I 6 Blackout Siqnal ea lUlliNllUUlllllllllllMlllil'llllWll On B-mlnut blast on (Irani and whlitlu li Iht ilgnil lor bliokout In Klamath rails. Anothor long blait, during a black out, ti a ilgnil ior all-clar. In precau tionary ptriodi, watoh your atroat light. PRECIPITATION A of March 13, 1943 Prnt tram yar .....m...........,10.00 Last yr to Cat ,, , ... a 4 Normal to that dat......... 1,34 ASSOCIATED P" IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1942 UNITED PRESS JEW AH illiilillllllllfl!lNIIIU!imillllllllllllilMI vvw , . ret smm Nazi taierals 1. 1'!!!' II! I' .!'! '"I1 ll'l I! I," II1 1 " i M 1 llil !! I 1 !t' liiiS I ' ' 1 ' JL il l I 1 I W1 S ! 'i i i jr ax -w :ar,i 1 llliilllll ! i! MM By FRANK JENKINS npHAT win a hard Jolt tho Jnpi got In New Guinea. It meont moro than tit plane Aid tho ihlp and the men they "it. It Indicated that they have run out from under the protec tion of their own land-bated air craft and have come within itrlklng distance of OURS. In other words, they're losing some of the advantages they possessed in the Philippines, Malayan and East Indies light ing. fllE reason they're losing these A advantages la perhaps more interesting than tho FACT that they're losing them. They're getting farther and farthor from noma. They're spreading themselves thinner and thinner. A that happens, their job gets hurdor and harder. , ' 1 ' Q-HE Jap arojaco to face with great decision. . v v Shall they setUa down to de velopment and exploitation 01 the rich empire they have al ready laid their clutches on?. Or shall they go on, and on and on? TWO considerations historic al! .. nmii.rfnl lira thfm ON. On li the hunger for MORS conquest that growa out 01 con annul alrendv accomplished. The other 1 the need to PRO TECT each new conquest. MAPOLEON. with all Europe A at his feet, grew fearful of Russia, hovering as an ever pscsent threat on his flank. In an effort to protect himself against this threat, he went ON gu& spent his strength beyond Uupe of recovery In the vast and frozen plains of Russia. It Is to be suspected that Hit ler hns mndo the same mistake and for the same reason. ' THE Jops hava done well A amazingly woll. They have cut off for themselves a vast slica of the richest port of Asia. Caution urgos them to stop, masticate and digest. . Greed urges thorn on. " FEAR also urgos them on. - As thoy gaze upon Australia, they see In It a threat on their flanks just as Napoleon saw In Russia a constant threat. The thought Is In their minds that If they can take Australia they will be SAFE from that quarter. ; . 'THE lesson of history lead us to hope the Japs will go on, spreading thomselves thinner and thinner until finally they crack Oidor tho strain. UANNIBAL, perhaps tho great est general of all time, lost himself In Italy, hopelessly far from his supply bases In Carth ago, his tough and seasoned and competent army too small for the job he had carved out. Aloxandnr, aftor destroying Persia and conquering Egypt, went on and lost himself In the lmmcnsltlos of India. Napoleon spent himself In the vastnosscs of Russia. (As Hitler mny.) In the present war, we 'have seen Britain spread so widely over the earth a to be unable to HIT HARD ENOUGH at any single place. dT la an all-Important decision thnt Japan must make. All the historical impulses LEAD Hm ON. Only caution urges her to stop and dig In. Against the urging of caution must bs set the PROMPTINGS OF FEAR thot If she stops now t (Continued on Page Two) 1 E S REPORTS era COMMON Prices Frozen After 20 Per Cent Cut Put in Effect WASHINGTON. March 19 CP) Petroleum Coordinator Ickcs an nounced today a rigid gosulinc coupon rationing system would be instituted In tho east and Pa cific northwest as soon as the cards can be printed which he estimated would b within six week. Th card rationing would sup plant the curtailment pro: am instituted ovar the ame area to day through reduction by 20 per cent In the supplies of gasoline delivered to filling stations. Situation Urgent Icke said he could not say now whether the more rigid sys tem would be severer than the present one-fifth cut In consump tion, but expressed the hope that th card system might be Instituted quickly because of the increasing urgency of the supply situation In the two coastal ar eas caused by - the sinking and war diversion of tanker ships. "We will go on' a card ration ing system as soon sit Mr. Hen derson, the price administrator, can get around to It," the petrol eum coordinator said. "He will do the rationing."- . Prices Frosn ' " Operations of approximately 100.000 filling stations In the area were limited to a 12-hour day, si x-d ay-week. Supplementing this wartime action, the office of price admin istration froze the retail gaso line prices In tho area at the lev els prevailing last Friday and made violations punishable by a maximum $8000 fine - or one year imprisonment. The freezing order, which will be in force for at least 60 days, becomes legally effective on Monday, March 23. In Issuing the order, Acting Prico Admin istrator John E. Hamm disclosed last night that "serious consider atlnn" was being given to the li censing of all filling stations In the curtailment area as a further measure of guarantee observ ance of the price regulations. Soto to Bo Moved Into Death Cell At Oregon Prison ' SALEM. March 19 (P) Still unconcerned ovor his scheduled execution In the stato prison lethal gas chamber at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow, John Soto, 1 7-year-old triple slayer, will bo moved to night to the prison death cell, located in a room adjacent to that containing the chamber. , Prison Warden George Alex ander said Soto is in "fine shape," and that he ' apparently wants to die. , Ho now Is in a cell in a main cell block. Soto's only chance for a post ponement of the execution would be to appeal to the state su preme court, Governor Charles 'A. Sprague already having re jected pleas for clemency made by Soto s mother, Soto, who had esenned frnm n California home for feeble-minded persona, went to Hormiston, where ho says ho worked on the army ammunition dump .for a fow days. He claims he shot and killed the three persons with whom he was living because he feared they would report him to police. . , CLAMS, FIREWORKS ' SALEM, March 19 W) Gov ernor Charles A. Sprague today ordered that clam digging on Oregon beaches be restricted to daylight hours, - and asked the public and local authorities to ban the sale of fireworks for thu duration of the war. No Shortage Felt Here As Gas Reduced Gasoline rationing went Into effect here Thursday, but due to already reduced demand In this territory it appeared unlike ly motorists will suffer a short age. Dell cries to stations were based on 80 per cent of salos of the corresponding month of last year. Many stations were al ready down to that volume, end under tho rationing will get all the gas they would order under any circumstance. Preferential customers were to be permitted to sign blanks which would give them all the gas they need. These Include public health and safety vehicles, government vehicles, commer cial. Industrial and agricultural machinery and school buses. Stations here will be open' no more than 72 hours a week. One large company reoorted It would stagger hours between stations, and that at least one station would be open on Sundays, FOR DRE SUITED . , ., .v.-. ' II' '' Ml , f ' Men 1 9-20. ancf 45-64 To Sign Up On, t ; .-v; April 27 ' 'in WASHINGTON, March 19 UP) President Roosevelt set April 27 today for the registration of men aged 43 to 64 Inclusive. It will te the fourtn registra tion during the current war emergency and the second since the war actually engulfed the United States. The chief executive Issued a proclamation, under terms of the selective service act, which pro vides that: "The registration of male citi zens of the United States and other male persona .who were born on or after April 28, 1877, and on or before February 18, 1897, shall take place - In the United States and the territories of Alaska and Hawaii, and . in Puerto Rico on Monday, April 27, between the hours of 7 a. m. and 9 p. m." The usual exceptions were made for persons already in the armed forces and for registration in exceptional cases prior to or after the prescribed date. . The men registering April 27 will not be liable to compulsory military duty nor will another group men of 18 and 19 still to be registered. TOP OF LIST VENICE. Calif.. March 19 UP) Taichl Ishlhara, a Japanese. held No. 441, fourth drawn In tho new draft lottery. It top the list in the Venice board. Vegetable Dehydrating Eyed As New Agricultural Jndustryfor Klamath By C. A. HENDERSON, County Agnt Government demand for de hydrated food products to save shipping .space Is creating con siderable interest on the part of Klamath potato and vegetable growers and might open up an entirely now field in agricul tural development. A fow days .ago Ernest H. Wiegand of the food Industries department, Ore gon State college, met with a small group of potato growers, members of the chamber", of commerce, and other interested people to discuss tho possibilities of developing dehydration plants In the Klamath basin. . . It was pointed out to Wiegand that there are sufficient potatoes pf the lower grades produced in the Klamath Hsln each year to operate an 80-ton a day capacity dchydratcr plant the year around,. Potato growers agreed n n v. Wm hit, rn'P iirwr niiLtn vuvl m-Lni HI 111 I ML ULLH Hill I Ul SPRING DRIVE Red Guerrillas Seize Section Behind North Front By The Associated Press Climaxing three months of bloody retreat, Adolf Hitler has abandoned his lone-wolf role In guarding the destiny of Ger man arms, it was reported to day, nd has called back his generals to help plan the nazi spring offensive., The Berlin correspondent of the Basel (Switzerland) National Zeitung said Hitler had sum moned nearly all the German officer, including Field Marshal Walter von Brauchitsch, who were ousted or resigned after the drive against Moscow failed last December. . , Spring. Offensive ' Hitler at that time announced that hir "intuition'' had led htm to take over supreme command of the German armies, ',t; , The National Zeitung corres pondent said the nazi spring of fensive might be expected soon, with the fuehrer and his gen erals now ; mapping strategy at a series of staff conferences. " The question ; of throwing Russia's winter steamroller into reverse still remained to be solved, however, and today's German high command com munique acknowledged that the red armies were attacking re lentlessly and that "heavy de fensive fighting is in progress." A bulletin from Hitler's field headquarters noted continuing Russian pressure on the Kerch peninsula, in the Crimea, as well as fierce soviet thrusts in the Donets river sectors of the Ukraine, where the Russians are battering at the gates of Khar kov. . 1 In the north, soviet dispatches (Continued on Page Two) Stilwell Takes T Command of Two Chinese Armies ' WASHINGTON. March 19 UP) The war -department announced today that Lieutenant General Joseph W. Stilwell of the United States army had been put in command of the fifth and tixlh Chinese armies operating with British forces defending Burma against the Japanese. The action waa taken by Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek of China, a brief communique said. General Stilwell -went to Chi na a few weeks ago and served initially as ' Chiang's chief of staff. that the diversion of No. 2 or other undergrade . potatoes to such use would greatly stimu late the demand for Klamath po tatoes as it would improve the grade and pack of the potatoes put on the market. ; Discussion brought out that up to March 1, over 40 carloads of Klamath potatoes lower than commercial grade; had been pur chased here and shipped to de hydrating plants in California, and that an additional 30 or 40 cars, would be shipped before tho. end of the season. Price, it was explained, was 40 cents per hundred pounds plus sacks or several times the price ordinar ily paid for this grade of pota toes, in the Klamath basin. If the potatoes could be shipped by freight and dehydrated there af ter paying this price, it seemed reasonable that dehydration might . be .undertaken - In . the Three Men on a Raft They Called It "Home" for 34 Dayi V'jf ''i'r'Kwiii' wo.ur ttv: r - - umnM Tin,- "T.-v. 1 eai at Honolulu, little worse 1 j tale of drifting In th south Pacific for 34 days. When their Harold Dixon. Anthony Pastula above. For 34 days they drifted pocket knife and an albatross tropical Island, Relief of Philippine Comrades High in" General's Plan MELBOURNE, Australia, March 19 UP) General Douglas MacArthur made it plain today that his paramount purpose as supreme commander in the southwest Pacific is to build as rapidly as possible an offensive force to smash Japan and at the same time relieve his beleaguer ed troops in the Philippines. MacArthur outlined his pur pose to his old friend and former war department associate. Briga dier General Patrick Jay Hurley, now minister to New Zealand, who told a press conference: "General MacArthur breathes the very spirit of victory. He specifically stated that he still is in command of the Philippine situation and has the utmost confidence that he will again be back on Filipino soil." Hurley said he found the hero of the Philippine campaign in excellent health. Hurley added: ' Under order of the president of the United States and with the concurrence and enthusiastic approval of other governments affected, the headquarters of General MacArthur was trans ferred to Australia. "General MacArthur's break through the Japanese blockade was one of the most spectacular (Continued on Page Two) : Klamath basin inasmuch as the facilities for storing potatoes are such that a plant of this kind could operate the year around. Other crops . also could be grown for this purpose, particu lar!; onlor , cabbage, rutabagas, carrots, turnips ard other crops Some Klamath onions have been shipped to the dehydrating plants In California this season, quality of these onions being equal or superior to any re ceived at the plant. As to whether private or co operative . dehydrating plants would be considered received considerable attention. The county agent was requested to write the head of the army pro curement division In order to find out directly the army' need and the volume that might be ordered at this time as well as to future possibilities. In addition, (Continued on Page Two) 1 . . for their experience, these tore and Gen Aldrich. from left, V In calm and hurricane, lived on a shark they 1 paired with a thy caught alive. They were finally; tossed , ashore on a small . - --- - - Survivors Land From Two Ships Sunk in Atlantic MIAMI, Fla, March 19 VPhr. Thirty-four members of .the! crew of a sunken Norwegian, tanker landed here from Nassau,; the-) Bahamas, and departed soon aft erward for New York.' r . ' ' The men said a submarine sent two torpedoes .crashing, in to the ship's side. One man was killed in the explosion. The axis raider then shelled the vessel, killing another man. The re maining men escaped injury. The attack took place in the Atlantic. First Officer Jacob Tvedt was in charge of the group that left here. (Sinking of the vessel - had been reported from Nassau on March 10, two days after the 38 survivors of a 40-man crew arrived from another Bahamian port. They were met there by the Duke of Windsor, royal gov (Continued on Page Two) Filipino Blood Aids MacArthur, Says Council Head PORTLAND, Ore., March 19 (fP) The gallant defense of the Philippine Islands may have been due In part to General Douglas MacArthur's Filipino blood, the president of the Phil ippine commonwealth defense council said here yesterday. 1 . Ernesto Mangaoang, in an in terview, said that he had been advised that MacArthur - had been made a member of the Katipunan, a secret society whose ritual Includes cutting the fin gers of old members and inject ing the blood into the veins of new members. "The general may be an Amer ican to you," Mangaoang said, "but he is a Filipino to u a Katipunan." , The society was formed under Spanish rule to fight oppressors and it again became active when the present war broke out, he said. . He added that MacArthur's membership might explain why Filipino soldiers fought so well under him. Lumbermen Bid on Supply for Army PORTLAND, Ore., March 19 (J1) The army continued to re ceive bids on lumber today from representatives of 144 compan ies. Purchases by nightfall might total 50,000,000 board feet for the two-day auction, army engi neers said. The fir, pine and other lum ber will be used at northwest military establishments. Major J. C. Stowersvreported. c 3i f 'XI nary men told hair-raising plane was forced down at sea. escaped In the inflated lif rait BIG SCALE Mult IN BURiilEjlllli Jdps-Moye Over Road To frrawaddy Oil Operations : NEW - DELHI, India, March 19 VP) '- American "volunteer group and 'British pilots possi bly destroyed 25 enemy planes in attacks on Japanese-held air dromes in southern Burma yes terday, a communique from British headquarters in Burma reported today. . . MANDALAY, Burma, March 19 UP The big battle of the Prome road key to Burma's Yenangyuang oil fields seemed today ready to burst momentari ly as Japanese troops streamed up the Irrawaddy valley for an assault on the new British po sitions. (Reuters said unofficial ad vices from Burma reported that British imperial forces had withdrawn from Tharrawaddy, 60 miles north of Rangoon and almost half way to Prome up the . asphalt - paved " western branch of the road to Manda lav). Marshaling their force! for the new attack, the Japanese were moving up the broad Ir rawaddy by boat, up the road by motor columns . and cross country by mule train. There are no natural obstacles along the lowland road to help the defense. Washes which will be deep with flood waters dur ing the mid-May monsoon now are dry and can be crossed by tanks. Other strong Japanese forces are moving northward along the east branch of the Mandalay road toward Toungoo. A sharp clash between British and Japa nese advance forces on this road occurred yesterday south of Kanyutkwin, 40 miles south of Tongoo. - .. Nelson Says Labor Law Unnecessary WASHINGTON, March 19 P) Chairman Donald M. Nel son of the war production board took the stand today that new war labor legislation waa not needed, that "we can get in creased production without use of force." Nelson's view, expressed, be fore a senate subcommittee, con trasted with that of Rep. Smith CD-Va.) who. In urging house naval committee approval of his bill to limit profits and abolish extra pay for overtime, said members of congress were "feeling the lash of the whip from constituents clamoring for such legislation. y. STRUCK IN AIR RAIDgNPORT Nazi Missionaries at . Head of Invaders On Island By VERN HAUGLAND MELBOURNE. March 19 UP) The - battle about Australia' northern tip broke into new fury today with allied air attacks on the Japanese at several- island points, Japanese raids on north ern Australia and the Soldmon islands, and sensational report that German missionaries are leading an overland Japanese invasion in New Guinea.. . . Messages from Port Moresby, on southern New Guinea, said the German missionaries and their nazified native pupils were guiding the Japanese in a drive from the north coast. . Secret Radio , The Germans were declared to have maintained secret radio transmitters and a factory for making swastika regalia and flags at their missions, around Finschhafen and Alexishafen. - Australian authorities recent ly smashed one transmitter and seized more than 400 nazi flags. (Northeast New Guinea was a German colony before the World, : witt1t"IA--183fl. census . showed 473 Germans there.) ; .1 - The missionaries were said to be leading the Japanese west ward from Lae, on the east coast, through the Markham valley. It was believed this was intended to take over a system of good airports in the valley, although it might develop into a south ward swing toward Port Mores by, - -"-' ' . . 1 . . . : ..: Air' Attack' - ' . The Japanese "launched their first air attack, reportedly with out ' damage, -on Cape York across Torres strait from Port Moresby, struck again at Dar win, and bombed Tulagi, Florida island, in the Solomons. ( Jap Cruiser Damaged Meanwhile . allied- aircraft at tacked Koepang, Dutch Timor, and damaged a heavy Japanese cruiser at Rabaul, New Britain island, to add to the score of 23 ships sunk or damaged off New Guinea. i The new ' Japanese bombing blows today against Port Mores by and the mainland city of Dar win were officially minimized. (A Berlin radio report quoted by the British Exchange Tele graph agency, said the Japanese advancing overland - in . New Guinea had occupied about 30 air fields in the south of the is land and had put them "into working order - for operations against the Australian - main land.") . There were no reports of new action today by or against Japa nese war vessels and transports. It was assumed that Japan's invasion fleets were reorganiz ing after one had been wrecked on the Guinea sea approach to Australia. ENEM CRUISER Swallows Back at Mission on Time ' SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif., March 19 UP) The van guard of Mission San Juan Cap istrano's swallows arrived on schedule : today 1 St. Joseph's day In their traditional migra tion from the south, but await ed the coming of the main flight before taking up their nests under the eaves of the his toric structure. -. .- ' ' 'Only a few comprised the first flight, which skimmed in about 4 a. m., not enough to put up a good battle against the flocks of swifts which occupy their nests during the winter, said Father Arthur Hutchinson, mission padre. .-, ; n. -r- I. News Index I City Briefs .....Pages 8, 0 Comics and Story Page 8 Courthouse Records ..... Page 4 Defense Calendar .......Page 12 Editorials ... .....Page 4 High School News .-.. Page 12 Information Page Market, Financial ..........Page 10 Midland Empire New ..Page 7 Pattern ............................ Pase 6 Sport ..Pag 8