EpISl
By FRANK JENKINS
OUR old friend "Informed
Quarters" goes Into action In
Uosoow today.
Hi says the "exploratory con
versntlons of tho Big Three
foralim ministers uonaiir to hovi
brought 'the United Slates,
Britain ana huiui closer iu-
Cnther than tlioy wori btfon
till meeting."
Ha add: . -
"Cortnln SUSPICIONS an be
lieved to have a good chance of
BEING DISPELLED."
r wo can Just dipel ENOUGH
usulclon. then la practically
. (i limit to what we cun accom
iiIIkIi In the way of International
co-operation. 1
Simplclon la the great enemy
world peace.
J
USPICION la also the great
cnomy of domoallc peace.
If wo could get rid of enough
suspicion, wo could aoivo prac
tically ALL our nroblums of DfO'
duction and diafrlbution and 10
beuln to move out of our present
atnlo of confusion Into something
bettor and finer than we have
known.)
A
A FINAL word of preaching:
" Honeaty, sincerity and fair
dealing are ANTIDOTES for the
acadly poison ai suspicion.
TNFORMED quarters" news.
of honestly and intelligently
employed, la one of our moat use
ful devices, making It posslblo
to Inform the peoplo without put-
unir nnviiociv on mo siioi.
What huppens when people an
put on tuo spot is wen illustrat
ed by American Broadcasting
company Larry Tyghe's direct
Suotutlon of MacArhtur yester
ny. MucArthur, caught In the
bight of tin line, dunlcs the
whole thlnil. adding: tliut he U in
Tokyo to "serve and not to
hinder or obstruct" American
government, that it Is his full
purpose to see the thing through
and that the question of Rus
sian DnrticlDntlon In the oc-
cupatlon of Japan Is a matter for
-oiner decision man my own
IF Tyisho's story Is accurate
(as it COULD be), he would have
done hotter to toll It on his
OWN rcsoonslblllty. as coming
from "informed" sources, instead
of putting. MacArthur behind the
eight ban.
Aa It Is, the public Is confused
rather man iniormea.
THE Chinese factions an still
sparring back and forth about
peace.
Chungking waved asidi the
Chinese communist proposal to
end the civil war IMMEDIATE-
Li as Just more "propaganda,"
whenunon a red aookosman re-
iorta Hint the communists will
OFFICIALLY PUT XT INTO
WRITING.
He adds!
- "Wo won an armlsllc. Wi
consider our proposal (to end the
fighting) aa official and formal,
but as tin (Chungking) govern.
ment wants it In writing we an
going to oblige'
THE way to Improve conditions
In China is to quit fighting
ana gel to worn, xne commun
lat proposal to end hostilities Inv
mediately Is the necessary first
step in that direction.
We shouldn't be so naive as to
think these Chinese comtnun
lata an Interested In NOTHING
but the well-being of China, with
NO selfish motives, but they
certainly do seem to havi the
best of the armistice argument.
'A BATAVIA (Java) dispatch
today says:
' " "High sources (first cousin
of ' informed sources) In Ba
la via say the British have de
cided to move in whatever re
inforcements are necessary to
restore order and GUARANTEE
DUTCH SOVEREIGNTY In the
East Indies."
A London dispatch adds that
tins decision (by British military
authorities at Singapore) Is being
reviewed by Premier Attlee and
Jils cabinet, and final decision Is
likely to be deferred pending
lurtner negotiations.
,
TT looks like a cose of EMPIRES
STANDING TOGETHER. We
.certainly shouldn't approve any
such arrangement. Neither
i should we GO TO WAR over it,
- mi Al.l . . . . I . .
J, HIT llllllg 1UI U9 IU UU JS IU
register our disapproval and let
it go at that, leaving no doubt
that such deals are not OUR idea
of the way to run tho world.
TNCIDENTAL Information:
The conmis department an
nounccs today that nearly
TWICE as many Americans died
of cancer In 1942-43-44 as our
armed forces lost by enemy
action.
- , .
A HIGH-UP rubber man In
Akron says that lifting tire
rationing will "produce more
contusion out not more tires."
He adds: "It will be late next
year before you can get the kind
of tire you want when you want
That Is true enough, prob
ablv. but this writer has an Idea
the American people will like it
ociter man rationing,
t -
Santa Changes
Phone Number
: Santa Claus' telephone . num
ber nas been cnanged irom aiaa
to 8183, and starting at' 4 p. m.
Friday, children can call the old
gentleman and toll him what
,they would like to find in their
Christmas stockings, the Junior
chamber of commerce sold to
day. "
"f Caroling under the Christmas
tree on the courthouse lawn will
also be held this evening, start
ing at 7 p. m. Fourteen young
girls will sing traditional Christ
mas hymns, and their voices will
be amplified by a public address
system so that passers-by mayj
listen from their automobiles.
fo)fn!M
mm
mm
fo)
Lrou
4 !..
VAAh Anrl Tn
See Huge
Business
Merchandise Supplies
Dwindle Under
Onslaught
The Klamath business district
today braced Itself for a flood
of weekend shoppors that may
make Saturday and Mondoy
last business days before 1045
Christmas two of the record
breaking retail days hen.
Although supplies of merchan
dise wcro dwindling under ter
rific buying pressure, exper
ienced merchants recalled that
the last weekend before Christ
mas Is alwaya a peak shopping
period hero and said Saturday
and Monday will probably main
tain that tradition.
There was still a lot of
merchandise left In local stores;
but the selection situation was
gottlng rapidly narrower. Ono
shopper remarked In a local
store that ho was glad he was
late his problem wus simplified
because he didn't have much
choice left,
Big Saturday
The shopping flow from near
by communities and the rural
districts Is expected to be
especially heavy Saturday.
Food stores anticipate huge
buainos days as housewives
stock up for Sunday, followed
by the feasting on the holiday.
School children went to their
last classes beforo the holidays
today, and the final Christmas
programs In the schools were
held.
Churches prepared for the
outstanding event of the year,
with the story of Christ's birth to
be told in song, story and
pageant. (See full page of
church news on Page 7.)
One of the hardest-worked
crews In the Klamath county was
still at it today at the Klamath
Falls post office. The peak had
been passed for outgoing mail,
but Incoming packages flooded
the office. Post office officials
oxpected a heavy influx of
Christmas parcels Saturday
night If It appears they can't
handle them on Monday, there
will be deliveries Sunday.
Chiang Greets
Gen. Marshall
NANKING, Dec. 21 (P)
Gen. George c. Marshall, Presi
dent Truman's special envoy to
China, arrived here by plane to
day and was met at the airfield
by Generalissimo Chiang Kai
shek and Madame Chiang.
. ' The two men saluted and
clasped hands on the dusty,
windswept Nanking airfield.
Then with Madame' Chiang
they drove off for tea and their
Initial history making talks
looking toward unity and peace
for China.
General Marshall, with the
rank of ambassador, was pre
pared to implement the newly
broadened American policy to
ward Chiang's government. The
Cersonal welcome at the airport
y Chiang was interpreted as a
fulsome gesture of friendship
by China's ruler.
Many thought that the gen
eralissimo, following protocol in
such matters, would await the
American gcnoral at his offi
cial residence Inside the walled
city, soon to resume its status
of the peacetime capital of
China.
Instead, two minutes after
General Marshall stopped from
his glistening C-54 slano. after
a half hour flight from Shang
hai, a large black sedan pulled
onto the field and Chiang, im-
firesslve in his undecorated,
ong olive green cape, emerged
from the car.
Marshall, In uniform and
wearing the five stars of his
rank, saw the Chinese leader at
once and they strode toward
each other, smiling. They ' sa
luted, then clasped hands warmly.
Telephone Mill
PRICE FIVE CENTS
KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 21, II4S
Number 10700
Mac Spikes Report
He Will Quit Post
; ; . .
Fact Boards
May Suggest
Vage Boosts
Each Group Must Find
If Employer Can
Absorb Cost
By The Auoclated Press
The administration today
gave fact-finding boards broad
authority to recommend wage
Increases which may or may
not result in price Increases.
The specific rules and poli
cies laid down for the boards,
however, cautioned them that
in proposing any wage in
creases, the individual board
must "satisfy itself" that the
employer could or could not
absorb the additional cost at
prevailing prices.
The statement on rules and
policies, issued by Secretary of
Labor Schwcllcnbach, said the
panel "must necessarily inquire
into the issue of the employer's
ability to pay" In reaching its
decision. It added, however,
such ability was "a limitation
6n afid . doc's not ' necessarily
constitute a measure of the
amount of fair increase."
Adjourns
Following the statement, the
oil wage fact-finding board, at
the request of several of the oil
companies involved, adjourned
until January 7. During the re
cess, the companies and CIO
oil workers union, which is de
manding a 30 per cent wage in
crease, will resume collective
bargaining on a plant-by-plant
basis.
The new. blue-print of fact
finding procedure was expected
to apply to all labor disputes,
although It was given directly
to the oil panel.
Top ranking officials of the
corporation and the union, in
Washington for hearings by the
government fact-finding board
studying the nation's major la
bor problem, prepared to con
fer in an attempt to agree on a
basis for resumption of collec
tive bargaining on strike issues,
Some 200,000 GM employes
have been idle for one month
following a strike in support of
the union's demands for a 30
per cent wage rate increase.
British Review
Policy In Java
LONDON, Dec. 21 (P) The
British military decisions at
Singapore to use additional arm
ed forces in Java are being re
viewed by Prime Minister. Att
lee and his cabinet, an unoift
clal source said today.
The final decision, according
to available information, prob
ably will be deferred until after
conferences of British leaders in
London with H. J. Van Mook,
acting governor general of the
Netherlands indies.
Pre-Wedding Celebration
W Ml 1
W1 ''-'-" v?'"X m
Confusion Seen As Result
Of Lifting Of Tire Ration
AKRON. O.. Dec. 21 M)
Lifting of tiro rationing by the
office of price administration at
12:01 a. m., Jan. 1 will result in
"more confusion" but not more
tins, predicts a spokesman for
one of Akron's huge rubber
companies. -
The spokesman, who declined
to be quoted by name, declared
last night the rubber industry
would produce a total of U,ooo,
000 passenger car tires during
the fourth quarter compared to
the OPA's estimated 12,800,000
units lor the final period of the
year.
(In announcing yesterday that
tire output now warrants an end
of the rationing program, OPA
Chief Chester Bowles said pro
duction currently is at the rate
of about ' 4,000,000 casings a
month and that approximately
11,000,000 would-be mode this
quarter). . -
Concerning the lifting of ra
tioning regulations, he asserted:
"This means more confusion,
lifting of rationing didn't make
any more butter. Freeing the
tire market la not going to make
any more tires."
"It will be late next year be
fore you get the kind of tire you
want when you want it," he pre
dicted. . ;
Tire warehousemen and deal
ers reported that their supplies
were nearly depleted here and
said it had been virtually impos
sible to obtain adequate stocks
of tires under existing shortages,
The rubber companies spokes
man said output of truck tires
would reach 3,000,000 this quar
ter, somewhat less than govern
ment estimates, but predicted
tho truck tire shortage would
be resolved before supplies of
passenger car units could satisfy
civilian demands.
Miss. Noel Toy, Chlnesi dancer, and Capt. Carleton Young,
of Hollywood. Canf., wno announced way would b married in
New York City, indulgi In m pn-widdlng calibration at Latin
ChWtir-ntght club in Now -Youc "fel( Wii Ty performs. (AP
winphoto). . -.:- i' f-'?. .'''''-, iv :
7t's Hurry Up And Waif
Lament 100.000 War Vets
Stranded At Coast Ports
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 21
W) "It's the same old army."
said Corporal A. L. Holzman, of
Long Island, N. Y, "Hurry up
and wait. '. . i
Holzman was one of nearly
100,000 veterans , from the Pa
cific who today appeared likely
to be : stranded at west coast
ports on Christmas day because
ol lack of transportation; '
' Nearly 120,000 veterans were
stymied at the ports today, and
ships were scheduled to dump
an additional 13,000 more daily
on harrasscd army and navy
2 Die, 4 Hurt
In Bus Wreck
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec' 21
(JP) Two persons were killed
and at least four were Injured
when a northbound Santa Fe
Trallways bus carrying 17 pas
sengers overturned on the Coast
highway three miles . south . of
San Clemcnte near the San
Diego-Orange county line, the
state highway patrol reported
today,
. The dead were listed as:
Vincent B. Cantermessncr,
coast guard boatswain's mate
2c, 25, of Elmhurst, L. I at
tached to the transport Samuel
Chase now in San Diego har
bor. Harry D. Patterson, 80, re
tired Northern Pacific railroad
telegraph operator, of Hoquiam,
Wash.
. The inlurcd. taken to Ocean-
side hospital, were Hazel Tal
bot, 55. of San Diego: Mrs. C.
D. Wray, 25, of San Diego, and
her two children, Jeanette Ann,
2H, and George David, S.
No other vehicle was in
volved in the accident. ,
House Adjourns
For Holidays
WASHINGTON. Dec. 21 P)
The house of representatives ad
journed at 2:11 p. m. (EST) to
day for a Christmas recess.
The senate still had to act on
adjournment.
The house will reconvene
with the senate on January 14
for the second session of the 79th
congress.
In a brief speech to the house
members who "remained until
the end, Speaker Sam Rayburn
reviewed accomplishments of the
year and said: ,.
"We have a right to be proud
of ourselves,- , .
transportation officials, a far
larger ' number than they ex
pected ' to have ' transportation
for.- '. ,
"We ' had hopes of ' getting
home by Christmas," said Pfc.
Julius P. Brenner, of Hudson,
N.-Y. "Nobody promised us we
would. We just hoped we would.
I've been overseas only 25
months. - Lots of these fellows
have been over a lot longer.
' Brenner , sent a telegram to
his Barents:
"Living aboard ship because
of transportation tie-up. Have no
idea when will get home."
' Reason Explained
Men required to stay aboard
ship then were four "floating
barracks" here today were giv
en an information sheet ex
plaining, the reason for the de
lay. The paper also listed enter
tainment and - sightseeing possi
bilities in San Francisco.
"Sure, this is good," said Ser
geant l,ouis Jane of New xorx
City, a ship-bound veteran of 20
months in the western Pacific,
"no mud, no filth, no duties
but it isn't home."
A spokesman from the office
of Major General Homer Uron
inger, commander of the port
of embarkation here, said:
"Our 'operation Santa Claus'
(the name the army gave its
plan for handling returning vet
erans)' has been too successful.
We've brought back more men
than the railroads can handle."
Liavi Passes
With more than 51,000 un
happy servicemen - on their
hands, army and navy authori
ties at San Francisco were lib
eral ' with leave passes. Sight
seeing tours were organized and
port officers planned Christmas
parties with Red Cross bags of
gifts.
At Los Angeles, a huge thea
tre on the dock was being read
ied for a Christmas day show
for harbor-bound men. An esti
mated 15,000 men were still
aboard ships last night. At San
ta Ana staging area mess ser
geants were flown in from other
bases to help feed the troops,'
and German prisoners of war
used as kitchen police.
Portland, Tacoma and Seattle
also had huge backlogs of serv
icemen. ..
WEATHER
' ' (Dacimbir 21)
Max. (Dm. 20) ... 37 Mln. ... 27.
Precipitation last 24 hours 04.
Stream yiar to data 4.77
Normal ..3.91 Last year ..3.90.
Foricast! Rain tonight and
Saturday.
Saturday Shooting Hours
Klamath-Tulilaki
Open 7:21 a. m. Clou 4:29 a. m.
Commander
Denies Rift
With Russia
Tig he Report Said To
Hare Absolutely.
No Basis
TOKYO, Dec. 21 IP) General
MacArthur today denied a
broadcast report that his head
quarters had become embroiled
in arguments with the Russians
over assignment of Soviet oc
cupation troops to Japan and
that MacArthur had threatened
to resign.
"I am here to serve and not
to hinder or obstruct American
government," the supreme com
mander of the allied powers said
in a statement issued by his press
relations office.
"It is my full purpose to ee
the thing through. The ques
tion of Russian participation in
the occupation is a matter for
other decision than my own."
The statement said the broad
cast report, "purported to have
been made by Larry Tighe of the
American Broadcasting corpora
tion, has absolutely no basis in
fact" - - ' . ;
. It concluded:
GEN. GEORGE 8. PATTON JR.
"Hooch'i:
J. ". -J
"if Tighe made the statement
he is alleged to have broadcast
from Tokyo, someone must have
been feeding him a funny type
of 'hooch' being peddled around
Tokyo on the black market."
(Taking to the air after ' is
suance of the statement, Tighe
said "I reaffirm the story which
(Centime n Pan t, Calama 1)
Yuletide Spirit
Still Prevails
The ' meanest man in the ,
world may still be at large
in Klamath Falls today, but
a lot of people sought to make
up for his meanness after The
Herald and News ran a story
. last night telling of a crippled
Western Union boy's bicycle
being stolen, and the boy at
tempting to deliver his mes
sages on foot.
Today he has a new bi
cycle, given to him by the
owners and employes of Ed's
Shoe Repair shop at 1022
Main. While the boy was ac
cepting this generous offer,
the employes of a large de
partment store were taking
up a collection to buy him a
brand-new bike as a Christ
mas gift, and workers at a
men's clothing store were do
ing the same
So one boy in town will
realize this holiday season
that kindness comes in equal
measure with hard-hearted-ness
in this world.
Who said the Christmas
spirit was dead?
Car Wreck
Unds tiff.e
By RICHARD A. O'REAGAN
HEIDELBERG, Germany, Dec. 21 (AP) Gen. Georae S.i
Dt I. ...u- A u. ll c .L.1.J i lL . i
r uiiuii , ttiiu isu nig vibiuiiuua w. iimu urmy Trom inn
Deacnes or iNormanay into v-zecnosiovaKia, died at 5:50 p.
m. (8:50 a. m. PST) today, a dozen days after his neck was
broken in a traffic accident. --
The general's stout fighting heart weakened durina th
oay irom euects or pulmonary
complications which had beset
his apparent recovery from thi
broken neck and partial pa
ralysis. ' . .
Mrs. Patton was with him. :
The announcement of the gen
eral's death was made by Brig.
Gen. John M. Willen of the U.
S. seventh army.
The general was 60 last No
vember 11.
He was commander of the U.
S. 15th army at the time of his
death. He had served briefly as
acting commander of all Ameri
can forces in the European the
ater a few days before his auto
mobile and an army truck col
lided near Mannheim on Sun
day, December 9.
"Hell Of A Way"
Patton himself, when his con
dition was critical after the mo
tor car accident, described it as
"a hell of a way to die."
Heidelberg, an old university
town, was one of the thousands
of places which the third army
captured in its rough ride over
Germany.- . ,
By an Ironic twist, Patton
had gone unscathed through all
his campaigns of war. Thi
peacetime accident left him pa
ralyzed . from the shoulder
down..
Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, U.
S., European theater, comment
ed that it was his "painful duty
to announce the death of a
great fighter and a great man."
The official- announcement
said:
"Gen. Patton died at 5:50 to
night, it ' was .announced by
Brig. Gen.- John M; Willen,
chief of staff of the seventh
army. The general died peace
fully." - -...':-.,-:;.
,1. - .. j Expert. ,; ,
The-expert at- armored war-
Then he leaned against the re who campaigned brilliant-
Body Found At
Modoc Field
' A 65-year-old Japanese alien,
Sosuke Ioka, was found dead,
apparently a suicide, underneath
the student section bleachers at
Modoc field early this morning.
Tommy Sandoe, KUHS fresh
man, discovered the body.
Sosuke's death was caused by
strangulation, investigating po
lite reported. He had tied One
end of a short section of, half-
inch sash rope to a girder under
the . bleachers,- looped it once
'hi - Wrte- and -tied the
other end-taut tg a. stacK of track
nuraies nearoy,
rope and his weight pulled the
loop: tight . around his neck.
When found he was dead in that
nnsition and the roDe had cut
through his scalp behind his left
ear.
The body was removed to
Ward's funeral home by the cor
onor and his assistant.
Papers on the body of the el
derly Japanese indicated that he
was an alien and had been re
leased from the Tulelake WRA
center December 14. His birth
place was given as Yamaguchi,
Japan, and his home address as
Lodi, Calif.
Ioka apparently' committed
suicide several days ago, before
or during the last snowstorm,
authorities said. His body was
snow-covered and stiff.
Young Sandoe, who resides at
1937 Painter, spotted the body
as he was walking by the bleach
ers on. his way to school this
morning, and told school author
ities of the discovery. The body
was so well concealed officials
had a hard time locating it after
the schoolboy had told where it
was.-
The body was lying behind
the concession booth under the
student stands. - -
WRA officials said Ioka had
been released to take , a train
from here the night of Dec. 14,
but apparently did not purchase
the ticket. He may have taken
his life that night. He was .a
farm laborer with a brother,
Isake Ioka, in Japan. " He had
lined up a job with S. Namba at
Lodi. . '
Columbia Gorge Covered
With Solid Sheet Of Ice
A solid sheet of ice, increas
ing with more freezing rain, cov
ered the Columbia river gorge
today, but the Klamath Falls
area, as well as western Oregon
valleys, gained a respite from
the cold spell. King Winter also
had relaxed his grip on Florida
and Texas, a nationwide round
up of weather news showed.
Chilly weather and below
freezing temperatures still pre
vailed over the east, midwest
and most of the southern states.
Only an occasional chain
equipped truck was able to move
along the glassy Columbia River
highway. The Washington side
of the highway was closed be
yond Washougal, delaying stages
for hours. A bus due here at
11:25 last night finally rolled in
at 8 this morning.
Stages were arriving on time
through the Willamette valley,
however, where rising tempera
tures melted ice. Some trains
were coming . in far - behind
schedule.
The low here last night, as re
corded at the air station, was 27
and the maximum 37. Shortly
before noon today the official
CAA thermometer read 42 and
still going up, but meters scat
tered over town read as high as
50.
Hopes for a snowy Christmas
here faded with the shadows
when the sun came out and the
snow and ice on the streets melt
ed into messy slush. By noon
today most of the overcoats worn
downtown had been hung in the
closet.
But the rest of Oregon Is still
having weather troubles. Four
teen inches of new snow fell on
Sun mountain during the past 24
hours the snow at Odell lake is
73 inches deep and chains are
needed on that highway, Willa
mette valley roads are ice-covered,
travel Is impossible with
out chains on the Columbia
River highway, Medford is hav
ing rain, Pendleton sleet and
Burns snow.
Minnesota and North Dakota
are having temperatures ranging
from 2 to 12 below, the rest of
the midwest from five below to
15 above and the eastern sea
board mercury is hovering
around the zero mark.
The official reading in Miami
this morning was 50 and about
the same in parts of Texas. Fore
casters predict that temperatures
in the south will, "moderate
quite rapidly" now.
The forecast for Klamath Falls
and vicinity is "rain tonight and
tomorrow."
ly in Africa, Sicily, France, Bel
gium, uermany, Austria ana
Czechoslovakia in allied ' drives
that staggered Germany to her
knees last spring had been mak
ing an amazing recovery until
yesterday. , '
It was then that tha resplra.
tory condition . developed. By
morning today,' doctors w e r a
gravely worried' about the de
terioration in his condition. 'As
Patton's life ebbed away, Jut
heart became affected. .
Shortly before his death, Ma.
Gen. A. W. Kenner, chief of
army surgeons in Europe, left
European headquarters ' in
Frankfurt for Patton's bedside.
Kimmel Failed
To Obey Order
WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 ()
Adm. R. K. Turner asserted to
day that Adm. Husband E. Kim
mel did not comply with "en
tirely clear" orders and ex
pressed the opinion that if Kim
mel had done so losses at Pearl
Harbor would have been cut
"materially." ,
Turner also told a senate
house committee investigating
the December 7, 1941, disaster
that the Pacific fleet under
Kimmel had been prepared for
"just such an attack" and was
"ready for war." '
The navy department, Turner
said, had given-Kimmel "per
fectly specific and entirely
clear" orders to take the neces
sary measures against a Japa
nese attack.
"Did Kimmel comply, In your
opinion?" asked Vice Chairman
CoopeV (D-Tenn.)
Did Not Comply
"He did not, in my opinion,"
said Turner.
. Turner, as chief of the navy,
war plans division had prepared
a November 27, 1941, "war
warning" message for Pacific
commanders.
If Kimmel had complied, pur
sued Cooper, "would the disas
trous effects not have occurred
or have been materially re
duced?" "I think they would havi
been materially reduced," Tur
ner replied, "and there was a
good chance we could have in
flicted considerable damage on
the Japanese fleet." y .
Arriving In
United States
By. Auoclated Prisi
Gerald Motschmbachir,
Sgt Klamath ' Falls, arrived
on John Sargeant due in Bos
ton December 20.
BiUy A. Goldm. T4, Rt. 2,
Klamath Falls, arriving on
George Washington due In
New York December 22.