in f s Sews truviNa I WtJ. landed SOMKWIlKnK b-o.' "1,,,ul ",lllw"y r . n.iiiniiiL- group. I , tho Jl wn. , a d nurlly Ijochuko wo '"," "L v ' outweighed In Sir we're ASIlOllli ON !.Ewcr.'.,.w,L- ticklish '., I, , ,T Invasion) with tliivciy ui.i .losses, ocr wo took the screening Wands t the '""' 01 ti Thru our iiuiiMwccin l tho J"l ' Ei, o( truusporls . mid pro- Up. ind ihrlr pl-nw kept Jans on win " "' ' Irions went nshoro from the El,c Jnp navy wn TOTALLY ENT ONE LONE JAP JANE conic overhead and ihot (town. uii no Jim niivy or nlrforco .u..nt-,. flittm ntir hntllo in moved along the bench ding JP pillboxes unci snore ....... u'lih ttwlr linen nnd tic kle gum. Closer inshoro our kct-Iiring criui am mkh lly work. :hat's whot air nnd naval rlorlty menu In modern war. ilTtl the way cleared for them by this ciirtnm ol lire, our hit ilii benches III their klina boats. seizing three Iclihcuds certainly aim per is b luurut iiiuiiK " mi.ii ic 70 or 8U mllea of Loyto'i I coast. It.-., nnl ftsltnrM llllH tnl.lirt in SfW vnrrln tKnv flvrl blocks! pre Hie Japs urea it snot. .! .... ...ill. n oil II,...., ntA nivu lf "lit. .,i,,V, J Ml,.. liars imormrs are me invoriio weapon, nnd they use them cr wen.) from mere on KoltiK (jot tougher us It nl 3 IIUI.-0, that'll about all we Imvo In wny oi neuiu as mis is wriv iERE arc the Jap navy nnd alrforce? Thnv nrc BEING KEN CARE OF by other units bur navy further north. In Jpast nine dny.s our tnHk forco las destroyed 1333 Jnp planes loam work, IcK of the Leytc beachheads s oroad tint area, described !tin tlGMnlnltnu . I.l..nl f..i twartnrp. It la Irlrnl nUn fnr WltLUS. From these n r i (when wo net them In VI rint'iin nit M1.WI......A t.,lll fily 273 miles nnd Mnnlln on i ..III - - 1.. IIIH ...II win uu uniy jiu nines. mi cnny rtiiKo for t iuht SCORTKD bombers. . , pia communique announcing p landing, MncArthur nntic- rs inn i ihn uii iinninnn 111 Plnknn Tlir. Hit.ni..l ..t- r r ropnitittrn u ...in nail K rnnrmrnl lulnM.l am IVi W Cl'1 f A MILLION men (Japs) I cut off without hope of r", no says, "to u t Hy destroyed at our leisure' late nu ii . i,..,.h l have hccll titirrl for us In he. Bm ,ill, l ii, .i WC'VO Knnn IMD K.n.l.. fy 01 MilrArllmrV I,, n... 1 know It WORKS 'VP. . - nnuc u gruua man. put don't oxnect tho Phllln ...ii iikr n ripe plum mo tree. Becnuso of their strnlrp i. i,....ni .. in r.. 1 1 in . "---i- mill t-,. " 1 1 jjiii mi Hi;, IMU '! I fiKhl for them to the ii. ni!L "re H23,ouu tlicrn TO niK n..i..- IllAW I . WJIIII. Ill Sl.lWl -ISP docs , i nno two) 4Teom Hits fond Jan Ship . S. 14T 1 r r,."LVANCE U, 1 jITTJ la ,'rr.Sf. UE IN CHINA, A B-Z . nM ' same III! llllUlip . ....turn rr T Incl in i... blew up a fV Inst niuh mm. " on . " uJ!:...So!'' bomb run ,iv,i wiiinn r.ui.. Japanese K snnk n ,i, b tiue.piHno destroyer of ;. on mil... r muki class, 90 Of lln.inl, gkong, and at a cruiser 1 "econd nns ni J Mro freighter, on nly got out Of 1ft ra fn Tls Shag.CaHradi Wonderland FIRST I T II AFTERSIEGE Canadians Strike Out n New Drive North of Antwerp By Tho AuoclaUd Prtit LONDON. Oct. 20 M'l Knitt ed Aachen, a sprawllnu city of death and destruction, fell to day to LI. Gen. Courtney It. !lodt!es' U. S. first army on the seventh dny of Its alone, To- nlBht the victorious Yanks started mopping up tne nisi rcmnnnU of the nazl garrison, trnpped on tho outskirts. The capture of the first ma jor German city, a gateway to tho Ruhr, was completed lit 3:30 n. ni. (7:30 n. m. Pnclfic War Time) official announce ments from the field said. Tho city is 340 miles from Berlin and 40 miles from Col ogne on tho Rhine. It hnd . a pcncctlmo population of los.uuu The douuhboys had been at tacking since September 15, and for a week they nnd engaged in street by street fighting with bazookas, bayonets and self nronellod milts. Aachen was left a mass of wreckage by fanatical ucrmnn resistance. Young German officers, many of them not long back from tho Russlnn front, threw away their lives to gain another Oak Leaf Cluster on their Iron crosses wnging warfare for vanity. Last Gsid Tho last convulsive gasp of resistance in tho center of the pltv wn. nt n Inruo stono build ing In which 100 SS men had barricaded themselves In de finnce of artillery which had pressed the defenders Into an ever narrowing space. Troops under lite command of Lt. Col. Mcrrll Daniel of Gonova, N. Y., knocked out this Inst major stronghold at 3:30 p. m. with dlrocl flro from a 185 mm. gun. The gun literally knocked down tho building. Nw Canuck Drive Canadian infantry and armor struck out in a new offensive through the mud and marsh land north of Antwerp today to bolster the allied powerhouse (Continued on Pago Two) , RAF Bombs City In Double Blow LONDON, Oct; 20 (VP) The RAF made a shattering double bender ntlnck last night on Stuttgarti one of tho main cen ters of electrical engineering in dustries In Germany, with two lnrgo forces of Hnllfnxcs and Lnttcastcrs pounding tho city four hours apart. A third large scnle attack was carried out simultaneously on Nnrnhorit. another engineering center, and a lighter mid was mndo on wicsDno.cn in vhk Rhlneland. More than " 1000 bombers participated In tho four attacks. Pvt. Shadduck Dies in Palaus T3t.nni.lu nt Put Pnhfrfc .T. Shadduck, 19, Wednesday were ndVlsca Dy mo war ncpiiruui.-iiv ... . i. in. j Dial ineir son nna dccii mii-vi In action on September 23 in Patau Islands. Pvt. Shadduck had been In II. . Qn,,it. Danfli. tlit-Ait mnnthn. Ho entered the United Stntes army October 12, 1043, from tiinmnin rnns ana rocciveu nw bnslo training nt Camp Adair. Born February 25, 1025, In Wyoming, Robert hnd lived most ol nls iifo in rvinmaui rnns uuu nttended grndc schools and VfTS-IQ linrn nnslrtn. his nnr- cnts, Mrs. Stella Shadduck and Maurice Shadduck of this city, tho youth is survived by two brothers and ono sister, all of mamniii runs. Harvest Weather ' Increasing cloudiness today. Showers tonight or Saturday. Lowest temperature near, 35. Further outlook showers con tinuing Sunday. Clear Mon day. 1 1 a - nft !-tor$ KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1944 nen Falls Reds Liberate Belgrade; Take Hungarian City LONDON, Oct. 20 (!'! Belgrade, capital of Yugoslavia, has been libsratod, Marshal Stalin announced tonight. It was the second ordor of the day to gat Moscow's victory guns to lighting tho skies with flaros and lt marked the end of days of ssvago street fighting by the red army and the Yugoslav partisans of Marshal Tito. Earlier, the Russians announced the capture of Debrecen, Hungary's third city, 116 milos east of Budapest. Belgrade Is 2000 yoars old and city of 266.040. It lies on the Danubo at Its confluence with the Save. Extensive fortifi cation.., were stretchod botween the rivers and the brow of a 150 foot hill. Once possessed by the Turks and Austria-Hungary in turn, the city had been a battleground in past centuries between Make It Good, Hunters, OP A Is Curious PORTLAND. Oct. 20 (VP) Mori; than 300 Oregon deer hunters hnvo n letter coming to them from the OPA, which is curious about tho ftasollnc they used to get to nutting grounds. Sol Stern, district enforce ment officer, said thnt at least 320 of them will be asked to explain why their cars were far from homo and how they got there. Investigators took the num bers of all curs found in hunting nreas. In the Klnm ath Fnlls-I.nkcvicw region, Stdrft said, 132 numbers wcro noted. Around Burns there wi re 60, and near John Day, 131. Questioned by investigat ors, Stern said, nearly all had good excuses to offer. Some were checking sawmills, oth ers were looking for Insur ance prospects. Ono was sell ing wallpaper. The letter these hunters will get, Stern explained, will ask them to appear before their local boards prepared to glvo a full explanation, and with evidence, to support their story. Britons Occupy Thebes; Nazis Speed Evacuation ' ROME, Oct. 20 (P) British trooos have occupied Thebes, 32 miles northwest of Athens, while German troops nnrrassca bv Greek guerrillas have speed ed up their withdrawal from northern Greece toward Yugo slavia, allied hendqunrters an nounced today. The Germans yesterday ac knowledged .withdrawal from Thebes. Us occupation put Brit ish units roughly 75 airline miles from the area in which German columns were last re ported fleeing. There wos no indication In the allied communique whether advance British elements hnd mndo any contact with tho re treating nnzls Tho communique reported thnt clvlllnn relief measures ore being stnrtcd nt Athens despite heavy demolitions in Piraeus hnrbcr which nrc cnuslng some delay In unloading food and supplies from ships. Killed Pvt. Robert Shadduck, above, was killed In action on the Palau Islands, his parents were notified by the war department. o II. S. tagliboys those antagonists Stalin's order said Belgrade, held by the Germans since the conquest of Yugoslavia in 1041, fell to tho combined forces of Mursh.nl Fcd- r Tolbukhin's third Ukrainian army group and Tito's national army of libera tion "after stubborn fighting which completed mopping up the German garrison." He order ed a salute of 24 salvos from 324 guns. Fall .Announced The fall of Debrecen was an nounced an hour before. Previously, the Germans an nounced the loss 'Of the city of 122,317 and said the red army had pulled up to another sec tion ol tne tail Prussian irom icr 20 miles south of fallen Eydtkau. massing vast tank forces in the Rominter Hcide, favorite doer forest of the late Kaiser Yilhelm II. Debrecen OuUlanked. Stalin's announcement said Debrecen fell to Marshal Rodion Mnlinovsky's Russian and Ro manian forces "as the result of an outflanking maneuver of cavalry and tank' units In co ordination with a frontal attack. The victory wns ordered sa luted In Moscow with 20 salvos from 224 guns. Other Russian forces were last reported with in 50 miles of Budapest. , nu inT FRTnitf . S. C. Oct. 20 (IP) The interior of the Caro- linas today felt tne lasn oi me imnin.1 ctnrm whtrh sweDt In land last night nnd hended slowly northwnrd with decreas ing intensity after causing the death of possibly 37 persons and doing Heavy property ttamagu in Cuba and Florida. Eleven soldiers from the New Orleans port of embarkation were reported drowned near Bradcnton, Fla., at the height of the storm. Third air force head quarters at Tampa said the men tnnli- In n riinnhv when their crash boat apparently got into nr. -..,... l 1. ....... I... ailUCUIiy H11U auttiuil licwa found no trace of them. Earlier two persons were reported killed at Miami and 24 were known dead in Cuba. Tho Washington weather bu (Continued on Pago Two) Today On The Western Front By The Associated Press Canadian 1st Army Struck out in a new offensive through marshlands north of Antwerp. Belgium, to bolster tho allied powerhouse salient being built In Holland. U. S. 7th Army On the ex treme southern end of the front, Americans captured Bruyeres while French units fighting In the Vosges foot hills outflanked Ventron. U. S. 1st Army Completes occupation of Aachen, now a shambles, 10 days after deliv ering an ultimatum that the city would bo destroyed un less It surrendered uncondi tionally. British 2nd Army Mnde slow progress through bog ging nnd mud ngninst stiff German resistance in its fight to clear tho enemy from west of the Mnas river along the relch border. U. S. 3rd Army Holding to positions botween the U. S. 1st army, In the, center of the front, and the 7th army on the south, but not mentioned in today's communique. eother Octeber JO, 1944 Mix, fOrl. 19) 15 Mln. ..,,,,. I'reHplutlon lot 31 noun .,..-.. Ktrram year l data Normal II LH year forttaid Rain and -oIir, Saturday Ahootlnf Hauri Orrgnnf Oprn CIm . Twlelafc: Open - ,........ fi:5l Close Back in Philippine Islands vl -4 - Fulfilling a pledge made in 1942 to return to the Philip pines, Gen. Douglas MacArthur has landed, invasion forces on Leyte. Shown at right in typi cal MacArthur costume, the general also brought Sergio Osmena, successor to Manuel Quezon a s president o f the Islands, back to his home. Os mena and his cabinet will re establish the government on home soil. . Allies Enter Former Nazi , Headquarters in Italy By LYNNHEINZERLIN;.,. "soKlK'. ""OcL" 20 (l British and Indian troops have entered Ccscna, former German admin istration center on the main Bologna-Rimini highway in the Adriatic sector, allied headquar ters announced today. Meanwhile, other eighth army troops made additional progress in bitter f iehtine in the moun tainous areas southwest of Ces ena, while the fifth army made local gains in the central Italian sector south of Bologna, flank ing the Bologna-Florence ntgn way. zo Miles tniona Cesena. Fori! tjrovince town on the historic Emilian way, is 12 miles southeast of the town of Forli and about 20 miles inland from the Adriatic. The penetration of Cesena ap parently was only in the eastern nart of the town, the communi que indicated, but gains by other eighth army troops to tne souin Duck Hunters Hurt in Crash Two Palo. Alto, Calif., duck hunters were injured, one se riously, at 6 o'clock Thursday night in an attempt to avoid striking a train at -the Hager crossing, six miles south of Klamath Falls. A. A. Young, about 45, re ceived severe head and neck in juries in the accident, and W. J. Booz. 45. driver of the car, had bad scalp wounds. Both men were moved to Hillside hospital by Charlie Read, passing mo torist. , Boaz said he had not driven the road before and was not aware of aDoroachmg a cross ing until he heard a train whis tle. At that moment he saw flat cars and he applied the brakes, the car hurtling into the ditch, overturning ana land ing some 50 feet from the road in the Lcibing field. Boaz was to be dismissed Frl dny night nnd planned to return to Palo Alto by train. He oper ates a lnrgo service station In tho southern city, and Young is a garage operator. Pierre Laval Sentenced to Die LONDON, Oct. 20 (P) Pierre Laval has been sentenced to death in absentia by a Mar seille tribunal, the Paris radio said today. A warrant for tho arrest of the Vichy chief of government. now either sheltering with or held by tho Germans, was is sued by tho tribunal two weeks ago and lt was stated then that he would be tried whether he was present or not. Tho Algiers- radio reported that Jean- Galliard, former di rector of the newspaper "Petit Marseille" was condemned to death in absentia by the same tribunal at tho same time. Number 10293 &l1 1 made, the German position . in Cesena extremely difficult. Headauarters said the bridge head across the Pisciateilo river, above the highway and west of Macerone, has reached a depth of two miles and has been joined with a bridgehead farther to the west established three days ago. South of the ' Emilian way, Celincordia has been captured and farther west several villages and hills have been cleared of the enemy south of Galeata, me communique, said. Kilmer Charged On Habitual Criminal Count Aloysius Kilmer; 25, sentenced nine years aao here after he had broken into the OK Blacksmith shop, was charged Friday by Dis- .v miuiucj' iviuier Ht Jiayaen, Salem, with being an habitual criminal. If Kilmer is convicted of the new charge, he will be sen tenced to life imprisonment, and woum ue ineiigioie tor parole. Kilmer was Daroled bv then Circuit Judge Edward B. Ash- urst lollowmg his first convic tion, but Hayden says that he has been convicted of felonies more than 10 times, was released from prison two months ago after serving a five-year sentence for burglary. On the day of his re lease, ne neid up a drug store, shooting and woundlne William Niemcyer, the owner. Police cap tured him in a gun battle, and ne was sentenced to 20 years, Bulletin LONDON, Oct. 20 Ankara radio broadcast today reports from Sofia that Bulgaria had signed an armistice with the United Slates. Russia and Great Britain. 1 I if .1:1 Final Registration Totals Give Demos KLAMATH REGISTRATION City Precincts Republicans 4,406 Democrats 5,960 Others 455 Total 10,821 County Precincts Republicans 4,051 Democrats 6,061 Others 335 Total 10,447 All-County. Total 21,268 Total Democrats 12,021 Total . Republicans 8,457 Total Others - ' 790 A re-check of preliminary fig ures from the county clerk's of fice on Klamath county voter registration shows republicans with 111 more registrants than reported last Saturday. Demo cratic figures remain the same, Three Beachheads Seized On Leyte; ; Yanks Move Inland GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS. Philippines. Oct. 20 (IP) Gen. Douglas MacArthur landed powerlul invasion forces in the heart of the Philippines, announced to the people of the archipelago "I have returned" and called upon them to rise and strike their Japanese Ground forces poured ashore vav under Drotectlon at a terrific naval anri air hamh.rilm.iit. quickly seised three strong beachheads along Leyte island's east coast. One assault force struck the beach from San Rieardo, ap proximately three miles south of the main city of Tacloban, to Palo. Another, strong force struck along the coastlines between San Jose and Dulag, end a combat team landed at Panaon on the southern tip ot Leyte. The beach fronts are three approximately 11 miles apart. inis quick, nerd drive into the heart of the southern Philip pines establishes American forces only 275 statute miles from BOARD SELLS SITE BE Klamath elementary school board agreed last night to sell to the government a 12-acre tract at Washburn and Shasta ways, to be used for the 80-unit housing development for families of ma rine and navy personnel. - - The board, which had held the site for several years as a pos- siDle location for a school, reach ed the decision after long consid eration and strictly on the grounds that the land was need ed for a purpose closely identi fied with the war effort, it was explained after the meeting. .- Plant Underway Representatives of the federal public housing authority and Howard Perrin, local architect, said that plans are well along for the construction program. The houses will be of a higher stand ard and more substantial nature than .the civilian row housing here, and the layout will include a' community-building and play ground. . The consideration to be re ceived by. the school district for ine tract will ne determined Dy four appraisers two local men and two from outside. If the ap proval figure is not satisfactory to the board, it can appeal and the figure will be determined by a jury. The board paid $5000 ior the-aite ln-1938, but its present value is Believed to be well above that. - . . Clause Requested - In reaching the decision last night, the school board asked that, if possible, a clause be add ed to the sale contract to give the board the first refusal on re purchase of the property when the government no longer needs it- , - In considering the possible need for a- school site in that area, the board discussed the pos sibility of obtaining the site of the nresent row-housing develop ment nearby. : The government is committed to removing the row-housing six months after cessation ot nosuuues, ana tne land is owned by the public bodies at the present time. The school , board met with members of the education com mittee of the chamber of com merce for a consideration of the nroblem. The committee. - how ever, was not authorized to act for the chamber, and members could give only their personal opinion of the proposal, which was favoraDie. Disorder Flames In Guatemala MEXICO CITY, Oct. 20 (IP) Guatemalan unrest is reported through private channels to have flamed into violent disor-. der. Darticularly in the capital No details are' available here but there are reports that roads around the center, of the city are blocked. :' Pan-American' Airways made no announcement of discontinu ance of service but no nassen- gers for Guatemala are booked on today's two southbound Dlanes. Gulllermo Toriello, Guate malan political exile, said here today that a "machete army" of 10,000 is active in Guatemala City. Lead in County but non-party registrants also are up a little over the preliminaries. The final registration figures for the county are set out in the table above, showing li.vtl dem ocratic registrants and 8457 re publican registrants. Registration is almost evenly divided between Klamath Falls precincts and those outside, Democratic registration is stronger outside. GOP registration represents 41.3 per cent of the total figure for both parties, as compared with 40.9 per cent at the time of the May primaries. Since May, republicans have gained 882, or 11.8 per cent, while democrats nave gained l itf, or . per cent. At the. election: November 7, all voters Will receive the same ballots, in contrast with the nri- maries, . when party, ballpts are nanaca ou, conquerors. in Loyte gulf from a huge con. and a half miles In width and Davao and 340 air miles south. east of Manila. While they Dressed inland to. ward the fertile valleys Gen eral MacArthur took -to the air in a broadcast over the "Voice of Freedom" radio, telling tha people he had fulfilled his two and a half year old vow to re turn. ... MacArthur told the Filipinos their president, Sergio Osmena, and his cabinet were with him on Leyte and had re-established the governmen on Philippine soil. . "Rally . to me," MacArthur said to the Filipinos. "Let the indomintable spirit of Bataan, and Corregidor lead on. As the lines of battle roll forward to bring you within the zone of operation, rJ;e and strike." With MacArthur was every able-bodied survivor of Coriegi- aor. . While men and suDDlies Dotir- ed in to meet an estimated 225, 000 Japanese in the Philippines under i ieid Marshal Juictu Ter- auchi, President Roosevelt mes saged from Washington: the whole American nation today exults at the news that the gallant men under your command have, landed on Phil ippine soil." , . '..; 415 Miles From Manila - The Leyte landings Dut the invaders within 415 miles of Manila to the northwest and marked an advance of 600 miles north from MacArthur s base at Morotai. . Front line dispatches said the Leyte landings were preceded three days ago by landings on small islands guarding the en trance to Leyte gulf and mine- sweeping operations of the gulf to make it safe for the passage of convoys. . ' '. ;- Participants MacArthur said the invaders comprised Lt. Gen. Walter Krueger's sixth U. S. army and units from tne central facuic. Without further identification. frontline dispatches of Associat ed Press correspondents specifi ed these participants: The first cavalry division: tna seventh division; the 96th divis-. ion. The. Japanese, expecting land ings to the south of Mindanao (Continued on rage xwo) ' Jap Admiral . Dies in Attack LONDON. Oct. 20 (IP) Vice Adm. Nashaharu Arima of the. Japanese navy was killed Oc tober 15 when his torpedo plane . "attacked and nit a Dig u. o. aircraft carrier" off the Philip pines, Berlin radio said today reporting a TOKyo oispaicn. Just why an admiral was rid ing a torpedo plane, one of the most nazaraous ot navai wea. pons, was not disclosed. ' The Tokyo dispatch said the admiral crashed his torpedo plane against the ' command bridge nf the carrier, when his plane failed to climb, and addr. ed: ne win remain an exam ple of Japanese heroism." Be-, fore he crashed, he was said to have torpedoed the carrier, but no such damage has been re-, ported by allied naval author ities. . , - - ' ' Asahel Bush Covers Invasion . Asahel Bush, former member of The Herald and . News staff and now with Associated Press,? went ashore with the first cav alry division on Leytc, the Phil ippines, as AP assembled the, largest force of war correspond ents ever used in the Pacific theater by any press organiza-. tion to cover Gen. Douglas Mac-. Arthur's return to the islands. ' i The correspondents moved onto the Leyte shore with or soon after the assault waves to man the beachhead bureau and cover every phase of the naval, and land operations. ; Marines Fight Fire on Stukle Fifty marines from the Bar-, racks were sent out with Mar lon Barnes, county fire warden, today to aid in the control of a' fire on Stukcl mountain, The conflagration was' be lieved to have been started by the carelessness of hunters, but-, was reported well under con-' trol. ... .,, '