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Show ' ' '.. . - SoThchrSay THE WEATHER . , T UTAH: Scattered deads and wide ly scattered thunder storms most" ly In soath and east portions this afternoon and Wednesday after' noon. Otherwise clear. Not much, change in temperature. Temperatures; Uixh 95 Low fit HVe in tli United States r now thoroughly and almost unani mously weed that the walls or Isolation are. cone forever. --Commander Harold Stassen, for- mer Governor of Minnesota. SIXTIETH YEAR, NO. 37 Sen. Barkley Calls For Ratification Of UNC History of Organized Peace Efforts Since 545 B. C. To League of Nations Reviewed By JOHN L. CUTTER United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Juy 24 (U.R) Sen. Alben W. Barkey, D., Ky., today called for ratification of the United Nations charter and said that the 'centuries-old effort to achieve lasting peace "is worth renewing." Barkley, senate Democratic leader, opened the second day of senate discussion of the treaty to bind the 50 United Nations into a world peace organization. Ratification is expected ex-pected by the end of the week. He reviewed the history of organized peace efforts from 545 B.V., to the League of Nations "proposal after the .last war. "The longing for peace, among the peoples ot the earth is not a new sensation," he said. "From 545 B. C. to 1919 A. D., the desire for peace among the peoples of the world was never absent" , He refused to assess the blame for failure of these efforts to prevent pre-vent World War II. But, he argued, we can profit by the mistakes mis-takes which .led to it only if we seek to avoid them now. "The effort is worth renewing," he, insisted. "I prefer the philiso-phy philiso-phy of Woodrow Wilson, of William Wil-liam Howard "Taft, of Charles Evans Hughes, of Elihu Root, of William Jennings Bryan, of Nicholas Murray Butler,' and of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Cordell Hull to that of the congregation of cynics who sit, as they always have' sat, in the seats of the scornful scorn-ful and the uneblieving." Administration leaders earlier had instituted a search for orators to put some pep Into the debate. -Despite their desire for speedy and overwhelming ratification of the document, administration senators sen-ators found themselves somewhat perturbed at the lack of interest displayed-by their colleagues during dur-ing the first day of charter debate. It got to the point wher Sen. J. William Fulbright, D., Ark., one of the charter's most ardent supporters, sup-porters, got up and appealed for "a little more spirited debate, a little more opposition." There can, he intimated, be too much of si good thing and the unanamity -with- which the -charter has- been received is "suspicious." ACCIDENT VICTIM DIES SPANISH FORK Ross Beck. 23, died this morning at 2 o'clock, in the Spanish Fork hospital as a result of a punctured lung in curred in an accident Monday. Provo, County, Utah Honor Pioneers of Beehive State Thousands of Utah county res! dents lined the streets of Provo, to witness an hour-long parade, honoring pioneers who entered this territory 98 years ago. Heralding a day full of events and activities of the old west, the parade began on a modern pat riotic note with a color guard of four Provo members of Gen Terry Allen's famous "Timber. wolf" division. Throughout the colorful parade,' young "Indians ' with leg make-up tans, decorated doll buggies, children and does were evident. and local riders and owners showed show-ed more than 200 horses in full western regalia. Sgt Alfred Carter, patient at the Bushnell general hospital; Pfc. Jack Storrs, Sgt. Jack Harrison and Sgt. Vernon Cheever, all "Timberwolves" on furlough, car ried the American Legion banner and Old Glory at the lead, repre senting the Provo Veteran's council. The Provo high school band came next, followed by a bicycle and doll buggy section of young pioneers and Indians, eyed critically by parents who applauded ap-plauded vigorously. Floats depicting de-picting pioneer scenes, and loudspeaker loud-speaker cars playing the national anthem and patriotic music passed. Old. pioneer residents- of the city, and four remaining members of the pioneer martial band rode on old wagons and floats. The horse section, which boasted animals of all sizes and colors. brought up the rear of the march which extended from Fifth West and Center streets, to along Cen ter Street, north on University avenue, to disband at North paVk. Utah Pioneer day will also be observed at Spanish Fork, where rodeo activities began Monday evening, and will take place again tonight, followed by dancing at the Arrowhead resort west of the city. Other county activities include a community celebration at Mapleton, where the local M. I. A. organization sponsored activities from noon throughout the after- UWII UU CVCIUDg. PIUIgTUJC spent a quiet day in the city itself, with all residents participating in celebrations of Provo or Spanish Fork. Business places were closed, however. FoUowins the parade. .Daugh ters and Sons of the Utah Pioneers Pio-neers of Provo, acted as hosts and hostesses to oldsters who participated partici-pated in the parade, at an outdoor party and program at North" park. special music and. entertain Bowles Announces Ration Boole 5; Perhaps Last WASHINGTON, July 24 (U.R) Price Chief Chester Bowles announced an-nounced today that 1500,000,000 copies of War Ration Book Five which he hopes will be OPA's last will be distributed between Dec. 3 and 13. At the same time, he said, 23,-000.000 23,-000.000 motorists will get new "A" gasoline books, the third edition edi-tion since gas rationing began. The agency hopes, Bowles said, these will be the last of the wartime war-time ration series and that there will be plenty of stamps in them "we won't have to use." Bowles said Book Five was designed de-signed to serve for 10 to 13 months because "it looks as if a ration book will be- needed at least through most of next year." He said the supply agencies the department of agriculture and war production board had informed in-formed OPA that meats and fats, canned goods, sugar and shoes "all will be in tight supply for some months to come.'" Both book Five and the "A" gasoline books will be handed out by school teachers in public boildings throughout the country. The new gasoline book, with five sets of stamps for a 15-month period, will become effective Dec. 22. Ration Book Five will not go into use Before Jsnrtr" Bowles warned that Ration Book Four must be sayed intact until Book Five , becomes valid because the spare stamps in Book Four must serve during an "interim "in-terim period" when its red and blue stamps are going and Book Five is not yet in effect. ment was presented and dinner served to everyone over 76 years of age. Concessions and swimming at the park continued through the afternoon. v- This evening, beginning at 8:30 p. m., the last of the big rodeos which have received such splendid splen-did response from Utah county citizens, Monday and Saturday nights, will take place at the county fair grounds and rodeo arena. Results of the second day contests con-tests for Provo Rodeo Days went into the record books, and thousands thou-sands of people who witnessed the performances agreed that an excellent ex-cellent rodeo had been presented by the riders and by Hutchison's Hutchi-son's famed rodeo stock. Glenn R. Kenner, Jaycee president and general chairman of the event, stated, "I sincerely believe that this show could not be equaled anywhere in' the state," and this thought was echoed by many enthusiastic en-thusiastic rodeo fans. Fresh rodeo stock is being held (Continued on Page Two) Little Child Had 'Blind Implicit Faith' In Father To Jump Off Bridge SAN FRANCISCO, July 24 (U.R) Five year old Marilyn De Mont "had no idea what death means and joined her father in Suicide from towering Golden Gate, bridge because of "blind, implicit faith in him, psychologists decided de-cided today. Authorities abandoned search for the bodies of Marilyn and her father, in the swirling riptides off San Francisco baj after the child took the lead in their 220 foot plunge yesterday from the bridge railing. t De Mont, an elevator operator, had been ill. Psychologists were puzzled as to why Marilyn apparently appar-ently seemed to have., obeyed a parental command to leap into the water. It was unusual human behavior, they agreed, for even sulh a young child to carry out an order that would mean self destruction. de-struction. But Dr. J. C. Geirger, director of public health in San Francisco, said he believed Marilyn was too young to have stopped to reason out that her obedience would bring harm. . "She probably had blind, im plicit faith in her father," Dr. Geiger said. "The child apaprently had no &&?Di2ScS PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. What Defejnt Will Mean to Japs j (BsiBssBsjBSHBSHiBsaMMsssassjsMMtaBsaHM tr-wy:gjfrr wwiw rga iimwwwmpjw1 iiu mmmmmmmm - lid - Iq Yt ' - 'Jr i J'?'l . 'iL. rseweM PHn-iwN is. Wi-T-"'7?A?t V7TZr?C7 Picto-map above illustrates highlights of probable peace terms Allies will impose updh Japan In case of unconditional surrender. Aimed at stripping the enemy of" conquered territory and wiping wip-ing out his capacity for future war. they include reduction of army and destruction of Jap fleet and air force; elimination of heavy industry with war production potentials, surrender of all conquered con-quered territory (indicated by black areas on map), including Manchuria, Korea and Formosa; dismantling of shipbuilding facilities and strict control over imports. ; Big 3 To Recess To Learn Of British Election By MERRIMAN SMITH POTSDAM, Julyi 24 (U.R) The big three conference will recess tomorrow to learn '-the out-come of Britain's elections, to be announced an-nounced Thursday, hut President Truman -and-JSreoaiepStalin' will) continue their talks next week regardless re-gardless of who wins the British race, It was learned authoritatively authoritative-ly today. The British announced officially official-ly today that Churchill was going to London for the Thursday election elec-tion results, but added the "Berlin conference" would hot end. Churchill plans to leave Wednesday Wed-nesday for London and if he wins the election he is expected to return re-turn by Friday wheitthe big three will resume its meetings. British Foreign Secretary Anthony An-thony Eden and Labor Leader Clement Attlee will return with Churchill. There was a wide belief in British circles that if Churchill is licked Eden will return to Pots dam as foreign; secretary, but Att lee will remain in London dealing with his new duties as prime mm ister. While Churchill is in London Mr. Truman and Stalin probably will confer informally, but this has not been confirmed. Official sources in Potsdam de clared there was no foundation for the recently circulated report that part of the American delegation has already left Berlin and that another section was leaving soon for a new and surprising des tination. These sources said that there had been a number of "low-level departures arid arrivals' but, none of importance. While all indications pointed toward the conference continuing into next week, it was conceivable conceiv-able that a Churchill defeat would (Continued on page two) idea what death means," one psychologist psy-chologist sa id. He speculated, that Marilyn had ended her life voluntarily volun-tarily ,without protest, probably without even a last minute question ques-tion as to a reason for such an act. Two bridge painters. Jack Rick-etts Rick-etts and Al Malmoux, said they saw De Mont first, ;but believed he was another painter. Then, they said, they saw Marilyn poised on a girder outside, a four foot a 1 i a nign peaesirian ran. Horrified, they watched as the girl jumped, hurtling head over heels downward. They said they were certain her father was; not touching her when she plunged; Even as Marilyn's: small form hurtled Ihroueh the sunlit can be tween, the bridge and the rushing waters the man leaped to the rail and went over in a perfect swan dive, the witnesses recounted. After giving the alarm on the bridge telephone. RJcketts and Maloux went to the par De Mont had parked near the; south tower of the great span. Inside the vehicle ve-hicle they -found a: crude rxte which read: -l "This auto belongs to Mrs. A. C. De Mont, 4356 26th St, (San Francisco. I and my daughter have committed suicide." The note was signed, "A C. De MontT 1 - r ; m SUPPLICATION- i Lord, give me eyes of vision eyes to see Like those who gazed from rugged! canyon walls Into a waste that nurtured one small tree, Beholding homes and freedom's spacious halls. Lord, give me eyes of wisdom eyes' to look Into the desert of my withering soul, Andiftdthe-Wee of faith-that I -forsook -To play a wandering doubter's role. Lord, give me eyes of reverence-- eyes cast up Unto the summits of pure melting snow, That I may fill my empty, rusting cup And water deep the tree that it may grow. ANON Petain Accused of Being In League With Nazis As Early As 1934 By HERBERT KING PARIS, July 24 (U.R) Former Premier Paul Reynaud accused Marshal Henri ' Philippe. Petain today of being in league with the Nazis as long ago as- 1934, soon afteV Adolf Hitler rose to power. Reynaud, testifying for the second sec-ond day as the state's first witness wit-ness in the treason trial, launched a bitter personal attack on Pe-tan. Pe-tan. The aged and .nervous chief hVacluTer closely and iwtaKd of state in the Vichy regime eyed occasionally. Dipping deep into the history of Petain, the "hero of Verdun" in the first world war, Reynaud thundered dramatically: "The myth of the victor of Verdun Ver-dun is sheer piffle." He recalled that Marshal Ferdinand Ferd-inand Joffre had accused Petain of having no confidence in the defense of Verdun, and said Petain Pe-tain was nreparing to withdraw his right flank but was prevented by orders from his superior. The dapper Reynaud, employing employ-ing all his famous oratorical skill, wound up his testimony at 4 p.m. he was on the stand three and one-half hours. He accused Petain of heading a "plot" to. get. . France's seperate armistice with Germany signed Polish Boy Faces Deportation Unless AGO Intervenes NIfW YORK July 24 U.R Joseph Eugene Paremba, 12-year-old Polish boy who was smuggled into the country aboard a troopship last Friday, Fri-day, today faced deportation : unless the Attorney General's office intervenes for him. Frank Watkins, district di-- di-- rector of immigration, said yesterday after a three-man committee completed an investigation in-vestigation that the boy's case was being appealed to the Attorney General's office but Sat he would have to be den-ted if the plea failed. The boy was smuggled into ; the country by members of a field artillery battery whose ; mascot he was in Europe. One -: of the members of the battery. ? CpL LeRoy .Ritchey of Tulsa, . I OkUi wantgtd adptflJoy. . The fcther members of the bat tery support Ritchey, UTAH.i TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1945 i I.TTi tii jilt r in 1940. Even; before the Armistice, Armis-tice, he said Petain had schemed under an aura of false prestige to seize power for himself. Petain, he charged, opposed an extension of the Maginot line along the Franco-Belgian frontier. It was in that section, at Sedan, that the - Nazi hordes sliced through in 1940 to overrun France. Gen. Maxime Weygand had advocated ad-vocated continuing the Maginot EW! "weil alon5 uil iiuuuci, c;uauu testified. . "I do not believe France could live if led' by a man inspired by a spirit like that of Petain and his accomplice," said Reynaud, the premier in the dark days of France's collapse. . He charged that both Petain and Weygand conspired to prevent pre-vent the French army .from going to North Africa to carry on the war after the fall of France. He recounted the strife within the government at Bordeaux, to which the government had fled from Paris. That led to Reynaud's resignation and; Petain's opening of negotiations with the Germans from an armistice. Take Moiir Solatium Tuberosum, Well Roast Ours oil a Forked Stick and Call 'em Spuds! BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN WASHINGTON, July 24 (U.R) When the government gets its paws on a simple thing like a potato, it becomes a solanum tuberosum: tu-berosum: I mean it gets complicated. compli-cated. Next thing you know potato salad comes out like corn meal mush mixed With mayonnaise. This cause complaints.; these result re-sult in official Inquiries. Now we have the U. S, senate whipping into and or mashing through a couple of ftcres of hermetically-sealed, hermetically-sealed, dehydrated, Julienne potatoes. po-tatoes. ;i : . What happened was that the government lent the F. S. Huxley & Sons Co., of Ontario, N. Y., $500,000 to buy some potatoes, slice 'em, dry -'em, and ship 'em to England under lend-lease. So a Miss Schenck of the .war food administration dropped up to Ontario in 1944,' looked over 14L-000 14L-000 pounds of the finished, product and okaved ?cnu She came back a few weeks later and rejected the Navy Dive- Bombers Pounce On Big Segment of Jap Fleet In Hiding At Kure Major Part of Nips Surviving Fleet, Air Forces Finally Brought to Bay; Tokyo Admits Only 'Slight' Damage GUAM, July 24 Hundreds of American navy dive bombers pounced upon a big segment of the Japanese fleet hiding in the Kure navy base today in a furious and continuing con-tinuing attack-that stung the enemy air force into battle for the first time in weeks. ; . ' Fragmentary reports from Admiral William F. Hal-sey's Hal-sey's U. S. Third fleet off Kure indicated that a major part of Japan's surviving sea and air forces had finally been Jap Forces Take Offense In Kiangsi CHUNGKING, July 24 c Japanese forces have taken the offensive in Kiangsi province pro-vince in an apparent effort to relieve pressure on embattled Kweilin, 260 miles to the southwest: A Chinese communique com-munique announced today enemy troops have swept to the Kan river. v The communique said Japanese Japa-nese troops have captured Waan, IS miles east of Suichwan (33 miles southwest of Nanchang) and were driving on Taiho, 25 miles north of Waan, when they were intercepted by hard-fighting Chinese Chi-nese troops. Japanese troops in this slashing drive may have hoped to force the Chinese high command to withdraw some of. its troops from those asaulting Kwilin's per-meter. per-meter. However, the communique also anonunced that Chinese forces pounding the Outer defenses of Kweilin, former great- American air base city and capital of Kwangsi province, had reached within three miles of Lingchwan, 15 miles northeast of Kweilin, and were bombarding the town. Holiness Healer Awaits Divine Intervention ST. CHARLES, Vs., July 24 (U.R) The Rev. Bill Parsons, holiness faith healer, waited -today for divine intervention to reduce the pain of copperhead copper-head poisoning which was turning his swollen face blue, and defied state authorities to stop a snake - charminff jamboree planned for Sunday by his followers. Parsons, his face puffed as the poison took effect, gingerly ginger-ly pointed out the place on top his head where an angry copperhead bit him Sunday night after docilely taking a klektnr around from one of the sect's "rood sisters." The sister was treading on the snake in compliance with Biblical passages, Parsons said. But the reptile got angry as he held It above his head , as usual. "I'll be all right because the Lord will take care of me," Parsons said. In Richmond, Gov, Colgate Darden planned to confer with the state attorney general gener-al today to find some way to ban the Jamboree for the homecoming- of the Rev. Georre Hensley, founder of . the healers. Darden said the sect had gone a little too far under "the guise of religious free dom." same batch, because the ends of some of these Julienne potato slices were colored gray and the middles of some were brown. She returned a third time, gave those potatoes another double-o, and said she guessed the English would enjoy eating all but 28,000 pounds of 'em. Huxley & Sons were what you might call confused. The fickle Miss Schenck was transferred to California and I-am committing no libel when I say this was a relief re-lief to the potato cookers. They opened their cans of rejected potatoes po-tatoes and spread the contents on tables. , A dehydrated Julienne potato slice, I'd better explain; looks like a piece of string a quarter of an inch long. The Huxleys hired a crew' of ladies to examine a couple billion of. these slices and throw away those with gray ends 'and brown middles.. "And another inspector came up this spring and examined our potatoes po-tatoes for .the fourth, time .and COMPLETE UNITED PRESS TSXJtGRAPH NEWS SERVICE brought fp bay and; were being pounded to pieces by the American Ameri-can raiders. "Many" Japanese warships were caught riding, at anchor in Kure harbor on the inland sea. United Press War Correspondent Richard W. Johnston reported from the attacking fleet. The Japanese ships and their shore batteries threw up a terrific ter-rific hail of flak and swarms of enemy fighters rose to battle the raiders, but Johnston said the American Helldivers pressed the attack home with "excellent results. re-sults. Tokyo admitted "slight" dam age to warships at Kure, but claimed that '30 American planes were shot down or damaged Upwards of 1,000 carrier planes were on the attack! over Kure and the chain of enemy airfields around the naval station, and it was indicated they had flushed out a huge concentration of Japanese Jap-anese aircraft hidden there. The carrier strike kicked off a day of unprecedented American aerial offensive during which perhaps per-haps 2,000 Yank warplanes. rang ing from fighters to giant B-29 Superfortresses were over the enemy homeland. A record fleet of over 600 B-29's bombed Osaka and Nagoya, and roxyo said another . 400 army fighters and light bombers also hit Honshu from their bases on Okin awa and Iwo Jima The main blow at Kjure. opened! at dawn, when Halsey launched his first waves of fighters, dive bombers and torpedo planes from a fleet rendezvous that Tokyo said was somewhere off the south east coast of Honshu. , Caught flatfooted in the open- ng minutes of thet American strike, the Japanese ; reacted at first with a terrific anti-aircraft barrage. Then, for the first time since Halsey began ' his fleet assault on Japan on July 10, Japanese fighters rose to meet the attacking Americans. ; Climbing through their own blazing xiaic screen, the enemy filers put up a desperate but ap parently futile battle to defend the great,, naval anchorage. By ail accounts trickling into fleet headquarters their defense was unsuccessful. "Weather fine, results excellent," excel-lent," was the first terse report from Yank bomber pilots landing back on their carriers. The Kure strike apparently was (Continued on page two) Fire Fighters Make last Ditch' Stand in Raging Forest Blazes BY UNITED PRESS i A climactic battle between man and the elements for control of raging forest fires ? enveloping nearly 150,000 acres of 'timber landin three northwest states neared a critical stage! today. . Forestry officials reported that thousands of soldiers, sailors and civilian fire fighters had been told to prepare 'last-ditch" firelines in the face of the at Gadfly advancing advanc-ing red tide. . - i . Weekend rains temporarily halted the main blaze; the Tillamook Tilla-mook fire in western Oregon, but rising winds carried turning em- okayed 'em," testified Frank F. Haugh of the Huxley company. ' "That's fine," said Sen. Kenneth Ken-neth F. Wherry of Neb., the chairman chair-man of the senate small business subcommittee. "And Where are these potatoes now?" J Haugh said they still were in his warehouse, deteriorating. Why one segment of the government ordered 'em,, another j approved em. and. a third refused to ac cept 'era, he could not understand. He said that was wny lie took nis potato troubles to the Senate. He said he had to get action, er he'd have a mountain of. rancid, dehydrated de-hydrated potatoes sullying the clean, clear air of Ontario. .4 And leavtar. the government holding the, er, potato sack," add ed sen.; wjierry. ,i s Came then succession of federal fed-eral potato experts. They proved so adept at slipping this particular particu-lar hot potato ta the next ieilow that Sen. Wherry Jmised , to question them loathe rest f the PRICE FtVE CENTS Aussies Force Nips Bach In Confusion MANILA July 24 ue' Japanese, forces in the Mount Batochampar area of southeastern south-eastern Borneo retreated in continued confusion today Their columns pulling out to the norths-were mauled by Seventh division Australians, who knocked out several truck loads of enemy units. The Australians surprised and waylaid the enemy withdrawal late Saturday and early Sunday , at a point about' six,, miles north, of Balik pa pan's oil installations. The Japanese were completely unprepared for the attack, and Australian patrofs pushed north up the main road for three miles without meeting any resistance. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's com-' munique announced that far eastern east-ern airforee fighter and bombers, striking at Japanese sea communications, commun-ications, sank 10 enemy craft, probably sank another, and damaged dam-aged at least 10 ranging from, medium tonnage freighters to luggers and junks. 2 Heat Deaths Reported In Midwest Wave BY UNITED PRESS The midwest sweltered under temperatures of more than 100 de-srees de-srees in some communitiea todav as -the weatherman-termed the current hot spell a "decided heat wave. Two heat deaths were reported in Minneapolis -yesterday as the mercury soared to 96, hottest day of the season. Temperatures will range between be-tween the mid 90's and 100 degrees for the rest of the week, U. S. weather bureau forecasters reported. re-ported. Occasional thunderstorms In the northwestern portion ot the midwest mid-west will afford only slight relief to hard hit city dwellers. The temperature yesterday reached an average eight degrees above the July 23 normal, fore casters said. Hottest spot in the midwest was Springfield, Minn., where the mercury registered -103 degrees. The temperature in St. Louis hovered around the 100 mark, while in East St. Louis, 111. a 98-degree 98-degree held on from yesterday. Crops, lagging behind schedule after a Jong siege of cool weather, (Continued on Page Two) bers to set additional spot, fires in rugged country near the junction of the Salmonberry and Nehalem rivers, extending the western fireline four' miles nearer the Oregon' Ore-gon' coast The newest front was in an inaccessible in-accessible area reached only by pack trail. Other crews on the eastern side of the- Oregon fire ere trying to hold a line along the Timber-Oochran railroad. Nearly 90,000 acres have been burned in the Tillamook blaze, raging between Portland and the ing 240,000 acres burned in 1933, Oregon coast. The fire, blanket-has blanket-has covered 140 square miles in almost two weeks, destroying numerous logging company operations oper-ations in its path. , Men were being rushed, to the nwe fire front on the Salmonberry and Nehalem rivers as state for estry headquarters reported con ditions in. the other Oregon fire areas were much improved. Lowes prevailing .temperatures helped the fighters, but it was added, "the weather Is touch, and go with a definite possibility that it will turn very warm-again." Fires in western Washington covered) more than 7,600 acres but rising humidity was an aid to fire-f men. The, biggest 1 Washington state blaze was in, the North Kivel area. - . -A, rancher; Alva CTatsonwai burned to death, near .Pomeroy). Wash, while fighting a wheal fire between Dayton and Pomeroy. Pom-eroy. , i x -r -More than 3,000 acres were burned w over.-. Thefire. lighter stemmerthe , roaring -eonflagra uon at me cage ot romeroy. - - fighters ? nears, Kellogg,, Ida. Fori estry officials said ihe 4.500 acrt blaze was. "well in hand." -range fire was reported still burning, in Shoshone, Ida area |