Will foKfo) j INS rRA",,;rfl written, the UrLl-lent, now ,t I? li.llllK ' tli"?.' .".iirrtiiu mmmfinem. F , ' I, ... undercurrent RwUMIIjhpHor.ty 1 li curry favor fr him 10 n n ll own. L,rjlVU - , '..nil tho awesome f5 Uveiy "':,u' '""K ,,' K'nd rVundli.il with the- t li (ho wuy tlJoso palace K uiuiiiy wrk- . I I- l.u nil king ol r."K"' " ' - counts pernonamu "-; .1.. li. nimcnm to charm Hint wl' her In Informal wy. lunera testimony is my ir" i.,.i i, iilcumiiit couple t jmi i to win frlcniU illucncc people " ,l,cy " ii.nl hv Inadvcrt nf Uucklnil- s nun v-i . . , ..i.. iialace, duly craicti. ucuihik orlorlty nu anurewcu iu r.i ..tniiiK of the king h ouccn. you may jure tnt ""J r " t. ipmv. or wniliever or- .,!... I,in,lllt mii-h trims- nutters In Great iiritnin, h ice to It with nil ciuo jut. Ihnl Ihp liriSlOLTIIl- led to IU destination In o L..M r limn unit with a fmiraof fwank und protocol. system would sco to that, our system docs, wholly unlikely, however, 1 1 casual don being sent routine wnv to some mom- hi the British royal family over set out ol buckiiiu- Dilarc with a gllt-cdgcd rtorHy" that -would carry- II destination by scarce and bus ilr express reserved (or try transportation ol inc lit Importance. K British palace system, n li old and wise ond far ed, would sec to that ci illy and with NO slips. I minor flunkey probnbly tcdltnry (lunkuy, with gen ni ol Iralnliiii ground into would tool the nurp and fancy transportation mid H mutter to himself the Brit- qulvnlent of "what goes " He would rccoitnizu In ly that such thhiKs do not uulo a "good press for tho i family, and If his own frlty was not sufficiently U to stop It right there he a uikc it up witii another cy somewhat higher up tho Eventually It would net iroyol chamberlain or n fust io( the bed chamber or some lionary of the sort who i be close enough to tho io to to to the king and say: go, old boy, there's been i oi a Doner somewhere thing hist won't, Hn. Tho ic wouldn't like it, y' know. "1, the Wholp ntfnlr would rougnt to a halt In time. British rovnl system In cry, very old and very, very do and what he must run unn ni in n, .....i - ." tiiniisn iiu iiiviov io is to seem to lord It over uojecis in minor and lrrltat na umrodi oiui wnv. ' is why the royul system ires n nrii,.i.. i ,u , I Ml IIIU 1I1VU Doacrn rrminiin..n.... ,i.i..i. 1 1 .:',r"".'"""'. ii. i 11 wlm nieticulous 'id j person who dOCS imnrnnor ll.lnna omcrs do them in his V king of England COULD tuimiA ,V '""r iirouna 111 hi., i " ereuy. uut it BIT wnv U aun0 111 1110 Jo right way would bo to .nun an a mark of fnyor and distinction to . ..... MVT1U wm, nna glop. ?i,T"? c.h,.,.rc I" Burma, or l .V "S ROrl- would Sid n i " ,"9 "notltor SlKH m Ci.?nl flKhtness of tlio f.iffpub.j:0 hi8i,iy thn j-f 1 lllc 'nmiry to ln.r t?? !""' tUsoomforts i"h & Mm 1 1 1 In The ShaHia-Cancade Wonderland ' January 23. 194S Max. (Jan. 22) 38 Min ...14 Precipitation last 24 hours ,00 Stream ytar to data 4.84 Normal 6.03 Last yaar ...3.14 Foracasti Clear and warmer. PRICE FIVE CENTB KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, IS45 . . Number 10370 First1 Army Takes Sf. Vifh; Yank PI canes Hitf Foe COURTS SECOND L DEAL PRDTES T ' Klamoth-Liiko opposition to the current Shevlln-Hlxon land exchnnKe transaction was ex tended today to Include a sec ond, and bigger, land exchange deal now In prospect between tho company und tho forest serv ice, ns well ns any other land acquisition by the federal gov ernmenl In those counties until tho basic Issued In the protests tiro Ironed out. Tho courts of the two counties agreed to this course today at a conference at which definite steps were token toward a thorouuh analysis of the situa tion by the state foresters oiiicc. W. F. McCulloch, assistant state forester, conferred with the courts, and It was agreed tho state would send a field man hero to muko n study nnd rccom mend the best course to follow with regard to tho BlievUn-lilXon lands.' Fur rrnm withdrawing, their protests to the lna iwnp. as nae, been suggested by WPB offic ial, the courts agreed unanimous. ly on continued protest. At recent meetings here, the Shevlln-Hlxon company of Dcnd, and tho forest service, revealed that a second exchange. Involving 23,000 acrci (Continued on iogc twoj old i, V "1". nntl v-ENTUR '?n. ? Iho angles f & lnt0 aU " m?JP 1 vet dry. klteldont "mind. Ince the We utt TULELAKE The first couple to leave tho segregco center t Newell for relocation on the Pa cific coast, left Klamath Falls Tuesday morning on route to Los Angeles where they hove accept ed household employment. Tho nulr. Tunero Mltomn, 58 and his wife, Setau, 4fl, ore par mils nf three sons. One, a ii vonr-nld. is teaching ill the Newell high school, nnd nnother, 22, is employed on construction work at the center. The eldest, 25, is working as a hospital lab oratory technician In Flint, Mich, Ho was njso nt tho center for n period of two months Im mediately nftor the family wns moved from Tonnz, Ariz., to Nnwoll. The Mltomn family lived for many years In San Francisco and nt the outbreak of tho wnr wns moved to Tona., nnd admitted to Newell In September, 1043 Hnlli nnrents oro nlltlvCS of Jn pan, born nt Kyushu, nenr the urcnt Ynwnln steel works. The father came to tho United States In 1H07. sett nil in San Kronen- co. In 1017, he returned to Jnpnn nnd tho next yenr brought his (Continued on Pago Two) WITH THE U. S. FIRST ARMY, Jan. 23 (P St. Vlth was captured today by troops of Lt. Gen. Courtnoy H. Hodges' first "mJ- ... The last bio bastion ol the Germans' Ardennes -salient ten to the seventh armored division and parachute troops attached to It. The capture was completed at B:45 p. m. alter a brisk, day. lona battle. The Americans stormed back Into St. Vith a month and two days after they were pushed out by Field Marshal Von Rund stedt a broak-throuoh. Although the locale was familiar to the Yanks, the town Itsell had been beaten into an almost unrecognisable pulp by Amen can bombing and shelling. The seventh armored division entered St. Vith ut dawn. Soon after sunup, American planes started their second strulghldny of relentless attack on the foe. Onlv German rcarminrds fought In the streets of St. Vith. Germans to the enst were lay ing down heavy shell flro from dug-ln positions In an effort to protect the retreat from the evaporated bulge. A first army spokesman de scribed ; resistance as "moder ate." but the seventh armored division and attached parachute imantry were having- to Diasi tho nazli out of a house at a time. The nlr force was giving ground troops close support and ranging far behind the lines all the way to the Rhine. Initial tabulations indicated an ever greater toll of destruc tion than yesterday wncn 4 idb Dlucci . of German equipment were destroyed or- disabled. Figures-for tho nlnth etr forcc attack force alone by z:J0 p. m. totaled 404 trucks destroyed and 607 damaged; 14 armored vehicles destroyed nnd IB dam aged; 62 mil cars destroyed and 123 damaged. Theso figures did not include exploits of the 10th and 29th attack forces, which had not boon reported. It was n clear day and the blue skies wcro blotted only by enormous olllnrs of block smoko curling from Germnn columns caught by the fleet P-38 and P-47 fluhtcr bombers. Tho nir-ground teamwork wns perfect, with the planes plump- inn their bombs Into some ene my positions scarcely 300 ynrds from first nrmy tnnks. Tho Lightnings went to work first, flipping their twin tails nnd whining straight down, one after nnother. Then tho Thun riprhnlls came in. Northeast of St. Vlth, Mnl. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgeway's 18th airborne corps wns having trouble keening up with the fnst nnco of enemy retreat West of the town, the 30th di vision ncared Maldange nnd Braunlauf. The 84th division driving up from the southwest Dushcd a mile nnd a hnlf enst of Bcho. CMoqun Man Hurt in Action PFC Wood A. Joe. 33, a Cali fornia Indian whose family lives at Chlloquin nnd Is carried on the Klnmnth Agency rolls, is report ed ns having been wounded in action In the Southwest Pacific, Tho soldier, fnmlllnrly known as "Woody" Joe, gave his resi dence ns Chlloquin, where his wife, Esther, lives with their three young children, Vernon, 8; Gcorglnnna, 7, and lvan, o. BE INVESTIGATED WASHINGTON. Jan. 23 (IP) The senate military committee today voted to Investigate the nriorlty system which gave a dog owned by Col. Elliott Roosevelt precedence over tnree service men. The three, flying west on leave, were forced off an army cargo plane at Memphis. Tenn early last month whilo the Eng lish bull mastiff, traveling un der an A-priority was permitted to continue the flight. Sent io Bride Tho dog was sent from Wash ington to Colonel Roosevelt's bride, Faye Emerson Roosevelt, YANKS POWER WAY THROUGH LUZON CENTER Gl's Only 54 Airline Miles Away From Manila ' Wallace Nomination Approval Delayed By George Proposal Konev's Army Reaches Oder River Barrier To Reich of By FRANCIS J. KELLY WASHINGTON, Jan. 23 UP) Senate committee consideration Henry A. Wallace's nomination as commerce secretary was GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS. LUZON, Jan. 23 (P) Only 54 airline miles from Manila and 11 miles from big Clark field by Mon day, a veteran Yank war ma chine powered its way over central Luzon today with five divisions, a regimental combat team and a battalion of special ists in close quarter fighting. Even If Mnj. Gen. Oscar W. Griswold's 14th army corps only partially matched the speed of its advance covered in officinl reports for 24 hours extending into Monday, by now it could have penetrated Pampanga pro vince and posed an immediate menace to Clark field. . Sweeping Gains Gains of 11 and 13 miles along parallel roads swept the 37th and 40th divisions, veter ans of Bougainville and New Britain, through the towns of Capas and Santa Monica Mon day on the shortest route to Manila. Spearheads rolled on south across the last miles of Tarlac province. -, An all-night fight with two enemy tanks, an armored truck and. artillery, near La Paz, pre ceded tnese advances oeiow- me of tho- movies. Roosevelt who hasjtu town pi Tar- duty with tho air-forces IrTXng- lana denied mat ne oraorea nolnfillir trf tit animal . In approving an inquiry by a (Continued on f age iwo) Exchange of Jap, Yank Prisoners Planned in 1945 WASHINGTON. Jan. 23 W) The Japanese government has advised Wnshington, that it ex pects to be able to carry out an exchange of interned citizens of the two countries some time this year. The state department today made public a note sent from Tokyo late last year through Spanish diplomatic channels giv ing the enemy's official reaction to insistent American proposals that a third exchange be arranged as soon as possible. The Japanese snid that they arc particularly interested in repatriating nationals held at the Tulclokc, Calif., segregation center. Yank Convicted Of Killing Briton LONDON, Jan. 23 (P) A Brit ish jury today convicted an American parachute trooper, 22-year-old Pvt. Karl Gustav Hul ten of Cambridge, Mass., of the murder of George Heath, a Lon don taxi driver. Hultcn wns sentenced to be hanged under British law. Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, 16-year-old strip tense dancer and his blonde one time girl friend, wns adjudged guilty of the same crime. She will go to the gallows with Hultcn. lac. Qriawold's corps thtis has covered halt: the distance be tween Manila and. the, scene, of the January 9 landings at Ung ayen gulf. Travel. Swiftly ' Maj. Gen. Robert S. Becht ler'a 37th and Maj. Gen. Rapp Brush's 40th rolled toward the Philippines' capital city almost as fast as supply-laden trucks could travel; Gen. Douglas MacArthur lift ed the veil of secrecy today from his forces on Luzon, ideninying them as units with battle expe rience gleaned all the; way up the Solomons from Guadalcanal to Bougainville, on New Brit (Continued on F;;e Two) Group to Study New U.S. Bases " WASHINGTON. Jan. 23 (IP) The house naval committee to ri a v created a seven - member subcommittee to study possible riermanent united btates posses sion of Japanese-mandated is lands in the Pacific. Undertaken with navy de rjartmcnt approval, the study is intended to determine what present Japanese holdings are needed bv this country for out er defense bases. The commit tee's conclusions will not be binding on any treaty negotiations. Rcd. Drewry ' (D-Va.) was named chairman of tho subcom mittee composed of these other members: Lyndon B. Johnson m-Tpx.). Brndlev (D-Pa.). Izac iD-Cnlif.). Mott (R-Ore.), Cole (R-N.Y.), nnd Bales (R-Mass.) Survivors of torpedoed SS Johnson Await Rescue A group of the survivors of lh. Liberty ship John A. Johnson w itow. as t drlltlna In the Paalflo for several hours. The navy disclosed January 19 -hant ve?.el and 10 of Its erew member, off the west coast in November, after merchant vessel Johnson are shown as they await rescue the loss of the 1944 by enemy (AP Wlrephoto From Navy). delayed today by a 10-to-2 decision to take up first legislation that would strip him of lending authority. Immediately, Chairman Bailey (D-N.C.) of the commerce com mittee announced that both Wallace and Jesse Jones, who was asked to leave office to make room for the former vice president, would be invited to a public hearing on the legislation tomorrow afternoon In the huge marble caucus room of the senate office building. . - Another invitation went out to Senator George (D-Ga.), spon or of the hill to reestablish the loan functions of the RFC and other important lending agencies Nominated i4 -4 Henry A- Wallace, above, was nominated yesterday :by Presi- J. At ' RnnuinK IS Ilk S OWt duties as secretary of commerce-. a move that-tnougni ininiiui opposition by senators. - U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD ottabtk.bs. Pearl Harbor, Jan. 23 (P) Carrier aircraft of the American third fleet swept Okinawa in the Ryukyus in strong force" Sunday,, one day after bagging at least 140 Jap unixo nlanes on their fourth ..ib. nr ihA month at Formosa nivntai enemv base south of Okinawa. . Fleet Adm. Chester1 W. Nlmitz reported the new strike today without giving details. He said reports on damage inflicted were not yet avaiiaDie. . Fourth Attack It 'was" the fourth- attack of this mrmth on Okinawa, which is obly' 350 -miles south of the Japanese .nomeiana. . nirinnwa Is the largest base id the- Rvukyus chain, which links Formosa with Japan. It has sev eral good harbors and is inhabit ed by more than half of the 820, nnn nnnnlntton of the Ryukyus. A major American warship was damaged in Saturday's strike at Formosa but airmen pounded enemy shipping and ground targets at "reletively (Continued on Page Two) Organization of Political Parties Underway for "46 Republicans By JACK BELL INDIANAPOLIS, Jnn. 23 (P) Herbert Brownell, Jr., had a free hand today to run the re publican party for the next couple of years just about any way ho chooses. Tho GOP national chairman, who laid his chips on the line at a one-day midwinter session of the party's national committee here yesterday, emerged with al most unlimited authority over personnel, program and policy. He had behind him a vote of confidence taken boldly only a little more than two months after the party's unsuccessful foray at the polls In November. Despite a considernble amount of indivldunl grumbling in the republican ranks nbout Brow ncll's close association with the defeated presidential candidate. Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, only minor opposition voices were raised at this mid lands meeting to his retention of the chairmanship.' Democrats Bw D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON. Jan. 23 UP) The democratic national commit tee and the CIO political aciion committee -will probably carry on . independent campaigns in Um 1fl4B conerossional elections, This was indicated today by Democratic Nntionnl Chairman Robert E. Hanneean as he laid plans for nn enrly swing ncross the country. On this trip he plans to discuss mutual assist ance pacts with democratic state chairmen, looking to united ac tion in the elections two years hpnfp. Hannegan announced plans for year-round educational and money-raising activity yesterday without waltintf until lust be fore the elections, as is usually the case. He will stay on as na tional chairman at $20,000 a yenr nnd not go In the postmnster generalship . as nact oeen rum ored. He made known his plans to a meeting of tho democratic na tional execuuve committee. - under a separate head George appeared Deiore tnc committee today to argue for his proposal. ' ' - ' ' Bailey told nan a nunarea re porters who crowded into the committee room after the closed session that "we don't intend to delay this matter." - To Disoosa oi mil However, he emphasized that the committee intends to dispose of the George bill before it acts the bitterly contested nomi nation. Senator Pepper (D-Fla.) said the committee decided, over his vieorous protest, to start hear ings on the measure introduced by Senator George at 2:30 tomnT: row afternoon wltn Jesse Jones, whom Wallace would displace, as a witness. "It obviously is a move to make passage of Senator Georges bill a condition prece dent to a vote on Mr. Wallace's confirmation.". Pepper told a re porter, adding that the former vice, president also would De a witness., -, - - OsDoiinon Echoes ? Senate Opposition-to the pro- nosed, cabinet shift eeFibCd. mean-. while lnf the house with -a. brief but sharp exchange, between-tne democratic -.ana repuDiican lead- M-Khin:r'-V . : : --. - - - It started - jvnen ep. Curtis (R-Neb.);declared that Wallace's "economic theories are part ana parcel-, of the system of state; so cialism. - :- Stanfield Tavern Hit by Proctice 1 Bomb From Plane. PENDLETON, Ore., Jan. 23 (JPi A . dozen - men in- a -Stan- field tavern escaped injury early last night wh e n- a 100-pound practice bomb- plummeted tnrougn tne ' ouuaing trom an arrnv bomber men overnead, Deputy Sheriffs F. F.' Jacobs and Roy Johnson reported this morn ing following an investigation The two officers believe the bomb was released accidentally from, a Walla-Walla air' base plane on a routine flight to nearby, bombing field.. The missile, loaded with five pounds of powder and a quantity of sand, partly exploded on contact; The bulk of the bomb casing tore a four foot hole in the floor and buried itself six feet in the earth beneath. " .- Clothing Cost Cut Announced WASHINGTON, Jan, 23 APh- The government today an nounced a drastic textile and clothing program designed to cut consumer costs six to seven per cent and to increase supplies o( low and medium-priced essen tial garments. The plan, blanketing mills. clothing manufacturers and deal ers and admittedly "tough on them was announced at a joint news conference by Chairman J. A. Krug of the war production board and Price Administrator Chester Bowles. By The Associated Press LONDON, Jan. 23 Three mammoth Russian invasion armies plunged to the Oder river in German Silesia on a 37-mile-front and struck to within 22 miles of completely ringing off East Prussia, Mar shal Stalin announced tonight in series ' of orders of the day. In the center, Rydgoszcz was captured and a Berlin report via Stockholm said the red army had burst into Poznan, Polish fortress city. 137 miles from Berlin. Reach Oder , Marshal. Ivan Konev's army on the south reached the Oder last big water barrier guard ing the heart of Germany from , the east--in a drive on Breslau, Stalin's fourth order of the day , declared. . Namslau and - Bern stadt, 28 and 19 miles east of Breslau were taken, along with ' Karismarkt, 30" miles southeast of Breslau. . In East Prussia, two Russian armies slugged within 22 miles of- the Baltic coast at the west ern end of the province,, and within-less than 24 miles of the - capital, Konigsberg, -in a push striking in from the east, Stalin announced.'- ; .' . "--;'; Trap Menace ; ' '" Uri'to 30. nazi divisions face 1 peril of a gigantic trap. Wings of the two armies are less than 63 miles- apart in- the province. . Reports from Berlin declared . other Russians . had fought into r Pdxnarf. - in . Poland, 137 miles from Berlin, and that the so-' viets'had scored a breakthrough -toward Breslau in German Sile-' sia in the south. The X second '.White ".Russian army strwine - halfway across he western, end of East Prus-i aa seized Saalfeld, just 22 miles , below - Elbing on the Baltic ' coast, the last land escape' for Germans in East Prussia.' Saal feld' is but 50 miles from. Dan zig, the city for which Hitler (continued on .rage imj Killed On Leyte 5 V V5 Pvt. Willie Thomas REDS BURST INTO POZNAN JAP IHOUSTRIES rBy .VERN HAUGLAND 21ST. BOMBER COMMAND HEADQUARTERS. GUAM, Jan. 23 (Via Navy Radio) (JP) A siz able force of B-29s bombed in dustrial tareets at Nacoya. on Japan's homeland island of Hon shu, this afternoon at an aiiuuae lower than previous attacks and met the' strongest enemy air re sistance so far encountered there. One Suoerfort was hit by gun fire, and- was seen to crash in flames into tne water prooapiy about 20 miles off shore. The foray was made by four formations of B-29s. Two kept the city under attack from 3:35 p. m. until 3:47 p. m.'Wapan time). The remaining two forma tions hit the city almost an hour later. The first formations met the fiercest fighter- attacks, which started from the time the planes approached Honshu and contin ued until they were 50 to 100 miles at sea on their return trip an hour and 25 minutes later. Willie Thomas Dies in Action Word has been received by Pauline Thomas that her hus band, Pvt. Willie Romalne Tho-, mas, 22, son of Mrs. Rosa B. Tho mas of Pelican City, was killed In action on Leyte on November 27. He was attached to the army Infantry and trained at Camp Beale, ' Calif ., prior to re ceiving his overseas orders on October of 1943. He had seen ac tion in New Guinea and in the Dutch East Indies before being sent to the Philippines and, be fore entering service, was em ployed by the Pelican Bay Lum ber company. ' Young Thomas is survived by his wife and daughter, Barbara Kay, who reside with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Alexam der, Manzanita, .and his mother, Mrs. Rosa B. Thomas, of Pelican City. - Also surviving are four brothers, Sgt.. Charles C. Tho mas, of the U. S. army in France, GM lo H. D. Thomas, with tha Scabees in the South Pacific; Cpl. James M. Thomas, who is stationed in California, and PFC Clarence S. Thomas, - USMC, somewhere in the South Pacific. , He is also survived by five sis ters, Mrs. Tom Weller and Mrs; Arthur Cllne of Oklahoma, Mrs. Dee Urqulago of Arnock.-Ore and Mrs. .Woodrow Martin and Mrs. Billie Meadows of thli city. submarine action