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The Columbus Telegram from Columbus, Nebraska • 1

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Columbus, Nebraska
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1
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Holing Up on the Belgian Front mil" f'zjumm, EDaely Telegiram The Weather Light to heavy snow today. Colder Sunday. F0C OF A FRIENDLY CITY" EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1945 SIXTY-FOURTH YEAR NUMBER 17 Canada-Russia Air Highway Hums With U. S. Planes Red Forces Smash Ahe Folks from Manchester.

N. can be depended upon to know how to cope with winter weather, and SgV Albert Luiz is no exception. He's pictured here emerging from the snug, straw-roofed, blanket-doored foxhole he built himself. With him is Pvt. Manuel Garcia, of North Hollywood.

Calif. Both are members cf a 155-tam. field artillery battalion in a forest on the Belgian front. Arctic Ocean 1 1 4500 ml SJr CANADA -j, TC" Fort Edmonton ixirv' I IS -ASr. John T- Sea of Bering Sea svv''X' Okhotsk XZT Guitot yy SAKHALIN ALEUTIAN IS.

HARS0R Alaska I I- i 4. 1 in i nrrrr-i LONDON Jan. 20 IP Russian forces drove the German border area about 200 miles from Berlin today, c' a crushing ninrpn on East Prussia and swept westward in the athians through th- hi t.nsTort centers of Nowy Sacz. Kassa, sov. and Bardeva.

Fourth Nazi Forces Drive Deeper At Strasbourg Snowstorm Hampers Air Operations Against Enemy PARIS. Jan. 20 German armored forces today deepened their wedge eight miles north of Strasbourg in a thrust toward one of the two highways which link the Alsation capital with its Saverne gap lifeline through the Vosges. The Germans were only four ai.d a half miles from the northernmost of the two main highways which run from Strasbourg to the Vosges gap and there were indications the nazis were strengthening their forces or an all-out -prestige battle" designed to recapture the Alsace citadel. Strong Force A strong German armored force was thrusting out of the Hegenau forest, striving to sever Hagenau 7,000 Witness Inauguration Of President Cannot Gain Lasting.

Peace With Mistrust, Fear, Warns FDR Bill Forcing War Work to Face Battle No Longer 'Work or Fight' But Will Provide Penalties By DEAN W. DITTMER WASHINGTON. Jan. 20 T-T House military affairs committee Americans In Big Gains On Way to Manila Now Only 25 Miles From Clark Field's Big Airdromes fell -r A Ukranian army, bringing up ine south wing of the record soviet offensive, overran the Polish rail junction of Nowy Sacz, 47 miles southeast of Krakow, and the Czecho-Slovak cities of Kassa in the Hungarian border area, Presov, 20 miles north of Kassa, and Bardeva, 22 miles north of Presov. Orders Salute Marshal Stalin issued a special order of the day announcing the conquests in lower Poland and Czechoslovakia, and ordered a salute of 20 salvos by 224 guns.

Other soviet forces gathered along a 60-mile stretch of the Silesian border and drove into East Prussia from the south in a bid to trap the defenders of the German province. The German high command reported that Marshal Konstantin K. army had invaded southwestern East Prussia on a 37-mile front between Chorzele and Gilgenburg, the latter only 71 milea from the Baltic. May Have Begun Other Russian forces reached the area of Kepno. seven miles from the Silesian frontier.

43 miles east GEN. M' ARTHUR'S LUZON. Jan. 20 I1E American members predicted today they ruDture the communication iii iTOi would finish writing a war-work- Unes on which the seventh army's or-e'e bQl Monday despite the fact; Strasbourg garrison depends, they still face "bloc" fights over I it was believed that Field Mar-questions of farm deferments Karl von Rundstedt had shift-union membership. ed some of the armored A lively floor fight over the bill which he emploved in the Ardennes, is predicted, with at least one southward for the Strasbourg American fighter planes pack the strip at Ladd Field, Fairbanks, Alaska, waiting to be ferried to Siberia, thence to the Pussian fighting front by Red Army pilots.

Inset map shows the Northwest Staging Route, a chain of airports from Eilmonton, Alberta, to Fairbanks. Over this vital aerial highway more than 5000 IT. plat.s have been ferried to Russia. The first ones passed through in September, 1942, immediately r-aw action against the Germans at Stalingrad. Canada pioneered and built the route and the U.

S. provided installations and extensions for which the Dominion will pay this coun.ry more than $39,000,000. WASHINGTON. Jan. 20 Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

inaugurated today as president of the United States for the fourth time, warned that we shall have no lasting peace if we approach ita commitments with saspicion. mistrust, and fear. He took the oath of his office on the south portico of the White House instead of the east capitol steps where inaugurations traditionally are held. Some 7.000 spe-cially invited guests stood on the snow-sodden lawn below him. Chief Justice Harlan F.

Stone administered the oath a few minutes after noon. Just before Mr. Roosevelt was sworn, his 1944 running mate. Harry S. Truman of armored columns have driven 50 miles inland along the road to Manila and are only 25 miles from the great Clark field constellation of airdromes, front reports said today.

Construction of a heavy duty bridge across the Agno river some 22 miea inland eased the transport problem and enabled the Americans to resume their southward march after halting several days to bring up supplies and reinforce committee member promising to thrust. oppose the measure when it comes The Germans were hammeung at Weyersheim. four and a half miles northwest of Gambshein and before the house. Drops Tag The bill dropped its "work-or- eieht miles north of Strasbourg. fight" tag late yesterday when the The Americans knocked out 11 committee voted 15 to to accept finks and probablv two more in ments.

of Breslau. and 60 milea northwest of Czestochowa. the opposite end of a border sector into which the an amendment by Rep. Paul Kil- On the western flank, Ameri day. substituting civilian British Subb Sink 84 Ships During Recent Patrols In Far Eastern Waters Missouri took the oath of office as i penalties for the army work-bat- can patrols reached the crest flS0Vict3 were flooding for an in the mountains and re-vasion drive which may have be-connoitered Dasol bay on the west'.

Jap Offices Underground $460,000,000 Allocated For Setup By FRED SCHERFF holding off three German attacks. Air Aperations Air force operations against the nazi armor were hampered bv snowstorms and generally poor weather. Front dispatches reported the weight of the German assault which is designed to retake Stras- v. a orl i rri V1 A Moscow dispatches said five so vice president. It was admmis- talion draft proposed in the orlg-teied by Henry A.

Wallace, who i inal measure. was chosen by Mr. Roosevelt as TTe "drift dodger" penalties in his campaign partner in 1940 but i the Kilday amendment would was discarded last year in favor of make violators refusing to wo'k the Mifsounan. I at essential jobs liable to fines up resistance. These forces were ex viet armies, striking progressively stronger blows, had set their sights pected to strike down the coast to- War In Brief By UNITED PRESS Easr.i front: fced army invades East Frussia from south as man retreat turns into rout.

Western front? Seventh army repulses Germa, attack on Maginot I'ne pot tions in Alsace but field patoes report Germans pou. reserves across Rhine for major offensive. Pacific: American forces drive SO miles inland road to Manila and are within 25 m.lti of Clark field. A i American heavy bombers resume attacks on Germany- ward Bataan, where Americans on Danzig. Poznan and Breslau as In Shelter to $10,000 and imprisonment for the next major objectives in their "winter victory" offensive, now in Lt.

uen. v.n. DOUre IS ETOWiiiK ana ruipinue: uiaue a uiuuuj iaak stand in early 1942. 50 Miles Thouerh the forces advancing its eighth day. air.

Koosevelt. Truman, their families, and their closest political associates and friends were in the Defer Farmer, Alexander Paichs Seventh armv Meanwhile Rep. William Lemke. I was fighting stubborruv to hold WASHINGTON. Jan.

20 (IP Japan today announced the allocating of $460,000,000 to move government offices underground "on Ernst von Hammer, military across the central Luzon plains rmm.t,inp for the official Ger- shelter of the south portico. N. claiming the support ol V. rer iln ted i Clinton D. Conger, United onnnwimntplv ffl milQ in- mtt, AAl.nn,i.UilfrAA tress z-z nouse memoers.

said ne would war correspondent, on the Strasbourg front reported the nazis have been heavily reinforced on their bridgehead south of the Hagenau introduce a resolution Monday to compel local d-aft boards to de-fet irreplaceable farm workers. Lemke said Hershey's latest di LONDON. Jan. 20 (IP The admiralty announced today that British submarines operating with Jie East Indies fleet sank 84 Japanese and Japanese-controlled supply ships during recent patrols in far eastern waters. Five, more Japanese ships were damaged by tcpeo.

or gunfire, an admiralty communique said, adding: "Many of these small supply vessels were carrying pertol, ammunition, foo-. and other valuable war material to Japanese forces in Burma, and to garrisons staitoned on enemy-held islands." The submarines also shelled shore installations, thi admiralty expand air raid defenses. distance from the Lmgayen gulf East Prussia from the south as far The announcement, broadcast by beachhead area was close to 40 as Gilgenburg. just inside the bor-the official Domei news agency miles. jder at a point 90 miles south of underlined the gravity with which The Americans were striking! Konigsberg and 85 miles southeast Japan views the expanding Ameri- I down two highways, route 3 and Qf Danzig forest and that the main weigm ot rective had been taken by local draft boards to mean all deferred erman ssauit He also conceded that soviet what formerly was a mere nuis farm workers aged IS to 25 must Half 6f Canadians Ordered Overseas Go AWOL Instead can air oriensive against ner nome 13, where merge at Tariac, ap-islands.

proximately halfway from the Lin- Domei said the move was part of gayen gulf beachhead to Manila forces pushing eastward along the Konigsberg-Kaunas railway had battled into the eastern outskirts of Gumbinnen. 20 miles inside the eastern borders of East Prussia and the lve-pomt program drawn up bay ance foothold. Depends On Weather The fate of Strasbourg, it was reported, may hinge on whether a break in the weather enabled Amer The column on route 13 overran last week by Premier Gen. Kuniaki be drafted into the armed forces regardless of essentiality, thus abrogating the Tydings amendment which defers them. The house agriculture committee invited Her-shey.

Byrnes and Marvin Jones, war food administrator, to a closed meeting Monday to discuss the Santa Ignacia, 13 miles northwest! Koiso's government to "augment Japan's total war efforts" in the of Tariac, in the eastern foothills 74 miles east of Koniesberg. capi- ican trcticfl air forces to strike reported. face of increasing air raids and the of the Zambalea mountains yester-4tal of Germany's -easternmost pro- The other card-holding, carefully-sifted guests stood down below, churning a two-inch snow into the White House turf. This was not the worst inauguration weather on record the Taft affair in 1909 and Mr. Roosevelt's 1937 ceremony were in a class by themselves.

But this was no day for an outdoor party unless the date was fixed by the constitution. For the president this day was one of prayer. For him it began with family prayers at 10 a. m. in the East room of the White House.

On each of his successive inaugurations he has thus sought divine guidance. Need Prayer To the inaugural guests after the oath-taking he said: "We pray now to Him for the vision to seek our way clearly to see the way that leads to a better life for ourselves and for all our fellow men to the achievement of will to peace on earth." The cost of the war is a fearful cost, he told them, and from it at the bridges which the nazis have vince. OTTAWA, Cc Jan. 20 IP Half of the Canadian home defense who. were ordered overseas under, the government's new compulse oversear service act, went aWOL from ports of embarkation fi'j 6.300 them pines.

Ten miles to the east "One of the sipnificant featuros other units were well eouth of Fa- of the appropriation is the fund still are mis Defense Minister Two-thirds of Poland already has been liberated. Moscow dispatches jubilantly reported. Death Chamber The entire 600-mile front winding up from the Carpathians was fast becoming a great death chamber for the pick of Germany's eas luque, 10 miles norm vu route 3. reeling Way Though both columns were in "sizable" strength and on the Inch of Snow Reported Here 39 high yesterday 30 low today 32 at 1 p. m.

today One inch of snow yesterday. Year ago: high 60, low 21. thrown across the Rhine. Driving snowstorms blanketed the entire western front this morning, shackling the allied air forces and slowing down the Anglo-American counterdrives against the enemy's Ardennes and Roer river salients. Under cover of the miserable weather, the nazis were reported massing strong armored forces in earmarked for the construction of tunnel air raid shelters," FCC monitors quoted Domei as saying.

"These shelters will be used not A. G. L. Mcf nughion announced today. farm labor problem.

Farm Bloc If Lemke fails to get house action on his resolution by the time the work-or-else bill gets to the floor, he may attempt a farm bloc fight against the measure although Jones testified it would not affect the Tydings amendment. Reps. Paul Stewart, and Arthur Winstead. march again after pausing to con- only for housing civilians durin tern armies as soviet flying col- under sodate their positions, they ap- umuci the raids, but plans are way to transfer vital installations Vl across meir imes or of the government to these shelters iu luw-uyuig iirui rneu tneir Dnageneaa norm oi -1 Snow ranging from one inch at All the overseas-bound troops were given the customary final home leaves from embarkation points and 7.800- of them failed to return on time. A few have straggled back.

or hive been apprehended since. Bjt the large majority of th-m ttill are absent. After being AV OTj for 21 days. per- a permanent basis." poawoiiuy or an enemy trap a permanent on both said they would offer amend oourg. wmcn now nas own i.

Vaientine Grand Isand to four up to their mam front facing the incheg Scottsbluff and chadron them with bombs and gunfire from dawn to dark. At least 10 000 nazis were killed and 3.100 captured in the past 24 Radio Tokyo also reported that I attack that is expected to carry to inventor in Kyoto had developed r-iarir fioi 91 enth t. an 1 Mlgmoi line aior.g ine noru.er.. id Omaha edge of the Hagenau forest. a "tunnel-digging machine" which lac.

ments Monday to prohibit any man assigned to a specific industry to be reouired to join a union against his will. Winetead's amendment also would "fix penalty of fine or imprisonment for anv rerson ttrhn and North Platte reported three inches of snow, while Kearney re hours alone and the enemy's losses in men and material were mounting wouia piay an important roie in rnPm ion nocr. they are listea as deserters, and McNaughton aid that "disciplin-1 constructing new sites for evac-I to toe frontal push toward at a staggering scale. r-w sKtinn w) 1 era in cfr I USteO War laCtOneS. iTaT-la.

hilt ths Tanangu nnlicltiil llgrmuj 1, I Tariac. but the Jaoanase unleashed Alarmed German leaders struer- It was obvious that Japan them under the provisions of king's American First and Third armv troops retained the initiative all around the shrinking Ardennes pocket, where there were increasing indications that the Germans were pulling their remaining panzer divisions back into the Siegfried line. Push Ahead Similarly, the British Second regulations ar.d orders. dl entire $45 i against the eastern flank of the the oncoming red army tide which 000.000 to the shelter and protec- 1 steadUy expanding Luzon beach-. already had overrun the northeas- corded two inches.

A light to heavy snow was forecast for the state today, with little change in temperature, by Meteorologist M. V. Robins of the Omaha weather bureau. Lower temperatures were expected in the west and north portions tonight. Desertion in wt.r'ime is a capi tern corner of East Prussia and anti-aircraft After fivj war, Canada guns would be embodied in Japan's instituted ofiT-vIrory oversea: Union to Repay Red Cross For 'Bumped' Mate large muiiary Duagei.

Partly cloudy and colder weather The counter-attacks all were on more than half of Poland and was a email scale and easily repulsed, threatening momentarily to spill but included the use of medium over into Silesia. Berlin accounts tanks by the enemy for the first said the Soviets had broken across time. The Japanese thrusts cen- the Silesian border for their first tered around Binalonan, 16 miles invasion of Germany proper, but army arive noirnwesx 01 Aaa, was predicted for Sunday. service for "Jiv fust time last month. deviously, Canadian was pusnmg steaaiiy lorwara wn- Temperature ranges ValenUne troops had se-ved overseas only in a nan-aozen mnes 01 ine r-o-r 33.34; Omaha 35-32: Lincoln 32-31; on a voluntry rsis.

The overseas draf picipitated a govern there was no confirmation from inland from Dagupan North Platte 33-30; Sidney 32-16; Chadron 30-6; Grand Island 33-32; 'Evasive Action' Crew Sent Home we are learning our lesson. And he promised better days to come. "We Americans today, together with our allies." the president said, "are passing through. period of supreme test. It is a test of our courage of our resolve of our wisdom of our essential democracy.

"If we meet that test successfully and honorably we shall perform a service of historic importance which men and women and children wil! honor throughout all time." Live As Men Challenging the isolationist philosophy. Mr. Roosevelt raid we haa learned that we must "live as men. not as ostriches, nor dogs in the manger." In the peace, he said, we shall strive for perfection, knowing that it is unobtainable at once but knowing, too, that we "cannot live alone at peace, that our own well being is dependent on the well being oi other nations, far away." "We can gain no lasting peace." he continued, "if we approach it with suspicion and mistrust and with fear. We can gain it onlv if we proceed with the understanding and confidence and courage which flow from conviction." Moscow.

The four kingpins of the elaborate German defensive system in Japs Pressed North ar.d south of Binalonan, the invasion forces forced the Jap at some points in spue 01 wie biiuyv and sub-freezing temperatures. At least three German divisions were reported battering into the Seventh army lines around Hatten and just west of the Rhine above Strasbourg, with seven to nine more anese back deeper into the inland Foiana Tarnov, Krakow, Lodz and A LIBERATOR BASE SOME-1 GRANITE CITY, UL. Jan. 20 Union brothers of Carpenter's Mate Maurice Nix. protecting his classification "below Col.

Elliott Roosevelt's dog." today arranged to repay to the Red Cross the $98 which Nix borrowed for commercial air passage to the coast when he was unable to obtain flight pri- WHERE IN THE MAR.IANAS i hard fighting. Sison, four Mlava all fell into soviet hands Jan. 20 tPv-The 10-man crew of miles south of Rosario, was cap-, yesterday in a day of whirlwind Scottsbluff 34-7; Hayes Center 31-30; Big Springs 31-21; Overton 33-30; Kearney 33-31. The forecast snow and not much change in temperature today and tonight: high today near freezing; low tonight 25-30; Sunday, mostly cloudy with little change in temperature. ment cnsK' which Prime Minister V.

L. MacKenzie King survived. Despite I've high percentage of defection, McNaughton said, a full comple'ient of 8.300 national rao-bilizatij, and resources act troops arrived ir the United Kingdom in the first overseas movement of Canadiaii j.raftee'. the B-24 "evasive action," which lurta-, anotner iorce was P-I nguneu more uian divisions wheeling into attack positions on a 50-mfle front running north from the Alsation canital to Hatten and thence west to Bitehe. tire war aeainst the proacning me Agno river crossing i-onsn towns ana villages.

entire war against the fought its Jans over the Bonins. was en route town of VLlasis, Japs over the Bonins, was en route aS1s. Anomer tw towns the northeastern border area of East Prussia iu mues eoutn or home today with a record of 40 Binalonan. onr "aKi.t The advance on Villasis raDidiv were captured, rounding out the ai tniroH ff uf0. i was enveloping an enemy force biggest 24-hour sweep since the I entronAliAH iv fVi- w.

1 1 1 a 1 a 1 1 Vi rl Ha Teachers Meet In Lincoln SIGN LINCOLN, Jan. 20 SDanS I tiG auamau 111113 1 John, I to the northwMt. Tho tnnm war" offensive from the Vistula imny-one ui liu-i iriissiuiia i were flown over Iwo Jima. and Cabaruan on the northeast slopes "ver eight days ago. ontv on an army plane.

Nix a member of AFX. Carpenters Local 633, wrote his wife he bad been stranded in Dallas, after expiration of his emergency "eave. although a plane "with four servicemen and a 130-pound dog;" stopped at the airport. He borrowed $98 from the Red Crass, he said, arriving on board his ship just one hour before it sailed. Nix did not identify the dog he A.

Amlay and Arch Hasterman, both rf TJtiroln havo tJh Massed German tanks and infantrymen charged head-on into the Maginot line bunkers at Hatten. striking from the east, northeast and southeast in an attemnt to drive a wedge into the Americans' interlocking lanes of fire. Six miles to the south, other Seventh army troops counter-attacked gallantly across the frozen swamps and forests west of Sessenheim in an unsuccessful attempt to recan- 11 of them were at night, co-pilot was capture Glenn M. Eower, Davenport. said, and "we figure that takes mnnrtant Krtet LINCOLN, Jan.

20 dpi Teach-1 lobbyists' register in the office of er retirement, tenure, federal and the secretary of state. Ainlay rep-state aid, sick leave, and hospital-j resents the yebraska petroleum ization are slated for inclusion on industries coitmittee. and Haster-the agenda, when the south central man the Nebika farm bureau about five years off any Claim Wallace to Succeed Jones life." All told their 40 missions yl Dl Nebraska Off iviarridii; icers added up to about 60,000 miles, or i region of the department of class-; federation irc u.ws inroom teachers of the National Ed- saw on the plane, but union members said they believed it was Col. Roosevelt's mastiff which caused 360 combat hours. The "evasive action's' crew was NEW YORK, Jan.

20 IP A re- Set Promotions three servicemen to be "bumped from those on the northern army of the Alsace triangle. credited with 100 percent ac- port in lo-al sport circles that Col. curacy when they led the Libera-1 Larry Mm Phail, former head of tors in a co-ordinated air-surface the Brookiyn Dodgers, is slated 20 npi from an army cargo plane at WASHINGTON. Jan The promotion of six Nebraska for "an important new oost in attack on Iwo Jima Dec. 8.

"It WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 Congressional friends of retiring vice president Henry A. Wallace claimed today that he would succeed Jesse Jones not only as secretary of commerce but as chairman of the reconstruction finance corporation as well. There was no hint from either Wallace or Jones that this was so. was all done on instruments," En- i gineer Howard M.

Sandberg, Wa nual meeting here Feb 10. The region includes Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas. Louisiana, and Arkansas. Officials expected to attend include Mrs. Beulah K.

Walker, Dallas, Tex national president; Marie Ernst, St Louis, regional director: Hilda Maehling, Washington. D. executive secretary; Memphis, last week when it was travelling to on an priority. Nix was granted a nine-day leave because of the illness of his wife, who was suffering from a heart ailment, and his four chil- officers were announced today by the war department. Major to Lieutenant Colonel Walter Robert MeClanahan, Inf.

Otoe. Oleo Favorite In Wisconsin terloo, explained. Washington," revived rumors today that he might be named national wartime sports coordinator. Sport personalities, who have urged the administration to estab- Caotain to Major Both sat at the head table nine Judah Elected MADISON. Jan.

20 IP The citizens of Wisconsin, who are lish such a post have mentioned seats apart at a presidential in-MacPhail frequently as a likely Lester Henry Mitzr.er. Sy-jaren. wno were stncKea witn racuse. whooping cough. Mrs.

D. Edna Chamberlain. Tulsa, such staunch butter boosters that i Oklahoma state director, and Pearl candidate. The coordinator would Planning Engineer memoers or me electoral college First to captain Marvin Christian Nelsen. AC, Wallace introduced his successor.

they didn't buy a pound of oleo- Donoho. Omaha, Nebraska state margarine before the war, now director. take over the handling of such problems as sports manpower. Vehiinp. Divorce Granted Mrs.

Don Nelson LINCOLN. Jan. 20 CP) C. T. transportation, and curtailment of are eating more than 72,000 pounds Second Lieutenant to First of oleo a month Quick Return No sooner said than done an old expression, which Telegram want ads have changed to "no sooner read than done." Many cases come up where the ads are answered almost as soon as the pape reaches the subscribers the first evening.

For example, an ad was inserted recently telling of the loss of a pair of girl's glasses in a black case. Finder was instructed to leave them at the Telegram office, or the advertiser's home address, which was given. A reward was offered. The first day the ad was in, it got quick action. The paper was on the street around 4 p.

and by 6 p. m. the girl had her glasses back. You can't beat thct for speed. Telegram want ads often do wonders for and they accomplish their purpose economics iry and efficiently.

Now is the time for you to use the want ads. Once you've tried them, you'll us? them again and again. Norfolk Soldiei CHICAGO. Jan. 20 applied for the $25 license requir- i 1 i Donald M.

Nelson. Glencoe. E1-. Harry S. Truman, in a brief, unre-vealing speech during which he continually smiled and chuckled as if something pleased him very much.

Jones didn't make a speech. But he was observed to drink a furtive champagne toast of mysterious significance with Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, two seats away. Judah has been named planning sports if necessary. engineer of the bureau of reclama- tion in Nebraska, E. B.

Debler, re- I j. I gional bureau director at Denver, Lie UtenanT PinuS announced last night Judah has been planning engi-Qfjf He COOKinQ neer for the bureau at its McCook Lieutenant Edwin Arthur Mangold. FT Gretna. Wavne Karl Pindt. Naponee.

Richard Gould Breeden. MAC Omaha. led to sell oleo in the butter-produc-, IT IVIISSinCJ today held a divorce from her husband, a special assistant to PJZSZiV" secreury-treasurer of TO HEAR ARGUMENTS office since 1940. He will be re-i FAIRMONT ARMY AIR placed there by A. W.

Redman, his FIELD, GENEVA, Jan. 20 UE) I former assistant Paul Harley, "What's cookin'," asked a lieuten-t Miss Perkins reportedly is on sinte on Rrounos oi ue5rl c.a.. n.r,,rf... tne uenerai Wholesale company, tion. Nelson did not appear in Department of Agriculture has missi fa action court, and after signing papers acqulf Dec 17 in Luxembourg, according ner way out.

too. Denver, formerly of the national ant as he made his way into the awarding nis wife an out-ot-coun mmr pnius to a war department telegram re-! resources planning board, will as- officer's c'ub and to a spot near a' LINCOLN. Jan. 20 vXX oral arguments on exception filed to an examiner report recommend-in approval of the request of Orie J.Lape. Beatrice bulk petroleum racrvrtr for authority to en- seiuemem ueu oi auunwiy, t- ceived yesterday by his parents, bearded a plane for Washington, last month.

i Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hoien. Mrs. Nelson testified before Su- The states intake from its 15- The sergeant has two brothers nerior Jude-e William J.

Lindsav cents-a-pound oleo tax. a com- r' v. tirritorv of sume a position similar to Red- glowing stove. WOUNDED man's at Grand Island, Debler. "You are," came the answer.

WASHINGTON. Jan. 20 U.P) said. I The lieutenant had gotten too: Ensign Edward Dysart McDonald, Judah will direct planning and close to the old fashioned stove USNR, husband of Mrs. Ruth T.

supervision of construction of all his neatly creased trousers were McDonald, Crete, has been wound-projects in Nebraska. His offices scorched from big knee to his ed in action, according to the navy wU be at Lincoln. ankle. department today. his operations will be heard Jan.

that her husband deserted her on pietely dry source of revenue two Hoien in the southwest state railway commission uec. ia. i4u. lcey were marnea ow averages nearly and Lieut Harold Hoien in today. I Dec.

13, 1926. $11,000 a month- land..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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