tfffie o)Awn j U.S. SILENT VeoiherN Mta fc-- """7 alii Kropo, where Important W n r o .t,po.to.l. 11 ru mini- Uuttlu n im-Hl nnvi ... wo lii'vo only tho J up itory fr 'V,i TiNrt l..ry. Ac- 1 1, an t. -. ,,,,,,, 'otited Note Jil o An.Vrlci... tk force," 9...' a, .licMii fleet" V re- d to. A t'k K" ' ",y " Ot "'T!'. I. I.rnn.lca.t Cibvii u ., II.. .Mlflll.H 11 ntTiiii a BiVesc )viil spokesman lis Mill "A,hf., -, ' 1.1. Iscy's ' .l.-d fr om i::"T!;iyic.01;yw1, ci iwnll anikcllicvici..r.i u. .... Ida- tnothcr Tokyo dispatch com. I10!, i.. nut "dec lvc Islvc 1'ry over the wurl.l u inn llll(i ill J 01 SC.ivii v. .. Sirlnl Jnp communiques i that 10 o( our wiirlilp, l. ten carriers liuvu be nd another 111 damaged. i ,.r,i whatever, cither I If ...i,,., nr rt.-.lflll Of V itronj enemy claims, has h (rom our Pacific head iters. As these word nro lion, ot noon, tho cllcklnit ..... Dm tplctvnt-s aro Si, Indicating Hint oil ncwi jlsblo has been transmitted. Ill we can do lit to wait for fU Irom Admiral niium. JTEMPT1NG to reassure- our J.i,.. Murine this nrrvoui lint period, we recall that jijip rndio has always talked jxxi war. It had in brulcn '5lidwoy until wo began to from our side, flicrc must be good reasons Illic silence o( our fleet mis having to do with tho 1.0V nt thn hutllfl. H Is illy beyond belief that our nanriers would conceal jrom ich a disasi bit ua tile jii pictures. ......,. uropc, Hungary lias finally IIODSCd KL'iu tioruiy (iicnti ot mo -rnmcnt) sued tor nil ariius- Immediately the nazls In I'ary pounced upon him like Kcnorls of what Is hap. ig arc contused, ltio nun ns aro said to bo fighting is themselves and also ling Germans. qie Germans admit that nys bid (or pcaco has ftly damaged the (German) ng ot the war, tiNGAnY'S crumpling was pparcmiy mueli like Bui s It was deferred until the i.nu came in 1RRESIST- (. lorcc, e bnttln nn thn lliinnnrlnn is curing tlie past week niv io iinvc ocen u icrriiic Tho Russians knnrkprl mil ucrmnn tanks on Snlurdny COW CIVCS thn lllnMnv 4nlnl zl tanks destroyed thero as l limn n..nll.. i,,,,tjr UlllllU, U11U S. Whnn lt,n II ...Mtn. nc jig was up, Hint Germany U "w iwisyi proicci mom, wc in lor una iroiiDio Bans were more lo be feared Ihcv milt rrun.A i.n , mvsu inn i, njr K. pnriiculnrly crcd tab c iv ii quiuing out 11 &dc WnritAr A n . - nnin mm sVhn; ...".I "'ponn- i i." s.onnon loony, i uiio Hungarian oi, I ueiwocn mo rcci . "Brcni tirivo past pest to Vienna and n nos- tivAV " ,liinn ana a i .FINAL DECISION IN .T HE L " riniard, tho nusfllnni hnvfl 'ma Picls by combined rt.-:"V..n"1!'1-. ihey lid. i . .'A?11 ''otsnmo. to on In '? "vny l,nc L " i-ngo iiirec) fsmuir Girls y onot ffnnU i Innrlnrl V their to two lluio' Dunsmiilr was Thn aem- u"' mt'n t South. in i u"IKemnn. Glendn i. , ""Kmors or I I' 'li.H .o'woids1 Dunsmiilr. " ....j ruesdny i-..' wcro rusliliiK - ". uurncy, , Cnllf., ,, hos. I :""K lu 1 in B nru which Bllcl ennn t and about 45 mil Ina frnm Mnck S ell I, ... n Hussoll U ... K" "n" Itl 11...'" .? !sdny and nf thn i: V'"" enr in one of nl thn Im ."'i ,nc foor l on fngo Three) PRICE 5 CENTS fezi Lifeline YANK FORGES MEET NORTH OF NAZ POST German Supplies Sent Into City by Parachutes By ALEX H. SINGLETON LONDON. Oet, 1(1 (,1.The lust thin lifeline of the nnzi Harrison of Anchcn was cut in tho buttle of tho Sleiifricd line todny by American forces which battled to a Junction from positions north and north east of tho city. The junction was mode at Wurselen, three miles north of the city, by the U. S. first army, which crushed five frantic counterattacks In three days and knocked out SO to 60 of tho enemy's tanks. Wursclcn was mopped up in the process. Parachut Supplies With the city completely locked by oncircllnu forces, the Germans were reduced to sup plying the garrison by para chute, Elsewhero allied forces sent patrols across the Ncder Rhine in Holland, clomped a two cdMod .hold on tho -sea ap proaches ' to Antwerp in Bel glum and captured a dozen towns, villages and forts In a brood ndvnnec in tho Vosges which took French troops to within :i2 miles of the Rhine.. Yanks Withdraw But along the Moselle the bitter bottle Insldo Kort Drlnnt ended unsuccessfully after 10 day of closc-qunrtcr combat. Amorlcan forces withdrew there before down Friday, it (Continued on Pago Three) Court Refuses Tyler Kent Case WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (VP) The supreme court refused to day to consider tho case of Tyler Kent, code clerk In the American embassy In London who was convicted In a British court of violating the British official war secrets act and sentenced to seven years' Im prisonment. Kent's mother, Mrs. Ann H. P. Kent of this city, asked tho high tribunal to aid in bringing about his return lo tho United Stntcs, Battle for American first army Iroopi encircled Aachen today, cutting off tha airman town from all supplies except those tent in by parachut.. At Fort Drlanl, American th rd arn units war. freed to withdraw. Positions of other allied urmies art Indl cated by flags and arrows. , In The ShaHin-CitHviulp Wonderland KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1944 L. as i,...rjiV.J .,i..,t-vi.-u... , t -i nii-. ii i i -.'T.aWn j'i i ikAr.i.ii i.iii.. i"; m Eight enlisted men and an officer of tht America! division, fighting Japs In the southwest Pacific, formed a "Dimo-a-Doten" club and their leader hands over 10 cents for each dozen Japs killed, First Lt. Raymond Ross of Modiord, Ore., hands out certificates to his men, attesting lh numbar ol Jam each h killed. Left to sight!' Pfo. Manuel Alvlres. Los Anoeles; Pfc. Morris Manuel, Winchester, Ky.i Cpl. Ri P.nl. Minn.i Staff Sat. Harrv Staff Sgt. Alex McLean. Grafton. photo irom u. s. army.) German Sea Escape Route Cut by Capture of Port By W. W. HERCHER LONDON, Oct. 16 (P) The German sen escape route from northern Finland has been cut with the enpturo of the Arctic port of Pclsnmo and advancing red army tanks were reported today to hnve won nn important rood junction close to tho Nor wegian border. Pr'nvda of Moscow described tho newly won highway center as the "key to Norway," without nnmlng it further and said it had been captured after Russian forces bent off a counternttnek by a German armored column retrcSting toward Norway. Divisions Routed Also, Prnvdn snid the land and sen nssnult on Petsnmo, capture of which wns announced of ficially by Moscow Inst night, Fatherland to tehen Yank Fighters Kill Japs at 'Dime Karl E. Doll, North. Holly wood, SchulU.-Gsrv. S. D.t Staff Sqt. N. D. and Pfc. Raymond A. CottrelL Sebeka, Minn. (AP Wire- ; - routed two choice enemy Alpine divisions in a three hour battle. Moscow did not . report on progress of the red army in Hun gary ' where Hungarian nozis were reported to have imposed a rule of terror following an armistice petition by Regent Nicholas Horthy. Not Mentioned The battle for Belcrade was not mentioned in the official soviet communique, but Berlin , (Continued on Page Three) Tax Statements Mailed Here Klamath county tax office yes tordnv mailed 21.000 tax state ments to approximately 8000 tax payers. In addition, a number of tax statements are held at the office for lnrgo companies and rcprcscntotives of various groups ol tnxpnyors, io oo cnuca ior. Total of tho 1044-45 tax roll Is $1,850,136.75, . or . about 10 per cent over the roll of the previous year. The tax office urged that tax payers mail in their checks with the copy of the statement re ceived by them, instead of going to tho tax office to make pay ment, in order td relievo conges- lion at the tax office counter. The receipted . tax statements- will then be mailed to the taxpayers. Unpaid tnxes for prior years have been shown on tho upper right hand side of nil statements, and taxpayers should pay these delinquent taxes when paying for tho current yenr. In such enses, however, it will be nccos snry to hnve the tnx office com pute tho Interest thnt has ac crued to timo of payment. Three per cent discount is al lowed on all current year taxes Cald in full on or before Novcm cr IS. Taxpayers were asked to make this deduction when mniling In remittances for the full year's taxes, High way Worker Eseap es Death Charles Dougherty, state high way cmnlovc. narrowly escaped dcnth iato Monday morning when he drove his rond blade In to the oath of a Southern Pacific AHurns-bound train, one-hnlf mile south of Mac's store on the Spring Lake road. Fred Hnskins was riding the trailer blade wncn he jumped to warn Dougherty of the ap proaching train. The engineer hnd applied brakes by this timo and as Dougherty sent the blade on tho tracks, the engine sheered off the front wheels and-. axles. Dougherty escaped With' minor face cuts, ,' ' , - a - Dozen' - Calif,;.. 5gt. Richard KowitzJ Ralph Brodin. Spooner, Minn.; , TO TULELAKE At least a half dozen shippers in the Tulctakc area announced Monday that they would discontinue shipping potatoes and that they would hold their spuds. Reports came through today that temperatures in the high spots south last night hit 20 and 22 degrees and that there is some report o f frost damage t o potatoes shipped over tha weekend in non-rctrigeraior cars. Some buyers said they would attempt to ship out a few car loads if the present weather holds. One buyer snid that his firm "was sending out a lew boxcars resentfully" and that everything was being done as far as he could find out but there was no relief in sight. W. H. Anderson, farm labor placement manager at Tulclake, said that tncre w o u i a De a check made this week on po tato storage available and growers would know at the end (Continued din Page Three) . Today On The Western Front By The Associated Press -U. S. 3rd Army Driven from slight toe-holds id Fort Drinnt, in the Mctz-Moselle sector, but blew up tho fort after withdrawing. The fort had taken everything Ameri can planes and guns could give it. British 2nd Army Sent two pntrols across the Nedcr Rhine in the Amhem area, where an airborne division failed two weeks ago to hold a Netherlands bridgehead menacing Germany's north flank; Canadian 1st Army Clamped a two-edged grip on the sen entrances to Antwerp, and Joined three bridgeheads across the Leopold canal, achieving a firm base for an assault on the final German positions in tho pocket around Breaking. U. S. 1st Army Fought off the third furious German countcf-attack In 24 hours at Aachen and edged forward by blocks inside the city. U. S. 7th Army Drove Hs deepest spearhead within two miles of LflBrcssc, 24 miles north of Belfo-rt and 32 miles from the Rhine, on the ex treme southern end of the front. . ' - Mas. (Oft. 19) PrcclptUtUn U 8lrtm jiar t dal .. Normal ft La it ytar rricaI: BU$bMy ovarratl. Sinday Hhosllnff Hnpra Oreiont Optn n.;.Hn....4:2ft CIia Tilclaktl Open Jt Claaca iced Chaos Follows Hungarian Bid For Armistice By WADE WERNER LONDON. Oct. 18 (JF) Hungary has toppled into "political chaos after Regent Nicholas Horthy's dramatic bid for peace. Horthy's auick eclipse at least on the Budapest radio by Count Ferencz Szalasy's last-ditch crowd of arrow cross nazis only emphasized that Hungarians were fighting among them selves instead of against . the invading red army. Reports via Stockholm today said that In some places they were, fighting the Germans too. This all added up to a melting of the barrier between the red army and a great drive past Budapest to Vienna and a pos sible final decision in the east. , - The Germans took quick measures to stave off the debacle but admitted through the official German news agency that Horthy's petition for an armistice had "greatly damaged the waging of the war." ' - - , Tak Over Buildings Berlin dispatches to Stockholm newspapers said nazi troops swiftly took over all strategic buildings in Budapest and that. a new government shortly would "try to get Hungarian troops to continue battle on the German side." One-report' said Horthy had escaped arrest and was holding out in. a strongly fortified castle. ,': A transocean broadcast from- Germany- said a "detailed declaration" on the Hungarian developments would be forth coming later. Meanwhile Berlin's morning papers' refrained from mentioning Hungary. -.'.--. That Hitler and his advisors should pause for some fast ininKing oeiore explaining the Hungarian collapse to the war weary German people was only natural. It was far more than the defection of Hitler's last satellite it must seem to anv German like the crashing of the vuiueraoie area. .''. Sail Control ".' -N Pro-German elements. nrsumablv aided bv Gorman SS riivl. sions rushed to Budapest from nf lhii"pnirwlw,--lmwnio.Bli.B.a " - - " " --'-"- .7 ...... iv. i. ... Dl.LI . 1 I J , . . ( . was uruHucasi eany uin evening uy negem nonny. , Within a few hours another nounced that the Hungarian nazi party headed by Szalsy had iaen mailers in nana io eliminate traitors at all costs and promise that "the most ruthless measures," including the death penany, woum De imposed on The Ankara radio said the and a report broadcast by the wormy nad been seized by the gestpo and taken to Germany. ; . The effect of the peace move -on the Hungarian army, an estimated 30 to 40 divisions, was not known immediately. Horthy's petition, as recorded ganan soiaiers to lay down tneir arms. A later broadcast of a statement attributed to the chief of the general staff, Col. Gen. Vitez Voeroes. ureed the troons to continue fi eh tine "until 'the outcome of armistice negotiations quoted swiss reports that large were aireaay quilling. 'Desert Fox' Erwin Rommel Dead, Says Berlin Radio LONDON, Oct. 16 (IP) Field Marshal Erwin Rommel,, the "desert fox," is dead, the Ber lin radio said yesterday. He was. the famed commander of the' Afrika corps. . The Berlin brpadcast yester day did not say how Rommel was wounded or when he had died, but said Adolf Hitler had prdcrcd a state funeral. The an nouncement described him as one of Germany's "most success ful army leaders." Death Rumored Rumors of Rommel's death had been current since late July when allied field dispatches quoted German prisoners as say ing' he had succumbed to in juries suffered , when his car was strafed by allied planes in Normandy. The Germans subse quently denied his death but acknowledged he had suffered a brain concussion and other injuries in an automobile acci dent during a strafing attack on July 17. . ' Rommel, who became known as the "desert fox" during the African campaign, when ' his troops drove the British to the gates of Alexandria before they were stopped in October, 1942, by Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's eighth army, was commander ot German forces in Normandy at the time of the allied invasion. Von Rundstedt Quarrel Ho was reported to have Klamath $15,000 Short in Drive Klamath county Is still $15,000 short in the combined commun ity war chest fund drive and persons who have not as yet given their contribution are urged to do so as quickly as pos sible so mat tne drive can oe wound up. Charles. R. Stark, secretary of the executive committee for the drive, Monday, urged thnt those who are. collecting donations, turn In what has been taken In, in order that progress in the drive can be. determined from day to day, & t brs w M : t ...:23 Number 10289 gate guarding the reich's most Vienna. aDDarentlv seized control .1 , : , : . ' i i - W.1. KIIUUII n utmxsiiKV ,. . ... m an oraer ot tne day signed ! . broadcast from Budapest an tnose disobeying orders. - gestapo was making mass arrests radio at Lille, France, said in London, did not order Hun-' is known," but the Lille radio groups of Hungarian -soldiers Quarreled with Field Marshal Gen. Karl Rudolf Gerd. yon Rundstedt then . over-all Ger man commander in western Europe concerning tactics used in combatting the: invasion. On July 6 the Berlin . radio an nounced; that :Von Rundstedt had-been replaced by Field Marshal Gen. Guenther von Kluge in a move .that, appar ently was a victory tor. Konv mel. ' -- . " . j. A veteran of the First World war. in which he foueht with distinction. Rommel joined the Hitler movement in its eariy stages and-later was considered a ereat favorite of the fuehrer. . Me won promotion to iieia marshal at the age of 50 during the summer of 1942 for his up- to-then successful campaign in North Africa, - becoming the youngest German' officer ever to hold tnat ranK. iyiSn Artificial Harbors Solve Invasion Supply Problems LONDON. Oct. 16 Two artl-1 ficlal harbors, built in secret and floated across the English channel, explain the riddle of how the allies were able to sup ply their ground troops which swept through northern France while the Germans held every port but Cherbourg.' - in- disclosing tne use oi tnese unique harbors, supreme head quarters said last night that they "made possible the libera tion of western Europe." Floating steel barges, 130 concrete caissons - or floating boxes and seven miles of pre fabricated pier equipment di vided into , segments 480 feet long were 'Used to make the harbors along with a flotilla of old ships sent to the channel bottom to! provide part of the breakwater system, . , The worst channol' storm in 40 years wrecked' one of the harbors before . it was com ploted, but not before It had contributed heavily to the stream of men and equipment ON FORMOSA FIGHT REPORT Yanks r Shoot Down 100 Nip Planes Off Luzon V. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEADQUARTERS, Pearl Har- Dor, Oct. 18 (P) A furious air. naval duel off Formosa, which began Friday, went into its third day today, Tokyo report ed after officially announcing the imperial fleet had joined the battle. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz an nounced yesterday morning. that strong Japanese aerial at tacks precipitated the engage-. ment in mid-afternoon Friday and said "this fight is continu ing." The Nipponese counter? attack, their third of the For- mosan campaign, followed new American raids on that island and Luzon. Hit 100 Nips Carrier planes of the third fleet sweeping across Luzon in two raids a day apart shot down- or destroyed on tne ground, more than 100 Japanese air craft as the great aerial assault upon the Philippines ana islands to the north went into its sev enth day. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, Pa cific fleet commander, an nounced in a noon communique' (Honolulu time) today that fighter aircraft raided Aparri, on the north coast of Luzon, Friday, and on tsunaay at tacked airfields in the Manila bay area, 200 miles southward, -The Japanese air force, stung ' into desperate action, attacked with the greatest vigor it has shown in many months, but at. terrible cost. Shot Down -In one battle alone the-Amer ican carrier planes- shot down all but 10 or 20' of one inter-; . .(.Continued on Page Three) SEIZE LIVERHO rruiv rof 1rt (ISA Amnrf. can troops have captured the hill town of Llvergnano, 10 the ' Germans had defended fanatically for days, auiea neaa quarlers announced today. . tt c Infflnim tanlrs anA f nnlr destroyers moved into Liver- gnano wnicn guards me ap proach to thehigh escarpment on which the Germans defend BoloKna, Llvergnano is on nign- way 65. German . troops stiu are re sisting fiercely all along the front and are launching counter attacks whenever their forward positions are prodded too sharp- ly'o'n the other end of the Ital ian frnnt Pnnariian units C8D- tured the small village of Bui- tuontinuea on .rage imcw Deadline on Sale Of Tickets Set ath football game at Medford will be taken off sale here at 10 a. m; Thursday morning,- ana Vlomofh fane nihil nl&n tn BO to Medford were urged to get their pasteboards immediately. The tickets are on sale at the chamber of commerce. Medford asked that the un sold tickets be returned Thurs day so they may be disposed of in Medford, according to Prin cipal Stanley Woodruff of Klamath union high school. pouring into France. The other was fimsnea as planned a port as big as Dover, capable of un loading at least 12,000 tons of stores and 2500 vehicles dally. Built in Year Construction of the harbors was started in June. 1943, when American and British opera tions officers decided that French ports falling into allied hands during the invasion could not possibly havf the capacity for the quantity of stores neces snry. ... When sunk, the flotilla of old vessels, including several Brit ish and Dutch warships, pro vided five small breakwaters of which two were in the areas where the artificial harbors later were established. Each concrete floating box had valves making it possible to sink or float them as desired. These boxes plus the floating ; line of steel barges anchored farther out In the water were designed to reduce an eight-foot wava to one or two feet.