fit On t-mlnute bliil on sirens and whiitUi ! li th signal for bliekout In KUmath ; rails. Another Ions blut, during a black out, ii a ilgnal for all-clear. In precau tionary periods, watch your street lights. ; March 4 High 55, Low it Precipitation if of February J8, 194S Stream yea te date , ,,,...,lj,il Last year . .82 format ....,., .8,38 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1943 Number 0737 M if i i ''.1 S'M . ruinnron InJluj - i o)AfW Mi By FRANK JENKINS nrllERE'S a lull again in the news. You can't ran all the time at top speed. You have to atop every now and then to catch your brcnlli, War work the name way, "THERE Isn't really much of a 1 lull in Russia. It merely SEEMS io. There't plenty of liurd fighting there every day, The now rises to fever heat only when STRATEGIC point are taken. It dies down in the intervals. This Is an interval. COMETMNG big Is shaping up. The Russians opneor to be pushing one jaw of a pinccr down from Rihev, which they forced the 'German to abandon a few days auo. They're push ing another plncer Jaw up from the general neighborhood of Kharkov. If these aws should CLOSE somewhere In the vicinity of Smolensk, the Gorman-held wedga whose point Is STILL within 100 miles of Moscow would be bitten off. ' VOU may b quite sure the A Russians want to do Just that, You may be equally sure the Germans will tight like wild. eats to prevent it.- . TN Tunisia, Von Arnlm Is still x hacking at the flanks of Med- Jer el Bab, which lies at the head of the., valley that Is the main eats to B zcrte and Tunis, That's the real meaning of this fighting up around. Sedjenane you'll read of in your newspaper tonight, - THERE'S a flicker of exclte- x ment in the news from South' ern Tunisia today. Free French outfits join Giraud's French at Ncftn, on the WEST side of tho Chott DJerid, the salt marsh that is a part of tho Mareth defenses where Rom' mel has been holding back Montgomery. The French are reported to be pushing northward from Nona to Gafsa. From Gafsa a railroad follows a gap in tho hills down to the Mediterranean coast. THE point Is that Montgomery may bo undertaking to FLANK tho Mareth defenses (through difficult country) and get into Rommel's rear by tho Gafsa route. Increased air and ground patrol activities aro reported in tho - Mareth area. These are ofton tho prelude to hard fight ing. QNE of our large objectives In Tunisia is to smash Rommel in the south and nioko possible a Junction between Montgom ery's and Alexander's armies, thus compressing the Germans Into ft tighter ring around Tunis and BIzorto, TN the Pacific, you may be A quite sure the Japs are STUNNED for the moment. Even terni-savages s u c h as the Jap anese can t help being shocked u., Jtn-,n-a ill, tu.t , n.n r i - marck Sea. VOU must havo noted the rls ' A ing tension in Spain, Keep your eye on that part of the world especially on Gibraltar. Every time Hitler looks at tho man. Gibraltar must Jumn out and hit him In the eye. If ho could close the Gibraltar strait, he could nullify a lot of mir prospective gains In tho Mediterranean. THE British RAF hits Germany for the NINTH consecutive night, They're bringing nearer the time when alllod planes will be over Germany CONSTANT LY. Don't overlook this angle: It will take a lot of planes to SUPPLY such an effort. A rough tabulation of admitted losses in the past week brings the total to around 40. Wo mustn't let ANYTHING (Continued on Page Two) Drastic Food Third Degree Methods Enter Lower U Case ALBANY. Ore., March 8 (IP) Third degree methods of Los An geles polico were precipitated In' to Oregon's "lower 13 murder case" here todny as Robert E Leo Folkes entered a plea of In noccnt beforo Circuit Judgo L, O. Lcwclllng of Linn county. Trial was sot for 10 a. m. April 7. Folkes, 20-year-old Los Ange les negro dining car cook, Is un der Indictment on a charge of knifing to death Mrs. Martha Virginia James aboard a limit ed train as she loy In berth low er 13 tho morning of January 23. Prosecution reverted to Linn county, through which the train was passing at tho time. Leroy Lomax, Portland attorney, asked permission to read a 75-page confession which District Attorney Harlow Wcm rick said the negro hod mode After porusing the document, Lomax asked whether similar confessions hod been made In Los Angeles, where Folkes was arrested when the tram reached that city. Wclnrick said Folkes had made conflicting statements in (Continued on Page Two) REt EII1ZI LIE Scores of Towns Re captured South Of Rzhev By EDDY GILMORE MOSCOW, March 5 (IP) Striking out from Rzhev, the Russians havo recaptured scores of towns southwest of the fort ress city and havo completely cleared tho 270-mllc-long rail way between Moscow and Veli kio Luki with the occupation of Olcnlno, 35 miles duo west of Rzhev, it was announced todny. Coupled with new gains by Marshal Scmcon Tlmoshcnko's forces on tho northwest front and with odvances by red army col umns northwest of Kharkov, the soviet successes Increased the lmmcdlato threat to German po sitions at Orel, Bryansk. Gzhutsk, Vyazmn and Stnroya Russa. Tho potential monaco to German key bases at Smolensk and Konotnp was intensified. Nail Claims At Vcliklo Lukl, the red army was only 80 miles from tho Lat vian border end a short distance from north and south railway lines over which the Germans (Continued on Page Two) 1 ' The r Mayor John Houston, second i - 1nriri i i t nwiTM-M V-1 iilitrntfc'''KJL''''l'itrfcir'tv-wiihMi(iittaM Sisemore, Red Cross war fund drive chairman. The mayor mad signed a proclamation to start' the drive next Monday. Others in Ramsby, at left, In surgical dressing uniform, and Mrs, Gladys secretary, 35-55 PER CENT SLASH IN TAX Conference Committee Eyes Changes in Oregon Set-Up By PAUL W. HARVEY Jr. SALEM, March 5 (IP) A con ference committee, seeking to reach agreement between the senate and house Income tax re duction measures, appeared to day to be favorable to an idea SALEM, March 5 P The houie voted today to end the Oregon legislative session at 1 1:53 p. m. tomorrow. There was some doubt, how ever, that the senate would agree because it still hat con siderable business before it. that taxes should be cut between 35 and 55 per cent on taxes pay- ablo next year. , After tho house had passed a bill for a 10 per cent cut on pay ments made this year and 11.02 per cent beginning next year, the senate voted 24 to 8 yester day for a plan by Sen. Dean H. Walker, Independence, chairman of the senate tax committee, whereby taxes would be reduced at least 35 per cent next year, and possibly 55 per cent, The house then refused to ac cept the senate plan, and a con- continued on Page Two) - Helen Jepson Sings Here At 8 o'Clock Tonight at 8 o'clock lovely Helen Jepson, Metropolitan soprano, will sing for members ! of the Klnmnlh Community Con cert association on the Pelican singe. This completes the season program and the 1943-44 drive gets under way. All visiting service men, sold iers, snllors or marines, are in-1 vitcd to attend the concert as : guests of tho association. No ad-: mitlonccs will bo sold at the door and scats are not reserved. : It Is hoped that memberships j will bo renewed tonight before or after the concert in order that workers will havo their burdens lightened in contacting the list, i Mrs. Martin Swanson is mem bership chairman this year with Mrs. F. Ceclt Adams and Mrs. George Myers as co-captains. Mayor Sets a Good Example from left. Is shown presenting 1 , Director ' r - J -, ft JsM Appointment of Lynn Roy- croft as director of the Civilian Service Corps, branch of the Klamath county defense coun cil, was announced Friday, He replaces Ed Ostendorf, now di rector of the OPA office here. Roycroft, who resigned as cap tain of the police reserves to fake over the new job, has been active in local civilian defense work. The corps covers war sav ings, , salvage drives, victory gardens , and related defense problems. ' s BOOTLEG RfiaT SALE Closer Control Over Slaughter, Sale . ' Ordered ' By KARL R. BAUMAN WASHINGTON,, March 5 ) The government launched a two-front attack today on black market operations in meat. Following closely on OPA an nouncement of uniform retail prices for meat, Agriculture Sec retary Wickard Issued three orders providing closer control over the slaughter of livestock and sale of meat. Black Market Kit OPA . announced uniform re tail ceilings for pork, beginning April 1, and said similar maxi mums would be established about the same time for beef, veal, lamb and mutton. ; Both Wickard and Price Ad ministrator Prentiss M. Brown said their actions were designed to prevent black market opera' Hons. Wickard also asserted his orders would result in adequate supplies of meats for direct war (Continued on Page Two) his personal check to L, Orth out the check at the time he the picture are Mrs. Elisabeth Toycen, right, Red Cross office SDH MOVE TO DEFER HUME M GROUND Food Crop Will Fall Below 1942, Say ; Leaders WASHINGTON, March S CP) The sena military, committee reported today that, the prospect of a 1943 food crop as large as last year is "almost hopeless of realization." It recommended legislation to restrain the movement of labor away from the farms to avoid a result that "may be tragic." The report, to the senate, asked passage of a bill to defer the Induction of farm workers into the army for the remaind er of 1943. MBl-Admhstf tration Administration of existing leg islation providing for the defer ment of essential farm workers, the committee said, has been "so circumscribed by red tape" feat it has not accomplished the de sired result,', it - "The draft boards throughout the-country did net administer It with understanding, sym pathy ana uniformity and many farmer who were entitled to deferment were given little or no - consideration," its' report added. - . .-. ' Minority ' Report The committee's main conclus ion was in line with a statement by Agriculture Secretary Wick ard that Americans must tighten their belts because there is not going to be enough food to sat isfy the demands of the United States and its allies this year. . While recognizing a need for some action, the committee min ority, in a report written by Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.) op posed deferment of farmers as a group and recommended a re vision of existing legislation de fining the agricultural commod ities essential to maintain the war effort as well as "the stand ard of production per person upon which deferment should be based." When Senator Nye (R-N.D.), who has forecast a food short age because of insufficient farm labor, said he was satisfied there (Continued on Page Two) Sneil Gets Bifi Increasing Wages -Of State Police SALEM, March !if The senate passed and sent to the governor a bill Increasing sal aries of state police officers be tween $35 and $50 a month. The bill would increase privates' pay from $160 to $200 a month. The house sent to the senate the state police appropriation bill totaling $1,592,492, includ ing $142,642 to provide the sal ary increases. Two Jap Planes Bomb Guadalcanal WASHINGTON, March 8 W) American planes raiding : through the Pacific have hit again at four Japanese bases in the Solomon island area and at the Japanese . position on Kiska in the Aleutians. The navy reported this today in a communique which told also of two Japanese planes bombing United States positions on Guadalcanal island but with out damage. News Index . V City Briefs "..a......... ..Page - 8 Church News ...... ......Page 9 Comics and Story ....Page 10 Editorials Page 4 Markets ...Page ,8 Midland Empire News ..Page 8 Our Men in Service Page 7 Pattern Page 10 Sports .... Can't Escape Home Duties Even in N. Africa n War er bo war, homely tasks as evidenced by this young American nurse at a V. 8. evacuation hospital behind the North Africa batUefront. Eugenia Alblinder, of San Francisco, is the nurse who laughingly Cleans mud off ber boots as newly-washed clothes hang in the background. Iff Too Bad Nobody Was In Jail Herein December Sheriff Lloyd Low was mighty- proud last December when the local jailhouse was virtually de void of prisoners but .now, . it has2 him worried. " ' , For the sheriff has learned that jail food allotments for the current period are based on the December requirements. Instead of a daily average attendance of two or three, as in December, the jail now has 3? prisoners, In- Net Spread for Youth in Mass Murder Mystery AUBURN, Calif., March' 5 (IP) All California peace officers were asked today by District At torney Lowell Sparks of Piacer county "to arrest and hold" 1S- year-old Raymond L a t s h a w whom ; the prosecutor said he wisnes to "question mmuteiy in connection with the slaying of five members of the youth's family near here. At the same time action was taken which would lead the fed eral bureau of investigation into a nationwide hunt for the youth, -who has not been seen -since February 11, the date establish ed as that when the mass killing took place. - Raymond's draft board, Sparks announced, has declared hira de linquent for failing to report and delinquency cases are re ported to the FBI. The district attorney also asked state authorities to press their search for one of the Lat- shaw family automobiles -which witnesses said disappeared from the murder premises after Feb ruary 11. The death gun, be lieved to be a .380 caliber pis tol, never has been found despite thorough search of the Lat- shaw ranch. Bobbery has been advanced as the motive for the crime, the authorities determining that the Latshaws cashed checks totaling more than $900 shortly before February 11 and this sum-has not been accounted for. Japs Maintain -Silence on Battle NEW YORK, March 6 IP) The Japanese radio maintained silence today over the crushing defeat inflicted by ' American planes on the 22-ship Japanese convoy off New Guinea. V, S. radio monitors said they had heard no Japanese broad cast mention the battle. ft-' 4 must be performed Is Tunisia eluding 11 Japanese .project evacuees. Sheriff Low has on hand- a quantity of dried beans, some rice and several sacks. of., po tatoes, but not much of anything else. . The beans put him behind a couple of thousand points, shutting off his buying power,- "It has to be worked out, .or somebody is going to be hungry for something besides beans," said the sheriff. Lee Jacobs, iood rationing of ficial of the OPA district office, said that it can be worked out He said there are provisions in the regulations that provide for a supplemental .ellotment, If needed, for the jail, -which is known to the OPA . not as a hoosegow or jug, but an "In stitution of involuntary confine ment." " . - Nazis Rushing. ' Construction of French Defense LONDON, March 8 m Fight ing French authorities said to day the Germans were rushing construction of defenses la, a zone between the region of Sois sons and Compiegne, at the con fluence of the Oise and Aisne rivers 80 miles inland from the ; English channel. Five thousand French prison ers of war were reported used on the -work at Margival north east of Soissons and another 2000 west Df Soissons. "It is obvious," a fighting French spokesman said, "that this locality would become a vital key point to any army which envisaged a withdrawal from the northern coast line." Airmen SinkTwo More Jap Destroyers Off New Guinea ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, March 5 IP) Airmen of the southwest Paci fic command, Including Ameri can, British, Dutch and Austral ian fliers, put the . finishing touches to the destruction of a Japanese convoy of 22 ships by sinking two battered destroyers yesterday and raising to 82 the number of enemy planes shot out of action, an allied communique said today. . Thus in three days, 12 trans ports and 10 cruisers or destroy ers were sunk, 15,000 Japanese troops and several thousand sea men were killed, 82 enemy planes -were destroyed or badly damaged and the attempt to strengthen the enemy garrisons on New Guinea was converted, rnrifPH RUPEE m mm m w e w w EASTWARD ON RAF, Carries Mighty Assault Into the Ninth Night By CARL C. CRAMMER -, Associated Press War Editor -Forty-ton Churchill tanks ot the British first army were re ported today to have thrown th Germans out of Sedjenane, about 40 miles west of Bizerte In north era .Tunisia, as the allied al forces mounted a sweeping of fensive la evident- creoaratioa for bigger things to come. : - For the ninth successive night the RAF carried on its mighty aerial- hammering of western Germany. , . . ' i Yanks Consolidate Field reports at allied head. quarters in North Africa said the British tanks threw the Gee mans out of Sedjenane, a little village 12 miles south of the sea on the Mateur-Tabarka road, and, after stiff street fighting held t-oi. uen. Jura-en von Arnim'i forces in check. ' In: central Tunisia American troops, reported yesterday with. in three miles of Faid pass, start ing point of Marshal Erwin Rom mel s recent offensive, were con souoaung meir position, an al uca communique announced. r 1.-.-AaiA..Patrol(iActf $ifa.jr Further south,-French force occupied Nefta. near the north western end of the Chott Djerid, a - salt lake, and pushed on. toward Gafsa, 60 miles to the east, the communique said, Th fighting French said their troops had joined Gen. Henri. Giraud'a Frenchmen in the action threat ening the rear of the Nareth line. Allied patrols -were officially described as "very active" be fore the Mareth line, and dis patches from advanced bases ia Continued on Page Two) . t. Greer Garson, James Cagney Get the Oscars HOLLYWOOD, March m James Cagney and Greer Gar son, established thespians but newcomers to the "Oscar" ros ter, received the Motion Picture! ' Academy's awards early today for the best actor and actress performances of 1942. Fifteen: hundred gueete at the academyi 15th annual dinner waited anxiously until well after midnight for announce ment of the winners of film land's most coveted honors, be stowed by ballots of apprexl mately , 11,000 motion . picture people. , Cagney s award was for hit role in "Yankee Doodle Dandy," Warner Brothers film, and Miss Garson's for her perform ance in M-G-M s "Mrs. Mini ver," the picture -which was ad judged the best production o 1942 and which virtually swept the list of "bests." Other major awards: ; Best supporting performance Continued oa Page Two) -J as an allied communique said, In to a "major disaster." A spokesman said today thai further analysis of battle photo termlne the nature of the war ships in the convoy. Three of the 18 warships were at first be lieved to be cruisers, but later reports . Indicated they might have been large destroyers. Allied planes, after pounding; the convoy all day Wednesday, returned yesterday to Huon gulf, on which the Japanese base of Lae Is located, and found that two Japanese destroyers were, still afloat although damaged. These were sunk. "Intense and widespread searches by our reconnaissance Continued en Page Two)