the and by Louis for 4 SOLDIERS GET 60 DAYS IN JAIL Youths Plead Guilty to $90 Theft From Motorist. COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, April soldiers from Geiger field, apprehended here Saturday night by sheriff's office and state police for allegedly robbing Alex. Hedvit of Kellogg of $90, never formally charged with petty larceny today. Taken into probate court, they enpleas of guilty and were sentenced to 60 days in the county be suspended on condition they were, turned over to military authorities. The four are Edward L.
Muringham, 16; Darvell L. Paige, 17; Reginald D. Stotts, 17, and Dewey L. Sutton, who after visiting a tavern with Hedvit had him stop the car near the city, taking his money and car keys. Divorce Is Granted.
On grounds of mental cruelty; P'anored Davis from Donald Davis. awarded Alleging extreme cruelty, J. L. McDowell filed suit to divorce Clarice McDowell. On the same grounds, Wilbur C.
Haver filed suit against Alice Marjorie Haver. Contending continuous separation, George F. Alexander is suing Irene L. Alexander for divorce. Betty Canell would divorce Gerald Canell.
Two Youths Arraigned. Two youths charged with violation of the Dyer act, involving the transportation of stolen cars over were arraigned before E. H. Miles, United States commissioner, here today. They were Eugene William Ramus, 21, apprehended Saturday after a chase across city, whose bond was set at $2500, and Raymond E.
Berry, 23, who allegedly drove a car from Kellogg to New Orleans, whose bond was fixed at Berry was brought here over the week end from Texas, where he was taken into custody and turned over to federal authorities. Both men are expected to be taken to the St. Maries jail pending the spring term of federal court. Fined After Crash. The car of Mike Saus was termed a total wreck following a collision east of Coeur d'Alene today with a car driven by Guy Clark of Bremerton.
Officers who investigated said that the accident apparently occurred when a tire on the Clark car blew out. Charged with reckless driving, Clark appeared before Justice Leona Frandsen, who levied a fine of $25, $10 of which suspended. In another accident investigated by city police, Mrs. Ray Melvin suffered minor head injuries when the car driven by her husband figured in a collision with a car driven by Jack Hurrell in downtown as Coeur d'Alene. Driver Forfeits $300.
Donald Clift, charged with driving while under the in influence intoxicating liquor, forfeited a $300 bond when he failed to appear in court this forenoon. Appearing before Justice W. B. McCartney, Roy L. Sheppard pleaded not guilty to a charge of reckless driving and asked that his case be heard before a jury.
Hearing was set for Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Tomorrow has been designated as "'C day" in Coeur d'Alene, will mark the beginning of a concerted drive by Lady Lions to raise funds for the cancer society. Booths will be set up in the downtown district and a canvass will be made of the business houses. Coulee Dam Green Hut Cafe Damaged by Fire FOUNTAL The Green Hut cafe at Coulee Dam, an upstairs apartment and guests were forced well known to tourists who have viewed the to escape by the windows. No one was hurt.
big project from its windows, was badly dam- The Green Hut was built in 1936 by C. E. Newaged by fire early Sunday morning. Loss was land on government leased land just north of estimated at $20,000 partly covered by insur- the dam on the west side of the Columbia. ance.
The fire was believed to have started in (Bureau of reclamation photo.) IDAHO ALUMNI TO HEAR HOWELL Football Coach Invited to Address Banquet. ing in pairs. To End Brief Marriage. LEWISTON, Idaho, April Football Coach Millard (Dixie) Howell of University of Idaho will speak at a public banquet sponsored by Nez Perce county memhers of the University of Idaho Alumni association here April 16. Howell has been asked to bring his coaching staff.
University President Jess E. Buchanan and Alumni Secretary James Lyle of Moscow also have been invited. The program is being arranged under Chairmanship of Dr. Glen Carlson. Only a skeleton crew of management personnel handled emergency business at Lewiston exchange of Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company today, as some 160 company employees took turns picket- Manager George Giffin said he was the only person in the business office, two men were in the plant department and six persons handled the switchboards.
Members of the National Feder-, ation of Telephone Workers, dependent union, were guests tonight of the Lewiston Central Labor council to explain their side of the strike. Issued licenses to wed were Ellen Willoughby and Paul Olson, Pierce, Idaho, and Helen Harris and George Brocke, Kendrick, Idaho. Virgil C. Stone filed to divorce Evelyn Stone, charging cruel and inhuman treatment. The couple married here last November 16.
Pauline Stockwell was divorced from Dell Stockwell. She was granted custody of two minors plus $50 for their support. Judge Ben E. Kelley imposed a $100 fine on Wally Anderson of Clarkston, charged with drunken driving yesterday in Lewiston. CYCLIST, HOOKING DRUMS HERALD RIDE, IS KILLED ROOT FESTIVAL NELSON, B.
April Harris, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Harris of Nelson, was instantly killed here shortly after noon today when he fell from his bicycle while riding beside a truck, striking his head against the cement curb. The bicycle struck some loose sand in the highway causing the fall.
The police stated the truck driver. John Chapman was unaware the boy 'was riding beside the truck, young Harris having come of a side street and caught hold of the side of the truck, and it was minutes later before he could be notified. The police stated that the death was accidental. 50,000 EXPECTED AT M'NARY FETE UMATILLA, April 7. An all-day program will lead to the ground-breaking ceremony here April 15 to launch construction of McNary dam on the Columbia river site.
Cornelia M. McNary, widow of the late Oregon senator, will turn the first shovelful of earth. Virgil I. Sparks, chairman of the McNary Development association, said plans handle a crowd up to 50,000 persons were under for the morning parade, the dedication ceremony and the boat gatta, street dance and fireworks displays. 14,000,000 BEES TO GO BY PLANE SACRAMENTO, April 7.
Fourteen million passengers were booked for a flight to Billings, today. were bees -900 colonies them--and Harry their Whitcombe reaction was to the assigned flight to which watch United Air Lines said "may revolutionize the honey bee industry." Whitcombe is a member of the California Bee Breeders' association. He will determine whether possible transporting large bees scale by movements of air will make bees from northern California breeders to places as far off as Aus- tralia, FUNERAL SERVICES SET FOR WILLIAM TRAVIS, 61 SANDPOINT, Idaho, April Funeral services for William F. Travis, 61, early-day resident of Sandpoint who died Thursday night at the Deaconess hospital in Spokane, will be held from the Moon chapel at 2 p. m.
Tuesday, with interment in Pinecrest cemetery. Born in Fairchild. Travis came to Sandpoint in 1906. A contractor and builder, he was president of Carpenters' union 1745 for many years, resigning recently due to ill health. He was still business agent of the union at the time of his death.
Many Sandpoint homes and business houses were built by him, the more recent ones being the Lutzke building on First avenue and the Tifft building on Cedar street. Surviving are his widow and one son, William B. Travis, and two brothers and a sister at Augusta, Wis. JOB PROGRESS REPORTED. OLYMPIA, April 7.
(P) -State Highways Director Clarence B. Shain reported today that 112 highway improvement projects under contract are 40 per cent completed. The contracts total $12,787,806, he said (2 HURT IN CRASH, MOTORIST JAILED Robert Edwards, 25, Arrested on Reckless Charge. pact. Edwards was not injured.
Held on Racing Count. WALLACE, Idaho, April 7. -Robert Edwards, Wallace, was jailed for reckless driving last night following a street intersection crash in which two persons were injured here. William Lehtonen, Wallace, suffered multiple cuts and bruises and Mack McCully, Wallace, into whose car Edwards crashed, was badly bruised in the crash, which 00- curred at Third and River streets and drove the McCully car end of the city ball park. Both cars were badly damaged.
Police said Edwards's car skidded 36 feet before and that McCully's car was thrown 24 feet by the im- Two youths allegedly involved in a race with a their cars on city street here are to appear in juvenile court Wednesday, officers said today. They are Gunnar Wold, 14, Woodland Park, and Robert Casey, Wallace. Wold's car struck J. H. Van Uden, manager of the Wallace Lumber and Manufacturing pany, who suffered a seriously cut hand and will lose the use of the little finger on his right hand, Chief of Police Charles Foust said.
Wallace employees of the Interstate company participating in the natic telephone strike that started today, and local service was as usual today. Seeks Crash Damages. Henry L. Miller filed suit in district court today against John G. Torkelson asking $2935 damages as the result of an automobile accident November 1946, on the Kingston hill, stopped his Kellogg.
car on Miller the shoulder charges of the highway when the lights went out and that Torkelson's car crashed into him. Officers are seeking the driver of a car which sideswiped cars of J. Van Slyke and William B. Fausett on the Wallace-Kellogg highway last night. Descriptions furnished by Van Slyke and Fausett indicate the same car was involved in both mishaps.
No one was hurt and cars were not badly damaged. TRAFFIC DEATH HELD ACCIDENT LEWISTON, Idaho, nine-man coroner's jury ruled today that death of Percy O'Brien of Lewiston here yesterday was accidental. O'Brien, World war I. and II. veteran and former University of Idaho athlete, was fatally injured by a car while he was walking across a street.
O'Brien had lived in northern Idaho 41 years. He was, captain of the University of Idaho baseball team in 1922, the year he graduated, and was an outstanding Vandal football player. Officers and witnesses testified that O'Brien was walking across the street near the Green Gables when struck at 12:30 a. m. by a car driven by Lawrence Isaksen, 20, Genesee.
Leon Eikum and Ted Schleuter, Genesee, were in the car. Testimony was that the youths had about three glasses of beer at the Gables before the accident, but were under perfect control. O'Brien had been drinking and was walking across the street 10 to 15 feet in front of the car, nesses said. The night was rainy. Survivors include two brothers, James R.
O'Brien. Lewiston, and Patrick L. O'Brien, North Hollywood; two sisters, Mrs. Betty Jane Geidl, Lewiston, and Miss Marie O'Brien, Los Angeles. NEW DAIRY UNIT VOTED BY GROUP SANDPOINT, Idaho, April Twenty-five persons attended the first annual meeting of directors of the Panhandle Dairy Herd Improvement association here, with President Les Wyman, Bonners presiding.
Dr. Glenn Holm, Moscow. state veterinarian from the University of Idaho, spoke. The association, organized in Coeur d'Alene a year ago, includes the four northern counties of Benawah, Kootenai, Boundary and Bonner. The latter two counties, Unit No.
1, pooled their finances, the Cooperative creamery of Sandpoint and the Bonners Ferry a creamery each donating $50. The association voted organize Unit No. 3 in Bonner county with Boundary county to keep testing equipment and adding machine and Bonnet county to receive scales and $50. Edward Still was approved as tester of Unit No. 3.
Vice presidents elected were S. M. Bouman, Bonners Ferry, Unit No. A. R.
Holz, Coeur d'Alene, Unit No. 2, and Roberts, Blanchard. Unit No. They are presidents of their units. Secretarytreasurers are James Keyes, Bonners Ferry; Clyde Stranahan, Coeur d'Alene: Merle Samson, Sandpoint.
All are county agents. RETIRED IDAHO BANKER TAKEN LEWISTON, Idaho. April 7. -B. F.
Miller, retired Lewiston banker and lumberman, died at his home last night following a year's illness. He was born at Liverpool, England, and came to this country when a small boy. Miller joined with J. H. Uglem upon coming to Lewiston in 1919 and formed the Home Lumber company.
He was one of the organizers of the Lewiston Savings and Loan association. When he died he was first vice president and director of its successor, the First Federal Savings and Loan association of Lewiston. Survivors include five children: W. J. Miller, Spokane; Mrs.
Georgie Kucklick, Pomeroy, Mrs. Marian Humphrey, Seattle; Mrs. Florence Anderson, North Carolina, and Miss Helen Miller of Lewiston; a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Dalrymple, Minneapolis. BASIN HIGHWAY SURVEYS READY OLYMPIA, April 7.
(P) -Clarence B. Shain, state director ways, today announced completion of a survey of a proposed state highway system to serve the Columbia basin project. The survey proposes future expenditures of $17,679,485 for construction of 330 miles of new highways to criss-cross the project area. Shain said completion of the survey's proposals would depend on future development of the area and allocations of funds by the legislature. He said the proposed new construction would include 183 miles of primary highways and 147 miles of secondary highways.
They would be integrated with existing state highways within the project area, resulting in a total of 546 miles of state highways. JOHN WINS AS GUNN OF REGIONAL FARENNALS BOISE, Idaho, April 7. (P) John B. Gunn of Eugene, won the regional finals of the American Legion oratorical contest in tristate competition here today. Gunn will go to Pocatello Thursday for tHe western sectional contest and the right compete in the national finals April 17 at Charleston, W.
Va. Second place today went to John Squires of Pocatello and third place was won by Barry Garland of Port Angeles, Wash. 1200 TELEPHONE OPERATORS IDLE Management Personnel Keeps Exchanges Alive. BOISE, Idaho, April 7. (P) -Between 1100 and 1200 telephone operators and plant workers at Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph company exchanges in Idaho were off their jobs today in compliance with their union strike orders, H.
P. Stommel, Boise, Idaho manager for the concern, said. Management personnel was supplying emergency service at all exchanges. Stommel reported "normal service" was being provided at Arco, Bancroft, Council, Grace, Mackay, New Plymouth, Soda Springs, Star and St. Anthony.
Stommel said the company has about of 75,000 the Salmon telephones river. the Of state tems with 4195 telephondial The exchanges there sysdials are unaffected except on long distance calls which are handled only in emergencies, Stommel said. The dial systems are at American Falls, Castleford. Downey, Driggs, Eaton, Glenns Ferry, Hagerman, McCannon, Meridian, Middleton, Oakley, Paris. Shelley and Wendell.
Publie Cooperating. Stommel said the public was "cooperating very well" in placing only essential calls. He pleaded for subscribers to limit the use of their telephones to "absolutely necessary" calls. Pickets marched back and forth in front of four telephone company offices in Boise. There were two pickets in front of each establishment.
Mrs. Harper said the pickets would maintain their lines from 6 a. m. to midnight daily throughout the strike. Strike headquarters was established by Boise union in the Owyhee hotel.
2 WOMEN, GIRL HURT IN CRASH SANDPOINT, Idaho, April Mrs. Elmer Runyan, Sandpoint, received possible fractured right shoulder, and Mrs. Marie Dunkelberger and her daughter, Grace, were bruised and lacerated when a car driven by Elmer Runyan collided with a car driven by Thomas W. Lynch last night near the Spokane International underpass north of Sandpoint. The left front of Lynch's car struck the left front of Runyan's car, which went out of control and came to rest on its top at the foot of a 220-foot embankment.
The women received blackened eyes and Mrs. Runyan's condition is such that it is still impossible to move her to have an X-ray taken. All are suffering from shock. J. Muzzy, Hillyard, received a fractured right arm dislocated shoulder today while working at the Marska Pole plant, northwest of Sandpoint.
He was taken to the community and sent to Spokane this afternoon for further treatments. HOSPITAL BOARD OFFICERS NAMED CRANBROOK, B. April The board of management of St. Eugene hospital, is owned and operated by the Sisters of Providence of Charity, reelected C. J.
Frederickson chairman, with Mayor R. E. Sang vice chairman, Sister Denise Marguerite secretary, and Alan Graham, L. P. Sullivan and J.
M. Falkins directors. Outstanding accounts tine hospital for the last years amount to around $40,000 it was reported. The board has decided to launch a collection program in cases where the debtor is able to pay. Also discussed was the cost of caring for social service cases which the board opined should be limited to the hospital's own area, with cases from other areas not acceptable.
An operating deficit at St. Eugene hospital of $18,899.41 was reported for 1946. WISHRAM MAN KILLED BY TRAIN THE DALLES, April 7. CAP) -Bruno Bethin, 48, was killed by a Union Pacific freight train near Dillon, east of here, yesterday. He was working at Wishram, and apparently fell while walking along the tracks as the train neared.
HOSPITAL LATTER- CHIEF NAMED SAINTS SALT LAKE CITY, April 7. (4P)- William Grant Ovard, Idaho Falls business man, accepted appointment today as superintendent the Saints hopsital at Idaho Falls. Day The appointment was announced by Le Grand Richards, presiding bishop of the church. Ovard will replace George Collins, who resigned March 1 because of his removal to Spokane, Wash. Since that time J.
Howard Jenkins, coordinator of all LatterDay Saints hospitals, has been supervising the operation of the Idaho Falls institution. The new superintendent is active in Latter-Day Saints church work. He is president of the church's Idaho Falls stake and of the northern Idaho region of the church welfare program. FUNERAL RITES HELD FOR PASCO WOMAN, 56 PASCO, April 7. -Funeral services were held Saturday at the Christian church for Mrs.
Margaret Fogg, 56, with burial in Cityview cemetery. Mrs. Fogg. her son and two daughters, moved to Pasco from Colville in 1923. shortly after her husband, Ernest Fogg, died.
She moved to Colville with her parents. Survivors are two daughters, E. Michel and Mrs. J. W.
Hanco*ck, and a son, Lee Fogg, Pasco: two sisters, including Mrs. Frank Moss, Moses Lake; two brothers and six grandchildren. SPUD GROWERS WARNED. IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, April 7. LAID J.
Purcell, chairman of the Bonneville county agricultural conservation committee, has urged eastern Idaho farmers not to exceed their recommended potato plantings for the year. Bonneville county's recommended acreage Is 19,568. MOSCOW EYES CITY ELECTION Six Offices to Be Filled on April 22. MOSCOW. Idaho, April for the municipal tions April 22 will be made at a meeting of the city council, Mayor W.
L. Anderson revealed today. The council will provide for registration of voters at the city hall, name election judges and clerks. While there were various rumors of possible candidates for the six offices to be filled, there was nothing concrete available and no petitions had been filed. The council has not set a caucus or convention date, as was done for many years.
Next Saturday will be the last day for filing of nominations, either by petition or from caucus convention. In either case 40 voters are necessary to nominate. Posts to be filled are, the respective office holders now: Maywith, or. W. L.
Anderson: treasurer, Dan Crimins; clerk (City Clerk' Ray Carter died shortly after taking office two years ago), H. J. Smith acting; and one councilman from each ward. Floyd Higgins, Clarence Childs and A. E.
Koster. Councilmen hold office for four years, the other officers for two years. P. O. Work Postponed.
Plans for an addition to the postoffice building, as proposed by the postal department in 1945 and again last October, must be postponed for another year, according to word from Abe Goff, congressman from the first district. In a letter Goff explained that the President's budget as submitted to congress "included nothing for new construction of postoffices, and the appropriations committee proceeded to cut the budget estimates." it stands now," he wrote, "the only chance of securing the necessary funds will be in next vear's session when appropriations will be made for the fiscal year starting July 1, 1948." Facilities in the three-story federal building here have been termed inadequate several years. It was erected in 1911. In 1945 congress was asked to allocate $160.000 to finance an addition to the present building. Action then was deferred.
SEWER PROJECT PIPE OBTAINED KIMBERLEY, B. April In preparation for a busy year of city public works, delivery here of a carload of 10-inch sewer pipe was reported to the city council. The new city-owned power is in operation and a loading chute is being constructed at the gravel Prices are being obtained on a asphalt storage tank. Taxi operators have agreed remove their stands from Spokane street, where parking space is overtaxed, and instead will operate their services from portable wooden call booths. Reported by the city for March were 18 births, six marriages and one death.
The city detachment of provincial police reported collection of $1809 in fines. In preparation for purchase of government land required for publie improvements, the city is offering $250 plus expenses with a guarantee the lots will not be resold. City estimates will be discussed next week. GAME COUNCIL TO PICK CHIEF BOISE, April 7. (P) -Selection of a new director, upland policies and control of predators will be discussed at a quarterly meeting in So Boise next Monday of the state fish and game commission.
Walter Fiscus of Potlatch, commission chairman, said that problems of game bird production on state farms and on refuges and escape areas would be thoroughly studied. Plans for future development of bird populations, particularly of pheasants, will be, outlined. Michael Throemorton Coeur d'Alene and Maurice Lundy of Boise, bird study leaders for north and south Idaho, respectively, will present programs to the commisR. G. Cole of Boise, commission secretary, said it was likely that several candidates for the position of director would be interviewed.
The new director will succeed James O. Beck who resigned in January after serving five years. Cedric D'Easum is serving as acting director. WELL-KNOWN BUSINESS MEN IN COAST HOSPITAL YAKIMA, April 7. Three wellknown Yakima business men are reported to be under treatment at the Swedish hospital in Seattle for various ailments.
Jay D. Keck, prominent rancher and business man, is reported to have undergone a major operation. Bill Hargreaves went to the hospital Friday to undergo diagnosis for a possible serious ailment. Jack Crawford is in the hospital treatment and possible surgery for a leg ailment, Attendants at St. Elizabeth hospital here report that County Auditor Harold Purdin, who underwent surgery today, is responding favorably.
RECEPTION FETES BRIDE. WILBUR, April reception yesterday at the home of a Mrs. Ham Wachter honlored their the bride daughter, of Helen, Howard who Anbecame derson in a quiet ceremony Saturday evening at Creston in the home of the Rev. and Mrs. E.
I. Mitchell. She is a native Wilbur girl and attended this high school. Anderson, son of Mrs. Mary Anderson and the late Neal Anderson, is a Wilbur high school graduate and former athletic star.
He served World war II. two years in the European theater. FORMER TEACHER DIES. ELLENSBURG. April 7.
-Mrs. Elsie Curtis Crane, 76, former Pullman and Kettle Falls resident and Stevens and Ferry counties teacher. died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Vida Crane Egbert, in Ellensburg. Survivors also inelude a son.
Rodney Crane of Balley, and two other daughters, Mrs. Frances C. Brady of Anchorage, Alaska, and Mrs. Helen Moser. Seattle.
60-YEAR RESIDENT DIES. ELLENSBURG, Apridel 7. -Mrs. James Shearing, 83, known upper Kittitas county. resident for 60 years, died at Roslyn after a long illness.
Besides her husband she is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Hannah Poulot, Sacramento, Mrs. Lavina Wells, Seattle, and Mrs. Adah Ranko, Roslyn, and a son, George Cruthers, Seattle. MENZEL WEDS.
KELLOGG, Idaho, April Wallace, and nest R. Damiano, Kellogg, were married last night at the Kellogg church. (THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW Tuesday, April 8, 1947. 9 CHAMBER HELPS VETS' CONCLAVE V. F.
W. Gets Aid in Campaign to Finance Sessions. WALLA WALLA, April portion of the funds necessary in connection with holding the state convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Walla Walla will be raised by the chamber of commerce, according to plans developed at a meeting today. The plans were drafted by the the retail chamber's committee board and aPPairector. general calls In it tion by the V.
F. W. approximately $1500 to $2000. the exact amount to be determined later, to finance its 1947 department convention. 'The convention committee has accepted the plan which conforms to the policy set trp here in recent years.
Cars Are Recovered. Two stolen cars were recovered officers for the owners over the week end, department officials said today. A car belonging 10 Rizzutt was found abandoned in Baker by Oregon state police, after being reported missing late Saturday. A car belonging to Harold Winn. Freewater, was taken from a parking place on West Rose early Sunday.
Police recovered in College Place later in the day. The superior court damage sult of Steven Grover against Otto F. Miller scheduled to be heard by a jury starting Monday morning was recessed until afternoon or longer at the request of the attorneys. It was reported that an attempt was being made to settle the case before the hearing. HENRY FORD, 83, DIES AT HIS DETROIT SOME DETROIT, April 7.
(AP) -Henry Ford, 83, famed automobile pioneer, died at his estate at 11. o'clock last night. Death came to the famed industrialist at his estate in Fairlane, near Dearborn. ment of his vast mother empire a He turned over manageyear and a half ago to his grandson, Henry Ford because he said he wanted to devote more time to his personal affairs. Cause of death was not immediately learned.
CITIZENS' PARTY FILES PETITION COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, April Candidates of the Progressive Citizens' party for the coming municipal election, nominated at last Thursday's caucus, filed their petition with J. R. Wilcox, city clerk, today. The ticket includes candidates "for mayor, city clerk and four councilmen, with a vacantreasurer left when Haley, who was nominated, declined to accept. candidates are M.
E. Frandsen, present councilman, for mayor: John Kelly for clerk, and Adam Baldwin, C. C. Mudge, Ernest Stark and Charles Lunceford, councilmen for the four wards respectively. This is the second ticket to be filed, first being the Community Welfare group headed by J.
G. Adams candidate for mayor. Licensed to Wed. Marriage licenses were issued to William O. Pressley Cora L.
Gaby; James Jobes, 40, and Lucille Williams, 31: Bruce E. Thompson, 27, and Wanda Poole, 20; Lawrence R. Davis and Edith L. Foster: Charlie Carlisle, 48, and Nadelia Willenborg, 25; Homer Welch, 22, and Imogene Wilson, 22; Jennings Graham, 22, and Joan Dover, 19; Daniel Hogan and Audrey Lang; Frank Newhart, 33, and C. Elizabeth Jean Forbes, 29, all of Spokane.
Glen G. Dill, 27, and Bertha Robins, 20, both of Omak. Elmer S. Schnell, 35. Hope, Idaho, and Nadyne McKenzie, 28, Hermiston, Robert A.
Glenny, Lewiston, and Marjorie Smith, Clarkston, Milton R. Neider and Norma G. Walker, both of d'Alene; John Martin Peters, Vancouver, and Gladine L. Siler, Spokane: James E. Brown, 31, Greenacres, and Irene Whiteley, 25.
Coeur d'Alene: Franklin D. Stevens and Rita M. Tully, both of Farragut, and Paul R. Dillard, 21. Fort George Wright, and F.
Lorraine Slark, 18, Spokane. WASMER CHOSEN BY AREA GROUP SEATTLE, April 7. The state aeronautics commission elected A. Elliott Merrill, Seattle, chief Boeing engineering test pilot, chairman Saturday and chose Seattle for commission headquarters. Louis Wasmer, Spokane, was named vice chairman; Goodwin Chase Ellensburg, secretary, and Joseph P.
Adams, Seattle, was approved as commission director and executive officer. Sites for emergency landing in Stampede and Snoqualmie passes were discussed, with several under consideration before two a are chosen. Commission meetings may be held in any of the state's congressional districts, the delegates decided. BONNER COUNTY FARM HORSES, EQUIPMENT SOLD The Bonner county commissioners SANDPOINT, Idaho, April announced an auction sale was held at the county farm Friday and horses, plows. harnesses, mowing machine, hay rake and miscellaneous articles were sold.
Tractor equipment will be installed at the farm, they said. City police said two tires and two wheels were reported stolen from a two-wheel trailer at the O. K. Sale yard at Division and Oak. The trailer was to have been sold yesterday, Mr.
Boohr, one of the partners, told the police. Miss Mary Janes Elder has accepted a position as secretary in the office of Attorney Glenn E. Bandelin. Miss Elder, who served as a WAVE stationed at the Great Lakes naval base, during World war recently graduated from the Kinman Business college in Spokane. TELEPHONE GIRLS DON'T RETURN AFTER LUNCH OKANOGAN, April Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company's telephone headquarters in Okanogan were picketed at 9:30 Monday morning.
Girl operators who went out for lunch did not pass through the picket line to return. Switchboards are being kept open by supervisors and an abbreviated county service is given. Emergency calls are being serviced to doctors, hospitals, fire departments, funeral directors and newspapers. GIRL, 16, KILLED, BROTHER INJURED IN CAR PLUNGE THE DALLES, April 7. (AP) -Betty Lou Bradford, 16, Portland, suffered fatal injuries yesterday in the plunge of an automobile from the Evergreen highway east of Bingen, Wash.
She was a former resident of The Dalles, Ore. Her brother, Eugene Bradford, Lyle. the driver, suffered leg injuries. CONFERENCE SET FOR 4-H LEADERS Plans for Year to Be Mapped at Campus Sessions. ing from Huron, S.
D. Billed for I. E. E. A.
MOSCOW, Idaho, April 10 and 20 4-H club leaders of the county will gather here Wednesday to discuss plans for the coming year. The conference has been called by Darrell Kerby, county 4-H club leader. It will be held on the University of Idaho campus. Camden B. Meyer, mathematics instructor at the University of Idaho, will resign to become principal of Pendleton, high school.
Meyer has been on the university staff, completing graduate work last year at University of Southern California. He was superintendent of schools at Shoshone three years previously, com- Three members of the University of Idaho School of Education staff are billed for addresses before sections of the Inland cation association meeting Pills week at Spokane. Dean J. F. Weltzin of the school is in charge of a section working on "The development of leadership for rural life through educaDr.
Ray M. Berry will participate in a panel for reorganization of secondary school social science curricula. and Dr. A. C.
Lemon is secretary for the section on psychology. Will Remember Number. One Latah county automobile owner who probably will remember his automobile license plate number in the future was driving his machine again to day after it had been stolen. Charles Chamberlain, Potlatch, reported to city police that was taken from Main street between 2 and 3:30 p. m.
yesterday. He couldn't, however, remember his license number, and it was 10 p. m. before police could get the in-1 formation. A short time later the machine was found abandoned in an alley and the owner notified.
School Trustees to Meet. Trustees of all county school districts have been invited to a meeting at the courthouse tomorrow when Alton B. Jones, state superintendent expiatiblew instruction, Boise, will school laws. meeting was called today by Mrs. Nell P.
La Follette county superintendent. VERVAEKE RITES DUE IN COLVILLE COLVILLE. April Funeral services for G. J. (Walke) Vervaeke, 66.
Stevens county mining man who died Saturday in Omak. will be held at 9 a. m. Wednesday from the Colville Catholic church. the Rev.
Anton M. Flour officiating, burial in Holy Cross cemetery, Spokane. Rosary will be said at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Survivors Moser-Egger include chapel the here.
widow at the home in Omak; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Lou Montgomery, Coulee Dam; a son, Robert Vervaeke, plant superintendent for the United States Gypsum company at Evans, and a sister in west Flanders. Belgium. Vervaeke at one time was owner and operator of the Bonanza mine in northern Stevens county and Deer Trail Mining in southern Stevens county. He was a member of the Northwest Mining association and at one time was an officer of the Stevens County Mining association.
He suffered a stroke four vears ago from which he never fully recovered. PYTHIAN SISTERS TO HONOR FIVE KELLOGG, Idaho, April district meeting celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Pythian Sisters will be held in Kellogg Wednesday night. Delegations are expected from Coeur d'Alene ad Bonners Ferry. The meeting will honor five charter members of the Kellogg chapter -Eliza Harris, Eula Johnson, Mabel Redding, Anne Lombard and Rose Nunamaker. A class of 17 will be initiated.
Mrs. Dovie Simpson, Gem, a member of the Kellogg chapter, is Idaho grand chief of the organization and will be the principal speaker during the banquet scheduled to open the celebration. Army day will be celebrated at weekly meeting of the Kellogg Kiwanis club tomorrow noon. Mrs. Patience Curtis, Boise, grand matron of the Order of Eastern Star, will visit the Kellogg chapter Tuesday night.
She is on a state-wide tour. TRUCK DRIVER INJURED, FOUR VEHICLES PILE UP SANDPOINT, Idaho. April A truck driven Kenneth R. Moore, overturned on highway 10A three. miles west of Priest River Saturday night, in a blinding snowstorm.
A car going east and driven by A. E. Silver, Vay, Idaho, struck the truck. Roger A. Belvail, Priest River, passing at the time, stopped to take the injured truck driver to the Newport hospital.
In the meantime a car driven by Opal Thosath of Spokane came from the west and struck the Silver car, then hit the truck and careened into the Belvail car, all without injury to the driver. Observe Army Day. review the Wa-Hi R. T. C.
unit was a feature of Army day celebration this morning. The girls' sponsor corps of the school also took part. In a short talk before the review Lt. Col. Thomas K.
Lindley told the men, "Look forward. mindful of the Army week slogan: A Strong America a Peaceful America. You people, in case of les future need, will furnish the L. B. Carter, Bend, has been named manager of the Walla Walla Western Union office and arrived today to take over his new work.
He replaces Dee Hatton who retired April 1 after 30 years' service with the company. OLDER BOYS TO MEET. Youths from southeastern Idaho will meet at Pocatello April 13 and 14 for the 26th older boys' conference. Speakers will include J. of Boise, associate executive of the Y.
M. C. A. POCATELLO, Idaho, April 7. (AP) of incorporation filed with the secretary of state included: Ellensburg- -Central Washington Athletic corporation, capital $10,000, by Ed C.
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S. 121 Madison ADVERTISING. GOLDENDALE, April 7. (P) The beat of Indian tomtoms and the eerie wails of tribal ceren.ony echoed in Rock Creek canyon near here yesterday as Columbia river Flathead Indians their centuries-old spring festival heralding the salmon in the rivers and the ripening of roots. Women of the tribe gathered roots at sunrise and prepared Chinook salmon for the feast which started after Chief William Yallup and other tribal leaders performed the ancestral ritual in a long-house made of canvas and poles.
The men, women and children wore heavily decorated garments. They sat in two long rows, one side of the double line beating on the drums while the opposite line ate the food to the rhythm. Wigwams dot the grassy meadow of the canyon floor, where about 800 tribesmen will participate in the ceremony. The white man's influence present, however, in the Indians' parked automobiles and an enterprising soda drink and gay balloon wagon which was doing a rush business. RETRIAL DENIED IN SLAYING CASE BOISE, Idaho, April 7.
(P)-District Judge Charles F. Koelsch today denied a new trial for Ralph Golden, former Boise policeman and taxi driver, sentenced to life imprisonment after his conviction last December 20 of first degree murder in the shooting of Mrs. Mildred L. Rusho at her Boise residence. Koelsch issued a 17-page statement.
in which he reviewed rejected the claims on which the application for new trial was based. They were errors of the court in his instruction to the jury, that the verdict evidence was contrary to insufficient law and was to justify verdict. The statement was addressed to Prosecuting Attorney James Blaine and P. J. Evans.
attorney for Golden. Since Golden was sentenced he has been held at the state prison in Boise. LOCKER CLOSING COSTS 900 JOBS BOISE, Idaho, April 7. (P) -The closing of Idaho liquor establish-1 in March caused mately 900 workers to be thrown out of work, the Idaho state employment service today. In a ruling 19, the attorney general declared the so-called clubs illegal and they subsequently closed.
The employment service said that apparently a great number of those laid off by the closing found other work or were not seeking jobs, since only 150 filed applications for other employment. Meantime, the service reported 1622 jobs were available on March 29, an increase of 54 over the previous week. MISS FEDDERSON BRIDE. KELLOGG, Idaho, April Helen Patricia Fedderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul C. Fedderson, Kellogg, and Robert S. Neuman, Mr. and Mrs. 0.
C. Neuman, also of Kellogg, were married last night in the Episcopal church here. The Rev. Frank Gilvert officiated. Both are lat the University of Idaho.
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