&mxva i uuui.riAn rui.nri"irr"ii r"r !- GIVE Blackout Signal On 8-mlnut blast on (Irani and whtitUi ti the signal for a blackout In Klamath Fall. Anothtr long blast, during black out, li ilgnil (or all-olear. In precau tionary periods, witch your street llghti. r iinn.nrinnnnn.nnnniinnnrir"ir'i" By FRANK JENKINS 'THERE'S lull In tho shooting 1 today. At alwayi when the hooting lull, talk rises. That U perfectly normal. Shooting and talking have worked together In war as far back aa tho record go. MAW SECRETARY KNOX, 4 talking to tho reporlora at his press conference, soys: "These stories of Internal un lest In Germany are SPURIOUS and are being deliberately spread to tako the edge off America's war eflort." lis adds: "German withdrawals In Russia should not be regarded as sign of a Gorman debacle. There has been hasty retirement but I don't bellevo there Is a German rout In Russia. fN tho other side of the fence, "usually reliable Inform ants" In Europe say today that German reverses on the Russian front hove upsot th whole axis aonle cart. Germany, they-add, wants des perately to get tho Italian fleet through the Dardanelles to smack the Russian fleet In the Block sea, but Turkey, Impressed y Russian successes, la sitting inht as the guardian of the gate, Travelers from Franca ana elsewhere In Europe report that the nazl forces moved recently Into Franco and to the Spanish frontier are battle battered troops from tho Eastern front and are replacing fresh troop which are being moved to the Russian and Bulgarian fronts, TAKE your choice. This writer ha an Idea the truth lies somewhere between the skepticism voiced by Knox and the wishful thinking arising out of Hitler's definite failure to smash Russia this winter. GERMANY has had a hard Jolt in Russia, but is FAR FROM LICKED. Napoleon got harder Jolt In Russia than Hitler has got, com' i i" v ' In The , DayV - News ing out with only a shattered Q-emnant of the veteran army he went In with. But he left his demoralized army insido the Russian border. hastened back to Paris, put down an Incipient revolution, raised a new army, hastened back across the Rhine and fought for nearly two years, winning most of the actual battles,' before being fin' ally finished off and sent Into exllo. The thing that finished Na poleon off was superiority In number and equlpmont on the part of hi enemies, so that if whorever ho turned ho fnced TOO MANY MEN AND GUNS, That Is what will finish Hit ler. rN the home front, we have a w new dcol a war production board that supplants tho old sup-, ply priorities and allocations board. Donald M. Nelson, former mall 0rdcr house man, Is to be its chairman and FDR announces that his doclsion a to questions of procurement and production will be FINAL. -, WHEN your business faces an emergency, you hire tho best man you can lay hands on and tell him to go ahead and got results. That I what the U. S. Is doing. Nelson is the man, and ap parently he's being told to go ahead, and got results TN our part of World War I, A Bernard M. Baruch was the man. He and hi war Industries board did their job so well that in .. his memoir Field Marshal Ovon Hlndcnburg acknowledged grudgingly: "They (Baruch and his war In dustrles board) UNDERSTOOD WAR.", ; , ; . NJELSON says: 1 . 4 ' Our goal la to substitute (Continued on Page Two) . ASSOCIATED ' ' ' ' U It I i.''' ,i.i.i Nells! Takes war Reshuffle of British War Cabinet Seen LONDON, Jun. 14 (IP) A re shuffle of tho, British cabinet as a result of criticisms over war management and changes in mln istcrlal assignments were de scribed as Imminent today In parliamentary circles. It was stated that announce ments might even precede the return to London of Prime Mln liter Churchill from his confer ence in Washington with Presl dent Roosevelt. Some Informants said the changes likely would Involve ap pointment of a new minister of supply not because of dissatis faction with Lord Bcaverbrook, who now holds the post, but be cause he Is expected to bo kept (Continued on Page Two) 'COLLAPSE' IES Stories Planned for Effect on U. S.r Soys Secretary WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 CP) Secretary of the Navy Knox to day sold he believed stories of Internal unrest In Germany were spurious and deliberately spread to take the edge off America's war effort. "Almost everyone of the stor ies about tho terrible situation In Germany originates In territory controlled by Germany," Knox told a press conference. "This alone should raiso suspicion." Assuming that they are doing It deliberately, it Is Intended to take the fine edge off the sense of urgency and singleness of pur pose with which this country is pushing Its war effort." Knox said also that German (Continued on Pago Two) Precinct Boards Taking Part in Bond Pledge Day County Clerk Mae K. Short said Wednesday that precinct I election boards are responding wholeheartedly to the plon for using the boards In conducting tho "bond pledge day" program throughout the county Janu ary 20. ' Mrs. Short on Tuesday night completed sending out notices and Instructions to tho boards. They will open precinct polling places from B a. m. to 7 p. m. January 20, and every citizen in the county Is asked to visit his polling place to obtain pledge cards. A number of volunteers of- forcd tholr services Wednesday, and Mrs. Short said more volun teer service will be acceptable. She also Is taking applications for work on election boards at the primary election In May. Contributions Received by Red Cross in War Contributions previously acknowledged S6.629.82 Contributions received Wednesday 268.50 Total ....$8.89B,12 War relief funds for the Red Cross $80,000,000 nationwide drlvo poured in by dollars and two-dollars and on up tho scale of voluntary contributions Wed nesday, to bring Klamath $268.80 closer to Its $10,000 quota. Of ficial were hopeful that tho drlvo would be completed here by Saturday, as Individual con tributions continued at the peak and the business district canvass progressed. - Wednesday, tho following con tributions wero recorded: Mr. and Mrs. M. L, Thomas S 2.00 Paul Henna ......., 1,00 .mill ': .i " M L Eastern Front Now in Motion, Say Reds; Kharkov Hit By The Associated Press Russian troops wcro report' ed advancing within 100 miles of Adolf Hitler's winter head quarters at Smolensk today, while In the south, red army forces wcro pictured as storm ing at the outer gates of Khar kov, Russia's "Pittsburgh ' In the Ukraine. Soviet military dispatches said collapse of a German wing defending a flank of the Mos-cow-to-Mozhslsk highway had knocked out the Germans' "last zone of positional warfare" be fore Moscow and that "the whole front Is now in motion." 200.000 Killed l The Russians declared . that Hlllertr Tceling-artnlosi Had Jost 200,000 killed between Novem ber 16 and January fl, with 20,- 000 slain In recent fighting In the - Donets ' river - industrial basin. ---.Soviet troop were described as now battering heavily against German defenses at Mozhaisk It self, 87 miles west of Moscow, where a nazl garrison of 100,- 000 men still held out despite the danger of being trapped by (Continued on Page Two) Defense Stamps, Money Stolen at Riverside School The meanest man In town added another feather to his cap and erased all doubt as to his right to tho title when he broke Into Riverside school some time Tuesday night and took money, defense stamps. and defense stamp books which children of the school were fill ing. City police were baffled by tho activities of tho marauder who added Riverside to a list of other schools including Joseph Conger, Falrvlew and Fremont, as well as several churches which he had Dlun dcred within the past few weeks. Methods used at River side wero similar to those env ployed In the robberies of other buildings, police officers said. In each of the four schools entered by the robber, a quant! ty ot defense stamps was taken. A total loss of $80 was report ed by city police. NAMED RIGHT CAMP FORREST. Tenn.. Jon. 14 (yPl The newlv annotated camp transportation officer here is first lieutenant Pullman Carr. Relief Campaign A. M. Klrkland 1.00 Charles Benny ....... 1.00 W. T. McGaughoy 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Law- son 1.00 Bertha Kandy 1.00 J. Marvin Hilton : 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dill- strom 2.00 A Friond 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Eng-. gllsh .50 Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Lund- strom 1.00 Ovgard Family .................. 3.00 Ella Chltds 2.00 Mr. and Mrs. William Gray 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. V.1 C. Rex ford ; 5.00 Mr. and Mrs. Tom Thorn.. 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller.. 2.00 Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bush..... 10.00 (Continued onPage Two) RSI POSITION NEAR ICI KNOCKED OT IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND - KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON, Tire Rationing Board Grants 4 Applications Klamath's 1 1 r rationing board has acted on ceven appli cations, granting four ot them, It was announced . Wednesday. The board will meet on Friday of this week to pass on further application. Application were granted as follows: One obsolute size tire, to a railroad worker. One passenger car tire, to a women who drives a mail route, Two truck tires to an oil com pany transporting fuel; Two obsolete size tires. (Ob solete tire can be rationed to anyone who needs them, regard less of other eligibility factors), . The board rejected the appli (Continued on Page Two) Argentina Withholds Support; Ecuador EyesPispvtel. By ALBURN WEST ' . RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. 14 W) Twenty-four hours before f its first' official, session, - the Pan American conference Ot foreign ministers, appeared to ,. have struck two obstacles today Ar gentina's reluctance to commit herself to any military alliances or "acts of pre-belligerency," . and Ecuador's determination to set tle her 100-year-old boundary dispute with Peru before enter ing into any general discussions. In the behind-the-scenes diplo macy aimed at creating a united western hemisphere front against the axis, Argentina was considered the chief obstacle. Its policy was reaffirmed at Buenos Aires last night by President Ra mon S. Castillo, who said his government could not assent to any "measures of belligerency which might come before the conference, and earlier had been laid down along the same lines by . Foreign Minister Enrique Ruiz Guinazu. (Private advices from Buenos Aires have indicated ' that the Castillo government is under strong popular and political pres sure to change its isolationist at titude. Argentine sources in the United States say the govern ment might even face a coup if it does not adopt a more pro-allied stand.) From a most authoritative source it was learned that Tobar Donoso, foreign minister of Ecua. dor, had declared he would not take part in the conference ses sions unless a basis of settler ment was reached in the bound ary dispute with Peru. The same source said a third problem had been created by the apparently unswerving de termination of the Central American and Caribbean na tions to force the conference to act on a proposal calling, for all the American nations to Join in the war against the axis. Oldster, Anxious To Help, Appeals To County Clerk Because he couldn't afford' to pledge even - 29 cents - ft1 week to Klamath's defenfY jl bond and stamp campaign,' one 70-year-old man was ' upset he took his troubles- i the county clerk's office help. - -'.- "I'nt already getting' -fe--lief." he explained, "and I don't see what I'm going to do about this pledge day they're having. I'd sure -like to help, but I can't." '-. Mae K. Short, county elrfrk,', advised him - to ' lgrf Jnei ' pledge card January 2 and write his explanation jit.;. In such a case, good 1nte" Ions, are worth great der t aba felt. . '.UiH ; WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 14, He CALL SHAKE-UP TO T Entire ' Production of War Put Under One Man WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 VP) America's new war production boss, Donald M. Nelson, told the army; navy and OPM today that he was ready to shake up the entire defense etup if necessary "to lick Hitler and the Japs." "Any organizational changes that have to be made In nrHpr in do this Job will be made," Nel son declared In a letter to Wil liam S. Knudsen, OPM director general: Undenuvrotnrv nt War Robert P. Patterson; and Under secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal. First Act The letter marked Nelson's first official act since his selec tion late' yesterday by President RmWVlt Ifl 4V.s nnA.mBH 1 1 of the1 nation s -ntire war- pro duction s and procurement ma chinery. . - -. . "We have lust nni Inh n on to make enough war material to iick mtier and: the Japs, and to do it in the Khortert nnxihls time," .the brief said. - . Everyone connected with in duction and procurement In nil agencies of the government, must carry on with the utmost devo tion and energy." Earlier Senators Connolly. (D Tex.) and Wiley (R-Wls.) urged in the senate that Nelson h given -complete authority" over me nation s machinery of pro- aucuon and supply. At the WhitS HOMUV Sionhan Early, presidential secretary said an executive order formally establishing a war production board Was in Drocess nf nmnnrn. tlon but. that its promulgation awaited word from Nelson on the type of setup desired. EarlV indicated tha nrAar would be drafted to conform to Nelson s recommendation, mil wishes. President Roosevelt nnnnllnA&n yesterday that . Nelson would nead up the war production and supply efforts. An executive order makine this etun f fonti. is yet to come. It Will be Nelson's 4oh in rli.n. licate, if not surpass, the master ly economic generalship which "onunuea on Page Two) Klamath County Car Owners to Pay U. S. Tax lire lJ.iio owners or cars operating in Klamath countv will line up In the Klamath Falls postoffice starting January 26. and plunk out $2,09 for the fed eral auto tax stamp which, after February 1, will bo required for legal operation of a motor ve hicle. A stamp, costing $2.09, will carry the motorist through to next July 1, according to an As sociated Press report from Wash ington, D. C. A new stamp, cost ing 5, will bo required for the ensuing 12 months' operation. The Internal revenue bureau, in 'speeding Issuance on the stamps, said some points of tho country would not bo supplied immediately.-Klamath Falls apparent ly fell in this category as the local postoffice said they did not expect the stamps before Janu ary 28, giving local operators but four days in which to buy the stickers. State police said the stamps were green with a Liberty bell printed in the center. The stamps will be affixed to the lower right hand corner of the windshield much as a temporary sticker is used. The stamps aro to remain on the windshield. Postal author ities said two windows would be open for the sale of stamps. , m NEWBOSS MAY 11 FIGH 1942 AfpM Nazi 'Secret Weapon' in Libya - -1 Two views of captured German tank, which British say was a "secret weapon" In Libya. Top: rmorea venule. Bottom: turret, stripped, revealed a a thin metal shield for heavy caliber gun firing armor-pUrcing shells with range of 5000 yards. British say such tanks were used as mobile artillery, covering advance of regular tanks. . Chinese Caff : For Action fn ; ...... t r. f -'!'; ' j Pacific Area ; CHUNGKING, Jan. 14 W) r The Chinese press declared today that signs ot British and Ameri can reinforcements in the ' Far East were lacking, that tha sit uation allowed of no optimism, and turned severe criticism upon the conduct of the war in the Pacific. . . i - i "British authorities in Malaya have shown themselves wanting in both vision and determina tion" was the blunt assertion of the Chinese army organ, Sao Tang Pao. - Easier Said 'The term 'Pacific war" , ap peared in publications 20 years ago and was the subject of con stant . discussion in Japan, yet Americans were caught off guard at Pearl Harbor, and the Philippines are left to look after themselves with a small force," it continued. "Signs of Anglo-American re inforcements are absent while British and American authorities continue to indulge in side-tracking remarks. Both Knox (United States secretary of the navy) and A. V. Alexander (Britain's first lord of the admiralty) urged the allies to strike Hitler first. If Japan is allowed to take Singa pore and the Netherlands East Indies it will be easier said than done for America and Britain to start the counter-offensive." While other papers strongly supported demands for the speedy dispatch ot land, naval and air reinforcements to the Far East, Sao Tang Pao took the gloomy view that if Japan gained control of Malaya and the Dutch Indies she would attain self-suf- (Continued on Page Two)' . Scrap Steel Collection Sought ' To Uphold Production for War By IRVING PERLMETER WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 (P A group of responsible govern ment officials today saw the na tion's huge war program threat ened In 1942 by a possible short age of from four to six million tons of scrap steel the very metal which Japan bought up so avidly here - in tho pre-war yeara. Accordingly, they urged an immediate rummage of the na tion's vacant lots, backyards and cellars for all available scrap. in a special memorandum for circulation among administra tion leaders, these officials as serted that unless scrap collec tion were stimulated the 1942 production of steel so urgently needed for munitions would bo smaller than 1941'.. The supply of scrap steel an essential to the Industry it last year's production is to be sur Klamath's Quota 110.000 , 'Racelved to Dat I6.898.ia J Needed I 13,101.88 UNITED PRESS Number 9484 o) tank has appearance of heavily- .3. Jap Hospital Vessel ' Sunk by American -, " Sub,- Claim TOKYO, Jan. 14 (Official Broadcast Recorded by AP) Japanese imperial, headquarters declared today that a Japanese submarine had scored two tor pedo hits on a United States air craft carrier of the Lexington type in waters west of Hawaii. (The Lexington and her sis- tershlp, : the Saratoga, both of 33,000 . tons ' displacement, were built in 1925 and normally carry a crew of 2122 officers and men. . (They have a normal carrying capacity of 81 aircraft and . a maximum capacity of 90. (The Japanese . repeatedly have reported- the " sinking or damaging of US aircraft carriers but the claims have been put down by Washington officials as "fishing expeditions" for in formation.) A communique issued by im perial headquarters said the sub marine commander was not able to state whether the aircraft car rier had sunk, because he had to dive his craft immediately to evade a counter-attack by de stroyers. TOKYO, Jan. 14 . (Official Broadcast Recorded by AP) Imperial headquarters charged in a communique today that the hospital ship Harbin Maru was sunk on Jan. 10 by an American submarine in Chinese waters. passed was said to.be so low that at New Year's only one month s supply was on hand. Shipments of scrap iron and steel to Japan climbed to a peak of 2,035,000 tons in 1939, but in 1940 'the United States required export licenses for the scrap and shipments dropped - to ' 963,000 tons. No figures were available for 1941, due to wartime restric tions, : but . officials Indicated shipments were below, those ot 1940. - . The United States last year made a record total of 83,000, 000 tons of steel. . The govern ment experts figure that, theor etically,, tho steel industry this year could .turn out 89,000,000 tons, but. probably would turn out between 82,000,000 and 85. 000,000 tons. Last year' output included 44,000,000 tons made out of pig iron and 39,000,000 made out of scrap." RED CROSS MacArthur Halts Jap Attacks; British . Still Retreat ; By The Associated Pics . Land and air -reinforcement for hard-pressed British forces in the Far East have arrived in Rangoon, on Japan's Burma flank, it was announced today. The landing of anti-aircraft units and ground crews for ad- oiuonai aircraft, along with ful ly equipped British and Indian soldiers, was disclosed t th. same time that cancellation of some postal services from Singa pore showed that the defenders Of that baxtion in Asia had been forced into a fur ther retreat. - .- !--. Counter ; Action -.rlr.S ' The Ransoon Announcement said, more reinforcements were on me way. xne new units were) Sent at once to, suard alrflelH. some of which are hidden in the jungle near the Thailand fron. tier. ' ; These were glens that tho all lies in the Pacific war were get ling sec tor counter action. ... Gen. Sir Archibald P. Wavell, commander-in-chief of the new allied. Ear.- East command, has arrived in the Dutch East In. dies and already launched, series of dynamic counter-blowa against. Japanese Invasion forces, military dispatches said today. . Dutch trooDS were, renorted moving into action on the border of the "White Rajah" kingdom of Sarawak, where . Jananesa troons had seized the ranltnl Kuching, and most of the north ern territory. . .. Gen. Wavell's second in com mand. Lieut.-Oen. flenrtfn' TT Brett,, former chief of tho US army air corps, arrived . at tne same time to help direct strat egy for the Indies' fishtinff de fense. Dutch Indies soldiers were al so reported battling hand-to-hand with Japanese invader' near Lake Tondano, on tho northeast tip of Celebes Wand. . Simultaneously, Dutch war-; planes bombed Japanese-occupied Tarakan island, off tha coast of Dutch North Borneo,1 and a Japanese base In the southern Philippines. ... . Americans Attack . . - The Philippine base , was pre (Continued on Page Two) Officers Listed For Klamath Unit Of State Guard Thomas B. Abbott and Nelson Reed were listed as commission ed officers and the names of 14 -non-commissioned officers dis closed today in an announcement by D. E. Van Vactor, captain of Company B of the First regi ment, Klamath Falls unit of the Oregon State Guard. - Van Vactor said the appoint ments, made by him, have been forwarded to state headquarter! for . issuance of certificates. Abbott was commissioned a first lieutenant and Reed a sec ond lieutenant. : Other appointments were: First sergeant, . Robert A. Thompson; supply sergeant, Louis A. Tureen; mess sergeant, Darrell E. Christie; other ser geants, Don R. Chase, Arthur L. Anderson, Paul O. Landry, Rob ert O. Odell; corporals, Charles) L. McDonald, Harry L. Kellls, Newton B. Nelson, Joy A. Ustlck, Abraham M. Neslin, Walter H, Hansen, William E. Call. ; A complete roster of the guard is scheduled for publication to morrow. . ' ' : News Index City Briefs .. ....... Comics and Story ..... Courthouse Records Editorials ........ High School News .. Information Market, Financial Midland Empire News, Pattern ............. PTA Notes ; Sports-........ 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