$ht nmln fetalis N . nciS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PR WEATHER 0 Blackout Signal On s-mlnut bUit on limit nd whittles U the atgnal for bUckout In Klamath Fall. Another long blait, during a black out, U a ilgnal lor all-claar. In precau tionary parlodi, watch your atrttt lights. are In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS FROM General MiicArthur nl bulletin: "Everything la quiet." (Relatively aulel. he mean. When you'vo Jut come out of a boiler factory, the clung and clutter of tho trcct aro hardly noticeable.) TTHE Japs icem to have rushed raw troops Into the Philip pine. With Hongkong out of the way, they aro sending In the vet eran used in that campulun. Hence (probably) tho lull re ported by General MacArthur. nATAVIA (Dutch Eut Inllc) newspaper unsure their reud era today that allied reinforce ment aro on the way to tho Pa cific and that a general often Ivo against Japan can bo ex pected toon. From Canberra, Australian capital, come a itatcmcnt that allied war plana Just completed hava greatly Improved the out look In tho Pacific. Tho Jap are laid to have uf- )fered 40-to-l casualties In their drive agalnat tho British on the Malay peninsula. ENCOURAGING, of court. c What would bo MORE en "couraglng would bo new thnt a vast fleet of allied warplanc had arrived at Singapore and Manila. TOOTE: A Tho reason there aren't warplanc enough at Monlla and Singapore Is that we haven't been able to mako them fait enough. The. faiter w mako them (and train pilot to man them) the quicker the war will be over, CHURCHILL, In a brief talk to Canada' war cabinet, pledge that men and nation fighting for a frea world "have reached tha creit of tho road to victory." If almost ANYONE ELSE had Mid that, it would sound like propaganda Intended to buck us up In the present pinch. ) Churchill' long record of tell ing the bad along with tho Rood encourage u to believe what he says 1 truo. A DISPATCH from Washing ton explain that the Japs seek to have tholr victories full on important festivals. New Year' is Japan's greatest holi day. They took Hongkong ou Christmas, which Is tho day marking the anniversary of Em peror Hirohlto'i accession to the throne. TN THE present lull in exciting event Goorgo H. Eorlo, who ha been U. S. minister to Bul garia, arrives in Istanbul (Con stantinople) and tells American correspondents: "Rumanian and Hungarian hospitals are choked with Ger man wounded from eastern front hospital trains. A deepen ing gloom Is settling upon nazl dominated Europe. German peo plo and soldier nliko aro sick- Oened by Hitler' assumption of personal command of the Ger man army." Ho adds: "German fortunes definitely aro declining, but the death throe may bo UNPRECEDENT EDLY VIOLENT." In other words, look for ANY THING from now on. AND today's dispatches carry a " bit of news that many peo ple have confidently expected. Colonel Lindbergh has volun teered his services to tho army air corps. BRIEF WALKOUT DETROIT, Dec, 30 (P) The Ford Motor company' tool and die department resumed opera tion this afternoon after 1000 worker had boon idle for hours In a dispute over rest periods Onnd a company complaint that employes smoked on tho job. Basis of settlement of tho dif ficulty, which a company spokesman termed a "spontane ous" protest by workmen, was not disclosed. -.tit" PRICE FIVE 4 IHussiams Retake BRITISH SMASH AXIS STAND IN DESERTJATTLE Last Italian Colony Totters as Reds Free Azov Area By Th Associated Press A smashing success for the Russian southern armies the ro cupturo of Kerch ot the eastern end of the Crlmeun peninsula and of Feodosiya, S3 miles farth er west was announced by the soviet tonight. This appeared to huvo effec tively freed the whole ot the Sea of Azov area from tha nuzl in vader and to put his Sevastopol siege army In great peril ot the hour of continued German de feats along the Moscow front. It was a victory comparable to the nazl rout from Rostov, which Is at tho northeastern ex tremity of tho Azov at the gate way, to the Caucasus. By Tha Associated Press Britain's desert armlos in a violent two-day tank battle have smashed an axis attempt to make a new stand after a 420-mile re treat from tho Egyptian border, front line dispatches said today, tnd British vanguards were re ported pushing on toward Tripol itania, the western part of Libya and tho last piece of Premier Mussolini's African empire. British middle cust headquar ters said 42 axis tanks were knocked out of action in a buttle south of Agcdubio, 80 miles be low captured Bengasi, and de clared that "our pressure on the enemy Is being maintained." Skirting Gulf With Cirenaica, or custcrn Libya, conquered, British troops were said to be advancing some where along the road to El Aghcila, 80 miles beyond Agc dabia, on the coastal highway skirting the Gulf of Sirte. El (Continued On Pago Two) Netherlands Indies Papers Declare Offensive Coming BATAVIA, N. E. I.. Dec. 30 (P) Netherlands Indies newspapers assured tho public today that allied reinforcements are on the way to tho Pacific and that a general offensive against Japan can be expected soon. But the papers warned against Impatience, said the drive could bo launched only after thorough preparation, and stressed the "enormous difficulties" Involved In having tho allies take the Initiative. At the same time Lteut.-Gcn. Ter Poortcn, tho army's commander-in-chief, stressed the need for "immediate material support" of the Indies defenses, especially bombers, fighter planes and anti-aircraft guns. Contributions Received By Red Cross in Drive for War Relief Contributions previously acknowledged $3871.38 Contributions received Tuesday 187.S0 TOTAL $4058.88 Tho bombing of Pearl Harbor, Honolulu, Manila; tho invasion of tho Philippines; tho submarine attacks in tho Atlantic and Pa cific all of theso have dramatic ally brought homo tho cruelties of this war, "Whcrover our soldiers, sail ors and airmen are so valiantly defending our soil, thoro also Is tho flag of tho Red Cross un furled," Norman H. Davis, chair man of tho American Red Cross cables, , CENTS One Man Gang 0 Here are tha principals in on Ih M fi : 0m aviator landtd on Niihau, 210 milts north of Honolulu December 7 and a reign of terror for tha Island inhabitants bagan. It ended when Benny Kanahel attacked the armed aviator and two Jap fifth columnists. He was shot three times but knocked down left, his wife, completed tha Job by Lt, Col. Eugana J. Fltsgtrald, PRESIDENT flEVEALS 50 Per Cent of U. S. Income Marked For Defense WASHINGTON, Dee. 30, (AP) President Roosevelt, divulging some phases of an overall war program, said today he was aim ing at devoting SO per cent of the national Income to that ef fort. Ho told a press conference that by tho end of this fiscal year next June 30 27 per cent of the national income would be de voted to war purposes and that In the year ensuing he hoped to build the percentage up to 50. He estimated that during the fis cal year beginning next July 1 the national Income would ap proximate $100,000,000,000. Mr. Roosevelt asserted that he had abandoned such terms as an all-out or victory program and had substituted a war program, which ho sold embraces some what less dramatic terminology, but contemplates maximum use of America's vast productive ca pacity. Since December 7, when Ja pan delivered her sneak punch on America's Pacific bases, Mr. Roosevelt said, tho war program has been amplified appreciably. Ho did not mention specific fig ures. But he did say that in some lines there might be a 100 per cent curtailment of civilian con sumption and thnt in other lines consumer uses would be little ef fected. "Funds aro urgently, needed to keep Intact these front lines of mercy. Tho enemy respects neither holidays nor weekends," ho continues. Hero Is tho opportunity every citizen can participate in-con-tributo to the war relief fund be ing gathered by tho American Red Cross for aid to tho armed forces In action, and civilians caught in war areas. Tho following contributions had been received by Tuesday noon: Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Alftln . 2.00 Mr, and Mrs. Frank Car- doza 2.00 (Continued onfPago Two) KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, (and the Mrs.) Retake tale of heroism to come out of by beating him to death. Above, Kanahel is congratulated commander of the Kauai district. In the Kauai hospital. Only 2 Aliens Yield Cameras, Radios Here Two German aliens have turned in four cameras and a radio to tho Klamath Falls po lice department only evidence of compliance here so far un der the federal order demand ing that aliens surrender radio transmitters, short-wave receiv ing sots, firearms and cameras to the authorities. Police Chief Frank Hamm and Sheriff Lloyd Low said they had received a number of in quiries, but the two Germans alone actually turned over equip ment. One turned in a radio and a camera, and the other handed over three cameras. Re ceipts were given and the equip ment was placed under seal to bo returned later if permitted by federal action. The deadline set for turning over the equipment was 11 p. m. Monday. While the U. S. census lists only one Japanese in Klamath county and the one not an alien it is believed there are many German and Italian aliens liv ing in this area. Bulletins received by police authorities here state that Ger man, Italian and Japanese aliens should turn over firearms, weap ons, ammunition, bombs, explo sives, radio transmitters, short wave sets and cameras. Board Proposes Shorter Sentence For Harry French SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 30, (AP) The state advisory pardon board recommended today that tho life sentence of Harry A. French, 32, for killing a rival newspaper publisher, be reduced to 25 years. French killed Claude L. Mc Cracken In Alturas four years ago, at the height of a feud be tween McCracken and the French family. Ho has asked for a pardon or commutation of sentence. If Gov. Culbcrt L. Olson ac cepts tho board's recommencing tlon, ho could apply for a pa role much earlier than would be possible under the life sen tence, which requires a mini mum Imprisonment of seven years before applying. 50 KILLED LILLE, German Occupied Franco, Dec. 30 (P) Fifty per sons were reported killed and many injured today in a train crash near Hazenbrouck in the prohibited frontier zone. De tails were lacking but the acci dent was believed to have been a collision, . re Kerch Isle From Japs the war with Japan. A Japanese tha flyer, and Ella Kanahel. T" II Retaliation for Air Attacks on Manila Asked by Chief WASHINGTON, Dec. 30 (P) General Douglas MacArthur urged ' today that retaliatory measures be taken against the Japanese for the recent bomb ings of Manila, which he char acterized as "completely villa tive ot all the civilized pro cesses of international law." An official war department communique said a heavy sur vey of damage to "undefended Manila by the repeated senseless and savage bombing by Japa nese aircraft . . . indicates that churches and other centers of Christian worship and culture (Continued on Page Two) Lindy Volunteers For Service With U. S. Air Corps WASHINGTON, Dec. 30 0P) The army air corps said today Charles A. Lindbergh had vol unteered his services. Lieut. Gen. Honry H. Arnold, chief of the air forces and depu ty chief of staff of the army, said "Lindbergh's act indicates a definite change from his iso lationist stand- and expresses a deep desire to help the country along the lines he trained him self for many years." Thero was no indication on how soon there might be action on Lindbergh's offer. Last summer Lindbergh, at that time engaged in making many speeches for the America First Committee in opposition to President Roosevelt's foreign policies, submitted his resigna tion as a colonel in the reserves to President Roosevelt by let ter. The resignation was accept ed. ARP Frowns on New Year Whistles Whistle blowing at midnight New Year's was discouraged Tuesday by L. Orth Sisemore, Klamath air raid precautions chairman. Sisemore said that in view of the fact that local whistles are used for blackout signals, pro longed blowing might lead to confusion. He said his office is asking various mills, which blow whistles for blackout sig nals, not to blow them when the New Year breaks at mid night Wednesday, UNITED PRESS 1941 M OF AXIS TALKED Total Extirpation of Nazi, Jap, Italian Regimes Sought OTTAWA, Dec: 30 (VP) Prime Minister Churchill, in a speech filled with confidence, told the people of Canada today that the final phase of the war must be "an assault on -the citadel and homeland of the guilty powers both in Europe and Asia." Speaking by radio from the chamber of the house of com mons of Britain's senior domin ion, the prime minister declared the final goal of the allied demo cratic powers was the total ex tirpation of "Hitler tyranny. Ja panese frenzy and the Mussolini flop." Time and again, the crowded chamber burst into a storm of applause and cheering, especial ly as Churchill called a roll of the allies, praising, one by one, the contributions to the common cause of the United States, Rus sia, The Netherlands, China and the Free French. JibM at Axis ' His speech was filled., with Jibes and taunts fat the axis part ners which moved the crowded chamber to cheers and laughter, but most of it was a calm, con fident review of the road al ready traveled and the road still left to travel. Three phases remain, he said: consolidation, in which all the allies might be marshalled; liber ation, when conquered territories are recovered and their people rise to revolt; and the assault on the axis nation's own homelands. Churchill said Britains were "most grateful for all you have done in the common cause and now you are resolved" to do even more in the fight for free dom. "We are not asking that the rules of the game be modified,' he said. "If anybody wants to play rough, we can play rough too. When he remarked that he had spent the week with Presi dent Roosevelt there was new applause. "That great man," he began, only to be interrupted by new cheers. Roosevelt, he said, was a man (Continued on Page Two) Sinking of U. S. Freighter Revealed NEW YORK, Dec. 30 VP) The sinking of an American freighter in the Atlantic Dec. 3 by an axis submarine whose commander spoke English has been disclosed here with the arrival of 19 of the torpedoed vessel's 35 survivors who spent a week in lifeboats on rations of six ounces of water and two biscuits a day. Chief Officer Norris Chad- bourne of the freighter the America South Africa line's 6275-ton Sagadahoc said one seaman, Anthony Castro, a U. S. citizen of Spanish birth, probably had been killed in an explosion that followed the torpedoing. INVASION BY CHURCHILL Gunman Robs Vanderbilt Party At Reception After Wedding BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Dec. 30 (P) What does a lady of wealth do when sho meets a gunman face to face at a swank wedding reception? Mrs, Gloria Morgan Vander bilt slyly turned a ring so that her hand hid the costly setting, surrendered two diamond clips worth $3000 and remarked: "You're a little bit late. Most of the guests have left." - "Yes, I know," said the gun man. Lady Thelma Furness, Mrs. Vanderbilt's sister, gave up a $1000 V for Victory clip and said quietly: "You're quite! foolish to do Low IS PRECIPITATION Saaion to data .................. 8.68 Normal precipitation 4.21 Lut yaar to data 3.97 Number 9471 MAM Nervy Suspects Jap Vessefs Off Alaska WASHINGTON, Dec. 30 UP) The navy announced late today that Japanese vessels were sus pected of being in the vicinity of Kodiak, Alaska. . All merchant vessels have been warned of the presence of the Japanese war craft, presu mably submarines, in the Alas kan waters, a navy communique said. In Far Eastern waters, it was reported, United States subma rine operations continued against enemy surface vessels. The navy described as with out foundation" reports that a United States destroyer and two American submarines were sent to the bottom in the period from December 26 to 28. Midway island remains in American possession, the com munique stated, there having been no recent Japanese as saults. TOKYO, Dec. 30 (Official Broadcast Recorded by AP) (Continued on Page Two) FOR SINGAPORE Jap Planes Held Off By Defenders in ;eries pf Raidj SINGAPORE, Dec. 30 UP) Martial law was declared in the Singapore area tonight. A semi-official statement said offenses against public safety and cases of treachery, assist ance to the enemy or looting will be tried by military courts. SINGAPORE, Dec. 30 OP) Blazing anti-aircraft batteries and searchlights which kept the Japanese planes high were cred ited today with holding the ef fect of overnight enemy raids on this stronghold to a mini mum. A communique said four raids were made, damaging some thatched houses whose flames ignited a small gasoline dump and caused four casualties. Winant to Meet Eden on Parley Held With Stalin LONDON, Dec. 30 (IP) United States Ambassador John G. Win ant called tonight on Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden to hear about his trip to- Moscow, the results of which some sources regarded as so important that a secret session of parliament might be called to hear them. Some even hinted that the foreign secretary's observations in Russia had led him to the conviction which may be im parted to parliament that the German war machine is in acute difficulties while still facing the three severest months of the Rus sian winter. Eden was expected to disclose some of his conclusions in broadcast next Sunday night (12:15 PST). Informed sources were con vinced that Eden had brought home good news from his con ferences with Joseph Stalin and observations behind Russia's lines on the eastern front. this, because the house Is full of cops." The gunman fled, without at tempting to rob the eight guests who remained of the several hun dred who had come to Mrs. Van derbilt's home. The occasion was a reception for Mrs. Vanderbilt's heiress daughter, 17-year-old Gloria, and her bridegroom, Pas quale (Pat) Dl Cicco, 31-year-old actors' agent. i ' The gunman, posing as a chauf feur for one of the guests, en tered by a rear door early yes terday morning and followed a maid Into the reception room, Gloria and Dl Cicco, who were (Continued on Page Two) COLDER LINES PRESS American Force Set For Defense 65 ; Miles North WASHINGTON, Dec. 30 VP) The army announced today that twenty-seven men' were killed and 80 wounded in the Japanese bombing of the Philippine fort ress Coregidor at the entrance to Manila bay. By CLARK LEE MANILA, Dec. 30 OP) Jap anese forces which landed last week southeast of Manila have fought their way to Lulsiana and Dolores, each about 45 air line miles from this city, and apparently are attempting to effect a junction for a further ' advance, reliable dispatches from the front said today. Patrol Active " In the north, the new Amen lean line, shortened and com solidated by General Douglas MacArt'.iur, was said to run east and west through Zaragoza, some 65 miles above Manila. The exact positions of the) i Japanese in this theater were not known but were believed to be a few miles north of the American link, with patrol ' active in between. American forces apparently had withdrawn completely from the Lingayen gulf area. The two Japanese columns in the south evidently aimed to join at San Pablo. Into Batangas This town is 35 airline miles southeast of Manila, but the Laguna De Bay, a lake about 25 miles long and 15 miles wide, lies between that position and the Philippine capital. If the Japanese reached San Pablo, it was probable one column would circle southward and westward to Batangas prov ince on the west coast south of Manila. Relative inactivity at the fronts, reported in this morn ing's communique, was taken to mean that the Japanese were resting their troops and bring ing up fresh supplies of am munition and gasoline and re inforcements for new assaults. Y e s t e rday's announcement from Washington that the Jap-., anese were landing veteran troops was believed here to mean that possibly the troops used in attacking Hongkong were being transferred to the Philippines. Manila, whose military signif icance has been lost by tho declaration that it is an open city, was kept on edge by con tinued Japanese air activity in the vicinity. . Year-End News, Picture Review Due Tomorrow What was' the biggest local nw story of 1941? Wa it the Auaukt flood. the Ewauna fire, the mystery death of Marie Huill, or ome other outstanding local happenings? The annual selection of the "big ten" local stories Trill appear in tomorrow' paptr, along with a comprehensive review of the year In local itorie and picture. There will alio be a day by-day account of the new that will carry the reader. tep by step, through the local happening of the year that law war com to this ' and other communitl of the United State. You will want to av to-, morrow's paper for full read ing. News Index City Briefs Page 8 Comic and Story .......Page 8 Courthouse Records ... Page 4 Editorials Page 4 High School News . Page 10 Information Page S Market, Financial ...Pago 7 Midland Emplro New. Page 2 Pattern .....-..-....,......Page 3 Sports ...................... a'age FOR JUNCTION SOUTH OF GITY