rv WANK JENKINS Uifhb 'M, t im"'" w"1' n,'WH 1 .'.,I,,H L'l'IIKOInllll) llllS Closed ' . ike tin- lid of a box. It". ",, il.lnu Ih uclt nil ISl" ANyWIIKlJE as till is irtttt-n. , , . rtTIlK past "I""11' c,r ",("'0 '" S .hkI M-;w. Tighten Iiig (I 1 . i- ..(111 U1IH llW'll. junii 11. "(V llllllll.n "i'n nil InikN liy whli'li the .miiiiiik " :',. . v minis liHK"i "IM" - 'cCliig.' "t ""' l"'w,,r .nwrcil Oriiiim rfiiiiimi' jnce. Ill i " """ . , , ,". ,, ,r M.l lo stop AM- news " ANY mention or troop - " . ... imIiIIkii Im ..1.1V ;:3,l in-TxYrcmuly help- i. II) till' I'lH-M'.V ncr tin P'Tlod. wo luivc ij favorable news following ,,Vn or these blackouts. THIS liii"- w0 " 1 ' 1 The Munition l llollinul In ntical. II WiiJiii mm ii MOT neriiinnently, i( court X I.,,,,, ih ii nowcr w ie. ..... ,.. ..hi.. miI Germany y milomw W only question ....... it,. I tli Ormiuis could ip V1C ""''" t'"1 run w which ' ro ii"i"iK ," ' ,i in tho r c ii r of their .' .. .i..r..n Thcv know tho gravity (if the Miuliun. If Hiry DON'T lop ii will lie b c c n u s e they CAST top That, in Hsvt, would bo atg din.it. m t f AGAIN wo mustn't Jump to n...r.. innilusloiis. ii our ....i ...wl run fulls, we'll -riy have lo try somewhere . . . irrr HAVE the POWKft. but n ,i... .ii,, ,,il,,.. In llnllnnd In Kth diiit wo haven't been iiblc u for) lo bring enougii oi n to ttir on the enemy. Tim nnrriiw corridor driven by the llrillsll Second nrniy litar up t" the Rhine lit Arn i,m follow RA1S1CD roiuU ihmiioli flooded country. The arm:,l ni-nf-crlll IT I tO (IrK'C II ttAtif II. m null mid theu WIUKN il Widening In this Instance .. i. ,,i,. iirrii'iilt bv the mturc of the ground (terrain l Ihf milllary term). Tt.l- himrll.M.n till llPPI! tWO UA Tl.n i,nrrnw.M4 nf IllO COT' tiHor lins miide Impossible swift movement of large bodies of our ...nnnrlli.ii li-iwti.M 1).rnilLll II 1111(1 made easier German effort lo bite il off from the sides. Three times In tho past few 6 nr hltl.T fluhilni! the Cier Mm have CLOSKD this thin pipeline llio lust time last right, when they held It shut tor five hours before bcins tnrown out. THE fate or the heroic Urllish 1 airborne division that for a cck mid n half has been hold ing out on the north bunk of the imrlh channel of the lthlne ii uncertain as this Is written. All news from our side bus (used, and German reports lire tontrndlrtory some of Ibem its rlinn Ihul the surrounded par ilroopors have surrendered lo tic last man mid others Indl nllng Hint they lire still fight int. We'll just bnvo lo wait. THK flow of news from the Russian front has practical ly c cased, mitt wo can only Jiicss what is happening there. This may mean that llio Hus "ara, relatively quiet for n long lime, have something big in the Immediate making. Tlinl often has been the case. ' "my be so now. At least, we "opo so. JUPERTOIITS hit Anshim, I" Jnp Mnnehurlii, lignln, Their Purpose, Washington dispatches "y, Is lo "clean up anything overlooked on the two previous Kills" (the last one was on Scp Itmber II), Tho point Is thai our D-2D 'Ids are gelling down lo the SYSTEMATIC stage as In Gcr mny during the past year. IN" A comparatively routine Imllciil blow nl German com- mimical inns this morning our (Continued on Pago Two) Superforfs Bash Manchurian Town "nac ;n WEST CHINA, Bepi. M'i A henvy force of Anierl 'nSiipcibonibors raided Indus i"l liuliillntU). s nl Anshim In "".iii nn ny cinyugui uiui.j. J."" the object of clearing up ""ything overlooked" on two pr!Lv- us raids on that key city. re raiding squadron today J" second III size only to that " macl R mnss nltncK, oep Ifmbcp , it. i Primary Inruola were ,,"' ""(I ehem en plains j " ('IC VdSl itiii(in,i-n" n Qflslf. alnnl n.,l.n nrndlte , ,1,,,1,,,,-n ninne nnr a. I'UICE 5 CENTS YANKS BYPASS ' JAP POSITIONS Oimp Marines Advance On Northern Tip of Island By CHAnLES H. McMURTHY II U IIAf'IL'lf f I iVL"l I I L A r QUAHTKItS. I'lCAHL IIAHHOK. Sept. 2(1 ll'i Murines hypnssed siiiiinj Jiipancse lull posllions on I 'tic I in and advanced (u within tip yciti-rday as the enemy death ion nir mo raiau campaign rose to H2H8. Adm. Chester W. Nlmltz an- nounced Inst nlcht the Amer icans hnd progressed more thnn n mile along I'eleliu's west coast, ttflnr llll,l,,l,f ,Micl .Innni.nvn nn. sltions in the Umorbrogol hills which me marines una iniieo 10 crncK m onys 01 inner ngiuing Silenca Clooks Movt Abrupt silence cloaked move ments of the U. S. third fleet whose carrier planes smashed objective in the Philippines last week. American confirmation was still lacking of Japanese reported attacks on Manila and the central Philippines, Friday nd Saturday (U. S. Time). Southwest Pacific bombers continued to patrol the southern Philippines, and one of them con tributed one of tho war's most unusual feats. A lone Catnllna flying boat destroyed n seaplane tender and two destroyer es corts in Davno gulf with four bombs in a single bombing run. The vessels, caught whllo refuel (Cont:nucd on Pago Two) Million Germans Taken Out of European Fight SUPP.EME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, Sept. 28 (V) German casualties on the western front In killed, wounded and captured Irrwtltu linndptslV Cllt Off were estimated tonight at close to 1 ,000,001) since u-uay. The estimate included at least 100.000 killed, well over 200.000 badlv wounded, more than 500, iii in .,iiii.H nnrl Hie rest sealed off in the channel islands, the i.i.i iw.idn.it nnris of France and l vnrinliu nnckcts alollg tllC const and the Bay of Biscay. n-i.A m m. c-iKiin lies nre wuu over twice the uerman lurte imur believed lo be lined up ah. ng the west wall for the home land defense. Dorsey Coupfe Pleads Innocent c a iifirl l'S Ki-iit 26 im Bnnd "Leader Tommy Dorsey, his wife. - -ess I'm uane. m. , f-... nl, I - I VWdllll niiu, w ,un 0,T,' i'l Xnt tnrlnv to mnn. picmi n,Vit iin. OP MOVIU Mtim Y V f At I ho snmo umc, um B . fn nil Ol HSMiuiv iim.ii il'dr trial vas set for November Bmu nut of .. f ,c I In noi-SOV npSment Wearl? morning 0 ChurSS i.ivrlvlng Norrls were ..i.V,V.d by Superior. Judge Clement D. Nyo after their w- wns unsuosmiiuiin;" witnesses. Former Klamath Men Loses Life in Weed Hotel Fire A former Klnmalh Foils' real dent, 'Delber Taylor . So'.lhern lrihct,rrKlteydClcWeed5no!S Ste&Xulr rly Saturday ilifO11- .. .. ....i Identified as , AJ' M Mays 45, SP lineman, Jack M. Mns, rescue S5ssa ot1Lorp.on.l Effect., In Tift ShaHia m-v - ir t , ' P4 W ' ' ' '',"'?-'3'''- '-3 -'i Main i - T? Fat'lombs. prim, "boof and ih16 379n2U5 hKwd tandTS!?:..- Exhibitor, and buyersT Upper !eft Paul c !;". rosvo champion Hampshire, purchased by Bill Br.Mon. (rights ol S, iw ' ,, was offered by Bratton for re-sale and brought WoVuskey BroThPer"Ys a donation to Yhe Community Chest. Upper right. Spud Harvest May Close Couniy Schools T-.i,...inr nn rmerccnev exists throughout the Klamath basin with the potato harvest demand ing thousands of hands in the fields, the Klamath county farm !tarcon,n,Utoln onMon- schools during Ihe peak period. The recommend"""" -county school board requested thai both grade and high schools n Merrill, Mulin. Henley and 1Z be closed, starting Thursday afternoon. . Dates for suggested closures were from Srnlombcr i!f lo October 16. building from the Pacific State Savings ana iionn ii.v,ui...... snid that rooms were 90 per cent occupied. ,,,., souincrn i-nuini. said that (here were no Klamath me mm.- ui ,- :r worked hero for a period of six months in ikij "" glnc watchman. Ho has no near relatives in mln' ,: thought he loft Klamath Falls for KL Paso, Tex., returning to t: .. ii...- f itio Hon ili hp was employed as a machinist s helper. JncK m. inuys. . V1", wns B Dunsmulr resident. Origin of the blaze has not been determined, u is uiuus u to have started In a pile ot ruo- . . . . . .... i n.v.n,,t Tl-tn nlnrm was sounded by Bob Kcllcy of - Cam'ade Wonderland KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1944 Money Jingles At the Ninth Annual Junior top dairy stock : paraded rh Emergency mu QIL.rlirrtti 1 rniinlv union high school board approved clos ing Tulelake schools' for harvest vacation starting October 2. Additional Closures Eyed" In case tho peak period has not been finished by tho' night of October 14, recommendations will be made that an additional week of closure bo allowed, com- nlll.tn n.ninhnri onlr! ( i lime cnininH nut hv members of the committee that during this peak period a large numuur ui suiaenis wouio oe out ui solium ,i,nihn ll.n clinnla wprn rinsed A.. nl nc l,n fnrm lnhnr sitnn. tion is sucn thai every possioie bit of family labor, would be utilized to tno maximum A., nmm-tfnnrv uiai rloplnrod to exist as regards farm .labor, as n.. mjj mnn 1c tlin InrvnQt in the histoo ot tho Klamath basin, of botn potoioos and onions; yiuiio 4 lu. at lr.net nnrmal. in. soring a tremendous crop to be harvested and stored; and' a c1- .ck-up on labor avaiiaoie on (Continued on rage -i wo. Penney Company Goes Over Top T n tlnnnnu wna thp first firm i n nrn Ihn Inn with At leflst a day's pay from every employe, turned "Ho me commumiy iuhu. Moe's store ran a close second, ...111. inn nnn nnnl nmnlflVP Cflll Willi ....f-.-v - tributlon, reported just a tew mimiics Hlier runu a : IIUIUIUCIIIUIIV. . , rr.r. Mm i.1(.ircixr mnrlt toward the drive quota, the fund, now 1 1 1 Odd nnn - Ita .1 Dan Liskev buys uan uianisy "" (By DANIEL DoLUCE MnsCM. Scrit. 26 (PI Rus sia's : powerful northern armies hammered tho final small pock et of German resistance in Es tonia today and began organiz ing an assault on iwu r.(-j lands guarding 'the 'Baltic sea .nnrnonhes to Riga, the besieged capital of Latvia. ' The islands Rislna ana usci j tiiA nnlmnrpt; in tllC Gulf of Riga, to the southeast, and the Gult ot rmianu, 10 im. northeast. .Lying some six miles off Estonlas wesi w "y could be, bypassed Indefinitely by the Kussians, uui o enemy garrisons remain there thnv will have a certain nuis ance value. 1 1 1 t r.nnM Cr.t 5(t lP) RUS- sian troops engaged In clearing the Germans from the west coast of Estonia captured more than 200 populated pirawr (Continued 011 rs 1 M,M,...n. ii The Road to Berlin t. talari PfAll iWestern front: 305 miles (from west of Klcve). 2 Russian front: 310 miles 1T ... (irom wiaw. aItalian front: 570 miles (from south of Bologna). POCKET MESTH Max. (Sept. 25) ......... 88 Min. ...S3 PraeiDitation' last 24 hours 00 Stream year to Normal 12.88 Last year........ 18.27 Forecast:- Fair. Livestock Show k . v ll Lois Lea Kandra's grand champion Hereford I for $1030 Lower .?. . ,1T,j ir Edith Gift's arand iett, Representative nenry oeiuuu j- r-- , --- - , champion Southdown. He paid $180 for the W i2iotl Tulelake bought the ninth Hampshire from Stanley McClellan for $2.Sp ' per. pound, paying $237.50. McClellan turned the proceeds over to the American Rod Cross. !.- ' : Records Shattered in 9th : Annual Livestock Exhibit nl r.nni.rB U.nro eVinlfprpd flt , tho ninth annual Junior Live stock show which ended Monday ;r,KI I.. Il,n fniroi-nunrlc nrpna. .Is growers found themselves richer oy $io,av.x9. The HI head Ol Deci oiierea in the arena under the hammer of Auctioneer Charles K. ; Wiesc, brought $12,283.15 or an average of 63 cents per pound and $!85 nn hr.nA Title rliH Tint include sifted stock sold after the show. Twenty seven - lat limns, weighing 3001 pounds, brought an average of 77 cents per pound and $85.40 per head. Total sales, not including re-sale, brought $23U9.tfi. t camoarisons Ae o nnmnnrnlivp fitfllrp. the ln.iq onln KPn..nl.( in 00. iiin lam oip isndnn 70 T.nst year lambs averaged $53.71 per head, and beef $335.68.- Purchase of the grand cnam pion stock is always a highlight at the Junior Livestock- shows, Marine Barracks Open House Set An open house to the visiting public will be held Wednesday at the Marino uarracKS. ineie will hp a rnvlnw At 10 8. m. at llin pnnnlueinn nf which tllC Barracks will be formally turned over to Colonel a. uu bcl, commanding officer, by the officer in cnarge oi cqikuuc inn. The public is cordially invit ed to attend the ceremony and in insnr.nl the itouiids and buildings. Seotamber 26. 1944 data ..10.68 Number 10272 but this year the re-sale of Paul Clark's reserye champion Hanip- snire lamo Dy i.ittiiiuui.i-iii:r.iiis nnmnarv nnrl ntirrllflSPd at S5 per pound by Liskey brothers, oversnaaowea an previous rec ords. Liskevs Daid $695 for the lamb, -rrocceds turned over to the community chest. i uonates io nea liobe ' Stanley McClellan, ninth' in lTa,v.r,el,i-a place nffni-Prl hi lamb to the highest bidder with the understanding that proceeds would go to the Red Cross. Bid ding started ' briskly at $1 per (Continued on Page Two) Dewey Gives Cry in Slashing AttacK By JACK BELL cm TiniiTif WITH T1F.WEY. Cnni 9R ijp rnnfident he had given the republicans a new bat tle cry wun an asseiiiuii n.t American people will vote in No- ...-.haa ln "t-Aeinrp IntPLtritV tO the White House," Gov. Thomas p rinvupv traveled across Okla' homa today for his last two at RanulDa and Tulsa on a western campaign swing. - ' In a bitter, caustic-reply to caaijani Rnnenuplt's Saturday ,,iohi enpprh ridiculing and ..lrlna rnnohllaan nttnrks on the new deal,, tho GOP standard UtJttltl. IUIM " o 'CI T crowd of nearly 10,000 persons in Oklahoma uuy s tiviu aum- tnl..m laet nluht! "I say the time has come to put a stop to-everything that is 'RED DEVILS' Latest Allied Re'porf . Says Britons Still Holding Out ' By JAMES M. LONO -T (MmnM Cant 9ft ( D Trl allied command put a mantle of secrecy upon the fierce battle for Liutn Arnnem toaay ana a iew ItAur. latar a dpi-man nrnnn. ganda agency declared the ent tire uritisn airDorne division there had been wiped out. Tn' lgtpct npwe frnm allifrt quarters before the security ban IT 1 1 . II 1 was imposea was uiai me icu devil" division on the north bank of the upper Rhine near Arnhem was being thinly supplied, and naa nign morale. . neport surrender A broadcast by the internation al information bureau, a nazi ' propaganda agency, declared 1400 British wounded had sur rendered, and said that "this morning the last 600 British paratroopers west of Arnhem put rlnum fhpir arms." UCI.l.BU Ul UUUbUU uv. clared the band of sky troops d.nnqn krnanaclo 1a sun was grimiy noiainx uui. . iNotning was oisciosea at su- rmma haaHmiarfor. tn inrllpatn r (' , , whether this was true or falser .Air AITBCKS Alliprl ait pnmmanrtpre In an. nHamnl ir clnn tho flnw nf ana. a..bu.j w ..r ' my troops and material to the Moselle ana uuicn iroms, iiung liuu Ji oriresses ana - ijioeraiurs nr.nn .,i(al naman (raiahl yards. With almost 3500 tons of bombs tnese neavy oomDers blasted the yards at OsnabrucK, through' which the enemy has been funneling supplies to his forces in Holland, the very large yaras al namm ana unspecuiea military targets at Bremen. - The latest information at su preme headquarters on the Arn hem troops was more than 24 hours old. This was that the British were holding on.-desper-ately thinly supplied by night across .-. the .. quarter-mile'-wide Rhine. - v Position Hazardous . There was no attempt to mini mize the hazard of their posi tion nor. any indication that they were not at least in strength to hold out yet a while longer. Even the Germans gave di vided accounts of what had hap pened. Almost an hour after first Ger man report that the last of the troops had laid down their arms, the Berlin commentator Ludwig Sertorius indicated they were - - (Continued on Page Two) x Woman lnured ' In Cab, Car Collision Here An intersection collision at Oak and Market streets at 2:55 p. m. Monday, sent Mrs. John Kadar Jr., wife of Lt. Kadar of the Marine Barracks, to Klamath Valley hospital. , , Lt. and Mrs. liaaar ana mcir lr-.pp.vpnr.nlrl rlailffhtpl Donna. were passengers in a Hurry cab en route io tne ooumern i-acmc depot to make arrangements for travel to Fresno. A 1937 La Salle sedan, owned and operated U., CO TTaeKn,,plr 30 TT. S. TIIIVV. stationed at "the barracks, failed to observe a stop sign, and struck the cab broadside. Impact hurled tne caD onto the parking of the Bell hotel where the machine landed up side down. A door was pried open with a pmcn, Dar to gee the passengers and driver out; ti rr,,ltlB . IM 5nrf pnh operator, suffered a minor cut on tno Knee. aji. iMua. iv daughtrr were uninjured. Mrs. Kadar's condition is not critical, although she is reported sufferi J from shoulder and head h' rts and cuts about the face and ears. Hasbrouck was arrested by city police and he posted $5 bail to app ir September 28 at 10 a. m. The charge was failure to stop at a stop sign. - GOP Battle ; summed up in that phrase, 'The indispensable man'.' NEW YORK, Sept. 26 Wl Robert E. Hannegan, chairman of the democratic national committee, today described the Oklahoma City address last night of republican presiden tial nominee Thomas E. Dewey as an "hysterical outburst and said "The mouso labored and brought forth a molehill. , Another democratic criti cism of Gov. Dewey's address came from U. S. Senator Jo seph E. Guffey of Pennsyl--vania who disputed Dewey s statements that there were 10, 000,000 unemployed In tne United States In 1940. . Sen. Guffey said in a state, ment released through the - (Contin -d on Page Two) t ',," Inslnllntli.is worn heavily (Conlinuenon ruxu j.wu '( Oil II, n .n..U... nllnl n. fl v;v K.IIM ('.