iMilllllllllfiilllll 'llllHR'lilfflilll Ont 8-mlnute bUit on sirens md whlillti li the algnal for blackout In Klamath rails. Another long blest during black out, It atonal lor all-clear. In precau tions' osflodi. watch vour aires! llnhta. rtbrury 1 High 40, Low 15 Precipitation oi January 87, 1943 Stream year to data .......11.41 Lait yaar .7.68 Normal 1.33 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1943 Number 9711 0 am ISM A V Ihiki "ak'mhih l II; II fan! I I i n u U IMA - ' 1 . lllliiil By FRANK JENKINS TIERE in a tew random 1 thoughts. If Interested, you might try imulllng them over. They sug gest Interesting poasibllltloa si to the new world wo will enter, Ilka going throuiili a door Into a strungo room, when the war corned to an end. TT will bo a new world be V cnuao wo will owe mora thnn everything wo have la worth. Wo will own our tools, with n MORTGAGE aiinlnsl thorn that fc will amount to nioro thun they 1 are worth. That moana we'll have to work hard AND El"- F1C1ENTLY to pay olf the mortgage) pONSIDEK aynthetle rubber. If It weren't for synthetic rubber, the Jiipi would have TREMENDOUS advantage over u, because they now possess nearly 00 per cent of all tho na tural rubber there la, Thla ad vantage might bo ao great (but for synthotle rubber) aa to en able them to win tha war, t tHE have aynthetle rubber be oauae wo have men with BRAINS. Our chemlala know how to break up the atoma In the mole cule of petroleum, alcohol, otc, and RECOMBINE them Into rub ber mbleculea, That la tho atartlng point. 1 - After that, we hava men with tha MANAGERIAL bralna to or- sanire the chemlats discoveries Into Industrial proceaaea, whlch are cornea out in great lactones, and out of these proceaaea will ultimately coma aynthetle rub ber In quantltlet largo enough to meet our vaat needs for war and peace. Thua checkmating the Jap. fN tha part of many theorists In recent yeara, there haa been tendency to minimize management and glorify labor. No peraon with oven rcaaon ablo Intelligence will quoatlon tha Importance of labor In our economy. Labor la fundamental. The economists dcflno wealth aa labor applied to raw materials. But every Intelligent observer knows that without management labor la Incomplete. If you doubt that, lmoglne a crow of men building a home without a fore man to organize and direct their efforts. No matter how good the men aro, it will take mora time to get the house built If there Is no boss on tho Job. CUPPOSE you are lost In tho 13 woods and night la coming on and you are getting cold, Thcro will bo fuel all around you, In vast quantities, but without a 'ipnrk to lgnlto tho kindling you gather you will bo unoblo to start a fire, no matter how abundant tho fuel. "' Brains (including managerial brains) arc tho spark thut Ignites our Industrial fuel. Without them, there will bo l!ltlo fire. TN this time of national emer x gency, It Is worth while to give a thought even to the lowly capitalist. Wo have great mines, great smelters, great steel mills. Be nin so of thoso enterprises, wo are nbln to oroduco motals In vast quantities. Wo Imvo great fac tories with which to mfcnu (Continued on Pago Four) Yank Fighters Escort RAF on Bombing Foray LONDON, Fob. 3 IP) With an American fighter plane es cort, RAF Ventura medium bombers attacked railway tar gets at Abbeville and tho Ger man airfield at St, Omcr today, It was announced officially to night.. i Two bombers and eight fight ers wero reported missing In tho daylight operations but one tighter pilot Is known to be safe. The Spitfires Including those of tho American escort destroyed three enemy fighters, ,. U.5.F drces L Yanks Hold Sened, Dig in to East of Rail Point By Tha AaaoclaUd Praaa LONDON, Feb. 3 Fruitful American combat team and aer ial thrusts wero announced to day from the central Tunisian theatre, but a spokesman said that United States armored forces were repulsed In a fierce drive against Fold pass und had temporarily broken off tho en gagement. "Tho German artillery prob ably outranged our own," the spokesman aold. Yanka Dig In Blasting Its way Into Sened In a push upon Maknassy, rood and rail Junction 33 miles from the Gulf of Gabes, an American combat force operating south of the Fold pass sector captured a number of prisoners and tanks, It was announced. The Americana not only held Sened, reversing an original plan to withdraw, but have dug in a mile east of that railway point, the spokesman said, Flros Stt United States fliers smashed at the supply port of Sfax, athwart Marshal Rommel's es cape corridor along the Gulf of Gabes; destroyed seven German planes- In a sweep across the Mediterranean between Tunisia and Sicily and attacked alr flelds and munitions dumps. Fires visible for 30 miles were set at Sfax, the flames leaping up from burning buildings and planes. "Our attacks on Fald February 1 and 3 were unsuccessful," an allied headquarters communique said. Guard Contacted Accompanying the Tunisian engagements for control of the corridor along the Gulf of Gabes was tho announcement In Cairo that the British eighth army proper was within heavy artil lery rango of the Tunisian fron tier, 'long ago crossed by Its armored patrols, A Cairo communique said Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery's men (Continued on Pago Two) No Announcement Made Yet on OPA Manager Here No announcement has come through yet as to tho appoint ment of a district manager for the OPA offices soon to bo opened here. Civil service and OPA personnel officials are In Klamath Falls, but there have been no announced develop ments with regard to personnel. Remodeling of tlio salesroom IA tho Balsigcr Motor company building is underway toprovldo quarters for the district office. A low partition has been con structed across the building, separating the OPA quartors from tho Balslger offices. REPU i ASSAULT Hitler's High Command Admits Loss of 6th Army By The Associated Press The destruction of the German sixth army In the epic battle, for Stalingrad was admitted defin itely today by Hitler's high com mand In a special communique which said tho fight was over and the sixth army "has suc cumbed." . Even whllo Berlin acknowl edged this blow, howover, a broadcast from Ankara quoted well-informed sources as saying that nnzl troops wore moving eastward for tho now spring of fensive pledged SAturday by Air Marshal Hermann Gocrlng, "It Is even asserted that a great part of the transfer has already been carried out," said the broadcast from the Turkish capital as recorded In Now York by CBS. ''It Is presumed that tho Germans will go over to tha offensive either at the end of 1 1 L4jCu n - - I -,-, ; . , ..' t ..,.'. j Charging down a sand duns, two "cavalryman" of the US coast guard's new mounted baacn patrol taka spills as they practice on an Atlantic coast baach. Idea of mounted guardsmen, latest wartime wrinkle In thwarting aabotaur landings, is that it lessens the number of man required to patrol a given stretch of beach. Loudspeaker Announcement Brings in Japanese Prisoners By WILLIAM HIPPLE GUADALCANAL, Jan. (De layed) (P) An encouraging sign was seen here today when a number of Japanese soldiers surrendered voluntarily in re sponse to a broadcast over a loudspeaker from the American lines. : ,' , v. They were the first Japanese on Guadalcanal to. give, them selves up without ' compulsion and discredit the legend that all Japanese are ready to fight un- Black Market In Nylon Hose Found In East DETROIT, Feb. 3 () A black market In nylon hose from which a Detroit couple grossed nearly $30,000 within a month was uncovered today by federal agents and office of price ad ministration men. .. William G. Fltzpatrlck, OPA enforcement attorney here, an nounced that Arthur Katz, 38, former Jewelry salesman, and his wife Dena, 33, admitted sell ing the hose at $4 pair from their hotel room. Women buyers, accepted on a "reference system" through which previous buyers vouched for them, purchased, an average of 1800 pair a week for the last four weeks, Fltzpatrlck said the Kotzcs admitted. Katz and his wife were charged with violating OPA reg ulations in selling above the ceiling price of $1.83 a pair., The maximum penalty is a year in prison and $5000 fine on each sale, the U, S. district attorney's offico said. Tho couple obtained the hoso from black markets In New York and Chicago which aro now under Investigation, said Joseph C. Murphy, assistant U, S. attorney. ' March' or at the beginning of April." . Tha communique, broadcast from Berlin and recorded by tho Associated Press, declared that "tho sncrlflcc of the army was not In vain." After reading , of the special communique all German radio stations went off tho air lor thrco minutes. The usual mar tial fanfares preceded the an nouncement but afterward the song "Ich Hatt' Elnon Kamara den" (I had a comrade), custom arily played at military funerals, was heard three times, followed by "Doulschland, Ueber Alles" and the Horst Wessel song. Propaganda Mlntstor Goeb bels ordered all places of enter tainment closed for four, days beginning tomorrow In memory of tho sixth army, which found retribution in' Stalingrad for its subjugation of the ; low coun tries In 1040. Charge of the Beach Brigade .t a. , . : 7. fcL,' & W M k ...'- o, t . 1 ttrSE . . . .-'.- 1 til death for emperor and coun try. These hungry, sick soldiers were definitely discouraged and tired of fighting. They gladly accepted American offers to give them hot cooked rice, cig arettes and good treatment and came in with their hands in the '? ;wu'- "I was sure I' Wouldlvdie," one of the' prisoners said through an Interpreter. "There was no hope. . They have promised us reinforcements and airplanes day after day, but these prom ises were never kept. My feel ings as a true Japanese soldier were gone. "I didn't want to be a Japa nese any more I wanted to be an American. When I heard the voice from the Americans prom ising good food and good treat ment, I came in." This prisoner was Private Aklyoshi Hasamoto, 23, of Fu kuoka in southern Japan. He said many other Japanese sol diers felt as he did about the war and expressed the belief that many others would surren der In response to broadcasts in (Continued on Page Two) Fifteen Saved After 4 Days Adrift In South Pacific ADVANCE SOUTH SEA BASE, Feb. 3 (P) The rescue of Brig, Gen. N. F. Twining, Col. Glen C. Jamison and 13 others after six nights and five days adrift on two small life rafts in the Coral sea was disclosed to day by the 13th air force. All were taken to a hospital for treatment for exposure and severe sunburned faces, hands and ankles. ' Gen. Twining and the party were on a combat mission when forced down at 10:29 p, in., January 26.' They were unable to land because of severe weath er and flew four and a half hours until they were out of gasoline. The plane tank In 32 seconds. All 15 crowded Into two six man rubber life rafts, which were lashed together. They were able to take from the plane only one and a half canteens of water, one chocolate bar and a small can of sardines. They caught a little rain water and shot two albatross, which helped their water and food situation some. ' s Weir Bulletin ; LONDON. Feb. 3 (P) The red army haa driven to a point only 22 miles north of Kursk, German bastion : in southern Russia1, has cut off another nasi eacape corridor , In tha Caucasua below Roitor, and haa captured the Impor tant railway Junction of Kup kanak, only 63 miles south east of Kharkov, Ukraine cap ital, a special Ruaaian com munique recorded by the aovlot radio monitor said to- 'Bight. !; " Speedy Action Seen to Prevent Induction Of Fathers' By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST " WASHINGTON, Feb, 3 m A war manpower commission an nouncement that family heads employed in non-essential Jobs will be drafted into the armed forces unless they shift to essen tial work gave impetus today, to a congressional move to enact new safeguards for men with children. - The WMC Issued lists yester day of what rc called ''non-essen tial occupations" and served no tice on, men working in them that they would face immediate induction shortly after April 1 unless they had shifted to essen tial work, regardless of how many dependents they have. The "non-deferable" occupations ap ply to owners, employers and employes in the jobs and lines of work listed. Extend System Members of the house military committee predicted speedy ac tion on legislation introduced by Representative Kilday (D-Tex.) to prevent the induction of mar ried men with children so long as there are physically fit single men or childless married men in the same state. ,. Briefly, It would extend the system of filling draft quotas from . a local board basis to a statewide basis. It would also set up deferment priority based on a man s family status, the effect being that all single men in a state would be drafted first, followed by mar ried men without children, mar ried men with one child, and so on. "This would prevent such in equities as the drafting of a fath er by one local board while -an adjoining board has more than enough eligible single men or married men without children," Kilday said. Retailers Here Plan for Equable Butter Distribution Following announcement that butter deliveries to retailers are to be cut 80 per cent immedi ately, retailers were making plans Wednesday to distribute the available butter as equitably as possible among consumers here. Some stores, It was learned, planned to limit purchases to one-half pound. Already, -one-pound limits are widely in ef fect, in an effort to discourage purchasing for shipment out of this area to the. butter-hungry big cities. The rationing to retailers, and the limit on purchases, are not government regulations, but are steps being taken here to meet an increasingly serious situation, it was emphasized. nKHor M mis SEA-AIR FIGHT S Battle Continues as Foes Spar for " Position 7 WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 Pi Air and naval battling is. under way throughout most of the Guadalcanal area of the Solomon islands, the navy reported .today, A spokesman said that the ac tions, scattered throughout the area, could not be called a pitch- ed battle but could be described as sparring for positions. ' ' .- The actions were reported in navy, department communique number 270: BattI Continues - "South Pacific: (All dates are East Longitude): "1. On February 1 U.-S. ground forces on Guadalcanal continued their advance to the west tod crossed the Bonegi river,; one-half mile east of Tas- samaronga. Stiff enemy, resist ance was encountered and 60 Japanese were killed. . '2. 'Air' and surface engage ments between XJ. S.- and enemy forces in the Guadalcanal area of the Solomon islands are con- -(Continued on Page Two), , Coffee Ration Cut to 7 Pound Every 6 Weeks WASHINGTON, Feb.- 3 (IP) The office of price administra tion today reduced the next cof fee ration from one pound every five weeks to one pound every six weeks. - --Stamp No. 23, the next" cof fee . stamp ' in - war ration ' book No. 1, becomes valid on ' Feb ruary 8, and will be good for the purchase of. one pound of coffee through midnight, March 21. Stamp 28, valid since January 4, expires at midnight February 7. v OPA said reduced coffee in ventories in the hands of whole salers and retailers made neces sary the: reduction in the . next ration. . ... The agency said an Increase in military requirements for shipping, and the need for main taining imports in strategic war materials were in part responsi ble for the reduced -inventories for the next ration period. "However," OPA said, ."steps are now being taken to over come a maldistribution on do mestic stocks due to a cut in im ports, with view of relieving shortages in certain areas." SCATTERS I AREA Sharp Increase in Prices Contributes to $10,917,104 Revenue on Reclamation Land ' A sharp Increase in prices for 1942 crops contributed much to the $10,017,104 revenue reaped by Klamath basin farmers On the bureau of reclamation lands, ac cording to officials of the USRS Wednesday when they released last year's figures. The 1942 fig ure shows an increase of 32, 043,560 over the 1941 total of $8,873,544. Total for the last three year's crop production reached $25,333,628, reclamation heads said. : Total Acreage was virtually the same and harvest figures did not vary much over 1941. There was a slight decrease in produc tion, if anything, it was said. Average crop - and livestock returns per acre in the main and Tulelake divisions of the project Was $108.48, as compared to the 1942 record breaking figure, $94.20, or an increase of $14.20 this past season. These figures are obtained from the approxi 2-Motored Army Bomber Lost in Northwest Area ' BOISE, Idaho, Feb. 3 . (JP) Capt. P. H. Farley, Gowen field public relations officer, said to day a two-motored army bomber had been the object of a search in Idaho, Nevada and Oregon since-Friday, " Farley said he understood the plane was based at Tonopah, Nev., but the public relations of ficer there said - it had merely stopped there for supplies before continuing its flight.. He did not disclose- its base. , ' - The officer said a radio mes sage had beep received from the crew. Monday night, in which the airmen- reported . they had (Continued pn Page Two) IT ; OUMTUH Newsman Describes Sened Battle as He Saw It ': By JAMES A. BURCHARD " SOMEWHERE" ON "THE TU NISIAN FRONT, Feb. 3 (De layed) ()-At 5:30 a. m., today a tremendous column of medium and light tanks, heavily armored half tracks, motorized infantry and. all the rest that goes with an. armored -outfit roared east ward. At 4:30 p. m., this formidable force had advanced 20 miles and captured - Sened, its . first objec tive. In plain language, all hell had broken loose with the' Ameri cans dishing out the fire and brimstone. I saw the opening of the battle for the Sened sector from a ring side seat in the first reconnais sance car- of the column- with Sergt. William Wilbur of Man ning, S. C, and five men of his command. We really got where the shell and shot were thickest. ' Nine Stukas plastered us. Six Messerschmitt 109's strafed everything in 'sight. . Artillery, mortars and machine-guns of sur prising strength were opened up in an effort to halt the American sledgehammer. They delayed tt admittedly, but before the day's fun in this mountain-rimmed valley was over, the Germans and' Italians had lost their town, five tanks and plenty of men and supplies. SURVIVORS LAND WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (JP) The. navy announced today that survivors had landed in Miami, Fla., from a medium-sized Brit ish merchant vessel, which was torpedoed and sunk by an enemy submarine in mid-November in the Atlantic off the northern coast of South America. mately 66,000 acres now being cropped. - -.; . ' ' Biggest revenue came - from Langell valley and all other areas: lumped - as "miscellan eous," with a reported figure of $3,287,955.- The main division of the bureau brought in $3,011, 489, with the Tulelake section reporting $3,007,548, when all crops were in.- Tulelake lease lands crop brought $1,431,050. , Last ' year's harvest picture varied' slightly over other yeara with 1451 acres in the Tulelake lease land area turned over to WRA for the production of veg etables including onions; pota toes, rutabagas, turnips, lettuce, table beets and miscellaneous vegetables. i This area was farmed; by Jap anese at the relocation center and according to bureau reports, total yield in dollars and cents reached $190,612, Figured down to - the - acres, onions brought LASTDFNAZIS SURRENDER AT. STALINGRAD - Axis Collapse May Signal Turning Point - In War. By JAMES M. LONO . Asaociated Preaa War Editor The battle of Stalingrad took its place today as a possible turning point in the war as the Russians announced the collapse) of the last resistance there, with 503,650 killed and captured in the greatest single military dis aster in the history of German, arms. . ' That toll since the start ol the red army's counter offensive in mid-November heavily oufc weighed the 330,000 total Get man casualties of Verdun, blood pool of the first World war. Ruinous Raid : t- Added to .the uncounted, thousands of dead who paved the way for the German thrust; to the Volga late last fall, the price the Germans paid in vain' I probably jmrmounted the' lose1 of both sides fit VerrinnARn 000 casualties. .:'- .:;.- j As the shock of the loss came) home, to Germany, the Rhine land thundered with a ruinoua1 20-minute night attack in which -the RAF loosed 100 two-ton "block busters" and incendiaries', by the thousands on Cologne, laid waste last May In one of -the British 1000-plane attacks. 100-Plane Raid Huge fires were left blazing; in the heart of Cologne, where, the - British said the Germans i had worked feverishly to re- f store war production, particular-1 ly for U-boat parts and equip-a ment. . An authoritative statement said "last night's attack should have valuable results" in inter- .' ruption of the repairs. Probably 100 of the RAF!s heaviest bombers made the con-. centrated raid, - and five were ' listed as lost. ; 1 ' a . Scattered German planes struct back by daylight, racing ' in over southeast England at rooftop level and causing num-: erous casualties. One shopping center was hit ; and many persons were trapped V in the ruins. . ' 'I The Russian high command -announced the end of the 162- (Continued on Page Two a- News Index City Briefs .......Page . 5 Comics and Story ...... Page 10 , Courthouse Records ......Page S Editorial ........Page 4 Markets, Financial Page 11 Our Men in Service ...:..Page 4 ? Pattern ..Page, 7 Sports ...... Page 8 $34.36; potatoes,' $148.26; ruta. bagas, $192.80; turnips, $232.78; lettuce, $369.19; table beets, $195.46; miscellaneous vegot- i ables, $98.73; average, $131.37 per acre. - i Forty acres of sugar beets ' cropped this year near Newell, brought an average of $100 per acre, or a total of $4000 to the 1 growers. . , Carload shipments Involving crops from tho project, and not including other , points in the basin, totaled 10,866 cars. This' includes grain, livestock, pots toes, small seeds, wool and sug ar beets. ; On the main division, 30,144 acres were cultivated with a to , tal return of $566,320, or an average of $18.79 per acre. Big gest dollar yield was from 22 acres of radish seed, averaging $130.18 per acre. Smell seeds also played an important part (Continued on Page Two) :-.'..'" ' ' ' f" '-.',' v.