Hitler's Last Birthday Celebrated By Victory Loan Pledge r I") Local Bonds Fan Adolf's Britches . Kliutmlh olmorvod Adolf llillur's birthday with un prccodunlod purcliHHintr. of war bonds, tlonin:nod to holn flnniico tho wnr to ut llitlor out of tha birthday buni jicfi ontiroly. Wnr flimnco Icudnrn cntlmiitod Hie dny's kiiIor would reach $250,000. Jiy 1 p. m. 'J'iKmdity, llio county's total of April pureliuHOH had mounlod to $728,951, as com pared with ?00.'l,051 Monday ovoninjf. Klamnth Indians contributed n heavy blow at Hitler In a $100,000 bond purchase This buy was mudo out of tho Indian's own money, as (liBliiiKulshed from tribal funds, and another $150,000 from trlbnl funds may bo invested later, reservation leaders said. Another hitf birthday purchnso was that of W. B. Lamm of tho l.amm Lumber company, Modoc Point, who Invested $25,000. Wnr financo loaders hoped for heavy bond buying among amnllcr Inveslors, pointing out that K bond pur chasers hnvo n major part in tho country's wartime econ omy plan. K bond purchases will go toward the union labor $500,000 sub-chaHor campaign hero. Evening event of Hitler's birthday observance hero will bo tho junior chamber of commerce radio program, Imlwoon 6:30 and 7 p. m., when Captain Jack, tho rooster, will bo auctioned over tho nir. Bond buyers are nskod to call 5155, 5157, 0067 or 4061 in responding to the auc tion appeal. At tho county chamber of commerce offices, Klamath Indians and tho candidates for Klamath Union high school (Continued on Paso Two) Blackout Signa One 5-mlnute blast on sirens and whistles Is the signal for a blackout In Klamath Falls. Another long blast, during a black out. Is a signal for all-clear. In precau tionary periods, watch your street lights. ; mm By FRANK JENKINS pE auro to read the dispatch In this newspnper todny from an advanced U. S. base in tha Andrcanofs. It tells a atory ) of Intelligent Jnp plnnnlng and ; determined acniovemcnt. I Under our very noses, under i cover of tho fog, the littlo ycl 1 low men have built a submar- J ine base and an air base on S American soil, r TVHY we've permitted It Is known only to our higher O command. We outsiders, lock ing all tho facts, are In no post' tlon to criticize Intelligently and constructively, i Wo can only wnlch develop' I mcnts. Wo enn't help watching ruth 1 er NERVOUSLY. THIS Is Hitler's blrthduy. A Tho Berlin rucllo, paying a tributo this morning "to our bo loved fuehrer," Is Interrupted by a ghost voice that rasps out: i "Tho entlro Gorman nation curses todny tho hour that man was born. Hitler's henchmen have been In power too long. Ger mans, AWAKEI Tho time hus como to finish with tho nazi gang. Down with Hitler and his crowl On tho day of his down fall, the war will bo over." ' I llio "gnost volco comes 9 through on the en mo wave 'length as tho Berlin radio, and so can't bo tuned out or jam- mod. It looks like some rather clover propaganda work. WHETHER or not It Is really clover, of course, doponds on how the German peoplo take It. If they're as angry as wo'd bo If tho Jnps or tho Germans perpotrated a similar trick on us, it will do more harm than good. But it IS true that tho day of Hltlor's birth was a BLACK day Indeed for Germany. Those world conquerors have ALL been scourges of tholr people, more terrlblo In tholr conse quences than pestilence and .lamina, . W Wo can only hope that this bitter and undeniable truth is beginning to sink into the minds of tho peoplo of Ger many. ' THE high spot of tho Tunisian 1 news Is still tho successful two-dny attack. by our air men (Continued on Paga Two) I. NAZIS SPEED KUBANDELTA Reds Admit German Superiority In Some Fronts By EDDY CILMOHE MOSCOW. April 20 UP) Largo-scalo German attacks have increased In tho Kuban delta area of the Black sea coast, and reports today said the Germans had attained numerical superior ity in some places, but despite tho weight of their attacks they wero reported to havo gained neither any major success or any new territory. Sharp midnight assaults, sup ported by a squadron of tanks, gavo them a wedgo in soviet po sitions In an undisclosed sector but tho Russians said they had thrown tho Germans out. The Germans lost 400 dead in one sector, said tho midday com munique. The nazi attacks were mount ed from near tho Sea of Azov to tha heights of Novorossisk and the German air force continued to lend the ground troops heavy support. Tho Germans wore mot, however, by determined Russian air resistance and effective anti aircraft fire, which combined to down 17 enemy planes since yes lorday. Strong Air Attack (A Gorman broadcast,, record ed by The Associated Press, said (Continued on Page Two) Ghost Voice Shouts Down Birthday Talk LONDON, April 20 (fl3) A powerful ghost voice Inter rupted the Berlin radio's birth day tributo to "our beloved fuehrer" today by shouting: , "Tho entlro' Gorman nation curses todny tho hour that man wns born," . . The volco continued: "Hitler's henchmen have boon In power much too long. Gormim peoplo ewokol Tha time has como to finish with tho nnzl gang. Down with Hit ler and his gang, On the day of Hitler's downfall,, the war will be over," Tho ghost was on tho same whvo length ns tho Berlin ra dio and tho mizls wore unable to sllflo the voice. v- 1 iqsm, 1 ln.ni hniiiliitfiMiiBtwniMMttifiwi Roughly treated wu Adolf lei'i birthday, it demonttrstod !wt three prominent member) of reirosonting the $100,000 war In the picture are, left to righti In tha other picture, the four down while Captain Jack, the bond-ielling rooiter, poiei arrogantly on der fuehrer's abdomen. The girls, left to right, aret Sally Mueller, Betty McKlnney, Vivien Dirschl and Bettia Hopkins. ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE FIVE CENTS r n State Demands Folkes' Life For Train ALBANY, April 20 (!) The slate asked today that Robert E. Lee Koikes be made to pay for the slaying of the young woman In lower 13 with his life or be released as a free man. L, Orth Siscmorc, associate prosecutor, in his summation of the state's enso In the trial of the 20-year-old negro for the knife killing of Mrs. Martha Virginia James aboard a passenger train January 23, said: "Folkos is entitled either to freedom or to execution. There are no mitigating circumstances guilty he should get the highest penalty. "If you decide he is not guilty he Is entitled to walk the Astreets in freedom.'" m m i l Hit Jap Fields In New Guinea ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA. April 20 ) Allied bombers, operating singly, attacked Japanese airdromes in New Guinea and Now Britain yesterday and bombed a small ship in tho Tanimbar island area. It was tho second successive day of unusually light aerial ac tivity. Further details on the previ ous reported raid by Mitchell bombers on tho Dutch Timor capital of Kocpang were dis closed In today's noon commun ique. Hudson bombers, which re mained over tho target for mora than half an hour, also took port In the raid. Returning fliers said fires started in the town could bs seen 30 miles away. The airdromes attacked yester day included Hollandla In Dutch New Guinea; Gnsmata ond Cape Clouccster In New Britain;' and Lae and Flnschhafon In New Guinea. Each mission was car ried out by a singlo Liberator or Mitchell bomber or Catallna Fly ing boat. Boise Overflows Onto Golf Course BOISE, Ida., April 20 (P) The Plantation golf course four miles west of Boise was flooded todny when tho surging Boise rlvor smashed a protecting dike. Manager Howard Tucker said tho rising river broko through tho dike at dawn and widened tho Rap to 200 yards despite the efforts of 8B0 men to check tho flow. : : ,. ' .:; . ' PLEADS INNOCENT MEDFORD, April 20 Iff) Sgt. Bernard J, Lotka,, 23, Cleveland, O., pleaded Innocent today to a first degree murdor charge growing out of the smothering of his 10-wceks-old son In an auto camn cabin here April 1. T Hitler' "personal representative" by the two picture! which fop today'! front page. At upper the Klamath Indian tribe are giving Hitler a crack with an axe. bond purchase made by tha Indiani at a birthday event. Tha men Boyd Jackson, Jim Johnion, and candidates for union labor a KUHS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, mm Murder found here and if you find him -i ne man wno slashed the throat of the attractive navy of ficer s bride from Norfolk, Va., as she lay in berth lower 13 was either the man whom wit nesses saw running from her berth or the man whom they saw bending over her body in the aisle as she died, Sisemore said. Folkes Seen The state contends that Folkes was the one who was seen run ning out of the car. The other men was Marine Private Harold R. Wilson, occupant of upper 13 and one of the state's key witnesses. Sisemore pointed out that the testimony of Ralph Connor, Se attle, and Eugene Norton, Daly City, Calif., for the state was that they had seen a man run to the back of the car before Wilson leaped from his berth to the aid of the dying woman. Repeatedly, the prosecutor re ferred to a remark attributed to Folgcs in an asserted confession of the crime Los Angeles police officers said he made to them. Statement Repeated The statement was: "She looked like my kind of woman." Sisemore argued that in four purported statements by Folkes two oral and two transcribed the negro second cook aboard the train narrowed his descrip tion of the -slaying as he real (Continued on Paga Four) , Dogs in Doghouse Again As Pickup Rule Wis Snag The dog situation in Khunnth Falls is right back, whore, it started! Members of the city council, In session Monday night, decided to retain tho 60-dny ordinance nnd all Fidos will bo penned or on leash from May 1 to July 1. Representing the Humane so ciety were Mrs. Robert Odoll and Mrs. M. J. Young. On rec ommendation of Mrs. Odoll, the 60-day ordinance was to be re placed by one demanding that dogs be penned from sunset to suurise during the growing sea her on tha observance of Hit- Levi Walker, wielding the axe. eweetheart are holding Hitler TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1943 WPB Decides to Defer Construction of Factories WASHINGTON, April 20 VP) A decision by WPB's chemicals division to defer construction of five projected grain alcohol plants without the "full agree ment" of Rubber Director Wil liam M. Jeffers brought a wave of protests today from members of a senate agriculture sub-committee. The committee voted to call Jeffers soon to get his reaction. Elmer Davis, director of the of fice of war information, will be called at the same time to allow an investigation of differences between the two officials over publicity respecting the rubber program. Davis Battles Jeffers and Davis yesterday engaged in a verbal battle over reports on the prograrn's pro gress. In a statement he said had been cleared by the OWI but had not been submitted to Chairman Donald M. Nelson of the war pro duction board, Dr. Walter G. Whitman, assistant director of the WPB alcohol section of the chemicals division, testified: "The decision of the chemicals division will defer approval at this time of projects at Carroll- ville, Wis., Oubuque and Keo kuk, Iowa, and Moline and .Pe oria, 111." Don t Agree Chairman Gillette, (D-Iowa) drew from the witness that the statement had not been submit ted to Nelson or C. E. Wilson, (Continued on Page Two) son which would probably, in tho opinion of councilman, be for six months. , ' i Plans Snagged " Right then and there, plafis'of both council and the society hit snngs. Who would pick up the offending dogs, how would com plaints bo handled, and where would the manpower come from, wore a few problems which nei ther group could iron out. , Mrs, Odell pointed out that tho one man employed by the Humane society could not be (Continued on Page Four) h o) ggwiww SENATE BALKS -OVER ALCDHOL" PLANT VERDICT rv;-;j-'ttur v - t VX'y'J ft. WWJJ'J If NEA FEATURES Number 9776 Roosevelt r M ee is By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL . . MONTERREY, Mexico, April 20 (JP President Roosevelt and President Manuel Avlla Camacho of Mexico met here today to talk of the war and the future of the two allied republics. . It was the first time since 1909 that chief executives of the two countries had met. Mr. Roosevelt and Avila Camacho will deliver radio addresses Meeting Fails Pay-as-you-go Tax Compromise WASHINGTON. April 20 0P) Another' bi-partisan meeting fail ed today to produce a pay-as-you- go tax compromise, but Rep. Dis ney (D-Okla.) said we appear to be coming toward an agreement that would abate SO per cent of 1942 taxes for all income tax payers.- , Any compromise was expect ed to embrace a 20 per cent with holding levy against the taxable portions , of all . wages and sal aries. The republicans, supporting the. skip-year-plan, and the dem ocrats, opposing any tax abate ment, called a night conference in an effort to attain final agree ment. Fighter Planes Drop Light Loads On Kiska Positions WASHINGTON, April 20 (F) American fighter planes, . dou bling as light bombers, dropped 17 tons of explosives on Japa nese positions on Kiska in the Aleutians, the navy reported to day.. .- , In the South Pacific, mean while, American and Japanese planes exchanged bombing at tacks on Guadalcanal and Mun da. . Moving Mountain Noted in Oregon V. BAKER, Ore., April 20 (A5) A. moving' mountain that has traveled five feet - in the last three weeks cracked and buckled the Old ' Oregon Trttil highway west of Weatherby, Ore., state highway engineers reported to day. - Highway crews have repaired the damage and are watching for new slides. The mountain forms one side o Burnt River canyon. iff fca- 1 'I o) On on Tour Pr esicJent ho, M exico tonight, to be broadcast to their countrymen and the world. Presidents Meet Flanked by high officials of their governments, the two presidents exchanged warm handclasps as soon as Mr. Roosevelt's special train pulled in from Texas. Guns boomed a salute which echoed through the streets of Mexico's Pittsburgh. Mr. Roosevelt had told re porters in advance that ' he would discuss with Avila Ca macho about many things, in cluding the future of the two sister Pan-American nations. Naturally enough, he disclosed no specific points that would be brought up. While relationships have been strained at times, no major issues now exist between the United States and Mexico, so the confer ences could take place in an at mosphere, of true cordiality. ; . Announcements Seen It remained to be seen wheth er any. announcements of results of the deliberations would be forthcoming or whether they would bring about even greater cooperation to smash the axis powers and restore world peace. Mr. .Roosevelt's -arrival - in Monterrey marked his first offi cial visit to Mexican soil. Early this year he had traveled to Cas ablanca for a momentous confer ence with Prime Minister Win ston Churchill of England, a conference which they said had laid the groundwork for inva sion of the European continent. Whether1 any thought existed that some of Mexico's relatively small army might take part in that undertaking was not appar ent here. Reports have been In circulation that Mexican troops might be used to help hold Afri ca after enemy forces there have been wiped out, but Mr. Roose velt Informed reporters .accom panying him he couldn't tell them anything about that,-: f No Unusual Problems - He said there were no unsual problems confronting the Mexi can and United States govern ments which had not been work ed out. The question 'of Mexi can expropriation of oil lands from United States owners is working out satisfactorily, he said, as is that of bringing Mexi- (Contlnued on Page Two) j April 19 High 80, Low 37 Precipitation as of April 13, 1943 Stream year to date ;...14.23 Last year 10.34 Normal "...9.70 OUT OF SKIES Bag Totals; 112 for 0 lI ct-rii. : nu-i IUUI JI II I I III Africa By WES GALLAGHER ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 20 VP) The allied aerial offensive, continuing its scorching pace against the axis air ferry route and warplane nests, cut down 24 more enemy planes yesterday, bringing the 48-hour total to 112, of which 70 were Junkers-52 transports, a communique from Gen. Dwight D. - Eisenhower's headquarters announced today. (Dispatches from Malta indi cated that allied airmen from that island fortress had boosted the total to 117 planes, including 73 transports. , - Say "Exaggerated" (Taking cognizance of . an nouncements of what was called "alleged Important success scor ed by British and American air forces against German air trans port fleets," a Berlin broadcast said authoritative German quar ters termed these reports "at lea st exaggerated if not com pletely incorrect." The broadcast acknowledged , large scale at tacks, however, on "transports of German and Italian reinforce ments to Tunisia." Allied dis continued on Page Two) British Bombs Disrupt German Communications LONDON. Aprll 20 (VP) BrIU ish light bombers and fighters struck again last night at tha creaking German transport sys tern over a long stretch of occu pied Europe and Germany. The air ministry news service said that the RAF's lighter ships ranged against nazl rail lines and roads from Brittany, through northern France and HollnraL and Into northwestern Germany, and Whirlwind bombers attack ed shipping in the channel. Two aircraft were missing from the night's missions, the news service said. (The Berlin radio, In a broad cast recorded by The Associated Press, . said that four enemy bombers which struck at Holland and northwestern Germany last night were shot down ana that fifth crashed into the channel.