J ijunAiLLm"nfvw" ------- - ------- "i-i-fi-i-i-n-yi-wvM On 9-mlnute blast on ilrani and whlillu I It the signal lor blackout In Klamath .' Falls. Anothar long bint, during a black- March 19 High 43, Low 18 Praclpltation as of March 13, 1943 Straam year to data .........13.4B Last Yaar 10.00 Normal 8.39 " out. li a signal lor all-claar. In precau tionary parlods, watch your atraat llghti. ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES PRICE FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 1943 Number 9750 M fo) fP.A in D D" uu mm By FRANK JENKINS QN the European ilda of tho war, ffio new today li edited by tha weather. TN northern Tunisia continuing torrentlnt rainstorms hnvo turned the airfields Into sloppy trips of muck and tho flat plains Into ftlcky bogs too aoft for tanks. In the south, DUST STORMS are holding Montgomery mora or less motionless before the IkMareth line, Mony of Rommel'a m desert-ranging tanks are stuck in the sand and our planes are hunting thorn down as well as they can In the swirling fogs of sand. (Ohce a tank Is stuck It Is out of luck. It has to keep moving to keep out of trouble.) TN the far Tunisian north, west A of Blzerte, Von Arnlm Is hitting the British hard in order to take the pressure off Rommel in the south. (Creating a second front, that Is, for Rommel's benefit.) (GENERAL GIRAUD Is said by the Algiers radio (run by our side) to have been present when Gafna was taken and to have re marked;; ; : ,:, . "I am convinced that Gafna - Marks the beginning of an of. tensive that will go on as far as Berlin." i , MOTE, please, that this Isn't nan,i Tt l h,Ana rfnnrla IVl ' must always differentiate be- . tween them. Glraud's remark Is Intended to ' reassure us that everything Is going well and to make the Germans nervous. The use of propaganda In war Is legitimate enough, but back , hero on tho home front we must - be careful to ldontlfy It for what it really-is. If wo get It mixed up with NEWS we'll bo misled. . "THE Russians, wollowing . through quagmires of deep '.'black mud, are still pushing ' toward Smolensk. Tholr winter 1 fighters are reported to bo oban- doning their skis in the face of 'the spring thaw. Today's dispatches say the tlmw.li nrocrcMlim at such a ' 'rate that soon only the nlr forces . on both sides will be able to ;, operate. V ' 'THE Germans are stilt throw : ing fresh masses of tanks, troops and planes into the Khar kov fighting. , . Whether they have crossed tho Donets is pot disclosed in today's dispatches, The Russians hold at least some advanced position ion tho west bank of tho river, ; and from the cast bank aro tnk- Ing a heavy toll of the Germans ' who try to cross on the thin Ice. j 'THE Germans claim today to ' ' hnvo sunk 32 ships out of an i allied convoy In tho Atlantic. This claim, of course, is sub- Ject to heavy discount, but the : fact remains that tho submarine : campaign. Is worrying us con ; sldcrably, i Wo'ro getting a fnlrly big force : ' on tho othor sldo of the Atlantic, . and it has to bo supplied by ' ships, ' CPEAKING of submarines, our I plnncs catch a Jnp sub UN LOADING CARGO at Lno, In ' (Continued on Pogo Four) Rationing Board Changes Hours to Benefit Workers A change In the hours at ra tioning board headquarters, 434 Main strcot, has beon announced by Don R. Drury, ohnlrmnn of the board, in order to glvo furth er benefits to those working six days a week. Hours at tho present time are 0:30 a. m. to 4:30 p. m and these ' have beon. changed from 10:30 1 a. m. to B p, m, Tho extra half hour will bo of special value lo .the. mill workors. Change goes 'totofiaot Monday, Crunr atatad. T m ships SLUG JAPS IN Fires Rage in Enemy Shore Positions In Burma ' By The Associated Prass British warships laid down a fire-netting barrage of Japanese positions yesterday in the Don balk area in Burma, a commun ique said today, and vanguards of Field Marshal Sir Archibald P. Wavcll's forces driving down the coast "made progress" to ward the town of Donbaik it self. Donbnlk lies near the tip of the Mayu ponlnsula, just north of tho big Japanese base at Ak yob on the bay of Bengal. Flru Started British headquarters said nu merous fires were started in the naval bombardment and de clared that Japanese shore bat teries Inflicted "neither damage nor casualties" in attempting to break up the assault. "East of tho Moyu river, our positions have been maintained and in the past 24 hours there has been no Important change In the situation," the British command said. -i . Japs Infiltrate Japanese Infiltration tactics east of, the Mayu river,: which separates the peninsula from the mainland, had - previously forced the British to withdraw north of Rathedaung, 28 miles above Akyab, and threatened to cut off British forward troops along tho coast. In the southwest Pacific, Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters reported continu ing allied aerial attacks against a 2000-mile arc of Japanese (Continued on Page Four) Nazi Submarines Claim Sinking of U, S. Convoy By Tha Associated Press A DNB dispatch broadcast by the Berlin radio and recorded by The Associated Press declared today that nazl submarines had sunk 32 cargo ships and. a de stroyer in . a prolonged attack against an caatbound allied con voy In tho Atlantic- Thorc was no confirmation from allied sources. Tho Gorman dispatch, de scribed tho action as the "great est and most successful" 'in tho history of U-boat warfare. It said the 32 cargo vessels sunk totaled 204,000 tons. Friday's German communique had reported that a fierce con tinuing fight was in progress be tween U-boats and an allied con voy over a largo area in the At lantic. Todoy'a announcement said tho German submarines had pressed homo tholr successful at tack in the face of a formidable defenso thrown around the con- voy by destroyers, corvettes and planes. I DOli AREA House Farm Bloc Speeds Parity Bill to President By WILLIAM F. ARBOGABT WASHINGTON, M a r c h 20 (AP) The houso farm bloc that caught the. "city fellers" napping yesterday looked with confidence today to the senate to speed to tho White Houso and posalbly veto legislation requiring tho inclusion of labor costs in determining parity. Parity Is a technical and In langlblo price calculated to give farmers a share of current na tional Income and purchasing power proportionate to that they enjoyed in the base porlod from 1000 to 1014. Surprise Maneuver In a surprise maneuver that caught oppononls off-guard, the farm bloc succeeded in passing through tho house on a voice vote tho bill ot Representative Paoa (D-GaJ to amend tha basic Collegiate VIJ'UI" . f ' V .,' if, Virginia Howard, daughter East Main straet, wst elected Emerald '."Cover Girl" , and candi date for the University of Oregon In the national collegiate bond queen contest - Virginia graduated from tha Klamath Union high school in 1941 and la now a freshman at the university. SKIP-A-YEAR TUXES Report Sees Tough Fight Over Ruml ' Proposal WASHINGTON, March 20 (AP) The house ways and means committee, in a major ity report outlining the admin istration's new. tax collection plan, today sharply criticized the counter proposal for skip ping 1942 levies as "like rob bing Peter to pay a bonus to Paul." "To forgive any taxpayer's one year's taxes means that the debt which he has already in curred and owes to the govern ment must be borne by some other taxpayer, who may . in some-Instances be -loss ablo to pay than the taxpayer whoso (Continued on Page Four) Jack Sorenson Gets Ci faff on ' Jack Wallace Sorenson of Klamath Falls, radioman third class, United States navy, was among the naval airmen to re ceive citations for' bravery - un der fire and devotion to duty at ceremonies, at the Whidby island air station, Washington, late Friday. t Tho citations were earned In aerial combat : against the Japanese at Kiska-harbor in the Aleutian islands.. - The name of young Sorenson was not listed among those who havo gone from Klamath Falls recruiting station, nor does his name appear on school records here. , farm law to require that the Increase in farm : labor costs since the base period be con sidered In computing parity.' This increase, Pace told tho house,' amounts to $1.41 per day, or tho difference between $1.42. paid in the 1009-1914 per iod and $2.83 paid on January 1 on the basis- of agrlculturo department surveys. Tho legislation- requires that the calcu lation take into consideration tho work of hired helpers, farm operators and members of op erators', families actually en gaged In farm work. Efforts Shouted Down Efforts to restrict the bill only to the labor ot hired work ers, and' to make it effective only for tho duration ot the war, were shouted down as the (Continued on fas fout) "Cover Girl' !, tljf rS', ol .Mrs. Bonn! Howard, 189 Navy Reports Aerial Attacks On Kiska Japs' WASHINGTON, March 20 VP) New aerial attacks on the Japan ese bases at. Kiska in the North Pacific and Munda in the South Pacific were reported today by the navy. . Navy communique No. 318 said: : "North Pacific: , "1. On March 18th Kiska was attacked twice by army Libera tor (Consolidated B-24) and Mitchell (North" American B-25) bombers, with Lightnings (Lock heed P-38) as escorts. Results were not observed. All United States planes returned. "South Pacific (all dates are East Longitude.) "2. On March 20, a force of Wildcat fighters strafed Japan ese positions on Munda, New Georgia. All planes returned." The raid on Munda was the 96th against . that base in the central Solomons, 180 nautical miles from Guadalcanal air field. The two attacks on Kiska were the 18th and 19th delivered against that Aleutians outpost of the enemy this month. Government Report On Farm Plan Eases Shortage Concern WASHINGTON. March 20 (AP) A government report that farmers plan to plant more food and livestock feed crops this year today lightened con cern over threatened shortages, but failed to indicate any eas ing of existing and proposed consumer restrictions. Such was the consensus of sources close to Secretary of Agriculture Wickard as they sized up a survey of tho fed eral crop reporting board show ing ' that the total prospective acreage of major crops was about 3.3 per cent larger than a year ago when the nation's food output reached a record level. Gen. Griswold Named Fort Lewis Chief FORT LEWIS, March 20 (IP) Gen, O. W. Griswold has been named commander of tho army ground forces at Fort Lewis, suc ceeding Maj. Gen. Charles H. White, who has been transferred to .another station, it was an nounced today by Col. Ralph K. Glass, post commander. i RANDALL LEAVES Two navy planes, piloted by Lieutenant Commander William Randall and an accompanying ensign, circled over town Sat urday afternoon before taking off northward. They have been held here several days await ing arrival of a tire for the plane piloted by Randall, form er manager of the local airport. Reds Struggle to Hold Defenses in Donets River Area Br EDDY GILMORE - MOSCOW, March 20 (AP) The red army still struggled to day to hold its defense lines along the twisting northern Donets river east and southeast of Kharkov against the increasing num ber ot German tanks, men and planes being poured into this area, many of. them apparently being brought up through Kharkov. ' . Despite unfavorable weather conditions, however, the Rus sians said they had driven steadily forward in the offensive for . Smolensk and had gained an JAP SUB UNLOADING IN Enemy Bombs Dock In Daylight Air ' Assault ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, March 20 VP) Allied aircraft ranging over New Guinea caught a Japanese sub marine unloading cargo in. Lae harbor last night and destroyed it with four direct bomb, hits, headquarters announced today in a -communique; which de scribed aerial " action', along; tha 2000-mile Japanese-held strip above Australia, ' A Japanese daylight assault on Porlock harbor, on the. north east coast of New Guinea near Tufi, 80 miles below Buna, damaged a wharf and a . launch but there were no casualties, the communique said. Japs Bomb Harbor Eighteen Japanese bombers and an escort of 32 fighters came in over the harbor. Without allied interception, it' was reported, arid dropped 70 bombs. Allied planes flew 500 miles north of Port Moresby to machine-gun an enemy carao vessel in the Admiralty islands harbor of Lorengau, and enemy shipping (Continued on Page Four) Gangster Ends Life by Suicide When Indicted CHICAGO, March 20 () Death by suicide . has ended Frank Nittl's gangster-studded career. .,' The chief of the Capone syndi cate, ruler qf the city's, under world and acknowledged "brains" of one ot the. nation's major gangs, shot and killed him self yesterday, only a few hours after he learned he was one of nine men Indicted by a New York federal grand jury on charges of extortion. The 86-year-old gang boss, known as "The Enforcer" by vir tue of his authority in racketeer ing, went to his death by his own hand near a railroad embank ment in suburban Riverside, only a short distance from his home. - Three members of a railroad freight crew saw Nittl die by fir ing two bullets Into his head, Po lice Sergeant William Crowe re ported. An attorney for the slain gang leader told police that Nitti had consulted him earlier yesterday and was advised of the indict ments In Now York. He said Nit ti, who had promised to come to his office later, did not appear to be distressed when he was given the news of the indictment. Tho New York indictments charged Nitti and six other Chi cagoans on federal charges of violating the -anti-racketeeering act, and of mail fraud and con spiracy. The nine men, includ ing two fro? New York who fed eral officials said were allied with the Nittl gang, were charged in the indictments with extorting more than one million dollars from movie firms and a labor union. The indictments were tho largest legal blow ever aimed at the gang-and federal officials here promised further developments. r other town after vicious street fighting in the Staraya Russa area. .... Dnieper River Clear ' Dispatches to - Pravda, the communist party newspaper, de clared that advances along the Dnieper river . front now had virtually cleared the enemy out of every sector along the river from its source down toward the Vyazma-Smolensk railway and that, driven westward, the Germans now were laying mines over a wide area to stem the red army push. With spring mud bogging down the entire area, however it , was thought that soon . only air forces Would be able to func tion -normally. Thin Ice . The aoviet noon communique did not disclose whether the Germans had been able to cross the upper Donets where the Russians still held some posi tions on the western shore. But as the red army continued its slaughter- of German infantry men and rapid-fire riflemen who charge across the thin ice ot the still-frozen Donets, the.. Germans Drougnt more ana more men to the battle line, it was reported. : The German death toll was said to be mounting steadily. -. Both sides are aided in the night fighting by the, present full moon. At one unidentified place on the northern Donets, the Ger mans grouped 25 tanks with a large infantry unit to force the Russians to withdraw. The. noon communique said that the soviet troops managed to re-form their lines and counterattack, hurling the nazis back to previous posi tions. The midnight communique had acknowledged that two vil lages were lost to a numerically superior enemy force "at the cost of heavy losses." - Germans Repulsed Southeast - of Kharkov, the noon war bulletin said, the red army continued to repulse at tacks of large forces of enemy tanks and . Infantry, attacking along the upper Donets river line. More -Russian successes were detailed 1 n . the drive for Staraya Russa with a company of Germany infantry extermin ated, the communique said, in street battles that followed the storming of one - settlement south of Lake Ilmen.. Angell Describes Bonneville for House Committee WASHINGTON, March 20 () Half the total electric power of the United States will be pro duced by the Bonneville and Grand Coulee dams on the Co lumbia river, Rep. Angell (R Ore.) told the house appropria tions committee during hearings on the war department civil functions bill. Testimony on the hearing, made public yesterday, also dis closed that the army engineer corps had asked for an addition al $500,000 appropriation to com plete work on the Bonneville dam this year. , The urgency for electric pow er necessitated a speedup in the building program, resulting in increased costs above the cur rent $4,166,000 Bonneville ap propriation, the engineers ex plained. ; . Maj. Gen. Eugene Reybold, chief of the engineers, said earl ier difficulties in securing labor and materials had been overcome since a "high priority rating" was assigned the project. Angell told the committee that because ot the priority delays work at Bonneville was 90 days behind schedule last July, but the time had been made up through bonuses and other , in Party Leader Dies Jl Frank O. Lowdes, 82, World war governor of Illinois - and leader of the republican party, died today in Tucson, Aris. FRANK Q. LDWDEHf Pheufnonia Fatal to Aged Republican Leader TUCSON. Ariz, March 20 UP) Frank O. Lowden, 82 years old. World war governor of Illinois, died today at . El Conquistador hotel where he. waa a winter visitor.-'-- - ".. ;.. Tired anil feeble when he ar rived, the elder statesman of. the republican party suffered an at tack of pneumonia -two weeks ago. He gradually grew worse until his death. Sees Reporters Lowden arrived here a few days before his 82nd birthday, January 26 intending to spend the remainder of the winter.: - As soon as he had rested from the train trip,-he agreed to see a reporter for the annual inter view he had given The Associat ed Press in recent years. He refused to comment on con troversial questions regarding Continued on Page Four) German Agency Claims Russian City for Nazis By The Associated Press DNB,- official German news agency, said in a broadcast rec orded by The Associated Press today that Chuguev, 22 miles southeast of Kharkov, in the Uk raine, "is firmly in German hands." The town of Sevsk, 170 miles northwest of Kharkov, also was taken by storm, the agency de clared. The broadcast claimed that the Upper Donets had been crossed at several places and said the town of Tomarovka, about 15 miles northwest of Belgorod, had fallen to German arms. "In the whole area west and northwest of Kursk the German march to the east Is continuing,',' tho agency, declared. Eden Focuses Attention on Soviet-American Relations By WADE WERNER WASHINGTON, March. -20 (AP) British' Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden's week of Washington conferences today appeared to have focused diplo matic attention on Soviet-American relations with particular reference to the Anglo-Russian pact he negotiated last year. ; .The question, generally posed is whether similar pacts -avoiding precise blueprint of post-war borders are in the offing between all the western democracies and Russia. Wallace Warning ' Eden arrived here just after Vice President Wallace had warned that without a "satis factory understanding" between the western democracies and Russia a third world - war would be Inevitable. With the diplomat was . William Strang, assistant undersecretary of state H. S. TROOPS ORGANIZE NEW SnTJPES Rain, Sandstorms Bog ' Airfields, Halt Planes By DANIEL DE LUCE ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 20 W) American infantry and ar mor organized their positions at Gafsa and El Guetar, only 60 miles from Marshal Erwin Rom mel's coastal road lifeline, and set the stage for what may be one of the biggest battles of the Tu nisian campaign today. ' A March downpour which turned the plains into sticky bogs too soft for tanks kept motion less, however, the forces of Lieut-Gen. George S. Patton Jr., and dust storms at the southern end of the front where Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's eighth army was poised before the Mar eth line held activities at a mini mum there. Continuing storms which turn ed northern airfields Into sloppy strips and dust storms in the south also, prevented the allied air forces, now welded Into a mighty weapon under one com mander and one . headquarters, from striking the crushing blows of which they are capable. -; , r . - . No Enemy. Planes . . Such sweeps as' were made irt ' the north,, today's allied head quarters communique said, were carried out by allied fliers with out meeting a single enemy , .(Continued on Pge Four) . Coal Operators Ponder Of fer to Extend Contract ; " NEW YORK,1 March 20 (AP) Northern Appalachian Bitumin ous coal operators have sent telegram to the White ' House, but a spokesman declined to say today whether an appeal had been made to President Roosevelt to intervene in nego tiations here with the ' United Mine Workers for a new con tract. " , : NEW YORK, March 20 (AP) The; negotiating committee of the United Mine Workers of America offered today to ex tend until May 1 negotiations for a new contract in the north ern and southern Appalachian soft coal areas, provided any agreement reached would be re troactive to April 1. The present contract expire March 31. "V The proposal, signed by John L. Lewis, UMW president, was described by a union spokes man as a move to avert a stoppage- of mining should no agreement , be reached before March 31. ' ' The northern and southern . operators made no . immediate reply to the proposal, and ad (Continued on P; ge Four) , and one of Britain's foremost experts on Russia. 4 Immediate interest in tha pact signed by Eden and soviet Foreign Minister Molotov 10 months ago. was heightened by London commentators who sug gested the former might find opportunity In Washington -to promote closer - relations be tween . Russia and the United States. , - Editorial Intarprstation i Attracting even more diplo matic attention than Eden's subsequent . conference hart with soviet Ambassador Max im Lltvlnoff was the delayed publication in the United States ot a London Times editorial in terpreting the "sense and sig nificance of the Edcn-Molotov" treaty. v . .; . "The iscue ot security in Eu rope," said this week-old Times (Continued on Page Four),