PAGE TWO TROOPS SENT T (Continued from Page One) seed that approved by the French. It was also said the Japanese answer emphasized that Japa nese troops were in Indo-China to protect Japanese interests against Chinese forces in Yun nan, just across the border, and were not a menace to Thailand. i TOKYO, Dec. 5 (Delayed) (P) 1 A Japanese government spokes , man expressed the opinion today that both the United States and ; Japan would "continue with sin v cerity to try to find a common : formula for a peaceful situation , ln the Pacific." ' Then he added: "If there is no sincerity then there Is no need to continue the ;', conversations." Misunderstood He declared that Washington had ."misunderstood our funda- mental policy" and that. Secre , tary Hull's recent statement - "seems to allege that we are following a policy of force and conquest in establishing a milt i' tary despotism." -- The spokesman, Tomakazu ' Hori, said Prince Konoye, when ." premier, had "made clear that ' we have no territorial ambi l ons." "We disclaimed indemnity (In " China) and this principle is be " tag put into practice, as is shown 1 in our recognition of the Nan king government." He said Japanese troops' had gone into French Indo-China "ac cording to an agreement." He added that he was not permitted to disclose the number allowed by the agreement nor whether a new limit had been set. There have been many exam ' pies of nations sending troops in to foreign domain with the con ' sent of a foreign government, he went nn. hut. in the nrfHumt in stance "there has been a misun derstanding, and that is the very reason we are continuing." .1 (Continued 'from Page One) embarrassment to our national defense, the chief evil of their publication is the revelation tht were snouia De among us a group of persons so lacking in appreciation of the danger that confronts the country and so wanting in loyalty and patriot ism to their government that they would be willing to take and publish such papers." The Tribune asserted y ester day that the government had a ', plan calling for an AEF of 5,- 000,000 men and for total armed , forces of 10,045,658 men. BOMBER FOR RAF (Continued from Page One) ' to the Portland army air base because of heavy weather. Lieut. O'Nell graduated from the advanced army flying school at Barksdale, La last August l, army records disclosed. He had been assigned to a bom bardment squadron at Boise, Ida, but had not reported there ; for duty. Moil Robbery Discovered in Attic Cache ' (Continued from Pase One) and local newspapers of that time tell of a series of mail thefts "between here and Balti more." All seals had been broken the letters were not in envelopes but folded and sealed as was ' done then and investigators were of the opinion the robber .; had hidden his loot after taking uy uisn louno in ine mau. But the cancelled stamps he casually stuffed away may be here said. He pointed out that ' catalogs list a one-cent blue j stamp current in those years at $2000. Other issues in common usage then are quoted from $8 ; to $2500. CARD OF THANKS ; We want to thank the friends who so kindly expressed sym pathy, offered assistance and gave the beautiful floral offer- i tags during our recent bereave- . ment. Words cannot convey the com fort of these acts when we feel our grief so keenly In the loss of our beloved husband and father, Henry Pfefferle. , Mrs, Myrtle Pfefferle and 010 CHINA HELD GUARDS Play Cast I fix t ' Comart Studio Russel Saunders suffers an Injured knee while going through' the play to be presented by Henley high school junior class. "Believe Me, Professor," Friday. December 5. at 8 p. m. in the school auditorium. The public is invited. Left to right Bonita Smith, Margaret Murphy. Russell Saunders. Mary Bruner. The play is being directed by Helen Dunbsck. Editorials on News (Continued from Page One) ments from the Crimea to meet the Russian counter - offensive from Rostov. As a result, pres sure on Sevastopol (Black Sea naval base still held by the Rus sians) has been lessened. That is another indication that Hitler is running short of re serves. DESERVES are fresh troops and supplies held in the rear, to be rushed as the needs of battle require to points in the line where the enemy is making pro gress. Intelligent use of reserves is basically what General For rest meant by "gitting thar fust est with the mostest men." Their importance is indicated by the historic military maxim that victory is apt to go to the side with the LAST reserves. When reserves are used up. commanders are reduced to the necessity of shifting troops and supplies from LESS threatened points to the MORE threatened pdints. .., ; "THIS is all guesswork, of A course, but it LOOKS as if the Germans had to shiit,forces from the Rostov front in order to. bolster their drive on Moscow. The interesting point is that the Russians apparently possess ed reserves enough to . HIT HARD on the Rostov front as soon as it was weakened by Ger man withdrawals. (XNE guesses today that the Germans, unable to spare any more troops from Moscow, are taking them from the Crimea in order to stem the Russian drive westward from Rostov. pEUTER'S (British news agency similar to the AP and 'the UP) hears from "somewhere in Europe" that Vichy has agreed to give Germany all the naval and air bases she requires in northern Africa if Germany can occupy them WITHOUT AS SISTANCE OF THE FRENCH FLEET. In return, France would get TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY INTERSTATE BUSINESS COL LEGE NEWS Bessie Knight, James Keyes, Ralph Miller, Edward Mettler, Richard Mett ler, Gloria Owens, Rosemary Sloan, Verda Heidland, Ira belle Barry, Merrill, and oth ers enrolled recently. 432 Main. 12-5 HOUSEKEEPING ROOM $2 week. Close in. Phone 7058. 12-5 CABBAGE No. 1 2c lb. Cab bage for chicken feed Mc lb. 2809 Shasta way. 12-6 WANTED Buildings to wreck. Phone 7830. 12-11 FOR SALE Red fryers, 23c lb. live weight. Crystal's, Merrill Lakeview junction. 12-8 FOR RENT at WORDENf Ore. Two-room house $10. Large 4 rooms $17.50. Inquire Wor den store. 12-8 FOR RENT Small 3-room un furnished house. Combination wood and gas range. Inquire Apt. 4, 1421 Esplanade after 8 p. m. 12-5 MODERN two-bedroom house in Altamont. Phone 5475. 12-9 FOR RENT Near Fairvicw school, newly decorated thrce " room unfurnished house with cookstove, $27.50. Also two room furnished house $15. 1425 Wllford avenue or phone 7010 Saturday afternoon. 12-5 OIL TO BURN For Union heating oils, phone 8404. Klam ath Oil Co., 615 Klamath. 12-31mtf at Henley release of more prisoners of war now held in Germany and a re duction of German occupation costs. Vichy France, you see, also wants to know how Hitler is going to come out in Russia be fore going off the deep end. YUGOSLAV "sources" in Jeru salem hear that open war fare is being waged in Yugo slavia, with the Germans using seven divisions (about 100,000 men) and considerable air power. Serb guerrillas claim to be threatening Kragtijevac. site of Yugoslavia's largest munitions works. Mexico hears tales of a brew ing anti-nazi movement in Ru mania. In Paris, a German major is shot in the hip and seriously wounded by a French cyclist. Hitler's job of holding down the European lid isn't getting any easier. Local, Boy Advisor For Film to Be Shown in Klamath A local boy played a promin ent part 'in the production of "In ternational Squadron," when Byron Konnerly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al Kennerly of Pine street, served as technical advisor to Warner Brothers during the film ing of the picture which deals with the RAF. Kennerly served as a member of the Eagle squadron in Eng land and saw active service for many months with the Royal air force. The picture, "Interna tional Squadron," opens Sunday at the Esquire theatre. The Ken nerly family will be guests of the Esquire, according to an nouncement made by Al Four met, manager. Court Reverses Sentences of Bund Speakers (Continued from Page One) advocate hostility to them, or a group, . . ." said the court in an opinion by Chief Justice Thomas J. Brogan, "is as revolting to any fair-minded man as it is absurd and unjust to the mind of a thoughtful man; yet to make the speaker amenable to the crim inal law his utterances must be such as to create a 'clear and present danger that will bring about the substantial evils' to so ciety thai the state has the right to prevent. TODAY and ...m weiut nisi rucsutw nMnuair n rictlll Ttl'lll Tu ffrZAm J 1 111 I A fit st. ' W Ai't I I I I I I 1 1 J (Jmk I torn. ,!0 V'iafT'jT ii ij ijonwH'in., .,,iJI. ,1 CUtf J mmm ...W WBIU'J HIST i r T rucaurw nwouiir I f tn rictlll Ttl'lll MBcrrmicox 'jM? ll HtiiN rvwmni rkW-TL& M Last Thrilling Chapter of "The Iron Claw" Porky Pig Cartoon and Latest News . THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON WEED UNDER PALL (Continued From Page One) kitchen by means of a work card issued to each striker who per forms regularly scheduled duties in any of the strike-born depart ments of picketing, wood-cutting, welfare, health, etc. Workers must each put in a prescribed number of hours each week on the picket line, at the welfare desk or in neighboring hills fall ing timber for firewood. Men with families patronize the commissary for foodstuffs and the "makin's" of a meal. Women, too, who work in the auxiliary, are entitled to "buy" at cither the commissary or soup kitchen. The kitchen, six weeks ago a privately -owned cafe, serves three meals a day and a mid night supper for the night shift on the picket line. It serves close to 700 meals daily. All the basic chores such as cooking, dishwashing, and stor ing are djne by strikers. The lighter waitress jobs are handled by auxiliary members. Eligible for soup kitchen meals, as well as for commissary food mu:it either show a work card or an okay slip from the welfare department which in vestigates food petitions. Soup kitchen meals, served for an average cost of 1 1 cents, con sist of hot cakes, sausage and cof fee for breakfast: meat, potatoes, vegetable, dessert and coffee for lunch and the same for dinner. The kitchen also operates a cof fee and sandwich wagon for picketers on duty. House rent for workers and their families, most of whom live in company-owned homes, hasn't yet become a problem. The firm has made no move to oust those who fall behind an action which would probably only fur ther antagonize the strikers, sol idify union opposition, and can cel any possible chance of col lecting back rent. Food subsidies are being en larged to include clothing, both castoff and new. It's handled through the welfare committee just as the food situation is. Gasoline for the automobiles of strikers who use their cars on strike business is furnished through the union. Cigarettes are one of the few luxuries af forded through the regular com missary channels. As yet there's no poverty. Un ion officials promise that there won't be. But neither is there much folding mofiey -and the holidays and winter are not far off. . The auxiliary is making plans for Christmas, when the situa tion is going to hit hardest on the small children of the strike bound community. There's go ing to be a Santa Claus, they vow, despite the stories circulat ing that some Weed mothers have told their children that Santa Claus has died. Tension has increased in the past two weeks as negotiations have temporarily ceased. Last Sunday night a meeting was called by a "back-to-work" com mittee first out-in-the-open sign of dissension among the mass. Tempers flared in the pack jammed Sons of Italy hall as 500 persons crowded inside and an other 200 stood In the street to witness. The rally turned into a union meeting and there was no violence. But there are an estimated 60 state patrolmen within a mo ment's notice of Weed today. Last reports indicate the strikers aren't backing down. They still want a minimum wage of 70 cents per hour, a week's vacation with pay, and a union shop. According to J. M. White, manager of the huge Long-Bell Weed unit, the company does not agree to the principles of union shop, has offered a compromise wage scale, and will further con sider the vacation proposal in 1942. Representative of each side SATURDAY '...iitiiiit a itiTi r I r t;' r HIT IN Til A Mining X 1 Jtc-T ' VVrrfifi! 'X yVTJL "''t ' V " " i MIIlTI' Memorial Speaker Rev. L. K. Johnson of the Klamath Lutheran church will give the principal address at the Elks memorial services in the Elks temple Sunday after noon. The public Is Invited. BE HELD SUNDAY Memorial sen-ices for mem bers of the Elks lodge who have died in years past, will be observed at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon, December 7, in the Elks temple. Names of those who have passed on since the last memori al Include Ira M. Coleman, March 7; John J. Parker, past exalted ruler. May 23; George J. Walton, June 17; J. S. El liott. July 22; F. C. Klabzuba, August 8; James A. Thompson, September 2; Will G. Wilson, September 15; J. H. Wise, Oc tober 3; Harry A. Prather, Oc tober 28. Following is the memorial service program: Prelude, Emile Buzaid; open ing exercises, Lawrence E. Slater, exalted ruler, and Charles E. Seavey, esquire; in vocation by Glen L. Evans, chaplainr song, "Our Absent Brothers," Wchrmann, by E. E. Burrows; roll call, "Our Absent Brothers," Don Hunt, secretary; song, "Face to Face," E. E. Bur rows; altar services, ritualistic, exalted ruler and officers; selec tion, "Adoration," Borowgki. Emile Buzaid at the organ: me morial address, Rev. L, K.John son, pastor Klamath Lutheran church. Memorial arrangements arc being made by Willard W. Ward, chairman. At Eugene Among those spending the weekend at Eu gene was Mary Francis Landram who visited with Thelma How ard, former student of KUHS. Sons of Norway The Sons of Norway regular meeting will be held Saturday, December 13, Instead of December 8, for elec tion of officers. last met two weeks ago before a three-man department of labor panel but no settlement came out of a two-day conference. The panel is reported to have recom mended that the principals carry on negotiations between them selves. Long-Bell is holding a num ber of defense orders. Others have been cancelled since the wrangle began. Meanwhile the gigantic plant stands idle and the little town of Weed buttons up its courage, goes on existing and waiting. ATTENTION KIDDIES! Th. ESQUIRE Saturday Morning KIDDIE CLUB Will Be DISCONTINUED Thar Will Be NO MEETING This Saturday Morning BUT the thrilling aerial "RIDERS OF DEATH VALLEY" will be shown EVERY SATURDAY on the first REGULAR MATINEE in addition to the COMPLETE ESQUIRE SHOW . DONETS 1 GERMAN LS (Continued from Pngo One) miles north of Moscow, and con tinued eastward toward Dmi- trov. 40 miles due north of the USSR capital. On the southern front, the soviet radio said Marshal Se moon Timoshcnkn's armies, driv ing west through tlio Doni't.i river basin and along the Sea of Azov, had reached the Mills river "where the Germans are trying to form a new front." Two red army spearheads were reported racing ahead in an attempt to hem up the Ger mans retreating toward Mariu pol, 100 miles west of Rostov-on-Don. Soviet dispatches acknowl cdKcd that German rear-guard detachments were still holding out in parts of Tagunrog, 40 miles west of Rostov-on-Don, but said the Russian flag was flying again over the city. A communique from Adolf Hitler's field headquarters as serted in broad general terms that fresli Russian attacks on the southern (Ukraine) front had been "frustrated." It gavo no details. A Berlin spokesman insisted that "the front is somewhere bc- tween Rostov and Taganrog." 49IH STATE EFFORT FIT (Continued from Page One) engineer. He came here to test chrome deposits and said that Los Angeles interests were ready to build a $290,000 ore reduction plant In Scott Valley if ade quate roads to the mines were built. Others viewed as a hopeful sign an announcement in Sacra mento by Kenneth Fulton, direc tor of natural resources, that the state forestry board would meet Dec. 13 and 18 to look into claims that Siskiyou county has an un limited timber reserve. Judge Childs said in his ac ceptance speech that when he settled in Crescent City 80 years ago there wasn't a passable road Into the Klamath river country. "And today there still Isn't a passable road," he said. Judge Childs succeeded the late Mayor Gilbert Gable of Port Orford, Ore., as leader of the new state movement. Gablo originally proposed that his county, Curry, secede from Ore gon and Join California. From that development the plan to organize a new stote Jefferson. Prospectors and bankers, lum berjacks and businessmen, In dians in tribal costumes and ranchers and local residents marched shoulder to shoulder in a huge torchlight parade through downtown Yreka last night in celebration of the "second seces sion Thursday." TODAY and SATURDAY 2 BIG HITS! Today 2:00 7.00 9:00 IP! Oregon Man Named IWA President in Sweeping Election SEATTLE. Dec. ft (fl'l Worth Lowpry of Jewel, Ore, leader of the so-called opposition bloc and severe critic of the northwest lumber strike laHt spring, wn elected president of the CIO's In ternational Woodworkers of America in a sweeping election that displaced all old officers of the group last night. TD Announcement of the appoint ment of Douglas Motor company lis official Packard sales und service agency for the Klamath territory was made here today by R. D. Davis, district manager of Packard-Portland company, distributors for Oregon and southwestern Washington, Jim Douglas, head of the Doug las Motor company, announced that ho has Installed complete service facilities, and that the new 10-12 models of the Packard line are now on display. With the introduction of a new line of Packard motor cars for 1042, It is Interesting to note that Packard celebrates lts.4:ird year as a producer of automo biles while simultaneously launching a defense industry pro gram as large as Packard Itself. Such enormous undertakings In the interest of national de fense cannot help but rai.ii- the question, "Is it possible to do both Jobs well?" A dual answer may be found In the fact that the defense pro gram Is on schedule while the Packard automobiles of IIHI! are superior In every way to any Packard cors previously built, Davis said. The same principles of work manship and engineering that earned for Packard its major defense assignments of Rolls Royce Aircraft engines and Packard Marine engines will continue as standard practice In tho manufacture of its automo biles. Starts Continuous Shows From 12 Noon THE "FOREIGN LEGION" of the R.A.F. i A V J Served si . ' J&L TECHNICAL i J tV V -7 m ADVISOR A , ,h'" PiCy"' ' 7-,' A ' "vw v"- .r L. 2f"Tl ir ,Wom tret. Nsw Th Wf Mt all for RONALD REAGAN M a Hn, aaiMiii laviblt Yankai Ami Comedy Cartoon asm DeeembM B, 1941 AXIS RETAKES LIBYAN T01N (Continued from Puge One) the attack of axis bombing planes ran "very high." Tho Italians declared that the situation was "favorably italic" NEW for the axis and said tho British corridor to Tnbruk was now "evidently definitely eliminat ed." One of the largest forces of British bombers over to hit a single objective In tho westurn desert raided German armored columns southeast of Tobruk while the Drills!) reorganized their forces for another attempt to smash the axis power in Libya. Weulher conditions have im mobilized (ha ground forces ex cept for scouting operations and repair work. A Reuters, B r 1 1 1 1 h news agency, dispatch from "some where In Europe" said Vichy had agreed to give Germany all the naval and air bases she m quired In French North Africa If Germany could occupy theu" without the assistance of thv' French fleet. New Gym Opened At Bly School Tho students of the Bly school are using tho new gymnasium for the first time this week. The building wii started In August nod has just been completed. The foundation of the structuro Is HO feet by 00 feet. The building as erected with the money that Is derived from the special levy that was voted upon by the tax payers Inst July. The contractor was Henry Hnskump of Klamath Falls. Here's to Wleland't, tried and true, old-time flavor, grand old brew! S und ay Klomoth Falls' Own BYRON KENNERLY 1 f ...MO,1 ..A, Triumph OLVMPE BRAONA. WILLIAM LUNDIGAN JOAN PERRY REGINALD DENNY Directed by LEWIS SEILER i fc, l.-t !'!. r... ,-,oM,tf, h I,, W-A W.... i,..",t H.tU.,1 ,!-- fc,7',,1 News of the Day'