I WEATHER ' , Low 30 . PRECIPITATION 24 hours to 8 a. m. ...True Season to data .. 2.97 Normal precipitation ...3.38 Last year to data ................ 2.21 SUNRISE TABLE HUNTERS! Sunday, December 14 Sunrise . 7i22 Duck bunting to 4 p. m. slmi of -Guafti In The :News By FRANK JENKINS HTODAY'S particular brlyht and shining spot In tho news: America's fighting forces have recovered from the first shutter. In shock of surprise and are f IllhtlnR doggedly, determinedly and SKILFULLY. TN the Philippines they are bear- Ing tho brunt of a MAJOR Ja panose attack. What happened at Honolulu was a daring, hit-and-run exploit, not (as yet) followod up. Tho attack on Manila la a sus tained affair. One suspects that American forces there are outnumbered. They are far from sources of re inforcement and supply, t They Oare putting up a REAL fight. At tiny Guam, Wake and Mid way, we know only that small American forces are fighting de terminedly and effectively. ' i THE axis hope of catching us off balanca-imeV-eripplIng u before we can get going has been shattered. .. ' ' That is the big development of a hectic week. TT is still nocessary to remem- ber that wa are fighting In WORLD war. What happens on ANY front concerns as almost as directly as what Is happening on our own particular fighting front. ' Plenty Is happening. , ... (GERMANY'S early-ln-the-week announcement that she is withdrawing her armies In Rus sia to "new defenso positions" for tho winter foreshadows some thing Just what can not yet be ft said with certainty. Moscow says Hitler's Russian campaign has been crushed. A soviet communique today claims 85,000 nazls have been killed and 23 out of a total of Si nazl di visions have been smashed, routed, surrounded or forced to rotreat in tho Moscow zono since November 16. Tho Germans are still foiling back along tho Black sea. ... fAPINION In London Is that Hitler is pulling out of Rus sia In order to hit harder some where else. A "British source" says today t , that tha German air forces re ported to bo withdrawn from Russia may bo thrown full strenath at tho British Modi terranean fleet which has been preventing reinforcements and suDolles from reaching axis 'forces In Africa. Hltlor. watching the spectacu- lar successes of aircraft against surface croft In the Japanese war Ois expectod to strike swiftly and with1 all his power against tho British in the Mediterranean. . THE British havo been making nroaress In Africa In this week when our eyes hove been turned elsewhere. If Hitler is unable to relieve his hard' pressed forces there, ho will suf- for another dofcot. ... ERMAN forcos continue to mass In southern Bulgaria. Bulgaria declares war on Britain and the United States. There Is growing expectation that Hltlor will strike through Turkey to reach tho oil fields of the Middle East. Turkey Is on an extremely hot spot. , 1 t -,,'. XJKANWHILE, the Nether- lands goes spectacularly Into action. s ! A Dutch East Indies subma- w rlno, operating In the Gulf of Slam, sinks four Japanese trans' ports carrying 4,000 soldiers to tho fighting in British Malaya (The British at Singapore soy t , (Continued. On Page Two). ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE FIVE ' o)m One Long Blast Blackout Signal Friday Night Surprise for All, But Success Attained in 33 Minutes A new blackout signal one fVmlnuta blast wus offlclully established here Saturday for future blackout periods, includ ing tlie experimental blackout set for Sunday night somo time between 8 and 10 o clock. Inadequacy of the warning signal was given as tho chief reason for the spotty start of Friday night's surprise black out, which began slowly but after 33 minutes brought almost complete light extinguishment in Klamath Falls. The defense coordinator's office announced that here after a S-mlnuta blast will start a blackout, and another long blast will be the all-clear signal. The blasts will com from the Southern Pacitlo whistle, various mill whistles and a whistle at the state 'highway shops for the benefit of the suburbs. In addition, state police sirens will be used to Inform DUTCH KILL ON KSELS Submarines Active in Malayan Waters; 4 Ships Sunk BATAVIA, Java, N. E. I., Dec. 13 (IP) Dutch submarines wero credited tonight with destruc tion of about 4000 Japanese sol diers and their four transports off southern Thailand and an other naval forco was said to havo liquidated a Japanese set tlement on tho cost coast of Borneo. Tho transports wero smashed as the Japanese reinforcement were being moved to the Mola yan battlcfront, Tho submarine victory was an nounced hy tho Butavla radio but the N. E. I. mllltory-naval cominunlquo reported the Bor neo action, saying "a unit of our naval forces has dealt with a Japanese settlement on tho cast coast of Borneo." - SINGAPORE, Dec. 13 (VP) The British Indicated In to night's communique that tho Japanese invasion of uppor and middle British, Malaya had been substantially checked. Combat continued on the Ke- doh province front, facing Thai land In the north. It was so d. and the sltu.Alon there was little changed while In the Kuantan area, on tho east coost about midway between Singapore and tho Thailand border, there was no alteration in positions. DO Official blackout signal on. 5-mlnute ' whistle blast. - Official all-clear signal another lona blast. , Watch your street lights. When they go off, there is a black out. Don't mistake any other whistle for the long blast, ' Sunday's trial blackout time 10 p. m. Extinguish every light Put out all lights when you leave Drivers of unauthorised cars subject to arrest. Pedestrians keep out of tha street, . , Blue eellophane by itself is of no value on ear lights and may lead to arrest. It is a violation of the law in all-clear periods It is Inadequate as a protection in blackout periods and again may lead to arrest, . . If driving when a blackout CURB and turn off lights. (Bead other blackout instructions on page CKNTS u", ' V1 suburbanites, who are expected to cooperate In future local blackouts. The suburbs did not bluckout Friday nignt. because suburbanites did nqt hear the warning signal. But Poll co Chief Frank Mumm told tho defense council Saturday morning that the citt zens, in general, did a good Job of blacking out onco they got the general Idea. .. The blackout of Friday night, which,, tasted approxi mately on. hour, started when the Southern Pacific com pany received blackout In structlons from San Francisco. Tha S. P. relayed tha report to city police, who set the ' wheels in motion here. The pre-arranged signals sounded at about 8:15 p. m. Street lights wont black at 8:17 p. m. An all-clear signal and re-lighting of streets came t 9:17 p- m, . ;f- t ,i; . ' -..dl8but ,0 """The blackout" dIoT,noi result from airplane activity in this area but was an offshoot from a Son Francisco darkening. Ash land and Mcdford did not black out but reported unconfirmed reports that unidentified planes were observed In the vicinity of Mt, Shasta. . .; :X For the first time, radio sta tion KFJI went off the air; from 7:43 to 10 p. m. This had nothing to do with the local- rules. KFJI, It Is understood, receives its instructions from tho fourth interceptor command at Sari Francisco. Station and defense officials emphasized that -a rodlo blackout here has nothing to do with a local gen eral blackout. Klamath people generally took tho new experience of blacking out In good spirit and after u (Continued on Poga Two) Colored Headlights Unlawful at All Times, Says Pray SALEM. Dec. 13 UP) Use of colored automobile head lights that reduce road il lumination below tha plain requirements of tha state law must be stopped, in the Interests of safety, Charles P. Pray, superintendent of state police, declared today. "Motorists driving with these colored lights outside of blackout periods era sub ject to arrest,' Pray warned, "And, of course, they must not drive at all during black outs unless they are properly authorised." This warning wus repeotcd by all local authorities Satur day. Reod motor vehicle In structlons on Pago 4, will be some time between 8 and the moment the signal is sounded. home ANY, TIME. moving in a blackout will -be 4 . . . . , occurs, park your car AT THE IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY. DECEMBER 13, m Wsi TO CONTACT SMALL BASE 20 Jap Planes Shot Down in Raid on Hawaii Sunday WASHINGTON. Dec. 13 VP) Tho war -department reported today, that more than 20 Ja panese planes were . destroyed in last Sunday s Japanese air attack In Hawaii. In an official communique. the war department said Lieut. Gen. Walter C. Short, com manding tha army's Hawaiian department, cited six ' army fliers for performing some of the "numerous spectacular feat of heroism in the action. WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (P) The navy announced today that It was unable to communicate with the Pacific island of Guam by .either, radio or cable fand. added that csptui of. the if la by the Japanese was probable?' A force of fewer than 400 naval personnel and 155 marines were stationed on the island, said the navy communique, and these defenders had been repeat edly bombed.' , r-. . ' Furthermore, Japanese troops were said to have landed at sev eral points on the island. Wake, Midway Hold The navy said that Wake and : (Continued - on Page Two) Weed Sirike Ends; Work Starts Monday Twelve hundred employes of the Long-Bell Lumber company of Weed, Calif., who have been out on strike since October 20. wjll go back to work next week beginning on Monday, the Lum ber and Sawmill Workers union (AFL) announced Friday night. The return will be in response to a request by Ernest P. Marsh, federal labor conciliator, who asked the union Friday after noon to go back to work with no settlement pending the find ings -of an arbitration board which will meet "not later than December 29." : Wilbur E. Yeoman, AFL rep- resentative here, said that it was a certainty Local 2907, the striking unit, would accede to Marsh s request. In Weed, J. M.'' White, Long Bell manager, stated that most of the men would return Mon day and that others would go back as soon as mill machinery had been re-conditioned. According to Marsh's .tele- gram, the arbitration board which three weeks ago at tempted to find a settlement in the elght-weck-old shutdown will reconvene in Weed within two weeks. Marsh asked that if the men returned to work in re sponse to his request that they and the company accept the rec ommendations which the board will make. . Yeoman regarded tha develop- . (Continued on Page Two) Red Cross Lists Places to Take Contributions Contributions to Klamath Falls' voluntary Red Cross drive for war funds will be received at the following places: Red Cross Headquarters., ' First National Bank. U. S. National Bank. First Federal Savings and Loan Association. ' Radio Station KFJI V, , , Herald and News. VY ' $ . " " ,' ' '' ' ' -I .This is a view of the harbor bean, cut off from communication part of the native village of Sumay. HITLER MAY SEEK Indicptions Ppint to ""Neat. East "After A Loss to Reds By The Associated Press A disastrous end to Adolf Hit ler's invasion of Russia was free ly predicted by London military quarters today as Moscow pro claimed the utter, defeat of a 750,000-strong German army and signs multiplied ' that - Hitler might be planning a new cam paign through Bulgaria into Tur key and the middle east. The prospect that the nazl fuehrer, heartily sick of bloody losses and bitter hardship suf fered on the frozen steppes of Russia, may have decided to lash out in another direction found these supporting omens: , . 1. Britain announced that she was sending immediate aerial re inforcements to the.middle east evidently to meet a new threat, since British armies al ready had the Germans and Ital ians on the run in North Africa, , 2. German-dominated Bulgar (Continued on Page Two) 14 Convicted of ' Selling Secret Plans to Nazis NEW YORK, Dec. 13 P) The conviction of 14 tight-lipped de fendants accused of supplying military information to Germany today capped the government's drive against one of the most fantastically-operated spy rings In recent history. Against a backdrop of the day old war between the two coun tries, the 14-week-long trial end ed early today with a compara tively speedy verdict. A Jury of nine men and three women de liberated only eight hours be fore finding the 14 guilty onJ Dom counts ot an indictment charging conspiracy to avoid registering os German govern ment agents and conspiracy to deliver to the nazi government Vital American defense-secrets. The verdict corried a maxi mum sentence of 22 years. Fed eral, Judge Mortimer W. Byers said in his 21-hour charge to the jury that it was "unfortunate" that war started during the trial, declaring it was "probably no exaggeration" to say tho defend ants had "manifested deep sym pathy for Germany." Those convicted wero Herman Land, 40, a Norden company em ploye: Conradln Dold, 35; Hein rich Ellcrs, 42; Paul Scholz, 41; Franz Josef Sttgler, 34; Erich Strunch, 32; Adolf Walischew skl50, all employes of American Steamship lines; Frederick Ldu quesne, 63; Rudolph Ebeling, 43; Edmund Heine, 50; Josef Kloin, 38; Carl Reuper, 37; Leo Waa len, 34, and Axel Wheeler-Hill, who admitted he was paid to re port ship movements in the U, S. UNITED PRESS 1941 Number 9459 AMI Guam Believed in Jap Hands at Guam, tiny island in the Pacific, and probably occupied by Japanese forces. In the foreground is Litvinoff Hints Russia To C Stand With U. S. in Orient WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 OP) Russia virtually took - a stand with the United States in the war with Japan, today- when Maxim. ;'Ltfvlnoffr soviet ambas-. saaor, aeciarea Nippon -was. a common enemy", belonging ' to the' same bunch of axis gang sters' ' ''r'- ." ' :.:...,: But, In a formal statement on Russia's position and in answer to questions at a press confer ence, the ambassador carefully WAR BULLETINS WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (IP) The Polish government notified the state department tonight that as of December 11 state of war existed be tween Poland and Japan. i WASHINGTON. Dec. 13 JP) The OPM today f rose sugar stocks in the United States and limited new de liveries by importers and re finers to 1940 levels. The move was designed to "pre vent possible hoarding or speculation." ' WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (fP) Creation of the war in surance corporation with a capital of $100,000,000 to pro vide "reasonable - protection" . against losses resulting from enemy . attacks on private property, in the continental United States was announced "today by the federal loan ad ministration. WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (P) Navy department an nounced today that i a fishing ' vessel of U. S. registry oper ating off the west coast of Costa Rica had been boarded and found to haye seven Japa nese in the crew. They' werV taken into custody .p. Tr vessel was said - hare been loaded, with I" gal lons of diesel oU..-. Eye-lV.'tness Tells Over Nippon ( MANILA, P. I., Sunday Dec. 14 (P) Hundreds of Japanese parachutists and land troops were wirlcd out in several hours of hand-to-hand fighting , with Filipino soldiers in the moun tains of north central Luzon island on Thursday, an eyewit ness told reporters today, Francisco Villanueva, a civil ian communications technician, returned to Manila and said he witnessed the encounter which lasted -for several hours be ginning about noon on Thursday. His story was the only first hand account of parachutists having landed In the Philippines. Reports of parachutists in the Uagan area JTO miles north -which the navy reported had avoided making at this time any commitments concerning actual soviet military operations in the far east i . ;' v :.j:; ,Ai)d. : when" asked' (Whether Russia; would permit' allied forces to fight on Russian terri tory, or permit the Unted States to use air bases in Siberia for attacks against Japan, he re plied: : .; .-. . That, the soviet union "would welcome help on any front in the common cause. Litvinoff received the corres pondents at the soviet embassy and, seated at a small desk with a golden bust of Lenin behind him, first read them a prepared statement. " . - :, ' . ' ' ' "Complete understanding ex ists, or will be arrived at," he said, "in decision concerning the sectors in which the great pow ers concentrate their strength, with the decisions to be made solely in the interests oi the common cause. . That declaration? was inter preted generally ;as meaning that Russia felt her greatest con tribution to the defeat of the axis could be made by maintain ing an offensive on the eastern front, with the possibility of war with Japan in the Pacific de pending on eventualities. S. F. Learns to Turn Lights Off SAN FRANCISCO,, Dec. 13 (IP) San Francisco, undergoing its fourth blackout ot the war last night in an air raid alert that lasted 2 hours and 34 min utes, 'proved, to the army that it knows how to turn out the liehts. A score of persons were Irf lured, one man dropped dead, there was violence, and proper ty damage. StraJMowsaets' bla; V .fd'?'" . 4 ' tSmfl drily military . announce ment was one from fourth army headquarters saying that army detectors had located unidenti fied planes flying over the area. of Victory Parachute Troops west of Luzon were circulated several days ago. Villanueva said he' saw hun dreds of Japanese swooping down upon the mountains. Some were land troops coming from an unknown source, he - said, and others were parachutists attempting to make a landing in a coordinated attack. t Many of the latter were killed while dangling from their para chutes, he said, and others were captured upon landing. The Japanese, force was out numbered and finally surrender ed, he added. He said the parachutists car ried small gasoline tanks which he believed were for the purpose pf starting fires. , COLD RAZED 75 KILLED AS FIELDJISSEO Landing Party Wiped . Out North of .' Capital MANILA, Sunday, Deo. 14 VP) Blackened and smashed ruins of more than 100 small residences: and stores littered a three-mile area bordering Nichols air field where Japanese bombs killed at least 75 persons and wounded 300 in yesterday's air raid. The long pathway of destruc tion showed that the Japanese airmen both overshot and under shot their Nichols field objective; in their most destructive . raid thus far on Manila. -; , .,, , . The casualties brought the city's death toll so far to more than 100, The final figures may exceed this, however! . -At least four planes were r ported shot down from the 4J planes which bombed Manila otx Jectives and the other planes which attacked Clark field to the north and another field in Nueva Ecija province, which al so is In the north central part' of Luzon island. -,., . Three of the 12 plane forma- tlion were reported shot down by anti-aircraft, f ire to the north ana one of the Manila harbor-de fenses, i The Japanese planes wheeled over Manila in their first attack since Wednesday and left a trail of small fires among flimsy Nipa shacks which still glowed early this morning. One small blaze was still visible at a remote end of Nichols field. The area of ruins was desert ed and the flickering firelight grotesquely outlined the gutted framework c stores, beer halls, some small stucco - dwellings. and abandoned horse drawn car riages turned over at ludicrous angles. Among the victims were many horses, still in harness. By R. P. CRONIN JR. MANILA, Dec. 13 (3 p. m, 4 a. m., EST) (IP) Japanese land ing forces which won a foothold at Lingayen on the west coast of Luzon, 100 miles from Manila were declared officially today to have been wiped out. ; A communique from the head quarters of Lieut. Gen. Douglas MacArthur indicated that the Japanese had made no gains at other landing bridgeheads and that no new landings had been reported. r "The situation on the ground has not changed," the war bulle tin asserted. It added that "mopping up in the Lingayen area has been con cluded." . ' The Japanese ' struck anew during the day at United States air bases around Manila and elsewhere in the Philippines, but a communique said that - al though reports so far were mea gre "it is believed our losses ere slight." , air sAtz-.n, ? number Uhom.,.. ported shot down, . a .. fense anti-aircraft ' battery .- credited with bringing down one of the attackers. 1 In possibly their heaviest at tack of the day the Japanese bombed military objectives in the Manila area particularly Nichols field.' QUICK TRIP SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec. 13 (P) Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox arrived by airplane from Hawaii today and left lm. mediately for - Washington, the eleventh naval district announ ced. :-. V ::;; :-(.: News Index . City Briefs Page . 8 Comics and Story ........Pago 14 Courthouse Records ... Page 4 Editorials : -..Pago 4 High School News ........Page II Information ...Page I Market, Financial ..Page 13 Pattern ...Page 3 Sports Pages 12, 13 Society ....;.Pagcs 0, 6, 7, 8, I Weekend Pictures ...5... Page H