TWO HERALD AND NEWS 1945 Social Authority To Address Meeting PORTLAND. Jon. 31 (.Fl As ncs Van Dricl, Washington, D. C, nationally known social au thority, will address the Oregon conference of social workers, Portland district, frcbrwiry 3. She is associated with the pub lie assistance bureau of the so cial service board. WedniUy. Jan. 31. Steps to MVk Trail ! Underway in West PORTLAND, Jan. 31 M'l c? ... n,ari tht f.rwi and i kll.J ,,... " Clark trail from St. Louis, Mo., , to Seaside, Ore., already arc un- ., :.. I ,,'iilnri, ct:it,. i dCnViiV in .... , ! the Oregon Chapter council of the American Pioneer Trails as- 'sociation, said today Shipment of Rogue River Pears Resumed' MEDFORD. Jan. 31 (P Shipment of Rogue River valley pears, halted briefly by traffic congestion and heavy weather In the cast, has been resumed at the rate of 10 to 25 cars daily. iVAnions. Winter Nellies and a few Patrick Barry's are being moved. Packers saia u win oc mid-April before local storage plants are cicarcu mmtmm am lll-l'l''f'ltW,',-?,''''''WWn''W Ccir Owners lB Who Do Not O P A Warning ', of Not Getting roWS , Elk zflB PS jtKx W n m iwi t, am. m r.tyB9K-Y TOE in 90 9 V' MO RAllwr l i-g - . CfRTlFlCATI NUOW j mf . 6QO,A I !. Guaranteed Material and Workmanship 2. Prompt Service 3. Famous Firestone Genr-Grlp Tread on Any Make Tire 4. Grade A Quality Camelback 5. Factory Methods Used . Ixtra Tread Depth for Longer Mileage We loan You Tires While We Rewp Yours IpiUlj!wrM.,.,,-...--- 11 . I hi iii mm iiiii.- CANADA If EE DGE L UMBER MILLS PORTLAND, Ore, Jan. 31 UV) Possibility that Canadian lumber mills may hold a 10 per cent monetary advantage over Ore gon and Washington mills in Dostwar competition was voiced nere by H. V, Simpson, Wash ington 0. C. representative of the West Coast Lumbermen's nsso- lation. Simpson said the Brctton Woods plan would permit any na tion to start its fixed currency value in terms of gold or the U.' S. dollar, and that he be lieved the Canadian dollar would be fixed at the present 10 per cent discount. He forecast elimination of present duty and excise tax on Canadian lumber entering the United States. "Thus wo would end up with British Columbia mills having a 10 per cent preference in every market in the world, including our own domestic markets," he said. Dean Johnson, association president, told a regional meet ing that lumber, faced with greater costs, must sell at a high er price than in prewar days to remain a major industry in the northwest. WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 ) A brownout designed to save 2, 000,000 tons of coal annually goes Into effect in most parts of the country at 12:01 a. m. to morrow. Areas exempted from the order are served by electricity generated entirely from hydro power or surplus gas. Jumping the February 1 dead line for compliance, some cities put the brownout into effect on a voluntary basis as early as mid-January. The states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Utah, where hydro electric energy is plentiful, have been granted an exemption. Oth er major exemptions include most of Texas,, southern Louisi ana,, and most of Arizona, Nev ada and California except for San Diego and Catalina island. Western Lawmakers Introduce Bills WASHINGTON, Jan.' 31 tP) Western legislators tossed bills into . the congressional. -hopper yesterday. Sen. Cordon (R-Orc.) intro duced one which would subject to assessment by local drainage districts lands in Oregon ac quired by the federal govern ment for military purposes. Rep. Coffee (D-Wash.) offered a- house bill to authorize the broadcasting of senate and house proceedings. Engineer Added to Bonneville Staff PORTLAND, Jan. 31 ifP) Addition of Roy Wilkins to the staff of engineering consultants oi tne Bonneville power admin istration was announced here by Administrator Paul J. Raver. Wilkins is an authority on 220,000 volt transmission line construction. He will consult with Bonneville engineers on general problems of system en gineering, f Spring Vacations in Colleges May Be Out EUGENE, Jan. 31 (VP) The state board of higher education has not yet received a' request from the office of defense trans portation to cancel spring vaca tions as a means of eliminating unessential travel, Chancellor Frederick M. Hunter said today. Dr. Hunter said if a request is received there wjll be ample time to consider it at the board's March meeting after determin ing the amount of travel in volved. New Vice President Of CIO-IWA Named PflUTT.iMn n .Tan II I Tr. Appointment of VlrBll ' Burtz. Bucoda, Wash., as vice president of the CIO International Wood workers of America held ap- Eroval of the union's executive oard today. The board unanimously urged nomination of Henry Wallace as secretary of commerce with RFC powers, and called for ac tion on the CIO request for a manpower conference of Indus try, labor and government. Any Photograph Copied, One Print 91.00 grapi y The War At a Glance By The AuoclaUd Prtu Tha Western front: Ameri cans stonicd across German border at two new places as artillery poured shells into main concrete works of SicK fried line; full-scale assault under way on 35-mile front. French in south encircled Ccrnay, seven miles north west of Mulhousc. The Russian front: Lands berg, 68 miles from Berlin, captured: Germans said red armv spearheads were from 58 to 63 miles from capital. Konie.sbr.rg encircled ami shelled. Marlcnwcrdrr, 34 miles southwest of ElbinK, captured: Russians reported across Silcsian Oder in strength. The Italian Front: Activity limited to patrols. Th. Pacific fronli Strong U. S. 8th army forces landed unopposed from 150 ships 60 miles northwest of Manila, threatened to cut off Japanese withdrawal route to Uataan by driving toward Juncture with sixth army across pen insula. Sixth army within 30 miles of Manila. HIKERS SLUE ADDITION OF JUDGE By The first lionieinakcis' festi val to be held In Klamath nulli ty was outlined by iiicinhci's of the hoiuoiuakcr.s committee ' a meeting held Saturday, Jan uary 1!7. Members oi ine ium 'extension units and "II otlicr.v 1 interested will be welcomed at ' the gathering which has been i .scheduled for sometime in May. it has been planned to hnvr ! discussions of time mid enemy isuviiiK methods by Mrs. GiUrn. 1 a skit, a luncheon and n special I address bv Dr. Jamrs Millar "I Portland, 'who will return attain I, t'ltuiitv for this i event. Dr. Millar presented n orics of addresses tliroiiiilioul I the county during the first part of January, una uie ciuiiiimiijhi with which he was received has warranted his engagement as the chief festival speaker. Committee members and oth ers who gathered to make the initial plans for tho affair were Mrs. Twyla Ferguson,, manager of the Soroptimisl House, Mis. Hex Illjjh of l'oc Valley, chair man of the committee, Mis. W. S Metier of Alliimont. Mrs. : Earl Mack of Henley. Mrs. L.ee llolliday of Fairhavcn. Mrs. v. 1J. Bickers of Modoc I'olnt, Mrs. William Williams of Men ley, Mrs. S. A. Barnum of Ho iiiinia and Bolty Jones, secre tary to the Home (leinonsuiiiion i agent. j Marine Fleet Air Officer Promoted SAN PIKGO, Calif., Jan. 31 (,'Vl Col.- L, H. M, Sanderson, lomiiiniuliiiK officer of murine fleet all', west coasl, regal clot as the lullier of dive bombing, has been proinoicu 10 uio iiuir ; of brigadier general, ins iieim- j quarters announced todav. A native of Slielton, Wash., I Sanderson made Ihe llritl sue-1 cesstul dive bombing iiltnekH aualust the insurrectionists ut Haiti in ll'tl). The ul fleer Used I a makeshift bomb release con-; sl.iting of a flour fack Into wlilen ; a lionil) had heen placed and winch was fastened to the mi- j cler carriage of thu plane. A , simple device opened tho sack I and released the bomb. Sander-; son described tho operation us akin to slinking it cat out ot a bag, OSC Men to Attend Farm Labor Meeting COHVAU..IS. Jim. 31 ll'l Dean William A. Schoenfeld and .1,. ft. Heck, state farm labor su pervisor, will represent Oregon Stale college 'agricultural exten sion service at meeting in ber keley, t'nlif., February 1-3 on farm labor requirements, Infm nMtlim on limmrtcd labor will he given county farm labor : assistants after tho meeting, en- j nbliiig them to plan recruiting of local workers. -! congroui.'r.ir would he allow ''', jli In the C." K uo. my nl ,le will,. At present ,, ,i ,t a SALEM, Jan. 31 M'l The Lane county legislative delega tion introduced a bill today in the house to add a fourth circuit Judge in the second Judicial dis trict, which includes Douglas, Lane. Coos, Curry and Lincoln counties. The fourth judge, who would have to be a resident of Lane county, would be given Jurisdic tion over probate matters in a companion bill. Rep. Earl Hill, Cushman, said he has abandoned plans to re move congestion In the Lane county court by ar'-Jing another county judge, asserting he had run into legal snags. The new bills, he said, would relieve the congestion just as well. Washington Man Named Director SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. 31 (VP) L. C. Meschke of Browns town, Wash., representing the Eastern Washington Beet Grow ers' association, was named to the board of directors of the newly-organized National Federation of Beet Growers yesterday. H. E. Hoesctt of Greclev. Colo., was elected president of the association, made up of nine western cooperatives. The or ganization today was studying labor problems. 'No. Vacancy' Sign Applies to Beaver ALBANY, Jan. 31 (VP) A homeless beaver found wistfully climbing, the steps to an apart ment house here, regardless of a "no vacancy" sign, was in a crate at the city hall today. Perry A. Stcllmachcr, police chief, said the animal probably had been ostracized by his col ony on the Willamette or Cala poola river and was hunting a new residence. Officers said they would set the beaver free in the Cascades. Charities, Family Beneficiaries of Will SALEM, Jan. 31 A) The will of the late Mrs. Fannie Kay Bishop, admitted to probate here yesterday, names as beneficiaries the Women's Christian Temper ance union, children's farm home at Corvallis, the First Presby terian church of Salem, and members of the family. The members of the family in clude six grandsons, two sons', a granddaughter, and daughter-in-law. The will was dated June 28, 1943, and is valued in excess of $10,000. Classified Ads Bring Results. If It's a "froien" article you need, advertise for a used, one In the classified. NONE RETURN OREGON I'l l V, Jan. 31 (I'l None of the HH JapiinowAinerl. cans cvucuiiled from Clackamas county has returned to reclaim personal property held by tho sherifl's office, Sheriff Fred Reakseckcr said today. rmnmi vsx NOW SSiHOHiUTitr FREE THIS ,.: EARTHBOUND nx oiri' opfn ut. in - rt GH05T hp c Mime rrPFTQ"" ' I HE S MORE 6 tt, CV r; I I to be pitied r &Vr& ? s I THAN SCARED h" ","SV&-'Ar V. k v 1 v'4'vs i I Sol.ci.d lAN G.''"- SHORT SUBJECTS 1 VV,,.4 LATEST NEWS y 11 i 11 ' I lot iwouunoH eui mi oi 4itr --f-----gZr PINE TREI Centinueus Daily Open 1:00 P. M. NOW PLAYING ri mm- ALSO DhrtMA STIH Playing to Outstandifln Crow Here they com.,, out of thc'tili blue yonder",,, flYINO TRAI4HT INTO NIAIti If W "(mill. I I'limin GEORGE CUI! 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