; Blackout Signal On 8-mlnut bUit on sirens and whistles ll the signal for a blackout In Klamath Falls. Anothir long bint, during black out. li signal ior all-elaar. In precau tionary periods, watch your street lights. WEATHER Low 32 PRECIPITATION 24 hours to B t. m. .... ,42 Season to dato 5.07 Normal praclpltatlon 3.74 Last year to data 3.08 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN tm- SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS TWO SECTIONS PRICE FIVE CENTS a,v S. OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1941 St jM mm u ; 'A. m ) In Th e Day's News 1 By FRANK JENKINS AT yesterduy'a meeting of the Oregon state defonso coun cil, which has been referred to already n this column, black outs furnished me principal topic for discussion as Is natural. In a stuto of war, with the Pacific coast ncurcst to the nemy, anything can happen, but It Is generally agreed that a night air raid Is the thing most likely to happen tint und the black out Is the first defensive answer to tho night air raid. yHE objective Is to black out quickly and to blnck out COMPLETELY. Early effort have left much to be desired, but there was general agreement that people are learning rapidly. 'TWERE are problems. Among them so for lighted dairy barns and poultry house have loomed rather large west of the mountains. Not that dairy men and poultrymen have been unwilling to cooperate. Far from It. The problem Is to GET WORD ki mw wnait;i vt auvu va The Idea now Is that they will have to be closed In so that the light, can bum without being aeen. .- , ;';..!'.;! ' i rui rem pruuicm ma w mill trash-burner. No satla- factory method of blacking out the trash-burner quickly has yet . been devised. One sawmill operator tiss been experimenting with steam and thinks it offers some possibili ties. 'TWERE Is plenty of authority to deal with blackout viola torsof that there Is no doubt When the order to black out Is given by tho army, failure to comply with It becomes a mill' tary offense. When the order Is given by the civil authorities, . their emergency powers for en forcement are ample. So far NO Intentional violators have been reported. The problem has been to get out a warning that can be heard and under stood by all. Warning devices now in use re far from satisfactory. THIS question is In every mind: Have enemy planes actually been over the Pacific coast? There I no flat and authorita tive answer, but Informed opln 1mm hitlit. . n . 4 V. .... M. LBIU been and MAY BE AGAIN at . any moment. . Present at Mon day's meeting was an army offi cer who has spent several years In Japan. Slipping In an aircraft carrier and raiding Pacific coast cities, he rays, would ' appeal strongly to the Japanese. We must be prepared for any thing. THERE have been rumors of evacuation of Pacific coast eitles and towns. NONE have been ordered. n ..l - - i out kkuiii nv unu Knows wnen such a thing may become neces sary, Handling evacuations is one of the problom under study. If such a thing should become necessary, careful advance plan ning and discipline and calmness on the part of tho population would be vitally Important. AND so it would be it Pacific coast towns and cities should be raided from the air. The re sults of panic would be incalcul ably terrible. Panic follows sur prise and lack of preparation.. It is prevented by discipline and readiness. . THIS is still sound advice: 1 Don't get excltod. Go about your ordinary busi ness in your ordinary way EX CEPT, insofar as discipline and preparedness for whntovcr may happen are concerned. , Remember that if your boy in 'the armed services can take it YOU CBn take it. Be PROUD of the fact that you are sharing the ' dangers of war with him. Accept (Continued on Page Two) MPS NEW ATTACKS THREATEN TO TAKEPENANB Nippon Offensive in Malaya Cuts Off British Base BATAVIA, Java, N. E. I., Dec. 18 W) The Japanese have extended their Pacific offensive with air raids on the Dutch island of Ternate and a coastal village of the Dutch part of New Guinea, the Dutch com mand announced today in a communique circulated by the news agency Aneta. The enemy, however, was said to have been put quickly to flight by defending Dutch naval planes. All the Japanese bombs, aimed at objectives In or near Sorong, northwestern New Guinea, missed their mark, according to the communique. By C YATES M'DANIEL SINGAPORE, Pec, 18 iff) Japan's offensive by land, tea and air, smashing ' m a ny point ' along a vast arc from Burma and the Malay peninsula to the Jagged coast of Dutch New Guinea, developed 1U dir est threat today on the road to Singapore. That threat in northwestern British Malaya seemed to have all but sealed the fate of the island state and port of Penang. Penang and another- Straits Settlement state, province Wellesley, have been cut off from direct communication with the rest of Malaya by British withdrawal In Kedah province. Official concessions indicated that all of tho HS-mllc-long state of Kcduh had been yield ed. This meant that the Japanese were able to advance the full length of Kedah, on the north western side of Malaya, along the coastal railway terminating at Singapore, bastion of British naval and air power in the Far East. Singapore had heard nothing from Penang for 24 hours, but (Continued on Page Two) U. S. Army Group Learns Japanese CAMP ROBERTS. Calif., Dee. 18 (P) Seven Japanese privates in the U. S. army here are teaching a class of more than 100 officers and enlisted men how to say "hcrio" and "how do I got there?" in Ja panese. The private professors, American-born all, are giving a course In simple conversa tion, greetings, and basic gram mar forms. It pays to be pre pared, the army believes! F. R. Cites Heroism of Flier In Note to 1956 Successor WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 (A) In an unusual token of appreci ation of a deed of heroism, Pres ident Roosovclt has addressed a letter to the . president of tho United States whoever he may be in 1958 requesting the ap pointment as a West Point cadot of Colin P. Kelly, III. Now less than two years old, Colin P. Kelly, III, is the son of 26-ycar-old Captain Colin P. Kelly Jr., who scored three bomb hits and sunk the Japanese bat tleship Hnruna off Luzon Do comber 9. Captain Kelly, ' of Madison, Fin., lost his life in the action which destroyed the first Ja panese warship in the war which began December 7 with tho Ja pancso surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. The president'! letter, wrltton on White House stationery and raid i After Japanese bombers roared over Honolulu In a surprise attack and left this wrecked corner. It once was a thriving business district but incendiary bombs started a fire which destroyed 20 building, SSI E Passenger Ship Goes Down in Bay; 300 Saved . MANILA, Dec. 18 (ff) Ap proximately S00 persons appar ently were lost in the sinking of the liiior-island passenger steumer Corrcgidor In deep, shark-infested waters near Man ila bay yesterday, it was report ed today. The ship was carrying about 800 persons, including passeng ers and crew, and approximately 300 were known to have been rescued. . " Little hope was held for re covering many bodies. Although there apparently was no accurate check of those on board, water front circles said inter-island vessels usually carry double the total of listed pass engers because1 many travelers pay their fare aboard ship. The 1881-ton Corregldor, once tho Engadine and the first sea plane carrier in history, took part In the World war battle of Jutland. She received special army permission to sail Tues day night and hit a mine before daylight yesterday. Many survivors were in the water five hour or more. The missing Included Assemblyman Juan M. Reyes and Professor Jose Reyes, of Santo Tomas uni versity, both brothers of Arch bishop Gabriel Reyes, of Cebu. ' dated yesterday, follows: (about 125 words) "To tho president of the United States In 19S6: "I am writing this letter as an act of faith in tho destiny of our country. I deslro to make a re quest which I make in full con fidence that we shall achieve a glorious victory in the war wo now are waging to preserve our democratic way of life. "My request Is that you con sider the merits of a young American youth of goodly heri tage Colin P. Kelly, III, for ap pointment as a cadet in tho United States military academy at West Point. I make this, ap peal in behalf of this youth as a token of the nation's appreci ation of tho heroic services of his father who met death in line of duty at tho very outset of the (Continued on Page Two) . IU1 re Jap Bombers Passed Wage Boosts 0 Given at Two Klamath Mills The Chtloquln Lumber, com pany of Chiloquin has granted a 2M-cent per hour wage in crease to nearly 200 of its em ployes, the International Wood workers of America (CIO) an nounced Thursday afternoon. It was the second 24 -cent pay boost announced for basin millworkers in the - 1 a s t 24 hours. Late Wednesday night, Wilbur Yeoman, representative of the- Lumber and Sawmill Workers (AFL) revealed that employes of the Big Lakes Box company havo. been given a similar increase. Both firms' employes also were granted a week's vacation with pay in 1942. The wage in crease will become effective on January 1. In both instances the increases bring the minimum scales to 72 M cents per hour, highest levels in the basin area. (For story on the Big Lakes increase, see page 4). Air Force Head Reported Lost On Hop West WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 (fh The war department announced today an army plane carrying Major General Herbert A. Dar gue, commander of the 1st air force, had been missing since De cember 12 on a transcontinental flight. ' There were seven other pas sengers in the plane, five of them officers and two enlisted men. Secretary of War Stlmson said the ship was last reported near Fnlmdalc, Calif., and it was believed that it had crashed or been forced down in that vicin ity. General Darguo Is a veteran flying officer, and usually pilots his own plane. Those listed as missing with him were;- Col. Charles W. Bundy, war department general staff, home, Washington. . Lieut. Col. George W." Rlcker, war department general staff, home, Washington. Major Hugh F. McCaffery, Mitchell field, New York. Captain J. G. Leavitt, March field, Calif., home, Los Angeles. First Lieutenant Homer C. Burns, March field, Calif., home, Spokane. " . . Staff Sergeant Stephen Hoff man, March field, Calif. (Native of Sun, W. Va.) Private Samuel J. Van Hamm, Jr., March field, Calif., native of ' (Continued On Page Two) Over Continued Firming of Prices Seen in New Figures WASHINGTON. Dec. 18 (JPh Final estimates of the nation's most important farm crops, is sued today by the department of agriculture, placed the potato crop at 357,783,000 bushels. Last year s crop totaled 378,103.000 and the 10-year average is 370, 045,000 bushels. Klamath agriculturists fore saw continued firming of the po tato market as a result of the Washington crop report Thurs day. On November 10, the USDA figure on the potato crop was 376,701,000 bushels, and the marked decrease- shown in the final report is believed certain to have a favorable effect on the market for the growers. Stronger conditions are al ready in effect. Four days ago, according to a reliable source. potatoes here were selling at $1.65 a cwt. for four-ounce sizes or better, whereas Thursday $1.75 was offered for straight US No. 1 grade regardless of size. Four days ago, No. 2 spuds were quoted at 85 cents, where as $1 was offered Thursday. Disease and deterioration in storage over the nation as a whole were regarded here as main factors in sharp decrease indicated in the final report. Guard Captain i Captain- Dayton E. Van Vac- tor, who has been appointed to command the Klamath unit of ..". -" 1 "WWW.1 M Ar' v' n y. J) 1.0 the state guard. (Story on Page 14) T S AS AXIS FACESJEFEAT British See Victory In Libya War as Reds Push On WITH THE RED ARMY ON THE MOSCOW FRONT, Dec. 18 VP) Now striking at the center of the Germans' Moscow line. that is, west of the capital, the red army was reported tonight to have recaptured 200 com munities, with its vanguard ap proaching Ruza, just northeast of Mozhaisk. Mozhaisk is 57 miles west of Moscow. ....!.. .- The Russian offensive thus has become general along the entire Moscow front, after German salt ems had been wiped out on the northern and southern flanks of the city. By The Associated Press A great, perhaps decisive turning-point marked Europe's war on two fronts today as Brit ain announced officially that the axis front in North Africa has been completely shattered and Russia declared that Adolf Hit ler's invasion armies were flee ing in chaos. A soviet . broadcast reported bitter hatred flaring among the axisi forces,, asserting JhaA .Rus sian cavalry in the Donets basin had captured retreating German, Italian - and Rumanian troops when they fell to fighting one another. . Meeting- -' - The broadcast said.Rumanian soldiers joined with the Italians against the Germans. Just one month to the day af ter Britain's desert armies struck back into Libya in their second North African offensive, British middle east headquarters an nounced: "Axis forces in eastern Ciren (Continued on Page Two) .. Sub Attacked Off U.S. Coast SPOKANE, Wash., Dec. 18 (JF) A submarine has been at tacked by an airplane based on the continental United States, Maj. Gen. Millard F. Harmon, commander' of the second air force, reported today. The time and place of the at tack and the nationality of the enemy vessel were not disclosed by the general, who told of the attack by a second air force plane in a letter of commenda tion to the officers of his com mand. He said the action took place "after the Japanese attack on Hawaii Sunday, December 7. - "Combat units performed with high efficiency and special com mendation must be paid to the alertness and promptness of the airplane commander and crew of a squadron in this air force in spying and attacking a sub marine, the general said in his letter. Klamath Stores To Remain Open For Gift Buyers - Klamath Falls stores will re main open later hours on Sat urday, Monday and Tuesday eve nings to accommodate late Christ mas shoppers, it was announced by the Klamath retail trade bu reau Thursday. In general, the closing hours will be 8 p. m. for department stores and 10 p. m. for men's stores. On Wednesday, stores will close at 6 p. m. to permit store employes to participate in Christ mas eve festivities. 1 Christmas shopping was mov ing at a rapid pace in the local business district Thursday, de- snltA unfnvnrnhla weather con ditions whiqh made the going a bit tough.' Friday and Saturday Were ex pected to be shopping banner days of the year and stores re tained extra help for those days to accommodate the anticipated Till PON LOOM Influx of customers. Invaders Shoved Back at Vigan On Luzon Isle MANILA, Dec. 10 UPy Japan ese Invaders have been shoved back many miles in the Vigan area of northwestern Luzon, the United States far eastern com mand announced today. An indefinite ' number of Ja panese dead and wounded were left on the field of battle, south of Vigan, in that action on Mon day afternoon, it was said. There was no further word on what had developed since then. Sea-borne Japanese troops se cured their Vigan foothold, about 200 miles north of Manila, soon after the outbreak of the war in the Pacific. Manila had its first air raid alarm in three days at 1:55 p. m., today (11.-55 p. m Wednesday PST) and before the all clear came 35 minutes later Japanese bombers, preceded by a small number of fighters, flew across the city. ' In ail, 12 planes were counted. They -were so high they could . ' (Continued on Page Two) SHALL APPEALS FOR LOIR DRAFT Senate Asked to ' Cut Age Limit to 19 ! Un Army Bill WASHINGTON. Dec. 18 (JPh General George C. Marshall ap pealed to the senate ' today to notify all men between 19 and 44; years," inclusive, that they were liable for active military service. Chairman Reynolds (D-N.C.) of the senate military committee read the appeal from the army chief of staff as the senate de bated reduction of the present 21-year minimum for compulsory military service to 19 years. Marshall told the senate vie-, tory in. this - war "will require maximum - national effort" and use of all manpower "either in uniform or in industry." His letter was read after Sec retary of War Stimson announced the war department was plan ning to expand the army to the greatest strength needed and would depend entirely on the selective service system to make the increase. All voluntary enlistments are to be halted as soon as "the pres ent rush subsides,". Stimson told a press conference. - An immediate increase of more than 150,000 men already has been recommended in a bill which Stimson said was on President Roosevelt's desk. . tThe war secretary apparently referred to the $10,077,000,000 military appropriations bill sign ed today by President Roosevelt. It provided for a net increase of 277,026 in the army's enlisted (Continued on Page Two) Allied Supreme War Strategy Board Visioned LONDON, Dec. 18 (Dis cussions are under way for es tablishment of a supreme allied war authority to direct high strategy - against the axis,, the authoritative British Press as sociation said tonight, and some quarters here believe that Wash ington should be its headquar ters. Informed opinion in London was divided on the desirability of Washington or London as the seat of the prospective allied grand council, Keynoting comment of British news organizations, the press as sociation said: "In capitals of each of the four great allied powers (the United States, Britain, China and Rus sia) leaders and spokesmen have already indicated their - agree ment to the general principle of a supreme authority for direc tion of the war. "Discussions which now are proceeding between service and political experts are designed to bring the necessary machinery Into being." NEW HAWAI COMMANDERS mm Pacific Forces Under Admiral Nimitz -In Shakeup WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 ,Pf- The navy department reported today that United State sub marines active in the Far .East had sunk an enemy transport and probably sunk a destroyer as well. - .... This information was contain ed in the navy's late afternoon, communique which reported "no new developments" in the cen tral and eastern Pacific It said also that the naval situation had been without incident in the Atlantic area where heavy weather prevails. The communique: . ' '""Atlantic area The naval (lb uation has been without incident. Heavy weather continues in th western Atlantic. .-"Eastern Pacific There are no new developments to report. "Central Pacific There are) no new developments to report, "Far East - Submarine -ac tlons against enemy forces in the) Far East have resulted in sink ing of an enemy , transport and the probable loss of one enemy destroyer.. ..t!Jt tj:' -A war department communi que issued at the same time, out lined the military situation as of 5 p. m. EST as follows: '- ' . 1. Philippines: the command ing general, far eastern com mand, reports that enemy air ac tivity during Dec. 18 was confin ed to mild raids over Luzon. Ground operations were unim portant patrol actions." . . 2. There is nothing to report from. other areas."; War Strategy Rear- Admiral . Chester W. Nimitz, the man who has been given the terrific responsibility of the command of the Paclfio fleet, was one of seven high of ficers called to the White House today for a conference on war strategy. - ) . Nimitz, along with Ernest J. King, head of the Atlantic fleet, (Continued on Page Two) , Ten Youths Die in Burning Bus Wreckage ROBINSON, 111., Dec. 18 UP) Ten youths perished last night in the burning wreckage of a National Youth administration bus that overturned near West Union., ' . . i .. At first only seven were be lieved trapped in the charred, bus but today the bodies of 10 were found, all burned beyond, casual identification. , , i The bodies were moved to a vacant store building at Mar shall, 111., and behind curtained windows today, grief-stricken relatives viewed them in an at tempt to establish their identi ties. ' . , . ,. '.- . . Clark County Coroner Howard E. Swlnford said the dead were Richard McClure, 20, Bernard Shonk, 15, Earl Melton, Leland Johnson, Tom. . Ollinger, 17, Henry Ollinger, 16, James Ho back, 15, and Henry Walters, all of Marshall, and Winifred Andrews and Victor Turner of Casey. The bus was driven by Ferris Williams of Casey, 35, who. la in critical condition from burns at a Robinson hospital. The youths were returning to Marshall from Oblong where they had engaged in NYA project work.' ; News Index . Agriculture '. .'..'...Page 20 City Briefs JPage 8 Comics and Story ..........Page 18 Courthouse Records ....Page 4 Editorials Page 4 High School News Page 9 Information .....rage 8 Market, Financial ... Page 10 Midland Empire Newt, Page 19 Pattern Page 3 Sport . .Fs 12, 13