9 . . r l& - - - w m - w ' i ' - "u J in i hi i i li in iii , FBANK JENKINS ,,, niilit-r unexpectedly, 1 , hl rise l P"w"r ''! ' Tim!.'! who listened " H0 9B"!0 HI""111 "')UBU vocct every Geriiinii tti (In MB "ftS .ml , infirm or i,o lll.s..-iiHiiblo must ,o Ibc lut ounce of their ith." f'i&rli'K our enemies Lk'l Onnnil town , rvsldw mill citpochilly """ pi,, are nothing beside ;r :,Lr . . ,ble Hi.rf.-r UK und ' which would f:'""w.'; ,y the plutocratic bolsho nuplrncy.'l f I pn rounds Hint German r'rtndcr would menn tho him nod His iiiml row. nmbnbly co d hhoukIi t t'S rSy Into ''I"'-' ,c ruin In order to POh l -; Hint catastrophe a Mile 'don't dinrmint thin strungo mi wllli Hi" forelock. Hi the Gormim people must per Hum II." four Inspired ecrct police. Ho must cro to them. 1 o must bo t a supernatural being In 'must' know Um n n it known tho strings of his mcnl. Otherwise ho could ay so surely on their hopes their fei.ru. Tho way n they ore following him to ,, nnllonnl ruin hint In It hlng of the quality of wor- pooh-poohed Hitler too We'll be wiser from here t K wc Blvo him credit for l.o hi..-. , , bis question In Kuropo Is iiv lonB enn the Russian lioliii!. fllow long enn they themselves supplied? Will luim enough to luku them rlliiJ le only enn tell. IED on the western front ml be at least two million loins, Drltlsh und Cnnu- They lout no sluggerlng of supplies In Von Rund i drive. They hiivo boon ng up supplies over relu sliurt lines for a lontl time. linicliiblo seems to hi.ve not too tmdly upset by the of the Belgian bulge. The ches intlnintc strongly that ire rendy again to tiiko the ilvo. y ore they wnltliiK? y our hitlh comiiumd enn ir that question. Wo out enn only guess, ccnu a fair guess that they nltlnn for Uu) Germans to EN TIIElll WESTERN S In order to .Mlreuitlhcn rcslstnncc to tho Russians, n would be tho decisive nt for Elsenhower to" hit :verytlilng he hns. RE Is another possibility, ir purpose (by "our" menn IX tho nlllcs) Is to glvo tho d Gcrinons no rest no o re form und re-group. Wc lie British mny bo waiting the Russians reach tho ;t limit nt which they will 10 to supply themselves, would then tnka the often hi tlio west. ' SE tiro only Idle guesses, hoy mny bo wldo of tho They nro rnther obvious ivnste of time. Hut wo on mo (rout ain't help spocu ! to whnt it Is nil ubuut. Mgcr minds simply won't for limo und events to tell "bout It. ninke n new landing on uzon-on the west side of II nun ponlnsuln. Whnt it l Hint wn hnvn tho neccs 'wee to do whnt we need to Insure victory. 11 reassuring. now fairly snfo lo ns'sume Jans Imve nbnndoned M holding the Philippines. " 111 .Possession of tho 'i' '. Iosj of tlieir Hand 1 1 "'."J" question of tlmo. lend, ,, q,.Klon. - in. IT ? 1,,'"n "bl" lr tl,ko S, ." the nll-nbsorb-;lnpm 1,0 R"dn ndvnnco LH,"'y.,yoii must hnvo Hie Uu n yellow men ltalr.ftohio 5 'o Knp In the rnllroad lend- htinfr t0si"li China gnied on Pngo Two) sYou 'in9 Paper? sVi','8. 1;'.'pcl' lny - . r When 0 brlnR i the l d ."ml Nws In i I i, Tl ,)orcl1- Bt " a pnper shortnoo ."" your fl,vol.(o ncw . 20 i ""'"nirlly llmitod tho J"1''1'. 10 molntnln WnoPP. scnt "I'mbei- of l"CgTw.n,.urt 1,0 bullt h wnslo pnper snl- . wrn?h, mim' "nlvugo nffi00 L)n"er fr nw- l,;,n0t,,olllcr osso"- INS'w r for f.,i 10 save .Juliiro colloetion,;! In The Shanta-Cascade Wonderland February 3, 1845 Max. (Feb. 2) 46 Min. 33 Precipitation last 24 hours 02 Straam yaar to data ...5.30 normal B.73 Lait year 4.11 rorecaii: Ham. PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1945 Number 10380 Van n tin Tiki rvinvnn if In its iqmuiiisi!. u uuu eimgiii Siegfnei Line - . J Pony Express 1945 Version II III .1 MMmjri I 1"IIIMMI 111 II 111 II 1 1 1 1 1 II I Henry Strnloy, MAM 3c, and Jim Amadeo, MAM 3c. pick up mail at the Klamath poit office to be transferred to the Klam ath navel air itation. Both the air station and the Marina Bar racks have their own post office and mail li picked up and brought in three times dally. Mi li tary Installations Handle Own Mail Problem By PAUL HAINES Tho servicemen stationed at the Klnmuth naval ulr station and Mnrlno Bnrn.eks get plenty of mall from home. The Burracks und tho naval air stutlon have their own post offices and their own postal employes and arc branches of tho Klamath post of fice, i The mnll for theso mllitnry In stallations is picked up. at the Klamath post office three times U. S. STILL HOLDS Tho United States has not abandoned lis plans for power development on the Klamath river, It was Indlcntcd today in a letter from Abe Forlns, power chief of the U. S. department of tho Interior, lo A. M. Thomas, secretary of tho Enlerpriso Irri gation district. Thomas wrote lo Forlos In In quiry after tho California Ore gon Power company had In formed tho state hydroelectric commission It is seeking permis sion lo build a power plant nt the Grant site near Kono. Said I'orlas' letter: "Tho hydroelectric commis sion of Oregon Is being advised Hint the United States hns not abandoned its rights on the Klnmalh river, nor is nny such abandonment In' contemplation, and that the d o p a r t m e n t, through tho bureau of reclama tion, expects to cover tho entire Klamath basin in a study to be (Continued on Pago Two) Summerville Charge Dismissed A chnrgo of assault with a deadly weapon, ponding against Lewis Summcrvllle, 22-ycnr-old veternn of World Wnr 2, wns dismissed Saturday in Siskiyou county, according to word re ceived by Attorney Joseph C. O'Neill from tho man's brother, Sgt. Luther Summcrvlllo of the Mnrlno Bnrracks. Summcrvlllo had been held under $2!i00 cash bond follow ing an ullorcnlion which result ed In serious injury to Fcrmon Clinton Evans, chief cook, Mar ino Bnrrncks, on December in. Sgt. Summcrvlllo told O Nelll that ho was leaving Yrcka, Calif., Immediately to accom pany Lewis to Loltcrmnn hos pital. Son Frnncisco. Lewis suf fered injuries In n plnno crash which brought about a medical dischargo this past year. This was considered the basis of a recommendation from District Attorney Charles Johnson, Yreko, that Summcrvlllo bo ro leased for hospitalization. Evans has returned to duty a day and taken to the branch offices, where It Is distributed. Five pouches of mall a day go to tho Marine Barracks and about four pouches arc taken to the air station daily, Mail going out of- Klamath Falls, from these installations is brought in three times a day and is sorted and dispatched by tho Klamath post office. Tho great majority of outgoing military mail is scntulrmail, and all these letters nro sent to Medford by stage, where- they Bre dispatched by plane. Other mall is scnt out by train and lenves here twice dally, ar riving in Portland and San Fran cisco in the evening and morn ing and Is Los Angeles and Scat tic at the same times. Decision on Manpower Delayed WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (TP) The senate military committee today was reported to have de ferred decision on a limited na tional service, bill until Mon day. Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.), emerging from a closed session, said lie had a number of objec tions to the bill as tentatively amended by tho committee. Not tho least of his criticisms was tho placing of overall control of tho manpower program In James F. Byrnes' office of war mobilization and reconversion. The legislation passed the house in such form as to give local selective service boards tho say about who would be shifted to war jobs. Under the senate committee's first draft, Byrnes' office w o u 1 d bo in charge, but could delegate the actual placement authority to any other agency of government. Nazis Say Red Drive On Oder River Repulsed By JAMES F. KING LONDON, Feb. 3 W) Russian attacks on the Odor river have been repulsed, the German high command declared today as American air fleets rocked Berlin with 3000 tons of bombs in aid of soviet troops massing along the river 40 miles east of the capital. " One Berlin broadcast said Marshal Gregory Zhukov's troops had won but later lost a bridgehead over the Oder near Kustrin. The Moscow radio declared one of Zhukov's columns had speared to within 11 M miles of Stettin on the Baltic. A plunge tu Dtortln would loo off 13,500 square miles of northeastern Germany, the Polish corridor, and the Danzig area. Kustrin is on the Oder 40 miles east of Berlin. A huge battle was reported raging farther south, four miles east of Frankfurt on the historic Kundersdorf bat tlefield, first bloodied in the GERMANS APPEAL LONDON, Feb. 3 m The German press and radio sound ed the theme of "Remember 1018" In appeals today to Ger mans to stand firm against bat tlefront setbacks and any allied calls t surrender. Promising nothing, German newspapers declared "all enemy alms cannot be achieved if the German people have tho firm will not to capitulate." Dispatches from neutral capi tals and allied broadcasts said anti-Hitler posters and slogans are appearing on-wulls in largo German cities. Moscow radio said "Thcro is no doubt of panic reigning In many sections of Germany." : Famine Menaces Berlin was reported In var ious dispatches as teeming with refugees, with armed guards try ing to shuttle them hurriedly from the ' capital. Ono Swiss newspaper's Berlin dispatch said the city was threatened with (Continued on Pago Two) Conductor Held On Bigamy Charge SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 3 (P) With three counts of bigamy against him, 58-year-old Francis Van Wio today was held to an swer to superior court, i The district attorney said it might bo a month before the case goes lo trial. Police say Van Wie has had at least 12 wives. Judge Leo Cunningham In creased bail from $500 to $3000 cash or $7500 bond., . When the attorney for the 5-foot 2-lnch streetcar conductor objected that Van Wlo might not bo able to produce such bail, Judge Cunningham remark ed: "It would bo wise, perhaps, If he spent some days in jail, for some serious thinking." era of Frederick the Great. The rain of bombs from more than 1000 U. S. Flying Fort resses crashed on the refugee choked capital, which Is within sound of soviet guns shelling nozi defenses on the western side of the Oder. Zhukov's drive on Stettin, 74 miles northeast of Berlin, threat ened to cut off great German forces and to open Berlin for an attack from the north. The Germans rushed fresh (Continued on Page Two) . EOF Fear of a barking dog prob ably caused the death of Mrs. Alma Belle Hatten, 58, who died early this morning' at the East Main and Wantlartd corner bus stop after she had been pursued for half a block by the" animal.' Deputy Coroner Marvin Al bec, called with Ward's ambu lance to the scene at 6:45 a. m said Mrs. Hatten was dead on his arrival. Relatives of the wom'.in said she left her home at 2323 Wantland at 6:30 a. m., en route to work at the Cascade laundry where she is employed as an ironcr. The dog, a harm less pup, said by Mrs. Hatten's relatives to be owned by Fred Rider, 2223 Wantland, ran from the house and barked at the woman as she passed. Mrs. Hatten became fright ened by the animal and started to run to the bus stop. When she readied the corner she collapsed. A fellow worker, Mrs. Ann Rog ers, 2241 Wantland, was on her way lo the laundry and saw Mrs. Hntlen fall. She ran back to summon Mrs. Hatten's sister, Mrs. Albert L. Bruley, 2233 Wantland, and from there called the Ambulance. When Mrs. Bruley and Mrs. Rogers returned to the corner, Mrs. Hatten had expired. Mrs. Hatten made her home with hor mother, Mrs. Belle Monroe. An obituary appears elsewhere in this issue. The remains are at Ward's. Nazis Offer No Opposition To Bombers Blasting Berlin By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN LONDON, Feb. 3 (fls) More than 1000 U. S. Flying Fortresses blasted and burned the heart of Berlin today in the greatest air blow over dealt tho German capital, and not a single nazi fighter opposed tho deadly bomb er runs. Nearly 3000 tons of bombs Military Occupation Idea Grows in American Circles By JOHN M, HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Feb, 3 Wi lli American government circles the idea of keeping at least small military occupation forces In Germany for many years Is gain ing Increasing support. Information reaching Wash ington about conditions hisldc Germany is generally interpret ed by officials as holding little hopo of a unified enemy surren del. Instead, tho belief Is that Ger man military forces will disin tegrate under pressure of Rus sian and Anglo-American armies, leaving tho country in a state of chaos, . Allied Rule Possible Since this prospect, If realized, likewise means tho complete dis integration of Germany political- . .4 1y, there is Increasing discussion here of the possibility that the defeated people may have to bo ruled by an allied commission for an Indefinitely prolonged pe riod. There Is some belief that dis cussion of n plan along this line mav bo taken ud bv Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin at tholr- meeting. Tho possibility Is not entirely discounted that Premier Stalin may suggest eventually building up tho free Germany committee of captured German fiencrals at Moscow as an admin strattVG group with which to work Inside Germany. . Split Virtually Impossible Persons fnmillur with German affairs Incline to the view that all effective power has passed (Continued on Page Two) were poured down In 45 minutes on the capital teeming with ref ugees and now almost in the frontline of land war. For tho first time in a major attack, no German planes fought in the air over Berlin Itself to disrupt the bombers' aim. But In dogfights near tho city, 20 nazl fighters were shot down and 13 more were wrecked aground. Targets Blasted The record attack was aimed directly at military and commun ications targets in the center of the city- menaced by soviet (Continued on Pago Two) Marines Damage 73 Jap Ships , U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Forward Area, Feb. 3 (iT) Low-flying marine Mitchells have damaged 13 Jap anese ships, probably sinking one of them, in nightly harass ing attacks since December 6 on the Bonln and Volcano is lands,. Adm, Chester W. Nlmitz reported today. His communique told also of fresh air strikes Wednesday and Thursday against Iwo Jima in the Volconos, protecting the ap proaches to the Japanese main land from the Tokyo-raiding Superfortress base at Salpan. Led Luzon Rescue 1 ' '-"rTlTaSf w Lt. Col. Henry S, Mucci, Bridgeport, Conn., commander of U. S. Rangers and Filipino guerrillas who rescued 510 al lied war prisoners, many or them men of Bataan and Cor regidor, in daring foray 25 miles inside Jap lines on Luzon. - ON WALLACE POST By JACK BELL . WASHINGTON, Feb; 3 UP) A republican move, -to freeze government agencies against a presidential transfer cast a new snaaow waay over'-nenry- Wal lace's nomination for secretary of commerce., "" --- " -Just. . whpn ; Wallace's .adher ents were settling back. to . await expected confirmation of the appointment after' March 1,- the h o u s e republican' leadership popped a' proposal to .alter the senate-approved George bill-f. Control Transferred This Wallace-saving measure would transfer the $45,000,000. 000 reconstruction finance cor poration and similar agencies from the commerce department to a separate federal loan admin istrator. President Roosevelt said he would approve legislation to af fect this change and on that note the senate put the cabinet nom ination on the shelf until March 1. Wallaces friends conceded he had no chance to win confir mation without divorcement of the lending powers. With it, they felt the nomination was safe. Clincher Message But Mr. Roosevelt's clincher message to Senate Majority Leader Berkley (Ky.) said only (Continued on f age Two) , Zombies Believed In Seattle SEATTLE,' Feb. S (IP) The Seattle Post Intelligencer said yesterday an "undetermined number of Canadian soldiers are believed absent without leave in ' Seattle - and neighboring American Pacific northwest cities and added the men "face court martial upon arrest." . The article said Maj. Gen. G. R. Perkes, general officer commanding-in-chief of the Pacific command at Vancouver, B. C, refused comment about tho sol diers, "known in Canada as 'zombies' ". ; v - "But it is known in Vancou ver that Canadian military au thorities have been apprised of tho presence at Seattle of Ca nadian soldiers suspected of 'zombie' status, and it is report ed that an Immediate effort will be made to return them to Can ada In custody," the article said. LAST PILLBOX BELT NEARED B 1ST m Doughboys Poke Way Into Town of Bronsfeld ; By JAMES M. LONG PARIS, Feb. 3 (P) U. S. first army doughboys, smashing into the final westwall defenses to day in the Monschau sector, reached points little more than a mile from the last concrete forti fications. They had burst com pletely through the first piiioox belt of the double Siegfried line. The Americans punched their way into Bronsfeld, slightly. more than a mile from bchlei den, which is on the eastern fringe of the Siegfried defenses. They occupied Bronsfeld, nine miles southeast of Monschau, Berescheid and Dreiborn, 7i miles east of Monschau, towns controlling the main highways to the communications center of Schleiden. , . , Gains Reported ''-'' ' Gains of three miles and more were registered ' as ; the second and , ninth divisions ,'p u s h e d through open country into the final Siegfried belt; ' '' ' The German High command reported lively air. activity and (Continued on -r age rww IADS SOLUTION Bv PAUL W. HARVEY, JR. SALEM, Feb. 3 (IP) Oregon's community property muddle was nearer solution today w n e n the senate passed unanimously and sent to the house two bills to repeal the 1943 community property law and to permit the 1251 couples who took advantage of the law to get out from un der it by paying a $15 filing fee. The 1943 community property law. cooied from an Oklahoma statute, was passed to let wealthy couoies soiit tneir incomes ana thus get . lower federal income tax rates, giving Oregon equal ity with her neighboring states which nave community property systems. There are eight com munity property states. The United States supreme court held the Oklahoma law (Continued on Page Two) Bob Roy Burgess Reported M issing ' Bob Roy ; Burgess, RM 3c, USN, has been reported missing in action in the Philippines, ac cording to word received from the war department by his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. William John Burgess, route 3 in Klamath Falls, . ' . ' w Young Burgess attended Peli can grade school and was grad uated from Klamath Union high school in 1943. Prior to enter ing the service in August of 1943, he was employed by the J. C. Penney company and West ern, Union Telegraph company. Burgess received his boot training at Farragut, Idaho, and was then sent overseas to the Central Pacific theater of war. Big Three Meeting Rumored Underway at Romanian Site TO ENTER GITY Little Jap Resistance Met by Advancing ; Americans LONDON, Feb. 3 The Brit ish Broadcasting Corporation ze ported tonight that American pa trols had pushed within two miles of Manila. It quoted an American radio correspondent on Luzon as broadcasting: "We got within a couple of miles of Manila and while we knew there were a certain num. ber of Japanese in the vicinity they did not challenge our pa trol. I don't think there is mucb. between us and Manila." GENERAL MACARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Luzon, Feb. 3 (IP) Two powerful American armored columns raced toward Manila from the north today in. dicating the Philippine capital would soon be liberated without a major fight. One U. S. forces was less than 18 air miles away. Battle-hardened first cavalry (dismounted) division troops drove a new arrow toward Man ila Thursday by sweeping 57 miles in 24 hours down the east flank of the central Luzon plain to Sabang, within 24 miles of Manila, and beyond. & Severs Forces ''': - Gen. Douglas MacArthur said today this sensational thrust completely severed Japanese forces in the north and south of Luzon. Even closer to MacArthur's prime objective were -elements (Continued on Page Two) - oseofIlseI ' i ' The Klamath heating. company will be forced to convert to oil for --one boiler in -order -to have a- margin of safety on fuel sup ply. This will necessitate a raise in rates to Klamath consumers. These facts were brought out at a. meeting of the housing .com mittee of the chamber of com merce,' of which L. L. Lombard is the chairman, OPA and ODT representatives, fuel dealers, rep sentatives of both military in stallations here,' railroads, and other interested parties at the chamber of commerce Friday af ternoon. i- - Ralph Westring, general pro ducts price- specialist for the OPA from Portland, said that (Continued on Page Two) British Drive Nearer M andalay SOUTHEAST ASIA COM. MAND HEADQUARTERS, KANDY, Ceylon, Feb. 3. (IP) ' British troops driving on Man dalay have completed occupa tion of Ywathitgyi, on the north bank of the Irrawaddy . river about 17 miles west of the city. The Southeast Asia command announced today that stubborn Japanese resistance was encoun tered after the village had been penetrated in strength yester day. . - i i ........ .. Meanwhile on Burma's west coast a furious fight Is still rag ing at Kangaw, 30 miles east ox Akyab, as the Japanese attempt to keep open their escape route southwards. ... .... By The Associated Press A security blackout veiled tho movements of President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Premier Stalin today as axis capitals speculated that the Big Three conference was underway in Romania. A dispatch from tho . Swiss border town of Chlasso to the Geneva newspaper La Suisse quoted fascist sources in Italy as saying that the conference had begun in the Romanian Black sea port of Constanta. One German broadcast had fixed the site as Bucharest, the Romanian capital, V while the German Transocean agency said the allied leaders were confer ring at a Romanian port on the Black sea. Recent dispatches from Lon don and Rome passed through censorship had speculated that the meeting would be held close to or within the border of the soviet union, since Stalin Is per sonally directing the Russian of fensive. A dispatch from London last night said there was every in dication that "the fate of Ger many was being decided by the Big Three somewhere east of London." - Workers returning to the Spanish town of La Llnea from Gibraltar brought rumors that Churchill arrived there by plane Wednesday night, a Madrid dis patch ald. . . ,.v taller Held In Shooting Case " John Hayter, 27, timber falter, was lodged In the Klamath coun ty jail at 10 o'clock . Friday night, held in connection with the shooting of nts . partner, Claude Powell, early Friday morning at the logging town of Shevlin, 55 miles south of Bend. No charge had been placed against Hayter, pending the out come of Powell s condition. No change had been reported from Lumbermen's hospital in Bend wnere Powell is being treated for gunshot wounds in the groin and arm. , , Sheriff Lloyd L. Low and Sgt. E. W. Tichenor of state po lice, returned Hayter to Klam ath Falls last night. Low said Hayter admitted shooting Pow ell as they stood In front of the latter's home. Hayter said he walked to the Shevlln store and called Deschutes county state police, advising them he had shot a man and to come and get him, He then said he asked tho store keeper to advise Powell's rela tives In Mitchell. Hayter then told officers he returned to his home and when the Shevlin company ambulance arrived, he assisted Powell on the stretcher and into the ''am bulance. The shooting wag the result of "differences" between the two families, officers were told. Both Powell and Hayter are 27, thelt wivos 23 years of age, and both have four young children. :: 11 Ml in-: