Nl Ml rui J"L fo) Ml o1 ran re flllf""""" ! " "" .f-l,rrrJ HI m. 1 TpHANK JENKIN8 lie iccin.i-i" - , . 111.r,...,-(l r0, ul:"lT n y ..'lirlSl ''" '?',, A (ierm.m (II- f .". I Jt " r'HAPI'KNKU to j,,,, lliiii J" . .. w . rouble In tt.e Normandy 1 '.'loci t.) know Ihnt our men . Xro Hi ;""i"y';" "" .... - tmrn fr.Hc rv : menu llM't I'1" J'1!'" w,;r" I"1."" 1... u..'ll lit wise , wo Ul l,'' b-tU"h j I, , certain tit-Kico of skep- imio yii'-w '" l,u,J- liilmosi Hie Identical poln j T ..... I. n.mw, ntltnl'C. It Sild be strange Indeed If they 1,1 reason Hint the "'"' ,; Sralloiw lhal led them lo laud re wotnu iinu -, These consideration lire furlanl ones ". T ... I Imik flL'llt llli. I ronus w . " - icems nlmoft beyond bolii-f tlll'V CO" "I I1UVU nvnnm. . '.1.1 1 II i- hiiikIi ill i.. II... i A,ftm 5inSl irymn iu huui urn M' tiur hcmsclvcs nnitwt Urn terrific 1. ...... i.rjittftrt titirrtltl UfM te capable of laying down In nice of a landing force, lero wn relatively lilllo rc nco when wa landed on 'tc, Dili piciliy in iiihu UK"- i cmo after wo hud moved In i d beyond the rungo of our I crlnK niivnl fire, t li highly probublo thut thin . il.mli.il. will tli.ui.lflil mi son. I I'T at ko.it we arc ihure, nnd 4th rlisnnteheii lndlentu rnth lenrly thut wo imve wldcnt'd bench heuih enouuli to en e us lo meet the Inevitable countemttucks when they ic. Thut Is a big ncliiuvenicut. IE lay of tho Innd more or lesi dlsiirom.i tho pattern of irk nn Mnnllii A frontal n.viiiult on the city, oijkIi (lie narrow mnutli of ll.'i ', which In conimiinded by tho Ircss of Cor.euldor, would bo cldal a fuel that wu dourly "gnlzcd and admitted by the s when they attacked lia re. There are two back-door civ ncej one from the north, by y of Lhiiiuycn Rtilf, and the cr from llw. Rnlllll hv wt,u nl i iwrt of Halunifiu. The roulo Sin inc nouili iiiis In net pnat i hiriic lakes, which nairow PH5M1UC COll.sldf-mhlv. A mir. f pnssaue, with it.i rimikit iriien. lewis imclf admirably the Jap system of milclde dc 'e. Besides, there la 1cm room (lank mnncuvcriiiK to the The Jnnj nuiy hnvc been own off by the fact that we re already established on Mill 'Oj w th only a few miles of (Conlinued oi, ia(l0 rlvo) leores Given I Hooper Murder d Uelccllvej, KrnupliiK for 11,0 -olldo kill. , . ? St'm,t0'' Warren G. per, today explored u posal- fell", '"; n,ay l,nvo bcc ' cicd In his own automobile eni?iir morc Kll""'o" unci ln .L'!! KniR-'ter fasldon. iL ? ,'!'10 w"s " PnnitlhlH- ' 1 ,1 'lo may have fnllen " foldly, cnrehilly prepared tfP, balled will! com wh'"n lie fell no fenr i.i ?''. l1","wnr! nlinost to to" VrTdc "C W"S bC,1"K ""'k' iso""0"' commandliiK the I si',1 8l,,lc liollcc wltl hero was evidence to c o(t iltTll,t,l,e,'r' In the ovSii.'10 I!I1II,K Hooper, ?lnl T the Cnrr Rrmu ami ' K", 0M ot U'-H'o-tak. o le l,l,,li'")e-'lvln" ,,,n'" nnd lobbyist,. red ?0Tnr o,(1 loRlsintor's M In Mly' ,wl,h ll,rec 'yevenlnK.'1"-"1"8 C"r d'ans Invade yefcon Peninsula idy, Cevlnn 9 u A R T ERS, PortoTi yi "' Jn"- J3 Ml ZtdL "nvnl, n,11 nlr la," enV" ' 100118 ot 1,10 ISth Zn V, lm,vo Intulocl on 'd comm.?. ' nynb, nn he lamE ' "no snld totlny onnn. , "K f"c(l! encounter. ry nnVi . y, ,Jnl"ineso nr o '""chlnoRunn, but "iSftJ1 citnbllshlnR , "lcnu. tho communique In The SluiHia-CuHcada Wonderland eattier Januiry 13. 1845 Max. (Jin. 12) 44 Min. 38 Precipitation lait 24 houn .05 Strtam year to date 4.50 Normal S.38 Last year 2.90 Forecast: Clear and cold. PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY, 13, 1945 Number 10362 American Troops Push Toward Manila 11E DEATH 5 0 UNO ED BY IS W Bullet Wounds Found 'n Brain, Body Of Man Mystery enveloped the circum stance MirroiimlluK the death of John ltiithiel KwIiik, !)U, whose ijullet-ridilli'il form was found early I-'rldiiy afternoon, dumped in Kiiniiliind fashion at the side of the Weed hlKhway, three miles southwest of Klamiith Fulls. Ueforc EwIiik. expired at Klamath Valley hospital at 4:04 p. i. yesterday, Klamath county law enforcement officers liud h-ouc to work on the case. Bullet In Brain One bullet was still lodiied In the man's bruin, Dr, Georite II. Ailler, Klamath county coroner, reported, and it is understood that there were wounds else where in Ewinii'a body. Kwinit's body, lylnii on blood snaket enrlli half way down a 30-foot embankment on the east side of the fill appronchliiK the Kalpliio brldiie on tho Weed highway, was first noticed by n Great Northern crew, swilcliltiK at tho west end of the Kalplne plant about noon. Stale pollre were notified and Deputy Sheriff Jack Kraney called. Unconscious The man's body was lying In huddled position, face down. lie (Continued on Pane Seven) Fourth Loot Group Sentenced PARIS. Jan. 13 (T) Testi mony of hlKh stakes nt G. I. poker names was Introduced to day as tin? fourth Krotip of en listed men accused of looting military t ruins in French black market deals wept on trial be fore an army general court mar tial. LI. Robert O'Reily of the army criminal Investigation di vision, who worked as n fire man In n railway battalion wliilc Investigating the looting outbreak, testified ho watched poker games nt which soldiers pnld ns high as 8000 francs ($1(10) lo see the Inst curd of a seven-card stud poker gnme. Today's defendants were Sgt. Fran C. Pozzl, Chicago, 111., and Sgt. Waller G. Thorsell, Port land. Ore. The men were con victed nnd sentenced to 25 years at hnrd labor and dishonorably discharged. First Photo! Invasion Armada Brings Yanks Back to Luzon V; First photo of General MacArthur's Invasion fleet heading to ward Jap-held shores of Luzon island on Llngayen gulf. The 1000 shlp armada 600 of them transports brought ashore unending streams oi American troops, artillery, tanks, transports and munitions as first wave assault troops secured beaches against feeble Japanese resistance. "Some loss and damage" was suffered by American ships but thoy were considered Infinitesimal in comparison to siie of fleet. Photo radioed from New Guinea. LONDON, Jan. 13 (II Mar sluil Stalin announced tonight a red army offensive west of Baranow had advanced 25 miles in two days on n -lO-mllc.ronl. Stalin's announcement which confirmed earlier Ber lin reports of a great new soviet onslaught from the Vistula bridgehead in Poland said Marshal Invnn S. Kancy's first Ukrainian army "broke through heavily fortified defenses" with an assault launched yesterday. Previously tho Germans said the Russians' had launched a gigantic winter offensive with Ihrco mighty attacks In Poland, Knsl Prussia and northern Hun gary. Kielce Menaced Tho advance opparcntly di rectly threatens German-held Kielce, a rail Junction 03 miles southwest of Warsaw w h i c h links the Warsaw and Krakow fronts. Among the towns cap tured were Chmlelnlk, 18 miles southeast of Kielce, nnd Busk, 11 miles south of Chmlelnlk. Stalin's order of the day, (Continued on Page Seven) Sgt. McFerrin Reported Missing Word was received Saturday morning by Mrs. Carl Carlson of this cltv, thnt her brother, MSgt. W. B. McFerrin has been reported as missing In action since December 10, according to the war department mcssnge. McFerrin was attached to the headquarters: of the Oth army, and spent 10 months In Englnnd before being transferred after the Invasion on D-Day. He was formerly a resident of Klamnth Falls, and has ninny friends here, although he moved to San Raphael, Calif., a few years ago. General Assault Made on Belgian Bulge; Houffaliie Menaced by 1st Army Men PARIS, Jan. 13 (P) U. S. first army troops, striking southward In a general assault on a 30-mile front, hammered today to within 4 V miles of Houffalize, central stronghold of the dwindling nazi bulge in Belgium, nnd within little more than a mile of the Houffalizc St. Vith escape road. The third armored division, HIT BY UNIONS By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (VP) A blast by organized labor against current congressional manpower moves brought a new prediction today from the house military committee chairman that work or fight legislation will become law. Chairman May (D-Ky.) soid he ls"more convinced than ever that "action by congress is needed to solve the nation's manpower problems." In recess after a week of hearings on a national service bill applicable to males between 18 and 45, his commit tee Is waiting to hear the views of labor next week. Ignores Suggestion May brushed aside a sugges tion made yesterday by Philip Murray, CIO president, that the problem be handled by volun tary methods nnd by taking out of "the congressional mess it is in" and returned "to the people where It belongs." "Congress is going to act and act soon," May said in an inter view. "It's a question of wheth er wo follow the suggestions of (Continued on Page Seven) Chiloquin Youth One of 23 Survivors Of Infamous Slaughter by Japanese A 10-year-old Chiloquin youth, William U. Flury, was one of a handful of survivors of a mer chant ship to live to loll the story ..r iiw. inr,,mmi,i nilrl-ocean slaughter al the hands of a Jap submnrlno crew in inc iiicuuu ocean hist June 11. Young Hury is now in Portland working with his father, Chester Flury, In tho Alblnn shipyards. Relatives of the seamnn, n graduate of Chiloquin h I g h school, class ot 1 !, n'dd Wil liam seemed little tho worse for the horrifying experience in I, .1, '! nt n romnlcmcnlof 100 survived tlic ordeal. Shin Torpeaooa Torpedoed In the Indian ocean 000 miles from Colombo, Cey lon, members of tho Liberty ship, Including acumen and soldiers, were taken from lifeboats nnd rafts aboard tho Jap sub. There they were trussed and beaten, many thrown overboard Into the shark Infested waters. Flury had n lucky break. He was nt the end of a lino being forced to run a gauntlet between two rows of armed Japanese who clubbed and bayoneted their prisoners when a whistle, warning tho approach of a plane, nr.. .a,! ll.n ,lt in HIVO. . RnVCI'al of tho survivors were caught In tho suction ami tirownco, Cut Bonds A II. n n,n. alrillfdloH ill tllC wnlcr, ono of the seamen pro duced a small pockctknifo which ho lind sown Into the sides of his Iln nirn.OrH In Pllt bonds of five or six nnd then handed tho knife to miry wno Survivor . I ia- I William B. Flury freed others. Later tho man who owned tho knife wns lost, Flury offering the opinion thnt ho wns a victim of sliiu'ks. After romnmlng afloat for 15 hours, the survivors were sight ed by n Cntallna patrol plane which dropped rofls nnd emer gency provisions, Lnter, the 23 were brought to Colombo, and later to Calcutta, Flury wns on his second voy ngc when the ship wns torpe doed. He was serving as chief steward. He returned to the United States, landing nt San Di ego, early in December. The service has given Flury an ex tended six months' leave. The youth's mother lives In Chilo quin. ... Convoy Ready to Travel Ledo Road MYITKYINA, Burma, Jan. 13 (P) Tho first allied motor con voy destined for China in' 214 years, and tho first ever to cross Burma from India, is ready to leave Ledo, Indin, with vital wnr supplies for American and Chinese troops. Tho trucks will travel 1000 miles over the Ledo road, con struction of which was begun more than 18 months ago, . Just 439 road miles south of Ledo, Chinese first army units under Lt. Gen. Daniel I. Sultan are in position for the final drive to capture Namhknm and the 25-mlle-long Shwcli river valley all thnt remnlns to bo cleared before the main road to China opens. fc- striking along the center, rammed Into the outskirts of Mont-Le-Ban, only a mile from the highway, the last route for a German withdrawal. Farther east the 30th Infantry division, attacking between Stavclot and Malmedy, gained up to 1200 yards against light opposition, AP Correspondent Wes Gallagher reported tonight. Push Ahead Along the western flank of the attack, the second armored division pushed ahead nearly a mrle- orr tturTiIghway leading southwest toward Houffalize. The 8 3rd infantry division was attacking with the - third armored along the center in the closest approach to Houffalize. The neck of the Belgian salient narrowed to 9M miles. Third army troops had pushed to with in five miles of Houffalize from the south. Nazis Shoved Divisions of the American first and third and British sec ond armies meanwhile were rolling the Germans eastward from the surrendered tip of the corridor thrust into Belgium. AP Correspondent Roger D. Greene declared that remnants of tho German army were pull ing back tonight at top speed, and said RAF pilots reported heavy movements of German transports fleeing cast as far inside the salient as St. Vith. Near Junction At the western tip of the once-deep German bulge, main forces of the British second and American third armies were re ported only three miles apart in the area near Chaplon. British troops had gained four miles across the Laroche-Champlon road, and third army men in a night advance gained two miles in this rollback of Germans. German rearguards, road blocks and extensive minefields and demolitions slowed the pace of pursuit of the' German re treat. Army Takes' Over Cleveland Plant CLEVELAND, Jan. 13 (P) Normal power pulsed through lines of tho Cleveland Electric Illuminating company today a few hours after the army took over company facilities to end a walkout of 400 coal passers which threatened to paralyze all of Cleveland's industrial op erations. The war department's seizure occurred after tho utility pre dicted collapse of manufacturing and transportation facilities if the strike continued. Col. E. A. Lynn, chief of the Cleveland ordnance district who was placed in charge of the facilities, snld "operations were normal," with vlrtunlly com plete crews at compnny plants. Earthquake Hits Jap Home Island By The Associated Press A "slight earthquake" struck the central area o f Honshu, main Japanese homo island to day, the Japanese Domcl agency reported In a broadcast. The dlspntch, recorded by the federal communications commis sion, said "a little damage to a small number of houses" had been caused, but declared "transportation facilities sustain ed no damage whatever." The quake was recorded at 3:55 a. m. (Tokyo time). Gl That Rosemary Jackson Mer- ritt, 19-year-old Chiloquin girl had died ot suiiocaiion as de termined in an autopsy conduct ed here by Dr. George H. Ad- lor. Klamath, county coroner. was upheld by Dr. Joseph Bee man. University of Oregon school ot medicine, in a report received this week. Government officers were as sisting Special Indian; Officer John Arkell.in investigating the death-of the girl which occur red December 20. at the home of a sister, Beulah Farris of Chiloquin. r .-'.'" Arkell had previously report ed talking to Rosemary at 11 o'clock the night before her death. At that time. Arkell said she was in "good health- and spirits." The girl s husband Knowlton Merritt, is serving with : the U. S. . army in the South Pacific. She was the dauehter of the late Frank Jack son and a niece of Boyd Jack- KContinued on Page Ssevenj Wright Clarifies Tax Situation Clarifying confusion over the January 15 income tax deadline, Deputy Tax Collector Paul Wright pointed out today that if estimated reports already filed are correct within 20 per cent, no additional returns need be filed until March 15. If the estimate is incorrect by more than 20 per cent, however, it should be amended on Janu ary 15 and the difference paid, he stated. Amended estimates should have the word "amend ed" written at the top of the re port, it was explained. Taxpayers who In 1944 were paid almost altogether in wages subject to the withholding tax and whose wages were not more than $2700 if single or $3500 if married,, may safely ignore the January 15 deadline. Also, a person who estimated his income tax reasonably correctly last Ap ril and paid everything due at that time is safe, but persons who were not paid wages in 1944 or were paid wages not subject to the withholding tax are af fected. Persons are also affected who were paid wages subject to the withholding tax but who also re ceived Income of 5100 or more from other sources or were paid wages subject to the withholding tax totaling more than $2700 if single, or $3500 if married. First Leyte Vets Come to Barracks The first two marine veterans of the Philippines invasion at Leyte arrived last Friday at tho Marine Barracks. - Both were members of an artillery battal ion which had seen action in the Gilbert islands previously. The men were PFC Valentine John Krzyknlski, of' Jersey City, N. J., and PFC Sherman Robert Donnelly, of Leroy, N. Y. Both left for furlough Sat urday afternoon. Although there were two bat talions of marine artillery, 155mm howitzers, attached to the army for the Leyte invas ion, these men were the first to come to the Klamath Falls bar racks. They were In Hawaii just before the campaign j started, and were scheduled to go into action in the Carolines, but their orders were changed while aboard transports at sea, so the leathernecksjjoined army forces going into the Philippines. T MIL ADVANCE i E TOWARD AGNO Eastern . Sector Units Meet Resistance By Nipponese By C. YATES McDANIEL GENE RAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, LUZON, Jan. 13 (P) Powerful spear heads of the sixth army invad ers of Luzon pushed forward steadily today toward Manila during the fourth day of the invasion after advancing 12 miles to cover more than half the road distance to the Agno river, without meeting any ene my opposition. The American troops moved cautiously despite advance pa trol reports of empty trenches and abandoned dugouts near the river, the most formidable natural barrier across the cen tral Luzon plain. Meet Resistance . Only in the eastern sector of their bulging beachhead have they-met any-considerable re sistance. Japanese guns and mortars hidden on the slopes or ridges forming the ' southern spurs of the Benguet mountains fired ' intermittently into the nanK. - Correspondent Spencer Davis of the Associated Press report ed that the Japanese- in those foothills pumped shells into American positions at the rate of 60 to 70 a minute before dawn Wednesday until they were silenced by warships. Air support was also called up to smash an enemy position in this area. Ships Sunk Japanese, attempts to land supplies for the defenders re sulted in a loss for them of a big freighter-transport and 45 luggers, winch were sunk or badly damaged at San Fernan do, about 45 miles north of the American Lingayen gulf beachhead. So far the sixth army troops have encountered none of the (Continued on Page Seven) WPBto Curtail Reconversion I WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (JFl The war production board pro poses shortly to emasculate its reconversion order allowing ad vance production of machinery and plant equipment for peace time manufacturing. The action, expected within five or six days, would wipe out the authority now granted ma chinery builders to fill orders which lack military or other priority standing. Kesponsioie omciais revealed today that -the only equipment which could be produced for peacetime use would oe print ing trades machinery, if the or der is signed as now written. 38 JAPANESE SHIPS HIT BY YANK FLEE 1 Cruiser, Destroyers, Transports Sunk ' By U. S. : By LEIF ERICKSON U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD. QUARTERS, PEARL HARBOR, Jan. 13 OP) A furious assault on four huge Japanese convoys massing along the French Indc China coast still roared on, ac cording to latest navy reports, with third fleet planes pouring down more of the bombs, rock ets and torpedoes which already have smashed 38 enemy ships. A 5000-ton cruiser, several de stroyers and 12 transports load ed with troops intended to be thrown against Gen. Douglas MacArthur on Luzon in the Phil ippines were among 25 ships sunk Thursday, first day of tha attack. Thirteen other ships were damaged. No Yank Damage Navy accounts to date report no damage to the American fleet. Suggesting the vulnerability of the Asiatic mainland to inva sion from the Pacific, Adm. Wil liam F. Halsey's fleet even de fied Japan's continental 1 a n d based air power by moving in close enough to send raiders in land. They set off big fires around the city of Saigon. This fleet of Halsey's can move over great distances and pack a wallop all the way. It now can be disclosed that his bat tleships, cruisers, destroyers and aircraft carriers swept to tho current action between Saigon and Camranh bay across the South China sea after sinking or damaging more than 100 Japa nese ships and knocking out 98 enemy planes at Formosa last Monday. It is' more than 1000 miles from Formosa to Saigon. The crucial Indo-China as saults, aimed at breaking up a big enemy effort to strike in be hind MacArthur before the con. voys can even get under wayj Caught the Japanese by surprise. That was attested by last night's communique pointing out that six loaded transports were, sunk at Saigon and at least an. other six in the harbor of Qui. Nhon, 250 miles to the northeast. TOUGH ASSIGNMENT The Klamath county grand jury which will convene Janu ary 25, on the call of Circuit Judge David R. Vandcnberg, faces one of the toughest assign ments in lengthy investigations seen here in some time. , One of the principal cases to be investigated by the body, will be the charge of contribut ing to the delinquency of a minor pending against former Chief of Police 'Earl Heuvel. Grand jurors will also go into facts concerning the death of Karl Bold, Henley farmer, who died December 10, following an alleged beating at the hands of PFC Herbert Daniel Stevens. Young Stevens is being held in the Marine Barracks brig. Dr. George II. Adlcr, Klam ath county coroner, announced Saturday that he had received a report from Dr. Joseph Bee man, University of Oregon school of medicine, attributing Bold's death to pneumonia fol lowing exposure and shock. A half dozen other major problems will face the grand jury made up of three women and four men. B. S. Grigsby is foreman. Yanks Gain On Luzon Y xl''l UTllnldoi 'lorombonj vaumunv . rl . . Diim , """e LM . lA$hi Tiies ) """J ' , C.,!,u, ) : ir. Itobefi .CompMe ft Kffi&V LUZ0N ' ' sT? v PStnrt CiuiNVtTI ei.Jost laUri-, ' Tac,antva"' Sfoloule SKftT j? J "V. .' JjfC.p.. t '!' T Dtn3olon Bey VeBotolon 'f rf UL ,, , :- Cl.rh Flelddltlr . Uml"n Cobonjon Amlt )) $. Wiju.l I P0UU.0 . s. f.jV Jt. . M.i., rjo . U S. Anwnl. . .,.! Ka.' - " V esbic maioiosVx V : V'CCV. wi ;, so MAcaJy',," 'I - i"m" Boy Pushing ahead without meeting any major resistance, Ameri cans have reached half the road distance to the important Agno river. Further inland, troops reached Malasiqul, 12 miles from the coast and 130 road miles from Manila. .ff '. .