rv-JijTf-ir r -r-rTir-ir i "in - ri -i -- irrrrr rr i -1 Blackout Signa On 5-mlnuU blast on sirens and whlatles li the signal for blackout In Klamath ralli. Another long blait, during black out, li a ilgnal lor all-clear. In precau tionary perloda, watch your atreet llghta. ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS ,'RICE FIVE rii" Number 9478 H1- .It ....I FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 7, 1042 fo) Nl M1 n N KUmath'ft Quota GIVE " RED CROSS j slsAsasa MS , or Japs iifaaice r I I NAZIS OUSTED Day's FROWI CENTRAL -News FRONT TOWNS Br FRANK JENKINS TODAY'S dlapatchcs Indicate that Japan's next major goal la the Dutch East Indira where Hhe oil li. It aounda logical. They haven't much oil and NEED A LOT. THE U. S. war department says today tho Jnpa oro massing a powerful striking force at Davao bay 600 mllea from Dutch Borneo and 400 mllea from Dutch Celebea. That waa a wife guess yester day when It waa announced that American bombera had struck hard and effectively at Jap naval forcea near Davao (on Mindanao Island, southernmost of the Phil ippine.) Bombera don't Juat Bo roaming around on tho loose, taking a crack at whatever they happen to ace. Whon you read of audden and fairly heavy bomber attacks, -vou'ro Justified In assuming that Somebody 1 cooking up some thing and that the bombera are out to spoil It If possible. -ORRECIDOR island and the Batiin peninsula afe being pounded daily by Jap bombera about SO at a time. Their Ameri can and Phllippino defender have to sit and take it. Flghtera aro needed to drive off the Jap bombera, and we haven't any there. We WOULD HAVE HAD if General Billy Mitchell and Ills friends had been listened to a couple of decades ago. flENERAL MITCHELL wasn't U listened to, and it's no use to cry over the milk that waa spilled then. Our Job now la to MAKE THE PLANES and get them to where they'ro needed vith the leaat poasible loss of 'timo.) TNCIDENTALLY, It la a matter of prldo among newspaper men that most of tho newspapers in the United Statca supported General Mitchell in his day and have supported his successors who havo continued to plead for expansion of U. S. air defenses. rN the bad sldo today: The Japs appear to be drawing steadily nearer to Sing apore down the Mulay peninsula. Tho British fight stubbornly but have to withdraw in tho face of hoavlly superior forces. On the good side: Tho Chinese claim practical annihilation of tho Jap army of 100,000 sent against Changsha. Tho Jups admit withdrawal from Changsha, explaining that their attack on it has "served its pur- hose." e THE Russluns appear to have accomplished the difficult feat of landing troops from trans ports under protection of naval guns at Feodosiya and at Yev patoriya, In tho Crimea. (Consult your map for details.) Their purpose is to drive the Germans out of the Crimean pen insula, which is a handy Jumping off plnco for a German drive Into tho Caucasus (for oil.) A soviet "lnformunt" (that's a new one) says today that Russia expects to drivo the nazl rnldcrs back of the Leningrad-Smolensk-Dnieper rlvor lino 200 miles west of Moscow by around February 1 thus "turning tho nazl retreat into a military catastrophe in the merest part of the winter." "THOSE whoso Job It is to V worry about American morale are getting afraid we're becoming cocksuro over Russian successes and inclined to alt back (Continued on Page Two) Relief of Leningrad Brings Attack on Finn Positions MOSCOW, Thursday, Jan. 8 (A') Russian troops attacking on tho central front were declared officially today to havo retaken a number of villugcs, Including Mcshchovak, 40 miles southwest of Kaluga. Meshchovsk represents a fur ther gain by the red armies In their drive toward the Vyazma iiryansk German defense line only 40 miles beyond. Smolensk is 130 miles west of Meschuvsk. By The Associated Press The German armlca were in retreat today along the entire 1200-mile soviet battlefront and tho Russian situation had so Im proved in the far north that major assault with strong arm ored force, were reported being delivered 'upon fho Finn while tile red Leningrad garrison was at the same time being rein forced. Dispatches from Stockholm told of a great battle raging along the southern sector of the Russo Flnnish front. Finns Attacked For the first time in months, the Helsinki correspondent of the Stockholm newspaper Alton bladct said, the Russians have strong armored forces at their disposal. They aro throwing bat talion after battalion Into the heaviest fighting seen in eastern Karelia since last September. A Finnish war bulletin also (Continued on Pago Two) Italian Papers Urge Neutrality Of South America ROME, Jan. 7 (Andi Agency to AP) Italian newspapers car ried today a semi-oftlciai note urging South American nations to stand for a "benevolent, in telligent neutrality" when they meet January 15 in the Pan American conference at Rio de Janeiro. "Tho decision of tho Pan American conference should not be based upon the axis declara tion of war against tho United States," tho note said, while "tho whole future of South American countries lies at stake." The noto added .that "tho Axis and Japan limit 'themselves to the hope that at this grave mo ment in human history the South American states can find among their ranks statesmen ca pable of realizing where the real Interests of their countries lie." Contributions Received By Red Cross in War Relief Campaign Contributions previous ly acknowledged $4989.48 Contributlona received Wednesday $ 157.50 Total $5148.98 Klamath county started on the second lap of its Red Cross war relief fund drive Wednesday, with over holf of the $10,000 quota ready to aid American fighting forces and bombed civil ians. Funds are being collected here on a purely voluntary-contribution basis, and represent tho de termination of every Klamath citizen to pitch In and do his part in licking tho onomy. By Wednesday, tho following contributions had been received: Elllngson Mill $ 25.00 Mary Worrell 8.00 S. D. Dorcmus 1.00 Mr. Bert Gooch, Bly .... 1.00 ast Russians Flay Nazi Massacre Of Civilians MOSCOW, Jun. 7 IIP) Ger limn troops were formally chnrged by soviet Russia today with inussnc-riiig 03,307 persons in 13 cities and countless hun dreds elsewhere in an occupa tion marked by "unheard of pillages, general devastation, abominable violence." Foreign Commissar Vyacho slav Molotov said in a detailed noto handed yesterday to all envoys accredited to Moscow that "German authorities legal ized marauding In their army and encouraged these pillages and violence." The text of the note was made public today by Tass. Slaying of civilians was said to have been accomplished by explosives, suffocation, knifing or hanging as well as shooting. The heaviest loss of civilian lives was listed at Kiev, the Ukrainian capital which fell in lato September, where 52.000 persons wcro said to have been "killed and tortured to death." T Deadline to Give Up Banned Articles Set Thursday Enemy aliens were granted an extension until lip. m. Thurs day as the deadline for the sur render of weapons and other pro hibited articles, such as cameras and radios, according to an nouncement received here by city and county officers from US Attorney Frank J. Hennessy. The deadline originally was set for 11 o'clock Monday night. The city police havo several guns, cameras and radios in their possession, turned over in De cember by alien residents of Klamath Falls. A check with tho sheriffs offlco made Wed nesday showed "three or four radios, eight or 10 guns and sov (Continucd on Pago Two) Army Cantonment To Be Started At Medford Site WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 (P) Tho war department today an nounced that a military canton ment would bo started immedi ately at Medford, Ore. Tho department would not am plify tho announcement and withheld all details and esti mates on cost, construction time and other phases of the work. Tho department did not men tion tho proposed cantonment in the Corvallis-Albany area. Joo Clark 2.00 Blanch Ager 1.00 Mrs. O. C, Johnson 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Fergu son 3.00 Mr. and Mrs. A. E. John son 2.00 Jeff Causbio 5.00 A Friend 2.00 Safeway Stores' 75.00 Delia McGrath 3.00 Roy Jenkins 5.00 Baldy Evans 2.00 H. B. Johnson 1.00 Rebckah Social club 0.00 A Friend 1,00 Mr. and Mrs. R. H, Car son 2,00 Violet Hahn 2.00 Mr. and Mrs. LcRoy Erd- mann 8.00 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Osten- dorf 2.50 II. fe. lloslcy, Chlloquln .. 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Evans, Chlloquln 8.00 taies DAVAO ATTACK SEEN POINTED AT Philippine Defenders Holding Against Jap Smashes By The Associated Press Japan's next goal is the Dutch East Indies. This appeared evident today from a U. S. war department communique reporting that the Mikado's sea borne invasion armies in the Philippines have massed a powerful striking force Bt Davao bay, only 600 miles from Dutch Borneo and 4UU mile from Dutch Celebes. A Rome radio report heard in London Indicated that the thrust may already have started, de claring that strong forces of Jap anese parachute troops had land ed on the cast coast of Dutch Borneo. Simultaneously, Dutch East Indies headquarters at Batavta reported that.. a formation of, eight Japanese flying .boats at tacked military objectives dur ing the night on the island of Ambon (Ambolna),- site of a major Dutch naval base, 800 miles south of Davao. Scouting Raids 'The enemy dropped 20 bombs and machine-gunned the island," the communique said, reporting that three civilians were killed and four persons wounded. The bulletin also noted lively aerial reconnaissance over the far-flung archipelago often the tlpoff of an impending invasion with the announcement that enemy planes were observed over various parts of the outer possessions. Base Blasted Tokyo imperial headquarters said Japanese troops who landed several days ago at Brunei In British North Borneo, adjoining Dutch Borneo, were "extending their field of operations." No details were given. In smashing at Ambolna, the Japanese were seeking to knock out one of the Indies bases from which U. S. army bombers may have been flying to attack Jap anese warships in the Philip pines. For Japan, t h e Indies with their treasure-trove of such vital war supplies as rubber, tin and (Continued on Page Two) Mystery Surrounds Fate of Driver in Sandy River Plunge PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. 7 P) Mystery surrounded the rescue last night of Newton a. cnerry, 40, Milwaukic, Ore., from a partially submerged car in the frigid waters of the Sandy river east of here. Charles W. Post, 22, Trout- dale, saw the car slide from the slippery road into the river about 4 p. m., summoned help and lifted tho unconscious Cherry to safety through a hole chopped in the roof. At Portland general hospital this morning, Cherry, suffering from head injuries, told attend ants that S. L. Odom of Oregon City had been driving the car. Post said he and the other res cuers found no one else in the vehicle and that the doors were Jammed shut. Officers began a search of tho river when they failed to locate Odom. FLEET PLANS SINGAPORE, Jan. 7 VP) Vice Admiral Sir Geoffrey Lay ton, commander In chief of Brit ain's Far Eastern fleet, has loft Singapore to organizo the east ern fleet "so that the allies may gain sea supremacy in the Far East as soon as possible," it was officially announced today. RIG AREA U. S. Gets in JT3. HAINAN ttlNOO-CHINA J WF frt SSW, - SuuSa tr-&AVAO M fi MINDANAO . , . Nrft 0r H ' AMBOINA Mapped here are latest developments in the Pacific theatre of warships: 2 Dutch baaea which Borneo; 4 Possible allied drive hard) 5 Gen. Douglas MacArthur fights on in the Philippines. . E British Admit Armies Withdrawing in Malay Battle SINGAPORE, Jan. 7 M3) Japanese forces fighting their way down the Malayan penin sula inched closer to Singapore today as the British acknowl edged for the third successive day that their forces had been compelled to withdraw south ward under the steady battering of the invaders. Heavy fighting was reported on the lower Perak front, where a communique said the Japanese launched a violent attack this morning supported by mechan ized units and had succeeded in penetrating the British lines at one point. On the opposite side of the peninsula, where the Japanese were admitted yesterday to have captured Kuantan, only 190 miles from Singapore, the Brit ish continued to withdraw south ward "according to plan," the bulletin declared. The announcement failed to disclose the extent of the with drawal. The disclosure that heavy fight ing still was continuing in Perak served to dispel doubts whether the British still held any part of that state doubts which were raised yesterday by reports of British withdrawals on that front and by mention of Japanese ac tivity in Selangor state to the south. Matanuskans Agree To Furnish Food For Alaska Area ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jan. 7 () "Fill the ships with those supplies essential to the defense of Alaska, we'll provide as much of the foodstuffs needed for civilians and soldiers in the territory as our farms will pro duce," Matanuska valley farm ers told their Uncle Sam today. . The members of the iedcral colonization project know they can't possibly become the ex clusive bread basket for Alaska but they feel they can produce enough to lighten the loads of ships plying between the states and the northland, leaving space vitally needed for defense sup plies. , They have pledged themselves to Increase production of their farms between 25 and SO per cent during this year. a Few Licks, Smacks Jap Warships K009 ' rurjviujfl r 1 . i 1 I3S " 3 South China Set U. S. planes might have used: 3 Jap attacks on Malaya and into Thailand from Burma, where U. S. planes hit Jap air force Price Control Held Necessary To Halt Rise WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 (P) Senator Brown (D-Mich.) brought the administration price control bill before the senate for consideration today with a declaration that it had become necessary to avert a "tremendous rise in prices." "Price control is necessary in the present situation," Brown said, "because the law of supply and demand does not operate to maintain a fair equilibrium of prices. "The law of supply and de mand breaks down because of the enormous demand for war materials, and we have a situa tion where the supply is suf ficient if ordinary civilian con sumption is not curtailed." Brown told his colleagues that the measure was also need ed "so that enormous profits will not be obtained as they were obtained In the last war." "If you can give an effective, (Continued on Page Two) British Navy, RAF Raid Norse Coast LONDON, Jan. 7 OP) A Joint navy and RAF raid on Helle fjord on the Norwegian coatt yesterday was announced today. A Joint communique an nounced that one German sup ply ship of medium tonnage and two trawlers were sunk off the town of Floro, near Aalcsund. A German canning factory also was damaged. Italy Doubts U. S. Ability in Comment on Roosevelt Speech By The Asaociated Preea Italian authorities today called President Roosevelt's pro gram for 185,000 planes and 120,000 tanks in 1942 and 1943 "sensational, spectacular, of a typical North American brand" but expressed unbelief in its realization and carefully kept the figures out of the controlled press. German commentators vague ly referred to It as a "fairly substantial speech, but said in general it was merely a warmed up version of old Roosevelt speeches. Germans, too, were not allowed to knoW American production plans. "Yanks Are Coming" In London, ono headline was typical in its jubilance: "The Yanks Are Coming." These, in brief, typified the world-wide reaction to the pres ident's war program laid before JAP THRUSTS JAP BASES Z0N PHILIPPINE anila ISLANDS PMlS Ocean - (NEA Telephoto) war. 1 TJ. S. bombers blast Jap Chinese Report More Japs Slain During Retreat North TOKYO, Jan. 7 (Official broad cast recorded by APJ A Domel dispatch from Hankow, quoting an announcement of Japanese army headquarters for Central China, said today that the Japa nese forces had begun their with drawal from Changsha, having accomplished their objectives. The dispatch said the Japanese expedition penetrated Changsha on Jan. 1 and by Jan. 4 had com pleted its task of cleaning up "enemy objectives" both inside and outside the city. CHUNGKING, China, Jan. 7 UP) The remnants of a Japanese army of 100,000 men, reported fleeing northward from a stun ning defeat at Changsha, were said today to have suffered 7000 additional casualties while breaking through Chinese forces blocking their line of retreat. - Chinese dispatcTies previously estimated that the Japanese had lost 30,000 men in their abortive attempt to take Changsha, Hunan pnvince capital which twice be fore had beaten off the invaders. In addition to the heavy losses in lead and wounded inflicted upoM the Japanese, the Chinese declared they had taken many prisoners exactly how many they did not say. the 77th congress yesterday in a speech in which he predicted a total victory over the axis. Axis quarters were cautious, skeptical of the program's real ization; the united nations and their friends showed a lift In morale. In Italy, a spokesman told foreign correspondents that "the evident scope of this sensation. at listing of such sensational fig ures is to impress the world, above all the population of the United States. "There is no point in examln lng the' figures. The practical utility of this, new method of conducting war in advance by means of sensational armaments plans remains to. be. seen," he added sarcastically.. Stefanl, the official Italian news agency, said the stupen dous armaments yet to be made (Continued on Page Two) BIGGEST WAR R 1 in RFT muF N TO CONGRESS Cost of ' Huge Battle Program Outlined " By President WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 UP)-- Bespeaking the nation's deter mination to "pay whatever price we must to preserve our way of life," President Roosevelt called today for a war budget of $58.. 000,000,000 for the next fiscal year, $9,000,000,000 of new taxes on top of all existing taxes, and unprecedented borrowing that would send the federal debt above $110,000,000,000. This is a war budget," he said in his annual budget message to congress. "Its magnitude and composition depend on events at the battlefronts of the world. . . . . Nothing short of a maxb mum will suffice. I cannot prer diet ultimate costs because I can not predict the changing fortunes of war. I can say only that w are determined to pay whatevef price we must to preserve out way of life." v Biggest in History , He added at a press conference that it was the biggest budget irt the history of the world. Gov ernment estimates indicated it irauijr . uuugie ixermany s annual war expenditures. It called, the president said, for 8 step-up in the rate of war spend ing from the current $2,000,000,- uuu a montn to $5,000,000,000 a month. To the United States armed forces and their allies, the presi dent promised that the buJget meant "a crushing superiority of equipment." To the public he said that it meant heavy new taxes because a fair distribution of the war burden is necessary for national unity." It also meant, he declared, ir-at the people would have to do without "many conveniences and' luxuries so that the nation may; shut labor, materials and facili ties from the production of civil-' ian articles to the production of, weapons and other war sup-' plies." 5 Technically, the budget con cerned only money to be paid out of the treasury. However, in. setting up the $56,000,000,000 war program, the president said that beside an estimated $52,786,- 186,000 out of the treasury, ho believed that an additional $3,- 000,000,000 would be spent out (Continued on Page Two) Cigaret Tax Due To Take Effect at , . Midnight Tonight SALEM, Jan. 7 (P) Oregon cigaret smokers will begin at midnight tonight to pay a state tax of 2 cents per package, un less a last-minute court injunc-' tion is obtained to prevent the measure from becoming law. . The measure was passed in the closing minutes of the 1941 legislature, but the State Retail Grocers association filed a ref erendum against the bill, pre venting it from becoming ef fective and placing it on the general election ballot next No vember. I The attorney general, how ever, voided the referendum and ruled the measure should be come effective, holding that the association's expense statements were Inadequate. The association . had an nounced it would file court ac tion to prevent the tax commis sion from collecting the tax, but it has not yet done so. : More than . 18,000 dealers must obtain licenses from the tax commission. Stamps will be available in about fix weeks. ' News Index City Briefs ......;....Page S Comics and Story ...Page 8 Courthouse Records Page 4 Editorials .,.1....... Page 4 High School News Page 10 Information Page 5 Market, Financial -.Page 9 Midland Empire News.-Page ' 7 Pattern Page 4 PTA Notes ..Page A Sports ...Page 6