A Contribution To On S-mlnut blast on ilrtm and whlstUs li th signal for a blackout In Klamath rails. Anothar long blast, during a black out, la a signal ior all-clear. In preciu tlonary periods, watch your atraai lights. mm mm By FRANK JENKINS JMMK. CHIANG KAI S1IKK, In ono of her recent speeches In this country, calls for a post-war world resting on "pillars of Jus tice, co-cxlstonce, cooperation and mutual respect." T ET us add, respectfully and sincerely: "And buttressed by the GUNS of an enlightened United States, " Brltuln. Itusslu nnd China," Pence, after all. If It is to bo permanent, must rest on a foundation of cnllghloncd and Intelligent FORCE. t T-HIS question la being widely asked: "After we ve won the war, what will wa do with the Ger mans and tho Japs?" TVHAT to do with beaten en- " emles Is one of tho world's big problems. History offers us two solu lions: 1. Kill them off. 2. Treat them fairly decent 'and get along with thorn, Both seem to work. riENQHIS KHAN and' a fulrly long line of huv.aucepssors almply killed oil tiieir van O aulshed enemies. It was simple, elemental and EFFECTIVE. But that was long ccnturlei aso. and populations were rein tively small. Fancy killing oft 70 million Japs and 80 million Germans. The mere physical task would be appallingly fatiguing. XTAPOLEON, In his early cam- naltfna.thftt Jl(tlhlllhl(l hlfl famo. tried the other solution. Ho first trounced tho decadent kingdoms of Northern Italy soundly, and thon mudo pcaco with them on torms so fair and so broad-minded that In tho end they found themselves much better off than they hod boon bo fore. What was the result? - Well, for generations slnco Napoleon the war-making poli ticians and the saber-rattling dic tators hnvo been trying to make tho Italians and the Fronch hato each other, but they've never had much luck at it. PRIVATE business operates on the rule of "live and let live." Business men (who are, of course, sneered at nnd spit upon by tho politicians) possess tho simple common sense to realize that a customer who Is broke and hungry and filled with pois onous hntrod Is no good what- ever to any business establish ment, whereas a customer who is making money and getting ahead In tho world Is one to bo VALUED. It is unfortunate that nations have never been able to master Othls slmplo and reasonable phil osophy. ' AYBE peace based on tho business rule of live and lot live wouldn't work. Still, the kind of peace we'vo been getting at the hands of the politicians and 'the demagogues hasn't worked well enough to arouse any great enthusiasm. The Germans whipped the Fronch at Sedan and rubbed their noses In tho dirt and load ed them down with debt, in tho ensuing pcaco. The French whetted their knives until 1014 and then turned tho tables on tho Germans. . Tho Gormans thon turned around and boat tho French in 1940. Where will It end? At any rate, we can't call tho method a good ono on tho basis of results. TT Is much too early to bo tnlk Q 1 Ing about tho kind of peace we're going to mako (though not, perhaps, too early to bo THINK ING about It.) Bofore ve can mako ANY (Continued on pago two) NEW CONFEREE GROUP SIFTS TUMBLE! Unanimous Agree ment Demanded by McAllister SALEM. March 8 (VP) The Oregon legislature's Income tax reduction question became in creasingly muddled today when Speaker of the House Wllllom M. McAllister appointed a new committee- to work out a com promise. Tile speaker refused to accept tho majority and minority re port of tho conference commit tee, holding that such a commit teo either has to make a unani mous report or be'dlscharged. Two Schema The committee's mojorlty re port, signed by Sens. Dean H. Walker, Independence, and Coe A. McKcnna, Portland; and Rep. Burt K. Snyder, Lakevlew, called for tho use of $2,000,000 In sur plus income tax revenues to re dtice county property taxes this year, nnd for a 30 per cent In come tax cut effective with pay ments mode next year. Rep. John Hall, Portland, sub mitted tho minority report pro viding 30 per cent Income tax (Continued on Page Two) Aircraiters Consider W LB Ruling LOS ANGELES, March 8 (VP) Pacific coast aircraft workers don't llko the war labor board's recent wage ruling, but they al so don't like strike talk in the face of the nation's war needs. This was the tenor of union mass meetings from Seattle to San Diego yesterday, called to protest as Insufficient the WLB's starting pay boosts of 4i cents an hour in Seattle and 71 cents an hour in southern California. San Diego's meeting produced by volo the proposal that Presi dent Roosevelt order tho army and navy to take over tho Con solidated Aircraft corporation's plant there. President Harvey C. Brown of tho AFL Aeronaut ical Mechanic's lodge 1125, which claims 38,000 members there, charged "collusion exists in tho aircraft Industry, not for prosecution of the war but for selfish intorests." Ho charges tho Consolidated management Is Inefficient, and avers that only a federal Inquiry will "lot the people know why wo aren't turning out more planes." At the Los Angeles meeting, Presldont Dale Reed of tho AFL International Association of Ma chinists, lodge 727, advocated in vestigation of the Wage dispute by a presidential committee and announced a meeting of tho machinists' national representa tives at Kansas City, to be held not later than March 12. Ignorance No Excuse Says CPA About Price Violations SAN FRANCISCO. March 8 (VP) -Sovoral hundred wholesnlo vegetable dealers from western states were warned by an official of tho office of price administra tion today that prlco ceilings would bo enforced and that "ignorance Is no excuse." "Local enforcement frcnuont- ly is behind but I can toll you they catch up," said Geoffroy Baker of tho OPA food prlco di vision In Washington. Ho told of a Kansas City. Mo.. Jobber who ho quoted as saying mat no wouldn't be "bothered" by regulation, and added that "he's shown an intent to violate tho law and ho will' be prose cuted accordingly." Baker said enforcement would bo rigid "no matter how inequit The Red ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE FIVE CENTS MHO "ilKMiJilK ' I'no.j A II V HUH Japanese Liner Wrecked on Beach I ' ' , , ' ' - , , , ' - . 1 ,t i fML - - f '. - - v. --" -. ,0Mimfi L " ,. . Jr , ...... ... .:-r;';5 " :xj- . s Part of th Jap Invasion fUt which was zoutad by American warships In the aple NoTm br 13-18, last, battle, tha one proud liner Kinugawa Maru lies with Its bow in th air and stern dp in th water between Kokubona and Tassafaronga on Guadalcanal. American troops wr attacking Jap iorcas near th ship when this pictur was made. TAX PLAN OKAYED House Ways, Means Gives Nod to income Tax Plan By FRANCIS M. LE MAY WASHINGTON, March 8 OF) Tho house ways and means com mittee approved tentatively to day the source collection feature of a pay-as-you-go Income tax system, including a 20 per cent withholding levy agnlnst the taxablo portion of pay envelopes and salary checks. Chairman Doughton (D-N.C.) said tho committee probably would vole later In tho day on the Ruml plan which proposes to skip a tax year as a means of tronsltlon to a, current collection system. Tho approval of source collec tion endorsed tho action of a sub-committco which , worked out a method for pay-as-you-go collections against America's 44,000,000 individual income taxes. Tho sub-committee by-passed tho issue, raised by Ruml, and (Continued on Page Two) Housing Authority Approves Building At Tongue Point WASHINGTON, Mnrch 8 ffl Tho public housing authority has advised Senator McNary (R- Ore.) that It has approved the construction of 20 accommoda tions for couples and 40 family dwellings at the Tonguo Point naval base near Astoria, Ore., and 40 accommodations for couples and 200 family dwelling units for the Clatsop airbase and other war industries of that vici nity. able tho law may"seo'm'," but added that regional OPA offices had authority to adjust prlco ceilings on proper showing of need. Ho estimated permanent ceil ings, to replace those now In effect, would bo placed by April 23 or 24, nftor hearings have boon completed here and In Texas and Florida. Hearings already have been held, to ob tain data, In New York and Kansas City. The first permanent ceilings In regard to vegetables will bo placed on lettuce and carrots, ho said. More will follow for greon peas, snap beans, spinach, cabbage and others. William Hadclor, executive (Continued on Page Two) Cross Is A Contribution To Your Man IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND KLAMATJI FALLS, OREGON, XSMU'JMHn Fortresses Bomb Rennes Rail Yards AT A U. S. BOMBER. STA TION 'm ENGLAND, "March 8 (P) U. S. Flying Fortresses es corted by RAF Spitfires plowed a path through Relchmarshal Goering's best fighters today and bombed a freight train In the railroad yards at Rennes, France. (It was announced In London that the French city of Rouen, ISO miles northeast of Rennes, also was attacked by heavy American bombers). , "We sura plastered that tar get," said the Tail-Gunner Stir ling May of Sisters, Ore., a mem ber of the crew of a Fortress piloted by Lieut. Lynn Moklcr of Clearwater, Calif, "You could see it miles away. Right after our bombs hit I could see a big billow of b.lue smoke go up." The RAF Spitfire escort' ap parently took the Germans by surpricc. "One Focke-Wulf pulled up right alongside some of those Spits," said Co-Pllot Harry Holt of Tallulah, La. "Ho apparently thought they were Focke-Wulfs The Spits blew him right out of the sky. . "The Fortresses battled Goer ing's yellow noses for a full 45 minutes from about three min utes before they reached the target to halfway back across the channel." Too Early to Think About Fourth : Term, Says Mrs. F. D. R. WASHINGTON, March 8 P) Mrs. Roosevelt, asserting "it's too soon to begin to think about a fourth term," said today: "We may all be dead two years from' now. "Nobody knows what will hap pen in the next few years," she told her press conference. "I think it is foolish (to hurt tho general effort by bringing In a question nobody knows about now. "It stirs political feeling which niBy hurt the war effort. I don't bellcvo In thinking ahead about things - which will hold back one's efforts." Gilman Elected Oregon Secretary Of CIO Woodworkers PORTLAND, Ore., March 8 (VP) The CIO International Wood workers announced today the election of Richard Gilman as secretary of the Cqlumbla Dis trict council by referendum vote. Gilman, former hiring hall mannger here, succeeds Frank Gordon, who resigned to go with the war production board at Seattle. MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1943 at Guadalcanal STRIKE AT DELAY Protest 'Unreasonable Delay" of WLB in -Wage Appeal MISHAWAKA, Ind., March 8 (VP) Employes of the. United States Rubber company's ball band plant here went on strike today in protest against' "un reasonable delay" by the War Labor board in Acting on an ap peal for higher wages.. -. In Washington the War Labor board called upon them to re turn to work immediately and told them the board would not act on the issues in controversy while the strike continues, " WLB spokesmen also explain ed informally that a decision in the case has been delayed be cause it has been grouped with about nine other rubber com panies. A panel is making a gen eral survey for the purpose of wage stabilization within the in dustry. Called yesterday at a series of meetings held by members of Local No. 65, United Rubber Workers of America (CIO), the strike started as the midnight shift was scheduled to go on duty. Only a few workers showed up and they were in formed of the strike by union representatives stationed at each plant gate. There was no dis order and no picket lines were established. Charles Glaes, manager of the plant,-said there was nothing the company could do about the demand for higher wages with out an order from the WLB. Ap proximately three-fourths of the plant's output is used , in war work. George S. Cummins, president of the upion, said the strike was called as a protest against "un reasonable delay" by -the WLB in acting on the union's appeal for increased wages. The union, he said, had asked for an in crease of 12 hi cents an ''hour. (Continued on Page Two) Oregon Manganese Ore Okayed for Steel Making PORTLAND, March 8 (VP) Manganese ore of the Tyrrell de posit in the Lake Creek district of Southern Oregon is very low In silica, making it one of the few Oregon manganese deposits that can be used in steel making, the state department of geology and mineral industries reported today. . High grade manganese oxide concentrates were produced by the Tyrrell manganese mine dur ing the first World war, Wallace D. Lowry, department geologist, said in a nowly published survey of the Tyrrell district. NEA FEATURES Number 9739 KIT IS GET ET E Each Case Must Show Inability To Meet Deadline WASHINGTON, March 8 (VP) Guy T. Helvering, commissioner of internal revenue, said today taxpayers may be granted ad ditional time to file income tax returns due March 15 "if they can make a showing that they are unable to meet the deadline." Instructions have gone out to internal revenue collectors throughout the country, Helver ing said, but he emphasized that every case would be handled on its individual merits. Senator Gillette (D-Iowa) earl ier had' told reporters of advices from Helvering that district col lectors had been instructed to grant extensions up to 60. days in justifiable, cases because of the confusion existing over tax leg islation and war conditions. Helvering said, however, that he. gave Gillette an opinion merely on an individual case' which Gillette called to bis at tention and that , the internal revenue bureau had no intention of - granting blanket extensions to taxpayers in filing their in come tax returns. District collectors, the commis sion said, have authority to grant extensions up to 60 days, but must obtain the approval of the internal revenue commissioner at Washington to grant an ex tension beyond that time. The (Continued on Page Two) U. S. Withholds Shipping From Martinque WASHINGTON, March. 8 (VP) A showdown over the status of Martinique and some 170,000 ton of merchant shipping in 4he Carribbean apparently is being forced by the United States through the powerful lever of withholding food supplies from the French colony. . Undersecretary of State Sum ner Welles told a press confer ence today that food shipments to Martinique were suspended in November month, of . the North African invasion and added they have not been resumed. What was the meaning of cut ting off American, supplies from the island ruled by Admiral Georges Robert? In reply to that, Welles told his hearers to draw their own conclusions. That the French . merchant tonnage in the Caribbean was an important factor appeared one Inescapable conclusion. Shortly before the African landings, an agreement . in principle was reached on all military questions raised by nearness to the United States of French possessions and warships under at least nominal Vichy rule. 1 Administration Eyes Army, Farm Manpower Needs WASHINGTON, March 8 (VP) The critical manpower problem was attacked on a broad front today as reliable reports made clear that administration leaders still hope to meet farm labor needs without cutting down on the armed forces. Over the weekend: 1. Selective service announced a four-point program for draft deferment of essential 'farm workers and men over 38 were ordered reclassified in a move to get them into farm work or pos sibly into trre armed services. 2. A special committee headed by Economic Stabilization Direc tor' James F. Byrnes was dis closed to be preparing for Presi dent Roosevelt recommendations covering program alined at mm His Sub Got 13 Ships Lieut. Comdr. Lucius H. Chappell (abova). of Columbus, Ga was th commanding of ficer of a submarine that th U. S. navy' said sent ton Jap merchant ships and thre of Nippon's, warships to Pacific ocean grave. (U. S. navy pho to). Fresh . Soviet Troops Pour Into Gaps in' German Lines LONDON, March 8 (VP) . Th Russians announced in a special communiqu tonight, th capture of Syehsvka, mid way of the 70-mil re!l lin between Rihev and Vyaima. The Germans had - an nounced th evacuation of th town on th bulge opposite Moscow earlier, saying they left without opposition to shorten-their line. By EDDY GILMORE MOSCOW, March 8 (VP) The red army rolled on westward to day with fresh soviet troops pouring into gaps in the German lines' far west of Gzhatsk and south of Olenino where two Rus sian - columns apparently are planning the doom of the import ant German base at Vyazma, 35 miles west of Gzhatsk. ' The capture of more than a hundred more settlements was reported in the last 24 hours, while numerous others are fall ing continuously and still 6thers are blockaded by the red army and on the verge of falling. Winter weather is still hold ing its strong grip on central and northern Russia, but during the day the fast climbing sun melts the top layers of snow and ice. They freeze again quickly when the shadows hit them. Two large red army forces are slicing large chunks- out of the German lines and converging in the area northwest of Gzhatsk. One of these forces, driving west and northwest from (Continued on Page Two) meeting manpower problems generally. It was stated on high authori ty that the White House commit tee vhlch includes Bernard M, Baruch, Harry Hopkins, Admiral William D, Leahy and Justice Samuel I. Rosenman of New York has reached agreement on the principle that whatever is done, there should be no re duction in 1943 military goals calling for a total of 10,800,000 men. Meanwhile, a congressional group led by Senator Bankhead (D-Ala) has demanded that this figure be reduced to leave more men on the. farms to cops with a threatened food shortage. Bankhead will attempt to , - J I (Continued on Page Two) - In Service IMMJinrr :rJfMMinrM( LI i-l-IM, Ih'i; iri; ! Wrif hJ:. -ft i,J; UMP! :NI, March 7 High 10. Low 87 PraclplUtlon as ol March I. 1943 - Btraam year to data ....1J.JI Last year 9,92 Normal 8.20 Ml RETREAT TO E Rommel Flees to Hills To Avoid Withering . British Fire By HAROLD V. BOYLE ALLIED HEAD QUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 8 (VP) Marshal Erwin Rommel's initial smashes at the British eighth army - have failed and "round one - Is over" with his tanks and - infantrymen in re treat toward Mareth line posi tions north and northwest of Medenlne, a complete military source said today. , "Round one has been won by the eighth army," he added. Gen. Sir Bernard Montgom ery's men, after stopping two' German attacks Saturday morn ing, disrupted four more thrusts in the course of the afternoon and forced Rommel to withdraw again into the hills, it wag an nounced. .. - Battered by ground fire and harassed by aerial bombard, ments, 33 of Rommel's tanks', were destroyed while not a sin gle British tank was knocked put, a communique disclosed. The heavy action at the south ern end of the Tunisian front was accompanied by aggressive allied patrol activity and local, gains in the north and destruc tive aerial blows at an axis convoy sighted in the Medlter-' (Continued on Page Two) Knox Promises Five-Ocean Navy By Fall of 1945 r WASHINGTON, March 8 (VP) All of the nation's projected five-ocean navy four' times as large as the naval force in 1939 will be ready for sea duty by the end of 1945, Secretary of the Navy Knox says. ' Attainment of that goal two years ahead of original expecta tions will be possible, he said in his annual report to the presi dent, because "speeded up con struction has broken all previous records" in naval shipbuilding. Included in the super navy, he said, will be all the author ized tonnage except "some large units upon which work has been suspended due to material short tages and the length of time re- . quired to build." More than 5,675,000 tons of naval craft have been authorized since the outbreak of the European war. 17 NAZI TANKS MARETH Involved Evacuees From Newell Held in Tulelake CCC Camp ' A nearby CCC camp Is being used for segregation of evacuees opposed to registration for mili tary service and job clearance at the Tulelake WRA center, It was disclosed today by Director Harvey Coverley. Coverley said 101 evacuee are detained at the Tulelake CCC camp, about eight miles from the main evacuee settlement south of Tulelake. Persons at the CCC camp In clude evacuees who wero recent ly arrested In connection with agitation and disturbances over the registration program. It if expected they will be moved later on to another project. Registration was reported as proceeding on an orderly basis, with 4585 evacuees registered a of Friday night. ' News Index City Briefs ...Page 5 Comics and Story Page 8 Courthouse Records .-...Pago 4 Editorial Page 4 Markets, Financial Pago 9 Our Men in Service ........ Pngo 4 Pattern ...Page 8 Sports Page 8 f