fo)M 0) im fo)M jwl Ml U uu ft I' PES A Bay's I. PRANK JEKRinO T . t..i..i... I- rftlK i-'w 1,01,1 "" "" wi""; ,.11ii Von iiu"""'", ........ 1 .tunned Jl lu"'1 1 d fiiii been blunlcd l.rk ill I'"1 C""1 1,0,1,0 10 mushing 111 from tin u 1. Ii''" widened lij ow (. f": ... iu..(luo to n mifu size and , . J., wecluo to n mi lu size and ? driven Tu Point tUruo mllw '",1 n ft-UMl UliniUKIlU, Mill- norui . . it... - 1.... in n 11.1i! ui 1 1 11 oiriv JlAN wi'uoflo mound 17 miles .nAUT of the Muusu, where Von h ii.mfinicclt'ii t h r 11 I wns ....1 WK'HE beginning l0'L ,.Vf mill surround units ol Ocrin "ml w'l'.! ,l!"'m ol'!r S,u, turning thu tables on the enemy. , , 1 1 front line dispatches re ,rl Unit Vim UiimlNledt appears Kb. 1 EGKOUl'ING hi force. IN SIOE 'US SALIENT or a uojjlble new utionsivo nun . n X sectors. thee dlspnlche y the mill- ore hrpwlng u SV hworkii unci dlK n thel links In, " preparing lor i....rllli-ll Mtiincl. ...... 1... iIipv AUK tirepurlii 10 Tilt buck In Belgium. Mnylv ? .... . i.,i,.,illnu lo hit SOMK SiffiiK KI.SE unit want to hold Ihelr Belgium sullcnt lis 11 lute ii.i.(.nt. w.. i.nmi. fronlers don't know what the Germans arc going to Jo We'll Just l,l,vu 10 Wl"1 ,or news us It develop. Hut the slluiilion In Belgium IS DEFINITELY BETTLR In The Shanta-Cancade Wonderland Dectmbar t9, 1041 Hbx. (Deo. 38 40 Mln freclptutlon list 21 hoars .. Strom year to dU Normal 4,45 !( year , rorccsit; comer. Oreran! Ontn TnleUket Open . Saturday Bhoollnr Hcuri nils' -uioe .......... o-ift 8:05 Cloie 6:13 ENEMY DIGS MICE 5 CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1944 Number 10350 Turn in Pacific Eyed; Reds Crack Nazis Lines ; Police Head JAPS ATTACK SUPERFDR IS' SA PAN E History's Biggest Navy Totals 1 1 67 Fighting Vessels SINCE he stnrled liln drive, Von Ituiid.itcdl litis lout 710 Uuiks, Ihe cnuiviilent of neurly four Gcrmnn nrmored divisions Uuo ol lliein were lost lit (trim unci bloody lliistuKiie. Our plnncs liavc 'knocked out 3:iS5 trucks ujed In (he German olfenslve ml shot down 755 Geriniin planes. It Is becoming evident Hint the Genniiiis hnvc puld hlKh price for thu ground they won In Delgluin. Whether they can slford the price we emi t suy, for we don I know wlnit they have in reserve. Time will tell. PELLES, Just east of the Meusc, where tho nazi thrust was iniined. is described us one of tho ghastliest carnage scenes of Hut war. A Gorman nockel there was wiped out, 12UU prisoners were taken and : cneniy uuiks. 40 guns and 177 military ve hides were miiashed. What our losses were linsn't been told. They were probubly heavy. BASTOGNE, where 10,000 Aim.rlr.nn nlfinH flCIllllst the best the Germans could send nnd answered "Nuts!" lo the German surrender ultimatum, Is u new American epic. For generations American boya nnd girls will read In Ihelr history books of this rlm stand hv men of their breed and will TI1K11.L ns they read. ECHTEP.NACII l disclosed to clnv ns ANOTHEH epic. It HAD BEEN held by n small American Infantry garrison, which REFUSED to leuve- the town with n relieving armored force (that Is to say, these men were rescued, but REFUSED the rescue, preferring to stand to the end. They did stand to the end. When Patton's tanks got back, the American Infantrymen were NOT THERE. Thero were stacks of enemy dead all around, as at the Alnnio, but our men were gono. Those left allvo were proo bly taken prisoner, as thero were not enough American bodies to account for the entire detachment. CLOWLY the talo of our dc- U f,.n ,,fl,l. Bnstounc nnd Echtornnch were not Just points whom Americans were caught nnd surrounded. They were KEY points, at the base of iho German wedge. By holding ihem at nil costs, we prevented the Germans from WIDKNIMP. ll.nl,. iliin'l hnse. BiisIokiid and E e h t c r n a c h lldn't Just liannen. Wo did It on purpose, THUEE days after tho Gcrmnn offensive stnrled, Pntton wns given the lob of caving In Von Jtunilstcdt'n southern flank. Ho iwung in with his customary cavalryman's dash and In six (Continued on Pago Two) Tofcyo Reports ft0 M L Mpproacn By Tho Aiioclated Press Undid Tolivn anlrl InHnv at 0 P ni. (8 n. m. eastern war time) iini enemy planes linvo been "Mien approaching - the l oKyo cmoliiiina metropolitan district, I he Jiipnne.so broadens!, moll- wcu oy ii,0 fedorn coinmuni pilous commission, unld that nlr raid warning had been M i t y iiiipanesu uhsii:iii uci army ncac nuartors. After Ilnlinr1l,rf iUn ulnrt nl radio Tokyo announced the -...cican pianes "ngnin cnang- COlirRO1' inri "nro now clr- ft ,Y" MIU llWlillUlll 2 the Kwanto district, This In :iu??s. tho lnrao Industrial cities U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUAHTEHS, PEARL HARBOR Dec. 211 II') A major turn in the Pacific war by next sum mer Is foreseen by Vice Adm Marc A. Mlt.icher who helped whip the Japanese decisively in two buttles of the Philippines sea and figures "In another year we should have their nnvy pretty wen cieaneci up. ny next summer, thev will he sitting on n decidedly uneasy seat in ine empire, lie told wor correspondents yesterday. Tho Tokyo radio roportod thai aevoral American con voys were "attempting to force their way westward" through the Mindanao sea to the Sulu sea. The Blue net work recorded the broadcast. Japanese units were de declared to have been strik ing "hammoring blows" at Ihe convoys since the night of De cember 27. Imperial Japanese head quarters claimed today Its pianos lank six "large trans ports" and damagod two oth ers yosterday in attacking 30 of the craft "hoadlng west ward In the Mindanao sea through Suriago straits." WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 (VP) The largest nnvy in the world, fighting the most extended war in history, now has 1107 men-of-war to carry the battle to the enemy. And it is still grow ing. This wns reported by the navy today in a review of ship production which showed that in the last year 3D.071 new ves sels 420 of them fighting ships Joined the fleet, boosting the overall total to 61,045 navy shins of all tyncs, Much emphasis was piaceo. during 1044 upon landing craft and attack vessels, wun con struction of 37,724 of the little ships used to batter the way on enemy-held 1EA GERMAN ROADS FRQWl CITY On tile side of current action Adm. Chester W. Nlmitz report cd the second Nipponese air raid in three clays on the Saipan base uomimicu on rage two) Jap Naval Leader Reported Dead LONDON, Dec. 20 (VP) The death of Admiral Nobumasa Suyetsugu, former commander in chief of the Japanese grand flciil and u leader in Japan's program of expansion and con quest, was announced today in a Tokyo dispatch broadcast by tho Berlin radio. He was 64 years old. Suyetsugu was one of the out standing firebrands In the years Japan was preparing for Asiatic conquest and war against the United states nna ununn. as commander of t lie fleet in 1033 and 1034 ho wns noted for his belligerent, undiplomatic state ments. He was an opponent of naval limitation and an advo cate of "liberation" of Asiatic peoples from influence of the white nations. Clark, Wilson To Close Mills PORTLAND. Dec. 29 (P) An era In Oregon's timber Industry ncarcd an end today as uiarK at Wilson Lumber company an nounced it will shut down opera tions at Its Prescott ml and the older of lis two mills In Llnnlon Immediately. Tho decision bears out the company's announced intention to liquidate by 1047. Tho reason is depletion of lower Column n timber stands, parlinlly due to the great Tillamook burn which destroyed enough timber to sup ply Portland sawmills for iU Trio old Llnnlon mill, one of the stale's first '"';cn ' ,bsc5 operations, was built about 00 years ago, Snow packed roads led out of Klamath Falls and giant Sno Go's were called into action on the Sun mountain stretch of The Dalles-California highway where more than 31 inencs ol snow covered that area. Temperatures were fairly mild throughout the past 24 hours, although a minimum of 8 de grees above was reported at the Southern Pacific station at Cres cent Lake at 5 a. m. Friday. Still Snowing Oregon state highway offi cials were advised from the va rious stations that snow was still falling Friday morning. Ten Inches of new snow fell on the Ml II l.nn t, r.- (YtnLrinrf a tntnl VY Illtlllll'llv lJU.-io, of 16 inches. All highways were sanded but the Lakevicw stretch was considered hazardous as a lato Thursday afternoon freeze covered portions of the highway with Ice. There was no new snow in that area, according to late reports. Twenty plows, including the Sno-Go's were being used throughout the Klamath area and sufficient manpower was available to keep all highways in good winter driving conai' lion. No Delays Trains were passing through Klamath Falls without delay de spite the heavy snowfall along the route. The SP trainmaster's office reported 28 degree at Dor- ris with one inch of new snow; Grass Lake, 22; unomuu, zo, 10 inches of new snow. State police said Friday that no major accidents had been re nnrted to that office and city police said accidents were con fined to numerous bumped fen ders as the result of slick pave ments. Oregon Passes 6th Loan Quota PORTLAND, Dec. 29 (T) n,, i nns-t its S34.000.000 E bond goal in the 6th War Loan drive with $785,000 to spare, Ed ward C. Summons, state bond iri todav. Three days remain In which to better the total, lie snld. The stnte Is well above Its quota for bonds of an types, wun 000,000 against a $107,000,000 quota. for landings shores. The new construction also in cluded, the navy said, 640 pa trol boats and mine craft, 630 auxiliaries and 557 harbor craft. Decreased Emphasis "Important in these tics," the navy reported, "is the slightly decreased empnasis on combat and patrol craft, denot ing a levelling off in the need for more warships and escort vessels, and the tremendous in crease in landing cratt, auxil iary attack ships and other sup ply vessels which have carried the allied offensive to enemy shores, both in Europe and the Pacific" . The total of 1167 warships now with-the" f 1 ee t was de scribed as more than three times the number on hand when the war broke out-three years ago. The navy announcement added; Account For Difference "Ship losses in action, and the transfer of certain vessels, especially escort carriers, de stroyer escorts and landing craft to other allied nations accounts for the -difference between the total number of new ships com pleted for the navy and the to tal on hand." Two hundred thirty-nine navy vessels of all types have been announced as lost. , Planes Built The air force striking arm, the navy continued, also called for mator Droductlon In 1944 when 30.070 olanes of all types were manufactured to maintain the navy's air forte at a stabil ized total of about 37,000. These figures." the navy ex plained, "demonstrate the high rate of obsolescence and attri tion attendant upon keeping naval air power supplied with the newest and best planes. Critical It placed on. the . "critical list for 1945" carriers and cruisers, some of which have been layed by labor shortage as mucn as seven to nine mourns; rue. ets, ammunition and 40 mm, (Continued on Page Two) DEFENSES HIT BY RUSSIANS Bv DANIEL DE LUCE MOSCOW. Dec. 29 OP) Rus sian forces cracked the first of three inner defense rings of the eneircled nazi garrison at Buda- statis- Pest today while the Austrian Dound red army lo me n o r i n stepped up its drive along both sides of the Danube river. The red forces made an all-out bid to win strategic control of the Hungarian capital in a mat ter of days, if not hours, as fa natical nazi troops in the hilly district of Buda ana ine popu lous flatlands of Pest gave eiour.d under a score of assaults by Russian combat teams of Tommy-gunners, tanks and self- propelled guns. Out of Suburbs The enemy was hurled out of 12 eastern suburbs of the city yesterday by the hard-driving Soviets. A battle of even greater mili tary importance raged on the ap proaches to the Danubian com munications center of Komarom, which is less than 85 miles south east of Vienna and within 53 miles of Bratislava. Two columns from Marshal Feodor Tobulkhin's third Ukrainian army group con verged on the city from the east and soutneast, wnue across ine Danube to the northeast Marshal Rodion Malinovsky mounted a powerful smash at the nazi Hron river defense line. Fiqht on Banks There was evidence that Rus sian vanguards may now be fighting on the west bank of the (Continued on fage rwoj CASE OF BOLD TURNED OVER TO CIVILIANS Marine Held In Brig For Action by: Authorities Comart Assistant Chief Orville Ham ilton, who is in charge of the Klamath Falls police depart- ment for the remainder of 1944, while Chief Earl Heuvel is on vacation. If Mayor-Elect Ed Os- tendorz fails to make a perma nent appointment of police chief January 2, it is expected Ham ilton will continue into the new year as acting chief. ofsALIENT First, Third Armie. Within 17 Miles k' Of Junction T WASHINGTON. Dec. 29 (TP) Economic Stabilization Director Fred M. Vinson agreed today to confer tomorrow morning with a group of cattlemen op posed to ceiling, prices on live Sen. Wherry Ol-Neb.) said pri? orities had been gYanted to fly cattle raisers to Washington for the meeting. Among them,, he said, will- be S. E. Mollin of Denver, secretary of the Amer ican National LavestocK associa tion; ; Joe . Montague, represent ing the Texas and Southwestern Cattle association, and Parr Young president of the Nebras ka Livestock Breeders associa- OPA has proposed imposition (Continued on rage iwo; Date Set for Ward's Case Hearing By Federal Judge Coos Bay Still Coos Bay After New Name Election North Bend thumbed It down at Union Man Asks For Enforcement Of WLB Order PORTLAND, Dec. 29 (P) A union official representing those employes involved In the dispute that nut the Portland store of Montgomery Ward & Company under armv control sooke out to day for full enforcement of the original WLB directive. Jack EstaorooK, secretary oi the AFL Warehousemen's local, said that only by such action could the army ciaruy a sii.ua. Hon he charged nad Deen com pletely garbled" by the com. pany. ; '" ' Fighting Slows In Italian Area ROME, Dec. 29 (IP) Allied headquarters announced today that fighting "has died down" In the Serchio valley area where a strong German counteroffen sivn had driven the American fifth army from the Important road town of Barga. The f our-dav-old German drive south toward Lucca also had pushed allied forces from the area of Gallicano, two and a half miles from Barga on tho west bank of the Sercnio, De fore it was slowed, . COOS BAY. Ore, Dec. 20 W'l This town, which keeps voting to decide whether to be Coos Buy or Marshfield, is still Coos Bay '"citizens retained the title Coos Bay by a vote of 084 lo BBS yes teruny, nnd hoped ull they wouldn't hnve to ballot on tho matter any more. . Tho nnmc e h n n g e, batten about verbally for a couple of decades, camo before the voters of this coastal town-h storlcally Marslitleld-ln November, 1043 In n nlnn to consolidate Mnrsn rold5nd11.twlncto.Nort Bend, into "City of Coos Bay. Marshfield, bound to have the name If not the consolidation, voted by Itself In the November 7 election mis yciu huh i""" ,,ri ilm town Coos Bay, Then a group of citizens didn't like the nSw title petitioned and petitioned the city council to hold the ballot over again. They Irl "And we hope," snld harassed postal and telephone workers, who can't decide what town they aro working In, "that that's an end of it.' CHICAGO, Dec. 29 VP) Fed-' eral Judge Philip L. Sullivan to day set January 8 for a hearing on the government lawsuit seek ing to estaoiisn legality oi a presidential order under which the army seized Montgomery Ward and Company facilities in seven cities yesterday. Meanwhile in Wash I n g t o n Atty.-Gen. Francis Biddle pre dicted tile case WOUIO oe carneu either by the government or Se well Avery, Ward's chairman of the board, to the U. S. supreme court. Says Illegal Avery contended the execu tive order and seizure were il legal and could not be accepted or obeyed by Ward's. From the Stettinius Plans No Trip to London WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 fP) Secretary of State Stettinius has no plans at present for going to London to discuss International affairs. , , . This was learned on the high est authority today. Stettinius personally declined comment when asked about a published report he might make the trip to discuss the Greek situation with Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. No-Point Sales Boomerang PORTLAND. Ore., Dec. 29 (VP) TWtlmirl merchants' sale of ra- imnorf onnrie ooint-free. which caused a near-riot in two Port land groceries, boomerangea again today. ThB OPA ordered 12 stores, nil branches of two chains, to a January 8 hearing on charges that they violated rationing reg ulations. TTncini htivprs swamoed a num.- hni- nf Portland stores the day after stricter OPA ration went into effect, when a number of merchants, saying they had no official OPA notification, failed to enforce the new rules. Farmers Protest Nisei Return r.PTTSHAM. Ore.. Dec. 29 (VP) A wave of protest rose here to day in response to notices that three Japanese-Americans plan to return to their Clackamas and eastern Multnomah county farms. . . A committee of farmers and businessmen not connected with Oregon anti-Japanese, which was born here, will fight Nisei efforts to terminate leases on pruuciw. reported Chairman Dale Bergh Damascus. . He nnd two others were given only 30 dnys' notice to v a c a t e Japanese-owned h o u s e s and farms, Bergh said, while the OPA rent control office allows 90 days. covernment viewpoint, however, l2nnn emDloves in the seven cities went to work for Uncle Sam today. Mai Gen. JoseDh W. Byron, military manager of Wards since yesterday, toured part of the main offices today and Averv also was in the building his secretary said, although re porters did not see him entering his private onices. . Not Restricted Army public relations offi cers said there were no restric tions on Avery's movements and n was free to carry on activities of the nation's second largest mail order house which were not included in the seizure order. The company operates more than 600 stores ana warenouoe thrnnphniit the nation. Hugh B. Cox, assistant to the solicitor general, asked Judge Sullivan for as prompt- a neariiig as possible on tne governmen notitinn filrri vpsterdav. for ( declaratory judgment on legality of the seizure and an injunction to prevent possible interference by Ward s otticiais. Counsel Protests ted January 3 for ihr hMrlne. Stuart Ball, Ward' counsel, protested that witnesses would have to be brought from afar and the noliaay travel (Continued on rage iwoj (ekes Urges Jap Return Soon WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 (fl5) Interior Secretary Ickcs today urged eligible Japanese-Americans who were evacuated from their west coast homes in 194Z to leave evacuation centers as soon as possible. The army recently rescinded the west coast exclusion order, ih. ...a,- rclnrntlnn authority said the eight centers would be closed within a year. . The Karl Bold death case, In volving PFC Herbert Daniel Stevens of the marine corps, was handed over to civil authorities today by the commanding offi cer of the Klamath Falls Marine Barracks. ' Stevens will remain1 for the time being in tne Marine Bar- racKS brig, and the question of an indictment against the 21-year-old marine in connection with tht" death of the Henley farmer will be submitted to the county grand jury when it meets soon after tne first ol 1945. Board Investigates Decision of Colonel George Van Uraen to hand tne young marine's case to civil authorities followed an intensive investiga tion by a board of officers at tne aarracKs. District Attorney L. Orth Sisemore received an oral report of the probe made by the ; military ooara, ana warmiy praisea the Marine Barracks'. ad ministration for assistance and cooperation in this case. Sisemore said that inasmuch as Stevens is held in military custody, no immediate filing of cnarges is contempiatea. tie stat ed the grand jurors will be asked to consider the Justification tor filing first' degree or;.second de gree imr.der or manslaughter charges against' Stevens. - Died December 10 Bold died December 10, never havine regained consciousness after he was louna tour a a y s earlier (December 6) lyme be hind the Kerns implement building on South Sixth street, Stevens was arrested by the as sistant provost marshal at the Marine HarracKS on tne nigni oi December 6, allegedly in posses sion of Bold s automobile. Investigations disclosed ' that Bold and Stevens got into a con versation at the Buffalo lunch on South Sixth street on the night of December 5. They left, with Private Gerard A. Bussiere, an. other marine, in Bold's automo bile. The other marine Is s a 1 d to have left the car when the three stopped at . Chick's lunch on Smith Sixth, and Bold and Stev ens went away, together in the car, which was driven to a point back of the Kerns building. Marine Provoked It was there that the incidents occurred hich culminated in Bold's being left behind the hit id ne and Stevens allegedly driving away in Bold's car. Stev ens, wno tola autnorii.it:: uum iic and Bold had been drinking, as serted he was provoked by an improper act on tne part ot coia and struck him with his hand, Sisemore .-id. Rnld wit found the next morn ing, after a cold nieht, by W W. (uontinuea on i-ase iui By JAMES M. LONG PARIS, Dec. 29 lP) Amerl. can armored troops have thrown tne western tip of German spearheads back 10 miles and ad vanced to the outskirts of the picturesque town of Rochefort field reports said today. Field Marshal ..Von Hund. stedt's troops were reported dig ging in at tne western end ot their salient while his armor drew back and U.S. third army troops advanced up to three miles today in a squeeze from the south. , Near Junction ; Less than 17 miles separated the first and third armies at the Bastogne neck of the salient where a junction would catch Von Rundstedt's advanced ele ments in a noose. J ,. Associated Press Corresnnn dent. Hal Boyle said American armored forces, hitting Von Rundstedt's offensive on the ' nose, had driven his forward ele ments back 10 miles and thrown them across the Lesse and Homme rivers. Enter Rochefort Roger D. Green, AP corres pondent with British forces, add ed that the Americans had .en tered Rochefort's outskirts on the east bank of the Homme by 10 a. m. yesterday. ..: Rochefort is a tourist center dating from medieval times and is 31 miles north of the famous Han Grottos, where the Lesse river flows through a series of subterranean chambers. . " Von Rundstedt's December of fensive had been kicked into re verse by American forces which slammed into all three sides , of his extended bulge, with LT. Gen. George S. Patton's thiifa army. sensationally changing its front and advancing 20 miles in. to tne German flank in six aays. Saar Drive Stopped . . The situation was not an un mixed-success, however, for Pat ton's snitt ot front brought his own offensive along the Saar to a stop and obliged the Americans' to give up their hard won bridgehead across the Saar .at Dillingen, where they had brok en into tne initial defenses of tna Siegfried line, .. ; The big turning point was the , seven-day stand of the U.S. 10.1st airborne division and other as yet unidentified units at Bas togne, one of the gateways to . French Sedan. And now the Americans were,: (Continued on Page Two) WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 (P) Interior Secretary Ickcs was ac cused today of attempting to continue the War Relocation Au thority (WRA) after it outlived its usefulness. , n,ur,raVinb (R-Ida.) chal lenged Ickes to justify "a long range objective" for the WRA which has supervised internment camps for two years since per sons of Japanese ancestry were excluded from the west coast military area, Yanks Throw Germans.Bqck unrrjjffjjy ; Britons Drive f Against Elas ATHENS, Dec. 29 (if) THe) British opened a three-pronged, drive against Elas forces in:. titer eastern suburbs of Athens toi day, ' jumping off after a pro longed artillery barrage in the second phase of operations' dei signed to clear the embattled Greek capital. Against slight opposition, the British forces advanced from the south through Zappion park on Ardittos hill, which changed hands in a mortar duel a weelc ago. A Greek mountain brigade meanwhile advanced southward' on the suburb of Kassariantr" one of the largest Elas strong holds in the Athens area. - ENGLAND ,o.,.. ui"MTf HOLLAND r1 PM u.... M.ev H. represents the penetrations of th. German m7 -the. time of their rly Krd pushing nem D. Uej Jram th, ,,,,, In Dinant. At on. time hin m Ids. Flr.t .nd third ot th. salient. The heavy broken .n- man goals In their winter oH.nW - 1