ra GOT TW Tl il lav's fern Herald '," t,,u0 buck Hi" ,! 1 tWj aXl Mat "f U" Pilpu). uuv Phlllpl11""' ,,, of un iNlmxl, and "kVu vasn't much of it "ffU Sow, croajarf ver In K:dTn;;idc; lh?' "5llM umber of our ma ',bl.Vw ho were on NgoroBomi 'lnW, i MHliml bonis. !; io l.v, hud only n rnil".. 'rftiu'uV, ..'3 &P.pV-rc..ltly wunlc. il for tb " , ' '' -jArn wnr goes, It didn't Accvn a!.. klrmlrii, but !Sl!hlv UOKS symbolic this f. 1h J ,!, J'ucHlc ,iot!.l due loreiifti-r they'll u'5y.m fight. COUNTER ..Rrs f. nnd when they c,fn the flush beginning, they bit . ..... I.i.n IlllorPHllllll Tmtle .lories In the Pacific "EES, our observers snot iJi arowini! Jl concentration. tX up countor-nltuck. So Jpbocllc were counted. The Tokyo nullo says 4U0 of .... ..prior nlnnci iitliiekccl the Manila re. damaging some Jnp WARSHIPS. It's a fair (lucss that the little yellow men were biiidim up r,o,h,il"ii irr. ihero. ond wo SMACrifcU "'The point Is Hint we're ON OUR TOtS :4-.t tip forces on Lcyte ore cstl J mtled today nt from 45,000 to 60,001) ami Ollu.L' unu"' INC. They're flying in oir rein forcements steadily. One correspondent says today lhat our progress In tho battle oILeytc Is heartening, but dirty lijhtlng Is still ahead, lie adds that the going Is tougher Ihiin the WORST 111 new uuincn uiai iht enomv "has to ba pi'led out ol foxholes Jnp by Jup."- - ADMIRAL M1TSCIIEH warned " us scvcrnl days bnck not to upeel further SWEEPING ad nce In the Puclflc for a while. He pointed mil that we re light Ini at VAST dlsliinccs from home, thut we've been fighting i LONG TIME, thus using up immense quantities of supplies. Well have to CO SLOWER while we BRING UP MORE sup plier Our present problem Is to HOLD WHAT WE'VE TAKEN jwhllc wo get ready for further .advances, C0MET1IING appears to be J brewing at Melt. Since early yesterday, wo have liken four of Its 22 forts. They Wto have fallen TOO EAS JLV, The German general Von 'Hundstedt, says In a broadcast: Melt has fulfilled its task in Voiding bnck tho Americans wmie our front line forllficu' lions were being deepened." I, nuyoo ine Hermans aro got' I'Mg ready to evacuate this itrongest fortress in western turopo. Headquarters dis patches this morning say the anwer to this riddle may be "peeled within iho next 24 to p nourj, UOLLAND is quiet, with low . ceilings, snow flurries nnd iienerallv hn,i u,.iiinp Lni.iin,, blrititviiu ...u.i J -.-..... p, titiiiiiiiuill, IIKIU heavy snow in the Vosgcs liMoinj to tne south of Metz, iircre is ioW cloud nt Mctz, HQ OUr, recnnnnlucrmr-n nlnm.c t'" F whether the Germans f," """Sing in reinforcement; ' Pulling out. THE uslans, stopped In Buda- lv,..Vi uiuern suourDS, ore rvaig in from tho east, and " niy j7 miic away Tho -'Crmans nrr. rt.ii.ti.... i.....t. will, I 'S",K uiitr. iiuiu fcm.. nncl nnti-tunk Buns, f ress Is slow. TOCKHOLM snys today' Hint rumnrn nr nm . jL.. nlnn.iri i """' S ncnin arc fancellcd. u u , 'IP Present "is ho Is or Is he Pier mZ I " w'n regnr,1 , 10 CI " " 'Irsl-clnss pulp thriller Khleli probablv nxnlnln. lm i mo p,,....- " - ONnriM .,,.. . . iu , . uisnaienes toe nv liv Pie fir.; " mat 1110 'Inking of k ex"," 'ttleshlP TlrplU Inlli i ,r release strong I .1 ,.,hc "rlllsh homo fleet Wv. c "Kulnst tho .Inns. cnuor io M n mi I nut period when In The Shata-Cacade Wonderland NTtmbr 14, If Max. fNT. 13) 4 Mia. . Precipitation Hit 24 boBTi fitriftnt jfltr ta'dftte ,.. Normal 1.81 Last year roracaitt Clear. Widntaday Sfaootlnf Hoan Orofonl Open 7:10 Close ... Taltlake: Opca , .....7:25 Clote M. PRICE 5 CENIS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1944 Japs Trapped By GO Artillery Barrage Mighty Battleship Missouri Fires a Salvo iin Tritons dpenI i PUSH TOWAfilTl . im .... ',- nnnn nnnnrn tltlbtl UUtiUtti .. K; .,," ' v. ,. 4t Number 10313 By JOSEPH E. DYNAN PAWS, Nov. 14 W) Britain and Franco were reported in ac cord today on the desirability of forming u bloc of western Euro pean nations to help keep Ger niimy in check during the com ing years of peace. Itcsponiilblu quarters said Del glum mid ilulluud may become original signatories to such a re gional pact along with Britain and Krance and that eventually Norway, Sweden and Denmark may come In. Consider Favorably Summarizing the weekend dis cussions of Prime Minister Win ston Churchill nnd Gen. Charles' do Gaulle, a French news agen cy expressed the view that "the French and British governments would consider favorably the possibility of concluding, such regional accords." . . (A dispatch from London said sources in the British capital ox- Eressed belief tliat a similar com.. Ine would be formed In-the cast by Russia, Czechoslovakia and 1'oluiul and uiai ni ineir next conference Prima Minister Chur chill, President Roosevelt and (Continued on rago iwoj lv.. v hub nnrinn tuhnii f'o StS,wl,l, brl2lnB In fN,,-Xtj;cmo scarcity of news lmifir.. lroJ)0 tl" n Httlo - .,....,v.,,,,,,H u,8. Hpbp. . ' ILK.6 J! " Inlerestlna side- 5 slorv ,IlllroPcnn ways In 'PaVX " lny lhnl Count Representative Of New Area to Be Select ed "' T .inl which councllmon around the city table will represent the newly acquired nroa north of Inwn will nrobablv be one of the tonics to be discussed at to night's session of city fathers. This area, which came in un dcr one of the annexation mea nirnc missed 44 to 31 by rc.ll dents of the precinct Involved, Includes Mountain view, irving. nn lli'luhtn. Nob Hill. Sunny. ulrlp. Eldorado Heights and Lake view addition. The town vote was 3!Utt for, and 1245 against, A second annexation measure which embraced a section south nt Klnmnth Falls, failed to pass, losing by one negative vote, n was 31 for, .32 against, m the south precinct. In town, voters went 3454 for, and 1200 against the measure. As provided by law, districts mnv be annexed to a city only by majority vole of those persons I Winn In tne district uivuiveu, Tim eltv vo e. though, over- tuiin m no v in rnvor ol anucxa. linn, did not bring the south sec- ,,r. mm I nr ruv. ii will nnw be necessary for an ordinance to be drawn up ana passed, changing Ihe city s douiv rinrin. in inrliiric the ncwly-aC' tiulre'd northern area, according to I'Oltee JUCIRC nnruiu TO RAILROAD CITY By DEAN SCHEDLEH GENERAL MacARTHUH'S HEADQUARTERS, Phlllppln.s, Nov. 14 (I') (Via Army Radio) Japanese reinforcements and equipment became a bloody shambles in Limon today when trooped by an American artillery barrage as aougnooys movea on the Ormoc road town from three sides. Obierreri on Breakneck ridae near Ormoc Talley, where tne bodies of more than 600 dead Japanese soldiers were counted after one day of fighting, saw large concentrations of Japanese reinforcements, troops, trucks and guns rolling Into Limon. American artillerv roared throuahout the nlflht ana today tn. town was a mats of flaming wreckage and apparently uninhabited. Mai. Gen. Fred Irvina, 24th division commander, told Fred Hampton, Attociated Pratt war correipondent, he was reluctant to tay the Japanete force In Limon had been knocked out. He added, however, the prospects were bright for American forces if the Japanete have been eliminated. The Japanete have elements of five divisions Sighting agalntt the Americans in the Philippines, Gen. Douglas MacArthur hat announced. Gen. Douglas MacArthur said today the Japanese first divl slon was in action on the Pina- monoan-Ormoc highway, and tne zmn division nas Been iden tified by its dead. The 16th, 30th ' and 102nd divisions al ready had been reported in the fight. At full division strength, this would mean 60,000 Japanese troops in tho hotly-contested sector of Leyte Island. Plans Slatted MacArthur reported the steady hut painfully slow Amer ican drive naq. oroacen ine ene my's plans for a counter blow py compelling tne Japanese to premature and piecemeal com mitments of his forces for the defense of tho main bastion of the Yamashlta line. While Am erican artillery raked tho enemy in the Ormoc squeeze, elements of the dis mounted .U. S. first cavalry di vision seized another., elevation, Mt. CabunganBah, overlooking the battlefield, in three-mile advance from Mt. uataDaran where their positions were be lng consolidated. ' . ' . ' Take Mill Zvzb . Their: left flank also' took in another height, called hill 2926. A MacArthur spokesman saia the Japanese had infiltrated some American 'ridge positions to send suicide , squads against the Yanks, but tne eiiori was mainly ineffective. General MacArthur said tne bulk of the-24th division, moy. ing down the tortuous highway toward Ormoc from Carigara bay, was proceeding slowly in tho face of increasingly strong opposition. By DANIEL DE LUCE MOSCOW. Nov. 14 (?! Rus sian forces have driven .into the important ran cny oi-tfastpcr-eny, 37 miles east 'of Budapest, and are encaging the enemy in hand-to-hand fighting, front dis patches said today, The Germans were reported hurling in numerous new tanks and scores of anti-tank weapons in an attempt to check tne soviet driva. to outflank the' Hungar ian capital. . ine nazis were or fering tho most determined ar mored resistance since tho big tank clashes In-which they were beaten back in the Debrecen area last month, Admit Penetrations (The Germans admitted soviet units had penetrated into Jasz bcreny, but asserted the attack ers, were hurled back.) Jted army columns striking (Continued on Pago Two) Irish Refuse To Bar Fugitives LONDON. Ncv. 14 (IP) Eire has Informed Britain it can give no assurance against granting asylum to political refugees from axis countries. Pnnl Fmrvj-Evans. undersec retary for-the-dominions, told commons today that Prime Min ister Eamon Dcvalcra, replying to allied representations seeking to bar enemy war criminals from all neutral countries, took the stand his country would accent such fugitives should "Justice, charity or the honor of the nation" so require. , Dcvalcra made it plain, how ever, that Eire would deny ad mission to aliens whose pres ence would Injure Irish neutral ity or tho interests of friendly states. British Home Fleet Sinks Nine Vessels in Convoy LONDON, Nov. 14 (H Ships of tho Brillsh home fleet de stroyed nine German vessels Sunday night off Lister fjord, south of Egersund, Norway, and drove n tenth ashore, an admir alty communique announced tp nlftlit. . The enemy convoy, 11 ships Including M-elass minesweepers, was taken by surprise as it at tempted to move northward along the coast. Two cruisers and four destroyers composed the British force. This occurred the same day that British airmen sank the German battleship Tlrpitz off Norway. Berlin acknowledged its loss today, b declared a great part of the crow was saved. Tho Stockholm newspaper Tid ihn other hand, said only 800 of tho crow of 2000 wcro rescued, and that- Berlin now expected a British landing In Norway. The Norwegian gov ernment In London announced some ot Its forces had joined Story's End May Show Bare Facts DALLAS, Nov. 14 No body knows the end of this story, but Youngsters plodding to a country school found a mon coat and hat on tho road. A few steps "further lay a pair of nants; then a shirt; and lastly n pair ot shorts. the Russians In action In north ern Norway. Berlin's broadcast requiem for the 41,000-ton Tlrpitz said: "The German battleship Tlr pitz, engaged in protecting the north Norwegian coast, has re pulsed in the last two years nu merous air attacks by strong jmeelnl British bomber forma tions and shot down a large number of enemy machines. On Nnvnmhor 12. the Tirpitz was again attacked by British planes with super-bombs. Tho battle shin, lvlng In shallow water just off the Norwegian coast, was put out of action. A grcot part of the crew was rescued." Klnklnir of tho Tlrpitz In Tromso fjord Is expected here to rolcaso additional strong units of tho British home fleet for service ogainst the Japanese in far eastern waters. Potential Menace As long as the Tlrpitz remain ed afloat she constituted a po tcntlal threat which made it Im perative that tho royal navy keen some of its most powerful warships at homo ready to deal with the German vessel should she venturo forth. With the Tirpitz gone, sunk at her mooring Sunday by RAF bomborsi all that remains of the German surface fleet Is bottled UP In the Baltic. These rem nants include two pocket battle ships, the Admiral Scheer and the Lutzow; two eight-Inch gun cruisers, the Hipper and Prinz Eugene, and four six-inch gun cruisers. u: S. PACIFIC-ixeetheAd-l QUARTERS, Pearl Hamor, or. 14 (") The simmering cam paign in the Palau islands broke into brief activity last week when 200 Japanese troops oc cupied Ngeregong islet, eight miles northwest of American- France Orders Count's Arrest PARTS. Nov. 14 (P) The French government hag ordered thi arrest nf the Count of Paris, pretender to the non-cxlstant throne of France, reported to have been wounded at Perpig- nan after crossing the bpanisn frontier into southern -France. , Thus the government adhered to an old law which prohibits nretenders to the throne from i-psidlnff nn French territory, and created another problem in ine aspirations of the 3B-year-oio Henri de Guise. A warrant issued by the in terior ministry to all depart ment prefects charged him with Illegal entry into the country and violation of the law against residence on French soil. City Councilman Still Unnamed At a late hour Monday, no ac tion had been taken to determine just who would serve the city of Klamath tans as councilman from Ward 1. In a race which ended in a tie for the two candidates, Angus Newton and Matt Finnlgan, it is necessary for the police judge to permit the two to draw by lot for the post. Police Judge Harold Franey said Monday afternoon that he was now waiting for an official report on all city issues. Including measures and offices, from the county clerk. He hoped to conduct the drawing in time for tonight s council meeting. Wright Strikers Vote to Continue PATER SON, N. J.. Nov. 14 (IF) Striking supervisors of the Wright Aeronautical corpora tlon's five plants in this area voted this morning to disregard a war labor board's return-to- work order and remain out. "until the army takes over," Production at all plants was at a standstill as the supervisors walkout kept 32,000 to 35,000 emulovcs Idle. The Wright com pany manufactures Cyclone en gines lor u-tv auperioriresses 'XJS Z? ii.in.Mi MI'NiMy Nazis Withdraw ForcoC I?. ' From West Side '. - - Of Maas Z In thit "remarkable photograph of the USS Missouri firing a salvo from her two forward turrets, the 16-inch projectiles can be teen in flight at upper right while the force of the blast churns the tea and f lamet from the burning gases light a path betid, the ship. The Missouri is one of the latest of the navy't Iowa clan battlethipt. (AP Wixephoto from U.S. Navy). Japs Recapture Ngeregong Islet for Reconnaissance mm ES HIT . AIRFIELDS By The Associated Press- ' Waves of American planes hit Manila and nearby airfields yes terday and today. Manna time, doina- "slieht damage" to war ships, installations and ship- ninff. Tokvo radio ana tne ene my-controlled Manila broadcast station said today. Four hundred planes blasted the Philippine capital city, Ca vite and Clark field yesterday and 400 sorties were flown over Manila targets today, said the broadcasts heard by the federal communications commission 73 Shot Down' The enemy claimed that. 73 of the raiders were shot down or damaged by Japanese inter ceptors in tne iwo-aay perioa. There has been no confirmation of the raids or asserted losses. Tr. trtrinv'e . mid. the Manila radio reported, Japanese air fields and Cavite, one-time Unit- (Continued on Page Two) Adrian Chaney . Killed on Palau TSet. Adrian Chancy. 24, son nf Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Chaney of 619 Mitchell and husband of tho former Barbara Lee Jacobs of Klamath Falls, was killed in action Octob er 18, in . the Palau islands, according to word received here by his pat ents Monday evening. Bill ' unaney was born Juiy 27, 1920, in Ash land, lio aiienci n rl Klnmnth Union high school and entered tho service June ot ivti, iai ine his training with the US nrmv in Alabama. Tennessee, Phoenix and at Camp San Luis Obispo. Young Chancy and Miss Jacobs were married at San Luis Obispo this past spring and for a lime lived at Grass Valley, Calif., while "Bill" was stationed at Camp Beale. He rxrnived overseas orders in early summer and Mrs. Chaney re turned to Baker to make her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Jacobs. "Bill" was a member of the "Wildcats," 81st infantry divis ion of tho US army which' fol lowed the marines Into the Palau Islands. His parents last received word from him in a letter written October 12, while "Bill" was stationed on Kanga Island in the South. Pacific. Mrs. Chaney is expected here Wednesday morning to be-with her husband s parents, in addi tion to his wife and parents, "Bill" Is survived by a brother, James Gilbert Chaney of this city. . , ' iold- 'P-oieliu, in J n---a'ppar.e.nt. reconnaissance move.-- ' - Adm. Chester W. -Nimitz, an nouncing the development yes terday,- said a small u.- a. ma-1 rine patrol was removed-, with-1 out casualties from the islet aboard LCI's (landing craft, in- laniry;.' . . . V ( , Storm' Covers , The Japanese landed' Tuesday night, under cover., of ,, a ..storm. Evidently they came, in,' small. boats across: thfi. reef striped Denges passage from EU Marlk island,' two m i 1 e s north, of riprifrnnp.i The V Were' eauioned with mortars and machine guns. ; Jn American- aesiruyer aim two gunboats quickly blocked Denges passage, -.to check fur ther landings, , and bombarded Ngeregong. The islet also was .raked by- bombs.! . .Ngeregongj. t r l a n g u i a r -in shape, is only one mile on. each side. From it, the Japanese could bombard Peleliu and other American-held islands, but thev would have -difficulty moving in artillery, runner more, the new positions would provide -only little advantage over Eil Marlk. The marine patrol was on Ngeregong for reconnaissance, and the Japanese probably wanted it for the same purpose. Navy, army and-marine land based' planes " concentrated on by-passed Palau; targets Thurs day ana i noay. iney shiik b previously damaged destroyer near Golou,' sank a barge and set fire to fuel tanks and other installations; '.- - Nimitz announced tnat army and- marine planes: are using air fields, .on Peleliu and Angaur islands,- conquest of wnicn was completed, in .early. October. . Jap Sniper Kills Photographer r.F.N. MacARTHUR'S HEAD QUARTERS. PhilioDlnes. Nov. 14 (p) (Via Army Radio) A Japanese sniper's bullet killed Frank Prist. 30. veteran Acme News picture photographer, dur ing heavy fighting in the Ormoc sector yesterday. Prist was the fourth war cor respondent to die in action since tne rniiippine tHiHrm'B11 pri and the 13th killed in the Pa cific area since the war started. He was buried today after a graveside service held in the same cemetery where two other correspondents, Asahel Bush of the Associated Press and Stan lev Gunn of the Fort Worth Star- Telegram and Houston Chron icle, were interred after their death In a Japanese bombing raid October 26 at Tacloban. John B. Terry of the- Chicago Daily News, injured in me ia cloban raid, -died aboard a hos pital snip, uciooer m. C. W. Whisenant Hurt in Accident Charles W. Whisenant, 1965 Portland, suffered back injuries in an automobile accident which occurred Monday evening 15 miles east of Klamath Falls on the Merrill highway. He is in Klamath Valley hospital. Cant. Millard F. Pedigo, V. S army, driver of the car, suffered bruises. According to Pedigo's report, a blowout sent the car Into the ditch as the machine rounded a curve. Total damage was reported to the vehicle. Churchill Has Run Of Bad Luck On 4 Tour of ; War Front ' :'. PARIS.- Nov.! 14 (P) Prime Minister Churchillthis week visited the French first army in the' Jura mountains approaching- Germany and in rapid succession: ; ' . - 1. .A tire on his car blew out: .- . ..' ; 2.- The chains came off on a perilous, ice-cake.d road, and- : '.-.';' - ;3. ' The -c'a r" was- bogged down in i snowdrift, for 15 minutes. . . '.: . 'Thahk heavens, the grand bid. man. didn't get out in the bitter cold to push," one , of the party said, "It's a wonder he didn't. . There surely is a limit to. what the prime-minister should be asked to do ih such weather." .' ; In the nartv were Gen. Charles 'de Gaulle, Marshal. Sit Alan Brooke, Miss.'Mary Churchill and French - Maj. Gen. Jean de Lattre de Tas signy who commands the first, army.' - ' Driving to a nearby town from "the French command post. 3000 feet in the moun tains, Churchill stood without hat in a heavy snow storm to receive, cheers of the French people. TO JAP FIGHTERS CHUNGKING. Nov.-14 '(IF) The Chinese high command ad mitted tonight that .. Liuchow, site of the last advanced Amer ican air base in eastern China, had been abandoned Saturday, and also announced tnat inein fciang on the highway from Liu chow to Yungning (Nanning), fell . to the Japanese the same day. The U.i S. 14th air - force, which announced yesterday that the Liuchow air base had Deen destroyed and abandoned, said in a communique today that the sector . was bombed yesterday and the 'day before, L,iucnow still was smoking when the fighters attacked Pheze', south nf the citv. in suDDort of Chinese ground forces, the American enmmuniaup said. Cheinkiang is as mues Deiow (Continued on Pago Two) By WILLIAM FRYE . LONDON, Nov. 14 (P). Americ-an troops toppled, a fourth fortress south of Metz and pushed to-within 3W mileai of that big French city today," while the British army ih south eastern Holland struck toward the German border in a sharp attack supported by 400 guns.' The British hit eastward from Nederweert, 18 miles southwest'2 of the frontier city of Venlo, af 4 p. m. The Germans abandoned Meijel, eight miles northeast of" Nederweert, and a front dis patch reported indications the enemy was withdrawing, strength from the west side of; the Maas (Meuse) river in this- southeast corner of Hollandr The crossroads of Meijel was won from Americans by an ar mor-pointed German attack last month. . . - ; . : . New Lin. Breach ." V In the battle for Metz 160 miles farther south, third army? doughboys piled through a new5 breach in German lines below the city after taking the fourtH," fort. - -TJ Supreme headauarters frlpnti.. fied this latest prize as Fort L'Yser, a half mile northwest. or me Town ot urny, and ae; scribed it as a powerful system of underground works. So far as was known at su preme- headquarters, : - Fort L'Yser fell without resistance. from its turreted batteries just as. Fort L'Aisne and twj satellite Dasuons to tne. soutft west were ' taken yesterday i L'Aisne was the: first, of nine?: mam fortress groups in the Metz. system to fall, and -L'Yser thai second. They were stormed 'by troops of the fifth' division 'v.of Lt.-Geri. Pattori'g third .army; i " "The American's pushed on in to the hospital, forest , f or ;their closest approach to Metz, and were striking toward thai city from the south along a nine mile front. Nothing ' in- 'froht dispatches indicated any - stif fening of - resistance, and.' the apparent . Glerman-iall.back'. sug gested Metz . itself might be for tified to avoid encirclement of its strong garrison.. . .- . Fifth division units,. punching; through -unexpectedly, light re sistance,'; had'-urcaptured yFort Aisne and two of - its satellites near . Verny i' yesterday, . ' and seized the towns of Corny, Pom merieux, Verny, and Liehonl' The- fortifications- at Fbt Orny fell to the 10th regiment of the fifth division, but battle front reports did not disclose whether it was taken without a strupele.'- - : ' With capture of Fort Aisifa and the town of Corny earlier, the Americans had cut up be hind formidable Fort Driant,.on the Moselle's west bank.- The speed with which this di vision has penetrated the Ger man defenses soutn or juetz raised the question- of whether the enemy actually plana 'to yield without a . fight -.this strongest fortified . city in an western Europe.. A dispatch from supreme headquarters said the answer-to tnis riddle-may come within the next 24 to -48 hours. . ' ' , - V. Norwegians BacH, Aid Russians ( i LONDON,' Nov. 14 (VP) Tne first Norwegian detachments to return home since the ill-fated 1940 campaign have landed in Norway and are operating with the Russians against the Ger mans on the Arctic front. . i. The Norwegian exiled govern ment announced this tonight. The vanguard, small but spe cially picked and highly trained in Arctic fighting, sailed recent ly from a north British port.. Congress Opens Six Week ? Session With Full Slate WASHINGTON, .Nov. 14 '(P) Consoling election losers' and congratulating winners, congress reassembled today for a . six weeks' flurry of activity, but decided to wait a few days be fore buckling down to work. Neither senate nor house had anything to do for a while. But Senator Vandenberg . (R-Mich.) supplied material for some fu ture chores bv offcrine a bill to freeze social security payroll taxes 'for another year at one per cent each on employers and employes. . ..-", , And Just' before' he took" the chair in the house, speaker nay- burn' (D-TeX.) gave a news con ference this pre-Chrlstmas 'pro- .gram for the old congress: Y!w,tr1 DnwIH ' ,' 1. "Extension of the president's extraordinary war powers, which otherwise would expiM December 31. Rayburn said) "We can do that in mightly lltj tie time for I expect little ,il any opposition." ' ' 2. Revival of the federal croj Insurance program, killed . pjl congress last year. ' . Roadt Program 3. Enactment of leglslatlol providing for federal expendti tures in cooperation with th states, in building roads through out the nation. It is necossaf j to hasten this legislation, Rayj burn said, due to the fact thai 42 of the 48 state legislature! convene early next year.. . ' : Only about 100 members wete On hand when the gavel fell M noon in the house. - . ; In the senate, 47 senator! wert nn bond when Vice .Presldenl J Wallace rapped for order. . , "nunued on Vae Two)