'MllW fll ip run '0 i i uuiia UMUU 9E in i i ITU iiii In Tfto Shaia-CaHcad Wonderland NrfVember 10. 1014 Max. (Nor. 13) 4S Mln. . I'rrclpiutlon ( 4 houra Hlrram year to date Normal I. IS Lad year Forecait: Cool and clear Ion J (hi and Friday, Friday Shooting Hour Orrioni Opn 7i Clout ; Tulclake: Open ,7:?S '.- Close , Trace .... t.n ...5:4a KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1944 Number 10315 LerE to D'O shooting new. 1 WW'. . i., il.-uriiietlll t.) L iwnrd from Auction l,M . ;m llio German border liml ??',.. , i An hour and (ut 01 .firl..r Inter Iho Amor "SvOTBRV lh nrmy. which ""y?i.r ,:rd from (or two Ph.:n.v;, cnKtwnrd out of K Z SAME time the British ILimv goes nlo ,,CUI"! " ,n??.i V (nut of Holland L Germany.) . .. nil, nrn preceded by n huge fleet f I F" . .i i.iiii-rn nrs. with IZ nhter protection, doing Kct" ombliiK lmllr "' l?,T-.,i..d .be St. Lo break- Kh when button got uwi.y 9 w w M r. In the smith, almost lit KSwln border, the Frcnc i ist ...h nrlli of tllO VoSgCS Munltlm, Iho American 7th my (which came up from Mar- ,!ii nn 10 MCHiicrruiiomu Z .v,.. n.iivnrd lowurd Strns- CUJIIIO -- i ours, on the termini emu m f Klune. , inn mllcii northwest of i. 7ih Patton's 3rd nrmy ham- Em with new vigor ut Hie grout men cny m LTOGETHEH. S I X ALLIED ' AltMlES four American, i nrltlsh nnil one French Bit pOUIldlllt! lUlllUt AL.L, 01 EumiDyi wcaicrn giiico. A WOnu of elementary ex nlnnollon mlllht bo useful in. aii arniv. comma oca oy i lieutenant ticucrnl, consists icmallv of two or moro army Sorpi. An nrmy corps consists oraially of two or more cu iiions. Anicricnn and British irdntry divisions, nl full BircnKth, arc approxlmatoly 35.000 men. A ioi 01 r uiil.Ii is siuriTiuiH the German gntcs. IT looks like the bin push from tnc west that tho (jcrmnns lave been miitterlnu about &frvnlMlv fnl- wnoltt nnrt H'nt i(iii been suitBestcd by Hie rc- yni utAiuii (H snooting news fiy have started. There is ANOTHER Indlcn- ton that Impresses us newspaper 'Otllf! Tim hii nWH fnflnv iOMiS PROMPTLY, with B ilin mnm Init in ,...Dl l,t jhe attack was all set, with the iv'ivspumicnis nl meir posis aim fie eensors primed to clear the vm with ns little dclny as pos 5 We rend also today that the ok has been WAITING FOR . HERK (r u.,un. -.. N we can use our nlr power ""seousiy. r n o aesircci jwincr finally enmo A tIGNIFICANTI.V IT,he Hussinns, coming WAVE WAVE, breach the German J icnjo line cast of Budapest, i " imuuifn uie nolo thus lorn J,. j, " armored units. To &D!Palchcs s"y tlint a Dli IIVE battle seems imminent & me Danube valley route to Hh ' f.rtrcss burring the way fine historic Danube route in. "U'hcnstern Germany. MAYbe the great push from ltd i . omiin prom r,A "y lew days ago li getting under way. Iresfii,"".1 tcw d"y will bo In. It ' rSalTL110 FATEFUi, days i -,'utiiiy KikPI,l"""lnes' we'ro sfI"ccz- i .;. . ?lcnily nl Ormoc, J.. ' 11 IS Ihn nlH r.n M t"y Of war nui,l,..i i. ...ii.i at ,VZ ?. llsl"lchos rclnto MdL" thc smi,llesl Ameri wl,y.nne ro being made ui enemy dend 1Ifffl.nn Inlcresllng little :a!l,!'.n" "d TAKE the the cm, I .; 1U " Tom M,i Ui " ul our bombers !;,"f.Tn tfo lTn Bink "CWI In sn ll,. "L j nm, i ,H,fc HIIU UlUl iiY rnlo soys todnv tho are movlno WEST. taking !.JP! Ann . - uiuvi in t.''" 'rom t.h,ni,r.. r"aeont inZ . ""V s !"linCng " l lOllllll HIIU PNMllJn gc,lcrnl rllrecllon of lr.'NC. and ll,n TTPPEU I ln? We've been fight- "ma i ,,.!l!?ody months in (Conlln.". ' LUQ this com -"ueo. on Pago Two) Yanks Land on Mapia Group to Knock Out Jap Coast Watchers By MURLIN SPENCER LEYTE, Philippines. Nov. 16 (I') A small fore of American troops Invaded the Mapia Islands, lest than ISO miles north of wostern New Guinea, yesterday in a ourelv orotectivo move to knock out Japanese coast watchers and warning stations. The Yanks went ashore In the face of light resistance and under cover of naval bombardment after two days of heavy pre liminary oomoingi leu enemy installations In names. A headquarters spokesman said the Drimarv reason for the offensive far behind Gen, Douglas MacArthur's line in the Philip pines was to protect the important U. S. air base on Bio It island In the Schouten group. Japanese watchers on Mapia, 145 miles northwest of Biak, were able to warn other Nipponese islands when the American bombers were going out on strikes. Fragmentary Information on the Mapia Invasion did not dis close the site of the landing force nor of the supporting naval units, ' The Maplas, also known at the Bt. David islands, are a cluster of small Islands that have seldom figured in the Southwest Pa cific war newt except for periodic bombardments. They are 400 milet touth of American air and tea batet In southern Palau, 400 milet eatt of U. S. air bases at Morotai, and 900 milet southeast of Leyte. Russians Storm Northward In Move to Flank Budapest LONDON. Nov. 10 UP) Soviet troops, storming north- word through Hungary in a flanking movement ngainsl Bud apest, captured the town and railway station of Jaszarokszal Ins. :i0 miles cast of the capital, and seized another long stretch of thc Budapest-Miskolc rail way, Moscow announced to night. Mtirshul Rodlon Malinovsky's second Ukrainian army, which several days ago broke across tho important railway west of Miskolc,. today occupied the sUi Hon of Vamosgyork. 37 grilles northeast ot Budapest. Tills move, announced In the broadcast Russian communique, clamped n vise around German and Hungarian troops between United Airlines officials, urg ing In San Froncisco this week Hint' United be permitted to servo Klamath Falls, assorted that service could be extended to this city with less oddillonnl mileage and less expenso to the government than Hint involved in nny other application. Civil neronnutlcs bonrd is con ducting hearings In San Fran cisco on airline applications to extend service to many western cities. Several applications in volving Klamath Fulls arc be fore tho hearing, including that ot United, which wants to in augurate mainline servico here. Harold Crary, vice president in charge of traffic for United, testified in behalf of the United Kliimatli application. He said United proposes to place Klam ath Falls on a route Including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Snernmento, Chlco, Klnmn I; Falls, Bend and Joining the old United route nt Salem. Full mnlnllncr e q u 1 p m cnt with stewardess service is pro posed for Klamath, he said. No government subsidies would be necessary to extend tho service here, he added. Tho recent development of airway aids on the rou to through Klamath Falls wns pointed out in connection with tho application. The hearing is covering several days and it will be some tlmo beforo the CAB acts, it Is expected. Stores Urged to Close for Hour All retailers of the city were tj tnrinv hv mayoralty proclamation to close their busi nesses ociwecu ii win x Monday, November 20, to enable their sales people to attend a war bond mass meeting nt the Pelican theatre. Tho meeting will start nt 0:10 a. m. and close before 10 n, m. , , Thi. uilll bp nart of retailers cooperation with thc Sixth War Loan drive, ine i .i,., nr litis nhn.m of thc bond program Includes J. A. Souther, chairman; Ted Reeves, Fred Everly, Sid Elliot, Marvin K. Lucas, Larry Whytal, Don An derson, I. J. Olson and W. L. Brnco. Three war bonds will be given as clty-wldo prizes to cierits ...Minif tinn nr more in bonds. Ench total of $300 In bond sales entitles a clerk to participate in tho bond prize competition. Vnmosgyork and Fuzesnbony, 22 miles farther northeast. Towns Taken More than 30 populated-places woro taken during the day. Jaszaorkszallas. which the Ger mans said earlier they had evac uated, is Hiree miles south of Vamosgyork. The German withdrawal ex tended along a 100-mile front from Mcnde, 12 miles southeast of - Budapest, t o Korom and other towns 10 miles below the north Hungarian rail junction of Miskolc, - T" "" Tho tired and mauled Ger man panzer units fell back to- ward thc southern base of the Matrn mountains and westward to thc perimeter defenses of Budapest. Ono soviet column, following the Joszbcrcny - Budapest rati way, passed well beyond Mendo, 12 miles from the capital, and drew thc siege line tighter against thc virtually doomed city. . utner Russian formations of tanks, cavalry and infantry, sup ported by . swarms ot attack planes, drove straight north 'in a continuation of the challenge for mastery of the highway and railway communications leading to Vienna. Jett Appointed Acting FCC Head WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 OP) President Roosevelt today dcs. Ignatcd Ewcll K. Jett to be act ing chairman of the federal com- mun cations commission. Jett, a native ot Baltimore and long-time member of FCC, will fill in for James Lawrence Fly pending selection of a regu lar chairman in succession to Fly. U. S. Casualties Reach 200,000 WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 (P) American ground force casual tics in western Europe now ex ceed 200.000. The war department said to day thc 200,049 total includes 35,884 killed, 145,788 wounded and 18,677 missing to November 1. It docs not cover the air- force but embraces the seventh army which landed, in southern France as well as the armies In the north. GI'S SQUEEZE JAPS IN VISE 11,1 ROAD American Divisions Rack Up Small Advances By C. YATES McDANIEL GENE RAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Philippines, Nov, 16 IP) An American vise closed tighter on General Yam oshita's encircled Japanese on Leyte today, pressing to within 10 miles of Ormoc on the soutn, 14 on thc east and about thc same distance on the north. Advances by four American divisions were small, but they came all around thc Japanese perimeter defending Ormoc, their last base on the island. In thc north, tho American 24th division applied double pressure. On the road from Pinamapoan, the main body of the division lunged against ene my positions near Limon, gate way to the Ormoc corridor. West ot the road, another unit nr the division swung around through tho hills, virtually cut the road behind an estimated 2000 Japanese front line troops. Cavalry Advances To the cast and north, pres sure was applied by the first cavalry division, whlcn overran several enemy strong points and seized hilltops as it moved west ward throueh the tangled peaks, Nn rnnrl srrvfid this division! and Us forward elements proueu tho .roughest terrain-.to-f Ind- the stubborn Japanese defense po sitions. Mt. Mamban, a 3830. foot peak,' and hills 4047 -and 4018 fell to the cavalry. Far to the south, the veteran seventh division, seldom men ilnnrvf in recent communiques, wns disclosed to have advanced four miles to the west coast town of Balogo, only 10 miles from Ormoc. Less than 30 miles now separates the 24th on the north and the seventh on the south. Repel Counterblow The daily headquarters com miininno announced the divi sion had repelled a Japanese counterattack at Balogo, kill ing or wounding approximately half thc attackers. Th seventh army today stands closer to Ormoc itself than cither of the other advanc ing American units. It was last previously reported at Damu- laan, 14 miles souin ui uunw, whnn It broke ud a small Japa nese landing attempt, there Tuesday night, Indians to Name Tribal Delegates With nine candidates out lor iho twn positions. Klamath In dians will name delegates to Washington in an election to take place on Saturday. The candidates are Selden Kirk, Boyd J. Jackson, Hiram Robbins, Wade Crawford, Mrs. rinrnthv Hamilton McNulty, Clayton Kirk, Delford Lang, Ida Crawford and lidoy toosman. Polls will be open from 8 a m. until 8 p. m. at Beany, spra duo River and Chiloauin. Tribal delegates will spend about three montns in wasn inglon appearing before con gressional committees and other wise reurcsentlng the Klamath Modoc and Yoohoskin band of Snake Indians. Senators Suffer Shortage Of Fags, May Investigate By FRANCIS J. KELLY WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 (A) Tho United States senate is get ting disturbed about this cigar ette shortage there may be an Inquiry if it grows more acute. Chairman Overton (D-La.) of the manufactures committee said today he "had it in mind to in vestigate" If tho retail supply situation worsens. Overton is a steady smoker himself, but he said one of his principal aims is to see that American fighting men overseas aren't pestered by a lack of fags. (Members of thc United States armed forces abroad now are smoking moro than 25 per cent of tho country's cigarette out put, the office of war informa tion reports). Senators drifting back after the election say the supply of smokes is spdbty over tho coun try. Senator Maybank, South Carolina democrat, was reduced to rolling his own wnile down home. When another southern sen ator asked a Chicago taxi driver Inst week whore ho could buy cigarettes, the driver pulled pack out of the glove compart ment and offered to sell it for 50 cents. Thc senator rejected the black market deal, he said Senator Green (D-R.I.) is one lawmaker who isn t bothered by the shortage he doesn t smoke "And I'm not altruistic enough to worry about my friends not smoking." he said. If worst comes to worst, the senators have a sure way of sat isfying that craving for tobacco. By a custom dating back to the days of Webster and Clay, an ornate snuff box is kept filled to capacity in a niche beside the senate rostrum. Wounded Yank Treated fV y pu V r ' Massive Blow Strikes Into Fatherland By WILLIAM FRYE LONDON, Nov. 16 UP) The American first and ninth armlet. paced by a 1700-plane bombardment of German defentet north east of Aachen, launched a massive offensive into the Rhineland today. Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' first army veterans sprang for. ward at 11 o'clock at 1200 heavv bombert crashed their bombi on the Duren-Etchweiler arc from four to tix milet ahead of tne aougnooy lines east and southeast of Aachen. An hour and 45 minutet later the U. S. ninth army, whose whereabouti had been a tecret two months, olunaed into nw assault on the German homeland defentet near the Dutch fron tier, and the entire 400-mile allied front from the marshy low lands of Holland to the Alps of Switterland was in motion. This may be Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's all-out winter offensive. At leatt tix great allied armies were on the march. Lt. Gen. William (Texas Bill) Simpson's ninth armv Donned up at the German front door after being transferred 800 milet. across France, Belgium and Holland into Germany and moved ' acrott the linet of communication of several other aimiet. r " Apparently it was attacking north of the -U.S. first army's SSat. Arthur Dohertv of Boston, Mass., wounded by a Jap sniper't bullet while advancing in the jungle of Leyte island of the Philippines, is given first aid by a buddy, PFC William Mc Donough of Pittsburgh, Pa. (AP wirephoto from coast guard). Wright Workers Stream Back to B-29 Engine Work PATERSON. N. J., Nov. 16 UP) Wright Aeronautical cor pora, tj,orj employes s t reamed pack to worn today to mase B-29Stroerfortress engines as a union of 1900 ' supervisors, bowing to a war labor board order, ended a strike which had made 32,000 idle and stopped production at ine cuuipttny s five plants in this area for three days. A sDokesman for the com pany said a "normal" number of employes reported tor work shifts and production was re sumed in an oeparuueiuo. ' Hnrmal n,,tr.tf WDft PVnPCtcd to be reached some time today. The spokesman said he believed all the striking supervisors out to rcbort litis morning were back. . The strike ended after the WLB promised the Wright Air craft Supervision association Senate Confirms Nomination Of Byrnes WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 (P) The nomination of James F. Byrnes for an additional two year term as director of war mobilization and reconversion was confirmed by the senate to day. Senator George (D-Ga.) asked IKn ..nnt. in wnlv'n ihn Custom ary committee consideration and act at once. His stand naa uie full support of Acting Minority T nnAr. Wllltn m.Mp 1. The Byrnes nomination was sent to the senate Dy tne presi dent at noon. i Anniversary Hailed by Reds . Mncnnw Nnv Ifl IIP) The soviet press hailed today's 11th anniversary or inc esuiuusu ment of diplomatic relations be tween the Union ot Soviet So ninllct Poniihllrs nnri the Unit ed States of America as the most important date "in tne his tory of relations between tho two greatest democratic coun tries in the world." Izvestia declared the effec tiveness of tho cooperation be tween the two nations is "brightly expressed" in thc struggle of their freedom-loving peoples with the enemy. GOP Head Urged To Keep Post WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 VP) Herbert Brownell Jr., has been asked by Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, to remain as chairman of tho re publican national committee, it was learned here today. Brownell, Now York lawyer, is now vacationing in Tucson, Ariz., and will return east, De cember 15, when he will decide whether to stay on as GOP chair man. ... - speedy consideration of the members'' claimed grievances on condition they call off the walkout-.. ':v. -'..i' : '.V.-.,.- ; More than 1500 'members of the unaffiliated'union voted al most unanimously last night to return to work starting with the 7;15 a.- m;- (EWT) snut to day: - - : . Chief cause of the strike was the union complaint, denied by tho comDany. that Wright's down-graded and cut the pay of numerous supervisors an air leged violation of a WLB direc tive- that tne status quo do main tained pending final WLB de cision on previous claimed grievances. Quake Recorded Near Philippines NEW YORK. Nov. 16 (P) An earthquake, described as very severe, was recorded on me seis mograph at Fordham university tonav. The Rev. Joseph J. Lynch, siesmologist, estimated the dis tance as about 8600 miles and said the tremors were in "the direction of the Philippines." The first shock was recorded today at 8:29:38 a. m., and the second at :st:4.-. . Father Lynch said the earth quake today was not connected with two fairly severe shocks 9000 miles away, recorded yes terday. They were- at o:oo:U8 p. m., and 5:08:27 p. m., yester day and he said they probably were in JMew uuinea. . Bombers Spark Winter Offense LONDON, Nov, 16 (P) More than 3000 heavy bombers spark ed a great new allied aerial of fensive that, opened today with thousands of American and RAF planes hitting . Germany's west wall in close support of ground troops rolling into a big winter campaign. British Lancasters. 1150 strong, attacked the heavily for tified towns of Duren, Julich and Hcinsberg, flying in tight forma tions and concentrating their mighty bomb loads. About 250 Mustangs and Spitfires escorted me KAi bombers. FDR Naughty, Say Ministers GLENDALE. Calif.. Nov, 16 iP) The Glondale Minis terial association said today it had sent a letter to Presi dent Roosevelt asking him to apologize for what it termed his "shocking profanity" in the voting booth on election day as reported by a news magazine (Time). The magazine said that after the president entered the voting booth there came a clank of gears, and "then a voice . familiar to all the U. S. and to most of the world spoke distinctly from behind the curtain: 'The god dammcd thUtg won't work'." LOS ANGELES. Nov 16 M5) Otto Steve Wilson was ques tioned today by police concern-: ing four other mutilation slay ings of women after confessing, detectives said, that he hacked and gashed two nude women to death in . separate downtown hotels. Officers disclosed that at the request of Tulsa, Okla., authori ties they were seeking to estab lish Wilson's whereabouts on January 14, 1943, when Mrs. Lu zila Stewart and her daughter, Mrs. Georgia Green, were killed. The husk v. 31-year-old waiter was grilled also concerning two unsolved Los Angeles' slayings. They were those of Mrs. Loretta Robinson,. 23, found nude and strangled a year ago in her room ing house, and Mrs. Katie Brady, 75, beaten in an alley last year. Jury to near Evidence The county grand jury will hear evidence in yesterday's slayings next Tuesday, District Attorney Fred N. Howser an nounced. Meanwhile the suspect was examined by Dr. Paul de Kiver. Donee rjsychiatrist. u .- - Wilson, medically discharged from the -navy, was - drinking wine at a bar last nieht when an alert patrolman handcuffed him shortly after-the suspect's de scription had been broadcast. Found by Maid . The first victim was Vireie Lee Griffin, 25, wife of a truck driver. A hotel maid on routine cleaning rounds found her lying disemboweled in the closet of one room. The torso had been slit from neck to abdomen, the right leg severed at the hip and knee, and the right shoulder hacked through. Bits of flesh, cut from other parts of the body, littered the blood-soaked carpet. A butcher knife with a 9-inch blade -'lay nearby. Razor blades were scattered on the floor. Police Detective Lt. R. F. Mc- Garry quoted Wilson as saying he killed her "because she want ed more money." Detective Lt. Harry Hansen called it "the most fiendish crime in my 19 years of experi ence here. It is worse than the Winnie Ruth Judd case." Mrs. Judd is serving a life sen tence for slaying Mrs.-Agnes (continued on rage two; Three Bullets Fail to Kill Huge Cougar BOISE. Nov. 16 P) Sheep- herder Harvey Arbuckle put three bullets into a huge cougar, one through the heart, then was jumped by tne animal wnen ne approached it and finally had to disoatch it with a hand axe. Arbuckle's only injury was a sprained thumb, H. M. West of Boise told tne state nsn ana game department in applying for a $15 bounty for Arbuckle. West said Arbuckle came up- dYi the cougar along the Salmon river east ot Higgins. Aachen sector, where it would be in position to implement the' long-standing threat to sweep away the German north flank. Bomb Germans After a week of waiting for cle'ar weather, the Flying Fort resses and Liberators, with near ly 500 fighters, bumped the Ger mans with 4800 tons of bombs ahead of the first army in a tac tical assault similar to ' that which preceded the St. Lo break through in Normandy last July: 25 and the offensive by Lt, Gen. George S. Patton's third army, in the Metz sector eight days: ago. ' '-' Fragmentation bombs fell on a 15-mile stretch of the Cologne highway between Eschweiler' and Duren ahead of the -first.' army veterans of the St. Lo; breakthrough. Anti-aircraft po-7 sitions, gun batteries and other German defenses were show-' ered. . - ..;:v ; Potltiont Held The Americans have beta holding positions in Stolberg' about four miles southwest of Eschweiler and in Hurtgen for- est about six miles southwest' of Duren. ? Front ' line dispatches said Hodges had - been withholding : his attack for a week in order, to have good bombing weather. td' accdmpany his artillery bar- rage and infantry assault. Rain, sleet and snow made the ground mushy. ', .. Gen. Eisenhower's other arm ies which had joined the assault one by one, .forged ahead on the flaming front. . , -. .-. Plunge Near Maas The British second - army plunged to within a mile of the Maas in Holland and captured Horn, only two miles from the German bastion of Roermond,; 34 miles west, of Dusseldorf on the Rhine. -; : The First French army, which joined the array of offensives only yesterday, pushed forward on a 29-mue front on oom sides of the Doubs river to a point 11 miles southwest of Belfort in the gap just north of Switzer land. Gen. Patton's third army tight ened its grip on Metz from the north and also captured Mor hange. .'..,-.. , , ; Germans Charged With Blasting Women, Children HEUSDEN, The Netherlands, Nov. 16 W The Burgomaster of this medieval town charged to day that the Germans had delib erately blasted to death ' 135 women and children in the Beus den town hall. He called it the most fiendish atrocity committed in Holland. (A preliminary re port of the deaths was issued last week by.the official Netherlands news agency.) "It was terrible, terrible," he said.' "The Germans pretended to be helping our people find shelter from British artillery shells and then they themselves set off dynamite which killed 135 of the 200 people in the base ment of the town hall." Congress to Consider Five Star Generals. Admirals WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 (A) Legislation to add a fifth star to the shoulder clusters of a group of four-star generals and admir als marched toward the top of congress' list today. It was shoved ahead after Speaker Raybum and Chairman Mav (D-Kv.l. of thc house mili tary committee disclosed that President Roosevelt would like to sec it enacted. The legislation Is In a position to be called up in the house at any time. Differences of opin ion over how many generals and admirals should be given the "super" ranking could delay con sideration. Two of Each Current plans provide for thc designation of two generals and two admirals as "general of the army" and "admiral of the fleet," respectively. These designations presumably would be bestowed on General George C. Marshall, army chief of staff, and General Dwight Ei senhower, commanding allied action in Europe, and on Admir al Ernest J. King, chief of naval operations, and Admiral William u. L,cany, tne president s cniei oi staff. Add Two A move now afoot would per mit the designation of four gen erals and four admirals for tho high honor, adding Generam Douglas MacArthur and H. H. Arnold and Admirals Chester W. Nimitz and William F. Halsey. Currently a four-star admiral is as high as naval rankings go, while only one general, John' J. Pershing, holds the coveted rank of "the general of the armies of the United States" bestowed up-, on him by special act of couA grcss after the last war. ; The legislation's position ranks with measures extending the sec ond war powers act, reviving tha crop insurance program and blueprinting a postwar road con struction and river and harbot Improvement program.