EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS Monday. Jin. IS. 1845 PORTLAND, Jan. 15 (P) A third death in Portland's city jail "drunk tank" in two weeks brought announcement from the Multnomah county coroner to day that autopsies will be per formed in the two most recent fatalities. . Death of John' N. Dillcy, 55, White Salmon, Wash., brought :to 22 the fatalities in the jail in the last 20 months. Dilley was booked at 11:20 p. m. Saturday on a drunk charge and was examined by a physician before being locked up, but died 30 minutes . later. Autopsies will be performed on Dillcy's body and that of Frank E. Spencer, 54, Portland, who '...nnnmhoil (n a hftOrt aifHI-k earlier in the day while serving a 10-day term for drunkenness. ; First death in the detention .tank in 1945 was that of John P. Uram, 44, serving a 60-day jail term for drunkenness, who .was listed as a pneumonia victim. The Road to Berlin By The Associated Press , 1 Western front: 301 miles (from near Duren). ' 2 Russian front: 304 miles (from north of Warsaw). 3 Hungarian front: 364 miles jtfrom Hron river). t 4 Italian front: 544 miles (from Reno river). .CAA Recommends National Air Plan LAKEVIEW Recommenda tions for a national airport plan, 'calling for the construction of 'new airports and the improve Iment of existing fields during ithe next five or -10 years has 'been made by the CAA to con gress. The report also recom mends that congress appropriate '$100,000 a year for federal aid ;to the states and cities, and that ithe money be channeled through 'state agencies. i Both the Lakeview naval air ,port and the Paisley emergency landing strip are included in the Oregon airports list calling for improvement. TO TURKISH POST WASHINGTON. Jan. 15 (IP) President Roosevelt today nomi nated Edwin C. Wilson, veteran American diplomat, to be ambas sador to Turkey. The action filled the last ma jor diplomatic post of this gov ernment which was still open in the European area. ' Wilson, who was the presi dent's representative at Algiers when that was headquarters tor the French committee of libera tion and who subsequently served as a member of the Medi terranean commission, is now di rector of the state department's office of special political affairs. The Turkish assignment for merly was held by Laurence Steinhardt, who was named am bassador to Czechoslovakia some weeks ago. iTurner Company Gets ;Refund On Taxes One Klamath Falls firm, Tur ner Chevrolet company, was in cluded in the list of Oregon business houses which received refunds on overpaid federal taxes for the 1944 fiscal year. according to the Internal rev enue bureau. Turner Chevrolet , company received $5244 on income tax and $dloa on excess profits, the bureau reported. Denny Burs. Blrmineham baseball pitcher, won four games in 1932, and pitched only three auu uirc-Mttii. Hillings. Interference QNE of the greatest dif ficulties in the recep tion of radio programs is interference. Most of us know thai simple operations such as turning off a light or other device can cause a large click or pop in our radio.. This is due to the fact that when any electrical device is turned off a liny spark occurs. These sparks are in reality miniature radio transmitters and although momentary they can cause : an annoyance when accom panied with thousands of other similar incidents. Electrical disturbances are constantly taking place in the multitude of wires and machines to be found in every community. To aggravate matters the wires which are sus pended like a webb and cover the landscape act as a conveyer of the Inter ference permitting most of it to be heard at a con siderable distance from the point of origin. The accumulation of noises may be heard as a constant roar in some areas. The condition ac counts for ninety-five per cent of all interference and can be recognised by the fact that it disappears when local or other pow erful stations are received. Interference that per sists when listening to the local station is usually due to a faulty radio. Conner Service Co. Geo. F. Conner Dial 6S78 2009 So. 6th St. Our Business Is Sound Today On The Western Front By The Associated Press Canadian 1st army At tacks Germans' Maas bridge head, but forced back. British 2nd army Cap tures Gebrock near Maeseyck on Maas river front. Other units attacking bulge pushed in western ind, joined with Americans U. S. 9th army Repulses small nazi attack at Wurm on ftoer river front; aided in drive in Belgium. U. S. 1st army--Soizes 15 towns in Belgian bulge, cu's Houffalize-St. Vlth highway, closes within 2 miles of Houf falizc. U. S. 3rd army Gains to ward Houffalize, and in Wiltz area. Captures Tettingen in German Saarland opposite Luxembourg. U. S. 7th army Fights new German assaults in Hatten area north of Haguenau for est. French 1st army No change reported.. Marines Awarded Medals In Ceremony T ALEM, Jan. 15 () The outdoor lighting restrictions, or dered by the federal government to conserve coal used for power production, apparently will ap ply to. the Pacific northwest, where little or no coal is used, Public .. Utilities Commissioner George Flagg said today. , Most of the northwest's power is produced by waterpower de velopments, with a small amount by sawdust and oil, Flagg said. Flagg said he received a tele gram today from the war pro duction board asking his cooper ation, and Flagg said he prom ised it. The regulations prohibit the use of electricity for outdoor ad vertising, outdoor display light ing, show window lighting, ex cessive street lighting, and out door advertising sign displays. Seed Growers Group To Meet In Eugene Annual meeting of the Oregon Seed Growers league will be held at Eugene, January 23 arid 24. Klamath is one of the lead ing counties in Oregon in - the production of small seeds and is usually well represented at the annual meeting. Quite a num ber of local seed growers are on various committees of the league. The Oregon Seed Growers league has been particularly ac tive on questions of importance to seed growers, such as tariffs, shipping rates, weed control, cer tification, and others of similar nature. lgggpppppppsjijspHSjiHMHHiHMiMBBIIiM At a formal presentation at the Marine Barracks Saturday, Col. George Van Ordin. extreme left, commanding officer, awarded three Bronie Stars, a Gold Star in lieu ol a second Purple Heart, and three Purple Hearts. Lett to right, the men awarded are: Bronse Stars. Lt. Anthony J. Caitagna, Tech. Sgt. Euborn L. Boro and PFC Paul Dineen. Gold Star. Cpl. Abner J. Flowers. Purple Hearts, Cpl. Bruce C. Peters, Cpl. Robert J. Rotchford and Cpl. Clyde A. Corr. (Official USMC photo). -. IIIGIlpi 001 New.s i iNotesartdjiji Comment: lli'ifiiiiiMiiii'iWiiiiiilllfl Sc. li By JUANITA SHINN After a week of. being shoved and pushed around in the trains buses in and around Portland I am only too glad to return to Iho wear and tear of school even if final exams did start today. My thanks to Barbara Ros- kamp who did a a little filling in for me while I was gone. Her sleuthing turned up a few facts that 1 had not encountered on my tours of the halls. The Klamath Knights, who have been perhaps more active this year than in the past few years in KUHS, have made and announced plans for a Valen tine's dance in the girls' gym on February 9. Baldy's band will again furnish music for the occasion. Dancing will be in the evening from 8:30 to 11:30, while the admission prices will be 74 cents for couples and 60 cents for stags. Today the numerals on the KUHS service flag in the main entrance stairway to the build ing were changed from 415 to 465, indicating that about 50 boys have enlisted in the service since the 1944 graduation. This number includes boys of that graduatingN class. ) A special treat is in store for the students on January 18. Pe riods in the afternoon will be cut to 3d minutes and at 3:05 an all school pep assembly will be held prior to the Medford basketball games, and to wind up the semes ter in a big way since there will De no scnool on Friday the 19. Performers from the girls' tumbling team will furnish the entertainment. Representing the Pelican basketball team, Jim Noreen and Jim Palmer will say a few words before the conclu sion of the assembly. Immediately following the as sembly, the Radio club will spon sore a free all-school dance in the girls' gym. Buses will leave as usual, but since the assembly is to be a short one, it will give the bus students a chance to dance for a while before leaving. SYNTHETIC RUBBER TULELAKE M. M. Pcrnell. manager of the Klamath Falls Firestone store presented an in teresting film on the develop ment of synthetic rubber be fore members of the Rotary club here Wednesday noon. He was introduced by W. G. McCly monds. program chairman. Captains of two teams selling tickets for the Institute of In ternational Understanding lec tures to be sponsored during the winter by the Rotary club re ported that nearly all tickets have been sold. The captains are Loeth Dunlap and Jerry Van Buskirk and the losing team will entertain the winners at a dinner, scheduled for ladies' night in the near future. Four lectures are planned, the first to be given January 18, in the high school gymnasium with Gertrude Townsend Fitch, long-time resident of the Orient to present "The New China In the New Pacific." Dates for the other lectures will be announced later but all will be on subjects of vital interest in the post-war world. Mrs. Fitch will speak also while here to students of the Tulelake high school. Clark W. Fenslcr is chairman of the Rotary club's institute committee and has completed all plans for the series of lec tures. Parents Die As Son Comes Home FITCHBURG, Mass.. Jan. 15 W) Mr. and Mrs. William La more died within two hours of each other today while a son was en route home from over seas war duty. The son Pharmacists Mate 2c William J., Jr., had just arrived in San Francisco. Another son is in France. WEATHER Min. Prerlp. Sunday, Jinusrv Mnx. EuRcne .... 54 Klamath Falls 34 Sacramento . .. North Bend, .... 60 Portland ... 45 Medford S6 Reno 52 San Francisco .17 Seattle 46 .... Northern California weather Showers today, tonight, and Tuesday with mow over mountains. Cooler today and to night except in Interior valleys. Oregon Forecast: Showers at low ele vations, otherwise snow flurries tonight and tomorrow. Colder today and to night 40 . 41 .03 .18 V MEN AND' WOMEN IN SERVICED ANDERSON HOME . TULELAKE 1st Sgt. Rus sell Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Anderson, is home on a 21-day leave after 24 years in the Mediterranean and European theaters of war. The young man, youngest son of the Andersons, has participated in six of the major campaigns. He arrived in the United States just prior to Christmas and will report back to Santa Ana, Jan uary . 14. While overseas he served with a U. S. army head quarters unit in a secretarial capacity. He enlisted In the serv ice four years ago January 10. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson have an elder son, Richard, trained as an aerial gunner, but now serving with an infantry unit which expects overseas orders in the immediate future. KOENIG KILLED . Word was received from the war department Thursday by Mrs. William Koenig of Paisley ol the death of her husband, bgl. Koenig, on December 20, in Ger many, in action. He was 49 years old. a vet eran of World War 1 and two vears alio this soring enlisted. He participated in the D-Day invasion and at the time of his death was a member of Hodges anti-tank division of the first armv. Besides his wife, Ethel, he is survived by one son, cpl. Don ald Koenig, stationed in the Hawaiian islands; two daughters, Lorna, a student at Paisley high school, and Joy, a Bernard Daly fund student attending OSC. Rubber Canning Rings Add to War Problems ROSEBURG, Jan. 15 (Pi Added to the problems that crowd upon a United States sena tor these days is that of what's wrong with rubber rings for homo canning, . .. Senator Guy Cordon has ad vised inquiring housewives here that he took the matter up with the WPB and was assured new rings now on the market have more snap and should not leak air. ; If you want to sell lt phone The Herald and News "want ads." 3124. We are pleased to announce the installation of the Latest Improved Equipment In ' Shoe Repairing We hove assembled workmanship, materials a complete service of the best available quali ties and shall endeavor to serve Klamath Falls and the surrounding vicinity in every pos sible way. We are ready to solve your present and future shoe repairing problems. Ed's Shoe Shop 1022 MAIN TOM DUNN, Owner SERVICE Guaranteed Workmanship QUALITY Annual FIREMAN'S DANCE Sunday, January 21 --MALIN Benefit MALIN FIREMEN Music By Pappy Gordon and His Oregon Hillbillies Dancing9 P. M. Til 2 A. M. Admission Genit $1.20 ' Ladies 50 - Servicemen .60 Price Includes Tax Flashes of Life By The Associated Pr.is THREE GENERATIONS THOMASV1LLK, Ala.. Jan. 15 P Mrs. J. M. Davis' birth day is January 10. That day Is also the blilhdny of her KrnmUluiiuliU'r, Mis. Boyd Wilson Kunches. And net Jnnuiiiy 10 Mis. Funchcs' dniiRhtcr will celebrate her first birthday. DESPERATE K-ANSAS rtTV .Inn. 13 Ml Want ad in the Kansas Clly Star: Will exchange my Interest In the hereafter for productive lead on a clean, furnished apart mcnt or house, I'm desperate." WHISTLE GLENNS FERRY, Idu., Jan. 15 (l) Residents complained that the laundry whistle was blown "too loudly and at the wrong times." ,. So the town board ordered that the whistle be sounded only at the beginning and end of a work shift; for periods of less than three, seconds . and "in moderate tones." DIOGENES JR. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 15 W) Radio Announcer Jullnn Harris hadn't come far from the taxi cab before the driver started honking insistently. My wallet, thought Harris, perhaps I'vo left it in the cnb. It was worse than that. The driver handed Harris the pack of cigarettes he had left on the seat. ' Misunderstanding Causes Reduction In Used Fat Drive A reduction of approximately 25 per cent in used fats salvage can be attributed to a misunder standing on the part of meat dealers of the facilities available for collecting the fats, and reim bursement to the dealer In both ration points and actual cash paid for the salvage, according to D. R. Winn, WFA representa tive from the district office in Portland. Winn is here on business per taining to salvaging used kitch en fats. Winn declared that there has also been a tendency on the part of housewives to relax their efforts because of a false impres sion of a quick victory in Ger many. He strongly urged that housewives and dealers combine in their efforts to salvage as much fat as possible. C-47 CARRIES 74 PEOPLE IN FLIGHT ROME, Jan. 15 Ml When conversations veer around to posl-wur ulrplinu'S that will cur-i-v scores of passengers. Iho men of a U. 8. troop carrier group In llnly tell iihout the limn n't ordinary twlnenglned C-47 transport pluno came out of Yugoslavia with 1 persons aboard. If a C-47 ever carried more living souls on a single hop Ihoso men never heard of It. LI. Harold F. Uonohuo of Toronto, O., piloted the trans port, which took off from an Italian base with morn than two tons of supplies for Murshul Tito's Yugoslav patriots. Douohuo and his crew, aided bv patriot workers, quickly un loaded the ship. Then came the surprise cargo for the return trip 00 children ranging In age from 2 months to 4 years. Throe Yugoslav women vol unteered to go along to watch over the live freight. They and the flvo-man crew brought the total load to 74 persons. To a Telegrapher If you'ro an experienced Tele grapher (Morse), your services were never so vitally needed as now. Here at Southern Pacific, we aro trying to do almost the impossible rolling war trains, troop trains, ammunition, tanks, Jeeps, guns In tremendous num bers ... all for the Pacific of fensive. As n telegrapher, you could help us KEEP these trains rolling, keep the spear alined at Japan. Your work would bo per haps out in one of the stations, perhaps In this area, But WHER EVER It Is, It would bo of ut most importance. We bellevo you will like working for S. P . . . like our people , . . like the friendly spirit of 'this Western railroad. New, higher wages. Railroad pass privileges. Fine pension plan. Medical services. And above all, a fine Job with a permanent company. Come in and have a talk with us. See or writs Trainmaster, . S.P. Station, Klamath Falls, or your nearest S.P. Ag.ni. Tola On HoneyJ rn.."r"!.',h,l1?.',".!,:''U1 tered Iho life" , &! eligible bachelor w, N yesterday by Mrs. K,.! Roosevelt. "H A K rutin of war voter.,, ng (Tie vVhlto the presidential colt,. " "I must makes c. '. Fnla ." the first lady , In the country, ' "ft ' having a wedding." otl Thai was all she mi tv remains u secret who uVI Is mid whore thev II I n 1 If Its u "lro.en" ,. need, udvertlso (r In the classified. if A NIW SHIPMINTt MEN'S ONE PIECE WORT SUITS Strongly itwn, xtm full cut for comfort. 3 M ontgomeri WardJ NET, VI MJP'.r ' iy ; i v ft!' I 7 AT --j I i w y 7 x 1111 VtiHPrin9 octant t tT" Gav twn-t.nnoi- in pttfl "5alyna". .a Crown p " ' , ; ,Wd Tested fabric bv ''.. 'SI ';St. George. VenoL " S I v.m. wi-nv LUCKfi in jr wm ' ... . : w i :w li 'Llwaistline for that' ' . i 7 iLJ whittled look. MU A : '