jf'S OUR ':!M!!!!!!!vi,!:;iiiii!ii!i'l",!lia!,a:iMM!llll!!!!!lll'a WiiIHiIi On o mlnute blast on tlrtm and whistles is' the signs! fsr a blssfcout In Klamath rli. Another long blast, during a bleck out, U a signal (or ell-cWar. In precau tionary periods, wetoh your street light. l-nnnf.'in-.v.- r.- n--r r- f ' I ww,..w,.v im N .i..i, , PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1 1942 , Number 9594 ' . J : ' hi. mm mw mm$ '. : i : : : ' ,: --.' r1:1""",'. i : .,,;v:i', I rr)D finnflCrP ' " Evidence of Possible Jap Air Raid fF n W H P II 11 In wmneein !?te;" . Maiigraoi en mm mmmm jrzzi. m Si '.;itV-LCv & DDCirjuoniiPU rvowe.Han,ea-: nmirn miidcdc Br FRANK JENKINS TT Is hard to scapo tin con elusion today that w era wit anelnR the beginning o( the end Wit Stalingrad, 'T'HE Russians acknowledge 1 that tha Germans, throwing In "several tens of divisions," have broken Into the city's north west outskirts. Izvestla (Russian newspaper) says: "Von Bock has sent perhaps 300,000 to 400.000 troops, led by tanks and support ed by swarms of dive bombers, crashing through Stalingrad's "northwest gates." Mmcow dispatches relate that ''hordes" of German reserves are moving up to replace the fallen, -some arriving In transport planes landing Immediately outside the elty. ryHK picture of tha last days at 0- Sevastopol Is apparently be nt raproduced at Stalingrad. And In the same way the Ger mans, exerting maximum force t tha chosen point, overwhelm' tng the defenders. . ,', AFTER tha (all of Stalingrad :whatt i . " " - r . N auteldsr can answer that auaatlon with any assurance. We on tha outside can only guess. Tha (all of Stalingrad may be the token the Japs have .been waiting for.-They may Immedi ately start tomethlnr they have promised HUlar to atari as soon as ha lakes the metropolis of the 'lower Volga.'- rr ' They may NOT.' This writer, has tha feeling the Japs are lighting their own war and will co-operate with Hitler only when such ' co-operation serves their own purposes. But we can only wait and see. r 0T HERE Is no oil at Stalingrad. The oil Is In the Caucasus most of It south of the Caucasus range. ,'Only IS per cent of the Russian' supply is In the two fields north of the mountains. Presumably a determined ef fort will be mode to hold the great Baku fields to the south. Churohlll told us a while back about the British Tenth army in Iran and' Iraq which might have to support the Russians, - 5 Your map will Indicate that this army can be moved Up (If it hasn't been alrendy) to support tho Russian forces In (Tio ex treme southern Caucasus. In-that event, the hopo will be to hold Hitler off for the winter. CO far as hews reaching the , world Is concerned, tho Rus sians are fighting to the death, taking their losses at Stalingrad and saying nothing. BEHIND THE SCENES, you 'may be quite sure they have been bringing all the pressure they know how to bring on us and the British to start a second front, and . take soma of tho iiilllng German weight off their necks. ; The fact that we haven't start .(Continued on Pago Two) . Midnight Explosion Rocks Winchester Arms Company NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 17 W) A ; midnight explosion so poworfijl that It- knocked sleep ers from tholr beds shook tho huge plant of tho Winchester Re peating Arms company, Injuring 18 persons. ; Eight of ,the Injured were taken to New Haven hospital and alx to the plant hospital early today, poctors said that the con dition of none was serious. Winchester' works manager 'Thornai 1. 8. Book, terming the explosion "accidental," said It Occurred In a small, sheet metal outbuilding when a worker drop ped a tray containing explosives. Fifteen persons, most - of them women, were in the building at the tlmo. . The mighty blast was heard hi' towns. 12 miles away. . , , . FIGHT - LET'S PUT ALL THE SCRAP WE'VE GOT INTO IT! DO ITTODAY! Labor Costs , 1 IITG Y I PTC WASHINGTON, Sept. President Roosevelt, in to chairmen of the senate and house banking committee, ex pressed "unalterable opposition" today, to any move to change tho present parity formula for farm prices. . Advised at a White House conference that amendments might be offered to pending anti-Inflation legislation to alter the level of parity returns to farmers, the president wrote Senator Wagner (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Steogall (D-Ala opposing such a move. ' , . FDR Policy ; I Parity Is a price level calcu lated to give farmers a return for their props comparable to a past favorable period, usually 1900-14.. Some farm bloc mem bers had contended this formula ought to be revised to take farm wagos , Into . account, ' thus In oreaslng the level to which (arm prices might rise before ceilings I '"I 'should Ilka to : make clear my ' unalterable opposition , to any, reeompuution of parity at thL time," the president wrote, "in my message of Sept. 71 stated, 'In computing parity,-we should continue to use the com putations of the bureau of . ag ricultural economics made under - (Continued on Page Two) New Tax Bill Wholly Inadequate, Says Morgenthau ' WASHINGTON, Sept. 17. W) Secretary Morgenthau said, to day that the new tax bill was "wholly. Inadequate" from the standpoint of tha amount - of yield and because "it does not contain any special provisions for restrictions on expenditures." Discussing tho bill at a press conference, Morgenthau express ed disappointment that the bill as It stands In the senate finance committoo fulls to correct some important loopholes." Among these ho listed the absence of a provision for toxlng Income from outstanding tax-exempt securities and tho failure to' re quire Joint roturns by -husband and wife. As the bill Is now written, Morgenthau said, the total rev enue for the government in a full year would bo in the neigh borhood of $24,000,000,000 whereas the treasury felt that tho federal tax bill should be at least $30,000,000,000. America Now on Production Upswing, Says WPB Chief WASHINGTON; Sept. 17 (Ft War Production Chief Donald Nelson said today that the na tion now ''is almost at a maxi mum" of production and that the output of - war material In 1943 would bo "much bigger" than the previous goal of $60, 000,000,000. Ho told tha house committee on defenso migration, now study ing methods for full utilization of manpower, that production would begin in full flow In Janu ary and February. "We are on the big upswing of production," he declared. He also remarked that the maxi mum was '"dictated by the amount you can get out of cer tain materials" and also was governed by other factors such as shipping. 'Later Nelson told reporters that when he said the country was approaching the "maximum of production," he meant that the time had arrived when WPB could make schedules for even tusl mass produotlon In a partie- I . -n..M MB tlUO 'illOM'LlIM ASSOCIATED PRESS letter B::i.-.fr4L'.v.:'.. .- , ..:v..:T';v.1 . .. . 1 ;.'.. u-'l:, kNfV ,; vast Hordes of Naz. -yW4 1 Reserves Reported " f CWA ' I Mving Up;; ' Tha army announced In Baa Francisco -that it, ..was Investigating the possibility that a Jap seaplane may have dropptd an Incendiary 'bomb - In tha Siskiyou' national forest In southern Oregon. After quickly controlling fires which broke out after a mysterious plane (law over. the art, U. 8. forestry officials discovered a crater and fragments. Above the small composition object with hole rests on a paper great heaC burning earth Into slag with Jap ideographs. British Terms of Sur render Held Un . . acceptable LONDON, Sept. 17 (IP) The governor general of Madagascar, who yesterday asked the British for .terms, has decided to defend the - Island .!'to . ..tho extreme limit," ' a French communique broadcast by the Vichy radio said today.. . . The communique announcing continued resistance against Brit ish columns converging, upon Tananrlve,: capital' of the island, said the British terms of sur (Contlnued on-Paga Two) Married Men In California Can ; Expect; Draft Call SACRAMENTO, Sept. 17 (P) Married men In California be tween'thb ages of 20 and 45 can expect to bo subject to call for military service in draft calls which are received In November, Major Kenneth H. Leltch, state director of selective service said today. , , The supply of 1-A registrants Is nearlng exhaustion, he said. ular plant, Ho said that he agreed with President Roose velt's recent statement that at present, tha country was oper ating at 80 per cent production. Ho said he had not studied the advisability of legislation to. control manpower, which Paul' McNutt, chairman of tho war manpower commission, yester day asserted was f'lnovltable" and essential to maximum pro duction.. However, Nelson said that "we have to have workers at places whore we need them arid at time when wo need them. If it can l e done voluntarily, well, that's 1 He. But if it can't be done that way, it must be done some ot!icr. wax'' .- "r Production, he bald, had "ar rived at the point whore, if you add a thing to our program, then you have to subtract some thing." . ,. ; . That assertion was made In replying to questions from mem bers of the committee on the i (Continued cat 'Page Two) pnpiinii to riftHT vih rftKiuribiii 01. II, MADAGASCAR a in THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND match book used to give comparison (or slse. 'It generated (below left). Top, right Is a piece of metal which was marked ., , ; ,. ' . . .- :i,v . i-'' . i .:-,- ' . i tv, . r ..- . i Bombers LONDON, Sept, 17 (fl Massed squadrons of possibly 800 RAF bombers unloaded an other huge load of explosives up on the industrial heart of Ger many last night, striking at the Run.- In a renewed effort to aid soviet Russia by crippling Adolf Hitler's war-making machinery. ' " This massive night blow at the Ruhr, the air ministry disclosed, followed a daring dusk attack by light British bombers on Wies baden, in the Rhineland. ' Wies baden Is the seat of the German Allen Sloan Resigns Post as Tax Cofector Allen Sloan, for the past 151 years tax collector in Klamath county,, has - resigned his post, presumably to actively campaign as a candidate for county as sessor, -Sheriff Lloyd Low sold today. ' Low said he had appointed Max A. Saunders, formerly of the state auditing department under Secretary of' State Earl Shell, to succeed- Sloan. The switch was effective September 15. Saunders, 28, is experienced In tax work and well qualified to handle the job, Low said., Sloan, In May won the repub lican nomination for county as sessor, and faces Newt Nelson, democratic candidate In ; the November 2 general elections.. Fred C. Langcll Is currently Klamath county's assessor, hav ing succeeded Charles H. Mack, resigned, last month. BASEBALL NATIONAL LEAGUE BOSTON, Sept. 17 W After being held to five hits for eight Innings, the St. Louis Cardinals landed on Alva Javery with a five-run blast in the ninth inning to down the Braves 6 to 4, and drove out in front by three full games in the National league pennant race. " BROOKLYN, Sept. 17 VP) The Dodgers' hopes for the Na tional league pennant suffered a serious setback today when the Pittsburgh Pirates shoved across thfee runs in the first two In nings and went on to a 3 to 2 victory behind Truett Sewer's eight-hit pitching. R. H. JS. st. Louis . 6 10 ' 1 Boston 4 11 S Beazley, Polley (3), Lanier (9), (Continued on page Two) . ?V ' .'..' , ":t. c't .-. - '-T- .-f.vj-u1,.ii -.t i.'iW;- Strike ai Ruhr armistice commission that deals with French - armistice . matters and also a manufacturing center. The night raid, delivered by "a very strong f brce of bombers," left many fires burning, the com-J muntoue said. ' ' British losses In ' the two " air forays were 39 planes, 'it was ah nouhced. ' If 'the usual fiVe per cent loss.' ratio prevailed., .the RAF may have sent over as many as 800 planes. An authoritative source said specifically, however. that it was not a 1000-bomber operation. -. - ; ".. The RAF.raji Its string of night assaults on the reich this month to 10 by this attack. " '' . Spitfire fighters meanwhile-intercepted a group of high-flying German daylight.' raiders - over the English channel this morning and turned them back after they had tried three times to cross the British south coast.' Two- American pilots serving with the Royal ' Canadian' air force reported many fires In the Ruhr valley. " .- -v "The fires were not- so con (Continued on Page. Two) ', Navy Reveals New Sub Toll Of Jap Ships - WASHINGTON,'; Sept," 17 () The navy announced today, that United States submarines oper ating in the western Pacific had sunk four enemy ships and dam aged four others in recent ac tions. A communique No. 128, said: "Far East: "1. United States submarines have reported the following re sults of operations against the enemy In Far Eastern waters: "(A) Two large freighters sunk. "(B) One medium-sized freighter sunk. "(C) One small patrol boat sunk. - . "(D) One large tanker- dam aged and left afire.- - :'. "(E) One large freighter dam aged. s 1 "(F) 'One large transport dam' aged. ' -i "(G) One .medium-sized cargo ship damaged. "2. These actions have not been announced In any previous navy department communique, and are not related to operations In the islands. , Tits- successful attacks on these eight ships raised to a total of 107 the number of Japanese vessels of all types which the navy here has reported sunk or damaged by American aubmar Ina attack. t NEA FEATURES By ROGER D. GREENS -Associated Press War Editor ' -Russian headquarters ' ac knowledged for the first time to day that the German' siege armies', throwing-"several tens of divisions" into the jusanlt had broken into the -northwest ' out skirts of Stalingrad and reported that bloody house-to-house fight ing was In progress. - The German radio late today asserted that - "Stalingrad has ceased to be a, solid block of re sistance" and. that parts of the city were f! 'under, complete con- frpv- ef nazl shock troops;;.. W Wubstentlated . The-; broadcast I also declared that Germaa fortea-had drivea a wedge through the, city tp.th Volga but acknowledged that the Russians . were, .still "offering fanatical-resistance in small and large groups -which military quarters in Berlin characterized as suicide." .'. -' . ; All these claims were unsub stantiated either by the German high command or the Russians. Reserves Move Up ; 1 (While there was still her, in timation that the .city was fall ing, ' the ' soviet radio conceded that the Germans were .''still pressing forward . sustaining enormous losses. " ' vast, hordes of German re serves were reported moving up to replace the fallen, some ar riving in transport planes land ing immediately outside the city. Greatest Assault - ' Dispatches to Izvestla, the so viet government' newspaper, in dicated that-Nazl-Marshal Fedor . (Continued on Page Two) Australian War . " loss Includes 28,251 Missing CANBERRA,. Australia, Sept. 17- (T-r-Australlan war losses Include 28,251 missing in action or captured by. the .enemy, Army Minister Frances ' Forde announced today. ? . : Of these, 7687 are known .to have been captured in the Mid. die East, mostly, In Greece and Crete, while 16,286 were taken prisoner or lost in. Malaya. Merchants Urged to Scour Stores for Useable Scrap All merchants ' In Klamath Falls are urged by Nick Long, chairman of . the Retail Trade Bureau, ' to . scour their base ments and storerooms for scrap metal and rubber between now and Saturday and have all such scrap piled on the curb In' front of their places of business by 11 o'clock Saturday morning, where -It will be picked 'up by trucks. , . At: 1 o'clock Saturday after noon there will be a parade through ' the . business district participated In by .: the , trucks that will pick up , the scrap. These trucks will be r donated by various .business .establish ments and will be driven by members of the Teamsters union who are contributing their time. The trucks will carry special banners calling attention to the scrap metal and rubber drive. ! Any metal,' other than tin cans, an eighth of an inch or more in thickness will be us able.' Rubber r6t all -kinds, Normal ... I . Stream year to data ....... UEW: YORK, Sept, ,17 W The eastern ' defense command announced' today that a- small rati had been. found along the Atlantic- coast of ' Long Island last night and . that, a shot was fired in an unsuccessful attempt to halt a prowler.. ".. , An army , beach . patrol,' to gether with, police and, coast guard, later searched the vicin ity but "discovered nothing un-1 usual." ... , .7-' The announcement , said the incident ' occurred at about. 10 The. location-Js within .25 (Continued on Page Two) ALLIED BOMBERS ATTACKBEiEASI Eye-Witness - Tel s of - Sunday Raid on j ; ';.Vn-i,v-Ji'i.rt.(.v'.' i lfJ S$...4'; -,'..'! '-J . ':,.: Vi;;!' 'CAIRO,-Sept.- n-OT-Ailled Heavy bombers made -a daylight attack- yesterday" on the. -axis supply port! of Bengasi -more than. 500 miles west of the Egyp tian battlefront, scoring - hits on two-ships and setting one1-afire, a British communique announc ed, today.' - ..; . ' "' At the " same ; .time;' ; the ; bul letin said,-British f ighters were active ;ov.er .. the. '.battle area, shooting - down .. . at- least., two enemy. - aircraft -and -damaging many Others. One British' plane failed' to return to' base."- On the previous night Tolbruk, . (Continued on Page Two) Shipyard Workers Hunted After Swastika-Painting - - SEATTLE,-Sept. IT UP) 'Fed eral authorities today sought two Seattle shipyard - workers, charged by H. B. Fletcher,' feder al bureau of investigation spec-lal-agent-ln-charge, - with paint ing nazl swastikas ph' the" "deck? house of a United 'States destroy er under construction here. The formal charge, filed before U. S. Commissioner Harry M. - West fall, is defacing United States property. . y . , :; .Fletcher said the accused men were not. employed' as painters and' are accused of painting the swastikas when they were sup posed to be at other work in the yard.. - ' . -'--. especially, old. tires, is. sought. All scrap materials donated In this drive 'will be sold by the Klamath County Salvage com mittee and the money, will be turned over to war. activities. It is hoped by the committee that all scrap, .materials in . small quantities, such as are expected on Saturday, will be donated as a patriotic contribution to the war effort. The Retail Trade Bureau urges hotels, rooming houses, etc., to search their premises for such objects as old metal beds and get them- out on the side walk to be collected by the trucks on Saturday, - '. All air raid wardens have been asked to contact' homes In their sectors and remind resi dents to get their scrap ready for the plck-up. All scrap should be piled on the curb,, it was an nounced, where trucks will col lect it on Saturday afternoon. Residents outside of the city should call the chamber of com' merce to make arrangements for collection 61 'scrap. "'. !llll1lll!lll!llll!lilllllllllllllllllllllllUlim!ll!imlllh!IHll!lliuiiuii;u iWSatKeiNlil . t September It High 80. Low 43 precipitation it of Stpttmber 10, 1941 Lut year : 17.59 U fl IMP j Nipponese Score New Advance on Port' ' Moresby . By The Associated Press American warplanes strikina at Japanese forces in the west ern Aleutians and in the South seas were credited today with damaging two enemy cruisers, sinking or damaging at least eight other ships and inflicting 500 troop casualties, while U. S. marines continued to hunt down enemy snipers in the Sol omon islands. - On the New Guinea front, de velopments took an ominous turn ' as j Gen. ' Douglas Mac- ' Arthur's headquarters acknowl edged that Japanese troops had scored a new- eight-mile advance -to: the drive toward Fort Mores-" by,.-;, . ; :. "Serious Fighting'' . . A United Nations communi que said the main bodies of the allied and Japanese forces in New Guinea now were locked in. battle only' 32 airline miles from. Port Moresby, with the Japanese exerting heavy pre sure.'.::: ':.- ; Thie communique reported that "serious fighting" was in progress . in the jungle-choked Owen . Stanley mountains, but gave no indication of the turn . it was taking. -, " Cruisers Hit : .'. Battlefront dispatches said the ' Japanese, strongly rein forced during the past week, were throwing everything into (Continued on Page, Two) British Bombers' Attack Waterfront At Mandalay NEW DELHI, Sept. 17 (IP) Japanese river craft and the waterfront at Mandalay were at tacked by British bombers yes terday for the second time- in three days, an RAF communique announced today. 'Bombs fell in the quay area and a direct hit was scored on a barge," the communique said. : "The results of other at-. tacks on steamers and barges was not observed." . All the raiding planes return ed safely, as they did from an earlier attack on the Irrawaddy river waterfront of Mandalay on Monday. Inhabitants of Four Villages Shot by Nazis LONDON, Sept. 17 m A Reuters dispatch from Istanbul today quoted Belgrade reports that the Germans had shot all male inhabitants of four Yugo slav villages and sent the women and children to concentration camps in reprisal for the blowing up of a German military train. The train, carrying troops and war supplies, was blown up by Serbian irregulars on September 10,.. it was stated, and many young officers on their way to reinforce Marshal Rommel's Africa corps were killed. . News Index City Briefs Page 7 Comics and Story Page 10 Editorial Page 6 Farm News Page 9 Information ...Page 7 Market, Financial Page 13 Midland Empire News.Page 7 Our Men in Service...... Page 7 Pattern ....Page 11 Sports .-..T....Page