On. .-minute blast on siren, .nd whistle. . TTTYTO fC VT PRECIPITATION U tht algnal lot blackout in Klamath Afy- S As of March 9, 1942 rails. Anoth.r long bl.it. during black- . m f""nt .. . ..gnai for .iu...r in pracau. ASSOCIATF' IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS ".CL 5 ttonary ptriodi. witch your slrt light w u am, PRICE FIVE KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1942 Number 9436 liM (EAST HUE HKI " i : " liiiiiiiililiiiiiiiliillllili n r-rv n rv n rn I MAIN nmnDTP Hitler Predicts IMA 71 P II klRR IT Mil! h 1 1 igii ii i 1 1 wi ii ii ai ii iiai av.i m hum ii i nrrnn i n i iuuiii uiiiiiii i m i TiiTiii! ' mma iu iMVA ihi ii ii n rjinnf n iki in SYnrvninni il uii i u "PPWWLP uvmv uuiiiii roguiuii FNFMY SHIP ""o.,..i FRDNT BROKEN IS liHlni! ! : . f ; mmm mm nun i -w. i ciiNK RY c bess - ry ;1 I I' H.' V'lli i i a a llllll I linill M II UUIII1UIUWU " By FRANK JENKINS TTITLER, ipcoklng In Berlin at memoriol excrcl.es for Gor many'i war dead, warm hi. peo ple of a hard .trugglo ahead, ap peal! for new aucrlflcci and promise, a "crushing victory" over Russia tills (ummcr, llo add: "If the Bolshevik, couldn't crush u during the unpreced entedly hard winter Just panning, Owhen they had the chance, wo'll . annlhllntlngly defcut them thli iummer." IJIS pcch 1 a purely routine nffnlr, ricnllng with what ho would bo expected to deal with on tuch an occaalon. If ho had (aid (or intimated) that Germany might LOSE this iummer, It would bo hot new.. HAVE no doubU, however, ai to thli: Ruula la the HOTTEST SPOT IN THE WORLD. If, with iuch help a. wo and tlia British can give them, the Ruulani can lick Hitler this iummer, thui releasing tho force wo now have to scatter all over tho globe, we can handle Japan. rvuniNG tho preont relative O lull hvth flghtlngtthero 1 no lull in Russia) here ara the plnco to watch: Australia. India. Tho Amur river In Siberia. Norway. Finland. Turkoy. THE Japs have to make up tholr minds whether to con solidate what they've already token or GO ON. They're afraid of Australia, which. If untakon, will always bo a threat on their flank. Australia expects invasion in forco. Premier Curtln appealed on Saturday for unlimited help from us, pointing out that with Aus tralia gono our west coast will be on tho front line. Today, General Bennett, speaking in Sydney, says: "Every man in the O Australian Imperial Forces (In cluding those overseas) Is NOW NEEDED for defenso of tho com monwealth." PRESENT fighting in India Is In Burma, which Is the back door to China by way of the Burma road. As long as China remains unconquorcd It will be a potential base for air attack on Japan. (That Is to say, a threat on the flank, like Australia.) A JAP drive down tho Amur river would cut off Vladi vostok, another threat to Japan. (Consult your map.)- There Is much uncertainty as to tho forces Russia has In Siberia. Dispatches today to the London Daily Mall any Russia has 8 million men there, with Immense reserves In training. Other sources have indicated movement of a considerable part w of the Siberian army to the Russian-Gormen front. "TODAY'S dispatches say x Chungking thinks the Japs are likely to strike Siberia as suddenly and dovnstntlngly as they struck Pearl Harbor. -"ERMAN-IIELD Norway Is on tho flank of tho SHORT supply routo to Russia by way of the Arctic. Getting British and American help to Russia this summer Is nil-important. You must havo noted tho dis patches tho other day telling of arrival of the Tlrpltz, Germany's biggest battleship, at a Norweg ian port. That would indlcnto that Ger many Is planning flank attacks Qj on the Arctic supply route to KUSS1S, THERE hnve been now intlma- , tlons of Into that Finland may ' bo getting ready to quit fight ing. Your map win ton what that would mean. It would clear ' (Continued on Paga Two) Pofce Seek Strangler of Portland Woman PORTLAND, Oro., Murch 16 W) Police traced today tho few clues left them by tho strangler of 28-ycur-old Margarot Gwcn Ponssen, Portland stenographer Her naked body, covered neat ly by a quilt, wos found last night 1 her apartment. In which there was no evidence of a strugglo and only one tiling was out of place. That was a missing lamp cord. Deputy Coroner Gideon Snook said it probably was used to gar- rot tlu woman, then was carried o(f by ihe slayer. He said there was no evidenco of criminal as sault. Of the woman, police knew little. They said her parents were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ponssen. Senslde, Ore. A sister was also believed to live at Seaside. Mrs. John B. Shank, opnrtment house manager, said tho woman had lived alone since a divorce two years ago. Police did not know his name. Carl Mngnuson, another apartment tenant, said two men (Continued on Pago Two) American Fliers on Hand for Battle To Stop Japs MANDALAY, Burma, March IS UP) Filers of tho American volunteer group whose air de fense of Rangoon was ono of the few bright spots for the United Nations in the south' west Pacific, are on hand for the defenso of central and up- per Durum miu aiv ueiiiu vui fitted with new pursuit planes. They are prepared to continue their fight for air supremacy In the new phase of tho Burma campaign and to make special efforts to halt terror bombings ugalnst civilians, one of Japan's most effective weapons in Bur ma. MANDALAY, Burma, March IS (Delayed) (VP) British Im perial forces, stiffening their re sistance after a long retreat, wero unofficially reported to day to have rocrosscd to the east bank of the Slttnng river in a counter offensive and cap tured Shwcgyln, 80 miles north of Rangoon. (A later communique- from New Delhi said two additional villages wero captured, but ex plained that the attack was In tended only as a diversion, and thnt tho attacking forces had since returned to tholr original positions "according to plan.") Tho British were forced to draw back over tho SIttang Riv er a few days ago In a retreat which opened the way to tho Jnpnncse occupation of Ran goon, the capital and chief port. Four. Trainmen Die In Rail Collision WAVERLY, Tcnn., March 18 Of) Four trainmen, including a father and son, were killed and two other trainmen critically In jured In tho head-on collision of a passenger and freight train on tho Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis railway line near here early Sundny. Those killed, all of Nashville, Tcnn., wore: A. C. Hargrove Sr., 46, pas senger train fireman; A. C. Har grove Jr., 21, his son, fireman of the freight; A. H. Laudcrmllk, 44, engineer on the freight; and H. Edmondson, 32, apprentice fireman on the passenger train. Robert Hargrovo, 68, also N. C, St St. L. fireman, was on tho scono as rescuers sought to extricate the bodies of his ion and grandson. ir-Mi ecu ii ii ii ii ii ii ji if wi iv ii ii ii fuiaj wiiiii ii ON AUSTRALIA DAMAGES BASE Allied Airmen Strike Return Blows at Jap Forces CANBERRA, Australia, March 16 (?') Fourteen Japanese bombers smashed at Darwin to day, subjecting that north coast port to its fourth air attack since war swept to the southwest Pa cific. V- Early reports of the raid said that soma damago resulted and that there were casualties, but details wero lacking. Darwin, a potential naval base for the allied nations, was mass raided by more than 100 Jap anese bombing and fighting planes for tho first time Feb. 19. Many casualties and some military damage resulted and civilian evacuation was ordered. , Rtturn Blows The Japanese curried out less er -raids tho following day and on March 4. ' Australian and Amorican air men struck return blows today at Japanese invasion bases, in cluding Dill in Portuguese Timor, a possible springboard for (he attacks on Darwin. : Heavy American bombers were reported to have partici pated in broad offensive sweeps by -the Royal Australian-air force, during which, the air min istry said, attacks were made yesterday on a Japanese air drome at Dill, in Portuguese Timor, and on invasion bases at Rabaul and Gasmnta, New Brit ain. Sub Scores Complementing these air blows was the announcement that a United Nations submarine (Continued on Page Two) $100,000 Damages Asked of Zuckerman For Fatal Shooting STOCKTON, Calif., March 16 (A') A $100,000 damage suit was filed against Maurice Zucker man, wealthy produce merchant, today for fatally shooting Otto Dander, prominent Stockton Leg ionnaire, In a bar room fight last fall. The civil action was filed in federal court by Hazel and Mar garetha Dander, the slain man's widow and mother, respectively. Their brief complaint snid Zuck erman "willfully shot" Dander. Zuckerman, who Is hold under guard in the County hospital pending a hearing March 23 for ball pending argument of a mo tion for a new trial on his man slaughter conviction, insisted he shot in self defense. District Attorney Maxwell Wlllens said further statements had been obtained from Walter J. Green, defense witness who Wlllens said recanted his testi mony. Green admitted in justice court he had perjured himself. Wlllens said he was considering taking further action, but did not Indicate what. Jap Propagandist Ex-Portlander ' PORTLAND, March 16 (P) Japan's Lord Haw Haw, English-speaking radio propagandist, Is Charles Yoshii, an American born -Japanese who attended school here in the late 1920's, Principal Charles A. Fry of Franklin high school said Satur day. Yoshll was graduated from Franklin high and University of Oregon, Fry said, then became a radio announcer in Los An geles. There he mot the touring Yosuke Matsuoka, former Jap anese premier. He left soon for Japan, where he renounced American oiuzensblp, Fry said. In San Quentin, r ik -i.JL I If. .and vin. the Himy -atttkwrabth- PsclllS eodit prod ucts designed and turned out by Inmates' ot San Quentin peni tentiary w"l do their part. in defense. Above. George W. Parsons works on a lathe-turned siren, designed by enother inmate, a type now being used in many California communities.. Four Die in Crack-up Near Boise; Other Wreck Sought PENDLETON, March 18 (IP) Four army airmen, including the pilot and co-pilot, were kill ed and two injured in the crash of a B-17 bomber three miles south of Gowen field at Boise, Ida., Col. Frank W. Wright, commander ot the Pendleton air-base, announced this after noon. Another B-17 which went down in the rugged Blue Moun tains 20 miles south of Pendle ton, will not be reached until late today by a crash crew of 21 men and doctors sent' from the Pendleton base. At Boise the dead are: Second Lieut. Charles S. Hos ford HI, Butler, Penn., pilot. Second Lieut. Duane I. Crosth waite, Pleasant Ridge, Mich., co-pilot. Pvt. Harold L. Gilliam, Ev erett, Wash. Pvt. Arthur L. Schifper, ad dress unknown. Injured are: Sergt. Morton L. Howard, Danville, Penn. Corp. George A. Gurlack, Danbury, Conn. The ship had signaled with (Continued on Pago Two) Cruiser Houston One of 12 Allied Ships Lost at Java 4JMfx' m k s B o i s i4ifc"T.r:; Bad news was the order of Unlttd Nations warships, against eight for the numerically superior Japanese forces, in last month's epic battle for Java. ' One ot the biggest losses was the United States cruiser Houston, above, and the U. S. destroyer baja. - ' : They Also Serve 1 . wwr.'! Opera Tonight i Closes Concert : Season Here , y The final concert of the 1941 42 series will be presented to night at 8 o'clock on the Pelican theatre stage when Mozart's gay "The Marriage of Figaro" will be performed by "The Nine o'clock Opera Company" under the. auspices of the Klamath Community Concert association. Simultaneously the 1942-43 con cert drive for membership gets under way. An operatic troupe which gets as many laughs as a smash Broadway review, which carries all its props in a suitcase and which has won the highest musi cal praise from few - York's hard-boiled critic-i this- is the "Nine o'clock Opera Company' which will play to a capacity crowd tonight. This is the fourth in a delightful winter series of concerts. Mozart's opera has long been acknowledged the perfect mast erpiece of opera buff. The audi ence will have a chance to see for Itself that opera can be rio tously funny and lose none of its musical appear. Nowhere else does one find such a combination of unflag ging wit and plot suspense with music of the highest order. The second act of "Figaro" has been called the most marvelous musi cally in all opera. But it is also the funniest, a fact which most Americans are quite unaware because the original libretto (Continued on Page Two). the day when the navy department announced the lots of 13 Pope. The action occurred between Bawean- island and Soar v ,,.:.s- , U. S. Army Fighters Nv Down Jap Planes In Australia WASHINGTON. March 16 0P) The navy announced today that a United States submarine had sunk an enemy freighter in Jap anese waters and that a 3,000 ton enemy gasoline tanker had been sunk by undisclosed means in the Philippine area. WASHINGTON, March 16 VP) The war department reported today that nine army fighter planes destroyed three Japanese aircraft in a fight north of Aus tralia. . One American, plane was lost in ramming an enemy fighter, a communique said. The engagement took - place Saturday when nine American pursuit planes of the Curtis P-40 type encountered a large flight of enemy bombers escorted by fighter planes. The Americans attacked, al though greatly outnumbered the war department said. Earlier, the war department disclosed.-, that an -American tour-mowred.bomber had- at tacked a Jap: nese-held airport on the island ' of New Britain last Friday, destroying at least two enemy planes on the ground and damaging the runways. Jn a communique, the -depart ment said the single American plane was. on reconnaissance pa trol when it attacked the Vun kanau airdrome at Rabaul. No activity was reported from the Philippines. - Klamath Flier Dies In Auto Accident Near Texas Field Mr. and Mrs. Mose Andrews of 4211 Homedale avenue have received a letter from the air corps commander at Ellington Field, Tex., expressing regret at the death of their son. Private Raymond G. Andrews, in an au tomobila accident. Private Andrews was injured March 6 and died in the station hospital March 10. Major H. M McMillan of the 70th school squadron said in his letter. "Private Andrews - was the highest type of soldier and was known for his friendliness and good-heartedness," the letter said. "His squadron joins in ex tending to you, his parents, their sincere and heartfelt sympathy." Andrews was a native of Om aha, Ark. and had made his home in Klamath Falls for five years - before joining the air corps. He was 21 years old. BOYLEN ON TRIAL PENDLETON, March 16 (IP) Tom Boylen Jr., indicted by a federal grand jury on a charge of unlawful mortgaging of sheep involving the Baker Production Credit association, went on trial here this morning before U. S. District Judge Claude McCol loch. - f ' 1 n Victory Over Soviet Russia ' BERLIN (From German Broadcasts), March 16 UP) Adolf Hitler appealed to- the German people yesterday for new sacrifices and warned them 'a bard struggle" lies ahead, but promised a crushing victory over soviet Russia during the coming summer. Speaking at memorial exer cises for Germany s war dead. Hitler also predicted the ulti mate defeat of what he called President Roosevelt's attempts to build a detestable new alien world." , The German leader made a special trip from his headquart ers on the Russian front to at tend the state ceremonies; later he reviewed units of the army, navy and air force and placed a wreath on the war dead memor ial in Unter Den Linden. He acknowledged frankly that the German armed forces had met unanticipated obstacles in Russia after achieving victories which he said had "no parallel in history. Winter, for instance he said came weeks earlier than expected. But one thing we know to day," Hitler declared: JThe bol sheviks who could not defeat the German troops and their allies In. one winter will be (Continued on Page Two) GAS SUPPLIES CUT Less -To Be Delivered To Stations; .12 ' .'Hour Day Set.. ; WASHINGTON-, March 16 VP) The 100.000 fillino station, of the eastern seaboard and Pacific northwest, which serve mnr. than 10,000,000 automobile drivers, will receive 20 per cent less gasoline beginning Thurs day and will be nermittrH in operate no more than 12 hours a a ay and 72 hours a week. Orders to this effect were is sued Saturday bv Donald M. Nelson, director of the war pro- auction board, as a stop-gap un til cards can be printed for a rigid rationing program on both coasts. States affected are Maine, Ver mont, New Hampshire, Massa chusetts, Rhode Island, Connecti cut, New York, New Jersey, Delaware. Pennsylvania land. Virginia, tha nietrirt of Columbia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Geor gia, Florida east -of the Apala chicola river, Washington and Oregon. - First Train Rolls Over Lofty Track Of Pit River Span REDDING, Calif., March 16 (A) A 40-car Southern Pacific freight train rolled along track suspended 500 feet above the canyon-walled Pit river yester day, and so inaugurated service over the highest double deck bridge in the world. The train, which also for the first time covered the 30 miles of new mainline track from Del ta to Redding, crossed over the lower deck of the bridge. The upper level, four lanes wide, will carry highway traffic when its approaches are completed, probably by summer. Both the bridge, 3,588 feet long, and the road and railway relocation l ojects are by-products of Shasta dam. The old routes, deep in the canyon, will be flooded by the water the dam will retain. Siskiyou Accident ,'. Proves Fatal ASHLAND, Ore., March 16 (P) Ed Corthell, 65, Hilt, Calif., died of pneumonia here today resulting from exposure and in juries suffered Thursday as his car plunged down a 200-foot can yon in a blinding Siskiyou mountain snowstorm. Lewis J. Layne, 42, Hilt, also in the car, is recovering. (Layne is a brother of Mrs. Frank Klein eger of Klamath Falls. Further details on page B.) t RUSSIANS Med ite rra nea n B I o W Shows Drive . in . . Turkey Eyed By CLYDE A. FARNSWORTH Associated Press War Editor British warships and planes within the past 24 hours have lashed out at the easternmost Mediterranean foothold of the axis, the Italian island of Rhodes, just off the Turkish coast. The assault suggested British readiness . for any springtime move of the axis to supplement the war with Russia by a south eastward stab into Turkey. Front Cracked ' ' ' t The most astonishing ' of the latest reports from the war to Russia was Berlin's bald admis sion . that the red army had breached the German line on the central front during ' a heav snowstorm and that "heavy de tensive ' fighting developed there." . . That appeared in a special an BomsmMBt of the Hitler com mand while the regular com. m unique admitted that tho r.,. sians had renewed mass attacks against uerman . forces of the Kerch peninsula of Crimea. From the Russian side came reports that liberation of the great industrial center of Khar kov, on the southern front h north of the Crimea, was Immi nent. . The German high command declared that the central front attackers were favored by -a blinding snowstorm in achieving their "local breach . . . in close ly wooded country." The assault started Saturday, it was .said, and "after 15 hours of hard fighting the breach was closed again in a counter-attack. The Soviets suffered heavy and bloody losses." , i Stab at Turkey ; The common opinion of many war observers has been that if Hitler cannot get his promised offensive under way in Russia he certainly will make a stab toward the Caucasus through Turkey. In such event, Rhodes might readily serve as a forward base for flanking assault on Turkey's Mediterranean shore. , Japs Report 500 ' Americans Taken v TOKYO (From JaDanese Broadcasts), March 16 (A) Four hundred American troops were captured by the Japanese at Bandoeng, Central Java, and 100 more in eastern Java, a Domel dispatch said today. ' All are now prisoners ot war, it was said.- War material seized from the Americans included 93 automo biles, 8 field guns, 19 machine guns, 390 automatic and regular rifles and 80,000 rounds ot am- mumuon, ine aispaicn saiat . Eight Killed in i Illinois Tornado ; DANVILLE, 111., March 16 VP) Eight pe ons were killed 'in a Tornado that cut across eastern Illinois today, striking hardest north of here at the villagi ot Alvin, where at least four were killed and perhaps two score hurt. Four others were killed in Champaign county. Reports were that most of the buildings in Alvin, a town ot 339 population, were destroyed and at least three burned when fires started in the wreckage. ' News Index City Briefs .: . Page 9 Comics and Story Page 8 Editorials . ....................... Page 4 Information ...Page 7 Market, Financial .......... Page 7 Pattern Page 3 Sports ? Page 9