BIGHT HERALD AND NEWS ' Thursday. '" ' Hitler's Strategy May Be Thrown Off Balance By Red Push FDR Inaugurated as President for Fourth Time By JOHN HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 0P Hitler's grand strategy for the prolonged defi'nse of the fortress ot ijermany pu:Muiy una umi thrown completely off balance by the terrific impact of the Russian offensive. This is the opinion of some military authorities here who are Beginning 10 wonaer now long now Germany will be able to hold out under the onslaught. Estimates that the European war would last until late sum mer or fall as a result of the German west front offensive in December now are being scrap ped. At the moment there is an open-minded attitude on how quickly and in what manner Germany may be defeated. Defeat could take the form of unconditional surrender by the army high command if the com mand splits with the nazi politi cal leadership or could be evi denced by a fairly rapid breakup of organized resistance with a long period of guerrilla warfare following. The last several days have TRAILER USE EYED SALEM, Jan. 25 OP) The house-approved bill to prevent the use of mobile trailers tor reg istering war workers for elec- tions in Portland is a "direct slap at labor," opponents of the bill said last night at a hearing by the senate elections committee. Opponents included represen- tatives of labor, the democratic party and the Oregon League of Women Voters. Stanley Earl, state CIO secre tary, saia passage or the bill ' would be interpreted "as a di ' rect play by the republican party to cut down worKer registra tions.'v - Mrs. R. W. Rasmussen, presi dent of the Oregon League of Women Voters, said the bill would nullify the league's efforts to get out the vote at elections. She said the league waj active in obtaining the use of trailers because registration facilities were inadequate. Broad Power Opposed For Optometry Board SALEM, Jan. 25 VP)- The state board of optometry's bill to give the board jurisdiction over persons wno give eye exercise treatments would give the board too broad powers, opponents of the bill said at a hearing yester day before the house medical committee. Dean Vincent, Portland, assert ing his daughter's vision had been corrected by such treat ments, said the bill would make it impossible to get such treat ment. Ralph Campbell, Salem at torney, said the bill was so broad it would prevent him from tell ing his son to put on dark glasses before going into the sunlight. Logger Boots 8-inch with boot heel. OREGON WOOLEN STORE 800 Main brought no evidence here of a German attempt to surrender. Diulomatic sources report the us ual crop of unofficial rumors and inauiries in ueutral capitals about peace but see no particular significance in tnem. Hitler's grand strategy, based on the hopelessness of the nazi position, and on a desire to split tne allies in orcier to moony peace terms, initially contenv plated a defense on the borders ot tne reicn. ... Thus, when allied - armies broke out of the Normandy beachhead last summer, the Ger mans were unable to halt their advance and in fact had evi- dently prepared no line of de fense west of the Siegfried line. Actual detailed information on eastern front operations is so slight as to make it impossible to say now wnere the enemy planned to make his final stand against the Russians, but cer tainly the Oder river figured in those calculations. Confronted with the necessity of fighting off attacks on two fronts this winter, the Germans launched their December coun ter-offensive.- They - hoped to cripple the offensive power of the western allies, but met with only limited success. The Ger man thrust inflicted heavy dam age onsome American units and perhaps blocked a threatened offensive move byr General El senhower. It failed to deal a crippling blow by knocking out the supply port of Antwerp nor did it cut the allied supply trunk from France -in the vicinity of Narriur: In consequence, the Ger mans must now realize a reborn danger of powerful assault ac tion by, Anglo-American forces.' Compulsory Military ; Training In High Schools Proposed SALEM, Jan. 25 (VP) Compul sory military training for high school students for one hour each school day is provided in a bill to be introduced by State Rep. Paul Hendricks, Salem, he said today. No funds, are provided in the bill, but Hendricks suggested that civilian defense funds could be used. OPA Attempts Ban On Newberg Store PORTLAND. Jan. 25 UPI The district OPA sought Wednesday to Dan a Newberg store from dealing in ceiling-priced articles ior an entire year. In a suit filed in Yamhill coun ty circuit court, the OPA charged that Abraham Wolfman, proprietor of the Newberg Trad ing Post, has sold two articles above ceiling prices and failed repeatedly to keep pricing and posting records. Starts INSTANTLY to relievt MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS . Soreness and Stiffness For blessed prompt relief rub on powerfully soothing Musterole. It actually helps break up painful local congestion. So much easier to apply than a mustard plaster. "No Jua. No muas tciih UutUrM" Just rub it on. In3 j Strengths wsnm Baama . una y m iiiir'','y'wyW'';WySf iiw,w-T"-l''''''W'l'TfaW,1j i ss i ii -i n n av ' m - w . - r m . . . ( - A i J I It . .M I lJU(tJL.VYV.l -M (ffi.J Trlei'holo) Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Inaugurated as President of the United States for the fourth time, repents th oath of office administered by Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone on the south portico of the White House. Left to right: Justice Stone, Charles E. Cropley (holding Bible), Supreme Court clerk; President Roosevelt, and the President s eon, Colon e'. James Roosevelt, USMO. , Jap Military Prison Turned Into Graveyard for Yanks (Editor's Note: This story of a military prison camp which the Japanese turned Into a mass graveyard is the. first story writ ten bv Russell Brines after his return to the Philippines where he was held for two years in a concentration camp.) By RUSSELL BRINES CAMP O'DONNELL PRISON CAMP. Jan. 23 (Delayed) (fl") Rotting, burned ruins of Camp O Donnell and the untenaea eraves of thousands of heroes of Bataan is all that remains of one nf the most notorious pestholes where the' Japanese herded 80, 000 prisoners of war. A Filipino colonel ' who sur vived O'Donnell's horrors esti mated 40,000 American and t Ml Dino soldiers half of the 80,000 imprisoned had died of disease, malnutrition and mistreatment. In the early days after the in famous "Death March" of Ba taan several hundred died- daily. The touch of those doomed, de spairing men hangs heavily over this camp. , Tall erass grows over the eraves of some 4000 Filipinos. Scores of American bodies lie in the American cemetery about 700 yards northeast of the main buildings. Deep in the thickets of grass, I found small crosses made of unpainted laths. Dog tags of the dead were fixed to Fourth Annuol Oyster Dinner SUNDAY, JAN. 28 Serving from 12:00 to 4:00 P. M. Congregational Community Hall 2150 Garden St. . One block east on Garden from East Main Adults 75c Children 50c the back ot the crosses. That was all. - The trail leading from the camp's administration buildings to the cemetery is thin and near ly overgrown. In the center of the cemetery stands a large white wooden cross, "In remembrance of Americans who died here erected by the imperial Japanese army, 1942. ' ' , The Filipino cemetery is reach ed by a wooden bridge over marshy ground a breeding place for mosquitos which now is collapsed and partially burned. ' The front part of the cemetery is labelled: "Officers Plot." Indi vidual graves are marked mostly with white painted, unnamed crosses. A few contained names and the words "Rest in Peace," hacked out by surviving com rades. Some were printed in ink, some burned, and one hammered in tin. Most of these officers died in 1942. Behind 25 rows of officers' graves 15 to a row were 30 rows of larger mounds divided into lettered plots and grouped in 39 sections. : Each grave might have con tained five men, or more. Much of the thick grass growing over the mounds is blackened by fire and some of the crosses are burned. In the center of the cemetery was a stark white plaster monu ment erected "In deep remem brance of the Filipinos who died in this place. The hearts and thoughts of friends and comrades are with them." Thick white ashes' on rolling ground north of this cemetery were all that remained of the flimsy prisoners' barracks. Posts stood at one end of a barbed wire area enclosing the ashes. One of the rums was still smouldering. Fresh automobile tracks told of the flight of the Japanese oc cupants. Margaret Culkin Banning, American novelist, has been abroad lit the outbreak of three wars in London in 1914; In San Sebastian at the commencement of the Spanish Revolution; in Paris for the first mobilization in 1939. - Classified Ads Bring Results. IRMA'S BEAUTY SHOP E. Main Will Be Closed -Every Monday Until Further Notice r -t i &r t, u.a.lJ Copper Starts to tie 1 via Great Northern A vast amount of the copper so vital to the produc-. tion of war-winning weapons for America and her allies starts for the world's battle fronts in Great ' Northern freight cars From Montana's famed, fabulous copper industry and from mines and smelters in near-by states, tool tremendous tonnages of the red metal in many forms, are moved to distant arsenals, foundries and plants by Great Northern's supply line. ' ' i . The Northwest's copper industry relies on Great Northern for dependable transportation. And, the railway depends on copper from its territory to keep its equipment in shape and the supply line rolling. H. I. WAYNE, General Agcm G. N. Station : Kliinialh Falls, Oregon rcuttotthe EMPIRE BUILDER SKILLED HANDS TO HELP A WOUNDED FIGHTING 11AN M ft, . jSfQ. IF'- . 4 AW WAC MEDICAL TECHNICIAN Our govarnmsnt is Biking for thouiandi mora - trained medical' technicians and surgical tech nicians to help America's wounded fighting men back to health. The Women's Army Corps needs more qualified women to aid this-urgent work. 'Don't let thoia -wounded men down. IF YOU ARE BETWEEN THE AGES OF 20 AND 49, MAIL THE COUPON NOW! WAC RECRUITING STATION Post Office Building ' Klamath Falls, Ore.- ' , . - Please send me complete information on th v. Women's Army Corps ':, ,' name ....l......;...;.;;.;...;;.:..l;.;;;..:.... ADDRESS ...il....:.,..;..,,....;.,...:...... Phono CITY STATE ....,. Good soldier ... the WAC WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS FIGHT INFANTILE PARALYSIS with Your Dimes SPONSORED IN THE INTEREST OF VICTORY BYf Belgian Spinster Describes Murder of 8 Yank Tankmen By EDWARD D. BALL LIGNEUV1LLE, HHulimi. J". 25 (VI A mUUIIcuKOd Uflln spinster who said she saw n Oi'r man non-cominlssiom'd oHIcer murder olKlit captured Anu-r c-im tunknivn, one by one, led n u. t. burial squad toilny to tho froron bodies which lay In R roadside snowbank. , ' On tho snmo day, December 17, the same Qoi'miin reconnais sance battalion of im niinoicd SS division moved up tho road two miles and slaughtered some 100 other Americans in nn open field. This nail elite Kiiard outfit has been bhimcd for n number 'f other atrocities against Ameri cans and civilians all across Ucl gium. Wile. Marie, who keeps house for her farmor brother, told the story of the murder of the eight Americans to Capt. George W. McBurney of Tuscaloosa. Aln assistant inspector general of the 30th division; LI. Homy SchmlU, New York, a 30th division offi cer, and Sgt.-Mark B. Curl of Chnmbersburg, Ph., McBurney's assistunt. "1 was milking, December 17, when the Germans camo ilown the road, marching 24 American prisoners before them," Mile. Marie said. "Tho Germans, all of whom were young and loud, were shouting at the Americans and knocking them about. "About 20 yards from our house they halted tho Americans and ordered eight of them to dig graves for three Germans who had been bumed to death in a knocked-out tank in front of tho house. "After the Americans finished digging tho graves, tho eight were lined up along thn roiiil. The Gi'rnmn non-commlsaloncd officer then stepped out mill shot them In tho fucn one lit n tlino, The Gi'iiniins then kicked the bodies over the hill Into u dllrh.' mi ,.i,l l,,,t,. "Aft,,,.. 1 111, WUMIUII v .,,.,. ... .,.. ,' ward the Goiinuiis uskvd If Id seen whin Happen, i lorn ,1. T btuiiu Hull If I Ulllrl yes. they wmild shoot mo, ton. "L.HUT oilier inTinnns I'liine and looked lit thu liiitlles. Thev ...I .....I Ml..ln lltM l,t,A nil WHIIll'l UMll pt.'tu ...... u, except one's, whiwo shoes nppnr- CI111V WIHIIOII I li III" ui l iiiiuin. Tho iiriiiH of most of thn vic tims still wero upraised stiffly In surrciiili'i' when tho bodies were found. In the shirt pocket of one 10-yeur-old snudy-linlrod tank mini wns a letter from his girl buck In Now York state, received only a few days hrforc. It was dated November 13. Classified Ads Drum Hem 11. Lined WORK JACKETS OREGON wnilifN STORE 800 Main' PILES SUCCESSFULLY THEATED SO TAIN Nil lin-ITl.lATUN N l,.s. ml Tim. p.rm.n.nl H.ttl.i - DR. E. M. MARSHA Thlrapraoll rbvtlrlm t N Ilk - rtim ThMlr 1114a fhn 1MI - v . am NEW kind of ASPIRIN tv doesn't opJ8t(J 'm, J fPlrijlJ SUPRniN .u-justAS: loronlereU"foroli,'"li! Supmln Is aipMn , ' hu hiiiiiu piiru, HL'r This n.w kind ol wpk, disso vm ,r (.U . m ILHIl fill irnf .1,.!., .. ... ' ordlnnry aspirin,, Taar this out to rimy. rolloves pnln-how i lino you ft.,.l u(tr timing. Alynurdrui Ut's, i:t und U9r. 'MONTGOMERY wJ f .1 ; ;( 4 A fill" L- . al Who dosin't rofs an admlrtng glanca In o really hondwms -lultt Is there onylhlno to nsal, so alwayi-wiorll. Wards hava your In pursil wool and In all thejo park- , ling colors . . . dawn blui , Amsrlcan beauty, god, llmtf mlnrgran.Slia12to20, i H'$ toty to buy your"', iu o( Wcrd Atk about our 1 Tma Paymnt Po. ontgonief Ward