i IRWIN IIZZED IN. WING CASE ,,cd From Po One) , micliiiio parked r iriiillu frnm wm"'u m IS rafter. Til? ''!' .,. I rluw I IUWI1 1,11 r; rwiim "l lld ""1 I . bva were ur K ,1,1. .unt on plKM " ,' , -i,t h, boor muJ' V 7r, m , i?Crv 10 until li W S,, l,o inn, tlmt "' ,d borrowed li la car he Z"r( ho had ;? I'1"'"1 cor pocket hu ,w."? . .. i ji i... 'n un nil to M 7, iffli-la i.h nV... if il.ln week mid KFovcr to him nnd Den- IShcrllf Jik V ." : to tlio timce m i M'hii uuii won ii .J I anil We.w". "w Wf hi (1 ii. in. Idjy lor Salem with two nrra Maunnii m-iivi-n-ii in- I nr .LiKiMlll Ileemaii of frlmc liiiwrntuiy, University eion ncliroil hi iiicuitiiie. 3 p. in. Thursday, Dr. Bee- callcil aiK'riu ww nim iki. alnli.tm.nt. Kit bulloli token from tho ol Ewlny wore llrod iroin L identified the gun ra il to by ur. in ciiuiii us uie Smith nnd wesson turnon to him. nnd the hulk'U im rnmnvi.rl hv fr. CeorUf- 11. r, Klniniith county coroner, Kwingt io(iy during iin au-cmrliirtl-d tho dllV lifter le u dentil. Nitife ol Nebraska liters continued throuKhoiit ly their questioning of if, a unlive of Alliance, curao to Klnnuitli Kails In imbcr, 1037. from Mnv, In l.minrv I O J I lt lyed at viirloun times by lieu Mimocr compuny, i-ei- .lnl,.,. f limit. 1 ;..,,l,..r tinw n.il '.r..riin n.t.l W..I..I. kmc to the Greot Northern m, jot i, as carpenter ittiip- Iri trattmA In trial,. fcvembor, 11)42. Ho has been uji'u on ii uriiKcniiui since plft Is mnrrled nnd ban four Vln nunnrAlnti In -....A..I Icrn records, lie has lived u iruiiua rwininnin rails lor ii ii yciirs. A Freezes Sale Fats, Oils hlllNGTON, Jan. II) (At l.urlirii l..l.. i , i... , ,,j,M ,u niroicn rnuon iwlnts over n fusl- !" ".i oi coininooities re iK stamps hnd tho added y of budKctlng for fatt 7 have three days to do h ll. rrt ... ... until Monday all retail 01 hrd nil,,,. ui. i i.... f'N and cooking oils. When n s lifted t tlmt time . 1 i'iviui:in will DC rl ot two red points a f ma, h"" wn" ordered, smnll l'rVVI-"1 ri"ls 011 "'CPs to put ratlonlnii In "laughter Charge a Againsf Man itiawii . . . o w,Tn-,l,FoUlMl "'lor Ion l,lvoLvol In an al- jl;'""ry i, poiico salt). To a Boilermaker in this area! oi !V'A? whcro t'cr'!' yo,M,"f",,)prcc!atct utfli you ro wll n ,I'S... working on 'or M,nk,;epin 'em 111 C l,0,lvy work '"lies , "'iiroatlom. Into" " And the like iff, .5 w? think UKOh3 "!. Ms ip nu,lri"d pans nd T P.enslon Pln. L hlh,,lnl services. l"lg,so ,i A renl J0J fnr" l Wnr future. 'Iinnfc or W.ti. . s,tlon vi "nmo,for K noki a?h Fi. -. Agnt Draft of Nurses Needed. Says Kirfc WASHINGTON, Jan, 10 (!) Tho uiiuy's kih'kihiii uiiiiurul said today Inadequacy n( niiinlnti care, ill lliu faco of a 271) per cent Increase In battle ciixuiilty pnlli'iilH, milk ii II Impel ntlve that nurses Im drnlteil, . Hlneii May, said MiiJ. On. Not niiiii T, Kirk, "our pnllenu have Inereased from 2110,00(1 to ino.UDIl," while the iitiinber of army nurses bus risen only 2000. Anpearlnu before tho bouse military committee, tho surxuon Kiinenil kiivc all-out supnort to the nurso druft proposul inude by President Itoosevelt two week ii ano In bis "state ot the union" messuKo to conKiess, STRESSED BY FDR (Continued From Puna One) plans Iin inlnht have for the re llrlim vice president, Henry A. Wallace. Ho remarked, however, bn didn't think Wallace would starve. I, Hiild there was no news on the (pieHllon of whether On. Charles Do Gaulle would sit In on tho next "111k Three" meet iiiK. Disturbed 0. Memiirkcd that he was still disturbed by the Italian econom ic situation but said there wns no news on II. Tito president told reporters, with a urln, Unit they all would try. to Interpret bis observation that Ibo flint 12 years are the hardest and suld they all would Kiiess wroim, Rugs Rolltd Meanwhile runs caine out of the White House, more Roose velt moved In, and the presi dent who has served lonKcst tolled over what may be his tory's shortest InuuKural nddress. In an uniiiirnlshed, abbreviat ed ceremony at noon tomorrow, President Roosevelt will take the oath of office for an epochal fourth time, then deliver the speech. Hu is iilminif at 500 words. Thus be may lower the record of the last wartime chief execu tive, Abraham Lincoln, whose second InouRiiral address ap proximated 000 words. B- T WASHINGTON, Jan. II) 11') A fleet of Salpan-bnsed Super fortresses today smashed at the bit: Kawusakl aircraft plant In Akn.ihl on tho Japanese homo is land of Honshu. Kxploslons and fires were observed. A sizable force of B-20s, per haps upwards of 100 bombers, plastered tho tartlet In dayllKht with what n war department communique described us "good results," 80 Planes Strike . Tokyo broadcasts sold 80 ot the Kinnt planes bombed the Osako-Kobe Industrial nren for an hour al noon and acknow ledged "some damiiKo." Tho en emy account added that three forays of H-20s preceded the main attack. It wns the first striko by the bill bombers iiKninst Akoshl, n few miles out of Kobe, Japan's blKdost port, Only n few enemy fllihters took the nlr to oppose the raiders. Anti-aircraft fire was described as moderate and Inaccurate. All ot the B-20S re turned to their bases. aEIAN LINE AGAINST 7TH ARWIY PUSH (Continued Krom Pago One) j mans hold, In the flattened Ar1. demies sulleiit. First Gains ! Tho first division gained up to 2S00 yurds und entered Schop pen, eight miles northeust of St. villi. Other troons entered Khertange, three miles further south, Near Heebl, the first iirniy wns tour miles from the road center, Palton's new nssnult had sur rounded and won n third of Dleklrch, IB miles north of Lux embourg city. It ulso won the border villages of Rosport und Wussenbllllg. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) determined to carry through whatever plans II has in mind.: Since we can't stop what Rus slu proposes to do there, wc might as well hold the hope that ii may turn oui lo no lor tho best in the long run. OOLISLAV BEHUT, president - of the new Polish provisional government Just established at I.ublln with Russian aid, culled In the correspondents at a dinner the other nlghl and told them some Interesting things ubput Poland. Before the war, ho said, more than 70 PKR CKNT of the Polish population consisted of peasants "who existed, but scarcely lived, on the land of 10,500 persons owning all the money-making farms in Poland." These "marginal and sub marglnul peasants," he con tinued, were unable lo pay for and consume enough of the nro- ducts of Polish Industry to uuibu up n volume that could employ n lnrge number of In dustrial workers. Heneo Polish Industry LANGUISHED. THAT Is anything but n sound picture. Yet It Is a picture ot tlio Poland or bclore the war the Poland thai Is represented by the Polish government in exile in Loudon which the Russians upset uic aristocratic, more or less feudal Poland with which wc arc vnguely familiar through history, song and story. A Po land made up of glittering nobles nnd starving peasants. t DEFOItK kicking up too loud a - disturbance about what the Russians arc planning in Poland, maybe we'd bolter read up a little more fully on the Poland of the past so that wc may bet ter understand Its almost con stant turmoil. Maybe there has been a screw loom there. Mnybc what Russia is planning for the Poles will be even better than what they hnve hnd. So for ns ALL THE POLES (not Just ihe great nobles) arc concerned, almost nnytbing could be as good ns what they've known for centuries. SCHOLARSHIP SET EUGENE, Jan. 19 (Pi The State Federation of Women's clubs has established a $150 scholarship for pre-nurslng stu dents, the University ot Oregon announced today. Ham Norland Auto Insurance. Phone 6060. Youth Rally... Fri. Night For Young Pooplo of All Denomination! Service Men aro invited to take part and gat acquainted. Service Men's Chapel 325 MAIN ST. Sponsored by Klamath Falls Churches and Christian Business Men HALLORY L MARKET Mcrrill-Lakoviow Jet. U Tolcphone 4620 Beef & Pork Liver 2 l, 1 5c Spare Ribs n,.25c Steak, Veal Lb28c Sausage Pure Pork .... ..2 Lbs. 35c Ground Beef 2Lb..35c Beef Short Ribs Lb 1 5c I Fancy Winter Bananas AQ AppieS and Jonathans Box AI7 Eggs, large ranch, doz. 53c Alfalfa Hay ' i;nd 22 Planes Lost In China Raids U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Jan. II) (I'l Fleet Adm, Chester W. Nlinltz announced today that American third fleet . currier forces lost 22 planes. In their three-day assault on the China coast In which more than 104, 000 tons of J n panose shipping were destroyed und docks and oil Installations ashore heavily damaged, The brief announcement gave no details of the raids other than the remarkably light plnno losses In Adm. William F. Hul sey's currier smashes at Hong kong, Canton, Swatow and Amoy lust Saturday, Sunday and Monduy. , . (Continued Xrom Page One) tee, both republicans, arc Angus Gibson, Junction City, and Paul Pottorson, Hlllsboroi Tho lack of dciiatc on the Is sue was in sharp contrast to the senate, which had approved the resolution 21 to 6 alter demo cratic charges that the heavily republican majority wanted to "whitewash" the liquor com mission. But the house democrats kept mum, not even raising the issue of whether the Oregon commit tee should cooperate with- the similar investigating committee in the Washington legislature. Washington and Oregon entered tho liquor deal Jointly. , Republican leaders of both houses said they do not think the committee will cooperate with the Washington group. They feel cooperation Is unneces sary, and that, since the Wash ington committee contains seven democrats and three republicans, it might already have its mind made up to find that the liquor purchases, made, during the re publican administration of Gov. Arthur B. Langltc, were illegal. Hoover Soundi Alert for Spies WASHINGTON,. Jan. 19 fP) FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover today sounded an alert for three niizl espionage agents who, he said, arc under orders to enter the United States. Hoover sold tho three men have been trained in espionage and snbolaKo and were associat ed during their training overseas with Erich Glmpcl and William C. Colepf.ugh who were arrested by the FBI In New York last month after allegedly landing oh the Maine coast from a submar ine In November. Hoover asked the nation to be on tho lookout for the men and to report any suspicious persons to tho nearest FBI office. Bill to Extend Licenses Passed , SALEM, Jan. 19 fP) A bill lo extend the state motor ve hicle driver's -licenses to June 30, 1947,. was passed by the house Thursday and sent to the senate. The licenses would expire next Juno 30, but the stale depart ment asked the extension on grounds the revenue from them is not needed, arid the depart ment cannot get sufficient help lo mail new licenses. - LODZ TAKEN; 1 INSIDE REICH '(Continued From Pago One) ! the duy announced the fall of Krakow, (population 200,000), ancient Polish capital In south western Poland, the former seat of the German government-general in Poland. It is 47 miles from German Silesia. , 5. A third order of the day announced the opening of a fifth offensive in East Prussia. 6. The second White Russian army, Stalin announced in his fourth order of the day, cap tured Mlnwn, 61 miles north of Warsaw and other points only three miles short of the south border of East Prussia. This army also took Plonsk, 33 miles northwest of Warsaw and 28 miles northeast of Plock on the Vistula., In the East Prussian opera tion, Stalin said, Gen. Ivan Chcrniakhovsky's third White Russian army broke through on a 36-mlle front and advanced 27 miles. The Soviets crossed the Mcmrl river, on the north side .of East Prussia, and cap tured the fortified town of Rag nit, five miles southeast of the city of Tilsit, a city of 57,000. Eight other fortified towns were captured, Including Krau plschkcn, 30 miles inside East Prussia and 15 miles northeast of Insterburg in the center of the one-time Junkers kingdom. Goose Lake Box Company Sued For Overcharges On Sales PORTLAND, Jan. 19 (P) The Goose Lake Box company, Lakeview, ' was accused today of overcharging $1707.24 on lumber sales from January to November, 1944. 'i . The OPA filed a treble dam age suit for $5121.72, charging the company with collecting payment from Blanchard Lum ber company, Seattle and Port land, for more lumber than was actually delivered. Fort Klamath Roads Slippery, Report Roads leading in and out of Ft. Klamath are in a slippery condition with , hard packed, snow, according to Robert Leav engood, forester for the Lake o' the Woods district. . .. Tho .recent snowfall resulted In 10 Inches of new snow di rectly north of Ft. Klamath at about 5000 feet elevation, which is far below normal for this time of year, Leavengood said.' Service Mdri and Women . i . ,j ,! Home on Leave 82e James R. Porter from Farrngut, Ida, Here-until.-January 23, t . ,. S2c Robert J., Schweloer from Farragut, Id.' Here'; until January 24. : . . - '!' The above se.'vice people'')r entitled to free passes to the lo cal theatres and free fountain service at Lo't River dairy- by courtesy of Lloyd Lamb of the theatres and R C Woodruff ol the dairy. Please call , at ( The Herald and News office Xask foi Paul Haines) for your, courtesy tickets . . -ii ... ' HC11P0LICY. (Continued From Page One), said, was "not f ii 11 y satisfied with the existing machinery for international . cooperation On , a political plane, and had been "rather troubled" , for some, time about the setup.' ' - ,- - . Earlier in the two-day-war de bate Laborite Aneurin B-e v a n had charged that Prime, Minister Churchill had distorted facta and had "the worst record of Inter vention in other people's affairs of any. statesman.'' " Non-Members' Invited To Walton Meeting " Non-members; of r 'the Klam ath-Modoc chapter ot the-Izaak waiton league, wno are lnterestr ed in conservation, are especial ly invited to attend the meet: ing of the chapter Friday, at 8 o'clock in the banquet room-of the Winema hotel,' - -; v Election of officer for- this year will be. held and the "nom inating committee has selected a fine group from which to se lect its officers. -It. is .urged that every member-attend this; meet ing. A buffet lunch . Will be served at 'a- cost .of 50 'cents: per person. . '. " ' .''''".', ; -. Friday January II, 1145 HERALD AND NEWS THREE (Continued from Page One) fantry force approached Tarlac obliquely down another road from Camiling. . AR advances were supported directly by American warplanes operating off the Lingayen air drome; Formosa and even parts of the China coast now are With in reach of long-range fighters. Raids Intensify , (The Formosa domestic radio warned today that large scale enemy raids ."will be intensified henceforth," In a broadcast picked' up by the federal com munications commission the For mosa announcer said "The feroc ity, of the war now raging is un precedented in war annals of the world, and the Japanese em pire is really facing a crisis.") At : Urdaneta, 27 road miles southeast of Lingayen gulf, the Luzon Japanese made their first determined effort to stand- and fight. The tank-led American column encountered Japanese artillery and camouflaged armor ed,, vehicles hidden amongst trees . and shrubbery on the town's outskirts., Urdaneta was ablaze as both sides' were pinned down for hours at a time by mortar fire. STOPPED ' SPOKANE, Jan. 19 W) Mil dred Hotzet was treated at Emergency- hospital for ankle injur ies.., . . v .. : As he was' walking beneath a traffic light, it toppled over on her. ,-, , . " - - Classified Ads Bring Results. ; Sfetfinius to Attend Meeting WASHINGTON, Jan, 19 (P) . Secretary of Stato Stcttinlus said ' today that ho would accompany President Roosevelt to the ap proaching meeting with Prime Minister Churchill and Marshal Stalin, , . . Stcttinlus told his news con ference he would also attend tho meeting of the American repub lics (with the exception of Ar gentina), In Mexico City sched uled for February 15 but which may be dolayed to February 21. The secretary declined to go Into any further detail on the timing of his trips, since the president's security Is involved, MEMBERS NAMED SALEM, Jmi. la iry Sans. Irving Rand, Portland, and Ernest R. Fatland, Condon, were added today to the senate labor . and industries committee, whose membership was increased from five to seven members. 4i , ' 590 atlier MOMARCH Foodi-ll hit n Peed 1 Both DAY and EVENING Classes A . Thorough Course in APPLIED BOOKKEEPING Hoth Gregg and that SPEEDY THOMAS r : NATURAL SHORTHAND ; ' Typing, Office Machines, and Kindred Subjects A Business Office Training School KLAMATH BUSINESS COLLEGE 733 Pine Street Phone 4760 IfVowKoso a, UL. BBK Spoils Sleep Tonight, You'll like the way' Vs-tro-nol works right where troublo Is to open up noso-relieve study transient con . gpjtlon. ( Also grand for relieving sntffly, sneesy, stuffy distress ot head colds.) Follow directions In folder. . YICdSVA-TCO-nOI Drees Mate Bnitblni Easier hnftti Rutfil Sltii Date Drop Cookies A moist luscious date drop cookie that will simply melt in, your mouth.. They are made with lots of dates and nuts., These cookies are a favorite with both young and old. So be sure to order several dozen and give them an extra treat. Carmel Nut Rolls A rich coffee cake made . .' with cinnamon and raisins. ; Baked as an upside down Coffee Cqke in arich CGr mel syrup. Topped with . nuts. These are ideal for your breakfast 'menu: t ; ... i , ' ''-'.!' ; '-, ' ' ' ' .' WUiteStaa seen TOG I 1 ' I '--I - For Winter Fun And. Comfort! . For .protection against the : . coldest weather ... . you'll want WHITE STAG'S : streamlined design, and. functional fabrics . . . at " THE TOWN SHOP .(Left) -i . ... - ... , :;. Snow Tunic . . . The action . free ski acket with zipper ' front,, in. natural and ice blue. ;. Sizes 12 to 20. . . Others1 to $12.95 Removable -Hood to - match- S25 (Right) Downhill Ski Trousers . . . Functionally tailqred, in fine 60-65 .wool gabardine. Navy, guhrnetal arid 'potfol. . Jlft'S Sizes 12 to i0 - ,w . , ' : and' l 1 1 A (Above) v .' . . Ski Cap i for men' and women. Waterproofed poplin in natural, sond, navy, aspen, 5carlet,'--greern $150 ..... . -f- - -it' - - ..- : 'i :'.,'.'('. ". ; ... . . i, (Above,-rijhl) I ktliM. ' -l- kong miiT. .... f . : 1- '.Waterproofed :.. poplin' with . leather palrn,,.and j thumb. '. . Natural," sanq, navy, scarlet, green; : ; ' '.$195 asperf. , . ' . Ail-Wool l4itt Pllleri, 69e" i V The TOWN SHOP Main at Fifth F Ig ht lf aittlle Paroryiis Join The MARCH OF DIMES