I yv x-v n n r n s- (ft W Is) Herald m$ January 28. 1945 Max. (Jan. 25) ..39 Mln. Precipitation last 24 hours Stream year to date Normal 6.23 Last yaar . . Foracasti Cloudy. ......22 00 ...4.84 ...3.35 fRANK JENKINS I FRANCISCO, Jul. 24- I two montlii. ago, in The Shania-Caacadc Wonderland w ..i 111" rr"1 ""'" PRICE riVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON, FRIDAY. JANUARY 28, 1845 Numbar 10373 5 I j ; FORGES in Via SOLATED EASTPRUSSIA fSS-n power of resist- ... knnrful. but we're wait- I ,co wlud liiMwn. L not bn lo atrongly St"1 ' . ,i., lii western .hllllCII "..", -..Ml. d ..nnnflU'd Itl West- !() YflW ' ' rallcC.' . .1.- riiirmiui do- W-' .mlv. Where- flhe nails started n retreat JIJi only at Germany's i...j.rti VYIHIl IMili' m wnvKb , v , lorly, tlf nuwiliim brciko r,,Z defenses In cenlrul r ,' ' ...i .inriml n Germ f. . t now is reaching r ..... . I r n borders, .i,...,. IimiiIkm. where ini" ' .,,,.- - ,i. ..... . ,.iil wo see how tho Z'. hnM on Hint line. Wo m- moment. It look 05 If ,e RidsIom lire going to cut fi-..i Primln by drlvlnil !h 10 IIIC Willie !' .,:rmnn anniLK. ........ Bmethoil to KOu nclvunlBRo If Baltic siaica. I, Pmula Is a German mil- W. .... L , I II, A sliriiw, inc nun"-,,.,." ,,n uir Ion s. Bill it ln t Jtillv Important to the &cr- .out I lull I cieii-nso inr whllo Silcsln 11 manufacturing district Prusjla Is nrctloinlnuntly feilluni., , . IRE Is certain nmounl of lilorlcnl inicresi in uic mis r.ioluro of Eylatl, In Etmt iii n was at fcyinu nun iron lcamcn moro tlinn try and a quarter ago inni Kussion souner was n uruvo sUiDOnrit iiKiiicr nna u I and effective lighter ab v led. ,c Russians didn't lvo much account or inemscivos in asl war. At Timiicrtuorii aia n at the Mnzurinn lakes in East PrusKln, they were ids vely beaten by tho tier i that they wcro never again ilo be much of a threat. t that was becnuno their irshlp was poor and their mem meager, mere was then nothltm wrong with fRuulan soldier, who time ma in stood and died in it twlih practically his bnro i. was Russian czarlst gov. icnt, not Russian couraiic, was bankrupt. ould be moro tlinn could fiianly be cxiweted If the ans, now ably led ninl Ulcenlly cnulnDcd. dldn t their best into East Prii low, to avenue tho German tries of Tannenbcri! nnd the .. run ibkcs. the Germain rctrciited out It France and cot behind wcstwnll defenses, thev kned their lli nnrl n. fewer men to nut un a fier defense. Tho mnn It clear that ns IIipv rnllr- If Poland (and pcrhnps out i rrussiaj iney will obtain fimc advantago of n ahorlor they slon tlm lli.cl tin n I frier, we will have to roullzo iney navo n lot of atrcngth we'd belter wnlt. . , RE is sllll n note of pnnlc io ucrmnn radio. It may milnc. ii i, a r,.i..,.. ...ii Ushcd fact ihnt they hnvu Hpiusiinniciy TWICE ns J rength on their cnslorn their wpfm frAn.. it.... 'null , Ullh i,4B ""uto on I'ugo Two) Japanese Say This Is Their Fleet- J. ' "'.;, "Japanea air fore and nary units leava a bast to malt tha Amartcan fleet," aays the caption for this picture radioed from Tokyo to Berlin, then sent to Stockholm and serriced by a Swedish picture agency. (AP wlrophoto). . Engineers Release Preliminary Details Of Klamath Water Diversion Study Here An official release, giving pre liminary details' of tho study be ing made by U. S. engineer! of tho proposed diversion of Klam ath waters Into tho Sacramento basin and related projects, was mndo hero yesterday by or my engineers. They were here to mnko pluntf for n hearing o bo held in Klamath Fals Fcbrunry 20. '. - Hero Is : their official state ment: A comprehensive survey re port of tho entire Klomuth River E FOR TARDY OUTPUT ' By STERLING F. GREEN WASHINGTON, Jan. 2B (IP) To cure production lags cnuscd by tardy delivery of pnrts to war plants, the war production board hns asked tho armed services to make contracts nt onco for the full year nhcod. Tile move reflects Chairman J. A. Kriig's belief that nrmn mcnt policy, should figure on European hostilities running in to 1040. Delays Threaten Somo "serious delays" have threatened, said his memoran dum to tho arm y. navy nnd maritime commission, because tho government and prime con tractors, in recent months of military optimism, failed to or der fur enough ahead. This development c a m o to light shortly after Krug dis closed n scries of new steps nlincd at both military and civ ilian activity to limit manu facturing and construction In tight labor areas. The program, made public last night, requires: No "Spot" Contracts 1. That no new "spot" au thorizations for civilian goods (Continued on Pago Two) tter Ration to Be Less Than One Pat Doily in "45 'CAGO, Jnn. 28 NT-iTho E civilians face o 104S "'less than one pnt of E day, spokesmen for the ile" ,h5 h.ntl "N "lm. th k.. "Mion-to ro- t ur cnsis." ,Produclio nd ,.,,,, lus. Ihn .t. . " Ii ihn """Kesmcn, rcpre. r 'he ovcm ii i, iKi.. V nn. ... - " butter In- urgently re- Dint h . " lo encour L",lscoiirng0 butter pro. I "ncclal mpelnR ,,8rc Ul0 lie n 'r...l,,'os.cnt!ng the I no " 7 institute, Na telv Milk Pro I CrStlc!"' nnd 'tho Nn- rntcrt- in'.", association, 'l,u. IncrenslnB ihn i,n. nn,.'."sln "ho pro- butler 011 """crfut po said protluc. In tlon payment per pound of but tcrfnt sold ns cream now ap proximates In most areas one sixth of the production payment fixed for 100 pounds of whole milk. It recommended a pay ment of nt least one-fourth of tho production payment for wholo milk. It also proposed extending limitation orders to cover nil sales of cream. Dr. H. A. Ruche, institute sec retary, snid government policies now in effect "discourage" pro duction and that tho loss In but ter output lust year was 322, 000,000 pounds, more than nil Iho butter taken for the nrmrd forces nnd lend-lease 287,000, 000 pounds. Ho said tho 1044 output of creamery butter was 1,478.000,000 pounds, as com pared to a normal output of 1,800,000,000 pounds. Lnsl year's trend is continu ing this year, Dr. Ruche said, "requiring action at onco to re vorse It and provide moro but ter for American tables." system In Oregon and California Is In preparation by the Corps of Engineers, U. S. Army, with n view to preparing a general, overall plan for the most bene ficial development, conservation, and-1)80 of-the waters 0f the en tire river system. The Invosti- fntlon was authorized by the 'lond. Control A c t' 5 anorbved August 28, 103? (Public No. 406,' 78th Congress, 1st session) ana also- Ii being mode as .a review of tho report entitled, ''Klamath River, Oregon and California," contained In House of Represent atives Document No. 181, 73rd Congress, 2nd Session,- which it self was mado under the pro visions of House Document No, 308, 09th Congress, 1st Session, In 1033. Tho present Invcsti-. gallon embraces flood control, navigation, irrigation, reclama tion, hydro-electric power, fish and wildlife, recreation, and other water-use features, and Is being mado In close cooperation witli the Department of Agricul ture, the Bureau of Rcclomation Rv DOUGLAS B. CORNELL WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (Pi Donald M. Nelson has predicted to President Roosevelt that China's war production this spring "should bo at least double the NovcmDor rate ana soon will be felt on fighting fronts. ; ' If was In November that NcV son, former war production chairman and now a personal representative of the president, made the second of two trips to Cliino to help build up war out put. . Effort Coordinated A report on the missions, made to Mr, Roosevelt Dec. 20 and re leased In part by the White House today, cited specific meas ures put Into effect and asserted that "for the first time tho Chi nese economic war effort is now coordinated. "In . addition to the Improve In the military situation," Nelson declared, "we . can look for far-rcachlng gains on the (Continued on Pago Two) definite Dates For Invalidation Of Stamps Set WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (At Tho OPA lodav reestablished a policy of definite invalidation times lor inoa ration stamps, witli each scries good roughly four months. As at present, a new scries of red stamps for moat and dairy products and blue stamps for procosscd food will bo validated each month. Instead of being good Indefinitely, however, they will oxDiro after about 16 weeks. Tho agency also restored its expiration policy for sugar slnmps, announcing that coupon Nn. 34 the only one now cood trniy not be used after Febru ary ZH. and the Fish and Wildlife Serv ice of the Department of the In tcrlor and the Federal Power Commission. In order that the views and desires of all Interested parties may be known, and to obtain all additional Information and data possib e bearing on the, subject, publio hearings will be held by the undersigned on ' this matter aa follows:.-1 r " - ; " -' At 10 a, m., Tuesday, February 20, 1B45, Klamath Falls, Oregon to consider matters related to the UDDcr Klamath River sys tem, Including the existing power installations at uopco; At 10 a. hi.; Wednesday. Feb ruory 21, 1945, in the chambers of the board of supervisors. court house, Yrcka, California, to consider matters related to the Klamath river: At .10 a. m., Friday',. February 23, 1945, in the chambers of the board of supervisors, court house, Eureka, California, to con. sidcr matters related to the Lower Klamath river and its tributaries, including the entire Trinity river. All interested parties are in. (Continued on Page Two) Clark Field, Nearby Fort Won by Yanks By The Associated Press GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS. LUZON. Jan. 26 Clark field, with Its 17 airstrips within striking distance of the China cosst, was firmly in American hands today along with adjacent Fort Stotsenburg. Triumphant Yanks rolled on south against such light opposnlon that combat omcers expresses douDt the Japanese would make a determined fight short of Manila, some 40 miles south. Vast Clark field, most hiqhly developed aviation center in the Philippines with its extenslye network of landing strips, shops and other Installations, was captured early Thursday by Maj. Gen. Oscar W. Griswold's 14th army corps. . Tha Americans found few Japanese but numerous land mines and booby traps as they swarmed over Clark in pursuit of an enemy garrison ot pernaps suuu wnicn ilea into me nuis wnere artillery positions could Keep the airstrips unusable, SIEGFRIED LI SECTION TAKEN BYYANKNINTH By JAMES M. LONG PARIS, Jan. 26 OP) The American ninth army captured the last four-mile section of the Siegfried line before it today and with the British second army closed up to the Roer river all the 40 airline miles from Hol land to below Duren. . Strangely, the Germans had abandoned the Hitlerian forti fications and fled to the Cologne nlain east of the Roer.. The while-clad men of : the ninth closed to within 25 miles of Dus.. seldort. li-of Munchen - Ulad bach and', 20 of Cologne . in. a limited -attack which overran Brachelen (population 5000) and six nearby Industrial-villages of Rhenish,. Prussia. - Battle In Billiard Fighting in an Alsatian bliz zard, the U. S. 7th army cleared the entire south bank of the Moder river 16 miles above Strasbourg late today and stamped out the gains achieved in a - new German offensive mounted- yesterday with seven strongly armored divisions. American lines were restored completely, . The first and . third . armies drew close to the German fron tier in the Ardennes section and in many long stretches were looking across the Roer river in (Continued on Page Two) The main body of Japanese was being pounded by Ameri can artillery. Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur's communique today said Our forces arc engaged in clearing enemy troops from the nearby mils. . Major Prise ' " Capture of Clark field, cer tainly a major prize of the war, constituted a personal satisfac tion for MacArthur, whose main air strength in the Philippines was wiped ' out in December, 1941, as Japanese dive bombers struck devastating blows to open the Nipponese conquest of the islands. Sixth army Yanks moved on to Clark field so fast the Japa nese failed to put up a stiff fight from defenses carefully dug into ridges at the northern approaches. Overrun Field ' Maj. Gen. Rapp Brush's 40th division overran the' field and Fort Stotsenburg; a, large mili-. tary Installation before the war, and - then,' advanced patrols five miles -south to Angeles on a main -Manila-highway,-- - - . Engineers followed to put the field into; shape. ; ' , 4,icaii,iuic. tin j u,tu uivoiuii pf Maj. Gen. Robert S. Beighter sent patrol , screens across the valley to the left to protect the flank. . This '- unit reached the highway town of Magalang,: 10 miles east .of Clark . This meant the two divisions were on parallel highways which converge; 15 miles to the south at San Fernando, capital of Pampanga province.- From there the highway ,'threads be tween two: extensive marshes along the-home stretch to Ma nila, where Filipinos ore re ported starving by the hundreds daily. Paces Leathernecks Red Troops 24; Miles1 From City of " V . Danzig j Proposed Diversion Channel fteWU. fAlkutf cm. III 3J il$ 1 ill I This rough map shows the approximate location of one of two alternate proposals for a diversion channel to move surplus waters from the Klamath basin Into the fiacramento basin for use down there for hydroelectric power and Irrigation. Another proposed channel would extend from tha Klamath river near Spencer creak, below Keno, to Weed and across a divide into tha Mccioud river channel, - . U. S.-PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS; PEARL HARBOR, Jan. 26 Iff") The eight square miles of little IwoJima in the Volcano islands, midway along the route, the Superfortresses fly from Salpan to' Tokyo, were shelled for the second time this year-and the sixtH time in the war by fleet units Tuesday. The ' warshins. Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz disclosed. raked that Nipoonese air and ob servation base with their guns the same day that Superfort resses and Liberators dropped more than 180 tons of bombs on it, starting fires visible for 20 miles. . Iwo, from which the Japanese send raiders against Saipan and spot the B-29s winging to Ja- fian, has been attacked on at east 15 of the first 23 days of 1945... "Our surface units inflicted (Continued on Page Two) "Red'.' Gilbert, marine cage star, will pace the Leatherneck fast breaking offense when the boys from the Barracks collide with Shannon's of Portland Sat urday night on the KUHS maple. Gilbert made all-city while playing for . Los - Angeles high school and later flipped in buckets for the . Los ,- Angeles Diablbs, top semi-pro club in the southern section of the west coast, . All proceeds from this clash will.be turned over to the current "March of Dimes' . in fantile paralysis drive. . LONDON, Jan. 26 (P) Mar shal Konstantin K. - Rokossov sky's second Wl.lte Russian1 army has' burst through the last German defense along the bor der of the former Free State of Danzig and East Prussia, reach-1 ing the Bay of Danzig and iso lating the German forces in East Prussia from the rest-of. Germany. 1 ' - : Marshal Stalin- ' announced this tonight in an order of the day. -.' ' : With the capture of Marien- burg, announced by Stalin, thd" Russians stand only 24 miles,, from the city of Danzig, where the second World War started September 1, 1939. . Divisions Cut Off . It - was estimated - here that' perhaps 25 German ' divisions were cut off in East Prussia Marienburg is on the main rail line- from Berlin t& rionigsDergj The swift thrust to anzi& bay was ' announced as other Russian -forces in the-south; drove past Poznan to threaten", the border of Brandenburg pro vince, of which Berlin is capital? The Germans, in announcing th& Russian drive had Teachea tnes vicinity of Brandenburg front? ier, did not specify the exacg point at which it had been ap proached. -In -addition, to raarienDurfj, Stalin announced that Muhl . (Continued on fage two; WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 fP) The senate commerce committee voted 14; to 5 today to. reject President Roosevelt s : nomina- tion;of Henrji A. Wallace, former vice president, to be secretary of commerce...:, . At the same time, the commit tee aDDroved a revised measure by Senator George (D-Gft.) to shift the RFC and other govern ment' lendine agencies Derma- nently" from the commerce, de partment ,to a federal' loan, ad- ministration. .Unfavorable Rebbrt" . Chairman Bailey (D-N.C) said the Wallace nomination would be reported -unfavorably' to the senate Monday, u cannot . De act ed upon until; thev ensuing meet ing of the' senate, unless- unani mous consent of the membership is nhtainpd.- - - Bailey said the action" to re ject the president's choice of Wallace for a post which ' he asked Jesse Jones of Texas to - ..(Continued -on Page Two) Canada Adheres To Air Freedoms NEW YORK, Jan. -26 (IP) Canada announced today -its. ad herence to the "two freedoms" air agreement, which provides that; planes of .one country muy fly across another without stop ping or' may stop at designated airports for-- refueling or for emergencies. , The announcement ' that Can ada would become the- 34th na tion to sign the agreement, draft ed 'it the international civil avia tion conference at Chicago,: was made at the conclusion of a two- day conference here of official delegations of Canada and the united states. . , Take It From Joe--- By PAUL HAINES " . : , "We 'came here to talk for Joe." Joe Is a mighty nice little Kuy, but he hasn't been feeling so chipper lately,: Joe hasn't, and he doesn't get around much-either. You see, Joe had a tough bout with infantile paralysis lately and he just about went down for the count. .4- . . He put up. a good scrap against Old Man Polio kids like Joe don't quit-r-but his right leg is still kind of withered and he can't play ball like he used to. Now Joe's folks haven't a lot of money .arid they can't, afford to send him to. a specialist,' so the days ahead look sort of dark from where Joe sits. No, sir, the outlook isn't very bright, take it from Joe. . ; But in this country of ours there's a fund to help kids like Joe. It's the "March ' of Dimes" for -the national - Infantile, paralysis fund. In fact, we're having a basketball game right here in Klamath town' Saturday night, with all proceeds , from the game being turned over to this humanitarian cause. So far, the advance sale of tickets is riot what we hoped for. Wo still firmly trust, however, that our goal of S.1000. will-be reached. ' ., .,.. ' '.'.; ,-,..';,,'. If we foil short of our mark, we'll, still' be able to-get around all right, but you might run Into Joe some day on his crutchos. He'd like' to get around, tool ' i ; ' y ' , , ' DE IIS TIX SYSTEM ' fBy PAUL W. HARVEY, Jr. ' SALEM, Jan. 26 (i) Governor-Earl Snell declared today that if the legislature meets the many demands for more revenue," then after'the' war.it probably would either.have.tomakela.drastic in-crease-ior theproperty -tax . or enact a -new-form of tax. ; .v - v ( Governor , Snell, in a radio, ad dress sporisored- by the state Eed-tratioti- of Women's clubs, cited requests made for bigger old age tensionsv. for :$5;000j000 -more- a year . for - schools, and for more highways-funds for cities, assert ing there1.arer1!sburid arguments in support-'rjiftfae recjuests. . If the annual $26,000,000 of in come tax collections drops to the (Continued : pn- Page Two) -' Sgt. John Arnold I Killed in Action i ''.Word has been received from, the war ' department that Sgt. John Arnold, son of Mr. ond Mrs. Frank Arnold of 1435 Oregon, was killed in action in France on January 11. j Arnold , is survived by his mother and; father and a sister, Mrs; Blanche Engelking. ';.-. . .r He was inducted into the army on November of 1943, and had seen' five months' of overseas duty. Before receiving his over seas orders, young Arnold was trained at Camp Shelby, Missis sippi, after which he was trans ferred to Camp Phillips In Kansas,--.' " ' .. i Before his enlistment, 'Arnold was employed as a truck driver for C. A. Dunn Construction company. : . Killed In Action 1 .awwi ,t...iilirin"'eMtiill.i Sgt.1 John Arnold ribble Your Dollars to the "March of Dimes" Cage Scrap Saturday Night! For complete details see page six. 4T