f r I I 0 blackout oigna i Mhii ir nniip in in uiiri m . Ont S-mlnute blast on sirens and whlstlas li the signal lor a bUckout In Klamath Falls. Another long blast, during bUck out, li a ilgnal lor all-olaar. In precau tionary perlodi, watch your treat llghti. l ,. . fl-" l;''1 -irjuuvt I PRIC" ' ... KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 6. 1942 Number 9477 ' - , " Days u- pHhmwEa-.BBK News ANOTHER JAP 1--: tr: iTTrii?" BRITISH BASE I X J iiiinpiiin nmu t By FRANK JENKINS I1HKS1DENT Roosevelt, uddrcw lug congress and tho notion on the atato of the union, says tho war program for the nex fluent yrur (beginning July 1 1042) will rrauirc .Id billion dol lura moro thnn hulf of our es timated natlonnl income. Thnt. ho addrd, "meuna toxei and bonda and bond and taxes It mcana cutting luxtirlca one other non-vucntliila. In a word Alt moan on ALL-OUT wor by "'Individual effort and family cf fort In a united country." JJERE U our anawer: "If our aona and our broth era and our nephews and our cousins con tuka it on tho fight Ing fronts, WE CAN TAKE IT AT HOME. "THEY can Hike It They proved thnt apectne ularly at Wake. Thcy'ro proving it over and over, day after day, In the unequal, lnat-atand fight ing tit Corregldor and tho Butan peninsula. We can take It, too. TTIIE time la hore to laugh off the 86 billion and all the . other billions that may bo need' Oed. Dollar no 1 0 n t r count; they're now only device for measuring productive effort. The thing that count are plane, tanks, ships and gun. Our job at homo I to produce theie things in greater volume than such thing were ever pro duced before since the world be gan. AFTER, all, our task here at home 1 a simple one. In the past, we've produced the thing that go to make liv ing fuller and richer and more pleasant. Thing uch as auto mobile and radio and mechani cal refrigerator and electrical appliance of all kinds. All the thing that have kept our stand ard of living rising steadily. We have produced these things In vast abundance. Now, suddenly, our need 1 Jfor weapon with which, to de fend this American way of life we have been so happily build' Ing up. All we have to do to meet this need I to turn our productive energy Into producing weapon Instead of device for making liv ing richer and fuller and pleas enter. TN order to do that, we shall have to DO WITHOUT (tern porarlly) the things that have made our American way of lifo o pleasant for we haven't the capacity to produce both kinds of things at onco. And if wo don't produco wcap ons we need we may LOSE our pleasant Amorican way of living ""EASE worrying about taxes, Cease worrying about DOL LARS. Dollar ore only COUNT ERS In this game wo are called -upon to play. J If we work loyally and effi ciently, if we produco to tho ex tant of our great capacity the tning we must novo to win the war and leurn intelligently to do without (temporarily) the thing we don't HAVE to have, if each of us docs hi Job in tho best xvny ho know how, tho dol .Inrs will bo forthcoming to pay whatover taxes novo to bo paid. When wo stop thinking in terms of THINflS. w win imun begun to make real progress. rjON'T get excited. Don't hoard. Don't try to do without the things that are present in abund ance uch as food and clothing and shelter. (After all, metals and rubber, certain chemicals, -.tc, are about all we're short of). Jut go ahead and do your lob the best you can, accept what deprivations are necessary with out complaining, buy what there is to bo had (and there will be plenty of a lot of things). Do your share to keep the useful life of the nation going at full (Continued on Page Two) ' J HAnan r nnAi r DESTROYED Manila Bay Defenses Down Seven Planes In Strong Raid ' WASHINGTON. Jan. 6 UP) Tho war deportment said today that It seemed "probable" that on additional enemy warship had been sunk by ormy bomb ers in tho raid off Davao In the southern Philippine whero a Jnpanrae battleship was hit three times. Later Information, the tie partmcnt sold, mode It appear probable that more than one de stroyer was sunk in the raid first told of yesterday. Then It snld also thnt numerous hits were made on other vessels which were believed to have wrought great damago. But today, the army said, U S. plane had come upon Japanese fleet of one battleship, five cruisers, six destroyer,. .12 submarines and 12-transports, 'Additional Information indi cate, the army reported, "the damage inflicted on enemy ves sels was probably greater than first reported." Br The Associated Press Imperial Tokyo headquarters let allp what seemed an ad' mission today that Japanese troop have mado little pro gress In attempting to drive Cen. D o u g 1 a Mac Arthur's force back into Baton penin- ula, and more good new came with the reported arrival of American aerial reinforcements In the Philippine conflict. U. S. anti-aircraft gunners wore officially reported to have hit at least seven Japanese planes during a four-hour aerial assault yesterday upon Cor regldor Island fortress and Marl veles. Casualties Light Marlveles lies at the southern tip of Bantan peninsula, near Corregldor Island at the en trance of Manila bay. A war department communi que said SO Japanese planes took part In the attacks but that 'material damage and cas ualties were light." The war deportment added: "While ground activity was considerably less than on the previous day, enemy pressure (continued on Pago Two) Fiqure-Viary Women Start Girdle Run Husbands may hiko to work and cotton stockings may sweep the country, but the women of Klamath Falls apparently have no Intention of losing tholr fig ure to Iho national emergency. Specialty shops about town re port a sudden flurry in the glrdlo market touched off by tho reported clamp-down on rubber. Motivated by a firm determin ation to be prepared for any emergency, Klamath's feminine contingent la demanding two girdles where before one was enough and ordering ahead, for good measure. Store buyers, however, antici pate no immediate shortage. Spring order nre already mode up and ready for shipment, ny lon should fill up tho greater part of any shortage, and so far government regulation do not apply to rubber yarn already mado up. Stool stay for the figure-conscious aro fast becoming a thing of the past but at the present, a return to the whale bone contraption grandmother wore seems remote. "And anyway." the w e a r v shopper glgh, "If we can't use the car, we'll walk It off." I u ' r ,4,989'48 - mill I Needed ' .1 QLJ EJ ASStV'-;-; ..m" IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS .oio.sa " RED CROSS .1 a, i, ... -i . ' At, foptutkmct: - 4 c-7f Is ' '? t i : . i-.-; L s's .--- p3iu': ii-',-, r? -. Lii'l;-"- . 'r- -Vr' ' I Klamath Indians are activity Interestad in helping "lick the Japs" through defense bond pur chases. Individual Indians have already bought S235.000 worth of bonds, and the Investment of I190.00Q or more In tribal fund ha bean proposed br .the lndlan,,Th above picture was takan at Klamath Agency Monday, showing a group looking ovar. thaU aatoposal to co tgrasa Jo, pernJat fhb Invoitma'nt of tb tribal cash. Left to rlghti Agancy Superintendent. B. G. CourtrighU ,Lvi Walkar, tribal delegate Dice Crane, praiident of the business committee, and A. M. Collier, coun ty defense savings chairman. v . Right-of-Way.Will Be Purchased for Use After Emergency South Sixth street widening to four lanes will be assured by Immediate purchase of right-of-way, but construction is "not in the cards" until after the present emergency the state highway commission disclosed Tuesday. Following up surveys and right-of-way negotiations that have been underway for several months ,tho commission at Port land this week voted to go ahead with the acquisition of property to give South Sixth an 80-foot right-of-way. This indicates in tcntlon to construct a four-lnnc highway on this heavily traveled section. Highway commissioners stated that work will not begin until after tho war Is over. Construc tion cannot stop until tho end of the emergency because tho South Sixth Job has not been approved by tho army as a defense meas urc, It was reported. The commissioners said In Portland they would go ahead on the right-of-way purchase be cause they have already been committed on the South Sixth program. British Offensive Against Nazis Seen 'Cinched' by F. R. LONDON. Jan. 6 (AV-British observers who have been pre dicting that Britain will launch a direct offensive against Ger many this year tonight declared it had been "cinched" by the refcrenco to stationing Amer ican forces in tho British Isles mado by President Roosevelt In his m ingo to congress. Tho British man and woman in the street lapsed into Americanism to call the mes sage "terrific" and "okay" and, from early Indications, tho en tiro British press planned to give tho speech wldo play and columns of fnvorablo editorial comment. There was no Imniedinto of ficial reaction, but from the broad smile in certain quarters, thero wo no doubt tho message evoked tromendtnis satisfaction. i ' - . -. BUY, Sevastopol Garrison Cuts Nazi Ring in Crimea War By The Associated Press Russia's long-besieged gar rison at Sevastopol appeared to have broken German lines around that key Black sea naval base today, while soviet trans ports boldly attempted to land troops on the Crimean west coast 40 miles to the rear of tho nazl siege armies. Front-line dispatches said Russian troops had sallied forth from Sevastopol, advancing at a number of points to smash German outposts and destroy fortifications. Lin Broken At the same time, the Berlin radio acknowledged that the red armies had broken "the German main line" before Mos cow perhaps referring to the vital Mozhaisk sector, 57 miles west of the Russian capital, where the Germans have con centrated powerful forces. A bulletin from Adolf Hit ler's field headquarters, indicat ing that the Russians are now in full command of the Black sea waters around the Crimea, said German warplo'nes bombed soviet troop transports off Yevpatoriya, 40 miles north of Sevastopol. The communique said three of tho Russian transports were damaged and a protecting speed boat was sunk. Trap Laid It seemed clear that the Rus sians, already over-running the Contributions Received by Red Cross in War Relief Campaign Contributions previous ly acknowledged $4733.38 Contributions received Tuesday $ 235.90 Total $4989.48 Not quite eleven dollars to go, and Klamath will have reached the half-way mark on its drivo to raise $10,000 for the Red Cross $50,000,000 war relief fund. ' Individual contributions pour ed in Tuesday to a total of $235.00: Mrs. C. E. Newcom $ 1.00 A Friend, Keno 1. 00 Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Schmitz, Beatty 1.00 W. E. PhilHpson, Beatty.. 1.00 General Fund, Beatty 90 A Friend, Fort Ord, Calif 1.00 Mr. Walter West ,. 2.00 Verna Ostrom 2.90 E. G. Kay 2.80 1 n 7 -.' ' J eastern Crimea in a tempestu ous counter-invasion, were seek ing to gain a toehold on the west coast where they could trap the Germans by cutting off the escape route north to the narrow Perekop isthmus. Dispatches to the soviet gov (Continued on Page Two) Farm Bloc Demands Price Authority For Secretary - WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (IP) Claiming support of at least 42 senators, the senate farm blol agreed today to demand that the secretary of agriculture be given equal authority in fixing price ceilings for any farm pro duct or article manufactured from form products. Senator Bankhead (D-AIa.) said ('general agreement" on his proposed amendment to the price-fixing bill awaiting senate action Wednesday was reached at a closed conference of sen ators from agricultural areas held In the senate agrlrulture committee room today. "No ona was bound by our session but it looks pretty good for senate passage of my amend ment," Bankhead told reporters. The amendment will require "prior . approval" by the sec retary of agriculture for any price maximums established by the price administrator under the proposed legislation. Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Harvey 2.00 Ed Gordon 2.00 Mr. and Mrs. Elroy Call.. 2.00 Mr. and Mrs. Philip Gustafson . 1.00 Bruco Hull 2.00 H. P. Bosworth, Jr. 10.00 H. Ringsmyer 2.50 Wlllard Hotel 25.00 Katherine Lanier ..... Albert Cametto Mr. and Mrs. F. E. 8.00 2.50 Smimmln. 8.00 Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Bliss 2.00 Ladclla Harnden 1.00 Veneta Hunter 2.00 Klamath Lank No. 460, Vasa Order of America 8.00 Mr. and Mrs, Clifford ' P. Lowe -2.00 Wesley McKaig Joe Milan! 6.00 1.80 Dorothy F. Revell 8.00 Mr. and Mr. Harold j (Continued On Page Two) Fresh Attacks Force - Singapore Defense Lines Back SINGAPORE, Jan. 6 (P) The tide of battle, rolling down the Malayan peninsula, crept nearer to - Singapore today as hard pressed British forces yielded further ground at both ends of the ill-defined front under fresh Japanese attacks by land and sea. On the eastern side of the peninsula, a communique dis closed, British troops were forced to withdraw yesterday from Kuantan, only 190 miles from Singapore. Sixth Stata On the western side, the Ma layan war front moved south. ward into another, the sixth, native -ruled . state as Japanese forces filtrated down the Malac ca straits coast into Selangor. Japanese appearing in the area of Kuala Selangor, 240 miles from Singapore, were be lieved intent upon planking the British out of their positions farther north along the Perak river. ; The British said these Japa nese - -detachments- apparently were a part of the force which landed along the lower Perak, 60 miles north of Kuala Selan gor, on January 2 and "which then moved southward, along a coastal footpath. - "r-Tr Air Threat Kuantan, 190 miles from Sin gapore, on the east coast, is connected with . central south Malaya by a single poor road through roughest jungle coun try infested with tigers and crocodiles. . (London military .commenta tors pointed out that possession of the airport at Kuantan, now would permit the Japanese to send their bombers with fitrhtor escorts to raid Singapore). Japanese infiltrations inland along this road, official quar ters said, already had "inter ferred" with British troop movements westward and had resulted in casualties on both sides. From Kuala Selangor, good roads run eastward and to the railroad to the south which con nects with Kuala Lumpur, sec ond largest and most important city in Malaya still in British hands. Kuala Lumpur is the center of a rubber producing district. Today's war bulletin said there had been no landings south of Kuala Selangor, how- J. E. Bodge, New Year's Eve Auto Victim, Succumbs John Edward Bodge, 71, for the past 36 years a familiar fig ure in Klamath Falls and one of its best known residents, died Monday afternoon at Klamath Valley hosnital. Mr. Bnrlee nf. fered injuries about 5 o'clock xvew i ear's eve when he was struck by a car at Eighth and Main streets. His hurts wera not considered serious and Sun day he seemed in good spirits and was ablo to be in a wheel chair. Coirmlicationa develnneri which caused his death. Mr. Bodge was born Fehrnnrv 17, 1870, in Ohio. Ho came to Klamath Falls in 1905 and nin. ed a tailoring shop and for a numDer or years operated under the firm of Alt and Bodge, later runnins his own bus! ripen Ma had a tailoring shop on North Eighth street at the time of his death. An ardent snnrtsman. Mr. Bodge enjoyed hunting and fish ing. He suffered a broken leg while fishing on the Rogue river a number of vaar aen. nnH nonln broke his hip, both injuries con fining him to hi bed for a num ber of months. Mr. Bodffa in fsurvlvprl hv hlis wife, Mrs. Daisy Bodge of Port land, and one daughter, Mrs. John (Janet) Holnier of near uinuviu. 125,000 Planes To Be Built in 1943, Says F. R; WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (AP) President Roosevelt, assuring the nation of ultimate victory in "a bloody war," told congress today the war program for the next fiscal year would require $56,000,000,000, to help produce 185,000 airplanes and 120,000 tanks by the end of 1943. All Over World To hit the enemy "wherever and whenever we can reach him," Mr. Roosevelt said American armed forceg would operate all over the world, including the British isles and the far east ; - Cheered time after time in the delivery of a message to a joint session of the house and senate, the president told of vast production plans which, he remarked grimly, lOnly Small Fraction Escaped Changsha Defeat, Claim , CHUNGKING, Jan. 6 (P) Forty thousand Japanese troops are caught in a Chinese trap on the plains between the Laotao and Liuyang Rivers northeast of , Changsha In Hunanprovfhce and Chinese forces are confident qf wiping out most of them, a Chi nese spokesman said today. - Estimating that the Japanese had suffered 30,000 casualties in the -battle before Changsha, the spokesman said only 30,000 of the original force of 100,000 had escaped toward their jumping off point at Yochow, 100 miles to the north. i Reduction The spokesman's estimate of 30,000 casualties was a reduction from previous estimates of 52,- 000. The Japanese had retreated more than 10 miles from the Hu nan province capital, dispatches said. i The third major Japanese de feat at Changsha in three years was attributed to their inability to move heavy armament south of the Milo river because of water-filled rice fields and oblitera tion of the ; roads by Chinese forces who for the first time (Continued on Page Two) 1 Log Operators Assured Tire Needs Covered Klamath county logging truck operators were -.assured Tuesday that their operations came with in the scope of'truck tire allot ments and thati they need not worr yabout curtailment of oper ations due to a tire shortage. The assurance, was given by Don Drury, , chairman of the county tire rationing committee. He said that logging trucks fell into the classification of raw pro ducts conveyors and were defi nitely covered. Drury warned truck owners, however, that applications should be mado now for tires which may be needed later this spring. Each monthly allotment, he said, must be taken up because one month's ration will not carry over to the next if It is not en tirely taken up. The chairman asked operators to make their applications as soon as possible. "We do not as yet have statis tics on the number of tires used each year by Klamath loggers," Drury said, "but I don't doubt that the Klamath county truck quota will be sufficient to han dle the county's needs. How ever," he asserted, "tires will not be allotted if present rubber will stand re-treading." Drury's statements were seen as laying to rest lumbermen's fears that the tire rationing pro gram would result in a serious curtailment of . lumber produc tion, an industry vital to na tional defense. . The Klamath county allotment Is 150 truck tires and 64 pas senger car tire per month. would give tne Japanese and nazis "a little idea of just wnat tney accomplished m the attack on Pearl Harbor." He disclosed these production plans: . 1942 60,000 planes (10,000 more than the goal set a year ago), 45,000 tanks, 20,000 anti aircraft guns, 8,000,000 dead weight tons of merchant ship ping. 1943 125,000 planes, 75,003 tanks, 35,000 anti-aircraft gun and 10,000,000 tons of shipping. "Give It Back" Admonishing the tense legis lators and others gathered in th crowded ' house chamber thai America may suffer further set" backs in this war, the president asserted that American fighters' wiIL"?ive back with conv pound interest to'the axis." v A page boy, sitting in tho aisle, led his elders in enthusi astic applause as the president asserted that the Japanese had failed in their plan to stun the American people by the sneak attack on Pearl harbor. . A noisy demonstration came when he said that the stars and stripes again would fly over the Pacific isles of Wake and Guam. The first outburst of apulause came early in the speech when Mr. Roosevelt said that the na tion s spirit "was never higher." Figures Applauded When he started to outline the nation's new production prcK gram, applause greeted his enu merations, and a low whistle arose from the floor when ha. spoke of 45,000 tanks this year. rne president diverted from his prepared text to say of the armament program: ' "I hope that all these figures I have given will become com mon knowledge in Germany and Japan." Handclapping broke out when the president said that he and Prime Minister Churchill of Brit ain understood each other. Mr. Roosevelt'si wish for Churchill's safe return home was seconded by applause from the senators and representatives. - Mr. Roosevelt completed read ing his address at 1:11 p. m (EST), after speaking 36 minutes and the legislators arose, ap plauding and shouting. . . ' Time Short In his speech, the chief execu tive laid emphasis on the fact that America's task is hard and unprecedented, and the time to perform it is short. He spoke of sacrifices to coma and said that it would appear in his budget message tomorrow that "our war program for the coming fiscal year will cost fifty six billion dollars, or, in other words more than one-half of the estimated national income." . All-Out Effort "This means taxes and bonds and bonds and taxes," Mr, Roose velt asserted. "It means cutting luxuries and other non-essentials. In a word, it means an "all-out" war by Individual ef fort and family effort in a unit ed country." The chief executive mentioned American reverses at the outset of the conflict, but he declared that "powerful and offensive ac (Continued on Page Two) News Index i City Briefs ; Page 5 Comics and Story ........Page 8 Courthouse Records ......Pane ' 4 Editorials ..- Page 4 High School News Page 10 Information ....i......Page . 5 Market, Financial . -.Page 0 Midland Empire News ...Page 8 Pattern ...i....Page 4 Sports ......,....f:....Page 7