IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfrl On 5-mlnut blast on sirens and whistles li the signal lor blackout In Klamath rails. Anothar long blait, during a black out Is a ilgnal ioi all-clear. In precau tionary parlodi. watcb your street lights. latnernevs ' "H'lHUNinnii ; , PRECIPITATION As of March 6, 1942 Present stream yew , , , . t Last year to Date , , m Normal to that date , ..,,.., , ,27 ASSOCIATE ; ..iMl' SU IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS " """'"nmnnnn rinAAruuuuLijLiJ KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1942 Number 9434 I . i Tan mwwm in ww mmwm J) kf f THE ; iKIKlSJiiiiffli IS BRITISH FORGE By FRANK JENKINS fllE Jups slackim temporarily tliclr altnck on the eastern tip of the Island ot New Guinea, and today's dispatches report that considerable Japanese forces have been sighted well to the eastward, In the neighborhood of Uio Solomon Islands. This might mean: 1. That they are attempting a fake play, hoping to draw U. S. ftind Australian forces away from New Guinea and northern Au tralla. 2. That they are moving east ward along the lino ot islands dotting the South Pacific to threaten tho supply lino from America to Auslrulla. IT must be accepted from the start that Australia will be unable to defend herself without aid and the United Suites is tho only place effective help can come from. If wa are to help Australia, tha sea lanes must be kept opon. THE Japs probably got some thing of a Jolt In their latest New Guinea attack, finding com bined American and Australian air strength tougher than they expected. Q Admiral Mart, former com mander ot tha U. S. Asiatic fleet, told us bluntly the other day that we lost the first round against Japan because the Japs had complete command of the air. Maybe we are making pro gress toward building air strength In Australia. "THE Japs have already spread A themselves reasonably thin. If they undortake the conquest ot Australia, they Will spread themselves thinner still. 1 f, simultaneously, they TACKLE INDIA, the spreading process will be carried much farther. We know from Britain's ex r perlenco what getting spread too far and too thin may mean. Because Britain was already ipread too far and too thin, she Owas unnbla to do anything about lilongkong and Singapore. TF we can keep from getting spread too thin, we can soon er or later mass our forces at ONE POINT for an effective counter-blow at Japan. XEANWHILE, on the other AVi side of the world, the Russians unleash a now counter offensive, using, todny's dis patches tell us, from a million and a quarter to a million and a half men, with 90 armored di visions. Tho Gorman line la re ported to be bending under the blow. Red Star, the Russian army newspaper, says: "The offensive this spring will be RUSSIAN not Gorman." Red Star Insists that tho nazl war machine Is wearing out as a result ot Its costly fall drivp and the battering It has received 0 luring the winter. WISHFUL thinking leads us to believe this statement. CAU TION points out that there have been no reports as yet of Gor mans SURRENDERING In large numbers, On the contrary, there have been repeated reports ot sur rounded Gcrmnns fighting stub bornly and bitterly as the Rus sians fought when they were be ing driven bnck lost fall. When we get authenticated re ports of Germans surrendering In largo numbers wo can begin to believe the nazl war machine is wearing out. Until then, we'd bettor keep ' our fingers crossed. . MOTE that the Russians 'are Qr striking NOW not retiring ''behind the barrier of mud that will be created by the melting of the wlntor snows. The Germans are masters of mechanized warfare. The Rus sians have demonstrated their ability to use cavalry effectively i . (Continued on Page Two) : Direct Hit on Wa Street 7" V:.r. V - PI If II I I - ' BB BB I r I T -9 ii 'r r -r- i M & . Mr I Ini I DKIir NEW YORK. March 13 (P), the 'explosion. These section Mill fll .IflUfl i it, ' K ' ' j : 1 lILL 111 LjlllUL Police said today that " direct broke Into minute particles and LUU I III Unlls If' I l SCALE AHACK Allies Beat Germans To Punch in Two Heavy Blows' By CLYDE A. FARNSWORTH Associated Press War Editor Germany's springtime offen sive waited today on the cal endar, propitious circumstances and Adolf Hitler, but Britain's and Russia's offensives In the air and on the land, respective ly, were in full swing. The British announced a flre ralslng raid on tha great Ger man naval base of Kiel while the red army, having beaten Hitler to the springtime punch, was battering its way across the Donets basin. New Reserves ' Via Stockholm came word that Marshal Semon Tlmoshenko and his. southern army ot from one and a quarter to one and half million men had forced the enemy to draw once more on reserves being prepared for Ger many's own offenslvo effort. The Germans admitted they still were on the defensive against "strong enemy forces" In the DoneU region gateway to the Caucasus. . London observers -held that the objective ot Tlmoshenko's 90 divisions was the Dnieper bend, natural defense line In the heart of the Ukraine. Near Goal Unofficial reports have placed thorn only SO to 40 miles from this goal. . . Although the calendar spring is but a week away, snow on the Staraya Russa front, below Len ingrad, was reported so deep that ski troops still had to carry the burden of the fighting against the entrapped 16th Ger man army. The Russian army newspaper Red Star declared there would bo only one spring offensive the Russian. .. It described the German In vasion machine as worn owt and run down, with Hitler's soldiers trying desperately to hold on, counter-attacking re peatedly but at heavy cost and (Continued on Page Two) Losee Appointed Juvenile Officer Circuit Judge David R. Van donborg Friday morning ap pointed Forrest C. Losce, Klam ath Insuranco man, new county Juvenile officer. Losee takes over the office vacated Thurs day by Gerald (Spec) Murray, who has left, for Utah to serve Forrest C. Losee NEW YORK, March 13 (P) Polico said today that "a direct hit" from an anti-aircraft . bat tery which accidentally un loosed eight shells In tha Met ropolitan area had knocked oft a section from the Equitable building In the Wall street dis trict. Lieut. James Pyke of the po lice bomb squad said he was convinced that "a direct hit" was made on the office build ing. Wide excitement resulted In the financial area, with po lice emergency cars and many fire trucks rushing to the scene. The "direct hit" caused some damage to the 40-story build ing. Part of the cornice on the 38th floor end one small piece of the wall on - the 39th floor cracked off under the force of HOUSE PIS FARM BILL BEFORE VOTE 56 Millions Cut Off Big Measure in .; 9-DaV- Debate '"rh WASHINGTON, March 13 VP) The house passed late today the 1943 agriculture" appropriations bill, carrying a total of $771.- 853,137 in authorized expendi tures and loans. A total ot S, 69, 810,722. wa out from the-blU In nine days, of .debate. ;?.'A A last ditch attempt to restore a $25,000,000 reduction In the allotment lor loans, grants ana expenses of the farm security administration met defeat on a standing vote. -As finally passed, on a voice vote, the measure still carried the controversial clause designed to forbid the sale ot government held crops, a ban to which Presi dent Roosevelt has objected strenuously. Dale New Chief of Air Raid Wardens R. C. (Bogue) Dale, local real tor, has been named chief of air raid wardens of Klamath Falls, It was announced Friday by Orth Slsemore, head of the air raid precautions section of the civil ian defense setup. Dalo succeeds Coleman O'Loughlln, who has resigned. Ho will take over his new duties immediately. to Fill Vacancy as second lieutenant In the re serves. , . , Losee is well known in Klam ath Falls, where for the past eight years he has been man ager of the Security Life and Accident company and active in civic affairs. Losee has with drawn from the insurance busi ness, and will assume his new duties Immediately, he said Fri day. Background for his new Job includes six years' experience in general police, traffic and Juvenile work in Coronado, Calif., where he served as presi dent ot the San Diego Highway Patrolmen's association during 1929, a Job placing him in charge of all county peace of ficers. Losee left police work in 1930 to enter the insurance business, but has retained an active Interest in Juvenile af fairs. In Klamath Falls, he holds the district commissioner's of fice for the Modoc area ot the Boy Scouts and has taken an active part in development of the junior police. Losee has also served as president ot the Klam-ath-Modoo chapter ot the Iznak Walton league, and Is a member of the board of. directors of the (Continued On Page Two) , the 'explosion. Theso sections broke Into minute particles and fell into Nassau street. Some pieces, of steel which fell into the street were about two inches long. Fragments also flew ' Into open windows of the building on the 37th - floor, but did no damage. No windows were shat tered, No one was reported- injured.- Shortly after tenants' in the building telephoned, police that an explosion had occurred. members of an anti-aircraft, unit reported to police that they had accidentally fired eight shell from one of their guns. Tbi t gun, they reported, was pointed south in the general di rection of lower Manhattan. . Unions Squabble Oyer Results of NLRB Election ' .; Unleashed union tempera were the only victors Thursday when a bitterly contested National La bor Relation board election "ftt tw.eyerraeuiBr.Timbr . com pany woods camps jsnded with no majority for either the) AFL or iiie CIO and an AFL protest almost certain to' be filed. -The rWA. pqlled. 96 votes, the at.ii, ana nenner union -o out.of ;183 ballots accepted but 14 others .were challenged and laKen unaer advisement oy Hen ry -PentleldV- NLRB conductor, Ohenailot was mutilated and not accepted. One hundred votes were necessary for a majority. ...Wilbur E.' Yeoman, AFL rep resentative, said Friday that his union- would protest the election and also the refusal of Penfleld to accept 19 additional AFL chal lenges. He charged that the 19 whose ballots were questioned were not fulltlme employes of the timber company and that many of them had not been on the Weyerhaeus er payroll since late last fall. . Most or them, ne said, have since been working in Portland and Seattle shipyards and ap peared here only for the elec tion. "There Is no assurance that these men will ever appear on Weyerhaeuser payrolls again," Yeoman asserted. "We believe," he said, "that every man who works for the company the year around should be allowed to. vote but do not accept the fact that part time employes should determine the will of regular workers. College Youth Shot After Robbery MALDEN. Mass., March 13 UP) An 18-year-old college student, son - of a prominent physician, died this Friday the 13th ot a bullet wound inflicted by police as he emerged from a drugstore that had been robbed of $13, The youth, Louts B. Grand! son, was Identified at a hospital by his father, Dr. Louis J. Gran. dison, who was described by po lice as amazed to find his son involved. . Police Sergeant John J. Buck ley said Special Officer William J. Butler fired the shot after watching the boy rob Joseph Ep stein, proprietor ot the Elmwood pharmacy, at gun point Defense Activity On Ceylon Reported NEW YORK, March 13 (P) The British radio, heard in New York by CBS, reported hurried defense preparations' on Ceylon,' the island off India's- southern tip, and said "more troops -are being brought In and Ceylon is being put into the fullest form of defense." It added that "all non-war workers" presumably meaning' British residents had been ordered to leave the island.. BYAUSTRALIA Americans Credited With Five. "Wins:' On-New Guinea,. MELBOURNE, Australia, Sat urday,. March 14. P) Prime Minister -John Curtln announced today the presumed loss of the cruiser Perth- and the sloop Yarn, with loss of. 833 Uvea. He said both warship -had fought successfully and with out damage in -the Java-sea' and had later put In at a Java port, but had not: been heard "from since they left there for-home. . The' Perth, is an Australian cruiser of 6980' tons; the Yarra a. sloop of 1060 tons. "V" WASHINGTON. March 13 'UP) The war department 'reported today , that ava American amy heaivjf f bomber, dsstroyad ft v enemy jlano-ln afraid two-day age on (7iipanese-hel4 airdromes at Silarnaua and Lae In New Guinea.-. i - ;vr - A etmununlQUe-sTafl build ings wew destroy edfKMyyk"! age lrnud:cm.Jronw and. direct . hit rn&de orir plen. in .the harbor of. I..iasnriafc' .... Xkeni'Vvakaiir AlUthe Awerlcan; brnnbf;e caped; damage in the Hght;wlth a tonnatioruot Japanese pursuit plane)..' which isuflared-,th 'Joss of five crafty -' '' - A spokesman, said- the raid presumably was among those re ported in dispatches from Aus tralia, but the results of the air attack were Believed new.- . - Bataaa Quiet Meanwhile the situation on the Bataan fighting . front ' in - the Philippines ' was reported un changed. ' For five consecutive days, - following the - disclosure that Lieutenant General Tomo- yukl Yamashlt had been shifted to command of the Invaders In the Philippines, military activity has been-at a virtually complete halt on the beseiged Philippine peninsula.' . . . Mt. Angel Wins; Salem, Eugene Go Out of Tourney SALEM, March 13 () Mt Angel.'defeated Hillsboro 44 to 40 in a state high school basket ball ' tournament game - today eliminating. Hillsboro from the tourney. ' t . Mt Angel , will meet the win ner of- this afternoon's North Behd-McMlnnville game at 10:35 a. m. tomorrow, the-latter game to decide .' fourth, ' place In . the tourney. ; ' SALEM, March 13 (P) Ore gon City and McLoughlin High of Milton-Freewater won their consolation. semi-final games to day und the right to meet each other at 9:30 a. m. Saturday in a game to decide fifth place in the Oregon state high school basketball tournament. Oregon City defeated Eugene 96 to 43, while Mac-Hi nosed dut Salem, 33 to 32. The losers were dropped out of the tourna ment i '.'.- i . In beating Eugene, Oregon City staged a furious last half assault Eugene held' a half time lead of 27-21, but Ray Cain, Eugene forward, and Bpb Hodgl.j, Eugene guard, who al most' single-handedly dominated first half play, were checked. ton closely in the second half. : ' PRICE FROZEN ' ' " WASHINGTON, March 13 (P) The office of price administration today damped a temporary price ceiling on finished piece goods made of cotton, rayon and their, mixtures to check what it called a "rapid and unwarranted rise In prices." , ; .Gilbert Roney, Santa Monica, even-a bicycle uses too much rubber. He built himself a unicycU BO. into, la how h 4ogks yedWP9J to work every nonung. a.'..- -.-.af'jsss1a1 ' SV sjat '". Man luueajty y; Fall From Train ' arMmeii- ; "William Hinetz, a native of Bremerton, Washington, was killed around 9:30 Thursday eve ning when he fell from the Southern Pacific freight train stopped on the siding near Wor den Thern was some question as 1 to the- cause of the death, which may have resulted from a heart attack, according to Coun ty Coroner George H. Adler, and', an autopsy ' will, be made lateV Friday -or- Saturday morning.-': - . ' - -. - Hinrtr, thought to' be about 60, was on his way to Weed with a companion, John' Leon Percy, to take a Job felling tim ber. The two men had gotten out of the' lumber car in which they were riding when the train stopped, and gone close to the engine to warm themselves, ac cording to Percy. Hinetz, he said, crawled into a "gondola," or. gravel car, and was leaning out the back to pull down the canvas curtain when' he slipped and fell between the tracks. , Hinetz had worked In lumber camps up and down the coast for the last 40 years,- Percy said. .The body is at Ward's funeral home.. - .- : ! Nonagenerian 'Says r 1 Modern Girl O. K. . PORTLAND, March 13 VP) The modern girl is all right take It from 90-year-old Anna Ruhl. . As ; she observed her 90th birthday anniversary, she said talk of the "good old days".-was all bosh. - If the modern- miss wants to smoke, -that's all right too, she said. Student Petitions Go Out After Music Agitation spread on the high school campus - and downtown Friday as an aftermath of the announcement of changes next year in the public school music staff, personnel. .. . Students reported that 700 or more names of students had been signed to petitions to the school boards urging the appointment of Charles Stanf leld, present high school music supervisor, as director , ot all public school music here.- A movement was also "Underway downtown for circulation of similar petitions among adults.'. . The city elementary and high School boards this week elected Andrew Loney, La Grande, as director of puHlc school music for next year. This is a new Calif., aircraft worker, thinks EBOW TO DEFENSE Local ' Group Accepts ' Possibility of ' Forest Ban . - . Klamath Sportsmen's associ ation was on record Friday with a declaration of willingness to support whatever measures may be taken by constitutional au thority to protect -forest lands and natural resources, even to the closure of any and all areas of the state to hunting and fish- tag. . . A resolution from the directors of the association, announced by President Elmer Myers Friday, states that the association recog nizes that in the war emergency there is an extremely acute dan ger of sabotage in the forests. , "This organization also is fully aware that it may be deemed advisable in the interests of na tional defense and safety to re strict to a greater or less extent the activities of fishermen and hunters, particularly during that period of the year when the fire hazard is greatest" read the statement' "It is further recognized by the . . . . association that during (Continued on Page Two) ."WEST INDIES ATTACK CASTRIES, St. Lucia, British West Indies, March 13 (jP) An enemy submarine has attacked Castries harbor, damaging two ships and causing slight casual ties, British authorities disclosed today. Head Named position, created in connection with a coordinated education program for both grade and high schools here. v Students at the high school held a brief "We want Stanfleld assembly at 1 p. m. Friday. The auditorium was nearly filled, and Wayne Chase, a student, ad dressed the youngsters briefly to the effect. that he believed there will be an assembly next week at which Arnold Gralapp, high school superintendent, and Stanf ield would appear. : The assembly had been un derway a few minutes when Rolla Goold, - principal-elect at the high school, entered and con ferred with Chase on the plat form. Chase then asked the (Continued on Page two) Burma Line Forms as . Australia Attack : Still Looming By CLYDE A. FARNSWORTH Japan's offensive against Aus tralia, still taking form in the welter of Islands curving along the vast northern shore of tha continent has speared off In a tangent of naval penetration of the Solomon islands. In the second chief theatre of the war with Japan, the British imperials withdrawing north of Rangoon have for the first time joined Chinese troops, attempt ing u consolidate a . front be tween two main routes out of Rangoon, 60 to 80 miles from the abandoned Dort citv nt th Irrawaddy delta. Japan's Solomon Islands move was evidently either a feint to distract attention from establish ment of New Guinea bases for the prospective lunge at Aus tralia or. actually a thrust to ward the New Hebrides and New Zealand along the Island chain pointed at the United Na-tibr'.a'otrte-to"' Australia, ahead of any direct attempt to invade the continent ;.i . r .vr-'- : ge Force -Sighted The move was disclosed by Australian air- reconnaissance over - the Australian-mandated part of the Solomon group. 'The warship force was sighted three days ago off Kessa, on tiny Buka island, a stepping stone from New Britain to the Solomons. There was no further indication that the Japanese had landed there.- '.'.,' :' ' . Buka Is 180 miles southeast of Japanese-occupied RabauL New Britain, and 900 miles northeast of Australia's north-: eastern extremity, the Cape York peninsula. New Britain Bombed Australian bombers smashing at the potential island route to ward New Zealand attacked the enemy-held airfield at Gasmata, on the south coast of New Brit ain, yesterday. "All our bombs fell in the tar get area and columns of smoke rose fron the ground," a com munique said. . The . Japanese , offensive "was crippled to some extent in the sinking of seven ships by air at tack last Tuesday off Salamaua, a Japanese foothold, in New Guinea. Closer at home for the enemy, a single United States submarine has picked off four vessels, boosting to 14P the total of Japanese ships destroyed or damaged by US forces. ... ., Profitable Fireplug -Nets Extraordinary Offender at. Dorris DORRIS One : sure money maker for the city of. Dorris is the fire plug opposite the city hall. . Hardly a week goes by without a' fine of $1 being as sessed by Police Judge L. M. Chase against an unwary mo torist who parks by the plug. ' . Recently, the Judge heard an extraordinary case and boosted the fine in the interest of the national emergency which de mands that fire equipment ot all kinds be kept clear at all times. "It is ordered by the court that you yap a fine ot 39 or . serve three days in the city Jail," he solemnly told the of fender standing before him. Fire Chief Fenwick sheepish ly paid the fine. . News Index Church News .-......Page 13 City Briefs ...."...........Page 5 Comics and Story ........Page 10 Courthouse Records Page 4 Editorials ... Page 4 High School News ..Page 14 Information .Page & Market, Financial .......Page 6 Pattern Page S Sport . - ...Jage U