JAArVALlJ-lnlrJtlll alb irUnu UlKiiiMNiaTiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiililliiiiiiiiNliil.wililHiliiiiiiiilii On a-mlnut blut on sirens ind whUtlM U th signal lor blackout In Klamath rails. Another long blast, during a black out. Is a signal for all-claar. In preoau- i . 1 i. t-U UA1(a llntita. April 20 High . Law 31 Precipitation aa of April 14, It 4 Straam yaar to data' ...M.1J Last yaar 10.64 Normal ,........73 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES --riri-ini-innAi'inn.ririnnririn.iir PRICE FIVE C ,LS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1943 Number 9777 : All Villi I'l A.l.lblll'IMMfl n W "I F WW 5 GfS flm Wage rase mwmd i I I .Toll linPLi Jl II: I : IttlPf sail ;lHl illlihl!!tl;''l CiVVB DM 1 1 1 t h hw-" t'fiin ''-rfii.r' it u ;t By FRANK JENKINS XJONTGOMERY crashes Rom A 1 mel's lino In tho Tunislnn hills BRuIn and In km the village of EnfldnvlII and tho HEIGHTS went of It. Enfidaville Is of comparatively Utile Importance. The heights ore Owhat count. MONTGOMERY'S troops InM 1 trate (seep through enemy positions) up the hillsides, blast ing out one by one tho German machine gun nests and crawling from wadl to wadl (dry gulches) In a slow, costly and during advance. The attack Is launched In Montgomery's favorite manner, In bright moonlight under a tre mendous artillery barrage. AT the same time, our side " launches a heavy air offen sive designed to knock Gorman fighter planes out of tho sky. The enemy's fighters are now operaiing xrorn iicicin aruuuu sert and Tunis. His bombers Osecm to be coming from Sicily, 100 miles awny across the strait. Sicily Is too far off for the fight ers. If tho Tunisian fields from which they rlo can be knocked out, German air defense can be badly crippled. Tank-busting Hurrlcnnes (Brit ish fighters), armed with 40-mll-limetcr cannon firing a 21 pound shell, are reported to bo ploying havoc with Rommel's armored equipment. . AN authoritative allied spokes- man says Montgomery's as sault is meeting with "extremely vigorous" enemy opposition, the Germans counter-attacking four times In quick succession. Allied "quarters" today warn against expectation of. a quick, easy conquest of the Tunisian tip. Rommel, they say, has a lot Oof high ridges still BEHIND him. It is probable that each rldgo will be bitterly defended. A YEAR aflor It happened, we " got the final, official story of the Doollttle raid on Tokyo. There were 80 men on the flight. One was killed, two are missing, eight are prisoners or presumed to be, and 64, Includ ing soven wounded mon, got home through China. The raid was lounched from - tho carrier Hornet. It was Intend ed to start 400 miles off Japan, but because of rising danger of discovery by Jap scouts had to start 800 miles from tho Jap shores. The extra 'four hundred miles and an unexpected storm exhausted the filers' gas and they had to crash-land whore fA they could when their tanks ran dry. TXOOLITTLE and his men flew Into probable death unhesi tatingly. Remember that the next time you're tempted to grouch about the trifling Incon veniences of the home front. A SPOKESMAN Bt our hcad quarters In Australia warns again today that Jap air and ground power in tho South Pa cific aro growing rapidly, Gen eral Chcnnault (commanding our air force In China) thinks the Japs aro concentrating troops in Indo-Chlna, Malaya and Thail and for a new attack In Burma or the South Pacific. p THE mounting battle of tho Ku " A ban delta In tho Caucasus suggests that the Germans may be starting a new spring offen sive lliero. The Russians say that In spite of heavy and determined fighting tho Germans have gain ed no new ground. Keep your eyo on this Cauca- (Continued on Paga Four)- - British Pass Enfidaville in Severe Fight By WES GALLAGHER ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 21 (VP) The British eighth army has pushed ' about two miles north In the DJobel Garcl area 10 miles west of Enfidaville In "very severs fighting," It was announced today. Fighting raged on a 10-mlle front as the dashing veterans of Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgom ery pressed the battle to a bloody pitch after capturing En flclnvlllo, anchor point of Mar shal Erwln Rommol's southern line of the Tunls-Blzert de fenses. They had already re pulsed four determined counter attacks. Blast Cava While the British blasted at tho caves and dug-in positions of the nazis and fascists with artillery and Infantry, sleet and snow storms swirled over the mountainous area today and re stricted the great allied air of fensive which had been sum moned to paralyze axis airfields. Accompanying Gen. Sir Ber nard L. Montgomery's drive from tha south; which was opened at .11 o'clock Monday night with mighty barrage from hundreds of guns, the Brit-. Ish first army has moved for ward slightly In tha MedJei-EI-Bab sector west of Tunis, said a communique from Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower's head quarters. The newest assaults,, aimed at Germans Throw More Troops in Kuban Struggle By EDDY GILMORE MOSCOW. April 24 OP) A violent struggle for an impor tant height marked the mount ing battle In the Kuban delta above Novorossisk today as the Germans threw In more troops In an attempt to regain lost po sitions, but nowhere did they succeed In gaining any ground, the Russians reported today. A dispatch to Red Star,, the army newspaper, said that ar tillery action has Increased and there are more and more bomb ings by the Gorman air force operating in strength from the waters of the Black sea north ward to tho Sea of Azov. : Pravda, communist party newspaper, printed a front line dispatch which said Rumanian troops were in the fight but that war prisoners complained the Germans had abandoned them. The Germans, using' more tanks to flank their increased infantry forces, smashed at the Russian lines in one sector in a sorlos of 10 attacks moving in groups of from 28 to 30 which wore turned back almost Imme diately, it was said. Secrecy Lifted From Tokyo Raiders' Shangri-la As Carrier Named Base By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, April 81 (P) Tokyo could tremble again today In memory of the bombs which struck terror Into Japan's vul nerable heart a year ago, For the war department prom ised that those were just a gen tlo prelude to the pounding to como, and disclosed that the "Shangri-La" from which the bombers struck was a ship at sea a floating baso that could be multiplied to maul the isle of Nippon from almost any direc tion. x Ripping away at last the mys tery that had cloaked the Paci fic war's most thrilling aerial ex ploit, the official story of the raid disclosed: That the base from which Maj. Gen, James H, DoollUle'a, collapsing the mountain rim held by Marshol Erwln Rommel und Col. Gen. Jurgcn von Ar- nlm, wcro meshed with the northwest African air force's heaviest bombardments of axis airfields the campaign has seen and by violent air battles in which 27 enemy aircraft were shot down yesterday. Along with other planes shot down on previous days but not previously reported here, this score brought to li me total of enemy planes destroyed in tho last three duys. "Enfidaville has been occu pied and all initial objectives csDtured after fierce fighting," the communique said. "Four enemy counterattacks have been repulsed. Fighting continues." While hundreds of allied planes ranged the skies, air rcc (Continued on Pag Two) RODSDELT VISIT Two Presidents Tour . Texas Training Center By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex., Ap ril 21 (Pj President Avila Camacho of Mexico today promptly repaid President Roosevolt'a precedent breaking visit yesterday to the land south of the border. Aboard a long special train the two president arrived here from the northern Mexican In dustrial city shortly after noon to lunch with flying cadets in the mess hall of the mammoth naval air training station. Tour Center Their program colled for a half-hour tour of the huge train ing center situated on the Texas coastal flats and to watch a dem onstration. After that they were to go their separate ways. The chief executives, who met for the first time yesterday In a festive Monterrey setting, were welcomed to one of the world's biggest pilot-training centers by tho commandant, Rear. Admiral A. E. Montgomery. Demonstrating wartime coop eration of the two allied nations was the schooling here of Mexi can student filers. Originally Mr. Roosevelt and General Avila Camacho had planned to travel across the border in separate trains. But they decided to cut two cars for the Mexican president and his party into Mr. Roosevelt's train. Continue Conference That gave them a chance to continue their conference of (Continued on Pag Two) 16 twin-engined bombers took off to blast war plants in Tokyo and four other Japanese cities was the aircraft carrier Hornet, later lost in the Pacific battle of Santa Cruz, October 26. Doolittla's Idea That the idea of the spectacu lar attack a first Installment on Pearl Harbor dobt was con ceived in January 1042, presum ably by Doollttle, and intense training in utmost secrecy pre ceded Its execution on April 18. : That the bombers took off from the Hornot In rough weath er 800 miles from the coast of Japan and attacked at noon, whereas the original plan had called for them to take off only 400 miles off-shpre and to go in at night, , . . That not one of the . planes 1 ' L '5 General 7V2-Cent Per Hour Increase Retroactive WASHINGTON, April 21 W) The war labor board announced today that Stabilization Director James F. Byrnes has approved a wage Increase for 26,880 em ployes of 86 pine industry con. cerns in the northwestern Unit ed States. In general, the in crease Is 7V4 cents an hour.. 1 The WLB's west coast lumber commission originally approved the increase, with the labor members dissenting and arguing for a larger amount. The war labor board approved, the com. mission's decision early in March by a 5 to 4 vote. Wayne L. Morse, a public member, and three labor members were in the minority. . Morse held in a dissenting nainlan. fn&dft ntihltc lnr-t Sun day, that a further ' increase o( at least. 2 Vi cents should nave been allowed. One of the rea sons he gave was that the ma. jorlty' of the lumber commission had informally offered to ap prove the additional sum in the interest of obtaining a unam mous decision, but the labor members of tha commission de murred. No Celling Jump . The WLB acted prior to the president s hold the line execu. tive order of April 8, but the decision was referred to Direc tor Byrnes because of its pos sible affect on price ceilings. Byrnes' approval, it was under stood, does not necessarily au thorize an Increase in price ceilings. The wage increases are retro active to dates established in contracts between the companies and unions except that retroac tive payments prior to Septenv ber 1, 1042, are to be figured at 2V4 cents an hour. Eastern Games Postponed in Major Leagues By Th Associated Press All eastern games in the ma jor leagues' opening program today were postponed, but the four scheduled contests in the midwest were expected to be played. The games that had to be called off today were Washing ton at New York, and Boston at Philadelphia in the American league and New York at Brook lyn and Philadelphia at Boston in the National league. Opening ceremonies planned for these parks will be held to morrow. reached tho Chinese landing fields to which all had been sup posed to go; the additional 400 mile flight to the island and a storm encountered after leaving it. drained away their gasoline reserves, forcing them to crash all except the one that reached Russia. Men Return That of the 80 officers and men on the flight, one was killed, two are missing, eight are prisoners or presumed to be pris oners of Japan, five are interned in Russia and 64, including seven who were injured, got home through China. Some ot the story of the raid had been told before by Doollt tle and his men; the great dis closure in tho army's ' release (Continued on Pag Four) . niinrnHnrii1 umduw BYRNES Made Japs Pay fit & Marina Lloyd D. Gunnels, 24, Kirbyvill. Tex., mildly ex plained his part In Guadalcanal fighting during which h picked off from 75 to 100 of th enemy single-handed from his position In a foxhol witht As ach Jap showad his head, I lt fir.' Sniper Gunnels was finally caught by a shot that . tor through his right y. Ha is con. Talescing at th Oak Knoll naval hospital at Oakland, Calif. Associated Prss photo from u, 8. navy. E Birthday Events, Auc ti6n Stimulate Buying . Klamath county's war finance campaign had passed the $900,- 000 mark in sales and pledges Wednesday, after a local cele bration of Adolf Hitler s birth day Tuesday had added $333, 000 to the total. War finance leaders were happy over the unprecedented success of 'Tuesday's effort, but agreed that it would take a pow erful squeeze to get the remain der necessary to make the $1,269,000 goal set for this coun ty for the April drive. They (Continued on Page Two) Pay-as-you-go Tax Compromise fails in House WASHINGTON, April 21 () The bi-partisan effort to agree on a pay-as-you-go ' compromise in the house collapsed today and republicans immediately launch ed a drive to bring about anoth er house vote on the modified Ruml plan to skip an income tax year. - . The breakdown came sudden ly after republicans and demo, crats a few hours earlier had in dicated they would announce a compromise this afternoon, probably providing for abate ment of approximately BO per cent of 1942 Income tax liabili ties. . The conferees, ranking mem bers of the ways and means com mittee, emerged from a closed meeting to announce their ef forts had failed, and democrats and republicans went into sep arate conferences to prepare statements explaining their posi tions. REDS BEAT ST. LOUIS CINCINNATI, April 21 (fl) A single by Max Marshall drove Lonnie Frey home in the 11th inning today to give tho Cincin nati Rads and Johnny Vander Meer a 1-0 victory over the world champion St. Louis Car dinals In the 1943 season s open ing game before 27,709 overrat ed fans. BROWNS WIN ST.' LOUIS, April 21 (&) Lefty Al Holllngsworth blanked the Chicago White Sox on 4 hits as the St. Louis Browns won the opening game of the season, 3 to 0, before 4421 fans today. BONO SALES SHOOT PAST 900,000 HER FDLKES'TRIAL JURY BEGINS DELIBERATIONS Judge I nstru'ets or Four Possible Verdicts ALBANY, Ore., April 21 VP) Eight women and lour men jurors began life-or-death delib eration at 10:15 a. m., PWT to day in the first-degree murder trial of Robert E. Lee Folkes, accused of the fantastic 'lower 13" knife slaying of Mrs. Mar tha Virginia James. The jurors mostly farm folk took the case with Circuit Judge L. G. Lewelling's detailed instructions after hearing testi mony and arguments for 13 days in the trial of the 20-year-old negro second cook of a South ern Pacific limited. . . . , Asks Death ' . Th state asks his .death for the throat slashing of the attrac tive Norfolk, Va., bridge navy ensign who lay in berth lower 13 last January. 23 as the train roared rast a village sta tion near her in tha pre-dawn blackness. The defense maintains Folkes was in the dining car galley preparing breakfast at the time she. was knifed; in. the throat. She died a few moments later In a pool of her own- blood in toe huus oc uic simplag car. . -Four Choices Possible ' ' Judge Lewdling told the Jury it could- return any one of four verdicts: guilty of murder in the first-degree which automatically calls for the death penalty if un accompanied by a recommenda tion -for leniency; first degree with a recommends tion. for life imprisonment; second degree which carries mandatory life im prisonment; or acquittal. . , ..The court dwelt upon the is sue of intoxication at length dur ing his 43-minute instruction. -Intoxication Considered If th jurors- found the evi dence showed Folkes was intoxi cated at the time he made his alleged confession of the crime, Lewelling said, this fact should be considered although intoxica tion does not make a confession inadmissible as evidence unless the person making the confes sion has lost possession of his faculties. As to intoxication at the time of the crime, Lewelling said that (Continued on Page Two) - New Damage Seen From Boise River BOISE, Ida., April 21 (IP) New' damage along the lower Boise river was reported. today as the crest of the flooding stream reached Canyon county communities on its way to the Snake river. Boise and other Ada county communities breathed easier, however, in- the belief their greatest battle was over, at least temporarily, as the river flow subsided. . . Easter Picture Shows Gay Bonnets, Lots of Clothes, Stores Well-Stocked By LOIS STEWART Klamath Falls women looked through their wardrobes this second war-Easter and admitted to themselves that they were probably the best dressed, and the- most comfortably clothed flock of females in the world today. - - , That panic of buying In mid- February, when a clothes ration scare sent, thousands scurrying to dress shops and department stores, must make a lot of them feel like well stocked-up ninnies as shops continue to pour forth colorful frocks, 100 per cent wool suits and coats, hats as gay as a whipped-up dessert. Merchants along Klamath s Main street were doing a whale of a business in the . apparel line. The first quarter, ending April 1, proved this: Women are buying heavily. Women are not asking the price, but they want good mer chandise, - good fabrics, - and a 'Barbarous Action ' Disclosed By F.R. In Revenge Pledge ' WASHINGTON, April 21 (P) The Japanese have executed some of the American army fliers who bombed Tokyo a year ago. President Roosevelt disclosed today in pledging punishment to those responsible "for these diabolical crimes." - "This recourse by our enemies to frlghtfulness Is barbarous," the president said in a statement received here from, his stop at Corpus ChristI, Tex., on his current tour; The United States, he promised, "Will hold personally and officially responsible for these diabolical crimes all of those offi cers of the Japanese government who have participated therein and will in due course bring those officers to Justice." . ; A note of protest from the STETTIN, ISTOCK S Mines Laid in Enemy Waters, Berlin ; Pounded LONDON, April 21 MV-Heavy British bombers attacked the German Baltic: porta of Stettin and. Rostock- last night while speedy Mosquito bombers pound ed- Berlin in widespread ' raids from which 31 planes-are miss ing, the air ministry announced today. ' ....... The night's operations also in cluded mine-laying in enemy waters and' sharp attacks by fighters and fighter-bombers on enamy railways, barges - and coastal ' shipping, - communique said.- .- - ! Good Weather - The- operations were favored by- good weather and the bomb ing' attacks-on Stettin and Ros tock which -were carried out by some of the RAF's mightiest planes were well concentrated, the air ministry said. Southeast coast observers said the cross-channel offensive con tinued late into the afternoon with' explosions in the direction of Calais and Boulogne which were so Intense they shook build ings miles inland from England's coast- Rostock is the site of the Hein- kel and Neptuna works and the communique said the- port and (Continued on Page Two) Harmon's Wrecked Plane Found, No Sign of Crewmen PARAMARIBO. Dutch Guiana. April 21 (fP) The wrecked army plane from which Lieut. Thomas Harmon, - former University of Michigan All-American football star, parachuted to . safety, on April 8, has been located in the jungles of French Guiana, Unit ed states army headquarters an nounced here today. The announcement indicated that no other survivor of the crash had been located as yet. There were six in the crew. Col. Paul L. Singer, army spokesman, said the plane had crashed 16 miles southwest of the village of Caux near the bor der between French Guiana and Brazil. conservative cut to their clothes, especially- wools. Shoe rationing . has b e e n a boon to the merchant carrying better stock, but it hasn't help ed the fellow in the $1.98 class. Most unrationed shoes are out of the picture. Colors . . . Although there is a demand for color, such as gold, acqua, crimson, yellows and greens, the old stand-bys, beige, brown, navy and black, are leading the field by a good long nose. ' The war has brought on a great many changes in the lady's manner of buying. Once upon a time she yawned, decided that a new dress would take care of her particular type of boredom, and she up and bought a hat or a dress, as the case may be. Returning home, the dress didn't go with her coat and looked fearful with the hat she thought she'd wear again, Now the lady shopper is doing some state department to Tokyo also was released here. How many of th eight fliers listed by the wsr department as prisoners of war after the raid, or presumed to be prisoners, were executed was not stated. Eight Listed . The eightywith the home ad. dresses of their nearest of kin, were Second Lt. , George Barr, Madison,' Wis.; First Lt. William Glover Farrow, Washington, D. C; First LU. Robert L. Hite, Earthi Texas; First Lt. Robert J. Meder4 Lakewoodi Ohio; First Lt. Corp. Jacob DeShazer, list-, ed as one of the prisoners held after the . Tokyo raid, is the brother of Mrs. J. G. Griffith ; of Henley, and -visited her one year prior to the attack. Also "missing in action" on word from Washington, is Sgt. William J. Dieter, bom bardier on the flight, son -of Mr. and Mrs. Jess-Dieter of Tulelake. . : ' Chase Jv Nielson. Hyrum, Utah: -FirstjteeWKTHlmark, Dal. las; Corp. Jacob D. Desha zer, Madras, Ore;; , and Sergeant Har old A. Spatz, Lebo, Kas. .- The press, Mr. Roosevelt said, "has just carried the details of the American bombing of Japan a year ago,'' giving information that crews of two of the Ameri can bombers were captured by the Japanese. On October: 19, 1943, he said, this government learned from Japanese radio broadcasts of the (Continued on Peg Two) Fifteen Raids Batter Kiska Japs Monday WASHINGTON, April 21-VP) War planes of the Aleutians command bombed and strafed Japanese positions on Kiska is-' land in 15 record-breaking raids Monday, the navy , reported to day, scoring numerous hits on important installations and start ing fires. In the South Pacific, a com munique said, heavy army bomb ers struck at the big enemy base at Kieta on Bougainville island in the northwestern Solomons. Another wave of lighter bombers attacked shipping at Tonolel harbor, also -on' Bougainville, damaging - one freighter and making seyeral near hits on an-other.- ; , The 15-r'aid attack on Kiska was the heaviest of tho war to date. Previously the island had (Continued on Page Two) thing that better magazines have long begged her. to. do. She is buying ''outfits" or ensembles, depending on th clerk's vocab ulary. Any number of Klamath mer chants have remarked on this complete costume type of buy ing. It starts with a basic suit, coat or dress, and builds up or down. That's why a hat shop in the dress shop, goes over big. This story is supposed to b about an Easter hatl But mer chants haven't said much about dressing up- for. Easter becaus it seems the girls set their teeth 'way back in January to got some new duds and they've been on their way to. building up a good wardrobe ever since th first day of 1943. -Suits Get Call Suits seem to be the first call. Good wool they 'want, too. Twills and gabardines lead, and dark colors are the primary (Continued on Pag Four) f v