- n7o W7 A ixnrw n JV (A iv ,A UMUU m if i U Lfu InTh Shanta-CttHeado Wonderland E FIVE CENTS gf J,, ,ri-- ---"- 1 " !!tllli'!il'll!llllll!'!l,J:l!lllll!lli,llll:lS,,'iillH!lPli January 10, 1945 " Max. (Jin. 9) ;..4S . Mln. 3S Precipitation latt 24 hours 08 Stream year to data ; :...4.35 Normal 6.18 Latt year 2.90 Forecast! Cloudy. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1944 Number 10359 iy FHANK JENKINS i ui'itrn Willi iu. Hi. r vnni.'vw ., .....i.. -i....m i.. pnriicuuiriy iikii "in Tur ui'Wii ut tlio tlmu IhU in an (Juiiunry H) Urn Pacific iolnii well nnd Kuropo still .i i.. II iiimillii iif rim. ....r.-rv one In templed to Vlttlo iimro iiiuriill.ing mi ,,,.. front uluu'lnges (inil litU'iiiliuit rationing. UK uro two kinds of short- Irs (hose that uro off Iclull v Ird mid thono tniii uro not. mutter hi Iimro or toss knowledge tlwtt tho pub. inlimiile toward tho un it scarce comiiiniiiiies Itlcs, cmiiiy, chewing gum. Hi one or tiiii'ruiicu mm humor, rnrro con oo umo llml Inn general iimtmio I offk'iiil rutlonlnil In one slslenl exasperation. Hint I.' n question Unit enn't iswrrrd llnlly. Une can lirotilntc But II Is lit H'lit.l .ling Unit Urn American IkiiiIiI accent with toler. mul good Imnior riitlonliiK Imposed oy me ordinary millliir processes of private irlso nnil sliouiti do ex ilrd by tlio rationing lm bv government. IAPS efficiency In the tent which wc should Indue two form of rationing lofflrlnl. nrlvnlc cntnriirise ic official, public kind. fj Inkc a look Ml cigarettes, uro scarce there can he iibt of Unit, They uro In- jnsly hard to come by. Tho ickn-a-ciny consumer una to n lot of time digging up n nnrk. ilnubtedly there In n lot of ling, Preventing hoarding Irnnlcclng to everybody mil of that which -in acurco announced purpose of of-run-by-thc-Koveinmeiil r- It hove ymi scon ANYBODY limit COULDN'T conio by I cigarettes? 'i'hlii wilier 8. nnil It In his firm convlc glint the cliliiretlc (iliortnuc Blurting nnvbody. I iAnETTES uro rationed it there bo no doubt nil to I They tiro rationed by tills I armed services and may IndleiiKc) TAKE AT THE itCE what they need. What t over is distributed to t no : by the ordinary processes vale commerce. Tlio nuiiiu :cr divides his supply up Si! the distributors. Tho dls ijnrs divide up with the solcrs. Tho wholesalers K up with tho retailers, it retailers APPOSITION I.OUT to tho consumers. ills final process of nppor- ment by tho retnller there 'ontlmicd on Pngo Two) 45INDUGTI0N RATE DOUBLED, LD CONGRESS TO 900,000 Men Needed In First Six Months By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (I') Undersecretary of War Hubert P. Piitterson told coiiKress today thiil InduclioMS for thu nrmed forcea lor the first six months of 1U4.1 will total 900,000 men, us u lulnlmuin. On this basis, the Induction ratn would bo 130,000 men monthly about twice tho ratu previously indicated for tho ear ly months of this year. The war department recently Indicated thiil army and nnvy were taking about (10.000 a month in Into 11144 and that thlr would be Jumped to around 80,000 this month. Cnactmant Urgad Urging quick enactment of na tional service legislation, Patter son advised tho house military committee thnt only through some form of nutloual service could Iho manpower needs for tho war effort bo met during the next six months. These needs, ho declared, In clude 1100.000 men for tho armed services and 700,000 others for war production and war-support-ItiX activities. Would Shorten War "Tho only complcto und ade quate loKlnlullon," ho sold, would bo national war torvlca leglnliitlon "at tho most compre hensive.; nature," Such- leftisln lion, ho slated,' would shorten the war and minimize tho loss of llfo. Pending ennctment of nn over, all statute, Patterson said, the war department favored "work or fight" legislation for nil men between the ages of 18 and 43. (Continued on Pago Two) Cold Wave Numbs East, Midwest By Tha Associated Praia Little relief was In prospect today from a numbing cold wave which blanketed most of the midwest, and moved eastward to chill New England with temper atures as low as 18 below. Water town, N. Y., reported 34 below. Tho United Stntcs wenther bureau In Chicago forecast clear ing skies, with a little snow around the fringes of the Great Lakes, but added that tempera tures would remain nt or near their present murk. esidential Power to Demilitarize Germany, Japan Urged by Senator By JACK BELL S1I1NGTON, Jan. 10 (P) l'ir vnmicnuerg (lt-Mlcli.) piod today that congress the president power Inimo y to use force to keep lany and Japan dcmllltnr 'lter tho war. ling on the major allies to jiatu a treaty now for Joint b to "achieve this depend 'd," Vandcnbcrg told tho p that this nation ought to I1 that any unilateral intents made on world po I questions bo subleeted to fv by a proposed peace or-illon. Urges Roitotoment chairman of tho senate Mean conference look the to urgo a restatement of lc American International after II linn,.. b.n,.. rreslcl out Tioosevclt had as- congressional leaders ho carry no prior commlt- on European political "'lis Into it forthcoming lee conference, liclputlng senate, discussion whole lulcrniilloniil situ Scniitor Kcrguson (R proposed in n sliitemont 'no semilo wrllo its own pillon of foreign policy. ffered n resolution colllna niorlcan participation In a ucumy organization pro to tiso orco to preserve co and roemphaslzlng oiintry's dotcrmlnatlon to by tho principles of tho 10 ehnrloi. Participation Doubtod 'cwlng tho trend of world P. VandonborR told his col- " "iai mo olno point on which our allies mny become suspicious of tho effectiveness of collective security lies In their doubts about American participation. Russia, he said, had a right to say: "How can you expect us to reply on nn enlgmn?" Ho contended that utmost every action being undertaken separately by lirltnln and Rus sia was built on n fenr thnt Ger many again might riso ns a military power. ' Pre-war Road Scene On Lingayen Via j. i v "'. ' K n it- l - r J aV - - x J- Jim 1 1 . -;-, VT.-w...Mir i i nil . r , -H. HfJm aa I'll VTtl 15J ni H 'Ammm m hi aaariti This is a pre-war view of the road leading south from Lingayen gulf and Lingayen town to Manila in the Philippines. Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur yesterday announced landings on Luaon. (AP wirephoto) Coup de Grace to Budapest Looms as Red Army Controls Major Part of City 21 KILLED IN CRASH NBW-YOKK, Jun, 10 W) Twenly-ono passengers, nil mem bers of tho armed services, and a crew of three died today In the crash of nn Amerlcnn Air lines plane near Burbank, Cnlif., tho company offices hero an nounced. Tho plane crasned about 4:10 a. m. (PWT) today libout five miles from the Lockheed air terminal lit Burbank, Chnrlcs A. Ithclnstrom, vice president in charge of traffic, snld. Names Withheld Names of passengers are be ing withheld by the nrmy and nnvy until next of kin aro noti fied. The crew consisted of Cnpt. James R. McCnuley, First Offi cer Robert G. Eitner, und Stew ardess Llla A. Docken, all of Burbank. "The piano when it crashed (Continued on Pngo Two) OP A Stamp Act Validity Queried PORTLAND, Jan. 10 P) The vnlldity of national OPA ac tion In cancelling ration stumps Christmas Duy "uftcr repeatedly snylng such action would not be taken," was challenged todny at the hearing of 14 stores charged with violations of tho order. - Tho stand was voiced by Rob ert L. Snbin, attorney for four Fred Meyer stores, at a hearing conducted by Robert M. Dulin of the San Francisco office of administrative hearings. The stores allegedly ncccpted enn ccllcd stamps and failed to apply new rntion requirements on De cember 20. Sabln accused the district OPA of acting "with lethargy, if not negligence" in relaying of ficial information on tho changes to the stores. Ho said newspaper charts, which the OPA advised stores to use, contained errors. Seattle to Capital Trip Takes Little Over 6 Hours WASHINGTON. Jnn, 10 (P) A transcontinental flying record was claimed today with war de partment announcement that one or Us big new transport planes had flown from Scuttle to Wash ington In llltlo over six hours. Acluul flying tlmo for the 2:)2.')-mllo non-slop trip, tho de partment snld, wns six hours, three minutes, BO seconds. Aver nge speed of tho plane, a double decked transport version of tho B-20 Superfortress, wns listed as 38H miles an hour. Tho big plnno, known ns tho C-07, left Soattlo yesterday nt 11:31) a. m. Pacific war tlmo (2:38 p. m., eastern lime) and ar rived hero nt 8:41 p. m, It wns piloted by Elliott Merrill, a Boo ing aircraft test pilot, Present official records for const-to-consl flights were mndo Inst spring by AAA pilots In P-51 Mustang fighters, Col. C. A. Pet erson and Lt. Col. Jack Cnrtor then spanned the continent from Los Angeles to Now York with respective records of six hours, 31 minutes, 30 seconds nnd six hours, 3D minutes, 30 seconds. Lnsl Mny tho Lockheed Con stellation flew from Los Angeles to Washington in six hours and 58 minutes, ' Strato-Cruiser The first bomber converted to a transport which fits Into post wnr plans while meeting mili tary needs during tho war, the Boeing-built C-07 In a commer cial postwar model wUl be known us the StratoCrulscr. It has n 13-21) fusclngo without tho armor, armament, bomb bays nnd othor mililnry equipment, with n second fusclngo superim posed on the first. In its postwar version It has been described rather fully but details of the present model designed for army transport scrvlco hnvo not boon disclosed, LONDON. Jan. 10 lP) The red army virtually delivered the coup dc grace to Budapest to day, capturing more than 1000 square blocks, which gave them 3300 of th Hungarian capital's 800 'blbcka.'-' l ' ' Tho night soviet communique broadcast from Moscow,'' an nouncing these gatns.-indlcolcd the stubborn but dwindling German-Hungarian garrison was at the point of exhaustion, stating that 3000 had been captured yes terday. Today's prisoner count remains to bo tabulated. ' Near Komarom At the samo time tho soviet communique announced .that a Russian tank and Infantry col umn had smashed within a mile (Continued on Pago Two) SET FOR JAM. 20 The 11th annual meeting of tho .Klamath Production Credit association is slated for Satur day, January 20, in the Willard hotel. William Kittredgc, presi dent, and Lee S. McMullcn, sec retary and treasurer, will pre side. This is "farmers' day" and McMullen announced that 4 per cent dividend checks will be distributed at this time. There (Continued on Page Two) Donald Leslie Reported Missing Word has been received re cently that 1st Lt. Donnld V. Leslie, 27, has been missing in action over Franco since De cember 13. Lt. Leslie Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Leslie of Complon, Calif., and formerly of Klamath Falls. He was the pilot of a B-28 and the cousin of 1 2nd Lt. Robert! T. Leslie, who was killed in ac tion October- 1, 1944. in Italy. Lt. Leslie graduated irom Klamath Union IllgU SCIIOOl 111 1037 and wasted employed at Shaw's stationery before enlisting In the service In October of 1941. He has been overseas eight months and com pleted 33 missions' over the Eu ropean theater. His brother, Pvt. Roy Leslie, is stationed at Camp Roberts, Calif. Universal Draft Action Deferred ' WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (ff") The house postwar , military policy committee today defer red action on a universal military training law requested by Pres ident Roosevelt. - Tho postponement was decided on to enable the house to dovoto its full attention to war man power legislation. , TANK BATTLE BY 1ST; 1 SAME TAKEN Third Wins Ground On 20-Mile' Front ys i mSUm, LL&Ji ENTERS SECOND DAY VANCOUVER, Jan. 10 (CP)- A strike of street railwayman s union (At l,; mem Dors m Van couver. Victoria and Westmin ster, B. C, today went into its second dny and workers in the three coast cities repeated the scramble to get to their jobs on foot, in jammed car pools and in vehicles hailed along the silent streets. There was no indication from union officials, British Columbia Electric company representa tives, or from federal spokesmen In minu.a tl,in tha it..ntlAn that an early return to work of uyou striking railwaymcn could be expected. Threats Reported Veiled threats were heard from some of the strikers that company workers in the power plants in the area would join in a sympathy strike nnd plunge the three cities into darkness if the (Continued on Pnge Two) Woman Injured In Car Crash A two-car collision at S. 6th and Shasta way sent Mrs. Win frcd E. Ralston, 19, route 2, box 432, city, to Klamath Valley hos pital, state police reported fol lowing an investigation at the cf-nn ii nf Ihn rf-ncii aorlv Time- . ...w v . .w ...... ,7 au.c I rinv nleht A car operated by J. M. Hil ton, 2019 Main, was proceeding toward the Tower theatre on S. 6th, when the car In which Mrs. Ralston and two other women were riding, entered S. 6th. Both cars were badly damaged and occupants were shocked and bruised. Mrs. Hilton was a pas senger in her husband's cnr. Wo men in the Ralston machine were moved to Klamath Valley hospital by Ward's ambulance. Two were treated and released and Mrs. Raiston was dismissed Wednesday. By JAMES M. LONG PARIS, Jan. 10 VP) Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' first army won the biggest tank battle of the Belgian bulge campaign to day, capturing the secondary road center of Samree after 30 hours of violent fighting in deep snow which included an all night artillery barrage. On the south of the salient, now less than nine' miles wide at its neck, the seasoned Amer ican third army o Lt. Gen. George S. Patton Jr., gained up to a mile and a half in an ad vance along a 20-mile front above Bastogne. Near Center His 101st screaming eagle air borne division moved to within four and a half miles of Houf falize, key road center near the center of the bulge. ; - ' The Germans were" withdraw ing from the western tip of the salient, and their peril- was in creased appreciably by the loss of stoutly defended ' Samree, whence a spiderweb of secondary roads lead into the salient.' Disengaging 'The Germans are disengag ing most sectors along the north weit t'P of the salient, and fall, ing back ip what appears to be a general withdrawal." a British staff officer said. "There are few 'contacts and the enemy is i (Continued on Page Two) ; Losses Light In Lingayen Gulf Landing Br The Associated Press GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS ON LUZON, PHILIPPINES Tens of thousands of American troops, landing with Gen. Douglaa MacArthur yesterday in Lingayen gulf on western Luson island, drove tank-led spearheads south acroia flatlands toward Manila today in the climactic showdown fight for the Philippines. Manila was lets than 120 miles away through low. dry court try excellently suited for the enormous quantities of mechanise equipment landed with the reteran fighting men from an 800. ship conroy which stretched out for 70 miles. (Jap reports said 60.000 men invaded the island). Twenty-four hours after the Initial landings, made against amaiingly light opposition at 8:30 a. m the sixth army Vanka till were pouring ashore and oyer the same crescent of sand dunes the Japanese invaders used three years ago. LOSSES SAID LIGHT Landing losses were officially reported as rery light , . .n,r,l MscArthur' wdiff ashore with an assault wave, es tablished headquarters on the island where his outnumbered men fought raliantly in defeat at Bataan and Corregidor. With the support of a blistering dawn naval and air barrage, of shells, bombs and rockets, Lt. Gen. Walter Krueger's sixth army veterans landed along 15 miles of Lingayen gulf, found inUnd virtually cleared of defenders and quickly pushed The beachhead extended from near Lingayen city-on -that southern shore eastward to San Fabian. . Refutes Jap Warnings 4 The low American casualties refuted enemy warnings that ait invasion of Luzon would be a costly undertaking from the start. Japanese defenses ashore were woefully inadequate. Soma, trenches were only a foot deep Associated rress uorrespon- IVCJ.EASES By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. SALEM, Jan. 10 VP) Bills to give state elective officials sal ary increases of 13 to 50 per cent, adding $22,000 to the state's annual payroll, are be fore ' the house administration and reorganization committee, the committee disclosed today. The . increases range from $1000 a year for each of the seven state supreme court jus tices, to $4500 for the governor. The lowest salary would be $6000 a year..- Changes Proposed ... The present and proposed sal aries follow: ... Governor, $7500 to $12,000; secretary - of state, $5400 to $8500; - treasurer,' $5400 t o (Continued on Page Two) Norwegians Cut Mam Railway LONDON, Jan.' 10 (ff) Nor wegian parachutists dropped in to Norway have cut the main railway between Trondheim and Oslo, over which Germans were being evacuated to Germany, a Norwegian government official disclosed today. He said two German divisions recently in Norway now are fighting with Field Marshal Karl von Rundstedt on the western front, and that the Germans are trying to get eight other divis ions out of ivorway. Government Slaps Ceiling On Prices for Live Cattle WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (P) The' government today slapped a flat price celling on live cattle. The action, widely op- fioscd by stockmen, carried with t n move to soothe opposition. The original ceiling was set nt $18 a hundred weight instead of $17.50 as originally proposed. Announced by Stabilization Director Vinson, the measure be comes effective January 29, The new overall ceiling, cov ering culves as well as cattle, will be lowered to $17.55 on July 2. Vinson also directed: 1. Tho defense supplies cor poration to Increase subsidy pay ments on choice beef from $1 to $2 a hundred weight, and on good beef from $1.45 to $1.95 a hundred weight, Chicago basis. The subsidy payment on choice cattle will bo cut by 50 cents July 2. 2. OPA and the war food ad ministration to increase the price of the present stabilization range for choice cattle by $1 and for good cattle by 50 cents a hundred pounds, live weight, over the entire country. On July 2 the maximum and minimum of the stabilization range for choice cattle . will be reduced by 50 cents a hundred pounds. . . , OPA Violation 3. OPA and WFA to Issue a regulation "making it an OPA violation for a slaughterer to pay more, on the average grade and yield considered than the max imum prices of the stabilization range for cattle purchased and slaughtered over a month's per iod. This provision does not in clude calves, . 4. WFA to delegate 'authority to OPA to issue an order estab lishing the maximum percentage of good and choice cattle that any slaughterer may kill or de liver over t month's time. dent.C. Yates McDaniel, who ac companied MacArthur ashore, reported that when the smoke of the bombardment lifted Filipino civilians were on hand to greet the Americans. "We found no booby traps or; land mines such as we encount ered on Leyte," McDaniel said. "If the Japanese ever had any dugouts or pillboxes they were buried in sand by our bombard ments. We didn't see any." Frantic Japs ; (Broadcasts from the scene said the Japanese were so frantic with rage some swam out and threw hand grenades at the American jjhlps, "like throwing a snowball at a hot stove.") Of momentous -importance in tightening a military noose on Japan, the invasion was orderly. There was no bloody battle on me Deacnes. rne Americans merely ploughed ud the inva sion ground with a fearsome pre liminary oarrage oi nunareas oi tons of metal '' and swarmed ashore calmly. At one point only 11 snipers oould be found in an hour's search. " General 'MacArthur triumph antly announced the landing had severed Japan's lines of rein forcement and: supply, . forcing the enemy to fight with such re sources as he has on the island. 'His back door is closed." MacArthur said in today's communique. ine decisive battle for the liberation of the Philippines and control of the Southwest Pacific is at hand." The general said the Japanese evidently did not expect the in vasion at the Lingayen sector, and attributed the light Ameri- (.cominued on rage Two) FBI Arrests Two For Bond Thefts WASHINGTON. Jan. 10 (1 The federal. bureau of investiga tion today announced the arrest of two persons charged with stealing $100,225 in Home Own ers Loan corporation bonds from the Bank of America, Los An geles. . The theft occurred May z. The announcement said that because of similar methods of operation the FBI was endeav oring to learn if the two in dividuals were connected - also with thefts of more than $6000 from banks in Phoenix, Ariz.; Seattle, Wash.; Portland, Ore., and San Francisco. T Circuit Judge David R. Van. denberg gave his instructions to me jury early Wednesday after, noon in the case of Dale Davis vs. M. P. Lavenik, as the defense and prosecution completed argu ments in one of the largest dam. age suits ever brought in Klam. ath county courts. Young Davis, 16-year-old Klamath Union high school stu dent, brought suit through his father, Allen Davis, guardian ad litem, for $50,000 against Lave nik, Klamath Falls business man, charging that as a result of an accident last April 19, Davis be came permanently Injured through, the loss of his right leg. Hear Details . f Jurors heard details of the ac cldent which took place at. the intersection of Alameda and Monclaire -as young Davis was (Continued on Page Two)- Hollywood Legion Admits Jap-Yank HOLLYWOOD, Jan.' 10 VP) A spokesman asserted today that Hollywood Post No. 591 of the American Legion, composed en tirely of World War II veterans was the first Legion post in the nation to admit a Japanese-Amerl ican to membership. Harley M. Oka, 28, native o! Santa Ana, Calif., who received a medical discharge last month from the army, joined the or ganization last night, Milton Luban, publicity chairman, an. nounced. ' i Britons Drive j Patrol From Reno ROME, Jan. 10 (M British troops have driven a nazi com bat patrol back from the south bank of the Reno river, along which the Germans have dug in for a stand at the extreme east ern end of the Italian battlefront, allied headquarters said today. - Severe winter . weather kept activity on the entire front re stricted to patrol sorties, a head quarters communique said. Yanks Return to Luzon v ' tfneoyen Guf J'Patinan I 1 IS" FernendoT if t-'iy -. iv LUZON South China . SsiYf"--: aSMANl'lA ) TAN3 yNfij lomon Bay , ialniins, Naqa Syj .V.-l'MARINDUQUl'Afcies; l MINDOROR- BURIASKj philippTnes. 'J , j? ' Jap reports Indicated that 60,000 Americana had made the initial landings on Luton island. Lingayen gulf, indicated by black arrow, waa the scene of invasion. Lower black arrow shows Paluan, captured recently by American forces fighting ea Mln doro. south oi the main Philippine island.