Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1944)
Iff A MfWra luM) i f ' ' : mm fTrnANK JENKINS "(iiNGTON-Tl.o war, os Kords written, I. f'7B'iro thu Gorman- . V waitluM I""- our aup- Slc0!?? ho nuKlns ii. .'V . iiicr mighty P? ?...,,,i Hil- German border. ktrun'"..,. i.nil tho Aegean C arc cut off from tho ("..." i- M,.nrlnln rn. U won tho end will como li, likely to bo dotermlned LTn u,c nexl few unyn Lllll ,,v. , n, tar nf rial urn .i" be nblo lo STAND Kir wr . . lit 111 ,, IhpV CHII 1. -very, very near ui.hinutoii. whero tl)l l -lll.n HlP l?MI III UUVIUUBIJ f"'"! r.- limn. M?" ' Vl T runin of -. itfn thai lllicui.-iiii wo oywii Germany folds . holclur I be taken oil 01 imuisuy, fc7"dlo MVOND I . I. f,,r iio Jim wnr. 11 II IIVVl.Vl. . klinpowcr Mcnuu " ini mat ",;. hi ore deientea uiu i k. rnmnUpd frOin lUUOf. Irormvo been announcements itidy 01 WCKcnca mou within the next ween ur . m... VnrU vnlnidnv. the Iflt market went Into n lull In, anticipating sharp curtull lot ol wnr orders Lilt l nnrrnnliblo HcrVOUS NlfallM If I .... Htiihln -lhn snrnwllnc l.i...riiiii Tnn men WHO hllVG jiving their time (or tho t year or so arc beginning to , f opttlnu back to their i.ifif hint nn.(it. ma icn nu and divisions ana annica ..nApllifo nrn lumnv. wond' in! when their present, tenure 111 end. . .. . ... ,1.1, tills is no more than L,i,ni nnrcsN'T In kle lliat'pcoi'lo back hero are t raping 10 llie IOOI cuiiciuaiuu 11 the fiiihlintt will bo ovor fcen Germany quits. They 1, l,1l.,r This UirillT iaS 1(11 a little mirprlsea at tiio MUation ncre m mo - io louBlmcss ol that part o Ic Pacific war that anil lies heart. Thorn is CI LI I to a lot 01 Inccrc Krumblini! about ; "tills lily business of V day ana onu lars on all sides the statement lit instead of tutting drunk sd waking up with a Hangover . Hav nllnr Millar thrOWS 111 It spongo we'd better grit our Itui and work jusi mai muti fcrdcr until tho Jap Is licked then do our coicDraiing. TILL, people aren't morons. I Thou rim. 'I I. nun In hl told lit when the European war onds ireai cnanges win iohow un mpr cnti liiunn ri'nill. lllcy Liu ll.nl I..M..elir n.llh Ha WQt Slant ALL BUILT and Its war tills PERFECTED, is just be innine to hit its rcnl production ride and Hint MUCH LESS HAN ALL of our present huge luipment will be needed to pro ne tnc tools Willi wnicn 10 nu ll off the Jap. , ,, t-Al 1 ,0- Inllc fm that the wise tiling to do pwgoi that part or our wm pJuslry that won't be required p mo task of licking mo aiuu. irlln,,, Iln lull nn ...un iiiuii ui. iii.u poduclion as quickly qnd as cf- i.nuiuy US pOSSIDIC. ROMETHING would bo rad- r Ir-nlllr ii.i.r.nrf It Allr nPnnlC kren't smart enough to see nKn f .inn unn ... tllllls Jul lllUIIIOVlvvn w. '"begin to make plans NOW to -h nicmscives 10 uiu huih. twntinued on Pago Two) Planning Chiefs pet V-Dav Date t LONDON, Sept. 13 (P) Unit States war planning chiefs r-" reported tonignt .10 nuvc Plab shed October 31 as the PJ.utive "outside" date for the pso of organized resistance K ""out discountlnfi tlio possi l"""y Hint victory may como 510, Quickly, a responsible o n n- lad 3 Wl MLT PRICE 5 CENTS In The Shania-u(nuidtt Wonderland !!it(!tl!!!l!i: mmm iiiiiimi mmmmmmmm Septamber 13, 1944 Max. (Sept. 12) 86 Min. :.. 43 Precipitation last 24 hours 00 Stream year to date) .10.62 Normal 12.64 Last year 18.27 Forecast: Partly cloudy. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1944 Number 10261 Reds Reach Border Of Czechoslovakia; Win Polish Town bvnuvn, dopi. id 11-, in ima army nai roacneja in ooraer ol Ciochoilovakla, Moicow announced toniaht. The broadcast Runian communiuo, itiuad after Promier Stalin had announcad the capture of thai Carman fortrait of Lomia in Poland, also said that a Polish army it lighting along- iiuo iovioi lorces in a outer oaitie on ina approacnas 10 Warsaw. Moscow identified tha Polish troops taking part in this en gagomant as "tha first Polish army" and said that fierce fight ing was underway against the Germans in the area of Praga nig rvariaw iuoutd on ma rigni oamc 01 ina Vistula rrrer. t.'nII ll. U...I. Sentenced .11. ,,f tin.iuln,, n,!nn. uiii.9 t nwu-Tiiir., it 1111- ally olfered to private builders ncre, may oc ouui unucr puuuc financing, it was reported to chamber of commerce directors today by Charles Stark, chamber secretary. stark said a representative 01 the national housing agency was here tills week and stated that 1 .1 li..lt,l,ir ii.lii nrlrflnnllv fin. plied for priorities on the auth orized r.u uniis, nuu cviiiuiiuy uu elded not to go ahead. The NHA man said he would .:cck to have tho priorities transferred to. pub lic financing, so the units may DC ouui unncr contract, us .were tho 40 row houses now ncaring r.mtinlr.1 inn hnrn The chamber directors adopted a report of the rates and finance committees asking that an at tempt be made to locate a rates expert to conouci me commun ity's efforts lo get more cqult- nhln iVnlM rnrnc for thin nrpa. miA nlun In nclr tni a ttlirunV hv tho PUC of the rate situation After' some discussion of V- Day plans, the directors voted a i-nnliitlnn in thn tfntfi liOUOr control commission suggesting tnat not only naro nquor saics be stopped, but that beer and wine sales be prohibited for 48 ll,Olllinucci oil ruBW iww Kouth injured As Bicycle Crashes Window Dexter Sexton, 15-ycar-old Vl.mnlli TTninn hinh snhool StU- j i Ka,ll, nul WnrtnosdflV noon, when his bicycle smashed through a plate glass window as his brakes failed. T-Hn hnv wnK rnminit down Payne alley on to Main street when tile Drake orone anu m: ttnnllln In tnn nt. tllfl illtcr- scction. The bicycle hurtled Mnln slrrpl and crashed Into tho window of the Gllmore service station on tnc opposite side ol tlio street.. Thn mnn nn dulv in the Sta tion rushed the -youth to tlio Klamatn wtcoicai ciinic wnuie nc was treated and then taken to Hillsido Hospital. tr i hn .nn nF Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Sexton of 3317 Blsoee. Lights on Again In Manchester MANCHESTER. England, Sept. 13 (A') This industrial city in central riiium"" briehtcst spot, in Britain .last night. , ,nun llrtlile wnro tlirncrl On liiu ' . again. So you could read a newspaper in mu rll. tlunnnrt Otirl SflnB find CVCH KlSSCd HIE IBU'jJ r1' , .. In tne words oi mu iyy"j rnnservatlvo British: "It's- very easy to take' jviancnesier is uiu Z " ...nnrn cirofit llehts have shown since the war began. The black out will be iiitco iiiiuuisi.uu Britain September 17. sourco said the daio nan ffl Pinpointed by tho United S Uff1l nr,r1nnlln hnui'H mill "",su'iBllon. tnrougn usual turti i "an"eia in piuns im C ' Industrial reconversion p." war to civilian production Awericons Freed om Internment JHIRD ARMY HEADOUART f ' FRANCE, Sept. 13 VP) of ? hundred Americans, most from n navo Dccn liuuu It vi?. 9erman Internment camp if. V.'el. IB mllno onnthnnst of Sn8? Were nlsn 1 horn tad. -. , ARMY DRIVES TOWARD FUTft PnMTnLl Troops Driye Against Central Sector Of Gothic Yanks Aid German Wounded Earlier the German high com mand said Lomza was given up to prevent a Russian break iiirniii'ii nn a nrnnn irnni. Qlcilln'o ni,lni nt Ihn Hnu nr. dcrcd a victory salute of 12 sal vn from 124 nuns. rlvnr 77 milns nnrthpaRt of War saw. At midnight, the Russians snici me town was viriuany en- nlrnlnrl no rnH trnnna nut lhrnunh l,i..Uln A n n If a nf Ihtnlr minn. fields. Its fall opens the way to Dr. Karl Friedrich Goerdaler lite wild Masurian ihkc ruHiuu iBoove;, wimw mout ui of East Prussia. xig, described by tho nazis as 'I' 1. .. n n I I n snnniinmmpnl I a .Innlaait, nf tha Illot to SB- said tersely: satsinate Adolf Hitler last July uivan up i zu, nas oeen nnvti.w (.KTHIV.nnf nf nctrnlnlrn niir ilnnn with six other "DOlitfci- trooos frustrated an intended ant." Berlin radio disclosed to- Russian breakthrough on a day. (AP wirephoto), brood front, in the course or which tho town of Lomza was Iven up. ... Onirninka n rnmnanion .base oh tho- Narew 23 miles to the west, fell to the Russian army crouo- of Gen. G. F,- Zakharov I net urnnlr German and Hungarian troops were said by Berlin to nave cmailinH trnmi assaults in unuthnm Transylvania on the Balkan front. Irhlnvi Panatration Southeast of Warsaw, the Russians acnievea pent:"-- narrowest, west ana wiuumrai ,nnn,i ..hvL... numerous rinianw nrinir-fr-flnernhe- ces; tlU,l , . HMtyen. a - - i w... ii.uiij ..i- - j fighter bombers and tanKs, mo tapo s mannuni ior soiaima buu communique said. ,BtJ.te, trench diggers and to "leave the i - lactones. . .. . , , ..Annn, - 1 IO ' tlT "Vn.l 9Pn In rlftnffnr" h( SSld Powerful Russian tank forces in a broadcast, out in tne next and Romanian infantry emerged few days you may nave me today from the western foothills greatest opportunities for action, of Transylvania and fought for In a desperate effort to eliminate nnnt-ni nf tho rail network radl- allied support among the work- l rolof. lho "'JL"6' la miles ers, Himmler plans to repeat in ating "'""u" the west what he and the gestapo south of the pre-war Hungarian alrcady done so thoroughly border and 10 mues norui ui . t the Yugoslav capital of Bel- ..Workers there have" been sent grade. .to man the fortifications. ITk. Dar mrt n Qalfl I 1C TCQ mi 1 r ii vaiiw inotisunas ui uiuur wuiriuia, n..v.u hoH rnnnhnd the outskirts -. t..n Oom of Sofia and that the Bulgarian FOREIGN WORKERS IN REICH WARMED at 1. 1 p n FVPF.niTlONARY it u u w " r t FORCE, Sept. 13 () A spokes- Ulan lu. '"O"' -r , hower told foreign worKers in northwest, west and southwest capital was preparing a recep Hon, naving arrc&ieu n u hers of the former pro-nazi gov ernment). , , Uiwhi mq innvsKV a oiien Indiana! . w - , sivc was rolling forward during his brief absence to sign an arm istice with Romania In Moscow (Continued on rage xww U. S. Ninth Army Now in France (Continued on Page Two) Remarks About King Result in Court Martial LONDON. SoDt. 13 (jT') - A Canadian major has been brought before a court martial on a charge of saying with ref- ni.ni-.nn In Vintf flnnf!??" "I have no use for that guy or his wife. Eddie is my type of iljfrtrjivii nunwwui..."" swj' ..... . ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY Eddie is a familiar term tor FORCE. Sept. la trj -Miien-ii tne uuse 01 mnin army lias lancu a ,,.. - pinill ,.?! In Wolllo Wnrf nlH S mnsnn. France, it was announced today, The major was charged also alongside the u. a. met, iuuu mm oiimiv '"" "' and seventh armies making the service and with threatening to mightiest American force ever kill himself. The trial is pro- .1-1 1 nn flahllntf front. nnnrllnff asscmoiuu ui u .' -- ----- i,t uen. wiuiaiii is commanding the nlntt, army, the announcement said. it was .1 ji..lner,H Immediately in what sector the ninth army was operating nor lis rewuuu tu r 11 mmnn entlin. OVCiail CUUIIimin By GEORGE BRIA ROME, . Sept. 13 (IP) Fifth army forces driving against the central sector of the Gothic line northeast of Florence are with in a mile of Futa Pass, one of ihn main aunnilPQ thmilffh the nnHman Aatansa linn hatTine tllP path to northern Italy, it was announced tpoay. , The pass was described as mnK ilrnna v rinfnnripn I nan Cassino, scene of some of the bitterest fignting in tne. uaiian campaign. Allied headquarters said the fifth army had reached Larig nano and Poggio d'Ella Dogana, five and two miles,- respective ly, southwest of the pass. Fierce Battles Some of the f icrcecest fighting nf 4tin Kalian, ramnaitfn pnnfin. ued meanwhile on the-Adriatic sector, where the ' Coriano-San Savino positions , remained un cnangea. ... . . - , . . rt tho wad nnojet fifth armv troops drove ahead three: miles to the Berlamacca canal, while farther east patrols pushed on to tne vicinity ot oant ippouw 18 miles northwest of Florence ' Thn aananaa nnrthenel nf Flnr ence tpward the har4 core of the nliiln linn uiae n elasnV &WPPD. UUVIUl. 11I1C HUB U bvuhh.. w i" frnnnc.tiihinh .harl-thrJlsl;.,..Rh(Wt distance across, the Sieve -river bunaay ana iviunuHj, Buvanut-u fii.n mllne vaelnrHov. ..... The Germans apparently were ready to meet any assault on the Gothic line. In the vicinity of the Futa Pass- new pillboxes and gun emplacements nave Deen es Inklialian in A rnBIIV haaVV nntf. aircraft guns brought into posi tion, , Delavina Action Tn'lhaVaar ornnc nf thn f5nthlC line the Germans have prepared rlnlm.inn nntinn linn with hanvV gun emplacements and anti-air- ..all nunc IncirtnnH tn fapUitnte biai, ci "n. " . an orderly retreat in the event of a breaktnrougn at any or me mountain passes. Thn ailing giitiania in thp rpn. tral sector was supported dur ing the night by heavy and me dium bomber raids against the Bologna railyards, 30 miles be vnnH thn Futa Pass. Medium-light and tignter bombers lashed communications in nnrlhwestern Italy ana me Po valley as well as . strong points, guns, troops and -concentrations all along - the , battle front. The Mediterranean allied air force yesterday flew 2000 sorties, losing 10 piancs. l2f.,i TROOPS DIG N DN GROUND ABOVE AACHEN Germans Expected to Make First Stand , On Rhine j; 1 ih. wAMTirii nt i.nrmitn ioiqihi U. o. meaicBi coujjiii-ii . -...-.- who were caught in the open by allied machine gunners near . . t i . xt .Um tnurn ihnrlrt-frauntli obiarve 'the monsi iseigiunia" houm w - - operation (AP wirephoto). J.'.- . -. ' "' ' " Pitch of Pacific Offense - Rises With New Poundings By Ships, Bombs, Rocke(s it o niCtPTr1 TTT.F.F.T HEAD QUARTERS, PEARL HARBOR, Sept. 13 (fl3) Japan's deteriorat ing- island lonresses 01 raiau, Celebes and Halmahera, whjch u:,.i.4 thn enntham Philinninp.s. , ,1V.. Li 1111. awuv....... . .ri ' have been dealt new sledgeham mer blows -oy oauiesmps, uoiu- t 1 i- t-Z.-ri tirrt-ofr qper.pg Jn;. cqrwt -;from the The-rising -pitch of destruc tion visited on the Japanese bas- Romanian Peace Terms Concluded i nunnM Rnnt 13' IIP All allied property in Romania will vealcd tonight in a broadcast from Moscow announcing the terms of the armistice signed tc nnt 13 -Alfred wiih Roma"la' . A - v- r , ' Tnnev vnn h. Wl 1U1 Wno Duff Cooper, British representa- s, Hungary by Hitler tive to the French committee of sf"ea e rnturned to the Roman Representative Now In France UVC tU fcliv- - ; nrtnai Hhnration. arrived to- lUH a-HJWpv- r- al rank of ambassador, and may assume tnat iormai hub wwi Combined Anqlo-American War Effort Emphasized By W. L. BEALE Jr. QUEBEC, Sept. 13 MP) Presl dent Roosevelt made known to dav that his conference here wUh Prime Minister Churchill and military advisers was de signed "to get the best we can out of the combined Br tislv and United States war effort in Eu- sponse to raquu """ ,-, possible part In the meeting. The 6 "This Is a conference to get the best we can out of the com binoo British and United. States war efforts in the Pacific aid Europe, we are woi-kihk in m .nnnnnn with the Situation ih nkina thn Pnplflc and in Eu nnn ' pnnrHlnatintt our efforts With those of our allies, partlcu- Wilt i.anii-w , j L ians, the broadcast recorded by the soviet monitor, said. -Other terms fixed the soviet n .. : tinnn Oc nf .TlinP 28 rtuilltuiiati uuiiaw I 1D40, and ordered all racial and other discriminating laws in no 1 ...nnlnH niaiutt lCJWI"i". . - nrme nf thp ' armistice were concluded last night oy rtoman- ian Deace delegates meemns with Russians in Moscow. Arthur Bergquist Killed in France Word has been received In Bly Gen. Lewis Heads French Mission SUPREME HEADQUARTERS A Lt Lt I Hi U XiArrilJltiuiinni FORCE, Sept. 13 (fl3) Gen. D wight D. Eisenhower an nmmppri that Mai. Gen. John T. Lewis of the U. S. army heads a newly activated supreme head quarters IIllSSlUll tu name iu- cated in Paris as of today. Maj. .Gen xl. . Kedman ot tne Tl.lt:Ph Bi.mu uiae namprl Hpnllt.V. The mission will represent the supreme allied commander with the Frencn government. Killed With those ot our antes, pot "."- Word has been received in r;y larly the Chinese and the Rus- of tne death of Pvt. Arthur W. sians." Bergquist, killed in action .in Global Aspects France on July 26, 1944. Simultaneously with the pres- He was inducted into the army ident's statement, tho global as- on November 10, 1942. Before pects of his conference with entering tho armed services, he Churchill were emphasized by was employed at Crane mills these developments: , and the Ivory Pine Lumber com- The British announced that pany, both of Bly. . Sir William Glasgow, high com- He was a native of Sweden mlssioner to Canada for Aus- and at the time of his death was tralia, and R. M. Firth, acting 37 years old He is survived by high commissioner for New Zea- his mother and brother in Vans (Contlnuedon Page Two) bro, Sweden. o Coo er Weather Decreases Fire Dangers Here '. nnln nmafhnn with a nnssl V-UWit. n.fc.i... ...... r- - bility of showers brought relief to the dangerous torest lire situ- at,'nn in thn lflnmnlh arpa to. day. Similar conditions ruled throughout the - northwest, and the logging Dan in western ure-o-nn was raised when .. showers fell in that region. - Thn Wnrthnnlr mnnntain firp which burned into Liskey land east of me summit ot tnat emi nence, was under control again nftpi- o wind spnt it over fire lines late yesterday. A force from the Marine Barracks was helping county, state and pri- iTBlo.oa-anpiac in na!rnllin& this blaze. Five men from the state forester s office arrived to help out. . A - dangerous fire near- the gravel pit beyond the Geary ranch was auelled by the Quick work of a crew from the. con crete company operations at that pit. Thnrn urae trapn nf rain tn. day at Clover creek,, west of nere. HPhn maallla- fni-nPQot nt-nrtlnt. ed light frosts in elevated val leys of eastern uregon tonignt. Fourth Candidate Files for Mayor. A fourth candidate for mayor on the fall ballot was assured today with petitions taken out oy Marvin snepnero, ruamain Falls businessman, operator of a music store. Shepherd was out of town Wpnnpsrinv nnn pnillri not be reached for a statement. .. He has served as president ot the Eagles lodge and is active in fraternal circles in the city. Other candidates for mayor so far are Walt Wiesendanger, Ed Ostendorf and Kenneth Mc- Leod ttn luae' n,,idnnt ' Tn POmrhUni- ques from Adm. Chester Nimitz yesterday and uen. uougias tviat- A Mtt.. tair ' ;"' Palau. euu miles east oi uavnu tmdnr aarripr airPraft'at tack Sunday- (U. S. time). Next Viattlaehinn .orul - Pl-lltsers Uajr, . moved; in' to shell" the .islands. TI1n..n. 'ri.imna - 19.0 '. tnnS nf iniica . viiiiiti- -- -T-- ;- "bombs 'on- buildings,' --gun posi- tions-ana coast aeietiacs bowoi- thuap, Peleliu and Angaur, prin cipal islands of -the group, . Nim itz reported.. - Inita Mtinnf wncKca Mara than 1 RO " rnpkptjS burst among defensive- positions dur ing tne twooay earner lutte at tack; wrecking many installa- liana - , .. -. The. .entrance of battleships into the Palau raids was remini scent of ( preainvasion blows at Guam to the northeast; Sixteen- innh hattlnuractnn: ritips. - WaitmE until : carrier planes ana , tepet Iaaa - u.archirtc haH' nOtinded the island for 10 straight days, opened up five days before Guam was invaded. By JAMES M. LONG LONDON, Sept. 13 iP) Two American armies attacked Ger many at three points along 75 miles of the Siegfried line today, .. penetrating to the important city of Aachen. . . This industrial center of 165,-; 000 is two miles inside the Ger-.t man border and 320 miles from Berlin.- U. , S. infantry dug in on heights overlooking the city ; after beating back an enemy counterattack at the fringes of , ... r.i ,:.i tne oiegixietl title. T nnva . aiara . inlinatinna that the Germans were planning to- 1 ' - . , .. , , L .. 1 n, tlta matte- metr ittat stattu ot tun Rhine, 35 miles to the east. - ; Rotgen Captured - ' To' the southeast of Aachen, tanks and doughboys who shoved off from Eupen, Belgium, had captured the German town of Rotgen. ' They hit beyond it against pillboxes and anti-tank obstacles,. -with . resistance . less than had been expected. - A second invasion column of the U. S. first army was fighting at least five mues msiae-ma-reich - northwest of Trier, 65 miles -south of Rotgen. ? , -. i r 11 it. e - .tteiOW 11, a CUlultlll ut tltc w. third army at the Luxembourg-' German frontier assaulted Sieg- friaA nnsitinne with a "terrif 1C barrage which failed to provoke . , : ..a, f.nm thn. 3 SttlgtC ctliawciiiig oiiut aiwiii Germans, an' Associated x-ibss reporter at the front said. : Aavartca oayona - nihai. nnuiarfnl armnrpri ana infantry forces of the third army were striking beyond the Moselle river on . the lower American flank. .1 One advanced at least; eight miles m two hours Deiow, Pont-a-Mousson. Mobile columns again were in' high gear mere. cttll alkaa unite mana a tlPVT . Otltl U.IK. laii.w, f 'crbssirig of the Moselle between Metz and rout, ana iuubui tui- Continued on. Page Twp) --P-t. -Arthur Bergquist, above. was Killed in action in r nnw Palau Raids Baian'a ictanrts wprp raided on 17 Havs in Aueust and on six days of this month.. T"h NimitT pnmmnninue made no mention of a ' carrier- task force assault on the central Phil ippines, as reported yesterday oy aalin Tnlrvnl MacArtnur s airmen exetmeu a-record 202-ton bomb assault Sundav nn Dutch Celebes, the (Continued on Page Two) Kuriles Bombed, Says Tokyo n Tha' aeenniatad Press The Tokyo radio said today that-m t.t-.r hpaw- and medium bombers had attacked the.. Kur iles islands north ot. japan yes terday morning (Tokyo time) atrhiln nn'nth pr fnrcei. of Liber ators struck at the Japanese base at Marcus island,-some 1200 miips soutneast or. iuaju.- tm TJlnnHnv. and Tllpsdav. The broadcast, recorded by the federal communications com mission, said two of the. Kuriles raidprs were downed and an other damaged. -' , Berlin broadcast a Tokyo re nni-t thot civ TTnitnd Statps bomb' pro nttpmnted 'tn attack ''north Japan" Sunday morning but ..men ilriuon. nff hv ..Tananese planes and anti-aircraft guns of Japanese warships. The broad aact Hid nnt indipatp whether the attack was aimed at the Kur iles, or", closer , to the heart of the homeland Trexel Assumes Charge of Naval Public Works SEATTLE. Sent.. 13 (P) HIS work to be the allocation of ''what is available to the places where it will do. the most good,. Rear Adm; C A.. Trexel has ar rived here to assume charge of all naval pumic wonts, m u- gohi ..Washington,- luano auiu Alaska r '-- '- -- - 1 . He formerly was in the log- . istics plans division of the office of the chief of naval operations. He attended the Cairo and first Quebec conferences. , a.fjtll.. Adm' TrPVPl ' ear-- UlltUldtiJ, ........ -- ries two titles director of the Alaska division of the bureau of a a dnnVe and siinervisin2 . engineer of area 8, comprising Washington, unguu im Reich Struck by Heavy Bomb Load T.nNnON. SeDt. 13 VP)r& pro cession of air attacks against Germany todaysent upwards, ol 10,000 tons of fire and explosive bombs crashing and searing the nation whtcn uen., u"iu Eisenhower warned to prepare for "high and low level air at tack at any hour of the day or night.", ' . : ;im. An- armaaa eatinii., w ber up to 6000 planes cascaded explosives at the rate of 10 tons a minute on the area between Berlin and the siegtnea tine. Thousands oi neavy, ukuv omv medium bombers and clouds of -I.,-.-,. .fUm thrnuffh SimnV -XlKtttcta . icn -'".""c,.- - - skies against the reich from Eng. land, ltaiy ana rnutnt.. dawn, . massive fleets of Britisn i. I- i u ...... had satnrntprl neavy- uutuucia -. , Frankfurt and Stuttgart behind the Siegfried line, wnue ta-quitos-. plunged two-ton bombl into J3erii.it. .; . To Klamath Business Men w 0 ONE knows better than 'you the inconvenience and - -.4- -nrteirtt-ari ran ocTC mr r-nnTrinui iufi i- xl , ..U lUn llir--i-tfl- Cru mtv ("nmninprl ..Com' I nib ycur, unuuyn mc txi-.i.-in ..7 ... . f- I I . II I- Ll: -1-:..-- n. .l.tUll trtr n lliui illy i ui t I 1YC( 1 1 ...w ' r 7 services are combined, with the single exception of, the Red Lross. ' ' ' Give generously to this campaign, because every bene :- . U-.-. uAAM rMPrT i illv m inlif ior! nn n nntinnnl nnd loCQ 1 lUIUI y l IU3 UCCi i v,gismiijr HUUM " - r- ' -l k-;e fnr eitrh ci mnnrf rind heeause vour contribution will help to make the combined campaign idea a permanent fixture, in Klamath county. ' t; l uon I SKimp on mo iniuiiiuui , v-viiiii.wi my, i . .- Make your contribution ; cbmmehsurate with the .size of i .i ..,..i.U:-' nf iUa loMotit. ihi k emacc nnn rnu i ii i vr yyiji ii ill i.3t ii iv vwi v. .ing organizations., uet s ger tnis joo uono Muit.My. Dewey to Make Stop in Klamath Thomas E. Dewey, republical presidential candidate, will makf an "unscheduled stop" at thi Southern Pacitic siatioii im Wednesday, September 20, s. 7:30 p. m., it was announced to day by Frank Howard, count! GOP chairman. . The public is- tnvituu to ui station to greet Dewey, Howari said, . - ii.- Buileiin r OHIMflTOM. fiant. 13 P Carrier based Amancan plane are carrying on heavy boms i T.n..a.a nnattlnnm In tht central Philippines where thai aireaay naya ouia -, than 200 enamy pianea, norain vi ur Nimit.. Paelile ilea commandr-in-chiaf. reported t day. t 1