mmtm mti ro win f ; : ; 1 : 1 7 ....... p. I in in 1 1 if I I j l l ) LHtUVLL NAZI OFFENSE -AIMED TOWARD STRASBOURG Breakthrough Averted By Hemming in Germans ' fl I I I UL I I lib I ,W .0k 1 r-Vj m. .15 Weather News unboier grand jury January 8, 1945 Max. Jen. S3 40 Min. 32 Precipitation last 24 hours OS Stream year to data .. ..4.20 Normal 4.S2 Last yesr 2.90 . Forecast! Showers. In The Shania-dineatUt Wonderland PRICE IIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, !94S Number 10356 BBBBOCBaSBEaBBBBnnnBnBBBI A I scision nnnounttu By Justice of Peace ;nrl Hcuvel, former chief of ire, win uuunu uvrr i mo ui jury 111 u 4 dUWII HI O Clllll, OMimuujr rains by Jui-lu-o "f ltl,) 1'l""-'u A. Muhoiiey. i.mivui " inquency oi .miiui. lulioncy s okwii (1 in jusnco ." 'ul" uvel, IJrfeiwo Attorney -Hi ll C. Orient biiu icy Clarence iiuinuio. n .- Inary hearing nww v ullernooii hjiiuwihk, u e mid one-hull 'y otlo. Explains icforo hix decision won given, i v tnlil attorneys ami the femtunt lhl ho wished o jjukc a lew explanatory ro- believe, llko everyone else, it the girls were giving llc jilniuny." Mnhoney itntert. re trim! to torie mid by Willie e Collin nnd her sister, Mur- I'Monilly. I "'Ink they, were HI iilrln but the fuel aim re Sins Hint the chief knew ot I ration books iiikI thiil ho Inilri huvc turned the young I over to mo juvcniiu bu- ufcrltie. , . ... "In the sccona piacc unm at no limo any .csumony (Continued on Page Two) HHEE N1MN STREET FIRWIS TO EXPAND cverl changes In tho BOO irk mi Mu In street were an mraii Sniurdnv us three firms iicati-d expansion plana for the mng Hiring. rir. nnd Airs, i.oiua rviurmum, i have been In business hero 12 years as operators of Mur s store fur women, will Join nuinattcmcnl of Lol'olntc's. iinllim to Curt Lion, owner. jl'ouUe's )lans call for includ- Hie lirsi limir oi tne r.uricy el, now occupied by the Town p, expanding the floor space jOitlie ruth street corner. Holds Lease .Ion has hnd n lease on the t floor of Iho hotel bultdlnK Bco Jnminrv 1. 11144. 'I'lio Town Shot), owned bv Mr, m Mrs. Keith Moon and Alice ,lc Peterson, hns taken a lease mo space now occupied by Emporium, 500 Main, and ".onunucd on rugo t wo) pl.Belden Hail issing, Report PENDLETON. Jan. 8 PI PI. Bcklen II. Hull. 22. nf Klnm, 3. I'-it. ..' -- - ii r Miu nun ocen missing in ac- fi over Germany since Decern 2.1. UlO Wnr rieonrtmetit in fmcd his nurenls. Mr niiri Mr ;crt Hull, hero today. iiiic parents moved hero from llimnlll FllIU In K,lnr.il,nx j. Hall is hi the nlr corns. No vtieuiurs wcro Riven in the r Department notice. iusband of Klamath Woman Bridges V story packed with nil tho UI", a Hollywood movlo up nred n i , i, n i.... .. file tnni7 nn 111 ,uKI,., llw. no of Cuptiiln Stanley A. Still- . iiii.iuunu oi tne former Jo in WlKHll'llff nf llilu nllu l ntloiicd as one of 10 Am'crl- I SOldlers Who Imlnivl .nun ""I Utter fllillKlni. Ilin H...I ... fjl in southeast China." V a pari of tlio story: for years to comg mi area of iheiist China for 300 miles Und Will linn,, tl,. ...o.. nr .1.. fiction left by a bond of 18 U. "uimcrs. aomewhero In China veen uio iu grimly added t he results of their odvcnluro. y nnd i accounted for somo 150 fgCS. ftO t-niIUt H nn i P'ts, one tunnel, an assort ii iof, Jocotnotlvoa, trucks, I y "'slols, one Catholic mis- 91 alia n mnnhlun Bl,n n..l !y liad helped slow Iho Jnpa e ndvnnco on Kwnlchow, liad Pcd save from ulter disaster n'1 retrcut in soulhcast Prs RrVi n .i n -"-- rraciicas iroyeis was 2S-vear.old Motor i, lpns,?" ot Wllkcs-Unrro, a J 'i ,relhen'll Major aical III In. . " Hl rlvcd m K.WCI ' i.fl."in,ncr t0 tnnch flomoll- 11 ICChllirilina ln II.. -ii.i nn tt i . IIIllUSU. I n fL i PS ,b0K,,n tholr nl" I? "i cnlvo, ho and his man ! leaching and began do- F-wciim, Wlh nearby Liu forms thn hub of sn.ni . Minnas highways and rail- NAZIS LAUNCH SUPREME BID FDRBUDAPEST Germans Try to Reach Isolated Garrison In Capital By EDDIE G1LMOHE MOSCOW, Jan. U W'i Tank, urtilk-ry und uu battles virtu ally as fierce as any fought since Germany ultiickcd lttisslii rngctl northwest of iiudapest today a the Cicrninns made a supreme bid to break through to their Isolated garrison In the battered llungnrlun capital. The fighting has reuched such o pitch that neither -side bus given any clear Indication of how far Iho German penetration has gone toward the city from Iho Komarom urea. Sector Fluid At last report the Hussions held a lone possibly 30 miles deep, but dispatches said tho whole sector south of the Dan ube bend now Is most fluid and places lire changing hands sev eral times dally. A Kusslan communique sold the Germans threw 300 tanks Into the battle yesterday,. Tho Germans were said to havo brought up numerous King Tigers from the Vienna area. Theso met u strong foe in tho red army's new T-34 tanks. Tho Germans also poured groat num bers of other mobllo weapons Into tho urea In tho past two days. Strong forces of German air craft in greater number than (Continued on I'ago Two) Job-Changers May Face Induction WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 Wl Capitol sources predicted today selective service headquarters would direct local draft boards within tho next 24 hours to In duct men between 1 8 and 38 who change Jobs without board ap proval. Sources closo to the house mil itary committee said they were informed of the new order by spokesmen for selective service. These sources also said the army has agreed to lower its physical simulants lo accept for work units men sent lo It by draft boards under a "work or fight" regulnlloii. to Slow Jap In China Capt. Stanley A. Slalgar roads, nrftigces were rushing In llko animals before a forest Ilro. Tho 16 Amcricnns among the thousands of fleeing Chinese went methodically to work min ing road junctions, digging cavi ties under bridges, under abut ments in tho sides of defiles. Rank Counts "They worked In teams of two or lltroo. One team consisted of Sgt. Graham Johnston, ex-jockey t Forces Close lira oi Maarns T. Gates, third from snown nerD0ing srecisa of fnn Mtarni will spaak tonight at tha U1H1T CAR ACCIDENT An elderly man and a young woman, whom he attempted to save from injury when she walked In tho path of a car, were Injured at 8:38 p. m. Friday near tho Southern Pacific depot. C. D. Collins, Kirk, and Nonlc Hargravcs, 28, 3131 Sunset, were treated at Klamath Volley hos- Cltol for head injuries but later oth were releosed. City police were called to the depot by Southern Pacific Officer Todd. They learned that Miss Hor graves walked out of tho Depot cafe toward the station and step- Ecd In front of a car operated y Fern Pennington, 1880 Port land, SP call girl. Collins ran forward to pull the girl aside and both wcro struck. They were moved to the hospital by Ward's ambulance. City police said that Miss Pen nington was exonerated of all blame. Demolishes Drive in China from New Canaan, Conn,, Sgt. Paul Todd of Kalamazoo, and a Chinese boy interpreter called 'Virgil.' When tho sergeants found it difficult to get coopera tion they promoted themselves lo 'colonels.' Chinese civilians, impressed by their rank, gave them special food and baths. "When the greot Jap eam- Eolgn got up full steam In Octo er, Glcason's band was ready io tamp in charges, fuse them and blow. Waiting until the last pos sible moment before Iho enemy advnncc, Glcoson finally slarlcd tho destruction, 24-Hour Day "Cnpt. Stanley A. Slniger, of Portland, and ex-Jockey John ston, carrying explosives in sacks, worked for 2'4 hours along a river bank, never knowing for sure how near tho Japs were. One after another they destroyed bridges along their way. By the time they reached the last bridge they had only four inches of fuse left. They tamped In the charge, lit the fuse and galloped off with tho uproar In their cars and de bris raining around them, "Tho Jap lido rolled on. It rolled up to the great air force baso ot Liuchow. Gionson and his men did their ruinous best Ihcre, They wanted to flro the city, too, but wretched Chinese house holders, waving guns, refused to let them." - (Mrs. Stniger nnd her infant son, Stanley, Jr., oro hero for tho duration with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, R, C.j Woodruff, 1428 Pacific Terrace)? Jaycee President Greeted a 0 lait, national president -oi tha wnsr ii a tars ana Mayor fid Ostendorl, axtram lisbt. Wlllard hotal for tha local Jsycee f oundersU fcanquat. . i . Roosevelt Calls for Total : :: Mobilization to Smash Jap, German War Machines in '45 By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL WASHINGTON. Jan. 8 VP) President Roosevelt today call ed for "totai mobilization of ali our human resources" to smash nzi Germany in 1945 and speed strangulation of Japan's "malig nant power." Once again he called for "un conditional surrender," but this time referred specifically to "the armies of our. enemies" in apparent distinction - from "whole peoples.1' National Servica By total mobilization, Mr. Roosevelt said in a message to congress, he means a national service act and "at the earliest possible moment." Tho president's message on the state of the Union, which he Canadians Take Sant' Alberto ROME, Jon. 6 OP) Canadian forces, pushing northward through Italy's eastern Po valley, have captured Sant' Aiberto, eight miies above Ravenna, al lied headquarters announced' to day. Climaxing a week long drive through iho canals and water ways of the Po estuary, Canad ian troops nnd armor pushed over tho Caualc Bonifica In a move that caught the Germans iloifooted. The Canadians fanned rout to the shores of Valli Di Co- machio, forcing the nazis to with draw eastward nnd westward un der tho threat of being cut off. M'Kellar Named To Head Senate WASHINGTON, Jan, 8 W) Tho Semite formally elected Scnntor Kenneth D, McKeilar (D-Tcnn.) its president pro tem pore today, ratifying the elec tion made by the democratic caucus yesterday. As a matter of form, Minor ity Leader White moved that Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich.) bo named instead. His motion lost by a straight parly vote of 37 to 24. Bulletin GENERAL MacARTHUR'B HEADQUARTERS. PHILIP PINES, Sunday, Jan. 7 VP) Mitchail bombers and iightar bombars continuad thair atrikas against southarn Luion, main Philippine island, January 4 and 3. Genaral -Douglas Mac Arthur announced today. W9' 4V v:' Junior charober of commerei, ia will summarize in a nationwide broadcast tonight, ranged over me wnoie field of domestic and world problems. Broadiy sketched, he . made these paramount points: HOME FRONT: Renewed his demand for .na tional military service and said he would ask later for postwar universal military training; call ed for the drafting of nurses for the armed forces; urged an expanded social security . pro gram said taxes should be mod ified after V-E day but deciartd no general revision can be made until total victory. FIGHTING FRONTS! . , Disclosed that the army has developed tho most powerfully armed tank yet produced and said "we shall resume the at tack and . . . continue the at tack relentlessly until Germany is completely defeated." Said we are about to equip large new French forces for combat against Ihe na2is, but warned that the Germans recently have increas ed their U-boat activity in the Atlantic. He expressed "com plete confidence" in General DwiRhl D, Eisenhower, FOREIGN POLICY! "We cannot and will not shrink from the political respon (Continued on Pago Two) . Shift in Western Front Armies May Be Temporary By ELTON C. FAY WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (VP) Belief that regrouping of the northern armies in western Eu rope under British Field Marshal Montgomery is a temporary ar rangement was expressed here today by informed military stu dents. They agreed, however, that it was possible the operation might prove sufficiently satisfactory to be made permanent. ' Their view wos that Montgom ery was first given the command because the allied leaders, at that time, fenred the Germans would slash lo the channel and split our forces. Not Clear Whether the assignment would have been made if the high command could have been certain of containing the break-through was not clear to those who discussed the matter here. In retrospect, some Washing ton military men described the situation thusly; ' The Germans, crashing out of their Siegfried line on January 16. surged forword in a westerly and northwesterly direction, ?o Island Invasion Hinted by Nips Associated Press War Editor Amarican assault iercas ara dosing in and "may have landed on Luton,", moit important island in the Philippines, Tokyo radio xapoxtad today as coordinated U. S, land, sea and air forces In vaded, shelled or bombed strategic Japanese-held Islands spread over more than 1000 miles, ' The quickening tempo oi the Pacific war brought these de velopments; 1. Tokyo radio reported three new allied codtovs on the move in Philippines waters, including a heavily guarded Invasion flotilla west of Luson oa which Manila ia situated. 2. Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced the unopposed inva sion and capture of Merinduque Island, 12 miles south of Lujon and less than 100 miles front Manila. It was the seventh island to be retaken in the Philippines. . 3. Adm. Chester W. Nirnits announced fast V. S. carrier forces destroyed 111 Japanese planes and 2? ships in their two day raid on Formosa and the Okinawa islands. Unking Japan and the Philippines. Sixty-eight other ships were damaged. 4. For the first time sce-serne U. S. planes reached the China cosst. They searched SOS miles of the coastline from Foochow to courts eye Withdrawal of protest . The KJamath and Lake.eouniy courts took under advisement to day u suggestion that they with draw their ' protests; against ' a proposed land exchange between thtforet,-service and Shevjin Hlxon Lumber company at Bend; made . yesterday by WPB and forest officials in order to assure continued production of war ma terials at the Bend plant. -' January 1? was set at the local meeting' as a date for further dis cussion of the proposed with drawal of protests. The protests were lotiged by both courts with the federal land office ana are holding up an exchange of some 17,000 acres'in northern areas of the two counties. Under the land exchange pro posal, the company wouid deed the 17.000 acres to the forest service, in exchange for timber ot equal value on roresi service land. The acreage totals 8436.47 in Klamath, county and 8118.89 in Lake county, but the company and forest, service also have an impending exchange Involving (Continued on Page Two) Superintendent Of GN Promoted W. R,: Minton, superintendent of the Klamath division of the Great Northern railroad for the pst year-and-a-half has been promoted to superintendent of the- Kalispell division of the line at White! ish, Mont. Minton succeeded H, M. Shapleigh here ins July of 1843, coming from Wiilmar, Minn. . T. A. Jarrow will replace Minton as superintendent of the Klamath division. . He arrived here yesterday from Spokane, Wash., where he held the posi tion of trainmaster. rapidly la the first days that the allied command could not be even reasonably certain that the enemy could be stopped before he reached tho channel. This wouid have isolated the Canad ian first, the British second, the American ninth and. tho bulk of the American first army from the remainder of the allied ex peditionary force in the south. t , Make Decision : During these first hectic, un certain days the allied command decided separate army group under a single commander should be established. The new setup also was dic tated In some measure by Ihe ex isting situation. The swift Ger man 'advance had so disrupted communications that Lt, Gen. Omar .Bradley, commanding the 12th. army group which em braced the first and ninth arm ies, had no assurance that he could maintain direct communi cations with or could go to his northern armies. To move his headquarters northward - would have entailed several -days of transferring communie i i o n a equipment andV-other material at a critical tirnei ... . . ' Hongkong and reported they coma nave Mown on to u. S. air bases in the Interior. 5. Another U. S. task force shelled major harbors on Haha Jima and Chichi Jima in the Bonin islands, 650 miies south of Tokyo and 1300 miles west of Formosa. 8. About 7Q or 80 China based Superforts bombed west ern Kyushu in the Japanese homeland, ' apparently hittsne for the sixth time at the impor- lam umura aircrait tactory. Tokyo sasd 12 . other B-23s bombed Wanking, 7.. Japanese troops in south west China recaptured Wanting, Burma-road fortress town near the Burma-China frontier. 8. The . r.svy announced the loss of the destroyer Reid in (Continued on Page Two) Chinese Lose Border Town CHUNGKING. Jan. 8 V Chinese armed forces have lost the China-Burma border town of Wanting after a brief occu pation, but are expected to as sume the offensive "within the almost immediate future," an American staff officer said to day. Brig. Gen. Marvin E. Gross, assistant chief of staff for plans, United States forces in China, declared that the Chinese now "are in position to offer much grarer resistance than ever be fore" to the Japanese and pre dicted the new Ledro-Burma road - would b e i n operation soon.' Famous Coach At Barracks 1 fV 7 V Taib - atvo I mmm Shown above It Lt. Col. Dick Kanley perusing The Herald and News while at breakfast at the maris BOQ, Hanlty ia for mer head football coach of Northwestern university In the Big Ten conference and ia here on s brief isapeetion tour. Haniy served as co-coach of tha East gild squad with Andy Ken for a number el yeara In the annual Eatt-Wett Shrine footbaii classic and began hit coaching career at Pendleton, (Ore.) high school, ft i t , I t -t C ! T . - 1 n r, which Big Frank Ramsey, former KUKS mentor, 1 member, Hanley slatei that Ramiey It ene of Ihe euUtaBdinglii-m ea the squad. By JAMES M. LONG PARIS, Jan, 8 (P) Fle34 Marshal Montgomery's Britain and American battle team fought deeper into Ihe middle at th north wall of the Belgian wedge today as a new German offensive in Aisace threatened Strasboura wiih a three-way drive. Late front dispatches said how ever that danger of a break through on ihe Alsace front had been averted by drawing a ring of steel around trapped Germans at Wingen, at the apex el a 15. mile deep wedge 28 miles north-, west of Strasbourg. . ; Hemmed In About 400 Germans who mska a surprise crossing of the Rhine at places seven to 14 miies nor'h of Strasbourg also were being hemmed in and mopped up, and a number of villages were re taken. The biggest gain of the day hammered out in the cattle of the bulge was in Luxembourg by the third army's Blue Ridge 80th) infantry division which crossed the Sure 13 miles east of Bastogne, took Goesdorf and went on into Dahi to a two-mile advance. - j . Gouge Out Gain '-. Amid a flurry of attacks ami counter attacks, U. S. first army units under Montgomery's com mand gouged out a series of gains of more than a mile, cap. luring Odeigne, mopping up Devantave and advancing to a crossroads near Fraiture,- where they were within one-half mils of the vital . Laroche-St. Vitlt highway, . - . . . J Suddenly reversing his ap parent intention of withdrawing strength from the western tip of his bulge, however, .oa Rundstedt threw a blow British-held sectors and knocked them bacK for as rnucn as ivw yards,- recapturing Bure at tha deepest point of his present pene tration into Belgium. - - -... -Advance. ' The 82nd airborne division-of the first army - ad vanced along the ' Salra river below Trols (Continued on Page Two) Bridges Blasted , By Yank Heavies' LONDON Jan. 8 VP)V More ' than 800 American heavy bomb ers, escorted by-nearly 800 Mus tangs, attaekedr-three. tread and, rail bridges across the Rhine st Cologne and Bonn today and bombed several rail yards-and other communication centers in western Germany. -. . . It was the 15th daylight attack by Britain-based U. S.. 8th air force bombers and fighters in 14 days in support of American! armies battling against the Ger man attempt to crash through sl , lied lines and overrun Belgium. - s.w.r. . J..iic'"?'i I"" .. eie! iwiuiiaimewu-i ' All t vm- a