WW 17 JllSUfi- il 9 NO SUPERFORTS LOST ON RAIDS Havtmbir ST. lfi Max. Wo. M) 39 Mln. .... PrtslplUtlon lait 34 bonrt . W Stram yttt to date 3.1 Nrml 2.64 tit year -....l.Ofl Foracmt: Colder. Tucadar Bfaoollnf Hours Or(on: Open Clow Tiltlaki: Open 7;4 Cloae a JfRAMC JENKINS ' . ...i.-i.in" forcn of 4 r. M I kill AGAINST JAPS Nips Report 40 Craft In The Shastu-Cascade Wonderland 1'! taken off from Sulpun PRICE 5 CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1944 Number 10323 er2orrc"Voiulont. says they tf'S-n .Jhcii they left. Hiking SS mlMTndh.lWon '"' ii nrcclso one-nilnulu ly. .1 rnnrinil UWIiy 'a lima. HlH cllmmteh W ' imni-esslve resources pll UNUSED D-20. ... ji.lnt, nf nowcr thnt will f , a ond worry tho Japs ,!".'C"l.t'.cl fact Mint wo in IX) IT AGAIN in JAYS. I. .. . ..., limp. China-based IV hit Bnkok. In Thai- " i,aY li.lni(kk Is big ; rcccnl ) o( the South China urn.) 7i. an Important i.;. rail ",nl wu" t u" Slk (which tho Jnps nro busy jjinj I") l,"'l from sl",n1,ul tl.ntD.20 n.8o V".e.-V iii k'lonr i lnc o-Chlnn "E';.nter on tlili. rail- r"vrn Hanoi DHANCH S lcnds up to Kunming, our W I . . I.. tl.n rtin-mii rniid. WWro toi S lllIM U xSt Jun IransporUilifti by 3ndwH1 us by sen. UIMITZ announces today that .1 in last Friday's carrier-plane m on Mniilln bay wc sank n S heavy cruiser, two luggers, ,rovcr and 14 other ships, g knocked out 72 Jap planes. nur pilots invt .i"v i lilMnnlla hay, tho Philippines J:inj o graveyard of Jap ship (Remember what happened to jtbiul.) tin r.tUinnro on Lcyto Is re- ported today to be stcndlly :fjur planes there go on sinking in K.nriiiL Jan reinforcements. ui,.ii,o liilln vellow men have irrlliccd five convoys of 33 M and mi estimated 17,000 Alien In their efforts to rc- larcc Lcyle MER-ALL news from the f Pacific Is so good thut wc 19 constantly luinmuu m ... tfxi.rmv conclusions. The 3m (mm China, uniformly bnd sxvidcj an offset thnt may be echoloiiically useful. AV Irarn lodnv that'Nonnlng r last far-forward nirbuso In ditheastcrn China, has fallen to Ijt Japs. Tho Jups take Hochih, Sy 120 miles southeast of the flier reaches of tho Burma JTic bad news from China Is at out to us In little scraps. today's dispatches say It "seems !iblc the Chinese nro hiintlhiK flho bnd news in smnll bits order to AVERT A PANIC" China.) HE reason the B-ZO news is Important is thnt It indi tes the beginning of a sus- tfotd nltnck nn jnnan's nro- Active nowcr similar to that itich wc launched against Ger- any a year and a half ago, THE fighting between Aachc land CoIobiio continues on ale that Is hnrd for us home. renters to Imagine. The Roer ft", last natural obstacle before Sogno ond the Rhine, is the iscnt center of It. Beyond the tor the country opens up into rouy roiling plain. . jThc fighting is in rain, snow, d and hail about as miser- e aa It could (bc, tETIE Ulcrnlly INCHING for s ward. More than n week f wc were renorted 20 miles n Cologne. We'ro 244 miles y today, E brutal fact Is that from Anrhnn ln rnln,,n uin'rn &UNG GERMANS. When t gel ENOUGH Germans fco, the war In Europo win Sovcr. It Is bccomlnu reason- Jy apparent that the amount ermory Rnincd Isn't ns lm. 'ant ns the number of Gcr silled, I JERMANY and Jnnnn aro tor Imylng examples of whnt INDOCTRINATION do. fl Hungary, red tanks are strlk westward from captured van lownrd tho Dnnubo J'TH of Budapest. Tho Rus jw.hsvo Enined a footlna on jniic-long, narrow Cscpel r"V in me Danube. Tho 7? northern end is a nnrt udapest. Tho Russians are X "uvancmg in eastern Slo' i. z wwicre there Isn't much Y' lmm iho eastern front, L " f," news comes today from 3"nsmngtnn. Secretary of ion?"" "ESIGNS. iing-contlmiori ill lmnllli jS" aS the rensnn fnr hlo rnolff. 31n1rw,h,ch mt,y or mBy nl t?.6'- ln these largo national Wh . America but h of . fci'tnln of tho literal f ? What umv iu f..v. I0p, "J win lachlnt.lil . tCimiu. m his textbook .iimcn nn n,...n n.... STETTINIUS TO SUCCEED Secretary of State Resigns Because Of Health WASHINGTON, Nov. 27 (VP) President Roosevelt nominated Undcr-Sccrelnry Edward R. Stcttinlus Jr., to be secretary of state. Two and a half hours after ucccptinK tho rcslKnulion of Sec retary or bliilc Hull, because 01 111 health, the president sent the nupio of Stettlnlus to the senate as Hull's successor. The president earlier lunched with Stettlnlus and also confer red with Chairman Connolly (D-Tex.) of the senate forcljn relations committee and Sena tor GeorRo (D-Ga.), ranking committee member. Now Effective Mr. Roosevelt had disclosed that Hull's resignation would become effective upon tho op polntmcnt of a successor. The information that Hull had handed in his resignation was given to the Associated Press Inst night by a high government official who asked that his name not bo used. Talked With Hull The nrcsident saw Hull yes terday at the naval hospital at Rethcsda, Md., where he has been a patient for five weeks, and told him then that he felt. under the circumstances, ho should accent tho resignation The chief executive declared Ihnt, Hull's doctors told the sco- retnry. and Hull felt, that his completo recovery from a long (Uonnnuea on rage iwoi Senate Rejects Flood Amendment WASHINGTON. Nov. 27 (fF) The senate rejected today a pro posed Missouri river oavisory commission ns part of the $1,' 000, 000. COO postwar flood con trol hill. Dnfent nf the amendment was a triumph for advocates of Missouri valley auinorny on which Senator Murray (D-Mont.) and Langcr (R-N.D.) demanded a vote. Senator Clark (D-Mo.) appeal cd vainly for npproval of the amendment on tho ground that a Missouri river commission, nnlterned nfler the Mississippi river commission, would speed relief from periodic floods. senator Murray suggested that Clark's amendment was a move to "offset" the authority proposal, Hurley Named Ambassador to China by FDR WASHINGTON, Nov. 27 (IV) Mai. Gen. Patrick H. Hurley was nominated by President Roosevelt today to be American ambassador to China. HiiHpv. soeretnrv of war un dcr President Hoover, has served thn nrescnt administration in diplomatic capacities during the war. At one time ne was mut ktnr in New Zealand. Hurley Is In China now with Donald M. Nelson, mo prese ripnt's nersonal representative, who Is attempting to build up Chinese war production. WELL HULL Japs Take Liuchow; Yanks Abandon Last CHUNGKING, Nov. 27 (VP) The Chinese high command to night announced the fall of Ho chili, 05 miles west Liuchow In Kwangsl province, southern China, In the Japanese sweep toward Kwclchow province. Hochih Is but 20 miles from thn Kwclchow border and 120 miles southeast of KwciyBng, Burma rond town in Kwelchow whence tho Invaders would be in position to strike at Chung kind 1 Loss of Hochih was announc ed shortly after lt wos disclosed that the last forward American air base In south China, a fighter field at Nnnning, had been aban doned and destroyed by the 14th U. S. air force. . ' . There was general acceptance of the Japanese claim to the capture of Nanning, although Hp o W Mil I IIMIIIMI tm MMMMMMMMWMWM A hnmltnhU wolpomn was nxtondod Saturday to a arouD of Californians, chiefly from Modoc rnniv wtin mm hmm Inr mAittlna of tha M odoc defensa council at the invitation of the Klamath chamDer 01 commerce, nere raiicneii i itioiion. local cnairman, is muwn ytoc.iuii visitors. In the picture, left to right: Harry Edgerton. Adin lumberman and chairman of the Modoc natural resources committee; Tillotion; Howard Dayton, Tulelake member of the defense council; Charlos Stark, secretary of Klamath chamber; Russ Bacon, Alturas, secretary of the Modoc council. By DANIEL de LUCE MOSCOW. Nov. 27 (!') Rus sian armored units lashed out from enntured Hatvan toward the Danube north of Budapest tndav while d rcctly 1 down' stream from the Hungarion cap ital another red formation was reported to have seized a loov hold on narrow Cscpel- island. Hatvan, 25 miles northeast of Budapest, fell yesterday after a 10-day struggle. With its cop- liiro Mm-slinl Rodion Y. Malm ovsky was able to maneuver his second Ukranian army for dou blcsidcd attacks to outflank Budapest. Fiaht Into Cseoel (Berlin said red army units fought their way into the north ern tip of Cscpel island in the Danube river five miles south of the capitals municipal boun (Continued on Pago Two) Canadians Try to Break Deadlock CHICAGO. Nov. 27 (P) The Canadian delegation attempted today to break the Anglo-American deadlock on a '"fifth free dom" of the air with a compro mise proposal which retains much of the detail outlined in the United States plan. The Canadian draft was sub mittcd at n Joint subcommittee meeting culled to work on tho stalemate In free debate, by the 54 countries represented at the international civil aviation con ference. Medford Doctors To Be Sentenced MEDFORD, Nov. 27 OP) Two Medford doctors found guilty in federal court here Inst month oi violation ot tno Har rison narcotics net will bo sent enced by Federal Judge James Alger Fee In Portland at an un announced date. Doctors A. F. Krosso and R, W. Clanev were taken to Port land Saturdny by U. S. Marshal Jack Caufield and Deputy George Vranlzan. Forward Base the high command still made no mention of the enemy drive southward toward Indo-Chlno, Uneasiness Heightened It seemed possible that the Thlnese were handing out bad news in small bits in order to avert panic. General uneasiness heightened despite this, how ever. Tho communique said the .Tnnancsc by-nassod Hawalyuan chen, railroad town 43 miles west of Liuchow, to reach Ho chih, and attacked Chinese po sitions five miles west of Ho chih. Nanning was tho seventh American air base lost in the twin Japanese northward and southward thrusts which for all practical purposes had split China in two. Californians Have Pleasant Visit . Klamath C of C Entertains Group Hands were figuratively clasped across tho Oregon-Cali fornia Doraer oaiuraay nigiu when the Klamath county chamber of commerce played host to 35 Californians, chiefly from Modoe county, at an in terstate dinner. . Thi nffair was held at the Willard hotel following after noon' trips to the Marine Bar racks awl-, the. ruamauv-rmxai ir station, Mitchell TiUotson,' Klamath (Continued on Page Two) Britons Outflank Po Valley Town prwE Nnv. 27 (IP) British troops, outflanking the Po vat W town of Facnza. have reacti on thn Lnmone river at a point three miles soutliwest oi mat Bologna-Rimini highway strong hold and are pressing against a new main German aeiaying pos ition, allied headquarters an nounced today. The village of Belvedere was taken. The Germans appeared to be preparing to fight another house- UMIa ' U. S. Troops Drive Against Decreasing Jap Resistance GEN ERAL MAC ARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, PHILIP PINES, Nov. 27(P) Infantry men of the U. S. 32nd division continued their southward push on Leyte island today, as a com munique noted that Japanese re sistance is "steadily, decreasing in vilol Ormoc corridor.- Though incessant rains, quag mire roads and stubborn Japan ese resistance prevented any considerable American advance in the Limon sector, an clement of the 32nd division was at tempting lo cross hills to the left of the Ormoc rond, Associated Press Correspondent Fred Hamp son reported. To Close Area Their purpose was to close an area through which Japanese have been infiltrating across the mountains to harass the coastal rond. Around Llmon the American troops continued to dig in and Wounded PFC Dale Moor -.we in - v 1 J Here ; ivlamath's community fund drive, benefiting five local pro jects and the state and national war chests, is over the top. J. V. Owens, chairman of the community fund advisory: com mittee, said the drive had passed the revised - quota- of- $61i200, but that additional contribu tions .will be welcome. The quota was scaled down from $65,200 to $61,200, when subsequent de velopments made possible a re duction in the allotment for the Klamath military service com mittee. Breakdown of Quota The quota is being divided as follows: Boy Scouts $10,000. Salvation Army $7500. Girl Scouts $3000. Camp Fire Girls $3000. Military service committee $2000. War chest $35,200. The sum of $500 was set aside for fund expenses. All bene ficiaries will receive their full allotments, Owens stated, and added that he believes the com munity fund idea is a demon- (Continued on Page Two) maki preparations to resume their drive south ogainst the enemy forces in the Ormoc corri dor. Forward elements of con testing forces were on either side of the Leyte river, a thousand-yards south of the village. tioia run One clement of the 24th divi sion held a hill near the road two miles farther south in the face of heavy opposition. Artillery men of the 32nd division knock ed out a Japanese 75 mm. gun the eighth enemy artillery piece put out of action in that region. Japanese artillery continued to harass the constat roaci ana com mnnri nnsts. but air observers re ported .lessening in attempts to reinforce the Japanese force Irnnneri hnlow Limon. Alert American pilots sank three small troon-laden freight- nr-transnnrts off Ccbu Saturday night in smashing another Jap anese attempt to reinforce their hammered Leyte lorces. PFC Dale Moore Hurt in Action PFC Dale "Scoot" Moore, Merrill resident, has been ser iously wounded and is now hos nltalized somewhere in France, according to word received by the infantryman's wife, Vir clnln. Moore's Injuries occurred November 8. Mrs. Moore has been advised that she will be notified of her husband s condi tion as soon as possible. Moore was with the 26th di vision, formerly known as the old "Yankee" division, now part of Patton's 3rd army. He took his training at Camp Shelby, Miss., and Fort Jack son, S. C, after entering the service December 1, 1943, He has been overseas since late August. Moore's address may be obtained from his wife at Mer rill. ' Yanks Storm Into Center Of Langerwehe By WILLIAM FRYE LONDON, Nov. 27 (IP) In hard and bloody fighting, first army. Americans stormed today into the center of Langerwehe, 24 H miles from Cologne and last major German road center west of the flooded Roer river. At dusk, the Infantry was slug ging it out with the nazis there, house to house. To the south, Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's third army infantry drove through the French Lorraine road center of St. Avoid. Their advance two miles east of St. Avoid placed them within 17 miles of sprawling Saarbrucken, one of Germany's great coal, steel and. rail centers. The Germans had fought stubbornly for the important communications town IS miles west of Sarregue mines, but withdrew Sunday night allowing the foot sloggers to enter unopposed. ' ' The third army widened its front inside the German Saar f- JAP CRUISER " U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Nov. 27 (P)' A Japanese?, heavy cruiser! a destroyer, 14 other ships and 72 planes were' wiped out as American carrier aircraft hit the Manila area and. its vi cinity Friday. Adirj. .Chester W. Nimitz -yesterday announced the results of this f tfth' raid of the' month oh Luzon islapd as ' reports from. Rainah,- told-' of the rescue at sea -of the enUre-orew-of-oner of- the two- superfortresses lost in the first B-29 raid on Tokyo, . Luggers Sunk ' Nimitz said: that, in addition in thn shins and rjlanes de stroyed around Manila, two lug gers were sunk and four cargo ships ana one oner were uhiu aged. . The attack increased to more than 250 the number of enemy ships immobilized around Luzon island alone in ,the 11 raids since September 20, carried out by carrier planes or un. " Hum F. Halsev's. third fleet, This does not include the 59 warships sunk or damaged m the recent f nuippmes seu uni ties. ' Planes Downed Twmtv.nine NiDDonese air craft were shot down by the attacking force, eight were knocked out' of the sky by' anti aircraft guns of the surface ships and 35 were destroyed on the grouna. The raid extended from San to rniT nhnut 75 miles north west of Manila, to Tayabas bay at the southern end of Luzon IqIohH. In the Manna Day area the navy planes strafed seven tank cars near Nicholas field and left them ablaze. They broke up a convoy of 150 trucks south of Manna. Shi: sunk included a heavy cruiser of the' Kumano class which previously had , been re norted damagea, one oauujo. n np rarso . siitus, - wu ---- ports and a small ouer. Cfark Elevated In New Shift -r nwnriw Nnv. 27 (IP) Eleva tion of Lt. Gen. Mark V Clark nnmrnnnri nf the U. S. fifth army, to commander-in-chief of the allied 15th army group in Italy ' was announced here last night as part of a general shift of the allied leadership in the Mediterranean. ' In other changes, Gen. Sir Har niri Ainvsnder. who has been al lied commander in Italy, be comes supreme commander in the Mediterranean, succeeding Sir Honrv Maltland Wilson, who in turn takes the place of the late Field Marshol Sir John Dill as chief of the British joint staff mission in Washington. Mabfe Meeker Held on Charge M a b 1 e Huntley Meeker, charged with larceny from the norsnn nf 1. Ci "Hod" Davis, Bonanza, is in the county jail in lieu of $1500 bail. The woman is said to have removed Davis' wallet, contain ing $940, while Davis was in a Bonanza restaurant the night of November 17. She was arrested by city police Sunday night. Jos eph C. O'Neill is Mrs. Meeker's attorney,' YANKS POUND MANILA 01 Basin to is miles. The first army burst finally intn the forest battlefield town of Hurtgen also and captured Frenz. 25 miles from Cologne. Langerwehe is 15 miles east of the German frontier. Hold Hurtgen The bigger part of Hurtgen was in American nanus. Patrols also entered Klein- hau, a Hurtgen forest town two miles to the nortneast. . Frenz is 14 miles inside Ger many and north of the highway leading through. tnreatenea uur en -to the great Rnineland city Troops stood within four miles of JJuren.. Boa Limits Tanks Ninth army infantry battling in the outer defenses of the rav aged Roer river fortress of Jul- ich fought toward tne cnurn ing stream, sometimes wading in water above their knees. The boggy ground limited the use of tanks. . Heavy infantry battles flamed around Barmen, 4000 - yards (Continued .on Page. Two) s B HARRY T. MONTGOMERY OTTAWA, Nov. 27 (IP) Spe iai riispinlinarv measures tc maintain order were taken in draftee camps throughout Can ada today as prime minister vv, terlv-torn rjarliament to ask for a vnte nf confidence in his new policy of partial conscription for overseas service. The life of King s nine-year-old regime hung in the balance as the house of commons assemDiea tn debate the conscriDtion issue. the most explosive political ques tion in Canada s modern nisiory. Take Precautions In some areas of the French- speaking province of Quebec, tra ditionally opposed to conscrip tion for service abroad, troops of all categories were told 10 keep off the streets in certain (Uonunued on rage iwo) Bonomi Cabinet Offers to Resign ROME. Nov. 27 (IP) Premier Ivanoe Bonomi's government has offered its resignation as a result of two weeks ot crisis over a iroeram for war-torn and hungry tnlv. hut his cabinet was re ported still conducting normal business last nient. A bfief communique yesterday said Bonomi had decided to re sign when representatives of the SIX DHriieS lUllllllIK luouwu,, government failed to agree on a program for governing the country, but it was said later that crown rrince umnera), lieutenant general of the realm, had reserved decision on the resignation, Yank Fighter 94 German By HOWARD COWAN LONDON, Nov. 27 (P) At least 94 German fighters were shot down today, the second con secutive day of big air battles over the Reich, as American war nlnnes sweDt almo.U to Berlin and heavy bombers got in licks in the frontline Dame. Five hundred American fight ers, part of: a 1300-plane force which bombed and strafed nazi rail, road and air, targets, met an almost equal number of uer man Focke-Wulfs and Messer- schmitts on a sweep within 70 miles of Berlin. Furious Battles ' : Furious air battles developed In the Magdeburg, Munster and Brunswick areas as the low-fly ing raiders swooped on targets all over northwestern Germany. The 94 enemy planes brought In Each Attacking . : Fleet . By VERN HAUGLAND SUPER FORTRESS BASE. Saipan, Marianas Islands, Nov. 27 (IP) A sizeable force of B-29s bombed the Tokyo in dustrial area for the second time in four days today while India-based Superforta hammer ed at strategic targets in Bang kok, capital of Thailand.. (Tokyo radio reported 40 Sup erforta participated in each raid. the first coordinated action oi the 20th and 21st bomber com mands - and their mighty : air fleets. WASHINGTON. Nov. 27. VP) Not one Superfortress was lost to the enemy as the twin com mands of the newly extended B-29 armada smashed today at the Tokyo industrial waterfront and vital railroad yards in Bangkok in Japanese occupied Thailand. (Japanese broadcasts ' said clouds forced bombardiers to release their explosive cargoes blindly, and insisted little dam age was done. - Propagandists, claimed one B-29 was shot; down over Bangkok, but made, no such claim aDout the Tokyo; raiders. " " (An imperial communique broadcast by Tokyo radio and recorded by the federal com munications commission said the big . bombers ranged over: Tokyo and other industrial sec-s tions ot central rionsnu island, for more than an hour and- at half. The B-29s, flying at an, extremely high altitude, burst' out of a drizzly overcast at; 1 p. m. Tokyo time, broadcasters said, "but there was no damage, inflicted on our important facil ities." Bomb Hanoi :" ' -' ' - (A Domei-'',nroadca'st '. "from Tokyo, recorded by the FCC, said 16 China-based U. S. Lib erators escorted by several fighters bombed Hanoi, capital of Japanese-occupied Indo-China late today.' The broadcast" said the attack was aimed at the suburbs and "none of the -"im-: portant industrial or military targets were hit.") . In an amazing display of sus tained power, the great silvered, planes stood in line along taxi-: ways and roared down the mile and a half long paved runways at one minute intervals wim even greater clockwork precis Ion than on last Friday's initial raid. Unused Resources Two Tokyo raids within four days by Brig. Gen. Haywood Hansen's 21st bomber command was a striking demonstration of the slight amount of damage (Continued on Page Two). ... Names of Crash Victims Released Names of four navy men who lost their lives in the collision of two light bombers near Clear lake last week were disclosed today by the navy. The victims were all passengers, two in each plane. The pilots parachuted to safety. ,- The dead:" " Ralph Walter Skldmore Jr., AR3C, Northrop, N.- Y. ' Richard Lee Hartwick,: AOM 3c, Beloit, Wis. . Edward Joseph Grohs,. AMM 3c, Lynbrook, N. Y. Benjamin L. Kauffman, !AR 3c, Indianapolis, Ind. The nilots who survived wera Ensign B. L. Weaver, SapUlpa, Okla., and Ensign H. C. McGee, Piedmont, Calif. The accident happened in . a remote area between Clear lake and Steele Swamp ranch, last Friday. '- ' Planes Down ,;i Craft in Battle down raised the total . In two days to 226. An eighth air force spokes man said it was the first time the German air force had been ordered into the air to do battla In such strength against a pure ly fighter force. , "They must have mistaken the fighters for a bomber escort,' he .said. . . Bombers Elsewhere Five hundred Fortresses and Liberators meanwhile wera smashing at rail targets at Of fenburg, 10 miles soutneast or Strasbourg, and Bingen, 15 miles west of Mainz, without meeting opposition. ... ; They followed an, RAF pre dawn attack by 270 Lancaster on Munich in which' six-ton blockbusters were scattered on a German Industrial city ior the first time... . t