41 VP DJ h INI Jft A Coming At You! in The Shaata-Caeade Wonderland PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1S45 Number 10371 wig I DPPELN TAKEN RUSSIANS ODER CROSSED . rjomllrovlch, southpaw guard lor th Lea thsrnvcki, will bo In thore looping 'em In wiih his k Htd duiIi allot Saturday nigni wnen ine marines iinnit wim Bnannon s, top independent ; o( porllnd. on the KUHS nil Manilla pralyli fund . ..,i.,i n lhs KUHS hardwood. All proceeds of lhia tilt will ba turnod ovar to tha uperforts Hit Japanese Bases; Yanks Approaching Clark Field mm .5. ASIIINGTON. Jan. 24 fI'l both YuKo.'lnvin and Chlnn this thutiRht from the Unit States today: Wo wish you uld ltd your domestic blcs .willed. tine troubles Itnvc become jr allied worries. They nro i on tho list of political prnb i facing President Roosevelt, ic Minister Churchill unci nler Slnlln. fph C. Grow, nctlnK sccro ol lnlc. In two statements ri ycslerdny cnllrd on rival ion in Chlnn and Yugoslavia rach aiin-cntr-nts. una, however, wns reminded Continued on Piute Two) imes Huffman ild Prisoner 'Sjt, James J. Huffmnn, 23, it minncr on n 11-17 Flying ;rcs, is a prisoner of war In nany, accordliiK to word re ed Tuesday by t lie nlrmnn's i, U-ono, 317 Lincoln, iilfman was reported missing rmbcr 21, and at Hint tlmo completed more than :t0 mis- over Europe from big bnsc .neland. He enlisted in Oclo-19-13, trained at Sheppard I, Tex., Kingman, Ariz., and inadrla, La., before going was, August 1, 11)4.1, to Join "in air force, ic airman lias n Iwo-ycnr-old inter Nancy who lives with 'Wilier at the 10me of the n father, William Schmltz. n Is n former Crater 5 i-umber and Box compnny loyu' ?KaM I'iver, nncl c Ms home there for more I three years. He Is the on Rinfn1,? J- E- Huffmnn. Bluff, Cal f. Mrs. Huffman Si ",rtY sctl cn crew of the U-17 wl,ch ttSj. w"5 Klim,cr-1,,Kl Rooms List ed HyCoC 1,7. ha, "jeen a flood of np 'lions bu room sl, J chamber of commerce lhr ?"'" of the now "K'jlrallon division on Ming to Charles Stork iber sccrelnrv, dt' A.,Kl.r.a,h Fa,la aro cemLP VlS"n houslnR for I T, "m l,clr families, J" "essential war workers bee??'1'? 10 ! city holei'.i01'001, 10 "'''ft from S 1,i0nn."";r l5"so of eLte 1 mlt which has avy a J HUT 11,0 "Tlvnl I .&,nnrln,(i Peraonnol. ler, win, T"11' crnmpecl : Jy. Kl examples of have lon! nl"n lhl la" Ma, ? n,own bV Slnt0 'RcnroSn Cornott n,ltl ' hnCn i '! lvo Woso Poo'. p l fe risss '"o'fClhe",,l,CT,' of 11,0 I'"" illons nro i ,nilllll"'.V I" inlty ,nnrol,"vlK tho op. lies for mIIvc wl11' is, n8 ' nn liousliiH con it Ihn y oxlst Klamath "8 to h',ri,sonl 'no, aro pm, ami o n ,very serious "nluHoS ? 10 whleh "'0 ition on, iC!! with tho co. 01 tl'o locnl rcsidcnla. By LEONARD MILLIMAN Aiioclatsd Preu War Editor Amtrlcnn SuperforUi harried Tokyo and boinb-wrncked Nuko ya, reeoniioltered three Korean Industrial cities, mid Joined cn niiisse In aoftenliiK up Iwo Jlmn, Island outpost on Tokyo's south ern approaches which Jupancse broaclcasUi have ILilcd na a poten tial U. S. Invasion objective. The strlko nt lwo, 730 miles south of Tokyo, was announced In Washington by the 2Uth nir force. Tokyo reported three Chlna-btisril Supcrfort.-i scouted Kctijo, Kanko and Kalian In Korea (Imlim dayllKht after two nlKht attacks by Mnrlnnns-bascd I1-2DS on NiiKoya ond one on Tokyo, Nipponese broadcasts also In tlnioled tho U. S. third fleet enr rlor raid on Formosa nnd tho Hyukyu Islands. HnkiiiR Japan and Hie Philippines, was carried into tho third consecutive day. Near Clark Flold U. S. Hth corps spearheads drlvlnii on Mnnlln cautiously ncarcd Clark field, one of tho Krcatoat military prizes In the Philippines, after recapturing Cnmp O'Doiincll which the Jap. nneso turned Into a concentra tion cnmp nnd mass cemetery for the heroes of Batumi. lli'lllati forces made their fourth amphibious landing this month on (he western Burnin coast, AntlclpntliiR an Ameri can invasion of occupied China, Japan sent sen-borno troops storming ashore on the coast north of Formosn while land col umns nrcssod dual campaigns in coastal ureas. Accepts Plan Spurred by yesterday's B-20 raid on the aircraft city of Nngo yu, Japanese intensified their clc (Continued on Pago Two) Instructions Set for Jury Circuit Judgo David It. Vnn denberg will give special In structions to the Klamath coun ty grand Jury n t 10 o'clock Thursday morning when that body convenes to consider one of the heaviest schedules In several years. Members of tho Jury Include B. S. Grlgsby, foreman: Mar giirct W. Blohm, Linda P. Put man. Edward G. Murphy, John M. Anderson, Charles A. Vogt, and Anna M. Funk. By Tha Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 24 OP) Sixteen new members of the United States sennte advised President Roosevelt today that they will back formation of a United Nations organization to preserve world peace, Tha 10 new democratic and six new republican members got together on their own In itiative and sent their assurance In u letter to the White House. Wishing Mr. Roosevelt success In conferences with Marshal Stalin und Prima Minister Churchill, the freshmen sena tors said: "We believe this government should use all reasonable means to assure our allies and the other nations of the world that wo intend to shnro In the direc tion of and the responsibility for tho settlement ot this war and tho maintenance of peace." They suggested further that "an agreement among the major allies bo concluded as soon as possible, to demilitarize Ger many und to keep It demilitar ized." Lear Appointed Deputy Commander PARIS, Jan. 24 (VP) Lt. Gen. Ben Lear has been' ap pointed deputy commander in the European theater charged with administrative matters of United Stoics troops, supreme headquarters announced today. Lear's new assignment per tains purely to American ad mlnlstrntion nnd Is not connect ed with the direction of the campaign, which Is on an allied basis. I He had been In command of U. S. army ground forces. Ho was appointed to that post In July, 1944, succeeding Lt. Gen. Lesley McNnir, who was killed In action, , "March of Dimes7' Game Set SHON'STO PLAY MARINES VE Strong Portland Club Sets Pace In City League By PAUL HAINES Here it corneal On Saturday, January 27, Shannon's, a top in dependent ball club in Portland, will swap buckets with Coach Lcs Israel's Leathernecks from the Marine Barracks on the KUHS hardwood at 8 p. m. All INFO ON HERALD-NEWS MARINE BARRACKS BENEFIT GAME Time: Saturday, 8 p. m. Place: KUHS gym. ' Teams: Klamath Marine Barracks and Shannon's, out standing Portland indepen dent club. Tickets: $1.20 for adult civilians; 60 cents for mili tary personnel and students, Including tax. Buy your tickets now for tho benefit of the infantile paralysis fund at The Herald and News, marine personnel, Dick Rccder's, Hibbs' Cloth, lug company, or Matt Flnnl gan's. ,i.. ', 1 proceeds from this (llfwlll bo turned over to the current "March of Dimes" infantile par alysis fund. The Portland club Is a classy outfit that will extend the Leath ernecks to their utmost. . At pre sent, Shannon's Is tied for a top perch on the Portland league basketball ladder with Fee s Music-Makers and,-as the merry (Continued on Page Two) IT Location of the new 50-unlt row housing project in the same general area where public housing projects are now situ ated wa9 rccommcnaea Dy ine city planning commission Wed nesday morning. This area is in the vicinity of Washburn way ond Eberleln street, where there is now a 45-unlt row housing set up, a trailer project, and a pro ject for homes for . families of military personnel. Howard Pcrrln, architect who Is working on Dlans for the new 50-unlt program, suggested the possibility of locating it in a 40-acro tract east of the canal near the Evans road and the Old Fort road. Ho pointed out that a footbridge across the canal to Home avenue would put this area in close contact with Mills school and the business district in the Mills school area. . Tho commission, however, do (Continued on Pago Two) Allied Planes Blast Exodus Of Nazi Troops By Tha Associated Press ' PARIS, Jan. 24 Alliod warplanea blasted anew today at a great exodus of German troops and tanks moving northeast by rail and road from the flattened Ardennes salient on the western front toward the convulsed Russian battlefields. Tho mystery move still lacked official clarification, AP Cor respondent Roger D. Groone roported from the northern part of the western front. British armies captured Heinsberg (pop. 5000), last important road center west of the Roer through the Cologne plain. They also took Haaren and Weerd to the north in' Holland and fought into the southern section of Linne, three miles below the German Maas (Mcusc) river bastion of Roermond. Heinsberg, where WASHINGTON, Jan. 24 iP) Jesse Jones, ousted to give Henry A. Wallace a cabinet job, bluntly asserted today that "amateur experimentation" in running huge federal lending agencies might "jeopardize the country's future." "The lending agencies of the government can be adminis tered, as they have been, on a non-partisan basis for the bene fit of all the people," Jones said, "or they can be used to destroy what we have built up in. this nation, in 170 years."' ; ' ' Emphatic Phrases ... j " Tho' statement by" the' secre tary of commerce, bristling with such phrases as "untried ideas and idealistic schemes" and "in experience, visionary planning" was prepared for presentation to the senate commerce commit tee before a jammed caucus room. , Even before he appeared, the Texan had made known in a letter to Mr. Roosevelt that he considered Wallace, who was vice president until last Satur day, unfit for the multiple du ties Jones has exercised over government lending. Directed At Bill His testimony was directed at a bill by Senator George (D-Ga.) to divorce the reconstruction fi nance corporation and its sub sidiaries from the commerce de partment and reestablish them as independent agencies.' "The man who is. given the (Continued on Page Two) Tenth Day of Cold Reported ' The tenth consecutive day of below freezing weather was re ported Wednesday by the U. S. weatherman, who announced the minimum temperature this morning as 12 degrees above zero. Ideal flying weather existed with clear, bright skies covering the basin the past several, days ant', planes were overhead from the Klamath naval air station. Heavy fogs the early part of January grounded planes and curtailed actual flying for a number of days. Klamath Men Form Only 'Br In B-29 Superfortress other Team' Taking Part Raids on Japanese Homeland sail : s ' 'f " Doran Lewis By VERN HAUGLAND B-2U BASIC, SAIPAN (fl'f Su pcrfort Sidelights: The only brother learn taking part in B-20 raids upon Japan, so far as is known hero, Is that of Oren C, Lewis, 21, nnd Doran C. Lewis, 20, sons of Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred N. Lewis, 1838 Wlard, Klamath Oren was born In Salt Lake City, and Doran Is a notlvo of Preston, Idaho. They fly side by side In a Superfortress waist, and at this writing they have made five bombing missions to Japan. Oren is tho right gunner, and Doran mans tho left gun Just a few feet away. Best in Business Their alrplano commander, a young Tcxnn, 1st. Lt. Luther M, Thompson, and their navigator, Capt. Enrl A. Snyder of Craw fordsvlllc, Ind., sny they are two of tho best gunners in the busi ness. . . They learned aerial gunnery nt schools In Amarlllo, Tex., where they wcro graduated from B-17 mechanics school October 17, 1043; Scatty, where they re ceived their certificate of techni cal aircraft training of the B-29 division, Boeing's Flying Fort ress school, January 28, 1944; Denver, Colo., where they were given their diploma from the B-29 armament school on March 19, 1944, and from there went to Salinas, Kans., where they gain ed actual flying experience. In Marines An older brother, Kellh, is In the marines. "We look and act so much alike that many of our friends think wo aro twins," says Oren. "I flunked the first grade so that Doran, caught up with me. Except for ono class In high school wo were together all the way through grudo and high school. Played, Worked Together "We'vo always played and worked and fought together. When It came time, we wanted tp servo our country together, But wo , got Into the army through different draft boards and Induction stations. "Our mothor wrote and got (Continued on Page Two) v hi v Oren Lewis seven traffic arteries meet, is 31 miles from Duesscldorf and 16 from Munchcn Gladback. The American first and third armies hammered through thick snowfields against the slender strip of Belgium and Luxem bourg still in German hands. Weather prevented all but scattered flights in the center, but in the north, RAF Spitfires and Tempests bombed and shot up scores of packed troop trains with rockets, cannons and ma chineguns. The Britons, too, flew in wretched weather. Roads Clogged Roads and rails were clogged; the Germans moved by day as well as night despite allied air (Continued on Page Two) I By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. SALEM, Jan.- 24 (P) The Oregon senate, after voting 14 to 12 to table Governor Earl Snell's requested tax investiga tion, changed Its mind today and voted to send the measure back to its tax committee. The governor recommended in his opening message that a firm of tax experts be hired to investigate the state's tax struc ture. Today's resolution called for a 15-man committee which would be authorized to hire ex perts. To Remove Mention The senate instructed the committee today to remove any mention of the experts. The senate first voted 20 to S against accepting the tax com mittee S' to a recommenuaiiuii. that the resolution be passed. Then it passed, 12 to 14 a motion by Sen. Thomas R. Ma honey, Portland democrat, to table the resolution. Un-Tabled The senate, on motion by Mc Kenna, then voted 23 to 5 to take the- measure off the table. Mahoney, making a new at tempt to kill the resolution, mdved to postpone it indefinite lv. but the motion was defeat ed 21 to 7. Then it was sent harlr tn committee. Mahoney told the senate he believed a firm of tax experts wouldn't do any good. Li. Benny Angus Returns Wounded T.t. Rnnv Annus. Klamath Falls, has been flown back to this country from the European war theater for treatment of tixta ehrannpl wounds In his body and is now a patient at McCall General hospital In Walla Walla, Wash., according to wora re rnivnrl Vv rplntlvPK. s Lt. Angus received a shrapnel wound in ono arm on Decem ber 6, but had gone back Into aetlnn with the wound still un healed. Soon after that he was wminried acaln. and was placed on a States-bound plane. Ho had been on the war front since Auatist. His wife, Dorctha Anmis, and vounu son left Tuesday ior Walla Walla to be with tho lieutenant while he Is in the hostiltal. He expects to visit his home here as soon as he is able to leavfi the hospital. He is the son of Mrs. L la Angus. 3909 Boardman, and of Ben Angus of WEATHER " January 24, 1945 Max. (Jan. 23) . 35 Mim ...12 Precipitation last 24 hours ... .00 Stream year to data, 4.84 Normal ... 8.10 Last year ....3.14 Forecast: Overcast F RM STAND N I E HELDTHREAT Optimism Over Soviet Win's Tempered By Menace By JUDSON O'QUINN LONDON, Jan. 24 (VP) While the red army's swift advances have resulted in a great upswing of optimism here, the possibility is not being overlooked that the retreating dermans may be ex tricating large numbers of troops for desperate stand inside the reich in the hope of prolonging the war. . Speculation along these lines is heightened by the absence of official Russian reports of over whelming enemy casualties a fact suggesting that the Germans may be withdrawing under so viet pressure in accordance with a well-conceived strategic plan. Not Necessarily So This is not necessarily so. It may be that the Russians, intent upon cutting tne enemy to pieces with their armored columns, are not stopping to mop up pockets hopelessly cut off by their swift advance or to total up casualties. Yet. there have been no offi cial -Moscow -reports p -the- -en trapment of large German forces. The only total of German losses announced by Moscow was contained in the soviet com munique of January 21, which said tnat 65,000 nazis had - been killed' and 25,000 captured - by three Russian armies in Poland (Continued on Page Two) . Robert Coleman Reported Missing Pvt. Robert B. Coleman has been reported missing in action in Luxembourg, since December 18, according to word received from the war department o n January 16 by his wife, Mrs. Alice L. Cole man of 1338 Wiard. No fur ther details were given at this time. Coleman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Coleman of 517 Upham, and has lived in Klamatn tails most ot his life. Before entering" the service, he was employed by the Arrow transit. Mr. and Mrs. Coleman are the parents of two young boys, Ronald and Dennis. Reds Capture Towns Along Polish Hinge 7 By The Associated Preu - LONDON. Jan. 24 (PI Tha first White Russian army today captured Oppeln. upper Silesiaa capital on the Oder river, and smashed northwest of Breslau to within 149 miles of Berlin, Marshal Stalin announced to night. The flanking drive abova Breslau, lower Silesian capital. toppled Traeenoerg, 27 miles northwest in Silesia, and Ra'- wicz, 10 miles farther north in Polish territory and 149 miles from the reich capital. Cross Oder A Berlin broadcast tonight said Russian troops had crossed the Oder river in Silesia, but were wiped out. "Single soviet units and ad- vance tank spearheads crossed the Oder but they all were speedily thrown back or wiped out," the broadcast added. : Make Breakthrough . Stalin in two earlier orders of the day proclaimed capture of tne central Poland ninee stronghold of Kalisz after a four-day tank battle, and dis closed a sixth Russian army group had lunged into the win tor offensive and made a 25-mile- wide breakthrough i rt Czechoslovakia. Oppeln (Pop. 44,000) on tha east bank of the Oder 47 miles . (Continued on Page Two) . .; GUY PDRTERFIELD ; KILLED NEAR DOiS Guy Porterfield, 48, promt nent Tulelake rancher, and ona of the original homesteaders in that section, was killed at 2:40 p. m. : Tuesday when a truck rolled down an incline and crushed Porterfield against a po tato cellar door at the ,"JF" ranch in the Oklahoma district, six miles east of Dorris. Calif. Porterfield was found by hia brother, Lester, and an employe, Theo Johnson, as they returned from Dorris where they had loaded potatoes at the railroad yard there; Porterfield had ap parently extricated himself from between the door and the truck: arid was found lying on tha ground. He was rushed to Dorria and given first aid, but when Ward's ambulence met the car carrying Porterfield to Klamath Falls, the rancher was pro nounced dead. Porterfield, a native of Gold Beach, Ore., homesteaded in Tulelake in 1928. He operated one of the largest dairy ranches on the west side of the lake but had sold the place last summer to Bert-Johnson of Merrill. 1 Alois Turner, Siskiyou county coroner, was called to Dorris to make an investigation and Wed nesday was at the Porterfield home in Tulelake. The remains are at Ward's Klamath Funeral home and final rites will be an nounced later. An obituary is given else where in this issue. r Lodgepole Pine Uses Set For Research at Oregon State, Soys Forestry Dean A study of possible uses of lodgepole 4) i n e, which covers thousands of acres of Klamath county, will be the first new project of the forthcoming bicn nium at tho Oregon forest prod ucts laboratory at Oregon State college, Dean Paul Dunn of the school of forestry at OSC told a Klamath chamber of commerce gathering last night. He said that the next year's activities depend upon passage of the laboratory's proposed budget, but indicated that the budget adoption at the legisla ture Is expected. Possible uses of lodgepole pine Include pulp, pressed wood boards, hogged material, and n number of oth ers, he said. Postwar Planning . . Dean Dunn spoke at a meet ing sponsored by the post-war p 1 a n n i n g committee of the chamber, headed by Wallace Bruce. A large number of lum bermen and others Interested in industrial development here at tended the session. The dean said nt the outset that the "second 100 years are the hardest" in the lumber in dustry. The main problem now facing tho Industry is proper utilization ot material available. The importance of research was emphasized by the speaker, who told of Investigations made by the Oregon laboratory, and also praised research programs of the Weyerhaeuser Timber company, Western Pine associa tion, and the forest service la boratory at Madison, Wis. Shows Samples He discussed destructive dis tillation of wood waste, and showed samples of charcoal bri quettes which he said may be used extensively for fuel in tho Portland area, especially if there is electro-mctalurgical de velopment in that region. Saw dust plaster, shredded wood fiber boards, similar to Mason Ite, and other products were discussed by the dean, who had a" number of samples with him. He mentioned the Springfield plant where production of ethyl alcohol will be started by June, and said this plant should con tinue nftcr the war if economl cal uses of the by-producls can be developed.' Among these ia lignln, which will come out of the plant at tho rate of 50 tons a day, and sugar which may b(s used for, livestock feeding yeast. .' After ' the talk,- numerous questions, were directed at tha Corvallis man, especially with regard to use of such species n( lodgepole pine and balsam fit The dinner was held at tha Pel .ican cafe. .. - -