflsy,----- ---------- -J I Seven died, tWfr more-wera-ln-a-^jos- -j pltal tonight in serious condUlon, ond ^ seven others wwe. In custody of »n»- ♦ migration officials Investfgatlng the j, w effdVt to smuggle Uie mrn lo thli fl coiyitry. '* Two climbed a rope ilial somebody " •• hod lefl hanging from a venillatov. * I ond broke through the venUlator cov- * h! erlng to tumble on to the dcck. gIv- ” ~ : Inir quarantine auUiorlUes ihelr, firs'. kiwwJrdge ntfii iii Inc noi^. ‘ A third, overcome.' was wedged un- r conscious in tbe ventilator, and from \ Uie two who ewaped D. H. S. While I T and his aaslsUnU le ^ e d thal in aU there had been.';lB'>in the hold. Pra- tccted by-gas nuukC'(he quaranUne • force dug furlouiOy l|umigh the man- ganese ore cargo tow ing oat the oth. era while wlrelesa *#aig>onfd pulmo- . - ton and''other-•fi.<«mt.Jn specd9 f e launches to the ihlp r mUe off shore. ^ ^ Crew under SaspClon Convinced that the stowaways mual have hnd help from some member of V the ship's crew. Leon R. J'ouch, acting / commissioner of immlgtBtlon here, de- e - clared somebody must have done tv cowardly act lo leaving the men to t< ) (heir fate after dropping 'the rape n I through the ventilator.' Presh food J and water and th? presence of somu h r lumber where the stowaways had bur- ^ 1 rawed/lnto the cargohto make qtta.-- » iSSjE*". thwnaelvea. added to hla con- ^ (ConOflusd 'on Page Two) b EE^UDGING-ERQM^STJER f/ \ 0 ' HC t \ ^ iXCr. / / i. K im ■' J ^ —^Dpyrigbtk : IN TWIN FALLS COl «NG; AUGUST 25,1828. l i r a l T O ~ J i CM FTFR- VI8I1GJ8 STATES Republican Chieftain Receives Thundering Ovation by Big "Ci-owd in Capitol; May Re - turn to West to Campaign ~~ iBy Tlie Assocloted Prc.ns) WASHINGTON. Aug. 24 — Herbert Hoover returned to Washington to- night lo pitch his licadquarlcra tent on neutral grounds for the remain- der «f hts presidential campaign. The RcpubUcan chiefUln was greet- ed upon the compleUon of his trip by a group of party leaders In- cluding Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of the Republican national commll- tee, and was given a thundering ova- tion by a lorge crowd osscmbled ot the station. Hoover, after receiving Uie saluta- tions Iti scores of close friends and Republibn workers, paied 'for pic- tures and paiued through Uie crowd to an automobile walUng to whUk him lo hta home. __________ ^WsiUJfl_siates__________ Hi* arrlTol I n l^ h ln g to n ended a six a-eeka' absence from the clly which carriMt him Into 19 sUte*. Al- though his trip to the Pacific coaat W05 more of a private .nalure.. his >etbfn • Jourwy put the HepiibHciin back plalforlii' talks which ended only today as lie »’as-ne«rhiK-4he-end-or-' hLi lost lap. His laal Ulk was In the nature of a tt-amliig to Uie resldcnls of Penn- sylvania, a Republican stronghold, that the coming campaign was - to be g hard fought one and Uiat the tOontUiued on Page Two) BUBNINGliiTESSEL HESDSPDMND PDBT PAOO-PAdo.-Qtmoa. Aug. 34 (4^— RodU dlftm'M^-.Rcetved. her» Ute today, said t e Port Napier. SMQ- ton Brltlih steaaier;.was on fire 7S miles south of this port. WiUi the fire gaining, the Port Napier was proceeding 13 knots an hour toward Pago-Pago. which she expected to reach aboul 0 A. M. The Port Napier's cargo la said to be otto, paints, matches anti ce- ment. The United States naval station here prepared fo rccelve the vessel and lend aid. Tlie naval radio sUtlon kept In continuous- communication with Uie biiralng.,steamer. RFORMANCES__^ -- -T ' VMW''. £t:> ' - ...... I - I m . by tbt Itav York TMboa^ Xas. ( o u n ty T " ■■■ !8. l3Person{ hfepEE^h ^^jSubway T vesi . ----------- gjg'Rapid Transit Express Into Concrete Partit , Under Ground; All Ei hattan Rush to Scene; h-rt ' (Br Th. A> to- MEW YOEK, (Saiorday aoi «nt local tracks of the'Interborougl ‘In- sido subway-was;rosunied at hours aft^r^ho crash which oi trip and injured Tol others. >Ian NEW YOEK, Anff. 2'i— Thi "‘t- 101 iijurod lato today when ’''qi Interborous^ Bapid Transit cx; ^leRiWORKMEni RESTDRIi SERIE 1 a . >■ AN Acetylene Torcties Cut wa\ iS Throuoh'Steel M ass; Oily I Dust In-A ir; Heat -Intense •lly" - ■■■• . '_______________ NEW YOBK. Aug. 34 While of 900 grim and perspiring workmen des- [in. peratcly cul away wllh acelyleno Did, torches at the big steel expreas cars • lo wrecked in the subway crash In Times the Square, traffic In New York's biui- ~ lesl subway was completely tied up ----- plrtuaUy all nlghl. . , At B o'clock, nearly threo hours afler the crash, pollcc estimated that L ll would Uke al least five hour* more to clear the tracks. IT To get the wreckage out. work- l men had Uterally to cut the can to plMcs wlUi Uw ,torch«i and t)u*b '' the pl«cea.aut'<pp bind .can., - . Abaut.MO:;mvl»m»l. tba.M uU ^ 'Mte dRd'of i BIIWiUB OO- a te d ' by'TWegtrk' searchUghti. ahd 78 iparki-from the koetylene torcbea Uy the wrecks of one and posaibly two ort cart, twuted, Jaggtd manea. of -ste«l an and broken glasa and blood-stained Jhe matting covering tbe seat*. Hero and Uiere a gay-cblored aidvertislng aid poster came ^nder the moving whlU> ce- lights—the smUe of a man on a collar ad. a red-cheeked baby eating ton breakfast food. BlU of clothUig lay isei aboul and careifully folded on one . of Uie scaU lay a newspaper sports In extra. Uie Workmen Uninformed Nobody, least of all the men work- Ing down In that gliasUy cave, ap- t r parently had any very cleor Idea as I to what actually hod happened.......... _ Power was tumed_ off^ and Uie __ trocks were rov'er^ with' wlro f ^ - iitue Eound wve the hiss ano duH — of-the-toroh—■eating.lnto tho-staol. Nobody Kald"much.--Whcn- anybody did speak, voices sounded htisky and awed. Occasionally came a muffled •*g»ng*'ay“ o^a doten men come plod- (ContlnuM on Pago Two) - Oil Train-D erails in -------- M innesota; Firem en Fight Stubborn Blaze OREEV VALLEV. Minn.. Aur. Zt (/p)—Flr<nun of Green Valley and Manhall Uto today were baUUng the fUmc:' from appnislmately ISO.OOO gal- loaa «r ca*oUne and oil which became tgnlird when 2« earn on » north- bcnnd Grral Northem train wreckrd at Ute edce of this village, Stvenlefn oU can were Ineladed In the train. Immediately after the de. raUmenl one of the cll ears barU In- to ftamn and the olhem foUowed In qnick neeewdon. EXPLOSION TAKES UVES OF TWO WISCONSIN UEN ASHLAND. WLi_ Aug. 34 W>>-. Tnv vorknien were kUled in an expla'lon in the punching house of Uic DuPont company powder plant at Dark-vlale. 10 mllea from here today. Tlie dead are:- Conrad Hollman. 43. and Al- vin Bestrom. 38. bblh of Wash* bum. Wisconsin. _ _The .caiise-.of the .cxploaJon-l*— - - - undetermined. ______ DERN ONLY DEMOCRATIC i ASPIRANT FOR GOVERNOR no conieit^taT^experted^ln*the''niee ' for' the guberaatorUl nomhaao n fca* f^hlcb Oeorge R, X>em. incumbent. DOW U unoccupied, a lively contest is in prospect for tbe nomination for UnUed SUtea anator at tbe Demo, cratic sute nooiTtattng eonvention beta tomonow. Unltad SUtc* sena- Ig -w n m n ' H.' King te-op^awtf-far- lenomtoatton by Wmsaa R. WaUaee, SaU Uk* attaratr. CaodMam ako wQl be named tor m enttrr ot atota. mUonter ttaeral. trataonr. JM ttar.MidMipcrtntmdipt i ; ot pabUa tortneoen. Ill® ■M... pRrcE^~GEa^Tsr^ IS Dead, 101 rrain Crash ;ss Jum ps Track; Smashes tition in Tunnel 200 Feet Emergency Units of M an- le ; T h o u sa n d s on 'VVay H ome Associated rre«.| morning) Aug. 25— Tra/fic on tho lugh Rapid Transit compnny'a'Wost at 1:10 o'clock this morning c!g;bt 1 oarly last night killed 13 persona Thirteen persons Were killed and eu tho eighth car in a southbound— express train jumped the track ns •it was loftWng tUe Times [ Square station andcrashjod in^ - to a concretc partition, in ^ho__ tunnel. The IdenUfled dead Included: p r Vlnccnt MvtiKua. 31, Clifton, New lir Jersey. George Frye. 35. chauffeur, Rocle- ----- vllfc CcnlcfrNW Yoric:----------------------- Irvin RablnowlU. 3S, Brooklyn, vav mcdlcal student, who died in Belle- vue hosplUl afler both legs had been QilV ampuUted. Tho accident happened . Bhort=___ nco ly-afU r -6 -o'clock at 'tho'pe®!; __ of the evening rush hour, at- tho _____ mnul ■rnngfsCed. sUOOn lu 'hlle New York's subwoy s^tcnir Tho thou- dea. tands of homeward-bound worker* on Icno Uie station plaUorms were thrown . cars into an uproor and traffic the en- ines tiro length of the West Side subway l»ui- lliie vrns brought to a slandsUU. up All available police nnd fire de- . partment emergency unlU uxro caU- oah. cd oul anti amouiances ironf Svery ■ that hosplUl In Manhattan rushed doeton :iorc to the scene and carried the injured to hosplt^ Taxicabs.and prlvato. ark- automobliM also were pressed into . » to service to-remove the Injured aa^fuit ' they were brought up by'TfeacUg-fr i .woikenz. ^ - ^?>’ing' ottV oftbe^natioiPpMaed’ateiott*^^ “ S' three-quarteft beyend a rirltcb In tW .7 .Jl? mate of trtcks 80P feet-below.-tho.y passenger pldUorm. II appaar^ tbat' : U*” tho first piUr of trucks of the eighth' car' in the string passed the awitch ‘ mlely. Reason Unknown J. “ Then, for wliat reason nc* one would even' venture to guess, the rear truclw spUt lhe switch, left tbe express Uaeka one ond hcodcd doa-n a parallel track,: uaed by local trains. ' - The eighth car. crowdcd wlUi home- gocrs, and carrying at least 80 per- irk- sons, buckled .In half like a bent pin; *P* hurtled through the car. and was . ^ cut IcngUiwlse by the cement woU ........and steel atanchions- that-acporata— -y'e_the_two_trac_ks,_ One halt hurUed ’«1- down the rails at Icasl 300/e e t before 'wag^rott'piing~lntQ fl~ncgp-'uf tom'Bte*!— ^Continued on Two> riO M IEGlTORNS-^" -4TTEilON-TO:PEIlGE= 1 sandpoint Veterans’ Convent- ion Passes Resolution Oppos- J5' Ing Bigger and Better War ‘m e _»»_ SANDPOINT. Idaho. Aug. 24 Wi— i, ReporU of committees, resolution* In for preparedness and peace instead de. of bigger and belter battles, and a tn- 'big porade" of peace instead of war, in occupied the attention of Idaho's u-ar veterans today at tho tenth an - nual convenUon of the sUte depart- ment of the American Legion. Norman W. Engle, SeatUe. secrc- i:N tary of the rehnbUlUUon committee, discussed iU work, recommending among other things, longer coU in n Uie veterans' hospitals for aecommo- e daUon of disabled soldiers who are ' r unusuaOy talL n General Paul Weyrach, Spokane, who ccnlmanried the 14lh Pleld AT- tiilery, commended the bravery of Ida- ho mm who served under him In France. Colonel Clyde Chafftas. Coeor *•— d'Alener-ahowed-that—in - , veterans— ------ T^pwwwUtlnn »t th» eontcnUon. 1 Favor PrrpairdM*. past Commander Oscar W. Wettb- . Jn xgint. Boise, chairman of tb* ronla-,’';- uons commute*, presented ra tfo tk n t / . Uie concerning aQ acUvities in' whlcb or- • > ace ganited' Leglonnalrei 'w m intciiU*3.s, fw - iBcludmg adequate mmtatr.lpR9*nd-:r. ^ at. M T''tniaffer ot tM e"ttf7tfiep«tr^ is acQr occupied by ib* Tetanos^ !»*•> ': for piul at Boise iron tte war u»- ment to tbe United ion boivaq; c«atlnttattaa-aC utiusuif y - fare conmtylna ot « e ,. leglslatfflr.'’ <Ppntntniin t ’b < ^ ri W tor' of a coflwuanft «(:-XdatiB,»^^SSBB ral. aat MOntaoB t e l a e S S ^ e iS H B H IBS >ttaM iiBtkeU p<ri£ - ea -ot dlMbl«t>.

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  • s i . .

    VOL. 11. NO: 12b. ^

    im is pyRPORTED

    tlER SK iyB IR a d io E x p e r t s S k e p t ic a l R e

    g a r d in g S o u r c e o f M e s s a g e s ;

    R e la t iv e s a n d F r ie n d s o f T w o

    S w e d e n - B o u n d A irm e n H o p e

    i ; (By The Aasoclftt«d Presa)WASmNOTON. Aujr. 24-T lic

    • N coast gudrd cuW*r, Maclon. ra d ioed ' hcadquArtera here la(e to>- n i^h t tha t she h ad abandoned Uie search fo r the missing plane. Greater RocUord. because of lock of definite Information tha t Uic the plane had been seen In the w aters near Piskemes. Greenland.

    Tfto message from the Marion’s commander. Lieutenant Commande r E. K. Smith read:

    _ _ "Discontinued search for Has- — ielHnvvlow of unawthentlc reports

    o r-.h l» being sigh ted -near Fls- k c iT ^ ^ Greenland."

    CmCAOO, Aug. 24—Allhough ama-----------t«ur-radlo-0Derat0rg_ in Chicago. To- _

    ledo and Brpoklyn received messages > last nigh t purporting to come from

    th e missing' Rockford-to-Btockholm filers, radio experts tonight were , franU y skeptical tha t the messages I came from Bert Hassell and Parker

    t l ^ * M d friends of thc*~«lers In Rock* ford, Illinois, beUei-ect tho messoges genuine and th a t they gave added evl- dence th a t the aviators who left Rockford eight days ago. are safe. .

    T he messases picked up last night ; and signed -Rockford fllera" said Ihc ° plane. G reater Rockford, woo down on a small island about SO miles o(( ~

    ______ the coast of Newfoundland, yidlng 1

    Ing th a t The Associated Press and ^ th e filers* families be notified.

    I McMsgQ Wa* Bent n/ W hile there was ■ np doubt th a t tl . . such a message w as’ sent. • skeptics *;

    pointed to m any reasons for doubt- » Ing lu authenticity, i t wa« on a « different wave band th an th a l oailgned • th a Jp teat«r R ockfor^ th e m w age c

    • ^ v ts 'm a a a a tte d u ' i t h r aa .akpert, • while Hassell and Crama'.>.«i« inex> v perienced senders and th e polaC where tl th e messages said they were down was n hundrds of miles from the two villages In southwestern Greenland over whleh villagers said the plane passed Sunday momlng headed east. .

    IIe*TT Penalty “A heavy penalty Is provided for an ®

    operator attem pting to perpetrate such a hoax but radio experts said it would B b almost impossible to detect such a tf person if th e messages are fictitious. S To trace him. It was pointed out w many“ 'dlrectlon detectors' would have to be employed and there are 20.000 “ atatl6ns_ln“ lh e counUy, ' ^

    / Last night's "messages said the —PlenlpoUntlar- ^ les represenUng IS naUona were gath- ^ erlng here lonlght to enter a written ” undertaking on behalf of their gov- * em m ent th a t as among Uiemselvei, they will tenouoce »-»r as an Instru- “ m ent of national policy. When this fomuUity is completed ttie pact will ^ be open for th e adherents of 47 o th- F er natlbns. *

    T he signing by the original IS will bring together the greatest diplomatic gathering in Paris since the consum- maUon of th e peacc treaty of 1919.- AU the Paris newspaper*' bring oul the anology "betwen tb e arrlra ls of "two great American dUsens. WUson and KeUogg. bent on the mission of establishing peace on earth .-

    AeU ot C e«rteir As th e sUtesmen are here to sign

    a pact tb a t has already been nefo- tiax ed rth e lr n je e U n g t 'a o d -c e n m » « -

    ----------tioas-w lll-basiora-aots'of-oourteq^aod —of dlpIomaticaUy takJog one anoth- r's measure, th an anything else.

    Secretary KeUocg and Poreign Min- p Uter Briand of Prance met for the first time today. _ I t was U r. ICeUogg^ first offidkl duty to eaU a t tbe Ptcach , fo re ig n 'o f f ltt and he ta iu d tber* with M. Briand for thre*-«piazt«n af _ an hour. Myron T. Berriek, United SUtea am basndor, a sd George A. ” Gordco. f in t secretary of th e United ^ s u t e s embassy, aceooipanled tbe ^

    of tbe ir departOMnl. tri

    —no offldaL p la n e n tbe p regrua of tu tbe interpatttm entary onion, b a t botb bb

    - f l n« t« n U y and today I t beld tb e a t- an 1 tenUes) ct th e more th an M taw- be

    t ta > a « trom t l eoantrtei wbo are a t- m (OoBtmwd on P m a t i 5 d f

    THE

    i] T W IF IR S T D E T A C H M E N T O F (

    A N T A R C T IC fiX P L O R E R S i I READY F O R LO N G T R IP

    • • mandcr Richard E. Byrt.. Three years of planning prepa- mion-s for his adventure to -ih e

    ;frlgld Antarctic, the vast, Inhospitable ' South polar continent, come virtualy to an end a t noon

    e* when tho little vessel. City o l ( New York, saUs out of New York

    S , harbor bearing supplies and tba f in t detachment of the men wbo

    /O are to make the boat their home f ^ the next two years. ‘ '

    36 The craft's desllnallon wUl be Dunedin. New Zealand, 9300 mUes

    . away. .T lie re she., will be. Joined., by the freighter. Chelsea, and the whaler. Larsen, which arc t6 convey the real of the personnel and ^ equipment from the United fiU tcs ^ to the land "down tmder." T he g Chelsea sails September l.-whUe ® the Larsen heads south about th e ° middle of next month.

    Commander Byrd,' who plana * \ to board the Larsen In San Pedro. [ California, Gclober IS, made his final Inspecnon > of the CiCy of New York -late today. ”

    ------------------------- II

    O E i E R H O T E L 'F IR E i

    m . / ' v

    I — “E a r ly , M o rn in g B la z e C a tc t ie s “

    - ‘^ 6 9 - P e r s o n s - i n - R o o m s ; $ 1 0 J

    ;• 0 0 0 L o s s ; G irl S a v e s D o g ;I- -----

    DENVER. AugV 24 match j.» tossed Into d pile of rubbish and *; „ baled paper was believed to have ,- started a fire which trapped scoresrr of BuesLi on the upper floors of :he “ ' flve-stpry Auditorium hotel and did . ; Idnmngp ftttmated .a t llO.OOO here tp . tl

    T lie early morning blaze caught f] many of Uie 309̂ .patrons registered'lit I

    t the hotel In tb t t r rooms asleep. Tlw, " a smoke.bUlowed. up a freight elevator

    shaft and sooiji fUjed .the upper hnll- a ways. 8prea4iX)g panlo ' among Uio - d awakening ^ e i ta ; As the smcAe bere camc more Odense and cries o l *'flre'* t, eebped tbrougb .tbe tmaoipv m e n and [. wcmen appeared a t the w i n d ^ of ° « their rooms' clad In p a ja m u and k l- ^ a monos.

    Fire U d d m M r t oiFire com pan la pUcM ladders lo

    windows in Uie various floors and men and women gue«U came swarming it:

    ^ down. v<U Lieutenant A. E. OuffieJd of an en- d g ln e ' company was Uijured and wtui a U ken to a hospital wllh Albert E. ^ I. Snyder. Stroudsburg. Pennsylvania, v t who had been overcome by th e smok?. „ e While the ladder men were rescu- *{.0 ing guesU from the outside W. E. '

    Pierson, Sl-year-old elevator pllo*..c stayed on the Job. rescuing loads ct =

    panlcky-m en-and women. j -3 "MU ̂ Marlon jC nrn ah iu i,_ Ito lly w ^ . |_• who was in the dining room' «U rig' |- breakfaa«T-thouHht-o(-Jtu tf .-h « r two -

    tn a room on the ftflh floor. Mias Carfiahan fought her way through smoke fumes up five fllghU of sUtrv

    - to reach the dog. Firemen rescued1 bolh.

    • Crossing Crash EndsLives of Three Iowa

    ) Persons; Two Injured1 FOBT UAOISON. Iowa. Aog. U {/?)

    —'Three petMBs were fciUed and two t e lh u * seriously i n jw ^ wbca their

    automobUe was s trad T b y a gaMllne car on the Barlington raUroad a t Vlele. near hete teday. . v

    The dead, all of Toti BCadbon, are:, Mr. and M n . GlfS Edlen and their

    daofhter. ZoU Mae. tlx.Mra. Clyde W. BJoet. FoH Madison.

    ' aad ber JS-jcair-eld daogbtcr. Dor- I o(hy. were Mrionsly Injored.

    ! F L IE R B U R N S TO D EA TH I IN C R A S H IN N E B R A SK A

    r NEBRASKA CITV. Aug. 24Elmer Fahrlander. 30. was bum -

    ( ed to death and Raymond Pahr- r lander. 23. his brother, was se- I rlously injured when Ihelr air- : pi«wo crashed Into a tree and

    burst into flamea near here today.

    I Raymond was able to extricate ■ himseU but couJd not rescue his ’ “ brother. -T ? » -p U n e -w a » -o » tie d —I —tnr—Raymond -who recently re

    ceived a pUot's Ucense.

    ; C A L IF O R N IA C H IN A M A N TO ; A N S W E R F O R 1 0 D E A T H S

    ! 8U8IN. C alif, iGig. 34 Loy ; Teung. CbbMM. captured a t O ra u —

    vaUer yMterday aad charged with tb e m urder ot- U OrlentaU. was bound o rer to tb* w partor court for tria l by JUitle* of Pmoa J . M. Maywood b e * todmr. O ttta t* deciand the Chtn#** h ad UtU* to My exerpt io r iw S r 'B 5 -w i* » tfT S r ia f f -o p p o r - ~ tunlty to u n h a lf a dOMO more of bla cuu u tijiawi. B* rrm aW ld defia n t a i ^ ta tb e lae* of teatteoBT th a t he b ad sla in 10 pezaooa and wouaded a m r a l 9 tb a n readOy wtoHtart bU ae«L

    E ONLY ASSOCIATED ,

    . TWIN FALLS, IDA!

    SIllllTiJOyRNElfTO :

    ,FOR WEEK-END REST j• - T ..... ' (

    C tie e r in g C r o w d s B lo c k P r o - !

    g r e s s o f A u to m o b ile C a r r y - |

    In g B o u rb o n N o n iin e e B o u n d

    f o r D e m o c r a t ic P a r t y R a lly

    (By The Associated Presa) SEAGIRT, N. J» Aug. 34-Ohecred

    by crowds which a t times blocked the progress, o t .h ls automobile. Governor Sm ith passed today through an Industrial secUon of New Jersey ond came for a week-end stay aU Uils seashore community • where Woodrow WUson made his home durln* th e presldenUal campaign of 1012.

    Tonight Oie DemocraUc presldenUal nominee was q u a r te r^ w ith h is fam ily In a hotel a t Spring lake, two t miles from Seagirt. Tomorrow he will attend a huge DemocraUc rally and review NoUonal Guard troops encamped here, wher# the sU tc of New Jersey provides Its governor n.

    • summer home.I ___.. gpends N ight in CoUiain' After on overnight slay in New _

    York, where he went after hla notltl- f. cation In Albany, and a momlng vUll

    5 to DemocraUc campaign headquarters. ^ Governor SmlUi Invaded New Jcr-

    I My. But nol unUl he had visited Jg the municipal building to register;IfiO ho could cast a vote Sor him - j _ self on elecUon day.No sooner had his motor car, w lth jn top down, emerged from th e New e Jersey end of the vehicular lunnrl ci ut>der the Hudson than the Democratic standard bearer became the center ^

    ; of a n enthuslasUc demonstraUon. ,n As his automobile moved th ro u sh ! e

    OOGDISCmsllOllllllN'S s BODY IN UD CULVERT:

    ______— * *, EUCHGRN.* Wta.. (/P )-A «: dog,' (tigging « t ii-blanJcet ctiP t,

    vert-near here tbday, led police to Uie u discover; of the Seconiposed body ot an unldentUled yobnt; woman ciclhed only in a sUk undergarment.

    Roy Brice, a patrolman, attracted by n the dog, found the bod>-, hidden by c< the blanket, firmly, wedged In a cul- cl vert under the road. ct

    A post m ortem .revealej the victim ^ as a young woman. 16 to 24 years tr old. who died from a punctured lung f due to a blow th a t ahaltered four rib s.' The woman had ben dead *rom ^ six weeks 'to two month.i, physicians ” said.

    [ ----------------- E A R M -B E L IE E .

    / W & 'P E M P A V l N d ;( COMTRftCT. GU4 t u e } OFFICE or- OFFlHM_

    eCrCi H U N T E R , P O T m O «U C T C O W T U A ,C \ C r O e ^ .T O

    u \ © l u L e r e r ^

    p » p p o m T M E « r ] ^ \ a n o roNA

    :

    > PRESS Ni^^SPAPEn

    ^ Q , : S A T O J p A r M O R N

    Seismogralph Records , Violent , Earthquake I

    W A M ^ OTON.^AUg. M I f f —

    ~ yem ty^TBpurtirtM ^ ^ ■r eorthquak; i^parenUy 6300 miles dls- I U n t Irom Washington was recorded-I a t 5:02 p .m . Tb*'disturbance reached

    lU maximum ftitenalty between S:40 o’clock and 8:4» aM still was ac-

    I tive a t 7:30 o'clock.' The dlrecUon was *■ not determined. .'■ P L A N E R E T U R N S T O P A R IS

    LE BOUBOST, Fnnee. Satnr- y day morning. Ang. S3 (;P)—The * monopUne Fnutoe returned, to tb«

    flying, field , t b ^ i momlng . >ihortly_ . a fle r taking for a non-stop

    ^ flight to New Teck.

    E O E f l D L f M L S

    S M S M m Y S iII < I- — t

    F u m e s T h in R a n k s o f 1 6 B r a - ‘

    z i l l a n s H id in g in H o l d - o f t

    ![ A m e r ic a n S h ip ; T w o M ay D ie f

    -------- I5T —BALTIMORE,.. Aug. ?5_tjn=aixteeu. _ ^ BrazUlans. stowaways m the hold- •>(,[ the American steamship. Slecl In- . ventor, were t r a i le d under batlcned „ ^ hotches in deadly fumes of hydrocy- ' '^T.anlc acid used to fumlBale the nlilp ,;‘‘ !oi quaranMne hw * .toflsy,----- -----------J

    I Seven died, tWfr more-wera-ln-a-^jos- -j pltal tonight in serious condUlon, ond ̂seven others wwe. In custody of »n»- ♦ migration officials Investfgatlng the j,

    w effdVt to smuggle Uie mrn lo th li fl coiyitry.'* Two climbed a rope ilial somebody " •• hod lefl hanging from a venillatov. *

    I ond broke through the venUlator cov- * h! erlng to tumble on to the dcck. gIv- ” ~ : Inir quarantine auUiorlUes ihelr, firs'.

    kiwwJrdge ntfii iii Inc noi^. ‘A third, overcome.' was wedged un- r conscious in tbe ventilator, and from \ Uie two who ewaped D. H. S. While I

    T and his aaslsUnU l e ^ e d th a l in aU there had been.';lB'>in the hold. Pra- tccted by-gas nuukC '(he quaranUne • force dug furlouiOy l|u m ig h th e m anganese ore cargo to w in g oa t the o th . era while wlrelesa *#aig>onfd pulmo- .

    - to n a n d ''o th e r - • f i .< « m t.J n specd9 f e launches to the ih lp r mUe off shore. ̂^ Crew u n d e r SaspClon „

    Convinced th a t the stowaways mual have hnd help from some member of

    V the ship's crew. Leon R. J'ouch, acting / commissioner of immlgtBtlon here, de- e- clared somebody m ust have done tv

    cowardly ac t lo leaving the men to t<) (heir fate after dropping 'the rape n I through the ventila to r.' Presh food J and water and th ? presence of somu h r lumber where the stowaways had bur- ^ 1 raw ed/lnto the cargohto make qtta.-- » iSSjE*". thwnaelvea. added to hla con- ^

    (ConOflusd 'on Page Two) b

    E E ^ U D G I N G - E R Q M ^ S T J E R

    f / \ •

    0 'H C t \

    ^iX Cr. / / i .

    K i m

    ■ ' J ^

    —̂ Dpyrigbtk

    : IN TWIN FALLS COl

    «NG; AUGUST 25,1828.

    l i r a l T O ~

    J i CM FT F R -

    ■ V I 8 I 1 G J 8 S T A TES

    R ep u b lic a n C h ie f ta in R e c e iv e s

    T h u n d e rin g O v a t io n by Big

    "C i-ow d in C a p i to l ; M a y R e

    tu r n to W e s t t o C a m p a ig n

    ~ ~ iBy Tlie Assocloted Prc.ns) WASHINGTON. Aug. 24 — Herbert

    Hoover returned to W ashington ton ight lo pitch his licadquarlcra ten t on neutral grounds for the remainder « f hts presidential campaign.

    The RcpubUcan chiefUln was greeted upon the compleUon of his trip by a group of party leaders Including Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of the Republican national commlltee, and was given a thundering ovation by a lorge crowd osscmbled ot the station.

    Hoover, after receiving Uie salutations Iti scores of close friends and R epublibn workers, paied 'fo r pictures and paiued through Uie crowd to an automobile walUng to whUk him lo hta home.__________ ^W siUJfl_siates__________

    Hi* arrlTol I n l ^ h l n g t o n ended a six a-eeka' absence from the clly which carriMt him Into 19 sUte*. Al- though his trip to the Pacific coaat W05 more of a private .nalure.. h is >etbfn • Jourw y put the HepiibHciin

    back plalforlii' talks which ended only today as lie »’as-ne«rhiK-4he-end-or-' hLi lost lap.

    His laal Ulk was In the nature of a tt-amliig to Uie resldcnls of Pennsylvania, a Republican stronghold, th a t the coming campaign was - to be g hard fought one and Uiat the

    tOontUiued on Page Two) —

    BUBNINGliiTESSEL HESDSPDMND PDBTPAOO-PAdo.-Qtmoa. Aug. 34 (4^—

    RodU d lf tm 'M ^ -.R c e tv e d . her» Ute today, said t e Port Napier. SMQ- ton Brltlih steaaier;.was on fire 7S miles south of th is port.

    WiUi the fire gaining, the Port Napier was proceeding 13 knots an hour toward Pago-Pago. which she expected to reach aboul 0 A. M.

    The Port Napier's cargo la said to be otto, paints, matches anti cement.

    The United States naval station here prepared fo rccelve the vessel and lend aid.

    Tlie naval radio sU tlon kept In continuous- communication with Uie biiralng.,steamer.

    R F O R M A N C E S _ _ ^

    - -

    -T 'V M W ''.

    £t:> '

    - ...... I - Im . by tb t I tav York TM boa^ Xas. (

    o u n t y T " ■■■

    !8 .

    l 3 P e r s o n {h f e p E E ^ h^ ^ jS u b w a y Tv e s i . -----------g j g ' R a p i d T r a n s i t E x p r e s s

    I n t o C o n c r e t e P a r t i t

    , U n d e r G r o u n d ; A l l E i

    h a t t a n R u s h t o S c e n e ;

    h-rt ' (Br T h . A>to- M E W Y O E K , ( S a i o r d a y a o i

    « n t lo c a l t r a c k s o f t h e 'I n t e r b o r o u g l ‘In- s id o s u b w a y - w a s ; r o s u n ie d a t

    h o u r s a f t ^ r ^ h o c r a s h w h ic h oi trip a n d in ju r e d T o l o th e r s .

    >Ian N E W Y O E K , A nff. 2 ' i — T h i " ‘t- 1 0 1 i i j u r o d la to to d a y w h e n ’''q i I n t e r b o r o u s ^ B a p id T r a n s i t cx;

    ^leRiWORKMEni

    RESTDRIi SERIE1 a . >■

    AN A c e ty le n e T o r c t ie s C u t w a \

    i S T h r o u o h 'S t e e l M a s s ; Oily

    I D u s t In - A i r ; H e a t - In te n s e• l l y " ■ - ■■■• . '_______________

    NEW YOBK. Aug. 34 While of 900 grim and perspiring workmen des-

    [in. peratcly cul away wllh acelyleno Did, torches a t the big steel expreas cars • lo wrecked in the subway crash In Times the Square, traffic In New York's biui- ~ lesl subway was completely tied up-----plrtuaU y all nlghl. ., At B o'clock, nearly threo hours

    afler the crash, pollcc estimated tha t L ll would Uke a l least five hour* more

    to clear the tracks.I T To get the wreckage out. work- l men had Uterally to cu t th e c a n to

    plMcs wlUi Uw ,torch«i and t)u*b ' ' the pl«cea.aut'em. incumbent. DOW U unoccupied, a lively contest is in prospect for tb e nomination for UnUed SUtea a n a to r a t tb e Demo, cratic su te nooiTtattng eonvention beta tomo n ow. Unltad SUtc* sena- I g - w n m n ' H.' King te-o p ^ aw tf-far- lenomtoatton by W m saa R. WaUaee, SaU U k * a tta ra tr .

    CaodM am a k o wQl be nam ed to r m en ttrr ot atota. mUonter tta e ra l. tra ta o n r. J M t t a r . MidM ipcrtntmd ip t i

    ; ot pabUa to rtn eo en .

    I l l ®■M... p R r c E ^ ~ G E a ^ T s r ^

    IS D e a d , 1 0 1

    r r a i n C r a s h; s s J u m p s T r a c k ; S m a s h e s

    t i t i o n i n T u n n e l 200 F e e t E m e r g e n c y U n i t s o f M a n -

    l e ; T h o u s a n d s o n 'V V a y H o m e

    Associated rre« .|morning) Aug. 25— T ra /fic on th o lugh R apid T ra n s it com pnny 'a 'W ost a t 1 :1 0 o 'clock th is m orning c!g;bt 1 o arly la s t n igh t killed 13 persona

    T h irtee n persons Were killed a n d eu tho eighth ca r in a sou thbound— exp ress t ra in jum ped the t ra c k ns

    — • it w as loftWng tUe T im es

    [ S quare s ta tio n an d c rash jo d in^ -to a concretc p a r titio n , in ^ho__tunnel.

    The IdenUfled dead Included: p r Vlnccnt MvtiKua. 31, Clifton, New l i r Jersey.

    George Frye. 35. chauffeur, Rocle-■----- vllfc C c n lc f rNW Yoric:-----------------------

    Irvin RablnowlU. 3S, Brooklyn, vav mcdlcal student, who died in Belle

    vue hosplUl afler both legs had been QilV ampuUted.

    Tho accident happened . Bhort=___n c o l y - a f U r - 6 -o'clock a t 'th o 'p e® !;__

    of the evening rush hour, at- tho_____ m nul ■ rnngfsCed. sUOOn lu'hlle New York's subwoy s ^ tc n i r Tho thou- dea. tands of homeward-bound worker* on Icno Uie station plaUorms were thrown . cars in to an uproor and traffic the en- ines tiro length of the West Side subway l»ui- lliie vrns brought to a slandsUU.

    up All available police nnd fire de- . partm ent emergency unlU uxro caU-

    oah. cd oul anti amouiances ironf Svery ■ tha t hosplUl In M anhattan rushed doeton :iorc to th e scene and carried th e injured

    to h o s p l t ^ T ax icabs.and prlvato. ark- automobliM also were pressed into .» to service to-remove the Injured aa^fu it '

    they were brought up by'TfeacUg-fr i .w o ikenz . ̂ -

    ^ ?> ’ ing' ottV o ftb e^n a tio iP p M aed ’ ateiott*^^ “ S' three-quarteft beyend a rirltcb In tW .7

    . J l? m ate of trtcks 80P fe e t-b e lo w .-th o .y passenger pldUorm. II a p p a a r^ t b a t ' :

    U*” tho first piUr of trucks of the eighth' car' in the string passed the awitch ‘ mlely.

    Reason Unknown J. “ Then, fo r wliat reason nc* one would

    even' venture to guess, the rear truclw spUt lhe switch, left tbe express Uaeka

    one ond hcodcd doa-n a parallel tra c k ,: uaed by local trains. ' -

    The eighth car. crowdcd wlUi home- gocrs, and carrying a t least 80 per-

    irk - sons, buckled .In half like a bent pin;*P* hurtled through the car. and was . ̂ cu t IcngUiwlse by the cement woU........and steel atanchions- th a t-acp o ra ta—-y'e_the_two_trac_ks,_ One ha lt hurUed ’«1- down the rails a t Icasl 300/ e e t before 'wag^rott'piing~lntQ fl~ncgp-'uf tom 'Bte*!—

    ^Continued on Two>

    r i O M I E G l T O R N S - ^ "

    - 4 T T E i l O N - T O : P E I l G E =1 —

    s a n d p o in t V e te r a n s ’ C o n v e n t-

    io n P a s s e s R e s o lu t io n O p p o s -

    J 5 ' In g B ig g e r a n d B e t t e r W a r‘me _ » » _

    SANDPOINT. Idaho. Aug. 24 Wi— i, ReporU of committees, resolution* •

    In for preparedness and peace instead de . of bigger and belter battles, and a tn - 'big porade" of peace instead of war, in occupied the attention of Idaho's

    u-ar veterans today a t tho tenth a n nual convenUon of the sU te department of the American Legion.

    Norman W. Engle, SeatUe. secrc- i:N tary of the rehnbUlUUon committee,

    discussed iU work, recommending among other things, longer coU in

    n Uie veterans' hospitals for aecommo- e daUon of disabled soldiers who are ' r unusuaOy talLn General Paul Weyrach, Spokane,

    who ccnlmanried the 14lh Pleld AT- tiilery, commended the bravery of Ida- • ho m m who served under him In France. Colonel Clyde Chafftas. Coeor

    *•— d'A lener-ahow ed-that—i n - , veterans—------ T^pwwwUtlnn » t th»

    eontcnUon.1 Favor P rrp a ird M * .

    p ast Commander Oscar W. W ettb- . J n xgint. Boise, chairman of tb* ro n la - ,’';-

    uons commute*, presented r a t f o tk n t / . Uie concerning aQ acUvities in ' whlcb o r - • > ace ganited' Leglonnalrei 'w m in tciiU *3.s, fw - iBcludmg adequate m m tatr.lpR 9*nd-:r. ^ a t . M T ''t n i a f f e r ot tM e " t t f 7 t f i e p « t r ^

    is acQr occupied by ib* Tetanos^ ! » * • > ': for p iu l a t Boise i r o n t t e w ar u»- m ent to tbe United ion boivaq; c«atlnttattaa-aC u tiu su if y - fare conm tylna o t

    « e , . leglslatfflr.'’

  • l i i i i i t i i DS “~ veit

    ~Miss :Hilclr“(r4ddle)—Sharii ̂, ■ Fails bj 34 Minutes to Set ™; New Record (or Hard Feat

    < _____ _ . • tu I

    • POVER, taigland. Aug. 21 - - li l t

    j ond Bf I jrr 'w x V o ^ ro T O » h ^ l(» r^ _

    ]lild& Sharp, called b r her in- Q tInwU* ‘’U ddJe" because of h f t boyl'h apiMarsncr, entered Ine w ater a t Cape Gri# Ne*. France. Dl a t 12:50 ;y -m . and came iv%hore hcn> a t p. m. after 15 hour. « m

    ' nnd 5 ralnuiCT in the water.Thus *hc m lued by « minulw sere

    h e r Koal of breaking thc rtconl ", »cl by Gertrude Ederle of, Uie p o ^

    UiiUed Stales. MiM Sharp wenl jcnw a fte r th a t rccord becau.e a Lon- don ncwKpaper ha* offered » pri*c

    ------- o f-jS O O O -tb -the-fln t-E nfllih -flri—to lower l l and »J>e w anted 'U ic «vcn money to aid her In cetUnic a farm In AUitnUla.

    At one iU ic thc 17.ycar-oId «*••Laddlo~ fecmcd to have a eood Amb chance to break the record. Butth e tide mrept her MVeral mllc5 « » o n t of her course.

    ------m koaeh tlrrd, nhe finished **P«‘rtro n r and after a fho rt rest wa» cannable to return to Coutocne on the ‘‘lUff which accumpanied her from P*®"'

    ________________ Mon.scrvli

    f ■ -■ ,1 . . I— FalU.

    i k e f ^ o t e l s £ ■conn

    ------------------------- able------- PE R IU N E -N — p — Stoulcrborough.■ M aroa, IU.; J. W. EUlott; Mary E.

    Van Dcuicn, Rupert; Mlss R. David- g son. S alt Lako City: MIm L. Davidson, o n

    , 8 o lt Loko City; J. Horace Sllcs, Pos- 37 ̂ j■ ndcna: C. L. Holden. Spoltane:, S. ber ' — B~ Mcyw.- B0 lMl MUB Oerald-BCOT.- Coch :— 8 t.~ ‘l/iu>5; L.- C.—Oar ri8.":0 ait—Lakfrrtlona

    City: Lon ' PoweU, Denver: • T, C. Mr — e m Ith r botir-B eachi-W r-D avter-Long- H d e

    Beach; M. L. House. Jerome; P. L. fo r I K ing and u ifc and children, Los ley Anaclea; K A. Sawyer.- Ooklond; ■»*ln ̂Blanche Brewer. Spokane; Emerron Sm ith. Pullman. ArU.; Mrs. H. D. Steiner. Boise; XV. P. Turner. Nom- pa; V. Klhuchl. Pocatello; Oeo., Hor- „

    - h . r , . .W ..I. ......... ...... .........._ . S S

    PARK—Mr. and M rs. R. B. Wheel- . cr. Berkley; Bernard Trauvelat, Par- " 'p "

    Is; L. Phllop Lemleux. Chlcaso: Mr. ^ ^ e . and Mrs. R. L. Stevens. Boise;- Mr. and Mrs. L. Harwood. Pocatello; Mr. «ho ' and Mrs. 8 . H. CUne, San Jose; m a„

    . B. M. Donaldson. BoUe; M. L. Crub- dav tree. Salt la k e City; Mr. and M ts. to be J . H. Rose. Idaho-PalU iLJ. (T.

    and M rs. C. L . i ' ^ f a 6hK Poftland; ' B. R. Hyde. SeitU e; M r ' and M n.P . A. BittffTO. Cblcago; C. Kmley. Ham lngton. Ind,; Mr. Mrs. W.B. Palmer. Sioux City; Mr. and.M rx.Oeo. B. Wray. Oakland; O. B. Benxcr.Boise; A. W. Bowman, San Joclnto. J , Nev.: w . R. McMullen. MonteUo; ®M r. and Mrs. 'H. L. McQufcnl; Jack tw, McQuanl; Howard W. Haight. Salt .w t". Lake Clly; Larrj' Hansen. S alt Lake s* co C ity; E. J*hllllps. Spokane; M. Stev- train; ena. Boise: Mr. and Mrs. T . E. W hit- vlstt

    • comb. Lo# Anseles:- E. Enitdahl and wii wife. Pocotello; Mrs, Neal M acKen- ver n

    — * lr.-p o ca tc lIo :-M rs.-j: T / -A nchrrrid keiw — Mlw - «ally Armstrong, Evanston .-in . van.

    „ _ , , -------- ----------- bers

    J . C. Kdwartls. s a l t iTkeT A. B. rrmci)olLi. Wj-o.; coruli Carl C. m il nnd family. Dutte; C. M, llna. Delscll. Honicr Dt*lic«. Cherokee. Ok- Charl Jahoma: C. H. OUletl. M. O. Dick- Son CRwn. Soil Lake; Cecelia McGrath, he » Pranccs Hansen. Boise: Mr. and Mrs. tn VI Lee. Duhl: H. c . DaUrd. SU>-er City: bama Ed DeWald. Nnmpa: E W. Church, to M Contact: .M. V. Maloney. Irene Ma- upon loney. OEdcn: Mr, and Mjs. D. E. Norman. L. W. Norman. Chowehllla, N T C al.: J. E. Roc;:wcU and party. BclJe- Thun vue.

    — -------------------- - • Prl'COOKED FOOD SALE 10. I

    a t American Dolrv Store. Saturday. A ugust 25. by Ute Bus)- De; class of Nei th c M. £ . Sunday sciMOl. Adv. you 1— ■ . —

    West Branch, Iowa, R Kindness of ^

    'titnd; — in en trcaso T F 'in an jr memories of the .--'‘Ju

    Hoover family. And new since Her- she b e rt Hoover, thclr most lUustitoui son ., L.ist«iti

    phecT on h e r llp« th a t her s o u j s h t i v o a U do a great work la the .world, pneur mkft U n . B k n C. M ather. Mra. -V i

    - M « tb e r ts SUU 0 m ttabcr. of th« Bukii■ ep rta ttla te Onaker roettm g of «tUsb e M

    . - m 8 m .'H g 8Ti g .‘y u ' 1 ' iw n a e d tm a - ' r t wi• a a d 'i

    ■ Bntst know m r m tm ory taUa **1%> m eeum O m ^r o l d th* ctataly Q u ik - KalOt ;..< r> ow n .vwbo h o i PUM4 hOT MT« n e tU

    r \ : t a i r i l t t b M rtbdsy.: "B at I n m cm b tr w d ee a i i S s S i . r ■ ■

    . • T W W F A U ^ D . A

    D E A D L Y G A S K l l l l B , ? g y E f) ■ ?fO W A W A Y S

    (Oohtlnuwt'ifrOT ona)victlon there was connivance from aotne of the craw, t i l of whom he or-■ d e rc d -h c ld -o n - th r^ t^ h i l i r -U ic - in - ~vetUgfttion was conduot«d. ~ o n e “of“ thm qiT}voTrTpol'C T-llttlc- — English: Prom h im . | t . p u t learned tho t tho men bonr^ed the ship .at RJo Janeiro., ‘ from : which port It sailed AuguiV 6. F % th ^ qucstlonlnif of the stowaways wM p«lponcd until tomorrow. ■ . I ' ;

    BUMPER INHEm m sDIXON. Aug% 34 (Speclii; to Ihe

    VeH’S)--Reports of good wheat yields :cntlnuc lans were made for an all day tc.i> ion a t the home of Mrs. Oochran, (ondny. The hostess was assisted In crvlng by Mlss Francis Call. Twin ■alls.At the all day meeting of the club

    jondO” a t thc home of Mrs. Ru.v lochran, 30 quarts of vegetables were anned. The girls spread a delecl- ble picnic lunch on the lawn a t 1 'clock. The leadera of the dub. Mr>. n next Monday afternoon. Auguct 7, Mlss Van Deusen and Mr. Brti* l l / j cr WlU meet wllh the glrU a t the W ' rochran-home- to give them Instnic- -lo n s-o n -th e ir work. ------------Mrs. J. R. Seeley and daughter, M ln

    tcle tt_Sceley_lcIt_M om liiy_m om lii£ .____ar S a lt Lake City where Mlss See- . ,>r wUl begin a four-year nur»:»’ LO raining ' course a t tho Latter Doy s t r l t o lnts' hospiui. Mrs. Seeley will re> and iBln for sevenU'weeks as the guest or

    Mrs. Oeorge Cope I tJw m e • again » « •f tc r a -vlalt with relatives a t h w o M Au»ie I n - Mtfgoufl. • ’ ,— :--------------------TO-JTMr. and- Mrs. j . R. Rlee are on ft the

    iclor trip to 'M o n ta n a where -they iwelvre th e guests of relatives of Mr. vlnctJce. . ,^ndMr. and Mrs. Nichols and family, a lte rho have resided a t the Charles Proj* Mrlan farm for several weeks, left Sun« ofa.v for Caldwell where they cxp^dt throi> help in the fruit harvest. > athei

    l i b o r e R S F iE T U R N SW a s h i n g t o n a f t e r - » « .

    V IS IT IN G 1 9 S T A T E S ' “$5i .. --------- .-2

    (Contto u ^ Prom Page One) Lond

    srty would need the baUoU of ail areast Its adherents. ‘ pcopi

    • B x p m ses. T hanks *nd |Thc nominee was greeted by a the 1

    ticering crowd In BalUmore where mie.e competed with the noise of passing snakt » ln s to express hla thanks for the Thistl and cheers. . strlcW ith thc candidate were Mra. Hoo- t i n t

    er_Bnd tljelr_aon. Allan; Oeorge.AU ing lerson. hU secreUry; WUUam Dono. tent,an. one of his advl.ior». four m em- leavliers of his office sU ff and more nlchlm n ^ a *̂ [ n«»^-«nap^rmi»n anir fhlngnotoKrapiicrs who hod accompanied He:im. on nis trip across tnc-country. tumeWhile his* plans for the rem ain- the i

    er of Uie campaign stUl are In- «lonccflnile. i t Is learned th a t he has T e«rnder-consideration a visit to. Texas. »lonc•here Thomas B. Love, fo rm er na- worlcional_com m U t«m an.--ls.- leadlng_a. jncn .loveoient for the . organlratlon nf a _ P•exas Dem ocrats to support th e Re- th c J ubUcan prcsldenUal ticket. If he "EDCS to Texas he probably wlU speak upont Dallas. Moreover the nomUuje Is capalansldcrliig a visit to North Caro- unexna. to speak ciUicr a t Raleigh or a qiharlotte. will 1Some advisers are suggesUng th a t will

    c extend hla souUiem tour., to u k e - I Virginia and Georgia. If no t Ala- »ma. e ither a t the time he goes> Memphis for his speech there or [>on some olher occasion.

    NEW BRON8 WICK raoordS ■ ttn r j hursday a t Ombancn'a.—AtfT.

    PrlTate K indergarten begins Sepl.). Inquire « 0 Sth ave. wesU Adv

    News W ant Aos m e n th e people ;u wUh to a ttract.

    R e m e m b e r s

    F H o o v e r ’ s M o t h e r

    olda Hoover a-ell. She And her-Bus; ind v e n achootoate< of m r ____

    • 'Ju » t-b c fo re -H n id a—Hoover—died. -------ie united happUy and aald *Tbe ord hos shown me In m y ' vision u t -hf wUJ care for m r boyi • «»d ley will gg a great work te the orld.' After t{i«t ahe . qoiet

    “Sh* couldn't ^ i d o ''iH y th ta i ui-wi»:3iQtL*HiS£S5».. W h»e mto- te itn* to » f a m i ly ^ p o « .I t e»u(b t cold -wBlte Maeum onu aad her ' SoiUt.~V e held a m enw ta l acrrto* for ukU alDce we fe lt she ha4 : rcaUy led te r aa. C a n ia n a 4 u S «C-Cl0w .n m n ' w ai4 Bt Of » a T » » c n r 3 i « a c ------->d' P4M u p to t ^ .......... . .WBI-T im * w # .m any wtiQ. w ptfm ber tU d a 'B o o m . Antf th e th ta f q u y c a n .m e e t Ttvitfbr ̂ w m tv w ;

    ' naoBer.** ,

    ) A I L Y N E W S g f e

    I

    ..... ^'''-■ 'IW

    DOVE, AET GOEBEL,-Harry Tucker a.------crowd-of-Newr--yorkent-at-CurilM -FI

    . .and Goebel drinking a toast to each

    V O M A E B A ^ m O ^

    iBy Tl»o 'AsJWWUU-d 'gyij LONDON.,. Aug. 34 — Mf*; DldnaTlckland.-prbmlifcnt W Id soclcty leader. l» back Ui ’her old lu n u again ' attending bridge ,par- es. teas and la te night dancing. 'A year ago , these Uilngs fe red her trip.I jnucn unit aliB 'SBiiBUt’*aeHtni>e' In' i n i ile heart .of .Africa. B u u ^ f te r a a tt«fclvemonth .in. the Jungle she>’ls con> i gneed tha t exploring Is a m an’s Job a fraId t h a t . pink teas are not so bad becaU r all. / fttri.Mm. Strickland, already < a . veteran -

    ^wo flther.'Alrlcan'expodltlons, oitt ;^ u g h ^ th e ^ B e lg h u ^ o n g ^ and QUi

    J?>00 m iles alone..: - ^•When'8he:ieft, she sold: - X“ 2 a h i tlr td of the social Ufe of ^ sndon and the- dlnncrs and dancet;- ^ le consU nt striving to wear pretUcr *' •eases than the other women. Some rople Uke It. but I prefer Uic forest Id great out-of-doors, the^camp fires, c ia^ le rotigh Ufe. and the swamps-W the He. where, there are colossal w ater takes, some of them 40 feel long."The great out-of-doora took Mr*. :rlckland at. her 'word. The .very r*t n igh t she pitched ten t.a lie r:lea» - ' ig Dakar a .d ry .to m a d o ^ re c k e d jjc c n t. blew her dinner. poU, pans away. . av lng-he r - l ^ i t c h ^ a j k n t ^ .

    Her mechanic look sick and re - nom imed to England, leavmg her and craU IC »urvcyor to complete the jcum ey vent one. Then the aurveyor died of Bteas >-er and Mrs. Strickland kept on Jouri one. passing through parts ol th e sUt< orld never before visited by whlU lionen or women. Finally she picked up ____

    FTgnch_mw>hiinlff, g hn f o fn^ t*« fle journey to the R ed 'Sea w ith hV . NI “Exploring is a man's job." she said lo 11 x n her return. “Few women arc craU kpable of blazing a trail through an supp nexplored land. I t U not so m ud i presl

    question of physical hardships aa In c III power. Above all thing* you need was 111 poa-er, the urge to get to tiie 36 e

    Herbert Hoovt

    VMS

    m 4 w ^ U r m . '

    r and th e tr BMnoptsne Yankee Doodle. 1 t-F k ldv w h w H h e r-w m p le te d -U te lr- tra i »c h . o ther wiUx ccitet shorUy, a fU r a tta l

    ^AFRICA, Im

    ether ald&*’Of the hill top. T ha t is te;, Fhere w cmah falls. And the aver-igpc m w b m ^ 'd o e s , not wnnt to bury .Into herself fOT.ia^yetr-without decent food | and th e* « « n racA ta or life.":, Mrs.--StHeklan4j?cxplnlncd tha t shO; , had iotUy one real ecare during h e r V , trip. “T h a t was when 1 pushed over, r - iw i H I « .iiioL io - .H ra e c ; J "» t t ^ l o n 'v h e n » I Unnicd some, food. “ t got w h a t . ! .• wanted, but I w a s | ^ sfraW to x e t^ c u t cf llie car oil n igh t j , >ecauM som e 'o f:;the natives seemed >

    .C O N V IC T S

    tem pt to ejeapiTTrom th e Nneva , O e rO B a l'f^ ra l pHron on the Isle

    :o l ,p li ic« iiR p o rt,b ro n ib tte P re a i- dent-M aehado tb d ay .b y .a deputy w «ntcn.;er the prison tUscloMd.

    .inN IS T E ns '. PROTESTNAMPA; ldaho,i'.Aug.. a4 (>P)—Dc- „,a

    J a ^ . . th a t • -OuiMli> Is the school inti l*yt.^ef morals ond religion." n ine jn ln ls te a of ihU < ity tcday mode eni }rot«st agolnst the plan to hove a Vampa rodeo caravan proced to 3o lse ifyt Sundoy lo lake part In the Un-on FacU lc athlellc meet beglnnUig on pegJia t day. tro

    ------------- - - ■■ tlal_N O M lN A X ED -FO a. CONGRESS ^

    iomlnated*^for congress a t thc Dcmn- ___

    renUon here tcalght. Tlie second con- J rreaslcnal du triei convention was ad- of 1 oum ed until immediately otter Uic slot lU tc democratic nomlnotlng conven- wit Jon here tomorrow. bot

    • nea------------ CAIX~TO~VOTER« -----------had

    NEW YORK. Aug. 34 (/P)-A call o liberal voters to bolt both Demo- :raUc m d KepubUean pnrtl-» nnd lUpport Nonnan Thomo.i. Socialist C jrcsldcntlal nominee. 01 the first stei> bct n creating a new ProjrcsMvc parly He) cos Issued tcday by a ccmmittee of ide: 16 educators. RoJ

    »ver Returns to Scenes oi

    f . -; '

    I.are seen anrrounded by a cheering am contlncBtal flight. Tncker (lefl; a lu lh g 'th e ir Eastern goaL *

    I I IN IS T E R S G A T H E R

    :-------- T O R E N O U N C E W A R S

    '(ConUnued From Page One)

    ending thc sessions. Virtually every pcakcr has discussed the treaty, no natter whnt his theme has been.Todny Mlrccn DJuvnra, Rumania,

    aid that the pact "can afford oiUy .'m oral and cUiical security." On be- lalf of thc Rumanian parliam ent and lecple he offered a C entral European greemcnt, along the Unea ot ttie~CD- , am o treaty as a means of Insuring ! airopean pettce. ^Shopurji Saklatvaln, Ihe B ritish Iu - g

    lan commuAlsu member of Uie House f f Commons, discussed occupation by r rocps of th e foreign territory and , aid tha t so long as such occupaUons < ndured. "all pacts are Ulusory.*’ Then i le added: , , • ,| “The ^ c U w 'p a c t ^ u great for- ] .■ard « t^ > •of'nhimeAiUrable moral 1 alu:.‘- R lohard Bortholdt, io rm er | lembcr of th e United BUtes house of - eprcsenutlvcs from Missouri, said tho 1 Ofit wat ' ‘pracUcaUy suspended In 1 Ir." and added;" I t will rem ain so untU some sys- ̂

    tm cf law -Is provided which wlU lake pcsslble judicial setUement of i item atlcnal disputes."Mr. Bartholdi urged th e union to «

    ndorse a modei arbltraUon treaty lentUlfd here tonight b;» L*iat of > Alph SummerhUl, 33. I'

    ................................. f• ' n

    if Boyhood. ;

    ^ ~ t

    i U S T '25-~ 1 9 2 8 -

    A P p E A t ^ 'P U f i P O R f p D . ,' ' T O C Q M E l'F R p iy i T W O :h:- - ^ . - • - F t l E H S C A IiS E -D O U B T .

    -•V y - (CoPUntii^er messages-and attem pt M> wive t)ie

    “ H ffdinJUDB«a«“ 6n n n i t t t i n , ' | t ’ WM

    par# g lued-to head-Rhones W n g ’ to : p ^ up 'm esuB ea from the Ioet;avia>

    ^ lo jIijliB iiiiflNEW VORK. AUit. 25 Bill-

    TUden .ea r ly today waa found guU- ty of vloIaUng the am aU ur player* writer rule of the Dnlted SU tes Lawp T ennb asso^U ons,

    The verdict, reached by the executive commltUe of the auoclatlon aft* er a session ofinearly-alx hours, car-

    . Vied w llh I t TUden’s Uideflntte -sus-. pension from competUloci as a n am ateur tennis player,-------

    The specific count on which the ac-— tion-w 4s~ ttkeir-w ar'T U den’i"W ltlnB

    of newspaper articles on the English tennis championships b i which he was a contestant.

    No definite period of IneUglbUlty was sUted.

    The by-laws of the association provide tha t any person who la declared

    . dlsquaUfled or suspended may be re instated by the ^xecuUve commlttce ot the association on evJden Dost tlemry^HeMt InCeaseOUy dust, stirred up by the crash,

    hung heavily in the air. The.’ heat;C was intense. ______ _________ The platform stretchftl out long

    and dim and em pty." Here and there, _ bMlde unllghted trains, small groups rv of uniformed trainm en gathered and j ' Ulked—In whispers.

    In all these whispered and m u u Usred conversations nobody could tell how many were dead or how many had been h u r t Some said 39. some

    f! said 10. some sald7 .':only a couple" had losi-lhcU- llv^_ U p jn the y e e t

    ^ Pcrty-flrst and Forty-second streeu and down a t Thirty-n in th street aU turned automobile traffic off Seventh avenue. Tho street was - fUled w ith

    K (Ire trucks and subway repair ap- V paratus. ,

    < As theatre time neared the usual crowds began to flock Into TUnes

    :n i}quare, streaming toward the lighted' entrances of , the p)ay h o u ^ ,

    r- parently .obUvIous of w hat had hap- ttl pened,’ desplU thc shouU .o f ,new»- er boys.of ‘ One man rushed Into a cigar store 10 when hc heard about i t and called In up his wife.

    “Bay. there's been a big subway »• wreck." he shouted. lU 'T housand people kUled. No trains Jf running a t aU."

    And police had to tu rn back thous- lo and who sU rted down to u k e trains.■y They had not heard about It.

    H IS T O R IC V IR G IN IA S IT E S

    ^ - H A V E .-M A R K S „F Q R ^V IS IT 0 R

    ,e . RICHMOND, VI.. Aug. 34 (/p)— _ MotorlsU traversing Virginia fUjd hls-— tone, InformaUon kn tm b te= tu-.tU ea» _ through 3000 markers In black and

    white easily read from a moving ly automobile. These signs, erected by •1. the s u t e Conservation and Develoi>- d m en t commission. teU the s to ry ' of It the "Cradle of the Republic"P Among the spoU marked are the

    batUeflelds of th e ClvU war, the place where Sherldah ended his { ^ - oua ride, where Ashby, confederau cavalry leader, fell and the scene

    . of “Storwwall" Jackson’s noted stra te- „ gle campaign tn th e Shenandoah val-

    ley. Indian massacre scenes. fUst if Bngtlah aetUemenU in America. Revo-

    lutiooazT war scenes and the ground where ComwaUis surrendered his a r-

    “ my also are Uicluded in the educational project. In addition, to the work done by the sUte. many p r ivate organlatUona are placing m arkers as m onum enu to historic events.

    NEED A ra iA L SnEBLOCR TAMPA. PU . C/W -^Uce here ar>*

    curious about Just how to apprehend an airplane thief. They were noUfled lecenUy to arrest the t>Uot of a stolen plane bearing . the insignia “CTub Aeronagtlco Mexioano." Motor niin)bers were supplied.

    Detroit Sheriffs Wi For Offic

    (By The AssocUled Press)____ DBXROrr.-Wktw; M -M rK -M argam_ y Wi^H to fTlmtTlU-

    tra tlea of ber husband, the U te ' Sheriff Edward P . Stein, bf DeU'olt •ad^ W aroe eannty, w anu to fUJ the ofnee .1^ vacant ky hia deaUi.

    S W9eeasna Ui the November election aba vOl be one of the ftrtf

    ’ fdfngtt. to aerve t s 'snerm in' a -m e » ; rU jic X 'e e O la a of th e 'U n ited '8 t i ^ i

    — r t o v a t e b v i e pM -m oth tr o t g i ^n « f« -.haa '.had a pCrt '

    . I ahrara i m pals," ahe ]-b t- ne-.-ereryUUnc .

    ^ Pffic r apA t o TouUm.- i

    ^ ,lf» a < ^ i9. i t l w i f ^ nearly a •

    r? n w -^c tbn ws> la t t e tntareet en trance r and m pe lln te Wfry thrown ab jiit the -nnUro

    thcusahds.. gathered In tho Square ^ above the scenes of thc wreck.

    A t the BeUevue hosplUl Jiearby, M rioiuly Injuroo: .n-.,

    T h e re ’it w as'sa id th a t of th e 'iw o *'** criUcaUy injured, one, a woman of

    40, probably .would die. Sne suffered r iJ * fractured skull. Of the many o lheri

    there, only two were seriously In- }ured.

    *y The Frcnch hospital was so crowded with poUenls Utai a call was sent for extra help from other InsUliillons. Over 40 persons were irenu-d there.

    “ * 30 of them remaining for furtijcr a t- tenUon.

    S M IT H S JO U R N E Y TO

    IR N E W J E R S E Y - R E S O R T

    : ~ F p R - W E E K = E N C R E S T

    (ConUnued Prom~ Page One)Qd na rt o f Jeraey-CltTT-lu Uie-Demtyrmtlp___hg stronghold of Hudson - county where by Mayor Frank-Hague, one of his clos- I>- est advisers. Is the recognized party of leader, men, women and children

    swept ou t from the curb. A t times he they forced th e governor's car to ^ com e _ to _ a _ 8_tandsU Il^as_m otorcycle n - police sought to clear a pathway, a u Again in Newark, admlrera swarmed me out into th e roadway cheering the k*. passing nominee, who kept wavlrnt al- lUs straw h a t In acknowledgmenL rat In front of the Newark city hall and ’ '«>- a t several other polnU Ui the city lh? nd throng became ao dense th a t th ;If- governor's automobile could otUy mo\-c a - a t a snail's pace or was halted, iie During th c lato aftenioon. th e n - nominee traveled on threugH Ellza- k - beth. Rahway. P erth Amboy, and Its. along the shore through Long Branch.

    Asbury Park. Ocean Orove and other resorts before reaching the New Mo-

    iTi mouth hoUl a t Spring lake. 8 U ’.c nd police on motorcycles cleared the U- highway.

    a .31a LISLE VAIINEY HAGERER « r Marcelling 50c. 354 3rd avenue west. ’

    Phone 19XB-W.

    iVidow Runsfice to Vindicate Him

    departm ent of weUare for women, ret deyeloped-by-8 U i n _ J . . . _ _ l i t .i Mta. a te tn ^ rtt)lT _w M n h e ~ ~ fc n ^ n : lU Kouncement ef her eacdldacy. She alt dealns only ^ Th» m ac ldaa 's act to a n avocatloa: ^

    « r M w i WU»t AOs r w c b « lu p tq p w L i m yoa w u a to MO»et. - ■ « .

  • - f -........... ' .......... '

    TH E S P

    — DM-FiteyicE-H o m e R u n in F i r s t In n in g to

    W in ; P i r a t e s B e a t G ia n ts

    ST. LOUIS. Aue. U —The S t Louis C trd liu l* ' NaUgnal leagne pennant obance* boomed today wbeg Ernest O n»tU crwhed oul A home run In tbe / I n t Innlnf to give the Cwda tb e necesawy m a n ln for a 1-to-O rlctorjr over

    W ith the CJantu bowing to tho P irate^ (he Red Birds' edge in the pennant n e e was increu rd

    d to nine pereentage points and lone ^ and one-half games. Orsattl'K

    . elrcult wallop was hU third in------------ the six games be has ptajred since

    being recalled from th e m lnon.-----------m e s c o re - R. H. E.

    Philadelphia ............................ 0 5 0St. Louis ................... “.......V... 1 4 0

    Batteries: Benge. Wolsh and Lpr- lan: Haines and Wilson.

    PITT8BUBOII 10. N^W YOBK J PnTSB U R O H . Aug. 24 l«hl over ue Ogden by winning, 10 to 2. here to-ii Id day. Salt Loke plied iij) n four-run), [‘* ieod In the first three Innlnw of thejsp ..........by

    ll- ^

    lea

    ■ f tlie J B

    1

    0 \ i |

    ml -

    In HJ.

    O n e after ai c o Q tiD u e to p a Balchca in bis re turn w ith Fi feld staked his o f this new mc A fiulure o f th« his compftoioc fprhis^cttxrn- th rough withc the m oto r and Balchen, -who •o grateftil for that be w rote: ''On myfiigh Gmutlj Jsla rtUtf of / i« J

    _____________________ Untie Flyen------------

    ia tbe Ford teHieb I vai sptendid rts

    — .ntetaaf^ij• f w K W fffw g y t

    ■' ch ild 'a pU y f

    SANFRANi 414 BnmmmD T O E P ]

    ■ . ______ _

    ■ ■ V ' ■'DAY MORNING, AtJGl SAN CAPITOL_______

    ibiican nominee for vice-president, wo! In the recent prwentalion to the slati

    1 territorial capllol building, a t Pawnee Union Pacific syntem. Senator Curtii

    I a reenactmenl of the t in t leglslatlTc 855,

    'gam e and added four more In th< ensuing (wo cantos to bring the scon (0 8 to 3, Kaslch, Gunner twirler tighiening up then and permltteij

    ■ bul six hits throughout the conical which was featured by three-bast hits by Tadevich and Nielsen.

    ' OODEN ' AB R H O A FM clssoc,' ss ................ 4 0 0 3 4 :Mcahone, 2b ..............4 0 0 1 3 C

    ' Woodson, rf ............. 4 0 0 I 0 lMcCouley, cf ............ 4 1 1 1 0 C

    > Skilllcom. If '.............. 4 0 1 5 0 tStoven, lb ....................4 0 1 7 0 (

    • : Tunney. 3b ............... 4 1 3 3 0 SBaker, c ..................3 0 0 4 3 CKosslch, p ....................2 0 0 0 1 C

    ; Totols ........... .........33 2 6 24 11 iSALT LAKE AB R H O A E

    iTodevich. 2b .............. 4 2 3 I 2 C't Jones.- If ..................... 4 1 I 2 0 C

    Donovan, cf ............... 4 2 3 4 0 C

    FightV E W " '

    carries B re to safety

    a n o th e r th e s e s t a lw a r t s o f t h e a i r > a y h ig h tr ib u te to N m 'V e e d o L B erne is e p ic fl ig h t to G rcen e ly I s la n d a n d F itzm aurice, K o e h l a n d V o a Huene> is success o n Sbe u n f a i l in g qu a litie s l o to r o t l - a n d w o n !

    h e m o to r m e s ^ t d isaste r f o r h im a n d 5ns. T h e w o r ld w a ite d a n d w a tch ed —to a p p la u d h is d a r in g . A n d h e cam e l o u t a h i t c h - a m u m p h fo r th e m a s , d t b e m o t o r o i l .

    3 f lew a tr i -m o to re d Ford p la n e w as i t t b e p e r f o r m a n c e 'o f N#u> V e e d o l e:

    ■bt from D ttro it to \and,C aaada,tothe : B rtm n 'Tntm-At- G U An a n d on tb e r ^ tm . ...--------

    ----- --- ----d T ri-m otor p l a n tas flying, with tm b rk«J«« m«k»tsu lti tha t I cannot ' I

    ,,Ti„r m ^ tn r Im U b»0«*bt dic o u r m o to r i i o n ly , , , , 4 ,f o r V e e d o l c o m -

    tkfOMk TUa Umm."

    L I - 0 E — W ^ ^ E - B r - © 4 - I r - S NOSOO LOS ANGELESanSlrmI 70$ Padfic

    ^ENDENT OIL & GAS C

    *

    3 T J S T 2 5 , 1 9 2 i

    Camllll. Ib ................J 2 2 9 0 1------ .Wallers, rf. ....... ..............

    Nielsen, 3b ..................^ 2 3 0 4 '- llammock— w .!:— — .5 0 0 O a ‘

    — — ner Roche. Mottolf. T le m w ;'h a m '^n n 13 2 balU. off Canfield 1, Parrla i ; struclc’'. o u ^ by Canfield 6, Parris 4; double ', ■ ^ ay irO ab le r- lo -T a n n e t- to .jn c m ffi;^— f Bernardo to ' Maloney and Crowley,,.

    f— Mol le (b Crowley; possed ball.. King.'

    rmcc Tragedy of the Buffalo■lays, . TIio prItnltlTo fluaibcr of bUiona baa

    I nt fmm_V)tW

  • l iE W S »

    ; v ' > ; ^B SgO M W ioit' k A ~ ^ "■.

    ̂ ^ ■ • M o a t m .............. ......................IM th1— ^-aiMt:::Mreasonabtc armies, navies and air ^forces~*but he would have them held im ore sl«adfasUy to Uiclr purpose by

    ^ ~lhls psycholt^lcal nomenclature.I 10r !■......................-JJ—J Slac*. GANG WARS -------- “— .............. ......................... won

    -! j ’, Tlie BarijT U-ara^ihav-aro.-troubling-Ujc iarBcr~An»crtM n™ cUle«^re“'oniy •^ f Indirect interest to Uio nation aljarRC. The publlc_b more conccni-■.cd with thclr ■'conn«lloh u*lih the Tc

    -----.crim e wave than wiui uie . c»sugKir of Xndltot. « « a t te ptUoo •iat - t l : i m c a l t m i s t tn effk* am sb td e v ef Ou .H k tti was Qpoo him. H* w>s t pm * i ! ^

    > « ^ .tt4d«p*d tn d« t s ' t e n d .iap rlsoB -l T:0

    TWINFALLSPig s a a s ^ ^ a B B M B ^ B B B S B S S B S a O K Sm ent iroiUd h ts ten h li death, but hto i re tu rn to freedom .found i hU recov- :sry^ In. h e a l t f e - ^ p le t t .— \ -------------- 1—

    WlUiout suggcstlhg the moral tha t a sure road lo health_ to through • the gates of t prison. Che a d v a n u ^ ' of prison .life as contrasted with the nerve-racicliif rout^n^ of a business m an or high public official arc ap- parent.--O bvlousJy-the-dlstlngutohcd — prtooner in question Jed regular hours.His food was simple, nourti^lng and adequate. I f U ien 'was. ever a s ink ing lllmtraUon of w hat a common*

    wnilpllsh'.’ VPo haVa-it in ' thc drt»WKie ^ career of the Hooeler. farmer, poll- Uclan and governor.

    If Uie average person takc.̂ a hint as to tlie healUi*devourlng cupabll* mbs ot the human stomach, tlien all can see compensations from what seemed, lo be a very sad adventure. T ha t term of Imprlsonmenl. while It may »iakc life less Worth llie living, doublleos prolonged McCray's life

    Obviously, prison life isn't u h a l I: used lo be. Prisoners arc no longer . placed In dark, damp cells to d b of disease. T lielr health to belter -nuard- ed itinn ' U u l of the avemge person wlUi complete liberty. They do not work too hard. Uiey play enough. r''.> sleep and food In liealUiliil (iiinnllUcs and live In sanitary qunrt''r.i. A healthy tan has uupp'antcct S!.. p rison pallor.

    Cburcb Services IFirst PrcsbyUrlan Ctiorch A. O. Pearaon. tWlnlsler.

    0:45 a. m.. Sunday school.11:00 a. m.. Momlng worsiilp. Mr.

    Pearson will speak on Uie subject."The Church's Ailment.'* The a n them Is ''Praise Uie Ijord," by Mln- shall. Mrs. O. P. Duvall ulll sing a solo.

    Dunn. . . ^6:30 p. m.. H ie Intermediate so

    clcty will hold Ils prayer meeting.7:00 p. m.. TtiP Senior Chrbtlan n:i- ____deavor will be led by Clinton EvansThe young people who are Rolnit a w a y -----lo college are especially asked to — be present.

    8:00 p. in.. T in v.-.lm meeting l:i the city park. 1'nles.i an outside

    wtll preach lhe serman. .Thto will b« the sccond last cf these union serv*Ices fo r thto summer. Wc cxpect to re turn to our own churches for the evening services of September P.

    MclhodUt Eptoeospal Oiurcb H. a . Humphrey, Paslor.

    A;49 a. m.. Sunday school, E.-' I*, iwrnon. • • ‘

    11:00 a. m. Preaching by Rev. E. U While, dtotrlet superintendent eastern Idaho M. E. chureh. Music In charge ot Mrs. J . A. Dygert.

    7:00 p..* m. EpworUi League dcvo*Uonal service.

    0 p. m. Union services In Uie city park. • J

    Chrtotian Church Rev. C. C. Curtto, Mlntoler.

    10:00 a. 11. Bible school, Prank Slack, director. . • _

    I1:Q0 a. m. Communion service and worship with special music.

    S:00 p. m. Union ser^'lces a l city

    ' U r-Ilap lb t CUureh ' .v,„.

    E. C. Barton, Pastor. |„ . .Teaclilng serglCC Ul U:Y. P . S. meeUng 7;30 p.‘ m. .,t 'E>enlng worship B p. m. y„uPrayer meeiUhg Wednesday eve- ,,

    ling. 8 o'clock.

    ChrUUan Kclence Church 160 NlnUi Avenue Bast ...

    “C hrist Jesus- to tho sub ject'o f Uie , •s» aa .* e m o n _ Jn .- t l l_ c h iffe h e s of i i i! ! :h rlst - SclsBlista— QoMan tex t: John c :;U. "The Word was madfc O ttb . tn d * ,.fl Iveli among us. land we btbeld hto llory. the glory as of the only begot- «n of the FtU ier). fuU of gnus* tn d ntUL" Sunday serrices a r t b tld t t ;l a. m. Sunday school fo r pupUs tir. mder 30 rear* of age u t t n t T t n a : n>e Wednesday evening m etUng t t r t ic h testimonies of C hrliU tn 8e l. ace. hetU ng are given, U a t I o'clock. ^ ;

    —■' ChrtiKimberty McUudlst C ksrcb ’ . Th

    Bert A. Powell. Pastor. heldJ i w 8no.c . . . lie s.-i.\h yuii w ii t l.iTo Invaum* of ll kUI. . . ." ̂ j

    -.X cirl? Iliikor wiltl IluilV* Nnr- i ' nnu r«lt III* fiicc reiMcii. “Tlmt Is . •Iillnilnun. Jiille!”

    The cirl tiirni-d tinvnrit lilm Ih> . n 'fh lits ly . Whm Stic mihl niipiilltrti iliii. IIl* hml never lhuii;;Iil JuIIo , votilil iiok Ihtnl '

    .Mill will fiinit. .SNirniiiti? n’’̂ . riioir. ;:ii«ln«*»«." »;>>lsJ. ElUoU Slimp. Pastor • Gas

    .Wa hope to hare a splendid devo* uusonal service t t th e morning hour, wayThe.union.K£ylcfi_£t the MethodUt lUcIlurch will close the union meeUngs m -ir thto season. The pastor of th t a. , i (irtsUan churth wUl spesk.The young p e ^ le 's meeUng aUl bodd in Uie MeUJOdUt church. ^ “1____ UTttl____________________________________PZ j

    C hts. W. Ronk. Pastor. ‘Bible school 10 a. m . W. M. Mor* ' ^ •oo. Supt. colaiR«T. t . U W hlU has coosentod to wlsi t t c h lo the erenin; sem ce a t llgb p; M . : . , ;« if i

    DAILY N E W a TW IN . F A IAliLS. I D ^ O , SATURDi

    1 IHE .wgw auciftBob:":' ’

    ^ —

    J

    m \

    R ' l l l

    _____________ _____________ s i m m a u K

    yt:o KoiiCQd Down tne Valley, and .1. Normsn. -tSoHov/Ino Her Gsst-jre, ! ’

    6 sw an Unpalnted House and ,.|

    .......— ■--------------------------^ ^"l( Im II vv̂ l hli.-flii-'sH, .Viiriimtt. Nut llbu thu fiinii. i am -i( i;iouiii fur the w tl liikcs. .YMi i.ilil nil) ouc(S youriiiiiilicr iiiudo n' iiilHiiiko. . . .” I'O

    “In mnrrylng'ii K:illiii-r' Iiu Icniicd «■'Itt Um word. "Von, Uut I'm not u n(H illiirr . . n,

    "And wa'rojiQt tnlKliig of nm rry'. HIIng ro 3 ia |tt's ,j:^ :u ia rc Iicd . Ills: : ol

    ‘■itlirM’C n iis iiiv ; I IH“No, Niiriiiiiii. no. You Itnvoii't found I”

    your pince ji-l. N'uniiiin. Onco wIioiiyiiu wero hon- you told me you n e w t Idwore Itt la-iK'i- ill It htoriii. . . . " eo

    "I mtld (III iviiior, Ju|k-!"*"riie ilKliili"u.-ic Is wutor." '“Nil!" , • ■ j niSlio dill IIDI ahytie furilii-r. A new , »'j

    lfii(lonio»H liail boKtitt to ;;low In til» : sturdy face mnr i.lie luinod nltru|Hl> I from It. It si'cmod ho was ii fuil 1 j:ruwn itimi iiul.ijj. Ilu iM)-.scM.od imira lUiSUriinii-, 11 tirciiHm tlmt d io nd- nilrod. . Sho >iit 'ilir{vii iinilor .it bcrecli.

    -tree.-mid. lii,-:'lr-ipiiod„lH*.»hlo,li(:r.rrtr” '."*1

    I'lW ihviu. slii->-|) wniiili'i'oil iilmtokiily In np and thivtji iliv iM>rih«Vi''t-tutFinnr —lltuli-r tin- r .m -r n f ‘|;|rH n '’i‘- _ _

    •mlttrtt-tn-hittt-rlf.- '•'Vi'ti onnn- Snmliiy nfteriHiciii," ho In-

    slhloil. Ills \.iio»! wu!« j.loii.lici:;. nk hor Iminl iirTi-otloiiuloly In IiIh.

    “ I'll Ihlnk iilmiit It,** sho m h l; tlioii, an If dono uilli iliat nuhjoot kIic with.

    ono lhi;:or I'l.iwii .tho valloy.••P.. X.IIJ M-,. Ilit-ni7'* who n̂ ‘ketl. ->l)

    tailii-r'.'i kIu-i'(iV Tlic ono iIiiii'm nonrly white? Woll. It hii.s till i'on>o. Wlit-nI want It in Mil- iuwor'juiKlnro. It c lo do whal I U-ll ll.II Ij. fiiily II .li.-cji. I ^o( viry an^ry i,. with il. Siiiiii-iiiiu*^ Norman . . . " /j'

    -^.iiiiotiiiii-i t t i ia i r ' '“n m lin- llkojii ĥ̂ M' l̂,'• .lullo sahl m.

    SniP»-ly. ••Wln'ic your fiilhor wmiiH ]̂, you U) IWi. .Mill wiini to ranit. Whoti woiiiolMiily vi'o t>uiH9 you lo farm, you „n tnlk iihoiit llulxs."

    .Vorimin Jim.-o. nuliUly. Ilo tumoil hj, otl hor wllli fl svK l hun h nn;:or, hut |,|. Kht- did ttol shripb. Shu uu« Iixikln;; nt him soberly frutii her line black‘•y***- ,i„

    “Ooodt.y.- Iiu suhl shorUy. l ie ,i„ nlovc^d nwiiy a ilnxou slcji#..

    “Cood-hy,’' Jiitic unswerrd. There n.i was resrct In lier vtilcc, rp^rol und in, riir£lvcnr«s hni no hint o f rvlenUng. un “C'-tiic nualn. .Vi>rman." si

    lie did nHib tmok. At the main iin ruud tic turiiiil suuili. wulkvO rapidly and s|H.ktt lu O" one on the way, UnWTis_nrii!3 ^_ V 3 i r y —t t —ItUnself,-tr- — ■julle.-iii'>tK-rt.il««r.—W ls«-.JulI«-ht4- -n r toTd him nliui lie had told IiImMlf s |,i, Uioumjind tliiK->. ‘ ' In;

    U k c or hirul] ll Dcvcr would.t>o tils im ti di-c!»lno. Uls Inolher nn'l G ttstaf luid reen t o tUaU lie irmlMbty fn u-us-a'»liM>)i . i, oue inlnote this way. ttie noxi minute BBOllter. Julia .m lUctwiud cutild ^ t - i n d m t a n d that tus wlllitii liini. aU slie saw .w aa Um ^ll>IUh a sy t| tnsd

    ' And «hni did helo«-em osl) Ite bait , s la sn M lir o f tbe tlye today, kumissed i{ e rm In Ui* dayiliM . sn- ,qi llgbtrd.* ll w v i . t hnrd dequodlag ~ > rtm s tkere icen no roni blow xliice Normnn cnino to mind .Miiii'a Kyc. U-l her blow, lio wns wllllnc for a to«L L

    Jtillc was an Indoiiemleiit girl, he told hliiixelf. And ll wus not a Imd forty non-s wlik-Ii shu |i>i ihiin n. tialf-tiour tioforo now |..om.-.l »v«T Clio tnkr. nnlllng oui Im _ daik olio«-kH. thronlonlnc |

    ■'U-t lior hlow!" Normnn told him- ■■■If. ilo siM>kc aloud usconitdmiKly. HIM voK-e soHnde«l tiol. nnd he tried nsnln. “I.et tit-r blow!" be aliouied. riiiil was iHMler.

    Kiir ii|> Iho Inmoh. half-wny 10 Ihc llthi. he aitw Slio Stocking wiolng liiwnrd hliiL Sho wii.i wnlWlne lirlok- ly. Mwlnslng hor nrms ns If sho cn- JiiMtl ll. In n short dnck skirt und a Millor'H middy, vvlfh hor huir hlotrlnz like n Niiinll Iniy's In the wind. Wiion . oiic uonhl Im ve. renchcd Norman in imolhor hundred i>acti«. siic sat down i>n n-drUt iin hitii. lli-rt llghi up. Stunni ^ nni.'-i K* rt-Hily now. kki."

    Tho iHiiijt Kiiiis out IlH liiimnilni.-, . l fiii'htily___:i»rtuaiL fi-lt-»nnHi-m->w4nv.

    with tho ll::lit on ilnty. i:itnd .Man’s----- IJyo_l'«niod..olL-iir,_ooniL-..iiILiIiu_fi«>'.

    of Ull.. liiiund w-n;t, ooiiii* viiuiil und _ I ^ nilTili'l.. liUrrli-ihi~K!ti-i, ll;;ln'tiHi~i ^

    tM-tli .Iff tlio litaxty |H>ln| . .It Illlml Mnn's Kyo sinyoil wakornl, Imik- it lt»a ninaroly Inio ilis facc of Its ngc- >p ohl onomy. iho lako. iI.V .Mroady tlio sioiim whl»lto nt Ilaltle 1̂ Ax l-ilaml n̂ ir lo Ihu jiortiiwcnt wnir

    ; n.oiitiins. two lo n a .d ru n n Nnon*» i. ainmit Ihc wiml. liicn f.iur siiort hUisiit. y. piintln';: lo koojt up wKh Itio Ural iWo. d .Vonmin iiiirricd liuok to Ihe hIkii-iIII. houiic nl Ciiptiiln Slookinu'x het'Is.

    'Hioro will n IiImh .if xU-am nml ii olh kic ‘if snuill molIi-iiloUH toiors. In n niii-K itir-iUM. ...................... . li«i«l. isiindi. Mnit’M Yolo* sorouniod tM nnswer loJ. Itiiltlo , . . ..........................uion::« |i\.> nhori.s “Tlii-n- -he tiet" SUh I.Iiis rni.tiwl nn

    K S ^ H m ■ j w

    D oable2 to firesl]i _ _ _ ------- -Eva|K>nJ , resu lte ,; V s

    iUST 2S. .1928. ■''[ H (Iw 9 tg n .n M Iifi .8 -JffO.wltl) Ilia spec.

    tocle cliniuols. "Co reiKirt for simper, tep« Krlcbwn. Xom llrsf. - U’ll bo on nll-

    '■pigljrjpb ootlierc.-":----------------------------outr Btov« Suftun .hatJ , appcored.Jrom was fomiiw|:cra wlieo Norman ran Into tho idsd k itchen .' Sue knew how to.vouk. siie

    atlll n-BS In hlgfi humor.DlDir "H ik e wind r 's h e criod.iflO- — lilorin^rrwtOTk-tlts-hrnd.—- 1-O otJX"^

    _ •'I like ^*5:. ___ilKC “•^o ’doci'm y w ilier?'

    • 8 tff>'0 Sutton looked up iiiqulalUvely «f'« but did not apcuk.;Ile- OuC In tho dark the th roat o t tho l|»e fog signal swelled with steam. Wind

    oow pounded the glnsi* of llio kitchcn win-

    ndy, dencd feet tonlglit. .etii. Norman pushed hack his plate.saf- "There's more (Tsh." Suo said..

    ".Vd. I Imve hnd enougii.’* Ilo ed." spake defen*lvcly. Suo looked pntuscii. re 's She would look moro amused, wormnn

    reflected, if ho told her nil tlio gn*- lesgue, hideous thoughts tha t popped Into his liend ns roon as tho wind bo*

    Itch ,{nn lo blow. Well, It wouldn't do to ' n tell ber. Uo'd better get oul and re-

    Ihivo her faUier. Strnngo, how be foil___ ton igh t:,no t frightened.os lie used to

    he when a boy. Imt not comfortnblc. Ing. T hat cursed wind I I t blew tho sensu ol

  • to A t te n d I n J i i n a l i b n o f

    President I f t i f y a t Moscow

    __________ B ,„r«^nU U v«i ot the

    ^ ' i n d S t r l M aod builneM In the vicinity, ftro being invttod to » t ^ r t thfl iMUffuraUon of Dr. Frederick J. Kelly M *

    • S a t MOSCOW September 24 M d 25 The Inauiuratlon la beln* developed M an event primarily for

    • U i e W f e or M aho and will take • Ujc form of a discussion of higher

    education problems In the s ta te and how tho university can servo the people better and aid in sU te developm ent. Tho Inauguration will hold l lr s t appeal to the many friends of Idaho's higher educaUon system.

    The tradlUonal custom has been to y inako 't h e InauguraUon of a new

    •A collcge president an event primarily of academic lolerest. Presidents aC other colleges and ^national leaders In higher educaUon are .Invited. People of the sta te usually arc given b u t secondary consideration. The p lan of thc s ta te board of education which conforms with the wishes of President Kelly.'la. th a t the Inauguration be planned first for thc people of Idaho.

    W. D. Vincent, sta te commissioner — —iiof. educaUon. feels th a t as the unl-

    — \\vcrslty 'belongs to thc state It Is n a tu r a l Uiat Uiey will be most intercst- ^cd' In Its development. All lenders in Idaho's various Industries, agriculture. mining, forestry, m anufacture. and business, will be Invited to participate. Leaders In public Ufe, ' women's organlzatloa-*. civic and social groups, and general friends ’ of Uie stato's. educational system will bs :

    _______ given ft prominent place. . i~ . isome ofiiciai rcpresentatlyM from 1

    attend bu t'U ie plans, of the commit- < tcc IndicaUs tlia t firs t and fo rem o st ̂consideraUon will be given to th e *

    ----------- pcopic - of- igflinK--------------------------------i____ ____________ J

    SOCimMI)(!«|iEdited by >

    U m B. & w m Uow FhoseSM

    ------------------------------------------------------ ! 1Compiimenting. Mrs. Vivian Kim- I

    brough of Weiser. who la visiting her « slater. Mrs.- Lee Stettler, and b ther i reUtivea In Twin, .Palls; Mtss Mae 1 Alvord entertained with a chkrmlng 1

    • b ridge‘party Prjday 'a f t ^ o o r t - a i her *1 h o m e 'o n Sixth av enu if'h^th* Five ' tables were arranged for the' games, 1 Mtss. Qeitrgla McMaster winning t i n t ' p rlie and Miss Zuma Sheneberger, 1 sccond. There waa also a- preUy I guest prize for the honored guest. A two-course luncheon waa served after th e games. Tho rooms v en most a t- J iracilvc wlUi garden flowers in a r- » tlAtic arrangement. ' I

    The home of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. « JJcfld on Seventh avenue north was I Ufo RCcno._of a Jolly informal danc- * tng - p a r ty Thursday evening, with fl

    ■ _.lzihclr.M >n. ftoy. Jr.. Jim K eel'and Rol- “3

    The BueatA were Misses Miriam Bab-*’ '______cock. .H elen OaUey of Bolne. Joyce

    _______ Wnllftms^ DcroUiy Provosi. Mary

    ----------- B Ilf- TrioinM. Jlm ~ MayWU m a HUIdcoii. Al u ie ClQSC QC Ulr rvrnlng refreshments were served. •

    Mrs. A. L. Skinner entertained a t l)er liome on Second avenue cast | Thursday evening in honor of Mrs.

    _______ Cora '^^bbs ot Wilmington. Callfor-nIS: The evening was spenl“ socially’ and Uie hostess served a two-ccurse luncheon. Those present In addUloh to the honoree .and hostess, were Mesdames Eftle M. Watkins. ElL-x Striffler. Paul Beer. A. I*. Besslre,

    . F rank Ham. Del KennUnn. Wllll«-n

    ( Felbufih. John Slgley. HatUo Lud- lorn. Jcfiflle Snowhlll. and \v. H. Ca- j wood of Wichita. Kansas.The Ladles of Uie O. A R. held

    Uielr annual «>clal meeUng a t thc

    "tonighta n d SyNDAY

    ■ ttt the

    Toby âlker

    Kfiar o j tr HaU

    **IfeU’s pafden”

    M d a j r . S A ) w d a > M d ~

    •*W W ? G X ^L 0y r A L S E O K E ’'

    B w m e d UejT d m c s 6 ^ i m\ 8 b « v g i ^ t a s

    ■ t. / ' gWlNFALLSJ

    J- - --^-The-Roots-of:j J i r- T iu m a f t i in

    :ed

    "Of

    3w

    ind

    mrt — .. B R

    of m M i■ ! »

    ie -for ; ~ n : f e - > w B R m i l

    « r.nd Vto- iM

    crs '

    'heonor ■—I 11. n ,

    V* home of Mrs. Joiuph Blake Friday I of afternoon. The time was spent with ;

    conversation and needlework. OucstJi ler of Uie afternoon Were Mesdames )l- Frank Durklialter, Haskins. O. P. 1 it- Vnnausdeln; Dryden.'M rs. Mary Space 1 It- ot Casper. Wyomlntf. Judge- James i •ra W., Shields of Boise, and James M. I rl. Bice .of Auburn. Washington. Re- I c . freshmcnts were served late In the c gjj aftenioon. Thc rooms were a ttrac- I

    tlve with garden flowers. to- _ _ _ Iof Mrs. J . D. B arnhart was hostess to * bs thc Amlgtts club Friday afternoon .

    a t her co u n try home to jjilne mcm- , im bcra 61 UIC “ AmlgAs «Iub and the * u r Tcnowmg—o at~ o f—tewn-Kuefll#;—Mre, . It. E. K. Kavell of Bouluur. Colorado. , ,st Mrs. R. Z. Knowles of Salirni. Kansas. \ he and Miss Amelia Seng of M anhattan. ^

    rcislon members who imd been away ‘during the summer gave an lutcrrai- .ing resume of their Journeys, n i e re- 2

    I malndcr of the nftcrnoon was spent ', with convcrsaUoii nnd necdieworlc and tI tlic hcsU:s» served refreshments. Ear- ., ly nutu»{it~nowrr8 in artisUc—a r r ^

    rungrm ent adorned the home.

    Mlss M aurlne Ballard entertained - J wiU) u picnic supper and slumber . n- party Thursday evening a t her coun- ̂er try home near Clover for Uie follow- £ er ing membera of the . A. M. C. club: 1 ae Mlssea B arbara Provost, Violet Adams, t ig Lenora Ostrander. Helen P arro tt and * er 'H elen'' -W arner tuid 'Misses "'A nita ve Westcott, Hazel p rim es and Helolse u . Miller, guests. A 'waffle - breakfast | f t was served Prtday momit^g a t oi^e >r, Inrge table centered with a t>enuU(ul ty bouquet of garden flowers.A ■er Neediecraft club members spent o i t- Jolly day on Prlday when Uielr nn- , r- nual picnic wa* held a t Uie home of j,

    Mrs. Ida Sweet on Washington, street, c The following members were pres- c

    A. ent: Mesdames Shumway. Kings- , u bury. ShutUc, Hedrick. Doss. Jen- t, : . sen. Lloyd Mimmlok. Holm. Mor- n i l gan. H am .,. Sweei. and HollenbecU. a 1. D ie next r ^ u la r meeting will be tl

    J- -------

    ISTARTING ~3 0 M 0 E E 0 B C = = ^

    ■-THE-GREAT STARS

    of "THE BIG RM2ADE" - t o g e t h e r a g a i n /

    V on 't miss this fascinating rom ancel i

    m t h \RENEE ADOREE

    T h e t h u n d e r o f ^nU op th i s f f r c a t p ic tu r c a» .sw eep o n to a H tir r in g

    J o h n ‘G ill>ert in T ol.s toi’i i n t o a a tu p c n d o u s .spec b rea th lc .s .s . T h e fc rea t i r a d e ”— to B c th c r aK uin, t u r e .

    , Based on the novel by I UUon and ' CimtmuUy

    ■ TiUes by John CoUoq. C

    r — l A B X T i w a

    EfllSB@335i

    V : f e a J r o m a n c e /

    ; DAILY NEWS; TWIN Fiii

    f : A c l i i e y e i n Q n tnrpT Y .) auri ' ' - - 3 . —r ------------

    y held September 14' a t the home of h Mrs. Frank Ham.-1 ■■s Mcsdnmes Ed Domros4\ Jr.. nnd >. Norn Willis were hostesses to Uic e Rock Creek WorUi While club Wed- !S neiiduy afternoon a t the home of I. Mrs. Ed Domrose. sr. Sixteen meni-

    bers were 'present and Me.sdamfcs Rob- e ert Qrose. sr. Robert Brose. Jr.. and >. Mifs Bertha Newman were gueats.

    After thc transacUon of business, piano duet-H. were given by Misses Loretta Domrose a n d .J Io ria Larsen

    ■; nnd by D oris-and Don Larsen. During the social hour games were play-

    ’ ed 111 which Mrs. Ed Domrose, Jr..® and Mrs! Charics Cline recelved-hlRlT ' ^ favor, Mrs. H. P. Larsen and Mrs; -* Oeorge Henry consblatlon. nnd Mlss* Bertlui. Newman guest favor. Re- ;

    " freshm en^ were served by the host-

    ̂ will be September 12 a t thc home of* Mrs. Charles Clinc wlUi Mr*. Osboni* Splnrilcr ns hostcs-s. Tlie club plc'.: nlc for the members and families will* be Sundny, Augu:»t 30. a t Uie Buhl^ park.__________________________ - I-

    ANNOUNCEMENTSi --------r . Tlie M. S. and S. club picnic will . be held lh’ thc p u h l city park next . Sunday. D inner will be served nl

    1:30 o'clock. Members are requested ■ I, to bring a covered dish, sandwiches, d an^ pie. and . tervlce fc r i their own a iom lly. - ............ .

    ' RABBIT GROWERS WILL d FORM OWN ORGANIZATION

    Rabbit breeders o r Twin Falls coiin- D ly will ' effect an organization a t a- mceUng to be held a t the Oranqe f hall on thc county fa ir grounds a t Fil-

    cr on' Mfanday evening next a t 3- o'clock. Al W .. Vance of Salt Lake.- labblt Judge and breeder, who Is to- }>e Judge of th e entries of ntbbJCs a t- tho fair, will attend the meeting and . aasist in formaUon of thc organlza- ? tlcn,

    ------ — -“Where- T b o 'B ljt-----------~ m i.-

    USUALTRICES

    loping hoofK run.s throughas» the irrestib lc Cos.sjick«i jntr climax. ioi’H famouH dram a, mnde Irxxtacle th a t Icave.s youit s ta rs of •'The Bljf Pa- ;n, in a foscinutinff pic-

    y Lj-Df V. ToUtol. Adap- >ty by Prances Marion.

    Dlr*ct«d by- O«ot»a Hill.

    ■ m s ~ ~

    I ^ - A T T B S - ; ■ '

    i

    f - W h m OMI » ;

    i .1 • ./ . *.'1. ,

    FALI.5, IDAHOk SATURE

    tOliCHESTjiOFE PflESENTS;A marvelous Insininieni tha t com-

    __bines triumphs of a r t and science andsurpsases tn potmti*} volume of'sound

    __and in endury ica any human orchestra, was p U M f'in GiKratl6n~yes- terday a t J . H.'. Qmbnugh and Company Jewelry atots,. 134 Main avenite south. ' I t is th« .Orthestrope which ccmblnes posaiblllUes o( modem ra dio. ami^iftcation with perfected pro- ccsaea of phonographic reproduction

    = •-E nU w lH m tcw nrtteF it requires-only e lec tric ' current drawn through u lighting aocket to place it In operation for an indefinite' period. I t plays automatically 38 rteords on both sides, affording a program of 50 numbers covering a period of three hours and 60 aeconda. Interval between selections la approximately 4o tcconds.' Volume of sound, ix regulated by meana of radio ampliflcntion device so th a t It may be modulated to a mere whisper, o r increased In volume to fUl a large auditorium or dance pavilion. In either csae ihe sound la reproduced wlthoul trace or distortion.

    The instrum ent displayed here b suitably housed in a handsome cabinet of seven-ply walnut wllh Inlay

    . cf saUnwood, presenUnii a maater- . p/ece of the cabinet, maker's art.

    • The Instrum ent has been on thc . market cnly slneo last May. I t la

    built by a new conccrn. and. orders fc r it are . said to b^ far In excess pf the available supply.

    B Mr. Umbaugh and hls company urc f to be dlatributom of the instrument

    in tht» territory, nnd ' Rolond S. Browning of Ogden, fnclory ropresen-

    , tative. who supervised iu initial per- "* formances • here yesterday. Is to re- j . main here for some dnyjv. ol ....JZZ.ll- Bamboo R ip ens Slowly

    Thc bureau of plunt Iwlurlry says ^ Uiat the lininbuo in-e rccclves' Its

    ' urowtli tn a comparntlrcly slion time.’ but frwin tlve to ten yt-nrn urc niiuired

    for the w w id 'to ripen m tliiit U will f . be of use vniiimerclnily.y . --------------------------I-- -

    — Expla ining Ka i i inn Nnma —rs; f«uu»f-lu-U«**lin«-«UP-As nimiea' uro piilnmynik's. nii-iinliiK a e- uniiidnm or (k^cendtinl. licIi i>r vltch i - nmims ii win; SUI U of IlchI originirTjnBTnwns-rtrT;— -^ ^of •

    Thote fVA« C o a n tIII The nivn behind un oxcciillvp cun hi nclp (o (lilt lilm to U.0 front.—Forbvs

    Oat of Sight, Out of MindKIml nature (lie douliln In doubted.—Syrua

    ] ^ ( e i s a c ^ _ a s =

    b o y — — _______ “tnmon market-place for a . few crambling columns s s former grandeur.complex civilization, mai

    rtered. It is no longer pos: lOiTiing—or even in a day.

    has become the conver rs and sellers. If you are f a new ear, you scrutinize

    Or if it’s a razor or a tall you tui n again to the ad

    itional market-place for i

    leaf over those same page storing away for tomorrc fund of information. .InsI er. those facts when you n Increase your store of ki

    vertisements regularly.

    1 becomc “tho^common this twentieth century

    NIN^ P A Y 'P E N A t T y l r t l t # ' TRAFFIC'RULE VipiyjTllillig

    ' ' . by H.- P . iuM r-.roagi« tti;fcr iff r.ifey: • lice court hero ycstenlftjr ;fo r .v*ti-’.

    oua ' vloUtlons of lKirTlWTwr«wih-=": . ances. Pive persons were penaltsed '

    $3M each fo r faJJure- to - Jceep-both— beadllghts-- tii operallifti:,

  • p i i i m i i i i T

    1I f ; P r e d i c t i o n o f M o re F r o s t in

    i s ! C a n a d ia n B e l t P ro v e F iz z le ;

    Si j i j ■ ~ E n p o r l - B us in a t t - is . - S r r a l l j .

    ^ OHICAOO. Aug. 2i f/p )-R l8lne tcm- I peraturcs in Cnnada mcanl Jescendlim J ; prices today for whnnt. Predictions f r Ot moro frost over the Cnnndian ; wheat belt were nearly n complete

    fizzle, and reports Iiere IndicAted that, up to doto the CanndUin crop h«s

    ,1 su/fercd no damoge of comcquonco '} i . .1 ,

    - • o 'n ' j c net lo cr.Vi c " “ h com unclianfred to S c to >vc J I off. Pots unchnntted to %c down, and 4 - [ — provlaions'varylng from 6c dccllnc to ' t lOc to I2o advance, j d DUpelln F rltlit

    ‘I 3 W hcot ‘tm ders prnmnilv roi rl ,

    M iM w y r ‘S a B i t f v ■

    S . " .ately active wllli prices steady. I n terest in quarter blood 48s lo 80s fleece wools shows n slight Improvement on sales. Transactions In Ohio m o l of this grade have been closed s t slightly above 53c in the .grease.

    B U R L E Y MAN F A L L S D EA D

    W H IL E A T W H E E L O F C A R

    BOBLEY. Aug. a . —Albert AUUpach rell- 'over-dead-at th e -w h e e l-o f -h ti autflmob»i> -yy»v i»vi»nlnir. the

    U>_ his h ome In Burle/. Mr. Allla- pach had been a resident o i c a ss i^ xtiinly seven or eight years, farming and running a threshing -machine. He l^ v es a wife, two children and a step-son. The cause of hU death VOS acute dilation of the heart.

    Bl) RLET^RbPERTYlS’ ŜOLD

    SURLEY, Auc. 3^-D . R. Langlols luu bought the residence of Dr. G. H. Cooper. The comlderaUon U under-> stood to be around $8000. Dr. Cooper inriouncM th a t he wtll n o t leave Burley. but th a t- he arul hU wife will U7 hotel life for a while. Another eale U reported of a residence owned by the Oregon Mortgage company to Harrison Powers. Sublett. uie price being about $3300.

    S o m a tro f t Sttp€rMtitionId (he Interior of Sam atra rice la

    tows by trom n who let their (islr hang loose down tbe back, to order ] that the rice nay grow laxurlaotly snd bave Inns stslka. j

    I n t r o c h i c e d S i i t e r

    iM SZCLU8XVI n c r c B K «r tk e feraser Waihettae T iw dir, ds$sr *t PaBy L a a te . M swtbad to Qmm T a iia i) . aa ^ agyaaw d fas I fU . Sbe Is w « itr& sdw to D « > iir

    riB M iTtrrt. la te*- «M td W r M « r to Om n t M

    DAY MORNING. AUG t

    ■ 4 1

    K r f e i l pawLUs.i»u.a

    D E M A N D B R O A D E N S F O R

    W O O L ; L I H L E C H A N G E

    IN P R IC E D U R IN G W E E K

    BOSTON. Aug. 34 (/P>—Tho Com- ' Mercinl' Bulletin tom om w will say:

    ' "There appears to be a somewhat broader demand for wool this week, although ' no large volume of .business has been accomplished. Fine wooU have been-posslUy-a. Bhade-ln favor of .the buyer, while medium-dis- crlptlons are. possibly, a bit firmer; On U« -whoJe. there h as ' beeh~very lllUe price change. ' '

    *The opening -o f the AustniUan season a t Sydney was perhaps a bit stronger th an some people had hoped and about where the niajorlt:^ ex> peeled, with prices a scan t 9 per cent below the high point of the closing sales last season. .O ther foreign m arkeU are~8U b iia n iw n y n in c n jm g e d r~

    'T h e dcmand'.^fo r 'rgDodB—spems lo be' iniprovlng i^ d manufacturers are looking for a much better movement after u b o r day.

    _____"Molttlr co n tin u e ■ m tfttr- gulMm th prices firm throughout the list.

    "The rail nnd w ater shipm ents af wool from Boston from January 1, 1928. lo August 23, 1928. inclusive, were 103,284,000 pounds against 130.- 099,OOO - oounda—tofc-ihe-sam e period la it year. -The ^ i p U from” 5ahu-' ary 1. 1938, to August 23, 1938, in clusive, were 251.134,400 p o u n d a against 274,191,428 pounds for the same period last year.”

    The Commercial BulleUn will pub. llsh the following wool quotations to- morrow:

    Ohio and Pennsylvania fleeces: De- . laine unwashed 48c: half blood comb,

    ing 60c: three-eighths blood comb, ing 45c to 55e; quarter blood combing 93c to 54c.

    Michigan and New York Fleeces; .1 . Delaine unwashed 43c to 44c; half

    blood combine 54c to 56c; quarter •n- blood combing 53c to 94c.»0« Wisconsin. Missouri and average 'f* New England: Half blood 45c lo 40c; »io three-elghU blood 51c to 53c; quarter «1 blood 50c to bit.

    Scoured basis—Texas:' F ine 12 months selected

    $L10 to $1.12; fine eight months $l D to $1.05.i n CaUfomla: Northern $1J0: middle i n county $1 to $1.03:‘'soulherrt=-90c- to

    95c.Oregon; F ine and F. M. staple $1.10

    ,1, to_$U2;_flneand-J._M ..am ich.com b> Jl£. . to 81-05: ■tine and F. M.

    “ To"ff.05. ^[Ja* —Territory:----------------------------------------

    M ontana and sim ilar: Fine staple And choice $1.13 lo $1.15; half blood

    It, combing 95c lo 74c. th Pulled: Delaine $1.39; AA $1.13 to

    $1.15; fine A supers $1.08 to $1.13: A supers $ U 8 to $1.13; A supers $1M

    " lo 'l lX B r-^ ---------------— ------------------n Mohairs: Good original bag Texaa ^ siJHng 75c to 77c; Texas kid 90c to

    93c; good original bag Arizona and ,1, New Mexico 89c to 70e; original bac H. average 13 m onths Oregon 70c to 73c. x j Graded stock; F irst combing 89c to e r Me; good carding &9c to OOc. r - ■ ■ —

    S FO U R T H BO U R B O N IS OU T S: O F C A S S IA C O U N T Y R A C E

    BDRLEV, Aug. a^—John O. Smllh. nominated for counly commissioner in th e Cassia counly Democratic prl- marles. has announced his wllhdrawal

    ll from the Ucket. sUUng th a t his name \r was used without hU consent and .. th a t he haa always b eta a Repub- _ Ucan. n U s U the fourth withdrawal* from the DemocraUc Ucket. others

    being candidates fo r sheriff, treaa-■ urer and probate Judge.

    Sine»rity Analyaed Shicerity ta to speak as w« tblnk, to

    do.aa we pri>ten>) nnd profeaa. to per> fo m whnt we protataa. and really to btf wbst we wonid seere and appear to lye.—nilA taoa

    I- Z !_21/m iw n — MonummntPrtrt. W. D. Dnrant sayi that tber*

    ar* o rer 2.»iOjOUO Moeks In ibe Oreat pyr*mld a t GIseh. averaglna two and oot>balf tooa eacu. Tlie pyramid weald welgb a t lean \7»i.nnn tnoa.

    Boise-TwinlF^- S T A G E S -

    ■a ' tMAVK T W a T iU M 'K S M A. K . t m r . M.« t e n r k w B a c n a

    i ' n a r n mK .O B K M N n i X L R M 0* ■ • - •________________

    GUST 25.1958. V - -

    ■■

    , ■

    ■..... -■u. Ofci C ^ ltU . tm , V T V CVklf.

    E OPLTOillL EMRtT ^ miillNfiE mTO SHOW^tint B u r le y A g e n ts F r e p a r e S c o ro 'cek. C a r d s a n d P r e m iu m L i s t s

    P o r S h e l lo y ’ 8 A n n u a l P a i r» - i n ................. .......... ...dls------BURLEY,-Aug, -34—J . W. Barber.

    d i ^ l c t agrlculluml extension agent, very has relum ed from Blackfoot where

    he jisslsted M. L. Tillery, county ngcnt, Han in arranging score cords for commun-

    bii ity exhibits and premium llsU for >ped the Shelley annual potato show. This ex. show was nuch u success Inst year

    » n i th a t Shelley clUiens propose lo moke sing it an annua) affair. The exhibition la r! wUl be held October 17. Entries

    -to^ w ill-take-place-the-foltewing-day=---------are WlUi E. R. Bennett, Boise. Mr.

    jen t Barber also visited Arco «nd conducted a poUto tour wlUi members

    ulet of the Moore 4-H club, called tho i i i t : H S o R rsp u o -p ick m r-E ig h n n B m b crs—

    0/ of th is club are growing Bliss T ri- ■ 1, umph seed potatoes. All fields were itve visited, the boys stringing-out along 30.- the rows and Mr. B ennett and Mr. •lo^ Barber f h ^ ) ^ g .Pnder

    in - boys’ work showed up as having been Id s well done in the fields examined, the After the tour the boys went In

    swimming above the Losl river diver- ub. sion dam, held a picnic lunch, and to- listened to talks by ){r. Barber and

    Mr. Bennett. The clfb will ahow a t De. the B utte county and'B lackfoot fairs, n b . and will have judging aiul demonstra-

    lion teams a t tb e 'la tte r fair.

    T W O Y O U N G W O M E N H U R T u l i B Y M A C H IN E A T B U R L E Yrter --------

    BURLEY. Aug. 34 —Miss Woodrow 'age Sathre, daughter of A. G. Sathre, lOc; DemocraUc candidate for' nomination i ^ r as sta te attorney general, and Mlss

    Esther Buchanan, daughter of Mrs. Marguerite Buchanan, counly super-

    :led Inlendent. were knocked down by an $1 automobile Wednesday evening. They

    were walking along . the highway.- Idle hear Mlss Buchanan's home, when ail— to automobile driver, blinded by head-

    lig h u of another car. ran Into them. 1.10 B oth were Injured about the head.Q b>__________________________^ £ f l E A H E S T - W A ¥ ----------------

    ^ T O U U V F L V T O X

    T im e ly h in t t o s a v o m o n o yMillions of people everywhere are

    to finding relief from files and mosqul- ; A. toes, thru the use of FLY-TOX Many 1,05 have welcomed th is suggesUon of buy- '— tng-to-the-tjest-adT antage;----------------xai T h o haU p in t botUe’ Is 'p r i c e d 'a t '~

    to 60c. The p in t bolUe a t 75c brings the ' utd cost lo 37 4 c a h a lf-p ln t The quart 300 botue a t $1.25 brings th e cost to Slo rSc. a half p in t while the gallon a t $4.00 to cosU 25c a half pint.

    Accept no subsUlules. demand tho gmulne.—Advertisement.

    r tx.40o g To Idaho FaUs and Return

    To Blackfoot and Return Ith. ABgrnt *4U»

    From Twin Falls via Oregon Short >ri- U ne Railroad. TlckeU good only m

    coaches and chair cars and limit for ^ re turn to bome desUnaUon before uw* m idnight o f August 37Ui. - a d v . ib-iral i-i—n m w i ■

    ^ L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T S

    ORDER TO s n o w CAUSE fa tb e Probate Coart of Twia Falla

    CMmty, s ta te ot Idaho. *In the M atter of Uie Estate of C. M.

    “ Boley. Deceased.^ Frank A. Terrill, Uie Adminlftrator

    of the Estate of C. M. Boley. deceased, having fUed herein hU peUtlon for an order authorizing him to mortgage the

    — real property of.aald-Estate._________ • ______ rC-IS-ORDKRED That-all,per»ons

    interested In said Estate show cause before the Court, a t th e Court Room

    * of, the Court In the Counly Court House In Twin Falla County. Idaho, on tbe I7lh day of September, 1938, why an order abould n o t be

    mm antboriilnff tbe Administrator to m o r-— ' M tgace all tbe real property of the

    aald Estate for tb e sum of «3430J0 for tbe purposes set forth In said peUUao, to which refensuM U m ade for fu rther particulars. .

    Dated August ITUi. 183S.(SEAL) C. A. BaOey,

    NoUoe U berebr gtrm tb a t L B a rre r W niam sea sentenced to tiM PeotttB* tta ty from Twin Falls Ooaaty, on Septem ber as, laag, f&r u i ic a i mMswTnn— ec T n t n r t ^ n t Ziqaor v f ll a p ^ le r » p n d e a a t tb a BMitlBC 9C tb a B etod to o c t < ^ , i n . '

    H A Z lV Sr'WXLLtAKSOir.

    BK,. ■■

  • WpROCPEDINQ$ OF BPARO; :• CqUNTY COMMISSIONEBS

    Current _. Schwart* A u to 'itirp iU iritp iiire ’'^^*;" ,

    V - c .“ d '. w S -DWdblM. C. o! K . r e p o rt— i—- 33.00 Maher, Wm. J , denUI work. Ind. 14.W

    . . . —TpyJor, _ W m ..- .tp e ^ ?.4cpu»yL-;= -̂. .J:*®Beua, D. H.. Bprnylng..-............... 34-WBrady. NL E , wiUry and «--.150.70 Hanacn Troiufer, dr»yag», weed - • • '

    departm ent Alnlp, M.