Ill YANKS SINE i " A MA ITQUVU iiii ... mlNK JENKINS ..iu loilnv la in ixi'd. Ton II'0 western front, wh; Cuiter-offensive, It clou HnV I I.ltlln (luf n tit &" w,lnK ,,hrou f".r.r' ..,.. from Mlndoro. L IhlH)'l',i l o GOOD fv-M L'i III! fliir tl'mii ru.r,.',.i -. n... I.....M, Lachi'H '' uro '"ln,, "''"'"l Without Krountl rcslatnncu from L.il-cit urn tho unsettling cle- J vclopniciitii 111 UulKlum: 1 I C0IH)ll!l0 OMCKIJUl 01 V Tl. ...., Thin is tho see of- onel fin" 7i. 1....7..I7,., n.ni .... times'"11- ""k, "v" I NFAVOIIAULE to our side tins t,n iilHrf.icti. Tho first wns WS t AKNIIKM. where wo trlci boldly nnu iniicu. J j The Gerinwis hnvo gnlnei from i" " ,,7, imorknii ll urmy.' '1 hey neon ft bo trying to el wound iul W roar lit Michon. ,J j 'jhey i"" using -nclr lu'v -Weapon henvlly ngiilnst on j. . -.,.1 nil. i.rmlf.N. niwl wi ircn't permitted yet to know i i II tat 1 1 If l Iv-vM the 1100(1 MKIC, II1C 1111. 1) .i.,r.rr..nlii 1IASN f.frtltvcd our STEADY PHES- SURE on the "no oi uiu iuilt r. ilri.lu i.ri. I'rnmtiI ffm'M V "rwR t . hiu Rtrly defended Duron, on the ;AST oaiiK. we were gravciy inrcnicucu would be PULLING BACK on he Itoer instead oi pusuiug ahead. . . . j.i SWEDISH newspaper enters the plcturo loony wun t iwmM r:irimuw J lory I...... h,.j... . jj . fl. .Inrv minion 1 lilt Von fl ll.l.- ""... '.Jtundttcrit ut lirst roiuscu 10 or jk.i it .un.tlrl meiin conimlttlni :ii nnrmnn forces In the west Including reserves, to mo dhuu and so would oc loo risny. t t u u...,tlli m.wsnnncr t ' : : . 11,; iourcf.f iiiiuiiiHiwu -J- .,,. Iupd hv 1IIMMLER UaddinK Hint It wns wioeiy nuo- llshcd msuio ucrmnny inm litlt (liu ii. . . 7 . f Von Rundstcdt Is snld to be diuollslleici Willi proiirviu " becauso the offensive lins been T00 COSTLY In Gorninn ro- J"'"1 . .VOU'D better keep your f inifcrs STRICTLY crossed, but If tho Jlory tins any louiiauiiun k I , l ll.n nn ml IF the offensive wns ordered 'of his Kenerul In tho field, It Is desperate venture akin -to the hu h mm ,.p nunin.it l ie huvivu Jao "Diinrni cnargo. S IP I'P PA If C I Well, if It fnlls,, utterly and Aloodilv. it will be Uic end of nail Germany. i ... . frTS linrd to wnlt for news, oui I . n,..cl Whlln vvn'rn wnitilllt It will bo well to remember that fit hnvo millions of Uic worm a jbravest and best In western Surnne. well COU IlllCd anU ABLY led. TIIE Russians nro plnclilnn oft 1 Ihn Innn Ihln Ctr.rninil flllUcr jthal thrusts' castwnrd Into Slo vakia, brhiRliiK their lines up -rvn nnrl 1 nnrl ttnulll OL J1UUH Jpcst. . I THE news from tho Philip- AP rnrrnuiinnrlnTil Wllltc. Oil jMlndoro, snys: "Tho Japs have lUonllnucd on fngo iwo Retred Farmer Kidnapped in Grants Pass GRANTS PASS. Dec. 10 (P) 'A .1 11... , .in !...,! r,.H,n nf Jiaklmn, visiting here, tele- P'oncd the ntntc police last night had been kldnnncd In his 0Wn niltn nnrl rnhherl nf $l.ri(l nt JJlie point of n gun by two hitch hikers ho hnd picked up on his iy irotn urcsconi Ulty, uniu., urnnus i'nss. An hour Inter, thn nollce hnd "rrcslcd Gnnrgo Vincent Flynn, ui mo xoungvine, uniu., voi- frailS hnmn nt n -r.,i Mnftr nnrl Kjwrtiy afterward picked up Do K""iK San Gnbrlcl, riliplno "ward, at n locnl reslnurnnt "Iter he hnd purchased n bus "CKOt for Renllln Pnllro Ser- ""H Jiimro Mnu r nu n rl lint 1 fi ",'lmlltp" they hnd held up I 'uuoen Hnys and had driven i'Hm nvnr .nln..n ..nnrl Ith Flyim nt tho wheel seeking SHOPPING- r Iaal Herald anb litr PKICE 5 CENTS IUI euvel Crested on ..Morals' (Dbr B-23S POUND Ground Troops Meet No Resistance On Mindorc S By LEONARD MILLIMAN Aaaoclntod Proaa War Editor Suncrforts smashed nunln to. day nt Jnpnncsc factories in a doublc-educd bombing campaign to cliininatc the source of Jupn nesc planes that have been pouring In nn unending strewn into the Philippines, where 742 were khocrcu out Inst week. Amerlcnn ground forces ad vnnccd on Mlndoro Island of tho central Philippines in sharp contrast to fierce fighting on Leylc. Gen. Douglns MacArthur announced the Japanese 20th envision has been annihilated in a crushing Yank vise on Lcyte and the U. S. 77lh divi sion has seized nn airport near valcnclu In the center ot oioooy Ormoc valley. Kyuahu Bombed Dozens of Suporforts sweep ing nut of western ulilna oomb cd Kyushu island Industries in southern Jiipnn today. Official Tokyo reported yioy struck at Omura, whose aircraft factory has been the objcctlvo of inrca previous rinds. An imperiul communique snld between 30 nnd 40 B-20s.made the nttnek on the heels of a dou bio blow yesterday by nearly 200 Suporforts against Hankow nnd the Mitsubishi Aircraft company's big Kokukl aircraft plant at Nagoya on iionsnu is land. The U. S. war department de scribed today's attacking waves (Continued on Pago Two) Tl LONDON, Dec. 19 (IF) The house of commons will hold a special debate on Grccco to morrow, with Prime Minister Churchill expected to speak This was announced tonight several hours after Churchill had sidetracked a new effort In commons to gel his comments of the Greek situation, uiurcn III refused nlso to give a full scnlc review of the wnr. Dnmand Debut Cnblnct ministers agreed to tomorrow's debate after a com mittee ot the labor party sub mitted a formal demnna. In commons lodny Churchill un. furred nto a hoMcmneroa defense of British troops' inter. volition In Belgium. "We were acting under Amcr (Continued on Pngo Two) 26 Sentenced In Court Martial cr-ATITl? TW 10 Twen- ... .i onirl tr Indnv faced u.ya.A - v - federal prison sentences iiki"k lruui uiu.' .u fj t......., -uin riiohni-iip nnd forfeiture of all pay nnd nllownnces as a re sult of a court ninruui a iiiuumk Hint thev pnrtlcipnted In a riot n,.nir..i rnrmnr Itnlinn prisoners of wnr nt ion i,awioii iasi au gust The military court passed the .n.rt..no unglnrrlllV nfter filld- Ing three of the defendants In f ximi-uxa Hint thev mur dered Pvt. Gugllchno Ollvotto, whose body was found hanging In n nenrbv gully the morning after the riot. These three defendants, how- .-.oolund Ihn stlffcst SCI1- Icnccs passed out by the court. Two ot mo mrcc, t ..i,i on iioW'iin. Ark., nnd n..t iillllnt.i n. .Tnnns. 20. Dc- CHtiir, 111. woro convicted of a reduced ennrgo oi mniiuiuK".- I .n..ln..nnrl In 1H nild 15 ....... -no..nniiunlv The third de fendant, St. Arthur J. Hurks, Houston, TCX., was nrara- 12 years on tho rioting con viction. . , Tho major portion of tho sen tences were for eight and 10 JAP PLANTS; CI'S ADVANCE InTJutShaHta-Caseade 'i Spi' " Smoke pours from more than 40 direct. oomb. hlta on the Mitsubishi aircraft plant at Nayoya, Japan, during the December 13 (Tokyo time) raid by Saipan-baaed Superforts (B-29i). This fira t Nagoya bombing raid picture was received by RCA radiophoto from Honolulu. (AP wirophoto from 20th air force via RCA ra diophoto). James Fitzgerald, 57-year-old Ewnunn employe, suffered fatal injuries early Tuesday morning as ho reportedly stepped in the path of a car operated by En sign G. B. Law, Klamath naval air station, 203 Cascade 'apart ments. The accident occurred at 7:53 a. in. at 6tli and Market, and Mr. Fitzgerald expired at Hillside hospital at 11:35 a. m. Dr. George H. Adlcr, Klamnlh coun ty coroner, said Mr. Fitzgerald suffered a probable skull frac ture, compound fracture of the lower left leg, broken ribs, and Internal hurls. The body is at Whitlock's. According to investigating city police, Mr. Fitzgerald step ped from behind a parked car as ho was on his way to work at Ewauna where he has been employed for Hie past two years as a glue mixer. The Fitzgerald family resides nt 511 S. 8th. No chnrgo had been filed against Ensign Law nt a late hour Tuesday. British Report Captives Of Japs Treated Brutally LONDON. Dec. 19 W) The British war office asserted today that tho Jnpnncsc had worked more than 60,000 white captives under such brulnl and Inhuman conditions that 24,000 of them had died. , The Japnneso themselves hnvo erected a memorial to 25,000 men who died in building the Thailand-Burnin railway and rond, the war office snid. Of the 25,000 men, the wnr office reported, fewer than louu were Jnps. The remainder were Eng lish, Austrnnnns nnu uuicn. Urnont Work In nn urge for speed, the Jap anese disregarded completely the cost In human lite, tnc war office said, Sick, prisoners were even carried to work on stretchers. Severo beatings were administered to officers nnd men, the statement snld, and there were nlso cases "of tor ture and killing." The statement supplemented an oral report to commons by Sir James Grlgg, war secretary, who said the Japanese used at lonst 00,000 white prisoners "re gardless of conditions under which the prisoners worked and of the cost In human life." Grlgg reported conditions im proved somewhat after comple tion oi wc rauroaa in ucioucr, 1943, but he said: . '1 snouia tnaite it cicar to Wonderland KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1944 Superforts Blost Aircraft Plant At Nagoya, Japan Land Exchange Protested By Klamath County Court Klamath county court today filed a protest with the district land office against a proposed land exchange transaction be tween the national forest service and the Shcvlin-Hixon Lumber company of Bend. The land involved is a large acreage of timber land in .the northern part o Klamath coun ty, now held privately by Shev-lin-Hixon company, which has been logging on the tract. Shcvlin-Hixon has offered it to the forest service, in exchange for an equal value of timber from lands in the Fremont and Des chutes national forests in Klam ath and Lake counties. If the transaction Is complet ed, the Shevlin-Hixon land will go into national forest owner ship and will bo removed from the tax rolls of Klamath coun ty. County court members said that 48,000 acres of Klamath county land has already been transferred -to national forest ownership in this manner. In legal notices published in The Herald nnd News, Clarence W. Ogle, Lakeviow, register of the house that these conditions arc fnr below anything which could be regarded as reasonable for our prisoners of war in Eu rope." "Men have, however, adapted themselves and become to some extent inured to these lower standnrds while many of the con ditions which caused such heavy sick nnd death rntcs in jungle camps did not obtain In rear camps to which the men were withdrawn." Griggs snld his report was confirmed by British troops for merly in Japanese hands. The U. S. navy rescued these troops from the sea In September. Strong Protest Asked Grlgg said tho protecting pow er had been asked to make the "strongest possible protest re garding past conditions in Slam (Thailand) and Burma" and said Britain would continue to press the Jnpnncsc to allow all prison camps to be inspected rcgulnrly by neutral observers nnd to mnkc arrangements . for Red Cross relief supplies. All the prisoners travolod from Singapore to Thailand in metnl cattle trucks so crowded that the men could not lie down for five days and nights, and were forced to sleep leaning agoinst piles of equipment or ngninst one another, the war of fice said. the district land office, named December 23 as the deadline for protests. It is presumed a protest will hold up the ex change while the protectants' objections are considered. Grounds For Protest The court's protests were based on the following grounds: 1. Contemplated exchange of lands materially effects tax base of Klamath county by attempt ing to place title to these lands on a tax-free agency. 2. No means or agreement has been proposed to effect the payment to protestant of legally required payment of 25 per cent. 3. Klamath county has never consented to such exchange of lands. 4. Applicant's retaining right to enter proposed exchange lands to harvest present timber crop until December 31, 1949, together with right to enter said lands to remove logs until June 30, -1950, is an attempt by the regional forester to grant to ap plicants indirectly a right to own timber within state of Ore gon in a free of tax status. 5. Oregon state timber com mission has never consented to exchange of lands. 6. The United States owns and holds tax-free a dispropor tionate area of Klamath county placing undue and unjust tax burden upon taxpayers of this county. 7. The application is a furth er step of the U. S. entering into private business in compe tition with private timber grow ing interests, and upon tax-free lands. Reds Swarm Over Slovak Frontier LONDON, Dec. 19 (A) Red army troops swarmed across the Czechoslovak frontier from northeastern Hungary today on a widening front, threatening early collapse of the entire Ger man salient in eastern Slovnkia between Poland and Hungary. Driving down out of the Kec skc mountains, Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky's second Ukrain inn army units gained up to 12 miles and poured into the broad Bodva and Hcrnnd river valleys leading to Kassa, the enemy's major cast Slovak stronghold. By yesterday, Moscow snld, one of Malinovsky's columns already was within two miles of the Germans' southern high way escape route out of Kassa. Once it is cut the garrison in Hungarian-annexed Kassa would be able to flee only through the patriot Infested Czechoslovak mountains. December 19, JOIt Mi. rDfp. IS) 4s Min, w I'reclpitatton lait 21 boura .......-. Hlream year to dale ... No'tnil 3.89 tut year forecast Light bower. Wedneiday Sbootlnc Hoora Oreroni On en 1-JiS Cln ..... Tulelakc: Open 'Bv JACK BELL WASHINGTON, Dec 19 (Pi The senate broke a two-week deadlock over six diplomatic ap pointments today by confirming President Roosevelt's nomination of Joseph C. Grew to be under secretary of state. Grew, former ambassador to Japan, won approval on a 66 to 7 vote. This action cleared the way for subsequent roll calls on (Continued on Page Five) Huge Balloon Armed With Bomb Found in Montana KALISPELL, Mont., Dec. 19 (P) A huge paper balloon, bear ing Japanese ideographs and armed with an incendiary bomb capable of starting a major con flagration in this northwest tim ber empire, has been found 17 miles southwest of Kalispell, the federal bureau of investiga tion said last night. Announcement of the strange device, camouflaged blue and cream color, was permitted a week after Owen Hill and his father, O. B. Hill, found it while on a wood-cutting trip. Silent Citizens Although more than 500 resi dents saw tl i balloon, which landed in a region sometimes swept by forest fires, they heed ed a warning to refrain from talking of it. L. D. Spafford, Kalispell pub lisher, said "everybody was mighty interested, but when the federal bureau of Investigation warned not to discuss it, the whole town clammed up." "There are too many people with sons and husbands in the service to take a chance on per haps giving out valuable infor mation to the enemy." 475 Air-Miles Ward Bannister, in charge of Montana-Idaho FBI offices, com mented that prevailing winds on the west coast recently hnve been from the west or northwest. Free balloons, he added, are known to travel as fast as 200 miles an hour in swift, high-air currents. Air mile distance trom Cape Flattery on the northwest Pacific coast to Kalispell, is 473 miles. He did not comment on the probable purpose of tho balloon, nor Its point of release, but snid it w.is a "free balloon, capable of making only one flight" and that It was not a weather balloon. Effective Camouflage Bannister described the bal loon coloring., as "an effective camouflage color." It was 331 :0Q Number 10342 Complaint Signed 16-Year-Old Girl by Police Chief Earl Heuvel of Klamath Falls was free on $1000 cash bond today after his arrest on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor girl. Heuvel submitted to the for malities of arrest at the office of Justice of the Peace Joseph Mahoney yesterday afternoon, after a complaint, signed by a 16-year-old girl, had been filed with Mahoney. The complaint charges Heuvel with an illegal act on October 5, 1944, when the girl was 15 years of age. Chief Denies . After his brief appearance at Justice Mahoney's office, Heu vel commented: "The accusation is false." He declined to make a further statement to the press then and on Tuesday, He appeared at council meeting Monday night in his customary routine duties as chief, and no mention of the criminal charges occurred" at council session. - To Ask Hearing The police chief was accom panied to Justic Mahoney's of fice by J. C. O'Neill, local attor ney, who stated Tuesday that he will ask for a preliminary hear ing in justice court for Heuvel. It will then be Mahoney's duty to - determine whether Heuvel shall be bound over to the grand jury, which would return either an indictment or a not true bill. If indicted, the case presumably would be set for trial. A not true bill would free the defend ant. District Attorney L. Orth Sisemore, who conducted an in vestigation which preceded Heu vel's arrest, said that the charges against the chief are based on al leged circumstances beginning in early October. Witness Arrested At that time, Margaret Collins, 24, and her younger sister, the complaining witness in the pre (Continued on Page Two) feet in diameter, and armed with a six-inch bomb containing "aluminum and some oxide." A 70-foot fuse had ignited, then sputtered out without caus ing any damage. Bannister said the Japanese ideographs stated date of manu facture and inspection, and that the balloon was "high quality paper," treated with varnish. The incendiary device, he added, apparently had been fixed so as to consume the balloon. ge IMF DEIS AbCUSATON POSTS BOND Norden Company Indicted On Charges of Conspiracy 1 NEW YORK, Dec. 19 OT A special federal grand jury today indicted Carl L. Norden, Inc., bombsight manufacturers, and a war plant survey firm and four individuals on charges of con spiracy to slow down produc tion of the war-vital Norden bombsights. ' The indictments also charged a conspiracy aimed at forcing makers of war goods to employ the survey company, Corrigan, Osburne and Wells, Inc.,- spe cialists in the installations of production control systems for Industrial concerns. Individuals named were Theo dore H. Barth, president, and Ward E. Marvellc, vice presi' dent of the Norden company; Navy Cmdr. John D. Corrigan as head of the survey firm, and Robert H. Wells, vice president of the concern. Two Indictments One indictment named the Norden company, of New York; the survey concern, with offices in New York and Chicago, and Barth, Marvelle, Corrigan and Wells. The other named Corri gan, Wells and their firm. Y PATROLS GROSS ENTERDUREiV Counterblow Slices 20 Miles Into Belgium By JAMES M. LONG ; PARIS, Dec. 19 (JPj 'Ameri can doughboys and tanks struck -back today at the German ar mor - powered counteroff ensiveJ that had cut 20 miles into Bel-" gium, while to the north first' army patrols crossed the Roer river barrier into Duren. American blows to stabilize' the front were thrown in as the bold nazi push probed into Bel--gium and Luxembourg on a 60 mile front. The first army maintained pressure on the Cologne front despite the menacing counter--offensive. Just before noon yes terday, patrols of the 83rd divi sion's 329th regiment crnasprf Jhe formidable Roer river and pusnea inio uuren, stronghold city 20 miles from Cologne, Security Silence Supreme headquarters im- posed security silence on the. powerful German counteroffen-;, sive, but a first army dispatch, said one German tank thrust be-" low Manchau "had some success in a frontal push" with the Ger mans being contained on some., sectors. The Germans were striking' from above Manschau to near; Echternach. The deep plunge1 into Belgium carried a broad flanking threat to Aachen. The' German onslaught was powered by massed reserves and support. ed by a new vengeance weaponn of an undisclosed type. Supreme headquarters was silent on de tails of the battle. v Four fathers, vigorously pro testing activities of members of the .city police department, whom they said picked up a group of high school students, December 8, and took them to the city jail as the party was en route home from a high school dance, appeared before the city council Monday night to. ex press their -opinions on the in terpretation of the curfew law. : Fred BRobinson, 1160 Cres cent, was' spokesman for the group and read a letter to the editor which appeared in The Herald and News under the date of December 14 and signed by Mrs. Dollie Peery. The letter also protested action of the po lice, and Robinson said he invesr tigated and found that Mrs. Peery had "not underestimated the situation." Waiting for Bu Robinson then told the police that the youngsters, girls dressed in formats, had left the dance to take the bus home and were waiting at 9th and Main when officers loaded the group into the paddy wagon and took them to the police station. They were then turned over to juvenile au thorities including Harold Hen dricksbn, county juvenile offi cer, and Faye Lucas, his deputy. The children were later re leased and left to get home to the best of their ability, Robin son said. The girls finally con tacted a sister of one of the group and reached home at 1:30 a. m. The boys pooled their re sources and hired a cab to get home. All lived in the subur ban areas, three to four miles from town. Robinson said that when the children asked how they were to get home at that (Continued on Page Two) Assistant U. S. Attorney Gen eral Hugh O'Donnell said after the indictments were filed that Carl L. Norden, inventor of the bombsight and former president of the company, was in no way involved in the case and was no longer associated with the Nor den firm. ' Conapiracy Charge The first true bill . accused the defendants with conspiring in New York, Washington and Elmira, N. Y., to endeavor cor ruptly to influence, impede and defeat the administration by the navy department of its law ful function to supervise pro duction by Remington Rand, Inc., of Elmira, of Norden bombsights under subcontract with the Norden company, ' The second indictment con tained the same charge and also accused Corrigan of ; conceal ment, while a civilian employe of the navy and later as a com missioned officer, of his pecuni ary interest in his company and his alleged filing of false and misleading reports to) the navy concerning official surveys of war pla.its made By him. Pi ! years.